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Home > Catholic Encyclopedia > B > Johannes Bessarion


JOHANNES BESSARION

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(Or BASILIUS).

Cardinal; b. at Trebizond, 1389, or according to others, 1395, but most probably
in 1403; d. at Ravenna 18 November, 1472. Some claim illustrious parentage for
him, but, as to this nothing certain is known. In 1413, while still very young,
he was sent to Constantinople, where he devoted himself to study, achieving
great success in the field of letters. In 1423 he entered the Order of St. Basil
and in the same year was sent to the Peloponnesus to study philosophy under
Gemistus Pletho. It is known that Pletho was a bitter opponent of Aristotle,
against whom he championed with immoderate zeal the doctrines of Plato, without,
however, distinguishing between genuine Platonism and neo-Platonism. The lessons
of Pletho, though making Bessarion a follower of Plato, did not prevent him from
perceiving the many points of contact between the two philosophers, and, during
the revival of ancient learning, constantly defending the harmonizing of the two
systems; he criticized the unrestrained partisanship of his master quite as much
as that of Michael Apostolius. His learning and eloquence soon excited the
admiration and respect of all and brought him, within a short space of time,
various ecclesiastical dignities. In 1436 he was made Bishop of Nicæa, but was
not destined to see his diocese, however, and the emperor, John VIII Palæologus,
had him accompany him to the Council of Ferrara, which they reached 4 March,
1438. Here his dignity and touching eloquence, as well as his vast theological
erudition, gave him such great authority among the Greek bishops that the happy
issue of the council — the reunion with the Latin Church — may be attributed in
great part to him. This was fully recognized, as on 6 July, 1439, in the
cathedral of Florence, to which the council had been transferred, he was
commissioned to read the Greek redaction of the Act of Union.



Bessarion returned to Greece, but during the same year is found once more at
Florence with Eugenius IV, who, in the consistory of 18 December, 1439
(according to others 8 January, 1440), created him cardinal of the title of the
Twelve Holy Apostles. At the same time another Greek, Archbishop Isidore,
received the sacred purple. The brief duration of the union of the churches is
well known. Bessarion himself, having changed to the Latin Rite was cordially
hated by the schismatic Greeks. This notwithstanding, Bessarion continued to
work zealously for the union of the other Oriental schismatic churches, the
Jacobites and Ethiopians (1442), the Syrians (1444), the Chaldeans and Maronites
(1445). At this time, also, to refute the accusations of Marcus of Ephesus,
against the council, he wrote the book: "De successu synodi florentinæ".
Nicholas V, like Eugenius IV, gave evidence of the great regard in which he held
the Greek scholar. In 1449 he made him Bishop of Ulazzara and in the same year
conferred on him the suburbicarian See of Sabina, for which that of Frascati was
shortly after substituted. In the following year he was sent as papal legate to
Bologna, a city torn by constant factional quarrels. In the Brief of appointment
of 26 February, 1450, the pope says he is sending Bessarion tamquam angelum
pacis, and expresses the hope that with his experience and prudence he may be
able to govern the city in peace.

Bessarion continued as governor of Bologna for five years, achieving complete
success in calming the internal discord. Not satisfied with that, he introduced
wise reforms into the city government and in the administration of justice.
Above all he lavished all his attention and generosity on the university,
Bologna's greatest glory, restoring the building which threatened to fall into
ruins. He gathered there as teachers the most famous professors of the time,
supplying at his own expense the deficiencies in their honoraria, and
encouraging with munificence particularly the study of the classics. Thus, he
gathered about him a court of poets and men of letters. He was cordial to all,
even the lowliest; by stringent legislation he sought to curb immoderate luxury;
and he rebuilt and adorned many churches of the city, among them that of San
Luca. By his prudent and far-seeing administration and his absolute impartiality
he won the confidence of the citizens of Bologna, so that on his departure they
honoured his memory in an inscription; and ever afterwards in all their
necessities and in all transactions with the Holy See, they had recourse to his
intervention.

