The conclave to elect the successor of …
Years: 1800 - 1800
March
The conclave to elect the successor of Pope Pius VI, virtually France's prisoner when he died at Valence, had met on November 30, 1799 in the Benedictine Monastery of San Giorgio in Venice.
There are three main candidates, two of whom prove to be unacceptable to the Habsburgs, whose candidate, Alessandro Mattei, cannot secure sufficient votes.
Carlo Bellisomi also is a candidate, though not favored by Austrian cardinals; a "virtual veto" had been imposed against him in the name of Franz II and carried out by Cardinal Franziskus Herzan von Harras.
After several months of stalemate, Jean-Sifrein Maury proposes Cardinal Barnaba Chiaramonti as a compromise candidate.
Chiaramonti, like his brothers, had attended the Collegio dei Nobili in Ravenna but had decided to join the Order of Saint Benedict at the age of fourteen on October 2, 1756, as a novice at the Abbey of Santa Maria del Monte in Cesena.
Two years after this, on August 20, 1758, he became a professed member and assumed the name of Gregorio.
He taught at Benedictine colleges in Parma and Rome, and was ordained a priest on September 21, 1765.
A series of promotions resulted after his relative, Giovanni Angelo Braschi, was elected Pope Pius VI (1775–99).
A few years before this election occurred, in 1773, Chiaramonti became the personal confessor to Braschi.
Pius VI had appointed the thirty-four-year-old Dom Gregory, who had been teaching at the Monastery of Sant'Anselmo in Rome, as honorary abbot in commendam of his monastery in 1776.
This ancient practice had drawn complaints from the monks of the community, as monastic communities generally felt it was not in keeping with the Rule of St. Benedict.
The pope appointed Dom Gregory as the Bishop of Tivoli, near Rome, in December 1782.
Pius VI soon named him the Cardinal-Priest of San Callisto in February 1785 and, as the Bishop of Imola, will hold an office until 1816.
At the invasion of Italy by the French Revolutionary Army in 1797, Cardinal Chiaramonti had counseled temperance and submission to the newly created Cisalpine Republic.
Elected pope on March 14, 1800, Chiaramonti is certainly not the choice of die-hard opponents of the French Revolution, and takes as his pontifical name Pius VII in honor of his immediate predecessor.
He is crowned on March 21 in a rather unusual ceremony, wearing a papier-mâché papal tiara—the French having seized the tiaras held by the Holy See when occupying Rome and forcing Pius VI into exile.
He now leaves for Rome, sailing on a barely seaworthy Austrian ship, the Bellona, which lacks even a galley.
The twelve-day voyage will end at Pesaro, whence he will proceed to Rome.
There are three main candidates, two of whom prove to be unacceptable to the Habsburgs, whose candidate, Alessandro Mattei, cannot secure sufficient votes.
Carlo Bellisomi also is a candidate, though not favored by Austrian cardinals; a "virtual veto" had been imposed against him in the name of Franz II and carried out by Cardinal Franziskus Herzan von Harras.
After several months of stalemate, Jean-Sifrein Maury proposes Cardinal Barnaba Chiaramonti as a compromise candidate.
Chiaramonti, like his brothers, had attended the Collegio dei Nobili in Ravenna but had decided to join the Order of Saint Benedict at the age of fourteen on October 2, 1756, as a novice at the Abbey of Santa Maria del Monte in Cesena.
Two years after this, on August 20, 1758, he became a professed member and assumed the name of Gregorio.
He taught at Benedictine colleges in Parma and Rome, and was ordained a priest on September 21, 1765.
A series of promotions resulted after his relative, Giovanni Angelo Braschi, was elected Pope Pius VI (1775–99).
A few years before this election occurred, in 1773, Chiaramonti became the personal confessor to Braschi.
Pius VI had appointed the thirty-four-year-old Dom Gregory, who had been teaching at the Monastery of Sant'Anselmo in Rome, as honorary abbot in commendam of his monastery in 1776.
This ancient practice had drawn complaints from the monks of the community, as monastic communities generally felt it was not in keeping with the Rule of St. Benedict.
The pope appointed Dom Gregory as the Bishop of Tivoli, near Rome, in December 1782.
Pius VI soon named him the Cardinal-Priest of San Callisto in February 1785 and, as the Bishop of Imola, will hold an office until 1816.
At the invasion of Italy by the French Revolutionary Army in 1797, Cardinal Chiaramonti had counseled temperance and submission to the newly created Cisalpine Republic.
Elected pope on March 14, 1800, Chiaramonti is certainly not the choice of die-hard opponents of the French Revolution, and takes as his pontifical name Pius VII in honor of his immediate predecessor.
He is crowned on March 21 in a rather unusual ceremony, wearing a papier-mâché papal tiara—the French having seized the tiaras held by the Holy See when occupying Rome and forcing Pius VI into exile.
He now leaves for Rome, sailing on a barely seaworthy Austrian ship, the Bellona, which lacks even a galley.
The twelve-day voyage will end at Pesaro, whence he will proceed to Rome.
Locations
People
Groups
- Benedictines, or Order of St. Benedict
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Austria, Archduchy of
- Habsburg Monarchy, or Empire
- Cisalpine Republic
