Difference between revisions of "Gilles de Loches"
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(Created page with "thumb|250px|Gilles de Loches '''Gilles de Loches / Aegidius Lochiensis''' (17th cent.) was a French Capucin and orientalist. in the early 17th c...") |
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[[File:Gilles de Loches.jpg|thumb|250px|Gilles de Loches]] | [[File:Gilles de Loches.jpg|thumb|250px|Gilles de Loches]] | ||
'''Gilles de Loches / Aegidius Lochiensis''' (17th cent.) was a French Capucin and orientalist. | '''Gilles de Loches / Aegidius Lochiensis''' (17th cent.) was a French Capucin and orientalist. In the early 17th century inaugurated the Capucin missions in Egypt (Said, 1626; Cairo, 1633). When he returned in France in 1633, he met the French intellectual and collector [[Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc]] and reported that the "lost" book of Enoch was available in Ethiopic in Egypt. Peiresc contacted Gilles' successor in Egypt, Father [[Agathange de Vendome]], and was able to obtain a copy of the manuscript, which however in 1681 was revealed to be merely a theological commentary, containing only some references and allusions to the book of Enoch. | ||
==Biography== | ==Biography== |
Revision as of 10:21, 18 March 2014
Gilles de Loches / Aegidius Lochiensis (17th cent.) was a French Capucin and orientalist. In the early 17th century inaugurated the Capucin missions in Egypt (Said, 1626; Cairo, 1633). When he returned in France in 1633, he met the French intellectual and collector Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc and reported that the "lost" book of Enoch was available in Ethiopic in Egypt. Peiresc contacted Gilles' successor in Egypt, Father Agathange de Vendome, and was able to obtain a copy of the manuscript, which however in 1681 was revealed to be merely a theological commentary, containing only some references and allusions to the book of Enoch.