Pope
Clement XIV
(LORENZOor GIOVANNI VINCENZO ANTONIOGANGANELLI).
Born at Sant Arcangelo, near Rimini, 31 October, 1765; died at Rome, 22
September, 1774.At the death of Clement XIII the Church was in dire distress.
Gallicanism and Jansenism, Febronianism and Rationalism were up in rebellion against the
authority of the Roman pontiff; the rulers of France, Spain, Naples, Portugal, Parma were
on the side of the sectarians who flattered their dynastic prejudices and, at least in
appearance, worked for the strengthening of the temporal power against the spiritual. The
new pope would have to face a coalition of moral and political forces which Clement XIII
had indeed manfully resisted, but failed to put down, or even materially to check. The
great question between Rome and the Bourbon princes was the suppression of the Society of
Jesus. In France, Spain, and Portugal the suppression had taken place de facto; the
accession of a new pope was made the occasion for insisting on the abolition of the order
root and branch, de facto and de jure, in Europe and all over the world.
The conclave assembled 15 February, 1769. Rarely, if ever, has a conclave been the
victim of such overweening interference, base intrigues, and unwarranted pressure. The
ambassadors of France (dAubeterre) and Spain (Azpuru) and the Cardinals de Bernis
(France) and Orsini (Naples) led the campaign. The Sacred college, consisting of
forty-seven cardinals, was divided into Court cardinals and Zelanti. The latter,
favourable to the Jesuits and opposed to the encroaching secular, were in a majority.
"It is easy to foresee the difficulties of our negotiations on a stage where more
than three-fourths of the actors are against us." Thus wrote Bernis to Choiseul, the
minister of Louis XV. The immediate object of the intriguers was to gain over a sufficient
number of Zelanti. DAubeterre, inspired by Azpuru, urged Bernis to insist that the
election of the future pope be made to depend on his written engagement to suppress the
Jesuits. The cardinal, however, refused. In a memorandum to Choiseul, dated 12 April,
1769, he says: "To require from the future pope a promise made in writing or before
witnesses, to destroy the Jesuits, would be a flagrant violation of the canon law and
therefore a blot on the honour of the crowns." The King of Spain (Charles III) was
willing to bear the responsibility. DAubeterre opined that simony and canon law had
no standing against reason, which claimed the abolition of the Society for the peace of
the world. Threats were now resorted to; Bernis hinted at a blockade of Rome and popular
insurrections to overcome the resistance of the Zelanti. France and Spain, in virtue of
their right of veto, excluded twenty-three of the forty-seven cardinals; nine or ten more,
on account of their age or for some other reason, were not papabili; only four or
five remained eligible. Well might the Sacred College, as Bernis feared it would, protest
against violence and separate on the plea of not being free to elect a suitable candidate.
But dAubeterre was relentless. He wished to intimidate the cardinals. "A pope
elected against the wishes of the Courts", he wrote, "will not be
acknowledged"; and again, "I think that a pope of that [philosophical] temper,
that is without scruples, holding fast to no opinion and consulting only his own
interests, might be acceptable to the Courts". The ambassadors threatened to leave
Rome unless the conclave surrendered to their dictation. The arrival of the two Spanish
cardinals, Solis and La Cerda, added new strength to the Court party. Solis insisted on a
written promise to suppress the Jesuits being given by the future pope, but Bernis was not
to be gained over to such a breach of the law. Solis, therefore, supported in the conclave
by Cardinal Malvazzi and outside by the ambassadors of France and Spain, took the matter
into his own hands. He began by sounding Cardinal Ganganelli as to his willingness to give
the promise required by the Bourbon princes as an indispensable condition for
election.Why Ganganelli? This cardinal was the only friar in the Sacred College. Of
humble birth (his father had been a surgeon at Sant' Arcangelo), he had received his
education from the Jesuits of Rimini and the Piarists of Urbino, and, in 1724, at the age
of nineteen, had entered the Order of Friars Minor of St. Francis and changed his
baptismal name (Giovanni Vincenzo Antonio) for that of Lorenzo. His talents and his
virtues had raised him to the dignity of definitor generalis of his order (1741);
Benedict XIV made him Consultor of the Holy Office, and Clement XIII gave him the
cardinal's hat (1759), at the instance, it is said, of Father Ricci, the General of the
Jesuits. During the conclave he endeavoured to please both the Zelanti and the Court party
without committing himself to either. At any rate he signed a paper which satisfied Solis.
