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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MEC-MIC |
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MEZIERES, PHILIPPE DE (c. 13271405) , French soldier and author, was born at the chateau of Mezieres in Picardy. He belonged to the poorer nobility
1345. In the autumn of that year he set out for the East in the French army. After the battle of Smyrna in 1346 he was made a knight, and when the French army was disbanded he made his way to Jerusalem. He realized the advantage which the discipline of the Saracens gave them over the disorderly armies of the West, and conceived the idea of a new order cf knighthood
drawn
Tripoli
chief
sent to Venice, to Avignon and to the princes of western Europe, to obtain help against the Saracens, who now threatened the kingdom of Cyprus. His efforts were in vain; even Pope Urban V. advised peace with the sultan. Mezieres remained for some time at Avignon, seeking recruits for his order, and writing his Vita S. Petri Thomasii (Antwerp, 1659), which is invaluable for the history of the Alexandrian expedition. The Prefacio and Epistola, which form the first draft of his work on the projected order of the Passion, were written at this time. Mezieres returned to Cyprus in 1368, but was still at Venice when Peter was assassinated at Nicosia at the beginning of 1369, and he remained there until 1372, when he went to the court of the new pope Gregory XI. at Avignon. He occupied himself with trying to establish in the west of Europe the feast of the Presentation of the Virgin, the office of which he translated from Greek into Latin. In 1373 he was in Paris, and he was thenceforward one of the trusted counsellors of Charles V., although this king had refused to be dragged into a crusade. He was tutor to his son, the future Charles VI., but after the death of Charles V. he was compelled, with' the other counsellors of the late
marriage
Some of his letters were printed in the Revue historique (vol. xlix.) ; the two epistres just mentioned in Kervyn de Lettenhove's edition of Froissart's Chroniques (vols. xv. and xvi.). The Songe du vergier or Somnium viridarii, written about 1376, is sometimes attributed to him, but without definite proofs. See Antoine Becquet, Galiicae coelestinorum congregationis monasteria, fundationes . (1719); the Abbe Jean Lebeuf's Memoires in the Memoires of the Academy of Inscriptions , vols. xvi. and xvii. (1752 and 1753) ; J. Delaville le Roulx, La France en Orient au xiv. siecle (1886189o) ; A. Molinier, Manuel de bibliographie historique vol. iv. (1904); and especially the researches of N. Jorga, published in the Bibliotheque de l'ecole des hautes etudes vol. no (Paris 1896) ; and the same writer's Philippe de Mezieres, et la croisade au xiv. siecle (1896). Jorga gives a list
Inscriptions .End of Article: MEZIERES, PHILIPPE DE (c. 13271405) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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