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Henri Spondanus

Henri Spondanus (de Sponde) (born at Mauléon, in the French Department of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, January 6, 1568; died at Toulouse, May 18, 1643) was a French Catholic jurist, historian and continuator of the Annales Ecclesiastici compiled by Cardinal Baronius, and Bishop of Pamiers. He was a convert from Calvinism.

Henri de Sponde, Bishop of Pamiers (1626-1641)

Biography edit

Henri de Sponde's father, Ennico (Iñigo), was a Councilor and Private Secretary of Queen Jeanne d'Albret of Navarre. Henri was born at Mauléon in Bearn on 6 January 1568. His mother was Salvia de Hosia of Bayonne, daughter of Martin de Hosia of Pamplona. At his baptism into the Calvinist church at Pau, baby Henri's godfather was Henri de Navarre, the future King of Navarre and France.[1]

At the age of eight, he began his studies at the Calvinist college of Orthez.[2] His elder brother Jean was studying in Geneva, and in 1584 published a Latin translation of Homer. At the same time Henri, inspired by the Psalms began to write poetry.[3] After studying humanities, and becoming proficient in Latin and Greek, he followed his father into the service of the royal house of Navarre. In 1589 he was jurist at the Parlement of Tours, and was named a Councilor of King Henri of Navarre, King Henri IV of France. Henri accompanied the royal ambassador of Henri de Navarre, Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas, to England and Scotland in 1597,[4] and, upon his return, took up the study of Civil and Canon Law. It was said that he could recite the entire Institutes of the Emperor Justinian from memory.[5]

Conversion edit

Persuaded by the writings of Robert Bellarmine and convinced by the instructions of Cardinal Jacques Davy Duperron, who had also instructed Henri IV, Sponde became a Catholic, officially converted by Louis Godebert, the Penitentiary of Notre Dame de Paris, on 21 August 1595.[6] His father had already converted to Catholicism from Calvinism in 1593. In 1600 Henri was a member of the suite of Cardinal François de Sourdis who was sent to Rome as French ambassador and pilgrim in observance of the Holy Year of 1600. At Florence in December, Cardinal Duperron had the opportunity to recommend Sponde to the Cardinal Legate, Pietro Aldobrandini, the Pope's nephew, who was working to arrange a peace between Henri of France and Charles Emmanuel of Savoy in the matter of the Marquesate of Saluzzo.[7] In Rome he became the Assessor of Cardinal Cesare Baronius, the Vatican Librarian from 1597 to 1607. He was ordained priest in Rome at the Basilica of San Marco on 7 March 1606, by Claudio Sozomen, Bishop of Pola. After his immediate return to France, he received a letter from Cardinal Baronius, dated 31 August 1606, granting him permission to publish his epitome of the Annales Ecclesiastici.[8] He was soon back in Rome, however, assisting Cardinal Baronius in seeing what turned out to be his last volume through the press.[9] Baronius died on 30 June 1607, and Sponde undertook to continue the work on the Annales, which had only reached the twelfth century.

Service in Rome edit

Pope Paul V then appointed him Corrector supplicationum in the office of the Apostolic Penitentiary. Frizon states that the appointment came after the appointment of Cardinal Scipione Caffarelli-Borghese as Major Penitentiary in 1610.[10] Sponde was also named Rector of the French Church in Rome, San Luigi dei Francesi. As Rector, he was concerned at the apparent laxness and inattention on the part of the Chaplains appointed to the Church, and he attempted to apply a remedy. He suggested to the Archbishop of Lyon, who was the French Ambassador in Rome, that Pierre de Bérulle might supply two Oratorian priests to the church of San Luigi to help raise standards. Chancellor Sillery obtained the King's agreement, and Pope Paul gave his, while Bérulle sent two priests from Paris.[11] The Administrators of Saint Louis and the Chaplains, however, feared the loss of their posts, raised such strong opposition that the two Oratorian priests asked to be repatriated. The affair dragged on for six years, until Pope Paul put an end to it, but in the meantime Father Sponde, realizing the difficulty of his position, resigned and returned to France.[12]

