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1 Early employment  





2 Diplomat and government minister  





3 Cardinalate  





4 Author  





5 Notes  





6 Sources  





7 External links  














Carlo Luigi Morichini






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(Redirected from Carlo Morichini)

Cardinal


Carlo Luigi Morichini
Cardinal-Bishop
DioceseCardinal Bishop of Albano (1877–1879)
Archbishop of Bologna (1871–1876)
Bishop of Jesi
(1854–1871)
titular Archbishop of Nisibis (1845–1854)
Orders
Ordination20 December 1828
Consecration25 May 1845
by Cardinal Luigi Lambruschini
Created cardinal15 March 1852
byPope Pius IX
RankCardinal Priest, then
Cardinal Bishop
Personal details
Born21 November 1805
Rome, IT
Died26 April 1879(1879-04-26) (aged 73)
Rome IT
BuriedCampo Verano Cemetery, Rome
NationalityRoman
ParentsDomenico Pino Morichini (1773–1837)
Occupationdiplomat, administrator
Professionpriest, bishop
EducationRome, La Sapienza (Doctor in utroque iure)

Carlo Luigi Morichini (1805–1879) was a Roman Cardinal.

Born on 21 November 1805 in Rome,[1] he was the son of the noted Roman physician Domenico Lino Morichini (1773–1837).[2] He studied philosophy and law for seven years (1822–1818) at the University of Rome, La Sapienza, and was awarded the degree Doctor in utroque iure. He was later awarded a doctorate in theology. He was ordained a priest on 20 December 1828.[1]

Early employment[edit]

He obtained a position as secretary to the Auditor of the Sacred Roman Rota, Msgr. Pietro Marini.[1] Morichini was Vice-President of the Ospizio apostolico di S. Michele in Rome. In 1833 he was appointed Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures. He also became an official (ponente) of the Sacred Congregation on Good Government.[3]

Diplomat and government minister[edit]

In 1845 he was appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Bavaria with residence in Munich, and titular Latin archbishop of NisibisbyPope Gregory XVI.[4] His appointment lasted less than two years (1845–1847).[5] In 1847, he was appointed Treasurer General of the Reverenda Camera Apostolica, which made him responsible for the budget of the Papal States, which was running a deficit and was relying on bank loans for current expenses.[6]

On 10 March 1848 the new Council of State of the Papal States was announced. Under the presidency of Cardinal Giacomo Antonelli, Archbishop Morichini was appointed Vice-President and Minister of Finance. His budget was immediately wrecked by the news of the revolution in Paris in February, and the consequent withdrawal of bank financing.[7] His ministry did not last long. In April 1848 he resigned.[8] In 1848 he was sent on a diplomatic mission by Pope Pius IX to mediate between Austro-Hungary and Piedmont.

Cardinalate[edit]

He was created a Cardinal by Pope Pius IX in the Consistory of 15 March 1852, and was assigned the titular churchofSan Onofrio on 18 March.[9] He was appointed bishop of Jesi, a diocese directly suffragan to the Holy See; he was allowed to retain the title of Archbishop.

On 29 September 1860, the papal fortress of Ancona surrendered to the forces of Victor Emanuel II. On 17 March 1861 he was proclaimed King of Italy, and on 27 March the city of Rome was proclaimed the capital of Italy. Nothing was left to the Pope to govern, outside of the city of Rome itself. The anticlerical government of Turin immediately began to harass those who were faithful to the papacy. On 23 April 1864, Cardinal Morichini was arrested in his episcopal palace in Jesi. He protested that a cardinal could only be judged by the pope, and he was ignored. During the night he was removed to Ancona, where he was imprisoned. The charge was that he had been corresponding with a foreign power. The "foreign power" turned out to be the Apostolic Penitentiary in Rome, with whom Morichini had indeed been corresponding, on a purely spiritual matter, to arrange for a consultation between the Penitentiary and one of his priests over a matter raised in a sacramental confession. Two of the Canons of the cathedral were also arrested and interrogated. The cardinal was released on 10 May, having been exonerated. On his return to Jesi, there were anti-clerical demonstrations. The entire incident was an effort to intimidate the leaders of the papal party in the territory newly annexed by the Turin government. A similar incident was arranged for the bishop of Spoleto.[10]

He participated the First Vatican Council (1869–1870).[11]

He was transferred to the archdiocese of Bologna in 1871 by Pius IX.[12] He relinquished that see on 22 December 1876, having been named Cardinal Secretary of Memorials in the Roman Curia.[13] He became cardinal-bishop of Albano on 12 March 1877.

