so vanishes the glory of the world

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    So Vanishes the Glory of the WorldThe First Pope of the 19th Century

    By Christopher Zehnder

    (Excerpt from Light to the Nations II: the Making of the Modern World ,

    Catholic Textbook Project 2011)

    t was no easy task to gather the cardinals for the conclave to elect a new pope. Scattered over Italy

    after the exile of Pope Pius VI and unable to meet in Rome, the cardinals finally decided to gather in

    Venice, a city under the control of the Holy Roman emperor. Emperor Franz II had offered to pay

    most of the expenses of the conclave --- a welcome offer, since the curia and individual cardinals had very

    little money. So it was that on the First Sunday of Advent, November 30, 1799, 34 cardinals out of an

    expected 46 gathered in the monastery of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice to begin their deliberations over

    who should be the next pope.

    IThe man chosen to oversee this assembly was the able cardinal-deacon, Ercole Consalvi. As the

    secretary of the conclave, Consalvi had to use all of his diplomatic

    skills, for the cardinals were a cantankerous bunch of men, princes

    of the Church though they were. The cardinals were as divided

    among themselves as were the political leaders of the time.

    Cardinal Hrzan had come from Austria to represent the

    emperor, who wanted a pope who would favor the interests of the

    Habsburgs. Opposed to Hrzan and other pro-Austrian cardinals

    was another group of cardinals that stood for Fernando IV, the king

    of Naples, who wanted a pope who would favor his family, the

    Bourbons. There were even a few cardinals, including Cardinal

    Jean-Siffrein Maury, who wanted a pope that would be friendly to

    France. Cardinal Maury represented Louis XVIII, who claimed to

    be the rightful king of France. Yet, though he wrote frequent letters

    to Louis XVIII describing the events of the conclave, Maury wanted

    a pope who would not be hostile to the new French government of

    the First Consul Napoleon Bonaparte.

    Split by these factions, the cardinals could come to noagreement on a papal candidate. Weeks and months dragged on, but no one man could obtain the

    required the number of votes to be elected pope. Cardinal Hrzan used the emperors veto to block the

    election of a cardinal who had received enough votes to be elected. (According to the canon law of the

    time, the emperor could veto the election of any candidate, even if a majority of the conclave voted for

    him.)

    The winter of 1799-1800 passed, spring approached, and still no pope had been chosen. It was

    Cardinal Maury who finally found a candidate that could please all the factions. He was Cardinal Barnaba

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    Cardinal Ercole Consalvi

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    Luigi Chiaramonti, the bishop of the northern Italian city of Imola. With another cardinal, Maury began

    working for the election of Chiaramonti and was able to win over a number of important cardinals to his

    cause. On March 14, 1800 (nearly four months after the opening of the conclave) the cardinals elected

    Chiaramonti, who, after some hesitation, accepted the choice of his brother cardinals.

    The Bishop of Imola

    Chiaramonti once told how his mother, the Countess Chiaramonti, had foretold that he would be elected

    pope and, as pope, undergo bitter sufferings. Young Barnaba doubtless did not wish for such an honor,

    for, at the age of 16, he had joined the Benedictine monks of Santa Maria del Monte, near his hometown of

    Cesena in the Papal States. By becoming a monk, Chiaramonti cast aside hopes of worldly glory for a life

    of contemplation.

    Such a life, however, was not to be his, for the Chiaramonti family had a special friend --- Pope

    Pius VI. In 1782, Pius made Barnaba Chiaramonti the bishop of Tivoli. Three years later, the pope sent

    Chiaramonti to Imola and named him a

    cardinal. The quiet, contemplative

    Chiramonti proved to be a very devout

    and able bishop. He was gentle, firm, and

    kindly. He welcomed exiled French

    priests to Imola and spent nearly half of

    his income on the poor. So much did

    Cardinal Chiaramonti lavish on the poor

    that, to attend the conclave in 1799, he

    had to borrow money for travel expenses

    from another cardinal.

    Though many bishops had

    abandoned their sees when Napoleon

    invaded northern Italy in 1797,

    Chiaramonti remained with his flock. Seeking to spare his people from violence, he preached a sermon on

    Christmas 1797, exhorting them to obey the new Cisalpine Republic. Democracy, Chiaramonti said, is not

    opposed to the Gospel of Christ. If the people of Imola respect other peoples rights and fulfill their

    own duties, said Chiaramonti, there will be true equality --- the equality that teaches man what he owes

    to God, to himself, and to his equals.

