He has roots in two important Venetian noble families -
Loredan and
Balbi. He was ordained a priest in 1768. His uncle, the
Bishop of Pula, Giovanni Andrea Balbi, appointed him a canon scholastic, prosinodal examiner and
inquisitor in his diocese. In 1795 he received his
doctorate in
theology from the
University of Padua, and in the same year
Pope Pius VI appointed him as
Bishop of Novigrad. Sudden political changes caused by the
Napoleonic Wars soon followed: the collapse of the
Venetian Republic in 1797, a brief change in Austrian and French rule, and the eventual establishment of Austrian rule in
Istria after the
Congress of Vienna in 1815. Although he did not get involved in the political events of the time,
Napoleon's authorities detained him for 10 months in
Venice after a trial, where he experienced all sorts of humiliations. After returning to the seat, he was for a time the only
bishop in
Istria and, under the authority of the
Holy See, he visited the
dioceses of Poreč and Pula. At the suggestion of
Holy Roman Emperor Francis I,
Pope Leo XII abolished the
Diocese of Novigrad in 1828, which became part of the
Diocese of Trieste, but, according to the Pope's order, only after Teodoro Loredan Balbi's death. As a bishop, according to his records, he sent three relations to the Holy See, in 1798, 1802 and 1807, but as they were not properly worded, the secretariat of the Congregation received them as letters. In them he reported that in the diocese there were one cathedral and one choir church, 17 parishes, and many fraternities; that he opened a seminary and a pawnshop, founded a canonry of theologians and penitents, etc. The last bishop of Novigrad was buried in the church of St. Agatha in Novigrad, and his remains were transferred in 1852 to the bishop's tomb in the cathedral. == References ==