Isidoro Isolani

There he received a theological and philosophical education based on Peter Lombard's Sentences and Thomas Aquinas' Summa contra gentiles.

He began writing his most famous and influential work, Summa de donis sancti Ioseph, in March 1514.

[1] It is "the first scholastically argued theological text devoted solely to [Saint] Joseph's godly qualities and powers as intercessor".

[1][4] In November 1519 at Cremona, Isolani published anonymously a treatise against Martin Luther, entitled Revocatio Martini Lutherii Augustiniani ad Sanctam Sedem.

[1] Isolani took up the project of Paolo da Soncino, an epitome of John Capreolus's commentary on the Sentences, and completed it in 1521.

It was published at Pavia by G. Pocatela in 1522 under the title Divinum epitoma quaestionum in IV libros sententiarum a principe Thomistarum Ioanne Capreolo O.P.

An illustration from Isolani's biography of Veronica da Binasco