RT Article T1 Clement of Llanthony’s Gospel Harmony and Augustine’s "De Consensu Evangelistarum" JF Church history and religious culture VO 94 IS 2 SP 175 OP 196 A1 Smith, Paul LA English PB Brill YR 2014 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1484129598 AB Clement of Llanthony’s twelfth-century Latin gospel harmony is an important British witness to the tradition of producing a continuous narrative from the four gospels that is almost as old as the gospels themselves. Close analysis of the text reveals that Clement’s harmony has no demonstrable links with the Tatianic Diatessaron tradition exemplified in the Codex Fuldensis but, rather, is possibly the earliest attempt to construct a life of Christ from Augustine’s treatise De Consensu Evangelistarum, which was written to prove the ‘harmony’ of the gospel accounts as a defence against those who pointed out their apparent contradictions. K1 Augustine : Clement of Llanthony : Codex Fuldensis : Concordia Quattuor Evangelistarum : De Consensu Evangelistarum : Diatessaron : Latin gospel harmonies : Oon of Foure : Tatian : Wycliffite Bible DO 10.1163/18712428-09402001