McClintock Biblical Encyclopedia: Pope

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McClintock Biblical Encyclopedia: Pope


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Having treated in the article PAPACY SEE PAPACY of the rise and development of the papal dignity and power, we shall speak in the present article of the personal attributes of the incumbent of the Roman see.

I. The Title. — The word pope is derived from the Latin papa, Greek ðÜððáò , and means father. While the Greek word was used in the Greek Church to designate both bishops and priests, and has gradually come to be reserved for the priests exclusively the Latin term was for several centuries a title applied to all bishops, and was finally reserved for the bishops of Rome. As far as is known, bishop Siricius, in the 4th century, was the first to use the word as a title. After the 5th century it came into more general use, and after the 7th it gradually disappeared from ecclesiastical language for every ecclesiastical dignity except that of the bishop of Rome. It was expressly made the exclusive prerogative of the Roman bishops by Gregory VII. In a like manner several other titles, which at first were applied to the bishops of the principal seats, such as apostolicus, dominus apostolicus, sedes apostolica, were gradually monopolized by the bishops of Rome. The designation servtus sermorum Dei was first used by Gregory I, and though occasionally also bishops, priests, and emperors adopted it, it likewise remained in the course of time the prerogative of the popes. During the 8th and the following centuries it was common to call the bishop of Rome vicarius Petri. The expression occurs in the Pseudo- Isidorian Decretals, in the oath which was taken in 722 by Boniface to Gregory II, in the oath taken by Gregory VII to the king of Germany, in the conclusion of peace between Alexander III and the emperor Frederick Barbarossa; but from the time of Innocent III, when the power of the popes had become more absolute, the vicarius Petri gave way to the vicarius Christi. The title Sanctitas tua or Beatitudo tuc, which came into use in the 3d or 4th century, the pope shares even now with the bishops of the Eastern Church. It is accorded to him even by Protestant governments. (See Brit. and For. Ev. Rev. Jan. 1866, p. 48 sq.)

II. Rights and Functions. —

1. Personal Prerogatives. The rights claimed by the popes within the Roman Catholic Church, and accorded to them by the bishops, priests, and laity of the Church, have of course greatly varied according to the degrees of power which the incumbents of the Roman see attained in various periods of Church history. For a long time they claimed and received as bishops of Rome and patriarchs of the West only those rights and honors which also belonged to other bishops and patriarchs. SEE BISHOP; SEE PATRIARCH.

When their superiority over other bishops and patriarchs came finally to be recognized and established, the popes were by no means regarded as absolute rulers of the Church, but their rights were limited and circumscribed by general councils and secular princes. While the popes were with an unyielding consistency endeavoring to develop the extreme papal system which now prevails, many of the greatest scholars of the Church defended an episcopal system which assigned to the pope a position similar to that of a constitutional monarch, and, in particular, maintained the superiority of a general council over the pope. At the general councils of Constance and Basle the friends of this view had an undisputed majority; and in the following centuries the history of Gallicanism, of Febronius, of Joseph II, are some of many proofs that in several countries the episcopal system had numerous adherents, even among bishops. After having been long on the decline, the episcopal system within the Roman Catholic Church was totally extinguished by the Vatican Council, and the extensive rights which the popes, in the course of many centuries, had claimed as their exclusive monopoly, were recognized by the entire Church. A common division of the papal rights is that into primatus jurisdictionis and primatus honoris. The former comprises the sovereign law of legislation, the supreme administration and the final decision on all subjects relating to ecclesiastical offices, especially the right of confirming, consecrating, transferring, and deposing bishops; the regulation of all religious institutions, especially of the religious orders; the supreme ecclesiastical jurisdiction, the supreme right of supervision, and the supreme management of ecclesiastical finances and property; the highest authority in all doctrinal questions. In the decision of doctrinal questions the popes have long claimed infallibility (q.v.), and the Vatican Council has recognized this claim as a doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church. The pope has also the supreme right of regulating the divine worship, of granting indulgences (q.v.), and the sole right of beatifying and canonizing deceased members of the Church. SEE BEATIFICATION; SEE CANONIZATION. The primatus honoris comprises the following distinctions:

(1.)
The tiara, also called mitra turbinata cum corona, triregnum, regnum, diadema, phrygium, consisting of the bishop's cap (mitra) encompassed with a triple golden crown. It is for the first time mentioned in the forged donation of Constantine (8th century), and was for the first time used at the coronation of Nicholas II (858). The third crown was added to the mitra by Urban V (1362-1370). The pope receives it on the day of coronation in the loggia of St. Peter's Church from two cardinal deacons, who place it upon his head with the words, “Accipo tiaram tribus coronis ornatam et scias, patrem te esse principum et regum, rectorem orbis in terra, vicaritum salvatoris nostri Jesu Christi, cui est honor in smecula saeculorum.” The pope only wears the timara at great ecclesiastical festivities and processions, but not during the performance of ecclesiastical functions.

(2.) The so-called pedum rectum, the straight bishop's staff ornamented with a cross, but not the crooked episcopal pastoral staff.

(3.) The pallium, a vestment having the form of a scarf, composed of white wool, and embroidered with six black silken crosses. The pope sends it as a mark of honor to patriarchs, primates, metropolitans, and sometimes to bishops all of whom are only allowed to wear it within their own dioceses and on certain occasions, while the pope wears it always and everywhere on saying mass.

(4.) The so-called adoratio, a homage which in the old Oriental Church was shown to bishops and priests generally. It consists in kneeling down and kissing the pope's foot. Gregory VII still demanded it from princes, the Dictatus Gregorii saying on this subject, “Quod solius papae pedes omnes principes deosculentur.” The kiss upon the cross on the pope's shoes is still demanded from clergymen and laymen, but an exception is made with princes and persons of higher rank. Sovereign princes only kiss the hand, cardinals the foot and the hand, after which they are admitted to an embrace; archbishops and bishops the foot and the knee.

(5.) During the Middle Ages the popes received from the princes the officium strepae, the princes holding the stirrups when the pope mounted the horse, and leading the horse for a while. Among the princes who are recorded to have rendered this homage were Louis II, Henry VI, Henry VII, Frederick III, Charles V, and Philip IV of France. Of Frederick Barbarossa, pope Adrian IV complained that he held the left, instead of the right stirrup.

