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Giovanni Boccamazza

Giovanni Boccamazza[1] (died 1309) was an Italian Cardinal. He was from the Roman nobility,[2] and was a nephew of Cardinal Giacomo Savelli,[3] who had been an important figure in the Roman Curia since his creation as cardinal in 1261.[4]

Early career Edit

On 14 May 1264 Giovanni was granted the benefice of the church of S. Fortunato de Vernot in the Diocese of Sens.[5] In 1285 Giovanni's uncle, Cardinal Savelli, was elected Pope Honorius IV. Giovanni Boccamazza began his career in the Church as a Canon of the Vatican Basilica[6] and Chaplain of Pope Nicholas III (1277-1280).

Bishop of Monreale Edit

He was made Archbishop of Monreale, near Palermo, by Pope Nicholas III on 15 August 1278.[7] He had not, however, been the original choice as bishop. The Chapter of the Cathedral of Monreale had originally and unanimously chosen Guillaume, Bishop of Potenza, but he declined the position and resigned the election into the hands of the Pope. The matter was referred to the usual committee of cardinals on episcopal elections, in this case composed of Cardinals Latino Malabranca Orsini, Guillaume de Bray, and Matteo Rosso Orsini. Nicholas then received the bishop's resignation of the election to Monreale and sought to appoint Bernard de Montemirato, OSB, the Abbot of Montismajoris in the Diocese of Arles.[8] But he flatly refused. Nicholas then chose his Chaplain, Giovanni Boccamazza.[9] He was there at the time of the Sicilian Vespers (1282). It was Cardinal Boccamazza who delivered the news of the Sicilian Vespers to King Charles I of Anjou[10] After fleeing Sicily,[11] he was made cardinal-bishop of Frascati on 22 December 1285[12]—the only cardinal created by Pope Honorius.[13]

Legate in Germany Edit

As soon as Honorius IV became pope, he was approached by King Rudolf of Germany, King of the Romans, with regard to his coronation as Holy Roman Emperor. This honor had been promised him by Gregory X in 1275, but succeeding popes had not authorized the coronation. Now he approached the new pope through the new Archbishop of Mainz, Heinrich de Isnay, O.Min. (1286-1288). In reply Honorius sent Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza as Apostolic Legate to Germany, Bohemia, Hungary and Sweden to engage in conversations with Rudolf.[14] Cardinal Giovanni attended the significant synod of March 1287 in Würzburg, considered as a German national council.[15] On 22 July 1287, during the Sede Vacante following the death of Honorius IV (1285-1287), he was at Cambrai, where he issued orders for Dacia and Suecia.[16] While he was at Cambrai the Legate, Cardinal Giovanni was attacked by a nobleman, Nicholas, his brothers and sons, and his retainers, while he was in church. When that attempt failed, they followed him to his house, where there was a riot. The bishop of Cambrai, who held both spiritual and temporal power in the city, was excommunicated by Cardinal Giovanni, and the city was placed under interdict. When Cardinal Giovanni returned to Rome and explained the whole affair to Pope Nicholas personally, the Pope cited the Bishop, the Archdeacon, the Bailli, the Chapter of the Cathedral, and numerous others, to appear before his court in Rome.[17] The case was finally disposed of on 3 October 1291 with the suspension of the Bishop from his pontifical powers and right to collate to benefices for three years.[18] Also, during the same Legatine assignment, Cardinal Giovanni became involved in strife between the Dominicans and the people of Strasbourg, and he felt compelled to lay the city under the Interdict.[19] On 16 September 1287 Cardinal Giovanni was at Clairvaux,[20] and he was still there on 8 November, when he wrote to the Archbishop of Uppsala, Sweden (Suecia),[21] and 6 December 1287, when he wrote to the Dominicans of Hungary and Poland.[22] He wrote from Novaevallis, on 14 December, to all of the clergy in his Legation for the benefit of the Cistercians.[23] He did not, therefore, attend the Conclave of 1287-1288.

