mardi 25 juin 2024

Bienheureux PAOLO GIUSTINIANI, ermite et fondateur de la Congregazione degli eremiti camaldolesi di Monte Corona (Montecoronesi)

 


Saint Paul Giustiniani

Humaniste vénitien (+ 1528)

En pleine Renaissance italienne, cet humaniste vénitien, devenu moine au désert de Camaldoli, s'efforça de raviver la flamme de son Ordre en fondant "la Compagnie des ermites de saint Romuald" ou "Congrégation de Monte-Corona". Dans le seul à seul avec Dieu, lui aussi élabora une doctrine équilibrée de l'idéal érémitique.

SOURCE : https://nominis.cef.fr/contenus/saint/7429/Saint-Paul-Giustiniani.html

Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani

à Dieu le Père

Voici la Prière « Mon Dieu, selon la mesure infinie de Ta grandeur et de Ta bonté, relève-moi, et je ressusciterai » du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528), humaniste vénitien devenu moine-ermite bénédictin au désert de Camaldoli qui réforma l’ordre des Camaldules et fonda la Compagnie des ermites de saint Romuald ou Congrégation de Monte-Corona.


La Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani « Mon Dieu, selon la mesure infinie de Ta grandeur et de Ta bonté, relève-moi, et je ressusciterai » :

« Si je regardais mes péchés, j'hésiterais à espérer en Dieu ; mais si je considère Sa miséricorde, il n'y a pas de limite à mon espoir. En tombant je me suis brisé, dispersé, souillé. Qui va me ramasser, me recueillir, me purifier ? Qui va me rendre l'innocence et la tranquillité ? Mon âme, espère dans le Seigneur, mets ta confiance en Lui : comme Il a promis, Il relève ceux qui tombent. Je suis tombé, oui, mais Tu es mon Dieu et mon Roi. Selon la mesure infinie de Ta grandeur et de Ta bonté, relève-moi, et je ressusciterai. Ainsi soit-il. »

Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528)

SOURCE : https://site-catholique.fr/index.php?post/Priere-du-Bienheureux-Paul-Giustiniani-a-Dieu

Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani

à Dieu le Père

Voici une Prière sur la bonne manière de prier « Comme le navire, qui fend la mer, ne laisse derrière lui aucune trace du parcours qu’il a fait » du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528), humaniste vénitien devenu moine-ermite bénédictin au désert de Camaldoli qui réforma l’ordre des Camaldules et fonda la Compagnie des ermites de saint Romuald ou Congrégation de Monte-Corona.


La Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani « Comme le navire, qui fend la mer, ne laisse derrière lui aucune trace du parcours qu’il a fait » :

« Comme le navire, qui fend la mer, ne laisse derrière lui aucune trace du parcours qu’il a fait, ainsi notre âme, sous la conduite de l’Esprit divin, en traversant l’immense mer et l’abîme des contemplations divines, ne devrait pas voir, si elle se retournait, le chemin par où elle est passée, ni comment elle est parvenue à tel point donné. Si tu avais pris tout cela en considération, cher frère en Christ, tu n’aurais probablement pas demandé ni à moi ni à d’autres que te fût suggérée une manière de prier ; mais tu te serais plutôt complètement abandonné à l’Esprit divin, sans prétention de connaître ni la voie ni comment Il Te guide. Souviens-toi alors que dans tes oraisons, c’est-à-dire quand tu es en prière, la méthode la meilleure est celle de n’en avoir aucune et que la forme la meilleure est de n’en avoir aucune. Puisque l’oraison naît de cet Esprit qui est généreux en ses dons, surabondant et divers, de même divers et variés et quasi infinis sont les modes et les formes que prend la prière. Ainsi soit-il. »

Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528)

SOURCE : https://site-catholique.fr/index.php?post/Priere-du-Bienheureux-Paul-Giustiniani-sur-la-Priere

Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani

sur la Charité

Voici une Prière sur la bonne manière de prier « Rien ne pourra me séparer de la charité de Dieu qui est en Jésus-Christ » du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528), humaniste vénitien devenu moine-ermite bénédictin au désert de Camaldoli qui réforma l’ordre des Camaldules et fonda la Compagnie des ermites de saint Romuald ou Congrégation de Monte-Corona.


La Prière du Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani « Rien ne pourra me séparer de la charité de Dieu qui est en Jésus-Christ » :

« Rien ne pourra me séparer de la charité de Dieu qui est en Jésus-Christ. M’enlèveras-Tu, Seigneur, le très doux sentiment de T’aimer ainsi ? Je pense que non, car c’est Toi qui veux que je T’aime ainsi. Tu m’éprouves peut-être pour savoir - ou pour mieux dire, pour me faire savoir- si je T’aime vraiment. Eh bien ! Seigneur, essaie et tente mon cœur, et vois s’il y a en lui un autre amour que Toi, s’il T’aime autrement qu’en Toi et pour Toi seul. Permets, Seigneur, que je Te parle ainsi, mais comment pourras-Tu faire que je ne T’aime pas ? Si Tu me donnes la paix intérieure et extérieure, je T’aimerai ; si Tu me donnes la guerre et la bataille, je T’aimerai ; si Tu me consoles intérieurement et au-dehors, je T’aimerai ; si Tu me laisses dans la tribulation, sans consolation, dans l’angoisse, je crois que je T’aimerai encore. Si c’est Toi seul, Seigneur, et non moi-même que j’aime - Toi, mon bien et mon unique Amour-, je ne me soucie pas de ce qui peut m’arriver, pourvu que je fasse Ta volonté et que s’accomplisse en moi et par moi tout Ton bon vouloir. Ainsi soit-il. »

Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528)

SOURCE : https://site-catholique.fr/index.php?post/Priere-du-Bienheureux-Paul-Giustiniani-sur-la-Charite

St Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528)

Né dans l’opulente famille vénitienne des Giustiniani, le jeune Thomas fut formé à l’école des humanistes italiens les plus renommés de son temps. Il se retira sur l’île de Murano pour approfondir dans la sérénité sa propre recherche philosophique ; là, Thomas entra en contact avec les moines camaldules et sa vie subit un retournement soudain et radical. En 1510, il entra, avec deux amis vénitiens, dans l’ermitage des Camaldules où il prit le nom de Paul. Vite, il se mit à aspirer, avec l’un de ses deux amis, Pierre Quirini, à une profonde réforme de l’Église, jusqu’à écrire un pamphlet détaillé sur la question qu’il adressa au pape Léon X.

Mais le mécontentement de Giustiniani ne se limitait pas à la situation d’ensemble de l’Église ; il garda, sa vie durant, la certitude que la vie érémitique pouvait être le rappel, dans le silence et le mystère, de l’amour de Dieu pour les hommes, une « prédication sans paroles ». Brûlant du désir de se livrer totalement à une vie d’intimité avec Dieu, il abandonna l’environnement des Camaldules et créa en 1520, près d’Ancône, la « Compagnie des Ermites de Saint Romuald », aujourd’hui connus sous le nom d’ermites camaldules de Monte Corona. Giustiniani sut, grâce à sa grande culture, maintenir l’unité entre une austérité poussée presque à son paroxysme et une sensibilité spirituelle remarquable.

SOURCE : http://www.peintre-icones.fr/PAGES/CALENDRIER/Juin/28.html

Church and Abbey San Salvatore di Montecorona (also: Abbazia Camaldolese di San Salvatore, Badia di Montecorona, San Salvatore di Monte Acuto), territory of Umbertide, Umbria, Italy

Le monastère de Monte Corona (monastero dell'Assunta Coronata), ou à l'origine ermitage du Mont-Corona, puis abbaye du Saint-Sauveur, monastère catholique situé en Italie à Umbertide, dans l'archidiocèse de Pérouse, à 30 kilomètres d'Assise, en Ombrie.

Church and Abbey San Salvatore di Montecorona (also: Abbazia Camaldolese di San Salvatore, Badia di Montecorona, San Salvatore di Monte Acuto), territory of Umbertide, Umbria, Italy

Le monastère de Monte Corona (monastero dell'Assunta Coronata), ou à l'origine ermitage du Mont-Corona, puis abbaye du Saint-Sauveur, monastère catholique situé en Italie à Umbertide, dans l'archidiocèse de Pérouse, à 30 kilomètres d'Assise, en Ombrie.


Blessed Paolo Giustiniani

Memorial

25 June (Camaldolese)

28 June on some calendars

Profile

Born to the Venetian nobility, the son of Francesco Giustiniani and Paola Malipiero. Studied theology and philosophy at the University of PaduaPilgrim to the Holy Lands in 1507 which left with a desire for the religious life. He joined the Camaldolese hermits in 1510 and became a travelling reformer, going from one hermitage to another to help them returned to proper Camaldolese discipline and teaching. Part of the general chapter of 1513 that helped unify and regularize the conventual and hermitic sections of the CamaldolesePrior of the hermitage in CamaldoliItaly from 1516 to 1520Ordained a priest in 1518.

While serving as priorBlessed Paolo obtained permission from Pope Leo X to found a order of hermits devoted to the original rule as written by Saint Romuald. He founded the Society of Saint Romuald, also known as the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona or Montecoronesi in 1520. Founded the hermitage of Monte Cucco in 1521, and wrote the constitutions of the new Order in 1522. In 1524 the four existing hermitages held their first general chapter and chose Paolo as their Prior-General. Imprisoned briefly in MacerataItaly and then in 1527 in RomeItaly when the city was sacked by the mercenary Lutheran Lanzichenecchi; he was imprisoned and tortured with Saint Gaetano da Thiene but escaped.

Born

15 June 1476 in VeniceItaly

Died

25 June 1528 in the hermitage of San Silvestro de Monte Soratte, RomeItaly of natural causes

buried in the nearby crypt of San Silvestro, his grave was lost over the years when the hermits had to abandon the site

relics re-discovered in 1932

Patronage

Society of Saint Romuald

Additional Information

books

Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints

other sites in english

Catholic Contemplative Life

Wikipedia

llocs web en català

Wikipedia

sitios en español

Wikipedia

sites en français

Wikipedia

fonti in italiano

Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani

Santi e Beati

MLA Citation

“Blessed Paolo Giustiniani“. CatholicSaints.Info. 7 January 2023. Web. 24 June 2024. <https://catholicsaints.info/blessed-paolo-giustiniani/>

SOURCE : https://catholicsaints.info/blessed-paolo-giustiniani/

Saint of the Day – 28 June – Blessed Paolo Giustiniani ECMC (1476-1528)

Posted on June 28, 2020

Saint of the Day – 28 June – Blessed Paolo Giustiniani ECMC (1476-1528) – Priest, Monk and Founder of the Congregation of the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona, Reformer – born as Tommaso Giustiniani on 14 June in Venice, Italy and died on 28 June 1528, aged 52 in Monte Soratte.

He was a member of the noble Giustiniani family of Venice and was born there in 1476, the son of Francesco Giustiniani and Paola Malipiero.   He studied theology, philosophy and law, at the University of Padua.   when he had completed his studies, in 1507, he made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land and upon his return he felt a call to follow the life of a the religious.

He joined the Order of the Camàldula, the Camaldolese, in 1510.    The superior of the order, Pietro Delfino, asked him to assist in ending the irregularities that existed in some communities of the order, caused by the autonomy of each house and the lack of authority of the Prior General. Especially, the conventual branch (of cenobitic life) had relaxed in the application of the rule.   In 1513, Pope Leo X, at the request of Giustiniani and Delfino, convened a General Chapter of the Camaldolese that decided the creation of the united congregation of the Sacred Hermitage and San Michele de Murano, with temporary general Priors and with a balance between the Conventual and Hermit branches.

