Petrus Comestor, also called Pierre le Mangeur (died 22 October 1178), was a twelfth-century French theological writer and university teacher.
12th-century French theologian
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Life
Petrus Comestor was born in Troyes. Although the name Comestor (Latin for 'eater', le Mangeur in French) was popularly attributed to his habit of devouring books and learning, it was probably, and more prosaically, a family name.[1][2] It did, however, give Peter a nice pun for his epitaph (supposed to have been composed by him): Petrus eram quem petra tegit,/ dictusque Comestor nunc comedor (I was Peter, whom this stone covers,/ called 'devourer', now I am devoured). (For a text of it, see Petrus Comestor.)
As a young man, Peter studied at Troyes Cathedral school, where he might have come into contact with Peter Abelard.;[3] sometime later, he was a student in Paris under, amongst others, Peter Lombard.[4] By 1147, he was back in Troyes, having been appointed dean of Troyes Cathedral. By 1160, Peter had returned to Paris to teach, holding the chair of theology at the university (from which he retired in 1169). He was made chancellor of Notre Dame in Paris around 1164, which put him, amongst other things, in charge of the cathedral school, and which post he held until his death in 1178.[5] Peter's reputation as an academic was such that Pope Alexander III exempted Peter from his ban on charging fees for giving licences to teach.[6]
Peter was buried in the Abbey of Saint Victor, and he may have retired and become a canon there; he was celebrated as such by the canons in their necrology.[7]
Works
Historia Scholastica
Peter's most famous work was his Historia Scholastica: as Beryl Smalley called it, a 'great study of biblical history'.[8] The Historia was completed by 1173, Peter having spent some time writing it at the Abbey of Saint Victor. Peter dedicated it to William, bishop of Sens. The Historia was a core text during the following centuries, even being a source, perhaps, for The Canterbury Tales.[9]
Other works
Many of Peter's works are still unpublished. Among his works are:
Sermons: 50 are in Migne PL, misattributed to Hildebert of Lavardin (PL clxxi, 330-964, others in PL cxcviii, 1721-1844). The precise number of Peter's sermons is not entirely agreed upon.[10]
Liber de Sacramentis
De Poenitentia
Breviarum Sententiarum
Glosses on the Gospels, the Glossa Ordinaria, the Psalter, St Paul, and the Twelve Minor Prophets
Sententiae de Sacramentis, an abridgement of Peter Lombard's Sentences
Treatises on the Eucharist and on Confession
Questiones
Petrus Comestor presents the Bible Historiale to Archbishop Guillaume of Sens.
Clark, M. (2005). "Peter Comestor and Peter Lombard: Brothers in Deed". Traditio. 60: 85–142.
Morey, 10
Dalyn, 67, 70
Dalyn, 68
Smalley, B. (1964). The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages. University of Notre Dame Press. p.178.
Morey, 32-5
Luscombe, D. (1985). "Peter Comestor". Studies in Church History Subsidia. 4: fn.26.
Further reading
M. J. Clark, The Making of the Historia scholastica, 1150–1200 (Studies and Texts, 198), Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, 2016 (ISBN978-0-88844-198-0)
Gilbert Dahan, Les Intellectuels chrétiens et les Juifs au Moyen Âge, Paris, Cerf, 1990.
B. Smalley, The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages, 2nd edn., University of Notre Dame Press, 1964
D. Luscombe, “The Place of Peter Comestor in the History of Medieval Theology,” in Pierre le Mangeur ou Pierre de Troyes, maître du XIIe siècle, ed. Gilbert Dahan, Brepols, 2013, 27–45
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