Luigi Galimberti

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Galimberti in 1893

Luigi Galimberti (26 April 1836 – 7 May 1896) was an Italian prelate of the Catholic Church who had a varied career as an academic and theologian, journalist, diplomat, and Vatican official. He became an archbishop in 1887 and a cardinal in 1893. He was considered a candidate for the papacy when he died at the age of 60.[1]

Biography[]

Luigi Galimberti was born in Rome on 26 April 1836, the son of a family of lawyers. He attended the Roman Seminary, where he earned degrees in philosophy in 1854 and theology in 1858. He was ordained a priest on 18 December 1858 and then earned a degree in civil and canon law in 1861. From 1861 to 1878 he was professor of theology at the Pontifical Urban University.[2] He became a canon of the Lateran Basilica in 1868.[3]

He launched his career as a journalist and polemicist in 1870, working with Catholic magazines. In the run-up to the conclave of 1878 he and Cardinal Alessandro Franchi promoted the candidacy of Vincenzo Pecci–who proved to be the successful candidate–to other journalists. He was promoted to director of the Journal de Rome at the end of 1881, but he fell out with its management and in October 1882 he founded the Moniteur de Rome to serve as a vehicle for his politically moderate views.

His moderate views on Italian nationalism and relations between the Holy See and Italy had been out of favor while Pius IX was pope; he gained favor under Leo XIII.[4] He was named a canon of St. Peter's Basilica in 1883 and an Apostolic Protonotary.

On 28 June 1886, Pope Leo XIII appointed him secretary of the Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs. In 1887 he took part in the difficult negotiations in Berlin to end the Kulturkampf.[4] The resulting reconciliation between the Holy See and the German Empire, and Galimberti's apparent sympathy for the Triple Alliance of Germany, Austria-Hungary, and Italy, earned him the distrust of the French, which may have prevented his appointment as Secretary of State following the death of Cardinal Luigi Jacobini in February 1887, though Galimberti had taken on the role of Secretary of State from October 1886 to May 1887, during Jacobini's illness and immediately after his death.[4]

On 23 May 1887, he was appointed titular archbishop of Nicaea[5] and Apostolic Nuncio to Austria-Hungary. He received his episcopal consecration from Cardinal Cölestin Josef Ganglbauer, Archbishop of Vienna, on 5 June. He was credited with the appointed of a candidate the Holy See favored as Primate of Hungary and of a Pole rather than a German as archbishop of Gniezno-Posen.[3]

In Vienna, Galimberti proved a ready conduit of information to his German counterpart there. In 1889, following the double suicide of the Austrian Crown Prince Rudolf and his mistress at Mayerling, Galimberti kept the German ambassador apprised of the latest information on the case, what one historian calls "highly placed gossip", and he continued to answer related inquiries about the Vatican's rumored denial of Rudolf's request for an annulment of his marriage.[6] Galimberti's name figures in the many investigations of the case, usually in a minor role, though one early account said that Galimberti had received Rudolf's annulment request and rather than forward it to Rome had it delivered to the Emperor, provoking a family quarrel and the deaths that followed.[7]

On 16 January 1893, Pope Leo made him a cardinal[8] and on 15 June gave him the title cardinal priest of Santi Nereo ed Achilleo.[9] On 25 June 1894, Galimberti was named head of the Vatican Secret Archives. He was considered a possible future pope.[1]

He died from a throat ailment in Rome on 7 May 1896 at the age of 60.[1][3][a] He was interred in the chapel of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in Rome's Campo Verano cemetery.

Writings[]

  • Apologia pro Marcellino Romano pontefice (1876)
  • Introductio philosophica ad historiam universam (1877)
  • Lutero e il socialismo (1879)
  • Leone XIII e la storia. Risposta a R. Bonghi d'un prelato romano (1883)

Notes[]

  1. ^ The New York Times reported he died in Süchteln near Düsseldorf.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Cardinal Luigi Galimberti". Illustrirte Zeitung (in German). 106 (2760): 633. 23 May 1896. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  2. ^ Mellano, Maria Franca (1998). "Galimberti, Luigi". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Treccani. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Mgr. Luigi Galimberti Dead". New York Times. 8 May 1896. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Jedin, Hubert; Dolan, John Patrick, eds. (1981). History of the Church: The church in the industrial age. Burns & Oates. pp. 23n, 57, 68, 68n, 69n, 71–2. ISBN 9780860120858. Retrieved 24 January 2021. As an enemy of the intransigents and the disciples of the Italian nation state, [Galimberti] was without influence for a long time. With the election of Leo XIII he became his political writer....
  5. ^ Acta Sanctae Sedis (PDF). XIX. 1886–87. p. 518–9. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  6. ^ Twilight of Empire: The Tragedy at Mayerling and the End of the Habsburgs. St. Martin's Publishing. 2017. pp. 189–91, 235. ISBN 9781250083036. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  7. ^ Guyot, Yves (1916). The Causes and Consequences of the War. Brentano's. pp. 32–3. Retrieved 24 January 2021. Guyot bases his account on [Caroline] Zanardi Landi, The Secret of an Empress (London, 1914), whose author said she was the secret daughter of Empress Elisabeth of Austria.
  8. ^ Acta Sanctae Sedis (PDF). XXV. 1892–93. p. 387. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  9. ^ Acta Sanctae Sedis (PDF). XXVI. 1893–94. pp. 6–7. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
Additional sources

External links[]

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