2. Dress, etc. — At home the pope's habit is a white silk cassock, rochet, and scarlet mantle. In winter he wears a fur cap; in summer a satin one. When he celebrates mass, the color of his habit varies according to the solemnity of the festival. At Whitsuntide, and all festivals of the martyrs, he officiates in red; at Easter, and all festivals of virgins, in white; in Lent, Advent, and eves of fasting-days, in violet; and on Easter-eve, and at all masses for the dead, in black. All these colors are said to be typical: the red expresses the cloven tongues and the blood of the martyrs; the white, the joy caused by our Savior's resurrection and the chastity of virgins; the violet, the pale aspect of those who fast; and the black, grief and mourning. The tiara is a council-cap, with three coronets rising one above another, and adorned with jewels. Paul II was the first who added the ornaments of precious stones to his crown. The jewels of Clement VIII's crown were valued, they say, at 500,000 pieces of gold. That of Martin V had five pounds and a half weight of pearls in it. “Nor is there anything unreasonable in this (says Father Bonani), since the pope governs the kingdom of Christ in quality of his viceroy: now this kingdom is infinitely superior to all the kingdoms of the universe. The high priest of the Jews wore on his head and breast the riches which were to represent the majesty of the Supreme God. The pope represents that of the Savior of the world, and nothing better expresses it than riches.” We must not omit that the two strings of the tiara are said to represent the two different manners of interpreting the Scriptures, the mystical and the literal. The pope has two seals. One is called “the fisherman's ring,” and is the impression of Peter holding a line with a bait to it in the water. It is used for briefs sealed with wax. The other seal bears the figures of Peter and Paul, with a cross on one side; and on the other an effigy, with the name of the reigning pope. This is used for the bulls, which are sealed with lead. On the decease of a pope these seals are defaced and broken by the cardinal-chamberlain in the presence of three others. When the pope goes in procession to St. Peter's, the cross is carried before him on the end of a pike about ten palms long. “Many reasons,” says Father Bonani, “authorize this custom. It is a monument of the sufferings of Jesus Christ, and of the pope's adherence to the Savior of the world. It is the true mark of the pontifical dignity, and represents the authority of the Church, as the Roman fasces did that of the consuls.” At the same time two grooms bear two fans on each side of his holiness's chair, to drive away the flies. This (according to the above-cited author) represents the seraphim covering the face of God with their wings.

3. Officers. — The pope has a Vicar who is always a cardinal. He who manages that charge has jurisdiction over the priests and regulars, over the lay-communities, hospitals, places of piety, and Jews. His place may be worth to him two hundred ducats per month. He has two lieutenants, one for civil and the other for criminal affairs, and a vicegerent, who is a bishop, for the exercise of episcopal functions.

The Penitentiary has jurisdiction in cases referred to the pope; and gives to approved confessors power to absolve. At solemn feasts he goes into one of the churches of Rome, where, sitting in a high chair, he has a switch in his hand, and hears the confession of particular cases. This place is worth eight thousand crowns a year.

The Chancellor was properly secretary to the pope, ab intimis. This charge is now bestowed upon none but a cardinal, and it may be worth to him fifteen or sixteen thousand crowns a year. His business is to dispatch the apostolic letters, except those signed by the pope, which are dispatched by a brief sub annulo piscatoris. He has under him a regent, and twelve abbreviators di parco maggiore, who are all prelates. The regent has power to commit all causes of appeal to the rota and referendaries. The abbreviators di parco maggiore draw the bulls, and send them when they are written. Besides these, there are abbreviators di parco minore, who are scriveners, and other officers of the chancery, appointed to receive and sign bulls. The vice-chancellor keeps a register of the collation of titles given to cardinals, and of promotions to bishoprics and consistorial abbeys.

The Chamberlain is always a cardinal, and has for substitutes the clerks of the apostolic chamber, a treasurer, and a president. This office is worth to him fourteen thousand crowns a year. He takes cognizance of all causes within the verge of the apostolic chamber, and, besides, judges of appeals from the masters of the streets, bridges, and edifices. When the see is vacant, the chamberlain remains in the palace, in the pope's apartment, goes through the streets with the Swiss guards attending him, coins money with his own arms thereon, and holds a consistory. He is one of the three chief treasurers of the Castle of St. Angelo, whereof the dean is another, and the pope the third. The Prefect of the signature of justice is also one of the cardinals, and has two hundred ducats in gold per month. His business is to make rescripts of all the petitions and the commissions of causes which are delegated by the court. Every Thursday the signature of justice is held in the palace of the cardinal-prefect, where assist twelve prelates-referendaries, that have votes, and all the other referendaries, with power to propose each two causes; as also an auditor of the rota, and the civil auditor of the cardinal- vicar, having no vote, but only to maintain their jurisdiction in what relates to them. The prefect of the signature of grace signs all the petitions and grants which the pope bestows in the congregations held in his own presence once a week. The prefect of the briefs is always a cardinal; he revises and signs the copies of the briefs.

The General of the Holy Church is created by a brief of the pope, who gives him the staff himself in his chamber, and takes his oath. In time of peace he has allowed him a thousand crowns per month, and three thousand in time of war. He commands all the troops and all the governors in the places and fortresses of the ecclesiastical estate. His lieutenant has three thousand crowns a year, and is made also by a brief from the pope, as is the general of the artillery, who has twelve hundred crowns per annum.

The governor of the Castle of St. Angelo has six thousand crowns per annum.

The pope has four Masters of Ceremonies, who are always clad in purple, and have great authority in public affairs. Besides these, there are other masters of the ceremonies, which are in the congregations of privileges, whereof one discharges the office of secretary, and the other dispatches orders.

The Master of the Sacred Palace is always a Dominican. He reviews and approves all the books that are printed, being assisted by two priests of the same order. The palace, besides a table, allows him a coach.

The Major-domo, or steward to the household of the pope, is always a prelate. The chamberlains of honor are persons of quality, who come to the palace when they please.

The Master of the Stables is a gentleman who has the office of master of the horse, without the title of it; for the pope bestows no such upon any person. He is sword-bearer, and sometimes one of the greatest lords in Rome. as was Pompey Frangipani under Leo II. The Vestry-keeper is an Augustine monk, who has the same allowance as the master of the palace. He takes care of all the riches in the pope's vestry. He goes like a prelate; and if he be a titular bishop, takes place among the assistant bishops.

The pope's Secretary is always a cardinal, and very often his nephew. This place is united to that of superintendent of the ecclesiastical estate. He writes and subscribes all tile letters sent to the princes and nuncios. All ambassadors and all ministers at Rome, after having negotiated with the pope, are obliged to give him an account of their negotiations. The secretaries of state are subject to the secretary superintendent, or cardinal patron, whose orders they receive, and to whom they send their letters to be subscribed. They live in the palace, and are prelates clad in purple.

There are twenty-four Secretaries of Briefs, the chief of whom lives in the palace. Their business is to subscribe and dispatch all the briefs that are received by the cardinal-prefect of the briefs. The secretary of the secret briefs takes care to prepare them when the cardinal-patron or some one of the secretaries of state commands him. These briefs are shown to nobody, nor signed by the prefect of the briefs, except when they are sealed sub annulo piscatoris, and accompanied with a letter from the cardinal-patron. The copies of these briefs are carefully kept; and, when the pope is dead, they are carried to the Castle of St. Angelo.

The Mareschal of Rome has under him two civil judges, one of whom is called the first collateral judge, and the other the second collateral, with a judge for criminal affairs. He, together with these judges, takes cognizance of matters between the citizens and inhabitants of Rome. He is always a foreigner, and lives in the Capitol: while in the discharge of his office he appears clad like an old senator, having a robe of cloth of gold that hangs down to the earth, with large sleeves to it lined with red taffeta.

