Marcantonio Bragadin was born in
Venice in 1591 (other sources indicate 1590 or 1594). His grandfather was
Marco Antonio Bragadin, famous for having been
flayed alive after the
Ottoman conquest of
Famagusta in 1571. His father, Antonio, had been one of the leaders of the
Council of Ten in 1607. Marcantonio completed his studies earning a
doctorate in utroque iure. He initially took the political career in the
Republic of Venice, but already in 1624 moved to
Rome and became an ecclesiastic: on 28 September 1626 he was ordained
priest. He took up a career in the administration of the
Papal States: on 17 March 1627 he became
referendary of the Tribunals of the
Apostolic Signature, in April to December 1627 he was governor of
Fabriano, then in 1628 governor of
Sabina and later of
Narni. On 3 December 1630 Bragadin was appointed
Bishop of Crema, which was a Venetian inland province. The
episcopal consecration followed on 21 December in the
Sistine Chapel by the hands of
Antonio Marcello Barberini. Already on 12 January 1633 Bragadin was moved to the
Diocese of Ceneda, nearer to Venice. In Ceneda he succeeded to keep exempt the town from the taxation over the near
Treviso, and in 1634 he issued a ban prohibiting the insults to the Jews during the processions. On 3 October 1639 he was promoted
bishop of Vicenza. On 16 December 1641 he was created
Cardinal priest with the title of
Santi Nereo e Achilleo, which was later, on 19 November 1646, modified in the title of
San Marco, the usual title of the most prominent Venetian Cardinal in Rome. He participated to the
Papal conclave, 1644. As bishop of Vicenza, he held two
synods in May 1647 and April 1642. According to a contemporary, his life was exemplar and pure. A few months after the
Papal conclave, 1655, he resigned as bishop of Vicenza in order to stay in Rome to support the politic of the
Republic of Venice, of which he always remained a loyal servant. In particular during the
Fifth Ottoman-Venetian War he persuaded the Pope to exhort various Western European nations to send men, ships and supplies to defend
Crete. In exchange to this effort the Pope requested and obtained, due to mediation of Bragadin, the re-admission in 1657 of the
Jesuits in Venice from where they had been expelled in 1606 for effect of the
Venetian Interdict. Marcantonio Bragadin died in Rome on 28 March 1658 and was buried in the
Basilica di San Marco. ==Episcopal succession==