Pietro Contarini
Bishop of Paphos
ChurchCatholic Church
SeePaphos
Appointed9 August 1557
Term ended16 October 1562
Orders
Consecration21 November 1557 (Bishop)
by Giovanni Giacomo Barba
Personal details
Born1491 (1491)
Died21 May 1563(1563-05-21) (aged 71–72)
Padua
BuriedSan Trovaso in Venice

Pietro Contarini (Latin: Petrus Contarenus 1491–1563) was Bishop of Paphos from 1557 to 1562.

Life

Pietro Contarini was born in 1491 in Venice in the noble Contarini family. In 1509 he and his father, Zaccaria, were made prisoners of the French army after the Battle of Agnadello. He suceeed to return to Venice only in 1513. During the imprisonment he became friend of Andrea Gritti, future Doge, who supported him in the next years.[1]

Left any political career, Pietro Contarini devoted himself to the classical studies and to charity. Since 1524 he operated in favour of the new Ospedale degli Incurabili, a hospital intended to accommodate those with incurable diseases such as syphilis, in 1525 he build a church in San Cipriano island near Murano for the Camaldolese hermits and in 1526 he went in pelgrinage to Jerusalem. He meet and supported Saint Ignatius of Loyola in 1536 and 1537 when Ignatius lived in Venice. His support to the Jesuits created some hostility towards him.[1]

From about 1577 he worked in the Roman Curia. On 9 August 1577 Pope Paul IV appointed him bishop of Paphos,[2] a formal title. He was consecrated bishop on 21 November 1557 by Giovanni Giacomo Barba, the sacristan of the Pope.[2] In 1562 he was one of the first bishops to move to Trento to participate to the last period of the Council of Trent. Ill and tired he resigned from his bishopric in favour of his nephew Francesco on 16 December 1562. Pietro Contarini died in Padua on 21 May 1563. He was buried in the San Trovaso church in Venice.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Gullino, Giuseppe (1983). "Contarini, Pietro". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 28: Conforto–Cordero (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  2. 1 2 David Cheney. "Bishop Pietro Contarini". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
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