Abell, Adam (1475x80
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Stephanie M. Thorson
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Patrick Wormald
Æthelweard [Ethelwerd] (d. 998
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Peter C. Herman
Arnold, Richard (d. c. 1521), merchant and chronicler, was a citizen of London, resident in the parish of St Magnus the Martyr, who seems to have made his living primarily by trading with Flanders. Nothing is known of his parentage. In 1473 he was an executor of the will of ...
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Roy Martin Haines
Baker, Geoffrey le (fl. 1326–1358), chronicler, was born in Swinbrook in Oxfordshire. He is noteworthy as the author of two chronicles. The smaller of these, the Chroniculum, begins in primordio temporis and ends on 20 July 1347, with a colophon revealing Baker's name and ...
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Bale, Robert (b. c. 1410, d. in or after 1473), chronicler, was, according to John Bale (d. 1563), a lawyer, public notary, and judge in civil cases in London, as well as being a chronicler of London affairs. He was probably the ...
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Bel, Jean le (c. 1290–1370), ecclesiastic and chronicler, was of noble rank, according to the chronicler Jean d'Outremeuse. He was born about 1290 into a patrician Liégeois family with important dynastic links to the more rurally based nobility. His father was the armigerous ...
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G. L. Harriss
Benet, John (d. 1474), priest and chronicler, is differentiated from contemporaries of the same name by being vicar of Harlington, Bedfordshire, from 17 March 1443 to 1471 and then rector of Broughton, Huntingdonshire, from 4 October 1471 to his death some time before November 1474. He may have been one of two ...
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Beverley, Alfred of (d. 1154x7
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George B. Stow
Binham, Simon (fl. c. 1350), Benedictine monk and chronicler, was probably born in East Anglia and became a member of the priory of Binham, Norfolk, one of the cells of the abbey of St Albans. He is first recorded as supporting his prior in resisting the unjust exactions of ...
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Brompton, John (fl. 1436–c. 1464), abbot of Jervaulx and supposed chronicler, was educated at Oxford, and was elected abbot of the Cistercian foundation of Jervaulx, Yorkshire, in 1436, holding that office until c.1464. He was claimed as the author of a very substantial chronicle, printed in ...
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Maker: Edward Burne-Jones
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Georgiana Burne-Jones, Lady Burne-Jones (1840–1920), by Edward Burne-Jones
Photo by Birmingham Museums Trust, licensed under CC0
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Jones [née Macdonald], Georgiana [Georgie] Burne-, Lady Burne-Jones (1840–1920), artist and Pre-Raphaelite chronicler, was born at 21 Vittoria Street, Birmingham, on 21 July 1840, the fourth of eight surviving children of the Revd George Browne Macdonald (1805–1868), a Wesleyan Methodist minister, and his second wife, ...
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Burton, Thomas (d. 1437), chronicler and abbot of Meaux, was the author of the most authoritative Cistercian chronicle to be written in late medieval England. The place of his birth, and the details of his early life are unknown. Although the continuator of his chronicle described him as '...
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Caer-went, Gregory of (fl. 1237), Benedictine monk and supposed chronicler, was responsible for at least some of the annals compiled at St Peter's, Gloucester, covering the period from the foundation of the abbey to 1290. These survive only in the form of extracts transcribed by the antiquary ...
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G. H. Martin
Canterbury, Gervase of (b. c. 1145, d. in or after 1210), Benedictine monk, chronicler, and topographer, was a member of the cathedral priory of Christ Church, Canterbury, where he was professed by Archbishop Thomas Becket early in 1163. Becket also ordained him, but not necessarily on the same occasion, and on balance it is likely that ...
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A. J. Piper
Chambre, William (fl. 1365
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Helen M. E. Evans
Chevalier, Jean (1588/9–1675), chronicler, was born in St Helier, Jersey, the younger son of Clément Chevalier (d. 1599) and his second wife, Jeanne (d. 1615), daughter of Jean Malzard. He was probably educated on the island. On 14 April 1619 he married ...
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Bernadette A. Williams
Clyn, John (d. 1349
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A. J. Piper
Coldingham, Geoffrey of (d. c. 1215), Benedictine monk, chronicler, and probably hagiographer, is described as sacrist of Coldingham Priory, Berwickshire, one of Durham Cathedral priory's dependent cells, in the rubric that heads three of the four fourteenth-century copies of the portion of the ...