Matthew Paris, known as Matthew of Paris
(Latin: Matthæus Parisiensis, lit. "Matthew the Parisian";[1] c. 1200 - 1259), was a Benedictine monk, English chronicler, artist in illuminated
manuscripts and cartographer, based at St
Albans Abbey in Hertfordshire. He wrote a number of works, mostly
historical, which he scribed and illuminated himself, typically in drawings
partly coloured with watercolour washes, sometimes called
"tinted drawings". Some were written in Latin, some in Anglo-Norman or French verse.
His Chronica Majora is an oft-cited source, though modern historians recognise that Paris
was not always reliable. He tended to glorify Emperor Frederick
II and denigrate the Pope.[2] However,
in his Historia Anglorum, Paris displays a highly negative view of
Frederick, going as far as to describe him as a "tyrant" who
"committed disgraceful crimes".[3]
Life and work
In spite of his surname and
knowledge of the French language, Paris was of English birth, and is believed
by some chroniclers to be of the Paris family of Hildersham, Cambridgeshire.[4] He may have studied at Paris in his
youth after early education at St Albans School. The first we know of Matthew Paris (from his own writings) is that he
was admitted as a monk to St
Albans in 1217. It
is on the assumption that he was in his teens on admission that his birth date
is estimated; some scholars suspect he may have been ten years or more older;
many monks only entered monastic life after pursuing a career in the world
outside. He was clearly at ease with the nobility and even royalty, which may
indicate that he came from a family of some status, although it also seems an
indication of his personality. His life was mainly spent in this religious
house. In 1248, Paris was sent to Norway as the bearer of a message from Louis
IX to Haakon
IV; he made himself
so agreeable to the Norwegian sovereign that he was invited to superintend the
reformation of the Benedictine Nidarholm Abbey outside Trondheim.
Apart from these missions, his known
activities were devoted to the composition of history, a pursuit for which the
monks of St Albans had long been famous. After admission to the order in 1217,
he inherited the mantle of Roger of Wendover, the abbey's official recorder of
events, in 1236. Paris revised Roger's work, adding new material to cover his
own tenure. This Chronica
Majora is an
important historical source document, especially for the period between 1235
and 1259. Equally interesting are the illustrations Paris created for his work.
The Dublin MS (see below) contains
interesting notes, which shed light on Paris' involvement in other manuscripts,
and on the way his own were used. They are in French and in his
handwriting:
- "If you please you can keep this book till
Easter"
- "G, please send to the Lady Countess of
Arundel, Isabel, that she is to send you the book about St Thomas the Martyr and St Edward which I copied (translated?) and illustrated,
and which the Lady Countess of Cornwall may keep until Whitsuntide"
- some verses
- "In the Countess of Winchester's book let
there be a pair of images on each page thus": (verses follow
describing thirteen saints)
It is presumed the last relates to
Paris acting as commissioning agent and iconographical consultant for the
Countess with another artist.
The lending of his manuscripts to
aristocratic households, apparently for periods of weeks or months at a time,
suggests why he made several different illustrated versions of his Chronicle.
Manuscripts by
Matthew Paris
Paris' manuscripts mostly contain
more than one text, and often begin with a rather random assortment of
prefatory full-page miniatures. Some have survived incomplete, and the various
elements now bound together may not have been intended to be so by Paris.
Unless stated otherwise, all were given by Paris to his monastery (from some
inscriptions it seems they were regarded as his property to dispose of). The
monastic libraries were broken up at the Dissolution.
These MS seem to have been appreciated, and were quickly collected by
bibliophiles.[citation needed] Many of his manuscripts in the British Library are from the Cotton Library.
