John of Vercelli
This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points. (November 2020) |
Blessed John of Vercellli O.P. | |
---|---|
Roman Catholic Church (Dominican Order) | |
Beatified | 7 September 1903, Rome by Pope Pius X |
Attributes | Dominican habit Book |
Patronage | Confraternity of the most Holy Names of God and Jesus ('The Holy Name Society') |
John of Vercelli (Giovanni da Vercelli) (c. 1205 – 30 November 1283)[1] was the sixth Master General of the Dominican Order (1264-1283).
Early life and education
John was born in 1205 to the Garbella family in
The Emperor Frederick II, that stupor mundi and "malleus Italiae Regionis", died on December 13, 1250. Pope Innocent IV's exile was over. He left Lyons on April 19, 1251, and arrived in his home town, Genoa, on May 18. From Genoa he began the difficult task of getting back the territories of the Catholic Church lost to the Emperor Frederick, and reconstructing the effective operation of the church hierarchy in northern and central Italy. One of his problems was the rise and flourishing of heresy in the Po Valley. On June 11, 1251, the pope issued instructions from Genoa to Vincentius of Milan and Joannes of Vercelli, to undertake the office of inquisitor, jointly or severally, in Venice and other parts of Lombardy.[7] These were not the only inquisitors appointed. On the same day, and with the same form letter ("Misericors et Miserator"), the pope also appointed Peter of Verona and Vivianus of Bergamo to the same task in the area of Cremona and other cities of Lombardy. No doubt there were others, now unattested. The pope was also prepared to take on Frederick's sons Manfred and Enzo (Ezolino) of Sardinia, as he indicated in a letter to the Dominican Bishop of Treviso and the Prior of Mantua.[8]
Umberto de Romans, the fifth Master General, elected in 1253, held the General Chapter in Buda, Hungary, on May 31, 1254.[9] At the conclusion of the meeting, he appointed John of Vercelli as the Master General's Vicar to Hungary.[10] Later (1255-1257) he was appointed Prior of the Dominican monastery in Bologna.
Prior of Lombardy
In 1257, at the Provincial Chapter for Lombardy held at Novara, he was elected Prior Provincial of Lombardy. At that time the province contained thirty convents of the Order.[11] During his administration three new convents were founded, at Turin, Chieri[12] and Tortona. He served as Prior of Lombardy for seven years.[13] One of the major and continuing problems in his province was the rise and spread of heresy, especially Catharism. The inquisitorial machine was being constructed, as John's own service in Venice a few years earlier indicates. These new inquisitors were directing one question after another to Rome, and were overwhelming the Curia with their concerns. Alexander replied, urging them to act boldly and independently, against any manner or quality of person, but to continue to consult the Holy See in difficult cases.[14] On March 23, 1262, the new pope, Urban IV, sent a mandate to John of Vercelli, authorizing him, in consultation with other discreet members of his Order, to appoint up to eight Dominican friars as inquisitors in the Province of Lombardy and the March of Genoa. He was also authorized to remove inquisitors from office who proved inadequate and to replace them; he could delegate this task to his vicar.[15]
As Prior of Lombardy he was expected to see to the election of a delegate (diffinitor) to the annual General Chapter, and to preside over the Provincial Chapter in Lombardy. In 1258, the General Chapter was held at Toulouse, and the Provincial Chapter at Milan. He took part in the General Chapter at Valenciennes, on April 13, 1259, and held the Provincial Chapter in Bologna. In 1260 the General Chapter was in Strasbourg, and John presided over the provincial General Chapter, which was held at Ferrara. In 1261 the General Chapter was held at Barcelona, and the Provincial Chapter at Milan. In 1262, both meetings took place in Bologna. In 1263 the General Chapter was held in London, and the Provincial Chapter at Venice.[16]
Master General
On June 7, 1264, he was elected as Master General by the
In 1267, an event of paramount importance for the Dominican Order took place in Bologna. Already in 1262, under the fifth Master General, the decision had been taken by the General Chapter to provide a more imposing resting place for their founder, Dominic Guzman, than his remains currently enjoyed. John of Vercelli and the members of the Order carried that plan to completion, providing a new shrine for Dominic's body in the apse of their church. Already on March 15, 1267, Pope Clement IV provided a bull, granting a series of indulgences for those visiting the shrine during the week centered on Dominic's feast day.[18] On May 27, 1267, Pope Innocent sent his blessing with his best wishes for an agreeable assembly to the General Congregation which was about to meet.[19] On June 5, 1267, the translation actually took place in a grand ceremony, with John and the delegates assembled for the General Chapter taking part, with the attendance of Archbishop Filippo of Ravenna, Bishop Ottaviano de' Ubaldinis of Bologna, Bishop Tommaso de' Ubaldinis of Imola, and other bishops. Before being placed in the shrine, the head and relics were shown publicly.[20]