Work in the Roman Curia Edit

He was back in Italy, at Rieti, in September, 1288, when he subscribed a bull for Pope Nicholas IV.[24] Later in the year, in Rome, he was a member of an examination committee of an abbot-elect.[25] On 28 January 1289 he is mentioned as having been an Auditor in the case involving the canonical election of a bishop of Avignon.[26] Two days later he was assigned the task of consecrating the newly approved Archbishop of Crete.[27] In September 1290 Cardinal Giovanni served on the examination committee that investigated the contested election to the Bishopric of Alatri.[28] In March 1291 he was a member of the committee that reviewed the election of the Abbot of S. Albans.[29] At nearly the same time, he did the same in the case of the monastery of S. Pietro in Perugia.[30]

On 5 March 1291 Pope Nicholas granted Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza the power to investigate and reform the apparently large number of encroachments and illegal occupations made by various persons upon the properties belonging to the Lateran Basilica. The Senators and other magistrates of Rome were ordered to assist the Cardinal in restoring the properties of S. Giovanni Laterano.[31] The same service was imposed on Cardinal Giovanni with respect to the Premonstratensian monastery of S. Quirico de valle introducti in the diocese of Reate.[32] He was then empowered to do the same for the Monastery of Farfa.[33]

At the end of November 1295 Cardinal Giovanni was present and working in the Roman Curia, and was one of eighteen cardinals who received a distribution from the funds of the Treasury of the College of Cardinals.[34] On 12 March 1296 he was one of twenty-one cardinals who received a 1/18 share in the payment of 2000 livres Tournois presented by the Procurators of the Abbot of Cluny.[35] At Easter 1296 he had his share of 600 gold florins presented by the Archbishop of Florence; and likewise a share in the 400 gold florins presented by the Bishop of Tortona in Lombardy.[36] On 29 April he shared in the 600 florins paid by the Bishop of Famagusta. At Pentecost 1296, eighteen cardinals shared in the 1900 florins presented by the Bishop of Séez; and a distribution of the 500 livres Tournois paid by the Archbishop of Rouen; and a 1/23 share in the 50 livres of the Bishop of Teramo.[37] On 29 June 1296 there was a distribution of 500 florins paid by the Bishop of Patras. Around the Feast of S. Michael, 29 September 1296 he received a share of the payment made through the bankers of the Abbot of S. Victor of Marseille.[38] On 10 May 1297 he was present at the degrading of Cardinals Jacobus and Petrus Colonna, from whose confiscated income Pope Boniface VIII granted a half to the cardinals, nineteen of whom are named, included Giovanni of Tusculum.[39] He also participated in a distribution of 5 gold pieces which had been offered by the Archbishop of Strigonia at his ad limina visit. On 24 June 1297 he was one of twenty-two cardinals who received his share of the money offered by the Abbot of S. Justinus in Padua; of the money offered by the Bishop of Padua; and of the money brought by the Proctor of the Bishop of Siena.[40] At Easter 1298 the Archbishop of Tours visited Rome, and presented the College of Cardinals with 200 livres Tournois, which was divided among fourteen cardinals, including Giovanni of Tusculum. At the same time the sum of 2500 florins out of the payment of the Bishop of Zaragoza was distributed to the same cardinals; and a distribution from the sum of 2000 florins paid by the Bishop of Pamiers.[41] On 20 May 1298 the 500 florins brought by the Bishop of Lodève was shared by eighteen cardinals in the Curia; at the same time there was a distribution of the 1000 gold florins paid by the Bishop of Urgel; and a distribution from the 500 livres Tournois presented by the Archbishop of Rouen. On 2 June 1298 the Abbot of Subiaco paid 300 gold florins owed by his predecessor, which was shared by twenty cardinals.[42] On 5 September 1298 there was a distribution of the payment of 180 livres Tournois made by the Abbot of the Major Monasterium in Tours, with a 1/15 share coming to Cardinal Giovanni of Tusculum.[43] These are only examples, showing the very large, if irregular, income of a cardinal at the time, and indicating that a cardinal was present in the Roman Curia at the time. Cardinals who were not present in the Curia (except occasionally deceased cardinals, whose estates benefitted from a late payment of dues) did not share in the distributions; this applied to Papal Legates, who had to be paid by the Pope through the Apostolic Camera, not by the Camera of the College of Cardinals.