In 1516 he was elected Prior of the Hermitage of Camaldoli until 1520 and in 1518 he was Ordained a Priest.   Desiring a more hermit-like type of life and faithful to the primitive rule of the order, he obtained from Pope Leo X, permission to found other communities, which would follow the original rule of St Romuald.  Pope Leo X granted him the necessary permission and allowed him to found a differentiated congregation, free from the jurisdiction of the Camaldolese Prior General and with its own constitutions, called the Company of Hermits of Saint Romuald, which would later be the Congregation of the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona.   This Order would come to considered as the most faithful expression of the original Charism of the Order of St Romuald.

On his return from Rome with permission, Giustiniani resigned as Prior and with a companion, Oliverio da Cortona, went to seek the spiritual guidance of a Hermit who lived in Monte Corona, near Perugia.   Together with a Dominican, they went to live alone in a place in the Apennines, Pascialupo, where they lived in a Chapel and in 1521 founded the Hermitage of Monte Cucco.

Paolo was left alone with the Camaldolese monk who had accompanied him, as the other companion did not want to adopt the rule of St Romuald.   The monks of Camaldoli asked him to be closer to them and he soon moved to a Hermitage near Massaccio, where he was joined by other monks of Camaldoli.   These first Hermitages were followed by those of Cupramontana, San Leonardo de Monte Volubrio (diocese of Fermo) and San Benedetto de Monte Conero, near Ancona .

In 1522, Giustiniani drafted the constitutions of the new congregation, which consisted of the rigorous application of the original rule, modifying only the habit.

In 1523, the Order recognised the congregation of Monte Corona as independent, remaining in the Camaldolese family and in 1524 the first Chapter of the four hermitages of the congregation took place, which elected the Founder as Prior General.   In 1527 he went to Rome for matters of order and was taken prisoner by the soldiers of the army of Charles V who occupied the city. with Gaietà de Thiene , also a prisoner, he was tortured but released.   He returned to Venice and then to Massaccio.

In 1528 he returned to Rome and visited the Pope, obtaining confirmation of some privileges of the Order.   In Viterbo he contracted the plague.    He went to San Silvestro de Monte Soratte, near Rome, an ancient Benedictine Abbey that had been given to the Hermits of Monte Corona.   He died there on 28 June 1528.

He was succeeded as the Prior General of the congregation by Agostino di Basciano.

He was buried in the crypt of San Silvestro.    His relics were lost during the abandonment of the Hermitage and were only rediscovered in 1932.   Although he has never been formally Beatified, he had always been considered a saint and was decribed as a “beati.”   His cultus was formally confirmed allowing special veneration in his order.

Blessed Paolo Giustiniani’s Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona lives solely in Hermitages, usually with a very small number of monks comprising the community.   There are three houses in Italy, two in Poland and one each in Spain, the United States and Colombia, as well as a new foundation in Venezuela.   Unlike the other congregation, it is not a member of the larger Benedictine Confederation.

Author: AnaStpaul

Passionate Catholic. Being a Catholic is a way of life - a love affair "Religion must be like the air we breathe..."- St John Bosco Prayer is what the world needs combined with the example of our lives which testify to the Light of Christ. This site, which is now using the Traditional Calendar, will mainly concentrate on Daily Prayers, Novenas and the Memorials and Feast Days of our friends in Heaven, the Saints who went before us and the great blessings the Church provides in our Catholic Monthly Devotions. This Site is placed under the Patronage of my many favourite Saints and especially, St Paul. "For the Saints are sent to us by God as so many sermons. We do not use them, it is they who move us and lead us, to where we had not expected to go.” Charles Cardinal Journet (1891-1975) This site adheres to the Catholic Church and all her teachings. PLEASE ADVISE ME OF ANY GLARING TYPOS etc - In June 2021 I lost 95% sight in my left eye and sometimes miss errors. Thank you and I pray all those who visit here will be abundantly blessed. Pax et bonum! VIEW ALL POSTS

SOURCE : https://anastpaul.com/2020/06/28/saint-of-the-day-28-june-blessed-paolo-giustiniani-ecmc-1476-1528/

Camaldolese

 (CAMALDOLITES, CAMALDULENSIANS).

A joint order of hermits and cenobites, founded by St. Romuald at the beginning of the eleventh century. About 1012, after having founded or reformed nearly a hundred unconnected monasteries and hermitages, St. Romuald arrived in the Diocese of Arezzo seeking place for a new hermitage. It was here, according to the legend, that he was met by a certain count called Maldolus. This man, after describing his vision of monks in white habits ascending a ladder to heaven (while he had slept in one of his fields in the mountains), offered this spot to the saint. The field, which was held by Maldolus in fief of the Bishop of Arezzo, was readily accepted by St. Romuald, who built there the famous hermitage afterwards known as Campus Maldoli or Camaldoli. In the same year he received from the count a villa at the foot of the mountains, about two miles below Camaldoli, of which he made the monastery of Fonte Buono. This latter house was intended to serve as infirmary, guest-house, and bursary to the hermitage, in order that the hermits might not be distracted by any worldly business.

Camaldoli and Fonte Buono may be considered as the beginning of the Camaldolese Order; the former foreshadowing the eremitical, the latter the cenobitical, branches. It is true that this opinion has been gravely contested. The Camaldolese writers are naturally inclined to place the date of the foundation of their order as early as possible, and their judgment is further influenced by their views on the birth-date of St. Romuald. But they differ considerably among themselves, their estimates varying from the year 940, chosen by Blessed Paolo Giustiniani, to the year 974, that commends itself to Hastiville. They point out that St. Romuald founded many monasteries and hermitages, and was many times surrounded by disciples before he came to Camaldoli; and they argue that in founding Camaldoli he did not intend to begin the order, but merely a new hermitage; that the order was called the Romualdine until the later years of the eleventh century, and then received the name Camaldolese, not from its origin at Camaldoli, but from the fact that the Holy Hermitage had always retained its first fervour and had been an exemplar to all other houses. It seems probable, however, that St. Romuald before 1012 was rather a reformer of Benedictine houses and a founder of isolated monasteries and hermitages, than the originator of a new order. Indeed it is doubtful if he had ever any intention of founding an order, in the modern sense, at all. But at Camaldoli the Rule, which later appeared in modified form as the "Constitutions of the Blessed Rudolph", is first heard of; at Camaldoli the distinctive white habit first appears; at Camaldoli are first found in combination the two cenobite and hermit branches that are afterwards so marked a feature of the order. Strictly, perhaps, the order did not come into existence till the Bull "Nulli fidelium", of Alexander II, in 1072. But, as all its distinctive features are first found together at Camaldoli in 1012, it may not be unwarranted to asign the foundation of the Camaldolese Order to that date.

The five Camaldolese congregations

For six centuries the order grew steadily as one body, recognizing the Holy Hermitage as its head. But in process of time it became divided into five separate congregations, viz.: (i) The Holy Hermitage, (ii) San Michele di Murano, (iii) Monte Corona, (iv) The Congregation of Turin (San Salvatore di Turino), (v) Notre-Dame de Consolation. The history of these congregations had better be considered separately, after which something will be said of the Camaldolese Nuns.

(i) The Congregation of the Holy Hermitage

Little need be said here of this great congregation, for throughout the centuries it has changed but little, and its history is mostly to be found in its relations with the congregations to which it gave birth. Before the separation of San Michele di Murano, the Holy Hermitage had given four cardinals and many bishops to the church, and was famous throughout Europe for the sanctity and austerity of its members. Gratian, the great canonist; Guido d'Arezzo, the founder of modern music; Lorenzo Monaco, the painter; Niccola Malermi, the first translator of the Bible into Italian, are all claimed as sons of this great congregation. To the present day, in spite of persecution and spoliation, the hermits of Camaldoli and the cenobites of Fonte Buono remain examples of austerity and monastic fervour.

(ii) The Congregation of Murano

In the year 1212 the Venetian Republic, anxious that a hermitage should be founded within its borders, sent a request to this effect to Guido, Prior of Camaldoli. By him were sent Albert and John, hermits, and two lay brothers. To these was made over the little church of San Michele, on an island (now known as the Cemetery Island) between Venice and Murano, where tradition asserts St. Romuald to have lived with Marinus. The church was partly under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Castello, partly under that of the Bishop of Torcello. It was, however, at once released from the jurisdiction of both and handed over to Albert as representing the Prior of Camaldoli. At first a hermitage was started; but soon, on account of the rapid influx of novices, it was found necessary to adopt the cenobitical manner of life. The church was rebuilt and was consecrated by Cardinal Ugolino, and by 1227 the house is included by Gregory IX in his enumeration of the monasteries subject to Camaldoli. In 1243 another attempt to found a hermitage near Venice was made, John and Gerard, hermits of Camaldoli, being sent by Guido, the prior-general, to take possession of the house and church of San Mattia in Murano, which had formerly been a nunnery and had been given to Camaldoli by the Bishop of Torcello. This hermitage prospered greatly, and, six years after its foundation, was granted a much-mitigated form of the rule by Martin III, prior general of Camaldoli. Within twenty years this hermitage already possessed a subject house, and by the middle of the fourteenth century we find the Prior of San Mattia making a visitation of his suffragan monasteries, and the hermitage itself adopting the cenobitical life.

Meanwhile, about the end of the thirteenth century, the Priory of San Michele had developed into an abbey, and in 1407 its monks were allowed to elect their own abbot, subject only to the confirmation of the Prior of Camaoldoli. Two years later Paolo Venerio, Abbot of San Michele, was appointed by the pope one of the visitors and reformers of monasteries in Venice. In 1434 Camaldoli asserted its authority, when Ambrogio Traversari, the prior general, suddenly made a visitation of San Mattia di Murano and deposed the prior for contumacy. At the same time he exempted San Michele from the jurisdiction of the vicar, and subjected it immediately to the prior-general. But in another ten years came a further impulse towards independence, when Pope Eugenius IV suggested that the Camaldolese abbeys should form a congregation similar to that of Santa Giustina di Padova. The times, however, were not opportune, and though a union of nine abbeys was attempted in 1446 (called the Union of the Nine Places) it was soon abandoned, and for twenty years the matter rested. But in 1462 Pius II granted to Mariotti, prior general, and to his successors the right of appointing all superiors under his jurisdiction ad nutum. At once the question of separation became again important, and twelve years later it was solved. The Abbeys of Santa Maria dei Carreri, at Padua, and of San Michele di Murano and the Priory of San Mattia di Murano formed a new congregation. To escape the danger of commendam it was arranged that the superiors of these houses should be elected for only three years at a time, and a semblance of connexion with Camaldoli was maintained by requiring confirmation of their election by the prior general. The new congregation was confirmed by Sixtus IV, and soon showed signs of vigour. In 1475 the two great abbeys of Sant' Apollinaire and of San Severo at Classe were united to it; and in 1487 Innocent VIII confirmed and extended the privileges granted by his predecessor. By 1513, however, the life tenure of office by the prior general was found to be inconvenient by others as well as by the new congregation, and a general chapter of the whole order was held at Florence. It was decided to form a new united congregation "of the Holy Hermitage and of San Michele di Murano", with a prior general elected annually (afterwards triennially), and alternately from the hermits and the "regular" cenobites. The "conventuals" were expressly excluded from the generalship and were forbidded to take novices. This congregation was confirmed and was granted extraordinary privileges by the Bull "Etsi a summo" of Leo X. The reunion lasted, in spite of many disputes between the hermits and the cenobites, for more than a century. In 1558 the conventuals were separated from all privileges of the order, and eleven years later (1569) were finally suppressed by Pius V.

