Andrés Clemente de Torrecremata

(also spelled Torquemada or Turrecremata; Croatian: Andrija Klement de Turrecremata) was a Spanish prelate of the Catholic Church who served as a titular bishop of Duvno from 1521.

Before his episcopal appointment, de Torrecremata, a member of the Third Order Regular of St. Francis, was a guardian of the St. Mary the Mother of God friary and a theology professor in Córdoba.

[1] Pope Leo X appointed de Torrecremata as the bishop of Duvno on 29 December 1520, with an order that he must relocate to the diocese, reside there and that he mustn't exercise his episcopal duties outside the diocese.

The Pope, aware that the diocese was under the Ottoman occupation and that the bishop could not reside there, used the appointment to incentivise the resistance of the Christian populace.

[3] From 1520 to 1522, de Torrecremata served as an emissary of the bishop of Funchal for the area of eastern Portugal.