On 1 February 1301 Cardinal Giovanni of Tusculum, who had been acting as Assessor (judge) on appointment by Boniface VIII, pronounced his verdict in the case of the contested election of Leo, Bishop of Soli in Cyprus.[44] On 20 May 1301 he and three other cardinals, Jean de Cressi, Robert de Pontigny and Matteo Rosso Orsini, were given the mandate to choose a new Abbot of the Monastery of S. Richard in the Diocese of Amiens.[45] In June 1301 he was Auditor in the request that the Cathedral of Sagunto be transferred from regular to secular clergy.[46] On 20 September 1301 his name heads the list of fifteen cardinals, ahead of Bishops Theoderic (Civitas Papalis) and Leonardo (Albano), subscribing to the papal grant of privileges to the Monastery of Santa Croce Saxivivo in the Diocese of Foligno.[47] Cardinal Niccolò Boccasini, OP, Bishop of Ostia, who would normally have signed first as senior Cardinal Bishop, was serving as Legate in Hungary. When the year 1301 began, the Curia was resident at the Lateran Palace in Rome; from 1 May to mid-October it was in Anagni; from 17 October to the end of the year it was back at the Lateran.

In January 1302 Cardinal Giovanni served on a committee to examine the election of the Bishop of Cammin in Germany.[48] On 2 July 1302 he is noted as having on a committee which examined the election and person of John, Abbot of Holy Cross Monastery in Waltham in the Diocese of London.[49]

In 1302, Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza was Canon of the Cathedral of Amiens.[50]

At the beginning of 1303 Cardinal Giovanni was consulted by the Pope concerning the depredations which had taken place against the Chapter of the Cathedral of Cambrai.[51]

Papal Elector Edit

He participated in five papal conclaves, which saw the elections of popes Nicholas IV in 1288, Celestine V in 1294, Boniface VIII in 1294, Benedict XI in 1303 and Clement V in 1305. He became dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals in 1302, upon the death of Cardinal Gerardo Bianchi, Bishop of Sabina (1 March 1302).

Reign of Benedict XI Edit

On 30 October 1303, a week after his election, Pope Benedict gave the College of Cardinals a gift of 2680 gold florins, 380 livres Tournois, and over 600 other gold coins of various origins and values. These funds were distributed among the Cardinals, including Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza, except for the Bishop of Ostia, Niccolò Boccasini, who was absent on a Legateship.[52]

In 1304 Cardinal Giovanni was again a member of a committee of cardinals that examined the election of an abbot for the Benedictine monastery of S. Maria de Alfiolo in the Diocese of Gubbio;[53] and likewise for the Benedictine Monastery of S. Angelo de Gaifa in the Diocese of Urbino;[54]

On 4 March 1304 Pope Benedict XI (1303-1304) granted Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza subinfeudation of three castles, Scandrillia, Castellucii, and Rocca Soldana, which belonged to the Monastery of Farfa by primary infeudation of the Roman Church, along with their tenements and vassals, with full jurisdiction and authority. The properties and their rights would descend to the Cardinal's heirs.[55]

Death Edit

Pope Nicholas IV had granted Cardinal Giovanni the privilege of making his own Will on 25 November 1289.[56] He died in Avignon on 10 August 1309 and was buried in the Church of the Dominicans