4. Official Powers. — As we have seen above, the pope of Rome is now the supreme head of what is known as the Roman Catholic world. Held to be the successor of the apostle Peter, the pope is claimed to be Christ's vicar on earth. The Council of Florence, 1439, says: “Definimus, Sanctam apostolicam Sedem et Romanum Pontificem in universum orbem tenere primatum, et ipsum Pontificem Romanum sluccessorem esse B. Petri principis apostolorum et verum Christi vicarium, totiusque Ecclesia caput et omnium Christianorum patrem ac doctorem existere, et ipsi in B. Petro pascendi, regendi ac gubernandi universalem Ecclesiarn a Domino Nostro Jesu Christo plenum potestatem traditam esse, quemadmodum etiam in gestis oecumenicorum conciliorum et in sacris canonibus continetur” (Bullarium Romanum [ed. Luxemb.], 1, 336). A similar doctrine is proclaimed by the fifth Lateran Council of 1512 (c. 1, De Conciliis in V, 3, 7), in the Roman Catechism, pt. 1, c. 10, qu. 11, and in the Profession of Faith of the Council of Trent: “Sanctam Catholicam et apostolicam Romanam Ecclesiam omnium Ecclesiarum matrem et magistram agnosco; Romanoque Pontifici, beati Petri apostolorum principis successori ac Jesu Christi vicario, veram obedientiam spondeo ac juro.” As such he is to be invested with all power necessary for the government of the Universal Church. This embraces authority to examine and decide authoritatively all controversies to convoke councils, to revise and confirm their decrees, to issue general decrees, whether upon discipline and morals or upon doctrine, to appoint bishops in all parts of the Church, to confirm the election when made by the clergy or by the civil authorities, no matter how it may have been made; he call also depose bishops and set others in their place, and even, in cases of great emergency, suppress bishoprics, and change their ecclesiastical limits according to his judgment of the existing requirements of the Church; he is also to judge of the doctrines taught in particular books or by particular individuals, and to pronounce infallibly as to their conformity with the Catholic faith, or the contrary. In addition to these powers, it is still further claimed for him by the Ultramontanes, as we have seen above and in the article INFALLIBILITY SEE INFALLIBILITY , that he is endowed by God with infallibility; so that what he says ex cathedua, i.e. officially and as pope, is of divine authority, and cannot be questioned or denied; and that also, as the vicar of Christ, he has a supreme authority over all civil rulers and civil jurisdiction, the allegiance of all the faithful to him being superior to that which is due to their respective governments. SEE PRIVACY.

The principal scriptural authority for the papacy relied upon by the Roman Catholic Church is Mat_16:18-19. Without entering into a discussion of the meaning of this famous passage, we may here quote from Abbott's Commentary on the New Testament a statement of the Roman Catholic interpretation, and the grounds on which that view is rejected by all Protestants:

“The ordinary Roman Catholic view of this passage is that Christ declared his purpose to found a great ecclesiastical organization; that this organization was to be built upon Peter and his successors as its true foundation; that they were to represent to all time the authority of God upon the earth, being clothed, by virtue of their office, with a continuous inspiration, and authorized by the Word, and fitted by the indwelling Spirit of God, to guide, direct, illumine, and command the disciples of Christ, with the same force and effect as Christ himself (see Phillips, Kirchenrecht, 1, 146). SEE PETER. This view is untenable for the following reasons:

1. Christ does not, as we have seen, refer to a definite ecclesiastical organization by the word church, and would not be so understood by his disciples.

2. Peter was not by nature rock-like; he was, on the contrary, characteristically impulsive and unstable. There must be, therefore, some other significance in the words ‘Thou art a rock' which the Roman Catholic interpretation loses.

3. Neither he nor the other disciples understood that Christ invested him with any such authority and position. He did not occupy any such place in the Church while he lived. In the first council a; Jerusalem (Act_15:7-11) he was simply an adviser, the office of chief or president being apparently held by James; Paul withstood Peter to his face, as no disciple ever withstood Christ, or would have withstood his acknowledged representative (Gal_2:11-14); and throughout the N.T. the apostles are all treated as co-equals (Mat_18:1; Mat_19:28; Mat_23:8; Joh_15:1-5 Rev_21:14).

4. There is neither here nor anywhere else in the N.T. any hint of a successor to Peter, or of any authority in him to appoint a successor, or of any such authority vested in any of the apostles, or exercised, or assumed to be exercised, by any of them.

5. The N.T. throughout, and the O.T. in all its prophecies, recognizes Christ as the chief corner-stone, the foundation on which the kingdom of God can alone be built.

6. Mark and Luke omit from their account this utterance of Christ; if it really designated Peter as the foundation of the visible Church, and was thus essential and not incidental to the right understanding of the whole incident, it would not be omitted from their accounts.” SEE ROCK.

Few Christian governments have ever been willing to recognize to their full extent the rights claimed by and for the Roman popes. The placet (q.v.) was introduced in the Middle Ages by most of the states, and without it no papal bull could be promulgated; and the popes found it necessary to consent to the conclusion of special concordats (q.v.) or conventions, which, in the way of compromise, regulated the papal rights which a state government bound itself to recognize.

Many popes in the Middle Ages also claimed the power of deposing kings, of absolving the subjects of excommunicated princes from their oath of allegiance, and, in general, an unlimited power over temporal as well as spiritual affairs. That a number of popes assumed this right is a fact admitted on all sides; but it is quite common among Roman Catholics to deny that this is a right inherent in the papal dignity, and also that it was ever claimed by the popes as a right belonging to them in virtue of their office. A few samples of pontifical arrogance may suffice for illustration here:

Pope Paschal II, in 1099, deprived Henry IV, and excited enemies to persecute him; telling them they could not “offer a more acceptable sacrifice to God than by impugning him who endeavored to take the kingdom from God's Church.” Pope Gregory VII says: “For the dignity and defense of God's holy Church, in the name of Almighty God, the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, I depose from- imperial and royal administration king Henry, son of Henry sometime emperor, who too boldly and rashly hath laid hands on thy Church; and I absolve all Christian subjects to the empire from that oath whereby they were wont to plight their faith unto true kings; for it is right that he should be deprived of dignity who doth endeavor to diminish the majesty of the Church. Go to, therefore, most holy princes of the apostles, and what I said, by interposing your authority, confirm; that all men may know at length, understand, if ye can bind and loose in heaven, that ye also can upon earth take away and give empires, kingdoms, and whatsoever mortals can have; s for if ye can judge things belonging unto God, what is to be deemed concerning these inferior and profane things? And if it is your part to judge angels, who govern proud princes, what becometh it you to do towards their servants? Let kings now, and all secular princes, learn by this man's example what ye can do in heaven, and in what esteem ye are with God; and let them henceforth fear to slight commands of holy Church, but put forth suddenly his judgment, that all men may understand that not casually, but by your means, this son of iniquity doth fall from his kingdom.”

