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Pietro Ottoboni, the last cardinal-nephew
Pietro Ottoboni, the last cardinal-nephew

A cardinal-nephew is a cardinal elevated by a pope who is his relative. The practice of creating cardinal-nephews originated in the Middle Ages and reached its apex during the 16th and 17th centuries. It is central to the etymology of the word nepotism , which appeared in the English language circa 1670. A pope without a cardinal-nephew was the exception from the Avignon Papacy until Innocent XII banned the practice with his 1692 anti-nepotism papal bull Romanum decet Pontificem . From 1566 until 1692, a cardinal-nephew held the curial office of Superintendent of the Ecclesiastical State. The curial office as well as the institution of the cardinal-nephew declined as the power of the Cardinal Secretary of State increased and the temporal power of popes decreased in the 17th and 18th centuries. Notable cardinal-nephews include popes such as Julius II, as well as the saints Charles Borromeo and Guarinus of Palestrina. ( Full article... )

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