Carlo Maria Bascapè

Venerable

Carlo Maria Bascapè

Bishop of Novara
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
DioceseNovara
SeeNovara
Appointed8 February 1593
Installed30 May 1593
Term ended6 October 1615
PredecessorPietro Martire Ponzone
SuccessorFerdinando Taverna
Orders
Ordination29 July 1576
Consecration24 February 1593
by Ludovico de Torres
RankBishop
Personal details
Born
Giovanni Francesco Bascapè

25 October 1550
Died6 October 1615 (age 64)
Novara, Duchy of Milan
BuriedNovara Cathedral
Alma materUniversity of Pavia (JD, 1574)
Coat of armsCarlo Maria Bascapè's coat of arms

Carlo Maria Bascapè CRSP (Latin: Carolus a Basilica Petri; born Giovanni Francesco Bascapè, 25 October 1550 – 6 October 1615) was an Italian Roman Catholic prelate and scholar who served as Bishop of Novara from 1593 until his death.[1] He was a close friend of Saint Charles Borromeo and assumed the first half of his religious name in honor of him.[2]

Bascapè became titled as Venerable on 19 December 2005 - on the road to possible sainthood - after Pope Benedict XVI confirmed his heroic virtue.

Life

Carlo Bascapè was born in Melegnano, Milan, on 25 October 1550 to the nobles Angelo Bascapè and Isabella Giussani.[2] At baptism he was named Giovanni Francesco.[3]

Bascapè studied humanities and classical languages under Marcantonio Maioragio, Milan's leading humanist and teacher of rhetoric.[4] He moved to Pavia in 1568 for his studies at the college there in law and he graduated with a doctorate in both civil and canon law in 1574. In Pavia he joined the newly founded Accademia degli Affidati, members of which included scholars like Gerolamo Cardano.[5] Bascapè received the minor orders in spring 1575.

He was ordained to the priesthood on 29 July 1576 and became a professed member of the Clerics Regular of Saint Paul after joining them in March 1578. His solemn profession into the order on 8 May 1579 saw him assume the religious name of "Carlo Maria". He had assumed the first half of his name in honor of Saint Charles Borromeo whom he admired and respected.

Bascapé soon joined the staff of Archbishop Borromeo, who appreciated his juridical-humanistic erudition. He was appointed canon of the Cathedral of Milan and became a close associate of Borromeo. At his behest, he began research for a monumental work on Church history, De rebus eclesiasticis commentarii. However he desisted when he heard that Caesar Baronius was already far advanced on the Annales Ecclesiastici.[6]

In 1580, Bascapè was sent by Borromeo to Madrid to meet Philip II on his behalf due to conflicts that had arisen with the Spanish governor of Milan, Antonio de Guzmán Zúñiga y Sotomayor. The mission was a success as it managed to re-establish good relations between Charles Borromeo and the Spanish government.[7] In Madrid Bascapè befriended the theologian Louis of Granada, who would exert a profound influence on his spiritual writings.[8]

After the death of Borromeo, Bascapè wrote De vita et rebus gestis Caroli cardinalis (Ingolstadt, 1592), one of the most substantial biographies of the saint. The book was a huge success and was later translated into several languages.[9]

Bascapè served as the Superior General for the Barnabites from 8 May 1586 until 8 February 1593. At some stage between 1589 and 1590 he met with Pope Gregory XIV. He promoted the sainthood cause for Charles Borromeo and was present on 1 November 1610 when Pope Paul V canonized him as a saint. He was also present on 12 May 1602 previously when the same pope previously had beatified him.

On 8 February 1593 Pope Clement VIII appointed him Bishop of Novara. He received his episcopal consecration that same month on 24 February from Ludovico de Torres with Francesco Gonzaga and Owen Lewis serving as the co-consecrators; he was installed in his new diocese the following 30 May and worked his hardest to implement the reforms of the Council of Trent.[2][1]

Following the example of Charles Borromeo, he showed deep attention to the training of the clergy, building new seminaries for theology scholars; he held episcopal synods and strived to ensure that the ecclesiastics measured up to their duties; he set up the Oblates of San Gaudenzio and San Carlo, a congregation of secular priests inspired by the Oblates of Saints Ambrose and Charles.[10]

He encouraged the foundation of new confraternities in order to promote devotion within the people and the foundation of companies of the dead to provide masses for the souls of deceased members.

Bascapè served as bishop in his episcopal see until his death from a long illness on 6 October 1615.[1] His remains were later relocated to the Cathedral of Novara in 1801.

Beatification cause

Tomb in Novara.

The process for beatification opened in Novara under Bishop Placidio Maria Cambiaghi who opened the informative process on 10 May 1966 while his successor Bishop Aldo De Monte closed the process at a special Mass on 4 December 1976. His spiritual writings were all approved on 12 March 1982 and the Congregation for the Causes of Saints validated the informative process on 12 April 2002 while also receiving the Positio in 2003.

