Tommaso Raggio
Tommaso Raggio | |
---|---|
Born |
1531 Forli, Papal States (modern-day Italy) |
Died | 1599 |
Other names | Radius, Raggius[1] |
Occupation | Jesuit missionary, Papal diplomat |
Tommaso Raggio (Latin: Thomas Razzius) (1531—1599) was a 16-th century Jesuit missionary.
Raggio joined Jesuit order in 1557 in Loreto.[2]
Raggio was Catholic missionary in Kotor in 1574—75.[3] Raggio was a poliglot who knew six foreign languages, including Croatian.[4] According to Miroslav Vanino, Raggio learned Croatian language in Kotor so he later worked for the benefit of Croats and other Balkan people.[5] Raggio emphasized that Jesuit presence in Kotor is very important because Kotor was very near Serbia while Kotor Bay goes deep into the territory populated with Orthodox people.[6]
In 1577 Raggio was one of two Jesuit envoys sent by Pope to Maronite patriarch.[7] In 1582 Raggio became a rector of Illyrian College in Loreto.[8] Between 1584 and 1587 Raggio accompanied Tommaso Pelessa at his missionary journeys into Ottoman held territories.[9]
At the beginning of 1594 Raggio and Aleksandar Komulović, as apostolic visitors,[10] began their diplomatic mission aimed to forge an anti-Ottoman coalition in support of the West during the Long Turkish War, principally in the Balkans and among the Slavs.[11] Raggio left this mission after one year and returned to Italy in 1595.[12]
References
- ↑ Orientalia Christiana Analecta. Pont. institutum studiorum orientalium. 1965. p. 82.
On Tommaso Raggio (Radius, Raggius) ...
- ↑ (Pagano 2008, p. 324): "Tommaso Raggio (1531-1599), nativo di Forlì, entrato fra i Gesuiti a Loreto nel 1557, fu ordinato sacerdote nel 1582,"
- ↑ Hrvatski isusovački misionari i pokušaji unije s pravoslavnima od 16. do. 19. stoljeća, Mijo Korade, Hrvatski studiji Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, 2015, p. 41
- ↑ Kolo Matice hrvatske. Matica hrvatska. 2007. p. 353.
U tome mu je mogao biti uzor i talijanski isusovac poliglot Toma Raggio (latinski Thomas Razzius, 1531-1599). On je znao šest stranih jezika, među njima i hrvatski, pa je od 1574. tri puta bio u Kotoru i jednom u Zadru.
- ↑ (Vanino 1986, p. 139): "...u Kotoru naučio je hrvatski pa zato kasnije na više načina djeluje za Hrvate i druge narode s Balkanskog poluotoka."
- ↑ Hrvatski isusovački misionari i pokušaji unije s pravoslavnima od 16. do. 19. stoljeća, Mijo Korade, Hrvatski studiji Sveučilišta u Zagrebu, 2015, p. 41
- ↑ (Frazee 2006, p. 137)
- ↑ (Pagano 2008, p. 324): "Tommaso Raggio (1531-1599),...fu ordinato sacerdote nel 1582, e fu quindi rettore del Collegio degli Illirici nella medesima citta; viaggio in compagnia di Tommaso Pelessa fra il 1584 e il 1587."
- ↑ (Pagano 2008, p. 324): "Tommaso Raggio (1531-1599),.... viaggio in compagnia di Tommaso Pelessa fra il 1584 e il 1587."
- ↑ Antrobus, Frederick Ignatius (1930). The History of the Popes from the Close of the Middle Ages. K. Paul, Trench, Tru bner & Company. p. 485.
At the beginning of 1584 Gregory XIII. sent Alessandro Komulowic, a canon of Zara, and the Jesuit Tommaso Raggio,
- ↑ Stanojević, Gligor (1973). Senjski uskoci. Vojnoizdavački zavod. p. 147.
Krajem januara 1593. hvarski biskup Petar Čedolini uputio je papi pismenu poruku kojom ga poziva u borbu protiv Turaka i uvjerava da je Turska slaba i da ne može odoljeti jednom hrišćanskom savezu.12' Iste godine sličan predlog je uputio papi i sveštenik Aleksandar Komulović
- ↑ Zlatar, Zdenko (1 January 1992). Our Kingdom Come: The Counter-Reformation, the Republic of Dubrovnik, and the Liberation of the Balkan Slavs. East European Monographs. p. 206. ISBN 978-0-88033-239-2.
While Raggio returned after a year, Komulovic stayed in the Balkans for three years....
Sources
- Vanino, Miroslav (1986). Vrela i prinosi. Nova tiskara.
- Frazee, Charles A. (22 June 2006). Catholics and Sultans: The Church and the Ottoman Empire 1453-1923. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-02700-7.
- Pagano, Sergio (2008). La nunziatura di Ludovico Taverna: (25 febbraio 1592 - 4 aprile 1596). Istituto Storico Italiano per l'Età Moderna e Contemporanea.