José Maria da Fonseca e Évora

José Maria da Fonseca e Évora (3 December 1690 – 16 June 1752), the religious name of José Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo e Sousa, was a Portuguese Franciscan who served as an accomplished diplomat of King John V in Rome and, later, Bishop of Porto.[1]


Frei José Maria da Fonseca Évora

Bishop of Porto
DiocesePorto
Appointed2 January 1741
PredecessorTomás de Almeida
SuccessorFrei António de Távora
Orders
OrdinationDecember 1715
Consecration12 March 1741
by Tomás de Almeida
Personal details
Born
José Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo e Sousa

(1690-12-03)3 December 1690
Died16 June 1752(1752-06-16) (aged 61)
Porto, Portugal
BuriedPorto Cathedral
DenominationRoman Catholic
Styles of
José Maria da Fonseca e Évora
Reference styleHis Most Reverend Lordship
Spoken styleYour Most Reverend Lordship
Religious styleFrei José Maria

Life edit

José Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo e Sousa was born on 3 December 1690, in the city of Évora, the son of Manuel Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo (who had served the Habsburgs as a cavalry officer in Milan and Flanders), and his wife, Ana Maria Barroso da Gama Michão. He had a sister, named Mariana Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo.[2] He first earned a Artium Magister degree from the University of Évora and, from 1710, studied Canon law at the University of Coimbra.[2]

José Ribeiro da Fonseca Figueiredo e Sousa left for Rome in 1712, as part of the extraordinary embassy of the Marquis of Fontes. The reason for his sudden departure from the country is obscure, but it was apparently due to his having incurred in King John V's wrath after standing accused of having forged genealogical documents to attain the status of fidalgo — fleeing persecution, he sought refuge and took his first vows at the Franciscan Monastery of Varatojo, but was soon after ordered to leave due to the Franciscans' fear of retaliation.[3]

Once in Italy, he made solemn vows at the Convent of San Bernardino di Orte and made his religious profession and was received into the Franciscan Order in the Convent of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli in Rome, 8 December 1712, taking the name "José Maria da Fonseca e Évora".[2] In 1727, Pope Benedict XIII named Fonseca e Évora Procurator General of the Franciscan Order,[4] and, in 1732, is granted the honorific title of Minister General.[3] As Minister General, he was untiring in his efforts to restore discipline; and displayed prudence, tact, and executive ability. In 1740 he founded the large library in the old convent of Ara Coeli (the Biblioteca Eborense), and under his direction and patronage, the Annales Minorum of Luke Wadding were published in Rome in seventeen volumes, between the years 1731 and 1741.[3]

From 1728, Fonseca e Évora assumed the duties of King John V's chargé d'affaires. Two years later he is made ambassador: in 1731, he is appointed resident minister and on 1 August 1733, minister plenipotentiary.[2] Fonseca e Évora was instrumental in the normalisation of diplomatic relations between Portugal and the Holy See following the Pope's refusal to elevate Vincenzo Bichi, Apostolic Nuncio to Portugal, to the cardinalate.

Fonseca several times declined the episcopal dignity (namely the bishoprics of Osimo, Tivoli, and Assisi[2][3]), but finally accepted (1741) the See of Porto, to which he was nominated by John V of Portugal.

He died on 16 June 1752 in Porto, and was buried the following day underneath the main altar of Porto Cathedral. The Franciscans in Portugal held a solemn funeral Mass at the Convent of São Francisco da Cidade, in Lisbon, on 1 September, with an eulogy delivered by Francisco Xavier de Santa Teresa,[2] which was published the following year. After his death, many of his possessions were scattered and auctioned off to pay his creditors.[2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bishop José Maria da Fonseca de Évora [Catholic-Hierarchy]
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Vale, Teresa Leonor M. (2015). Arte e Diplomacia: a vivência romana dos embaixadores joaninos [Art and Diplomacy: the Roman experience of the ambassadors of King John V] (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Scribe. ISBN 978-989-8410-42-9.
  3. ^ a b c d Oliveira, Maria Gabriela (2002). "A reedição dos Annales Minorum de Lucas Wadding e a figura de Fr. Joseph Maria da Fonseca e Évora" [The re-edition of Luke Wadding's Annales Minorum and the figure of Fr. Joseph Maria da Fonseca e Évora]. Frei Marcos de Lisboa: Cronista Franciscano e Bispo do Porto (in Portuguese). Porto: Faculdade de Letras da Universidade do Porto, Centro Interuniversitário de História da Espiritualidade, Instituto de Cultura Portuguesa. pp. 93–104. ISBN 972-9350-72-8.
  4. ^ Marlowe, Elizabeth (2013). Shaky Ground: Context, Connoisseurship and the History of Roman Art. A&C Black. ISBN 9781472502094.
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "José Ribeiro da Fonseca". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of Porto
1741–1752
Succeeded by