Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900/Maidstone, Richard

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1904 Errata appended.

1445830Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 35 — Maidstone, Richard1893Charles Lethbridge Kingsford

MAIDSTONE or MAYDESTONE, RICHARD (d. 1396), Carmelite, a native of Kent, was educated at Oxford, where he became bachelor and doctor of divinity. Maidstone was confessor to John of Gaunt (MS. e Mus. 86, f. 160), and a Carmelite friar of Aylesford, Kent, where he died on 1 June 1396. According to the ‘Savile Catalogue,’ compiled in 1586, he was a fellow of Merton College, but, as Anthony à Wood noticed, this is extremely doubtful. He speaks of himself in his ‘Psalms’ as

frere Richarde Maydenstoone
In Mary ordre of the Carme,
That bachilor is in dyvynité.

He appears to have taken part in the controversy about evangelical poverty, and was prominent among the opponents of the followers of Wiclif. John Ashwardby [q. v.] was his special antagonist.

Maidstone's extant works are: 1. ‘The Seven Penitential Psalms in English;’ in Rawlinson MS. A. 389, ff. 13–20, of the early fifteenth century, and in Digby MSS. 18, ff. 38–63, and 102, ff. 128–35, all in the Bodleian Library; incipit ‘To godes worshipe that us dere bou3te.’ 2. ‘Protectorium Pauperis,’ incipit ‘Constituit eum super ecclesiam;’ in MS. e Mus. 86, ff. 160–76, in the Bodleian Library. 3. ‘Determinationes;’ in MS. e Mus. 94 in the Bodleian there are by Maidstone two ‘Determinations,’ of which the first is acephalous, and the second, entitled ‘Determinacio ejusdem doctoris contra magistrum Johannem [Ashwardby] vicarium ecclesie sancte Marie Oxon,’ begins ‘Utrum Christus enumerans in Euangelio pauperes.’ Bernard (Cat. MSS. Angliæ, No. 3631) refers to this manuscript as containing ‘Lectiones et quæstiones cum determinationibus.’ 4. ‘Canon in anulum Johannis de Northamptone ejusdem ordinis; scilicet regulæ … ad inveniendum literam dominicalem,’ &c.; in Digby MS. 98, ff. 41–8, mutilated, and Bodley MS. 68, both in the Bodleian Library. 5. ‘Super Concordia Regis Ricardi et civium Londiniensium,’ a long poem in elegiac verse on Richard II's visit to London on 29 Aug. 1393, edited by T. Wright, with the ‘Alliterative Poem on the Deposition of King Richard II,’ Camden Society, 1838, and in ‘Political Songs,’ i. 282–99, Rolls Ser.

Other works are: 1. ‘In Canticum Moysis.’ 2. ‘In Cantica Canticorum.’ 3. ‘Compendium Divi Augustini de Civitate Dei.’ 4. ‘Precationes Metricæ.’ 5. ‘Conciones xvi ad Clerum.’ 6. ‘Sermones Oxonienses.’ 7. ‘Sermones de Sanctis.’ 8. ‘Sermones de Tempore.’ 9. ‘Lecturæ Scholasticæ.’ 10. ‘In Sententias.’ 11. ‘De Sacerdotali Functione.’ 12. ‘Quæstiones Ordinariæ.’ 13. ‘Contra Lolhardos.’ 14. ‘Contra Wiclefistas.’ Of most of these the first words are given by Bale and De Villiers, but they do not seem to be extant, with the possible exception of the sermons. At the end of the fifteenth century a collection of ‘Sermones Dominicales et de Sanctis, “Dormi secure” nuncupati,’ were frequently printed. These have been variously ascribed to Maidstone or John of Verdena. In the British Museum there are fourteen editions, ranging between [1475?] and 1530. Graesse gives the following enumeration: 1. Without date or place (C. de Hornbosch about 1481), fol. 2. Without date or place (Louvain, John de Westfalia, about 1483), fol. 3. Strasburg, 1487–8, fol. 4, 5. Lyons, N. Philippi, 1488, 4to, and De Vingle, 1497, fol. 6, 7. Paris, De Marnes, 1503 and 1514, 8vo. 8. Lyons, S. Vincentii, 1535, 8vo.

[Bale's Heliades, Harl. MS. 3838, ff. 82, 189; Tanner's Bibl. Brit.-Hib. p. 627; De Villiers's Bibl. Carmel. ii. 682–3; Brodrick's Memorials of Merton College, p. 224 (Oxford Hist. Soc.); Graesse's Trésor de Livres, iv. 341; Cat. Bodleian MSS.; Wylie's Henry IV, ii. 362–3; Brit. Mus. Cat.; information from F. Madan, esq., of the Bodleian.]

Dictionary of National Biography, Errata (1904), p.190
N.B.— f.e. stands for from end and l.l. for last line

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340 ii 17 Maidstone, Richard: after MSS.; insert Wylie's, Henry IV, ii. 362, 363;