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Agostino Richelmy

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See
  
Archdiocese of Turin

Name
  
Agostino Richelmy

Predecessor
  
Davide Riccardi

Role
  
Poet


Successor
  
Giuseppe Gamba

Spouse
  
Iole Giachero

Created Cardinal
  
18 June 1899

Uncles
  
Agostino Richelmy

Agostino Richelmy

Installed
  
18 September 1897 — 10 August 1923

Other posts
  
Previously Bishop of Ivrea

Died
  
February 27, 1991, Collegno, Italy

Parents
  
Piero Richelmy, Giuseppina Pesce-Maineri

Movies
  
Malombra, Escape to France, Daniele Cortis

Similar People
  
Ettore Margadonna, Mario Soldati, Antonio Fogazzaro, Renato Castellani, Nino Rota

Agostino Richelmy (29 November 1850 – 10 August 1923) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Archbishop of Turin from 1897 until his death, and was elevated to the rank of cardinal in 1899.

Contents

Early life and education

Born in Turin, Agostino Richelmy received his Confirmation on 13 August 1857 and later joined the Garibaldian Volunteers in the War of 1866, wearing his red shirt under his cassock for years afterwards. He attended Liceo classico Cavour and studied at the seminary in Turin, from where he obtained his doctorate in theology on 18 May 1876. He was ordained to the priesthood on 25 April 1873 and finished his studies three years later. Within the Archdiocese of Turin, Richelmy taught at its seminary, served as a prosynodal examiner, and was a canon of the cathedral chapter.

Episcopate

On 7 June 1886 he was appointed Bishop of Ivrea by Pope Leo XIII. Richelmy received his episcopal consecration on the following 28 October from Cardinal Gaetano Alimonda, with Bishops Davide Riccardi and Giovanni Bertagna serving as co-consecrators. He was later named Archbishop of Turin on 18 September 1897.

Cardinalate

Pope Leo created him Cardinal Priest of Sant'Eusebio in the consistory of 18 June 1899. After participating in the 1903 papal conclave, Richelmy's cardinalatial church was transferred to Santa Maria in Via on 27 November 1911. He was one of the cardinal electors in the conclave of 1914, and also in the that of 1922, which selected Pope Benedict XV and Pope Pius XI respectively. In 1915, when Italy entered World War I, Richelmy organized priests for duty as army chaplains in the mountains of Trentino, where they carved altars out of snow and said Mass in below-zero temperatures.

The Cardinal died in Turin, at age 72. He was initially buried at the chapel for the clergy in the Turin cemetery, but his remains were transferred in 1927 to the Santuario della Consolata, where they lie in a pink marble sarcophagus.

Richelmy succeeded Davide Riccardi, who assisted in the former's episcopal consecration, as both Bishop of Ivrea and Archbishop of Turin.

References

Agostino Richelmy Wikipedia