Ercole Rangoni

Ercole Rangoni or Ercole Rangone (died 25 August 1527) was a cardinal and religious leader of the Catholic Church for 10 years.

His Eminence

Ercole Rangoni
Cardinal-Deacon of Sant'Agata de' Goti
Bishop of Modena
Native name
Rangoni Ercole
ChurchCatholic Church
Orders
Created cardinalJuly 1, 1517
Personal details
Born1491
Died15 Aug 1527
Rome, Italy
NationalityItalian
DenominationRoman Catholic

Biography

He served as Bishop of Adria from 1519 to 1524 and Bishop of Modena from 1509 until his death.[1][2] He was made a cardinal in July 1517 by Pope Leo X. This was during his fifth consistory. Not much information is known about Ercole, but he served as a cardinal for the Catholic Church, in Vatican City. When his mother became a widow in 1500, she took the family back to Modena. When he finished his studies, he went to Rome and entered the service of Cardinal Giovanni de' Medici, future Pope Leo X. When the cardinal, who was papal legate, was taken prisoner by the French in 1512. In Ravenna, Ercole who was in Rome, was sent by his mother to assist the cardinal with gifts and help; he wanted to remain with the cardinal and share with him his prison but the latter did not allow it and asked Ercole to return to the Medicis; when the cardinal was being transported to France, helped by Andrea Guidone, a Modenese, he escaped and went to Piacenza and then to Modena, where Donna Bianca received him in Palazzo Rangone and gave him vestments, money, horses and a considerable sum of silver; the cardinal was later elected to the pontificate and then invited her to Rome and treated her as if he was her own son. The new pope named Ercole his privy chamberlain and gave Andrea Guidone the title of chamberlain. Soon afterward, Ercole was named “protonotary apostolic”.

References

  1. Miranda, Salvador. "RANGONE, Ercole (ca. 1491-1527)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Florida International University. OCLC 53276621. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  2. Cheney, David M. "Ercole Cardinal Rangone". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Retrieved June 16, 2018. [self-published]


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