- Louis-Siffren-Joseph de Salamon
Louis-Siffren-Joseph Salamon (b. at
Carpentras ,22 October 1759 ; d. atSaint-Flour ,11 June 1829 ) was a FrenchBishop of Saint-Flour , and papal diplomat of the period of theFrench Revolution .Life
After studying law and theology at
Avignon , at that time belonging to thePapal States , he was madeauditor of the Rota by the favour ofPope Pius VI. This office he resigned for a post in theParliament of Paris , where he took part in the famouscase of the Diamond Necklace (1784), whichCardinal de Rohan had purchased forMarie Antoinette . He continued to be a member until the Parliament was abolished (1790).Meanwhile he had kept up a correspondence with the cardinal secretary of State, informing him of all that passed in Paris and could be of interest to Pius VI. When the nuncio,
Antonio Dugnani , left Paris towards the end of 1790, the pope appointed Salamon to be his internuncio at the Court ofLouis XVI . His devotion to the Church marked him out for persecution, and accordingly he was thrown into prison at the time of theSeptember massacres, 1792 . Twice he narrowly escaped death.On his release he wandered about in disguise, acting as
vicar Apostolic . In 1801Mgr Caprara arrived in France as papal legate and appointed him administrator general of the dioceses of Normandy. The new pontiff,Pope Pius VII , did not select him for one of the sees under the Concordat, but made himtitular bishop of Orthozia . It was not until after the Restoration that he received a French see at the suggestion ofLouis XVIII (1820).Works
His "Memoires" were discovered at Rome and published by Abbé Bridier ("Mémoires inédits de l'internonce ý Paris pendant la Révolution", Paris, 1890). They have been translated by Frances Jackson ("A Papal Envoy during the Terror", London, 1911). They are not reliable.
References
*Delaporte, "L'Internonce à Paris, pendant la révolution" in Etudes, LII [LIII] (Paris, 1891), 318-22;
*Scannell, "The internuncio at Paris during the revolution" in Dublin Review, CIX (London, 1891), 107-23.External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/13395a.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.