John is known to have consulted Thomas Aquinas officially on several occasions on matters pertaining to theology and the teaching of Pierre de Tarantaise.[21]
During his administration,
1276-1277—Five popes
Following the Council, Pope Gregory again looked to the Dominican friars, this time to spread devotion to the
On October 15, Pope John XXI appointed John of Vercellae, as well as Hieronymus, the Minister General of the Franciscans, as Apostolic Legates to go to France to arrange a peace between King Philip and King Alfonso X of Castile.[30] The urgency of their mission was repeated in a letter from the College of Cardinals, written during the Sede Vacante[31] following the death of Pope John XXI on May 16, 1277.[32] Pope Nicholas III repeated the same urgent wish for peace directly to King Philip III of France and King Alfonso X of Castile, with a recommendation for John of Vercellae and Hieronymus Masci.[33] On March 12, 1278, Hieronymus Masci was named a cardinal,[34] but the legates had their orders reinforced by a letter from Nicholas III dated April 4, 1278.[35] Another letter was sent to Masci on April 23, urging him to conclude the embassy as soon as possible, since his services were urgently needed in the Roman Curia.[36]
Later Years, 1278–1283
Late in his life, on May 15, 1278, John was appointed by
The General Chapter of the Order of Preachers was held in Montpellier in 1283. The Chapter decided that the next Chapter would be held in Bologna. But John of Vercelli died on 30 November 1283 in the convent of the Dominicans in Montpellier, France.
General Chapters held by John of Vercelli as Master General
John of Vercelli insisted on the rule instituted by Dominic himself that Friars of the Order should travel on foot, never using a horse or a wheeled vehicle. The table below demonstrates the peripatetic nature of John's life as Master General, never staying in one convent for very long, but constantly pursuing his visitations of one province after another, one convent after another.[41] The site of each General Chapter[42] had been decided at the General Chapter the year before (with the proviso that emergency circumstances might allow the Master General to choose another site),[43] and therefore John's itinerary every year would include the goal of reaching the chosen site at the appropriate time each Spring.
Chapter | Year | Location |
---|---|---|
XLV | 1265 | Montpellier |
XLVI | 1266 | Trier |
XLVII | 1267 | Bologna[44] |
XLVIII | 1268 | Viterbo[45] |
XLIX | 1269 | Paris |
L | 1270 | Milan |
LI | 1271 | Montpellier[46] |
LII | 1272 | Florence |
LIII | 1273 | Pest |
LIV | 1274 | Lyons[47] |
LV | 1275 | Bologna |
LVI | 1276 | Pisa[48] |
LVII | 1277 | Bordeaux |
LVIII | 1278 | Milan |
LIX | 1279 | Paris |
LX | 1280 | Oxford |
LXI | 1281 | Florence |
LXII | 1282 | Vienne |
LXIII | 1283 | Montpellier |
Patronage
John of Vercelli is the patron of the Confraternity of the most Holy Names of God and Jesus ('The Holy Name Society').
References
- ^ Canetti, Luigi (2001). "GIOVANNI da Vercelli". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 56.
- ^ Daniel Antonin Mortier, Histoire des Maîtres généraux de l' Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs II (Paris 1905), pp. 1-4: Né dans les premières années du XIIIe siècle,—la date précise reste incertaine...
- ^ P. Glorieux, "L’enseignement au moyen âge. Techniques et méthodes en usage à la Faculté de Théologie de Paris au XIIIe siècle," Archives d'Histoire Doctrinale et Littéraire du Moyen Âge 35 (1968) 54, 58.
- ^ Stephanus Salanhacus (13th c.) states that he was Regent in Canon Law in Paris, quoted by J. Echard, Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum I (Paris 1719), p. 210: Sextus magister ordinis successor F. Humberti F. Joannes de Vercellis provinciae Lombardiae, qui rexerat Parisius in jure canonico.... At Paris the minimum age for a doctorate in Canon Law was thirty-five.
- ^ The studium generale was allegedly founded in 1228. Tommaso Vallauri, Storia delle università degli studi del Piemonte (Torino 1875), pp. 15-25. It is imagined, without specific sources, that John of Vercelli left Paris in 1229, as a result of a strike on the part of all of the professors: Mortier, p. 6 and n. 1. So too Perotta. Such an early date for his departure from Paris would be impossible if he were a Doctor in utroque iure. His study at Pavia and at Vercelli is conjecture and inference. Before adopting the unlikely idea of a university at Vercelli, consult William A. Hinnebusch, "The Dominican Order and Learning," History of the Dominican Order II, pp. 3-18, where S. Dominic's idea is explained—that each house of the Order should have a Doctor and a Lector for the education of the members. The ideal, occasionally realized, was that each convent would become a studium, if not a studium generale.
