- Lorenzo Campeggio
Lorenzo Cardinal Campeggio (1471 or 1472 – 1539) was an Italian cardinal and politician.
Campeggio was born in
Milan , the eldest of five sons. In 1500, he took hisdoctorate in canon and civil law atBologna and married Francesca Guastavillani with whom he had five children. When she died in 1509, Campeggio began an ecclesiastical career underPope Julius II 's patronage.He was soon appointed to two diplomatic missions, both against the
Council of Pisa , first to the emperor Maximilian I, who gave him thebishopric of Feltre in 1512 (held until 1520), and then in 1512–13 to the duke of Milan. In 1513 he returned toGermany seeking a league against the Turks.Pope Leo X made him a Cardinal on1 July 1517 , and Maximilian made him cardinal–protector of theHoly Roman Empire . On3 March 1518 he was sent toEngland as part of Leo's peace policy. This gaveThomas Wolsey the chance to become legate himself by using permission for Campeggio to enter England as leverage, and then to outmanoeuvre the new legate when he arrived, taking over the process of peace-making which led to theTreaty of London in 1519. He was also a member ofJohann Goritz 's humanist sodality.Campeggio was appointed cardinal–protector of England on
22 January 1523 . He was not involved in much English business, except for the referring of episcopal provisions inconsistory . The election ofPope Adrian VI in 1522 cemented his position in theRoman Curia .Campeggio wrote his "De depravato statu ecclesiae" for Adrian, which proposed radical reforms for the papal bureaucracy. On
2 December 1524 he received thebishopric of Salisbury , which he had been promised in 1518. The election ofPope Clement VII in 1523 further exalted Campeggio's power. Clement made himbishop of Bologna on2 December 1523 (held until 1525) and then on9 January 1524 legate to theDiet of Nuremberg .During the sack of Rome in 1527, Campeggio lost everything. Clement, who fled to
Orvieto , left him behind as papal legate in the city, just when the English political situation required his attention. Wolsey and Henry VIII expected his support for their proposal that a papal co-legate should decide Henry's divorce fromKatherine of Aragon in co-operation with Wolsey. Campeggio had, however, already given a legal opinion to the pope supporting the validity of the marriage.Nevertheless, he was named legate on
8 June 1528 , after a joint commission with Wolsey had been agreed on13 April . Campeggio arrived inLondon on8 October 1528 and held the first of many sessions with Wolsey and Henry, the first English king to sue before a papal judge in person.Campeggio found himself in an almost impossible position, since emperor Charles V, Katherine of Aragon's nephew, was determined to prevent the divorce, and was putting pressure on Clement. The deciding point in law for Campeggio was Julius's dispensation for Henry and Katherine's marriage. In Katherine's possession from early in 1528, she showed it to Campeggio in October, and he took it to invalidate his commission, since the latter failed to cover the document. He tried to make the case disappear on
23 July 1529 by proroguing it until October, but this was forestalled by the pope sending the matter to Rome a week earlier. On his way back to Rome, Campeggio met Charles and Clement inBologna , where the pope gave Campeggio the castle ofDozza and the emperor took Campeggio's family under his patronage. Charles later (2 September 1530 ) gave Campeggio the Spanish bishopric of Huesca and Jaca, which he held until17 June 1534 when he became bishop of Candia (Crete ) (until 1536); in 1532, moreover, when making Campeggio's son Gianbattista bishop ofMajorca , the emperor reserved the administration of the see to the young man's father. Campeggio was legate to theDiet of Augsburg in 1530, where he pursued negotiations withPhilip Melanchthon .By
20 May 1531, Henry had dismissed Campeggio as legate. In August 1533, he lost the revenues of Salisbury, and on21 March 1534 was deprived of the bishopric by act of Parliament. Campeggio was a member of the commission whichexcommunicated Henry in 1535. He remained protector of Germany until his death, at the same time devoting much energy to insuring the future of his family; his two sons, two brothers, and one nephew all became bishops. He was named legate to the general council called first atMantua and then atVicenza , but he attended only the first session in May 1538. He died on25 July 1539 , aged sixty-seven, and was buried in Santa Maria in Trastevere; in 1571 at least some of his bones were transferred to the church ofSanti Marta e Bernardino that he had built in Bologna.References
*E. V. Cardinal, "Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggio, legate to the courts of Henry VIII and Charles V" (1935)
*"Oxford Dictionary of National Biography"
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