- Peter of Spain
Peter of Spain or, in
Latin , Petrus Hispanus (13th century ) is the Mediaeval author of "Tractatus", a standard textbook onlogic , and often credited with a number of works onmedicine . He also wrote "Summule logicales magistri Petri Hispani" (Collection of Logic Matters of Master Peter of Spain) which has a large volume of manuscripts and printed editions. This is a strong indication his work enjoyed great success throughoutEurope an universities well into the seventeenth century.Peter's true identity remains debated. The word "Hispanus" refers to
Hispania , often translated as "Spain ", but including the wholeIberian Peninsula (as a country, Spain exists since the late15th century ). It is often assumed he was Pedro Julião (ca. 1215-1277), the Portuguesephysician known as Petrus Hispanus who in1276 becamePope John XXI . [Michael Haren, "Medieval Thought" (1985), p.148 states that he was a pupil ofWilliam of Shireswood and a master of arts at Paris, taught at Siena, was bishop of Braga, and then John XXI.] Another theory, usually sustained by Spanish authors, asserted the author of the "Tractatus" was Castilian, and a member of theDominican Order . Other theories from the fifteenth century point toPetrus Ferrandi Hispanus (d. between 1254 and 1259), or to a Blackfriar (Dominican) from the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century.Notes
External links
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/peter-spain/ Peter of Spain] at the
Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
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