Bernat Boรฏl monument to Columbus, Barcelona

Bernat Boรฏl (also spelled Boil, Boyl or Boyal) was an Aragonese monk or friar, known as Fray Buil, who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his second voyage across the Atlantic. On January 6, 1494 Buil conducted the first mass held in the New World, in a temporary church on La Isabela.[1] There is unclear evidence about his affiliation to a religious order. He left the Indies after disagreements with Columbus, and his mission work came to little.

Identification

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According to Stephen M. Donovan writing in the Catholic Encyclopedia, the accounts given of Buil are confused by a misidentification. He asserts that Bernardo Boil, a Franciscan, was a different person from a Bernardo Boyl, who was a Benedictine. It was to Boil, according to Donovan, that Pope Alexander VI addressed his Bull dated 25 June 1493, appointing him first vicar Apostolic of the New World, while other accounts recite that Boyl was the first person to hold the office. Ferdinand II had employed Boyl, the Benedictine, in diplomatic negotiations and had sought his appointment as vicar Apostolic in America. Citing researches of the historian Roselly, Donovan concludes that Ferdinand deliberately misidentified the intended recipient of the bull, and that Bernardo Boil, the Franciscan, did not leave Spain.

On the other hand, Livarus Oliger, also writing in the Catholic Encyclopedia, states that Buil was a Minim, citing research of Fita for the view that the bull of Alexander had a clerical error in the phrase ordinis Minorum which would indicate that Buil was a Franciscan.[2]

Voyage

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Nova typis transacta navigatio novi orbis Indiรฆ occidentalis, upper cover

The 1911 Encyclopรฆdia Britannica states that twelve missionaries accompanied the second Columbus expedition of 1493, under the orders of Bernardo Buil, a Benedictine.[3] On January 6, 1494 Buil conducted the first mass held in the New World, in a temporary church on La Isabela.[4] James Reston, who calls him a Benedictine monk, says that Buil took a hard line against the Taรญno leader Guacanagarรญx, arguing for his execution.[5] Later Buil returned from the Indies, and was one of those accusing Columbus of harshness and inconsistency. He resumed work as a diplomat.

An account of Buil and the Benedictine mission was later written by a Benedictine abbot, Caspar Plautius (Kaspar Plautz) of Seitenstetten Abbey in Austria. A fanciful work with fictional parts and fantastic illustrations, it was published as Nova typis transacta navigatio novi orbis Indiรฆ occidentalis at Linz in 1621. Plautius used the pseudonym Honorius Philoponus, dedicating the work to himself.[6]

Notes

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  1. ^ "First Mass in the New World - 1201-1500 Church History Timeline". Christianhistorytimeline.com. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  2. ^ s:Catholic Encyclopedia (1913)/Minimi
  3. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Columbus, Christopher"ย . Encyclopรฆdia Britannica. Vol.ย 6 (11thย ed.). Cambridge University Press. p.ย 743.
  4. ^ "First Mass in the New World - 1201-1500 Church History Timeline". Christianhistorytimeline.com. Retrieved 2013-12-08.
  5. ^ James Reston, Jr., Dogs of God: Columbus, the Inquisition and the Defeat of the Moors (2006), p. 328.
  6. ^ "La Mer". Expositions.bnf.fr. Retrieved 2013-12-08.

References

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Attribution
  • ย This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain:ย Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Bernardo Buil". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. The entry cites:
    • F. Fita, Fray Bernal Buyl o el primer apรณstol del Nuevo mundo (Madrid 1884)

Further reading

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  • B. T. F. Poole, Case Reopened: An Enquiry into the 'Defection' of Fray Bernal Boyl and Mosen Pedro Margarit, Journal of Latin American Studies, Vol. 6, No. 2 (Nov., 1974), pp.ย 193โ€“210

๐Ÿ“š Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

La Isabela

left his brother Diego Columbus as president of the island, with Fray Bernardo Buil and Pedro Fernandez Coronel as regents. During his absence, his brother

Inter caetera

Piis fidelium, appointing him apostolic vicar in the Indies. Father Bernardo Buil of the Order of Minims left Cรกdiz for America on 25 September 1493,

The Ascetical Homilies of Isaac the Syrian

and it was likely taken by the translator (a companion of Columbus), Bernardo Buil, on Columbus' second voyage. If this is true, it could arguably make

1493

Friar Bernardo Buil, a Catalan monk in Spain, is appointed by Pope Alexander VI as the first Christian "Vicar Apostolic of the New World". Friar Buil will

Public art in Barcelona

statues of Catalonia, Aragon, Castile and Leรณn, as well as figures Bernardo Buil, Pedro Margarit Jaume Ferrer de Blanes and Luis de Santรกngel; the column

1490s

Friar Bernardo Buil, a Catalan monk in Spain, is appointed by Pope Alexander VI as the first Christian "Vicar Apostolic of the New World". Friar Buil will

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santo Domingo

of Pope Alexander VI, dated 24 June 1493, designated the Franciscan Bernardo Buil (Boil) to accompany Christopher Columbus on his second voyage of discovery

Giovanni Antonio de Carbonariis

ambassador notes that on the damaged ship was โ€˜another Friar Buil.โ€™ This was an allusion to Bernardo Buil, the Minim missionary who had accompanied Christopher