Richard Olivier de Longueil (1406–1470) (called the Cardinal of Coutances or the Cardinal of Eu) was a French Roman Catholic bishop and cardinal.
Biography
Richard Olivier de Longueil was born in Lisieux on 18 December 1406, the son of Guillaume III de Longueil, sieur of Eu, and his second wife, Catherine de Bourguenole.[1] His family was an old noble family from Normandy.[1]
On 15 August 1461 he attended the coronation of Louis XI of France and shortly thereafter resigned as president of the Chambres des comptes.[1]
Louis XI revoked the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges and Cardinal Longueil was part of a delegation (including Jean Jouffroy, Bishop of Arras) sent to inform the pope.[1] They arrived in Rome on 12 March 1462, were received by the pope on 14 March and the ceremony recognizing the abrogation of the Pragmatic Sanction took place in a consistory held on 16 March.[1] In that same consistory, Longueil was given the titular church of Sant'Eusebio.[1]
Cardinal Longueil now fixed his residence in Rome and became a close adviser of the pope.[1] As a result of his having left France, on 24 May 1463 the Conseil du Roi issued an order stopping all his benefices.[1]
He died in Sutri on 19 August 1470. He was buried in St Mark's Basilica.[1] His death was commemorated in Rouen Cathedral on 1 August until the time of the French Revolution.[1]