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Boccamiti; John of Tusculum (Tusculum is the old Roman name for the city later known as Frascati), a name also applying to Antipope Benedict X.
  2. ^ Sandro Carocci, Baroni di Roma (Roma: Istituto storico italiano per il Medio Evo, 1993), pp. 321-326.
  3. ^ it:Savelli (famiglia)
  4. ^ Bernhard Pawlicki, Papst Honorius IV. Eine Monographie (Münster 1896), pp. 7-13.
  5. ^ Ingeborg Walter,"Boccamazza, Giovanni," Dizionario biografico degli Italiani 11 (1969).
  6. ^ Johrendt, Die Diener des Apostelfürsten, 451-452.
  7. ^ Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi I, editio altera (Monsterii 1913), p. 348.
  8. ^ Denis Sammarthani (editor), Gallia christiana I (Paris 1716), p. 610.
  9. ^ Jules Gay (editor), Registres de Nicolas III (Paris 1898), no. 120, pp. 38-39.
  10. ^ V. D'Avino, Cenni storici sulle chiese arcivescovili, vescovili e prelatizie (nullius) del Regno delle Due Sicilie (Napoli 1848), 359.
  11. ^ Steven Runciman, The Sicilian Vespers.
  12. ^ The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Consistories of the 13th Century
  13. ^ Eubel, pp. 10-11.
  14. ^ The continuator of Martinus Polonus, in G. Pertz (ed.), Monumenta Germaniae Historica Vol. 22 (Hannover 1872), p. 482.
  15. ^ Pawlicki, pp. 81-88. Georg Freiherr von Gaisberg-Schöckingen, Das Konzil und der Reichstag zu Würzburg im Jahre 1287 (Stuttgart: J. Fink, 1928). Theodor Lindner, Deutsche Geschichte unter den Habsburgern und Luxemburgern, 1273-1437 Vol. II (Stuttgart: J.G. Cotta, 1890), pp. 64-68.
  16. ^ Augustus Potthast, Regesta pontificum Romanorum II (Berlin 1875), no. 22598.
  17. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 582, p. 116-117.
  18. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 6140, p. 827-828.
  19. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 2683, pp. 447-448.
  20. ^ Potthast, no. 22599.
  21. ^ Potthast, no. 22601.
  22. ^ Potthast, no. 22602.
  23. ^ Potthast, no. 22603.
  24. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 243 (3 September 1288).
  25. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 397 (31 October 1288).
  26. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 532, p. 104.
  27. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 541.
  28. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 3316, p. 525 (Orvieto, 16 September 1290).
  29. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 4638, p. 667.
  30. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 4911, p. 694.
  31. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 4557-4558, p. 657.
  32. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 6521, p. 871 (13 January 1292).
  33. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 6948, p. 928 (18 March 1292).
  34. ^ Johann Peter Kirsch, Die FInanzverwaltung des Kardinalkollegiums im XIII. und XIV. Jahrhundert (Münster 1895), p. 98.
  35. ^ Kirsch, p. 112-113.
  36. ^ Kirsch, p. 113.
  37. ^ Kirsch, p. 115.
  38. ^ Kirsch, p. 112.
  39. ^ Kirsch, p. 102.
  40. ^ Kirsch, p. 103.
  41. ^ Kirsch, p. 120.
  42. ^ Kirsch, p. 121.
  43. ^ Kirsch, p. 124.
  44. ^ Georges Digard (editor), Les Registres de Boniface VIII (Paris 1907), no. 3957.
  45. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 4069.
  46. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 4081.
  47. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 4132.
  48. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 4481 (Lateran).
  49. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 4721 (Anagni).
  50. ^ G. Boudon, "Un feuillet du registre de la Quotidiane du Chapitre de Nôtre-Dame d' Amiens," Bulletin de la Société des antiquaires de Picardie 18 (1892-1893-1894) (Paris 1895), p. 322.
  51. ^ Digard, Les Registres de Boniface VIII, no. 5149 (13 February 1303).
  52. ^ Kirsch, p. 128.
  53. ^ Ch. Grandjean (editor), Le Registre de Benoit XI (Paris 1905), no. 130, p. 112 (Lateran, 2 January 1304).
  54. ^ Ch. Grandjean (editor), Le Registre de Benoit XI (Paris 1905), no. 518, p. 348 (Lateran, 17 February 1304).
  55. ^ Ch. Grandjean (editor), Le Registre de Benoit XI (Paris 1905), no. 649, p. 412.
  56. ^ E. Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV (Paris 1905) no. 1886, p. 341.

Bibliography Edit

  • Bernhard Pawlicki, Papst Honorius IV. Eine Monographie (Münster 1896).
  • Agostino Paravicini Bagliani, "Alfonso Ceccarelli, gli «Statuta Urbis» del 1305, e la Famiglia Boccamazza," in Raymundus Creytens and Pius Künzle (editors), Xenia Medii Aevi Historiam Illustrantia. Oblata Thomae Kaeppeli o.p. (Roma: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura, 1978), pp. 317–350.
  • Agostino Paravicini Bagliani, I Testamenti dei Cardinali del Duecento (Roma: Presso la Società alla Biblioteca Vallicelliana, 1980), pp. 77–78.
  • Jochen Johrendt, Die Diener des Apostelfürsten: das Kapitel von St. Peter im Vatikan (11.-13. Jahrhundert) (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2011), pp. 186, 451-452.
  • Werner Maleczek: Die Urkunden des päpstlichen Legaten Johannes Boccamazza, Kardinalbischofs von Tusculum, aus den Jahren 1286 und 1287. (Legation ins Reich in der Spätzeit König Rudolfs von Habsburg). In: Archiv für Diplomatik, Schriftgeschichte, Siegel- und Wappenkunde 59 (2013), pp. 35–132 DOI:10.7788/afd.2013.59.jg.35.

