Born in Bagnoregio
Born in a hill town of central Italy, he entered the Franciscan order and studied at Paris.
A Franciscan who taught at Paris alongside Aquinas and later led his order, Bonaventure held that reason and love are not rivals but partners on a single road. His Journey of the Mind to God maps the soul's ascent from the traces of the divine in the natural world, through the image of God within the mind, to a union that finally outruns thought altogether. Where his contemporaries leaned on Aristotle, he kept faith with Augustine and the older mystical tradition, insisting that the point of understanding is not to possess truth but to be drawn toward its source.
Born in a hill town of central Italy, he entered the Franciscan order and studied at Paris.