Franz Xaver Amrhyn
Franz Xaver Amrhyn | |
|---|---|
| Born | 22 August 1655 |
| Died | 6 November 1731 (aged 76) |
| Occupations | Jesuit priest, theologian, academic |
Franz Xaver Amrhyn (22 August 1655, Lucerne – 6 November 1731, Munich) was a Swiss Catholic Jesuit priest and theologian. Son of Joseph Amrhyn and brother of Karl Anton Amrhyn, he was considered one of the most eminent Swiss Jesuits before the suppression of the order in 1773.[1]
Life and career
Amrhyn entered the Society of Jesus at Landsberg am Lech in 1671 and was ordained priest in Rome in 1684. He taught philosophy (a three-year course) at the University of Ingolstadt (1686–1692), and subsequently requested, without success, to be sent to the missions by the superior general of the order.[1]
He then served as professor of theology and prefect of studies in Lucerne (1692–1698), professor of moral theology at Ingolstadt (1698–1701), and court preacher at St. Michael's in Munich (1701–1714). He was rector of the Jesuit colleges of Munich (1712–1715) and Regensburg (1715–1718), and provincial of the order (1718–1721). He subsequently served as rector at Ingolstadt (1721–1724), Regensburg (1724–1728), and Amberg in Bavaria (1728–1731).[1]
Bibliography
- HS, VII, 105
- F. Strobel, Schweizer Jesuitenlexikon, ms., 1986, p. 29
References
This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC-BY SA. Text taken from Amrhyn, Franz Xaver, Urban Fink, Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Translated by Ursula Gaillard.