Crétineau-Joly, the historian of the Jesuits, gives its text; the future pope declared
"that he recognized in the sovereign pontiff the right to extinguish, with good
conscience, the Company of Jesus, provided he observed the canon law; and that it was
desirable that the pope should do everything in his power to satisfy the wishes of the
Crowns". The original paper is, however, nowhere to be found, but its existence seems
established by subsequent events, and also by the testimony of Bernis in letters to
Choiseul (28 July, and 20 November, 1769). Ganganelli had thus secured the votes of the
Court cardinals; the Zelanti looked upon him as indifferent or even favourable to the
Jesuits; dAubeterre had always been in his favour as being "a wise and moderate
theologian"; and Choiseul had marked him as "very good" on the list of papabili.
Bernis, anxious to have his share in the victory of the sovereigns, urged the election. On
18 May, 1769, Ganganelli was elected by forty-six votes out of forty-seven, the
forty-seventh being his own which he had given to Cardinal Rezzonico, a nephew of Clement
XIII. He took the name of Clement XIV.
The new pope's first Encyclical clearly defined his policy: to keep the peace with
Catholic princes in order to secure their support in the war against irreligion. His
predecessor had left him a legacy of broils with nearly every Catholic power in Europe.
Clement hastened to settle as many as he could by concessions and conciliatory measures.
Without revoking the constitution of Clement XIII against he young Duke of Parma's inroads
on the rights of the Church, he refrained from urging its execution, and graciously
granted him a dispensation to marry his cousin, the Archduchess Amelia, daughter of Maria
Theresa of Austria. The King of Spain, soothed by these concessions, withdrew the
uncanonical edict which, a year before, he had issued as a counterblast to the pope's
proceedings against the infant Duke of Parma, the king's nephew; he also re-established
the nuncio's tribunal and condemned some writings against Rome. Portugal had been severed
from Rome since 1760; Clement XIV began his attempt at reconciliation by elevating to the
Sacred College Paulo de Carvalho, brother of the famous minister Pombal; active
negotiations terminated in the revocation, by King Joseph I, of the ordinances of 1760,
the origin and cause of the rupture between Portugal and the Holy See. A grievance common
to Catholic princes was the yearly publication, on Holy Thursday, of the censures reserved
to the pope; Clement abolished this custom in the first Lent of his pontificate. But there
remained the ominous question of the Jesuits. The Bourbon princes, though thankful for
smaller concessions, would not rest till they had obtained the great object of their
machinations, the total suppression of the Society. Although persecuted in France, Spain,
Sicily, and Portugal, the Jesuits had still many powerful protectors: the rulers, as well
as the public conscience, protected them and their numerous establishments in the
ecclesiastical electorates of Germany, in the Palatinate, Bavaria, Silesia, Poland,
Switzerland, and the many countries subject to the sceptre of Maria Theresa, not to
mention the States of the Church and the foreign missions. The Bourbon princes were moved
in their persecution by the spirit of the times, represented in Latin countries by French
irreligious philosophism, by Jansenism, Gallicanism, and Erastianism; probably also by the
natural desire to receive the papal sanction for their unjust proceedings against the
order, for which they stood accused at the bar of the Catholic conscience. The victim of a
man's injustice often becomes the object of his hatred; thus only the conduct of Charles
III, of Pombal, Tanucci, Aranda, Moniño can be accounted for.
