Bonaventure Baron (christened Bartholomew Baron; 1610 – 18 March 1696) was a distinguished Irish Franciscan friar and a noted theologian, philosopher, teacher and writer of Latin prose and verse.[1]
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (February 2015) |
Biography
editBaron was born at Clonmel, County Tipperary. His mother, one of 14 children, was a sister of the Irish Jesuit priest, Ambrose Baron. Franciscan friar and historian Luke Wadding was another of Baron's uncles. His brother Geoffrey Baron acted for the Irish Confederates in their negotiations with the continental rulers.[citation needed]
Bartholomew Baron joined the Franciscan community of Clonmel, pursued his studies in philosophy at the Old University of Leuven. Afterwards he proceeded to the Irish College of St Isidore in Rome, founded by his uncle, Wadding. Upon the completion of his theological courses, he was appointed professor and devoted himself specially to a defense of the Scotist system then generally assailed. During his stay in Rome he published numerous works on theology, philosophy and history, all listed below.[citation needed] His writings were lauded by Donegal-born physician Niall Ó Glacáin.[2]
Ordained in 1634, he took the religious name Bonaventure. Around 1651 he left Rome, and went first to a house of his Order at Schwaz in Tyrol, and then to Salzburg, where he was kindly received by Archbishop Guidobald. He was sent as commissary into Habsburg Hungary (about 1656), was again in Schwaz (1661), went to Paris, taught for some time at Würzburg, where he published a volume of his Opuscula (1668), taught theology at Lyon in southern France and finally returned to Italy. It is said that representations were made to secure his appointment to the Archbishopric of Cashel, but that he declined the office. He was appointed historiographer in 1676 by Cosmo I de' Medici, Grand-duke of Tuscany and was elected a member of the Academy of Florence.[citation needed]
He died on 18 March 1696, and was buried at St Isidore in Rome, where his tomb with the inscription, written by John de Burgo, a rector of the college, still exists. Two contemporary oil paintings of him are extant: one is in the Franciscan friary in Clonmel, the other in a Franciscan friary in Dublin. There is also a fresco of Bonaventure in the aula of St. Isidore's College in Rome.[citation needed]
Writings
editWhile under the patronage of the Grand Duke he published the Trias Tuscia, in honor of three remarkable religious of Tuscany, and in the same year the Orbes Medicei. [citation needed]
His principal works are:
- Panegyrici Sacroprophani (Rome, 1643; Lyon, 1656)
- Obsidio et expugnatio Arcis Duncannon sub Thoma Preston
- Praelusiones Philosophicae (Rome, 1651; Lyon, 1661)
- Boetius Absolutus (Rome, 1653)
- Scotus defensus et amplificatus (3 volumes, Cologne, 1664)
- Cursus Theologicus (6 volumes, 1670)
- Opuscula (4 volumes of "small works", 1666–71)
- Annales Ordinis Sanctae Trinitatis pro redemptione captivorum ab anno 1198 usque ad annum 1297 (Rome, 1864), his last work, a history of the Order for Redemption of Captives (Trinitarians), from 1198 till 1297.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Bonaventura Baron profile, newadvent.org; accessed 25 February 2015.
- ^ Meehan, Charles Patrick (1877). The rise and fall of the Irish Franciscan monasteries and memoirs of the Irish hierarchy, in the seventeenth century : with appendices containing documents from the Rinuccini manuscripts, public records, and archives of the Franciscan Convent, Dublin. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
Attribution
edit- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Bonaventura Baron". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- Webb, Alfred (1878). . A Compendium of Irish Biography. Dublin: M. H. Gill & son.