Guido, de Baysio, -1313

Also known as the Archdeacon or the Archdiaconus Bononiensis, he was born in the mid-thirteenth century to a noble Ghibelline family. He studied and then taught canon law at Reggio Emilia and was made a canon of the cathedral. He was appointed archdeacon of Bologna and by extension archchancellor of the university in 1296. In 1304, he joined the papal curia and moved to the papal court in Avignon. He is best known for the Rosarium, a commentary on Gratian's Decretum. He also wrote several extant quaestiones, a commentary on the Liber sextus, a treatise on heresy and other crimes in the case of the Templars, and a procedural manual. Guido died in Avignon in August 1313.

HMML ID
163442753326
PURL
https://w3id.org/haf/person/163442753326
LC name
Guido, de Baysio, -1313
HMML name
Guido, de Baysio, -1313
Library of Congress
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n88071045
VIAF
https://viaf.org/viaf/32352777

Variants

  • Abaisi, Guido
  • Archdeacon
  • Archdiaconus
  • Archidiaconus, Bononiensis
  • Baisio, Guido da
  • Baysio, Guido
  • Baysio, Guido de
  • Da Baisio, Guido
  • De Baysio, Guido
  • Guido, Archdiaconus

Name elements

Given names
Guido

Personal information

Death date
1313-08-10
Centuries
14th century CE
Gender
Males
Associated countries
Associated places
Occupations
Fields of activity
Honorary titles
Archdeacon of Bologna
Languages

Affiliations

Affiliation

Preferred citation

"Guido, de Baysio, -1313." HMML Authority File. Hill Museum & Manuscript Library. Last modified December 20, 2022. https://w3id.org/haf/person/163442753326

Change notes

Date added
2022-12-20
Last edited
2022-12-20