Pope
Paul III
(ALESSANDRO FARNESE).
Born at Rome or Canino, 29 Feb., 1468; elected, 12 Oct., 1534; died at Rome, 10 Nov.,
1549. The Farnese were an ancient Roman family whose possessions clustered about the Lake
at Bolsena. Although counted among the Roman aristocrats, they first appear in history
associated with Viterbo and Orvieto. Among the witnesses to the Treaty of Venice between
Barbarossa and the pope, we find the signature of a Farnese as Rector of Orvieto; a
Farnese bishop consecrated the cathedral there. During the interminable feuds which
distracted the peninsula, the Farnese were consistently Guelph. The grandfather of the
future pontiff was commander-in-chief of the papal troops under Eugenius IV; his oldest
son perished in the battle of Fornuovo; the second, Pier Luigi, married Giovannella
Gaetani, sister to the Lord of Sermoneta. Among their children were the beautiful Giulia,
who married an Orsini, and Alessandro, later Paul III. Alessandro received the best
education that his age could offer; first at Rome, where he had Pomponio Leto for a tutor;
later at Florence in the palace of Lorenzo the Magnificent, where he formed his friendship
with the future Leo X, six years his junior. His contemporaries praise his proficiency in
all the learning of the Renaissance, especially in his mastery of classical Latin and
Italian. With such advantages of birth and talent, his advancement in the ecclesiastical
career was assured and rapid. On 20 Sept., 1493 (Eubel), he was created by Alexander VI
cardinal-deacon with the title SS. Cosmas and Damian. He wore the purple for over forty
years, passing through the several gradations, until he became Dean of the Sacred College.
In accordance with the abuses of his time, he accumulated a number of opulent benefices,
and spent his immense revenue with a generosity which won for him the praises of artists
and the affection of the Roman populace. His native ability and diplomatic skill, acquired
by long experience, made him tower above his colleagues in the Sacred College, even as his
Palazzo Farnese excelled in magnificence all the other palaces of Rome. That he continued
to grow in favour under pontiffs so different in character as the Borgia, Rovera, and
Medici popes is a sufficient proof of his tact.
He had already on two previous occasions, come within measurable distance of the tiara,
when the conclave of 1534, almost without the formality of a ballot, proclaimed him
successor to Clement VII. It was creditable to his reputation and to the good will of the
cardinals, that the factions which divided the Sacred College were concordant in electing
him. He was universally recognized as the man of the hour, and the piety and zeal, which
had characterized him after he was ordained priest, caused men to overlook the
extravagance of his earlier years.
The Roman people rejoiced at the election to the tiara of the first citizen of their
city since Martin V. Paul III was crowned 3 Nov., and lost no time in setting about the
most needed reforms. No one, who has once studied his portrait by Titian, is likely to
forget the wonderful expression of countenance of that worn-out, emaciated form. Those
piercing little eyes, and that peculiar attitude of one ready to bound or to shrink, tell
the story of a veteran diplomat who was not to be deceived or taken off guard. His extreme
caution, and the difficulty of binding him down to a defininte obligation, drew from
Pasquino the facetious remark that the third Paul was a "Vas dilationis." The
elevation to the cardinalate of his grandsons, Alessandro Farnese, aged fourteen, and
Guido Ascanio Sforza, aged sixteen, displeased the reform party and drew a protest from
the emperor, but this was forgiven, when shortly after, he introduced into the Sacred
College men of the calibre of Reginald Pole, Contanini, Sadoleto, and Caraffa.
Soon after his elevation, 2 June, 1536, Paul III summoned a general council to meet at
Mantua in the following May; but the opposition of the Protestant princes and the refusal
of the Duke of Mantua to assume the responsibility of maintaining order frustrated the
project. He issued a new bull, convoking a council at Vicenza, 1 May, 1538; the chief
obstacle was the renewed enmity of Charles V and Francis I. The aged pontiff induced them
to hold a conference with him at Nizza and conclude a ten years' truce. As a token of good
will, a granddaughter of Paul was married to a French prince, and the emperor gave his
daughter, Margaret, to Ottavio, the son of Pier Luigi, founder of the Farnese dynasty of
Parma.
