named bishop Nîmesin commendam on 1 April 1454, by transfer of a cousin, Jean du Châtel, to Carcassonne. The commission was revoked on 19 November 1460;[5]
In the conclave of 4–8 April 1455,[6] Coëtivy was opposed to the election of Basilios Bessarion, for his Greek background and apparently incomplete conversion to Roman Catholicism.[7]
On 8 September 1455, Cardinal Coëtivy was given the crusader's cross by Pope Calixtus personally, in a solemn ceremony in St. Peter's Basilica. He was sent as a pontifical legate to King Charles VII of France, departing Rome on 17 September 1455.[8] He was charged by Pope Calixtus III with persuading Charles set out on the crusade against the Turks.[9] He returned to Rome on 6 May 1458.[10]
On 3 June 1455, Pope Calixtus III canonized the Dominican preacher Vincent Ferrer. His remains, in the cathedral in Vannes, Brittany, were inspected on 29 June 1455, and found to be "uncorrupted". Pope Calixtus sent Cardinal Alain as his legate to France; he departed Rome on 17 September 1455.[11] He was in Vannes, to preside over the inauguration of the cult of the new saint, on 2–4 June 1456, in the presence of the cardinal and fifteen bishops.[12]
made bishop-administrator of Dol, 18 June 1456. He did not reside in Dol, but instead appointed the bishop of Alet, Anbroise de Camerato, as his coadjutor.[13] He returned to Rome on 6 May 1458.[14] He resigned on 7 January 1460, expecting to be replaced by Bishop Gabriel du Châtel of Uzès, but in 1462 the transfer was revoked and Coëtivy resumed the administration.[15]
as cardinal, made bishop of Palestrina on 7 June 1465, then of Sabina on 11 December 1472;
made (honorary?) abbot of the abbey of Redon in 1468.
He also held the benefices of the parish of Marsac, which he resigned at the request of Pierre II de Bretagne on 4 September 1451. It was he who helped establish the parish of Saint-Yves-des-Bretons in Rome. Pope Nicholas V ceded Saint-André-de-Mortaraziis to the Breton nation, who reconsecrated it in honor of saint Yves.[1]
He died in Rome, at his palace at the Campo de' Fiori, on 3 May 1474, at the age of 69. He was buried in Rome in his titular church. His monument at Santa Prassede[16] was executed by Andrea Bregno.
^Ludwig von Pastor, The History of the Popes: From the Close of the Middle Ages, Volume 2 (London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Company, 1891), p. 349-350.
^Tomb inscription: Lorenzo Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiese e d'altri edifici di Roma,(in Latin and Italian), Vol. 2 (Roma: Bencini 1873), p. 501.
Bibliography
Albanès, Joseph Hyacinthe (completed, annotated and published by Chevalier Ulysse), Gallia christiana novissima. Histoire des archevêchés, évêques et abbayes de France d'après les documents authentiques recueillis dans les registres du Vatican et les archives locales.
Catel, Guillaume de. Histoire de Languedoc
Charvet, Gratien (1870). La première maison d'Uzès, étude historique et généalogique de la première maison d'Uzès suivi du catalogue analytique des évêques d'Uzès (Alais: J. Martin 1870; Nîmes, edited by Lacour-Ollé, 2002 reissue) [pp. 120–122].
De la Roque, Louis. Armorial de Languedoc
Eubel, Conradus, ed. (1914). Hierarchia catholica (in Latin). Vol. 2 (second ed.). Münster: Libreria Regensbergiana.
Germer-Durand, Eugène, Le Prieuré et le Pont de Saint-Nicolas-de-Campagnac
Labande, Léon-Honoré (1920). Avignon au xve siècle: Légation de Charles de Bourbon et du cardinal Julien de la Rovère.(in French). Monaco, 1920. pp. 71-96