Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 837 pages of information about Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2.

Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 837 pages of information about Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2.
of Bavaria, Bobadilla succeeded in rendering the Interim proclaimed by Charles V. nugatory; while Le Jay founded the college of the Order at Vienna.  In this important post he was soon succeeded by Canisius, Ferdinand’s confessor, through whose co-operation Cardinal Morone afterwards brought this Emperor into harmony with the Papal plan for winding up the Council of Trent.  It should be added that Ingolstadt, in Bavaria, became the second headquarters of the Jesuit propaganda in Germany.

The methods adopted by Ignatius in dealing with his three lieutenants, Bobadilla, Le Jay, and Canisius, are so characteristic of Jesuit policy that they demand particular attention.  Checkmated by Bobadilla in the matter of the Interim, Charles V. manifested his resentment.  He was already ill-affected toward the Society, and its founder felt the need of humoring him.  The highest grade of the Order was therefore ostentatiously refused to Bobadilla, until such time as the Emperor’s attention was distracted from the cause of his disappointment.  With Le Jay and Canisius the case stood differently.  Ferdinand wished to make the former Bishop of Triest and the latter Archbishop of Vienna.  Ignatius opposed both projects, alleging that the Company of Jesus could not afford to part with its best servants, and that their vows of obedience and poverty were inconsistent with high office in the Church.  He discerned the necessity of reducing each member of the Society to absolute dependence on the General, which would have been impracticable if any one of them attained to the position of a prelate.  A law was therefore passed declaring it mortal sin for Jesuits to accept bishoprics or other posts of honor in the Church.  Instead of assuming the miter, Canisius was permitted to administer the See of Vienna without usufruct of its revenues.  To the world this manifested the disinterested zeal of the Jesuits in a seductive light; while the integrity of the Society, as an independent self-sufficing body, exacting the servitude of absolute devotion from its members, was secured.  Another instance of the same adroitness may be mentioned.  The Emperor in 1552 offered a Cardinal’s hat to Francis Borgia, who was by birth the most illustrious of living Jesuits.  Ignatius refrained from rebuffing the Emperor and insulting the Duke of Gandia by an open prohibition; but he told the former to expect the Duke’s refusal, while he wrote to the latter expressing his own earnest hope that he would renounce an honor injurious to the Society.  This diplomacy elicited a grateful but firm answer of Nolo Episcopari from the Duke, who thus took the responsibility of offending Charles V. upon himself.  Meanwhile the missionary objects of the Company were not neglected.  Xavier left Portugal in 1541 for that famous journey through India and China, the facts of which may be compared for their romantic interest with Cortes’ or Pizarro’s exploits.  Brazil, the transatlantic Portugal, was abandoned to the Jesuits, and they began

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Renaissance in Italy, Volumes 1 and 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.