In the same year the congregation was much strengthened by the suppression of the hermit order of Fonte Avellana, which, with all its possessions, was united to the Camaldolese Order. Four years later, in 1573, the great Abbey of San Gregorio on the Cælian Hill in Rome was united to the congregation. The whole order was, at the beginning of the seventeenth century, at the summit of its fortunes. In 1513 there had been seventeen "groups of monasteries" and four nunneries in the order, and since then had been added Fonte Avellana with its dependencies, the congregations of Monte Corona and of Turin, and several great historic abbeys. But the disruptive tendencies in the order were fatal to its continued prosperity. In 1616 the differences between the hermits and the cenobites of the great Congregation of the Holy Hermitage and San Michele resulted in their separation again into two congregations, and in spite of an attempt at reunion in 1626 this separation was final. The Congregation of San Michele di Murano had its own general, styled "the general of all the Camaldolese monks and hermits". It possessed at one time about thirty-five monasteries (including Sant' Apollinaire at Ravenna, San Michele and San Mattia at Murano, Santa Croce at Fonte Avellana, Santi Angeli at Florence, and San Gregorio at Rome), as well as eight nunneries. The houses subject to the congregation were divided into the four provinces of VeniceTuscany, Romagna, and The Marches and Umbria, each with its "house of profession", whose abbot was the vicar of the province. At each of the quinquennial chapters, the four great offices of the general, the two visitors, and the procurator general were distributed in turn among the four provinces, so that each province every twenty years had possessed all these dignities. Under this organization the congregation attracted many devout and intelligent subjects, and its reputation both for learning and for strictness was widespread. Romano Merighi (1658-1737), one of the founders of the Accademia degli Arcadi; Guido Grandi (1670-1742), historian of the order and famous mathematician, friend and correspondent of Newton; the two brothers Collina; Angelo Calogerà (1699-1768), the historian of letters; Claude Frommond (1705-65), physician and chemist; Benedetto Mittarelli (1708-77) and Anselmo Costadoni (1714-85), authors of the "Annales Camaldulenses"; Mauro Sarti (1709-66), historian; Isidore Bianchi (1733-1807) and Clemente Biagi (1740-1804), archæologists; Ambrogio Soldani (1736-1808), naturalist—these are but a few of the illustrious names that adorn the congregation. It has also produced four cardinals: Andrea Giovannetti (1722-1800), for twenty-three years Archbishop of Bologna; Placido Zuria (1769-1834), Vicar of Rome under three popes; Mauro Cappellari (1765-1846), who in 1831 was elected pope and assumed the name of Gregory XVI; and Ambrogio Bianchi, who was also general of the order till his death in 1856. It was Mauro Cappellari to whom the Camaldolese Order is indebted for its survival. The great catastrophe of the French Revolution resulted in 1810 in the general suppression of religious orders in Italy. Fonte Avellana was spared in recognition of the scientific attainments of the titular abbot, Dom Albertino Bellenghi. But the Venetian houses were involved in the general ruin. S. Mattia was deserted and ultimately demolished. But Mauro Cappellari, who was at that time Abbot of S. Michele di Murano, succeeded in retaining house and community, by clothing the latter in the habits of secular priests, and by turning the former into a college for noble youths. The magnificent library was confiscated, and, after its chief treasures had been placed in public libraries, the remaining 18,000 volumes were sold by public auction. In 1813, after the blockade of Venice by the Austrians, the Commune made a public cemetery of the island of San Michele, thus destroying the vineyards of the abbey. In 1829 the same body gave the monastery and island into the custody of the Friars Minor Observant, who still possess them. Meanwhile, in 1825, Cappellari had been created cardinal by Leo XII, and it was owing to the strenuous opposition of the former and of Cardinal Zuria that that pope relinquished his intention to suppress the now enfeebled order. And when Cappellari mounted the pontifical throne as Gregory XVI, he not only materially assisted the finances of the order, but in every way furthered its attempts to regain something of its former prosperity. At his death, in 1846, it had recovered several of its historic houses and had hopes of regaining all. But these hopes have not been realized.

(iii) The Congregation of Monte Corona

If we except Camaldoli itself, all the houses of the order may be said to have abandoned, by the end of the fifteenth century, the eremetical mode of life so dear to St. Romuald. The establishment of hermitages in the neighbourhood of towns had rendered the solitary life of the hermit almost impossible, and the munificent benefactions which at various times had been made to the order had caused it to lose not a little of its primitive spirit and to abandon many of its stricter observances. It was reserve to Paolo Giustiniani, a member of the illustrious Venetian family of that name, to restore to the order the observance of St. Romuald's ideal of a life of silence and solitude. At an early age he left Venice, where he had been born in 1476, to study philosophy and theology in the famous schools of Padua, and at the end of a brilliant career there he went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. On his return to Italy he entered religion at the age of thirty-four, becoming a hermit at Camaldoli. His promotion to high offices in the order was rapid. Shortly after his profession he was sent on an embassy to the court of Leo X to obtain papal protection against a certain abbot of S. Felice at Florence, who seems to have been lavishly spending the revenues of Camaldoli, and whom the prior of Camaldoli, general of the order, was unable himself to deal with. The result of the embassy was a Bull from the pope ordering restitution to be made to Camaldoli and forbidding to the Abbot of S. Felice any further interference. On Giustiniani's return from Rome, the general of the order, Pietro Delphino, invited his co-operation in the difficult task of suppressing the abuses which had grown up. All authority in the order, which by right belonged to the prior of Camaldoli, was now possessed by the superiors of the regulars and conventuals. The discipline and observance of the former seem to have been strict, but the case of the conventuals left a great deal to be desired. Their superiors were perpetual, and apparently independent of one another. Recourse was had to Leo X, who, in 1513, ordered a general chapter to assemble. The results of its deliberations have been given above in the history of San Michele di Murano.

In 1516 Paolo Giustiniani was elected Prior of Camaldoli, and on the expiration of the three years of office, he again journeyed to Rome on business concerning the order. After the lapse of another three years spent in seclusion at Camaldoli, he was re-elected to the office of prior and once again approached the court of Leo X, to obtain permission from that pontiff to attempt an extension of the order. Leo, who appears to have had a great respect for Giustiniani, not only encouraged him in his project, but allowed the foundation of an entirely new congregation, exempt from the jurisdiction of the general and possessing its own peculiar constitutions. Returning from Rome to Camaldoli, he read the Brief from Leo to the assembled hermits and monks, and proceeded to resign the office of prior. Accompanied by a single companion he travelled on foot to Perugia to seek advice and spiritual direction from a solitary (of the Third Order of St. Francis) who dwelt at Monte Calvo. With this latter and a member of the Order of St. Dominic, he betook himself to a retreat in the Apennines—a dismal and solitary rock known as Pascia Lupo. A ruined chapel appears to have been the sole shelter for the three wanderers, and their right to possess even this was disputed by the priest of the neighbouring village so vigorously that it required papal authority to settle the question. Paolo was soon forsaken by his Dominican and Franciscan companions, who were aggrieved at the idea of adopting St. Romuald's rule, he himself remaining at Pascia Lupo with the companion whom he had brought from Camaldoli and two others who had joined him. He was not destined, however, to remain long in this lonely spot, for, acceding to an earnest request from the hermits of Camaldoli to live near them, he came, with his original companion, to a place near Massaccio, and was there joined by some of the religious from Camaldoli. Such were the first beginnings fo the congregation founded by Paolo Giustiniani. Soon it was increased by the addition of two famous monasteries, viz. that of St. Leonard, situated on the summit of Monte Volubrio, in the Diocese of Fermo, and that of St. Benedict, near Ancona. The former was given to the order by its commendatory abbot, Gabrielli, nephew of the Cardinal of Urbino. Massaccio was given over entirely to the new congregation by Camaldoli in 1522. In the same year Giustiniani drew up his constitutions. No important additions to previous legislation seem to have been made. The rule of life was to be kept with the greatest rigour, as in St. Romuald's time. The hermits' food was rarely to consist of anything better than dry bread, and wine was very seldom allowed. The form of the monastic habit was considerably altered: the tunic and scapular were so shortened as to come only a few inches below the knee, and in place of the cowl the new hermits were given a capuce with a hood attached to it, and a short cloak fastened with a piece of wool at the throat.

There were now in all four hermitages belonging to the congregation, and in January of the year 1524 the first general chapter was held in the monastery of St. Benedict near Ancona. In this chapter Paolo Giustiniani was elected general of the congregation, priors were chosen for the different monasteries, and the constitutions were confirmed. In the same year Cardinal Giulio dei Medici, the friend and helper of Giustiniani, succeeded to the papacy as Clement VII. Giustiniani immediately repaired to Rome to obtain from the new pontiff confirmation of the acts of Leo X and full possession of the monasteries which Gabrielli, holding in commendam, had given over to the congregation when he joined it. Clement readily gave the necessary confirmation and at the same time granted the congregation certain dispensations from canon law.

This confirmation of Gabrielli's gift did not imply that the monasteries would remain in the possession of the congregation after Gabrielli's death. Giustiniani, anxious that the gift should be made perpetual, once more set out for Rome, accompanied this time by Gabrielli. It was the month of May, 1527, the very time at which the soldiers of the Emperor Charles V were occupying Rome. Giustiniani and his companion on their arrival were made prisoners, but, having nothing in their possession, were released, and travelled first to Venice and then to Massaccio. In 1528 Giustiniani went to Rome for the last time. He saw Clement in the Castle of S. Angelo and obtained the confirmation he had sought in the preceding year. Besides this he received confirmation of a gift previously made by the Abbot of St. Paul's, of the monastery of San Silvestro on Monte Soracte. On his way to this monastery, which was about twenty miles distant from Rome, he was seized by his last illness, and died at his newly acquired monastery on the 28th of June, 1528.

On the death of the founder, a new general was chosen for the congregation in the person of Agostino di Basciano, who died shortly after. His place was taken by Giustiniano di Bergamo, formerly a Benedictine monk. He summoned a general chapter to decide which of the then existing houses was to be considered as the chief of the congregation. Many preferred Massaccio, as being the first-founded, but precedence was finally given to the monastery of Monte Corona.

In 1540, reunion was effected between the Congregations of Monte Corona and Camaldoli, with the prior of Camaldoli as general. It was arranged that a general chapter was to be held yearly at Camaldoli, at which the prior was to be chosen. This state of things only lasted for a year; the congregations were again separated and remained so till the year 1634, when they were again united by Pope Urban VIII. This union lasted till 1667, when they were finally separated by a Bull of Clement IX.

(iv) The Congregation of Turin

The Congregation of Turin owes its foundation to Alessandro Ceva, a member of a noble Piedmontese family. Born in 1538, he went to Rome in 1560 to study for the priesthood, and there placed himself under the spiritual direction of St. Philip Neri. Eight years later, with the saint's advice, he determined to join the Camaldolese, and we find him becoming prior general of the order in 1587. From 1589 to 1595 he was in perpetual dispute with the order concerning the reformation of the Breviary ordered by Popes Pius V and Clement VIII. In 1596 he was sent to Turin as prior of the Camaldolese monastery of Puteo Strata, with authority to found hermitages of the order in Piedmont. Two years later a terrible plague visited Turin, during which the Camaldolese monks undertook the care of the sick, which the secular clergy, whose numbers had been terribly reduced by the pestilence, were scarcely able to perform. Alessandro Ceva, in the midst of his ministrations in the afflicted city, was called away to assume the priorship of the monastery of San Vito at Milan, and we find him writing from this place in 1599 to the Archbishop of Turin, begging him to ask Charles Emmanuel, Duke of Savoy, to make a solemn vow to God to found a Camaldolese hermitage, that the plague might be arrested. The vow was made publicly by the Duke of Savoy and the people of Turin, and the foundation of the new hermitage after much delay was laid in July, 1602, at a lonely spot between Turin and Peceto. The church of this new hermitage was finished in 1606, and endowed by the Duke of Savoy as the chapel of the Order of the Knights of the Annunciation (see MILITARY ORDERS), of which order the hermits were to be regarded as chaplains. Little is known about this congregation, which seems to have been reabsorbed into the congregation of Monte Corona in the eighteenth century.

