Thomas Bungay
{{hatnote|Not to be confused with St Thomas Bungay, martyred 17 February 1511, or with Thomas de Bungeye the Currier, the 16th-century resident of London.}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
File:Friar Bacon's Brazen Head.png and Bungay sleep through the activation of their brazen head while their manservant Miles plays a pipe and drum.]]
Thomas Bungay ({{langx|la|Thomas Bungeius}} or {{lang|la|Bungeyensis}};Personal Names of the Middle Ages, [https://books.google.com/books?id=g85Z7eeE9DwC&pg=PA653 p. 653]. {{circa|lk=no|1214|1294}}),{{citation |last=Carr-Gomm |first=Philip |author-mask=Carr-Gomm |author2-last=Heygate |author2-first=Richard |display-authors=1 |title=The Book of English Magic |page=[https://books.google.com/books?id=FXUjCQAAQBAJ&pg=PT223 223] }}. also known as {{nowrap|Thomas of Bungay}}{{sfnp|Hartsiotis|2013|p=59}} ({{langx|la|Thomas de Bungeya}}; {{langx|fr|Thomas de Bungeye}}) and formerly also known as {{nowrap|Friar Bongay}}, was an English Franciscan friar, scholar, and alchemist.
{{anchor|Biography|History}}
Life
Thomas was born in Bungay, a market town in Suffolk.{{sfnp|Serjeantson|1911|p=27}} He was educated at Oxford and Paris in the mid-13th century{{sfnp|Serjeantson|1911|p=27}} and, at an unknown date, entered the Order of the Friars Minor (Franciscans) at Norwich.{{sfnp|CE|2003}} He lectured as the 10th Franciscan "Reader in Divinity" at Oxford,{{sfnp|Serjeantson|1911|p=27}} certainly in the years 1270–72, before leaving to serve as the 8th Minister Provincial of the Franciscans in England during the years 1272–75.{{sfnp|CE|2003}}{{sfnp|Goad|1979|p=207}} (He was succeeded at Oxford by John Peckham.){{sfnp|Serjeantson|1911|p=27}} From around 1275{{sfnp|CE|2003}} to at least 1283,{{harvp|Galle|2003|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=A8PpoJAyJ3wC&pg=PA38 38]}}. he served as the 15th Franciscan master at Cambridge.{{citation |last=Little |first=A.G. |author-mask=Little |title=The Friars and Faculty of Theology at Cambridge |pages=131 ff }}.{{sfnp|CE|2003}} He wrote {{lang|la|Quaestio in Aristotelis de Caelo et Mundo}}, a commentary on Gerard's edition{{harvp|Wingate|1931|p=[https://books.google.com/books?id=uU8Sgwge6NsC&pg=PA28 28]}}. of Aristotle's work On the Heavens.Cambridge Gonville & Caius MS 509 (XIII), f. 208–252.{{sfnp|Parker|1968}} Other questions are attributed to him in MS Assisi 158, in the Palazzo Giacobetti in Assisi.{{sfnp|CE|2003}} He died at Northampton, England.{{sfnp|CE|2003}}
Despite their roughly contemporaneous studies and later legends, no real evidence of a relationship between Bungay and Roger Bacon has yet been discovered.{{citation |last=Little |first=A.G. |author2-last=Pelster |author2-first=F. |display-authors=1 |ref={{harvid|Little & al.|1934}} |title=Oxford Theology and Theologians |date=1934 |location=Oxford |page=75 }}.
Legend
He is better known from later English legend, which made him Roger Bacon's sidekick in the stories that developed around that scholar's knowledge of alchemy and supposed mastery of magic.The Honorable Historie of Frier Bacon and Frier Bongay.The Famous Historie of Frier Bacon.{{sfnp|Hartsiotis|2013}} In some versions, he is killed by the German mage Vandermast.
The most famous version of the legend is the Elizabethan play Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay by Robert Greene''.
Bungay may owe his magical reputation to a separate Friar Bungay, who seems to have been a magician in the 15th century.{{citation |editor-last=Quasten |editor-first=Johannes |editor2-last=Kuttner |editor2-first=Stephan |display-editors=0 |title=Traditio |date=1974 |page=449}}.
Legacy
Bungay serves a similar sidekick role in Doctor Mirabilis, James Blish's fictional biography of Roger Bacon.
References
=Citations=
{{reflist|30em}}
=Bibliography=
- {{citation |last=Bungay |first=Thomas |editor-last=Parker |editor-first=Bernard Street |contribution=Thomas de Bungeye's Commentary on the First Book of Aristotle's De Caelo |title=Dissertation Abstracts, Vol. XXIX, No. 5 |date=1968 |pages=105–281 |ref={{harvid|Parker|1968}} }}.
- {{citation |last=Crowley |first=T.C. |display-authors=0 |contribution-url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/article-1G2-3407711079/thomas-bungey.html |contribution=Thomas of Bungey |title=New Catholic Encyclopedia |date=2003 |ref={{harvid|CE|2003}} |publisher=Gale Group }}.
- {{citation |last=Galle |first=Griet |title=Peter of Auvergne: Questions on Aristotle's De Caelo: A Critical Edition with an Interpretative Essay |contribution=The Reception of De Caelo in the Thirteenth Century |publisher=Leuven University Press |location=Leuven |date=2003 |isbn=90-5867-322-7 }}.
- {{citation |last=Goad |first=Harold Elsdale |title=Grey Friars: The Story of St. Francis and his Followers |publisher=Franciscan Herald Press |date=1979 |isbn=9780819907790 }}.
- {{citation |last=Hartsiotis |first=Kirsty |title=Suffolk Folk Tales |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2KA7AwAAQBAJ |contribution=Friar Bungay and the Fair Maid of Fressingfield |contribution-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2KA7AwAAQBAJ&pg=PT59 |pages=59–65 |publisher=History Press |date=2013 |isbn=9780752492940 }}.
- {{citation |last=Serjeantson |first=Robert Meyricke |publisher=J. Tebbutt |date=1911 |title=A History of the Six Houses of Friars at Northampton: The Black, White, Grey, and Austin Friars, the Friars of the Sack, and the Poor Clares }}.
- {{citation |last=Wingate |first=S.D. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uU8Sgwge6NsC |publisher=Courier Press |location=London |date=1931 |title=The Mediaeval Latin Versions of the Aristotelian Scientific Corpus, with Special Reference to the Biological Works }}.
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bungay, Thomas}}
Category:13th-century English writers
Category:13th-century writers in Latin
{{england-writer-stub}}