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・ Ernesto Benedettini
・ Ernesto Bertarelli
・ Ernesto Bertea
・ Ernesto Berumen
・ Ernesto Bessone
・ Ernesto Biondi
・ Ernesto Bonacina
・ Ernesto Bonino
・ Ernesto Bonino (footballer)
・ Ernesto Bonomini
・ Ernesto Bosch
・ Ernesto Brambilla
・ Ernesto Brown
・ Ernesto Brunhoso
・ Ernesto Buenrostro
Ernesto Buonaiuti
・ Ernesto Burzagli
・ Ernesto Bustamante
・ Ernesto Báez
・ Ernesto Cabruna
・ Ernesto Caffo
・ Ernesto Calindri
・ Ernesto Calzadilla
・ Ernesto Canto
・ Ernesto Cardenal
・ Ernesto Carlos
・ Ernesto Carolina
・ Ernesto Castano
・ Ernesto Cavallini
・ Ernesto Ceirano


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Ernesto Buonaiuti : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernesto Buonaiuti
Ernesto Buonaiuti (1881 – 1946) was an Italian historian, philosopher of religion, Catholic priest and anti-fascist. He lost his chair at the University of Rome owing to his opposition to the Fascists.
As a scholar in History of Christianity and religious philosophy he was one of the most important exponents of the modernist current.
== Life ==
Buonaiuti was born in Rome on April 24, 1881. He was ordained priest on December 19, 1903, and began his studies working with the historian of religion Salvatore Minocchi. He made use of the positive method in his study of early Christianity in his book ''Il cristianesimo primitivo e la Politica imperiale romana'' ("Primitive Christianity and Roman Imperial Politics", 1911).
At the age of 24 he founded the magazine ''Rivista storico-critica delle scienze teologiche'' ("Historical-critical Review of the Theological Sciences"), in order to propagate his vision of religious culture in Italy, and after that he directed the magazine ''Ricerche religiose'' ("Religious Researches"). Those magazines were soon banned by the church and placed on the ''Index Librorum Prohibitorum'', the index of publications to be considered as forbidden to Catholic readers.
On January 25, 1925 he was punished with excommunication, which was confirmed several times, because in his works he defended the ideas of the modernist current, particularly in ''Il programma dei modernisti'' ("The Modernists' Program", 1908) and ''Lettere di un prete modernista'' ("Letters from a Modernist Priest", 1908).
In his autobiography ''Il pellegrino di Roma'' ("The Pilgrim from Rome", 1945), Buonaiuti reconstructed the history of his conflict with the Catholic Church, of which he continued to claim himself a "loyal son", even after his excommunication.
From 1925 he was Professor of History of Christianity at the University of Rome; however, after the Concordat in 1929, the University forbade him to teach and to examine students, and he was given non-academic tasks, such as library investigation and the writing of research papers. In 1931 his university chair was definitively revoked, because he refused to swear the "oath of loyalty" to Fascism (all teachers were forced by law to swear an oath of loyalty to the Fascist government, and those who refused were fired).
In 1945, after the Allied victory in the Second World War he was restored to his rank of university professor, but he was not allowed to give lectures, since, according to the bureaucracy and the laws resulting from the Concordat, which were retained by the new government, teaching in any Italian State University was forbidden to any excommunicated priest.
He died on April 20, 1946 in Rome.

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