Domenico Bollani

Summary

Domenico Bollani (1514–1579) was a diplomat and politician of the Republic of Venice, and as Bishop of Brescia from 1559 to 1579 he was a leading figure of the Catholic reform.

Domenico Bollani
Bishop of Brescia
ChurchCatholic Church
SeeBrescia
Appointed14 March 1559
Term ended12 August 1579
PredecessorDurante Duranti
SuccessorGiovanni Dolfin
Orders
Consecration1559 (Bishop)
Personal details
Born10 February 1514
Died12 August 1579(1579-08-12) (aged 65)
Brescia
BuriedOld Cathedral of Brescia

Political career edit

Domenico Bollani was born to a noble family in Venice on 10 February 1514,[1] or in 1513 according to other sources[2]. He earned a doctorate of Law at the University of Padova and he took a political career in the Republic of Venice[1] He was elected in the Consiglio dei Pregadi (the Senate) and he held also the office as one of the Savi di Terraferma (an office comparable to a minister).

In 1547 he was appointed ambassador to England. Returned to Venice, in 1551 he served in the Council of Ten. In 1556 he was appointed lieutenant (governor) of Friuli where he successfully managed a crisis due to famine and plague: an arch in Udine (the Arco Bollani built in 1556 and attributed to Andrea Palladio) remembers his activity.

In 1558 he was appointed as podestà (governor) of Brescia, where he was able to settle a dispute with the near Duchy of Milan for the use of the waters of Oglio river.[3]

Ecclesiastic career edit

Even if he was not an ecclesiastic, he was proposed as the new bishop of Brescia by the citizen of the town, and this candidature was approved by both the Republic of Venice and by Pope Paul IV who formally appointed him on 14 March 1559.[3] He was ordained priest in Brescia in the spring of 1559, celebrated his first mass in the cathedral of Brescia on 15 August 1559, and was consecrated bishop in the autumn of the same year in Venice.[4]

Domenico Bollani participated in the final stages of the Council of Trent, and he was ready to implement the consequent reform in his diocese. Following the requests of the council, he founded the seminary in 1568, he gathered a diocesan synod in 1574 and was anxious to personally visit the parishes of the diocese of Brescia. When in 1577 the plague spread in the city, in a moment's hesitation he left the town, then he chose to return to take care of the sick, following the example of Charles Borromeo. In 1567 he completed the construction of the new Bishop's Palace in Brescia, which started almost a century before.[3]

He died in Brescia on 12 August 1579 in the arms of Charles Borromeo.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Pillinini, Giovanni (1969). "Bollani, Domenico". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 11: Boccadibue–Bonetti (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  2. ^ a b Cairns, Christopher (1976). Domenico Bollani, Bishop of Brescia : devotion to church and state in the republic of Venice in the sixteenth century. Nieuwkoop: De Graaf. ISBN 9789060043462.
  3. ^ a b c Fappani, Antonio; Trovati, Francesco (1982). I vescovi di Brescia (in Italian). Brescia: Edizioni del Moretto. pp. 154–160.
  4. ^ Fé, Luigi Francesco (1875). Il Vescovo Domenico Bollani (in Italian). Brescia: Pio Istituto Pavoni. p. 16.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Bishop of Brescia
1559–1579
Succeeded by