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John
Barbour
Scottish
poet, was born, perhaps in Aberdeenshire, early in the 14th century,
approximately 1316. In a letter of safe-conduct dated 1357, allowing
him to go to Oxford for study, he is described as archdeacon of
Aberdeen. He is named in a similar letter in 1364 and in another
in 1368 granting him permission to pass to France, probably for
further study, at the university of Paris. In 1372 he was one
of the auditors of exchequer, and in 1373 a clerk of audit in
the king's household. In 1375 (he gives the date, and his age
as 60) he composed his best known poem The Brus, for which he
received, in 1377, the gift of ten pounds, and, in 1378, a life-pension
of twenty shillings. Additional rewards followed, including the
renewal of his exchequer auditorship (though he may have continued
to enjoy it since his first appointment) and ten pounds to his
pension. The only biographical evidence of his closing years is
his signature as a witness to sundry deeds in the "Register
of Aberdeen" as late as 1392. According to the obit-book
of the cathedral of Aberdeen, he died on the i3th of March 1395.
The state records show that his life-pension was not paid after
that date.
Considerable
controversy has arisen regarding Barbour's literary work. If he
be the author of the five or six long poems which have been ascribed
to him by different writers, he adds to his importance as the
father of Scots poetry the reputation of being one of the most
voluminous writers in Middle English, certainly the most voluminous
of all Scots poets.
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