Pope Boniface VIII, in 1294, has a decree extant in the canon law running thus: “We declare, say, define, pronounce it to be of necessity to salvation for every human creature to be subject to the Roman pontiff. One sword must be under another, and the temporal authority must be subject to the spiritual power, whence, if the earthly power doth go astray, it must be judged by the spiritual power.” Before him, pope Innocent III affirmed “the pontifical authority so much to exceed the royal power, as the sun doth the moon;” and applies to the former the words of the prophet Jeremiah Ecce, constitui te super gentes et regna—” See, I have set thee over the nations and over the kingdoms, to root out and to pull down, and to destroy and to throw down,” etc. Of this power that pope made experiment by deposing the emperor Otho IV, “whom,” says Nauclerus, “as rebellious to the apostolical see, he first did strike with an anathema; then him persevering in his obstinacy, did, in a council of prelates held at Rome, pronounce deposed from empire.” This monstrous authority was avowed by that great council under this pope which, according to the Council of Trent, did represent or constitute the Church, ‘when it was ordained that if a “temporal lord, being required and admonished by the Church, should neglect to purge his territory from heretical filth, he should, by the metropolitan and the other co-provincial bishops, be noosed in the band of excommunication; and that if he should slight to make satisfaction within a year, it should be signified to the pope, that he might from that time denounce the subjects absolved from their fealty to him, and expose the territory to be seized on by Catholics,” etc. Pope Pius V, in 1570, begins his bull against queen Elizabeth in these words: “He that reigneth on high, to whom is given all power in heaven and in earth, hath committed the one holy catholic and apostolic Church, out of which there is no salvation, to one alone on earth, namely, to Peter, prince of the apostles, and to the Roman pontiff, successor of Peter, to be governed with a plenitude, of power. This one he hath constituted prince over all nations and all kingdoms, that he might pluck up, destroy, dissipate, ruinate, plant, and build.”

And in the same bull he declares that “he thereby deprives the queen of tier pretended right to the kingdom, and of all dominion, dignity, and privilege whatsoever: and absolves all the nobles, subjects, and people of the kingdom, and whoever else have sworn to her, from their oath, and all duty whatsoever, in regard of dominion, fidelity, and obedience.” The bull of pope Sixtus V, in 1585, against Henry, king of Navarre, and the prince of Condu, begins thus: “The authority given to St. Peter and his successors, by the immense power of the Eternal King, excels all the powers of earthly kings and princes. It passes uncontrollable sentence upon them all; and if it find any of them resisting God's ordinance, it takes more severe vengeance of them, casting them down from their thrones, though never so puissant, and tumbling them down to the lowest parts of the earth, as the ministers of aspiring Lucifer.” He then proceeds to thunder against them, “We deprive them and their posterity forever of their dominions and kingdoms; “and accordingly he deprives those princes of their kingdoms and dominions, absolves their subjects from their oaths of allegiance, and forbids them to pay any obedience to them. “By the authority of these presents, we do absolve and set flee all persons, as well jointly as severally, from any such oath, and from all duty whatsoever in regard of dominion, fealty, and obedience: and do charge and forbid all and every of them that they do not dare to obey them, or any of their admonitions, laws, and commands.”

For a full review of this question, SEE GALLICAN CHURCH; SEE INVESTITURE; SEE TEMPORAL POWER.

III. The Election of the Pope. — In the 2nd and 3rd centuries the bishops of Rome were, like all the bishops of the ancient Church, elected by the clergy and the people. When Christianity was declared to be the religion of the state, the emperors claimed a share in the election of the pope. The clergy of Rome greatly disliked the interference of the emperors in the election of their bishops. and. after the destruction of the Western Roman empire in 499, a Roman synod under bishop Symmachus vindicated to the Roman clergy the exclusive right of electing the bishop. Three years later, 502, the Roman synod declared a decree issued by Odoacer, who as successor of the Roman emperor demanded that no bishop of Rome should be elected “sine nostra consultatione,” to be an unwarranted encroachment upon the rights of the Church. That Odoacer paid no attention to these resolutions is proved by the fact that in 514 he had a share in the election of Felix III. The Gothic kings Theodoric and his successors, as well as Justinian I and the Byzantine emperors, likewise disregarded the occasional protests of the Roman bishops. They are known to have appointed or confirmed several popes as Vigilius, Pelagius I, and Pelagius II. The so- called Liber diurnus, a collection of formulas of the Roman Curia, which relates to the time from the 6th to the 8th century, and received its present shape in the 8th century, expressly mentions that the Roman bishops elected by the clergy and the people were confirmed by the Greek emperor, or his representative, the exarch of Ravenna. The weak rule of the last Longobardian kings, and the impotence of the emperors in Constantinople, greatly favored the endeavors of the popes to exclude altogether the influence of princes from the papal elections. During the reign of Pepin the Short and Charlemagne the elections were entirely free, and the report that a Roman synod under Adrian I conferred upon Charlemagne the right of confirming the elected pope is a forgery.

The popes of this time only notified Pepin and Charles of the result of the elections. The baneful influence which was soon after obtained by the Roman nobility upon the elections of the popes induced again an interference of the imperial power, and in 824 Lothaire, the son of Louis le Dibonnaire, entered into an agreement with Eugenius II, according to which the consecration of a newly elected pope was not to take place without the concurrence of an imperial delegate. This agreement remained in force throughout the following century. In the 10th century Otho the Great rescued the Church from the most disgraceful condition in which it had yet found itself, and rid it of some of the most wicked popes which have ever disgraced the see of Rome. It was quite common in the Church then to look upon the emperor as the chief pillar of reform, and it is therefore not to be wondered at that a greater influence was accorded to him than had been possessed by any of his predecessors. When he entered the city of Rome, the people, according to Luitprand, had to take an oath “numquam se papam electuros aut ordinaturos praeter consensum atque electionem domini imperatoris Ottonis Caesaris Augusti filiique regis Ottonis.” After the Synod of Sutri had, in 1046, deposed all the three popes, the Roman people conferred upon Henry III, for himself and his successors, the right “in electione semper ordinandi pontificis principatum.” Henry availed himself of this in the appointment of the German popes Clement II, Leo IX, and Victor II, for which he consulted only his German advisers, as if it had been an affair of the German empire. After the death of Henry III, the influence of Hildebrand upon the popes of that time soon brought on the beginning of a new era in the history of the papacy. One of the events which mark the beginning of this new era is the radical change which was made in the papal elections by the famous decree of Nicholas II and the Lateran Synod in 1059. The essential points of the decree are the transfer of the papal election to the cardinal-bishops, the total abolition of the former concurrence of the Roman people and nobility, and virtual abolition of the former imperial right; for the words “salvo debito honore et reverentia” do not appear to imply more than the right of the emperor to demand a notification of the result of the election. The emperors were to possess the insignificant rights which were left to them only as a personal privilege, for the conferring of which every new emperor had to make an application. The decree of Nicholas I was further developed and defined by that of Alexander III and the Lateran Synod of 1179, which made the validity of the papal election contingent upon a two-thirds vote of the cardinals. The defeat of the emperor Frederick Barbarossa in his struggle with the papacy put an end forever to even the nominal rights of the emperors in regard to the papal elections. The first provisions concerning the conclave were made by Gregory X and the Council of Lyons in 1274. The town for holding the conclave (q.v.) was not to be exclusively Rome, but the city in which the pope died; and in case this city was under an interdict, the next adjacent city. The place for the conclave was the episcopal palace. The provisions of the decree of Gregory X were somewhat, though not essentially, modified by Clement V (1305-1314) and Clement VI (1342- 1356). The councils of Pisa, Constance, and Basle elected new popes, without binding themselves to the papal provisions concerning the conclaves; but in this as in many other respects their proceedings were of an exceptional character, and were without abiding consequences in the law of the Church. In 1621 Gregory XV issued the constitution Eterni Patris filius, which contained all the principal provisions in regard to the conclave that are now in use. In a few points only it was supplemented by bulls of Urban VIII (1625) and Clement XII (1732).

