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ADRIANO CASTELLESI (c. 146o?—c. 1521?)

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Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 471 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ADRIANO

CASTELLESI (c. 146o?—c. 1521?)  , known also as CORNETO from his birthplace,
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Italian cardinal and writer, was sent by Innocent VIII. to reconcile James III. of Scotland with his subjects . While in England he was appointed (1503), by Henry VII., to the see of
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Hereford, and in the following
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year to the more lucrative diocese of Bath and Wells, but he never resided in either . Returning to Rome, he became secretary to Alexander VI. and was made by him cardinal (May 31, 1503) . A man of doubtful reputation, Alexander's confidant and favourite, he paid the pope a large sum for his
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elevation . He bought a vigna in the Borgo near the Vatican, and thereon erected a sumptuous palace after designs by Bramante; and it was here, in the summer of 1503, that he entertained the pope and Cesare Borgia at a banquet that went on till nightfall despite the unhealthy season of the year, when ague in its most malignant form was rife . Of the three, Cardinal Adrian was the first to fall
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ill, the pope succumbing a week after . The story of the poisoning of the pope is to be relegated to the
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realm of fiction . Soon after the election of Leo X. the cardinal was implicated in the conspiracy of Cardinal Petrucci against the pope, and confessed his
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guilt; but, pardon being offered only on condition of the payment of 25,000 ducats, he fled from Rome and was subsequently deposed from the cardinalate . As early as 1504 he had presented his palace (now the Palazzo Giraud-Torlonia) to Henry VII. as a residence for the
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English ambassador to the
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Holy See; and on his
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flight Henry VIII., who had quarrelled with him, gave it to Cardinal
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Campeggio . Adrian first fled to Venice . Of his subsequent
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history nothing is known for certain . It is said that he was murdered by a servant when on his way to the conclave that elected Adrian VI .

As a writer, he was one of the first to restore the Latin

tongue to its pristine purity; and among his
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works are De Vera Plzilosophia ex quatuor doctoribus ecclesiae (Bologna, 1507), De Sermone Latino (Basel, 1513), and a poem, De Venatione (Venice, 1534) . See Polydore Vergil, Angl icae historiae, edited by H . Ellis (
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London, 1844) ; and A . Aubery, Histoire generale
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des cardinaux (Paris, 1642) . (E .

End of Article: ADRIANO CASTELLESI (c. 146o?—c. 1521?)
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