In February 1615 Sponde is recorded as living in a house at the foot of Monte Pincio below Santissima Trinità del Monte, from which, on 26 January he visited the parishes of San Bartolommeo all'Isola, San Niccolò in Carcere, and Santa Maria in Cosmedin, trying to bring peace to warring factions.[13]

Bishop edit

In 1625 he was nominated Bishop of Pamiers by King Louis XIII, and approved in Consistory by Pope Urban VIII on 20 July 1626.[14] As a mark of his special pleasure, the Pope ordered that Sponde's bulls be granted without the payment of the usual fees.[15] He was consecrated a bishop in Rome on 16 August 1626 by the Archbishop of Lyon, Cardinal Denis de Marquemont, who had just been created a Cardinal in January. It is said that fourteen cardinals had bid for the honor of being the principal consecrator.[16] He labored for the preservation of Catholicism and converted numerous Protestants.[17] In March 1628 he was credited with having successfully persuaded the leaders of Pamiers to open the gates of the city to the King, despite the intentions of the Huguenots in the city to resist to the death.[18] On 26 May 1628, Pope Urban VIII wrote him a letter congratulating him on his return to his diocese after having been driven out by the Huguenots.[19] In 1634 he was given his nephew, Jean de Sponde, to be his Coadjutor Bishop, with the expectation of succeeding his uncle. On 31 October 1634 Bishop Henri wrote his Last Will and Testament.[20] In 1638 he obtained an order in council of Louis XIII, granting him 60,000 livres over a period of ten years for the reconstruction of the cathedral and the bishop's residence.[21] Owing to ill-health, he attempted to resign his diocese in 1639, and retired to Paris;[22] the resignation, however, was not accepted.[23] Jean succeeded to the bishopric in 1641, and Henri left Paris and retired to Toulouse, but Jean died on 31 March 1643.[24]

Bishop Henri de Sponde died in Toulouse on 18 May 1643. He was buried in the Cathedral of Saint-Étienne.[25]

Works edit

His writings are:

  • Les Cimitières sacrez (in French). Bordeaux: impr. de S. Millanges. 1597.
  • Annales ecclesiastici Cæsaris Baronii in Epitomen redacti (Paris, 1612)
  • Annales sacri a mundi creatione ad ejusdem redemptionem (Paris, 1637), an epitome of the "Annals" of Agostino Tornielli
  • Annalium Baronii continuatio ab a. 1197 quo is desinit ad a. 1622 (Paris, 1639).

References edit

  1. ^ Frizon, p. ix.
  2. ^ The Collège was founded in 1571 by transferring the College of Lescar to Orthez. In 1583 King Henri III of Navarre proclaimed the little school a University, and in 1591 Catherine de Navarre transferred the academy back to Lescar. Joseph Coudirolle (1885). Étude sur l'Académie d'Orthez, fin du XVIe et commencement du XVIIe siècle ... (in French). Orthez: J. Goude-Dumesnil. pp. 16–28.
  3. ^ Frizon, p. xi.
  4. ^ Räss, III, p. 287.
  5. ^ Frizon, p. xii.
  6. ^ Räss, III, pp. 290-292, correcting the erroneous date given by Charles Perrault (1696). Les hommes illustres qui ont paru en France pendant ce siecle: avec leurs portraits au naturel (in French). Paris: Dezallier. pp. 5–6.
  7. ^ Frizon, p. xv.
  8. ^ Räss, III, p. 292. Frizon, xv-xvi.
  9. ^ Frizon, p. xvi.
  10. ^ Frizon, p. xvii.
  11. ^ Frizon, p. xvii.
  12. ^ Albert d' Armailhacq (1894). L'église nationale de Saint Louis des Français à Rome: notes historiques et descriptives (in French). la Paix, P. Cuggiani. pp. 31–32.
  13. ^ Frizon, p. xvi-xvii.
  14. ^ Gauchat, Hierarchia catholica IV, p. 88.
  15. ^ Lissène, p. 10.
  16. ^ Lissène, p. 11.
  17. ^ Frizon, pp. xx-xxi; xxviii-xxix.
  18. ^ Lissène, p. 18.
  19. ^ Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana XIII, Instrumenta p. 139.
  20. ^ Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana XIII, p. 176.
  21. ^ Mémoires de la Société archéologique du Midi de la France 65-66 (2005), pp. 185-187.
  22. ^ Frizon, p. xxx.
  23. ^ Gauchat, p. 88, note 3.
  24. ^ Gauchat, p. 88, with note 4.
  25. ^ Frizon, p. xxx. Sainte-Marthe, Gallia christiana XIII, p. 176.

