Franciscus of Marchia

Steven Avery

Administrator
Franciscus of Marchia (c. 1290 - after 1344)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_of_Marchia
Francis of Marchia[1] (c. 1290 - after 1344) was an Italian Franciscan theologian and philosopher.[2] He was an ally of William of Ockham and Michael of Cesena, and opponent of Pope John XXII, in the struggles of the Franciscan Spirituals, leading to his expulsion from the order in 1329. He was commenting on the Sentences of Peter Lombard around 1320,[3] but no longer closely bound to Lombard;[4] for example he incidentally theorises on projectile motion,[5] views now thought to be taken from Richard Rufus of Cornwall.[6] He was nicknamed Doctor Succinctus.[7][8]

RGA
Franciscus of Marchia (1285/1290-after 1343)

Franciscus de Marchia. Commentarius in IV libros Sententiarum. Ed. Nazareno Mariani.
Spicilegium Bonaventurianum 31. Quaracchi: Editiones Collegii S. Bonaventurae, 2003.
p. 559
 
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