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Ultramontanism
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Ultramontanism is a clerical political conception within the Catholic Church that places strong emphasis on the prerogatives and powers of the Pope. It contrasts with Gallicanism, the belief that popular civil authority—often represented by the monarch's or state's authority—over the Church is comparable to that of the Pope.
History
[edit]| Separation of church and state in the history of the Catholic Church |
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The term descends from the Middle Ages, when a non-Italian pope was said to be papa ultramontano – a pope from beyond the mountains (the Alps).[1] Foreign students at medieval Italian universities also were referred to as ultramontani.
After the Protestant Reformation in France, the concept was revived but with its directionality reversed to indicate the man "beyond the mountains" in Italy: the Pope. The term ultramontain was used to refer to Catholics who supported papal authority in French affairs – as opposed to the Gallican and Jansenist factions, who did not – and was intended as an insult implying lack of patriotism.[1] From the 17th century, ultramontanism became closely associated with the Jesuits.[2]
In the 18th century the term came to refer to supporters of the Church in any conflict between church and state. In Austria ultramontanists were opposed to Josephinism, and in Germany to Febronianism. In Great Britain and Ireland ultramontanists resisted Cisalpinism, which favored concessions to the Protestant state in order to achieve Catholic emancipation.
In eighteenth-century Spain, the Bourbon monarchs began implementing policies of regalism, which expanded the power of the monarchy and sought to bring the Catholic Church under its jurisdiction in all matters except the spiritual sphere. Charles III of Spain's ministers, Count of Floridablanca and the Count of Campomanes rejected the arguments of the ultramontanists that the Church had inalienable rights in the secular sphere.[3] The regalist reforms that the Spanish crown sought to implement were not completely successful, and the resistance to them were attributed to support for the Society of Jesus, which had been expelled from the Spanish Empire in 1767, but prior to that were educators.[4]
In Canada, the majority of Catholic clergy despised the French Revolution and its anti-clerical bias and looked to Rome for both spiritual and political guidance. There were many laymen and laywomen who supported these ideals as key to preserving Canadian institutions and values. For this reason they were called ultramontanists. The ultramontanes distrusted both the Protestant anglophone and francophone politicians, but the Church found it easier to deal with British governors, who appreciated the role of the Church in containing dissent, than with the francophone liberal professionals who were secularists.[5]
First Vatican Council
[edit]According to Catholic academic Jeffrey P. von Arx,
The threat to the Catholic Church and the papacy through the 19th century was real, and the church’s reaction to that threat was understandable. Indeed, the church remained threatened on all sides. On the left, secular liberals sought to reduce or eliminate the role of the church in public life and civil society (by suppressing church schools, for example, and expelling religious congregations). The more radical heirs of the revolution and the socialists and communists into whom they evolved remained committed to the church’s utter destruction. But the threat was also from the nationalist right. Otto von Bismarck’s Kulturkampf was aimed directly at the Catholic Church, imposing state supervision of Catholic schools and seminaries and government appointment of bishops with no reference to Rome.[6]
The response was a condemnation of Gallicanism as heretical:
[W]e condemn and reject the opinions of those who hold that this communication of the supreme head with pastors and flocks may be lawfully obstructed; or that it should be dependent on the civil power, which leads them to maintain that what is determined by the apostolic see or by its authority concerning the government of the church, has no force or effect unless it is confirmed by the agreement of the civil authority.[7]
The council also asserted papal primacy. In July 1870, it issued the Dogmatic constitution Pastor aeternus, defining four doctrines of the Catholic faith: the apostolic primacy conferred on Peter, the perpetuity of this primacy in the Roman pontiffs, the meaning and power of the papal primacy, and Papal infallibility.
