- Girolamo and Pietro Ballerini
Girolamo and Pietro Ballerini were Italian Catholic theologians and
canonist s of the eighteenth century, who published joint works.They were the sons of a surgeon of
Verona .Girolamo Ballerini
Girolamo was born at Verona 29 January, 1701, and died 23 April, 1781. After finishing his course in the Jesuit college of his native city he entered the seminary and was ordained a secular priest.
In the pursuit of historical studies he soon came to appreciate
Cardinal Noris , also of Verona, and brought out (1729-33) a complete edition of his works.Pietro Ballerini
Born 7 September, 1698; died 28 March, 1769, after completing his studies both at college and the seminary was chosen principal of a classical school in Verona. Here he began his literary career in 1724, when he prepared for his pupils a treatise on the method of study taught and followed by
Augustine of Hippo . Some passages in this work gave serious offence to the school ofabsolute Probabilists , and for some years Pietro was engaged in a dispute with them, defending his principles ofProbabiliorism in three volumes.Shortly afterwards he turned his attention to the question of
usury , and threw his influence against the claims of theLaxist s. To sustain his argument in this controversy he prepared (1740) an edition of the "Summa" ofSt. Antoninus which he sent toPope Benedict XIV , and also (1774) one of the "Summa" ofRaymond of Pennafort .In the same year he published "La Dottrina della Chiesa Cattolica circa l'usura", in which he condemned all forms of usury.
The scholarship of the two editors is best seen in the fourth volume of the works of Noris, especially in their dissertations against
Garerius , and in their study of the early days of thePatriarchate of Aquileia . They also published (1733) an edition of the writings ofMatteo Giberti ,Bishop of Verona , and in 1739 a critical edition of the sermons of St.Zeno of Verona .The Ballerini brothers became famous throughout Italy, and in 1748 Peter was chosen by the senate of Venice to serve as its canonist in Rome in a dispute over the Patriarchate of Aquileia. He attracted the attention of
Pope Benedict XIV , who commissioned him to prepare an edition ofSt. Leo 's works in refutation of the defective one published byQuesnel .After almost nine years of labour in which he enjoyed free access to all the libraries of Rome, Pietro brought out his work in three volumes (Rome, 1753-57) reproducing the entire edition of Quesnel together with elaborate refutations and additions (
Migne , "Patrologia Latina ", LIV-LVI). The third volume is a profound study of the sources of canon law.Quesnel had published a collection of canons from a codex which he believed to have been in use under
Pope Innocent I ,Pope Zozimus , and Leo the Great. Besides disproving this, Pietro brought out in an improved form earlier Latin editions of the canons, together with some very old unknown versions of Greek canons. He also published two works againstFebronius on papal power, "De vi ac ratione Primatus Romanorum Pontificum" (Verona, 1766), and "De potestate ecclesiastica Summorum Pontificum et Concilorum generalium" (Verona, 1765).References
*Mazzuchelli, "Gli scrittori d'Italia" (Brescia, 1753-63), II, part I, 178
*Fabroni, "Vitae Italorum doctrina excellentium" (Pisa, 1778-1805), XVIII, 109.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02223b.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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