Baldassarre Bonifacio
Bishop of Koper
Memorial plaque for Msgr. Baldassarre Bonifacio (Chiesa della Beata Vergine del Soccorso, Rovigo)
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseDiocese of Koper
Appointed23 November 1653
Term ended17 November 1659
PredecessorPietro Morari
SuccessorFrancesco Zeno
Orders
Consecration30 November 1653 (Bishop)
by Marcantonio Bragadin
Personal details
Born(1585-02-05)5 February 1585
Died17 November 1659(1659-11-17) (aged 74)
Capodistria, Republic of Venice
BuriedAssumption Cathedral, Koper
ParentsBonifacio Bonifacio and Paola Bonifacio (née Corniani)
Alma materUniversity of Padua

Baldassarre Bonifacio (5 January 1585 – 17 November 1659) was an Italian Catholic bishop, theologian, scholar and historian, known for his work De archivis liber singularis (1632), the first known treatise on the management of archives.[1]

Biography

Baldassare Bonifacio was born at Crema, in the Republic of Venice, on January 5, 1586, the son of Bonifacio Bonifacio, celebrated jurist and assessor, and of Paola Corniani, the daughter of Giovanni Francesco Corniani, likewise jurist and assessor.[2] He studied humanities at Rovigo under the supervision of Antonio Riccoboni and graduated in law at the University of Padua at the age of eighteen.[3] About two years later he was appointed professor of law at the college of Rovigo, where he lectured on the Institutes of Justinian.[4]

Sometime within the next five years, Bonifacio accompanied Count Girolamo di Porzia, bishop of Adria and papal nuncio, to Germany as a private secretary.[2] Upon his return to the Republic of Venice he was made archpriest of Rovigo. In 1619 Bonifacio was nominated as professor of classics at the University of Padua but turned down the position.[5]

In the next year the Venetian Senate offered him the position of professor of civil law at the Academy of Nobles in Venice.[6] At the time of his acceptance he was in Rome. Before his return Pope Urban VIII, upon the recommendation of the Venetian Senate, named him to the bishopric of Hierapetra and Sitia on the Greek island of Crete. Bonifacio declined the post for health and safety concerns. As partial compensation, the pope appointed him archdeacon of Treviso, in which office he served four successive bishops (Francesco Giustiniani, Vincenzo Giustiniani, Silvestro Morosini and Marco Morosini).[7]

In 1636, the Republic of Venice created a new college for the sons of the nobility at Padua. By public decree, it named Bonifacio dean, at a generous stipend, of the new institution which was formally opened in 1637. He directed the college for only a short time, after which he was succeeded by the Milanese scholar Francesco Bernardino Ferrari.[8] Shortly afterwards he founded the Accademia dei Solleciti in Treviso.[5]

In 1653, he was appointed bishop of Koper, a position he held until his death. He died on 17 November 1659, aged 75, and was buried in his cathedral church, close by the altar of the Epiphany (which he had privately contributed).[9] Bonifacio was an erudite and prolific author (scribacissimus homo, according to Morhof, Polyhistor, 1732, p. 1070). He is best known by his Historia Ludicra, a collection of miscellaneous notes on a vast variety of subjects originally published in Venice in 1652. The first edition of the work had no index or table, and its contents were consequently almost inaccessible. Jean Mommart supplied this want in his edition of 1656, to which he has prefixed a full table and added a copious index. Bonifacio published also a collection of Latin poems (1619) and an essay on ancient Roman historiography, De Romanæ Historiae Scriptoribus excerpta ex Bodino Vossio et aliis, Venice, 1627. A list of his works is given at the end of the second edition of the Historia Ludrica (Bruxelles, 1656).

Throughout his life Bonifacio maintained friendly relationships with numerous intellectuals of his day and was a member of several academies (Umoristi, Incogniti, Olimpici, Filarmonici).[2] He was a close friend of the learned Augustinian monk Angelico Aprosio.[5] Bonifacio was a regular attendee of Sara Copia Sullam's literary salon.[10] Despite having been her friend and protector, in 1621 Bonifacio published the philosophical pamphlet Dell'Immortalità dell'anima, a frontal attack on Sara, whom he repeatedly accused of denying the immortality of the soul.[10] Sara answered this attack with a Manifesto published the same year, in which she defended herself from Bonifacio's accusation.[11]

Works

Title page of De Archiviis by Baldassarre Bonifacio, 1632

References

  1. Duchein, Michel (1992). "The History of European Archives and the Development of the Archival Profession in Europe". The American Archivist. 55 (1): 16. doi:10.17723/aarc.55.1.k17n44g856577888.
  2. 1 2 3 Bonfiglio Dosio 2019, p. 58.
  3. Born 1941, p. 222.
  4. Chalmers 1812, p. 56.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Rossi 1970.
  6. His inaugural address is extant and separately published: Oratio cum inciperet jus civile in Gymnasio Veneto interpretari (Venice, 1632).
  7. Born 1941, p. 223.
  8. Nicéron 1731, p. 368.
  9. Nicéron 1731, p. 369.
  10. 1 2 Busetto, Giorgio (1983). "COPIO, Sara". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 28: Conforto–Cordero (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  11. Boccato, Carla (1973). "Un episodio della vita di Sara Copio Sullam: il Manifesto sull'immoralità dell'anima". Rassegna Mensile di Israel. XXXIX: 633–46.

Bibliography

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