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CLEYNAERTS (CLENARDUS Or CLENARD), NI...

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Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 507 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CLEYNAERTS (CLENARDUS Or CLENARD), NICOLAS  (1495- 1542), Belgian grammarian and traveller, was born at Diest, in Brabant, on the 5th of December 1495 . Educated at the university of Louvain, he became a professor of Latin, which he taught by a conversational method . He applied himself to the preparation of manuals of Greek and
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Hebrew grammar, in order to simplify the difficulties of learners . His Tabulae in grammaticen hebraeam (1529), Instituiiones in linguam graecam (1530), and Meditationes graecanicae (1531) appeared at Louvain . The Institutiones and Meditationes passed through a number of
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editions, and had many commentators . He maintained a principle revived in
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modern teaching, that the learner should not be puzzled by elaborate rules until he has obtained a working acquaintance with the language . A
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desire to read the
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Koran led him to try to establish a connexion between Hebrew and Arabic . These studies resulted in a scheme for proselytism among the
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Arabs, based on study of the language, which should enable Europeans to combat the errors of
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Islam by peaceful methods . In
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prosecution of this
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object he travelled in 1532 to Spain, and after teaching Greek at Salamanca was summoned to the court of
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Portugal as tutor to Don Henry,
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brother of John III . He found another
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patron in Louis Mendoza,
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marquis of Mondexas, governor-general of Granada . There with the help of a Moorish slave he gained a knowledge of Arabic . He tried in vain to gain access to the Arabic
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MSS. in the possession of the Inquisition, and finally, in 1540, set out for Africa to seek information for himself .

He reached

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Fez, then a flourishing seat of Arab learning, but after fifteen months of privation and suffering was obliged to return to Granada, and died in the autumn of 1542 . He was buried in the
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Alhambra palace . See his Latin letters to his friends in Belgium, Nicolai Clenardi, Peregrinationum ac de rebus machometicis epistolae elegantissimae (Louvain, 1550), and a more
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complete edition, Nic . Clenardi Epistolarum libri duo (Antwerp, 1561), from the house of Plantin; also Victor Chauvin and Alphonse Roersch, " Etude sur la
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vie et
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les travaux de Nicolas Clenard " in Memoires couronnes (vol. lx., 1900-19o1) of the Royal Academy of Belgium, which contains a vast amount of information on Cleynaerts and an extensive bibliography of his
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works, and of notices of him by earlier commentators .

End of Article: CLEYNAERTS (CLENARDUS Or CLENARD), NICOLAS
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