- Federico Borromeo
Federico Borromeo (
August 18 ,1564 –September 22 ,1631 ) was an Italianecclesiastic , cardinal and archbishop of Milan.Biography
Federico Borromeo was born in
Milan as the second son of Giulio Cesare Borromeo, Count ofArona , and Margherita Trivulzio. The family was influential in both the secular and ecclesiastical spheres;Charles Borromeo was his cousin.He studied theology and law in
Pavia and in 1585 he went toRome for higher studies, where he was strongly influenced by SaintPhilip Neri ,Cardinal Baronius andCardinal Bellarmine . Borromeo was created cardinal byPope Sixtus V in 1593, when was only 23, andarchbishop of Milan onApril 24 ,1595 . During thirty-six years he gave the world an example of episcopal virtue, zeal, and dignity. He followed the example of his elder cousin in promoting the discipline of the clergy, founding churches and colleges at his own expense, and applying everywhere the reformed principles set by theCouncil of Trent .In 1609 he founded the
Biblioteca Ambrosiana , a college of writers, a seminary of savants, a school of fine arts, and, after the Bodleian atOxford , the first genuinely public library in Europe. Borromeo had the famous Saint Charles Borromeo statue erected in Arona, supported the development of the Sacro Monte of Varese (today aWorld Heritage site ), and participated in the embellishment of theDuomo di Milano where he was to be buried.He is most notable for his efforts to feed the poor of Milan during the great
famine of 1627-1628. He took part in eight conclaves.He died in Milan in 1631. His successor in the archdiocese of Milan was his favourite pupil
Cesare Cardinal Monti .Federico Borromeo appears as a character in
Alessandro Manzoni ’s novel "The Betrothed " ("I promessi sposi"), in which he is characterized as an intelligent humanist. However, he shared the current excessive credulity in witchcraft and magic. In 1685 the citizens of Milan erected a marble statue of him next the gates of the Biblioteca Ambrosiana.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02688b.htm Federico Borromeo in the Catholic Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.verbanensia.org/scrineum/AlbGen_100_Borromeo_Federico_03_card.pdf Biography by P. Canetta (pdf)] it icon
*Genealogy:
**http://www.sardimpex.com/Borromeo/BORROMEO%202.htm
**http://genealogy.euweb.cz/italy/borromeo3.html
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