Antoine Philibert Albert Bailly
Antoine Philibert Albert Bailly B.  | |
|---|---|
| Bishop of Aosta | |
| Church | Roman Catholic Church | 
| See | Diocese of Tarentaise | 
| In office | 1659–1691 | 
| Predecessor | Philibert Milliet de Faverges C.R.L. | 
| Successor | Alexandre Lambert de Soyrier | 
| Orders | |
| Ordination | 1635 | 
| Consecration | March 9, 1659 by Archbishop Giulio Cesare Bergera  | 
| Personal details | |
| Born | 1 March 1605 Grésy-sur-Aix, FR  | 
| Died | 3 April 1691 (aged 86) Aosta, IT  | 
| Nationality | Italian | 
| Denomination | Roman Catholic Church | 
| Occupation | Bishop | 
| Profession | priest | 
| Styles of Antoine Philibert Albert Bailly  | |
|---|---|
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| Reference style | His Excellency | 
| Spoken style | Your Excellency | 
| Religious style | Bishop | 
Antoine Philibert Albert Bailly (1 March 1605 – 3 April 1691) was a Savoyard clergyman who was bishop of Aosta from 1659 until his death.
Biography
Born in 1605 to Barthélémy Balli and Béatrix de Loziano,[1] he studied with the Jesuites of Chambéry and after he moved to Turin, where he became secretary of Victor Amadeus I, Duke of Savoy. He became a Barnabite priest in 1633.
He was ordained as a bishop in March 1659.
Although not a native of the Aosta Valley, Bailly remains, as a devoted defender of local freedoms, a cultural and historical figure of the valley. He is considered by Lin Colliard as "the best and the most prolific Valdôtain writer of the time" and Rosanna Gorris[2] stated that "the most important writer of Valdôtain 17th century literature is certainly Albert Bailly, bishop of Aosta".
References
- ^ Archives de Savoie, Registre paroissiaux: baptêmes (1597-1634) BM - cote 4E1200 vue 17. His surname was initially written Bally, and then Bailly, and first name Albert was adopted only when he became a bishop. It is this later form which is used by modern authors.
 - ^ Dipartimento di Lingue e Letterature Straniere - Rosanna Gorris
 
Bibliography
- J.-M. Albini (1865). Memoire historique sur Philibert-Albert Bally Evêque d'Aoste et Comte de Cogne au dix-septième siècle (in French). Turin: Imprimerie de Seb. Franco et fils.
 
External links
- Profile of Mons. Bailly www.catholic-hierarchy.org [self-published]
 - Official Page of diocese of Aosta
 