An ever-recurring and almost solitary grievance against the Society was that the
Fathers disturbed the peace wherever they were firmly established. The accusation is not
unfounded: the Jesuits did indeed disturb the peace of the enemies of the Church, for, in
the words of dAlembert to Frederick II, they were "the grenadiers of the pope's
guard". Cardinal de Bernis, now French ambassador in Rome, was instructed by Choiseul
to follow the lead of Spain in the renewed campaign against the Jesuits. On the 22nd of
July, 1769, he presented to the pope a memorandum in the name of the three ministers of
the Bourbon kings, "The three monarchs", it ran, "still believe the
destruction of the Jesuits to be useful and necessary; they have already made their
request to Your Holiness, and they renew it this day." Clement answered that "he
had his conscience and honour to consult"; he asked for a delay. On 30 September he
made some vague promises to Louis XV, who was less eager in the fray than Charles III.
This latter, bent on the immediate suppression of the order, obtained from Clement XIV,
under the strong pressure of Azpuru, the written promise "to submit to His Majesty a
scheme for the absolute extinction of the Society" (30 November, 1769). To prove his
sincerity the pope now commenced open hostilities against the Jesuits. He refused to see
their general, Father Ricci, and gradually removed from his entourage their best friends;
his only confidants were two friars of his own order, Buontempo and Francesco; no princes
or cardinals surrounded his throne. The Roman people, dissatisfied with this state of
things and reduced to starvation by maladministration, openly showed their discontent, but
Clement, bound by his promises and caught in the meshes of Bourbon diplomacy, was unable
to retrace his steps. The college and seminary of Frascati were taken from the Jesuits and
handed over to the bishop of the town, the Cardinal of York. Their Lenten catechisms were
prohibited for 1770. A congregation of cardinals hostile to the order visited the Roman
College and had the Fathers expelled; the novitiate and the German College were also
attacked. The German College won its cause, but the sentence was never executed. The
novices and students were sent back to their families. A similar system of persecution was
extended to Bologna, Ravenna, Ferrara, Modena, Macerata. Nowhere did the Jesuits offer any
resistance; they knew that their efforts were futile. Father Garnier wrote: "You ask
me why the Jesuits offer no defence: they can do nothing here. All approaches, direct and
indirect, are completely closed, walled up with double walls. Not the most insignificant
memorandum can find its way in. There is no one who would undertake to hand it in"
(19th Jan., 1773).
On 4 July, 1772, appeared on the scene a new Spanish ambassador, Joseph Moniño, Count
of Florida Blanca. At once he made an onslaught on the perplexed pope. He openly
threatened him with a schism in Spain and probably in the other Bourbon states, such as
had existed in Portugal from 1760 to 1770. On the other hand, he promised the restitution
of Avignon and Benvento, still held by France and Naples. Whilst Clement's anger was
roused by this latter simoniacal proposal, his good, but feeble, heart could not overcome
the fear of a widespread schism. Moniño had conquered. He now ransacked the archives of
Rome and Spain to supply Clement with facts justifying the promised suppression. Moniño
must be held responsible for the matter of the Brief "Dominus ac Redemptor", i.
e. for its facts and provisions; the pope contributed little more to it than the form of
his supreme authority. Meanwhile Clement continued to harass the Jesuits of his own
dominions, perhaps with a view to preparing the Catholic world for the Brief of
suppression, or perhaps hoping by his severity to soothe the anger of Charles III and to
stave off the abolition of the whole order. Until the end of 1772 he still found some
support against the Bourbons in King Charles Emmanuel of Sardinia and in the Empress Maria
Theresa of Austria. But Charles Emmanuel died, and Maria Theresa, giving way to the
importunate prayers of her son Joseph II and her daughter the Queen of Naples, ceased to
plead for the maintenance of the Society. Thus left to himself, or rather to the will of
Charles III and the wiles of Moniño, Clement began, in November, 1772, the composition of
the Brief of abolition, which took him seven months to finish. It was signed 8 June, 1773;
at the same time a congregation of cardinals was appointed to administer the property of
the suppressed order. On 21 July the bells of the Gesù rang the opening of the annual
novena preceding the feast of St. Ignatius; the pope, hearing them, remarked: "They
are not ringing for the saints but for the dead". The Brief of suppression, signed on
8 June, bears the date 21 July, 1773. It was made known at the Gesù to the general
(Father Ricci) and his assistants on the evening of 16 August; the following day they were
taken first to the English College, then to Castel Sant Angelo, where their long
trial was commenced. Ricci never saw the end of it. He died in prison, to his last moment
protesting his innocence and that of his order. His companions were set free under Pius
VI, their judges having found them "not guilty".
