Osbern of Gloucester
Osbern Pinnock of Gloucester[1] (1123–1200) was an English Benedictine monk of St Peter's Abbey, Gloucester,[2] and a lexicographical writer.
His Panormia, or Derivationes (Liber Derivationum), was a Latin word list compiled from about 1150 to 1180. It contained elements of both the glossary of rarer words, and derivations (based on etymology) and so was innovative; but at this stage the two aspects were kept separate.[3] This work was printed by Angelo Mai in 1836 as Thesaurus novus latinitatis;[4] its authorship is a later attribution of Wilhelm Meyer. It was widely circulated, and influenced later work of Huguccio.
References
- P. Busdraghi and others, editors (1996), Osberno, Derivazioni, two volumes
- Oxford Dictionary of National Biography entry for Osbern Pinnock
Notes
- ↑ Osbernus Glocestriensis, Claudianus Osbernus Pinnuc
- ↑ Houses of Benedictine monks - The abbey of St Peter at Gloucester | British History Online
- ↑ J. Shaw: The Printed Dictionary in France Before 1539: A.1.3-A.1.3.3
- ↑ Gloss - LoveToKnow 1911
External links
- Osbern von Gloucester (German)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.