(v) The Congregation of Notre-Dame de Consolation.

In the year 1626 there entered the Congregation of Turin Boniface d'Antoine, a French priest belonging to the Diocese of Lyons. Almost immediately he was sent to France by the general of the congregation, to solicit from Louis XIII authorization for the founding of Camaldolese hermitages in France. His first monastery was in his native Diocese of Lyons, near a town named Bothéon. It was dedicated to Our Lady of Consolation and was founded and endowed by Balthassar de Gudaigne de Hostun, Marquis do Baume, in 1631. His second foundation was at Mont Peuchant in Le Forez, thanks to the help and munificence of the Archbishop of Lyons, Cardinal de Marque Mont. The Archbishop of Vienne, Pierre de Villars, was also friendly to the new order, authorizing the foundation of the hermitage of Notre Dame de Grâce at Sapet: and testifying at the same time to the sanctity and austerity of d'Antoine. Another foundation in the Diocese of Lyons was made in 1633, when Père Vital de Saint-Paul, an Oratorian, and his sister presented the two churches of St.-Roch and Val-Jésus, situated in the parish of Chambre, to d'Antoine. In the following year Louis XIII gave his formal consent by letters patent to the establishment of the Camaldolese in his dominions, on the condition that their general should always be French. He also prevailed upon the reigning pontiff, Urban VIII, to form the French Camaldolese into a separate congregation, with the title of "Notre-Dame de Consolation", which was effected by a Bull dated 8 October, 1634. They were to observe the constitutions of Monte Corona, to which congregation they were affiliated. The new order seems to have been popular in France. In 1642 Charles de Valois, almoner of the Duc d'Angoulême, founded a hermitage at La Flotte, in Vendôme, and in 1659 the order was presented with another house in Vendôme, at La Gavalerie, in the parish of Bessé. A foundation was made in 1674 by the Comte de Guénégaud and his wife, Elizabeth de Choiseul, on their estate at Rogat, in the parish of Congard, in Brittany. In 1671 the new congregation took possession of the hermitage of Mont-Valérien, near Paris, whither they had been invited two years previously by a lay religious community. This foundation, however, was abandoned two years later. In 1679 a Camaldolese community was introduced into the old Benedictine abbey at Ile Chauvet, in Lower Poitou. This abbey had been held in commendam by various persons, some of whom had been laymen. In 1654 Henri de Maupas, Abbot of St.-Denis at Reims and afterwards Bishop successively of Le Puy and Evreux, became commendatory abbot, and fifteen years later introduced the Camaldolese, with the consent of the Bishop of Luçon, in whose diocese the abbey was situated. This was the only foundation of any importance made in France after the death of Boniface d'Antoine in 1673. Henceforth the history of this congregation is closely connected with the history of Jansenism. Throughout the congregation there were many obstinate adherents of the new heresy, and in 1728 a pamphlet, entitled "Le Témoignage", defending their position, appeared in answer to the punitive measures taken against them by the General Chapter of 1727. No amount of repression could remove all traces of this persistent heresy, and the whole Congregation was suppressed in 1770.

The first house of Camaldolese Nuns, San Pietro di Luco in Mugello, near Florence, was founded by Blessed Rudolph, in the year 1086. It is true that St. Romuald himself had founded houses for nuns in 1006 and 1023; but there is no evidence that they followed the Camaldolese rule, and the Camaldolese writers almost unanimously assign the beginning of the houses for women to Blessed Rudolph. By 1616, when the congregation of San Michele di Murano was finally separated, there were eight houses subject to that congregation, besides many others under the jurisdiction of the bishops in whose dioceses they were situated. The nuns follow the rule of Camaldoli. They wear a white habit, veil, scapular, and girdle, to which the choir nuns add a black veil. In choir the choir nuns wear a white cowl, but the lay sisters a white cloak.

Rule and constitutions

St. Romuald has left no written rule; the austere manner of life led by his hermits was transmitted by oral tradition. His great ideal was to introduce into the West the eremitical life led by the Eastern monks and the Fathers of the Desert. In the words of St. Peter Damian, his endeavour was "to turn the whole world into a hermitage, and make all the multitude of the people associates of the monastic order" (totum mundum in eremum convertere, et monachico ordini omnem populi multitudinem sociare). He introduced into Western monasticism a system hitherto unknown, and attempted a blending of the cenobitical life of the West with the eremitical life of the East. The rule was of the utmost severity. The brethren lived each in their separate cells, in the midst of which stood the oratory or chapel, where they met for the Hours of the Divine Office, the whole Psalter being recited daily. There were two Lents during the year, one in preparation for Christmas, the other for Easter. During both these periods every day of the week except Sunday was an abstinence day, that is to say, really a fast of the most rigorous kind on bread and water. During the remainder of the year this abstinence was to be kept on all days except Thursdays and Sundays, when fruit and vegetables might be eaten. The ideal of St. Romuald was one of absolute asceticism, and there was little room in his system for the "nothing harsh, nothing burdensome" (nihil asperum, nihil grave) which is so striking a feature in the Rule of St. Benedict, with its broad comprehensiveness and wise power of dispensation. This rule of life remained unrelaxed at Camaldoli till the year 1080, when the fourth prior, Blessed Rudolph I, gave the first written constitutions to the order. Besides a mitigation of austerity, there had become necessary a definite written code which everyone who joined would be bound to follow. The abstinence on bread and water, which had hitherto been observed on all days except Sundays during the two Lents, was now dispensed on Thursday as well, and also on the feasts of St. Andrew, St. Gregory, St. Benedict, the Annunciation, Palm Sunday, and Maundy Thursday. On these days fish and wine were to be allowed. On feasts of twelve lessons, if these were not days of abstinence, the hermits were allowed to take their meals together in a common refectory. The observance of silence which was continual under St. Romuald, was slightly relaxed in Rudolph's constitutions. It was to be observed throughout both Lents and on all abstinence days. At other times it was to be observed from Vespers till after the conventual Mass. An important change in the character of the order was made by Rudolph's extension of the cenobitical life. Fonte Buono, from being merely an adjunct of Camaldoli, now became a separate monastery, and henceforth the Camaldolese Order is distinguished by this twofold character. In his legislation for cenobites Rudolph built carefully on St. Benedict's Rule. The interpretation which adhered closely to the letter and rigour of this rule, without consideration of circumstances of time, place, and national characteristics, was that which naturally appealed most strongly to the monastic reformer, and it was this aspect of the rule, if anything, intensified, which Rudolph chose for his monks, who were regarded by their contemporaries, and have ever since been regarded, as forming one of the many branches of the great Benedictine tree. In 1085 and 1188 further constitutions were given, more mitigated than those given in 1080; and as time went on the tendency was ever towards greater relaxation. In 1249 and 1253 Blessed Martin III gave his constitutions, and others again were promulgated in 1328. When the hermits of Camaldoli were united with the monks of the Congregation of San Michele di Murano, in 1513, special constitutions were drawn up, and when the first union was made between the Congregations of Camaldoli and of Monte Corona, in 1540, separate constitutions were given to the former.

With regard to the rule observed at Camaldoli today, it may be said with truth to retain some of the early rigour and austerity. Meat is never allowed except to the sick, and the severe abstinence on bread and water has to be observed on every Friday throughout the year. Meals are always taken in the seclusion of the cell, except on the great feasts, and even then in silence. The two Lents are still observed, and during these periods eggs, milk, butter, and cheese are strictly forbidden. All the Hours of the Divine Office are said in common in the hermitage church, a building which practically consists of one long and spacious choir. The hermits rise all the year round at half an hour after midnight for MatinsLauds, and Meditation, which last for an hour and a half. A rest is then allowed till sunrise, when they betake themselves again to the church for the Office of Prime, and then return to their separate oratories to celebrate Mass. A slight collation is then taken, and the time between that and Tierce is spent in spiritual reading. Tierce is sung at nine, followed immediately by the conventual Mass and Sext. The remainder of the morning till the Office of None, at eleven, is passed daily in study and manual labour, each hermit having his own little garden and workshop. Dinner is taken at half-past eleven and is followed by recreation, during which the hermits are allowed in summer to take a siesta. Vespers are sung at sunset, and a slight collation is taken later on. The day is closed by Complin, Meditation, and the Rosary. Twice a week in winter, and three times a week in summer, talking is allowed during recreation time, and walks may be taken through the woods surrounding the hermitage. The monks at Fonte Buono live a life somewhat similar, though, of course, without the solitude of the hermits' life, and a walk beyond the monastic enclosure is allowed daily. Their hospice is now an hotel, and their forests have been appropriated by the Government. Speaking generally, the Camaldolese cenobites today may be said to follow the Benedictine rule in its ordinary interpretation.

The habit of the Camaldolese is now but little changed from that worn in the earliest days of the order. A white tunic reaching to the ankles, with scapular, girdle, and hood of the same colour. The cowl, worn only during the Divine Office, is also white, and of the same shape as the ample cowl of the Benedictines. A cloak is worn when walking abroad in cold weather, and the hermits also have another very ample cloak in which the whole body can be wrapped when hurrying to the midnight Office from their cells in severe weather.—Camaldoli, it should be remembered, stands on a range of the Tuscan Apennines at an altitude of 3680 feet above the sea.

An aspirant to the solitary or to the cenobitical life at Camaldoli has to undergo a long and severe probation. He is at first regarded as a guest for some days, and is then summoned before the community, assembled in chapter, and formally received. Placed immediately in the novitiate, he continues to wear his secular dress for forty days, after which period he is clothed in the novice's habit and begins a novitiate of two years. If he should persevere he is admitted to simple vows, which may, if necessary, be dispensed during the three following years. During these three years the young religious does part of his ecclesiastical studies, and then, unless his superiors think a longer period necessary, he is admitted to solemn or final vows and to Holy orders. A lay brother's probation is different. He remains one year in the novitiate, and then becomes an "oblate" for seven years; another year's novitiate is then gone through, at the end of which he is called conversus, and his simple vows are taken for three years. If all is satisfactory, at the end of this period he is allowed to take solemn vows.

Present state of the order

There are at the present date (1907) three congregations in the Camaldolese order: the Congregation of Cenobites, which possesses four monasteries, with about fifty subjects; the Congregation of Hermits of Etruria, which possesses two hermitages and three monasteries, with nearly sixty subjects; the Congregation of Hermits of Monte Corona, which possesses ten houses, with about one hundred and thirty subjects. All these houses are in Italy, except the monastery of Bielany in Poland, belonging to the Congregation of Cenobites, and the hermitage of Nuova Camaldoli, near Caxias in Brazil, belonging to the Congregation of Hermits of Etruria. This last was founded from Camaldoli in 1899, by Dom Ambrogio Pierattelli and Dom Michele Evangelisti, and one lay brother, Ermindo Dindelli. In 1900 these were joined by three more hermits and two more lay brothers from Camaldoli. Dom Ambrogio was elected prior in 1903, and the first Camaldolese hermitage in the New World shows many signs of rapid and fruitful growth.

There are also five houses of nuns in existence, with about 150 inmates. These are all in Italy.

