Suche Infos über 3 Theologen von 1300-1400

Hallo,

Ich suche Informationen über drei angebliche Theologen des 14. Jahrhunderts.
Angeblich deshalb weil ich über den Zweiten nur einen Text und über den Dritten gar nichts gefunden habe.

Der erste ist Jean de Marginy, ein französischer Bischof der 1350 gestorben ist.
Sagt jedenfalls die Wikipedia in Kooperation mit der Encyclopædia Britannica: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_de_Marigny
Wann er geboren ist, weiss ich aber nicht und fand ich auch nicht raus. Wisst ihr das vielleicht?

Der zweite ist Guillaume de Charny, Jemand der 1298 einer Bruderschaft ein Dokument zum Geschenk gemacht hat.
Unter Punkt 10 auf dieser Webiste nachzulesen: http://lodel.irevues.inist.fr/saintjacquesinfo/index…
Mehr habe ich über ihn aber nicht gefunden. Wisst ihr mehr und habt vielleicht einen Link oder ein Buch das ihr nennen könnt?

Der dritte ist ein Mönch namens Sansbarbus, das soll anscheind ein Synonym sein. Ob es das ist oder ob es der echte Name ist weiss ich nicht…

Also, wenn ihr wisst wann diese Menschen gelebt haben und was sie waren und wofür sie berühmt sind würde ich mich wirklich freuen. Ein Tipp zu einem Link oder Buch würde auch schon weiterhelfen.

Schöne Woche
Liebe Grüße

reality-vision

Hallo!
Hast Du es schon mal mit dem Lexikon des Mittelalters versucht?

Jean de Marigny, archbishop, d. 1351

Archbishop of Rouen 14 May 1347–27 December 1351

Jean de Marigny’s family were petty lords who owned the villages of Rosey and Lions. His father, Philippe, was lord of Ecouis. His family’s importance increased under Philip the Fair due to the fortune of his half-brother Enguerrand, who became count of Longueville. Philippe, Jean’s other brother, was bishop of Cambrai in 1306 and archbishop of Sens from 1309 to 1316.

While Jean was a student of civil law in Orléans in 1309 he was already cantor of Notre-Dame de Paris. He also possessed the parsonage of Gamaches in the diocese of Rouen, near his family’s domain, and had a prebend at the cathedral of Rouen by 1306 at the latest. He accumulated prebends in Sens, Lisieux, Auxerre, Meaux, Arras, Chartres, and Orléans. In 1311 he was still a student and was in competition to become provost of Arras. In 1312 he received the archidiaconate of Sens and that of Pont Audemer in Lisieux. He was also provost of Saint-Amat in Douai. On 8 January 1313 he was appointed bishop of Beauvais, but was not consecrated until 1316. He played an important role in the king’s entourage, particularly under Philip VI. He was counselor of the grand chamber of Parliament in 1328, president of the Chamber of Accounts from 1343 to December 1344, and lieutenant of the king in Languedoc from June 1339 until 1345 and then again in 1347. He sat on a secret council that was instrumental in the government of the kingdom. He was appointed archbishop of Rouen on 14 May 1347 in return for his loyal service. He took possession of his seat in December 1347 and lived both in Paris and in his diocese. He exempted the Rouen chapter from the charitable tax that Pope Clement VI had allowed him to levy on his clergy to pay his very large fees to the apostolic chamber. He gave his successors the fief that he had acquired in Corny near the archiepiscopal domain of Fresne, although he reserved part of the land for the collegiate church of Ecouis. He was fond of the hospital of the Madeleine in Rouen and gave them the relics of Saint Margaret and a statue of Mary Magdalene. He died on 27 December 1351 and was buried in the collegiate church of Ecouis that his brother Enguerrand had founded and built.
Vincent Tabbagh - (Ruthemma Ellison trans.)
LexMa online