- ^ a b Perrotta O.P., Paul C., "Patron of the Holy Name Society", National Association of the Holy Name Society
- ^ T. Ripoll, Bullarium Ordinis FF. Praedicatorum VII (Rome 1739), p. 25 no. 365; I (Rome 1729), pp. 192-193, no. 227. Potthast, Regesta pontificum Romanorum II, no. 14332.
- ^ Ripoll, Bullarium Ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome 1729), p. 193, no. 228 (June 16, 1251).
- ^ Daniel Anton Mortier, Histoire des maîtres généraux de l' Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs I (Paris 1903), pp. 430-433.
- ^ Mortier II, p. 12 n. 3, quoting Sebastian de Olmedo. Penone, p. 89.
- ^ In 1303, when the Province was divided in two, there were thirty-three convents. They are listed, according to a text of Bernardus Guidonis, in Jacobus Echard, Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum recensiti Tomus primus (Paris 1719), p. vii.
- ^ also claimed as a foundation of Saint Dominic himself, in 1220.
- ^ Daniel Antonin Mortier, Histoire des Maîtres généraux de l' Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs II (Paris 1905), p. 12-13.
- ^ See the letter of Alexander IV, Ripoll I, p. 387 (January 10, 1260), to all the Inquisitors of Italy of the Dominican Order. Potthast II, no. 17745. A similar letter was sent to the Inquisitors of the Franciscan Order: A. Tommassetti (ed.), Bullarum, Diplomatum et Privilegiorum Sanctorum Romanorum Pontificum Taurensis editio Tomus III (Turin 1858), p. 669 no. LI-LII (January 20 and March 4, 1260). Mortier's interpretation (II, p. 17), that the letters to the Dominican Inquisitors shows that John of Vercelli was liberal or lax, is myopic and unlikely, considering the sum of the evidence.
- ^ Ripoll I, p. 419, no. 5. Potthast, II, 18256.
- ^ Benedikt Maria Reichert (editor), Cronica ordinis praedicatorum ab anno 1170. usque ad 1333 Part 1 (Rome 1897), pp. 97-99 and p. 110.
- ^ Daniel Antonin Mortier, Histoire des Maîtres généraux de l' Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs II (Paris 1905), pp. 21-22. Butler's lives of the saints of Alban Butler, published in 2000 by Burns and Oates at Tunbridge Wells, Vol. 12 pp. 9–10
- ^ Ripoll, Bullarium Ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome 1729), p. 483 no. LXII: cum tanti Patris et Doctoris vestry sepulcrum infra Ecclesiam vestram de Bononia in loco magis demisso in humili quam tam famoso thesauro conveniat, habeatur, reverenter et salubriter decrevistis ut pretiosum Corpus confessoris ejusdem in altiorem et digniorem locum ipsius ecclesiae transfereatur...
- ^ Ripoll, Bullarium Ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome 1729), p. 484 no. LXIV
- ^ Ripoll, Bullarium Ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome 1729), p. 483 n. 3, quoting Michael Plodius. Anita Fiderer Moskowitz, Nicola Pisano's Arca Di San Domenico and Its Legacy (University Park PA USA: Penn State Press, 1994), pp. 5-9. Barbara W. Dodsworth, The Arca Di San Domenico (New York: Lang, 1995), p. 31. Whether the idea for a new resting place for the saint's remains came from Master John, who had been Prior of the Dominican convent in Bologna, and then Prior of Lombardy, or from his predecessor Master Umberto is unknown.
- ^ Jean-Pierre Torrell (tr. Robert Royal), Saint Thomas Aquinas: the person and his work, Volume 1 revised edition (Washington DC: Catholic University of America Press, 2005), pp. 167-169.
- ^ A. Touron, Histoire des hommes illustres de l' Ordre de Saint Dominique Tome premier (Paris 1743), pp. 434-437.
- ^ Thuente, Clement. "Society of the Holy Name." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 27 Dec. 2014
- ^ AmericanCatholic.org "Blessed John of Vercelli" Archived 2011-06-16 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Sede Vacante and Conclave, January 1276 (Dr. J. P. Adams).
- ^ Sede Vacante and Conclave, June-July 1276 (Dr. J. P. Adams).
- ^ See, e.g. Potthast, II, no. 21178 (November 3, 1276), the final settlement of a dispute between S. Maria Sopra Minerva and S. Marco in Rome.
- ^ Sede Vacante and Conclave of August-September, 1276 (Dr. J. P. Adams)
- ^ Augustinus Theiner (Editor), Caesaris S. R. E. Cardinalis Baronii, Od. Raynaldi et Jac. Laderchii Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus Vigesimus Secundus 1257-1285 (Barri-Ducis: Ludovicus Guerin 1870), pp. 377-378, nos. 31-33; Potthast 21152.
