William Briton
William Briton or Breton (died 1356) was a Breton Franciscan theologian. John Bale places his death in 1356 at Grimsby.
Works
Briton's works, enumerated by Bale, are principally concerned with dialectics. He is rememberes, however, for his 'Vocabularium Bibliæ,' a treatise explanatory of obscure words in the Scriptures. The prologue and some other components are in Latin verse. These, with supplemental specimens, have been printed by Angelo Maria Bandini.[1] Extracts are given by Ducange.[2]
gollark: Has that actually been tested in court? That seems like it might not hold up.
gollark: I'd imagine that glowy grass would mostly do worse than regular grass since it wastes energy on the fluorescent protein.
gollark: Them *naturally* spreading?
gollark: This sort of thing will get cheaper and easier over time, and then someone will *actually do that*.
gollark: Oh no.
References
- In his 'Catal. Codd. Latin. Biblioth. Medic. Laurent.' iv. 213 et seqq., Florence, 1777
- 'Glossar. Med. et Infim. Latin.' praef., cap. xlix.
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