The Brief, "Dominus ac Redemptor" opens with the statement that it is the
pope's office to secure in the world the unity of mind in the bonds of peace. He must
therefore be prepared, for the sake of charity, to uproot and destroy the things most dear
to him, whatever pains and bitterness their loss may entail. Often the popes, his
predecessors, have made use of their supreme authority for reforming, and even dissolving,
religious orders which had become harmful and disturbed the peace of the nations rather
than promoted it. Numerous examples are quoted, then the Brief continues: "Our
predecessors, in virtue of the plenitude of power which is theirs as Vicars of Christ,
have suppressed such orders without allowing them to state their claims or to refute the
grave accusations brought against them, or to impugn the motives of the pope."
Clement has now to deal with a similar case, that of the Society of Jesus. Having
enumerated the principal favours granted it by former popes, he remarks that "the
very tenor and terms of the said Apostolic constitutions show that the Society from its
earliest days bore the germs of dissensions and jealousies which tore its own members
asunder, led them to rise against other religious orders, against the secular clergy and
the universities, nay even against the sovereigns who had received them in their
states". Then follows a list of the quarrels in which the Jesuits had been engaged,
from Sixtus V to Benedict XIV. Clement XIII had hoped to silence their enemies by renewing
the approbation of their Institute, "but the Holy See derived no consolation, the
Society no help, Christianity no advantage from the Apostolic letters of Clement XIII, of
blessed memory, letters which were wrung from him rather than freely given". At the
end of this pope's reign "the outcry and the complaints against the Society
increasing day by day, the very princes whose piety and hereditary benevolence towards it
are favourably known of all nationsour beloved Sons in Jesus Christ the Kings of
France, Spain, Portugal, and the two Sicilieswere forced to expel from their
kingdoms, states and provinces, all the religious of this Order, well knowing that this
extreme measure was the only remedy to such great evils." Now the complete abolition
of the order is demanded by the same princes. After long and mature consideration the
pope, "compelled by his office, which imposes on him the obligation to procure,
maintain, and consolidate with all his power the peace and tranquillity of the Christian
peoplepersuaded, moreover, that the Society of Jesus is no longer able to produce
the abundant fruit and the great good for which it was institutedand considering
that, as long as this order subsists, it is impossible for the Church to enjoy free and
solid peace", resolves to "suppress and abolish" the Society, "to
annul and abrogate all and each of its offices, functions, and administrations". The
authority of the superiors was transferred to the bishops; minute provisions were made for
the maintenance and the employment of the members of the order. The Brief concludes with a
prohibition to suspend or impede its execution, to make it the occasion of insulting or
attacking anyone, least of all the former Jesuits; finally it enhorts the faithful to live
in peace with all men and to love one another.
The one and only motive for the suppression of the Society set forth in this Brief is
to restore the peace of the Church by removing one of the contending parties from the
battlefield. No blame is laid by the pope on the rules of the order, or the personal
conduct of its members, or the orthodoxy of their teaching. Moreover, Father Sydney Smith,
S. J. (in "The Month", CII, 62, July 1903), observes: "The fact remains
that the condemnation is not pronounced in the straightforward language of direct
statement, but is merely insinuated with the aid of dexterous phrasing"; and he
contrasts this method of stating grounds for the suppression of the Society with the
vigorous and direct language used by former popes in suppressing the Humiliati and other
orders. If Clement XIV hoped to stop the storm of unbelief raging against the Bark of
Peter by throwing its best oarsmen overboard, he was sorely mistaken. But is unlikely that
he entertained such a fallacy. He loved the Jesuits, who had been his first teachers, his
trusty advisers, the best defenders of the Church over which he ruled. No personal
animosity guided his action; the Jesuits themselves, in agreement with all serious
historians, attribute their suppression to Clement's weakness of character, unskilled
diplomacy, and that kind of goodness of heart which is more bent on doing what is pleasing
than what is right. He was not built to hold his head above the tempest; his hesitations
and his struggles were of no avail against the enemies of the order, and his friends found
no better excuse for him than that of St. Alphonsus: What could the poor pope do when all
the Courts insisted on the suppression? The Jesuit Cordara expresses the same mind:
"I think we should not condemn the pontiff who, after so many hesitations, has judged
it his duty to suppress the Society of Jesus. I love my order as much as any man, yet, had
I been in the pope's place I should probably have acted as he did. The Company, founded
and maintained for the good of the Church, perished for the same good; it could not have
ended more gloriously."