[W]e teach and declare that, by divine ordinance, the Roman Church possesses a pre-eminence of ordinary power over every other Church, and that this jurisdictional power of the Roman Pontiff is both episcopal and immediate. Both clergy and faithful, of whatever rite and dignity, both singly and collectively, are bound to submit to this power by the duty of hierarchical subordination and true obedience, and this not only in matters concerning faith and morals, but also in those which regard the discipline and government of the Church throughout the world.[8]
Von Arx compares this to "the great empires and national states of the 19th century, which used new means of communication and transportation to consolidate power, enforce unity and build bureaucracies".[6] "Cardinal Henry Edward Manning in Great Britain thought unity and discipline within the church were of the utmost importance in protecting the church and advancing its interests in a liberal, democratic state, and so he was one of the strongest advocates of the ultramontane position."[6] The English bishops at the council were characterized by their ultramontanism and described as "being more Catholic than the Pope himself".[9]
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Pope Pius IX called the First Vatican Council
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Cardinal Henry Edward Manning
Reaction
[edit]Other Christian groups outside the Catholic Church declared this as the triumph of what they termed "the heresy of ultramontanism". It was specifically decried in the "Declaration of the Catholic Congress at Munich", in the Theses of Bonn, and in the Declaration of Utrecht, which became the foundational documents of Old Catholics (Altkatholische) who split with Rome over the declaration on infallibility and supremacy, joining the Old Episcopal Order Catholic See of Utrecht, which had been independent from Rome since 1723.[7]
As with previous pronouncements by the pope, liberals across Europe were outraged by the doctrine of infallibility and many countries reacted with laws to counter the influence of the church. The term "ultramontanism" was revived during the French Third Republic (1870–1940) as a pejorative way to describe policies that went against laïcité, a concept rooted in the French Revolution. The French philosopher Jacques Maritain noted the distinction between the models found in France and the separation of church and state in the United States in the mid-twentieth century. He considered the US model of that time to be more amicable because it had both "sharp distinction and actual cooperation" between church and state, what he called "an historical treasure" and admonished the United States, "Please to God that you keep it carefully, and do not let your concept of separation veer round to the European one."[10]
After Italian Unification and the abrupt (and unofficial) end of the First Vatican Council in 1870 because of the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, the ultramontanist movement and the opposing conciliarism became obsolete to a large extent. However, some very extreme tendencies of a minority of adherents to ultramontanism – especially those attributing to the Roman pontiff, even in his private opinions, absolute infallibility even in matters beyond faith and morals, and impeccability – survived and were eagerly used by opponents of the Catholic Church and papacy before the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) for use in their propaganda. These extreme tendencies, however, were never supported by the First Vatican Council's dogma of 1870 of papal infallibility and primacy, but were rather inspired by erroneous private opinions of some Catholic laymen who tend to identify themselves completely with the Holy See.
At the Second Vatican Council's Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen gentium, the Catholic Church's teaching on the authority of the pope, bishops and councils was further elaborated. The post-conciliar position of the Apostolic See did not deny any of the previous doctrines of papal infallibility or papal primacy; rather, it shifted emphasis from structural and organizational authority to doctrinal teaching authority (also known as the magisterium). Papal magisterium, i.e. papal teaching authority, was defined in Lumen gentium No. 25 and later codified in the 1983 revision of Canon Law.
Controversy
[edit]
Some, such as the former Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, have claimed the Catholic social teaching of subsidiarity can overrun ultramontanism and has the potential to decentralize the Catholic Church,[11] whereas others defend it as merely a bureaucratic adjustment to give more pastoral responsibility to local bishops and priests of local parishes.[12]
Challenges to ultramontanism have remained strong within and outside Roman jurisdiction.[13] Ultramontanism has particularly overshadowed ecumenical work between the Catholic Church and both Lutherans and Anglicans.[14] The joint Anglican-Roman Catholic International Consultation published The Gift of Authority in 1999, highlights agreements and differences on these issues.[15]
Position of other traditional churches
[edit]Ultramontanism is distinct from the positions adopted by the other traditional churches, particularly the Anglican communion, Eastern Orthodox communion, the Oriental Orthodox communion, the Old Catholic Church, or the Church of the East. These churches regard the pope as having been primus inter pares when the churches were united in full communion, and generally still acknowledge that status today, albeit in an impaired form due to disunity; similarly they do not recognize the doctrines of infallibility or the pope's alleged universal jurisdiction over patriarchates and autocephalous churches other than that of Rome itself, except insofar as this is part of the concept of primus inter pares.[16]
In the joint agreed statement "The Gift of Authority" (1999) the Catholic Church and the Anglican Communion were agreed on the collegial nature of the life and work of bishops.[17]: 148 Similarly both churches acknowledged the role of episcopal primacy within the college of bishops.[17]: 151 On the question of the universal primacy of the Pope, the joint report found common ground, and stated that a "particular conclusion" of their discussions had been "that Anglicans be open to and desire a recovery and re-reception under certain clear conditions of the exercise of universal primacy by the Bishop of Rome";[17]: 159 nonetheless a clear distinction remained between the Anglican view of a universal primacy exercised within a universal collegiality, and the Catholic view of a universal primacy with actual universal jurisdiction.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Benigni, Umberto. "Ultramontanism." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 15. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1912. 6 January 2019
- ^ Unterburger, Klaus, “Ultramontanism”, Religion Past and Present. 2006, ISBN 9789004146662
- ^ Farriss, N.M. Crown and Clergy in Colonial Mexico 1759-1821. London: The Athlone Press 1968, p. 97.
