Camillo Mazzella (10 February 1833 – 26 March 1900) was an Italian Jesuit theologian and cardinal.


Camillo Mazzella

Prefect of the Congregation for Rites
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
Appointed15 June 1897
Term ended26 March 1900
PredecessorGaetano Aloisi Masella
SuccessorDomenico Ferrata
Other post(s)Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina (1897-1900)
Orders
Ordination8 September 1855
by Domenico Carafa della Spina di Traetto
Consecration8 May 1897
by Lucido Maria Parocchi
Created cardinal7 June 1886
by Pope Leo XIII
RankCardinal-Deacon (1886-96)
Cardinal-Priest (1896-97)
Cardinal-Bishop (1897-1900)
Personal details
Born
Camillo Mazzella

10 February 1833
Died26 March 1900(1900-03-26) (aged 67)
Rome, Kingdom of Italy
BuriedCampo Verano
ParentsMuzio Mazzella
Eugenia Marcarelli
Previous post(s)

Biography edit

Mazzella was born at Vitulano, near Benevento. He and his siblings were first tutored at home. Three of his brothers entered religious life.[1] His twin brother, Ernesto, later became Archbishop of Bari.

Mazzella entered the ecclesiastical seminary of Benevento when about eleven years of age, completed his classical, philosophical, and theological studies before his twenty-fourth year, and was ordained priest in September 1855, a dispensation as he was under canonical age having been granted by Pope Pius IX.[2]

For two years after his ordination he remained at Vitulano, attending to the duties of canon in the parish church, a position he held from his family. Resigning this office he entered the Society of Jesus, 4 September 1857.[3] After spending a year in the novitiate, he was sent to teach philosophy first, at the Seminary of Andria, in Apulia and then at the College of Cosenza, in Calabria.

When the Jesuits were expelled from Naples in 1860, he went to teach theology at Fourvières (Lyon, France), and in 1867 at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C.[4] In 1869, he was the founder and one of the first professors at Woodstock theological college, Maryland, where he was Prefect of Studies. In 1875, he served a Visitor to the Jesuit Mission in New Mexico. Mazzella became a naturalized American citizen.[1]

In 1878, he was called to Rome to teach at the Gregorian University, and later became president of the Academy of Saint Thomas. He was very involved with Pope Leo XIII's promotion of Thomistic Philosophy.[5] In June 1886 he was named cardinal-deacon of Sant'Adriano al Foro.[1] Even as a cardinal, Mazzella maintained his identity as a Jesuit, spending his summers at the novitiate in Naples.

On 1897, he was made Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina. Mazzella served at various times as prefect of a number of Curial Congregations, and as Cardinal-Protector of several religious institutes. Mazzella was conservative and an Ultramontanist and likely contributed to the drafting of Testem benevolentiae nostrae, Pope Leo's 1899 letter to James Cardinal Gibbons cautioning him about the dangers of Americanism.[6] He was likewise opposed to Darwin's theory of evolution.[7]

He died in Rome[8] and was buried in the chapel of the Society of Jesus in Campo Verano cemetery.[4]

Works edit

  • De gratia Christi (1874).
  • De Deo creante (1880).
  • De Religione et Ecclesia (1880).[5] (6th edn., 1905, on Google Books.)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Cardinal Mazzella", Woodstock Letters, Volume XV, Number 3, 1 November 1886
  2. ^ Brosnahan, Timothy. "Camillo Mazzella." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 10. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 25 September 2022   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ "Mazzèlla, Camillo", Treccani
  4. ^ a b Florida International University, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, Biographical Dictionary of Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903), Consistory of June 7, 1886 (IX)
  5. ^ a b Treccani website, Camillo Mazzella
  6. ^ Howard, Thomas Albert. God and the Atlantic: America, Europe, and the Religious Divide, OUP 2011, p. 77 ISBN 9780191624834
  7. ^ The Reception of Charles Darwin in Europe, (Eve-Marie Engels, Thomas F. Glick, eds.), A&C Black, 2008, p. 417 ISBN 9781441166623
  8. ^ Obit, The Messenger of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Volume 35, p. 587