Pope
Pius IX
(GIOVANNI MARIA MASTAI-FERRETTI).
Pope from 1846-78; born at Sinigaglia, 13 May, 1792; died in Rome, 7 February, 1878.
BEFORE HIS PAPACY
His early years. After receiving his classical education at the Piarist College
in Volterra from 1802-09 he went to Rome to study philosophy and theology, but left there
in 1810 on account of political disturbances. He returned in 1814 and, in deference to his
father's wish, asked to be admitted to the pope's Noble Guard. Being subject to epileptic
fits, he was refused admission and, following the desire of his mother and his own
inclination, he studied theology at the Roman Seminary, 1814-18. Meanwhile his malady had
ceased and he was ordained priest, 10 April, 1819. Pius VII appointed him spiritual
director of the orphan asylum popularly known as "Tata Giovanni", in Rome, and
in 1823 sent him, as auditor of the Apostolic delegate, Mgr Muzi, to Chile in South
America. Upon his return in 1825 he was made canon of Santa Maria in Via Lata and director
of the large hospital of San Michele by Leo XII. The same pope created him Archbishop of
Spoleto, 21 May, 1827. In 1831 when 4000 Italian revolutionists fled before the Austrian
army and threatened to throw themselves upon Spoleto, the archbishop persuaded them to lay
down their arms and disband, induced the Austrian commander to pardon them for their
treason, and gave them sufficient money to reach their homes. On 17 February, 1832,
Gregory XVI transferred him to the more important Diocese of Imola and, 14 December, 1840,
created him cardinal priest with the titular church of Santi Pietro e Marcellino, after
having reserved him in petto since 23 December, 1839. He retained the Diocese of
Imola until his elevation to the papacy. His great charity and amiability had made him
beloved by the people, while his friendship with some of the revolutionists had gained for
him the name of liberal.
His election. On 14 June, 1846, two weeks after the death of Gregory XVI, fifty
cardinals assembled in the Quirinal for the conclave. They were divided into two factions,
the conservatives, who favoured a continuance of absolutism in the temporal government of
the Church, and the liberals, who were desirous of moderate political reforms. At the
fourth scrutiny, 16 June, Cardinal Mastai-Ferretti, the liberal candidate, received three
votes beyond the required majority. Cardinal Archbishop Gaysruck of Milan had arrived too
late to make use of the right of exclusion against his election, given him by the Austrian
Government. The new pope accepted the tiara with reluctance and in memory of Pius VII, his
former benefactor, took the name of Pius IX. His coronation took place in the Basilica of
St. Peter on 21 June. His election was greeted with joy, for his charity towards the poor.
his kindheartedness, and his wit had made him very popular.
TEMPORAL ASPECT OF HIS PAPACY
Within the Papal States. Conciliatory policies (1846-1848).-- "Young
Italy" was clamouring for greater political freedom. The unyielding attitude of
Gregory XVI and his secretary of state, Cardinal Lambruschini, had brought the papal
states to the verge of a revolution. The new pope was in favour of a political reform. His
first great political act was the granting of a general amnesty to political exiles and
prisoners on 16 July, 1846. This act was hailed with enthusiasm by the people, but many
prudent men had reasonable fears of the results. Some extreme reactionaries denounced the
pope as in league with the Freemasons and the Carbonari. It did not occur to the kindly
nature of Pius IX that many of the pardoned political offenders would use their liberty to
further their revolutionary ideas. That he was not in accord with the radical ideas of the
times he clearly demonstrated by his Encyclical of 9 November, 1846, in which he laments
the oppression of Catholic interests, intrigues against the Holy See, machinations of
secret societies, sectarian bitterness, the Bible associations, indifferentism, false
philosophy, communism, and the licentious press. He was, however, willing to grant such
political reforms as he deemed expedient to the welfare of the people and compatible with
the papal sovereignty. On 19 April, 1847, he announced his intention to establish an
advisory council (Consulta di Stato), composed of laymen from the various provinces
of the papal territory. This was followed by the establishment of a civic guard (Guardia
Civica), 5 July, and a cabinet council, 29 December.
Failure of appeasement (1848-1850).-- But the more concessions the pope made,
the greater and more insistent became the demands. Secret clubs of Rome, especially the
"Circolo Romano", under the direction of Ciceruacchio, fanaticized the mob with
their radicalism and were the real rulers of Rome. They spurred the people on to be
satisfied with nothing but a constitutional government, an entire laicization of the
ministry, and a declaration of war against hated and reactionary Austria.
