John Ridewall
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John Ridewall[1] (fl. 1331–1340), also known as John of Musca,[2][3] was the 54th regent master of the Franciscans at Oxford.[4][5] He received his doctorate in theology around 1331 and was regent in 1331–1332.[3] He was still living in October 1340, when he was in Basel.[6] His known writings are:
- Commentarius super Fulgencium, his most popular work, known from at least four manuscripts,[7] a commentary on the Mitologiae of Fulgentius[3]
- Lectura super Apocalypsi, a commentary on Revelation surviving only in excerpts[7] and quotations in Robert Holcot[8]
- A commentary on Augustine of Hippos' De civitate Dei, of which only books 1–3 and 6–7 survive[7][3]
The Commentarius super Fulgencium, better known as Fulgentius metaforalis, has been edited at least twice, firstly by Hans Liebeschuetz in 1926 and more recently and completely by Ralph Hanna in 2023.[9] It was designed to offer material to preachers by giving a moralizing treatment of classical mythology.[3][10] It is found both as a marginal text surrounding the text of Fulgentius, a format common for commentaries, and as an independent treatise unaccompanied by Fulgentius' text.[11]
Two further works are sometimes attributed to Ridewall:
- Ovidii Metamorphoseos fabule ccxviii moraliter exposite, a commentary on Ovid's Metamorphoses, anonymous in the manuscript, sometimes presumed to be Ridewall's,[7] but usually attributed to Pierre Bersuire[3]
- In Valerium ad Rufinum de uxore non ducenda, a commentary on Walter Map's Dissuasio Valerii ad Rufinum philosophum ne uxorem ducat, usually attributed to Ridewall,[7] but possibly by John of Wales[3]