John of HowdenOFM (
fl. 1268/9–1275), also known as John of Hoveden, was a 13th-century English
Franciscan friar from the north of England, and for a time was chaplain to Queen
Eleanor of Provence, wife of
King Henry III of England.[1]
Works
John is known only by the various spiritual writings attributed to him. There are certain texts in
Latin, including Philomena (The Nightingale) (the influence of which may be seen in
Richard Rolle's Incendium amoris and Melos amoris); Canticum amoris (Song of Love); Cythara (Cittern); Quinquaginta cantica, Quinquaginta salutationes (Fifty Songs; Fifty Salutations), and several other shorter Latin poems.[2]
There are also works written in
Anglo-Norman. One, Li Rossignos (The Nightingale) is a re-working of Howden's own Latin Philomena, with borrowings from the anonymous Desere iam anima (Abandon Now O Soul).[3] Internal evidence suggests the poem was written before 1282.[4]
For a long time, it has been assumed that he was the John of Howden who was prebendary of the
church of Howden in
Yorkshire. Recently, however, this has been questioned.[5] The prebendary has been identified with Master John of London, canon of Auckland and sometime master of Kepier Hospital in Durham and a noted student of astrology, who was appointed first (or senior) prebendary of Howden minster before 1268. He died in 1272.[6]
References
^See Margaret Howell, Eleanor of Provence, pp83, 97–8.
^Denis Renevey, '1215–1349: texts', in Samuel Fanous and
Vincent Gillespie, eds, The Cambridge Companion to Medieval English Mysticism, (Cambridge, 2011)
^Andrew Lawson King, 'A Critical Edition of Li Rossignos' (unsubmitted PhD thesis, University of Cambridge, 1984).
^Denis Renevey, '1215–1349: texts', in Samuel Fanous and Vincent Gillespie, eds, The Cambridge Companion to Medieval English Mysticism, (Cambridge, 2011).
^For a reconsideration of the identity of John of Howden, the author, with John of Melton, prebendary of the church of Howden, see Glynn Hesketh (ed.), Rossignos by John of Howden (a thirteenth-century meditation on the passion of Christ), ANTS (2006). The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry also doubts this identification.
^Victoria County History of Yorkshire East Riding, vol. 10, pt 2, 80-81
Further reading
Poems of John of Hoveden, ed.
F. J. E. Raby, Publications of the Surtees Society, no. 154 (1939).
Johannis de Hovedene Philomena, ed. C. Blume (Leipzig, 1930) [the Latin text of the Philomena].
Denis Renevey, '1215–1349: texts', in Samuel Fanous and Vincent Gillespie, eds, The Cambridge Companion to Medieval English Mysticism, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011).
A. G. Rigg, "Howden, John of (fl. 1268/9–1275)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford University Press, 2004).