Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Mathias Hovius

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Church
  
Roman Catholic

Ordination
  
1566

Predecessor
  
Joannes Hauchin

Term ended
  
1620

Successor
  
Jacobus Boonen


Installed
  
1596

Archdiocese
  
Mechelen

Name
  
Mathias Hovius

Consecration
  
February 18, 1596

Mathias Hovius

See
  
St. Rumbold's Cathedral

Died
  
May 30, 1620, Affligem, Belgium

Place of burial
  
St. Rumbold's Cathedral, Mechelen, Belgium

Alma mater
  
Old University of Leuven

Mathias Hovius (1542 – 30 May 1620), born Matthijs Van Hove, was the third Archbishop of Mechelen from 1596 to 1620. As Archbishop, Hovius presided over implementing the Catholic Reformation in the Spanish Netherlands.

Contents

Early career

Born at Mechelen, Hovius studied theology and philosophy at Leuven University, and was ordained priest in 1566, the year iconoclasm broke out in the Netherlands. While pastor at Saints Peter and Paul's Church in Mechelen, Hovius witnessed the Spanish Fury at Mechelen in 1572, and the English Fury at Mechelen in 1580, both during the Eighty Years' War.

Vicar-General

Hovius was appointed vicar-general of the archdiocese of Mechelen upon the death of Archbishop Joannes Hauchin in 1589.

Archbishop

In 1596, Hovius was consecrated the third Archbishop of Mechelen. Among his accomplishments were the founding of a seminary and the creation of a catechism with help from the Jesuits. The Mechelen Catechism remained a standard in Catholic religious education in Belgium until well into the twentieth century.

In 1609, Hovius convened a provincial council in Mechelen to implement the decrees of the Council of Trent in the archdiocese. He was supported in his efforts by Albert and Isabella of Austria, Governors-General of the Spanish Netherlands.

Archbishop Hovius died on 30 May 1620 during a canonical visitation to Affligem Abbey.

References

Mathias Hovius Wikipedia