The present mode of electing a pope has been fully described in the article CONCLAVE SEE CONCLAVE . The right of voting is limited to the cardinals who have been ordained deacons. The lack of this ordination may, however, be supplied by a special privilege of the pope. The cardinals do not lose their right of voting even by excommunication, but they can cast their votes only if they are personally present in the conclave. Those who live outside of the city of Rome are not specially invited. Since Boniface IX (1389) all the popes have been taken from the College of Cardinals, but in a legal point of view the eligibility of the pope is not conditioned by his being a cardinal. The decree of Nicholas II abolished a former provision by a Roman synod which demanded it, and since then a number of popes have been elected who were not cardinals. Urban III, elected in 1185, was only archbishop of Milan; Urban IV (1261) was patriarch of Jerusalem; Clement V (1305), archbishop of Bordeaux; Urban VI, with whose election in 1378 the papal schism began, was archbishop of Bari. Celestine V (1294) was an eremite, who after a long conclave was agreed upon by two contending parties as a mere figurehead, and Urban V (1360) was abbot of St. Victor in Marseilles. No pope is allowed to appoint his own successor, and the election by a conclave is an indispensable condition. In troublesome times some popes, as Pius VI (died 1799) and Pius VII (died 1823), provided that at the election of their successors some of the regulations for the holding of the conclave might be dispensed with. Pius IX is reported to have made similar arrangements for the election of his successor. The emperor of Austria, as the successor of the Roman emperor, and the governments of France and Spain, have exercised, and the governments of Naples and Portugal have claimed, the right of excluding some particular cardinal, as persona minus grata, from the papal throne. The right is exercised before an election through a member of the College of Cardinals, who is commissioned for that purpose by the government, and it is limited to one veto at each conclave. It is generally believed at the time of this writing (1877) that, on the death of pope Pius IX, the empire of Germany will claim this right, in order to prevent the election of the candidate of the Jesuits. Long usage causes the selection of the candidate from the Italian cardinals. Several popes, like Celestine V, have resigned the office; quite a number, in the course of the Middle Ages, have been deposed by the emperors; and in the 15th century the councils of Pisa, Constance, and Basle claimed and exercised the right of deposing the pope. The principle, first enounced by the Pseudo-Isidorian Decretals, and ever since maintained by the advocates of the extreme papal system, that the apostolical see is not judged by any one (“apostolica sedes a nemine judicatur”), has more and more been accepted by the Church; and after the Vatican Council it would appear to be impossible that the Catholic world would ever recognize any vacancy of the papal see except those caused by the voluntary resignation or the death of the incumbent.

The coronation and consecration ceremonies attending the inauguration of the pope are of a very solemn and impressive character. We give a description in the words of an eyewitness:

“About eleven o'clock the procession began to arrive from the Quirinal Palace. It was immensely long. Tile cardinals were in their state carriages, and each was accompanied by several carriages full of attendants. The senator and governor of Rome formed part of the train. The pope was in a state coach drawn by six black horses, and preceded by a priest riding on a white mule, and bearing a large crucifix. The procession went round by the back of St. Peter's, and the pope went up to the Sistine Chapel, where various ceremonies were performed which I did not see. In about half an hour the procession entered the center door of St. Peter's. In all these processions the lowest orders of the clergy came first, then bishops, archbishops, cardinals, and, lastly, the pope. He was borne aloft on his throne, carried by twelve bearers, the choir singing, Ecce sacerdos magnus— ‘Behold the great priest!' At the chapel of the Sauntissimo lie stopped and adored the host. He was then borne forward to the highaltar, and, passing by the north side of it, alighted in a space enclosed for the use of the pope and the cardinals on the east side. He walked up to the altar, prayed at the foot of it, ascended the steps, and seated himself on the middle of the altar, on the very spot where the ciborium or pyx, containing the host, usually stands. The cardinals in succession went through the ceremony of adoration. This ceremony is performed three times: first, before quitting the conclave; secondly, in the Sistine Chapel before the procession came into St. Peter's: and now, for the third time, each cardinal prostrated himself before the pope, then kissed his toe, or rather his slipper, next kissed his hand, which was not bare, but covered by the cape of his robes: and, lastly, the pope embraced each twice, and when all had gone through this ceremony, the pope rose and bestowed his blessing on the people present, and retired in a sedan chair, on the back of which there is embroidered in gold a dove, to represent the Holy Spirit.” On the Sabbath after his solemn installation his holiness performs mass at an altar of the richest decoration, the pontifical mantle being placed on him by the oldest cardinal-deacon, who addresses him thus: “Receive the holy mantle, the plenitude of the pontifical offices, to the honor of Almighty God, and of the most glorious Virgin Mary, his mother, and of the blessed apostles Peter and Paul, and of the holy Roman Church.” After this comes the public coronation on the balcony above the great door of St. Peter's. His mantle as a priest is taken off, and his triple crown as a king is put on, with these words: “Receive the tiara adorned with three crowns, and know that thou art the father of princes and kings, the governor of the world, on earth vicar of our Savior Jesus Christ, to whom is honor and glory for ever and ever. Amen.” His holiness then pronounces this prayer: “May the holy apostles Peter and Paul, ill whose power and authority we confide, intercede for us with the Lord. By the prayers and merits of the blessed Mary, always a virgin, of the blessed Michael, the archangel, of the blessed John the Baptist, and the holy apostles Peter and Paul, and all the saints; may Almighty God have mercy upon you, and may Jesus Christ, having remitted all your sins, lead you to life everlasting. Amen.” “May the Almighty and merciful Lord grant you indulgence, absolution, and remission of all your sins, space for true and fruitful repentance, a heart always penitent, and amendment of life, the grace and consolation of the Holy Spirit, and final perseverance in good works.” Two keys are also given him in the church of St. John Lateran. (See also Wesleyan Mag. 1851.)

