Bernardino Cardinal Spada

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Cardinal Spada. Oil painting by Guido Reni, c. 1631. Galleria Spada, Rome.
Cardinal Spada. Oil painting by Guido Reni, c. 1631. Galleria Spada, Rome.

Bernardino Cardinal Spada (April 21, 1594 - November 10, 1661) was an Italian Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church and a great patron of the arts whose collection is housed in the Palazzo Spada in Rome.

[edit] Biography

Spada was born in Brisighella, current province of Ravenna (Romagna).

His father was the rich merchant Paolo Spada (unrelated to the Spada family of ancient nobility) who had directed him early on to a career in the church. Bernardino studied law in Bologna, Perugia and Rome and received a doctorate. He served in the Papal Curia from 1617. In December 1623 he was appointed papal nuncio to the court of France, in preparation for which he was ordained titular archbishop of Damietta. He served as nuncio until 1627, when he became papal legate in Bologna. He was made a cardinal January 19, 1626 by Pope Urban VIII. When the plague epidemic hit Bologna in 1630/1631, he helped organize the health care system there.

From 1631 he served again in Rome, taking several influential positions in the Curia. He purchased what is now called the Palazzo Spada in 1632 and commissioned Francesco Borromini to modify it for him in a more Baroque style.

During the First War of Castro between the Vatican and the Duchy of Parma, he served as the main peace negotiator in 1643, together with his brother Virgilio Spada.

Bernardino Spada was successively Bishop of Albano, Frascati, Sabina and Palestrina.

He died in Rome in 1661 and was interred in the family grave in the church of San Girolamo della Carità.

Bernadino had supported the church careers of several of his family members. His great-nephew Fabrizio Spada became cardinal in 1675 and Cardinal Secretary of State in 1691.

[edit] External links and sources

[edit] Books

  • Arne Karsten: Kardinal Bernardino Spada; Eine Karriere im barocken Rom (German)
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