Niccolò Orlandini
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Niccolò Orlandini (1554 - May 17, 1606) was an Italian Jesuit author.
[edit] Biography
He was born at Florence.
He entered the Jesuit novitiate in 1572, became rector of the Jesuit college at Nola and was master of novices at Naples for five years.
He was finally appointed secretary of the Jesuit general Claudio Acquaviva, who in 1558 detailed him to write the history of the Jesuit Order, his master piece.
He died in Rome in 1606.
[edit] Works
His history of the Jesuit Order comprises only the generalate of St. Ignatius. It was edited by Sacchini, and appeared under the title "Historiæ Societatis Jesu prima pars" (Rome, 1614, 1615, 1621; Antwerp, 1620; Cologne, 1620). It is written in the form of annals and based chiefly on a life written by the saint's secretary, de Polanco.
It was continued by Sacchini, Petrus Possinus, Joseph de Jouvancy and Guilo Cesare Cordara. The sixth and last part, reaching to 1633, was published at Rome in 1758.
Other works are:
- Annuæ litteræ Societatis Jesu, anni 1583-85 (1585-1588)
- Vita Petri Fabri (1617); the same also appeared under the title Forma sacerdotis Apostolici, expressa in exemplo Petri Fabri (1647)
- Tractatus seu Commentarii in Summarium Constitutionum et in regulas communes (1876).
[edit] Source
- This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913. [1]