Guala da Telgate

Guala da Telgate (died 1186) was a bishop of the Roman Catholic diocese of Bergamo.[1]

Life

Guala participated in a capitular meeting in the Basilica di Sant'Alessandro, when the bishop Gerardo was forced by the people to recognize or not the Antipope Victor IV (1159–1164).

In 1166 Frederick Barbarossa descended upon the Po Valley with his army. He devastated the territories of Brescia, Bergamo and Milan, whose city was completely destroyed. Bishop Gerardo of Bergamo, who was supporting Frederick and his Antipope Paschal III (Guido of Crema), was summoned to Rome by Pope Alexander III, but when he refused to appear before the Papal Court, he was deposed. Pope Alexander then appointed a new Archbishop of Milan and Papal Legate for Lombardy, Cardinal Galdino della Sala, and instructed him to deal with the situation in Bergamo. Cardinal Galdino arrived in Bergamo in December 1167, summoned the clergy and people, and formally deposed Bishop Gerardo. Gerardo was driven out.[2] He then ordered the Canons of S. Vincenzo and the Canons of S. Alessandro, led by the Archdeacon Adelardo, to form their usual committee to elect a replacement for Bishop Gerardo. One of the Canons of S. Alessandro, Guala, who was supported by Cardinal Galdino, was elected bishop.[3]

Bishop Guala was present in Venice in 1177, as a representative of the Lombard League, when Pope Alexander and the Emperor Frederick concluded the Treaty of Venice.[4]

Bishop Guala participated in and subscribed the decrees of the Third Lateran Council in March 1179.[5]

Guala is known for his strong support of the Peace of Costanza, for which many Bergamaschi had fought and died.[6]

Guala died in Bergamo on 30 October 1186.

References

  1. Belotti, B.; Banca popolare di Bergamo (1989). Storia di Bergamo e dei bergamaschi. Storia di Bergamo e dei bergamaschi (in Italian). Edizioni Bolis. p. 327. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  2. Ferdinando Ughelli; Niccolò Coleti (1719). Italia sacra, sive De episcopis Italiæ, et insularum adjacentium (in Latin). Tomus quartus (4). Venice: apud Sebastianum Coleti. p. 466.
  3. Giuseppe Ronchetti (1807). Memorie istoriche della città e chiesa di Bergamo (in Italian). Tomo III. Bergamo: Natali. pp. 127–136, esp. 135–136.
  4. Ughelli-Coleti, p. 469. Ronchetti, III, p. 163.
  5. J.-D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XXII (Venice: A. Zatta 1778), p. 463.
  6. Annamaria Todeschini, Papato ed Impero in età medioevale, Milano Vita e pensiero 2003, consultato il 4 Dicembre.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.