Giovanni di San Paolo
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Giovanni di San Paolo (died ca. 1214/1216) was a Benedictine monk at San Paolo fuori le Muri in Rome before he was made Cardinal-Deacon on February 20, 1193, then Cardinal Priest of Santa Prisca in May 1193 and finallyCardinal Bishop of Sabina on 9 January 1205. He is often referred as member of the powerful Roman Colonna family, but this is disputed.
John rose to incluence in the curia during the pontificat of Pope Celestine III. According to Roger of Hoveden, he was nominated by Celestine to succeed him in 1198, but appears to have received cardinal priesthood of Santa Prisca as a consolation prize from Celestine's successor Innocent III. Innocent employed on many legatine missions to Germany, Spain, Sicily, and France.
In 1200 he was in France with Cardinal Octavian to deal with Philip Augustus' divorce. From there Innocent sent him from there into Languedoc to act as papal legate to work for the suppression of the Cathar heresy. He delivered a revised version of the decretal Vergentis in senium, first issued by Innocent in March 1199 for Viterbo in the Papal States. The Languedocian version of the decretal was considerably less harsh, omitting a clause calling for the dispossession of the Catholic heirs of heretics. It was probably for his work in Languedoc that he was elevated to the suburbicarian bishopric of Sabina in 1205.
He was the powerful friend of Francis of Assisi and was instrumental in obtaining papal approval of the Franciscan Rule. He died at Rome, after April 21, 1214, but before July 16, 1216. He is remembered at Amalfi for his munificence in building and endowing a spacious hospital there.
[edit] Sources
- Graham-Leigh, Elaine. The Southern French Nobility and the Albigensian Crusade. Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2005. ISBN 1 84383 129 5
- Salvador Miranda: biographical entry of Cardinal Giovanni di San Paolo