An Annotated Bibliography of Printed and Online Primary Sources for the Middle Ages


Dimock, James F, ed., Magna vita S. Hugonis episcopi Lincolniensis : from manuscripts in the Bodleian Library (London: Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts and Green (Rolls Series, No. 37), 1864). View Source Online

Text name(s): Magna Vita S. Hugonis Episcopi Lincolniensis; Life of St. Hugh

Number of pages of primary source text: 378

Medieval Author(s): Adam of Eynsham

Dates: 1135 - 1220

Archival Reference: Bodleian Library, Oxford (Digby 165); Imperial Library, Paris (Latin No. 5,575)

Original Language(s): Latin;

Translation: Original language included.

Translation Comments:

Geopolitical Region(s): England;

County/Region: Lincoln

Record Type(s):
Hagiography
Subject Heading(s):
Clergy - Priests, Bishops, Canons
Monasticism
Royalty / Monarchs
Saints
Saints - Cults / Relics

Apparatus: Index Glossary Introduction

Comments:

This volume contains the Life of St. Hugh (c. 1135-1200), a Carthusian monk from Burgundy who became the bishop of Lincoln in 1186 because of pressure exerted by king Henry II (1154-1189). The Magna Vita was written by a Benedictine monk named Adam who later became the abbot of Eynsham. The author had been a member of Hugh’s household for three years prior to the saint’s death during which time he served as his private chaplain (priest). This relationship gave him access to vast stores of information about Hugh’s life but may have also predisposed him to writing about the bishop in a favorable light. The full text is available through the Medieval and Modern Thought Text Digitization Project. Although Dimock’s edition is a good one, the newer edition of the Magna Vita by Douie and Farmer is of superior quality, see: Decima Douie and David H. Farmer “Magna Vita Sancti Hugonis: The life of St. Hugh of Lincoln” (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1985).

Introduction Summary:

Cataloger: SES