Giulio Antonio Santorio
Giulio Antonio Santorio | |
---|---|
Archbishop of Santa Severina | |
Appointed | 6 March 1566 |
Installed | 12 March 1566 |
Term ended | 9 January 1573 |
Predecessor | Giovanni Battista Orsini |
Successor | Francesco Antonio Santorio |
Other post(s) | Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1557 |
Consecration | 12 March 1566 by Scipione Rebiba |
Created cardinal | 17 May 1570 |
Rank | Cardinal-Bishop |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Giulio Antonio Santorio |
Born | 6 June 1532 Caserta |
Died | 9 May 1602 | (aged 69)
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Previous post(s) |
|
Giulio Antonio Santorio (6 June 1532 – 9 May 1602) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.
Biography[]
Santorio was born in Caserta. He served as Archbishop of Santa Severina from 1566 until his death.[1][2]
On 12 March 1566, Santorio was consecrated bishop by Scipione Rebiba with Annibale Caracciolo, Bishop of Isola, and Giacomo de' Giacomelli, Bishop Emeritus of Belcastro, serving as co-consecrators.[1] Santorio was made Cardinal on 17 May 1570, and installed as the Cardinal-Priest of S. Bartolomeo all'Isola the same year, and subsequently became Cardinal-Priest of S. Maria in Trastevere in 1595 and finally in 1597 Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina. Through his own episcopal consecration of Girolamo Bernerio, Cardinal Santorio figures in the episcopal lineage of Pope Francis, Pope Benedict XVI, and most modern bishops.
Episcopal succession[]
While bishop, he served as the principal consecrator of:[1]
- Giovanni Agostino Campanile, Bishop of Minori (1567);
- Andrea Minucci, Archbishop of Zadar (1568);
- Giovanni Battista Santorio, Bishop of Alife (1568);
- Serafino Fortibraccia, Bishop of Nemosia (1569);
- Prospero Vitelliano, Bishop of Bisignano (1569);
- Gregorio Forbicini, Bishop of Strongoli (1572);
- Ottavio Mirto Frangipani, Bishop of Caiazzo (1572);
- Francesco Antonio Santorio, Archbishop of Santa Severina (1573);
- Gaspare Cenci, Bishop of Melfi e Rapolla (1574);
- Dermot O'Cleary, Bishop of Mayo (1574);
- Massimiliano Palumbara, Archbishop of Benevento (1574);
- Giovanni Paolo Marincola, Bishop of Teano (1576);
- Giovanni Battista Soriani, Bishop of Bisceglie (1576);
- Giovanni Battista Ansaldo, Bishop of Cariati e Cerenzia (1576);
- Giovanni Bernardino Grandopoli, Bishop of Lettere-Gragnano (1576);
- Vincenzo Cutelli, Bishop of Catania (1577);
- Miguel Thomàs de Taxaquet, Bishop of Lérida (1577);
- Mario Bolognini, Archbishop of Lanciano (1579);
- Flaminio Filonardi, Bishop of Aquino (1579);
- Pietro Orsini, Coadjutor Bishop of Spoleto (1580);
- Girolamo Bentivoglio, Bishop of Corneto (1580);
- Giulio Monaco, Bishop of Lucera (1580);
- Domenico Petrucci, Bishop of Strongoli (1582);
- Nicola Stridoni, Bishop of Mylopotamos (1582);
- Leonard Abel, Titular Bishop of Sidon (1582);
- Scipione Gesualdo, Archbishop of Conza (1585);
- Enrico Caetani, Titular Patriarch of Alexandria (1585);
- Fabrizio Gallo, Bishop of Nola (1585);
- Giulio Masetti, Bishop of Reggio Emilia (1585);
- Antonello de Folgore, Bishop of Sant'Angelo dei Lombardi e Bisaccia (1585);
- Enrico Cini, Bishop of Alife (1586);
- Giovanni Battista Albani, Titular Patriarch of Alexandria (1586);
- José Esteve Juan, Bishop of Vieste (1586);
- Girolamo Bernerio, Bishop of Ascoli Piceno (1586);
- Pietro Ridolfi, Bishop of Venosa (1587);
- Bonaventura Bellemo, Bishop of Andros (1587);
- Antonio de Marchi, Bishop of Santorini (1588);
- Camillo Gualandi, Bishop of Cesena (1588);
- Giovanni Battista Costanzo, Archbishop of Cosenza (1591);
- Scipione Spina, Archbishop of Cosenza (1591);
- Napoleone Comitoli, Bishop of Perugia (1591);
- Claudio de Curtis, Bishop of Crotone (1592);
- Nicolò Stizzia, Bishop of Cefalù (1594);
- Placido della Marra, Bishop of Melfi e Rapolla (1595);
- Giulio Doffius, Bishop of Alessano (1595);
- Manuel Quero Turillo, Bishop of Cefalù (1597); and
- Alberto Drago, Bishop of Termoli (1599).
He also served as the principal co-consecrator of:[1]
- Tiberio Carafa, Bishop of Potenza (1566);
- Tommaso Orsini, Bishop of Strongoli (1566);
- Francesco Rusticucci, Bishop of Venosa (1566);
- Archangelo de' Bianchi, Bishop of Teano (1566);
- Carlo Carafa, Bishop of Guardialfiera (1567);
- Marco Landi, Bishop of Ascoli Satriano (1567);
- Paul Burali d'Arezzo, Bishop of Piacenza (1568);
- Stanislaus Szezniski, Auxiliary Bishop of Poznań (1568);
- Marcus Teggingeri, Titular Bishop of Lydda (1568);
- Organtino Scaroli, Bishop of San Marco (1569);
- Gregorio Cruz, Bishop of Martirano (1569);
- Cesare Ferrante, Bishop of Termoli (1569); and
- Giovanni Aldobrandini, Bishop of Imola (1569)
Literary works[]
- Vita del card. Giulio Antonio Santori detto il card. di Santa Severina composta e scritta da lui medesimo, in «Archivio della R. Società di Storia Patria», voll. XII 1889 e XIII 1890
- Pro confutatione articulorum et haeresum recentiorum Haereticorum et pseudo-apostolorum, ex Utriusque Testamenti textu decerpta, in ms. Vaticanus Latinus 12233, cc. 62r-439v, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana
- Historia abiuratorum et haereticorum scripta et notata a Cardinali Sanctae Severinae ... De persecutionis haereticae pravitatis historia, ms. in Archivio della Congragazione per la Dottrina della Fede
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Giulio Antonio Cardinal Santorio" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved April 30, 2016
- ^ "Cardinal Giulio Antonio Santorio" GCatholic.org. Gabriel Chow. Retrieved April 30, 2016
Further reading[]
- (in Italian) L. Santori, La spedizione di Lautrec nel Regno di Napoli, Galatina 1972
- (in Italian) R. Ajello, Una società anomala. Il programma e la sconfitta della nobiltà napoletana in due memoriali cinquecenteschi, Napoli 1996
- (in Italian) S. Ricci, Il Sommo Inquisitore. Giulio Antonio Santori tra autobiografia e storia (1532–1602), Roma 2002 ISBN 88-8402-393-9
- 1532 births
- 1602 deaths
- 17th-century Italian cardinals
- Cardinal-bishops of Palestrina
- Cardinals created by Pope Pius V
- People from Caserta
- Major Penitentiaries of the Apostolic Penitentiary
- 16th-century Italian Roman Catholic archbishops
- Roman Catholic archbishops in Italy
- Bishops in Calabria
- 16th-century Italian cardinals