He participated in the 1878 conclave. On 15 July 1878, he was appointed Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Signature of Justice by the new pope, Leo XIII (Pecci).

He died in Rome on 26 April 1879, and was buried in the Campo Verano cemetery.[1]

Author[edit]

Morichini was the author of: Di Giovanni Borgi mastro muratore detto Tatagiovanni e del suo ospizio per gli orfani abbandonati memoria dell'ab. Carloluigi Morichini (Roma: Tipografia Marini 1830); Degl'istituti di pubblica carità ed istruzione primaria e delle prigioni in Roma libri tre (in Italian). Vol. 2 vols. Rome: Marini. 1842. He was also a published poet: La Via Crucis di Gesu Cristo Signor Nostro elegie latine dell'eminentissimo cardinale Carlo Luigi Morichini (in Italian and Latin). Bologna: Tip. Pontificia Mareggiani. 1872.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Bräuer, p. 49.
  • ^ Raffaello Lambruschini (1918). Primi scritti religiosi di Raffaello Lambruschini, con lettere di lui di Mons. Morichini, di Mons. Minucci e del card. Luigi Lambruschini (in Italian). Firenze: presso la Rivista bibliografica italiana. p. lxxix.
  • ^ François Jankowiak (2007). La curie romaine de Pie IX à Pie X: le gouvernement central de l'Église et la fin des États pontificaux, 1846-1914 (in French). Rome & Paris: École française de Rome. p. 120. ISBN 978-2-7283-0710-4.
  • ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VII, p. 284.
  • ^ Rupert Hacker (1967). Die Beziehungen zwischen Bayern und dem Hl. Stuhl in der Regierungszeit Ludwigs I. 1825-1848 (in German). Tübingen: Niemeyer. pp. 40–41, 132–144.
  • ^ Rivista d'Italia (in Italian). Vol. 18. Roma: Società editrice dante alighieri. 1915. p. 73.
  • ^ Robert Matteson Johnston (1901). The Roman Theocracy and the Republic, 1846-1849. London: Macmillan. p. 107.
  • ^ Luigi Carlo Farini (1851). The Roman state: from 1815 to 1850. London: J. Murray. pp. 57–58.
  • ^ Ritzler-Sefrin, VIII, pp. 43, 48.
  • ^ La civiltà cattolica (in Italian). Vol. Anno decimoquinto. Vol. X della serie quinta. Uffizio della civilta cattolica. 1864. pp. 487–489, 613–615, 740.
  • ^ Bruno Bellone (1966). I vescovi dello stato Pontificio al Concilio Vaticano I (in Italian). Rome: Libreria editrice della pontificia Università Lateranense. p. 111. ISBN 9788846503770.
  • ^ Gabriel Chow, GCatholic, "Metropolitan Archdiocese of Bologna, Italy"; retrieved: 7 March 2019.[self-published source]
  • ^ Bräuer, p. 49. La gerarchia cattolica e la famiglia pontificia per l'anno 1877 (in Italian). Roma: Monaldi. 1877. pp. 463, 617. The Secretary of Memorials presents petitions and requests to the pope, and notes his directions on how they are to be answered. Robert Jefferson Breckinridge; Andrew Boyd Cross (1837). The Baltimore Literary and Religious Magazine. Vol. III. Baltimore: R. J. Matchett. p. 127.
  • Sources[edit]

    External links[edit]

  • icon Catholicism
  • flag Italy

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carlo_Luigi_Morichini&oldid=1145008870"

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