Pope
Clement XI
(GIOVANNI FRANCESCO ALBANI).
Born at Urbino, 23 July, 1649; elected 23 November, 1700; died at Rome 19 March, 1721.
The Albani (q.v.) were a noble Umbrian family. Under Urban VIII the grandfather of the
future pope had held for thirteen years the honourable office of Senator of Rome. An
uncle, Annibale Albani, was a distinguished scholar and was Prefect of the Vatican
Library. Giovanni Francesco was sent to Rome in his eleventh year to prosecute his studies
at the Roman College. He made rapid progress and was known as an author at the age of
eighteen, translating from the Greek into elegant Latin. He attracted the notice of the
patroness of Roman literati, Queen Christina of Sweden, who before he became of age
enrolled him in her exclusive Accademia. With equal ardour and success, he applied
himself to the profounder branches, theology and law, and was created doctor of canon and
civil law. So brilliant an intellect, joined with stainless morals and piety, secured for
him a rapid advancement at the papal court. At the age of twenty-eight he was made a
prelate, and governed successively Rieti, Sabina, and Orvieto, everywhere acceptable on
account of his reputation for justice and prudence. Recalled to Rome, he was appointed
Vicar of St. Peter's, and on the death of Cardinal Slusio succeeded to the important
position of Secretary of Papal Briefs, which he held for thirteen years, and for which his
command of classical latinity singularly fitted him. On 13 February, 1690, he was created
cardinal-deacon and later Cardinal-Priest of the Title of San Silvestro, and was ordained
to the priesthood.
The conclave of 1700 would have terminated speedily with the election of Cardinal
Mariscotti, had not the veto of France rendered the choice of that able cardinal
impossible. After deliberating for forty-six days, the Sacred College united in selecting
Cardinal Albani, whose virtues and ability overbalanced the objection that he was only
fifty-one years old. Three days were spent in the effort to overcome his reluctance to
accept a dignity the heavy burden of which none knew better than the experienced curialist
(Galland in Hist. Jahrbuch, 1882, III, 208 sqq.). The period was critical for Europe and
the papacy. During the conclave Charles II, the last of the Spanish Hapsburgs, had died
childless, leaving his vast dominions a prey to French and Austrian ambition. His will,
making Philip of Anjou, grandson of Louis XIV, sole heir to the Spanish Empire, was
contested by the Emperor Leopold, who claimed Spain for his second son Charles. The late
king, before making this will, had consulted Pope Innocent XII, and Cardinal Albani had
been one of the three cardinals to whom the pontiff had entrusted the case and who advised
him to pronounce secretly in its favour. This was at the time unknown to the emperor, else
Austria would have vetoed the election of Albani. The latter was finally persuaded that it
was his duty to obey the call from Heaven; on 30 November he was consecrated bishop, and
on 8 December solemnly enthroned in the Vatican. The enthusiasm with which his elevation
was greeted throughout the world is the best evidence of his worth. Even Protestants
received the intelligence with joy and the city of Nuremberg struck a medal in his honour.
The sincere Catholic reformers greeted his accession as the death-knell of nepotism; for,
though he had many relatives, it was known that he had instigated and written the severe
condemnation of that abuse issued by his predecessor. As pontiff, he did not belie his
principles. He bestowed the offices of his court upon the most worthy subjects and ordered
his brother to keep at a distance and refrain from adopting any new title or interfering
in matters of state. In the government of the States of the Church, Clement was a capable
administrator. He provided diligently for the needs of his subjects, was extremely
charitable to the poor, bettered the condition of the prisons, and secured food for the
populace in time of scarcity. He won the good will of artists by prohibiting the
exportation of ancient masterpieces, and of scientists by commissioning Bianchini to lay
down on the pavement of Sta Maria degli Angioli the meridian of Rome, known as the
Clementina.
His capacity for work was prodigious. He slept but little and ate so sparingly that a
few pence per day sufficed for his table. Every day he confessed and celebrated Mass. He
entered minutely into the details of every measure which came before him, and with his own
hand prepared the numerous allocutions, Briefs, and constitutions afterwards collected and
published. He also found time to preach his beautiful homilies and was frequently to be
seen in the confessional. Though his powerful frame more than once sank under the weight
of his labours and cares, he continued to keep rigorously the fasts of the Church, and
generally allowed himself but the shortest possible respite from his labours.
In his efforts to establish peace among the powers of Europe and to uphold the rights
of the Church, he met with scant success; for the eighteenth century was eminently the age
of selfishness and infidelity. One of his first public acts was to protest against the
assumption (1701) by the Elector of Brandenburg of the title of King of Prussia. The
pope's action, though often derided and misinterpreted, was natural enough, not only
because the bestowal of royal titles had always been regarded as the privilege of the Holy
See, but also because Prussia belonged by ancient right to the ecclesiastico-military
institute known as the Teutonic Order. In the troubles excited by the rivalry of France
and the Empire for the Spanish succession, Pope Clement resolved to maintain a neutral
attitude; but this was found to be impossible. When, therefore, the Bourbon was crowned in
Madrid as Philip V, amid the universal acclamations of the Spaniards, the pope acquiesced
and acknowledged the validity of his title. This embittered the morose Emperor Leopold,
and the relations between Austria and the Holy See became so strained that the pope did
not conceal his satisfaction when the French and Bavarian troops began that march on
Vienna which ended so disastrously on the field of Blenheim. Marlborough's victory,
followed by Prince Eugene's successful campaign in Piedmont, placed Italy at the mercy of
the Austrians. Leopold died in 1705 and was succeeded by his oldest son Joseph, a worthy
precursor of Joseph II. A contest immediately began on the question known as Jus
primarum precum, involving the right of the crown to appoint to vacant benefices. The
victorious Austrians, now masters of Northern Italy, invaded the Papal States, took
possession of Piacenza and Parma, annexed Comacchio and besieged Ferrara. Clement at first
offered a spirited resistance, but, abandoned by all, could not hope for success, and when
a strong detachment of Protestant troops under the command of the Prince of Hesse-Cassel
reached Bologna, fearing a repetition of the fearful scenes of 1527, he finally gave way
(15 Jan., 1709), acknowledged the Archduke Charles as King of Spain "without
detriment to the rights of another", and promised him the investiture of Naples.
