Beniamino Cavicchioni

Beniamino Cavicchioni (27 December 1836 – 17 April 1911) was an Italian cardinal of the Catholic Church. He was a papal diplomat and worked in the Roman Curia.

Biography

He was born in Pago Veiano, Italy, on 27 December 1836. He was ordained a priest on 18 December 1859.

He worked on the staff of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith with particular responsibility for the United States.[1]

On 21 March 1884, Pope Leo XIII appointed him titular archbishop of Amida and Apostolic Delegate to Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru.[1] He received his episcopal consecration on 27 April from Cardinal Luigi Serafini.

He returned to Rome in 1889 and worked in the Roman Curia.

Pope Leo made him cardinal priest of Santa Maria in Ara Coeli in the consistory held on 22 June 1903.[2]

From 11 March 1910 he was Prefect of the Congregation for Religious Studies.[2]

Cavicchioni underwent surgery and died a few days later on 17 April 1911 in Rome.[2]

gollark: This honestly looks like satire.
gollark: Bitcoin's thing (and most others) is basically just "bruteforce a really low hash value".
gollark: Ethereum charges you for on-blockchain computing power in some way, but since the NFTs mean basically nothing and are just pointers to external things, they can totally have turing machines if they want to.
gollark: The issue with that is that mining has to be hard to *do* but easy to *verify*.
gollark: I suppose there's some ambiguity on where it would actually revoke from.

References

  1. McNamara, Robert Francis (1956). The American College in Rome, 1855-1955. Christopher Press. pp. 251, 270.
  2. Lentz III, Harris M. (2015). Popes and Cardinals of the 20th Century: A Biographical Dictionary. McFarland. pp. 40–1. Retrieved 18 June 2020.
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