Everything about Francesco Zabarella totally explained
Francesco Cardinal Zabarella (
10 August,
1360 -
26 September,
1417) was an
Italian cardinal and canonist.
Born in
Padua, he studied jurisprudence at
Bologna and at
Florence, where he graduated in 1385. He taught
Canon law at Florence until 1390 and at Padua until 1410. Having taken
minor orders in 1385, he became vicar of bishop Acciajuoli of Florence and pastor at the Church of Santa Maria in Pruncta near Florence. In 1398 he was made archpriest of the cathedral at Padua. The Paduan Government repeatedly employed him on diplomatic missions, and towards the end of 1404, he was one of two ambassadors sent to
King Charles VI of
France to obtain the latter's assistance against
Venice, which was preparing to annex Padua. When Padua had become part of the Venetian Republic in 1406, Zabarella became a loyal supporter of Venice. In 1409 he took part in the
Council of Pisa as councilor of the Venetian legate. On
18 July,
1410,
Pope John XXIII appointed him bishop of Florence and papal referendary, and on
6 June,
1411, he made him the
Cardinal Deacon of the
Titular church of Santi Cosma e Damiano.
Though he never received major orders, he was one of the most active and influential cardinals of John XXIII, whose interests he supported at the
Council of Rome (1412-13). When this council failed to end the lamentable schism, John XXIII sent the cardinals Zabarella and De Challant as legates to King Sigismund at Como in October, 1413, with full powers to come to an understanding with the latter concerning the place and time for holding a new council. It was arranged to open the new council at Konstanz,
1 November,
1414, where Zabarella was one of the chief supporters of John XXIII. When the latter fled from Konstanz
20 March,
1415, in order to thwart the election of a new pope, Zabarella remained as his representative. It was chiefly through his influence that John XXIII finally resigned the papacy unconditionally in April, 1415. Nevertheless the
Council of Constance continued its proceedings against John, and commissioned Zabarella with four other cardinals to inform him of his suspension, and, later, of his formal deposition by the council. In the proceedings against the Avignonese
Pope Benedict XIII, Zabarella proposed, at the session held
28 November,
1416, that Benedict be cited before the council. He also took part in the proceedings of the council against
Huss,
Jerome of Prague, and
Jean Petit. His attempts to induce the two former to signed a softened form of retraction proved useless. From April till the end of July he sought to regain health and strength at a neighbouring watering place. On 28 July he was again at Constance, and up to the time of his death exerted all his influence to hasten the election of a new pope. He is buried in the cathedral at Padua.
His most important literary production is an ecclesiastic-political treatise,
De schismate (Strasburg, 1515). It consists of independent portions, written at different intervals from
1403 to
1408, and contains various suggestions for ending the schism.
Zabarella's chief writings in canon law are (with examples of editions):
- Lectura super Clementinis (Naples, 1471)
- Commentarius in libros Decretalium (Venice, 1502)
- Consilia (Venice, 1581)
Also attributed to him but in need of verification:
- De felicitate libri III (Padua, 1655)
- De arte metrica
- De natura rerum diversarum
- De corpore Christi
A large number of his letters are in the
Österreichische Nationalbibliothek of Vienna, Cod. Lat. 5513. In some, Zabarella is referred to by the nickname
Cardinalis
In
music history, Zabarella is famous for being the patron of the composer
Johannes Ciconia. Ciconia immortalized Zabarella in song by composing a three-voice
isorhythmic
motet in his honor,
Doctorum Principem/Melodia Suavissima/Vir Mitis, surviving in the manuscript
Bologna Q15.
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