- ^ T. Ripoll, Bullarium ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I, p. 549 no. 3. Potthast II, 21165; and see Theiner Caesaris S. R. E. Cardinalis Baronii, Od. Raynaldi et Jac. Laderchii Annales Ecclesiastici Volume 22, under the year 1277, no. 47, p. 402.
- ^ Sede Vacante and Conclave, May-November, 1277 (Dr. J. P. Adams).
- ^ Potthast, II, 21253.
- ^ Potthast, II, no. 21259-21260.
- ^ Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi I editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 10.
- ^ Potthast, II, no. 21294.
- ^ Ripoll, I, pp. 555-556, no. IV.
- ^ Conradus Eubel, OFM Conv., Hierarchia Catholici Medii Aevi...ab anno 1198 usque ad annum 1431 perducta editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 275.
- ^ T. Ripoll, Bullarium ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome: Hieronymus Mainard, 1729), p. 572. August Potthast, Regesta pontificum Romanorum II, no. 21462. Augustinus Theiner (Editor), Caesaris S. R. E. Cardinalis Baronii, Od. Raynaldi et Jac. Laderchii Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus Vigesimus Primus 1229-1256 (Barri-Ducis: Ludovicus Guerin 1870) under the year 1278, § 80, p. 446.
- ^ T. Ripoll, Bullarium ordinis FF. Praedicatorum I (Rome: Hieronymus Mainard, 1729), p. 561-562, nos. XI-XII.
- ^ Jules Gay (editor), Registres de Nicolas III fasc.1 (Paris 1898), p. 159 no. 419 (February 4, 1279).
- ^ Mortier II, pp. 28-32.
- ^ Benedikt Maria Reichert (editor), Cronica ordinis praedicatorum ab anno 1170. usque ad 1333 Part 1 (Rome 1897), pp. 99-102.
- ^ Ernest Barker, The Dominican Order and Convocation (Oxford 1913), pp. 14-16.
- ^ Master John's encyclical letter, written during the General Chapter, is dated July 14, 1267: E. Martene and U. Durand, Thesaurus novus anecdotorum IV (Paris 1717), pp. 1751-1752. It was at this General Chapter, on June 5, 1267, that the relics of Saint Dominic were transferred from their second resting place to the new marble tomb.
- ^ Master John's encyclical letter, written after the close of the General Chapter, is dated June 5, 1268: E. Martene and U. Durand, Thesaurus novus anecdotorum IV (Paris 1717), pp. 1751-1752.
- ^ Philip III of France wrote to the General Chapter on May 6, 1271, at Cluny, announcing the death of several of his relatives. E. Martene and U. Durand, Thesaurus novus anecdotorum IV (Paris 1717), pp. 1761-1763.
- ^ Master John's encyclical letter, written after the close of the General Chapter, is dated November 3, 1274: E. Martene and U. Durand, Thesaurus novus anecdotorum IV (Paris 1717), pp. 1774-1777.
- ^ Pope Innocent V wrote a letter to the Master General and General Chapter from the Lateran on May 10, 1276, lamenting his inability to be present with his fellow Dominicans: E. Martene and U. Durand, Thesaurus novus anecdotorum IV (Paris 1717), pp. 1787-1788. Ripoll, I, p. 543, no. 3. Pope Innocent V died on June 22, 1276.
Bibliography
- Jacobus Quetif and Jacobus Echard, Scriptores Ordinis Praedicatorum recensiti, notisque historicis et criticis illustrati Tomus primus (Paris 1717), pp. 210–212.
- A. Touron, Histoire des hommes illustres de l' Ordre de Saint Dominique Tome premier (Paris 1743), pp. 418–440.
- Joseph Pie Mothon, Storia del culto prestato nella Chiesa da tempo immemorabile al B. Giovanni da Vercelli (Vercelli 1900).
- Joseph Pie Mothon, Vita del B. Giovanni da Vercelli: sesto Maestro Generale dell'Ordine dei Predicatori (Vercelli: G. Chiais, 1903).
- Daniel Antonin Mortier, Histoire des Maîtres généraux de l' Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs II (Paris 1905).
- G. Donna Doldenico, "B. Giovanni Garbella da Vercelli," Memorie domenicane 69 (1952), pp. 259–265.
- William A. Hinnebusch, The History of the Dominican Order. 2 Vols (NY: Alba House 1973).
- William A. Hinnebusch, "The Dominican Order and Learning," History of the Dominican Order II, pp. 3–18.
- Daniele Penone, I domenicani nei secoli: panorama storico dell'Ordine dei frati predicatori (Bologna: Edizioni Studio Domenicano, 1998) pp. 88–101.
- Luigi Canetti, "Giovanni da Vercelli," Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 56 (2001).