Ferdinando Ughelli

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Ferdinando Ughelli (21 March 1595 - 19 May 1670) was an Italian clergyman and church historian.

[edit] Biography

He was born in Florence. He entered the Cistercian Order and was sent to the Gregorian University in Rome, where he studied under the Jesuits Francesco Piccolomini and John de Lugo.

He filled many important posts in his order, being Abbot of Settimo (near Florence), and from 1638 was Abbot of Tre Fontane in Rome. He was skilled in ecclesiastical history. To encourage him in this work and to defray the expense of the journeys it entailed, pope Alexander VII granted him an annual pension of 500 scudi. He was a consultor of the Index Librorum Prohibitorum and theologian to Cardinal Carlo de'Medici, and was frequently offered the episcopal dignity, which he refused to accept. He was buried in his abbatial church.

[edit] Literary works

His chief work is Italia sacra sive de episcopis Italae (9 vols, 1643-1662), re-edited with corrections and additions by Nicola Coleti (1717-1722), with a tenth volume. In compiling this work, he frequently had to deal with matters not previously treated by historians; as a result, the Italia sacra, owing to the imperfections of historical science in Ughelli's day, especially from the point of view of criticism and diplomatics, contains serious errors, particularly as the author was more intent on collecting than on weighing documents. Nevertheless his work with all its imperfections was necessary to facilitate the labours of critical historians of a later day, and is consulted even now. In the last volume of the Italia sacra he published various historical sources until then unedited.

Among his other writings are:

  • Cardinalium elogia ex sacro ordine cisterciensi (1624), on the writers and saints of his order and the papal privileges granted to it;
  • Columnensis familiae cardinalium imagines (1650)
  • genealogical works on the Counts of Marsciano and the Capizucchi (1667, 1653);
  • Aggiunte to the Vitae pontificum of Ciaconius.

[edit] Sources and references

This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913. [1]