tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-70602978677945264.post9125400768935863326..comments2023-01-19T10:26:24.136+00:00Comments on Speculum Stultorum: Bradwardine and Augustine, Pagans and PelagiansBrunellushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08630207490739621242noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-70602978677945264.post-13359818243256072372017-01-31T15:54:49.383+00:002017-01-31T15:54:49.383+00:00Good thinking, if I may say so myself. Perhaps som...Good thinking, if I may say so myself. Perhaps some small confirmation can come from the following entry from a mid-14th-century list of books in the Merton College library: <i>Summa domini Cantuariensis de causa dei contra <b>pelagianos</b></i>. As Rodney Thomson notes, the description of Bradwardine as ‘<i>dominus Cantuariensis</i>’ suggests that the entry for this book (a bequest from John Staveley, attested as a fellow of Merton in 1323 and 1335) was written during Bradwardine's brief stint as Archbishop of Canterbury in the summer of 1349.Brunellushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08630207490739621242noreply@blogger.com