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Melchior Klesl (19 February 1552 – 18 September 1630) was an Austrian statesman and cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church during the time of the Counter-Reformation. He was minister-favourite of King and Emperor Matthias (1609-1618) and a leading advocate for peace between the empire's different confessional leagues before the ...
- 1624–1630
- Alessandro d'Este
19 de mar. de 2024 · Melchior Klesl was an Austrian statesman, bishop of Vienna and later a cardinal, who tried to promote religious toleration during the Counter-Reformation in Austria. Converted from Protestantism by the Jesuits, he became an outstanding preacher and served as bishop of Vienna from the 1590s.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Melchior Kardinal Khlesl, auch Klesl und Klesel [1] (* 19. Februar 1552 in Wien; † 18. September 1630 in Wiener Neustadt) war Bischof von Wien von 1602 bis 1630, Verwalter des Bistums Wiener Neustadt von 1588 bis 1630, Günstling-Minister des Kaisers Matthias und Friedenspolitiker vor dem Dreißigjährigen Krieg.
Melchior Klesl o Khlesl o Klesel (nacido el 15 de febrero de 1552 en Viena en Austria y murió el 18 de septiembre de 1630 en Wiener Neustadt), es un cardenal austríaco de la Iglesia Católica de la XVII ª siglo, nombrado por el Papa Pablo V. Consejero influyente del emperador Matías I er, cayó en desgracia cuando Fernando II llegó al poder.
Melchior Klesl (a veces Khlesl , raramente Cleselius ) (19 de febrero de 1552 - 18 de septiembre de 1630) fue un estadista austriaco y cardenal de la iglesia católica romana durante la época de la Contrarreforma . Klesl fue nombrado obispo de Viena en 1598 y elevado a cardenal en 1616.
Two Angels in Sant'Agostino. The Bust of Cardinal Melchior Klesl is a life-size marble bust of the seventeenth-century cardinal by Gianlorenzo Bernini and his assistants, notably Giuliano Finelli. It was probably executed in 1626.
Melchior Klesl. (1552—1630) Quick Reference. (1552–1630), Austrian bishop and statesman, born in Vienna, the son of a Protestant baker. He converted to Catholicism, and, after completing his education in Vienna and Ingolstadt, was appointed chancellor ... From: Klesl, Melchior in The Oxford Dictionary of the Renaissance »