Antoine Pagi
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Antoine Pagi (31 March 1624 – 5 June 1699) was a French ecclesiastical historian.
Pagi was born in Rognes. After studying with the Jesuits in Aix, he entered the monastery of the Conventual Franciscans in Arles and made solemn profession on 31 January 1641. At the age of twenty-nine years, he was elected provincial, an office which he held four times. He died, aged 75, in Aix-en-Provence.
Works[]
He devoted his spare time to the study of history. Discerning numerous chronological errors, and frequently misstatements of facts in the Annales ecclesiastici of Baronius, he made it his life-work to correct them and otherwise elucidate the work.
Pagi's first volume was printed during his lifetime (Paris, 1689); the remaining three volumes, reaching till the year 1198, the last year in the work of Baronius, were completed in manuscript shortly before his death. The whole work was edited in four volumes by his nephew François Pagi: Critica historico-chronologica in universos annales ecclesiasticos em. et rev. Caesaris Card. Baronii (Geneva, 1705; second ed., 1727). Mansi embodied it in his edition of the "Annales" of Baronius (Lucca, 1736–59). The "Critica" itself is not free of errors.
Other publications[]
- Dissertatio hypatica seu de consulibus caesareis (Lyons, 1682), printed also in Apparatus in Annales ecclesiasticos (Lucca, 1740), pp. 1–136;
- Dissertatio de die et anno mortis S. Martini ep. turonensis and a few minor treatises in defense of his Dissertatio hypatica, in which he had set down various rules for determining the consulship of the Roman emperors, and which had been attacked by Cardinal Henry Noris and others.
- He also edited: D. Antonii Paduani O. Min. sermones hactenus inediti (Avignon, 1685).
Sources[]
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Antoine Pagi". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- 1624 births
- 1699 deaths
- French historians
- Conventual Friars Minor
- Historians of the Catholic Church
- French male writers