Ambrose Agius

His Excellency
Ambrose Agius, O.S.B.
Titular Archbishop of Palmyra
Church Roman Catholic
Appointed 3 September 1904
Term ended 13 December 1911
Predecessor Jules-Basile Kandelaft
Successor Antonino Sardi
Other posts Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines (1905-1911)
Orders
Ordination 16 October 1881
Consecration 18 September 1904
by Rafael Merry del Val
Personal details
Birth name Tancredi Alfred Agius
Born (1856-09-17)September 17, 1856
Alexandria, Khedivate of Egypt, Ottoman Empire
Died December 13, 1911(1911-12-13) (aged 55)
Manila, Insular Government of the Philippine Islands, United States
Buried Manila Cathedral, moved in 1945 to Our Lady of Montserrat Abbey, Manila, Philippines
Nationality Maltese
Denomination Roman Catholic
Residence Philippines
Parents Tancredi Agius & Saveria Sammut

Ambrose Agius, O.S.B., (September 17, 1856 – December 13, 1911) was a Maltese[1] Archbishop of the Roman Catholic Church.

A member of the Benedictine Order, Agius served under the pontificate of Pope Leo XIII and was appointed the Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines by Pope Pius X in 1904. Agius was delegated to canonically crown the image of Our Lady of La Naval de Manila in 1906. More prominently, he founded the first Benedictine monastery in Malta, and ordained the first Filipino bishop in the Roman Catholic Church.

Early life

Agius was born on September 17, 1856, in the Egyptian city of Alexandria (then under the Ottoman Empire), the second son (third child) of a Maltese merchant named Tancredi Agius and his wife Saveria Sammut.[2] Tancredi's children were:

Agius was baptized as Tancredi Alfred Agius at Saint Catherine's Cathedral in Alexandria on November 5, 1856. He returned with his family to Malta during his early years. Agius later attended the college operated by the monks of St Augustine's Abbey in Ramsgate Kent, England, where he was an outstanding student.[3] After he had completed his studies in 1872, he felt called to join the monastic community of the abbey. At his first profession of monastic vows, he was given the religious name of Ambrose. On October 12, 1873, he professed his perpetual vows and was then sent by his abbot to Rome to complete his studies of Philosophy and Theology.

Priesthood

With permission from Pope Saint Pius X, Dom Agius crowned the image of Our Lady of La Naval de Manila.

Agius was ordained into the Catholic priesthood on October 16, 1881 at Subiaco Abbey.[4]

Agius' Maltese ancestry was traced back to 1550 before his appointment in 1904.[5] He became greatly immersed in Maltese culture as he traveled extensively in his early years.

In May 1881, Agius was instructed by the Holy See to open the first Catholic monastery in Malta. In December 1881, Agius, along with a group of Benedictine monks settled in Nigret, Żurrieq.[6] Under his supervision, a canonical religious community was begun, and a novitiate open to international candidates was set up. The first and only Benedictine monastery in Malta at the time was founded and dedicated to the Saint Mary of the Immaculate Conception.

In 1884, the monastery was closed down due to the Italian-Maltese political turmoil, and Agius returned to Ramsgate to continue his religious mission. In 1893, he was summoned to Rome by the Holy See and appointed secretary to the Procurator of the Subiaco Congregation by Pope Leo XIII.

Appointment to the Philippines

The interior of the Cathedral-Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, where the body of Monsignor Ambrose Agius was interred in the underground crypt until 1945

On August 24, 1904, Pope Pius X appointed Agius as the Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines.[7] He was appointed Archbishop of the Titular Diocese of Palmyra on September 3, 1904, and received his episcopal consecration on September 18, 1904, at St. Ambrose of Marsina Church in Milan by the Vatican Cardinal Secretary of State Rafael Merry del Val.[8] Upon his appointment, Agius donated his celebration funds to the impoverished parishioners of the Basilica of Sant'Ambrogio.

In the Philippines, Agius was known for canonically crowning the famed ivory statue of the Our Lady of the Most Holy Rosary of La Naval de Manila on October 5, 1907, representing Pope Pius.[9]

Agius was also known for having convoked the 1907 Provincial Council of Manila with the other bishops of the nation at Manila Cathedral, re-dedicating the Philippines to the Immaculate Conception, which later became the country's official patroness under the pontificate of Pope Pius XII in September 1942.[10]

As Filipinos were previously barred from priestly ordinations and officially joining religious orders under Spanish colonial rule, on June 29, 1906, Agius ordained the first Filipino bishop in the Roman Catholic Church, Jorge Barlin y Imperial.

Death and burial

On November 1911, Pope Pius appointed Agius as the new Papal Legate to the United States. While preparing to travel to Rome for the appointment, he died of an acute attack of peritonitis on December 13, at 55 years of age. On December 15, 1911, Agius was given a solemn Requiem Mass and was buried in the underground crypt of the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Manila. The tomb survived the destruction of the cathedral due to bombing during the Battle of Manila in 1945. His remains were set into a smaller casket and moved to a new grave inside the Benedictine Abbey Church of Our Lady of Montserrat in Manila. The inscription translates as:

Ambrose Alfred Agius (1856 - 1911), Monk of Ramsgate, Titular Archbishop of Palmyra, Apostolic Delegate to the Islands, lies buried here; whose bones were formerly buried in the Cathedral basilica; which, destroyed by war, they were transferred to this Abbey church in the year 1945.

Nicknames

Agius was baptised as Tancredi Alfred Agius by his parents and was often called Alfredo until his perpetual vows at the Benedictine monastery of Monte Cassino. After which, Agius became known as Don or Dom Ambrosio Agius and was commonly referred to as Padre Ambrosio, Padre Ambo or Father Dom by the Filipino and Maltese faithful who knew him during his lifetime.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/2/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.