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Manuel do Cenáculo

Dom Frei Manuel do Cenáculo, T.O.R. ( Manuel de Vilas-Boas Anes de Carvalho; 1 March 1724 – 26 January 1814) was a Portuguese Franciscan prelate, who served as the first Bishop of Beja (1770–1802) and as Archbishop of Évora (1802–1814).


Manuel do Cenáculo

Archbishop of Évora
Portrait of Frei Manuel do Cenáculo,
National Library of Portugal
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
DioceseArchdiocese of Évora
Appointed16 March 1802
Term ended26 January 1814
Other post(s)Bishop of Beja (1770–1802)
Orders
Ordination4 April 1747
Consecration28 October 1770
by Francisco de Saldanha da Gama
Personal details
Born
Manuel de Vilas-Boas Anes de Carvalho

(1724-03-01)1 March 1724
Died26 January 1814(1814-01-26) (aged 89)
Évora, Portugal
BuriedChurch of the Holy Spirit, Évora
Alma materUniversity of Coimbra
Styles of
Frei Manuel do Cenáculo
Reference styleHis Most Reverend Excellency
Spoken styleYour Most Reverend Excellency
Religious styleFrei Manuel

One of the country's leading intellectuals at the time, Manuel do Cenáculo was aligned with the novel ideas of the Enlightenment and the Pombaline reforms of public instruction in Portugal: he played a leading role in the reform of the University of Coimbra, he directed the Royal Censorship Board (with which deposits he for the first time proposed to create a national library), and gathered a vast collection of books, antiquities, and works of art.[1]

Following Pombal's fall from grace in 1777, Manuel do Cenáculo lost much of his influence at court and directed his attention to ecclesiastical life while, at the same time, spearheading the creation of public schools, libraries, and academies across the country; chief among them are the Évora Public Library, the Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences, and the art and archaeology collection that nowadays comprises the Frei Manuel do Cenáculo National Museum.

Early life edit

Of humble origins, Manuel de Vilas-Boas Anes de Carvalho was born in Lisbon, the son of José Martins, a metalsmith from the village of Constantim in Vila Real, and Antónia Maria.[2] He was brought up in the spirit of the prevalent Christian principles and values: his mother was the first to educate him in religion, instilling in him the virtues of charity and piety; his paternal uncle, Caetano Jerónimo, was a familiar of the Holy Office of the Inquisition.[3] According to Francisco Manuel Trigoso writing shortly after Manuel do Cenáculo's death, the seemingly unassuming family had illustrious forebears.[4] Cenáculo showed a great deal of ingenuousness about his upbringing: Father José Agostinho de Macedo once inquired about a scar on his face and he candidly replied that it was a burn from a spark that had generated as his father was hammering a red-hot iron rod on an anvil.[4]

He would have learned how to read and write in his parish church, as primary education was then usually entrusted to the parish priest.[3] At age 16, he took vows in the Third Order of Saint Francis, in the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus in Lisbon.[2] After first studies in the Humanities, he earned a doctorate in Theology from the University of Coimbra (26 May 1749); he soon started teaching at the College of the Arts in Coimbra and, later, Theology at the University.

In 1750, he travelled to Rome in the entourage of Frei Joaquim de São José for the General Chapter of the Franciscan Order, which coincided with a jubilee year; this meant Manuel do Cenáculo had ample opportunity to meet several distinguished individualities, among them leading scholar and historian Ludovico Antonio Muratori.[5] The atmosphere in Rome was one of great transformation as even Pope Benedict XIV was promoting the implementation of modern teaching reforms.[6] By his own admission, this voyage, with its many visits to libraries, museums, universities and direct contact with many foreign thinkers, left a lasting impression on his ideas on culture and teaching; the Enlightenment principles would be fully incorporated in his later activities as a reformer and as a pedagogue.[1][5] Around this time, he also developed an interest in Oriental languages, and became fluent in Syriac and Arabic, as he was already in Greek.[2][7]

 
Portrait of Frei Manuel do Cenáculo, 1771, by António Joaquim Padrão (Lisbon Academy of Sciences)

Upon his return to Portugal in 1751, he published Conclusiones de Logicæ ("Conclusions on Logic"), which became the first wide-ranging official Franciscan essay published in the country, applying modern philosophical ideas to the teaching of Logic; his consideration of History as a propaedeutic to Philosophy already shows the influence of Johann Jakob Brucker's chief work Historia Critica Philosophiæ ("Critical History of Philosophy").[6]

