Federico Visconti was born in Milan on 4 December 1617, to count Carlo of the House of Visconti, last of six brothers. He studied in the college of Brera in Milan and later he was admitted at the Collegio Borromeo in Pavia and graduated in law at the University of Bologna. Advised by his uncle Francesco Borromeo, bishop of Cremona, he entered in the clerical state and moved to Rome. However he soon returned to Milan, where he served as diocesan priest. In 1644 he became a lawyer,[1] from 1646 to 1662 he was primicerio (third position of the chapter of the Cathedral of Milan),[2] from 1651 to 1652 prefect of Biblioteca Ambrosiana.
Federico Visconti was a typical bishop shaped by the Counter-Reformation. He took very seriously his service, condemned the licentious uses of the population and fought the Protestantism in Valtellina, erecting a sanctuary in Lezzeno and forbidding almost any contact of the population with the Protestant soldiers who passed throughout North Italy.
Following the example of Saint Charles Borromeo, he visited, from 1682 to 1689, all the 67 pieves which composed the large diocese,[5] and in September 1687 he celebrated the 37th diocesan synod.
Federico Visconti maintained good relations with the Spanish government (who ruled the Duchy of Milan), and with this aim he waived the right of asylum in the churches for the deserters, and he asked the population to support with offerings the Battle of Vienna against the Ottoman Empire.[3]
He participated in the Conclaves of 1689 and 1691, but he was forced due to an illness to leave the Conclave before the election of the pope.[1] He died in Milan on 7 January 1693, and his remains were buried in the north nave of the Cathedral of Milan.
^Monzio Compagnoni, Giordano (1992). "Primicerio". Dizionario della Chiesa Ambrosiana (in Italian). Vol. 5. Milano: NED. pp. 2954–7. ISBN88-7023-102-X.
^ abcCazzani, Eugenio (1996). Vescovi e arcivescovi di Milano (in Italian). Milano: Massimo. pp. 242–244. ISBN88-7030-891-X.