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Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet

Archbishop of Catania
Painting.
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
ArchdioceseCatania
SeeCatania
Appointed22 February 1867
Installed1878
Term ended4 April 1894
PredecessorFelice Regnano
SuccessorGiuseppe Francica-Nava de Bontifè
Other post(s)Cardinal-Priest of Santa Pudenziana (1889–1894)
Orders
Ordination18 September 1841
Consecration10 March 1867
by Antonio Saverio De Luca
Created cardinal11 February 1889
by Pope Leo XIII
RankCardinal-Priest
Personal details
Born
Giuseppe Dusmet

(1818-08-15)15 August 1818
Died4 April 1894(1894-04-04) (aged 75)
Catania, Sicily, Kingdom of Italy
Coat of arms
Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet's coat of arms
Sainthood
Feast day
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified25 September 1988
Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City
by Pope John Paul II
Canonized25 March 1989
Attributes
PatronageArchdiocese of Catania
Ordination history of
Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet
History
Diaconal ordination
Ordained byDomenico Balsamo
Date15 November 1840
PlaceMonreale, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Priestly ordination
Date18 September 1841
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorAntonio Saverio De Luca
Co-consecratorsPietro Giannelli & Giuseppe Maria Papardo del Parco
Date10 March 1867
PlaceBasilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura, Rome, Kingdom of Italy
Cardinalate
Elevated byPope Leo XIII
Date11 February 1889
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet as principal consecrator
Giovanni Blandini15 August 1875
Antonio Caff15 August 1882

Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet (15 August 1818 – 4 April 1894) – born Giuseppe Dusmet – was an Italian Roman Catholic cardinal who served as the Archbishop of Catania from 1867 until his death.[1][2] He became professed into the Order of Saint Benedict where he took "Benedetto" as his religious name. He studied under the Benedictines prior to joining them before serving as a professor in addition to prior and abbot. His elevation to the episcopate saw him distinguish himself in cholera epidemics when he tended to the ill while also remaining a strong advocate for the poor of his archdiocese.[3] He remained a Benedictine and was known to continue to don the Benedictine habit instead of the red cardinal's regalia.[2][3]

His beatification was celebrated on 25 September 1988.[1][3]

Styles of
Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet
Reference styleHis Eminence
Spoken styleYour Eminence
Informal styleCardinal
SeeCatania

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Transcription

Life

Education

The late cardinal's incorrupt remains.

Giuseppe Dusmet was born in Palermo in 1818 as the first of six children to the nobles Luigi Dusmet and Maria dei Dragonetti. His house could be traced back to Flanders in Belgium.[2] Dusmet was baptized just hours after his birth in the archdiocesan cathedral as "Giuseppe Maria Giacomo Filippo Lupo Domenico Antonio Rosolino Melchiorre Francesco di Paola Benedetto Gennaro". He would be referred to as Melchiorre at home.[2][1] His siblings were:

  • Marianna
  • Carlo
  • Tommaso
  • Diomede
  • Raffaele

His two maternal uncles Vincenzo and Leopoldo Dragonetti were both monks from the Order of Saint Benedict.[3]

Dusmet was educated at the San Martino delle Scales convent in Monreale from 1824. It was around this time that the Dusmet's moved to Naples and his father made him return there in 1832 since he feared exposure in the convent would mean his son would harbor the desire to follow an ecclesial path. But Dusmet returned to the school in 1834 when his father realized that he could not change his son's vocation.[2] He would later teach philosophical and theological studies at Benedictine houses. He entered the Benedictines at Montecassino and chose the name "Benedetto" as his middle name after professing his formal vows on 15 August 1840 into the hands of Eugenio Villaraut.[1][2] In preparation for his profession he went on a retreat where the preacher was the future cardinal Michelangelo Celesia who became his lifelong friend.

Priesthood

He received the subdiaconate from Archbishop Domenico Balsamo on 11 October 1840 in the archiepiscopal palace and would later receive the diaconate from the same prelate in the same location on 15 November 1840. He was ordained to the priesthood on 18 September 1841 and had to receive a special dispensation to be ordained since he was under the canonical age requirement.[2][1]

In 1845 he began serving as an aide to the abbot Carlo Antonio Buglio and travelled with him as the latter made visitations to the Caltanissetta and Catania convents. The General Chapter in 1847 saw Buglio – and Dusmet accompanied him – moved to the San Flavio convent of Caltanissetta. Dusmet served as the prior for the Santi Severino e Sossio convent in Naples from 12 June 1850 until May 1852 (during the General Chapter at Montecassino) when he was named as the prior for the San Flavio convent in Caltanissetta.[2][3] He held that position until 1858 when the General Chapter at Perugia named him as the abbot for the San Nicolò l'Arena convent. But he no longer could hold that position as of 15 October 1866 after the Italian kingdom was established with the state confiscating all religious properties.[1]

