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Ottavio Mirto Frangipani

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Other posts
  
papal nuncio

Denomination
  
Catholic

Consecration
  
8 December 1572

Nationality
  
Italian

Rank
  
Archbishop

Ordination
  
9 November 1572

See
  
basilica di San Cataldo

Born
  
April 11, 1544 Naples (
1544-04-11
)

Buried
  
basilica di San Cataldo

Died
  
24 July 1612, Taranto, Italy

Alma mater
  
University of Naples Federico II

Diocese
  
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Taranto

Ottavio Mirto Frangipani (April 11, 1544 – July 24, 1612) was an Italian bishop and papal diplomat.

Contents

Life

Frangipani was born in Naples on 11 April 1544 to Silvio Mirto and Laura della Gatta. He studied at the University of Naples, graduating in law. He was appointed bishop of Caiazzo on 19 November 1572, ten days after his ordination as a priest, and was consecrated by Giulio Antonio Santorio, Archbishop of Santa Severina on 8 December with Thomas Goldwell, Bishop of Saint Asaph, and Giuseppe Pamphilj, Bishop of Segni, serving as co-consecrators.

In 1587 he was appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Cologne, which was then in the midst of the Cologne War. He was appointed bishop of Tricarico on 9 March 1592, while in Cologne, but did not visit the diocese. As a result of his experience in Cologne he pressed for the creation of a nunciature in Brussels, arriving there as nuncio on 11 February 1596. He was active in promoting the restoration of Catholic life in the war-torn Spanish Netherlands, visiting Antwerp, Arras, Liège, Namur, Tournai, Cambrai, Calais, Lille, Dunkirk and Gravelines.

On 20 June 1605 Frangipani was appointed Archbishop of Taranto and he returned to Italy to take up the post in late 1606. He died in Taranto on 24 July 1612 and was buried in his cathedral. While bishop, he was the principal consecrator of Laurentius Fabritius, Auxiliary Bishop of Cologne.

Correspondence

Four volumes of Frangipani's letters as nuncio to Cologne have been published as part 2 of the series Nuntiaturberichte aus Deutschland: Die Kölner Nuntiatur, the first volume edited by Stephan Ehses (1968), the other three by Burkhard Roberg (1969–1983).

His correspondence as nuncio to Brussels has been published as three volumes in the series Analecta Vaticano-Belgica, Nonciature de Flandre, the first edited by Leon van der Essen (1924) and the other two by Armand Louant (1932, 1942).

References

Ottavio Mirto Frangipani Wikipedia