Giuseppe Agostino Orsi Explained

Type:Cardinal
Honorific-Prefix:His Eminence
Giuseppe Agostino Orsi
Diocese:Diocese of Rome
Cardinal:24 September 1759
Created Cardinal By:Pope Clement XIII
Rank:Cardinal-Priest
Birth Date:1692 5, df=yes
Birth Place:Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany
Death Place:Rome, Papal States
Nationality:Italian
Religion:Roman Catholic

Giuseppe Agostino Orsi (1692, Florence - 1761) was a cardinal, theologian, and ecclesiastical historian.

Biography

Born as Agostino Francesco Orsi at Florence on 9 May 1692, of the aristocratic Florentine family Orsi, he studied grammar and rhetoric under the Jesuits, but entered the Dominican Order at Fiesole on 21 February 1708. At his profession he received the monastic name of Giuseppe Agostino. His studies included not only theology, in which he gave particular attention to the Fathers of the Church and the great Scholastics, but also classical and Italian literature.

Having been master of studies for some time at the convent of San Marco, Florence, he was called to Rome in 1732 as professor of theology at the College of St. Thomas Aquinas, the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum where he was also made prior. He held this position for two years, after which he became the theologian of Cardinal Neri Corsini, nephew of Pope Clement XII. In 1738 he was appointed secretary of the Congregation of the Index. In 1749 Benedict XIV made him "Magister Sacri Palatii", or papal theologian, and on 24 September 1759, Clement XIII created him cardinal priest of the title of San Sisto. In this position Orsi was an active member of several Congregations until his death on 12 June 1761, in Rome. He was buried in his titular church of San Sisto Vecchio.

Works

Orsi's literary activity covered especially dogmatics, apologetics, and church history. His chief work was Latin: Storia ecclesiastica (20 vols., Rome, 1747–61), an ecclesiastical history. It only covered the period up until the end of the sixth century; the twenty-first volume, which Orsi had begun, was finished by his former pupil Giovanni Bottari (Rome, 1762). The work was afterwards brought up to the year 1587 by the Dominican Filippo Angelico Becchetti (new ed. in 42 vols., Venice, 1822; in 50 vols., Rome, 1838). It has been translated into several languages.

Other writings of Orsi are: