Jacobus Cruquius
Jacob Cruucke or Jacob van Cruyck, also known by his
Life
Little is known about his early life and training. He enrolled in the
In 1542, Cruucke was teaching Latin and Greek in a convent in Leuven. He applied for a position at the Collegium Trilingue to replace Nannius who was planning to leave for Italy. While he did not get the position as Nannius had called off his Italy trip, his application had drawn the attention of the theologian Georgius Cassander, who recommended Cruucke as his successor for his own teaching position at the Cuba foundation in Bruges. Cruucke replaced Cassander starting from 8 February 1543 until his death on 22 June 1584. The Cuba foundation was named after its founder, Jan de Witte (1475-1540), who had been bishop of Cuba from 1528 to 1530 and willed his money to establish a chair of “bonae litterae” (established in 1541) and a chair of theology (established in 1545) in Bruges.
Cruucke became a prominent intellectual in Bruges, on account of his large collection of books, as well as his collection of ancient coins. He taught many notable humanists of the age, including Jacobus Raevardus, Lucas Fruterius, Victor Giselinus, Janus Lernutius and Franciscus Modius.[1] He was also in contact with leading humanists of his time such as
Cruucke died in Bruges.[citation needed]
Work
Cruucke is primarily known from his editions of the lyric poet
Of special interest is Cruucke's access to an extremely rare and ancient manuscript of Horace now referred to as V, variously known otherwise as Blandinius, Blandinius vetustissimus, or codex antiquissimus Blandinianus.[4][5]
Cruucke published several separate volumes of this work from 1565 to 1578—the first with Hubert Goltzius then all the remainder with Christophe Plantin—and then one complete edition in 1578, and ultimately a standalone edition of Commentator Cruquianus's scholia.[4] After his death, the editions were reprinted in 1597 with a small collection of notes from Janus Dousa.
While these editions were quite successful in their time, modern scholars question the merit of these works. Their popularity in the 16th and 17th centuries is attested to by the fact that all rare book collections in Western Europe hold at least one copy of one of Cruucke's editions, either in an original printing or one of the expanded versions from 1597.[1]
Publications
- Q. Horatii Flacci Carminum, liber quartus, with notes, Hubert Goltzius, Bruges, 1565.[6]
- Q. Horatii Flacci Epodôn liber, with comments and notes, Christ. Plantin, Antwerp, 1567.
- Q. Horatii Flacci Satyrarum libri duo, with comments and corrections, Christ. Plantin, Antwerp, 1573.
- M. Tullii Ciceronis oratio pro Milone, with translation, Christ. Plantin, Antwerp, 1583.
Notes
- ^ ISSN 0775-1117. Retrieved 2021-06-10.
- ^ ISBN 9789004223622. Retrieved 2016-02-14.
- ^ Heesakkers, C.L., De eerste Neolatijnse Menippeïsche satire. I. Lipsi Satyra Menippaea. Somnium. Lusus in Nostri aevi Criticos (1581) in: Lampas, Volume 12, nr. 4/5, W.E.J. Tjeenk Willink, 1979, p. 330
- ^ ISBN 9781444319194. Retrieved 2016-02-14.
- ISBN 9780521283083. Retrieved 2016-02-14.
- ^ Q. Horatii Flacci Carminvm liber qvartvs, ex antiqviss. manvscriptis codicibvs cvm commentarijs falsò adhuc Porphyrioni & Acroni adscriptis Voorkant Quintus Horatius Flaccus ex officina Huberti Goltzi, Hubert Goltzius, Bruges, 1565, copy at Universiteitsbibliotheek Gent