Aleandro, Girolamo

ALEANDRO, GIROLAMO (HIERONYMUS ALEANDER) (1480- 1542), Italian
cardinal, was born at Motta, near Venice, on the 13th of
February 1480. He studied at Venice, where he became acquainted with
Erasmus and Aldus Manutius, and at an early age was reputed one of the
most learned men of the time. In 1508 he went to Paris on the
invitation of Louis XII. as professor of belles lettres, and held for a
time the position of rector in the university. Entering the service of
Eberhard, prince-bishop of Liege, he was sent by that prelate on a
mission to Rome, where Pope Leo X. retained him, giving him (1519) the
office of librarian of the Vatican. In the following year he went to
Germany to be present as papal nuncio at the coronation of Charles V.,
and was also present at the diet of Worms, where he headed the
opposition to Luther, advocating the most extreme measures to repress
the doctrines of the reformer. His conduct evoked the fiercest
denunciations of Luther, but it also displeased more moderate men and
especially Erasmus. The edict against the reformer, which was finally
adopted by the emperor and the diet, was drawn up and proposed by
Aleandro. After the close of the diet the papal nuncio went to the
Netherlands; where he kindled the flames of persecution, two monks of
Antwerp, the first martyrs of the Reformation, being burnt in Brussels
at his instigation. In 1523 Clement VII., having appointed him
archbishop of Brindisi and Oria, sent him as nuncio to the court of
Francis I. He was taken prisoner along with that monarch at the battle
of Pavia (1525), and was released only on payment of a heavy ransom. He
was subsequently employed on various papal missions, especially to
Germany, but was unsuccessful in preventing the German princes from
making a truce with the reformers, or in checking to any extent the
progress of the new doctrines. He was created cardinal in 1536 by Paul
III. (at the same time as Reginald Pole) and died at Rome on the 1st
of February 1542.
Aleandro compiled a Lexicon Graeco-Latinum (Paris, 1512), and wrote
Latin verse of considerable merit inserted in M. Tuscanus’s Carmina
Illustrium Poetarum Italiorum. The Vatican library contains a volume of
manuscript letters and other documents written by him in connexion with
his various missions against Luther. They were utilized by Pallavicino
in his Istoria del Concilio Tridentino (i. 23-28), who gives a very
partial account of the Worms conference.
Aleandro, who is sometimes called “the elder,” must be distinguished
from his grand-nephew, also called Girolamo Aleandro (1374-1629). The
younger Aleandro was a very distinguished scholar, and wrote Psalmi
poenitentiales versibus elegiacis expressi (Treves, 1593), Gaii, veteris
juris consulti Institutionum fragmenta, cum commentario (Venice, 1600),
Explicatio veteris tabulae marmorcae solis effigie symbolisque exculptae
(Rome, 1616).
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