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'''Jean de Gagny'''<ref>Jean de Gagney, Jean de Gagnée, Gagnaeus, Gagneius.</ref> (died [[1549]]) was a French theologian.
'''Jean de Gagny'''<ref>Jean de Gagney, Jean de Gagnée, Gagnaeus, Gagneius.</ref> (died [[1549]]) was a French theologian.


He was at the [[Collège de Navarre]] in 1524<ref name = "Hunt">http://www.tertullian.org/articles/hunt_need_for_a_guide.htm</ref>. He became Rector of the [[University of Paris]], and Almoner Royal <ref>http://www.tertullian.org/editions/mesnart.htm</ref>, in 1536.
He was at the [[Collège de Navarre]] in 1524<ref name = "Hunt">http://www.tertullian.org/articles/hunt_need_for_a_guide.htm</ref>. He became Rector of the [[University of Paris]], in 1531, and Almoner Royal <ref>http://www.tertullian.org/editions/mesnart.htm</ref>, in 1536.


He published some significant [[Roman Catholic]] commentaries on parts of the ''[[New Testament]]''<ref>[http://www.ivpress.com/title/exc/2927-1.pdf ''Biblical Interpretation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries'' (PDF), p. 10.]</ref>. He was also a business partner of the typographer [[Claude Garamond]]<ref>Allan Haley, ''Typographic Milestones'' (1992), p. 27.</ref>, and collector of manuscripts, particularly of [[patristic]] works.<ref name = "Hunt"/>. His position close to [[Francois I of France]] gave him access to monastic libraries<ref>[http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=%2FASE%2FASE33%2FS0263675104000079a.pdf&code=85046f32031c3a9401f7ea49a2a202a6 James P. Carley, Pierre Petitmengin ''Pre-Conquest manuscripts from Malmesbury Abbey and John Leland's letter to Beatus Rhenanus concerning a lost copy of Tertullian's works'' (PDF), pp. 5-7], = ''Anglo-Saxon England'' 33 (2004), 195–223.</ref>.
He published some significant [[Roman Catholic]] commentaries on parts of the ''[[New Testament]]''<ref>[http://www.ivpress.com/title/exc/2927-1.pdf ''Biblical Interpretation in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries'' (PDF), p. 10.]</ref>. He was also a business partner of the typographer [[Claude Garamond]]<ref>Allan Haley, ''Typographic Milestones'' (1992), p. 27.</ref>, and collector of manuscripts, particularly of [[patristic]] works.<ref name = "Hunt"/>. His position close to [[Francois I of France]] gave him access to monastic libraries<ref>[http://journals.cambridge.org/download.php?file=%2FASE%2FASE33%2FS0263675104000079a.pdf&code=85046f32031c3a9401f7ea49a2a202a6 James P. Carley, Pierre Petitmengin ''Pre-Conquest manuscripts from Malmesbury Abbey and John Leland's letter to Beatus Rhenanus concerning a lost copy of Tertullian's works'' (PDF), pp. 5-7], = ''Anglo-Saxon England'' 33 (2004), 195–223.</ref>.

Revision as of 20:22, 12 February 2008

Jean de Gagny[1] (died 1549) was a French theologian.

He was at the Collège de Navarre in 1524[2]. He became Rector of the University of Paris, in 1531, and Almoner Royal [3], in 1536.

He published some significant Roman Catholic commentaries on parts of the New Testament[4]. He was also a business partner of the typographer Claude Garamond[5], and collector of manuscripts, particularly of patristic works.[2]. His position close to Francois I of France gave him access to monastic libraries[6].

Notes