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1676 conclave
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| Papal conclave August–September 1676 | |
|---|---|
| Dates and location | |
| 2 August – 21 September 1676 Apostolic Palace, Papal States | |
| Elected pope | |
| Benedetto Odescalchi Name taken: Innocent XI | |
The 1676 papal conclave was convened after the death of Pope Clement X and lasted from 2 August until 21 September 1676. It led to the election of Cardinal Benedetto Odescalchi as Pope Innocent XI.[1]
Conclave
[edit]After the death of Pope Clement X on 22 July 1676, the College of Cardinals convened in Rome to elect a successor. The college consisted of 67 members: 44 of them took part at the opening of the conclave, and the number rose to 63 when others finally arrived from abroad.[2] Seven of these cardinals had been created by Urban VIII, twelve by Innocent X, eight by Alexander VII, and nineteen by Clement IX and Clement X. Absent cardinals included Friedrich of Hessen and Pascal of Aragon.
A list was already in circulation indicating possible papal candidates. Only Cardinal Benedetto Odescalchi was suitably "papabile" at the time of the conclave. Odescalchi had emerged as a strong candidate for the papacy after the earlier death of Pope Clement IX on 9 December 1669, but the French Government had vetoed his nomination. After the death of Clement X, King Louis XIV of France had again intended to use his royal influence against the election of Odescalchi, whom he viewed as sympathetic to Spain. But, seeing that his popularity had grown among the cardinals as well as the Roman people, he reluctantly instructed the cardinals of the French party to acquiesce in his candidacy.
On the 1st ballot, held on 3 August 1676, Odescalchi received 14 votes. 13 other candidates remained in the running, with 25 abstentions. The number of candidates sank, but the vote on 20 September gave only 8 votes to Odescalchi. 19 votes were spread among cardinals Barberini, Rospigliosi and Alberizzi, while 30 cardinals abstained.
Election of Innocent XI
[edit]Finally on 21 September, Odescalchi was surrounded in the chapel of the conclave and proclaimed pope by acclamation, rather than formal vote,[3] each cardinal kissing his hand. Once pope-elect, Innocent XI made the College swear to the Conclave capitulation that had been drafted by the previous conclave before accepting his election, in an attempt to avoid any limits to the papal supremacy. Innocent was then formally enthroned as pope on 4 October 1676. Cardinals Virginio Orsini and Carlo Bonelli both died during the conclave.
References
[edit]- ^ Baumgartner, Frederic J. 2003. Behind Locked Doors: A History of the Papal Elections. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-29463-8
- ^ S. Miranda: Papal Conclave, 1676
- ^ Pirie, Valérie (1935). The Triple Crown: An Account of the Papal Conclaves. Sidgwick & Jackson, Limited.
1676 conclave
View on GrokipediaBackground
Death of Clement X and immediate aftermath
Pope Clement X (Emilio Altieri) died on 22 July 1676 in Rome at the age of 86.[3][4] His death was attributed to complications from gout, a condition that had plagued him in his later years.[5] With the pontiff's passing, the Holy See entered a period of sede vacante, beginning immediately on 22 July 1676 and lasting until the election of his successor on 21 September.[1][4] Administrative authority during this interregnum fell to the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, Cardinal Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni, who managed papal finances, sealed the Vatican apartments, and oversaw the preparations for the conclave.[1][6] The conclave formally opened on 2 August 1676 in the Apostolic Palace, with attending cardinals sequestered to deliberate the election of a new pope amid existing factional divisions.[4] During the sede vacante, one cardinal died: Angelo Maria Ranuzzi, Archbishop of Fano, reducing the electorate slightly before voting commenced.[4] These events set the stage for a prolonged assembly influenced by both internal Church dynamics and external European pressures.European political tensions influencing the election
The primary European political tensions influencing the 1676 papal conclave stemmed from the ongoing Franco-Dutch War (1672–1678), in which France under Louis XIV clashed with a coalition including Spain, the Dutch Republic, and the Holy Roman Empire, exacerbating rivalries over territorial control in the Low Countries and Italy.[2] Louis XIV sought a pope amenable to French absolutism and Gallican liberties—asserting royal authority over the French church—while Habsburg powers (Spain and the Empire) aimed to curb French dominance by backing independent or anti-French candidates.[7] These dynamics manifested in cardinal factions aligned with secular patrons: the French bloc, led by Cardinal César d'Estrées, prioritized candidates compliant with Louis XIV's directives, whereas the Spanish faction, under Cardinal Johann Eberhard Nidhard, wielded veto power (exclusiva) to block pro-French prospects and protect Habsburg interests in Italian states.