Richard of Lavenham


Richard of Lavenham was an English Carmelite, known as a scholastic philosopher. He is now remembered for his approach to the problem of future contingents.

Life

He was born at Lavenham, Suffolk, and, after becoming a Carmelite friar at Ipswich, studied at the University of Oxford, where he is said to have graduated D.D.; but in the colophon to his tract against John Purvey he is called simply 'magister'.
Lavenham was later prior of the Carmelite house at Bristol.

Works

Lavenham enjoyed a reputation as a theologian and schoolman. John Bale gives a list of sixty-one treatises ascribed to him, De Villiers names sixty-two, and Davy sixty-three. In Sloane MS. 3899 there are twenty-four short treatises by Lavenham on logical subjects. Other extant works ascribed to Lavenham are:
Among the other treatises given by De Villiers are 'Abbreviationes Bedæ', 'Compendium Gualteri Reclusi', 'De Fundatione sui Ordinis,' a treatise called 'Clypeus Paupertatis', a commentary on Aristotle's 'Ethics,' tracts on physics and astronomy, together with 'Quæstiones,' sermons, and similar works.