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'''Carlo Borromeo''' ({{lang-it|Carlo Borromeo}}, {{lang-la|Carolus Borromeus}}, 1538–1584) was the [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinal]] [[Archdiocese of Milan|archbishop of Milan]] from 1564 to 1584. Among the great reformers of the troubled sixteenth century, Borromeo, with St. [[Ignatius of Loyola]], St. [[Philip Neri]], and others, led the movement to combat the inroads of the Protestant Reformation. He was a leading figure during the [[Counter-Reformation]] and was responsible for significant reforms in the [[Catholic Church]], including the founding of [[seminaries]] for the education of priests. He is honoured as a [[saint]] in the [[Catholic Church]] and his [[feast day]] is 4 November.
'''Saint Carlo Borromeo''' ({{lang-it|Carlo Borromeo}}, {{lang-la|Carolus Borromeus}}, 1538–1584) was the [[Cardinal (Catholicism)|cardinal]] [[Archdiocese of Milan|archbishop of Milan]] from 1564 to 1584. Among the great reformers of the troubled sixteenth century, Borromeo, with St. [[Ignatius of Loyola]], St. [[Philip Neri]], and others, led the movement to combat the inroads of the Protestant Reformation. He was a leading figure during the [[Counter-Reformation]] and was responsible for significant reforms in the [[Catholic Church]], including the founding of [[seminaries]] for the education of priests. He is honoured as a [[saint]] in the [[Catholic Church]] and his [[feast day]] is 4 November.


==Sources==
==Sources==

Revision as of 02:52, 10 March 2013

Saint Carlo Borromeo
Cardinal Archbishop of Milan
Carlo Borromeo, by Giovanni Figino. Oil on canvas, 41 × 48 cm. Biblioteca Ambrosiana
ChurchCatholic Church
SeeMilan
Installed12 May 1564
Term ended3 November 1584
PredecessorFilippo Archinto
SuccessorGaspare Visconti
Orders
Ordination4 September 1563
Consecration7 December 1563
by Giovanni Serbelloni
Created cardinal31 January 1560
RankCardinal-Priest of Santa Prassede
Personal details
Born
Count Carlo Borromeo di Arona

(1538-10-02)2 October 1538
Died3 November 1584(1584-11-03) (aged 46)
Milan
BuriedMilan Cathedral
ParentsGilberto Borromeo, 7th Count of Arona
Margherita de' Medici di Marignano
Sainthood
Feast dayNovember 4
Venerated inCatholic Church
Beatified12 May 1602
by Pope Paul V
Canonized1 November 1610
by Pope Paul V
Attributescord, red cardinal robes
Patronageagainst ulcers; apple orchards; bishops; catechists; catechumens; colic; intestinal disorders; Lombardy, Italy; Monterey California; seminarians; spiritual directors; spiritual leaders; starch makers; stomach diseases; São Carlos city in Brazil (as the name indicates)
ShrinesMilan Cathedral

Saint Carlo Borromeo (Template:Lang-it, Template:Lang-la, 1538–1584) was the cardinal archbishop of Milan from 1564 to 1584. Among the great reformers of the troubled sixteenth century, Borromeo, with St. Ignatius of Loyola, St. Philip Neri, and others, led the movement to combat the inroads of the Protestant Reformation. He was a leading figure during the Counter-Reformation and was responsible for significant reforms in the Catholic Church, including the founding of seminaries for the education of priests. He is honoured as a saint in the Catholic Church and his feast day is 4 November.

Sources

His life was originally written by three eminent persons who all had occasion to live some time with him. Two in Latin, by Agostino Valerio, afterwards Cardinal and Bishop of Verona, and by Carlo Bascape, General of the Barnabites, afterwards Bishop of Novara; plus a third in more detail in Italian by Pietro Giussano, a priest of the congregation of the Oblates at Milan.[1]

Early life

His father, Count Gilberto Borromeo was a man of piety and ability, and his mother was a member of the Milan branch of the House of Medici. The third son in a family of six children, Carlo was born in the castle of Arona on Lake Maggiore, fourteen miles from Milan, on October 2, 1538.[2] The family of Borromeo was one of the most ancient and wealthy in Lombardy, and famous for several great men, both in the church and state.[1] The aristocratic Borromeo family's coat of arms included the Borromean rings, sometimes taken to symbolize the Holy Trinity.

