Mathias Hovius
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Mathias Hovius | |
|---|---|
| Archbishop of Mechelen | |
Matthias Hovius – by Lucas Franchoys the Elder (attributed) | |
| Church | Roman Catholic |
| Archdiocese | Mechelen |
| See | St. Rumbold's Cathedral |
| Installed | 1596 |
| Term ended | 1620 |
| Predecessor | Joannes Hauchin |
| Successor | Jacobus Boonen |
| Orders | |
| Ordination | 1566 |
| Consecration | 18 February 1596 |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1542 |
| Died | 30 May 1620 (aged 77–78) |
| Buried | St. Rumbold's Cathedral |
| Alma mater | University of Leuven |
| Motto | Superat Patientia Fortem (Patience Overcomes the Strong) |
Mathias Hovius (1542–1620), born Matthijs Van Hove, was the third Archbishop of Mechelen from 1596 to 1620. As Archbishop, Hovius presided over implementing the Catholic Reformation in the Spanish Netherlands.
Hovius was born in Mechelen in 1542; his father was a fuller. Hovius attended the Standonck College in Mechelen, and later studied theology and philosophy at Leuven University, and was ordained priest in 1566, the year iconoclasm broke out in the Netherlands. While pastor at Saints Peter and Paul's Church in Mechelen, Hovius witnessed the Spanish Fury at Mechelen in 1572, and the English Fury at Mechelen in 1580, both during the Eighty Years' War.[1]