In 1768, he was elected Provincial of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Portugal. At the time, the country was ruled by the Marquis of Pombal as an enlightened despot, the chief minister of King Joseph I. Pombal's views on education as an affair of the State meant science and technology ought to be completely secularised and reformed. Pombal took advantage of Manuel do Cenáculo's valuable intelligence and innovative pedagogical ideas and appointed him to various political and administrative offices related to education and culture: in 1769, he appointed him the confessor (and, later, tutor) to the king's grandson and heir apparent, Joseph, Prince of Brazil; in 1770, President of the Board of Literary Providence (Junta da Providencia Literária), created for the reform of public instruction; in 1772, President of the Board of the Literary Subsidy (Junta do Subsídio Literário).[2][6]

Bishop of Beja edit

In 1770, Pope Clement XIV restored the ancient Diocese of Beja (the modern name of the Dioecesis Pacensis, or Diocese of Pax Julia), which had been suppressed following the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the 8th century AD. Manuel do Cenáculo was appointed the first bishop of the newly restored diocese in March of that year,[2] and was consecrated on 28 October by Cardinal-Patriarch Francisco de Saldanha da Gama, in the chapel of the Royal Palace of Ajuda.[4][8] He, however, remained at court in Lisbon.

In 1777, the death of King Joseph I meant the accession of his eldest daughter and heiress Queen Maria I: in a period that became known as "the Turnabout" ("a Viradeira"), the Marquis of Pombal and his political allies all fell from power — as the fervently religious Maria I was staunchly opposed to Pombal and his policies. Manuel do Cenáculo soon was banished to his bishopric in Beja, where he stayed for the next twenty-five years.[2] As Bishop of Beja, he was a great promoter of culture and education: he was an assiduous presence in many learned societies and conferences; he set up a public course of the Humanities and Theology in his own Episcopal Palace; he sponsored the education of poor boys from the mountains in Ourique so that they could return to their villages and promote the literacy of the population; he paid for Latin tutors and schoolteachers in remote villages.[2] Notably, he also promoted the training of Mestras de Meninas ("teachers for girls") which constituted a first step towards institutionalised education for women (only officially established in the country in 1815).[6]

Through his connections with many scholars in Spain, France, Italy, and elsewhere in Europe, during this time, Manuel do Cenáculo greatly expanded his collection of antiquities; to this also contributed the many ancient artefacts retrieved in his pioneering archaeological surveys in Beja.[4] Because the collection comprised many unwieldy artefacts that could not be conveniently displayed in a library or cabinet of curiosities, Manuel do Cenáculo chose a nearby church dedicated to Saint Sisenandus of Beja and repurposed it into a museum, the Museu Sisenando Cenaculano Pacense (referring to the saint, to himself, and to the ancient Roman name of the city of Beja, Pax Julia).[4]

Archbishop of Évora edit

 
Portrait of Frei Manuel do Cenáculo, Évora Public Library

In 1802, following the death of Archbishop Joaquim Xavier Botelho de Lima, the government of John, Prince Regent appointed Manuel do Cenáculo to the vacant metropolitan archbishopric of Évora, all resentments toward the allies of the Marquis of Pombal long past. In Évora, he also diligently promoted public education by creating a public library and museum, and having his precious collection of antiquities available for public fruition.[2]

He was in Évora in 1807, setting up courses in ecclesiastical history, Biblical theology, polemics, and morals, when these were interrupted by the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal in the context of the Peninsular War. As the Portuguese revolted against the French occupying forces, Évora's poorly-armed townsmen and militias were slaughtered in a short battle in July 1808 and the city was brutally sacked by the troops of Louis Henri Loison.[2] Archbishop Manuel do Cenáculo, at that point aged 85, refused Spanish colonel Frederico Moretti's suggestion to flee the city as it became apparent the French forces had won the battle; as the troops stormed the Cathedral (shooting a chaplain, and throwing grenades that killed several people gathering there), the Archbishop rose from the cathedra and, held at bayonet point, humbly capitulated, begging them to spare the lives of his flock. After seeing the Archepiscopal Palace occupied and sacked, especially his natural history museum and his library, and between violent threats and insults, Manuel do Cenáculo was arrested by the French and carried to prison in Beja, where he remained without recognising the authority of the new regency.[9]

After the Battle of Vimeiro in August put an end to the French invasion, there were instructions issued in the name of John, Prince Regent to restitute the Archbishop to his diocese in the most dignified way possible: Manuel do Cenáculo made his solemn re-entrance in Évora on 17 October 1808, escorted by a guard of honour comprising the Regiments of Estremoz, Évora, Olivença, and Moura, and was welcomed back with cheers, the chime of the bells, and pyrotechnics.[9]