While Bessarion was legate in Bologna, Cardinal Stefano Porcaro was in
banishment in that city, being assigned one hundred ducats in addition to the
annual pension of three hundred granted him by the pope. Porcaro succeeded in
eluding Bessarion's vigilance and escaping to Rome. Bessarion did not delay in
apprising the pope of his flight. The rest is well known. In 1453 Nicholas V
died; and in the conclave following his death, Bessarion was all but chosen to
succeed him; however, Calixtus III was finally elected. Constantinople had just
fallen into the hands of the Turks and the Byzantine Empire had been destroyed.
Thereupon Bessarion used all his influences with Francesco Foscari, the Doge of
Venice, as well as with the new pope to persuade them to take up the offensive
against the invading barbarians. Not confining his efforts to words, at the cost
of heavy pecuniary sacrifices he furthered the cause of the crusade. His zeal
was still more pronounced under Pius II, whose election was due in a special
manner to him. In the congress of Mantua, convened by the pope in 1459 for the
purpose of forming a league of all Christian princes against the Turks,
Bessarion took a most active part, not justified, however, by results. The love
of his native land impelled him to accept the commission given him by the pope
to attend two German diets held the following year, one on the 2nd of March at
Nuremberg, the other on the 25th of the same month at Worms. Neither, however,
had any practical results. At the command of the pope he went to Vienna to
induce the emperor to assist with arms and supplies Matthias Corvinus, the young
King of Hungary. After a long wait the German leaders, 17 September, asked for
another delay, and only the express wish of Pius II kept Bessarion in Germany
for a whole year, pleading the cause of the Christians of the Orient. Internal
discord among the German leaders prevented them from reaching any decision
concerning the crusade, and Bessarion returned to Rome disillusioned and
discouraged. As a reward for his labours the pope bestowed on him the
commendatory Abbey of Grotta-Ferrata of Greek Basilians, which became a centre
of learned pursuits. Shortly afterwards, on the death of Cardinal Isidore,
metropolitan of Kiew and Patriarch of Constantinople, Bessarion received the
patriarchal title.



In 1463 Pius II once more sent him to Venice to win that republic over to the
cause of the crusade which the pope, on his own initiative, wished to organize.
Long, serious discussions ensued, and at last, in September of the same year,
the republic signed a treaty of alliance with Matthias Corvinus, and on 20
October the crusade was solemnly proclaimed. The results hoped for, however,
were not entirely achieved. During the pontificate of Paul II who continued the
crusade, Bessarion withdrew from active affairs and devoted himself entirely to
study, cultivating the friendship of many Greek and Italian scientists then in
Rome, and engaging in learned discussions with them. Thus he won the title of
Litterarum patronus. In his house the first Accademia was founded. In 1470 when
Paul II desired to organize a new crusade, Bessarion wrote the letter "De Bello
Turcis inferendo". Sixtus IV, who approved the plans of his predecessor, sent
Bessarion once more as legate to the King of France, the Duke of Burgundy, and
the King of England to settle the discords which had arisen between the first
two, and to induce the last-mentioned to join in the great expedition against
the enemy of Christianity. On 20 April, 1472, he left Rome — but was received in
an unfriendly manner both in Burgundy and at Paris so that he was forced to
return to report the complete failure of his mission. The disappointment, the
discomforts of travelling, and his great age made sad havoc on his strength. At
Ravenna he was obliged to interrupt his journey; there his death occurred at the
Abbey of St. John the Evangelist, 18 November, 1472. His body was taken to Rome
and interred in a tomb which had been erected in the portico of the convent of
the Conventual Minorites, close by the Basilica of the Twelve Holy Apostles. A
simple sarcophagus, on which is inscribed a Greek distich of his own
composition, contains his remains.

All the aspirations of Bessarion, which, more than great, were unique, were
absorbed by three ideas: the union of the Oriental Church with the Latin, the
rescue of Greek lands from the Mussulman yoke, and the triumph of classic
literature and philosophy, especially the Greek. If the realization of the first
two was only partial or, in a way, temporary, the third was certainly fulfilled
to a more complete degree than perhaps Bessarion himself had dared hope. His
labours in that direction had lasting success. By his translations of Xenophon's
"Memorabilia", Aristotle's "Metaphysics", etc., he paved the way for a more
exact knowledge of the real thought of the Stagyrite. His part in the
reconciliation of Platonism and Aristoteleanism has already been mentioned. In
this contest of intelligence, he wrote the works "In calumniatorem Platonis"
against George of Trebizond, who in his translation of the Laws of Plato had
sharply criticized their author, exalting Aristotle instead. In the fifth book
of his work, Bessarion, in turn, enumerates the faults of translation and the
errors in the commentary of George. At a tremendous outlay, he gathered together
a library of eight hundred codices of Greek manuscripts, and still at his own
expense had many others copied by men of letters. After 1464 he gave these
treasures to the Republic of Venice with which he had always been in the
greatest sympathy. These codices formed the nucleus of the famous "Bibliotheca
Sancti Marci".




SOURCES

The greater part of BESSARION's works are to be found in P.L., CLXI. Concerning
Bessarion: AL. BLANDINUS, De vitâ et rebus pestis Bessarionis (Rome, 1777);
WOLFG. V. GOETHE, Studien und Forschungen über das Leben und Zeit des Card. B.
(Jena, 1874); VAST, Le Card. B. (Paris, 1878); SADOV, Bessarion de nicée son
rôle au concile de Ferrara (Florence and St. Petersburg, 1883); ROCHOLL,
Bessarion (Leipzig, 1904).


ABOUT THIS PAGE

APA citation. Benigni, U. (1907). Johannes Bessarion. In The Catholic
Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02527b.htm

MLA citation. Benigni, Umberto. "Johannes Bessarion." The Catholic Encyclopedia.
Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907.
<http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02527b.htm>.

Transcription. This article was transcribed for New Advent by WGKofron. With
thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio.

Ecclesiastical approbation. Nihil Obstat. 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor.
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York.

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