It should be noted that the Brief was not promulgated in the form customary for papal
Constitutions intended as laws of the Church. It was not a Bull, but a Brief, i. e. a
decree of less binding force and easier of revocation; it was not affixed to the gates of
St. Peter's or in the Campo di Fiore; it was not even communicated in legal form to the
Jesuits in Rome; the general and his assistants alone received the notification of their
suppression. In France it was not published, the Gallican Church, and especially Beaumont,
Archbishop of Paris, resolutely opposing it as being the pope's personal deed, not
supported by the whole Church and therefore not binding on the Church of France. The King
of Spain thought the Brief too lenient, for it condemned neither the doctrine, nor the
morals, nor the discipline of his victims. The court of Naples forbade its publication
under pain of death. Maria Theresa allowed her son Joseph II to seize the property of the
Jesuits (some $10,000,000) and then, "reserving her rights", acquiesced in the
suppression "for the peace of the Church". Poland resisted a while; the Swiss
cantons of Lucerne, Fribourg, and Solothurn never allowed the Fathers to give up their
colleges. Two non-Catholic sovereigns, Frederick of Prussia and Catherine of Russia, took
the Jesuits under their protection. Whatever may have been their motives, whether it was
to spite the pope and the Bourbon Courts or to please their Catholic subjects and preserve
for them the services of the best educators, their intervention kept the order alive until
its complete restoration in 1804. Frederick persevered in his opposition only for a few
years; in 1780 the Brief was promulgated in his dominions. The Jesuits retained possession
of all their colleges and of the University of Breslau until 1806 and 1811, but they
ranked as secular priests and admitted no more novices. But Catherine II resisted to the
end. By her order the bishops of White Russia ignored the Brief of suppression and
commanded the Jesuits to continue to live in communities and to go on with their usual
work. Clement XIV seems to have approved of their conduct. The empress, in order to set at
rest the scruples of the Fathers, engaged in several negotiations with the pope and had
her will. In France, too, the persecuted Jesuits were not altogether without friends.
Madame Louise de France, daughter of Louis XV, who had entered the Carmelite Order and
was, with her sisters, the leader of a band of pious women at the court of her royal
father, had worked out a scheme for re-establishing the Jesuits in six provinces under the
authority of the bishops. Bernis, however, defeated their good intentions. He obtained
from the pope a new Brief, addressed to himself and requesting him to see that the French
bishops conformed, each in his diocese, to the Brief "Dominus ac Redemptor".
After the death of Clement XIV it was rumoured that he had retracted the Brief of
abolition by a letter of 29 June, 1774. That letter, it was said, had been entrusted to
his confessor to be given to the next pope. It was published for the first time in 1789,
at Zurich, in P. Ph. Wolf's "Allgemeine Geschichte der Jesuiten". Although Pius
VI never protested against this statement, the authenticity of the document in question is
not sufficiently established (De la Serviére).