· Chronica Majora. Corpus
Christi College, Cambridge, Mss 26 and 16,
362 x 244/248 mm. ff 141 + 281, composed 1240-53. His major historical
work (see below), but less heavily illustrated per page than others.[5] These two
volumes contain annals from the creation of the world up to the year 1253. The
content up to 1234 or 1235 is based in the main on Roger of Wendover's Flores
Historiarum, with additions; after that date the material is Paris' own,
and written in his own hand from the annal for 1213 onward. There are 100
marginal drawings (25 + 75), some fragmentary maps and an itinerary, and
full-page drawings of William I and the Elephant with Keeper. MS 16 has very recently
had all prefatory matter re-bound separately.[c 1][c 2]
A continuation of the Chronica, from 1254 until
Paris' death in 1259, is bound with the Historia Anglorum in the British Library volume below. An unillustrated copy of the material from 1189 to 1250,
with much of his sharper commentary about Henry III toned down or removed, was
supervised by Paris himself and now exists as British Library Cotton MS Nero D
V, fol. 162-393.[6]
· Flores Historiarum. Chetham's Hospital and
Library, Manchester, MS 6712. Only part
of the text, covering 1241 to 1249, is in Paris' hand, though he is credited
with the authorship of the whole text, which is an abridgement of the Chronica
with additions from the annals of Reading and of Southwark. Additional
interpolations to the text make it clear the volume was created for Westminster Abbey. It was apparently started there, copying another MS of Paris' text
that went up to 1240. Later it was sent back to the author for him to update;
Vaughan argues this was in 1251-2. The illustrations are similar to Paris'
style but not by him. Later
additions took the chronicle up to 1327.[7][c 3]
· Historia Anglorum. British Library, Royal MS
· Abbreviatio
chronicorum (or Historia minor), British Library Cotton MS Claudius D VI, fols. 5-100.[11] Another shortened history, mainly covering 1067 to 1253. Probably begun
circa 1255, it remained unfinished at Paris' death. Illustrated with
thirty-three seated figures of English kings illustrating a genealogy. It also
contains the most developed of Paris' four maps of Great Britain.[c 5]
· Chronica excerpta a magnis cronicis. British Library Cotton MS Vitellius A XX, folios 77r-108v.[12] Covers from 1066 to 1246. Written at some point between 1246 and 1259.
Not definitely by Paris, but evidently written under his supervision, with some
of the text in his own hand.
· Book of Additions (Liber additamentorum) British Library Cotton MS Nero D I, ff202 in all, contains maps, Vitae duorum
Offarum (illustrated), Gesta
abbatum, the lives of the first 23 abbots of St Albans with a miniature
portrait of each, coats of arms, as well as copies of original documents. A
version of his well-known drawing of an elephant is in this volume, as is a
large drawing of Christ, not by Paris.[13][14][c 6]
· Life of St Alban etc., dating controversial (1230-1250), Trinity College,
Dublin Library, Ms 177 (former Ms E.I.40) 77
ff with 54 miniatures, mostly half-page. 240 x
· Life of King Edward the
Confessor 1230s or 40s, Cambridge
University Library MS. Ee.3.59.[15] This is the only surviving copy of this work, but is believed to be a
slightly later copy made in London, probably by court artists, of Paris' text
and framed illustrations. Based on the Latin Life of Edward the Confessor by Aelred of Rievaulx, c. 1162.[c 8]
· Life of St Thomas of Canterbury, British Library Loan MS 88 - Four leaves (the "Becket Leaves") survive from a
French-verse history of the life of Thomas Becket with large illuminations. Based on the Latin Quadrilogus
compiled by Elias of Evesham at Crowland Abbey in 1198. The illuminations are attributed to Paris by Janet Backhouse, but not by Nigel Morgan. Vaughan had previously noted that the leaves
from the Life of St Thomas and the Life of King Edward are of
different sizes, and written by different scribes, neither of them Paris
himself, so they are not likely to be part of the manuscript that Paris wrote
of having lent to the Countess of Arundel; but that, "to judge from the
script and the style of illumination" they are "very close copies of
Matthew [Paris]'s original".[16][c 9]
· Life of St Edmund, a French-verse history of the life of Edmund Rich, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1233 to 1240. Based on Paris' own Latin
prose life of Rich, composed in the late 1240s, which drew on a collection of
materials made at Pontigny, statements from Robert Bacon and Richard Wych, Bishop of Chichester, and other materials including
from Paris' own histories. A 14th-century copy of the prose life has survived
in British Library Cotton MS Julius D VI, folios 123-156v.[17] One copy of the verse life that was in Cotton MS Vitellius D VIII was
destroyed in the fire of 1731; but another copy was discovered in the early 1900s
at Welbeck Abbey and is now in the British Library.[18]
· Liber
Experimentarius of Bernardus Silvestris, and other fortune-telling tracts.[19] Bodleian Library, Oxford, Ms. Ashmole 304, 176 x
· Miscellaneous
writings by John of
Wallingford (the Younger), British Library, MS Cotton Julius D VII,[20] 188 ×
Also, fragments of a Latin biography
of Stephen
Langton. Various
other works, especially maps.
