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CAPEROLANS

Volume 5 · 240 words · 1815 Edition

a congregation of religious in Italy, so called from Peter Caperole their founder, in the 15th century.

The Milanese and Venetians being at war, the enmity occasioned thereby spread itself to the very cloisters. The superiors of the province of Milan, of minor brothers, which extended itself as far as the territories of the republic of Venice, carried it to haughtily over the Venetians, that those of the convent of Brescia resolved to shake off a yoke which was grown insupportable to them. The superiors, informed of this, expelled out of the province those whom they considered as the authors of this design; the principal of whom were Peter Caperole, Matthew de Tharvillo, and Bonaventure of Brescia. Peter Caperole, a man of an enterprising genius, found means to separate the convents of Brescia, Bergamo, and Cremona, from the province of Milan, and subject them to the conventuals. This occasioned a law-suit between the vicar-general and these convents, which was determined in favour of the latter; and these convents, in 1475, by the authority of Pope Sixtus IV., were erected into a distinct vicariate, under the title of that of Brescia. This not satisfying the ambition of Caperole, he obtained, by the interposition of the doge of Venice, that this vicariate might be erected into a congregation, which was called from him Caperolans. This congregation still subsists in Italy, and is composed of 24 convents, situated in Brescia, Bergamo, and Crema.