He received the tonsure when he was about twelve years old. At this time his paternal uncle, Julius Caesar Borromeo, turned over to him the income from the rich Benedictine abbey of Sts. Gratinian and Felin, one of the ancient perquisites of this noble family. In spite of his youth, Carlo made plain to his father that all revenues from the abbey beyond what was required to prepare him for a career in the Church belonged to the poor and could not be applied to secular use. The young man attended the University of Pavia, where he applied himself to the study of civil and canon law. Due to a slight impediment of speech, he was regarded as slow; yet his thoroughness and industry more than compensated for the handicap.[2] In 1554 his father died, and although he had an elder brother, Count Federico, he was requested by the family to take the management of their domestic affairs. After a time, he resumed his studies, and on December 6, 1559 he earned a doctorate in utroque iure.

Rome period

On December 25, 1559 his uncle, Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Medici, was raised to the pontificate as Pope Pius IV. The new elected pope required his nephew Charles Borromeo to come to Rome, and on January 13, 1560 appointed him protonotary apostolic.[3] Shortly thereafter, on January 31, 1560 the Pope created him Cardinal, and thus Charles Borromeo as Cardinal-nephew was entrusted with both the public and the privy seal of the ecclesiastical state.[4] He was also entrusted in the government of the Papal States and appointed supervisor of the Franciscans, Carmelites and Knights of Malta.

During his four years in Rome Charles Borromeo lived in austerity, compelled the personnel in the Roman Curia to wear black and established an academy of learned persons, the Academy of the Vatican Nights, publishing their memoirs as the Noctes Vaticanae.[5]

Charles committed to organize the third and last section of the Council of Trent, in 1562-63. He took a large share in the creation of the Tridentine Catechism (Catechismus Romanus). In 1561, Borromeo founded and endowed a college at Pavia, today known as Almo Collegio Borromeo, which he dedicated to Saint Justina of Padua.

On November 19, 1562 his older brother, Federico, suddenly died. His family urged Charles to quit the church to marry and have children, so that the family name would not become extinct, but he decided not to leave the ecclesiastic state.[6] His brother's death, along with his contacts with the Jesuits and the Theatines and the example of bishops such as Bartholomew of Braga, were the causes of a conversion of Charles towards a more strict and operative Christian life, and his aim became to put into practice the dignity and duties of the bishop as drafted by the recent Council of Trent.[5]

Archbishop of Milan

Charles Borromeo was appointed Administrator of the Archdiocese of Milan on February 7, 1560. After his decision to put into practice the role of bishop, he decided to be ordained Priest (September 4, 1563) and on December 7, 1563 he was consecrated bishop in the Sistine Chapel by Cardinal Giovanni Serbelloni.[7] Charles was formally appointed archbishop of Milan on May 12, 1564 after the former archbishop Ippolito II d'Este waived his claims on that archbishopric, but he was only allowed by the Pope to leave Rome one year later: Charles Borromeo made his formal entry in Milan as archbishop on September 23, 1565.[6]

Reform Program (Acta Ecclesiae Mediolanensis)

Intercession of Charles Borromeo supported by the Virgin Mary by Rottmayr (Karlskirche, Vienna)

After the death of his uncle, Pius IV (1566), Borromeo contributed materially to suppressing the cabals of the conclave. Before Borromeo went to Milan, while he was overseeing reform in Rome, a nobleman remarked that the latter city was no longer a place to enjoy oneself or to make a fortune. "Carlo Borromeo has undertaken to remake the city from top to bottom," he said, predicting dryly that the reformer's enthusiasm "would lead him to correct the rest of the world once he has finished with Rome."[8]

Subsequently he devoted himself wholly to the reformation of his diocese. It had deteriorated in practice owing to the 80-year absence of previous archbishops.[9] When Borromeo arrived in Milan, he faced a daunting task. Milan was the largest archdiocese in Italy at the time, with more than 3,000 clergy and 800,000 people. Both its clergy and laity had drifted from church teaching. The selling of indulgences and ecclesiastical positions was prevalent; monasteries were "full of disorder"; many religious were "lazy, ignorant, and debauched".[8] Borromeo made numerous pastoral visits, and restored dignity to divine service. In conformity with the decrees of the Council of Trent, which suggested simplifying church interiors, Borromeo cleared the cathedral of ornate tombs, rich ornaments, banners, and arms. He did not even spare the monuments of his own relatives. He divided the nave of the church into two compartments to separate the sexes at worship.

