Apostolic Nunciature to Poland
The Apostolic Nuncio to Poland is one of the oldest nuncios, appointed by the Pope as apostolic representative to the Roman Catholic Church in Poland. Three nuncios to Poland went on to be elected pope. Three were cardinals at the time of their appointment as nuncio, and the rest—with the sole exception of Filippo Cortesi—were elevated afterwards.
List
To the Kingdom of Poland
- Luigi Lippomano
- Camillo Mentovato
- Berardo Bongiovanni
- Giovanni Francesco Commendone
- Giulio Ruggiero
To the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
- Vincenzo Portico
- Vincenzo Lauro
- Giovanni Andrea Caligari
- Alberto Bolognetti
- Gerolamo Vitale de Buoi
- Annibale di Capua
- Nicolò Mascardi
- Germanico Malaspina
- Claudio Rangoni (bishop of Reggio Emilia)
- Francesco Simonetta
- Lelio Ruini
- Francesco Diotallevi
- Cosimo de Torres
- Giambattista Lancellotti
- Antonio Santacroce
- Onorato Visconti
- Mario Filonardi
- Giovanni de Torres
- Pietro Vidoni
- Antonio Pignatelli, future Pope Innocent XII
- Galeazzo Marescotti
- Francesco Nerli (iuniore)
- Angelo Maria Ranuzzi
- Francesco Buonvisi
- Francesco Martelli
- Opizio Pallavicini
- Giacomo Cantelmi
- Andrea Santacroce
- Gianantonio Davia
- Michelangelo Conti, future Pope Innocent XIII
- Francesco Pignatelli
- Orazio Filippo Spada
- Giulio Piazza
- Nicola Gaetano Spinola
- Vincenzo Bichi
- Benedetto Odescalchi-Erba
- Girolamo Grimaldi
- Girolamo Archinto
- Vincenzo Santini
- Camillo Paolucci
- Fabrizio Serbelloni
- Alberico Archinto
- Niccolò Serra
- Antonio Eugenio Visconti
- Angelo Maria Durini
- Giuseppe Garampi
- Giovanni Andrea Archetti
- Ferdinando Maria Saluzzo
- Lorenzo Litta
To the Second Republic
- Achille Ratti, future Pope Pius XI
- Lorenzo Lauri
- Francesco Marmaggi
- Filippo Cortesi
- *Cesare Orsenigo, nuncio to Germany, had his authority formally extended to Poland on November 1, 1939, due to the exile of Cortesi.
- *Alfredo Pacini, chargé d'affaires to the Polish government-in-exile in Paris until 1940
- *William Godfrey, chargé d'affaires to the government-in-exile in London from 1940