Carlos María de la Torre

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Carlos María Cardinal de la Torre (born Carlos María Javier, November 14, 1873, Quito, Ecuador; died July 31, 1968, Quito, Ecuador) was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. Elevated in 1953 by Pope Pius XII, He was the first Ecuadorean bishop to be elevated to the cardinalate.

After finishing his studies at the Conciliar Seminary in Quito, Carlos María moved to the prestigious Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome where he earned doctorates in theology and canon law. He was ordained a priest on 19 December 1896, served as Professor of dogmatic theology at the Seminary where he had been a student and was for a time pastor in Pelileo. Pope Pius X appointed him Bishop of Loja on 30 December 1911 and de la Torre worked as a parish priest throughout this period. Despite his unusually youthful appointment as a bishop, it took a long time for him to advance further: he was only transferred to the more important diocese of Guayaquil in 1926 and promoted to Archbishop of Quito at the age of fifty-eight in 1933.

However, his ability was recognised eventually after World War II by Pope Pius XII in 1946 when he became Assistant at the Pontifical Throne, and gradually over the next decade his long period of service to the Church was recognised - not only though his elevation to the cardinalate at the advanced age of seventy-eight in January 1953 - when he had already be a bishop for forty years! He was decorated by the Spanish government with the Cruz of Alfonso X el Sabio at the same time and in the following years he began addressing the issue of extreme social inequality in Latin America and the problem of the evangelical inroads that were just beginning to emerge in Latin America.

Cardinal de la Torre participated in the conclave of 1958 but his efforts to ameliorate social inequality in Latin America were rapidly defeated by his exceedingly advanced age. By 1962, his health was so poor that he could, at eighty-eight, attend neither any of the sessions for Vatican II nor the 1963 conclave. He was the first cardinal not to attend a conclave for health reasons since José María Martín de Herrera y de la Iglesia and Giuseppe Prisco in 1922.

Cardinal de la Torre died in 1968 at the age of ninety-three and was buried in the metropolitan cathedral of Quito.

One of his major contributions to Ecuadorian education was his founding of the Catholic University of Ecuador.

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Preceded by
Francesco Morano
Oldest Living Cardinal
July 12, 1968July 31, 1968
Succeeded by
Augusto Álvaro da Silva