External links Edit

  • (in Italian)

giovanni, boccamazza, died, 1309, italian, cardinal, from, roman, nobility, nephew, cardinal, giacomo, savelli, been, important, figure, roman, curia, since, creation, cardinal, 1261, contents, early, career, bishop, monreale, legate, germany, work, roman, cur. Giovanni Boccamazza 1 died 1309 was an Italian Cardinal He was from the Roman nobility 2 and was a nephew of Cardinal Giacomo Savelli 3 who had been an important figure in the Roman Curia since his creation as cardinal in 1261 4 Contents 1 Early career 2 Bishop of Monreale 3 Legate in Germany 4 Work in the Roman Curia 5 Papal Elector 6 Reign of Benedict XI 7 Death 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEarly career EditOn 14 May 1264 Giovanni was granted the benefice of the church of S Fortunato de Vernot in the Diocese of Sens 5 In 1285 Giovanni s uncle Cardinal Savelli was elected Pope Honorius IV Giovanni Boccamazza began his career in the Church as a Canon of the Vatican Basilica 6 and Chaplain of Pope Nicholas III 1277 1280 Bishop of Monreale EditHe was made Archbishop of Monreale near Palermo by Pope Nicholas III on 15 August 1278 7 He had not however been the original choice as bishop The Chapter of the Cathedral of Monreale had originally and unanimously chosen Guillaume Bishop of Potenza but he declined the position and resigned the election into the hands of the Pope The matter was referred to the usual committee of cardinals on episcopal elections in this case composed of Cardinals Latino Malabranca Orsini Guillaume de Bray and Matteo Rosso Orsini Nicholas then received the bishop s resignation of the election to Monreale and sought to appoint Bernard de Montemirato OSB the Abbot of Montismajoris in the Diocese of Arles 8 But he flatly refused Nicholas then chose his Chaplain Giovanni Boccamazza 9 He was there at the time of the Sicilian Vespers 1282 It was Cardinal Boccamazza who delivered the news of the Sicilian Vespers to King Charles I of Anjou 10 After fleeing Sicily 11 he was made cardinal bishop of Frascati on 22 December 1285 12 the only cardinal created by Pope Honorius 13 Legate in Germany EditAs soon as Honorius IV became pope he was approached by King Rudolf of Germany King of the Romans with regard to his coronation as Holy Roman Emperor This honor had been promised him by Gregory X in 1275 but succeeding popes had not authorized the coronation Now he approached the new pope through the new Archbishop of Mainz Heinrich de Isnay O Min 1286 1288 In reply Honorius sent Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza as Apostolic Legate to Germany Bohemia Hungary and Sweden to engage in conversations with Rudolf 14 Cardinal Giovanni attended the significant synod of March 1287 in Wurzburg considered as a German national council 15 On 22 July 1287 during the Sede Vacante following the death of Honorius IV 1285 1287 he was at Cambrai where he issued orders for Dacia and Suecia 16 While he was at Cambrai the Legate Cardinal Giovanni was attacked by a nobleman Nicholas his brothers and sons and his retainers while he was in church When that attempt failed they followed him to his house where there was a riot The bishop of Cambrai who held both spiritual and temporal power in the city was excommunicated by Cardinal Giovanni and the city was placed under interdict When Cardinal Giovanni returned to Rome and explained the whole affair to Pope Nicholas personally the Pope cited the Bishop the Archdeacon the Bailli the Chapter of the Cathedral and numerous others to appear before his court in Rome 17 The case was finally disposed of on 3 October 1291 with the suspension of the Bishop from his pontifical powers and right to collate to benefices for three years 18 Also during the same Legatine assignment Cardinal Giovanni became involved in strife between the Dominicans and the people of Strasbourg and he felt compelled to lay the city under the Interdict 19 On 16 September 1287 Cardinal Giovanni was at Clairvaux 20 and he was still there on 8 November when he wrote to the Archbishop of Uppsala Sweden Suecia 21 and 6 December 1287 when he wrote to the Dominicans of Hungary and Poland 22 He wrote from Novaevallis on 14 December to all of the clergy in his Legation for