Sources edit

  • Frizon, Pierre, Vita Henrici Spondani in: Sponde, Henri de Sponde (1675). Annalium ecclesiasticorum... cardinalis Caesaris Baronii continuatio, ab anno MCXCVII quo is desiit ad finem MDCXLVI (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. ex typographia haerededum Bartoli. pp. ix–xxxi.
  • Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). Hierarchia catholica IV (1592-1667). Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  • Lissene, Jacques (1643). Discours funebre de la mémoire de ... Henri de Sponde (in French). Toulouse: I. Bovde.
  • Ott, Michael (1912). "Henri Spondanus". In: The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 2017-11-22. [an inept condensation of Frizon]
  • Räss, Andreas (1866). Die Convertiten seit der Reformation nach ihrem Leben und aus ihren Schriften dargestellt. 13 Bde. [with] Personen- und Sachregister [by F. Janner] (in German). Vol. Dritter Band (3). Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder. pp. 285–295. [an epitome of Frizon]
  • Sainte-Marthe, Denis de (1785). Gallia christiana, in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa (in Latin). Vol. Tomus decimus-tertius (13) (second ed.). Paris: Johannes- Baptista Coignard. pp. 171–177, Instrumenta, pp. 138–139.
  • Vidal, Jean-Marie (1929). Henri de Sponde, recteur de Saint-Louis-des-Français, évêque de Pamiers, 1568-1643 (in French). Rome: Établissements français. [= Histoire des évêques de Pamiers, 4]