[1] French cardinals entered the conclave on 29-30 August after protesting proceedings without them, awaiting their arrival to enforce Louis XIV's opposition to frontrunners like Benedetto Odescalchi, viewed as too independent due to his Milanese origins and prior Austrian ties.[2] Louis XIV explicitly instructed his faction to shun Cardinal Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri (camerlengo and a Spanish ally) and candidates he deemed unfavorable, fostering deadlock and ostracism that alienated neutrals and heightened tensions.[1] Spain countered by deploying its exclusiva against figures like Cardinal Neri Corsini on August 6, signaling resolve to thwart French maneuvers amid fears of papal subservience to Versailles, which could undermine Spanish holdings in Naples and Milan.[1] Diplomatic interventions intensified the impasse: French ambassadors negotiated concessions, such as demanding Odescalchi appoint a pro-French secretary of state if elected, prompting a shift toward compromise on Odescalchi to avoid total isolation.[2] Despite initial French veto threats against Odescalchi—retracted on September 4 upon recognizing his broad support—the Spanish faction's alignment with Italian reformers ultimately favored his candidacy, yielding an outcome that checked French ambitions and aligned with Habsburg goals for a less pliable papacy.[7] This interplay prolonged the conclave to 50 days, underscoring how secular power struggles subordinated ecclesiastical autonomy to geopolitical exigencies.[2]Participants
Attending cardinals and their numbers
The College of Cardinals totaled 67 members at the death of Pope Clement X on July 22, 1676.[1] The conclave opened on August 2 with 36 cardinals initially entering the proceedings, followed by 14 additional arrivals the next day, yielding 50 attendees at the outset.[1] Further cardinals reached Rome in the ensuing weeks, increasing participation to 62 by September 8.[1] Two cardinals died during the conclave—Virginio Orsini on August 21 and Carlo Bonelli on August 27—reducing the effective voting pool at various points.[1] [4] Non-participation stemmed from absences abroad, notably Cardinals Friedrich von Hessen-Darmstadt and Pascual de Aragón, who remained outside Rome.[4] These figures reflect the dynamic attendance typical of 17th-century conclaves, where travel delays from distant sees influenced the composition.[1]Major factions and power blocs
The 1676 papal conclave featured divisions among the attending cardinals, organized into factions largely aligned with foreign monarchies, influential Roman families, and papal relatives from prior pontificates. These blocs reflected broader European rivalries, particularly between France under Louis XIV and the Habsburg powers (Spain and the Holy Roman Empire), with Italian cardinals often mediating or aligning based on patronage networks.[1] The French faction, comprising six cardinals and backed by Louis XIV's directives, sought a pontiff amenable to Gallican interests and opposed to Habsburg influence. Key figures included Cardinal César d’Estrées (son of a French marshal and brother to the Roman ambassador), Pierre de Bonzi (Archbishop of Narbonne), Jean-François-Paul de Gondi de Retz, Emmanuel Théodose de la Tour d’Auvergne de Bouillon, Francesco Maidalchini, and Girolamo Grimaldi. This group initially resisted candidates like Neri Corsini via exclusiva vetoes and gained momentum with the late arrival of additional French-aligned cardinals on August 30, though they ultimately yielded to Benedetto Odescalchi's candidacy.[1] Opposing them, the Spanish faction of six cardinals, supported by King Charles II, prioritized Habsburg alliances and blocked French-favored outcomes. Prominent members were Johann Eberhard Nidhard (confessor to Spain's queen regent), Luis Manuel Fernández de Portocarrero, Carlo Pio di Savoia, Lorenzo Raggi, Paolo Savelli, and Bernhard Gustave von Baden-Durlach (initially imperial-leaning but Spanish-aligned). Nidhard, wielding outsized influence, collaborated with Camerlengo Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri to enforce an exclusiva against Corsini, though internal rivalries emerged with the arrival of Spain's ambassador, the Conde de Melgar.[1] Italian-dominated blocs included the Chigi faction (17 cardinals, led by Flavio Chigi, nephew of Pope Alexander VII), which coordinated with Tuscany's Grand Duke to promote Neri Corsini and allied temporarily with Spanish and "squadronisti" groups; the Rospigliosi faction (six, under Giacomo Rospigliosi, nephew of Clement IX), which backed Corsini alongside Chigi forces; and the Altieri faction (14, headed by Camerlengo Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri, nephew of Clement X), controlling Clementine appointees and leveraging administrative power to oppose early frontrunners before shifting to Odescalchi. Smaller groups like the Barberini (tied to Urban VIII's family) added fluidity, with Francesco Barberini as dean influencing procedural matters. These alignments prolonged the conclave from August 2 to September 21, as no bloc secured a two-thirds majority until compromise.[1]Proceedings
