Pamelius
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Jacob van Pamele (Jacobus Pamelius) (13 May 1536 – 19 September 1587), was a Flemish theologian.[1]
He was born at Bruges and educated at the Cistercian Abbey of Boneffe in the Province of Namur. He studied philosophy at Louvain, and on 27 March, 1553, he was promoted magister artium. For the next nine years he studied theology under the direction of Ruard Tapper and Josse Ravestein and after receiving the baccalaureate he followed the course of the Sorbonne. On 19 June, 1561, he was made a canon of St-Donatien at Bruges, and was ordained priest probably 21 February, 1562.
He visited all the libraries of the Low Countries to procure manuscripts and unedited works, and devoted himself to the publication of rare texts, beginning with the Micrologus de ecclesiasticis observationibus (Antwerp, 1565), a liturgical commentary of the Roman Ordo which dates probably from the beginning of the twelfth century. From 1568 to 1571, Pamelius was dean of the chrétienté of Bruges. He was appointed (1570) a member of the commission for the examination of books by Remi Drieux, Bishop of Bruges, and aided in the publication of the Index expurgatorius of 1571.
In 1574 he replaced George de Vrieze as scholar of the chapter of St-Donatien and shared in the installation of the college of the Jesuits at Bruges in 1575. The protection which Pamelius extended to the victims of Calvinistic violence at Bruges drew upon him hatred, and he was obliged to withdraw to Douai in 1578.
In 1581 the chapter of St-Omer promoted him to the dignity of the Archdiaconate of Flanders. After the death of Bishop Jean Six (11 October, 1586), Philip II appointed Pamelius his successor in the See of Saint-Omer, but Pamelius died, at Mons in Hainaut, before receiving his bulls of confirmation.
[edit] Works
Besides the Micrologus, he wrote
- Liturgica latinorum (Cologne, 1571)
- "De religionibus diversis non admittendis ... relatio" (Antwerp, 1589)
- a catalogue of ancient commentaries on the Bible (Antwerp, 1566)
and he edited the works of St. Cyprian (Antwerp, 1566), Tertullian (Paris, 1584), and Rhabanus Maurus (Cologne, 1527).
[edit] References
This article incorporates text from the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.