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Alessandro Orsini (cardinal)

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Catholic cardinal (1592–1626) This article is about the 17th-century cardinal. For the 21st-century professor, see Alessandro Orsini (sociologist).

Alessandro Orsini (1592–1626) was an Italian Cardinal. He was a patron of Galileo, who dedicated his 1616 work on the tides to him, and requested that he pass it on to Pope Paul V. Orsini belonged to the ducal family of Bracciano.

Orsini was born in Bracciano, Italy. He was son of Virginio Orsini, Duke of Bracciano and his wife Flavia Peretti, a niece of Pope Sixtus V. He was brought up at the court of the Grand Duke Ferdinand I of Tuscany, and in 1615 was created a cardinal by Paul V. As papal legate to Ravenna under Pope Gregory XV, he distinguished himself in 1621 by his charity on the occasion of the outbreak of an epidemic. Upon his return to Rome, he devoted himself to religion and to the practice of an austere asceticism. He asked permission of the pope to resign the cardinalate and to enter the Jesuit Order, but this was refused.

Ordained by Giovanni Garzia Mellini in 1602

Notes

  1. The Galileo Project | Chronology | Galileo Timeline
  2. "Galileo". Archived from the original on 2008-06-06. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  3. Cheney, David M. "Alessandro Cardinal Orsini". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved February 14, 2019.
  4. "Orsini". Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 12 September 2010.

External links

Catholic Church titles
Preceded byGiovanni Battista Deti Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Maria in Cosmedin
1615–1626
Succeeded byPietro Maria Borghese
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