On 8 February, 1848, a street riot extorted the promise of a lay ministry from the pope
and on 14 March he saw himself obliged to grant a constitution, but in his allocution of
29 April he solemnly proclaimed that, as the Father of Christendom, he could never declare
war against Catholic Austria.
Riot followed riot, the pope was denounced as a traitor to his country, his prime
minister Rossi was stabbed to death while ascending the steps of the Cancelleria, whither
he had gone to open the parliament, and on the following day the pope himself was besieged
in the Quirinal. Palma, a papal prelate, who was standing at a window, was shot, and the
pope was forced to promise a democratic ministry. With the assistance of the Bavarian
ambassador, Count Spaur, and the French ambassador, Duc d'Harcourt, Pius IX escaped from
the Quirinal in disguise, 24 November, and fled to Gaëta where he was joined by many of
the cardinals. Meanwhile Rome was ruled by traitors and adventurers who abolished the
temporal power of the pope, 9 February, 1849, and under the name of a democratic republic
terrorized the people and committed untold outrages. The pope appealed to France, Austria,
Spain, and Naples. On 29 June French troops under General Oudinot restored order in his
terrotory. On 12 April, 1850, Pius IX returned to Rome, no longer a political liberalist.
His subsequent rule (1850-1858).-- Cardinal Antonelli, his secretary of state,
exerted a paramount political influence until his death on 6 November, 1876. The temporal
reign of Pius IX, up to the seizure of the last of his temporal possessions in 1870, was
one continuous struggle, on the one hand against the intrigues of the revolutionaries, on
the other against the Piedmontese ruler Victor Emmanuel, his crafty premier Cavour, and
other antipapal statesmen who aimed at a united Italy, with Rome as its capital, and the
Piedmontese ruler as its king. The political difficulties of the pope were still further
increased by the double dealing of Napoleon III, and the necessity of relying on French
and Austrian troops for the maintenance of order in Rome and the papal legations in the
north.
Intrigues against the Papal States (1858-1878).-- When Pius IX visited his
provinces in the summer of 1857 he received everywhere a warm and loyal reception. But the
doom of his temporal power was sealed, when a year later Cavour and Napoleon III met at
Plombières, concerting plans for a combined war against Austria and the subsequent
territorial extension of the Sardinian Kingdom. They sent their agents into various cities
of the Papal States to propogate the idea of a politically united Italy. The defeat of
Austria at Magenta on 4 July, 1859, and the subsequent withdrawal of the Austrian troops
from the papal legations, inaugurated the dissolution of the Papal States. The
insurrection in some of the cities of the Romagna was put forth as a plea for annexing
this province to Piedmont in September, 1859. On 6 February, 1860, Victor Emmanuel
demanded the annexation of Umbria and the Marches and, when Pius IX resisted this unjust
demand, made ready to annex them by force. After defeating the papal army at Castelfidardo
on 18 September, and at Ancona on 30 September, he deprived the pope of all his
possessions with the exception of Rome and the immediate vicinity. Finally on 20
September, 1870, he completed the spoliation of the papal possessions by seizing Rome and
making it the capital of United Italy. The so-called Law of Guarantees, of 15 May, 1871,
which accorded the pope the rights of a sovereign, an annual remuneration of 3¼ million
lire ($650,000), and extraterritoriality to a few papal palaces in Rome, was never
accepted by Pius IX or his successors. (See STATES OF THE CHURCH; ROME; LAW OF
GUARANTEES).
Outside of the Papal States. The loss of his temporal power was only one of the
many trials that filled the long pontificate of Pius IX. There was scarcely a country,
Catholic or Protestant, where the rights of the Church were not infringed upon. In
Piedmont the Concordat of 1841 was set aside, the tithes were abolished, education was
laicized, monasteries were suppressed, church property was confiscated, religious orders
were expelled, and the bishops who opposed this anti-ecclesiastical legislation were
imprisoned or banished. In vain did Pius IX protest against such outrages in his
allocutions of 1850, 1852, 1853, and finally in 1855 by publishing to the world the
numerous injustices which the Piedmontese government had committed against the Church and
her representatives. In Würtemberg he succeeded in concluding a concordat with the
Government, but, owing to the opposition of the Protestant estates, it never became a law
and was revoked by a royal rescript on 13 June, 1861. The same occurred in the Grand Duchy
of Baden where the Concordat of 1859 was abolished on 7 April, 1860. Equally hostile to
the Church was the policy of Prussia and other German states, where the
anti-ecclesiastical legislations reached their height during the notorious Kulturkampf,
inaugurated in 1873. The violent outrages committed in Switzerland against the bishops and
the remaining clergy were solemnly denounced by Pius IX in his encyclical letter of 21
November, 1873, and, as a result, the papal internuncio was expelled from Switzerland in
January, 1874. The concordat which Pius IX had concluded with Russia in 1847 remained a
dead letter, horrible cruelties were committed against the Catholic clergy and laity after
the Polish insurrection of 1863, and all relations with Rome were broken in 1866. The
anti-ecclesiastical legislation in Colombia was denounced in his allocution of 27
September, 1852, and again, together with that of Mexico, on 30 September, 1861. With
Austria, a concordat, very favourable to the Church, was concluded on 18 August, 1855
("Conventiones de rebus eccl. inter s. sedem et civilem potestatem", Mainz,
1870, 310-318). But the Protestant agitation aginst the concordat was so strong, that in
contravention to it the emperor reluctantly ratified marriage and school laws, 25 March,
1868. In 1870 the concordat was abolished by the Austrian Government, and in 1874 laws
were enacted, which placed all but the inner management of ecclesiastical affairs in the
hands of the Government.
