Pope
Pius III
(Francesco Todeschini Piccolomini).
B. at Siena, 29 May, 1439; elected 22 Sept., 1503; d. in Rome, 18 Oct., 1503, after a
pontificate of four weeks. Piccolomini was the son of a sister of Pius II. He had passed
his boyhood in destitute circumstances when his uncle took him into his household,
bestowed upon him his family name and arms, and superintended his training and education.
He studied law in Perugia and immediately after receiving the doctorate as canonist was
appointed by his uncle Archbishop of Siena, and on 5 March, 1460, cardinal-deacon with the
title of S. Eustachio. The following month he was sent as legate to the March of Ancona,
with the experienced Bishop of Marsico as his counsellor. "The only thing
objectionable about him", says Voigt (Enea Silvio, III, 531), "was his youth;
for in the administration of his legation and in his later conduct at the curia he proved
to be a man of spotless character and many-sided capacity." He was sent by Paul II as
legate to Germany, where he acquitted himself with eminent success, the knowledge of
German that he had acquired in his uncle's house being of great advantage to him. During
the worldly reigns of Sixtus IV and Alexander VI he kept away from Rome as much as
possible. Sigismondo de Conti, who knew him well tells us that "he left no moment
unoccupied; his time for study was before daybreak; he spent his mornings in prayer and
his midday hours in giving audiences, to which the humblest had easy access. He was so
temperate in food and drink that he only allowed himself an evening meal every other
day." Yet this is the excellent man to whom Gregorovius in his "Lucrezia
Borgia", without a shadow of authority, gives a dozen childrenthe calumny being
repeated by Brosch and Creighton. After the death of Alexander VI, the conclave could not
unite on the principal candidates, d'Amboise, Rovere, and Sforza; hence the great majority
cast their votes for Piccolomini, who though only sixty-four was, like his uncle, tortured
with gout and was prematurely old. He took the name of Pius III in honour of his uncle,
was crowned on 8 Oct., after receiving priestly and episcopal orders. The strain of the
long ceremony was so great that the pope sank under it. He was buried in St. Peter's, but
his remains were later transferred to S. Andrea della Valle where he rests by the side of
Pius II.
PASTOR, History of the Popes, VI, 185 sqq.; PANVINIO, Continuation of Platina; VON
REUMONT, Gesch. der Stadt Rom; ARTAND DE MONTOR, History of the Popes (New York, 1867).
JAMES F. LAUGHLIN
Transcribed by Herman F. Holbrook
Ut in omnibus glorificetur Deus per Iesum Christum.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XII
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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