the benefit of the Cistercians 23 He did not therefore attend the Conclave of 1287 1288 Work in the Roman Curia EditHe was back in Italy at Rieti in September 1288 when he subscribed a bull for Pope Nicholas IV 24 Later in the year in Rome he was a member of an examination committee of an abbot elect 25 On 28 January 1289 he is mentioned as having been an Auditor in the case involving the canonical election of a bishop of Avignon 26 Two days later he was assigned the task of consecrating the newly approved Archbishop of Crete 27 In September 1290 Cardinal Giovanni served on the examination committee that investigated the contested election to the Bishopric of Alatri 28 In March 1291 he was a member of the committee that reviewed the election of the Abbot of S Albans 29 At nearly the same time he did the same in the case of the monastery of S Pietro in Perugia 30 On 5 March 1291 Pope Nicholas granted Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza the power to investigate and reform the apparently large number of encroachments and illegal occupations made by various persons upon the properties belonging to the Lateran Basilica The Senators and other magistrates of Rome were ordered to assist the Cardinal in restoring the properties of S Giovanni Laterano 31 The same service was imposed on Cardinal Giovanni with respect to the Premonstratensian monastery of S Quirico de valle introducti in the diocese of Reate 32 He was then empowered to do the same for the Monastery of Farfa 33 At the end of November 1295 Cardinal Giovanni was present and working in the Roman Curia and was one of eighteen cardinals who received a distribution from the funds of the Treasury of the College of Cardinals 34 On 12 March 1296 he was one of twenty one cardinals who received a 1 18 share in the payment of 2000 livres Tournois presented by the Procurators of the Abbot of Cluny 35 At Easter 1296 he had his share of 600 gold florins presented by the Archbishop of Florence and likewise a share in the 400 gold florins presented by the Bishop of Tortona in Lombardy 36 On 29 April he shared in the 600 florins paid by the Bishop of Famagusta At Pentecost 1296 eighteen cardinals shared in the 1900 florins presented by the Bishop of Seez and a distribution of the 500 livres Tournois paid by the Archbishop of Rouen and a 1 23 share in the 50 livres of the Bishop of Teramo 37 On 29 June 1296 there was a distribution of 500 florins paid by the Bishop of Patras Around the Feast of S Michael 29 September 1296 he received a share of the payment made through the bankers of the Abbot of S Victor of Marseille 38 On 10 May 1297 he was present at the degrading of Cardinals Jacobus and Petrus Colonna from whose confiscated income Pope Boniface VIII granted a half to the cardinals nineteen of whom are named included Giovanni of Tusculum 39 He also participated in a distribution of 5 gold pieces which had been offered by the Archbishop of Strigonia at his ad limina visit On 24 June 1297 he was one of twenty two cardinals who received his share of the money offered by the Abbot of S Justinus in Padua of the money offered by the Bishop of Padua and of the money brought by the Proctor of the Bishop of Siena 40 At Easter 1298 the Archbishop of Tours visited Rome and presented the College of Cardinals with 200 livres Tournois which was divided among fourteen cardinals including Giovanni of Tusculum At the same time the sum of 2500 florins out of the payment of the Bishop of Zaragoza was distributed to the same cardinals and a distribution from the sum of 2000 florins paid by the Bishop of Pamiers 41 On 20 May 1298 the 500 florins brought by the Bishop of Lodeve was shared by eighteen cardinals in the Curia at the same time there was a distribution of the 1000 gold florins paid by the Bishop of Urgel and a distribution from the 500 livres Tournois presented by the Archbishop of Rouen On 2 June 1298 the Abbot of Subiaco paid 300 gold florins owed by his predecessor which was shared by twenty cardinals 42 On 5 September 1298 there was a distribution of the payment of 180 livres Tournois made by the Abbot of the Major Monasterium in Tours with a 1 15 share coming to Cardinal Giovanni of Tusculum 43 These are only examples showing the very large if