Though the Bourbon monarchs had done nothing to aid the pope in his unequal struggle, both
Louis and Philip became very indignant and retaliated by every means in their power (see
Louis XIV). In the negotiations preceding the Peace of Utrecht (1713) the rights of the
pope were studiously neglected; his nuncio was not accorded a hearing; his dominions were
parcelled out to suit the convenience of either party. Sicily was given to Victor Amadeus
II of Savoy, with whom from the first days of his pontificate Clement was involved in
quarrels on the subjects of ecclesiastical immunities and appointments to vacant
benefices. The new king now undertook to revive the so-called Monarchia Sicula, an
ancient but much-disputed and abused privilege of pontifical origin which practically
excluded the pope from any authority over the church in Sicily. When Clement answered with
bann and interdict, all the clergy, about 3000 in number, who remained loyal to the Holy
See were banished the island, and the pope was forced to give them food and shelter. The
interdict was not raised till 1718, when Spain regained possession, but the old
controversy was repeatedly resumed under the Bourbons. Through the machinations of
Cardinal Alberoni, Parma and Piacenza were granted to a Spanish Infante without regard to
the papal overlordship. It was some consolation to the much-tried pope that Augustus of
Saxony, King of Poland, returned to the Church. Clement laboured hard to restore harmony
in Poland, but without success. The Turks had taken advantage of the dissensions among the
Christians to invade Europe by land and sea. Clement proclaimed a jubilee, sent money and
ships to the assistance of the Venetians, and granted a tithe on all benefices to the
Emperor Charles VI. When Prince Eugene won the great battle of Temesvár, which put an end
to the Turkish danger, no slight share of the credit was given by the Christian world to
the pope and the Holy Rosary. Clement sent the great commander a blessed hat and sword.
The fleet which Philip V of Spain had raised at the instigation of the pope, and with
subsidies levied on church revenues, was diverted by Alberoni to the conquest of Sardinia;
and though Clement showed his indignation by demanding the dismissal of the minister, and
beginning a process against him, he had much to do to convince the emperor that he was not
privy to the treacherous transaction. He gave a generous hospitality to the exiled son of
James II of England, James Edward Stuart, and helped him to obtain the hand of Clementina,
John Sobieski's accomplished granddaughter, mother of Charles Edward.
Clement's pastoral vigilance was felt in every corner of the earth. He organized the
Church in the Philippine Islands and sent missionaries to every distant spot. He erected
Lisbon into a patriarchate, 7 December, 1716. He enriched the Vatican Library with the
manuscript treasures gathered at the expense of the pope by Joseph Simeon Assemani in his
researches throughout Egypt and Syria. In the unfortunate controversy between the
Dominican and the Jesuit missionaries in China concerning the permissibility of certain
rites and customs, Clement decided in favour of the former. When the Jansenists provoked a
new collision with the Church under the leadership of Quesnel, Pope Clement issued his two
memorable Constitutions, "Vineam Domini", 16 July, 1705, and
"Unigenitus", 10 September, 1713 (see UNIGENITUS; VINEAM DOMINI; JANSENISM).
Clement XI made the feast of the Conception of the B.V.M. a Holy Day of obligation, and
canonized Pius V, Andrew of Avellino, Felix of Cantalice, and Catherine of Bologna.
This great and saintly pontiff died appropriately on the feast of St. Joseph, for whom
he entertained a particular devotion, and in whose honour he composed the special Office
found in the Breviary. His remains rest in St. Peter's. His official acts, letters, and
Briefs, also his homilies, were collected and published by his nephew, Cardinal Annibale
Albani (2 vols., Rome, 1722-24).
POLIDORI, De vita et rebus gestis Clementis XI libri sex (Urbino, 1724), also in
FASSINI, Supplemento to NATALIS ALEXANDER, Historia Ecclesiastica (Bassano, 1778);
REBOULET, Histoire de Clment XI (Avignon, 1752); LAFITEAU, Vie de Clment XI
(Padua, 1752); BUDER (non-Catholic), Leben und Thaten des klugen und berhmten
Papstes Clementis XI. (Frankfort, 1721); NOVAES, Elementi della storia deŐ sommi
pontefici da S. Pietro fino a Pio VI (Rome, 1821-25); LANDAU, Rom, Wien, Neapel
whrend des spanischen Erbfolgekrieges (Leipzig, 1885); HERGENR
THER-KIRSCH,
Kirschengeschichte (4th ed., Freiburg, 1907), III. See also on the Albani, VISCONTI in
Famiglie di Roma (I), and VON REUMONT in Beitrge zur ital. Geschichte, V, 323 sqq.,
and Gesch. d. Stadt Rom (Berlin, 1867), III, ii, 642 sqq. Cf. ARTAUD DE MONTOR, History of
the Roman Pontiffs (New York, 1867), II.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by Gerald Rossi
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IV
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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