- John Clyn
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John Clyn (ca. 1286? – ca. 1349?) of the Friars Minor, Kilkenny, was a 14th century Irish monk and chronicler who lived at the time of the Black Death.
Contents
Background
Clyn was probably born in Leinster some years prior to 1300, possibly at Baile a Clinn/Clyn's town/Clintstown, in the parish of Conahy, some six and a half miles north-west of Kilkenny. The surname Clyn is found in Somerset and Bristol, which may have been where his Anglo-Norman ancestors originated.
Career
Bishop James Ussher stated, possibly in error, that Clyn was a doctor of the Franciscan Order. This statement may be a presumption as it has no supporting evidence. Clyn was well educated, though just where he received his education is unknown. He may have attended the university at Dublin, while Oxford and Cambridge remain more distant possibilities.
Clyn is recorded as the guardian of the friary of Carrick in 1336; Bernadette Williams believes that he would have been about fifty in 1336 ("around the same age as his hero Fulk de la Freigne") as someone mature would have been needed to become guardian of Carrick in 1336.
He may have attended the general chapter of the Friars Minor at Marseilles in 1346. At some point between 1336 and 1348 he moved to Kilkenny. He was still alive after 17 June 1349, his last entry in his annals being a eulogy for Fulk de la Freigne. As the Black Death had ceased by this point, Clyn may have survived it. If this is the case, he may have ceased writing " ... because of the death of his friend, and perhaps patron, Fulk de la Freigne."
The Annals of Ireland
In an effort to identify Clyn's purpose in writing his annals, Bernadette Williams states:
"They are not a house chronicle, a town chronicle or a political history. ...the difference between a city and county annalist is quite evident; Clyn was not a member of the burgage population of Kilkenny but a man of the countryside. ... The reality is that Clyn was writing a military history of the geographical area of Kilkenny and Tipperary ... his audience was either the military men of that area or more specifically a military family such as the de la Freignes."
Indeed the latter family are mentioned fulsomly in his annals.
As a person "from a military and chivalric background ... he displayed an acceptance of the military situation on the ground" but abhorred "treachery and unprovoked violence."
He would be unknown as the author had he not identified himself in his entry on the Black Death.
In 2007 an edition of the annals of Friar Clyn was translated into English by Dr. Bernadette Williams.
Notable entry
"So that notable deeds should not perish with time, and be lost from the memory of future generations, I, seeing these many ills, and that the whole world encompassed by evil, waiting among the dead for death to come, have committed to writing what I have truly heard and examined; and so that the writing does not perish with the writer, or the work fail with the workman, I leave parchment for continuing the work, in case anyone should still be alive in the future and any son of Adam can escape this pestilence and continue the work thus begun."
References
- The Annals of Ireland by Friar John Clyn, edited and translated with an Introduction, by Bernadette Williams, Four Courts Press, 2007. ISBN 978-1-84682-034-2
- John Clyn - Catholic Encyclopedia article
External links
See also
- Irish annals
- Annals of Ulster
- The Chronicle of Ireland
- Chronicon Scotorum
Authors John Clyn · Henry Crumpe · Henry Fitzsimon · John of Fintona · Malachy of Ireland · Master Patrick of Ireland · Dubhaltach Mac Fhirbhisigh · Ruaidhrí Ó Flaithbheartaigh · Niall Ó Glacáin · John Lynch (Gratianus Lucius) · Francis O'Molloy · Perot de Garbalei · Petrus de Ibernia · Phillip Norreys · Richard FitzRalph · Simon of Ireland · Symon Semeonis · Thomas of Ireland · Ailbe Ua Maíl Mhuaidh · James Ussher · John Whitehead (theologian)See also: Hiberno-Latin to 1169Categories:- 1280s births
- 1340s deaths
- Franciscans
- Irish religious leaders
- Irish historians
- 14th-century writers
- 14th-century Latin writers
- 14th-century historians
- Renaissance Latin-language writers
- People from County Kilkenny
- 14th-century deaths
- Irish chroniclers
- Year of birth uncertain
- Scribes
- Medieval Irish writers
- 14th-century Irish people
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