Jerome de Angelis
Jerome de Angelis | |
---|---|
Born | 1567 |
Died | 4 December 1623 |
Beatified | 1867 |
Jerome de Angelis (1567 – 4 December 1623) was an Italian Jesuit missionary to Japan. He was beatified in 1867.[1]
Life
He was born Girolamo degli Angeli at Castro-Giovanni, Sicily. He studied law in Palermo before entering the Society of Jesus at Messina in 1585. Nine years later, he was assigned to the Japanese mission and he immediately set out for Lisbon and the voyage to the Indies.[2] In 1585 he set our from Genoa with St.Charles Spinola and three others, bound for the College in Goa, to complete his studies in anticipation of ordination.[3]
In 1602 he began his mission in Japan. He remained there after the publication of the edict expelling all Christian missionaries from the country.
The first European on Hokkaido,[4][5] he was the first missionary to reach Yezo and the Ainu people. De Angelis, after making many converts to Christianity, seeing that his neophytes were cruelly persecuted because of his presence among them and his preaching, gave himself up to the authorities. Condemned to death, he underwent public execution by fire.
Notes
- ^ Stephen Turnbull, Japan's Hidden Christians, 1549-1999 (2000), p. 44.
- ^ Bl. Jerome de Angelis S.J.", The Jesuits - Singapore
- ^ Cieslik S.J., Hubert. "Blessed Jerome de Angelis: First Misisonary in Hokkaido", in Britto's All About Francis Xavier, (2008)
- ^ http://www.library.ucsb.edu/people/larsgaard/plan1600.html
- ^ Laures Rare Book Database SIMPLE
References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Girolamo degli Angeli". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- 1567 births
- 1623 deaths
- Italian Jesuits
- Italian Roman Catholic missionaries
- Italian beatified people
- 17th-century venerated Christians
- Jesuit missionaries
- 17th-century executions by Japan
- People executed by Japan by burning
- Italian people executed abroad
- Roman Catholic missionaries in Japan
- Italian expatriates in Japan
- 17th-century Roman Catholic martyrs