Bernardin Gantin

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Cardinal Bernardin Gantin
Cardinal Bernardin Gantin
Styles of
Bernardin Cardinal Gantin
Reference style His Eminence
Spoken style Your Eminence
Informal style Cardinal
See Palestrina (suburbicarian)

Bernardin Cardinal Gantin (8 May 192213 May 2008) was a Beninese cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was the highest-ranking black African in the history of the Catholic Church, though three early Popes came from the Mediterranean shores of the African landmass. Born in Toffo, Benin, his name means tree of iron (gan, tree and tin, iron), which explains his coat of arms.

He entered the minor seminary at age 14 in Benin, and achieved priesthood in 1951 under Archbishop Louis Parisot. In 1953 he was sent to Rome to study theology and Canon law. He was consecrated bishop of Tipasa of Mauritania and Auxiliary of Cotonou in 1957 by Cardinal Eugène-Gabriel-Gervais-Laurent Tisserant, to whose then post of Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals he would one day succeed. In 1960, Pope John XXIII appointed him Archbishop of Cotonou. After he attended the Second Vatican Council, Pope Paul VI appointed him to the Roman Curia and made him a Cardinal in the consistory of 1977. He was named President of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum by Pope John Paul I, the only administrative appointment of that month-long papacy. During the Conclave following John Paul I's death, Cardinal Gantin was thought to be one of the papabili, those cardinals who are considered favorites to be elected pope.

Under Pope John Paul II he headed the Congregation for Bishops, supervising episcopal appointments throughout the world, from 1984 to 1998. Cardinal Bishop of the suburbicarian diocese of Palestrina since 1986, he was Dean of the College of Cardinals from 1993 to 2002 when he retired to move home to Benin. (He added the suburbicarian diocese of Ostia when he became dean and relinquished it when he retired.) Because he turned 80 on May 8, 2002, Cardinal Gantin was not eligible to vote in the 2005 Papal Election.

Gantin died in Paris on 13 May 2008, five days after his 86th birthday.[1] The Beninese government declared three days of mourning for him, beginning on 14 May.[2]

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Roman Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Louis Parisot
Archbishop of Cotonou
1960 – 1971
Succeeded by
Christophe Adimou
Preceded by
Agnelo Cardinal Rossi
Dean of the College of Cardinals
1993 – 2002
Succeeded by
Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger
(Pope Benedict XVI)
Preceded by
Sebastino Cardinal Baggio
Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops
April 8, 1984June 25, 1988
Succeeded by
Lucas Cardinal Moreira Neves
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