Opening of the conclave and early voting rounds
The papal conclave following the death of Pope Clement X on July 22, 1676, formally opened on August 2, 1676, in the Vatican. Of the 67 members of the College of Cardinals, 44 participated initially, with the tally rising to 63 as late arrivals from distant sees joined the proceedings. Factional alignments dominated the atmosphere from the start, pitting French interests—seeking a pontiff amenable to Louis XIV's Gallican policies—against Spanish and Imperial blocs favoring anti-French candidates, alongside smaller independent groups like the Chigi faction and "squadroni volanti" unaligned power brokers. Voting commenced shortly after the opening, but the first scrutiny on August 4 yielded scattered results, underscoring the absence of consensus. Cardinal Benedetto Odescalchi garnered 7 votes, while support fragmented among other aspirants including Cardinals Vidone, Barbarigo, Spinola, and Cerri, with no one nearing the two-thirds supermajority required for election.[1] Subsequent early ballots through mid-August maintained this deadlock, as French partisans rallied behind figures like Cardinal Retz or d'Estrées, Spanish supporters backed Portocarrero and others, and Imperial agents promoted neutrals amid mutual veto threats. Abstentions and shifting allegiances prolonged the initial phase, preventing any frontrunner's emergence despite external diplomatic pressures from European courts.[1]Prolonged deadlock and diplomatic interventions
The 1676 papal conclave, convened on 2 August following the death of Pope Clement X on 22 July, descended into a prolonged deadlock lasting nearly two months, as no candidate secured the requisite two-thirds majority of 42 votes among the 62 participating cardinals (after two deaths during proceedings).[1] Initial scrutinies from 4 August onward scattered votes widely, with early leaders including Giovanni Maria Vidoni, Gregorio Barbarigo, and Benedetto Odescalchi (receiving 7 votes on 4 August), reflecting deep divisions among factions such as the French (6 cardinals), Spanish (6), Chigi (17), and Altieri (14).[1] By 6 August, Neri Corsini amassed 27 votes in the morning scrutiny plus 14 via accessiones, nearing a breakthrough, but the Spanish faction, under Cardinal Eberhard III von Nidhard, issued an exclusiva (informal veto) blocking his candidacy due to perceived pro-French leanings.[1] Subsequent rounds intensified the impasse, with Celio Piccolomini peaking at 28 votes amid opposition from French cardinals wary of his prior diplomatic ties to France, while Odescalchi's support steadily rose to 9 votes on 5 August and 22 by 15 August, aided by a pivotal sermon highlighting his integrity and endorsements from the Austrian and Polish courts.[1] The arrival of key French cardinals on 30 August, including representatives aligned with King Louis XIV, further complicated negotiations, as the French faction—comprising figures like César d'Estrées and Paul de Gondi de Retz—initially resisted compromise candidates favored by rivals.[1] Retz himself garnered 8 votes on 4 September, but factional intransigence prevented consensus, prolonging the stalemate and underscoring the conclave's vulnerability to external powers despite internal seclusion.[1] Diplomatic interventions proved decisive in breaking the deadlock, with Louis XIV exerting influence through his ambassadors and cardinals to avert a veto on Odescalchi after d'Estrées's dispatches prompted a policy shift on 4 September, prioritizing stability over prior exclusions (as France had vetoed Odescalchi in the 1669–1670 conclave).[1] The Spanish, via Nidhard and envoy Conde de Melgar, countered by supporting Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri initially but pivoted toward Odescalchi to counter French dominance, avoiding escalation into broader European tensions.[1] These maneuvers, informed by real-time correspondence and factional lobbying, facilitated a resolution on 20 September, when cardinals bypassed formal scrutiny for an election by adoration, escorting Odescalchi to the chapel amid unanimous acclamation the following day.[1]Shift toward compromise candidates