With Spain, Pius IX concluded a satisfactory concordat on 16 March, 1851 (Nussi,
281-297; "Acta Pii IX", I, 293-341). It was supplemented by various articles on
25 November, 1859 (Nussi, 341-5). Other satisfactory concordats concluded by Pius IX were
those with:
- Portugal in 1857 (Nussi, 318-21);
- Costa Rica, and Guatemala, 7 Oct., 1852 (Ib., 297-310);
- Nicaragua, 2 Nov., 1861 (Ib., 361-7);
- San Salvador, and Honduras, 22 April, 1862 (Ib., 367-72; 349);
- Haiti, 28 March, 1860 (Ib., 346-8);
- Venezuela, 26 July, 1862 (Ib., 356-61);
- Ecuador, 26 Sept., 1862 (Ib., 349-56).
(See CONCORDAT: Summary of Principal Concordats.)
RELIGIOUS ASPECT OF HIS PAPACY
His greatest achievements are of a purely ecclesiastical and religious character.
Battle against false liberalism. It is astounding how fearlessly he fought, in
the midst of many and severe trials, against the false liberalism which threatened to
destroy the very essence of faith and religion. In his Encyclical "Quanta Cura"
of 8 December, 1864, he condemned sixteen propositions touching on errors of the age. This
Encyclical was accompanied by the famous "Syllabus errorum", a table of eighty
previously censured propositions bearing on pantheism, naturalism, rationalism,
indifferentism, socialism, communism, freemasonry, and the various kinds of religious
liberalism. Though misunderstandings and malice combined in representing the Syllabus as a
veritable embodiment of religious narrow-mindedness and cringing servility to papal
authority, it has done an inestimable service to the Church and to society at large by
unmasking the false liberalism which had begun to insinuate its subtle poison into the
very marrow of Catholicism.
Previously, on 8 January, 1857, he had condemned the philosophico-theological writings
of Günther, and on many occasions advocated a return to the philosophy and theology of
St. Thomas.
His promotion of the inner life of the Church. Through his whole life he was
very devout to the Blessed Virgin. As early as 1849, when he was an exile at Gaëta, he
issued letters to the bishops of the Church, asking their views on the subject of the
Immaculate Conception, and on 8 Dec., 1854, in the presence of more than 200 bishops, he
proclaimed the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin as a dogma of the Church. He
also fostered the devotion to the Sacred Heart, and on 23 Sept., 1856, extended this feast
to the whole world with the rite of a double major. At his instance the Catholic world was
consecrated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus on 16 June, 1875. He also promoted the inner life
of the Church by many important liturgical regulations, by various monastic reforms, and
especially by an unprecedented number of beatifications and canonizations.
Convocation of the Vatican Council. On 29 June, 1869, he issued the Bull
"Æterni Patris", convoking the Vatican Council which he opened in the presence
of 700 bishops on 8 Dec., 1879. During its fourth solemn session, on 18 July, 1870, the
papal infallibility was made a dogma of the Church. (See VATICAN COUNCIL..)
Appointments and foundations. The healthy and extensive growth of the Church
during his pontificate was chiefly due to his unselfishness. He appointed to important
ecclesiastical positions only such men as were famous both for piety and learning. Among
the great cardinals created by him were: Wiseman and Manning for England; Cullen for
Ireland; McCloskey for the United States; Diepenbrock, Geissel, Reisach, and Ledochowski
for Germany; Rauscher and Franzelin for Austria; Mathieu, Donnet, Gousset, and Pitra for
France. On 29 Sept., 1850, he re-established the Catholic hierarchy in England by erecting
the Archdiocese of Westminster with the twelve suffragan Sees of Beverley, Birmingham,
Clifton, Hexham, Liverpool, Newport and Menevia, Northampton, Nottingham, Plymouth,
Salford, Shrewsbury, and Southwark. The widespread commotion which this act caused among
English fanatics, and which was fomented by Prime Minister Russell and the London
"Times", temporarily threatened to result in an open persecution of Catholics (see
ENGLAND). On 4 March, 1853, he restored the Catholic hierarchy in Holland by erecting the
Archdiocese of Utrecht and the four suffragan Sees of Haarlem, Bois-le-Duc, Roermond, and
Breda (see HOLLAND).
