- Johann Franz Bessel
Johann Franz Bessel (in religion Gottfried) (b.
5 September 1672 , atBuchen , in theGrand Duchy of Baden ; d. at Göttweig,22 January 1749 ) was a GermanBenedictine abbot and historian.Life
He made his course in the humanities at
Aschaffenburg ,Würzburg , andBamberg , and in 1690 entered theUniversity of Salzburg , conducted by the Benedictines, where he specialized in philosophy, also attending lectures on theology and jurisprudence. He entered the Benedictine Order at Göttweig on theDanube ,Lower Austria , 15 June, 1692. After making his vows (21 June, 1693), he completed his theological course atVienna , was ordained (21 March, 1696), and on 23 May was granted the degree of Doctor of Theology, being shortly afterwards appointed Lector in philosophy and theology in themonastery of Seligenstadt on theRiver Main .In 1699 he was summoned to the electoral court of
Mainz by ArchbishopLothar Franz von Schonborn , who immediately sent him to Rome to study the curial practice of theRota Romana . Having completed a two years' course in law, he obtained the degree ofDoctor Juris Utriusque , and on his return to Mainz (1703) he was appointedvicar general and supreme judge of theecclesiastical court of thearchdiocese of Mainz . He was also employed on various diplomatic missions, as, for instance, to the court ofBrunswick-Wolfenbuttel in connection with the conversion ofDuke Anton Ulrich and his granddaughter, thePrincess Elisabeth Christine , later the wife ofEmperor Charles VI .He made three journeys to Rome to settle differences between the pope and the emperor concerning the limits of the
province of Commacchio . On 7 February, 1714, he was electedAbbot of Göttweig , and from that time forward was commissioned by the emperor to conduct diplomatic negotiations, in addition to being made imperial theologian and serving twice as honorary rector of the University of Vienna.Abbot Bessel was the second founder of Göttweig, which became, under his rule of thirty-five years, a centre of learning. He added to the rare Hebrew, Greek, and Roman coins and
bracteate s collections ofcopper-plate engraving s (over 20,000), minerals, shells, and paintings. By the expenditure of princely sums he enriched the library with thousands of volumes, chiefly on historical subjects, as well as incunabula and MSS. Himself a thorough scholar, he encouraged among his religious all undertakings of a scientific or artistic nature. When the abbey was almost totally destroyed by fire, he gathered, by judicious management, means sufficient to rebuild it on a more splendid scale.Personally, Abbot Bessel was a retiring religious, presenting to all a shining example of monastic piety and virtue.
Works
Besides several comparatively unimportant works, such as "Mararita pretiosa", "Curiae Romanae praxis", and "Austriae ritus", he published (Vienna, 1732) two letters of
Augustine of Hippo toOptatus ,Bishop of Mileve , which had been until then unknown. He is erroneously credited with the authorship of "Quinquaginta Romano-catholicam fidem omnibus aliis praeferendi motiva" (Mainz, 1708), a controversial work written originally in Latin, but translated into almost every European tongue.The work which brought him lasting renown and a place in the records of the science of history is entitled "Chronicon Gottwicense, tomus prodromus" (Tegernsee, 1732). Not, as might be thought, a history of the abbey, this single volume is a comprehensive work on German
diplomatics , treating of manuscripts found in registers and archives, original documentary evidence, diplomas of German emperors and kings, and inscriptions and seals, illustrated with maps and engravings on copper. The author also discusses medieval geography, as well as the royal palace-domains (Pfalzen) and the various districts of Germany. Great learning and clear critical acumen distinguish this work, which marked an epoch in the history of German diplomatics, and has served as the basis of all later works on the same subject.References
*Albert, "Gottfried Bessel und das Chronicon Gottwicense" in Freiburger Diocesan-Archiv. (1899), XXVII, 217-250.
External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02528a.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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