Francisco de Vitoria

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Francisco de Vitoria
Francisco de Vitoria
Statue of Francisco de Vitoria, in Vitoria-Gasteiz
Statue of Francisco de Vitoria, in Vitoria-Gasteiz

Francisco de Vitoria (Francisci de Victoria;c.1480 or 148312 August 1546)[1] was a Spanish Renaissance Roman Catholic theologian, founder of the tradition in philosophy known as the School of Salamanca, noted especially for his contributions to the theory of just war and international law.

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Vitoria was of Jewish converso descent. [2].He became a Dominican in 1504, and was educated at the College Saint-Jacques in Paris, where he went on to teach theology from 1515 (under the influences of Pierre Crockaert and Thomas Cardinal Cajetan). In 1523 he returned to Spain to teach theology at the monastery of St. Gregory at Valladolid. Three years later, he was elected to the Prime Chair of theology at the University of Salamanca, where he was instrumental in promoting Thomism, until 1546. He renewed the methods of theology and natural or public law.

A noted scholar, he was publicly consulted by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Spain. An important part of his influence was the justification of the imposition of Spanish imperial power over the indigenous inhabitants of America, although he was not as thoroughgoing in these justifications as the emperor might have liked. His works are known only from his lecture notes, he himself having published nothing in his lifetime; Relectiones XII Theologicae in duo libros distinctae was published posthumously (Antwerp, 1604).[3]

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Notes of his lectures from 1527-1540 were copied by students and published under the following titles:

  • De potestate civili, 1528
  • Del Homicidio, 1530
  • De matrimonio, 1531
  • De potestate ecclesiae I and II, 1532
  • De Indis, 1532
  • De Jure belli Hispanorum in barbaros, 1532
  • De potestate papae et concilii, 1534
  • Relectiones Theologicae, 1557
  • Summa sacramentorum Ecclesiae, 1561

  1. ^ Cath. Enc.
  2. ^ Antonio Dominiguez Ortiz, "Los judeoconversos en España y América." Madrid, 1971
  3. ^ Ernest Nys, introduction to Francisco de Vitoria, De Indis et Ivre Belli, English translation of a substantial portion of Relectiones XII Theologicae, available online.

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