Online Encyclopedia

WALTER OF HEMINGBURGH

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 258 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WALTER OF HEMINGBURGH  , also commonly, but erroneously, called WALTER HEMINGFORD, Latin chronicler of the 14th century, was a
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canon
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regular of the Austin priory of Gisburn in
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Yorkshire . Hence he is sometimes known as Walter of Gisburn (Walterus Gisburnensis) . Bale seems to have been the first to give him the name by which he became more commonly known . His chronicle embraces the period of
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English
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history from the
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Conquest (Io66) to the nineteenth
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year of
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Edward III., with the exception of the years 1316-1326 . It ends with the title of a chapter in which it was proposed to describe the
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battle of Crecy (1346); but the chronicler seems to have died before the required information reached him . There is, however, some controversy as to whether the later portions which are lacking in some of the
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MSS. are by him . In compiling the first
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part, Hemingburgh apparently used the histories of Eadmer, Hoveden, Henry of Huntingdon, and William of Newburgh; but the reigns of the three Edwards are
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original, composed from
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personal observation and information . There are several
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manuscripts of the history extant—the best perhaps being that presented to the College of Arms by the
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earl of Arundel . The
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work is correct and judicious, and written in a pleasing style . One of its
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special features is the preservation in its pages of copies of the
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great charters, and Hemingburgh's versions have more than once supplied deficiencies and cleared up obscurities in copies from other
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sources . The first three books were published by Thomas Gale in 1687, in his Historiae Anglicanae scriptores quinque, and the remainder by Thomas Hearne In 1731 . The first portion was again published in 1848 by the English
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Historical Society, under the title Chronicon Walteri de Hemingburgh, vulgo Hemingford nuncupati, de gestis regum Angliae, edited by H .

C .

Hamilton .

End of Article: WALTER OF HEMINGBURGH
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