He extended his reforms to the collegiate churches, monasteries and even to the Confraternities of Penitents, particularly that of St. John the Baptist. This group was to attend to prisoners and those condemned to death, to give them help and support.

Borromeo believed that abuses in the church arose from ignorant clergy. Among his most important actions, he established seminaries, colleges and communities for the education of candidates for holy orders.[10] His emphasis on Catholic learning greatly increased the preparation of men for priesthood and benefited their congregations. In addition, Borromeo founded the fraternity of Oblates of St. Ambrose, a society of secular men who did not take orders, but devoted themselves to the church and followed a discipline of monastic prayers and study. They provided assistance to parishes where ordered by the church.[9] The new archbishop's efforts for catechesis and the instruction of youth were especially fruitful, initiating the work of the Confraternity for Christian Doctrine and the first “Sunday School” classes.

His reforms of the diocese, in accordance with the decrees of the council, were dramatic and effective. Borromeo faced staunch opposition of several religious orders, particularly that of the Humiliati (Brothers of Humility), a decayed penitential order which, although reduced to about 170 members, owned some ninety monasteries. Some members of that society formed a conspiracy against his life, and a shot was fired at him in the archiepiscopal chapel. His survival was considered miraculous.[10]

In 1576 there was famine at Milan due to crop failures, and later came an outbreak of the plague. The city's trade fell off, and along with it the people's source of income. The governor and many members of the nobility fled the city, but the bishop remained, to organize the care of those who were stricken and to minister to the dying. He called together the superiors of all the religious communities in the diocese, and won their cooperation. Borromeo tried to feed 60,000 to 70,000 people daily. He used up his own funds and went into debt to provide food for the hungry. Finally he wrote to the governor, and shamed him into coming back to his post.[4][2]

Borromeo had also been involved in English affairs when he assisted Pius IV. Many English Catholics had fled to Italy at this time because of the persecutions under Queen Elizabeth. He gave important pastoral attention to English Catholics who fled to Italy to escape the new laws against the Catholic faith.[10] Saint Edmund Campion, a Jesuit, visited Borromeo at Milan in 1580 on his way to England. Campion visited with Borromeo for eight days, when they would talk at length every night after dinner. A Welshman, Dr. Griffith Roberts, served as Borromeo's canon theologian, and an Englishman, Thomas Goldwell, as vicar-general. The Archbishop carried on his person a small picture of St. John Fisher, who, with St. Thomas More, had been martyred for the faith during the reign of Henry VIII, and for whom he held a great veneration.

Suppression of witchcraft and heresy

Painting by Francesco Caccianiga showing an angel tending to Charles Borromeo

Though the Diet of Ilanz of 1524 and 1526 had proclaimed freedom of worship in the Republic of the Three Leagues, Saint Carlo repressed Protestantism in the Swiss valleys. The Catholic Encyclopedia relates: “In November [1583] he began a visitation as Apostolic visitor of all the cantons of Switzerland and the Grisons, leaving the affairs of his diocese in the hands of Monsignor Owen Lewis, his vicar-general. He began in the Mesoleina Valley; here not only was there heresy to be fought, but also witchcraft and sorcery, and at Roveredo it was discovered that the provost, or rector, was the foremost in sorceries.”[11] During his pastoral visit to the region, the Cardinal had about a hundred people arrested for practising witchcraft. Ten women and the provost were condemned to "the flaming death". They were put to death by being placed head-first in the fire.[12]

Reacting to the pressure of the Protestant Reformation, Borromeo encouraged Ludwig Pfyffer in his development of the Golden League, but did not live to see its formation in 1586. Based in Lucerne, the organization (also called the Borromean League) linked activities of several Swiss Catholic cantons of Switzerland, which became the centre of Catholic Counter-Reformation efforts. This organization was determined to expel heretics and burned some people at the stake. It created severe strains in the civil administration of the confederation, and caused the break-up of Appenzell canton along religious lines.[citation needed]

Controversy and last days

Crypt of Charles Borromeo, in the Duomo di Milano.

