André Wilmart

Dom André Wilmart O.S.B. (1876 - Paris, 21 April 1941) was the Benedictine medieval scholar and liturgist of St Michael's Abbey, Farnborough.[1][2]

He was a Corresponding Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America from 1928.[3]

He is responsible for the name and the works of John of Fécamp being recovered.[4]

Wilmart's article on Alan Rufus and Alan Niger[5] is an important secondary source of information on these two Breton counts who were successive tenants-in-chief under the first two Norman kings of England.

His bibliography includes more than 375 books and articles.[6]

References

  1. "Notes and News". The Journal of the Historical Association 26 (102): 123–127. September 1941. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1941.tb00792.x. ISSN 1468-229X.
  2. "Historical News". The American Historical Review 47 (1): 214–224. October 1941. doi:10.1086/545912.
  3. "Memoirs of Fellows and Corresponding Fellows of the Mediaeval Academy". Speculum 17 (3): 455–465. July 1942. doi:10.1017/s0038713400064976.
  4. Jordan Aumann, O. P. (1985). "Chapter 5: Benedictine Spirituality". Christian Spirituality in the Catholic Tradition. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. ISBN 0-89870-068-X.
  5. Wilmart O.S.B. André. Alain Le Roux et Alain Le Noir, Comtes de Bretagne. In: Annales de Bretagne. Tome 38, numéro 3, 1928. pp. 576-602.
  6. WARD A. (1991). "Anniversary of a Liturgist : Dom André Wilmart, O.S.B. (1876-1941)". Ephemerides Liturgicae 105 (6): 468–475. ISSN 0013-9491.

External links


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