Sources

AUGUSTINUS FORTUNIUS, Historia Camaldolensium (Venice, 1575, 1579); BEAUNIER, Receuil historique des Archevêchés, Evêchés, Abbayes et Prieurés de France (Ligurgé, 1906), introduction; Camaldoli ed i Camaldolesi, brevi note di un sacerdote secolare ad un giovane (Rome, 1905); CARMICHAEL, In Tuscany (London, 1901), 245-264; CAMPBELL, Guida storica illustrata di Camaldoli (Udine, 1906); GRANDI, Dissertationes Camaldolenses (Lucca, 1707); HASTIVILLIUS, Romualdina seu Eremetica Camaldulensis Ordinis Historia (Paris, 1631); HEIMBUCHER, Die Orden und Kongregationen der catholischen Kirche (Paderborn, 1907), I, 401-408; HELYOT, Histoire des ordres monastiques (Paris, 1718), V, 236-79; HERZOG AND HAUCK, Realencyclopädie für protestantischle Theologie und Kirche (Leipzig, 1897), III, 683-87; MABILLON, Acta Sanctorum O. S. B. (Venice, 1733-1740), Sæc. VI, i, 246-78; IDEM, Annales Ordinis S. Benedicti (Paris, 1707), IV, 1261-3, 275, 289, 339; MATTABELLI AND COSTADONI, Annales Camaldulenses O. S. B. (9 vols., Venice, 1755-73); MORONI, Diz. (Venice, 1840-58), V, 290, 308; XCI, 519-53, 561--62; S. PETRUS DAMIANUS, Vita Sancti Romualdi (Florence, 1513); RAZZI, Regola della vita eremitica data dal b. Romualdo (Florence, 1575); RAZZI, Vite dei santi e beati del ordine di Camaldoli (Florence, 1600); THOMAS DE MINIS, Catalogue Sanctorum et Beatorum totius ordinis Camaldulensis (Florence, 1605); ZIEGELBAUER, Centifolium Camaldlulense (Venice, 1750); Regola di S. Benedetto e Constitutioni della Congregazione degli Eremiti Camaldolesi di Monte Corona (Rome, 1670); Regolamento giornaliero pei novici degli Eremiti Camaldolesi di Monte Corona (Frascatri, 1906); Le Messager des Fidèles, Revue Bénédictine (Maredsous, 1887), IV, 356-63; Revista Storica Benedictina (Rome, 1906-7), I, 288-9, 470-5; II, 371-383, 600-4.

Butler, Richard Urban, and Leslie Toke. "Camaldolese." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1908. <http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03204d.htm>.

Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by WGKofron. With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert and St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio.

Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York.

Copyright © 2023 by Kevin Knight. Dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.

SOURCE : https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03204d.htm

GIUSTINIANI

A celebrated family, which, according to Bernardo Giustiniani in his vita of his uncle St. Lawrence, was driven from Constantinople by sedition and migrated to Istria and Venice. The Venetian branch is found in Chioggia and Fermo. A Genoese branch spread to Corsica, Naples, Sicily, and Lipara, as well as to Chios, an Aegean island ruled by Genoa. The first member of whom there is record was Bl. Nicholas, a Benedictine monk (d. c. 1180). He entered the monastery of San Niccolò del Lido at Venice in 1153. When all the male members of his family perished in a disaster at sea, he was dispensed from his monastic vows by Pope Alexander III. He married Anna Michieli, daughter of the Doge of Venice, and fathered nine children. He returned to the monastery before his death. Although he is honored on November 21 in the Benedictine Order, there has been no formal beatification.

Venetian Branch. Lawrence (see lawrence justinian, st.), the most famous member of the family, an ascetical and mystical writer, entered the canons regular of st. augustine in 1400 and led a humble, mortified life, showing special love for the poor. From 1409 on, he served in various administrative posts in his order and in the Church, ultimately becoming superior general (1424–31), bishop of Castello (1433), and finally patriarch of Venice (1451–56). Beatified in 1524 by clement vii, Lawrence was canonized by alexander viii in 1690.

Leonardo, statesman and poet; b. Venice, c. 1388; d. there, Nov. 10, 1446. Leonardo was the brother of Lawrence. He became head of the Council of Ten (1443) and the procurator of saint mark's. He is noted for having restored the canzonetta as a popular lyric.

Bernardo, statesman and historian; b. Venice, Jan. 6, 1408; d. there, March 10, 1489. He was the son of Leonardo, and became ambassador to Louis XI of France, paul ii, and sixtus iv, as well as a member of the Council of Ten. He is known for his biography of his uncle St. Lawrence (Venice 1475) and for his history of Venice, the De origine urbis Venetiarum (Venice 1492).

Paolo, Bl., monk and spiritual author, known also as Tommaso; b. Venice, June 15, 1476; d. Abbey of St. Sylvester of Mt. Sorate, June 28, 1528. He studied philosophy and theology at the University of Padua and then c. 1505 took up a solitary existence at Murano near Venice. He was the founder of the Camaldolese Hermits of Monte Corona and in 1513 succeeded Pietro delfino as general of the order. Paolo is known also as the author of numerous ascetical works and the Regula vitae eremiticae (Camaldoli 1519). His cult has not been officially confirmed.

Innocenzio, scholar; d. Aug. 10, 1563. He was a Camaldolese monk, a noted theologian and the author of a vita of Bl. Paolo.

Nicolò Antonio, bishop; b. 1712; d. 1796. A Benedictine, he was named to the See of Torcello in 1754, Verona in 1759, and Padua in 1772. He also translated and edited the works of St. athanasius and of St. Lawrence Giustiniani. Two Jesuit authors, Fá brice (1530–1604) and Gerolamo (b. 1698), also are from this branch of the family.

Genoese Branch. Paolo de Moneglia, curialist and diplomat; b. Genoa, 1444; d. Budapest, Hungary, 1502. A Dominican since 1463, he became provincial for Lombardy in 1485, master of the Sacred Palace in 1490, and inquisitor general for Genoa in 1494 (see inquisition). In 1499 he became bishop of Chios and was named legate for Hungary by Pope alexander vi.

Agostino, bishop and Orientalist; b. Genoa, c. 1470;d. at sea off Liguria, Italy, 1536. He became a Dominican, was named bishop of Nebbio in Corsica in 1514 and participated in the Fifth lateran council (1516–17). In 1517 he became the first professor of Hebrew at the University of Paris. A friend of pico della mirandola, erasmus, and Thomas more, Agostino was the first in Europe to publish a polyglot bible (1516), and in it, commenting on Ps 18.5, he inserted a brief notice on Christopher columbus. Quétif ascribes 15 works to his authorship.

Vincenzo, a classicist; d. 1599. He took up residence at Valencia, Aragon, and was the author of Commentaria in universam logicam and editor of the works of vincent ferrer. Decio (1580–1642), another Dominican, came from Messana and was bishop of Aleria, Corsica, from 1612.

Benedetto, Jesuit exegete; b. Genoa, March 16, 1551; d. Rome, Dec. 19, 1622. He served seven years as rector of the Roman College and was appointed theologian of the Sacred penitentiary in 1606. Twelve works are ascribed to his authorship, of which his commentaries on the Epistles of St. Paul (2 v. Rome 1612–13) and on the Catholic Epistles (Lyon 1621) are best known.

Six other Giustiniani are numbered among the Jesuit writers: Agostino (1551–90), Giorgio (1569–1644), Vincenzo (1593–1661), Pietro (1628–1707), Gerolamo (1656–1734) and Ottaviano (1689–1768).

Giovanni, a military commander; d. Chios, 1453. He brought a Genoese contingent to Constantinople in 1453 and played a leading part in the brave but unsuccessful defense of that city against the Turkish attack.

Michele, (1612– c. 1680) was vicar to his cousin Decio, Bishop of Aleria, and also a historian of Italian affairs. Lorenzo (1761–1824 or 1825) was a distinguished scholar who became librarian of the Biblioteca Nazionale (1805) and professor of critical diplomatics at the University of Naples.

Members of the Hierarchy. There were five cardinals from the Giustiniani family.

Vincenzo of Chios, scholar; b. Chios, Aug. 28, 1519;d. Rome, Oct. 28, 1582. He was master general of the Dominican Order from 1558 to 1571 and participated in the Council of trent (1562–63). He was the legate of Pope Pius V in Spain and was created a cardinal in 1570. He edited the first complete edition of the works of St. thomas aquinas (17 v. Rome 1570).

Benedetto of Chios, bishop of Porto; b. 1554; d.1621. He served under the popes from gregory xiii to gregory xv and was noted for his zeal and charity to the poor of his diocese.

Orazio of Chios, scholar and curialist; b. Chios, Feb. 28, 1580; d. Rome, July 25, 1649. He was an oratorian and became librarian of the Vatican (see vatican library) under urban viii. He was made bishop of Montalto in 1640 and a cardinal in 1645. He also served as consultor of the Congregation for the propagation of the faith and of the Holy Office, as well as grand penitentiary.

Giacomo, curialist and papal diplomat; b. Rome, Dec. 29, 1769; d. Rome, Feb. 24, 1843. He was vice-legate at Ravenna in 1794, governor of Perugia in 1797, and vice-governor of Rome until he was forced to withdraw before Napoleon's troops. Reinstalled in Rome by pius vii, he was created archbishop of Tyre in 1817 and served as nuncio to Spain until raised to the cardinalate in 1826 by leo xii. He was among the candidates for the papacy after the death of pius viii but was opposed by the Spanish government.

Allesandro, papal diplomat; b. Genoa, Feb. 3, 1778;d. Genoa, Oct. 11, 1843. He was instrumental in the negotiation of the Concordat of 1818 with the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies and was in Naples during the revolution of 1820–21. He was created archbishop of Petra in 1822, named nuncio to Naples the same year, reassigned as nuncio to Lisbon in 1826, and raised to the cardinalate in 1832.

Two archbishops and four bishops are listed among the Giustiniani of Chios. Leonardo (c. 1395–1459), a Dominican, was vicar-general of the Congregation of Fratres Peregrinati until appointed archbishop of Mytilene in 1444. He is widely known through the account of the capture of Constantinople (Patrologia Graeca 159:923–944) that he sent to Pope nicholas v. Antonio (1505–71) became archbishop of Naxos in 1562, assisted at the Council of Trent, and was later transferred to the See of Lipari. Timoteo (c. 1502–71), a Dominican, was bishop of Aria in Crete (1550), of Chios (1564), and later of Stromboli in Calabria. Angelo (1520–96), a famous Franciscan preacher, was bishop of Geneva (1568) and assisted with the edition of the Greek Fathers produced under Pope Gregory XIII. Gerolamo (1554–1618) was made bishop of Chios in 1597. Pietro Mario, a Benedictine, was bishop of Sagona in Corsica (1726) and of Ventimiglia (1741). He also composed a history of the Abbey of monte cassino to the 10th century.