IV. List of the Roman Popes. — In the article PAPACY SEE PAPACY we have referred to the uncertainty prevailing in regard to the first bishops of Rome. Roman Catholic writers themselves quite generally admit that the statements of ancient Church-writers on the subject are entirely irreconcilable, and that it is impossible to establish with any degree of certainty the order in which they followed each other, the years of their accession to the see of Rome, and the year of their death. The following table is given from the Roman almanac entitled Gerarchia Cattolica (with the original names of the popes, and notices of antipopes, from other sources), and although it is so uncritical in its first part that even the Roman historians do not adopt it, it is of some value, as presenting the claims of the Church of Rome:

[St. stands for Saint, B. for Blessed, M. for Martyr.]

No. Name. Place of Birth. Term.

1. St. Peter, M... Bethsaida in Galilee 42-67

2.
St. Linus, M... Volterra...   67-78

3.
St. Cletus, M... Rome... 78-90

4.
St. Clement I, M… Rome… 90-100

5.
St. Anacletus, M…Athens… 100-112

6.
St. Evaristus, M… Syria…112-121

7.
St. Alexander I, M… Rome… 121-132

8.
St. Sixtus I. M… Rome… 132-142

9.
St. Telesphorus, M… Greece… 142-154

10.
St. lyginlus, M… Greece… 154-158

11.
St. Pius I, M… Aquileja … 158-167

12.
St. Anicetus, M… Syria… 167-175

13.
St. Soterus, M…Campania… 175-182

14.
St. Eleutherius, M… Epirus… 182-193

15.
St. Victor I, M… Africa… 193-203

16.
St. Zephyrinns, M… Rome… 203-220

17.
St. Calixtus I, M… Rome… 221-227

18.
St. Urban I, M… Rome… 227-233

19.
St. Pontianus, M… Rome… 233-238

20.
St. Anterus, M… Greece…238-239

21.
St. Fabian, M… Rome… 240-253

22.
St. Cornelius, M… Rome… 254-255 [Novatian, first antipope.]

23.
St. Lucius I, M… Rome… 255-257

24.
St. Stephen I, M… Rome… 257-260

25.
St. Sixtus II, M… Athens… 260-261

26.
St. Dionysius… Italy… 261-272

27.
St. Felix I. M… Rome… 272-275

28.
St. Eltychianus… Tuscany… 225-283

29.
St. Caius, M… Dalmatia… 283-296

30.
St. Marcellinus, M… Rome… 296-304

31.
St. Miarcellus I, M… Rome…304-309

32.
St. Esebius… Calabria… 309-311

33.
St. Melchiades…. Africa… 311-314

34.
St. Sylvester… Rome… 314-337

35.
St. Malrcus… Rome… 337-340

36.
St. Jillius I… Rome… 341-352

37.
St. Liberius… Rome… 352-363

38.
St. Felix II… Rome… 363-365

39.
St. Darnass... Spain... 366-384 [Ursicinus, antipope.]

40.
St. Siricius... Rome... 384-398

41.
St. Anastasius... Rome… 399-402

42.
St. Innocet I... Albano... 402-417

43.
St. Zosim... Greece... 417-418

44.
St. Boniface I... Rome... 418-423

45.
St. Celestine I... Campania... 423-432

46.
St. Sixts III... Rome... 432-440

47.
St. Leo I, the Great... Tuscany... 440-461

48.
St. Hilary... Cagilari... 461-468

49.
St. Simplicius... Tivoli... 468483

50.
St. Felix II... Rome... 483492

51.
St. Gelasius I... Africa... 492-496

52.
St Anastasius II... Rome... 496-498

53. St. Symnachus... Rome... 498-514

54.
St. Hormisdas... Frosinone... 514-523

55.
St. John I, M... Tuscany... 523-526

56.
St. Felix IV... Benevet... 526-530

57.
Boniface II... Rome...       530-532

58.
John II... Rome... 532-535

59.
St. Agapetus I... Rome... 535-536

60.
St. Sylverius, M... Frosinone... 536-538

61.
Vigilius... Rome... 538-555

62.
Pelagius I... Rome... 555-560

63.
John III... Rome... 560-573

64.
Benedict I... Rome... 574-578

65.
Pelagius II... Rome... 578-590

66.
St. Gregory I, the Great. Rome... 50-604

67.
Sabiniaus... Volterra... 604-606

68.
Boniface III... Rome... 607-607

69.
St. Boniface IV... The Marches... 608-615

70.
St. Adeodatus I... Rome... 615-619

71.
Boniface V... Naples... 619-625

72.
Honorins I... Campania... 625-638

73.
Severinus... Rome... 640-640

74.
John IV... Dalmatia... 640-642

75.
Theodorus I... Greece... 642-649

76.
St. Martin, M... Todi... 649-655

77.
St. Engenius I... Rome... 655-656

78.
St. Vitalianus... Segi... 657-672

79.
Adeodatus II... Rome... 672-676

80.
Donus I... Rome... 676-678

81.
St. Agathon... Greece... 678-682

82.
St. Leo II... Sicily... 682-683

83.
St. Benedict II... Rome... 684-685

84.
John V... Antiochia... 685-686

85.
Conon... Thrace... 686-687

86.
St. Sergis I... ?... 687-701

87.
John VI... Greece... 701-705

88.
John VII... Greece... 705-707

89.
Sisinnius... Syria... 708-708

90.
Constantine... Syria... 708-715

91.
St. Gregory II... Rome... 715-731

92.
St. Gregory III... Syria... 731-741

93.
St. Zachary... Greece... 741-752

94.
St. Stephen II... Rome... 752-752

95.
Stephen III... Rome... 752-757

96.
St. Paul I... Rome... 757-767

97.
Stephen IV... Syracuse... 768-771

98.
Adrian I... Rome... 771-795

99.
St. Leo III... Rome ... 795-816

100.
Stephen V... Rome... 816-817

101.
St. Paschal I... Rome... 817-824

102.
Eugenius II... Rome... 824-827

103.
Valentiuns... Rome... 827-827

104.
Gregory IV... Rome... 827-844

105.
Sergius II... Rome... 844-847

106.
St. Leo IV... Rome... 847-855 [Fabulous antipope Joan.]

107.
Benedict III... Rome... 855-858

108.
St. Nicholas I, the Great… Rome... 858-867

109.
Adrian II... Rome... 867-872

110.
John VIII... Rome... 872-882

111.
Marinus I... Gallese...     882-884

112.
Adrian III... Rome... 884-885

113.
Stephen VI... Rome... 885-891

114.
Formosus... Ostia... 891-896 [Sergius, antipope.]

115.
Boniface VI... Rome... 896-96

116.
Stephen VII... Rome... 897-898

117.
Romanus... Gallese... 898-898

118.
Theodorus II... Gallese...  898-898

119.
John IX... Tivoli... 898-900

120.
Benedict IV... Rome... 900-903

121.
