On this date in 1599, a heretical Franciscan named Fra Celestino of Verona burned at the stake at Rome’s Campo de’ Fiori.
For posterity he is a secondary character in the passion play of Giordano Bruno, who followed him to the same stake just a few months later.
Celestino had been imprisoned with Bruno in the early 1590s — the Inquisition’s legal gears took years to spin — and wrote up for his jailers a denunciation of his Bruno’s deviant doctrines. This might have been precisely what was hoped or demanded: turn the man’s fear of the fagot into an engine for incriminating the heresiarch.
It’s purely speculative whether this viperous intervention really made any difference in Bruno’s case. The rat vanishes from the documentary trail, only resurfacing in early 1599 when the Inquisition takes a sudden and intense look at this loose end. No record remains of Celestino’s specific doctrines, only that interrogators operated under a pall of silence mandated by the Pope himself.
He was condemned as a relapsed heretic, although we can only guess at his heresies. A few days later, an ambassador’s letter made reference to the burned man “who insisted that Christ Our Lord did not redeem mankind.”
On this day..
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- 1581: Peter Niers
- 1996: Youssouf Ali, the first in independent Comoros
- 1776: Robert Harley and Edward George, tea smugglers
- 1723: Hermann Christian von Wolffradt, Chancellor of Mecklenburg-Schwerin
- 1846: Andrew Kim Taegon, the first Korean priest
- 1931: Omar Mukhtar, Libyan revolutionary
- Feast Day of St. Euphemia
- 1938: Albert Dyer, sex killer (presumably)
- 1870: Jacob Wallace, Henry Coston, and Moses and Peter Newby
- 1961: Fatin Rustu Zorlu and Hasan Polatkan
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- 1560: Arnaud du Tilh, alias Martin Guerre