irregular income of a cardinal at the time and indicating that a cardinal was present in the Roman Curia at the time Cardinals who were not present in the Curia except occasionally deceased cardinals whose estates benefitted from a late payment of dues did not share in the distributions this applied to Papal Legates who had to be paid by the Pope through the Apostolic Camera not by the Camera of the College of Cardinals On 1 February 1301 Cardinal Giovanni of Tusculum who had been acting as Assessor judge on appointment by Boniface VIII pronounced his verdict in the case of the contested election of Leo Bishop of Soli in Cyprus 44 On 20 May 1301 he and three other cardinals Jean de Cressi Robert de Pontigny and Matteo Rosso Orsini were given the mandate to choose a new Abbot of the Monastery of S Richard in the Diocese of Amiens 45 In June 1301 he was Auditor in the request that the Cathedral of Sagunto be transferred from regular to secular clergy 46 On 20 September 1301 his name heads the list of fifteen cardinals ahead of Bishops Theoderic Civitas Papalis and Leonardo Albano subscribing to the papal grant of privileges to the Monastery of Santa Croce Saxivivo in the Diocese of Foligno 47 Cardinal Niccolo Boccasini OP Bishop of Ostia who would normally have signed first as senior Cardinal Bishop was serving as Legate in Hungary When the year 1301 began the Curia was resident at the Lateran Palace in Rome from 1 May to mid October it was in Anagni from 17 October to the end of the year it was back at the Lateran In January 1302 Cardinal Giovanni served on a committee to examine the election of the Bishop of Cammin in Germany 48 On 2 July 1302 he is noted as having on a committee which examined the election and person of John Abbot of Holy Cross Monastery in Waltham in the Diocese of London 49 In 1302 Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza was Canon of the Cathedral of Amiens 50 At the beginning of 1303 Cardinal Giovanni was consulted by the Pope concerning the depredations which had taken place against the Chapter of the Cathedral of Cambrai 51 Papal Elector EditHe participated in five papal conclaves which saw the elections of popes Nicholas IV in 1288 Celestine V in 1294 Boniface VIII in 1294 Benedict XI in 1303 and Clement V in 1305 He became dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals in 1302 upon the death of Cardinal Gerardo Bianchi Bishop of Sabina 1 March 1302 Reign of Benedict XI EditOn 30 October 1303 a week after his election Pope Benedict gave the College of Cardinals a gift of 2680 gold florins 380 livres Tournois and over 600 other gold coins of various origins and values These funds were distributed among the Cardinals including Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza except for the Bishop of Ostia Niccolo Boccasini who was absent on a Legateship 52 In 1304 Cardinal Giovanni was again a member of a committee of cardinals that examined the election of an abbot for the Benedictine monastery of S Maria de Alfiolo in the Diocese of Gubbio 53 and likewise for the Benedictine Monastery of S Angelo de Gaifa in the Diocese of Urbino 54 On 4 March 1304 Pope Benedict XI 1303 1304 granted Cardinal Giovanni Boccamazza subinfeudation of three castles Scandrillia Castellucii and Rocca Soldana which belonged to the Monastery of Farfa by primary infeudation of the Roman Church along with their tenements and vassals with full jurisdiction and authority The properties and their rights would descend to the Cardinal s heirs 55 Death EditPope Nicholas IV had granted Cardinal Giovanni the privilege of making his own Will on 25 November 1289 56 He died in Avignon on 10 August 1309 and was buried in the Church of the DominicansSee also EditCardinals created by Honorius IVReferences Edit Boccamiti John of Tusculum Tusculum is the old Roman name for the city later known as Frascati a name also applying to Antipope Benedict X Sandro Carocci Baroni di Roma Roma Istituto storico italiano per il Medio Evo 1993 pp 321 326 it Savelli famiglia Bernhard Pawlicki Papst Honorius IV Eine Monographie Munster 1896 pp 7 13 Ingeborg Walter Boccamazza Giovanni Dizionario biografico degli Italiani 11 1969 Johrendt Die Diener des Apostelfursten 451 452 Conradus Eubel Hierarchia