Agostino Centurione Explained

Order:110th Doge of the Republic of Genoa
Term Start1:August 23, 1650
Term End1:August 23, 1652
Predecessor1:Giacomo De Franchi Toso
Successor1:Gerolamo De Franchi Toso
Birth Date:November 25, 1584
Birth Place:Genoa, Republic of Genoa
Death Date:December 7, 1657
Death Place:Genoa, Republic of Genoa

Agostino Centurione (Genoa, 25 November 1584 - Genoa, 7 December 1657) was the 110th Doge of the Republic of Genoa and king of Corsica.

Biography

His dogal mandate is remembered in the annals for the strong work of opposition and crushing of the ever more numerous gangs of brigands led, among others, also by exited Genoese patricians. Among the public works there is the large wall of the moat of San Tommaso useful for supplying water to the Lagaccio powder factory. After the end of the Dogate on 23 August 1652, he was appointed perpetual procurator, later dean of the Inquisitors of State and, in January 1653, dean of the war magistrate until 1654. In that year he resigned from office to definitively leave public life for religious life, a choice that his father had already taken as an elder entering the Barnabites order. After initial attempts to dissuade him from the action by his sister Vittoria, Agostino Centurione entered the Society of Jesus, carrying out his novitiate in Chieri. Centurione died in Genoa on December 7, 1657.

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