Pope
Innocent X
(Giambattista Pamfili)
Born at Rome, 6 May, 1574; died there, 7 January, 1655. His parents were Camillo
Pamfili and Flaminia de Bubalis. The Pamfili resided originally at Gubbio, in Umbria, but
came to Rome during the pontificate of Innocent VIII. The young man studied jurisprudence
at the Collegio Romano and graduated as bachelor of laws at the age of twenty. Soon
afterwards Clement VIII appointed him consistorial advocate and auditor of the Rota.
Gregory XV made him nuncio at Naples. Urban VIII sent him as datary with the cardinal
legate, Francesco Barberini, to France and Spain, then appointed him titular Latin
Patriarch of Antioch, and nuncio at Madrid. He was created Cardinal-Priest of Sant'
Eusebio on 30 August, 1626, though he did not assume the purple until 19 November, 1629.
He was a member of the congregations of the Council of Trent, the Inquisition, and
Jurisdiction and Immunity. On 9 August, 1644, a conclave was held at Rome for the election
of a successor to Urban VIII. The conclave was a stormy one. The French faction had agreed
to give their vote to no candidate who was friendly towards Spain. Cardinal Firenzola, the
Spanish candidate was, therefore, rejected, being a known enemy of Cardinal Mazarin, prime
minister of France. Fearing the election of an avowed enemy of France, the French party
finally agreed with the Spanish party upon Pamfili, although his sympathy for Spain was
well known. On 15 September he was elected, and ascended the papal throne as Innocent X.
Soon after his accession, Innocent found it necessary to take legal action against the
Barberini for misappropriation of public moneys. To escape punishment Antonio and
Francesco Barberini fled to Paris, where they found a powerful protector in Mazarin.
Innocent confiscated their property, and on 19 February, 1646, issued a Bull ordaining
that all cardinals who had left or should leave the Ecclesiastical States without papal
permission and should not return within six months, should be deprived of their
ecclesiastical benefices and eventually of the cardinalate itself. The French Parliament
declared the papal ordinances null and void, but the pope did not yield until Mazarin
prepared to send troops to Italy to invade the Ecclesiastical States. Henceforth the papal
policy towards France became more friendly, and somewhat later the Barberini were
rehabilitated. But when in 1652 Cardinal Retz was arrested by Mazarin, Innocent solemnly
protested against this act of violence committed against a cardinal, and protected Retz
after his escape in 1654. In Italy Innocent had occasion to assert his authority as
suzerain over Duke Ranuccio II of Parma who refused to redeem the bonds (monti) of
the Farnesi from the Roman creditors, as had been stipulated in the Treaty of Venice on 31
March, 1644. The duke, moreover, refused to recognize Cristoforo Guarda, whom the pope had
appointed Bishop of Castro. When, therefore, the new bishop was murdered while on his way
to take possession of his see, Innocent held Ranuccio responsible for the crime. The pope
took possession of Castro, razed it to the ground and transferred the episcopal see to
Acquapendente. The duke was forced to resign the administration of his district to the
pope, who undertook to satisfy the creditors. The papal relations with Venice, which had
been highly strained during the pontificate of Urban VIII, became very friendly during
Innocent's reign. Innocent aided the Venetians financially against the Turks in the
struggle for Candia, while the Venetians on their part allowed Innocent free scope in
filling the vacant episcopal sees in their territory, a right which they had previously
claimed for themselves. In Portugal the popular insurrection of 1640 had led to the
secession of that country from Spain, and to the election of Juan IV of Braganza as King
of Portugal. Both Urban VIII and Innocent X, in deference to Spain, refused to acknowledge
the new king and withheld their approbation from the bishops nominated by him. Thus it
happened that towards the end of Innocent's pontificate there was only one bishop in the
whole of Portugal. On 26 November, 1648, Innocent issued the famous Bull "Zelo domus
Dei", in which he declares as null and void those articles of the Peace of Westphalia
which were detrimental to the Catholic religion. In his Bull "Cum occasione",
issued on 31 May, 1653. he condemned five propositions taken from the
"Augustinus" of Jansenius, thus giving the impulse to the great Jansenist
controversy in France.
Innocent X was a lover of justice and his life was blameless; he was, however, often
irresolute and suspicious. The great blemish in his pontificate was his dependence on
Donna Olimpia Maidalchini, the wife of his deceased brother. For a short time her
influence had to yield to that of the youthful Camillo Astalli, a distant relative of the
pope, whom Innocent raised to the cardinalate. But the pope seemed to be unable to get
along without her, and at her instance Astalli was deprived of the purple and removed from
the Vatican. The accusation, made by Gualdus (Leti) in his "Vita di Donna Olimpia
Maidalchini" (1666), that Innocent's relation to her was immoral, has been rejected
as slanderous by all reputable historians.
CIAMPI, Innocenzo X Pamfili e la sua corte (Imola, 1878); FRIEDENSBURG, Regesten
zur deutschen Geschichte aus der Zeit des Pontifikats Innocenz X in Quellen und
Forschungen, edited by the Prussian Historical Institute in Rome, V (1902), VI (1903);
RANKE, Die römischen Päpste, tr. FOSTER, II (London, 1906), 321-9; BAROZZI E
BERCHET, Relazioni degli stati Europei lette al senato dagli Ambasciatori Veneti nel
secolo decimosettimo, Serie III: Italia, Relazioni di Roma, II (Venice, 1878),
43-161; PALATIUS, Gesta Pontificum Romanorum, IV (Venice. 1688), 571-94.
MICHAEL OTT
Transcribed by Douglas J. Potter
Dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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