Jaume Serra i Cau

Jaume Serra i Cau (Valencian pronunciation: [ˈdʒawme ˈsɛra j ˈkaw], Spanish: Jaime Serra y Cau; died 1517) was a Spanish Valencian cardinal, from the city of Valencia. He was tutor to the young Giovanni Borgia,[1] and a close associate of his father Pope Alexander VI.[2]

He was archbishop of Oristano in 1492, and was created cardinal in 1500. He was bishop of Linköping in 1501, bishop of Elne in 1506. He was bishop of Albano in 1511, and possibly bishop of Palestrina in 1516 (sources disagree).

He was governor of Rome and Cesena[3]

He was buried in San Giacomo degli Spagnoli, where a mortuary chapel was built for him.

Notes

  1. Michael Mallett (1969), The Borgias, p. 118.
  2. Mallett, p. 164, 201.
  3. Mallett, p. 191.
  • Miranda, Salvador. "SERRA I CAU, Jaime (ca.1427-1430-1517)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Florida International University. OCLC 53276621.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Ferdinando Romano
Archbishop of Oristano
1492–1510
Succeeded by
Pedro Serra Muñoz
Preceded by
Raymond Pérault
Cardinal-Priest of San Vitale
1500–1502
Succeeded by
Giovanni Stefano Ferrero
Preceded by
Henrik Tidemansson
Administrator of Linköping
1501–1513
Succeeded by
Johannes Petrus Brask
Preceded by
Domenico della Rovere
Cardinal-Priest of San Clemente
1502–1511
Succeeded by
Francesco Argentino
Preceded by
Juan Ortega
Bishop of Potenza
1503–1506
Succeeded by
Giacomo Nini
Preceded by
Francisco Lloris y de Borja
Administrator of Elne
1506–1513
Succeeded by
Juan Castellanos de Villalba
Preceded by
Philippe de Luxembourg
Cardinal-Bishop of Albano
1511–1516
Succeeded by
Francesco de Remolins
Preceded by
Pascual Rebenga de Ampudia
Administrator of Burgos
1512–1514
Succeeded by
Juan Rodríguez de Fonseca
Preceded by
Juan Fernández Velasco
Administrator of Calahorra y La Calzada
1514–1515
Succeeded by
Juan Castellanos de Villalba
Preceded by
Marco Vigerio della Rovere
Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina
1516–1517
Succeeded by
Francesco Soderini


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.