Alessandro Crescenzi (cardinal)
Italian Roman Catholic cardinal
Alessandro Crescenzi, C.R.S. (1607 – 8 May 1688) was a Roman Catholic cardinal who served as Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals (1685–1688), Archbishop (Personal Title) of Recanati e Loreto (1676–1682), Titular Patriarch of Alexandria (1671–1676), Bishop of Bitonto (1652–1668), Bishop of Ortona a Mare e Campli (1644–1652), and Bishop of Termoli (1643–1644).[ 1] [ 2]
Biography
Alessandro Agostino Crescenzi was born in Rome, Italy, in 1607, the son of Giovanni Battista Crescenzi and Anna Massimi.[ 1] He is related to Cardinal Marcello Crescenzi (named 1542) and is the nephew of Cardinal Pier Paolo Crescenzi (named 1611).[ 1] He was ordained a priest in the Ordo Clericorum Regularium a Somascha .[ 1] [ 2]
On 13 July 1643, he was appointed Bishop of Termoli by Pope Urban VIII .[ 1] [ 2] In Rome, on 26 July 1643, he was consecrated bishop by Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore) ,[ 1] Cardinal-Deacon of Sant'Eustachio .[ 2]
On 13 June 1644, he was appointed Bishop of Ortona a Mare e Campli by Pope Urban VIII.[ 1] [ 2]
On 26 August 1652, he was appointed Bishop of Bitonto by Pope Innocent X .[ 1] [ 2] Pope Innocent X appointed him Apostolic Nuncio to Savoy (Turin), where he served until 1658.[ 1]
On 14 May 1668, he resigned as Bishop of Bitonto.[ 1] [ 2] On 23 December 1670, he was named Prefect of the Cubiculi of His Holiness (Maestro di Camera) by Pope Clement X .[ 3] [ 1] On 19 January 1671, he was promoted by Pope Clement X to the titular post of Titular Patriarch of Alexandria .[ 1] [ 2] On 27 May 1675, he was installed as Cardinal Priest of Santa Prisca in the consistory of 1675.[ 1] [ 2]
On 24 February 1676, he was appointed Bishop of Recanati e Loreto by Pope Clement X, where he served until his resignation on 9 January 1682.[ 1] [ 2] As cardinal, he participated in the conclave of 1676 which elected Pope Innocent XI .[ 1] On 9 April 1685, he was named camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals .[ 1]
He died in Rome on 8 May 1688, and was buried in the church of Santa Maria in Vallicella .[ 1]
Episcopal succession
Episcopal succession of Alessandro Crescenzi
While bishop, he was the principal consecrator of:[ 2]
Andrea Bonito , Bishop of Capaccio (1677);
Vitus Piluzzi , Titular Archbishop of Marcianopolis (1678);
Stephanus Cosimi , Archbishop of Split (1678);
Bernardino Belluzzi , Bishop of Montefeltro (1678);
Francesco Scannagatta , Bishop of Avellino e Frigento (1679);
Carlo Berlingeri , Archbishop of Santa Severina (1679);
Francesco Megale , Bishop of Isola (1679);
Giacomo Villani , Bishop of Caiazzo (1679);
Giovanni Battista Nepita , Bishop of Sant'Angelo dei Lombardi e Bisaccia (1680);
Tommaso Guzzoni , Bishop of Sora (1681);
Andrea Brancaccio , Bishop of Conversano (1681);
Sebastien Knab , Archbishop of Nakhchivan (1682);
Giovanni Battista Giberti , Bishop of Cava de' Tirreni (1683);
Giuseppe Felice Barlacci , Bishop of Narni (1683);
Bernardin Marchese , Bishop of Sarsina (1683);
Stefano Ghirardelli , Bishop of Alatri (1683);
Agostino Fieschi , Bishop of Accia and Mariana (1683);
Giambattista Quaranta , Bishop of Larino (1683);
Francesco Antonio Leopardi , Bishop of Marsico Nuovo (1683);
Domenico Menna , Bishop of Minori (1683);
Vincenzo Maria Durazzo , Bishop of Savona (1683);
Ferdinando de Rojas (Roxas), Bishop of Vigevano (1683);
Francesco Maria Moles , Bishop of Nola (1684);
Annibale de Pietropaulo , Bishop of Castellammare di Stabia (1684);
Horatius Ondedei , Bishop of Urbania e Sant'Angelo in Vado (1684);
Giovanni Battista de Belli , Bishop of Telese o Cerreto Sannita (1684);
Fulvio Crivelli (Cribelli), Bishop of Tricarico (1684);
Antonio Polcenigo , Bishop of Feltre (1684);
Domenico Minio , Bishop of Caorle (1684);
Giambattista Rubini , Bishop of Vicenza (1684);
Giovanni Battista De Pace , Bishop of Capaccio (1684);
Giovanni Battista Sanudo , Bishop of Treviso (1684);
Pier Giulio Delfino , Bishop of Capodistria (1684);
Nicolaus Gabrieli , Bishop of Novigrad (1684);
Joannes Cuppari , Bishop of Trogir (1684);
Stefano David , Bishop of Krk (1684);
Giambattista Morea , Bishop of Lacedonia (1684);
Pietro Luigi Malaspina , Bishop of Cortona (1684);
Giovanni Riccanale , Bishop of Boiano (1684);
Girolamo Compagnone , Archbishop of Rossano (1685);
Angelo Cerasi , Bishop of Bovino (1685);
Giovanni Battista Antici , Bishop of Amelia (1685);
Pietro Valentini , Bishop of Sovana (1685);
Emiddio Lenti , Bishop of Nocera de' Pagani (1685);
Domenico Valvassori , Bishop of Gravina di Puglia (1686);
François Genet , Bishop of Vaison (1686);
Paolo Naldini (bishop) , Bishop of Capodistria (1686);
Muzio Dandini , Bishop of Senigallia (1686);
Filippo Tani , Bishop of Città Ducale (1686);
Giulio Giacomo Castellani , Bishop of Cagli (1686);
Baldassare de Benavente , Bishop of Potenza (1686);
Filippo Massarenghi , Bishop of Bitonto (1686);
and the principal co-consecrator of:[ 2]
Camillo Astalli-Pamphilj , Bishop of Catania (1661);
Antonio Bottis , Bishop of Minori (1670);
Giuseppe Labonia , Bishop of Montemarano (1670);
Mario Alberizzi , Titular Archbishop of Neocaesarea in Ponto (1671);
Pompeo Varese , Titular Archbishop of Hadrianopolis in Haemimonto (1671);
Domenico Massimo , Bishop of Corneto (Tarquinia) e Montefiascone (1671);
Fabrizio Spada , Titular Archbishop of Patrae (1672);
Friedrich von Hessen-Darmstadt , Bishop of Wrocław (1673);
Simon Gaudenti , Bishop of Ossero (1673);
Andrea Francolisio d'Aquino , Bishop of Tricarico (1673); and
Giuseppe di Giacomo , Bishop of Bovino (1673).
References
Sources
Cardella, Lorenzo. Memorie storiche de' cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa , (in Italian) , Vol. 7 (Roma: Pagliarini 1793), pp. 231–233.
External links
International National People