, a learned Polander, and a very voluminous writer, was descended
, a learned Polander, and a very
voluminous writer, was descended from a good family, and
born in 1567. His parents dying when he was a child, he
was educated by his grandmother on the mother’s side, in
the city of Prosovitz; and made so good use of the instructions of one of his uncles, that at ten years of age he could
write Latin, compose music, and make verses. After this,
he went to continue his studies at Cracow, and there took
the habit of a Pominican. Being sent into Italy, he read
lectures of philosophy at Milan, and of divinity at Bologna.
After he returned into his own country, he preached in
Posnania, and in Cracow, with the applause of all his
hearers; and taught philosophy and divinity. He was principal of a college of his own order; and did several considerable services to that and to his country. Afterwards
he went to Rome; where he was received with open arms
by the pope, and lodged in the Vatican. From his holiness he certainly deserved that reception, for he imitated
Baronius closely in his ambition to favour the power, and
raise the glory, of the papal see. His inconsiderate and
violent zeal, however, led him to representations in his
history of which he had reason to repent. He had very
much reviled the emperor Lewis of Bavaria, and razed him
ignominiously out of the catalogue of emperors. The
duke of Bavaria was so incensed at this audaciousness, that,
not satisfied with causing an apology to be wrote for that
emperor, he brought an action in form against the annalist,
and got him condemned to make a public retractation, and
he was also severely treated in the “Apology of Lewis of
Bavaria,
” published by George Herwart; who affirms, that
Bzovius had not acted in his annals like a man of honesty,
or wit, or judgment, or memory, or any other good quality of a writer. Bzovius would probably have continued
in the Vatican till his deat^h, if the murder of one of his
servants, and the loss of a great sum of money, which was
carried off by the murderer, had not struck him with such
a terror, as obliged him to retire into the convent of Minerva, where he died in 1637, aged seventy. The letter
which the king of Poland writ to the pope in 1633, does
our Dominican much honour; for in it the king supplicates
Urban VIII. most humbly to suffer the good old man to
return into Poland, that he might employ him in composing a history of the late transactions there. He declares, that he shall esteem himself much indebted to his
holiness, if he will be pleased to grant him that favour,
which he so earnestly requests of him.