    When you are wholly Christians, said Chiaramonti, you will be excellent democrats.

    Imolas neighboring city, Lugo, however did not follow Chiaramontis advice. It resisted the

    French, and when it was conquered, the French General Augereau, ordered it sacked. For three hours the

    pillage continued until Chiaramonti appeared before Augeareau and, on his knees, begged him to spare

    the city.

    Yet, the bishop did not love the French republic. When the Austrians later entered Imola,

    Chiaramonti exhorted his people to receive them as liberators. The French again retook the city, but, even

    then, Chiaramonti did not flee. Appearing before his French conquerors, he justified his support of

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    The cathedral of Imola, as it appears today

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    Austria and, because of his courage, the French did not carry out their threat to exile him from Imola.

    It was because of Chiaramontis willingness to make peace with the republic that Cardinal Maury

    thought him the right man to be pope. He knew, too, that Chiaramonti was willing to abide by the Peace

    of Tolentino, even if it meant that the Papal States would never recover their lost territories. Bishop

    Chiaramonti thought preserving the popes spiritual authority was far more important than salvaging histemporal power as lord of the Papal States.

    Peter Returns to His People

    The coronation of the new pope on March 21, 1800 did not occur in Venices beautiful San Marco cathedral

    but in the humble chapel of the monastery of San Giorgio. There, in that church, so unlike St. Peters

    Basilica in Rome, the man who had taken the

    name of Pius VII underwent ancient ceremonies

    that proclaimed the glory of his office and the

    smallness of his humanity. He watched and

    listened as, thrice, they burnt a tuft of cotton and

    thrice repeated the words, Holy Father, so

    vanishes the glory of the world. He rose as a

    deacon removed the episcopal miter, while

    another deacon, approaching with the triple

    crown, placed it on his head. He heard the words

    of wonder and fear, spoken in other papal

    coronations century after century, and trembled

    when he realized they were now addressed to

    him: Receive the tiara with the three crowns,

    and know that thou art the father of princes and

    the leader of kings, yea, the vicar of our Savior

    Jesus Christ on earth!

    Following his coronation, Pope Pius VII

    prepared for his journey to Rome. It had been

    over two years since Pius VI had been forced to

    leave the city and, during that period, Rome had

    suffered much under what had been called the Roman Republic --- a tool of French power in Italy. But in

    the summer of 1799, the Austrians and Russians had taken Rome and overthrown the republic. The pope

    could now return and take up both his spiritual and temporal power.

    Because Emperor Franz II would not allow the pope to cross overland from Venice to Rome, Pius

    took to sea on a leaky Austrian ship, sailing to the port of Pesaro on the eastern coast of the Papal States.

    From Pesaro, the pope and his small party traveled by land to Rome. Enthusiastic crowds greeted the

    pontiff as he entered the city on July 3, 1800. A triumphal arch had been raised in honor of his return.

    Moving amid the shouting throngs, bestowing his papal blessing on all, Pius VII proceeded to the tomb of

    St. Peter, where he knelt in prayer.

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    Pope Pius VII, by Jacques-Louis David

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    Having returned to his city and his people, Pius VII set about repairing the damage done by the

    revolution. Among his first acts was to appoint Cardinal Ercole Consalvi as his secretary of state --- a wise

    move, for Consalvi was a brilliant diplomat and unswervingly faithful to the pope. Pius not only looked

    to the physical wellbeing of his people, but to their spiritual and cultural good as well by passing edicts to

    restore public morality. And he was merciful to those who had been his enemies, granting amnesty to allrevolutionaries except those who had been their leaders. No revenge, no hateful persecution stained the

    return of the Papal government, a Prussian ambassador later wrote. Pius VII and his ministers showed

    gentleness and forgetfulness of the past.

    In returning to Rome, the pope had achieved his first triumph. But other challenges awaited him.

    Not the least of these would come to this father of princes and leader of kings from Napoleon

    Bonaparte, the man who now held sole power in Paris and who, only shortly before the popes return to

    Rome, had again carried war into Italy.

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