Type: | Cardinal |
Honorific Prefix: | His Eminence |
Cardinal | |
Cardinal: | 1205 |
Created Cardinal By: | Innocent III |
Death Place: | Monte Cassino |
Buried: | Monte Cassino |
Birth Place: | Guimarães, Kingdom of Portugal |
Church: | Roman Catholic |
Coat Of Arms: | Coat of arms of Paio Galvão.svg |
Death Date: | 30 January |
Nationality: | Portuguese |
Pelagio Galvani[1] (c. 1165 – 30 January 1230,[2] Portuguese: Latin: Pelagius) was a Leonese[3] cardinal, and canon lawyer.[4] He became a papal legate and leader of the Fifth Crusade.
Born at Guimarães, his early life is little known. It is repeatedly claimed that he entered the Order of Saint Benedict but this is not proven.[5] Pope Innocent III created him cardinal-deacon of Santa Lucia in Septisolio around 1206.[6] Later, he was promoted to the rank of cardinal-priest of S. Cecilia (probably on 2 April 1211[7]), and finally opted for the suburbicarian see of Albano in the spring of 1213. He subscribed the papal bulls between 4 May 1207 and 26 January 1230. He was sent on a diplomatic mission to Constantinople in 1213.[8] During this two-year mission he attempted to close Orthodox churches and imprison the clergy, but this caused such domestic upset that Henry of Flanders, the Latin Emperor of Constantinople, reversed his actions which had caused the "tempest which held the city of Constantine in its grip", as noted a contemporary historian.[9] Three years later he was elected Latin Patriarch of Antioch but his election was not ratified by the Holy See. He was dispatched in 1218 by Pope Honorius III to lead the Fifth Crusade at Damietta in Egypt, and made a poor strategic decision in turning down favourable peace offers made by the sultan al-Kamil. During his absence, the see of Albano was administer by Thomas of Capua.
He became dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals at the election to the papacy of Cardinal Ugolino Conti, who became Pope Gregory IX, on 19 March 1227.[10] He was one of the leaders of the papal army in 1229–1230 during the War of the Keys against the Emperor Frederick II.[11] He died at Monte Cassino and was buried there.