Pope Leo X had initially been willing…
March 1514 CE
Pope Leo X had initially been willing to grant the title of Christianissimus Rex (Most Christian King) to Henry, after Francis had automatically forfeited the title by waging war on the Pope.
However, Henry's making peace with France in 1514 probably ends these hopes.
Bainbridge dies on July 14, 1514, having been poisoned by one of his own chaplains, Rinaldo de Modena.
Rinaldo is imprisoned and confesses to the crime.
He also implicates Silvester de Giglis, at this time Bishop of Worcester, as the instigator of the plot.
De Giglis is the resident English ambassador at Rome, and regarded Bainbridge as a threat to his position: he also has sufficient power and influence to make Rinaldo retract his confession and have him killed in prison.
Richard Pace and John Clerk, the cardinal's executors, are eager to prosecute De Giglis, but he maintains that the priest was a madman whom he had dismissed from his own service some years before in England, and his defense is accepted as sufficient.
Bainbridge is buried in the chapel of St Thomas of Canterbury at the English hospice in Rome, which will later become the Venerable English College.