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Pietro Peregrosso (born in Milan, ca. 1225; died in Anagni, or Rome, 1 August 1295) was a Roman Catholic legal scholar, ecclesiastical bureaucrat, and Cardinal (1288-1295). He had a sister, who was a nun at the convent of S. Agnete de Archagniago at the Porta Vercellina in Milan. He had a nephew, Belviso de Perego, to whom he left a legacy. He studied at the University of Bologna and at the University of Orleans, ultimately receiving the laurels ''in utroque iure'' (both Canon Law and Civil Law).


Offices

Pietro Peregrosso was Treasurer of the Church of Laon and of the Church of Cambrai, and he was a Canon of Chambéry and Canon of the Cathedral of Paris. All of these appointments were sources of income, not offices which required one to care for souls of Christians. He was Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church under Popes Innocent V, Adrian V, John XXI, Nicholas III, Martin IV, Honorius IV and Nicholas IV (i.e. from 1276 to 1288). This office made him the effective head of the papal Secretariat in the Roman Curia. In the earliest surviving papal bull which he supervised, he signs as ''Magister Petrus de Mediolano''. He was commended by King Edward I of England for being especially attentive to expediting the King's business in the Roman Curia. In 1279, as
Pope Nicholas III Pope Nicholas III ( la, Nicolaus III; c. 1225 – 22 August 1280), born Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 25 November 1277 to his death on 22 August 1280. He was a Roman nobleman who ...
was preparing his bull on the regulation of the Constitution of the ''Ordo Minorum'' (
Franciscan The Franciscans are a group of related Mendicant orders, mendicant Christianity, Christian Catholic religious order, religious orders within the Catholic Church. Founded in 1209 by Italian Catholic friar Francis of Assisi, these orders include t ...
s), he appointed an editorial committee to give the document its final form. Members of the committee were: Petrus Peregrosso, the Vice-Chancellor; Comes Giusiano de Casate, the Auditor of the Apostolic Palace; the Curial Advocate Angelo; and Benedetto Caetani, the protonotary. The results of their work was embodied in the ''Liber Sextus'' of the Code of Canon Law.


Cardinalate

Magister Petrus was created a Cardinal Deacon by
Pope Nicholas IV Pope Nicholas IV ( la, Nicolaus IV; 30 September 1227 – 4 April 1292), born Girolamo Masci, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 22 February 1288 to his death on 4 April 1292. He was the first Franciscan to be ele ...
(Hieronymus Maschi) on 16 May 1288, along with five others, and was assigned the Deaconry of
San Giorgio in Velabro San Giorgio in Velabro is a church in Rome, Italy, dedicated to St. George. The church is located next to the Arch of Janus in the rione of Ripa in the ancient Roman Velabrum. According to the founding legend of Rome, the church was built wh ...
(''velum aureum''). A few months later, certainly before February 13, 1289, he was appointed Cardinal Priest and assigned the titular church of S. Marco. In 1288 he was named the Protector of the Order of the Humiliati in Milan, and he may have been the person responsible for their decision to adopt the Roman rite in place of the Ambrosian rite in their liturgical ceremonies. Cardinal Pietro took part in the Conclave which followed the death of Pope Nicholas IV, which led ultimately to the election of
Pope Celestine V Pope Celestine V ( la, Caelestinus V; 1215 – 19 May 1296), born Pietro Angelerio (according to some sources ''Angelario'', ''Angelieri'', ''Angelliero'', or ''Angeleri''), also known as Pietro da Morrone, Peter of Morrone, and Peter Celes ...
. He signed the Electoral Decree of 5 July 1294. He was not present five months later on 13 December, however, when Pope Celestine resigned the Papacy. In the last year(s) of his life, apparently, Cardinal Pietro was Chamberlain of the College of Cardinals. On 25 November 1295, nearly four months after his death, the Cardinal's estate received a distribution from the Chamber of the College of Cardinals of 11 gold florins, 12 solidi, and 2 denarii from the contribution which had been made by the Abbot of S. Giorgio in Venice and was finally paid by his bankers.


Death

Cardinal Pietro's last known signature on a papal bull was on 21 June 1295, but he was too ill to attend personally and had his signature appended by proxy. He wrote his Testament at Anagni on 14 and 15 July 1295. He died on 1 August 1295, probably at Anagni, where the Papal Curia was resident from 13 June to 1 October. In accordance with one option among his testamentary wishes, he was buried in the Franciscan church of S. Maria in Aracoeli in Rome. One of the beneficiaries of his Testament was the Franciscan convent at Pozzolo in Milan, of which he was the founder. He also left 200 florins to be distributed to his poor relatives at Pozzolo.Giorgio Giulini, ''Memorie spettanti alla storia, al governo ed alla descrizione della città e della campagna di Milano ne' secoli bassi'' Parte VIII (Milano: G. B. Bianchi, 1760), p. 462.


References


Bibliography

* A. Mercati, "I codici di Cristoforo Tolomei priore de Salteano in pegno presso il Cardenale Pietro Peregrosso (1295)," ''Bulletino Senese di Storia Patria'' n.s. 5 (1934) pp. 13–27. * Agostino Paravicini-Bagliani, "Le biblioteche del cardinali Pietro Peregrosso (d. 1295) e Pietro Colonna (d. 1326)," ''Revue d'histoire ecclesiastigue suisse'' 64 (1970) 104-139. * Maria Pia Alberzoni and Claudio M. Tartari, ''Il Cardinale Pietro Peregrosso e la Fondazione Francescana di Pozzuolo Martesana: (1295 - 1995)'' (Pozzuolo Martesana (Milano) 1996). * C. Tangari, "Profilo biografico di Pietro Peregrosso," in ''Il cardinale Pietro Peregrosso e la fondazione francescana di Pozzuolo Martesana (1295- 1995)'' (ed. Claudio M. Tartari) (Pozzuolo Martesana 1996), pp. 41–60. * C. Tangari, "Pietro Peregrosso cardinale protettore degli Umiliati," in ''Il cardinale Pietro Peregrosso e la fondazione francescana di Pozzuolo Martesana (1295- 1995)'' (ed. C.M. Tartari) (Pozzuolo Martesana 1996), pp. 147–161. * Annamaria Ambrosioni, ''Milano, papato e impero in età medievale: raccolta di studi'' (Milano: Vita e Pensiero, 2003). * Giancarlo Andenna,
Peregrosso, Pietro
" ''Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani'' Volume 82 (2015). {{DEFAULTSORT:Peregrosso, Pietro 1295 deaths 13th-century Italian cardinals People of medieval Rome