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1 Life  





2 Works  





3 References  





4 Sources  














Cristoforo Numai






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Cristoforo Numai
Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli
Cristoforo Numai
ChurchCatholic Church
Orders
Consecration5 Jul 1523
by Pope Hadrian VI
Personal details
Born
Died23 Mar 1528

Cristoforo Numai (died 23 March 1528) was an Italian Franciscan, who became minister general of the Friars Minor and a cardinal.

Life

[edit]

A nativ eof Forlì, his date of birth is uncertain. In his youth he studied at Bologna and, after joining the Friars Minor, was sent to complete his studies at Paris. In 1507 he was elected vicar provincial of his order at Bologna, in 1514 vicar general of the Cismontane Franciscan families, and in 1517 he became minister general of the whole order of Friars Minor. Less than a month later he was raised, in spite of his protests, to the cardinalate by Pope Leo X, who in presence of the Sacred College paid a splendid tribute to Christopher's great learning and prudence and to his still greater holiness of life.

In 1520 he became Bishop of Alatri[1] and Bishop of Isernia in Italy, and in 1526 Bishop of RiezinProvence. He subsequently fulfilled the office of Apostolic legate to the King of France, and later became Apostolic nuncio and commissary for the construction of the Vatican Basilica, being then invested with the temporal dominion of Bertinoro.

During the Sack of Rome (1527) by the soldiers of the Duke of Bourbon, Christopher suffered many hardships and insults, on account of which he received letters of condolence from Pope Clement VII, Francis I of France, and Henry VIII of England. He took refuge in Ancona, but died the next year as a consequence of the inflicted injuries. His remains were transferred back from Ancona to Rome, and placed in the Church of Ara Coeli.

Works

[edit]

Besides an Exhortatio ad Galliarum regem Franciscum I in Turcas and a number of letters addressed to that king and the other rulers concerning the liberation of Clement VII, Christopher is said by Luke Wadding and others to have written several treatises on theological and ascetical questions, all of which appear to have perished during the sacking of Rome.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Eubel, Konrad (1923). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentioris aevi. Vol. III (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana. p. 99. (in Latin)

Sources

[edit]
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by

Graziano Santucci

Administrator of Alatri
1517–1528
Succeeded by

Filippo Ercolani

Preceded by

Superior General of Order of Observant Friars Minor
1517–1518
Succeeded by

Francisco de Quiñones

Preceded by

Cardinal-PriestofSan Matteo in Merulana
1517
Succeeded by

Egidio da Viterbo

Preceded by

Cardinal-PriestofSanta Maria in Ara Coeli
1517–1528
Succeeded by

Francisco Mendoza Bobadilla

Preceded by

Massimo Bruni Corvino

Bishop of Isernia
1523–1524
Succeeded by

Antonio Numai

Preceded by

Thomas Lascaris de Tenda

Administrator of Riez
1526–1527
Succeeded by

François de Dinteville

  • icon Catholicism
  • flag Italy

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cristoforo_Numai&oldid=1199619105"

    Categories: 
    1528 deaths
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    This page was last edited on 27 January 2024, at 14:22 (UTC).

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