Everything about Pope Gregory Xvi totally explained
Pope Gregory XVI (
September 18 1765 –
June 1 1846), born
Bartolomeo Alberto Cappellari, named
Mauro as a member of the
religious order of the
Camaldolese, was
Pope of the
Catholic Church from
1831 to
1846. Strongly
conservative and
traditionalist, he opposed
democratic and modernizing reforms in the
Papal States and throughout Europe, seeing them as fronts for
revolutionary
leftism, and sought to strengthen the religious and political authority of the papacy (see
Ultramontanism).
Early life
Cappellari was born at
Belluno on
September 18 1765 to a
noble family. At an early age he joined the order of the
Camaldolese (part of the
Benedictine monastic family) and entered the
Monastery of San Michele di
Murano, near
Venice. As a Camaldolese
monk, Cappellari rapidly gained distinction for his
theological and linguistic skills. His first appearance before a wider public was in
1799, when he published against the Italian
Jansenists a controversial work entitled
II Trionfo della Santa Sede, which, besides passing through several editions in Italy, has been translated into several European languages. In
1800 he became a member of the
Academy of the Catholic Religion, founded by
Pope Pius VII (1800–23), to which he contributed a number of memoirs on theological and philosophical questions, and in
1805 was made abbot of San Gregorio on the Caelian Hill.
When Pius VII was carried off from Rome in
1809, Cappellari withdrew to
Murano, near Venice, and in
1814, with some other members of his order, he moved again, this time to
Padua; but soon after the restoration of the Pope in 1814 he was recalled to Rome, where he received successive appointments as vicar-general of the Camaldolese Order, councillor of the
Inquisition, prefect of the Propaganda, and examiner of bishops. In March
1825 he was created
Cardinal in pectore by
Pope Leo XII (1823–29), and shortly afterwards was entrusted with an important mission to adjust a
concordat regarding the interests of the Catholics of
Walloonia in the predominantly Protestant
United Kingdom of the Netherlands. He negotiated peace on behalf of Armenian Catholics with the
Ottoman Empire. He discouraged
Polish revolutionaries who undermined Tsar
Nicholas I's efforts to support the
Catholic royalist cause in France, by the necessity of diverting troops to Poland.
Election as Pope
On
February 2 1831, he was, after sixty-four days of conclave, unexpectedly chosen to succeed
Pope Pius VIII (1829–30) in the papal chair.
His election was influenced by the fact that the cardinal considered the most likely
papabile,
Giacomo Cardinal Giustiniani, was
vetoed by King
Fernando VII of
Spain. The other major candidates,
Emmanuele De Gregorio and
Bartolomeo Pacca, had been candidates in the previous conclave. When a deadlock arose between them, the cardinals turned to Cappellari, but it took as many as eighty-three ballots for a decisive result to be obtained. Gregory XVI was the last man (thus far) elected Pope who wasn't already a
bishop. In fact, of subsequent Popes only
Pius XII was never the bishop of a diocese.
At the time of election to the papacy Cardinal Cappellari wasn't a bishop, so after his election he was consecrated bishop by Cardinal
Bartolomeo Pacca, seniore,
bishop of Ostia and Velletri,
dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals; the co-consecrators were:
Cardinal Pier Francesco Galleffi,
bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina,
sub-dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, and
Cardinal Tommasso Arezzo,
bishop of Sabina.
The choice of Gregory XVI as his
regnal name was influenced by the fact that he'd been
abbot of San Gregorio monastery on the Coelian Hill for over twenty years. This was the same abbey from which
Pope Gregory the Great had dispatched many bishops to England in 596.
Conservative policies
The progressive revolution of
1830 had just inflicted a severe blow on the Catholic royalist party in France, and almost the first act of the new government there was to seize
Ancona, thus throwing
Italy, and particularly the
Papal States, into an excited condition which seemed to demand strongly defensive measures. In the course of the struggle which ensued, it was more than once necessary to call in Austrian defenders against red shirted republicans engaged in a terrorist campaign. The conservatives postponed their promised reforms after bombings and assassination attempts. Nor did the replacement of
Bernetti by
Luigi Lambruschini in
1836 mend matters.
Pope Gregory and Cardinal Lambruschini opposed basic technological innovations such as gas lighting and
railways, believing that they'd promote commerce and increase the power of the
bourgeoisie, leading to demands for liberal reforms which would undermine the
monarchical power of the Pope over central Italy. Gregory in fact banned railways in the Papal States, calling them
chemins d'enfer (literally "ways of
hell," a play on the
French for railroad,
chemin de fer, literally "iron road"). However, under pressure from the French, Gregory was liberal in forgiving imprisoned revolutionaries, a policy which might have aided the final overthrow of Gregory's successor,
Pope Pius IX, as temporal ruler in 1870.
The financial condition in which Gregory XVI left the States of the Church makes it questionable how far his expenditures for defensive, architectural and engineering works, and his magnificent patronage of learning in the hands of
Mai,
Mezzofanti, Gaetano,
Moroni and others, were for the real benefit of his subjects.
The
insurrections at Viterbo in
1836, in various parts of the Legations in
1840, at
Ravenna in
1843 and
Rimini in
1845, were followed by wholesale executions and severe sentences, hard labour or
exile; still the Papal States seethed with unrest.
However, it should be noted that on
December 3 1839 Gregory issued the encyclical
In Supremo Apostolatus stating:
Ultramontane pontificate
The years of Gregory XVI's pontificate were marked by the steady development and diffusion of ultramontane ideas dating back to Pope Innocent III, which were further developed under the guidance of his successor
Pope Pius IX (1846–78), by the
First Vatican Council. He canonized
St Veronica Giuliani, an Italian mystic. He died on
June 1 1846.
Further Information
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