List Of Franciscan Theologians
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List Of Franciscan Theologians
This is a list of Franciscan theologians, in other words a list of Roman Catholic theological writers belonging to the Order of Friars Minor.http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13610b.htm Scotism and Scotists The intended arrangement is chronological by date of death. Scotism and Scotists' Old Franciscan School * Haymo of Faversham (d. 1244) * Alexander of Hales (c.1183-1245) * John of Rupella (d. 1245) * St. Clare of Assisi (1194-1253) * William of Melitora (d. 1260) * St. Bonaventure (d. 1274) * Hugh of Digne (d. 1285) * Matthew of Aquasparta (d. 1289) * John Pecham (d. 1292) * Richard of Middleton (d. about 1300) * St. Angela of Foligno (c. 1248–1309) Scotism and the Later Franciscan School * Bl. John Duns Scotus (1265-1308) * Petrus Aureoli (1280-1322) * Francis Mayron (1280-1327) * Walter Burleigh (1275-1337), possibly an Augustinian * William of Ockham (1288-1348) * Nicholas of Lyra (c.1270-1349) * Peter of Aquila (d. 1361) * Robert de Finingham (d. 1460) * Nicolas ...
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Nicolas D'Orbellis
Nicolas d'Orbellis was a French Franciscan theologian and philosopher, of the Scotist school. Biography He was born about 1400. He seems to have entered the monastery of the Observantines, founded in 1407, one of the first in France. He appears to have been professor of theology and philosophy in the University of Angers, where he enjoyed great reputation as an expounder of the teaching of John Duns Scotus. After 1465 he wrote his chief work, a commentary on the Four Books of Sententiae 'Sentences'. He died at Rome in 1475 and was interred in the church of the Ara Coeli on the Capitoline. Under the entry for the word Dorbel, the Oxford English Dictionary gives the date of his death as 1455. The meaning of Dorbel (based on the name of Nicholas de Orbellis) is given as: a scholastical pedant, a dull-witted person, dolt. Writings His chief works are: *"Expositio in IV Sententiarum Libros", a compilation based on the teachings of John Duns Scotus, published first at Rouen withou ...
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Martin Of Cochem
Martin of Cochem (born at Cochem on the Moselle (river), Mosel, 13 December 1630 or 1634; died in the convent at Waghäusel, 10 September 1712) was a German Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, Capuchin theologian, preacher, and ascetic writer. Life He came from a Catholic family, and while still young entered the novitiate of the Capuchins. After his ordination to the priesthood, he was assigned to a professorship of theology. In 1666, he was involved in the care of Plague (disease), plague victims, and began to compose short popular religious treatises. Martin then made a specialty of popular preaching and religious writing in the Archdiocese of Trier and Archdiocese of Ingelheim. He continued up to the time of his death, hearing confessions with the aid of an ear-trumpet. Works The most voluminous is an ecclesiastical history in 2 vols, fol., composed for apologetic purposes and provoked by the attacks made upon the Catholic Church by Protestantism. However, the author brought it ...
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Fortunatus Hueber
Fortunatus Hueber (21 November 1639, in Neustadt an der Donau – 12 February 1706, in Munich) was a West German Franciscan historian and theologian. Life He entered the Bavarian province of the Franciscan Reformati on 5 November 1654. He was general lector in theology; cathedral preacher in Freising from 1670 to 1676; then in 1677 Provincial of Bavaria. In 1679 he was definitor-general and chronologist of the order in Germany, and in 1698 was proclaimed 'scriptor ordinis''. He was also confessor to the convent of the Poor Clares at Munich, called St. Jacob on the Anger. As commissary of the general of the order in 1675 and 1701 he visited the Bohemian province, and in 1695 the province of St. Salvator in Hungary. The Elector of Cologne The Archbishop of Cologne is an archbishop governing the Archdiocese of Cologne of the Catholic Church in western North Rhine-Westphalia and is also a historical state in the Rhine holding the birthplace of Beethoven and northern Rhineland-Pa ...
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José De Carabantes
José de Carabantes (Carabantes) (1628 in Aragon – 1694) was a Spanish Order of Friars Minor Capuchin, Capuchin theologian. He worked for the evangelization of the Native Americans in Spanish America. Works He wrote a work entitled "Ars addicendi atque docendi idiomata", and likewise a "Lexicon, seu vocabularium verborum, adverbiorum, etc.", for the use of missionaries (Madrid, 1678). Veneration Theologians approved Carabantes's spiritual writings on 27 July 1904, and his cause was formally opened on 24 August 1910, granting him the title of Servant of God. He was later declared Venerable. References

