'Alexander of Neckam' (sometimes spelled "Necham" or "Nequam") (
September 8 1157 –
1217), was an
English scholar and teacher.
Born at
St Albans,
Hertfordshire,
England, on the same night as
King Richard I, Neckam's mother nursed the prince with her own son, who thus became Richard's foster-brother. He was educated at the St. Albans Abbey school (now
St Albans School), and began to teach as schoolmaster of
Dunstable, dependent on
St Albans Abbey. He later spent several years at
Petit Pons in Paris (c. 1175 - 1182). By 1180 he had become a distinguished lecturer on the arts at the
University of Paris.
By 1186 he was back in England, where he again held the place of schoolmaster, first at
Dunstable in
Bedfordshire and then as Master of St Albans School until about 1195. He is said to have visited
Italy with the
Bishop of Worcester, but this statement has been doubted; the assertion that he was ever prior of St Nicolas's Priory,
Exeter, seems a mistake; on the other hand, he was certainly much at court during some part of his life. Having become an
Augustinian canon, he was appointed
abbot of the abbey at
Cirencester in 1213. He died at
Kempsey in
Worcestershire, and was buried at Worcester.
Besides
theology, Neckam was interested in the study of
grammar and
natural history, but his name is chiefly associated with nautical science. In his ''De naturis rerum'' and ''De utensilibus'' (the former of which, at any rate, had become well known at the end of the
12th century, and was probably written about 1180) Neckam has preserved to us the earliest European notices of the
magnet as a guide to seamen, the early
compass. Outside
China, these seem to be the earliest records (the Chinese encylopaedist
Shen Kuo gave the first clear account of suspended magnetic compasses a hundred years earlier in 1088 AD with his book ''Mengxibitan'', or ''
Dream Pool Essays''). It was probably in Paris that Neckam heard how a ship, among its other stores, must have a needle placed above a magnet (the ''De utensilibus'' assumes a needle mounted on a pivot), which would revolve until its point looked north, and guide sailors in murky weather or on starless nights. Neckam does not seem to think of this as a startling novelty: he merely records what had apparently become the regular practice of many seamen of the Catholic world.
See
Thomas Wright's edition of Neckam's ''De naturis rerum'' and ''De laudibus divinae sapientiae'' in the
Rolls Series (1863), and of the ''De utensilibus'' in his ''Volume of Vocabularies''. Neckam also wrote ''Corrogationes Promethei'', a scriptural commentary prefaced by a treatise on grammatical criticism; a translation of
Aesop into Latin
elegiacs (six
fables from this version, as given in a Paris manuscript, are printed in Robert's ''Fables inedites''); commentaries, still unprinted, on portions of
Aristotle,
Martianus Capella and
Ovid's
''Metamorphoses'', and other works. Of all these the ''De naturis rerum'', a sort of manual of the scientific knowledge of the 12th century, is by far the most important: the magnet passage referred to above is in book ii. chap. xcviii. (''De vi attractiva''), p. 183 of Wright's edition. The corresponding section in the ''De utensilibus'' is on p. 114 of the ''Volume of Vocabularies''.
See also
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List of writers
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Medieval literature
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Monastic order
References
Roger Bacon's reference to Neckam as a grammatical writer (''in multis vera et utitia scripsit: sed ... inter auctores non potest numerari'') may be found in
Ebenezer Cobham Brewer's (Rolls Series) edition of Bacon's ''Opera inedita'', p. 457.
See also
★
Thomas Wright, ''Biographia Britannica literaria, Anglo-Norman Period'', pp. 449-459 (1846) (some points in this are modified in the 1863 edition of ''De naturis rerum'')
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C. Raymond Beazley, ''Dawn of Modern Geography'', iii. pp. 508-509.
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External link
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Catholic Encyclopedia entry for Alexander of Neckham (newadvent.org)