The slot that would later host the convent of Saint-Jacques where originally owned by Symon de Pisciaco and his wife Agnes, for one part, and the
magistri et scholares Parisius, for the other part. It was a small spot on the slopes of the Montagne Sainte-Geneviève, in front of
ecclesia Sancti Stephani de Gres, near Porte d'Orléans, the most important southern gate of Paris. Symon and Agnes gave the place to a friend,
magister Iohannes de Sancto Albano, if he would build an hospital in name of Sanctus Jacobus there. Iohannes did exactly that, and within a few years rose an hospice where
fratres conversi healed the poorest. He added a chapel to the original plan where prayers were sang.
In 1217,
fratres from the
ordo Predicatorum led by Matheus arrive in Paris with letters from Honorius III, asking the University to send
magistri to Tolosa to spread knowledge of the
sacra pagina, and to teach the same subject to the
fratres predicatores. By then, Iohannes had become
decanus Sancti Quintini and welcomes the
fratres as students. Within months, he grows so accostumed to them that he rehabilitates the Sancti Jacobi hospital into a
studium for them and starts giving his lessons there. In addition, he formally gives them the place, first temporarily, and then permanently in 1221. Shortly after, the University adds more slots to the donation.
In the same period, voices rise from neighbouring chapters, and worry that there might simply be too many chapels and churches for the actual living population. Letters are written, orders are given : Sancti Benedicti, the nearest chapter, does not want the
fratres to hold the right to celebrate the divine office. A
frater was promptly sent to Roma, where papal authorisation was acquired, and later extended to the right to hold a burial ground. After all, the
episcopus was not pleased by the departure of the
fratres from the Île, where he could directly oversee them.
The
studium however is rapidly too small for the ever growing community of
fratres. Thus, from 1226 to 1228, the group buys numerous more slots : one is provided by the
fratres et sorores hospitalis Sancti Lazari, and is an empty land spot near the gate, another is sold by Baldwenus de Campis and is a house across the main building's street, the third is acquired from
domus Jerosolimitani and is a land outside the parisian walls. A year later in 1229, the
ordo predicatorum had one of their own graduate as
magister, and Johannes stopped teaching them.
It is in those very years, 1228-1229, that the
ordo comes under the eyes of Louis IX, a pious king and powerful knight as well as a vibrant youth hiding more excentricities than most could withstand. With the meeting of Louis IX and
Vincent of Beauvais comes a time of great prosperity for the
ordo : the king has appointed Vincent to the office of
lector of his favorite monastery, Royaumont, and then proceeds to drown the
fratres of Sancti Jacobi under his generosity. Through the years, he has the dormitories, the refectoire as well as the chapel rebuilt, and every new land acquisition is sure to be the target of a new funding of reconstruction. When the king comes back from the crusade in 1249, the Sancti Jacobi and
ordo predicatorum recieve one of the three newly founded annual celebrations of the relics of the Sainte Chapelle, bringing them even more fame and spiritual responsibilities.
When Louis IX finally dies in 1270, it is not a surprise that Sancti Jacobi is among the first entities to advocate for his elevation to the title of saint.
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Author's Notes