Jean de Venette

French chronicler
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Quick Facts
Born:
c. 1308,, Venette, Fr.
Died:
c. 1369
Subjects Of Study:
history of France

Jean de Venette (born c. 1308, Venette, Fr.—died c. 1369) was a French chronicler who left a valuable eyewitness report of events of the central France of his time.

Of peasant origin, Jean joined the Carmelite order and was elected prior of the Carmelite convent at Paris in 1339. In 1342 he was appointed provincial of France for the Carmelite order. He also apparently served as a master of theology at the University of Paris. About 1360 he composed a short history of the Carmelites up to 1240. His Latin chronicle, covering the period of 1340–68, was a continuation of the work by Guillaume de Nangis. Although he was interested in the success of the 14th-century Valois dynasty, he displayed an unusually pronounced sympathy for the peasants and was critical of both the monarchy and the feudal lords. An eyewitness of most of the events he recorded, he provided innovative interpretation and lively discussion of the narrative, a characteristic unique among chroniclers at that time. He also wrote an unpublished religious poem, the Roman des trois Maries (c. 1347).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.