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cardinali

Cardinali is the Italian plural form of cardinal, a senior rank within the Catholic Church. In common usage, cardinale refers to a member of the College of Cardinals, the body of senior church officials who advise the pope and, in the event of a papal vacancy, elect a new pope. The term can therefore denote individual cardinals or the collective body itself.

The College of Cardinals is traditionally divided into three ranks: cardinal bishops, cardinal priests, and cardinal

Creation and duties of cardinals are at the discretion of the pope. Cardinals participate in governing the

Beyond ecclesiastical contexts, cardinali can also refer to cardinal virtues in Italian usage when paired with

deacons.
Cardinal
bishops
are
typically
the
senior
prelatures,
often
holding
suburban
Roman
sees.
Cardinal
priests
are
bishops
of
important
dioceses
worldwide
who
are
assigned
a
“title”
church
in
Rome.
Cardinal
deacons
are
usually
officials
of
the
Roman
Curia
or
bishops
who
hold
the
rank
of
deacon.
Most
cardinals
are
bishops,
but
the
modern
practice
has
from
time
to
time
included
clerics
who
are
priests
or
hold
other
roles
within
the
Church.
Church
through
various
congregations
and,
most
prominently,
they
elect
the
pope
in
a
conclave,
provided
they
are
under
the
age
of
80
at
the
time
of
the
papal
vacancy.
The
College
of
Cardinals
has
played
a
central
role
in
papal
elections
since
the
medieval
period
and
remains
a
key
instrument
of
governance
and
continuity
within
the
Holy
See.
appropriate
nouns
(for
example
virtù
cardinali),
or
to
Italian
family
names.
The
term
thus
spans
ecclesiastical,
linguistic,
and
onomastic
domains.