- Theodorich Canisius
Theodorich Canisius (1532,
Nijmegen –September 27 ,1606 ,Ingolstadt ) was aJesuit academic.Biography
Canisius was a half-brother of
St. Peter Canisius . After winning, at the age of twenty-two, the highest academic distinction at Louvain, he decided to follow his stepbrother and enter theSociety of Jesus , and was sent toSt. Ignatius of Loyola in Rome, who received him into the Society. On the completion of hisnovitiate , Theodorich was appointedprofessor oftheology inVienna , but was soon after appointedrector of the Jesuit College atMunich . Here, in 1562, one of the first productions in Germany of the morality play "Homulus" (Everyman) was given in Latin by the students under his direction. From Munich, where he was succeeded in 1565 by the celebratedPaul Hoffaeus , he was transferred toDillingen , where for twenty years he presided over the college and the academy and laboured with zeal and success for the improvement of studies and for the religious training of the students. From 1565 to 1582 he held the office ofchancellor of the university. In company with his distinguished brother, he attended the first provincial congregation of the Society of Jesus in Upper Germany, and furthered important reforms in the teaching of philosophy. In 1585 he was made rector of the college ofIngolstadt , and in this capacity became a member of the German commission which tested in practice the first draft of the Ratio Studiorum. At length, having spent thirty years at the head of three of the foremost colleges of Germany, he was sent toLucerne inSwitzerland to enjoy a period of rest; but soon again, at the age of sixty-three, he had to undertake the government of the college of Ingolstadt. Two years later, on the advice of his physician, he was relieved of the burden and allowed to return to Lucerne. A fortnight after his arrival the death of St. Peter Canisius was announced; the shock deprived Theodorich of memory and speech, an affliction which he bore with exemplary patience for seven years. For his amiable disposition and spotless purity of life he deservedly received the surname of "Angelus" 'angel'. In 1604, he was transferred again to Ingolstadt, where he died, and was interred in the church of the Holy Cross.ource
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03250c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article]
*Catholic
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