Jump to content

Symon Semeonis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Symon Semeonis
Síomón Mac Síomóin
NationalityIrish (Lordship of Ireland)
Other namesSimon FitzSimon(s)
CitizenshipLordship of Ireland
OccupationFranciscan friar
Years active1320s
Notable workItinerarium Symonis Semeonis ab Hybernia ad Terram Sanctam

Symon Semeonis (fl. 1322–24; also Simon FitzSimon or Simon FitzSimmons) was a 14th-century Irish Franciscan friar and author.

Biography

[edit]

Of Hiberno-Norman origin, Semeonis was the author of Itinerarium fratrum Symonis Semeonis et Hugonis illuminatoris (The Itinerary of Brother Symon Semeonis and Hugo Illuminator).[1] In 1323 he and his companion friar, Hugo Illuminator (Hugh the Illuminator), undertook a pilgrimage from Clonmel in Ireland to Jerusalem. In his manuscript account, he described his experiences and encounters during that journey.[citation needed]

His encounter with a migrant group he called ‘the descendants of Cain’ outside the town of Heraklion (Candia) in Crete is probably the earliest surviving description by a Western chronicler of the Romani people in Europe. The account of his experiences in what is now Greece is also one of the earliest written reports of that land to reach Britain.[2]

He received a special passport for mendicants from Sultan Al-Nasir Muhammad at a reduced fee. This passport was apparently authenticated by the application of the Sultan's fingerprints.[3] The original manuscript is currently held as MS 407 in the Library of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.[citation needed]

His surname is now rendered FitzSimon, FitzSimmonds, or Simmonds, and still found in Ireland.[citation needed]

Journey

[edit]

Fitzsimons described a detailed itinerary. Starting from Clonmel, he did not say how he left Ireland, but the fact that he entered Wales at Holyhead makes his departure via Dublin a near-certainty; even today, Dublin–Holyhead is an active ferry route. From Clonmel, the road went north to Roscrea, and then Fitzsimons could follow the Slighe Dála ("Way of the Assembly") east to Abbeyleix, and then northeastwards through Naas, Tallaght and Dublin.[4]

From Holyhead, his party continued eastwards across North Wales. They then followed Watling Street down through England to Canterbury, leaving via Dover — not to Calais, but to Wissant. They continued south across France to Paris, then down the Seine to Châtillon, crossing overland to Beaune and then down the Saône and Rhône to Marseilles.

During his journey through Eastern Europe, Symon Semeonis started to pay more attention to inhabitants and local customs, which led him to mention and briefly describe Romani people who he encountered in Crete.[1] This is the first known mention of the Romani people in Europe.[5]

Places in Egypt and the Levant visited by Symon Semeonis on his pilgrimage.
The pilgrimage of Symon Semeonis. Towns and cities are called by their modern names.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Itinerarium Symonis Semeonis, 22.
  2. ^ Robert Elsie. "Texts and Documents of Albanian History". Archived from the original on 23 March 2014. Retrieved 23 March 2014.
  3. ^ Eastward Bound: Travel and Travellers, 1050–1550 By Rosamund Allen.
  4. ^ Map: Roadways in Ancient Ireland
  5. ^ Justicia Lara, Agustí (2020). "The Corpus Islamolatinum as Auctoritas in the Polemical Discourse of Symon Semeonis". Propaganda and (Un)Covered Identities in Treatises and Sermons: Christians, Jews, and Muslims in the Premodern Mediterranean. Bellaterra: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Servei de Publicacions: 41–54.

Sources

[edit]