- ^ Farriss, Crown and Clergy, p. 105.
- ^ Belshaw, John Douglas. "Ultramontanism and Secularism", Canadian History: Pre-Confederation, B.C. Open Textbook project
- ^ a b c Von Arx, Jeffrey (June 10, 2015). "How did Vatican I change the church?" America Magazine.
- ^ a b O'Neill, Taylor Patrick (October 12, 2018). "A Defense of Ultramontanism Contra Gallicanism". Church Life Journal. University of Notre Dame. Archived from the original on January 17, 2019. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
- ^ "Pastor aeternus", Const. de Ecclesia Christi, July 18, 1870
- ^ Nobili-Vitelleschi, Francesco (1876). The Vatican Council; Eight Months at Rome, During the Vatican Council. London: John Murray. p. 28.
- ^ Carson, D. A. (2008), Christ And Culture Revisited, Wm. B. Eerdmans, p. 189, ISBN 9780802831743, retrieved 2012-02-10
- ^ John L. Allen, Pope Benedict XVI: A Biography of Joseph Ratzinger (London: A&C Black, 2001), 308-309. ISBN 0826413617, 9780826413611
- ^ See e.g. Vinzenz Gasser, trans. James Thomas O'Connor, The Gift of Infallibility: The Official Relatio on Infallibility of Bishop Vincent Ferrer Gasser at Vatican Council I (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1986/2008). ISBN 1681494914, 978168149491
- ^ e.g. Derek Hastings, Catholicism and the Roots of Nazism: Religious Identity and National Socialism (Oxford University Press, 2009), 17-22. ISBN 0199741417, 9780199741410
- ^ Russel T. Murray, Anglicans and Catholics in Dialogue on the Papacy: A Gift for All Christians (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 2017). ISBN 0809149605, 9780809149605
- ^ Anglican/Roman Catholic International Commission, The Gift of Authority: Authority in the Church III (Toronto: Anglican Book Centre, 1998). ISBN 1551262460, 9781551262468
- ^ "Anglicanism and the Papacy". Anglican Catholic. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 9 June 2018.
- ^ a b c "Looking towards a Church fully reconciled" (PDF). SPCK (2016). Retrieved 16 June 2018.
- Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
External links
[edit]- The Gift of Authority (Eternal Word Television Network)
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Ultramontanism
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Principles
Core Doctrine and Etymology
Ultramontanism derives its name from the Medieval Latin term ultramontanus, meaning "beyond the mountains," a phrase that originally denoted anything situated across the Alps from the vantage point of northern European countries such as France and Germany.[4] This geographical reference underscored the perception of papal authority as originating from Rome, positioned "beyond the mountains" relative to those regions, thereby emphasizing a centralized power transcending local or national boundaries.[5] The term gained prominence in the 17th and 18th centuries amid debates over ecclesiastical jurisdiction, where supporters of strong papal influence were labeled "ultramontanes" by opponents advocating for greater autonomy of national churches.[5] At its core, the doctrine of ultramontanism upholds the Pope's full, supreme, immediate, and universal jurisdiction over the Catholic Church, asserting his primacy not only in spiritual matters of faith and morals but also in governance and discipline, without subordination to councils, bishops, or secular rulers.[6] This principle posits that the Pope, as successor to St. Peter, possesses an ordinary and direct authority over every part of the Church, enabling him to intervene in diocesan affairs, appoint bishops, and define doctrine independently.[6] Proponents viewed this centralization as essential for maintaining unity and orthodoxy, particularly against schismatic or state-influenced deviations, as evidenced in historical assertions like those preceding the First Vatican Council's dogmatic definitions on papal primacy and infallibility in 1870.[5] Ultramontanism thus rejects limitations on papal power, such as those proposed by Gallicanism in France, which contended for the superiority of ecumenical councils over the Pope and the right of national churches to resist ultramontane overreach in temporal affairs.[5] While the movement's advocates drew on scriptural foundations like Matthew 16:18–19—where Christ grants Peter the keys to the kingdom—and patristic traditions affirming Roman primacy, its practical emphasis lay in fortifying the papacy's role amid 19th-century secular challenges, prioritizing ecclesiastical independence from modern nation-states.[6]Theological Basis in Scripture and Tradition