The first and almost the only advantage the pope reaped from his policy of concessions
was the restoration to the Holy See of Avignon and Benevento. These provinces had been
seized by the Kings of France and Naples when Clement XIII had excommunicated their
kinsman the young Duke of Parma (1768). The restitution, following so closely on the
suppression of the Jesuits, seemed the price paid for it, although, to save appearances,
the duke interceded with the two kings in favour of the pope, and Clement, in the
consistory of 17 January, 1774, took occasion from it to load the Bourbon princes with
praises they little deserved. The hostile and schismatical man;uvres against the
Church continued unabated in many Catholic countries. In France a royal commission for the
reformation of the religious orders had been at work for several years, notwithstanding
the energetic protests of Clement XIII; without the pope's consent it had abolished in
1770 the congregations of Grandmont and of the exempt Benedictines; it had threatened the
Premonstratensians, the Trinitarians, and the Minims with the same fate. The pope
protested, through his nuncio to Paris, against such abuses of the secular power, but in
vain. The Celestines and the Camaldolese were secularized that same year, 1770. The only
concessions Louis XV deigned to make was to submit to Clement the general edict for the
reformation of the French religious before its publication. This was in 1773. The pope
succeeded in obtaining its modification in several points.
In 1768 Genoa had ceded the Island of Corsica to France. At once a conflict arose as to
the introduction of "Gallican usages". The pope sent a visitor Apostolic to the
island and had the gratification of preventing the adoption of usages in opposition to the
Roman practice. Louis XV, however, revenged himself by absolutely refusing to acknowledge
the pope's suzerainty over Corsica. Louis XV died in 1774, and one is rather surprised at
the eulogy which Clement XIV pronounced in a consistory on "the king's deep love for
the Church, and his admirable zeal for the defence of the Catholic religion". He also
hoped that the penitent death of the prince had secured his salvation. It may be surmised
that he was prompted by a desire to please the king's youngest daughter, Madame Louise de
France, Prioress of the Carmelites of SaintDenis, for whom he had always shown a great
affection, attested by numerous favours granted to herself and to her convent.
During Clement XIV's pontificate the chief rulers in German lands were Maria Theresa,
of Austria, and Frederick the Great, of Prussia. Frederick, by preserving the Jesuits in
his dominions, rendered the Church a good, though perhaps unintended, service. He also
authorized the erection of a Catholic church in Berlin; the pope sent a generous
contribution and ordered collections for the same purpose to be made in Belgium, the
Rhineland, and Austria. Maria Theresa lived up to the title of Regina Apostolica
bestowed on her by Clement XIII. But the doctrines of Febronius were prevalent at her
court, and more than once she came into conflict with the pope. She refused to suppress a
new edition of Febronius, as Clement XIV requested; she lent a willing ear to the
"Grievances of the German nation", a scheme of reforms in the Church making it
more dependent on the prince than on the pope; she legislated for the religious orders of
her dominions without consulting Rome. She maintained her edict on the religious against
all the pope's remonstrances, but withdrew her protection from the authors of the
"Grievances", the Electors of Cologne, Mainz, and Trier. She also obtained from
Clement in 1770 the institution of a Ruthenian bishop for the Ruthenian Catholics of
Hungary. In other parts of Germany the pope had to face similar difficulties. The number
and wealth of the religious houses, in some instances their uselessness, and occasionally
thier disorders, tempted the princes to lay violent and rapacious hands on them. Numerous
houses were to be suppressed in Bavaria for the endowment of the new University of
Ebersberg, in the Palatinate the reception of new religious was to be stopped; Clement
opposed both measures with success. Westphalia is indebted to him for the University of
Münster, erected 27 May, 1773.
In Spain Clement approved the Order of the Knights of the Immaculate Conception,
instituted by Charles III. The king also desired him to define the dogma of the Immaculate
Conception, but France blocked the way. Portugal, whilst it made a certain outward show of
goodwill towards Rome, continued to interfere in ecclesiastical affairs and to impose on
colleges and seminaries an education more in accord with French philosophism than with the
spirit of the Church. At Naples the minster Tanucci hindered the recruitment of religious
orders; episcopal acts required the royal placet; the anti- religious press enjoyed
high protection. Poland and Russia were another source of deep grief for Clement XIV.