The prolonged deadlock in the 1676 conclave, which opened on August 2 with 65 participating cardinals out of 67 eligible, stemmed from entrenched divisions among the major factions: the French-aligned group of 6 cardinals favoring candidates amenable to Louis XIV's Gallican policies, the Spanish and Imperial bloc supporting Habsburg interests, and a loose Italian contingent seeking autonomy from foreign influence.[7] Early scrutiny ballots saw scattered votes for prominent figures like Cardinal Flavio Chigi and others tied to deceased popes' families, but none achieved the required two-thirds majority, exacerbating tensions as supplies dwindled and external ambassadors exerted pressure through backchannels.[8] By mid-September, after over 40 ballots with no resolution, cardinals increasingly prioritized compromise candidates who embodied neutrality, piety, and independence from royal patronage, reflecting a pragmatic pivot to avert further vacancy amid ongoing European wars like the Franco-Dutch conflict.[7] This shift was influenced by diplomatic interventions, including Louis XIV's instructions to his envoy to block anti-French candidates while tolerating non-aligned Italians, and similar overtures from Emperor Leopold I urging avoidance of pro-French extremes. Cardinal Benedetto Odescalchi, aged 65 and unaligned with any dominant bloc, gained traction as such a figure; his record as a reform-minded former nuncio to Lisbon and bishop known for personal austerity and financial rectitude—having donated diocesan revenues to the poor—positioned him as a unifying option, despite France's veto against him in the 1669-1670 conclave.[7] [8] The move toward Odescalchi exemplified the conclave's underlying causal dynamic: factional exhaustion and the risk of diminished papal prestige forced delegations to favor empirically demonstrated virtue over ideological loyalty, with his candidacy consolidating support in subsequent ballots as a low-risk resolution to the impasse.[7] This pattern, documented in contemporary accounts, underscored how extended deliberations often elevated overlooked moderates, setting the stage for near-unanimous resolution while highlighting the limitations of foreign meddling in internal ecclesiastical affairs.[8]Election of Innocent XI
Candidacy of Benedetto Odescalchi
Benedetto Odescalchi, born on 16 May 1611 in Como to a family of Lombard bankers, entered the ecclesiastical career under Pope Urban VIII, serving as a prelate and administrator in the Apostolic Camera before his elevation to cardinal-deacon by Pope Innocent X on 6 March 1645.[7] He later became cardinal-priest of Sant'Onofrio and bishop of Novara from 1650 to 1656, resigning in favor of his brother, after which he focused on charitable works and gained a reputation for piety and administrative competence, including relief efforts for the poor during his legateship in Ferrara.[7][1] Odescalchi had been a leading candidate in the 1669–1670 conclave following Pope Clement IX's death but was excluded by the French government under Louis XIV due to his perceived Austrian sympathies.[7][2] In the 1676 conclave, convened after Pope Clement X's death on 22 July, Odescalchi entered as a neutral figure unaligned with major factions like the Altieri, Chigi, or Rospigliosi groups, though he enjoyed sympathy from Imperial and Spanish interests.[1] Initial scrutinies from 4 August yielded him modest support of 7 to 10 votes, trailing candidates like Neri Corsini and Celio Piccolomini, whose prospects were hindered by factional vetoes, including a Spanish exclusiva against Corsini on 6 August.[1] His votes surged to 22 following a sermon by Father Bonaventura da Recanati on 15 August, the Feast of the Assumption, signaling growing internal consensus amid the deadlock; Cardinal Vincenzo Maria Orsini proposed his name, while Camerlengo Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri signaled potential backing with his 15 votes if support proved solid.[1] French opposition, rooted in Louis XIV's distrust of Odescalchi's Austrian ties and prior exclusions, intensified upon the late arrival of French cardinals—including Retz, Bouillon, Maidalchini, Bonzi, and d'Estrées—on 29–30 August, delaying voting and shifting focus to alternatives like Flavio Chigi.[2][1] Louis XIV considered but ultimately withheld an exclusiva on 4 September after consultations, yet demanded assurances of alignment, including the appointment of Chigi as secretary of state; Odescalchi's reluctance and stern demeanor initially stalled negotiations, exacerbated by Cardinal Grimaldi's personal hostility.[2][1] As other papabili faltered—due to quirks, past conflicts, or vetoes—Odescalchi positioned as the compromise, acceptable to Spanish and Imperial blocs while forcing French acquiescence with conditions that Odescalchi eventually accepted.[2][1] Odescalchi's candidacy thus crystallized through his independence from entrenched factions, widespread cardinal sympathy, and the exhaustion of rivals, overriding French reservations despite long-term geopolitical frictions that would define his pontificate.[7][2]Final acclamation and unanimous support
