Pope
Innocent XII
(ANTONIO PIGNATELLI)
Born at Spinazzolo near Naples, 13 March, 1615; died at Rome, 27 September, 1700. Re
entered the Roman Curia at the age of twenty and was successively made vice-legate at
Urbino, inquisitor in Malta, and Governor of Perugia. Under Innocent X he became nuncio in
Tuscany, and Alexander VII sent him as nuncio to Poland, where he regulated the disturbed
ecclesiastical affairs and united the Armenians with Rome. In 1668 he became nuncio at
Vienna. Innocent XI created him Cardinal-Priest of San Pancrazio fuori le mura and
Bishop of Faenza on 1 September, 1682, then Archbishop of Naples in 1687. After the death
of Alexander VIII the cardinals entered the conclave at Rome on 11 February, 1691, but
neither the French nor the Spanish-Hapsburg faction among the cardinals could carry its
candidate. A compromise resulted in the election of Cardinal Pignatelli on 12 July, 1691.
In his Bull "Romanum decet Pontificem" (22 June, 1692), which was subscribed and
sworn to by the cardinals, he decreed that in the future no pope should be permitted to
bestow the cardinalate on more than one of his kinsmen. Towards the poor, whom he called
his nephews, he was extremely charitable; he turned part of the Lateran into a hospital
for the needy, erected numerous charitable and educational institutions, and completed the
large court-house "Curia Innocenziana", which now serves as the Italian House of
Commons (Camera dei Deputati). In 1693 he induced King Louis XIV of France to repeal the
"Declaration of the French Clergy", which had been adopted in 1682. The bishops
who had taken part in the "Declaration" sent a written recantation to Rome,
whereupon the pope sent his Bull of confirmation to those bishops from whom it had been
withheld. In 1696 he repeated his predecessor's condemnation of Jansenism and in his Brief
"Cum alias" (12 March, 1699) he condemned twenty-three semi-Quietistic
propositions contained in Fénelon's "Maximes". Towards the end of his
pontificate his relations with Emperor Leopold I became somewhat strained, owing
especially to Count Martinitz, the imperial ambassador at Rome, who still insisted on the
"right of asylum", which had been abolished by Innocent XI. It was greatly due
to the arrogance of Martinitz that Innocent XII advised King Charles II of Spain to make a
Frenchman, the Duke of Anjou, his testamentary successor, an act which led to the
"War of the Spanish Succession".
Bullarium Innocentii XII (Rome, 1697); RANKE, Die römischen Päpste, tr.
FOSTER, History of the Popes, II (London, 1906), 425-7; KLOPP, Hat der Papst
Innocenz XII im Jahre 1700 dem Könige Karl II von Spanien gerathen, durch ein Testament
den Herzog von Anjou zum Erben der spanischen Monarchie zu ernennen in Historisch-Politische
Blätter, LXXXIII (Munich, 1879), 25-46 and 125-150; BRISCHAR in Kirchenlex.,
s. v.
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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