Francisco de Toledo (Jesuit)

His Eminence
Francisco de Toledo
S.J.
Orders
Created Cardinal September 17, 1593
Rank Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Traspontina
Personal details
Born Spain
Died Rome
Nationality Spanish
Coat of arms

Francisco de Toledo (4 October 1532 in Cordoba (Spain) – 14 September 1596 in Rome) was a Spanish Jesuit priest and theologian, Biblical exegete and professor at the Roman College. He is the first Jesuit to have been made a cardinal (in 1593).

Biography

After studying under Domingo Soto, Toledo became a professor of philosophy at the University of Salamanca from 1555 to 1559.[1]

He was ordained priest at Salamanca in 1556 and two years later, in 1558, entered the Jesuit order. After a brief period of spiritual formation he was called to Rome by the Superior General, Diego Laynez, where the budding Roman College was in great need of professors. Toledo successively (and successfully) taught Philosophy (1559-1562), Scholastic and Moral Theology (1562-1569), and was prefect of studies of the fast-growing university.

In the 1570s he published a number of commentaries on Aristotle's works.[2]

He directed the work on the Clementine Vulgate, the revision of the Latin Vulgate that was published in 1598; this built on the Sistine Vulgate (the 1590 text), approved by Pope Sixtus V.

Works

Commentarii et annotationes in Epistolam Beati Pauli apostoli ad Romanos, 1602

His works may be divided into three classes:

Notes

  1. Roger Ariew, René Descartes and the Jesuits, p. 164, in Mordechai Feingold (editor), Jesuit Science and the Republic of Letters (2002)
  2.  Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Francisco Toledo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Francisco Toledo". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton. 

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