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See also: Paul's, See also: London, and chronicler, is first mentioned in 1152, when he received the archdeaconry of Middlesex
.
He was probably See also: born between 1120 and 113o; of his parentage and See also: nationality we know nothing
.
The See also: common statement that he derived his surname from Dias in See also: Norfolk is a See also: mere conjecture; Dicetum may equally well be a Latinized See also: form of Dissai, or Dicy, or Dizy, place-names which are found in Maine, See also: Picardy, See also: Burgundy and See also: Champagne
.
In 1152 See also: Diceto was already a master of arts; presumably he had studied at See also: Paris
.
His reputation for learning and integrity stood high; he was regarded with respect and favour by See also: Arnulf of See also: Lisieux and See also: Gilbert Foliot of
See also: Hereford (afterwards of London), two of the most eminent bishops of their See also: time
.
Quite naturally, the archdeacon took in the See also: Becket question the same See also: side as his See also: friends
.
Although his narrative is colourless, and although he was one of those who showed some sympathy for Becket at the council of Northampton (1164), the See also: correspondence of Diceto shows that he regarded the archbishop's conduct as See also: ill-considered, and that he gave advice to those whom Becket regarded as his chief enemies
.
Diceto was selected, in 1166, as the See also: envoy of the See also: English bishops when they protested against the excommunications launched by Becket
.
But, apart from this See also: episode, which he characteristically omits to record, he remained in the background
.
The natural impartiality of his intellect was accentuated by a certain timidity, which is apparent in his writings no less than in his See also: life
.
About 118o he became dean of St Paul's
.
In this office he distinguished himself by careful management of the estates, by restoring the discipline of the chapter, and by See also: building at his own expense a deanery-See also: house
.
A See also: scholar and a See also: man of considerable erudition, he showed a strong preference for See also: historical studies; and about the time when he was preferred to the deanery he began to collect materials for the See also: history of his
own times
.
His friendships with See also: Richard Fitz See also: Nigel, who succeeded Foliot in the see of London, with See also: William
See also: Longchamp, the chancellor of Richard I., and with Walter of Coutances, the See also: arch-See also: bishop of See also: Rouen, gave him excellent opportunities of See also: collecting information
.
His two chief See also: works, the Abbreviationes Chronicorum and the Ymagines Historiarum, cover the history of the See also: world from the See also: birth of Christ to the See also: year 1202
.
The former, which ends in 1147, is a See also: work of learning and industry, but almost entirely based upon extant See also: sources
.
The latter, beginning as a compilation from Robert de See also: Monte and the letters of Foliot, becomes an See also: original authority about 1172, and a contemporary record about 1181
.
In precision and fulness of detail the Ymagines are inferior to the See also: chronicles of the so-called Benedict and of Hoveden
.
Though an annalist, Diceto is careless in his chronology; and the documents which he incorporates, while often important, are selected on no principle
.
He has little sense of See also: style; but displays considerable insight when he ventures to discuss a See also: political situation
.
For this reason, and on account of the details with which they supplement the more important chronicles of the See also: period, the Ymagines are a valuable though a secondary source
.
See W
.
Stubbs' edition of the Historical Works of Diceto (Rolls ed
.
1876, 2 vols.), and especially the introduction
.
The second See also: volume contains minor works which are the barest compendia of facts taken from well-known sources
.
Diceto's fragmentary Domesday of the capitular estates has been edited by Archdeacon See also: Hale in The Domesday of St Paul's, pp
.
109 if
.
(See also: Camden Society, 1858)
.
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