In the United States of America he erected the Dioceses of: Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland,
and Galveston in 1847; Monterey, Savannah, St. Paul, Wheeling, Santa Fe, and Nesqually
(Seattle) in 1850; Burlington, Covington, Erie, Natchitoches, Brooklyn, Newark, and Quincy
(Alton) in 1853; Portland (Maine) in 1855; Fort Wayne, Sault Sainte Marie (Marquette) in
1857; Columbus, Grass Valley (Sacramento) Green Bay, Harrisburg, La Crosse, Rochester,
Scranton, St. Joseph, Wilmington in 1868; Springfield and St. Augustine in 1870;
Providence and Ogdensburg in 1872; San Antonio in 1874; Peoria in 1875; Leavenworth in
1877; the Vicariates Apostolic of the Indian Territory and Nebraska in 1851; Northern
Michigan in 1853; Florida in 1857; North Carolina, Idaho, and Colorado in 1868; Arizona in
1869; Brownsville in Texas and Northern Minnesota in 1874. He encouraged the convening of
provincial and diocesan synods in various countries, and established at Rome the Latin
American College in 1853, and the College of the United States of America, at his own
private expense, in 1859.
Conclusion. His was the longest pontificate in the history of the papacy. In
1871 he celebrated his twenty-fifth, in 1876 his thirtieth, anniversary as pope, and in
1877 his golden episcopal jubilee. His tomb is in the church of San Lorenzo fuori le mura.
The so-called diocesan process of his beatification was begun on 11 February, 1907.
[Pope Pius IX was beatified on September 3, 2000. -- Ed.]
BIBLIOGRAPHY. Acta Pii IX (Rome, 1854-78); Acta Sancta Sedis
(Rome, 1865 sq.); RIANCEY, Recueil des allocutions consistoriales (Paris, 1853
sq.); Discorsi del Sommo Pont. Pio IX (Rome, 1872-8); MAGUIRE, Pius IX and his
Times (Dublin, 1885); TROLLOPE, Life of Pius IX (London, 1877); SHEA, Life
and Pontificate of Pius IX (New York, 1877); BRENNAN, A Popular Life of Our Holy
Father Pope Pius IX (New York, 1877); O'REILLY, Life of Pius IX (New York,
1878); MCCAFFREY, Hist. of the Cath. Church in the Nineteenth Century, I (Dublin,
1909); LYONS, Dispatches resp. the condition of the Papal States (London, 1860);
BALLERINI, Les Premiéres pages du pontificat de Pie IX (Rome, 1909); POUGEOIS, Histoire
de Pie IX, son pontificat et son siècle (Paris, 1877-86);VILLEGRANCHE, Pie IX, sa
vie, son histoire, son siècle (Paris, 1878); SAGèS, SS. Pie IX, sa vie, ses
écrits, sa doctrine (Paris, 1896); ROCFER, Souvenirs d'un prélat romain sur Rome
et la cour pontificale au temps de Pie IX d(Paris, 1896); VAN DUERM, Rome et la
Franc-Maçconnerie (Brussels, 1896); GILLET, Pie IX, sa vie, et les actes de son
pontificat (Paris, 1877); RÜTJES, Leben, wirken und leiden Sr. Heiligkeit Pius IX
(Oberhausen, 1870); HÜLSKAMP, Papst Pius IX in seinem Leben und Wirken (Münster,
1875); STEPPISCHNEGG, Papst Pius IX und seine Zeit (Vienna, 1879); WAPPMANNSPERGER,
Leben und Wirken des Papst Pius IX (Ratisbon, 1879); NÜRNBERGER, Papsttum und
Kirchenstaat, II, III (Mainz, 1898-1900); MAROCCO, Pio IX (Turin, 1861-4);
MOROSI, Vita di SS. Pio papa IX (Florence, 1885-6); BONETTI, Pio IX ad Imola e
RomaMemorie inedite di un suo famgiliare segreto (Rome, 1892); CESARE, Roma e
lo stato del Papa dal ritorno di Pio IX al 20 Settembre (Rome, 1906).
MICHAEL OTT
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XII
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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