catholica medii aevi I editio altera Monsterii 1913 p 348 Denis Sammarthani editor Gallia christiana I Paris 1716 p 610 Jules Gay editor Registres de Nicolas III Paris 1898 no 120 pp 38 39 V D Avino Cenni storici sulle chiese arcivescovili vescovili e prelatizie nullius del Regno delle Due Sicilie Napoli 1848 359 Steven Runciman The Sicilian Vespers The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Consistories of the 13th Century Eubel pp 10 11 The continuator of Martinus Polonus in G Pertz ed Monumenta Germaniae Historica Vol 22 Hannover 1872 p 482 Pawlicki pp 81 88 Georg Freiherr von Gaisberg Schockingen Das Konzil und der Reichstag zu Wurzburg im Jahre 1287 Stuttgart J Fink 1928 Theodor Lindner Deutsche Geschichte unter den Habsburgern und Luxemburgern 1273 1437 Vol II Stuttgart J G Cotta 1890 pp 64 68 Augustus Potthast Regesta pontificum Romanorum II Berlin 1875 no 22598 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 582 p 116 117 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 6140 p 827 828 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 2683 pp 447 448 Potthast no 22599 Potthast no 22601 Potthast no 22602 Potthast no 22603 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 243 3 September 1288 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 397 31 October 1288 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 532 p 104 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 541 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 3316 p 525 Orvieto 16 September 1290 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 4638 p 667 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 4911 p 694 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 4557 4558 p 657 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 6521 p 871 13 January 1292 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 6948 p 928 18 March 1292 Johann Peter Kirsch Die FInanzverwaltung des Kardinalkollegiums im XIII und XIV Jahrhundert Munster 1895 p 98 Kirsch p 112 113 Kirsch p 113 Kirsch p 115 Kirsch p 112 Kirsch p 102 Kirsch p 103 Kirsch p 120 Kirsch p 121 Kirsch p 124 Georges Digard editor Les Registres de Boniface VIII Paris 1907 no 3957 Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 4069 Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 4081 Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 4132 Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 4481 Lateran Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 4721 Anagni G Boudon Un feuillet du registre de la Quotidiane du Chapitre de Notre Dame d Amiens Bulletin de la Societe des antiquaires de Picardie 18 1892 1893 1894 Paris 1895 p 322 Digard Les Registres de Boniface VIII no 5149 13 February 1303 Kirsch p 128 Ch Grandjean editor Le Registre de Benoit XI Paris 1905 no 130 p 112 Lateran 2 January 1304 Ch Grandjean editor Le Registre de Benoit XI Paris 1905 no 518 p 348 Lateran 17 February 1304 Ch Grandjean editor Le Registre de Benoit XI Paris 1905 no 649 p 412 E Langlois editor Les registres de Nicolas IV Paris 1905 no 1886 p 341 Bibliography EditBernhard Pawlicki Papst Honorius IV Eine Monographie Munster 1896 Agostino Paravicini Bagliani Alfonso Ceccarelli gli Statuta Urbis del 1305 e la Famiglia Boccamazza in Raymundus Creytens and Pius Kunzle editors Xenia Medii Aevi Historiam Illustrantia Oblata Thomae Kaeppeli o p Roma Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura 1978 pp 317 350 Agostino Paravicini Bagliani I Testamenti dei Cardinali del Duecento Roma Presso la Societa alla Biblioteca Vallicelliana 1980 pp 77 78 Jochen Johrendt Die Diener des Apostelfursten das Kapitel von St Peter im Vatikan 11 13 Jahrhundert Berlin Walter de Gruyter 2011 pp 186 451 452 Werner Maleczek Die Urkunden des papstlichen Legaten Johannes Boccamazza Kardinalbischofs von Tusculum aus den Jahren 1286 und 1287 Legation ins Reich in der Spatzeit Konig Rudolfs von Habsburg In Archiv fur Diplomatik Schriftgeschichte Siegel und Wappenkunde 59 2013 pp 35 132 DOI 10 7788 afd 2013 59 jg 35 External links EditPicture in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Giovanni Boccamazza amp oldid 1172884572, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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