“An austere, dedicated, humorless and uncompromising personality” is the way that a biographer—an admiring biographer—describes Carlo Borromeo. Charged with implementing the reforms dictated by the Council of Trent, Borromeo had to be tough, and his toughness brought him into conflict with secular leaders, priests, and even the pope himself.[8] Borromeo met with much opposition to his reforms. The governor of the province, and many of the senators, addressed complaints to the courts of Rome and Madrid. They were apprehensive that the cardinal's ordinances would encroach upon the civil jurisdiction.

He successfully attacked his Jesuit confessor, Giovanni Battista Ribera, who, with other members of the college of Milan, was found to be guilty of unnatural offenses. This action increased Borromeo's enemies within the church.

Borromeo's manifold labors and austerities appear to have shortened his life. Travels in his diocese, especially in the difficult Alpine country, had weakened the bishop's constitution. In 1584, during his annual retreat at Monte Varallo, he was stricken with an intermittent fever and ague, and on returning to Milan grew rapidly worse. After receiving the Last Sacraments, the beloved bishop died quietly on November 4, at the age of forty-six.[2]

Veneration

People's devotion to Borromeo as a saint arose quickly and continued to grow. The Milanese celebrated his anniversary as though he were already canonized. Supporters collected documentation for his canonization. They began the process at Milan, Pavia, Bologna and other places. In 1602 Pope Paul V beatified Borromeo. In 1604 his case was sent on to the Congregation of Rites. On 1 November 1610, Paul V canonized Carlo Borromeo. Three years later, the church added Borromeo's feast to the Roman Catholic calendar of saints for celebration on 4 November. Along with Anselm of Lucca, he is one of only two cardinal-nephews to have been canonized. He was canonized in 1610, and his feast is celebrated on 4 November each year in the Roman Catholic Rite.

Iconography

Borromeo's emblem is the Latin word humilitas (humility), which is a portion of the Borromeo shield. He is usually represented in art in his robes, barefoot, carrying the cross as archbishop; a rope round his neck, one hand raised in blessing, thus recalling his work during the plague.

Legacy

Il Sancarlone (Template:Lang-en): colossal statue of Carlo Borromeo erected in Arona, Italy in 1697. The work of Giovanni Battista Crespi, the statue is 23 m tall and stands on a plinth 12 m. in height.

The position which Carlo Borromeo held in Europe was remarkable. He is venerated as a saint of learning and the arts. The mass of correspondence both to and by him testifies to how often his opinion was sought. The popes under whom he served sought his advice. The Catholic sovereigns of Europe – Henry III of France, Philip II of Spain, Mary, Queen of Scots – and others showed how they valued his influence. His brother cardinals wrote in praise of his virtues. Cardinal Valerio of Verona said of him that Borromeo was "to the well-born a pattern of virtue, to his brother cardinals an example of true nobility." Cardinal Baronius styled him "a second Ambrose, whose early death, lamented by all good men, inflicted great loss on the Church."

Late in the sixteenth or at the beginning of the seventeenth century, Catholics in England circulated among themselves a "Life of St. Charles".[13]

  • Besides the Noctes Vaticanae, to which he appeared to have contributed, Borromeo's written legacy consisted only of some homilies, discourses and sermons, with a collection of letters. Borromeo's sermons have been translated into many languages.
  • Contrary to Borromeo's last wishes, the Duomo di Milano created a memorial crypt to honor him at the church.
  • His nephew, Federico Borromeo (1564–1631), was archbishop of Milan from 1595 and, furthering Carlo's support for Catholic learning, in 1609 founded the Ambrosian Library in that city. He donated a tremendous collection of art and literature to the library.
  • His relative Federico Borromeo and admirers commissioned a statue 20 m high that was erected on the hill above Arona, as they regarded him an important leader of the Counter-Reformation.
  • The city and county of St. Charles, Missouri are named for Borromeo. Also, a Brazilian city was named after him, named in Portuguese São Carlos.
  • The Parish of St. Charles, Louisiana is named for Borromeo.
Depiction of Charles Borromeo in a stained glass window.