Bibliography: General. J. Kraus, Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche, ed. J. Hofer and K. Rahner (Freiburg 1957–65) 4:904–905. M. L. Fenoglio, Dizionario ecclesiastico 2:209. Nicholas. A. M. Zimmerman, Kalendarium Benedictinum: Die Heiligen und Seligen des Benediktinerorderns und seiner Zweige 3:343. J. L. Baudot and L. Chaussin, Vies des saints et des bienheureux selon l'ordre du calendrier avec l'historique des fêtes, ed. by the Benedictines of Paris (Paris 1935–56) 11:703. Leonardo. M. T. Dazzi, Leonardo Giustiniani, poeta popolare d'amore (Bari 1934). G. Billanovich, "Alla scoperta di L. G.," Annali della R. Scuola normale superiore di Pisa 8 (1939) 99–129. Bernardo. Enciclopedia ecclesiastica, ed. A. Bernareggi (Milan 1942) 4:156. Paolo. P. Lugano, ed., L'Italia benedettina (Rome 1929) 273–279. A. des Mazis, Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiques 11:519–536. J. Leclercq, "Le Bx. Paul Giustiniani et les ermites de son temps," Problemi di vita religiosa in Italia nel cinquecento: Atti del convegno di storia della chiesa in Italia (Bologna, 2–6 sett. 1958) (Padua 1960) 225–240; Un Humaniste ermite: Le Bx. Paul Giustiniani, 1476–1528 (Rome 1951). Innocenzio. J. François, Bibliothèque générale des écrivains de l'Ordre de Saint Benoît, 4 v. (Bouillon 1777–78; repr. Louvain 1961) 1:550. Nicolo AntonioEnciclopedia ecclesiastica, op. cit. 4:156–157. Fabrice and Gerolamo. C. Sommervogel et al., Bibliothèque de la compagnie de Jésus (Brussels-Paris 1890–1932) 3:1491–94. Paolo de Moneglia. J. Quétif and J. Échard, Scriptores ordinis Praedicatorum (Paris 1719–23) 2.1: 3–4. Agostino. ibid. 2.1:96–100. R. A. Vigna, I vescovi domenicani liguri ovvero in Liguria (Genoa 1887) 216–244. BenedettoBibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus op. cit. 3:1489–91. P. Bernard, A. Vacant et al, ed. Dictionnaire de théologie catholique (Paris 1903–50) 6.2:1381. Other Jesuits. Bibliothèque de la Compagnie de Jésus op. cit. 3:1491–94. Giovanni. S. Runciman, The Fall of Constantinople, 1453 (New York 1965), passim. Michele and Lorenzo. N. Cortese, Eruditi e giornali letterari nella Napoli del settecento (Naples 1922) 36–59. Enciclopedia ecclesiastica, op. cit. 4:156. Vincenzo of Chios. J. Quétif and J. Échard, Scriptores ordinis Praedicatorum (Paris 1719–23) 2.1:164–165. Orazio. É. d' Alençon, A. Vacant et al, ed. Dictionnaire de théologie catholique (Paris 1903–50) 6.2:1381–82. Giacomo. A. Eisler, Das Veto der katholischen Staaten bei der Papstwahl (Vienna 1907) 240–242. J. Becker, Relaciones diplomáticas entre España y la Santa Sede durante el siglo XIX (Madrid 1908), passim. J. M. March, La exclusiva dada por España contra el cardinale Giustiniani (1932). Alessandro. W. Maturi, Il Concordato del 1818 tra la Santa Sede e le due Sicilie (Florence 1929), passim. J. H. Brady, Rome and the Neapolitan Revolution of 1820–21 (New York 1937), passim. G. M. Monti, "Stato e Chiesa durante la rivoluzione napoletana del 1820–21," in Studi storici, v.1 of Chiesa e Stato, 2 v. (Milan 1939) 335–405. Leonardo. S. Runciman, op. cit., passim. R. Loenertz, La Société des Frères Pérégrinants (Rome 1937–) 1:66–70. Angelo. L. Wadding, Scriptores Ordinis Minorum (Lyons 1625–54) 23:275–278. G. Matteucci, Due illustri minoriti del sec. XVI (Venice 1949). Pietro-Mario. J. François, op. cit. 1: 550–551.

[M. G. McNeil]

New Catholic Encyclopedia

SOURCE : https://www.encyclopedia.com/religion/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/giustiniani

Church and Abbey San Salvatore di Montecorona (also: Abbazia Camaldolese di San Salvatore, Badia di Montecorona, San Salvatore di Monte Acuto), territory of Umbertide, Umbria, Italy


Beato Paolo Giustiniani Eremita camaldolese

Festa: 25 giugno

Venezia, 15 Giugno 1476 – Monte Soratte, Roma, 25 giugno 1528

Era figlio della nobile famiglia Giustiniani di Venezia. Vi nacque il 15 Giugno 1476. Dopo essere diventato superiore maggiore nell'eremo di Camaldoli fino al 1520, ottenne da Leone X il permesso di fondare un nuovo istituto eremitico, il quale da principio fu chiamato la "Compagnia di San Romualdo".Più tardi ebbe il nome canonico di "Congregazione degli eremiti camaldolesi di Monte Corona" anche detti più brevemente "Montecoronesi". Tra gli eremi cui dette vita, dopo quello di Monte Cucco, che fu il primo eremo ad accoglierlo, vanno ricordati tra gli altri quello delle grotte di Cupramontana e quello di San Silvestro sul Monte Soratte. A Macerata fu imprigionato per amore e difesa degli eremiti. Trovandosi a Roma nel 1527, cadde prigioniero dei Lanzichenecchi, in quel terribile sacco. Fu torturato insieme a San Gaetano da Thiene, ma ne scampò riacquistando la libertà. Nella primavera del 1528 contrasse la peste a Viterbo. Non perfettamente guarito si rimise in viaggio alla volta di Roma per ricevere in donazione l'eremo del Monte Soratte. Ma proprio in quell'eremo morì di peste ancora giovane di 52 anni, il 25 Giugno 1528.

Il 28 giugno del 1528 si spegne sul monte Soratte Paolo Giustiniani, monaco e fondatore degli eremiti camaldolesi di Monte Corona.

Nato nel 1476 nella ricca famiglia veneziana dei Giustiniani, il giovane Tommaso fu formato alla scuola dei più grandi umanisti italiani del tempo. Ritiratosi sull'isola di Murano per approfondire nella quiete la propria ricerca filosofica, Tommaso venne a contatto con i monaci camaldolesi e la sua vita subì una svolta repentina e radicale. Entrato nel 1510 assieme a due compagni veneziani nell'eremo di Camaldoli, Tommaso assunse il nuovo nome di Paolo, e cominciò presto con uno di loro, l'amico Pietro Quirini, a invocare una profonda riforma della chiesa, fino a scrivere un dettagliato Libello sull'argomento, indirizzato a papa Leone X.

Ma lo scontento di Giustiniani non si limitò alla situazione globale della chiesa; egli serbò per tutta la vita la convinzione che la vita eremitica potesse costituire una silenziosa e misteriosa memoria dell'amore di Dio per gli uomini, una «predicazione senza parole». Desideroso di dedicarsi totalmente all'intimità con Dio, egli abbandonò l'ambiente camaldolese e diede vita nel 1520 nei pressi di Ancona alla «compagnia degli eremiti di san Romualdo», oggi noti con il nome di eremiti camaldolesi di Monte Corona.

Giustiniani seppe tenere unite grazie alla sua grande cultura un'austerità quasi parossistica e una notevole finezza spirituale. I suoi insegnamenti sulla vita spirituale ci sono giunti attraverso una preziosa serie di opere capaci di parlare, a dispetto della loro netta impronta eremitica, a ogni cristiano in cerca del radicalismo evangelico.

Come la nave, che solca il mare, dietro a sé non lascia traccia alcuna del percorso fatto, così la nostra anima, condotta dallo Spirito divino, attraversando l'immenso mare e l'abisso delle contemplazioni divine, non dovrebbe vedere, se si volta indietro, per quale strada sia passata, né come a quel dato punto sia giunta.

Se tu avessi considerato tutto questo, carissimo fratello in Cristo, probabilmente non avresti domandato né a me né ad altri che ti fosse suggerito un modo di pregare; ma ti saresti completamente abbandonato, invece, allo Spirito divino, senza pretendere di conoscere né la via, né come ti guida.

Allora tieni a mente che nelle tue orazioni, quando cioè sei in preghiera, il metodo migliore è quello di non avere nessun metodo e che la forma migliore è quella di non avere alcuna forma. Poiché l'orazione nasce da quello Spirito che nei suoi doni è generoso, abbondante e vario, così vari e diversi e quasi infiniti sono i modi e le forme che essa ha.
(Paolo Giustiniani, Trattato sulla preghiera)

Fonte : www.monasterodibose.it

SOURCE : https://www.santiebeati.it/dettaglio/94177

GIUSTINIANI, Paolo

Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani - Volume 57 (2001)

Stefano Tabacchi

Nacque a Venezia il 15 giugno 1476, ultimo figlio di Francesco e Paola Malipiero, nobili veneziani, che gli diedero il nome di Tommaso. La sua giovinezza resta in gran parte sconosciuta a causa dell'assenza di documentazione. Infatti, nel 1507 il G. distrusse tutti i suoi scritti giovanili, e gli spunti autobiografici che si trovano nelle sue opere più tarde tendono a leggere le vicende passate in funzione dell'approdo alla vita eremitica, con una consapevole selezione di temi e una scarsa attenzione per la cronologia.

Rimasto orfano di padre in giovane età, il G. fu educato a Venezia sotto la guida della madre. Nel 1493 si trasferì a Padova, per frequentare i corsi universitari di filosofia e teologia, e vi rimase fino al 1504-05. Anche su questo periodo, che si intuisce decisivo ai fini della sua formazione, non disponiamo di molte notizie. Certo è che a Padova egli approfondì la conoscenza dei testi greci e latini e strinse legami di fervida amicizia con diversi coetanei, come Nicolò Tiepolo e Vincenzo Quirini (Querini), anch'essi membri di importanti famiglie veneziane e appassionati di cultura classica. Progressivamente, però, maturava nel G. un desiderio di vita ritirata e un forte interesse per la dimensione religiosa, che lo condusse ad approfondire i testi scritturali e patristici, esplicitamente contrapposti alla teologia scolastica. A quanto scrisse, in questo passaggio dalla filosofia alla riflessione religiosa sarebbe stata determinante una lunga malattia di cui soffrì nel 1504.

Alla fine del 1505 tornò a Venezia. Desideroso di solitudine, si ritirò in una casetta che possedeva sull'isola di Murano, e intensificò le sue riflessioni religiose. Nell'estate 1506 compose così le Cogitationes quotidianae de amore Dei, un interessante diario spirituale che dimostra solide letture bibliche e teologiche e tende a ricollocare la cultura filosofica in una sfera decisamente inferiore alla contemplazione religiosa. Il ritiro a Murano non fu però sufficiente a offrire al G. la serenità di spirito cui aspirava. Deciso a dedicarsi esclusivamente allo studio delle lettere sacre, nel 1507 fece voto di castità e partì per la Terrasanta, con il progetto di ritirarsi nel convento francescano di Betlemme, ma senza prendere gli ordini. Il soggiorno a Betlemme fu molto più breve del previsto: all'inizio del 1508 era di nuovo a Venezia, ancora incerto sulla via da seguire.

A Venezia il G. riprese i contatti con i vecchi amici: Vincenzo Quirini, Gaspare Contarini, G.B. Cipelli, detto Egnazio, Sebastiano Zorzi, Nicolò Tiepolo, Paolo Canal, Trifon Gabriel e altri. Questo gruppo di giovani patrizi, conosciuto anche come "circolo di Murano", si caratterizzava per una forte sensibilità per il tema della salvezza individuale e trovava nella preghiera e nella meditazione un rifugio dai drammatici eventi politici contemporanei. Nell'ambito del gruppo, il G. assunse un ruolo di guida spirituale, esercitando una forte influenza sui più affezionati amici, come Contarini, Egnazio e Quirini. Tuttavia, in questa fase della sua evoluzione spirituale egli non aveva ancora elaborato una concreta proposta culturale e religiosa e anche per questo motivo sembrano poco fondate le analisi che tendono ad attribuire al circolo di Murano una coesione che in realtà non ebbe.

Nel 1508-09 il G. era ormai deciso a ritirarsi in qualche luogo pio con gli amici che lo avessero voluto accompagnare, ma era poco propenso a prendere gli ordini sacri, che considerava carichi di obblighi eccessivi. In questa fase, il ritiro dalla vita attiva si configurava come un'esperienza di studio e preghiera, ancora fortemente condizionata dall'ideale umanistico del saggio stoico. D'altro canto, il G. nutriva un interesse ormai esclusivo per gli studi sacri, che si espresse in un ampio commentario al Genesi, rimasto manoscritto e incompiuto.

Nel 1509 il G., Egnazio e Quirini avviarono trattative per essere accettati come oblati nell'abbazia benedettina di Praglia, ma senza successo. L'anno successivo presero allora contatto con i camaldolesi di S. Michele di Murano, il monastero dove si era rinchiuso, per morirvi, Paolo Canal, uno dei più cari amici del Giustiniani. Il generale dei camaldolesi, Pietro Dolfin, e il vicario generale, Paolo Orlandini, si dimostrarono subito ben disposti e fu stabilito che il G. si sarebbe recato nell'eremo di Camaldoli, per valutare la possibilità di ritirarvisi; restava comunque inteso che i tre amici non avrebbero preso gli ordini e avrebbero vissuto in stretta comunione.

