Tournon was born of a noble
Savoyard family at
Turin on 21 December 1668; died in confinement at
Macau, 8 June 1710. Tournon studied at the Propaganda at Rome, and later taught there. After graduating in canon and civil law; he went to Rome where he gained the esteem of
Clement XI, who on 5 December 1701, appointed him
legate a latere to the
East Indies and the
Qing Empire of China. The purpose of this legation was to establish harmony among the missionaries there; to provide for the needs of these extensive missions; to report to the Holy See on the general state of the missions, and the labours of the missionaries and to enforce the decision of the
Holy Office against the further toleration of the so-called
Chinese rites among the native Christians. In particular, he was sent to China to settle the question of whether Confucianism was an ethic system or a religion, thereby confirming if Christians could observe Confucian rituals. These rites consisted chiefly in offering sacrifices to
Confucius and the ancestors, and in using the Chinese names
Tiān (heaven) and
Shàngdì (supreme emperor) for the God of the Christians. On 27 December 1701, the Pope consecrated Tournon bishop in the Vatican Basilica, with the title of
Patriarch of Antioch. The
Kangxi Emperor received him kindly at first, but upon hearing that he came to abolish the Chinese rites among the native Christians, he demanded from all missionaries on pain of immediate expulsion a promise to retain these rites. Many missionaries left China at this time. At Rome, the Holy Office had meanwhile
decided against the rites on 20 November 1704, and being acquainted with this decision, the legate issued a decree at
Nanjing on 25 January 1707, obliging the missionaries under pain of
excommunication latae sententiae to abolish these rites. Hereupon, the Kangxi Emperor ordered Tournon to be imprisoned at Macau and sent some Jesuit missionaries to Rome to protest against the decree. Tournon died in prison, shortly after being informed that he had been created cardinal on 1 August 1707. Upon the announcement of his death at Rome, Clement XI highly praised him for his courage and loyalty to the Holy See and ordered the Holy Office to issue a Decree (25 September 1710) approving the acts of the legate. Tournon's remains were brought to Rome by his successor, Carlo Ambrogio Mezzabarba, and buried in the church of the
Propaganda Fide on 27 September 1723. == See also ==