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An eighteenth-century canonist of the Franciscan Order. The
exact dates of his birth and death are unknown, but he was born at
Solero, near Alessandria in Northern Italy. He was also professor,
provincial of his order, and consultor of the Holy Office. It would
seem he died before 1763. He is the author of the "Prompta Bibliotheca
canonica, juridica, moralis, theologica, necnon ascetica, polemica,
rubricistica, historica", a veritable encyclopedia of religious
knowledge. The first edition of this work appeared at Bologna, in 1746.
A second edition, much enlarged, also a third, were published by the
author himself. The fourth edition, dating from 1763 seems to have been
published after his death. This, like those which followed it, contains
the additions which the author had made to the second edition under the
title of additiones auctoris, and also other enlargements (additiones ex aliena manu)
inserted in their respective places in the body of the work (and no
longer in the appendix as in the former editions) and supplements. The
various editions thus differ from each of her. The most recent are:
that of the Benedictines (Naples, 1844-55), reproduced by Migne (Paris,
1861-1863), and an edition published at Paris 1884. A new edition was
published at Rome in 1899 at the press of the Propaganda in eight
volumes, with a volume of supplements, edited by the Jesuit, Bucceroni,
containing several dissertations and the recent and important documents
of the Holy See. This supplement serves to keep up to date the work of
Ferraris, which will ever remain a precious mine of information,
although it is sometimes possible to reproach the author with
laxism.
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