External links edit

Acknowledgment edit

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

henri, spondanus, sponde, born, mauléon, french, department, pyrénées, atlantiques, january, 1568, died, toulouse, 1643, french, catholic, jurist, historian, continuator, annales, ecclesiastici, compiled, cardinal, baronius, bishop, pamiers, convert, from, cal. Henri Spondanus de Sponde born at Mauleon in the French Department of Pyrenees Atlantiques January 6 1568 died at Toulouse May 18 1643 was a French Catholic jurist historian and continuator of the Annales Ecclesiastici compiled by Cardinal Baronius and Bishop of Pamiers He was a convert from Calvinism Henri de Sponde Bishop of Pamiers 1626 1641 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Conversion 1 1 1 Service in Rome 1 2 Bishop 2 Works 3 References 4 Sources 5 External links 5 1 AcknowledgmentBiography editHenri de Sponde s father Ennico Inigo was a Councilor and Private Secretary of Queen Jeanne d Albret of Navarre Henri was born at Mauleon in Bearn on 6 January 1568 His mother was Salvia de Hosia of Bayonne daughter of Martin de Hosia of Pamplona At his baptism into the Calvinist church at Pau baby Henri s godfather was Henri de Navarre the future King of Navarre and France 1 At the age of eight he began his studies at the Calvinist college of Orthez 2 His elder brother Jean was studying in Geneva and in 1584 published a Latin translation of Homer At the same time Henri inspired by the Psalms began to write poetry 3 After studying humanities and becoming proficient in Latin and Greek he followed his father into the service of the royal house of Navarre In 1589 he was jurist at the Parlement of Tours and was named a Councilor of King Henri of Navarre King Henri IV of France Henri accompanied the royal ambassador of Henri de Navarre Guillaume de Salluste Du Bartas to England and Scotland in 1597 4 and upon his return took up the study of Civil and Canon Law It was said that he could recite the entire Institutes of the Emperor Justinian from memory 5 Conversion edit Persuaded by the writings of Robert Bellarmine and convinced by the instructions of Cardinal Jacques Davy Duperron who had also instructed Henri IV Sponde became a Catholic officially converted by Louis Godebert the Penitentiary of Notre Dame de Paris on 21 August 1595 6 His father had already converted to Catholicism from Calvinism in 1593 In 1600 Henri was a member of the suite of Cardinal Francois de Sourdis who was sent to Rome as French ambassador and pilgrim in observance of the Holy Year of 1600 At Florence in December Cardinal Duperron had the opportunity to recommend Sponde to the Cardinal Legate Pietro Aldobrandini the Pope s nephew who was working to arrange a peace between Henri of France and Charles Emmanuel of Savoy in the matter of the Marquesate of Saluzzo 7 In Rome he became the Assessor of Cardinal Cesare Baronius the Vatican Librarian from 1597 to 1607 He was ordained priest in Rome at the Basilica of San Marco on 7 March 1606 by Claudio Sozomen Bishop of Pola After his immediate return to France he received a letter from Cardinal Baronius dated 31 August 1606 granting him permission to publish his epitome of the Annales Ecclesiastici 8 He was soon back in Rome however assisting Cardinal Baronius in seeing what turned out to be his last volume through the press 9 Baronius died on 30 June 1607 and Sponde undertook to continue the work on the Annales which had only reached the twelfth century Service in Rome edit Pope Paul V then appointed him Corrector supplicationum in the office of the Apostolic Penitentiary Frizon states that the appointment came after the appointment of Cardinal Scipione Caffarelli Borghese as Major Penitentiary in 1610 10 Sponde was also named Rector of the French Church in Rome San Luigi dei Francesi As Rector he was concerned at the apparent laxness and inattention on the part of the Chaplains appointed to the Church and he attempted to apply a remedy He suggested to the Archbishop of Lyon who was the French Ambassador in Rome that Pierre de Berulle might supply two Oratorian priests to the church of San Luigi to help raise standards Chancellor Sillery obtained the King s agreement and Pope Paul gave his while Berulle sent two priests from Paris 11 The Administrators of Saint Louis and the Chaplains however feared the loss of their posts raised such strong opposition that the two Oratorian priests asked to be repatriated The affair dragged on for six years until Pope Paul put an end to it but in the meantime Father Sponde realizing the difficulty of his position resigned and returned to France 12 In February 1615 Sponde is recorded as living in a house at the foot of Monte Pincio below Santissima Trinita del Monte from which on 26 January he visited the parishes of San Bartolommeo all Isola San Niccolo in Carcere and Santa Maria in Cosmedin trying to bring peace to warring factions 