On the last three years of his life, he started to lose his eyesight and he grew debilitated in his physical strength and his intellectual faculties.[2] He died on 26 January 1814; shortly afterwards, on 24 June, Francisco Manuel Trigoso delivered a Historical Praise of Frei Manuel do Cenáculo (Elogio Histórico de Fr. Manuel do Cenáculo) during a public session of the Royal Academy of Sciences, of which Manuel do Cenáculo had been an honorary member.[2]

He was buried under a plain ledgerstone in the sacristy of the Church of the Holy Spirit in Évora, annexed to the Jesuit College of the Holy Spirit, which today houses the University of Évora. It is inscribed:

Aeternae memoriae sacrum / D. D. Fr. Emmanuelis a Coe- / naculo Villas Boas ter- / tii Ordinis S. Francisci / alumni, primum Episcopi / Julio-Pacensis, postremo / Archiepiscopi Eborensis: / qui ob sedulam ac diutur- / nam operam, sive in Serenis- / simo Brasiliae Principe / D. Iozepho instituendo; si- / ve in re litteraria apud so- / dales et concives ad novam / quasi viram revocanda; si- / ve in aliis magnisque Rei- / publicae et Ecclesiae mu- / neribus integerrime obe- / undis; pietate duce ac Doc- / trina, Religionem et Pa- / triam sibi perenniter de- / vinxit. Obiit VII. Kal. Febr. / CIↃDCCCXIV aetatis suae / anno XC. Pontificatus XLIV. / Desideratissimo praesu- / li bene merenti posuit / Antonius Iosephus Olive- / rius.[10]

Legacy edit

 
The Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences (originally belonging to the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus), was endowed by Manuel do Cenáculo

Manuel do Cenáculo was one of the most prolific writers of his time, on a vast array of subjects. Among them, a work in defence of the educational reform doctrines of Luís António Verney, the great enemy of the methods of the Jesuits; a dissertation on the definability of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary (only defined after Cenáculo's death by Pope Pius IX in Ineffabilis Deus, 1854); Memórias Históricas do Ministério do Púlpito ("Historical Memoirs on the Ministry of the Pulpit", 1776), one of his most celebrated works, a contribution of great importance to the history of religious oratory in Portugal; Cuidados Literários do Prelado de Beja em Graça do seu Bispado ("Literary Cares of the Prelate of Beja on the Behalf of his Bishopric", 1791), detailing his pedagogical concerns and his archaeological endeavours in the south of the country.[2][11]

As bishop and archbishop, he published twenty-eight pastorals on different subjects; while Provincial of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Portugal, he wrote important dispositions on regular observance and instruction (1790), and an extensive historical memoir (1794) of that religious congregation.[2] These documents show Manuel do Cenáculo's views on the importance of an instructed clergy as an agent for the modernisation of the economy and of society as a whole, thoughts that are in keeping with his Enlightenment ideals.[12]

 
Ancient Roman artefacts seen in Beja and Évora by James Cavanah Murphy and published in his Travels in Portugal (1795)[13]

A recurring theme in Manuel do Cenáculo's writings is that libraries constitute a privileged means to further the cause of education, and striving to establish them is therefore a patriotic duty when such efforts are guided by the love of knowledge and public usefulness. Cenáculo was well-versed in the most widely circulated bibliothecography treatises of his time, such as those of Pierre Le Gallois (Traité des plus belles bibliothèques de l'Europe, 1680), Daniel Georg Morhof (Polyhistor, sive de auctorum notitia et rerum commentarii, 1707), and Johannes Lomeier (De bibliothecis liber singularis, 1680).[3] One of his greatest legacies remains his close association with the creation of what still are some of the most important public libraries in Portugal: he was the first to devise the Royal Public Library of Lisbon (the modern-day National Library of Portugal), he endowed the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus in Lisbon with a condign library (this is now the Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences), and founded Évora Public Library.[3] He is also credited with suggesting Diogo Barbosa Machado, the author of first great bibliographical reference book published in Portugal (Bibliotheca Lusitana) and founder of the Royal Academy of Portuguese History, to donate his valuable personal library to King Joseph I, to make up for the loss of the Royal Library in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake.[3]

Manuel do Cenáculo's important antiquities collection in Évora was severely depauperated during the Napoleonic invasions of Portugal during the Peninsular War, still during his lifetime. This did not prevent Emil Hübner on remarking on the importance and worth of the surviving collection.[4] Fortunately, Cenáculo had Félix Caetano da Silva draw faithful reproductions of his every epigraphic specimen; these have survived to this day in the collections of the Évora Public Library.[2]

