Terenzio Alciati


Terenzio Alciati was an Italian Jesuit and author. He is best known for his influential studies on the history of the Council of Trent.

Biography

Terenzio Alciati was born in Rome in November 1570. He belonged to a noble and wealthy family, originally from Milan. He entered the Society of Jesus on 9 March 1591. Alciati taught philosophy for five years, and theology for seventeen years at the Roman College. He subsequently became studiorum præfectus of the college and held the office for thirteen years, whereupon he was appointed vice-præpositus of the professed house in Rome. Esteemed by the cardinals for his learning, he was appointed censor by the Holy Office; the Congregation for Divine Worship chose him their consultor, and he became director of the Apostolic Penitentiary. In the ninth General Congregation, Alciati was the deputy of the Roman province. The Superior general of the Society of Jesus Francesco Piccolomini appointed him vice-provincial the Jesuit province of Rome. Alciati died of apoplexy on 12 November 1651.

Works

Alciati is the author of several historical and theological works written in Italian, and published under the pen name of Erminius Tacitus. Alegambe gives their titles in his Bibliotheca Scriptorum Societatis Jesu. Alciati was commissioned by Pope Urban VIII to refute Sarpi, the author of the Istoria del Concilio Tridentino, but death prevented him from accomplishing this work. However, he had collected valuable materials, of which Cardinal Francesco Sforza Pallavicino afterwards made use for his Istoria del Concilio di Trento.