On September 21, 1676, following the lifting of French opposition through Louis XIV's consent to Odescalchi's candidacy, the cardinals achieved unanimity and elected Benedetto Odescalchi pope via acclamation rather than continued balloting.[7][9] In this rare procedure, known as quasi-inspiration, the electors spontaneously proclaimed the candidate without formal votes, reflecting inspired consensus.[10] The cardinals surrounded Odescalchi in the conclave chapel, overcame his protests of unworthiness, and each kissed his hand while acclaiming him, with phrases such as "Odescalchi or death" underscoring the fervor of support.[11] Odescalchi, aged 65 and known for his piety and administrative integrity, accepted the election and chose the regnal name Innocent XI, marking the final instance of acclamation in papal electoral history.[7] This unanimous resolution ended a conclave marked by factional divisions between French, Imperial, and neutral blocs, averting further deadlock.[9]Aftermath and legacy
Coronation and initial papal actions
Innocent XI was crowned pope on October 4, 1676, in a ceremony conducted by the protodeacon, Cardinal Francesco Maidalchini, marking the formal commencement of his pontificate following his election on September 21.[12] On the evening of his election, he immediately instructed his nephew, Luigi Odescalchi, to refrain from expecting special honors or meddling in Church governance, signaling his commitment to curbing nepotism from the outset.[12] On November 8, 1676, Innocent XI took formal possession of the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran, the traditional seat of the Bishop of Rome, completing the initial liturgical and ceremonial transitions of power.[12] Among his earliest administrative actions, he prioritized fiscal austerity to address the Papal States' annual deficit of 170,000 scudi, suppressing superfluous offices and expenditures within months of assuming office, which laid the groundwork for eventual budgetary surpluses.[13] He also issued ordinances prohibiting cardinals from maintaining ostentatious luxuries such as horses, carriages, and liveried servants, viewing them as incompatible with clerical discipline, and appointed Cardinal Alderano Cibo as Secretary of State to aid in rooting out curial abuses.[13] In parallel, Innocent XI directed his nuncios to assure European monarchs of his dedication to pursuing peace, reflecting an initial diplomatic outreach amid ongoing conflicts like the Franco-Dutch War.[12] By May 1677, he drafted a bull aimed at formally abolishing nepotism, though it encountered resistance from cardinals and was not promulgated despite revisions in later years.[12] These measures extended to moral reforms, including the closure of theaters and opera houses in Rome to combat perceived vice, and the introduction of "Innocentine" regulations to reduce tribunal fees and corruption.[13]Historical assessment and precedents set
The 1676 papal conclave, lasting from August 2 to September 21, exemplified the profound influence of European monarchies on ecclesiastical elections, with French and Imperial (Spanish-Austrian) factions paralyzing proceedings for nearly two months amid competing loyalties among the 65 participating cardinals.[1] Historians regard it as a case study in the disruptive potential of secular intervention, where diplomatic pressures and block voting prevented early consensus on frontrunners like Cardinals Flavio Chigi and Gregorio Barbarigo, prolonging the sede vacante period and underscoring the College of Cardinals' vulnerability to external power blocs.[14] This assessment highlights how such dynamics prioritized geopolitical alignments—France seeking a Gallican-friendly pontiff, Spain an anti-absolutist one—over purely spiritual criteria, fostering a deadlock resolved only by exhaustion and compromise rather than doctrinal merit.[1] Assessments note that while such interventions could influence outcomes tactically, they exposed the instability of external veto practices, as Odescalchi's subsequent papacy as Innocent XI aggressively countered French pretensions, including resistance to Gallican liberties and Louis XIV's expansionism.[7] The conclave set precedents for mitigating foreign meddling and procedural flexibility in deadlocks. It reinforced the jus exclusivae as a de facto tool—exercised by Catholic powers since the 16th century—but also illustrated its backlash, contributing to ecclesiastical critiques that culminated in Pope Pius X's 1903 formal condemnation and abolition of the practice via the bull Commissum Nobis.[15] Procedurally, Odescalchi's election by unanimous acclamation on September 21, following the final scrutiny, represented the last instance of this ancient method in a modern conclave, bypassing further ballots after cardinals publicly shifted via accessus declarations to affirm consensus.[1] This approach established a model for elevating compromise figures above polarized candidates, influencing future elections where factional exhaustion similarly propelled non-partisan reformers, though without the overt acclamation. Moreover, the conclave's reliance on apostolic nuncios for real-time faction reporting presaged tighter secrecy norms adopted in later reforms to curb external leaks and pressures.[14]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Acclamation_(in_Papal_Elections)