Manuel do Cenáculo was very well-connected with leading intellectuals in Europe; his collected correspondence of more than five-thousand letters is kept at the Évora Public Library, where a significant amount of the drafts of Cenáculo's replies are also preserved. Gabriel Pereira, in his important reference work on the local history of Évora, Estudos Eborenses (1886–96), writes: "Cenáculo's correspondence fills an entire cabinet; among these stacks of letters, there are precious autographs; the great archbishop corresponded with scholars, artists, bibliophiles, princes, humble friars and missionaries; hundreds of protégés in all social strata in Spain, Italy, India, Brazil."[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Calafate, Pedro. "Filosofia Portuguesa: "Frei Manuel do Cenáculo Vilas Boas"". Instituto Camões. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Torres, João Romano. "Vilas Boas (D. frei Manuel do Cenáculo)". Portugal – Dicionário Histórico, Corográfico, Heráldico, Biográfico, Bibliográfico, Numismático e Artístico, Volume VII (in Portuguese). Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e Vaz, Francisco António Lourenço (2012). Medeiros, Filipa (ed.). A Ideia de Biblioteca na Obra de D. Frei Manuel do Cenáculo [The Idea of Library in the Work of D. Frei Manuel do Cenáculo]. Acervos Patrimoniais: Novas Perspectivas e Abordagens (in Portuguese). Mértola: Campo Arqueólogico de Mértola. pp. 77–96. hdl:10174/6823. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Ribeiro, José Silvestre (1873). Historia dos Estabelecimentos Scientificos, Litterarios e Artisticos de Portugal nos Successivos Reinados da Monarchia [History of the Scientific, Literary, and Artistic Establishments in Portugal in the Successive Reigns of the Monarchy] (in Portuguese). Vol.  III. Lisbon: Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencias. pp. 82–83, 336–338, 413–417.
  5. ^ a b Cabral, Maria Luísa (2011). "Uma jornada de Lisboa a Roma: leitura e interpretação de um manuscrito setecentista" [A journey from Lisbon to Rome: reading and interpretation of an eighteenth century manuscript]. Cultura: Revista de História e Teoria das Ideias (in Portuguese). 28: 89–102. doi:10.4000/cultura.180. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d Simões, Ana; Carneiro, Ana; Diogo, Maria Paula (1999). "Constructing Knowledge: Eighteenth-Century Portugal and the New Sciences". In Gavroglu, Kostas (ed.). Archimedes 2 — New Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology; "The Sciences in the European Periphery During the Enlightenment". Springer Science+Business Media. p. 1–40. ISBN 978-0-7923-6563-1.
  7. ^ von Kemnitz, Eva-Maria (20 April 2015). "Frei Manuel do Cenáculo". Dicionário de Orientalistas de Língua Portuguesa (in Portuguese). Centro de Estudos de Comunicação e Cultura. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  8. ^ Cheney, David M. "Archbishop Manuel do Cenáculo Villas Boas, T.O.R. †". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved 17 November 2020.
  9. ^ a b Amaral, Manuel. "Páginas Pessoais: O Saque de Évora pelo Exército Francês em 1808". O Portal da História (in Portuguese). Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  10. ^ Barata, António Francisco (1874). Esboços Chronologico-Biographicos dos Arcebispos da Egreja de Evora [A Chronological-Biographic Sketch of the Archbishops of the Church of Évora] (in Portuguese). Coimbra: Imprensa Litteraria. pp. 61–64.
  11. ^ Vaz, Francisco António Lourenço (2017). "As Ideias Pedagógicas na obra de Frei Manuel do Cenáculo". Cultura: Revista de História e Teoria das Ideias (in Portuguese). 36: 185–203. doi:10.4000/cultura.3712. hdl:10174/26389. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  12. ^ Oliveira, Márcia Carolina Ferreira de (2012). A Bibliofilia em Portugal no Início da Época Contemporânea: o Exemplo de D. Frei Manuel do Cenáculo [Bibliophilia in Portugal at the Beginning of Contemporary Age: the Example of D. Frei Manuel do Cenáculo] (doctoral thesis). University of Évora. hdl:10174/15186. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  13. ^ Murphy, James Cavanah (1795). Travels in Portugal; through the Provinces of Entre Douro e Minho, Beira, Estremadura, and Alem-Tejo, in the years 1789 and 1790 : Consisting of Observations on the Manners, Customs, Trade, Public Buildings, Arts, Antiquities, &c. of that Kingdom. London: A. Strahan, and T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davies.

