Francesco Saverio de Zelada

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Francesco Saverio de Zelada
Archivist of the Vatican Secret Archives
Librarian of the Vatican Apostolic Library
Ritratto del cardinale Francisco Xavierio de Zelada.jpg
Portrait - Anton Raphael Mengs (1773-74).[1]
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
Appointed15 December 1779
Term ended19 December 1801
PredecessorAlessandro Albani
SuccessorLuigi Valenti Gonzaga
Other post(s)
  • Cardinal-Priest of Santi Silvestro e Martino ai Monti in commendum (1773-1801)
  • Archpriest of the Basilica of Saint John Lateran (1781-1801)
  • Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary (1788-1801)
  • Cardinal-Priest of Santa Prassede (1793-1801)
  • Prefect of the Consistorial Congregation (1800-01)
Orders
Ordination23 October 1740
Consecration28 December 1766
by Pope Clement XIII
Created cardinal19 April 1773
by Pope Clement XIV
RankCardinal-Priest
Personal details
Birth nameFrancesco Saverio de Zelada
Born27 August 1717
Rome, Papal States
Died19 December 1801(1801-12-19) (aged 84)
Rome, Papal States
BuriedSanti Silvestro e Martino ai Monti
ParentsJuan de Zelada
Manuela Rodríguez
Previous post(s)
Alma materLa Sapienza

Francesco Saverio [de] Zelada (27 August 1717 in Rome – 19 December 1801 in Rome) was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church, born of a Spanish family, who served in the Papal Curia and in the diplomatic service of the Holy See.[2]

He was educated at the University of La Sapienza, gaining degrees in both canon and civil law. He was ordained on 23 October 1740. Zelada was appointed titular Archbishop of Petra on 23 December 1766, and cardinal priest in the consistory of 19 April 1773. Appointed by means of a papal brief of Pope Clement XIV, he was the principal negotiator for the Holy See and composer of the brief Dominus ac Redemptor of 8 June 1773, that suppressed the Society of Jesus. On 2 October, the Diario di Roma reported he had been given a Meissen group representing the death of St. Francis Xavier, confiscated from the Jesuits.[3]

Already Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals (1783–84), his career culminated in his appointment by Pope Pius VI as Cardinal Secretary of State, 1789–1796, in which post he was entrusted with difficult negotiations with the French Revolutionary state, which included his conclusion of peace in 1793.[4] With the French occupation of Rome, Cardinal Zelada retired to Tuscany. Following Pius' death, Zelada participated in the Papal conclave of 1800 that elected Pope Pius VII.

Librarian of the Holy Roman Church from 15 December 1779 until his death, Cardinal Zelada was not known for his religious fervor.[5] Rather he was a great collector of books, of coins and medals and other works of art, and of scientific machines. He had a telescope installed in his house near Il Gesù, and transferred it to his residence as Cardinal-Librarian. He installed an observatory at the Collegio Romano. After his death his printed books went to the Vatican Library, while his manuscripts - already sent to Spain for safe keeping - went to the capitular library of Toledo.[6] His collection of anatomical models he bequeathed to the Ospedale di Santo Spirito.

He is buried in the church of San Martino ai Monti, Rome.

Notes[]

  1. ^ Replica painted on panel now at the Art Institute of Chicago, acc. no. 1969.2, which is illustrated and discussed by Steffi Röttgen, "Two Portraits by Mengs in The Art Institute of Chicago", Art Institute of Chicago Museum Studies, 5 (1970), pp. 64–75.
  2. ^ The prime reference for Zelada's career is Moroni, Dizionario eccesiastico 103 (Venice, 1861:460-68). note 4 Ludwig Pastor, Geschichte der Päpste16, pp 2f.
  3. ^ Röttgen 1970.
  4. ^ Pastor, 16.3, pp 510ff.
  5. ^ A contemporary satiric verse asserts that Zelada is seen to "portar la croce sol per ornamento", wear the cross only as an ornament". (quoted in Nello).
  6. ^ Röttgen 1970:65, quoting Vian Nello, "un piccolo fondo sulla rivoluzione francese", Studium", (July – August 1965:7f).

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