;Attribution * The entry cites: **A biography of Father Carabantes was published at Madrid in 1705 by Diego Gonzales de Quiraga. {{DEFAULTSORT:Carabantes, Jose de 1628 births 1694 deaths Capuchins 17th-century Spanish Roman Catholic theologians Venerated Catholics ...
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Francesco Lorenzo Brancati Di Lauria
Francesco Lorenzo Brancati di Lauria (10 April 1612, Lauria – 30 November 1693, Rome) was an Italian Cardinal (Catholicism), cardinal and theologian. Life and career At the age of seventeen di Lauria was struck with a dangerous illness, and he made a vow that in the event of his recovery he would enter the order of Minor Conventuals. In July, 1630, he received the religious habit at Lecce in Apulia, and shortly after the completion of his novitiate was called to Rome. He subsequently visited several of the most noted convents of his order in Italy, in which he taught philosophy and theology. In 1647, he was again recalled to Rome and was shortly afterwards made guardian of the convent attached to the Conventual Church of the Twelve Apostles, where the minister general of the order resides. In 1653, he was appointed to the chair of dogmatic theology in the Roman University, and was later made Consultor of the Congregation of the Holy Office by Pope Alexander VII who used to ca ...
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Mathias Hauzeur
Mathias Hauzeur (1589 at Verviers – 12 November 1676 at Liège) was a Belgian Franciscan theologian. Life He was for many years professor of theology. He was a prolific writer and left behind twenty works, while, as a keen controversialist, he attained great celebrity in consequence of his disputation with the Calvinist preacher Gabriel Hotton, which continued from 19 to 22 April 1633, and, was brought by Hauzeur to such a conclusion that the Catholics throughout the vicinity lit bonfires to celebrate his triumph. Works He describes this controversy in his "Accusation et conviction du Sieur Hotton" (Liège, 1633), issued also in Latin under the title "Conferentia publica inter M. Hauzeur et G. Hotton" (Liège, 1633). Other important works of Hauzeur are: *"Exorcismes catholiques du maling esprit hérétique etc." (Liège, 1634), directed against the same opponent; *"Equulcus ecclesiasticus, aculeatus exorcismis XXIII etc." (Liège, 1635), against the Calvinist Samuel ...
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Gaudentius Of Brescia
Saint Gaudentius ( it, San Gaudenzio di Brescia; died 410) was Bishop of Brescia from 387 until 410, and was a theologian and author of many letters and sermons. He was the successor of Saint Philastrius. Biography Gaudentius had studied under Philastrius, and was a preacher in Italy and the Middle East. When Philastrius died around 387, the people of Brescia elected Gaudentius as bishop –evidently against his will. He was on pilgrimage to Jerusalem when Philastrius had died. The ''Catholic Encyclopedia'' states that “the people of Brescia bound themselves by an oath that they would accept no other bishop than Gaudentius; and St. Ambrose and other neighboring prelates, in consequence, obliged him to return, though against his will. The Eastern bishops also threatened to refuse him Communion if he did not obey.” Gaudentius was consecrated by Saint Ambrose in 387. A record of the discourse given made by Gaudentius on the occasion of his consecration survives. Gaude ...
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Bonaventura Baron
Bonaventure Baron, O.F.M. (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.Bonaventura Baron profile
newadvent.org; accessed 25 February 2015.


Biography

Baron was born at Clonmel, . His mother, one of 14 children, was a sister of the Irish Jesuit priest, Father Ambrose Baron. Franciscan friar and historian Father Luke Wadding was another of Baron's uncles. His brother,
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Pedro D'Alva Y Astorga
Pedro de Alba y Astorga ( – 1667) was a Friar Minor of the Strict Observance, and a voluminous writer on theological subjects, generally in defense of the Immaculate Conception. He was born at Carbajales and died in Belgium. He took the Franciscan habit in Peru. He lectured on theology, was Procurator-General of the Franciscans, in Rome, and Qualificator of the Holy Office The Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) is the oldest among the departments of the Roman Curia. Its seat is the Palace of the Holy Office in Rome. It was founded to defend the Catholic Church from heresy and is the body responsible f .... He was an indefatigable traveller. His principal opponents were the Dominicans. His polemic had such a personal tone and was so violent that he was sent to the Low-Countries. Two editions of his work, "Nodus indissolubilis de conceptu mentis et conceptu ventris" (Madrid, 1661, 1663), are on the Index of prohibited books. His writings fill forty folio volum ...
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Francis Nugent
Francis Nugent (1569–1635 at Charleville, France) was an Irish priest of the Franciscan Capuchin Order. He was the founder of the Irish and the Rhenish Provinces of the Order. Life Lavalin Nugent was born in Walshestown near Mullingar, Co. Westmeath. He was the son of Edward Nugent, of the Dysert family, and Margaret O'Connor, the daughter of the 'Great O'Connor Offaly'. His aunt Katherine Nugent Cusack was the mother of Fr Christopher Cusack, founder of the Irish Colleges at Douai and Lille. In 1582, he was sent to France to receive an education which the Penal Laws denied him at home.Hayden, John Augustine. "Francis Nugent." The Catholic Encyclopedia
Vol. 11. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 19 July 2023
Before the age of twenty, he obtained the degree of doctor at t ...
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Juan Bautista (theologian)
Juan Bautista (born in Mexico, 1555; date of death unknown, but probably between 1606 and 1615) was a Mexican Franciscan theologian and writer. Life He joined the Franciscans in his native city, and taught theology and metaphysics at the convent of St. Francis of Mexico. He was also a definitor of the province, and became Guardian of Tezcuco twice (1595 and 1606), of Tlatelolco (1600), and of Tacuba Tacuba is a municipality in the Ahuachapán department of El Salvador. Church Of Tacuba It is located in Villa of Tacuba. It is head of the municipality of the same name in the department of Ahuachapán, at about 14 Kilometers of the city of Ahu ... in 1605. Works A number of his works are known by title only. Ten of these were written in the Nahuatl language, previous to 1607; several were printed at Mexico. He learned Nahuatl after joining the Franciscans. References ;Attribution * The entry cites: **Mendieta, ''Historia eclesiastica'' Indiana (finished in 1599 but first ...
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