Online Encyclopedia

ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1279)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1279)  , archbishop of Canterbury and cardinal, studied at the university of Paris, where he soon became famous as a teacher of grammar and logic . Afterwards joining the order of St Dominic and turning his attention to
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theology, he was chosen provincial prior of his order in England in 1261, and in
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October 1272 Pope Gregory X. terminated a dispute over the vacant archbishopric of Canterbury by appointing Kilwardby . Although the new archbishop crowned
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Edward I. and his queen Eleanor in August 1274, he took little
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part in business of state, but was energetic in discharging the spiritual duties of his office . He was charitable to the poor, and showed liberality to the
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Dominicans . In 1278 Pope Nicholas III. made him cardinal-bishop of
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Porto and
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Santa Rufina; he resigned his archbishopric and
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left England, carrying with him the registers and other valuable
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property belonging to the see of Canterbury . He died in Italy on the 11th of September 1279 . Kilwardby was the first member of a mendicant order to attain a high position in the
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English Church . Among his numerous writings, which became very popular among students, are De ortu scientiarum, De tempore, De Universali, and some commentaries on Aristotle . See N . Trevet, Annales sex regum Angliae, edited by T . Hog (
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London, 1845) ; W . F .

Hook, Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury, vol. iii . (London, 186o-1876); J . Quetif and J . Echard, Scriptores ordinis Predicatorum (Paris, 1719-1721) .

End of Article: ROBERT KILWARDBY (d. 1279)
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