Matthias of Neuburg
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Matthias of Neuenburg was a chronicler, born towards the close of the thirteenth century, possibly in Neuburg, in Baden; died between 1364 and 1370, probably in Strasbourg, in Alsace. He studied jurisprudence at Bologna, and later received minor orders, but never became a priest. In 1327 he was solicitor of the episcopal court at Basle, and shortly after, while clerk to Bishop Berthold von Buchecke, held a similar position in Strasbourg.
He has been considered to be the author of a Latin chronicle from 1243 to 1350, and of its first continuation from 1350 to 1355. Later, three other writers carried on the work to 1368, 1374, and 1378 respectively. It is an important contribution to Alsatian and Habsburg history and for the times in which Matthias lived. It has been attributed to different writers, among them to the Speyer notary, Jacob of Mainz[1], also to Albert of Strasbourg, especially by earlier editors, while those of later times attribute it to Matthias of Neuburg. For the voluminous literature on this controversy see August Potthast, Bibliotheca Kin. Med. Aevi. (Berlin, 1896).
Among the editions are:
- Alberti Argentinensis Chronici fragmentum, an appendix to Johannes Cuspinian's work De consulibus Romanorum commentarii (Basle, 1553), 667-710, very much abridged;
- G. Studer, Matthiae Neoburgensis chronica cum continuatione et vita Berchtoldi;
- Die Chronik des Matthias von Neuenburg, from the Berne and Strasbourg manuscripts (Berne, 1866);
- A. Huber, Mathiae Neuwenburgensis Cronica, 1273-1350 in Bohmer, Fontes rerum Germanicarum, IV (Stuttgart, 1868), 149-276;
- Continuationes, 276-297
It has also been edited from a Vienna and a Vatican manuscript in Abhandlungen der Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften, xxxvii-viii (Gottingen, 1891-2), and translated into German by Grandaur (Leipzig, 1892).
[edit] Notes
- ^ cf. Wichert, Jacob von Mainz, Königsberg, 1881
[edit] Sources
- This article incorporates text from the entry Matthias of Neuenburg in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.
- POTTHAST, Bibliotheca (Berlin, 1896), 780 sq.;
- WEILAND, Introduction to the above-mentioned German version, pp. i-xxviii