Comments on the Bible Calmet was educated at the Benedictine
priory of Breuil in the town of
Commercy, and in 1688 joined the same Order at the
Abbey of Saint-
Mansuy at
Toul, where he was admitted to
profession on 23 October of the following year. After his
ordination, 17 March 1696, he was appointed to teach
philosophy and
theology at the Abbey of
Moyenmoutier. Here, with the help of his brethren, he began to gather the material for his commentary of the
Bible, which he completed at
Munster in
Alsace where he was sent in 1704 as sub-prior and professor of Biblical
exegesis.
Other works In the meanwhile he had prepared two other works closely connected with Biblical exegesis: (1) ''Histoire de l'Ancien et du Nouveau Testament et des Juifs
(Paris, 1718), which went through several editions, and was translated into English (London, 1740), German (Augsburg, 1759) and Latin (ib., 1788); (2) Dictionnaire historique, critique, chronologique, géographique et littéral de la Bible
(Paris, 1720, two vols. folio), a supplement (also folio) was added in 1728. An improved and enlarged edition in four folio volumes was published in 1730, which has several times been reprinted, the last time in Migne, Encyclopédie théologique'', I-IV. It, too, was translated into Latin and the principal European languages. The English translation by
D'Oyley and
John Colson (1732), revised and with additions by Taylor (1795), went through many editions in a larger and compendious form. Calmet wrote a noted history of the
Duchy of Lorraine, as well as a history of the Abbey of Senones, which was still in manuscript form at the time of his death. == Bibliography ==