Many causes contributed to delay the opening of the general council. The extension of
power which a re-united Germany would place in the hands of Charles was so intolerable to
Francis I, that he, who persecuted heresy in his own realm with such cruelty that the pope
appealed to him to mitigate his violence, became the sworn ally of the Smalcaldic League,
encouraging them to reject all overtures to reconciliation. Charles himself was in no
slight measure to blame, for, notwithstanding his desire for the assembling of a council,
he was led into the belief that the religious differences of Germany might be settled by
conferences between the two parties. These conferences, like all such attempts to settle
differences outside of the normal court of the Church, led to a waste of time, and did far
more harm than good. Charles had a false idea of the office of a general council. In his
desire to unite all parties, he sought for vague formulę to which all could subscribe, a
relapse into the mistakes of the Byzantine emperors. A council of the Church, on the other
hand, must formulate the Faith with such precision that no heretic can subscribe to it. It
took some years to convince the emperor and his mediating advisors that Catholicism and
Protestantism are as opposite as light and darkness. Meanwhile Paul III set about the
reform of the papal court with a vigour which paved the way for the disciplinary canons of
Trent. He appointed commissions to report abuses of every kind; he reformed the Apostolic
Camera, the tribunal of the Rota, the Penitentiaria, and the Chancery. He enhanced the
prestige of the papacy by doing single-handed what his predecessors had reserved to the
action of a council. In the constantly recurring quarrels between Francis and Charles,
Paul III preserved a strict neutrality, notwithstanding that Charles urged him to support
the empire and subject Francis to the censures of the Church. Paul's attitude as a
patriotic Italian would have been sufficient to prevent him from allowing the emperor to
be sole arbiter of Italy. It was as much for the purpose of securing the integrity of the
papal dominions, as for the exaltation of his family, that Paul extorted from Charles and
his reluctant cardinals the erection of Piacenza and Parma into a duchy for his son, Pier
Luigi. A feud arose with Gonzaga, the imperial Governor of Milan, which ended later in the
assassination of Pier Luigi and the permanent alienation of Piacenza from the Papal
States.
When the Treaty of Crespi (18 Sept., 1544) ended the disastrous wars between Charles
and Francis, Paul energetically took up the project of convening a general council.
Meanwhile it developed that the emperor had formed a programme of his own, quite at
variance in some important points with the pope's. Since the Protestants repudiated a
council presided over by the Roman pontiff, Charles was resolved to reduce the princes to
obedience by force of arms. To this Paul did not object, and promised to aid him with
three hundred thousand ducats and twenty thousand infantry; but he wisely added the
proviso, that Charles should enter into no separate treaties with the heretics and make no
agreement prejudicial to the Faith or to the rights of the Holy See. Charles now contended
that the council should be prorogued, until victory had decided in favour of the
Catholics. Furthermore, foreseeing that the struggle with the preachers of heresy would be
more stubborn than the conflict with the princes, he urged the pontiff to avoid making
dogmas of faith for the present and confine the labours of the council to the enforcement
of discipline. To neither of these proposals could the pope agree. Finally, after endless
difficulties (13 Dec., 1545) the Council of Trent held its first session. In seven
sessions, the last 3 March, 1547, the Fathers intrepidly faced the most important
questions of faith and discipline. Without listening to the threats and expostulations of
the imperial party, they formulated for all time the Catholic doctrine on the Scriptures,
original sin, justification, and the Sacraments. The work of the council was half ended,
when the outbreak of the plague in Trent caused an adjournment to Bologna. Pope Paul was
not the instigator of the removal of the council; he simply acquiesced in the decision of
the Fathers. Fifteen prelates, devoted to the emperor, refused to leave Trent. Charles
demanded the return of the council to German territory, but the deliberations of the
council continued in Bologna, until finally, 21 April, the pope, in order to avert a
schism, prorogued the council indefinitely. The wisdom of the council's energetic action,
in establishing thus early the fundamental truths of the Catholic creed, became soon
evident, when the emperor and his semi-Protestant advisers inflicted upon Germany their
Interim religion, which was despised by both parties. Pope Paul, who had given the emperor
essential aid in the Smalcaldic war, resented his dabbling in theology, and their
estrangement continued until the death of the pontiff.
Paul's end came rather suddenly. After the assassination of Pier Luigi, he had
struggled to retain Piacenza and Parma for the Church and had deprived Ottavio, Pier
Luigi's son and Charles's son-in-law, of these duchies. Ottavio, relying on the emperor's
benevolence, refused obedience; it broke the old man's heart, when he learned that his
favourite grandson, Cardinal Farnese, was a party to the transaction. He fell into a
violent fever and died at the Quirinal, at the age of eighty-two. He lies buried in St.
Peter's in the tomb designed by Michelangelo and erected by Guglielmo della Porta. Not all
the popes repose in monuments corresponding to their importance in the history of the
Church; but few will be disposed to contest the right of Farnese to rest directly under
Peter's chair. He had his faults; but they injured no one but himself. The fifteen years
of his pontificate saw the complete restoration of Catholic faith and piety. He was
succeeded by many saintly pontiffs, but not one of them possessed all his commanding
virtues. In Rome his name is written all over the city he renovated. The Pauline chapel,
Michelangelo's work in the Sistine, the streets of Rome, which he straightened and
broadened, the numerous objects of art associated with the name of Farnese, all speak
eloquently of the remarkable personality of the pontiff who turned the tide in favour of
religion. If to this we add the favour accorded by Paul to the new religious orders then
appearing, the Capuchins, Barnabites, Theatines, Jesuits, Ursulines, and many others, we
are forced to confess that his reign was one of the most fruitful in the annals of the
Church.
PANVINIUS, Pont. Romanorum vitę; PALLAVICINI, Concilio di Trento;
PASTOR, Gesch. der Päpste, V; EHSES, Concilium Tridentinum, V; VON RANKE, Hist.
of the Popes in the XVI-XVIII Centuries: ARTAUD DE MONTOR, Hist. of the Popes
(New York, 1867).
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XI
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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