Background
Orderic was born on 16 February 1075 in Atcham, Shropshire, England. Orderic was the eldest son of his parents. He was the son of a French priest, Odelerius of Orléans, who had entered the service of Roger Montgomery, earl of Shrewsbury, and had received from his patron a chapel in that city.
Education
Parents sent him at the age of five to learn his letters from an English priest, Siward by name, who kept a school in the church of SS Peter and Paul at Shrewsbury.
When eleven years old he was entered as a novice in the Norman monastery of St Evroul en Ouche, which Earl Roger had formerly persecuted but, in his later years, was loading with gifts.
The parents paid thirty marks for their son's admission; and he expresses the conviction that they imposed this exile upon him from an earnest desire for his welfare.
Career
Odeler's respect for the monastic profession is attested by his own retirement, a few years later, into a religious house which Earl Roger had founded at his persuasion.
But the young Orderic felt for some time, as he tells us, like Joseph in a strange land.
But, in the title of his Ecclesiastical History he prefixes the old to the new name and proudly adds the epithet Angligena, His cloistered life was uneventful.
He left his cloister on several occasions, and speaks of having visited Croyland, Worcester, Cambrai (1105) and Cluny (1132).
St Evroul was a house of wealth and distinction.
War-worn knights chose it as a resting-place of their last years.
It was constantly entertaining visitors from southern Italy, where it had planted colonies of monks, and from England, where it had extensive possessions.
Thus Orderic, though he witnessed no great events, was often well informed about them.
His narrative is badly arranged and full of unexpected digressions.
He throws a flood of light upon the manners and ideas of his own age; he sometimes comments with surprising shrewdness upon the broader aspects and tendencies of history.
His narrative breaks off in the middle of 1141, though he added some finishing touches in 1142.
He tells us that he was then old and infirm.
Probably he did not long survive the completion of his great work. The Historia ecclesiaslica falls into three sections.
Planned before 1122, they were mainly composed in the years 1123-1131.
The fourth and fifth books contain long digressions on the deeds of William the Conqueror in Normandy and England.
Before 1067 these are of little value, being chiefly derived from two extant sources.
William of Jumieges' Historia Normannorum and William of Poitiers' Gesta Guilelmi.
For the years 1067-1071 Orderic follows the last portion of the Gesta Guilelmi, and is therefore of the first importance.
In this section, after sketching the history of France under the Carolingians and early Capets, Orderic takes up the events of his own times, starting from about 1082.
He has much to say concerning the empire, the papacy, the Normans in Italy and Apulia, the First Crusade (for which he follows Fulcher of Chartres and Baudri of Bourgueil).
But his chief interest is in the histories of Duke Robert of Normandy, William Rufus and Henry I.
He continues his work, in the form of annals, up to the defeat and capture of Stephen at Lincoln in 1141.
The Historia ecclesiastica was edited by Duchesne in his Historiae Normannorum scriptores (Paris, 1619).
This is the edition cited by Freeman and in many standard works.
It is, however, inferior to that of A. le Prevost in five vols.
The fifth volume contains excellent critical studies by M, Leopold Delisle, and is admirably indexed.
There is a French translation (by L. Dubois) in Guizot's Collection des memoires relalifs a Vhistoire de France (Paris, 1825 - 1827); and one in English by T. Forester in Bohn's Antiquarian Library (4 vols. , 1853 - 1856).