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'Ercole Consalvi' (
June 8,
1757 –
January 24,
1824) was a
cardinal of the
Roman Catholic Church.
Biography
He was born in
Rome, and died there also. His mother was Claudia Carandini, a noblewoman. He was educated at the seminary founded in Frascati by
Henry Benedict, Cardinal Duke of York, "Cardinal York", the
Stuart pretender to the throne of Great Britain. He became a favorite of the Cardinal's and was helped by him to obtain high office in the
Roman Curia while still a young man.
After the Revolutionary French invaded Italy in 1798, Consalvi was jailed, but he later escaped and joined
Pope Pius VI in exile. An able diplomat, he was nominated secretary of the conclave that met in Venice to elect
Pope Pius VII, the successor of Pius VI.
Ercole Consalvi was created
Cardinal-Deacon in the ''consistorio secreto'' of
11 August 1800 and received the red hat in the public consistory of the
14 August 1800. On the
20 October 1800 he was assigned to the diaconate of
Sant'Agata in Suburru, and eventually transferred to that of
Santa Maria ad Martyres on 28 July 1817.
Pius VII ordained Consalvi to the
subdiaconate and to the
diaconate in his private chapel on 20 and 21 December 1801.
The new pope named him
Cardinal Secretary of State, and in this capacity he negotiated the
Concordat of 1801 with
Napoleon, which reaffirmed the Roman Catholic Church as the established church of France and restored some of its civil status. He also reformed the administration of Rome and to some extent modernized the city.
After the fall of Napoleon, he represented the Pope at the
Congress of Vienna and was able to convince the victorious powers to restore the
Papal States almost entirely (although the Papacy had been forced to accept the French annexation of
Avignon). For the remainder of the pontificate of Pius VII, Consalvi was the virtual ruler of Rome, and his government was characterized by good sense, moderation and concern for the poor. He retired when Pius died in 1823. Yet he still headed the
Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith at the time of his death the following year, 1824. Although a consummate diplomat and man of the world, Consalvi was both honest and pious and has been called "one of the purest glories of the Church of Rome" (Schaeffer).
He died in 1824 and was buried in the church of
San Marcello al Corso.
External links
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Catholic Encyclopedia - Ercole Consalvi
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Biography
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Carandini pedigree