[PAULUS V]
ECCLESIASTICAL BENEFICES
[PAULUS V]. Bulla
Rome, Manuscript on vellum, 1607.
Rare ms. bull by Pope Paulus V, issued on April 6, 1607 at Sts Peter and Paul, conferring an ecclesiastical beneficium simplex revenues from ecclesiastical institutions which could be earned in absentia , without residence, by paying another cleric, a vicar, to act in vece on Pellegrino Puglia, vicario generale of Milan in the 1590s. The beneficiatus could only be appointed when a vacancy arose, after an examination and declaration of suitability by the ecclesiastical authorities confirming both the merit of the recipient and the voluntary nature of the resignation, to avoid suspicion of simony. Puglia was awarded the simple benefice of clericatus after the free resignation of Giuseppe Mazocchi, at the Church of San Martino in San Salvatore [Monferrato] in the dioceses of Pavia; he was granted another as simple benefices could be accumulated from the Church of Santa Maria di Fossano (in Vignale Monferrato). Further simple benefices, called cappellaniae (revenue in exchange for caring for a specific chapel and saying mass), came from Santi Andrea and Nicola of Lussinio (probably the present Oratorio di Sant Andrea) near Lugo in the dioceses of Faenza, as well as San Servo (?), St Angelo de Flumine (in Terni?), San Valentino prope et extra muros , and Sant Agata in the dioceses of Rome, and the Church of Santa Maria Foris Portas (probably near Varese). The total amounted to nearly 300 ducats a year, though presumably he would have had to employ curates to deal with the work load. The bull bears numerous autographs including that of B. de la Cabra, Archbishop of Cagliari. An interesting insight into the ecclesiastical administration of the Counter-Reformation. Papal bulls retaining their lead seals are rare on the market.