13 Bishop edit In 1625 he was nominated Bishop of Pamiers by King Louis XIII and approved in Consistory by Pope Urban VIII on 20 July 1626 14 As a mark of his special pleasure the Pope ordered that Sponde s bulls be granted without the payment of the usual fees 15 He was consecrated a bishop in Rome on 16 August 1626 by the Archbishop of Lyon Cardinal Denis de Marquemont who had just been created a Cardinal in January It is said that fourteen cardinals had bid for the honor of being the principal consecrator 16 He labored for the preservation of Catholicism and converted numerous Protestants 17 In March 1628 he was credited with having successfully persuaded the leaders of Pamiers to open the gates of the city to the King despite the intentions of the Huguenots in the city to resist to the death 18 On 26 May 1628 Pope Urban VIII wrote him a letter congratulating him on his return to his diocese after having been driven out by the Huguenots 19 In 1634 he was given his nephew Jean de Sponde to be his Coadjutor Bishop with the expectation of succeeding his uncle On 31 October 1634 Bishop Henri wrote his Last Will and Testament 20 In 1638 he obtained an order in council of Louis XIII granting him 60 000 livres over a period of ten years for the reconstruction of the cathedral and the bishop s residence 21 Owing to ill health he attempted to resign his diocese in 1639 and retired to Paris 22 the resignation however was not accepted 23 Jean succeeded to the bishopric in 1641 and Henri left Paris and retired to Toulouse but Jean died on 31 March 1643 24 Bishop Henri de Sponde died in Toulouse on 18 May 1643 He was buried in the Cathedral of Saint Etienne 25 Works editHis writings are Les Cimitieres sacrez in French Bordeaux impr de S Millanges 1597 Annales ecclesiastici Caesaris Baronii in Epitomen redacti Paris 1612 Annales sacri a mundi creatione ad ejusdem redemptionem Paris 1637 an epitome of the Annals of Agostino Tornielli Annalium Baronii continuatio ab a 1197 quo is desinit ad a 1622 Paris 1639 References edit Frizon p ix The College was founded in 1571 by transferring the College of Lescar to Orthez In 1583 King Henri III of Navarre proclaimed the little school a University and in 1591 Catherine de Navarre transferred the academy back to Lescar Joseph Coudirolle 1885 Etude sur l Academie d Orthez fin du XVIe et commencement du XVIIe siecle in French Orthez J Goude Dumesnil pp 16 28 Frizon p xi Rass III p 287 Frizon p xii Rass III pp 290 292 correcting the erroneous date given by Charles Perrault 1696 Les hommes illustres qui ont paru en France pendant ce siecle avec leurs portraits au naturel in French Paris Dezallier pp 5 6 Frizon p xv Rass III p 292 Frizon xv xvi Frizon p xvi Frizon p xvii Frizon p xvii Albert d Armailhacq 1894 L eglise nationale de Saint Louis des Francais a Rome notes historiques et descriptives in French la Paix P Cuggiani pp 31 32 Frizon p xvi xvii Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV p 88 Lissene p 10 Lissene p 11 Frizon pp xx xxi xxviii xxix Lissene p 18 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana XIII Instrumenta p 139 Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana XIII p 176 Memoires de la Societe archeologique du Midi de la France 65 66 2005 pp 185 187 Frizon p xxx Gauchat p 88 note 3 Gauchat p 88 with note 4 Frizon p xxx Sainte Marthe Gallia christiana XIII p 176 Sources editFrizon Pierre Vita Henrici Spondani in Sponde Henri de Sponde 1675 Annalium ecclesiasticorum cardinalis Caesaris Baronii continuatio ab anno MCXCVII quo is desiit ad finem MDCXLVI in Latin Vol Tomus primus ex typographia haerededum Bartoli pp ix xxxi Gauchat Patritius Patrice 1935 Hierarchia catholica IV 1592 1667 Munster Libraria Regensbergiana Retrieved 2016 07 06 Lissene Jacques 1643 Discours funebre de la memoire de Henri de Sponde in French Toulouse I Bovde Ott Michael 1912 Henri Spondanus In The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 2017 11 22 an inept condensation of Frizon Rass Andreas 1866 Die Convertiten seit der Reformation nach ihrem Leben und aus ihren Schriften dargestellt 13 Bde with Personen und Sachregister by F Janner in German Vol Dritter Band 3 Freiburg im Breisgau Herder pp 285 295 an epitome of Frizon Sainte Marthe Denis de 1785 Gallia christiana in provincias ecclesiasticas distributa in Latin Vol Tomus decimus tertius 13 second ed Paris Johannes Baptista Coignard pp 171 177 Instrumenta pp 138 139 Vidal Jean Marie 1929 Henri de Sponde recteur de Saint Louis des Francais eveque de Pamiers 1568 1643 in French Rome Etablissements francais Histoire des eveques de Pamiers 4 External links editAcknowledgment edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Henri Spondanus Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henri Spondanus amp oldid 1193300267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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