RELIGIOUS FIGURE

António Marto

1947 - Today

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António Augusto dos Santos Marto GCIH (Portuguese pronunciation: [ɐ̃ˈtɔniu ˈmaɾtu]; born 5 May 1947) is a Portuguese prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as the Bishop of Leiria-Fátima from 2006 to 2022. Pope Francis elevated him to cardinal on 28 June 2018. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. António Marto is the 1,917th most popular religious figure (up from 2,418th in 2019), the 232nd most popular biography from Portugal (up from 305th in 2019) and the 15th most popular Portuguese Religious Figure.

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Among RELIGIOUS FIGURES

Among religious figures, António Marto ranks 1,917 out of 3,187Before him are Caspar Schwenckfeld, Thomas Byles, Raymond Franz, Crescenzio Sepe, Diego Laynez, and Sobekemsaf II. After him are Joseph Vaz, Hans Tausen, George Pell, Hyacinth, Sergio Sebastiani, and Ignatius Joseph III Yonan.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1947, António Marto ranks 267Before him are Soe Win, Mitch Mitchell, Peter Strauss, Harry Redknapp, Alan Dale, and Ray Wise. After him are Stefan Persson, Hugh Keays-Byrne, Ron Rivest, Kailash Purryag, Deborah Lipstadt, and Viktor Klima.

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In Portugal

Among people born in Portugal, António Marto ranks 232 out of 633Before him are Francisco Serrão (1500), Carlos do Carmo (1939), Leonor Teles (1350), Eleanor of Portugal, Queen of Denmark (1211), Nuno Gomes (1976), and Carlos Seixas (1704). After him are Manuel Teixeira Gomes (1860), Manuel Bento (1948), Bento de Góis (1562), António José de Almeida (1866), Alexandre Herculano (1810), and Fernando I, Duke of Braganza (1403).

Among RELIGIOUS FIGURES In Portugal

Among religious figures born in Portugal, António Marto ranks 19Before him are Pelagio Galvani (1165), John de Britto (1647), Manuel Clemente (1948), Manuel Monteiro de Castro (1938), António de Andrade (1580), John of Biclaro (540), José Policarpo (1936), Simão Rodrigues (1510), Manuel Gonçalves Cerejeira (1888), and António Ribeiro (1928). After him are James of Portugal (1433), and José Tolentino de Mendonça (1965).