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On [[October 17]], [[1935]], Panico was appointed [[Apostolic Nunciature to Australia|Apostolic Delegate to Australia]] and [[Titular bishop|Titular Archbishop]] of ''Iustiniana Prima'' by [[Pope Pius XI]]. He received his [[Bishop (Catholic Church)|episcopal consecration]] on the following [[December 8]] from [[Pietro Fumasoni Biondi|Pietro Cardinal Fumasoni Biondi]], with Archbishops Bartolomeo Cattaneo and Domenico Spolvorini serving as [[Consecrator|co-consecrators]], in Rome.
On [[October 17]], [[1935]], Panico was appointed [[Apostolic Nunciature to Australia|Apostolic Delegate to Australia]] and [[Titular bishop|Titular Archbishop]] of ''Iustiniana Prima'' by [[Pope Pius XI]]. He received his [[Bishop (Catholic Church)|episcopal consecration]] on the following [[December 8]] from [[Pietro Fumasoni Biondi|Pietro Cardinal Fumasoni Biondi]], with Archbishops Bartolomeo Cattaneo and Domenico Spolvorini serving as [[Consecrator|co-consecrators]], in Rome.


As [[Apostolic Delegate to Australia]] Panico believed that the time had arrived for the appointment of native born Australian Priests as [[Bishops]] and [[Archbishops]] instead of Irish born priests. This was seen as a very contraversial move in some quarters of the Catholic church in Australia. According to on of the biographers of [[Archbishop Mannix]], Niall Brennan, Panico was a Prelate of 'uncertain ability' and was known widely among the clergy in Australia, as 'Panicky Jack'. He officiated at the Eucharistic Congress of 1938 which was held in [[Newcastle]] [[NSW]]. During [[World War II]], Archbishop Panico established charities for [[Italy|Italian]], [[Germany|German]], and [[Japan]]ese [[Prisoner of war|war prisoners]] in [[Australia]] and the Australian and [[New Zealand]]ese prisoners in Italy.
As [[Apostolic Delegate to Australia]] Panico believed that the time had arrived for the appointment of native born Australian Priests as [[Bishops]] and [[Archbishops]] instead of Irish born priests. This was seen as a very contraversial move in some quarters of the Catholic church in Australia. According to one of the biographers of [[Archbishop Mannix]], Niall Brennan, Panico was a Prelate of 'uncertain ability' and was known widely among the clergy in Australia, as 'Panicky Jack'. He officiated at the Eucharistic Congress of 1938 which was held in [[Newcastle]] [[NSW]]. During [[World War II]], Archbishop Panico established charities for [[Italy|Italian]], [[Germany|German]], and [[Japan]]ese [[Prisoner of war|war prisoners]] in [[Australia]] and the Australian and [[New Zealand]]ese prisoners in Italy.


He was named [[Nuncio]] to [[Peru]] on [[September 28]], [[1948]], and Apostolic Delegate to [[Canada]] on [[November 14]], [[1953]].
He was named [[Nuncio]] to [[Peru]] on [[September 28]], [[1948]], and Apostolic Delegate to [[Canada]] on [[November 14]], [[1953]].

Revision as of 09:40, 26 August 2008

Styles of
Giovanni Cardinal Panico
Reference styleHis Eminence
Spoken styleYour Eminence
Informal styleCardinal
SeeIustiniana Prima (titular see)

Giovanni Cardinal Panico (April 12, 1895July 7, 1962) was an Italian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Nuncio to Portugal from 1959 to 1962, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1962.

Biography

Giovanni Panico was born in Tricase to Carmine Panico and his wife Marina Zocco. The sixth of eleven children, he was given the baptismal name was Santo Giovanni. Panico, after studying under a private tutor, attended the seminary in Ugento. He then went to Rome, where he studied at the Leonine College (1910-1915) and Pontifical Roman Seminary (1915-1919). Panico was ordained to the priesthood by Basilio Cardinal Pompilj on March 14, 1919, in the Lateran Basilica. He then attended the Pontifical Lateran University until 1922, obtaining a doctorate in theology in 1919, and later a doctorate in canon and civil law in 1922).

Panico did pastoral work in Tricase from 1922 to 1923, and was raised to the rank of Privy Chamberlain of His Holiness on August 25, 1923. He was auditor of the nunciature to Argentina (1926-1931) and to Czechoslovakia (1931-1932) before becoming chargé d'affaires in Bavaria in 1932, and again in Czechoslovakia in 1933. Durng his time in Prague, he also contributed to the foundation of the University of Bratislava. He was created a Domestic Prelate of His Holiness on August 20, 1934, and later awarded the Légion d'honneur.

On October 17, 1935, Panico was appointed Apostolic Delegate to Australia and Titular Archbishop of Iustiniana Prima by Pope Pius XI. He received his episcopal consecration on the following December 8 from Pietro Cardinal Fumasoni Biondi, with Archbishops Bartolomeo Cattaneo and Domenico Spolvorini serving as co-consecrators, in Rome.

As Apostolic Delegate to Australia Panico believed that the time had arrived for the appointment of native born Australian Priests as Bishops and Archbishops instead of Irish born priests. This was seen as a very contraversial move in some quarters of the Catholic church in Australia. According to one of the biographers of Archbishop Mannix, Niall Brennan, Panico was a Prelate of 'uncertain ability' and was known widely among the clergy in Australia, as 'Panicky Jack'. He officiated at the Eucharistic Congress of 1938 which was held in Newcastle NSW. During World War II, Archbishop Panico established charities for Italian, German, and Japanese war prisoners in Australia and the Australian and New Zealandese prisoners in Italy.

He was named Nuncio to Peru on September 28, 1948, and Apostolic Delegate to Canada on November 14, 1953.

Pope John XXIII created him Nuncio to Portugal on January 25, 1959, and Cardinal Priest of S. Teresa al Corso d'Italia in the consistory of March 19, 1962. Panico also founded the Cardinale G. Panico Hospital in his native Tricase, where he died at age 67. The Cardinal was originally buried in his family's tomb in the Tricase cemetery, but his remains were later moved to the crypt of the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the same town.

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