External links edit

  • Catholic Hierarchy
  • Works by or about Manuel do Cenáculo at Internet Archive
  • Direcção-Geral do Património Cultural: National Museum of Friar Manuel do Cenáculo
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
New title (diocese restored)
Bishop of Beja
1770–1802
Succeeded by
Francisco Leitão de Carvalho, O.Cist.
Preceded by
Joaquim Xavier Botelho de Lima
Archbishop of Évora
1802–1814
Succeeded by
Joaquim de Santa Clara Brandão, O.S.B.

manuel, cenáculo, frei, manuel, vilas, boas, anes, carvalho, march, 1724, january, 1814, portuguese, franciscan, prelate, served, first, bishop, beja, 1770, 1802, archbishop, Évora, 1802, 1814, most, reverend, excellency, freit, archbishop, Évoraportrait, frei. Dom Frei Manuel do Cenaculo T O R ne Manuel de Vilas Boas Anes de Carvalho 1 March 1724 26 January 1814 was a Portuguese Franciscan prelate who served as the first Bishop of Beja 1770 1802 and as Archbishop of Evora 1802 1814 His Most Reverend Excellency D FreiManuel do CenaculoT O R Archbishop of EvoraPortrait of Frei Manuel do Cenaculo National Library of PortugalChurchRoman Catholic ChurchDioceseArchdiocese of EvoraAppointed16 March 1802Term ended26 January 1814Other post s Bishop of Beja 1770 1802 OrdersOrdination4 April 1747Consecration28 October 1770by Francisco de Saldanha da GamaPersonal detailsBornManuel de Vilas Boas Anes de Carvalho 1724 03 01 1 March 1724Lisbon PortugalDied26 January 1814 1814 01 26 aged 89 Evora PortugalBuriedChurch of the Holy Spirit EvoraAlma materUniversity of Coimbra Styles of Frei Manuel do CenaculoReference styleHis Most Reverend ExcellencySpoken styleYour Most Reverend ExcellencyReligious styleFrei Manuel One of the country s leading intellectuals at the time Manuel do Cenaculo was aligned with the novel ideas of the Enlightenment and the Pombaline reforms of public instruction in Portugal he played a leading role in the reform of the University of Coimbra he directed the Royal Censorship Board with which deposits he for the first time proposed to create a national library and gathered a vast collection of books antiquities and works of art 1 Following Pombal s fall from grace in 1777 Manuel do Cenaculo lost much of his influence at court and directed his attention to ecclesiastical life while at the same time spearheading the creation of public schools libraries and academies across the country chief among them are the Evora Public Library the Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences and the art and archaeology collection that nowadays comprises the Frei Manuel do Cenaculo National Museum Contents 1 Early life 2 Bishop of Beja 3 Archbishop of Evora 4 Legacy 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editOf humble origins Manuel de Vilas Boas Anes de Carvalho was born in Lisbon the son of Jose Martins a metalsmith from the village of Constantim in Vila Real and Antonia Maria 2 He was brought up in the spirit of the prevalent Christian principles and values his mother was the first to educate him in religion instilling in him the virtues of charity and piety his paternal uncle Caetano Jeronimo was a familiar of the Holy Office of the Inquisition 3 According to Francisco Manuel Trigoso writing shortly after Manuel do Cenaculo s death the seemingly unassuming family had illustrious forebears 4 Cenaculo showed a great deal of ingenuousness about his upbringing Father Jose Agostinho de Macedo once inquired about a scar on his face and he candidly replied that it was a burn from a spark that had generated as his father was hammering a red hot iron rod on an anvil 4 He would have learned how to read and write in his parish church as primary education was then usually entrusted to the parish priest 3 At age 16 he took vows in the Third Order of Saint Francis in the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus in Lisbon 2 After first studies in the Humanities he earned a doctorate in Theology from the University of Coimbra 26 May 1749 he soon started teaching at the College of the Arts in Coimbra and later Theology at the University In 1750 he travelled to Rome in the entourage of Frei Joaquim de Sao Jose for the General Chapter of the Franciscan Order which coincided with a jubilee year this meant Manuel do Cenaculo had ample opportunity to meet several distinguished individualities among them leading scholar and historian Ludovico Antonio Muratori 5 The atmosphere in Rome was one of great transformation as even Pope Benedict XIV was promoting the implementation of modern teaching reforms 6 By his own admission this voyage with its many visits to libraries museums universities and direct contact with many foreign thinkers left a lasting impression on his ideas on culture and teaching the Enlightenment principles would be fully incorporated in his later activities as a reformer and as a pedagogue 1 5 Around this time he also developed an interest in Oriental languages and became fluent in Syriac and Arabic as he was already in Greek 2 7 nbsp Portrait of Frei Manuel do Cenaculo 1771 by Antonio Joaquim Padrao Lisbon Academy of Sciences Upon his return to Portugal in 1751 he published