Annales Ecclesiastici

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Cesare Baronius, 17th-century engraving.

Annales Ecclesiastici (full title Annales ecclesiastici a Christo nato ad annum 1198; "Ecclesiastical annals from Christ's nativity to 1198"), consisting of twelve folio volumes, is a history of the first 12 centuries of the Christian Church, written by Caesar Baronius.

Significance

The Annales were first published between 1588 and 1607. This work functioned as an official response to the Lutheran Historia Ecclesiae Christi (History of the Church of Christ). In that work the Magdeburg theologians surveyed the history of the Christian church in order to demonstrate how the Catholic Church represented the Antichrist and had deviated from the beliefs and practices of the early church. In turn, the Annales fully supported the claims of the papacy to lead the unique true church.[1]

Before Baronius was appointed Librarian of the Vatican in 1597, he had access to material and sources in its archives that were previously unpublished or unused. He used these in the development of his work. Accordingly, the documentation in Annales Ecclesiastici is considered by most as extremely useful and complete. Lord Acton called it "the greatest history of the Church ever written."[2]

Annales Ecclesiastici, title page for vol. IV (1601) in the Antwerp edition.

First edition

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Volume Published Dates
I 1588 To 100 AD
II 1590 100 to 306
III 1592 To 361
IV 1593 361 to 395
V 1594 395 to 440
VI 1595 440 to 518
VII 1596 518 to 590
VIII 1599 590 to 714
IX 1600 714 to 842
X 1602 843 to 1000
XI 1605 1000 to 1099
XII 1607 1100 to 1193

The first volume dealt with Gentile prophets, among whom were Hermes Trismegistus, the supposed author of the Corpus Hermeticum, and the Sibylline Oracles of Rome. Some, it was claimed, had foreseen Christ's birth. This was disputed by post-Protestant Reformation scholars, including Isaac Casaubon in his De rebus sacris et ecclesiasticis exercitationes, XVI.[5]

Continuations

Continuators of Baronius of the Early Modern period were Odorico Rainaldi,[6] Giacomo Laderchi,[7] Henri Spondanus,[8] and Abraham Bzovius[9] In the 19th century the Annales were continued by August Theiner.[10]

External links

References

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  2. Lord Acton (1906). Lectures on Modern History, "The Counter-Reformation".
  3. treccani.it, Cesare Baronio.
  4. Cyriac K. Pullapilly, Caesar Baronius: Counter-Reformation Historian (1975), University of Notre Dame Press, p. 136.
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