Pontificio Collegio Urbano de Propaganda Fide


The Pontificio Collegio Urbano de Propaganda Fide, also known as the Collegium Urbanum or Urban College, was a Catholic seminary established in 1627 for the purpose of training missionaries to spread the faith around the world. It is now known as the Pontifical Urban University.

History

The college was established in Rome by Pope Urban VIII. In a brief on January 27, 1624 he ordered the investment of money and the acquisition of the palazzo Ferratini in the Piazza di Spagna; by the Bull “Immortalis Dei Filius” on 1 August 1627, the college was established.
One of the greatest benefactors of the new college was Urban VIII’s brother, Cardinal Antonio Barberini. In September 1633 he bought all the houses and gardens between the College building and the Church of Sant'Andrea delle Fratte. On May 5, 1634 he laid the foundation stone of the college church.
Italians were not admitted to the college, except from areas of missionary work - Valtellina and the diocese of Como. From the outset, students were drawn from the Balkans, Northern Europe and the Middle East. The college prepared them for taking holy orders, after which they were to return to their homelands as missionaries. Between 1633 and 1703 a total of 451 students attended the college. Of these, 48 were Armenian, 42 Dutch, 34 Dalmatian, 33 Greek, 25 Syrian, 25 Valtellinese, 22 German, 17 Indian, 10 Ethiopian, 8 Persian and one from New Spain. In the first half of the nineteenth century the College had as its spiritual director Saint Vincent Pallotti and among its students, at different times, were Saints Oliver Plunkett and John Henry Newman.
On 27 June 1641 a further Bull of Urban VIII abolished the college’s autonomous administration and brought it directly under the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith.
The effectiveness of the training was difficult to judge. In 1660 it became a requirement for all missionaries within Europe to send an annual letter back to the college - for those outside Europe, every other year sufficed. From these letters it can be ascertained that of the 51 seminarists between 1633 and 16&3, 27 had become missionaries, while the remaining 24 had died, abandoned their mission or simply disappeared.
In 1798, following the disruption surrounding the creation of the Roman Republic and the Napoleonic Wars, the college was closed and some of the students were received by the Lazarists at Montecitorio. This arrangement lasted until 1809, when even this last remnant of the college was suppressed. In 1814, however, some of the Propaganda students were again received by the Lazarists, and in 1817 the Urbaniana was reopened. From 1836 until 1848, it operated under the direction of the Jesuits.
In 1925 the Cardinal Prefect, Willem Marinus van Rossum purchased the hospital of Santa Maria della Pietà on the Gianicolo Hill, and the seminarians transferred to this site, their current residence, on 2 November 1926. In the meantime, Van Rossum also began the construction of the Pontifical Urban University. After the teaching functions moved to the new university, the college building has continued to serve as the residence for the seminarians, which was inaugurated by Pope Pius XI on 24 April 1931.

Current arrangements

The Collegio Urbano comes under the direct authority of the Dicastery for Evangelization. The most recent change to the statutes of the College were made in 2001 by Cardinal Crescenzio Sepe. The new regulations were approved on 11 November 2006 by Cardinal Ivan Dias. At present the college has been led by don Armando Nugnes, of the diocese of Aversa.
As of 2022 the Collegio Urbano had 158 students from various parts of Asia and Africa; none of the seminarists are from Italy. To be admitted to the college, candidates must be recommended by a bishop and are required to have an understanding of Italian. The first stage of training for the priesthood lasts five or six years, during which the seminarists study philosophy and theology as well as languages. In some cases a period of licentiate lasting two or three years is required before ordination takes place.

Alumni

Rectors

The following is a chronological list of rectors of the college.
  1. Giuseppe Matraia
  2. Juan Bautista Vives
  3. Sebastiano Pietroardi
  4. Domenico Cerroni
  5. Marco Romano
  6. Cosimo Riccardo Accolti
  7. Vincenzo Greco
  8. Sebastiano Panaceni
  9. Giuseppe Cruciani
  10. Annibale Saletti
  11. Michele Columera
  12. Andrea Bonvicini
  13. Giulio Cesare de Rossi
  14. Nicola Castelli
  15. Guido Della Porta
  16. Teodoro Moriconi
  17. Francesco Sosio Tramontana
  18. Domenico della Rocca
  19. Ildefonso Tarditi
  20. Paolo Lazzarini
  21. Bernardino Ficoroni
  22. Giovanni Battista Canonici
  23. Filippo Biagioli
  24. Raimondo Serdominici
  25. Carlo Augusto Conte di Reisac
  26. Liberio Figari
  27. Giovanni Antonio Grassi
  28. Giovanni Batta Dessi
  29. Maksymilian Stanisław Ryłło
  30. Antonio Bresciani
  31. Paolo Cullen
  32. Filippo Tancioni
  33. Loreto Iacovacci
  34. Gustavo Corrado
  35. Filippo M. Camassei
  36. Giovanni Bonzano
  37. Bartolomeo Cattaneo
  38. Paolo Giobbe
  39. Torquato Dini
  40. Pietro Parente
  41. Lorenzo Maria Balconi
  42. Domenico Brizi
  43. Carlo Cavallera
  44. Felice Cenci
  45. Pellegrino Ronchi
  46. Natalino Fumagalli
  47. Angelo Lazzarotto
  48. Carlo Tei
  49. Francesco Pavese
  50. Fidel Gonzales Fernandez
  51. Fernando Domingues
  52. Armando Nugnes