Pius VII | |
---|---|
Portrait by Jacques-Louis David |
|
Papacy began | 14 March 1800 |
Papacy ended | 20 August 1823 ( | 23 years, 159 days)
Predecessor | Pius VI |
Successor | Leo XII |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti |
Born | August 14, 1742 Cesena, Papal State |
Died | August 20, 1823 Rome, Papal State |
(aged 81)
Other Popes named Pius |
Pope Pius VII, OSB (14 August 1742 – 20 August 1823), born Count Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti, was Pope from 14 March 1800 to 20 August 1823.
Contents |
Chiaramonti was born at Cesena, the son of count Scipione Chiaramonti; his mother, Giovanna Chiaramonti, was the daughter of the marquese Ghini and was related to the Braschi family. He joined the Benedictine order in 1756 at the Abbey of S.Maria del Monte of Cesena and changed his first name to Gregorio. He then became a teacher at Benedictine colleges in Parma and Rome. His career became a series of promotions following the election of a family friend, Giovanni Angelo Braschi, as Pope Pius VI (1775–99). In 1776 Pius VI appointed the 34-year old Barnaba, who had been teaching at the monastery of S. Anselmo in Rome, honorary abbot in commendam of his monastery, to complaints from the brothers. After making him bishop of Tivoli, near Rome, Pius VI made him a Cardinal-Priest of San Callisto and Bishop of Imola in February 1785.
From the time French forces invaded Italy in 1797, Cardinal Chiaramonti cautioned temperance and submission to the Cisalpine Republic. In his Christmas homily that year in 1797 he asserted that there was no opposition between a democratic form of government and being a good Catholic: "Be good Catholics and you will be good democrats", said the bishop.
Papal styles of Pope Pius VII |
|
---|---|
Reference style | His Holiness |
Spoken style | Your Holiness |
Religious style | Holy Father |
Posthumous style | None |
Following the death of Pius VI, virtually France's prisoner, at Valence in August 1799, the conclave met on 30 November 1799 in the Benedictine monastery of San Giorgio, Venice. There were three main candidates, two of whom proved to be unacceptable to the Habsburgs, whose candidate, Alessandro Mattei, could not secure sufficient votes. After several months of stalemate, Chiaramonti was elected as a compromise candidate. He was elected Pope Pius VII at Venice on 21 March 1800 in a rather unusual coronation, wearing a papier-mâché papal tiara, the original having been seized by the French along with Pius VI. Then an Austrian vessel, the "Bellona", brought him to Pesaro, from where he reached Rome by land.
One of Pius VII's first acts was to appoint Ercole Consalvi, who had acted as secretary to the recent conclave, to the college of cardinals and to the office of Cardinal Secretary of State.
From the beginning of his papacy to the fall of Napoleon I of France in 1815, Pius VII was completely involved with France. He and Napoleon were continually in conflict, often involving the French military leader's wishes for concessions to his demands. Pius wanted the return of the Papal States, and, later on, the release of the 13 Black Cardinals[1][2] along with several exiled or imprisoned clergymen, monks, nuns, priests, other various supporters including his secretaries of state, and his own release from exile.
On the United States' suppression of the Muslim Barbary Pirates along the southern Mediterranean coast, who kidnapped Christians for ransom and slavery, Pope Pius VII said that the United States “had done more for the cause of Christianity than the most powerful nations of Christendom have done for ages.”[3]
Catholic Church titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Giulio Matteo Natali |
Bishop of Tivoli 1782–1785 |
Succeeded by Giovanni Battista Banfi |
Preceded by Giovanni Carlo Bandi |
Bishop of Imola 1785–1816 |
Succeeded by Antonio Lamberto Rusconi |
Preceded by Pius VI |
Pope 1800–1823 |
Succeeded by Leo XII |
|
|