Francis Xavier Patrizi (Rome, 19 June 1797 Rome, 23 April 1881) was an Italian Jesuit exegete.

Life

He was the eldest son and heir of the Roman Marquis Giovanni Patrizi and his wife Princess Kunegunde of Saxony, entered the Society of Jesus, 12 November 1814, was ordained priest in 1824, and soon became professor of Sacred Scripture and Hebrew in the Roman College. The revolution of 1848 caused Patrizi and his fellow professor Perrone to take refuge in England. Here, and afterwards at the Catholic University of Leuven, Patrizi taught Scriptures to the Jesuit scholastics. When peace was restored at Rome, he again began to lecture in the Roman College. The revolution of 1870 ended his career as a teacher, and he found a home in the German-Hungarian College of Rome, remaining there till death.[1]

Works

He wrote twenty-one biblical and ascetical works. Of the former the most important are:[1]

  • De interpretatione scriptararum sacrarum (2 vols., Rome, 1844);
  • De consensu utriusque libri Machabæorum (Rome, 1856);
  • De Evangeliis (3 vols., Freiburg im Breisgau, 1853);
  • In Joannem commentarium (Rome, 1857); In Marcum commentarium (Rome, 1862);
  • In Actus Apostolorum commentarium (Commentary on the Acts of the Apostles; Rome, 1867);
  • Cento salmi tradotti litteralmente dal testo ebraico e commentati (a translation of the Psalms; Rome, 1875);
  • De interpretatione oraculorum ad Christum pertinentium (Rome, 1853);
  • De immaculata Mariæ origine (Origin of the Virgin Mary; Rome, 1853);
  • Delle parole di San Paolo: In quo omnes peccaverunt (Rome, 1876).

His Latin is classical and found to be plodding by some. His work on interpretation has gone through many editions. The Gospel commentaries were meant especially to refute the Rationalism of the time.[1]

References

Attribution
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Drum, Walter (1913). "Francis Xavier Patrizi". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. This work cites:
    • Hurter in Kirchenlexicon, s. v.
    • Sommervogel, Bibliothèque de la C. de J., VI, 366-69
    • Cività Cattolica, 11th series, VI, 491.
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