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Carlo Caccia Dominioni

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Church
  
Catholic Church

Term ended
  
October 6, 1866

Appointed
  
September 28, 1855

Consecration
  
December 2, 1855

Name
  
Carlo Dominioni


Other posts
  
Titular Bishop of Danaba

Born
  
14 May 1802 Milan (
1802-05-14
)

Died
  
October 6, 1866, Cornate d'Adda, Italy

Carlo Caccia Dominioni (1802–1866) was an Italian prelate, who become auxiliary bishop of Milan.

Life

Born in Milan in the noble family of Caccia Dominioni he entered in 1812 in the seminary of Milan, then in 1826 he was ordained a priest. In 1853 he was named member of the archdiocesan Chapter and two years later he was named auxiliary bishop of Milan and titular bishop of Famagosta. In 1859 archbishop Romilli died and the chapter of the cathedral named Caccia Dominioni as diocesan administrator during the vacancy of the see. For the succession to archbishop Romilli Caccia Dominioni was one the candidate but pope Pius IX chosen with the advice of Austrian Emperator the more conservative Paolo Angelo Ballerini the vicar of archbishop Romilli.

Soon after the death of archbishop Romilli the Austrian Empire was defeated in the Second Italian War of Independence and the new Italian government refused to recognize Ballerini as archbishop of Milan, so Caccia Dominioni was forced to assume the duty of archbishop of Milan. The events of the years 1859 and 1860 stiffened Caccia Dominioni who refused to celebrate a Te Deum for the birth of Italy, in reaction for this decision many clergy of the archdiocese together with many lay people forced Caccia Dominioni to escape in his family residence in Cornate d'Adda and later in Monza. He was later deported to Turin and sentenced by the Italian authorities to spend time in jail that he never served, and he wasn't allowed to come back to Milan.

He died in Cornate d'Adda in 1866.

References

Carlo Caccia Dominioni Wikipedia