François Baert
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François Baert (25 August 1651–27 October 1719) was a Belgian Jesuit hagiographer, one of the Bollandists.[1]
Born in born in Ypres on 25 August 1651, Baert entered the Society of Jesus at Mechlin, 28 September 1667. After passing through the novitiate he was regent of several colleges in the province of Belgian Flanders, studied theology and philosophy, and was finally ordained priest in 1680. The following year, 1681, he made assistant to Daniel Papebroch, the last survivor of the first generation of Bollandists.
The name of Baertius is on the title pages of nine of the volumes of the Acta Sanctorum; the last four of May, and of the first five of June; but to judge from the articles published in these volumes his collaboration is by no means so large as these figures would indicate. There are no articles bearing his signature either in the volumes for May nor in the fifth volume for June. The other four volumes for June contain some fifteen articles by him, all very short excepting the commentaries on St. Columba and Saint Basil the Great, of the date of 9 June. In 1688, in company with Father Conrad Jannick, he made a trip to Austria and Hungary in search of literary material; the journey lasted eight months and the two returned with a large number of documents.
Baert died in Antwerp on 27 October 1719.
[edit] References
- ^ François Baert - Catholic Encyclopedia article
This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.