- John of Montson
John of Montson (Juan de Monzón) (born at
Monzón , Spain; date of birth c.1340, death after 1412) was anAragonese Dominican theologian and controversialist.Life
He joined the Dominicans probably in Valencia. In 1383 he was lecturing on theology at
Valencia Cathedral . Thence he went to Paris, taught in the convent of St. James there, and obtained the mastership of theology in 1387.Here he entered the field of controversy on the question of the
Immaculate Conception , which was not then defined. Maintaining the proposition that theBlessed Virgin was conceived without sin was heretical, he aroused against him the faculty of the Paris university. They condemned fourteen propositions from his lectures, warned him, first privately, then publicly, to retract, and when he refused carried the matter toPierre Orgement ,Bishop of Paris , who promulgated a decree ofexcommunication against all who should defend the forbidden theses. The faculty issued letters condemnatory of Montson's errors and conduct, whichDenifle conjectures, from their acerbity of speech, were written byPierre d'Ailly . Denifle also says Montson would not have been condemned had he not declared the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception heretical.Montesono appealed to
Pope Clement VIII , who cited him and the university faculty toAvignon . Later, foreseeing that the case was going against him, Montson, despite the command under pain of excommunication to remain at Avignon, secretly withdrew into Aragon, then went toSicily , changing his allegiance toPope Urban VI , Clement's rival. There and in Spain, whither he afterwards returned, he filled several important positions. In 1412 Alfonso,Duke of Gandia , chose him as head of a legation sent to defend his claim to the crown of Aragon.Works
Besides four works against Clement's claim as pope, he wrote: "Tractatus de Conceptione B. Virginis", a number of sermons, and various opuscula in the vernacular.
References
*
Quétif andEchard , "Scriptores Ord. Praed.", I (Paris, 1719), 691;
*Hugo von Hurter , "Nomenclator";
*Denifle , "Chartul.", III (Paris, 1894), 486-533.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08474b.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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