(Redirected from Albert of Jerusalem)'Albert Avogadro' (
1149 –
September 14,
1214), was a
Canon lawyer who served as
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem from
1204 until his death.
Born in
Parma, Albert was educated in
theology and law and served as Bishop of
Bobbio until 1184, when he was appointed Bishop of
Vercelli. He served the
Papacy as a mediator and diplomat between
Pope Clement III and
Frederick Barbarossa. He served as
papal legate in 1199 and helped end the war between Parma and
Piacenza.
In 1204 he was named Patriarch of Jerusalem by
Pope Innocent III, whom he also served as papal legate in the
Holy Land. As Patriarch he helped found the
Carmelite order around 1209 in particular by his composition of what came to be the Carmelite Rule, otherwise known as the
Rule of St. Albert. Additionally he mediated disputes between the
Kingdom of Jerusalem and the
Kingdom of Cyprus, as well as between the
Knights Templar and the
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. In 1214, he had been invited to the
Fourth Lateran Council, but was
assassinated in
Acre on the
Feast of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross by a disgruntled cleric. He is regarded as a
saint by the Carmelites and as "
blessed" by the
Roman Catholic Church.
He was succeeded by
Raoul of Merencourt.
External links
★
Catholic Encyclopedia
★
Carmelite Identity in the Rule of St. Albert
★
Carmelite Vocation