Maximilien de Wignacourt

Maximilien de Wignacourt, alternatively Vignacourt or Vignacurtius (1560–1620) was a writer in Latin and French in the Spanish Netherlands.

Life

Wignacourt was born in Arras in 1560, a nephew of the renowned jurist François Baudouin. In the late 1570s he studied at the University of Leuven under Justus Lipsius, to whom he wrote a letter (now in Leiden University Library) on 9 November 1586.[1] In 1582 he entered the service of Bernardino de Mendoza in England, and on his recommendation seems to have become a hanger-on at the court of Philip II of Spain. His poems of commemoration and congratulation for powerful figures provided a meagre income. By 1602 he was attached to the court in Brussels.[2] He died in Leuven on 21 November 1620.[3]

Works

  • Sereniss. Parmae et Placentiae ducis nominis anagrammatismus (n.p.d. [1586])
  • Discours sur l'estat des Pays Bas, auquel sont déduictes les causes de ses troubles et calamitez et leurs remèdes (Arras, Guillaume de la Riviere, 1593). Available on Google Books.
  • Serenissimi Ernesti adventum gratulatur Belgicae Maxaemyliani V (Brussels, Jan Mommaert, 1594).
  • In res Belgicas deinosis (Antwerp, Andreas Bax, 1596). Available online.
  • Antistitis praecellentis euphemia (Arras, Robert Maudhuy, 1605). Congratulatory verses on the occasion of Nicolas Mainfroy's enthronement as abbot of Saint-Bertin.
  • Preliminary verses included in Estienne Ydens, Histoire du S. sacrement du miracle reposant à Bruxelles (Brussels, Rutger Velpius, 1605). Available online.
  • Pro eutrapelia seriis interposita per Isabellam Claram Eugeniam, regiam ex Hispania progeniem, archiducem Austriae, principem ditionum Belgicae Inferioris apologia (Leuven, Gerard Rivius, 1615)
gollark: Very efficient.
gollark: Bees in the lower atmosphere.
gollark: There are 88 of these.
gollark: Anyway, all your statements of the form "macron has X" are lies.
gollark: Yes, I know the *real* motives behind this now.

References

  1. Iusti Lipsi epistolae. Pars II: 1584-1587, ed. M.A. Nauwelaerts, S. Sué (Brussels, 1983), pp. 314-315.
  2. Anton van der Lem, Wignacourt, Maximiliaan de, of: Vignacurtius, De Tachtigjarige Oorlog. Leiden University Website, 18 May 2010. Accessed 27 December 2016.
  3. "Vignacourt, Maximilien". CERL Thesaurus. 25 October 2016. Retrieved 27 June 2017.
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