Whilst, politically, Poland was preparing its own ruin, the Piarists openly taught the
worst philosophism in their schools and refused to have their houses visited by the papal
nuncio at Warsaw. King Stanislaus planned the extinction of the religious orders and
favoured the Freemasons. The pope was powerless; the few concessions he obtained from
Catherine II for the Catholics of her new province were set at naught by that headstrong
woman as soon as it suited her politics. Of her own authority she created for the annexed
Catholic Ruthenians a new diocese (Mohileff) administered by a bishop (Siestrencewicz) of
schismatic temper. Clement XIV had the satisfaction of seeing his nuncio, Caprara,
favourably received at the Court of England, and of initiating measures for the
emancipation of English Catholics. This turn in the relations between Rome and England was
due to the granting of royal honours to the king's brother when he visited Rome in 1772;
the same honours being refused to the Pretender. In the East, the Nestorian Patriarch, Mar
Simeon, and six of his suffragans, were reunited to Rome. In Rome the pope found little
favour with either the Roman patriciate or the Sacred College; none of the many measures
he took for the betterment of his people could atone, in their eyes, for his subserviency
to the Bourbon Courts and for the suppression of the Jesuits. The last months of his life
were embittered by the consciousness of his failures; at times he seemed crushed under the
weight of sorrow. On the 10th of September, 1774, he took to his bed, received Extreme
Unction on the 21st and died piously on the 22nd of the same month. Many witnesses in the
process of canonization of St. Alphonsus of Liguori attested that the saint had been
miraculously present at the death-bed of Clement XIV to console and fortify him in his
last hour. The doctors, who opened the dead body in presence of many spectators, ascribed
death to scorbutic and hæmorrhoidal dispositions of long standing, aggravated by
excessive labour and by the habit of provoking artificial perspiration even during the
greatest heat. Notwithstanding the doctors' certificate, the "Spanish party" and
historical romancers attributed death to poison administered by the Jesuits. The mortal
remains of Clement XIV rest in the church of the Twelve Apostles. (See also SOCIETY OF
JESUS.)
Bullarium Romanum: Clementis XIV epistolæ et brevia,
ed. THEINER (Paris, 1852); CORDARA, Memoirs on the suppression of the Jesuits,
published by DÖLLINGER in Beitrage zur politischen, kirchlichen u. Culturgeschichte
(Vienna, 1882).As to the Lettres intéressantes de Clément XIV, published by
the MARCHESE CARACCIOLO in 1776, Father Sydney Smith, S. J., says, in a note to one of the
articles in The Month (CI, 180, Feb., 1903) referred to below: "There has been
much discussion about these letters. The Marchese Caracciolo in his Preface is
suspiciously reticent as to the channels through which he obtained them, and gives them in
a French translation instead of in the original Italian. On this account, and because it
is difficult to believe that some of the contents come from Fra Lorenzo [as Clement XIV
was called in religion], many critics have rejected the entire collection as spurious. But
VON REUTMONT thinks (GanganelliPapst Clementseine Briefe und seine Zeit,
1847, Preface 40-42) that it is in substance a genuine collection, though some of the
letters are spurious and interpolated. Von Reumont argues very justly that it would hardly
be possible to fabricate so many letters, addressed to correspondents most of whom were
alive at the time of the publication, and yet impart to them the unity, distinctness, and
spontanedity of a living character."CHRETINEAUJOLY, Clément XIV et les
Jésuites (Paris, 1847); Le Pape Clément XIV, Lettres au P. Theiner; MASSON, Le
Cardinal de Bernis (Paris, 1884); ROUSSEAU, Expulsion des Jésuites en Espagne
(Paris, 1907); DE LA SERVIÉRE in VACANT, Dict. de théol. cath. (Paris, 1907), s.
v. Clément XIV; The Dublin Review (1855), XXXIX, 107; SMITH, The Suppression of
the Society of Jesus, articles in The Month (London, 1902-3), XCIX, C, CI, CII;
RAVIGNAN, Clément XIII et Clément XIV (Paris, 1854).
J. WILHELM
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio
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
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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