Early life Pompilio Ruggieri was born in
Spinazzola,
Apulia, then part of the
Kingdom of Naples, in 1543. He obtained a
doctorate in civil and canon law at the
University of Naples and was employed in the administration of
Philip I. He entered the
Society of Jesus in
Rome on 27 October 1572
Missionary work Ruggieri left Europe with a group of missionaries which included
Rudolph Acquaviva and
Matteo Ricci. Arriving in
India (September 1578), he promptly started to study the language used on the
Malabar coast and in 6 months reached such proficiency that he could hear
confession. It is probably this gift for language that made him an ideal choice for the beginning of the
Chinese mission. Ruggieri was assigned to
Macau to study the Chinese language and customs, arriving 20 July 1579. In 1584 Ruggieri published the first Chinese catechism. A Chinese Jesuit Lay Brother
Sebastiano Fernandez, who had grown up and been trained in
Macau, assisted in this work. To Ruggieri is attributed one of the first collections of handwritten maps of China, translated into Latin from Chinese sources (atlases and maps), dating back to 1606, or nearly fifty years before the manuscript maps of the Polish Jesuit
Michael Boym and the Novus Atlas Sinensis of the Trentino Jesuit
Martino Martini (printed by the publisher Johan Blaeu in Amsterdam in 1655 and immediately translated into several languages). The manuscript is now preserved in the State Archives of Rome, ms. 493. Ruggieri was accused by Cai Yilong (
wTs‘ai I-lung) of adultery with the wife of Lo Hung in October 1587. After trial, the judge ordered Cai to be severely punished, to the point he died of his wounds.
Return to Europe In November 1588, Ruggieri left China for
Rome in order to get the pope to send an embassy to the
Wanli Emperor. This plan had been proposed as a means to allow Jesuits to reach Beijing and to be received by the emperor. But nothing became of it, the frequent death of Roman Pontiffs, and the deterioration of his own health, preceded the weary Jesuit's retirement to
Salerno, where he died in 1607 without ever going to China again. In
Salerno, the retired Jesuit carried on intellectual work that would make China better known in Europe. He completed the Latin translation of the
Four Books (the classic Chinese introduction to
Confucius’
philosophy), wrote
poetry in Chinese, and circulated copies of Chinese maps he had brought along with him from Zhaoqing. Ruggieri was also a much sought after spiritual guide and confessor in the school of Salerno. He died on 11 May 1607. ==References==