abelard

listen to the pronunciation of abelard
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Abelardus
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A male given name
Peter Abelard (1079-1142); French philosopher and theologian
French philosopher and theologian; lover of Heloise (1079-1142)
Peter Abelard
a French philosopher and theologian best remembered for his love for Heloise, shown in their famous letters to each other (1079-1142). born 1079, Le Pallet, near Nantes, Brittany died April 21, 1142, Priory of Saint-Marcel, near Chalon-sur-Saône, Burgundy French theologian and philosopher. The son of a knight, he abandoned his inheritance to study philosophy. He became private tutor to Héloïse, niece of a canon in Paris, 1114. They fell in love; Héloïse became pregnant, and they married secretly. Her uncle had Abelard castrated, after which he became a monk and Héloïse became a nun. Abelard's Theologia was condemned as heretical in 1121. He accepted election as abbot of a monastery in Brittany in 1125, but his relations with the community deteriorated and he had to flee for his life. From 1135 Abelard taught at Mont-Sainte-Geneviève, where he wrote Ethica, in which he analyzed the notion of sin. In 1140 he was again condemned for heresy, and he withdrew to the monastery at Cluny. His influential Sic et non, a collection of apparently contradictory writings by church fathers on various topics, was intended to bring readers to the truth by wrestling with divergent opinions. He also wrote an autobiography, Historia calamitatum, and his best-known work is the series of letters he exchanged with Héloïse after they retired to monasteries
abelard

    Hyphenation

    Ab·e·lard

    Turkish pronunciation

    äbîlırd

    Pronunciation

    /ˈabələrd/ /ˈæbɪlɜrd/

    Etymology

    () An extension of the French name Abel with an Germanic suffix -(h)ard. The name is also regard as a variant of Germanic Eberhard "boar" + "hard", cognate to English Everett.
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