St. Bonaventure University

Franciscan Institute


The Franciscan Institute, located on the St. Bonaventure University campus, engages in three principal areas of scholarly concern: research, publications and academic conferences, workshops and seminars on the Franciscan Intellectual Tradition.


Franciscan Institute Research


Founded as an international center of research on the Franciscan intellectual tradition, with the highest standards of scholarly production, the Franciscan Institute exists to serve the scholarly and educational needs of the Franciscan family and the wider community.

It is a center for promoting the study of Franciscan sources, history and theology, with a focus on a critical study of the origin and early development of the Franciscan movement.

For the first decades of its existence, the research team of the Institute dedicated its energies to preparing the critical editions of the works of William of Ockham and Adam of Wodeham. More recently, it has turned its attention to completing the philosophical works of John Duns Scotus — a project in collaboration with scholars at The Catholic University of America. 

It continues research projects on Peter of John Olivi, the works of St. Bonaventure, and Alexander of Hales. Learn more at Franciscan Research.


  • Franciscan Institute Publications


    Franciscan Institute Publications logoKnown for many years for its critical editions of leading medieval Franciscan philosophers and theologians, Franciscan Institute Publications has more recently endeavored to make available to a wider reading public the very best of modern scholarship on the history, spirituality and intellectual tradition of the Franciscan movement.

    The newly reinvigorated Bonaventure Texts in Translation Series is a case in point. The latest online version of the FIP catalog reveals a good number of monographs, translations and several new scholarly series that attempt to bridge the medieval and contemporary worlds.

    Franciscan Studies: An annual academic journal

    Franciscan Studies is a scholarly (peer-reviewed) journal published by the Franciscan Institute at St. Bonaventure University. It deals with Franciscan matters: history, philosophy, theology, and culture. 

    Franciscan Studies is an important journal in the English-speaking world, not just for those of us who study Francis and early Franciscans but more broadly in the fields of medieval and modern history, theology, philosophy, spirituality, literature, etc."   - Dr. Aaron Gies, Associate Editor


    Franciscan Connections blogPictured_Logo for Franciscan Connections
    Franciscan Connections is an international Franciscan blog that connects, communicates, and conveys the best of Franciscan learning in the twenty-first century.

     

    Programs & conferences


    Institute seminars, workshops and conferences for engaging people in historical and contemporary issues related to Franciscan thought and charism.

    Learn about upcoming offerings on our Programs & Conferences webpage.


    Holy Name Library

    Franciscan Institute Library


    The Franciscan Institute Library boasts the largest and finest collection of Franciscan sources in North America.

    Two scholars studying a centuries-old textThe library constitutes one of the special collections of  Friedsam Memorial Library at St. Bonaventure University, and includes more than 18,000 volumes, 110 current periodical subscriptions and 470 other periodical titles..

    In its coverage of the Franciscan movement, the collection is unique in North and South America and can only be matched by a few European libraries.

    The Franciscan Institute Library supports not only a teaching program, but also research by various scholars worldwide.

    The Holy Name Library for the Franciscan Institute (pictured above), which is attached to Friedsam Memorial Library, protects the university's collection of rare books, described by the National Endowment for the Humanities as "a unique national asset of great value to American humanistic scholarship." 

    It includes the most important collection of Franciscana in North America, more than 9,000 rare books and manuscripts dating from the 12th century up to and including the seminal journals of renowned monastic Thomas Merton, who taught English at St. Bonaventure in the early 1940s.

    Learn more at Franciscan Institute Library.


    Endowed support of the Franciscan Institute


    The mission and programs of the Franciscan Institute are supported in part by a number of key benefactors.

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