Bernardo de' Rossi

Bernardo de' Rossi (26 August 1468 28 June 1527) was an Italian bishop and patron of the arts.

Biography

The son of a feudal family of the area of Parma, at a young age he received the archdiaconate of Padua and the Abbey of St. Crisogonus in Zadar. In 1488, thanks to the support of the Republic of Venice, he became Bishop of Belluno. In 1499 he was appointed as bishop of Treviso. Here he held a small court, featuring artists such as Lorenzo Lotto, who painted a portrait of him around 1505.

In 1503, de' Rossi entered into conflict with the Venetian podestà of Treviso, Girolamo Contarini. In September of that year a plot set against him by the Onigo family failed as it was discovered before its application.

In 1509, after further controversies with the Venetian authorities, he was forced to leave the diocese, and moved to Rome (1510). In 1522 he returned to the ancestral fied of San Secondo Parmense, fighting against members of his family. He eventually clashed against the condottiero Giovanni dalle Bande Nere, who had come to help his sister-in-law Bianca Riario, the wife of Troilo I de' Rossi. Bernardo de' Rossi fled to Parma in 1524, and died a few years later, perhaps poisoned by his nephews Giovan Girlamo and Bertrando.

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Pietro Barozzi
Bishop of Belluno
1488–1499
Succeeded by
Bartolomeo Trevisan
Preceded by
Niccolò Franco
Bishop of Treviso
1499–1527
Succeeded by
Francesco Pisani
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