Conclusiones de Logicae Conclusions on Logic which became the first wide ranging official Franciscan essay published in the country applying modern philosophical ideas to the teaching of Logic his consideration of History as a propaedeutic to Philosophy already shows the influence of Johann Jakob Brucker s chief work Historia Critica Philosophiae Critical History of Philosophy 6 In 1768 he was elected Provincial of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Portugal At the time the country was ruled by the Marquis of Pombal as an enlightened despot the chief minister of King Joseph I Pombal s views on education as an affair of the State meant science and technology ought to be completely secularised and reformed Pombal took advantage of Manuel do Cenaculo s valuable intelligence and innovative pedagogical ideas and appointed him to various political and administrative offices related to education and culture in 1769 he appointed him the confessor and later tutor to the king s grandson and heir apparent Joseph Prince of Brazil in 1770 President of the Board of Literary Providence Junta da Providencia Literaria created for the reform of public instruction in 1772 President of the Board of the Literary Subsidy Junta do Subsidio Literario 2 6 Bishop of Beja editIn 1770 Pope Clement XIV restored the ancient Diocese of Beja the modern name of the Dioecesis Pacensis or Diocese of Pax Julia which had been suppressed following the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the 8th century AD Manuel do Cenaculo was appointed the first bishop of the newly restored diocese in March of that year 2 and was consecrated on 28 October by Cardinal Patriarch Francisco de Saldanha da Gama in the chapel of the Royal Palace of Ajuda 4 8 He however remained at court in Lisbon In 1777 the death of King Joseph I meant the accession of his eldest daughter and heiress Queen Maria I in a period that became known as the Turnabout a Viradeira the Marquis of Pombal and his political allies all fell from power as the fervently religious Maria I was staunchly opposed to Pombal and his policies Manuel do Cenaculo soon was banished to his bishopric in Beja where he stayed for the next twenty five years 2 As Bishop of Beja he was a great promoter of culture and education he was an assiduous presence in many learned societies and conferences he set up a public course of the Humanities and Theology in his own Episcopal Palace he sponsored the education of poor boys from the mountains in Ourique so that they could return to their villages and promote the literacy of the population he paid for Latin tutors and schoolteachers in remote villages 2 Notably he also promoted the training of Mestras de Meninas teachers for girls which constituted a first step towards institutionalised education for women only officially established in the country in 1815 6 Through his connections with many scholars in Spain France Italy and elsewhere in Europe during this time Manuel do Cenaculo greatly expanded his collection of antiquities to this also contributed the many ancient artefacts retrieved in his pioneering archaeological surveys in Beja 4 Because the collection comprised many unwieldy artefacts that could not be conveniently displayed in a library or cabinet of curiosities Manuel do Cenaculo chose a nearby church dedicated to Saint Sisenandus of Beja and repurposed it into a museum the Museu Sisenando Cenaculano Pacense referring to the saint to himself and to the ancient Roman name of the city of Beja Pax Julia 4 Archbishop of Evora edit nbsp Portrait of Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Evora Public Library In 1802 following the death of Archbishop Joaquim Xavier Botelho de Lima the government of John Prince Regent appointed Manuel do Cenaculo to the vacant metropolitan archbishopric of Evora all resentments toward the allies of the Marquis of Pombal long past In Evora he also diligently promoted public education by creating a public library and museum and having his precious collection of antiquities available for public fruition 2 He was in Evora in 1807 setting up courses in ecclesiastical history Biblical theology polemics and morals when these were interrupted by the Napoleonic invasion of Portugal in the context of the Peninsular War As the Portuguese revolted against the French occupying forces Evora s poorly armed townsmen and militias were slaughtered in a short battle in July 1808 and the city was brutally sacked by the troops of Louis Henri Loison 2 Archbishop Manuel do Cenaculo at that point aged 85 refused Spanish colonel Frederico Moretti s suggestion to flee the city as it became apparent the French forces had won the battle as the troops stormed the Cathedral shooting a chaplain and throwing grenades that killed several people gathering there the Archbishop rose from the cathedra and held at bayonet point humbly capitulated begging them to spare the lives of his flock After seeing the Archepiscopal Palace occupied and sacked especially his natural history museum and his library and between violent threats and insults Manuel do Cenaculo was arrested by the