
Pietro Gasparri
'Pietro Cardinal Gasparri'
JUD S.T.D. Ph.D (
May 5,
1852 –
November 18,
1934) was
Roman Catholic archbishop,
diplomat and
politician in the
Roman Curia and signatory of the
Lateran Pacts.
Born in Capovallazza di Ussita,
Macerata province, Gasparri served as the
Apostolic delegate to
Peru from 1898 to
1901, when he became a member of the Curia and returned to
Rome. He was called to Rome in 1904 to take the post of Secretary for the Commission for the Codification of
Canon Law, in which he spent the next 13 years in seclusion, digesting volumes of decrees and studies compiled over centuries to create the first definitive legal text in the history of Catholicism. The size of his accomplishment is seen when the work he gets done in 13 years on his own takes a team of canonists 24 years to simply ''revise''.
He was made a
Cardinal-Priest of ''
S. Bernardo alle Terme'' in 1907, and served as the
Cardinal Secretary of State from 1914 to
1930, when he retired to be succeeded by Eugenio Cardinal Pacelli the future
Pope Pius XII. From 1916 until his death he was
Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church, and Cardinal Pacelli also succeeded him in that position. He played a significant role in the codification of canon law, heading the effort that produced the Code of Canon Law of 1917. Beginning in 1929, he also played a significant early role in the codification of eastern catholic canon law.
In the early
1920s shortly after
Benito Mussolini was elected to power he said "I certainly have no regrets for
Italian parliamentarianianism when I see Mussolini moving toward a
conservative government".
His nephew, was
Enrico Cardinal Gasparri.
Cardinal Gasparri is the great-great-great uncle of
Rocco Palmo, writer of
Whispers in the Loggia.
Sources
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Catholic-hierarchy.org
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Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographies