Jacobus a Castro

Jacobus a Castro

Print portrait of Jacobus a Castro published by Abraham Dircksz Santvoort
Native name Jacob van der Borgh
Diocese Roermond
Appointed 20 March 1610
Predecessor Hendrik van Cuyk (1596–1609)
Successor Henricus Calenus
Orders
Ordination 1585
Consecration 11 April 1611
Personal details
Born 1560
Amsterdam, County of Holland, Habsburg Netherlands
Died 1639
Roermond, County of Guelders, Spanish Netherlands
Parents Gerard Pietersz. van der Borgh, Anna Janssen du Bois
Education philosophy and theology
Alma mater Leuven University
Motto Esto Vigilans

Jacob van der Borgh, Latinized Jacobus a Castro (1560–1639) was the third bishop of Roermond.[1]

Life

Jacobus a Castro was born in Amsterdam in 1560, the son of Gerard Pietersz. van der Borgh and Anna Janssen du Bois. He studied philosophy and theology at Leuven University. In 1579 he graduated in philosophy at the top of his year and was appointed a lecturer in Pig College (Pedagogie Het Varken).[2] Among the students that he taught there were Jacobus Boonen, a later archbishop of Mechelen, and Petrus Peckius the Younger, a later Chancellor of Brabant.

Castro was appointed professor of theology in Leuven on 22 August 1594. In 1610 he was named to the see of Roermond, and consecrated bishop in 1611. He invited the Jesuits to establish their first presence in the city, giving them his own house for the purpose.

From 1632 to 1637 Roermond was occupied by the States and the cathedral was turned over to Protestant worship. Castro remained in the city, and risked his own life to tend the sick during the epidemics of 1634 and 1635.

He died in Roermond on 24 February 1639. A volume of 110 of his sermons was printed posthumously in 1649.

Writings

References

  1. A.J. van der Aa, Biographisch woordenboek der Nederlande,. vol. 3 (1858), 231–232.
  2. Nieuw Nederlandsch biografisch woordenboek, edited by P. J. Blok and P. C. Molhuysen, vol. 2 (1912), 302-303.
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