Ultramontanism draws its scriptural basis primarily from passages depicting Christ's conferral of unique authority upon Peter, interpreted as establishing a perpetual primacy of jurisdiction extending to his successors in the Roman See. Central is Matthew 16:18-19, where Jesus declares, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church... I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven," signifying Peter's foundational role and binding-loosing power aligned with heavenly authority, which ultramontanists hold necessitates infallibility to prevent doctrinal error in guiding the universal Church.[7] Similarly, Luke 22:32 records Christ's prayer for Peter: "I have prayed for thee, that thy faith may not fail; and do thou, when once converted, confirm thy brethren," implying indefectible faith for the successor to strengthen the episcopate, a personal promise extended to the papacy per Vatican I's Pastor Aeternus.[8] John 21:15-17 further reinforces this through the threefold command to Peter to "feed my lambs... feed my sheep," entrusting universal pastoral care.[7] These texts underpin the ultramontane view of papal supremacy as divinely instituted for Church unity, countering theories of episcopal collegiality without Roman headship, as articulated in Pastor Aeternus: "A primacy of jurisdiction over the whole Church... was immediately and directly promised to the blessed Peter the apostle by Christ the Lord."[7] Ultramontanists reject alternative interpretations, such as Protestant or Orthodox views equating the "rock" solely with Peter's faith or confession, insisting on the literal Petrine succession evidenced by early Church practice.[8] In Church tradition, ultramontanism finds support in patristic affirmations of Roman primacy as a unifying appellate authority. Irenaeus of Lyons (c. 180 AD) wrote that "every Church should agree with this Church [Rome], on account of its preeminent authority," citing its "principal" position derived from apostolic origins.[9] Cyprian of Carthage (c. 251 AD) acknowledged: "To Cornelius [Bishop of Rome]... we decided to appeal, since the faith of the whole world must converge in the see of Peter," reflecting deference in doctrinal disputes.[10] Optatus of Milevis (c. 367 AD) described Rome as holding "the primacy" with the "chair of Peter," from which heresies are judged invalid.[11] Such testimonies, compiled in Vatican I's rationale, illustrate a consistent tradition of papal intervention for orthodoxy, which ultramontanism elevates against Gallican or conciliarist dilutions of Roman oversight.[7] This scriptural and traditional framework was dogmatically synthesized at the First Vatican Council (1869-1870), affirming Peter's successors' "full and supreme power of jurisdiction over the whole Church," not merely honorific but operative in faith and morals, as essential to resisting secular encroachments on ecclesiastical autonomy.[7] Critics, including some nineteenth-century theologians, contended these patristic references indicate primacy of honor rather than universal jurisdiction, yet ultramontanists maintain the causal link from Peter's role to papal governance preserves the Church's indefectibility.[9]Distinction from Related Concepts
Ultramontanism fundamentally opposes Gallicanism, a French ecclesiological position that asserted the Gallican Liberties, limiting papal authority in favor of episcopal collegiality and royal oversight in church affairs, as articulated in the 1682 Declaration of the Clergy of France, which claimed the pope's power was subordinate to ecumenical councils and required state consent for doctrinal enforcement. In contrast, ultramontanism insists on the pope's full, supreme, and immediate jurisdiction over the universal church, rejecting any national qualifiers on papal prerogatives that could subordinate Rome to secular monarchs or local synods.[12] This distinction arose acutely during the 17th and 18th centuries, when Gallicanism aligned with absolutist state control, viewing the church as integrated into the national fabric under royal placet or exequatur requirements for papal bulls.[13] Similarly, ultramontanism rejects Febronianism, named after the 1763 treatise De statu ecclesiae by Johann Nikolaus von Hontheim (under pseudonym Justinus Febronius), which advocated a conciliar model emphasizing bishops' collective authority derived from Christ, with the pope as a primus inter pares whose decisions needed episcopal consent to bind the German church. Ultramontanists countered this by upholding the Vatican I-defined papal primacy, arguing that Febronianism fragmented church unity by elevating regional conferences, such as those in Ems (1786), over Roman directives, thereby risking schism in the Holy Roman Empire's dioceses.