Pope
Paul V
(CAMILLO BORGHESE).
Born at Rome, 17 Sept., 1550; elected 16 May, 1605; died 28 Jan., 1621. Although proud
to call himself, as we read on the faade of St. Peter's and on his epitaph, a Roman,
Borghese was descended from a noble family of Siena which held important positions in that
city, and claimed St. Catherine for a relative. Their removal to Rome was caused by the
endless disturbances which made life in Siena unbearable. Camillo was carefully trained in
jurisprudence at Perugia and Padua, and became a canonist of marked ability. He rose in
the ecclesiastical career steadily, if not rapidly; in 1596 he was made cardinal by
Clement VIII, and became Cardinal-Vicar of Rome. He held aloof from all parties and
factions, devoting all his spare time to his law-books. In consequence, on the death of
Leo XI, all eyes were centred on him, and he ascended the papal throne without engagement
or obligation of any sort. His legal training was soon visible in all his words and
actions. He knew nothing of compromises, and and proceeded to rule the Church not from the
standpoint of diplomacy but from the decretals. He conceived it his duty to maintain
inviolate every right and claim advanced by his predecessors. This made his character at
times assume a very stern and uncompromising aspect. His first public act was to send home
to their sees the prelates and even the cardinals who were sojourning at Rome upon one or
other pretext. The Council of Trent had declared it a grave sin fro a bishop to be an
absentee. That he was engaged in Rome doing the business of the Holy See made no
difference. Paul was soon involved in controversy with various cities of Italy on matters
concerning ecclesiastical jurisdiction and the relations between Church and State. The
bitterest quarrel was with the proud Republic of Venice, which refused to acknowledge the
exemption of the clergy from the jurisdiction of the civil courts and passed two laws
obnoxious to the Roman Curia, the first forbidding the alienation of real property in
favour of the clergy, the second demanding approval of the civil power for the building of
new churches. Paul demanded the repeal of these anti-clerical ordinances, and insisted
that two clerics who had been committed to prison should be surrendered to the
ecclesiastical court. The dispute became daily more bitter and gradually developed into a
broad discussion of the relative position of the Church and State. What gave the quarrel a
European importance was the ability of the champions who entered the field on either side.
For the claims of the Church stood Cardinals Baronius and Bellarmine; the cause of Venice
was defended by the Servite Paolo Sarpi, a man of wonderful literary skill and a sworn
enemy of the Roman Court. On 17 April, 1600, the pope pronounced sentence of
excommunication against the doge, Senate, and Government collectively. He allowed a very
short space for submission, after which he imposed an interdict on the city. The clergy
had now to take sides for or against the pope. With the exception of the Jesuits, the
Theatines, and the Capuchins, who were immediately expelled, the entire body of secular
and regular clergy held with the Government and continued to hold services,
notwithstanding the interdict. The festival of Corpus Christi was celebrated with unusual
splendour, and Sarpi said Mass for the first time in years. The schism lasted about a
year; and peace was patched up through the mediation of France and Spain. The Republic
refused to repeal the obnoxious laws openly, but promised "to conduct itself with its
accustomed piety". With these obscure words the pope was forced to be content; he
removed the censures 22 March, 1607. The Theatines and Capuchins were permitted to return;
an exception was made against the Jesuits.
The pope watched vigilantly over the interests of the Church in every nation. On 9
July, 1606, he wrote a friendly letter to James I of England to congratulate him on his
accession to the throne, and referred with grief to the plot recently made against the
life of the monarch. But he prays him not to make the innocent Catholics suffer for the
crime of a few. He promises to exhort all the Catholics of the realm to be submissive and
loyal to their sovereign in all things not opposed to the honour of God. Unfortunately the
oath of allegiance James demanded of his subjects contained clauses to which no Catholic
could in conscience subscribe. It was solemnly condemned in two Briefs, 22 Sept., 1606,
and 23 Aug., 1607. This condemnation occasioned the bitter dissension between the party of
the archpriest George Blackwell and the Catholics who submitted to the decision of the
Holy See. In Austria the efforts of the pope were directed to healing the disputes among
the Catholics and to giving moral and material aid to the Catholic Union. He survived the
battle of Prague, which put an end to the short reign of the Calvinistic
"winter-king".
Paul V was no more free from nepotism than the other pontiffs of that century. But if
he seemed to show too many favours to his relatives, it must be said that they were
capable men of blameless lives, and devoted their large revenues to the embellishment of
Rome. Paul had the honour of putting the finishing touches to St. Peter's, which had been
building for a century. He enriched the Vatican Library, was fond of art, and encouraged
Guido Reni. He canonized St. Charles Borromeo and St. Frances of Rome. He beatified Sts.
Ignatius Loyola, Francis Xavier, Philip Neri, Theresa the Carmelite, Louis Bertrand,
Thomas of Villanova, and Isidore of Madrid. During his pontificate a large number of new
institutes for education and charity added new lustre to religion. His remains were placed
in the magnificent Borghese chapel in St. Mary Major's, where his monument is universally
admired.
Life, in Latin, by BZOVIO, It. tr. in continuation of PLATINA, Vite dei Pontefici
(Venice, 1730); see also VON RANKE, History of the Popes in the Sixteenth, etc.,
Centuries; VON REUMONT, Gesch. der Stadt Rom; ARTAUD DE MONTOR, History of the Popes (New
York, 1867).
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by Gerald Rossi
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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