Tolomeo Gallio
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Tolomeo Gallio (also spelled Gallo and Galli; 25 September 1527 - 3 or 4 February 1607) was an Italian Cardinal.
In the time of Pope Gregory XIII, he acted as papal secretary of state (in office 1572 to 1585), having a key role in the curia.[1]
He built the Villa d'Este, in his birthplace Cernobbio, in 1568, as a summer residence; and the Palazzo Gallio of Gravedona.
He was bishop of Martorano in 1560, archbishop of Manfredonia in 1562, bishop of Albano in 1587, bishop of Sabina in 1589, bishop of Frascati in 1591, bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina in 1600, bishop of Ostia in 1603.
Tolomeo in 1595 acquired the County of Alvito (later Duchy) in southern Lazio, which he assigned to his nephew Tolomeo; the Gallio family held the fief until 1806.
Episcopal succession
While bishop, he was the principal consecrator of:[2]
- Gaspare Visconti, Bishop of Novara (1584);
- Francesco Liparuli (Liparolo), Bishop of Capri (1584);
- Cesare Speciano (Speciani), Bishop of Novara (1584);
- Fulvio Passerini, Bishop of Avellino e Frigento (1591);
- Marsilio Landriani (bishop), Bishop of Vigevano (1593);
and the principal co-consecrator of:[2]
- St. Charles Borromeo, Archbishop of Milan (1563); and
- Ippolito Aldobrandini, Pope (1592).
Notes
- ^ Gianvittorio Signorotto, Maria Antonietta Visceglia editors, Court and Politics in Papal Rome, 1492-1700 (2002), pp.142-3.[full citation needed] [author missing]
- ^ a b "Tolomeo Cardinal Gallio" Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved June 24, 2017
External links
- Salvador Miranda, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, Gallio, Tolomeo. Retrieved: 2016-10-20.
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- Gaetano Moroni, ‘GALLI Tolomeo’, in Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica da S. Pietro sino ai nostri giorni, (Venice: Tipografia Emiliana, 1844) XXVIII, pp. 120-121.