A panel painting on oak of St Peter, the only surviving part of a tabernacle shrine (1850 x
Paris as an artist
In some of Paris' manuscripts, a
framed miniature occupies the upper half of the page, and in others they are
"marginal" - unframed and occupying the bottom quarter
(approximately) of the page. Tinted drawings were an established style well
before Paris, and became especially popular in the first half of the 13th
century. They were certainly much cheaper and quicker than fully painted
illuminations. The tradition of tinted drawings or outline drawings with ink
supplemented by coloured wash was distinctively English, dating back to the Anglo-Saxon art of the mid-10th century, and
connected with the English Benedictine Reform of the period. A strong influence on one branch of the style was the
Carolingian Utrecht
Psalter, which was
at Canterbury from about 1000 to 1640. This was
copied in the 1020s in the Harley Psalter, and in the Eadwine Psalter of the mid-12th century.
Recent scholarship, notably that of
Nigel Morgan, suggests that Paris' influence on other artists of the period has
been exaggerated. This is likely because so much more is known about him than
other English illuminators of the period, who are mostly anonymous. Most
manuscripts seem to have been produced by lay artists in this period. William
de Brailes is shown
with a clerical tonsure, but he was married, which suggests he had minor orders
only. The manuscripts produced by Paris show few signs of collaboration, but
art historians detect a School of St Albans' surviving after Paris' death,
influenced by him.
Paris' style suggests that it was
formed by works from around 1200. He was somewhat old-fashioned in retaining a
roundness in his figures, rather than adopting the thin angularity of most of
his artist contemporaries, especially those in London. His compositions are
very inventive; his position as a well-connected monk may have given him more
confidence in creating new compositions, whereas a lay artist would prefer to
stick to traditional formulae. It may also reflect the lack of full training in
the art of the period. His colouring emphasises green and blue, and together
with his characteristic layout of a picture in the top half of a page, is
relatively distinctive. What are probably his final sketches are found in Vitae
duorum Offarum
in BL MS Cotton Nero D I.
Paris as a
historian
From 1235, the point at which Wendover dropped his pen, Paris continued the history
on the plan which his predecessors had followed. He derived much of his
information from the letters of important people, which he sometimes inserts,
but much more from conversation with the eyewitnesses of events. Among his
informants were Richard, Earl of Cornwall and King Henry
III, with whom he
appears to have been on intimate terms.
The king knew that Paris was writing
a history, and wanted it to be as exact as possible. In
Naturalists have praised his
descriptions of the English wildlife of his time, brief though they are: in
particular his valuable description of the first irruption into England in 1254 of the common crossbill.[23]
Studies of Matthew
Paris
The relation of Matthew Paris's work
to those of John de Celia (John of Wallingford) and Roger
of Wendover may be
studied in Henry
Richards Luard's
edition of the Chronica majora (7 vols., Rolls series, 1872-1881), which contains
valuable prefaces. The Historia Anglorum sive historia minor (1067-1253)
has been edited by Frederic Madden (3 vols., Rolls series, 1866-1869).
Matthew Paris is sometimes confused
with Matthew
of Westminster, the
reputed author of the Flores
historiarum
edited by Luard (3 vols., Rolls series, 1890). This work, compiled by various
hands, is an edition of Matthew Paris, with continuations extending to 1326.
He wrote a life of Edmund
of Abingdon.[24] He also wrote the Anglo-Norman
Paris House at St Albans High School for Girls is named after him.
Notes
1. John Allen Giles (translator), Matthew
Paris' English history, from 1235 to 1273, Publ. 1852. (page v)
2.
Peter Jackson, Mongols and
the West, p. 58
3.
Matthew Paris, 'Matthew Paris
on Staufer Italy'. In Jessalyn Bird, Edward Peters, and James M. Powell, Crusade
and Christendom: Annotated Documents in Translation from Innocent III to the
Fall of Acre, 1187-1291, p.405
4.
Edmund Carter (1819). The history of the county of Cambridge.
5.
http://parkerweb.stanford.edu/
6.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Cotton MS Nero D V.