French and carried to prison in Beja where he remained without recognising the authority of the new regency 9 After the Battle of Vimeiro in August put an end to the French invasion there were instructions issued in the name of John Prince Regent to restitute the Archbishop to his diocese in the most dignified way possible Manuel do Cenaculo made his solemn re entrance in Evora on 17 October 1808 escorted by a guard of honour comprising the Regiments of Estremoz Evora Olivenca and Moura and was welcomed back with cheers the chime of the bells and pyrotechnics 9 On the last three years of his life he started to lose his eyesight and he grew debilitated in his physical strength and his intellectual faculties 2 He died on 26 January 1814 shortly afterwards on 24 June Francisco Manuel Trigoso delivered a Historical Praise of Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Elogio Historico de Fr Manuel do Cenaculo during a public session of the Royal Academy of Sciences of which Manuel do Cenaculo had been an honorary member 2 He was buried under a plain ledgerstone in the sacristy of the Church of the Holy Spirit in Evora annexed to the Jesuit College of the Holy Spirit which today houses the University of Evora It is inscribed Aeternae memoriae sacrum D D Fr Emmanuelis a Coe naculo Villas Boas ter tii Ordinis S Francisci alumni primum Episcopi Julio Pacensis postremo Archiepiscopi Eborensis qui ob sedulam ac diutur nam operam sive in Serenis simo Brasiliae Principe D Iozepho instituendo si ve in re litteraria apud so dales et concives ad novam quasi viram revocanda si ve in aliis magnisque Rei publicae et Ecclesiae mu neribus integerrime obe undis pietate duce ac Doc trina Religionem et Pa triam sibi perenniter de vinxit Obiit VII Kal Febr CIↃDCCCXIV aetatis suae anno XC Pontificatus XLIV Desideratissimo praesu li bene merenti posuit Antonius Iosephus Olive rius 10 Legacy edit nbsp The Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences originally belonging to the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus was endowed by Manuel do Cenaculo Manuel do Cenaculo was one of the most prolific writers of his time on a vast array of subjects Among them a work in defence of the educational reform doctrines of Luis Antonio Verney the great enemy of the methods of the Jesuits a dissertation on the definability of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary only defined after Cenaculo s death by Pope Pius IX in Ineffabilis Deus 1854 Memorias Historicas do Ministerio do Pulpito Historical Memoirs on the Ministry of the Pulpit 1776 one of his most celebrated works a contribution of great importance to the history of religious oratory in Portugal Cuidados Literarios do Prelado de Beja em Graca do seu Bispado Literary Cares of the Prelate of Beja on the Behalf of his Bishopric 1791 detailing his pedagogical concerns and his archaeological endeavours in the south of the country 2 11 As bishop and archbishop he published twenty eight pastorals on different subjects while Provincial of the Third Order of Saint Francis in Portugal he wrote important dispositions on regular observance and instruction 1790 and an extensive historical memoir 1794 of that religious congregation 2 These documents show Manuel do Cenaculo s views on the importance of an instructed clergy as an agent for the modernisation of the economy and of society as a whole thoughts that are in keeping with his Enlightenment ideals 12 nbsp Ancient Roman artefacts seen in Beja and Evora by James Cavanah Murphy and published in his Travels in Portugal 1795 13 A recurring theme in Manuel do Cenaculo s writings is that libraries constitute a privileged means to further the cause of education and striving to establish them is therefore a patriotic duty when such efforts are guided by the love of knowledge and public usefulness Cenaculo was well versed in the most widely circulated bibliothecography treatises of his time such as those of Pierre Le Gallois Traite des plus belles bibliotheques de l Europe 1680 Daniel Georg Morhof Polyhistor sive de auctorum notitia et rerum commentarii 1707 and Johannes Lomeier De bibliothecis liber singularis 1680 3 One of his greatest legacies remains his close association with the creation of what still are some of the most important public libraries in Portugal he was the first to devise the Royal Public Library of Lisbon the modern day National Library of Portugal he endowed the Convent of Our Lady of Jesus in Lisbon with a condign library this is now the Library of the Lisbon Academy of Sciences and founded Evora Public Library 3 He is also credited with suggesting Diogo Barbosa Machado the author of first great bibliographical reference book published in Portugal Bibliotheca Lusitana and founder of the Royal Academy of Portuguese History to donate his valuable personal library to King Joseph I to make up for the loss of the Royal Library in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake 3 Manuel do Cenaculo s important antiquities collection in Evora was severely depauperated during the Napoleonic invasions of Portugal during the Peninsular War still