Miguel da Anunciação

Miguel da Anunciação (da Cunha) (1704 – 29 August 1779) was a Portuguese prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He won notoriety as an opponent of the Enlightenment and of Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal, for which he spent eight years in prison.

Miguel da Anunciação
Bishop of Diocese of Coimbra
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
DioceseDiocese of Coimbra
In office1740-1779
PredecessorAntónio Vasconcelos e Sousa
SuccessorFrancisco de Lemos
Orders
Ordination26 June 1729
by Luis Simoes Brandao, Bishop of Angola
Consecration9 April 1740
by Valerio do Sacramento
RankBishop of Angola
Personal details
BornFebruary 1704
Lisbon, Portugal
Died29 August 1779
Coimbra, Portugal
Previous postPrior General, University Administrator

Biography

Miguel Carlos da Cunha was the son of Tristan da Cunha de Ataide, Count of Povolide; his mother, Archangela Maria de Tavora, was the daughter of the Count of S. Vicente.

Anunciação became a doctor of Canon Law (Coimbra, 1725), where he lectured in Canon Law and eventually was elected Rector. He became a member of the Congregation of Hermits of Saint Augustine (O.E.S.A.) at the monastery of Santa Cruz in 1728, and was elected Prior General of his Order in 1737. He was ordained a priest on 26 June 1729 by Luis Simoēs Brandão, Bishop of Angola.[1]

Anunciação was nominated Bishop of Coimbra by the King on 22 February 1739, and approved by Pope Benedict XIV on 19 December 1740.[2] He was consecrated bishop on 9 April 1740, in the church of the monastery of Santa Cruz, by the Bishop of Angola, Valerio do Sacramento, O.E.S.A., assisted by the Bishop of Macao, Hilario de Santa Rosa, and the Bishop of Funchal, Jose do Nascimento.[3] He made his entry into his diocese on 11 June 1740.[4] He founded the diocesan seminary of Coimbra in June 1741.[5]

On 8 November 1768 Anunciação issued a pastoral letter,[6] condemning a number of books of Enlightenment doctrine. Among these were the Encyclopédie, works of Rousseau including the Social Contract, Justinus Febronius' De statu ecclesiae et legitima potestate Romani Pontificis, and Voltaire's La pucelle d'Orléans.[7] His attack ran diametrically opposite to the policy of Pombal, to modernize the educational system in Portugal to bring it into line with the more modern teaching of other institutions in Europe. The University of Coimbra's curriculum was more than two centuries out-of-date, and in some ways still medieval in character.[8] The bishop was arrested, imprisoned and deposed by the Marques de Pombal. He spent eight years imprisoned in the fortress of Pedrouços.

To break Anunciação's connection with the diocese he was given, against his will, and initially against the will of Pope Clement XIV, a coadjutor bishop, Francisco de Lemos de Faria Pereira Coutinho, a follower of Pombal, who was confirmed on 13 April 1774.[9] This gave De Lemos canonical rights to govern the diocese during Anunciação's years in prison, and to succeed him on his death on 29 August 1777.[10]

References

  1. Rodrigues, p. 240.
  2. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 172 with note 2.
  3. Rodrigues, p. 241.
  4. Rodrigues, pp. 241-242.
  5. Rodrigues, pp. 237-238; 243-244.
  6. José Eduardo Franco, "O 'terramoto' pombalino e a campanha de 'dejesuitzação' de Portugal," Universidade Católica Portuguesa. Centro de Estudos de História Religiosa (2006). Catolicismo e sociedade na época moderna: o terramoto de 1755. Lusitana sacra, 2a serie, Tomo XVIII (in Portuguese). Lisbon: CEHR-UCP. pp. 147–218, at pp. 213–215. ISBN 978-972-8361-24-2.
  7. Rodrigues, p. 223.
  8. Rodrigues, pp. 222-225.
  9. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 172 with note 3.
  10. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 172, note 2.

Bibliography

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