Thomas Sprott (chronicler) explained

Thomas Sprott or Spott (fl. 1292) was an English Benedictine chronicler, a monk of St Augustine's Abbey, Canterbury.[1]

Chronicles

Sprott wrote a history of St Augustine's Abbey. His work was used and acknowledged by the chroniclers Thomas Elmham and William Thorne.[2] Thorne copies him freely to 1228, where he says Sprott's share ends.[2] He elsewhere stated that Sprott's work ended in 1272, a point that is unclear in surviving manuscripts (which had later additions, and some damage).[1] John Leland mentioned a chronicle by Sprott that extended to 1272, which Casimir Oudin stated was among the manuscripts of Walter Cope.[2]

Manuscripts and misattributions

The text of Sprott's chronicle survives in two variant 13th-century manuscripts (Lambeth Palace Library MS 419, folios 111–60; and British Library Cotton MS Tiberius A.ix, folios 107–80), and in several later transcripts. However, it has never been printed.[1]

Two texts falsely attributed to Sprott have been published:

Notes

Attribution

Notes and References

  1. 26183. Sprott, Thomas. Nigel. Ramsay.
  2. Sprott, Thomas. 53.