'Jacques de Vitry' (c.
1180 –
1240) was a
theologian and
historian.
He was born near
Paris and studied at the
University of Paris, becoming a
regular canon in 1210 at the church of Saint-Nicolas d'
Oignies. From 1211 to 1213 he preached the
Albigensian Crusade, touring France and Germany with
William, archdeacon of Paris and recruiting many
Crusaders.
[1] He participated in the siege of
Toulouse in 1214. In 1216 he was named
Bishop of Acre and was heavily involved in the
Fifth Crusade, participating in the siege of
Damietta from 1218 to 1220. In 1219 he began to write the ''Historia Hierosolymitana'', a history of the
Holy Land from the advent of
Islam until the
crusades of his own day, but only two parts were completed. He returned to Europe in 1225. In 1228, after resigning the
see of Acre, he became
Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum (
Frascati) and continued to preach against the Albigensians. Around 1239 he was named
Patriarch of Jerusalem, but died in
Rome soon after.
Aside from the ''Historia'', his works include hundreds of
sermons, and letters to
Pope Honorius III. He also wrote about the immoral life of the students at the University of Paris.
Notes
1. Peter of les Vaux-de-Cernay, ''Historia Albigensis'' 285. It was perhaps during this preaching campaign that he met Bishop Foulques of Toulouse; cf. Guillaume de Puylaurens, ''Chronica'' 28.
Bibliography
★ ''Lettres de Jacques de Vitry'' ed. R. B. C. Huygens. Leiden, 1960.
★ ''The exempla or illustrative stories from the Sermones Vulgares of Jacques de Vitry'' ed. T. F. Crane. London, 1890.