Historians assented to the cause on 20 May 2003 as did the theologians on 9 March 2004 as well as the C.C.S. members on 18 January 2005. He was proclaimed to be Venerable on 19 December 2005 after Pope Benedict XVI confirmed that he had lived a life of heroic virtue.

The current postulator assigned to the cause is the Barnabite priest Mauro Domenico Regazzoni.

In fiction

Carlo Maria Bascapè is one of the main characters of Sebastiano Vassalli's historical novel La chimera.[11]

Works

  • De regulari disciplina monimenta patrum. Mediolani: apud Pacificum Pontium. 1588.
  • De vita et rebus gestis Caroli S.R.E. Cardinalis... libri septem. Ingolstadt: ex officina typographica Dauidis Sartorii. 1592.
  • De Metropoli Mediolanensi. Mediolani: apud Paulum Gottardum Pontium. 1592. The text has been reprinted in Graevius, Thesaurus Antiquitatum et Historiarum Italiae vol. 2, pt. 2 col. 1337-1362.[12]
  • Scritti pubblicati da mons. reverendissimo D. Carlo vescovo di Novara nel governo del suo vescovato dall'anno 1593 fino al 1609. Novara: Girolamo Sessali. 1609.
  • Novaria seu de ecclesia Novariensi libri duo. Primus de locis, alter de episcopis. Novariae: apud Hieronymum Sesallum. 1612.
  • Historia Ecclesiae Mediolanensis... Liber primus. Novariae: apud Hieronymum Sesallum. 1615.
  • Commentarii canonici. Novariae: apud Hieronymum Sesallum. 1615.
  • Perinsignes... pro Ecclesia allegationes. In quibus efficacissimis rationibus illius vera libertas et immunitas defenditur. Bologna: apud Haeredes Bartholomaei Cocchi. 1622.
  • De Choreis et Spectaculis in festis diebus non exhibendis. Toulouse: J. Boude. 1662.
  • C. Annoni, ed. (1839). "Ecclesiastica Mediolanensis historia ab obitu s. Caroli". Documenti spettanti alla storia della s. Chiesa Milanese. Como: Ditta C. Pietro Ostinelli.

References

  1. ^ a b c "Bishop Carlo Bescapè, B." Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "Venerable Carlo (Giovanni Francesco) Bescapè". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  3. ^ Picinelli 1670, p. 107.
  4. ^ Chiesa 1993, p. 97.
  5. ^ Chiesa 1993, p. 102.
  6. ^ See O. M. Premoli, Storia dei Barnabiti nel Cinquecento (Rome, 1913), pp. 331-2. Cf. F. A. Zaccaria, Dissertazioni varie italiane a storia ecclesiastica appartenenti, tom. 1 (Rome, 1780), p. 139.
  7. ^ D'Amico, Stefano (2012). Spanish Milan: A City within the Empire, 1535-1706. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 112. ISBN 978-1137309372.
  8. ^ Chiesa 1993, p. 168.
  9. ^ Prodi 1965.
  10. ^ Deutscher, Thomas B. (2013). Punishment and Penance. Two Phases in the History of the Bishop's Tribunal of Novara. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-1442669413.
  11. ^ Pagano, Sergio (1990). "Carlo Bascapè fra romanzo e storia (In margine a La chimera, di Sebastiano Vassalli)". Barnabiti studi. 7: 239–278.
  12. ^ Bascapè, Carlo Maria (1704). "De Metropoli Mediolanensi Libellus". In Johann Georg Graevius (ed.). Thesaurus Antiquitatum et Historiarum Italiae. Vol. 2. Part 2. Leiden: Pieter van der Aa. pp. 1337–1362.

Sources

Further reading

  • Guariglia, Guglielmo (1936). "La corrispondenza di Carlo Bascapè a S. Carlo Borromeo nella collezione della Biblioteca Ambrosiana". Aevum. 10 (2/3): 282–337. JSTOR 25818943.
  • Herklotz, I. 2011. “Antonio Bosio und Carlo Bascapè: Reliquiensuche und Katakombenforschung im 17. Jahrhundert,” in S.-G. Bruer and D. Rößler (edd.), Festschrift für Max Kunze:… die Augen ein wenig zu öffnen(J.J. Winckelmann). Der Blick auf die antike Kunst von der Renaissance bis heute (Ruhrpolding, Mainz) 93-104.
  • Lovison, Filippo (2007). "I Venerabili Cesare Baronio e Carlo Bascapè: due pionieri della storia della Chiesa". Eco dei Barnabiti. 4: 45–50.
  • Mazzucchelli, Giammaria (1758). Gli scrittori d'Italia. Vol. 2. Part 1. Brescia: Giambattista Bossini. pp. 511–3.
  • Salvadeo, Mario (1957). "Le relazioni fra il cardinale Federico Borromeo e Carlo Bascapè (da alcune lettere inedite)". Studi in onore di Carlo Castiglioni Prefetto dell’Ambrosiana. Milan: Giufré. pp. 757–779.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of Novara
8 February 1593 – 6 October 1615
Succeeded by