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Pierre de Marca

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French bishop and historian (1594–1662)
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Pierre de Marca
Archbishop of Paris
Engraving byGérard Edelinck, 1696
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
ArchdioceseParis
SeeNotre-Dame de Paris
Installed5 June 1662
Term ended29 June 1662
PredecessorJean François Paul de Gondi
SuccessorHardouin de Péréfixe de Beaumont
Other postsArchbishop of Toulouse
Bishop of Couserans
Personal details
Born(1594-01-24)24 January 1594
Died29 June 1662(1662-06-29) (aged 68)
NationalityNavarrese
Spouse
Marguerite de Forgues
(m. 1618)
Alma materUniversity of Toulouse

Pierre de Marca (24 January 1594 – 29 June 1662) was a French bishop and historian, born atGan inBéarn of a family distinguished in the magistracy.[1]

Life

[edit]

His family was known among judicial circles in the 16th century, and maintained theRoman Catholic faith after the official introduction of the Reformed religion intoNavarre. After having studied law at theUniversity of Toulouse, he practised successfully at Pau. But he was ambitious, and turned to a larger sphere.

He ardently called for the armed intervention of KingLouis XIII inBéarn. He published his first writing,Discours d'un Béarnais, très fidèle sujet du roi, sur l'Édit du retablissement de la religion catholique dans tout le Béarn (1618), which supported Catholicism as the established state religion. After an easy military campaign of 1620, the possessions which had been taken by theProtestants were given back to the Roman Catholic Church. Marca supervised the restoration of properties to the Catholic Church.

During thesiege of La Rochelle, he performed a mission which brought him in touch withRichelieu, who shortly afterwards nominated him asintendant de justice in Béarn (1631). In 1639 Marca was summoned toParis to serve as counsellor of state. The following year, the question of the intervention of kings in the election of bishops having been raised in a pamphlet by Charles Hersent (Optatus Gallus de cavendo schismate, 1640), Marca defended what were then called the liberties of theGallican Church, in his celebrated treatiseDe concordia sacerdotii et imperii seu de libertatibus ecclesiae gallicanae (Paris, 1641). He was soon rewarded for this service. He was widowed around that time, and decided to enter the clerical orders.

Although Marca had not yet taken even the minor holy orders, he was nominated asbishop of Couserans (Gascony) by the king on 28 December 1641. ButPope Urban VIII refused to give his sanction. It was only after Marca had formally denied those propositions contained inDe concordia which were displeasing toRome that he was proclaimed in the consistory (13 January 1648).

During this time, and until 1651, he served as governor of the province ofCatalonia, then occupied by the French. After theTreaty of the Pyrenees, Marca was sent to direct the conference that had been formed to fix the limits ofRoussillon, which had just been ceded to France (1660).

Marca allied withCardinal Mazarin, and remained faithful to him even during theFronde. As a recompense, he was nominatedarchbishop of Toulouse (28 May 1652). He had to wait for the bulls of investiture until 23 March 1654.

It was difficult for him to please both pope and king. In the struggle against theJansenists, Marca used all the influence he had with the clergy to secure the passage of the apostolic constitution of 31 March 1653 (Relation de ce qui s'est fait depuis 1653 dans les assemblées des évêques au sujet des cinq propositions, 1657). But, in the rebellion raised byCardinal de Retz,archbishop of Paris, against the king, he took the part of the king against the pope.

Michel Le Tellier having ordered him to refute a thesis of the college of Clermont on theinfallibility of the pope, Marca wrote a treatise which was most Gallican in its ideas, but refused to publish it for fear of drawing down the indignation of Rome. These tactics were successful. When Retz, weary of a struggle without definite results, resigned the archbishopric, Marca became his successor (26 February 1662). He did not derive much profit from this new favor, as he died in Paris on the following 29 June, without his nomination having been sanctioned by the pope.

When very young Marca had shown an interest in the history of his native land. In 1617, at the age of twenty-three, he had set to work looking through archives, copying charters, and corresponding with the principal men of learning of his time, the brothers Dupuy,André Duchesne and Jean Besly, whom he visited inPoitou. HisHistoire de Béarn was published at Paris in 1640. It was not so well received at the time as hisDe concordia, but has been more appreciated by posterity. If Marca's criticism is too often undecided, both in the ancient epochs, where he supports the text by a certain amount of guesswork and in certain points where he touches on religion, yet he always gives the text correctly. A number of chapters end with an interesting collection of charters. It is to be regretted that this incomplete work does not go beyond 1300.

During his long stay in Catalonia, Marca conducted research to support a geographical and historical study of this province, which was bound to France by so many political and literary associations.Etienne Baluze, who became his secretary in 1656, helped him with the work and finished it, adding appendices and publishing the whole in 1688 under the titleMarca hispanica.

Marca married Marguerite de Forgues on 4 June 1618. They had one son and three daughters together. Their son Galactoire was elected as president of the parliament of Navarre; he died on 10 February 1689.

Two biographies of Marca were written inLatin by intimate friends. Baluze, his secretary, wroteEpistola ad Samuelem Sorbierium, de vita, gestis et scriptis Petri de Marca, Paris, 1663. His cousin, Paul de Faget, published a biography of the bishop at the beginning of a collection of Marca's theological pamphlets, first published by Faget in 1668. This collection contained four of Marca's treatises on theEucharist, the sacrifice of theMass, the erection of the patriarchate ofConstantinople (in Latin), and the sacrament of the Eucharist (inFrench). It was supposed to contain heretical propositions and caused a good deal of scandal. Baluze and Faget criticized each other in an effort to defend the memory of the prelate.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913)."Pierre de Marca" .Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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Preceded byArchbishop of Paris
1662–1664
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