Jean Bolland, SJ () (13 August 1596 – 12 September 1665) was a Flemish Jesuits priest, theologian, and prominent hagiography. "Father John Bolland, S.J.", Jesuit Stamps
Bolland's main achievement is the compilation of the first five volumes of the Lives of the Saints in Latin, called the Acta Sanctorum, a series which was continued by others, who, after his death, formed the Bollandist
In 1630 he was called to Antwerp by the superior of the Flanders province of the Society of Jesus to examine papers left by the hagiographer Heribert Rosweyde who had died shortly before, and report back his opinion as to what it was advisable to do with them. Bolland went to Antwerp, familiarized himself with the manuscripts, and, while admitting that the work was still merely a rough and faulty draft, gave reasons for believing that without an undue expenditure of labour it might be brought to a successful completion. He offered to oversee the work on two conditions: that he should be free to modify the plan of Rosweyde as he understood it, and that Rosweyde's materials should be set apart for his exclusive use. The Provincial Superior, Jacques van Straten, accepted the conditions and Bolland was transferred from the college of Mechelen to Antwerp, where he became director of the Latin Congregation, a congregation composed of the principal people of the city, and had charge of preparing the Acta Sanctorum for publication.
Bolland began by outlining an even more ambitious plan. Rosweyde had confined his quest of original texts to libraries in the Flanders and neighbouring regions. Rosweyde had proposed to publish only the original texts, without commentaries or annotations, but Bolland decided to give all the information he could find for each saint and his cult, to preface each text with a study of its author and its historical value, and to append notes of explanation. He visited monastic libraries, collecting and copying a considerable number of documents.
Work on the January volume was done in two garrets where Bolland kept his papers and books. As climbing the steep steps began to prove difficult, he asked for and obtained the use of a vacant room on the second floor, which later became the Bollandist Museum. Delahaye, Hippolyte S.J., The Work of the Bollandists, Princeton University Press 1922 The three volumes for February were released in 1658. Henschen continued to labor at the publication of the Acta Sanctorum up to the time of his death in 1681.
In 1659 Bolland received assistance from a third Jesuit, Daniel van Papenbroek, who in the end did most of the work for the 18 volumes of the Acta Sanctorum. Pope Alexander VII invited Bolland to Rome offering access to manuscripts in the Vatican Library. For reasons of health, Bolland sent Henschen and Papenbroek. In 1660–1662 they traveled through Germany, France and Italy, searching for old documents in monasteries and libraries. "Bolland, Jean (1596-1665)", Jesuit Resource
Jean Bolland died in Antwerp, aged 69, in 1665.
Arrival of Henschen
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