John Albert Vasa

John Albert Vasa (Jan Albert Waza) (25 June 1612 29 December 1634) was a Polish cardinal, and a Prince-Bishop of Warmia and Kraków. He was the son of Sigismund III Vasa and Constance of Austria.


John Albert Vasa
Cardinal, Bishop of Kraków
Portrait of Cardinal John Albert Vasa by Tommaso Dolabella, ca. 1633, Museum of King John III's Palace at Wilanów
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
Appointed20 November 1632
Term ended29 December 1634
Other post(s)Cardinal-Priest of Santa Maria in Aquiro (1632-1634)
Orders
Created cardinal19 November 1629
by Pope Urban VIII
RankCardinal-Priest
Personal details
Born(1612-06-25)25 June 1612
Died29 December 1634(1634-12-29) (aged 22)
Padua, Republic of Venice
Previous post(s)Bishop of Warmia (1621-1632)

Biography

John Albert Vasa was born in Warsaw in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. When he was 9 years old, after the death of Szymon Rudnicki his father chose him to be the next Prince-Bishop of Warmia. The pope agreed to that request on 21 October 1621. More difficult to reach was an agreement from the Warmian chapter, and the objections of szlachta delayed the final approval of this nomination in the Sejm until 1631. The prince never visited his diocese, it was governed in his name by the suffragan bishop Michał Działyński, archdeacon of Warsaw Jakub Wierzbipięta Borzuchowski and canon of Warmia, Paweł Piasecki. The cathedral at Frauenburg (Frombork) was enriched by the gifts from Jan Albert that included liturgical robes and a golden statue of Saint Andrew.

He was educated in the Society of Jesus.

On 20 November 1632 Vasa received the office of Prince Bishop of Cracow (after the death of Andrzej Lipski); he performed his duties in person from 27 February 1633.

On 20 December 1632 his cardinal nomination was declared in public; Pope Urban VIII signed the nomination on 19 October 1629 but in secret (in pectore tacite), and after revealing the information he granted Jan Albert the presbyterian title of Sanctae Marie in Aquiro.

Jan Albert died in Italy in 1634 at Padua, where he was likely sent by his brother, King Wladislaw IV Waza with a diplomatic mission. The cause of his death is uncertain - Albrycht S. Radziwill in his diary suggested that he was infected with smallpox when he met his brother, Aleksander Karol during their meeting before he left for Italy (Karol died this same year from smallpox). Paweł Piasecki suggests that the cause of his death could be some illness other than smallpox.

In the office of Bishop of Warmia he was succeeded by Mikolaj Szyszkowski in 1632. In the office of Bishop of Kraków he was succeeded by Jakub Zadzik.

Ancestors

See also

References

  1. Marcin Latka. "Cardinal John Albert Vasa". artinpl. Retrieved 28 July 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.