All'inizio di luglio 1510 il G. raggiunse Camaldoli e vi si trattenne fino al principio di agosto. Il viaggio a Camaldoli modificò completamente il suo progetto iniziale e lo convinse ad abbracciare la vita eremitica. Così, dopo un nuovo, breve soggiorno a Venezia, il G. vestì l'abito camaldolese con il nome di Paolo nel giorno di Natale del 1510. Nella sua corrispondenza egli attribuì la decisione a un grave incidente verificatosi nel corso del viaggio, che aveva messo a rischio la sua vita e aveva assunto il valore di una "illuminazione". Non si trattò tuttavia di una decisione precipitosa, ma dell'esito ultimo di un travaglio interiore iniziato da parecchi anni. Né si può trascurare l'influenza che esercitò sul G. la conoscenza diretta dell'eremo di Camaldoli, che lo impressionò per la serenità e la semplicità di vita.

Divenuto novizio camaldolese, il G. cercò di indurre gli amici, e particolarmente Egnazio e Quirini, a imitare la sua scelta, iniziando un fitto carteggio, che è uno dei documenti più interessanti della sua spiritualità. Nelle sue lettere il G. descrive con spontaneità i suoi sentimenti nella nuova condizione di vita e teorizza la superiorità della vita religiosa e la sostanziale inutilità della cultura classica ai fini della salvezza, riprendendo in maniera originale il dibattito sugli stati di vita.

Le sue argomentazioni non riuscirono a convincere Egnazio, che rimase in una posizione di incertezza, né Contarini, che negò l'esistenza di una condizione di vita privilegiata all'interno del cristianesimo, ma ebbero una forte influenza su Sebastiano Zorzi e su Quirini, che nell'autunno del 1511 si recarono all'eremo. La scelta di Quirini e l'attività di proselitismo svolta dal G. suscitarono perplessità in alcuni degli amici veneziani, che valutavano come un vero e proprio tradimento l'abbandono di Venezia proprio nel momento in cui era attaccata dalle truppe della Lega di Cambrai. In particolare, Contarini cercò di dissuadere Quirini, difendendo la legittimità della vita nel secolo e insistendo sui pericoli che comportava la scelta eremitica. Il G. reagì con una dura lettera a Contarini e Tiepolo, nella quale ribadì i fondamenti dottrinali della scelta eremitica e li tacciò di manifesta eresia. Dopo che Quirini e Zorzi presero l'abito camaldolese (22 febbr. 1512), la frattura fu in qualche modo ricomposta e i rapporti del G. con Contarini tornarono cordiali. Rimase però un dissenso di fondo sul significato della vita eremitica e sulle vie per raggiungere la salvezza individuale.

L'8 ag. 1512 il G. fece la sua professione solenne, insieme con Quirini e Zorzi, e divenne rapidamente un punto di riferimento per gli altri eremiti. La situazione dell'eremo di Camaldoli, in effetti, non era così rosea come era sembrato al G. nei primi mesi del suo soggiorno. L'incerto governo di Pietro Dolfin sembrava incapace di garantire la riunificazione dei diversi rami dell'Ordine e lasciava del tutto insoddisfatti gli eremiti di Camaldoli, che lo consideravano supino ai voleri di discutibili consiglieri. Il malcontento degli eremiti trovò in Quirini e nel G. degli autorevoli portavoce, capaci di elaborare una proposta complessiva di riforma. Fulcro di tale proposta era l'unione di Camaldoli con il monastero di S. Michele di Murano, cui facevano riferimento altri monasteri camaldolesi, e, soprattutto, l'allontanamento del generale dal governo dell'eremo, che avrebbe dovuto essere assegnato a un priore, eletto ogni tre anni. Questi provvedimenti, poi, sarebbero stati codificati in una riforma delle costituzioni dell'eremo.

Dolfin si piegò di malavoglia a convocare un capitolo generale, che si tenne a Firenze nell'aprile del 1513. Le conclusioni del capitolo, recepite nella bolla Etsi a summo rerum Conditore (4 luglio 1513), prevedevano il depotenziamento della figura del generale in favore delle cariche elettive, l'unione delle Congregazioni di S. Michele e Camaldoli e l'introduzione di altre riforme proposte dal Giustiniani. L'opposizione di Dolfin fu facilmente superata, grazie all'appoggio di Giuliano de' Medici e del neoeletto papa Leone X, ma il vecchio generale cercò di rimettere in discussione le conclusioni del capitolo, rivolgendosi direttamente al pontefice. Perciò, nel maggio 1513 i camaldolesi inviarono a Roma il G. e il Quirini.

Il viaggio a Roma offrì ai due religiosi l'opportunità di presentare al papa, nel luglio 1513, una proposta complessiva di riforma della Chiesa, il cosiddetto Libellus ad Leonem X, testo di importanza capitale per la storia religiosa del Cinquecento, che può essere adeguatamente compreso solo tenendo presente le speranze entusiastiche che salutarono l'elezione al papato di Leone X. Nel Libellus è infatti ben evidente l'attesa di una nuova età apostolica, in cui sarebbe stato possibile riformare la vita religiosa dei popoli cristiani, riunire le Chiese orientali al cristianesimo occidentale e convertire ebrei e musulmani. Queste attese millenaristiche, peraltro, non toglievano nulla alla concretezza delle proposte di riforma, che prefiguravano alcune linee guida del cattolicesimo postridentino.

Il discorso di Quirini e del G. si articolava in sei parti, tra cui la più interessante è senza dubbio la quinta, dedicata alla riforma della vita religiosa del clero e del laicato. Le osservazioni sul clero insistevano molto sull'ignoranza e sulla bassa qualità morale dei religiosi e contenevano proposte di riforma radicali: una riorganizzazione degli studi ecclesiastici, che avrebbe dovuto ridurre il ruolo della cultura classica e della scolastica a vantaggio dello studio dei testi patristici; l'uso del volgare nella liturgia e la traduzione dei testi sacri; l'istituzione di una censura preventiva sui testi religiosi; l'unificazione dei regolari in poche famiglie religiose; una rigida vigilanza del pontefice sulla scelta dei vescovi. Le proposte relative al laicato si caratterizzavano invece per un'accentuazione degli aspetti repressivi, che peraltro affioravano un po' in tutto il Libellus. In particolare si auspicava una severa azione di contrasto di pratiche come il gioco, la prostituzione, l'uso dei cosmetici e, soprattutto, l'astrologia.

Una corretta valutazione di questo testo è difficile. I numerosi studi che lo hanno analizzato hanno di volta in volta enfatizzato aspetti diversi, dal tema dell'evangelizzazione dei popoli non cristiani alla critica della vita licenziosa del clero. Tuttavia l'elemento più interessante, e potenzialmente più ricco di sviluppi, è l'idea che le riforme si sarebbero dovute sviluppare non tanto attraverso un movimento dal basso, quanto piuttosto grazie all'azione del pontefice. Una tesi che, pur non criticandole apertamente, liquidava le ancora diffuse tesi conciliariste e già prefigurava il ruolo che il Papato avrebbe assunto con il concilio di Trento.

Il Libellus influenzò alcuni decreti del quinto concilio Lateranense, ma non riuscì a imprimere una svolta alla politica religiosa di Leone X. Tuttavia, il pontefice dimostrò molta stima per i due camaldolesi e particolarmente per il Quirini, che nel 1514 tornò a Roma e assunse un ruolo di qualche rilievo nell'entourage papale. Nell'estate del 1514 si parlava insistentemente di un suo possibile cardinalato e il G. intervenne più volte sull'amico per invitarlo a resistere alla proposta, per quanto possibile. Ma improvvisamente Quirini si ammalò e, il 23 sett. 1514, spirò tra le braccia del G., prontamente accorso a Roma.

La morte di Quirini non rappresentò solo un grave colpo personale, ma privò il G. di un interlocutore intelligente, capace di temperare le sue rigidità e più abile a muoversi sugli scenari politico-diplomatici e a mantenere aperto il dialogo con le alte gerarchie. Negli anni successivi alla morte dell'amico, il G. continuò comunque a impegnarsi con straordinario attivismo per la riforma, interessandosi sia all'Ordine camaldolese, sia alle grandi problematiche religiose contemporanee. Particolarmente importante fu il suo intervento al sinodo fiorentino del 1516, convocato per dare attuazione ai disposti del concilio Lateranense. In quest'occasione il G. operò perché si giungesse a una condanna di G. Savonarola e del profetismo savonaroliano, che considerava un ostacolo alla riforma della Chiesa per via istituzionale, ma non riscosse molto successo. Lo stesso Contarini, richiesto di un parere in merito, difese la sostanziale legittimità delle posizioni savonaroliane.

Di non minore rilievo fu l'azione svolta dal G. all'interno dell'Ordine camaldolese. Già prima di diventare sacerdote, nel 1515, il G. era ormai riconosciuto dai confratelli come un'autorevole guida spirituale; assunse diverse cariche istituzionali: presiedette i capitoli del 1514, del 1515 e del 1516, allorquando fu eletto maggiore, una carica triennale che gli fu rinnovata nel 1520. Nel 1516, inoltre, portò a termine la ricompilazione delle Regulae Camaldulenses, che furono approvate e stampate nel 1520. Le nuove Regulae si fondavano sulle antiche tradizioni dell'Ordine, ma erano fortemente segnate dall'impronta del G., soprattutto nell'accentuazione del ruolo dell'eremitismo rispetto alla vita cenobitica. Contemporaneamente, il G. componeva numerosi scritti religiosi, talora semplici meditazioni, talora veri e propri trattati, e manteneva un fitto commercio epistolare con numerosi amici e conoscenti, ai quali magnificava la superiorità della vita eremitica. Grazie al suo indubbio carisma, egli riuscì a convincere diversi religiosi, soprattutto benedettini, a passare tra i camaldolesi, anche se ciò produsse qualche frizione con gli Ordini di provenienza.

L'azione del G. raccolse notevoli consensi, ma suscitò anche forti opposizioni, che trovavano un appoggio autorevole nel vecchio generale, Dolfin, ormai definitivamente estromesso dal governo dell'Ordine. Desideroso di porre termine ai conflitti e di intensificare la sua attività di proselitismo, il G. cominciò a meditare la possibilità di abbandonare l'eremo. Già il 7 febbr. 1515 aveva ottenuto, grazie all'intercessione di Pietro Bembo, un breve papale che concedeva a lui e ad alcuni monaci di poter viaggiare, predicare ed erigere monasteri, ma non se ne servì fino al 1520, quando la morte dell'amico Paolo Orlandini (1519) e le tensioni interne all'Ordine lo indussero a rompere gli indugi. Il 14 sett. 1520 radunò il capitolo di Camaldoli e depose la carica di maggiore; qualche giorno dopo abbandonò l'eremo insieme a un converso. Il progetto iniziale era probabilmente quello di recarsi nelle Indie, ma, giunto sul monte Corona, nei paraggi di Umbertide, un terziario francescano di nome Tommaso lo convinse a desistere e si unì a lui. In seguito, il G. trovò altri seguaci, soprattutto religiosi e romiti selvatici, ma anche un personaggio di qualche rilievo come il ricco canonico Galeazzo Gabrielli, che mise le proprie sostanze a sua disposizione. Furono così fondati i primi eremi, quello di Pascilupo, nell'Eugubino, e quello delle Grotte di Massaccio, nei pressi di Jesi, un antico monastero camaldolese che fu ceduto al G. nel 1522.

