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Stefano Pendinelli

Stefano Argercolo de Pendinellis
Archbishop of Otranto
1451–1480
Stephanus de Pendinellis.jpg
The portrait of Pendinelli hanging in the Chiesa dell'Assunta della Chiesa Matrice, Galatina
Church Roman Catholic Church
Other posts Bishop of Nardò (1436–1451)
Personal details
Born 1403
Galatina, Italy
Died August 11, 1480 (aged 76–77)
Otranto, Italy
Sainthood
Beatified December 14, 1771
by Pope Clement XIV
Canonized May 12, 2013
by Pope Francis

Stefano Pendinelli (also Stefano Argercolo de Pendinellis; 1403 – August 11, 1480) was the Roman Catholic archbishop of Otranto, Italy. He was slain in 1480, along with all his priests, by the Ottoman force that invaded Otranto. He is among the 813 martyrs of Otranto canonized by Pope Francis in 2013.

Stefano Argercolo de Pendinellis was born in 1403 in Galatina and studied in Nardò, where he became bishop on February 8, 1436 shortly after the death of his uncle, a Franciscan friar. In 1451, he was appointed archbishop of Otranto. He assumed the archbishopric on June 16.

On July 28, 1480 an Ottoman force commanded by Gedik Ahmed Pasha, consisting of 90 galleys, 40 galiots and other ships carrying a total of around 150 crew and 18,000 troops, landed beneath the walls of Otranto. The city strongly resisted the Ottoman assaults, but the garrison was unable to resist the bombardment for long. The garrison and all the townsfolk thus abandoned the main part of the city on July 29, retreating into the citadel while the Ottomans began bombarding the neighboring houses.

When Gedik Ahmed asked the defenders to surrender, they refused, and so the Ottoman artillery resumed the bombardment. On August 11, after a 15-day siege, Gedik Ahmed ordered the final assault, which broke through the defences and captured the citadel. In the massacre which followed, all men over 15 years old were killed and all the women and children were enslaved. According to some historical accounts, a total of 12,000 were killed and 5,000 enslaved, including victims from the territories of the Salentine peninsula around the city.

Some survivors and the city's clergy took refuge in the cathedral to pray with the elderly Archbishop Pendinelli. Gedik Ahmed ordered them to convert to Islam, but received a flat refusal and so broke into the cathedral with his men and killed all those inside. This included Pendinelli, who encouraged the survivors to turn to God at the point of death.

Accounts of means of his martyrdom differ. One account says that he was skewered and cut to pieces with scimitars before having his head cut off, put on a pike and carried around the city. Another account, given by Antonio de Ferrariis in his work De situ Japigiae, states that the archbishop, "after having heartened the population the previous day by the sacrament of the Eucharist, climbed from the crypt of the cathedral into the choir, and there, a martyr of the faith in Christ and dressed in ecclesiastical vestments, was murdered on his cathedra by the Turks, when they broke into the church." Yet another source claims that he was sawn in half with a wooden saw.


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