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D. João III e D. Miguel da Silva, bispo de Viseu: novas razões para um ódio velho

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:In the summer of 1540, D. Miguel da Silva (c. 1480-1556), secretary of king D. João III and bishop of Viseu, fled from the city of Viseu to Italy, where he remained for the rest of his life until he died in 1556. According to the chronicles and as narrated almost ne varietur by historiography, the cause of the hatred that king D. João III nurtured against D. Miguel da Silva, his escape to Italy and his persecution by the monarch until the year of his death in Rome was believed to have been, exclusively, his rise to Cardinal in 1539, against the King's will. It is our understanding that this event must rather be seen from the perspective of a complex set of motives, in which the cardinalate certainly plays an important, albeit not exclusive, part. Consequently, we will be revisiting this exceptional personality to attempt an assessment and understanding from a new perspective of one of the most disturbing episodes in the reign of D. João III, with D. Miguel da Silva, the Bishop of Viseu as its leading actor.
Autores principais:Buescu, Ana Isabel
Assunto:D. Miguel da Silva D. João III Relations with the Holy See Humanism and Renaissance Bishopric of Viseu D. Miguel da Silva D. João III Relações com a Santa Sé Humanismo e Renascimento Bispado de Viseu
Ano:2010
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Instituição associada:Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra
Idioma:português
Origem:Revista de História da Sociedade e da Cultura
Descrição
Resumo:In the summer of 1540, D. Miguel da Silva (c. 1480-1556), secretary of king D. João III and bishop of Viseu, fled from the city of Viseu to Italy, where he remained for the rest of his life until he died in 1556. According to the chronicles and as narrated almost ne varietur by historiography, the cause of the hatred that king D. João III nurtured against D. Miguel da Silva, his escape to Italy and his persecution by the monarch until the year of his death in Rome was believed to have been, exclusively, his rise to Cardinal in 1539, against the King's will. It is our understanding that this event must rather be seen from the perspective of a complex set of motives, in which the cardinalate certainly plays an important, albeit not exclusive, part. Consequently, we will be revisiting this exceptional personality to attempt an assessment and understanding from a new perspective of one of the most disturbing episodes in the reign of D. João III, with D. Miguel da Silva, the Bishop of Viseu as its leading actor.