Leo V... Ardea... 903-903

122.
Christopher... Rome... 903-904

123.
Sergius III... Rome... 904-911

124.
Anastasius III... Rome... 911-913

125.
Lando... Sabine... 913-914

126.
John X... Ravenna... 915-928

127.
Leo VI... Rome... 928-929

128.
Stephen VIII... Rome... 929-931

129.
John XI... Rome... 931-936

130.
Leo VII... Rome... 936-939

131.
Stephen IX... Rome... 939-942

132.
Marinus II... Rome... 943-946

133.
Agapetus II... Rome... 946-956

134.
John XI*... Rome... 956-964 (Octavian Conti.) [Leo 8:antipope.]

135.
Benedict V... Rome... 964-965

136.
John XIII... Rome... 96S-972 (Bishop John of Ravenna.)

137.
Benedict VI... Rome... 972-973

138.
Donus II... Rome... 973-975

139.
Benedict VII... Rome ... 975-984 (Conti, bishop of Sutri.)

140.
John XIV... Pavia... 984-985 (Peter, bishop of Pavia.)

141.
Boniface VII... ?...        985-985 (Cardinal Boniface Franco.)

142.
John XV... Rome... 985-996

143.
John XVI... ... 996-996

144.
Gregory V... Germany... 996-999 (Bruno, court chaplain of the emperor.)

145.
John XVI... ?... 999-999

146.
Sylvester II... France... 999-1003 (Gerbert.) * The first pope who changed his name on ascending the papal throne.

147.
John XVIII... Rome... 1003-1003

148.
John XIX... Rome... 1003-1009

149.
Sergius IV... Rome... 1009-1012

150.
Benedict VIII... Rome... 1012-1024 (Conti.)

151.
John XX... Rome... 1024-1033 (Conti, a brother of the preceding.)

152.
Benedict IX ... Rome... 1033-1044 (Theophylact, nephew of the two preceding.) [Sylvester, antipope.]

153.
Gregory VI... Rome... 1044-1046 (Archpriest John Gratianus.)

154.
Clement II... Germany... 1046-1048 (Bishop Suidger of Bamlberg.)

155.
Damasus II... Germany... 1048-1048 (Bishop Pappo of Brixen.)

156.
St. Leo IX... Germany... 1049-1055 (Bishop Bruno of Toul.)

157.
Victor II... Germany... 1055-1057 (Bishop Gebhard of Eichstidt.)

158.
Stephen X... Germany... 1057-1058 (Abbot Frederick of Montecassino.)

159.
Benedict X... .?... 1058-1059 (John Mincius Conti, bishop of Velletri.)

160.
Nicholas II... France... 1059-1061 (Bishop Gerard of Florence.)

161.
Alexander II... Milan... 1061-1073 (Anselm Badagio, bishop of Lucca.)

162.
St. Gregory VII... Soana... 1073-1085 (Cardinal Hildebrand.) [Clement III, antipope.]

163.
Victor III... Benevent... 1087-1087 (Desiderius, duke of Capua, abbot of Montecassino.)

164.
Urban II... France... 1088-1099 (Otto de Lagers, cardinal-bishop of Ostia.)

165.
Paschal II... Bieda... 1099-1118 (Cardinal Rainer.) [Albert and Theodoric, antipopes.]

166.
Gelasius II... Gaeta... 1... 1118-1119 (Cardinal Johannes Cajetani.)

167.
Calixtus II... France...1119-1124 (Guido, count of Burgundy, archbishop of Vienne.)

168.
Honorius II... Bologna... 1124-1130 (Lambert, cardinal-bishop of Ostia.)

169.
Innocent I... Rome... 1130-1143 (Cardinal Glegory Papy.) [Anacletus, antipope.]

170.
Celestine II... Citta di Castello... 1143-1144

171.
Lucius II... Bologna... 1144-1145 (Cacciauemici)

172.
B. Eugenius III... Montemagno... 1145-1153 (Bernardus, abbot at Rome.)

173.
Anastasius IV... Rome... 1153-1154

174.
Adrian IV... England... 1154-1159

175.
Alexander III... Siena... 1159-1181 (Roland Bandinelli.) [Victor, Paschal, and Callixtus, antipopes.]

176.
Lncius III... Lucca... 1181-1185

177.
Urban III... Milan... 1185-1187 (Bishop Humbert of Milan.)

178.
Gregory VII... Beneventum... 1187-1187

179.
Clemelnt III... Rome... 1187-1191

180.
Celestinie III... Rome... 1191-1198

181.
Innocent III... Anagni. ... .1198-1216 (Cardinal Conti.)

182.
Honorius III... Rome... 1216-1227 (Savelli.)

183.
Gregoury IX... An agni... 1227-1241 (Conti.)

184.
Celestine IV... Milan... 1241-1241 (Castislione.)

185.
Innocent IV... Genoa... 1243-1254 (Fieschi.)

186.
Alexander IV... Anagni... .1254-1261 (Conti.)

187.
Urban IV... France... 1261-1264 (Jacob Pantalean, patriarch of Jerusalem.)

188.
Clement IV... France... 1265-1269 (Guido Fulcodi.)

189.
B. Gregory X... Piacenza... 1271-1276 (Theobald Visconti, archdeacon at Liuge.)

190.
Innocent V... ... Savoy... 1276-1276 (Peter de Tarantaise.)

191.
Adrian V... Genoa... 1276-1276 (Fieschi.)

192.
John XXI... Portugal... 1276-1277 (Peter Julian, bishop of Tusculum.)

193.
Nicholas III... Rome... 1277-1280 (Cardinal John Cajetan Orfini.)

194.
Martin IV... France... 1281-1285 (Simon de Brie.)

195.
Honorius IV... Rome... 1285-1287 (Savelli.)

196.
Nicholas IV... A... Ascoli... .1288-1292 (Cardinal Jerome, bishop of Tusculum.)

197.
St. Celestine V... Isenia... .1294-1294 (Peter, an eremite.)

198.
Boniface VIII... Anagni... 1294-1303 (Benedict Cajetan.)

199.
B. Benedict XI... Treviso... 1303-1304 (Boccasini.)

200.
Clement V... France... 1305-1314 (De Gout, archbishop of Bordeaux.)

201.
John XXII... France... 1316-1334 (Cardinal Jacob de Esne.) [Nicholas, antipope.]

202.
Benedict XII... France... 1334-1342 (Cardinal Jacob Fournier.)

203.
Clement VI... France... 1342-1352 (Cardinal Peter Roger.)

204.
Innocent VI... France... .1352-1362 (Cardinal Stephen Aubert.)

205.
B. Urban V... France... 1362-1370 (Abbot at Marseilles.)

206.
Gregory XI... France... 1370-1378 (Cardinal Peter Roger.)

207.
Urban VI... Naples... 1378-1389 (Prignano, archbishop of Bari.) [From 1378 to 1410 occurs the great Western Schism, during which, in conflict with the line of popes inserted in the catalogue, is found a rival line residing at Avignon-Clement VII 1378-1394; Benedict XIII 1394-1410. The Council of Pisa, 1410, deposed both rival popes; but Benedict XIII remained in schism till his death in 1424.]

