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  1. Francisco de Vitoria OP (c. 1483 – 12 August 1546; also known as Francisco de Victoria) was a Spanish Roman Catholic philosopher, theologian, and jurist of Renaissance Spain. He is the founder of the tradition in philosophy known as the School of Salamanca, noted especially for his concept of just war and international law.

  2. Francisco de Vitoria (born probably 1486, Vitoria, Álava, Castile—died August 12, 1546) was a Spanish theologian best remembered for his defense of the rights of the Indians of the New World against Spanish colonists and for his ideas of the limitations of justifiable warfare.

  3. Jan 1, 2020 · Francisco de Vitoria (1485–1546) was a Spanish theologian and philosopher who was a leading figure in the sixteenth-century revival of Thomism, a movement which was central to early modern ideas about natural law, individual rights, and the state.

  4. www.encyclopedia.com › historians-miscellaneous-biographies › francisco-de-vitoriaFrancisco De Vitoria | Encyclopedia.com

    May 29, 2018 · Francisco de Vitoria was a Spanish theologian, teacher, and defender of the rights of the Native Americans who inhabited the newly discovered continents of North and South America. Vitoria was born circa 1483 in Vitoria, Álava, Spain. He taught at the University of Valladolid from 1523 until 1526.

  5. Dec 11, 2021 · The prestigious theologian founder of the School of Salamanca, Francisco de Vitoria, founded his analysis in the Relectio de Indis, arguably the most important text in the history of international law, both on the defence of Indians’ natural right of dominion...

  6. Francisco de Vitoria, 1485-1546. Spanish Dominican jurist, founder of the 16th C. Salamanca School. Of Basque origin, educated at the College Saint-Jacques in Paris, Francisco de Vitoria was appointed to the all-important chair of theology at the University of Salamanca in 1526.

  7. Apr 29, 2019 · Francisco de Vitoria, born in Burgos in 1483, is recognized not only as one of the founding fathers of international law but also as one of the renovators of the sixteenth-century theological method. His father, originally from Vitoria, holds an important position in Burgos at the service of the Catholic Kings.

  8. Jun 27, 2024 · While Hugo Grotius is generally regarded as the principal forerunner of modern international law, historians of the discipline trace its primitive origins to the works of Francisco de Vitoria, a sixteenth-century Spanish theologian and jurist.

  9. Francisco de Vitoria ( Burgos, 1483 1 - Salamanca, 12 de agosto de 1546) fue un fraile dominico español, escritor y catedrático de la Universidad de Salamanca, destacado por sus ideas y contribuciones al derecho internacional y la economía moral basados en el pensamiento humanista del realismo aristotélico - tomista.

  10. Vitoria, who is considered to have been one of the best known, if not the best-known, Spaniard of his day, was born in Vitoria, the chief city of Alava, in Old Castile,