Imbert du Puy

Imbert du Puy (DuPuy, Dupuis; Lat. Imbertus de Podio, Ital. Umberto del Pozzo) (born at Montpellier in Languedoc,[1] died in Avignon on 26 May 1348) was a French Cardinal of the fourteenth century. He was a nephew of Pope John XXII.

Cardinal

Imbert du Puy
Cardinal-Priest
ChurchBasilica XII Apostolorum (1327-1348)
Orders
Created cardinal18 December 1327
by Pope John XXII
Personal details
BornMontpellier
Died26 May 1348
Avignon FR
NationalityFrench
Occupationcourtier

Imbert du Puy was a Protonotary Apostolic. At the time of his elevation to the cardinalate Imbert Du Puy was Archdeacon of Langres.[2]

In his fourth Consistory for the creation of cardinals, held on 18 December 1327, Pope John XXII created ten new cardinals, among them Imbert Du Puy. He was named Cardinal Priest of the Basilica of the Twelve Apostles (XII Apostolorum), which had been unassigned since 1281.[3] He was given a Prebend in the Cathedral of St. Paul's in the diocese of London in January 1328, but such a conflict arose at the time of the installation that the cathedral needed to be reconsecrated.[4]

Cardinal du Puy participated in the Conclave of 1334, which elected Pope Benedict XII.[5]

He was granted the Priory of Saintville in the diocese of Aix;[6] the Priory of Vaugines in the diocese of Aix; and the Priory of Saint-Baudile in the diocese of Nîmes.[7]

Early in 1340, Cardinal Imbert was a member of a committee of cardinals, with Pierre Després of Palestrina and Napoleone Orsini of S. Adriano, to examine the election and suitability of Jean de Tréal, Abbot of Rothonensis in the diocese of Vannes. The election was approved by Pope Benedict on 17 March 1340.[8]

He was elected Chamberlain of the College of Cardinals on 11 July 1340, in succession to Cardinal Pedro Gomez Barroso. He held the post until his death.[9]

In 1341 he was appointed by Pope Benedict XII to a committee of three cardinals to investigate the election and suitability of Giovanni Zaulini to be Archbishop of Antivari in Epirus.[10] The Pope's final approval was given on 17 December 1341.

In 1342, Cardinal du Puy resigned the Provostship of the church of Poson in the diocese of Esztergom (Strigonia), so that he could take up the parochial church of Saint-Paul de Frontiniano (Frontignan) in the diocese of Maguelonne. Both appointments involved the care of souls, and therefore two could not be held at the same time.[11]

Imbert du Puy participated in the Conclave of 1342, which elected Pope Clement VI.[12]

In the Spring of 1344 the Cardinal bought some fields with two farmhouses from King James of Majorca, who was also Lord of Montpellier, and the transaction was certified by King Philip VI of France on 19 June.[13] The purchase was no doubt intended as an investment, finally becoming part of a foundation project. The Cardinal also purchased the Hospital of the Teutonic Knights in Montpellier.[14] There is a record of an amortization of one hundred librae of land to found and endow two chapels, one of them dedicated to the Holy Savior (Saint Sauveur). In fact, the chapel was erected as a Collegiate Church, with twelve chaplains and twelve deacons. The transaction was registered with the King of France and approved in a bull by Pope Innocent VI.[15] The Prior and Sacristan of the Collegiate Church were charged with the duty of maintaining hospitality in the Hospital of the Teutonic Knights, which was deeded to them as part of the foundation project.

Cardinal Imbert du Puy died on 26 May 1348 in Avignon. The Bishop of Maguelonne, Arnaud de Verdale (1339-1352), was present at his deathbed. He left a Testament, the executor of which was Cardinal (Pierre) Bertrand du Pouget, which is referred to in the documents concerning the Church of the Holy Savior.[16]

Of Cardinal Imbert the famous author of the lives of the Avignon popes, Étienne Baluze, remarks: "Neither then [when he was made a cardinal] nor afterward was he distinguished in the Curia, nor was he ever entrusted with a legation to any princes, however long a time he spent as a cardinal."[17]

References

  1. Charles d' Aigrefeuille (1739). Histoire de la ville de Montpellier (in French). Second partie. Montpellier: Rigaud. p. 197.
  2. Louis Caillet (1975). La papauté d'Avignon et l'Église de France: la politique bénéficiale du pape Jean XXII en France, 1316-1334 (in French). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France. p. 321, n. 113. ISBN 978-2-87775-809-3.
  3. Eubel, p. 16. Baluze (1693) I, p. 768. The notion that he had been a cardinal-deacon was a mistake of Onuphrio Panvinio.
  4. John Robert Wright (1980). The Church and the English Crown, 1305-1334: A Study Based on the Register of Archbishop Walter Reynolds. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. p. 289. ISBN 978-0-88844-048-8. William Stubbs (1882). Chronicles of the reigns of Edward I and Edward II. Longman. pp. xc–xci, 340. The person involved may have been a proxy or procurator.
  5. J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante 1334. Retrieved: 2016-06-18.
  6. Caillet, p. 168.
  7. Caillet, p. 173.
  8. Guillaume Mollat (1907). Études et documents sur l'histoire de Bretagne (XIIIe-XVIe siècles. Paris: H. Champion. pp. 115–117.
  9. Paul Maria Baumgarten (1898). Untersuchungen und Urkunden über die Camera Collegii Cardinalium für die Zeit von 1295 bis 1437 (in German). Leipzig: Giesecke & Devrient. p. LII.
  10. Melchior de Vogüé; Charles Henri Auguste Schefer (1905). Revue de l'orient Latin (in French and Latin). Volume 10. Paris: E. Leroux. pp. 51–54.
  11. Baluze (1693), I, p. 768. The fees were remitted by his uncle.
  12. J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante 1342. Retrieved: 2016-06-18.
  13. Baluze (1693), I, pp. 769-770.
  14. Aigrefeuille, p. 328
  15. Pierre Gariel (1664). Series praesulum Magalonensium et Monspeliensium (in Latin). Pars posterior (secunda editio ed.). Toulouse: Ioannes Boude. pp. 17–30. Baluze (1693), I, p. 272.
  16. Gariel, p. 21.
  17. Baluze (1693), I, p. 768: Neque tum neque postea inclaruit in Curia neque legationibus apud principes ullis ornatus fuit quamvis longam aetatem egerit in cardinalatu.

Bibliography

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