Vittorio or Victorio Riccio or Ricci OP (18 January 1621 – 17 February 1685) was an Italian Dominican missionary, scholar and diplomat in the Philippines and south-east China, later named the first Prefect Apostolic of Terra Australis.

Biography edit

Vittorio Riccio was born in Fiesole, near Florence, in 1621. He joined the Dominican order and taught philosophy in their house of studies in Fiesole. He was recruited for missionary work in the East by Juan Bautista Morales, who sent him to Rome where he successfully argued for pontifical university status to be granted to the Dominican college in Manila, which thus became the University of Santo Tomas, the oldest university in Asia with a European charter.[1]

In 1648 he travelled via Mexico to the Philippines, where he worked with Chinese in the Manila area and learned the Chinese language.[2] In 1655 he transferred to the Dominican mission in Amoy (Xiamen), where he formed a close alliance with Koxinga, the ruler of Fujian.[3] In 1662 he returned to Manila as envoy of Koxinga, conveying his threat to invade the Philippines.[4][5] The invasion did not take place.

His 1667 account of the Dominican mission in China and its background in Chinese history, Hechos de la orden de predicadores en el imperio de China, remains unpublished.

Prefect Apostolic of Terra Australis edit

In 1676 Riccio, then prior of the St Dominic Monastery in Manila, wrote to the College of Propaganda Fide in Rome on the opportunities for evangelisation in the unknown continent of Terra Australis to the south of the Philippines. Based on reports from Dutch sailors, he enclosed a map showing the continent stretching to the South Pole and beyond.[6] He requested that he be appointed Prefect Apostolic of Terra Australis to initiate missionary activity there.

Communications with Rome were slow but the college appointed him to the position in 1681.[1]: 175–8 

Riccio died in Parián in 1685.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Wiltgen, Ralph M (1979). The Founding of the Roman Catholic Church in Oceania: 1825 to 1850. Canberra: ANU Press. p. 170. ISBN 0708108350.
  2. ^ "Vittorio Ricci". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 25 Dec 2023.
  3. ^ Busquets i Alemany, Anna (2012). "Other Voices for the Conflict: Three Spanish Texts about the Manchus and Their Conquest of China". Ming Qing Yanjiu. 17 (1): 35–64. doi:10.1163/24684791-01701003. Retrieved 25 Dec 2023.
  4. ^ Busquets, Anna (2016). "Dreams in the Chinese Periphery: Victorio Riccio and Zheng Chenggong's Regime". In Andrade, Tonio; Hang, Xing (eds.). Sea Rovers, Silver, and Samurai: Maritime East Asia in Global History, 1550-1700. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. pp. 202–225. doi:10.21313/hawaii/9780824852764.003.0010. ISBN 9780824852764.
  5. ^ Busquets, Anna (2019). "Three Manila-Fujian Diplomatic Encounters: Different Aims and Different Embassies in the Seventeenth Century". Journal of Early Modern History. 23 (5): 442–457. doi:10.1163/15700658-12342642. Retrieved 25 Dec 2023.
  6. ^ "Terra Australis, Quinta Pars Orbis, 1676 (Map)". Living Histories. University of Newcastle Australia. Retrieved 25 Dec 2023.

Sources edit

  • González, José María (1955). Un misionero diplomático: vida del Padre Victorio Riccio. Madrid: Ediciones Studium.

External links edit