7. Nigel Morgan in: Jonathan
Alexander & Paul Binski (eds), Age of Chivalry, Art in Plantagenet
England, 1200-1400, Royal Academy/Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London 1987,
Cat 437
8.
British Library Digitised
Manuscript information: Royal MS 14 C VII
9. https://web.archive.org/web/20050429145604/http://ibs001.colo.firstnet.net.uk/britishlibrary/controller/subjectidsearch?id=11624. Archived from the original on 29 April 2005. Retrieved 7 March 2007. Missing or empty |title=
(help)
10.
Showcases :: Matthew Paris' map of Great Britain Archived 15 September 2008
at the Wayback Machine
11.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Cotton MS Claudius D VI, fols. 5-100
12.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Cotton MS Vitellius A XX, ff 67-242.
13.
Itinerary From London To Chambery, In Matthew Paris'
'Book Of Additions'
14.
Matthew Paris’ “Lives of the Offas”, Christ of Revelations
15.
Paris, Matthew. "Life of St Edward the Confessor". Cambridge Digital Library. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
16.
Vaughn (1958), Matthew Paris,
p. 171
17.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Cotton MS Julius D VI, ff 123r-156v.
18.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Add MS 70513, ff 85v-100.
19.
Iafrate, Allegra (2016). Matthieu Paris, Le
Moine et le Hasard: Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 304. Paris: Garnier. ISBN 978-2-8124-4945-1.
20.
British Library Archives and
Manuscripts catalogue: Cotton MS Julius D VII, ff 34r-115r.
21. https://web.archive.org/web/20070311022838/http://www.imagesonline.bl.uk/britishlibrary/controller/subjectidsearch?id=8541. Archived from the original on 11 March 2007. Retrieved 12 March 2007. Missing or empty |title=
(help)
22. Nigel Morgan in: Jonathan
Alexander & Paul Binski (eds), Age of Chivalry, Art in Plantagenet
England, 1200-1400, Royal Academy/Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London 1987,
Cat 311
23.
Perry, Richard Wildlife in
Britain and Ireland Croom Helm Ltd London 1978 p.134
24. Lawrence, C. H.
(1996). The life of St. Edmund by Matthew Paris. Oxford: Alan Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-1129-8.
Media related
·
Media related to Chronica Majora part 1 (Matthew Paris) - Parker MS 26 at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to Chronica Majora part 2 (Matthew Paris) - Parker MS 16 at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to Flores
Historiarum at Wikimedia Commons
· Media related to Historia Anglorum (1250-1259) - BL Royal MS 14 C VII at Wikimedia Commons
· Media related to Matthew Paris, Abbreuiatio chronicorum, AD 1000-1255 (13th C) - BL Cotton MS Claudius D VI at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to Matthew Paris, Liber Additamentorum (13th-14th C) - BL
Cotton MS Nero D I at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to Dublin, Trinity College, MS E. I. 40, Life of
St._Alban at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to The Life of King Edward the Confessor at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to The Becket Leaves (c.1220-1240) - BL Loan MS 88 at Wikimedia Commons
·
Media related to Liber Experimentarius - Bod. MS Ashmole 304 at Wikimedia Commons
· This
article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Matthew of Paris" . Encyclopædia Britannica. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge
University Press. pp. 898-899.
Bibliography
· Morgan, Nigel (1982). Early Gothic manuscripts.
London: H. Miller. ISBN 0-19-921026-8. (on manuscripts, and artistic style)
· Weiler, Björn (3 January 2012). "Matthew Paris on
the writing of history". Journal
of Medieval History. 35 (3): 254-278. doi:10.1016/j.jmedhist.2009.05.001.
· Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Paris, Matthew" . Dictionary of National Biography. 43. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
· Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1911). "Matthew Paris" . Catholic
Encyclopedia. 11. New
York: Robert Appleton Company.
External links
·
Stanford Digitized texts - Works by and about Paris,
including Vaughan etc, in huge pdf files
·
JSTOR review of
Vaughan book
·
Matthew Paris' Jerusalem pilgrim's travel guide: information, zoomable
image British Library website
·
Latin Chroniclers from the Eleventh to the Thirteenth
Centuries:Matthew Paris from The Cambridge History of English and American
Literature, Volume I, 1907-21.
·
Life of St Edward the Confessor, Cambridge Digital Library
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