Karlskirche, Vienna, Austria; Carolus Borromeuskerk, Antwerp, Belgium; Mission San Carlos Borromeo de Carmelo in Carmel-by-the-Sea, California; Cathedral of San Carlos Borromeo in nearby Monterey, California; the city of Saint Charles, Missouri, San Carlos City, Negros Occidental, are all named in his honor.

Roman Catholic schools and parishes named for St. Charles Borromeo include those in: Toronto, Canada; Tacoma, Washington; Kettering, Ohio; Fort Wayne, Indiana; Bloomington, Indiana; Albuquerque, New Mexico; Bayport, Minnesota; Paisley, Scotland; Brooklyn, New York, Staten Island, New York; Syracuse, New York; London, England; New York; Woonsocket, Rhode Island; Cinnaminson, New Jersey; Montgomery, New Jersey; Peoria, Arizona; Orlando, Florida; Port Charlotte, Florida; San Francisco, California; Livermore, California; Sacramento, California; Bloomington, California; Columbus, Ohio; Lima, Ohio; Cassville, Wisconsin;Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin; Hartland, Wisconsin; Pikesville, Maryland; Arlington, Virginia; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Cheboygan, Michigan; Ahoskie, North Carolina; Newport, Michigan; Frankston, Texas; Ryde, New South Wales, Australia; Waverley, New South Wales, Australia; Portland, Oregon; Cleveland, Ohio; Cebu City, Philippines

A number of seminaries besr his name: The San Carlos Seminary of the Archdiocese of Manila in Makati City, Philippines, San Carlos Major Seminary of the Archdiocese of Cebu, University of San Carlos in Cebu City, Philippines, the Priestly Seminary of St. Charles Borromeo (Kňazský Seminár sv. Karola Boromejského) in Košice, Slovakia,[14] the seminary of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Colegio San Carlos in Bogotá, Colombia, the Saint Charles Borromeo Seminary of the Catholic Diocese of El Paso, Texas, are all named after him.

Also, a castle (fortress) in Margarita Island, Venezuela is named after him.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Butler, Alban, The Lives or the Fathers, Martyrs and Other Principal Saints, Vol. III
  2. ^ a b c d "St. Charles Borromeo Archbishop, Cardinal", Lives of the Saints, John J. Crowley & Co., Inc.
  3. ^ Salvador Miranda. "Borromeo, Carlo". Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
  4. ^ a b Foley, O.F.M., Leonard, Saint of the Day (rev. by Pat McCloskey O.F.M.)
  5. ^ a b De Certau, Michel (1977). "Carlo Borromeo, santo". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 20. Treccani.
  6. ^ a b Cazzani, Eugenio (1996). Vescovi e arcivescovi di Milano (in Italian). Milano: Massimo. pp. 226–230. ISBN 88-7030-891-X.
  7. ^ David Cheney. "St. Charles Cardinal Borromeo". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved 20 Jan 2013.
  8. ^ a b c Swetnam, Susan H., "My Best Teachers Were Saints", Loyola Press, ISBN 978-0-8294-2329-7
  9. ^ a b "Saint Charles Borromeo", Catholic Online, accessed 14 Dec 2008
  10. ^ a b c "St. Charles Borromeo", Catholic News Agency, November 4, 2013
  11. ^ Keogh, William. "St. Carlo Borromeo." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. 11 Jan. 2013
  12. ^ Louise M. Stacpoole-Kenny, Saint Charles Borromeo: a sketch of the reforming cardinal, 1911.
  13. ^ G.P. Giussano, Vita di S. Carlo Borromeo (1610, England, HE Manning, ed., reprinted, London: 1884)
  14. ^ www.kske.sk

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