Episcopate and cardinalate

He was appointed Archbishop of Catania in 1867 and he received his episcopal consecration on 10 March in the Basilica di San Paolo fuori le Mura in Rome from Antonio Saverio De Luca.[1] Pietro Giannelli and Giuseppe Maria Papardo del Parco served as co-consecrators. Dusmet issued his first pastoral letter to the faithful on 14 March. He served as a Council Father at the First Vatican Council that Pope Pius IX had convoked. Dusmet could not assume formal possession of his episcopal see since the new political situation with the kingdom saw the government approve bishops prior to formal enthronement. The government did not grant Dusmet the "exequatur" until 1878 when he was then enthroned in Catania. Dusmet was later elevated to the cardinalate in 1889 with Pope Leo XIII naming him as the Cardinal-Priest of Santa Pudenziana. He did not receive the red hat and title until a week after his elevation.[3]

Dusmet was close friends with the fellow Sicilian cardinal Giuseppe Guarino and he knew also Giuseppina Faro.[3] Dusmet was also awarded as a Grand Cross Knight of the Order of the Holy Sepulcher and was also awarded the Gold Medal for the Benefits of Public Health on 23 November 1889 in Rome due to his efforts in aiding the ill in cholera epidemics.[1]

Death

Dusmet died on 4 April 1894 at around 10:30 pm and was buried in the chapel of the Confraternita dei Bianci at a funeral on 6 April that started at 10:00 am and ended with his burial at 4:30 pm.[2] He had fallen ill at the beginning of 1894 and on 2 April left instructions not to be embalmed and to have a simple funeral. On 4 April attempts at artificial respiration were stopped when doctors said that Dusmet's death was imminent. His final words echoed that of Jesus Christ: "it is finished". His relics were later translated to the Catania Cathedral in May 1904.[1] Cardinal Alfredo Ildefonso Schuster – future Blessed and a Benedictine himself – unveiled a monument dedicated to Dusmet in Catania in 1935.

Beatification

Monument to Blessed Giuseppe Dusmet in Piazza San Francesco d'Assisi, Catania

The process for Dusmet's beatification opened in Catania in an informative phase of investigation that opened on 7 January 1931 and closed in 1937 prior theologians approving his spiritual writings on 5 February 1941.[2] Two additional process were held with one in Turin in 1936 and another one in Montecassino from 1935 to 1937. The formal introduction to his cause came under Pope Pius XII on 14 December 1948 which titled Dusmet as a Servant of God.[4] An apostolic process was later held in Catania from 1949 to 1951. The Congregation for Rites validated the two processes in Rome in a decree issued on 17 March 1954 and the cause passed three bodies for approval. The first was the antepreparatory congregation which assessed and approved the cause on 1 March 1960 with a second preparatory one meeting on 15 December 1964. The last general committee met and approved the cause not long after on 18 May 1965.

The confirmation of his life of heroic virtue on 15 July 1965 led to Pope Paul VI naming Dusmet as Venerable.[1]

Dusmet's beatification then depended on the papal confirmation of a miracle attributed to his intercession. One such case was investigated in Catania and sent to officials in Rome for additional assessment after the diocesan phase concluded on 7 December 1987. The Congregation for the Causes of Saints approved the diocesan investigation and validated it on 5 March 1988 with medical experts approving (unanimous vote) the healing's miraculous nature on 1 June 1988. Theologians met (unanimous approval) on 1 July 1988 and the cardinal and bishop members of the C.C.S. also affirmed the healing as a miracle on 19 July 1988.

Papal confirmation to this miracle came from Pope John Paul II on 1 September 1988 who presided over Dusmet's beatification in Saint Peter's Square on 25 September 1988.

Beatification miracle

The miracle leading to his canonization was the cure of Salvatore Consoli (18.02.1886–16.11.1971) who fell from a staircase aged 51 and contracted high fevers and acute spinal pain. He was hospitalized two months later while a month after was found to have a serious condition in which there was partial destruction of the spine. Consoli's condition worsened but appeals were made to Dusmet for healing – the pain ceased and his fever disappeared with the spine restoring itself. Consoli died from stomach cancer decades after.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Blessed Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet". Saints SQPN. 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Salvador Miranda. "Consistory of February 11, 1889 (XII)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "Blessed Giuseppe Benedetto Dusmet". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  4. ^ Index ac status causarum beatificationis servorum dei et canonizationis beatorum (in Latin). Typis polyglottis vaticanis. January 1953. p. 124.

External links

This page was last edited on 4 December 2023, at 04:06
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