208. Boniface IX... Naples... 1389-1404 (Cardinal Peter Tomacelli.)

209.
Innocent VII... Sulmona... .1404-1406 (Migliorati.)

210.
Gregory XII... Venice... 1406-1409 (Coriario.)

211.
Alexander V... Bologna... 1409-1410 (Cardinal Peter Philargi.)

212.
John XXIII... Naples... 1410-1415 (Cardinal Cossa.)

213.
Martin V... Rome... 1417-1431 (Cardinal Otto Colonna.)

214.
Eugenius IV... Venice... 1431-1447 (Condulmero.) [Felix, antipope.]

215.
Nicholas V... Sarzana... .1447-1455 (Thomas de Sarzano.)

216.
Calixtus III... Spain... 1455-1458 (Cardinal Alphons Borgia.)

217.
Pius II... Sieia... 1458-1464 (AEneas Sylvius Piccolomini.)

218.
Paul II... Venice... 1464-1471 (Barbo.)

219.
Sixtus IV... Savona... 1471-1484 (Cardinal Francesco della Rovere.)

220.
Innocent VIII... Genoa... 1484-1492 (Cardinal John Baptist Cibo.)

221.
Alexander VI... Spain... .1492-1503 (Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia.)

222.
Pius III... Siena... 1503-1503 (Cardinal Francis Piccolomini.)

223.
Julius II... Savona...1503-1513 (Cardinal Rovere.)

224.
Leo X... Florence... 1513-1521 (Cardinal de' Medici.)

225.
Adrian VI... Netherlands... 1522-1523 (Adrian Florent.)

226.
Clement VII... Florence... 1523-1534 (Cardinal de' Medici.)

227.
Paul III... Rome... 1534-1549 (Cardinal Alexander Farnese.)

228.
Julius III... Tuscany... 1550-1555 (Cardinal del Monte.)

229.
Marcellus II... Montepulciano... 1555-1555 (Cardinal Cervino.)

230.
Paul IV... Naples... 1555-1559 (Cardinal Caraffa.)

231.
Pius IV... Milan... 1559-1565 (Cardinal de' Medici.)

232.
St. Pins V... Bosco... 1566-1572 (Michael Ghisleri, cardinal of Alessandria.)

233.
Gregory XIII... Bologna... 1572-1585 (Cardinal Hugo Buoncompagno.)

234.
Sixtus V... Marchigiano... 1585-1590 (Felix Peretti, cardinal Montalto.)

235.
Urban VII... Rome... 1590-1590 (Cardinal Castagna.)

236.
Gregory XIV... Cremona... 1590-1591 (Cardinal Sondrati.)

237. Innocent IX... Bologna... 1591-1592 (Cardinal Fachinetti.)

238.
Clement VIII... Florence... 1592-1605 (Cardinal Aldobrandini.)

239.
Leo XI... Florence... 1605-1605 (Cardinal Octavian de' Medici.)

240.
Paul V... Rome... 1605-1621 (Cardinal Camillo Borghese.)

241.
Gregory XV... Bologna... 1621-1623 (Cardinal Alexander Ludovisio.)

242.
Urban VIII... Florence... 1623-1644 (Cardinal Maffeo Barberini.)

243.
Innocent X... Rome... 1644-1655 (Cardinal John Pamfili.)

244.
Alexander VII... Siena... 1655-1667 (Cardinal Fabio Chigi.)

245.
Clement IX... Pistoia... 1667-1669 (Cardinal Rospigliosi.)

246.
Clement X... Rome ... .1670-1676 (Cardinal Altieri.)

247.
Innocent XI... Cono... 1676-1689 (Cardinal Benedict Odescalchi.)

248.
Alexander VIII... Venice... 1689-1691 (Cardinal Peter Ottoboni.)

249.
Innocent XII... Naples... .1691-1700 (Cardinal Anthony Pignatelli.)

250.
Clement XI... Urbino... 1700-1721 (Cardinal Albani.)

251.
Innocent XIII... Rome... 1721-1724 (Cardinal Conti.)

252.
Benedict XIII... Rome... 1724-1730 (Cardinal Orsini.)

253.
Clement XII... Floence... 1730-1740 (Cardinal Colsini.)

254.
Benedict XIV... Bologna... .1740-1758 (Cardinal Prosper Lambertini.)

255.
Clement XIII... Venice... 1758-1769 (Cardinal Rezzonico.)

256.
Clement XIV... St. Angelo in Vado…1769-1774 (Cardinal Gianganelli.)

257.
Pius VI... Cesena... 1775-1799 (Cardinal Braschi.)

258.
Pius VII... Cesena... 1800-1823 (Cardinal Chiaramonte.)

259.
Leo XII... Spoleto... 1823-1829 (Cardinal della Genga.)

260.
Pius VIII... Cingoli... .1829-1830 (Cardinal Castiglione.)

261.
Gregory XVI... Belluno... 1831-1846 (Cardinal Mauro Capellari.)

262.
Pius IX... Siniagli... 1846-1878 (Cardinal Mastai Ferretti.)

263.
Leo XIII... Carpinetto... 1878 (Cardinal Gioacchino Pesci.)

How uncertain the table of the early Roman bishops is, may be seen by comparing it with the catalogue given in Alzog's Handbuch der Kirchengeschichte (9th ed. 1872), a work probably more extensively used as a text-book of Church history than any other Roman Catholic's work. It gives (2, 649) the catalogue of the first Roman bishops, as follows:

St. Peter, 42-67 or 68. St. Anterus, 235-236. “Linus. “Fabianus, 235-236. “Anacletus (or Cletus). “Cornelius, 251-252. “Clement I, 92, 101 “Licius, 253. “Evaristus. “Stephen I, 253-257. “Alexander, until 119. “Xystus or Sixtus II, 257-258. Xystus or Sixtus, until 127. “Dionysius, 259-269. “Telephorus, 127-139 “Felix I, 269-274. “Hyginus, 139-142. “Eutychianus, 274-283. Pius I, 142-157. “Caius, 283-296. “Anicetus, 157-168. “Marcellinus, until 304. Soter, 168-177. “Marcellus, 308-310. “Eleutherius, 177-192. “Melchiades, 311-335. “Victor, 192-202. “Sylvester I, 314-335. “Zephyrinus, 202-219. “Marcus, 336. “Callistus, 219-223. “Julius I, 337-352. “Urbanus, 223-230. Liberius, 352-366. “Pontianus, 230-235 Felix, 355 (antipope)

It will be seen that, according to this list, one of the Roman bishops, whom the Roman list calls St. Felix II, was neither a saint nor even a legitimate pope. In the Roman list of popes, 80 are enumerated as saints, 4 as blessed, and 32 as martyrs. In regard to their nationality, 14 were Frenchmen, 11 Greeks, 6 Germans. 6 Syrians and natives of Asia Minor, 3 Africans, 3 Spaniards, 2 Dalmatians, 1 Thracian, 1 Englishman, 1 Portuguese, 1 Dutchman; all the remainder were Italians. The last non-Italian pope was Adrian VI (1522-23); the last saint, St. Pius V (1566-72). As the Roman legend claimed that the apostle Peter had been 25 years bishop of Rome, although it is very doubtfu