Luigi Pisani
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by Pope Pius IV
Cardinal Luigi (Alvise) Pisani | |
|---|---|
| Cardinal-Priest | |
| Diocese | Bishop of Padua |
| Elected | 2 December 1527 |
| In office | 3 June 1570 |
| Orders | |
| Created cardinal | 12 March 1565 by Pope Pius IV |
| Rank | Cardinal Priest of San Marco |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1522 |
| Died | 3 June 1570 Venice IT |
| Buried | Santa Maria delle Grazie, Venice |
| Nationality | Venetian |
| Parents | Giovanni (Zuan) Pisani, Benedetta Gritti |
Luigi Pisani (1522 – 3 June 1570) was an Italian Roman Catholic bishop and cardinal. He was the son of Giovanni Pisani, an Ambassador of Venice to France. His uncle, his mother's brother was the Doge of Venice, and another uncle, his father's brother, was the Bishop of Padua, Cardinal Francesco Pisani.[1] In 1524, Francesco, resigned his position in favour of Luigi[2] but, Luigi being only a toddler, Francesco was appointed Administrator of the diocese that he had formally resigned. In 1555, Luigi succeeded Francesco on the latter's promotion to Bishop of Albano. Pisani rose in the hierarchy of the church serving as praefectus annonae, dealing with the finances of the provisioning of the Papal Court and the City of Rome from 1561 to 1562.[1] Pope Pius IV made him a cardinal priest in 1565.[3] He participated in the papal conclave of 1565-66 that elected Pope Pius V.[4] He received the red hat and the titular church of San Vitale in 1566.[3] In 1568 he opted for the titular church of San Marco.[3][1]
Bishop of Padua
Luigi (Alvise) Pisani was born in Venice in 1522,[5] the son of Giovanni Pisani, future Ambassador of the Republic of Venice to the Kingdom of France (1531), and his wife Benedetta Gritti.[1] His mother was the sister of Andrea Gritti, Doge of Venice, and his father was the brother of Cardinal Francesco Pisani.[1]
When his uncle, Cardinal Francesco Pisani, who had been Bishop of Padua since 1524, resigned the See on 2 December 1527, he did so in favor of his nephew Luigi.[2] At his tender age, Luigi was too young to be a bishop (the minimum canonical age being twenty-five), and thus the diocese needed an Administrator, who turned out to be his uncle the Cardinal. The Cardinal, therefore, was able to pursue his activities at the Papal Court (which was in exile at the time) and still collect a share of the revenues of the diocese and control over the awarding of benefices. This arrangement continued until 1555.[6]