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JERONYMO See also: Lisbon and son of the Ouvidor Geral of See also: India
.
In 1519 his See also: mother sent him to Salamanca to study See also: civil See also: law, and in 1525 he went on to See also: Paris to study philosophy, and there became intimate with See also: Peter See also: Fabre, one of the founders of the Society of Jesus
.
Returning to See also: Portugal, See also: Osorio next proceeded for See also: theology to Bologna, where he made such a name that See also: King
See also: John III. invited him in 1536-1537 to lecture on scripture in the reorganized university of
See also: Coimbra
.
He returned to Lisbon in 1540, and acted as secretary to See also: Prince Luiz, and as tutor to his son, the See also: prior of Crato, obtaining also two benefices in the diocese of See also: Vizeu
.
In 1542 he printed in Lisbon his See also: treatise De nobilitate
.
After the See also: death of Prince Luiz in 1553, he with-See also: drew from See also: court to his churches
.
He was named archdeacon of See also: Evora in 156o, and much against his will became See also: bishop of See also: Silves in 1564
.
The See also: Cardinal Prince See also: Henry, who had bestowed these honours, desired to employ him at Lisbon in
See also: state business when King See also: Sebastian took up the reins of power in 1568, but Osorio excused himself on the ground of his pastoral duties, though he showed his zeal for the See also: commonwealth by writing two letters, one in which he dissuaded the king from going to See also: Africa, the other sent during the latter's first expedition there (1574), in which he called on him to return to his See also: kingdom
.
Sebastian looked with disfavour on opponents of his See also: African adventure, and Osorio found it prudent to leave Portugal for See also: Parma and See also: Rome on the pretext of a visit ad limina
.
His scruples regarding residence, and the appeals of the king and the Cardinal Prince, prevented him enjoying for long the hospitality of See also: Pope See also: Gregory XIII., and he returned to his diocese and died at See also: Tavira on the loth of See also: August 1580
.
An exemplary prelate, a learned See also: scholar and an able critic, Osorio gained a See also: European reputation by writing in Latin, then the lingua franca of the studious throughout Christendom, and the perfection of his See also: prose See also: style caused him to be named by contemporaries " the Portuguese See also: Cicero." His well-stocked library was carried off from See also: Faro when the See also: earl of See also: Essex captured the See also: town in 1596, and many of the books were bestowed on the Bodleian at See also: Oxford
.
His See also: principal See also: works written in Latin include: (I) De gloria et nobilitate civile et christiana, an See also: English version of which by W
.
Blandie appeared in See also: London in 1576
.
(2) De justitia
.
(3) De regis institutione et disciplina
.
(4) De See also: vera sapientia
.
(5) De See also: rebus Emmanuelis (1586), a See also: history of the reign of King Emanuel which is little more than a See also: translation of the See also: chronicle on the same subject by Damiao de Goes
.
Osorio's See also: book was turned into Portuuese by F
.
M. do Nascimento (q.v.), into French by J
.
See also: Crispin 2 vols., See also: Geneva, 161o), and an English paraphrase in 2 vols. by
Gibbs came out in London in 1752
.
His See also: Opera omnia were published by his See also: nephew (4 vols., Rome, 1592)
.
Two of his polemical See also: treatises have been translated into English, his See also: Epistle to See also: Elizabeth uene of
See also: England by R
.
Shacklock (See also: Antwerp, 1565), and his See also: Con-
Ytation of M
.
W
.
Haddon by J . Fen ( See also: Louvain, 1568)
.
His Portuguese epistles, including the two before mentioned, were printed in Lisbon in two See also: editions in 1818 and 1819, and in Paris in 1859
.
For his biography see Obras de D
.
F
.
A
.
See also: Lobo, bishop of Vizeu, i
.
293- 01 (Lisbon, 1848)
.
(E
.
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