Synonyms for innocenzo_cibo or Related words with innocenzo_cibo

cesare_facchinetti              alfonso_gesualdo              giacomo_savelli              flavio_chigi              niccolò_fieschi              tolomeo_gallio              marzio_ginetti              francesco_maidalchini              guido_ascanio_sforza              giovanni_garzia              ippolito_aldobrandini              michele_bonelli              fabrizio_paolucci              oliviero_carafa              vincenzo_vannutelli              cristoforo_madruzzo              luigi_lambruschini              fabrizio_spada              galeazzo_marescotti              francesco_soderini              marco_cornaro              di_santa_fiora              carlo_rezzonico              carlo_carafa              ss_sergio_bacco              di_sciarra              ss_cosma_damiano              giovanni_francesco_commendone              giuseppe_spinelli              rainiero              antonio_correr              girolamo_grimaldi              girolamo_colonna              carlo_confalonieri              giovanni_gaetano_orsini              benedetto_aloisi_masella              maria_nuova              serafino_vannutelli              francesco_pisani              enrico_caetani              ulderico_carpegna              luigi_capponi              annibale_albani              luigi_caetani              alessandro_albani              giacinto_bobone              dei_conti_di_segni              rodolfo_pio              valenti_gonzaga              costantino_patrizi_naro             



Examples of "innocenzo_cibo"
Innocenzo Cibo (25 August 1491 – 13 April 1550) was an Italian cardinal and archbishop.
In Rome the Cardinal had his residence in Palazzo Altemps. He returned to that city in 1549 to take part in the Conclave following the death of Pope Paul III (Farnese). The favored candidate was Reginald Pole, but Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte, Julius III, was elected. As senior Cardinal Deacon Innocenzo Cibo crowned Pope Julius III on 22 February 1550. On 28 February 1550 he exchanged the Deaconry of Santa Maria in Dominica for that of Santa Maria in Via Lata. He died on 13 April 1550, according to his tombstone, at the age of 59 and having been a cardinal for 37 years. He was buried in the Basilica of Santa Maria sopra Minerva, in the center of the Choir, behind the High Altar, between the monuments of his uncle Leo X and his cousin Clement VII.
Conclave began on October 11, but the first electoral assembly took place on the next day. Cardinal de Lorraine in the name of king of France officially proposed the candidature of Farnese, and this initiative immediately obtained the support of Trivulzio, leader of pro-French Italians, and of Medici, leader of the Italian party. The consent of Imperialists was also quickly achieved, and in the evening it was clear that Alessandro Farnese would be elected unanimously. On October 13 in the morning a formal scrutiny took place, but it was a mere formality: Farnese received all votes except of his own. He accepted his election and took the name of Paul III. On November 3 he was solemnly crowned by Protodeacon Innocenzo Cibo.
Both King Henry VIII and Pope Leo X tried to take advantage of the vacuum created by the loss of so many of the Scottish ruling class. Henry, on 12 October 1513, asked the pope to repudiate the privilege held by the Scottish kings to nominate the successor to vacant ecclesiastical positions; he also asked that the see of St. Andrews should have its metropolitan honours removed and that the unoccupied Scottish bishoprics caused by the battle of Flodden should remain unfilled until he was consulted. Pope Leo also moved quickly to take advantage and appointed his nephew Cardinal Innocenzo Cibo to St Andrews on 13 October. He instructed his ambassador John Battista to take control of the see of St Andrews on Cibos behalf but the governing council of Scotland prevented his entry to the country. The papal datary claimed the priory of Whithorn while Cardinal St Eusebius tried to appropriate Arbroath Abbey prompting the infant King James V via his council to write to Cardinal St Mark stating that he "will not submit to a violation of his privileges." Pope Leo replied in November confirming the right of the Scottish king to make recommendations for religious appointments. Even so, Forman was still influential in Paris and Rome and with the help of the French king and Albany, he obtained provision to the see of St Andrews on 13 November—Leo and Albany agreed that Forman would resign Bourges in Cibo's favour. However, this didn't automatically guarantee his succession to the cathedra. On the death of Alexander, archbishop of St Andrews, John Hepburn, Prior of St Andrews and dean of St Andrews immediately assumed the vicar-generalship collecting the revenues of the cathedral and then had the chapter elect him to the archbishopric.