during his lifetime This did not prevent Emil Hubner on remarking on the importance and worth of the surviving collection 4 Fortunately Cenaculo had Felix Caetano da Silva draw faithful reproductions of his every epigraphic specimen these have survived to this day in the collections of the Evora Public Library 2 Manuel do Cenaculo was very well connected with leading intellectuals in Europe his collected correspondence of more than five thousand letters is kept at the Evora Public Library where a significant amount of the drafts of Cenaculo s replies are also preserved Gabriel Pereira in his important reference work on the local history of Evora Estudos Eborenses 1886 96 writes Cenaculo s correspondence fills an entire cabinet among these stacks of letters there are precious autographs the great archbishop corresponded with scholars artists bibliophiles princes humble friars and missionaries hundreds of proteges in all social strata in Spain Italy India Brazil 2 References edit a b Calafate Pedro Filosofia Portuguesa Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Vilas Boas Instituto Camoes Retrieved 15 November 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Torres Joao Romano Vilas Boas D frei Manuel do Cenaculo Portugal Dicionario Historico Corografico Heraldico Biografico Bibliografico Numismatico e Artistico Volume VII in Portuguese Retrieved 15 November 2020 a b c d e Vaz Francisco Antonio Lourenco 2012 Medeiros Filipa ed A Ideia de Biblioteca na Obra de D Frei Manuel do Cenaculo The Idea of Library in the Work of D Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Acervos Patrimoniais Novas Perspectivas e Abordagens in Portuguese Mertola Campo Arqueologico de Mertola pp 77 96 hdl 10174 6823 Retrieved 18 November 2020 a b c d e f Ribeiro Jose Silvestre 1873 Historia dos Estabelecimentos Scientificos Litterarios e Artisticos de Portugal nos Successivos Reinados da Monarchia History of the Scientific Literary and Artistic Establishments in Portugal in the Successive Reigns of the Monarchy in Portuguese Vol III Lisbon Typographia da Academia Real das Sciencias pp 82 83 336 338 413 417 a b Cabral Maria Luisa 2011 Uma jornada de Lisboa a Roma leitura e interpretacao de um manuscrito setecentista A journey from Lisbon to Rome reading and interpretation of an eighteenth century manuscript Cultura Revista de Historia e Teoria das Ideias in Portuguese 28 89 102 doi 10 4000 cultura 180 Retrieved 15 November 2020 a b c d Simoes Ana Carneiro Ana Diogo Maria Paula 1999 Constructing Knowledge Eighteenth Century Portugal and the New Sciences In Gavroglu Kostas ed Archimedes 2 New Studies in the History and Philosophy of Science and Technology The Sciences in the European Periphery During the Enlightenment Springer Science Business Media p 1 40 ISBN 978 0 7923 6563 1 von Kemnitz Eva Maria 20 April 2015 Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Dicionario de Orientalistas de Lingua Portuguesa in Portuguese Centro de Estudos de Comunicacao e Cultura Retrieved 15 November 2020 Cheney David M Archbishop Manuel do Cenaculo Villas Boas T O R Catholic Hierarchy org Retrieved 17 November 2020 a b Amaral Manuel Paginas Pessoais O Saque de Evora pelo Exercito Frances em 1808 O Portal da Historia in Portuguese Retrieved 16 November 2020 Barata Antonio Francisco 1874 Esbocos Chronologico Biographicos dos Arcebispos da Egreja de Evora A Chronological Biographic Sketch of the Archbishops of the Church of Evora in Portuguese Coimbra Imprensa Litteraria pp 61 64 Vaz Francisco Antonio Lourenco 2017 As Ideias Pedagogicas na obra de Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Cultura Revista de Historia e Teoria das Ideias in Portuguese 36 185 203 doi 10 4000 cultura 3712 hdl 10174 26389 Retrieved 18 November 2020 Oliveira Marcia Carolina Ferreira de 2012 A Bibliofilia em Portugal no Inicio da Epoca Contemporanea o Exemplo de D Frei Manuel do Cenaculo Bibliophilia in Portugal at the Beginning of Contemporary Age the Example of D Frei Manuel do Cenaculo doctoral thesis University of Evora hdl 10174 15186 Retrieved 18 November 2020 Murphy James Cavanah 1795 Travels in Portugal through the Provinces of Entre Douro e Minho Beira Estremadura and Alem Tejo in the years 1789 and 1790 Consisting of Observations on the Manners Customs Trade Public Buildings Arts Antiquities amp c of that Kingdom London A Strahan and T Cadell Jun and W Davies External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Manuel do Cenaculo Catholic Hierarchy Works by or about Manuel do Cenaculo at Internet Archive Direccao Geral do Patrimonio Cultural National Museum of Friar Manuel do Cenaculo Catholic Church titles Preceded byNew title diocese restored Bishop of Beja1770 1802 Succeeded byFrancisco Leitao de Carvalho O Cist Preceded byJoaquim Xavier Botelho de Lima Archbishop of Evora1802 1814 Succeeded byJoaquim de Santa Clara Brandao O S B Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Portugal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Manuel do Cenaculo amp oldid 1199276514, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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