, in Latin Corderius, lived in the sixteenth century, and was an
, in Latin Corderius, lived in
the sixteenth century, and was an eminent teacher. He
understood the Latin tongue critically, was a man of virtue, and performed his functions with the utmost diligence,
mixing moral with literary instruction. He spent his long
life in teaching children at Paris, Nevers, Bordeaux, Geneva, Neufchastel, Lausanne, and lastly again at Geneva,
where he died September the 8th, 1564, at the age of
eighty-five, having continued his labours until three or
four days before his death. He studied divinity for some
time at Paris in the college of Navarre, about the year 1528,
after he had taught a form in the same college but he left
off that study in order to apply himself to his former functions of a grammarian. He had taught at Nevers in 1534,
1535, and 1536. Calvin, who had been his scholar at
Paris in the college de la Marche, dedicated his Commentary on the 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians to him. It is
not exactly known of what province Mathurin Cordier was;
some say he was born in Normandy; others pretend he
was born in the earldom of Perche. He published several
books for the use of schools, among which were, 1. “Epistres Chrestiennes,
” Lyons, Sentences
extraictes de la Saincte Escriture pour Tinstruction des
Enfans,
” Latin and French, Cantiques spirituels en nombre 26,
” Le Miroir de la Jeunesse,
pour la former a bonnes mceurs, et civilite de la vie,
” Paris,
16to. 5. “L‘ Interpretation et construction en Francois
des distiques Latins, qu’on attribue a Caton,
” Lyons, 8vo,
and since, perhaps, above an hundred times. His “Colloquia
” have long been used in schools, and have been
printed, says Bayle, a thousand times.