Giuseppe Beltrami
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Styles of Giuseppe Cardinal Beltrami |
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Reference style | His Eminence |
Spoken style | Your Eminence |
Informal style | Cardinal |
See | none |
Giuseppe Cardinal Beltrami (January 17, 1889—December 13, 1973) was an Italian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Internuncio to the Netherlands from 1959 to 1967, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1967.
[edit] Biography
Born in Fossano, Giuseppe Beltrami attended the seminary in Fossano before being ordained to the priesthood on March 5, 1916. He served as a chaplain in the Italian Army during World War 1 (1916-1919), and then studied at the Pontifical Roman Athenaum S. Apollinare, from where he obtained his doctorates in theology and in canon law, and the Royal University, earning a doctorate in letters, until 1923.
From 1923 to 1926, Beltrami was a staff member of the Vatican Library. He was raised to the rank of an Honorary Chamberlain of His Holiness on July 14, 1924, and became an official of the Vatican Secretariat of State in 1926. Monsignor Beltrami then served as a lawyer for the causes of canonization and beatification in the Sacred Congregation of Rites until 1940, also being named a Privy Chamberlain of His Holiness on July 9, 1926.
On February 20, 1940, Beltrami was appointed Nuncio to Guatemala and El Salvador and Titular Archbishop of Damascus. He received his episcopal consecration on the following April 7 from Luigi Cardinal Maglione, with Archbishop Gabriele Vettori and Bishop Angelo Soracco serving as co-consecrators, in the church of S. Carlo al Corso. Beltrami was later named Nuncio to Colombia on November 15, 1945; during his tenure there, he served as the papal legate to the National Eucharistic Congress in Bogotá on June 29, 1946. The Archbishop worked as a nuncio at the disposition of Secretariat of State from 1948 to 1950, when he was assigned as Nuncio to Lebanon on October 4. Beltrami was appointed Internuncio to the Netherlands on January 31, 1959, and faced much theological dissidence in the usually progressive country[1]. The Dutch Catholic clergy once complained that Beltrami "kept the wires to Rome hot with reports of heresy in Holland"[2].
He attended the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965. Pope Paul VI created him Cardinal Priest of S. Maria Liberatrice al Monte Testaccio in the consistory of June 26, 1967. Beltrami resigned his diplomatic post in the Netherlands on July 22, 1967, and eventually lost the right to participate in a papal conclave upon reaching the age of 80 on January 1, 1971.
The Cardinal died in Rome, at age 84. He is buried in the cathedral of his native Fossano.
[edit] References
- ^ TIME Magazine. In Dutch with the Vatican June 5, 1967
- ^ TIME Magazine. The Pope's Fraternal Eyes July 14, 1967
[edit] External links
Preceded by unknown |
Nuncio to Guatemala 1940–1945 |
Succeeded by Giovanni Castellani, OFM |
Preceded by Albert Levame |
Nuncio to El Salvador 1940–1945 |
Succeeded by Giovanni Castellani, OFM |
Preceded by Paolo Giobbe |
Nuncio to Colombia 1945–1948 |
Succeeded by Antonio Samoré |
Preceded by Alcide Marina, CM |
Nuncio to Lebanon 1950–1959 |
Succeeded by Paolo Cardinal Bertoli |
Preceded by Paolo Giobbe |
Internuncio to the Netherlands 1959–1967 |
Succeeded by Angelo Felici |