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French theologian
Jean de Gagny
[1] (died 1549) was a French theologian.
He was at the
Collège de Navarre in 1524.
[2] He became
Rector of the
University of Paris , in 1531, and Almoner Royal,
[3] in 1536. In 1546 he became
Chancellor of the University of Paris .
[4]
He published some significant
Roman Catholic commentaries on parts of the
New Testament .
[5] He was also a business partner of the typographer
Claude Garamond ,
[6] and collector of manuscripts, particularly of
patristic works.
[2] His position close to
Francis I of France gave him access to monastic libraries.
[7]
Notes
^ Also spelled Jean de Gagney, Jean de Gagnée, Gagnaeus, Gagneius.
^
a
b
Tertullian: R.W.Hunt, The Need for a Guide to the Editors of Patristic Texts in the 16th Century, Studia Patristica XVII.1 (1982), pp.365–371
^
Tertullian: Jean de Gagny / Martin Mesnart (B) (1545)
^ Farge, James K. (2003). "Jean de Gaigny". Contemporaries of Erasmus: a biographical register of the Renaissance and Reformation .
University of Toronto Press . p. 71.
^
Biblical Interpretation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (PDF), p. 10.
Archived 2011-07-13 at the
Wayback Machine
^ Allan Haley, Typographic Milestones (1992), p. 27.
^
James P. Carley, Pierre Petitmengin Pre-Conquest manuscripts from Malmesbury Abbey and John Leland's letter to Beatus Rhenanus concerning a lost copy of Tertullian's works (PDF), pp. 5–7 , = Anglo-Saxon England 33 (2004), 195–223.
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