In questa febbrile attività di proselitismo il G. dovette talora scontrarsi con l'opposizione delle autorità di governo locali. Nel 1522 il legato della Marca lo fece addirittura rinchiudere nel monastero di S. Francesco di Macerata, accogliendo le denunce di alcuni eremiti irregolari. Ma complessivamente si trattò di un periodo particolarmente fortunato per il G., finalmente privo di responsabilità di governo e libero di dedicarsi a quella che considerava la sua vera missione: la diffusione dell'ideale eremitico camaldolese. In questa fase egli non pensava infatti alla fondazione di una nuova congregazione, ma mirava piuttosto a ricondurre al rigore della disciplina di s. Romualdo le varie forme di eremitismo sparse per l'Italia. Così, nel 1523 il G. ottenne dal vicario generale della Congregazione camaldolese il riconoscimento ufficiale e l'erezione della nuova Compagnia degli eremiti di S. Romualdo, di cui fu riconosciuto superiore indipendente. L'anno successivo, il capitolo della Compagnia, che contava ormai una trentina di membri, approvò una regola, stesa dal G. e basata sostanzialmente sulle Regulae del 1520. Progressivamente, però, la rigorosa osservanza della vita eremitica propugnata dal G. e dai suoi seguaci condusse a un'aperta rottura con la Congregazione camaldolese, che fu sancita ufficialmente nel capitolo di Classe del 1525. Tuttavia, anche negli anni successivi, il G. mantenne i contatti con Camaldoli e vi si recò più volte per difendere le posizioni degli eremiti contro i cenobiti.

Nel frattempo, la Compagnia romualdina continuava ad ampliarsi e nel 1526 il G. poté tranquillamente abbandonare la carica di maggiore, pur mantenendo un ruolo molto importante tanto sul piano spirituale quanto nell'organizzazione pratica delle nuove fondazioni. Egli era ormai diventato un punto di riferimento per i settori più attivi e innovatori del clero italiano. Sin dal 1523 aveva avviato uno scambio epistolare con Gaetano Thiene, che gli esponeva con fiducia i principî-guida del suo apostolato. Inoltre, il G. esercitò una forte influenza sui fondatori dell'Ordine dei cappuccini e li protesse dalle persecuzioni di cui erano fatti oggetto.

Gli anni della fondazione della Compagnia non segnarono un arresto dell'attività letteraria del Giustiniani. Risalgono anzi a questo periodo le sue opere più interessanti, tutte scritte in volgare: il Secretum meum mihi (1524-26) e il Trattato di ubidienza di don Paolo Giustiniano con una pistola del medesimo a M. Marcantonio Flaminio (composta nel 1526 e pubblicata a Venezia, S. de Sabio, nel 1535).

Il Secretum analizza i vari aspetti del sentimento d'amore, da quello carnale a quello spirituale, e rappresenta un'opera di grande originalità, per la saldatura tra la tradizione mistica medievale e la filosofia neoplatonica. Al pari delle altre opere del G. si tratta di una meditazione molto personale, caratterizzata da una scrittura frammentata, che riutilizza in maniera originale diversi codici culturali. La Lettera al Flaminio riprende uno dei temi favoriti della riflessione del G., l'inutilità della cultura classica e profana ai fini della salvezza. In questo testo, peraltro, la polemica antiumanistica e l'esaltazione della vita eremitica si sostanziavano in argomentazioni complesse e raffinate, che utilizzavano largamente la letteratura filosofica e teologica antica e medievale.

Nel maggio 1527 il G. dovette recarsi a Roma, per risolvere una vertenza relativa all'abbazia di S. Salvatore a Montacuto. Si trovava da pochi giorni in città, ospite di Gian Pietro Carafa e Gaetano Thiene, quando le truppe imperiali la presero d'assalto e la misero a sacco. Anche il G. fu catturato e malmenato, ma dopo pochi giorni era libero e poté fare ritorno all'eremo delle Grotte. All'inizio del 1528 lo lasciò di nuovo per recarsi a Orvieto da papa Clemente VII, al quale richiese la conferma dell'acquisizione di alcuni eremi. Nell'estate dello stesso anno si recò sul monte Soratte insieme con il confratello Giacomo da Gubbio, per visitare l'eremo di S. Silvestro, che gli era stato ceduto da Giovanni Matteo Giberti.

Quando vi giunse, il G. era già molto ammalato e lì spirò, il 28 giugno 1528.

Personalità complessa e tormentata, il G. occupa un posto centrale nella vita religiosa italiana del Cinquecento, non solo per la sua originale proposta di restaurazione dell'ideale eremitico, inteso come testimonianza di amore per Dio e rifiuto del mondo, ma anche per l'influenza che esercitò su alcuni dei più importanti esponenti della Riforma cattolica, come Gasparo Contarini, Gian Pietro Carafa e Gaetano Thiene.

Sin dai primi decenni successivi alla sua morte all'interno dell'Ordine camaldolese fu attribuito al G. il titolo di beato. Con un decreto dell'11 genn. 1681 la congregazione dei Riti ordinò però di ritirare le immagini del G. con l'aureola e il titolo. Tradizionalmente, il G. è rappresentato in abito eremitico, con una barba fluente. Un esempio interessante di questa iconografia è una statua seicentesca nella chiesa della Salute a Venezia.

Opere. Le opere del G. sono per la maggior parte manoscritte. Opere pubblicate: Trattato di ubedentia di don Paolo Giustiniano, con una epistola a m. Marc'Antonio Flaminio, Venezia, S. de Sabio, 1535; G.B. Mittarelli - A. Costadoni, Annales Camaldulenses, IX, Venetiis 1773, coll. 447-719 (parte dell'epistolario e il Libellus); Secretum meum mihi, o Dell'amor di Dio ragionamenti sei, a cura di A. Stolz, Frascati 1941; Trattati, lettere e frammenti, a cura di E. Massa, Roma 1961-67; Regola della vita eremitica, a cura di A. Visentin, Seregno 1996. Alcune opere minori sono state pubblicate in Vita cristiana, XIV (1942), pp. 117-144; XXI (1952), pp. 63-83, 149-156. L'originale del Libellus è da considerarsi perduto. Una traduzione italiana è stata pubblicata, sulla base di un manoscritto settecentesco: P. Giustiniani - P. Quirini, Lettera al papa, a cura di G. Bianchini, Modena 1995.

Fonti e Bibl.: Attualmente i manoscritti del G. sono conservati presso il Sacro Eremo Tuscolano di Frascati e non sono consultabili. La maggior parte del fondo è stata inventariata in P. Giustiniani, Trattati, lettere e frammenti, I, I manoscritti originali custoditi nell'eremo di Frascati, a cura di E. Massa, Roma 1961; ma si veda anche P.O. Kristeller, Iter Italicum, Cumulative Index to volumes I-VI, s.v.; Le lettere di s. Gaetano da Thiene, a cura di F. Andreu, Città del Vaticano 1954, ad indicem; A. Fiori, Vita del beato P. G., Roma, 1724; P. Paschini, S. Gaetano da Thiene, Gianpietro Carafa e le origini dei chierici regolari teatini, Roma 1926, passim; J. Schnitzer, Peter Delphin, ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Kirchenreform, München 1926, passim; J. Leclercq, Un humaniste ermite. Le bx Paul Giustiniani (1476-1528), Roma 1951 (a tutt'oggi il migliore profilo biografico); H. Jedin, Contarini und Camaldoli, Roma 1953 (anche in Arch. italiano per la storia della pietà, II, 1959); J. Leclercq, Le jugement du bx Paul Giustiniani sur st Pierre Damien, in Riv. di storia della Chiesa in Italia, XI (1957), pp. 423-426; Id., Le bx Paul Giustiniani et les ermites de son temps, in Problemi di vita religiosa in Italia nel Cinquecento, Padova 1960, pp. 225-240; S. Tramontin, Un programma di riforma della Chiesa per il concilio Lateranense V: il Libellus ad Leonem X dei veneziani P. G. e Pietro Quirini, in Venezia e i concili, Venezia 1962, pp. 67-93; G. Musolino - A. Niero - S. Tramontin, Santi e beati veneziani, Venezia 1963, pp. 267-276; I. Cervelli, Storiografia e problemi intorno alla vita religiosa e spirituale a Venezia nella prima metà del '500, in Studi veneziani, VIII (1966), pp. 447-476; F. Gilbert, Cristianesimo, umanesimo e la bolla "Apostolici regiminis" del 1513, in Riv. stor. italiana, LXXIX (1967), pp. 976-990; E. Massa, Le prime meditazioni del "secretum" di P. G., in Filosofia e cultura in Umbria tra Medioevo e Rinascimento, Gubbio 1967, pp. 301-366; F. Gilbert, Contarini on Savonarola: an unknown document of 1516, in Archiv für Reformationgeschichte, LIX (1969), pp. 145-149; J.B. Ross, Gasparo Contarini and his friends, in Studies in the Renaissance, XVII (1970), pp. 192-232; O. Zorzi Pugliese, Girolamo Benivieni: umanista e riformatore (dalla corrispondenza inedita), in La Bibliofilia, LXXII (1970), pp. 253-288; H. Jedin, Chiesa della fede, Chiesa della storia, Brescia 1972, ad indicem; G. Alberigo, Vita attiva e vita contemplativa in un'esperienza cristiana del XVI secolo, in Studi veneziani, XVI (1974), pp. 117-225; J. Leclercq, Il richiamo del deserto. La dottrina del beato P. G., Roma 1977; A. Pastore, Marcantonio Flaminio, Milano 1981, pp. 46-50; L. Fortini, Un trattato cinquecentesco sull'amore mistico: il "Secretum meum mihi" di P. G., in Riv. di storia e letteratura religiosa, XXII (1986), pp. 241-255; A. Visentin, P. G. eremita, Padova 1987; G. Fragnito, Gasparo Contarini. Un magistrato veneziano al servizio della Cristianità, Firenze 1988, ad indicem; E. Massa, P. G. e Gasparo Contarini: la vocazione al bivio del neoplatonismo e della teologia biblica, in Benedictina, XXV (1988), pp. 429-474; Id., L'eremo, la Bibbia e il Medioevo in umanisti veneti del primo Cinquecento, Napoli 1992, passim; E. G. Gleason, Gasparo Contarini. Venice, Rome and Reform, Berkeley-Los Angeles 1993, ad indicem; N.H. Minnich, The Catholic reformation: council, churchmen, controversies, Aldershot 1993, ad indicem; Id., The fifth Lateran council (1512-1517), ibid. 1993, ad indicem; L. Polizzotto, The elect nation. The Savonarolian movement in Florence, 1494-1545, Oxford 1994, ad indicem; C. Vasoli, Il tentativo di condanna del Savonarola come eretico e scismatico al sinodo fiorentino del '16-'17 ed al V concilio Lateranense, in Savonarole. Enjeux, débats, questions, a cura di A. Fontes - J.-L. Fournel - M. Plaisance, Paris 1997, pp. 243-261; J. Leclercq, G. P., in Dictionnaire de spiritualité, VI, Paris 1966, coll. 414-418; E. Massa, G. P., in Bibliotheca sanctorum, VII, Roma 1966, coll. 2-9; Diz. degli istituti di perfezione, III, coll. 1190-1192; IV, coll. 1367-1369.

© Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana fondata da Giovanni Treccani - Riproduzione riservata

SOURCE : https://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/paolo-giustinian_(Dizionario-Biografico)/

Jean Leclercq. Seul avec Dieu : la vie érémitique d'après la doctrine du bienheureux Paul Giustiniani. Fenixx Réédition Numérique (Plon). Tradition monastique. Date de publication : 1955-01-01 : https://excerpts.numilog.com/books/9791041014910.pdf

Masai François, « Dom Jean Leclercq, Un humaniste ermite : le Bienheureux Paul Giustiniani (1476- 1528) [compte-rendu] », Scriptorium  Année 1953  7-1  p. 168 : https://www.persee.fr/doc/scrip_0036-9772_1953_num_7_1_2480_t1_0168_0000_2