Pietro Paolo Medici

Pietro Paolo Medici (died 1657) was a Roman Catholic prelate who served as Bishop of Alife (1639–1657).[1]

Most Reverend

Pietro Paolo Medici
Bishop of Alife
ChurchCatholic Church
In office1639–1657
PredecessorGiovanni Michele Rossi
SuccessorHenri Borghi
Orders
Consecration25 April 1639
by Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore)
Personal details
DiedOctober 1656 or October 1657
Alife, Italy

Biography

On 11 April 1639, Pietro Paolo Medici was appointed during the papacy of Pope Urban VIII as Bishop of Alife.[1][2] On 25 April 1639, he was consecrated bishop by Alessandro Cesarini (iuniore), Cardinal-Deacon of Sant'Eustachio, with Tommaso Carafa, Bishop Emeritus of Vulturara e Montecorvino, and Lorenzo della Robbia, Bishop of Fiesole, serving as co-consecrators.[2] He served as Bishop of Alife until his death in or October 1656 or October 1657.[1][2]

gollark: Replying to https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/750047961043697774Well, the zim people had to invest effort into writing it, I would not be surprised if it had some security issues, and it likely has worse bindings/higher-level tooling than SQLite3.
gollark: ... an x86 assembly typing test link?
gollark: > sqlite is not less complex than this formatYes. *But*, you don't actually have to interact with the SQLite disk format directly because libsqlite3 exists.
gollark: I suspect SQLite would lose out somewhat in storage efficiency, but it could plausibly be faster for many things at runtime.
gollark: It's less complex for everyone interacting with it, since they can just... use SQLite, which has bindings for everything, instead of "zimlib". And by "efficiency" do you mean "space efficiency" or "lookup efficiency"? Because, as I said, SQLite would probably only add a few bytes per directory entry row, which is not a significant increase.

References

  1. Gauchat, Patritius (Patrice) (1935). HIERARCHIA CATHOLICA MEDII ET RECENTIORIS AEVI Vol IV. Münster: Libraria Regensbergiana. p. 78. (in Latin)
  2. Cheney, David M. "Bishop Pietro Paolo Medici". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. [self-published]
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Giovanni Michele Rossi
Bishop of Alife
1639–1657
Succeeded by
Henri Borghi


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