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Croatian Scotistic Philosophy. The late Baroque Historical-Lexicographical Research: Franciscan Emanuel Hoško
Veronika Reljac
; Theology of Rijeka, Dislocated Studies of Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb, Rijeka, Croatia
Abstract
Since 1900 Franciscans are combined by a single provincial board in the area of continental Croatia: St. Cyril and Methodius Croatian Franciscan Province. It gathered Croatian Franciscan monasteries from former multinational province, namely: the Croatian-Slovene provinces St. Cross, Croatian-Hungarian Province of St. Ladislav and Croatian-Hungarian-Austrian Province of St. John Capistrano, which has in the 1757th in its structure assembled friars in Slavonia and the Croatian and Hungarian Danube, by which time they were members of the Province of Bosnia the Silver that by the end of 17th century gathered all Franciscans among Croats under Turkish rule. These three provinces in continental Croatia and Croatian ethnic community in Hungary in the 18th led five colleges; these were schools of general education in Zagreb, Varaždin, Budapest, Pécs and Osijek. In Trsat and in Petrovaradin operated four-year theological schools, and in more monasteries were studies of philosophy. They followed the 17th and 18 Franciscan basis of teaching, a particular scholastic orientation of philosophy and theology, which demanded full loyality to scotism, so. "Ratio Studiorum". This confirms the view that the Croatian Franciscans in continental Croatia during the 17th and 18 century were faithful to scotistic philosophy and that they were gathered in four schools and cultural circles, Trsat, Zagreb, Osijek and Buda. Franciscan Emanuel Hoško pointed to, so far unknown heritage of these schools by making printed list of settings for public philosophical discussions and more numerous philosophical elaboration of the material in the manuscript.
Keywords
Scotism; scholasticism; philosophy; high school; the Franciscans; philosophical discussions; philosophical writings; Croatia
Hrčak ID:
93681
URI
Publication date:
31.12.2012.
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