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HUGH OF ST See also: cardinal and Biblical commentator, was See also: born at St See also: Cher, a suburb of See also: Vienne, See also: Dauphine, and while a student in See also: Paris entered the Dominion convent of the See also: Jacobins in 1225
.
He taught philosophy, See also: theology and See also: canon See also: law
.
As provincial of his See also: order, which office he held during most of the third See also: decade of the century, he contributed largely to its prosperity, and won the confidence of the popes See also: Gregory IX., Innocent IV. and See also: Alexander IV., who charged him with several important
See also: missions
.
Created cardinal-See also: priest in 1244, he played an important See also: part in the council of See also: Lyons in
1245, contributed to the institution of the Feast of See also: Holy See also: Sacrament, the reform of the See also: Carmelites (1247), and the condemnations of the Introductorius in evangelium aeternum of Gherardino del Borgo See also: San Donnino (1255), and of See also: William of St Amour's De periculis novissimorum temporum
.
He died at
See also: Orvieto on the 19th of See also: March 1263
.
He directed the first revision of the text of the Vulgate, begun in 1236 by the
See also: Dominicans; this first " correctorium," vigorously criticized by See also: Roger See also: Bacon, was revised in 1248 and in 1256, and forms the
See also: base of the celebrated Correctorium Bibliae Sorbonicum
.
With the aid of many of his order he edited the first concordance of the See also: Bible (Concordantiae Sacrorum Bibliorum or Concordantiae S
.
See also: Jacobi),
but the assertion that we owe the See also: present division of the chapters of the Vulgate to him is false
.
Besides a commentary on the See also: book of Sentences, he wrote the Postillae in sacram scripturam juxta quadruplicem sensum, litteralem, allegoricum, anagogicum et moralem, published frequently in the 15th and 16th centuries
.
His Sermones de tempore et See also: sanctis are apparently only extracts
.
His exegetical See also: works were published at Venice in 1754 in 8 vols
.
See, for See also: sources, Quetif-Echard, Scriptores ordinis praedicatorum; Denifle, in Archie fur Litteratur and Kirchengeschichte See also: des Mitlelalters, i
.
49, ii . 171, iv . 263 and 471; L'Annee dominicaine, iii . (1886) 509 and 883; Chartularium universitatis Parisiensis, i . 158 . (H . |
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