[14] The movement's causal dynamic stemmed from Enlightenment-era princely interventions, where Febronianism served as an ideological tool to curb papal influence amid secularizing reforms. Ultramontanism also diverges from Josephinism, the Austrian state-church policy under Emperor Joseph II (r. 1765–1790), which imposed rationalist controls like suppressing contemplative orders, regulating seminaries, and requiring imperial approval for clerical appointments via the 1781 Patent on Ecclesiastical Affairs.[12] While sharing some anti-Jesuit elements with earlier Gallican strains, Josephinism prioritized bureaucratic efficiency and state utility over theological centralization, treating the church as an administrative arm of the Habsburg monarchy rather than affirming papal supremacy as the guarantor of doctrinal purity.[15] Ultramontanists, particularly in the 19th century, viewed such regalian rights as erosive to ecclesiastical independence, advocating instead for Rome's transcendent authority to resist Enlightenment statism.[16] Though sometimes conflated with broader integralism, which seeks a confessional state subordinating civil authority to Catholic moral order under papal indirect power, ultramontanism is narrower, focusing primarily on internal ecclesial governance and papal plenitudo potestatis against conciliar or national dilutions, without mandating specific political configurations beyond church autonomy.[17] Historical ultramontanes like those at Vatican I prioritized doctrinal centralization over societal blueprints, distinguishing their position from integralism's extension into temporal spheres, as evidenced by varied national implementations where papal loyalty did not uniformly entail throne-and-altar alliances.[6] This ecclesiological core avoids equating ultramontanism with exaggerated "hyper-papalism," which posits unqualified obedience to non-infallible papal acts, whereas orthodox ultramontanism aligns with defined limits like Pastor Aeternus (1870).[18]Historical Development
Medieval Precursors and Early Assertions
The Gregorian Reforms, initiated by Pope Gregory VII during his pontificate from 1073 to 1085, marked an early medieval push toward centralizing ecclesiastical authority in the papacy, challenging secular interference in church appointments and discipline. Gregory sought to eradicate simony—the sale of church offices—and enforce clerical celibacy, while asserting the pope's superiority over both bishops and temporal rulers to purify the church from corruption.[19] A cornerstone of these efforts was the Dictatus Papae, a set of 27 propositions compiled in 1075, which boldly claimed the pope's universal jurisdiction, including the exclusive right to depose or reinstate bishops worldwide, the inability of any earthly court to judge papal decisions, and the power to depose emperors if necessary. These assertions positioned the Roman pontiff as the ultimate arbiter of Christian society, laying groundwork for later ultramontane emphasis on papal primacy over national or conciliar limits.[20][21] This doctrinal stance fueled the Investiture Controversy, a protracted conflict with Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV, whom Gregory excommunicated in 1076 for defying papal bans on lay investiture of bishops. Henry IV's subsequent penance at Canossa in January 1077, where he stood barefoot in the snow for three days seeking absolution from Gregory, symbolized a temporary triumph of papal over imperial authority, though the struggle persisted until the Concordat of Worms in 1122 partially resolved investiture rights.[22][23] Subsequent popes built on these foundations; Innocent III (r. 1198–1216) expanded papal claims to feudal overlordship, compelling King John of England to render his kingdom a papal fief in 1213 amid interdicts and excommunications. Similarly, Boniface VIII's bull Unam Sanctam in November 1302 declared subjection to the Roman Pontiff "absolutely necessary for salvation," encapsulating a hierarchical view of authority where spiritual power subsumed temporal realms, though it provoked fierce resistance from Philip IV of France. These medieval assertions of untrammeled papal sovereignty prefigured ultramontanism's rejection of episcopal or state autonomy in church governance.[24]Counter-Reformation and Enlightenment Challenges
During the Counter-Reformation, the Council of Trent (1545–1563) centralized doctrinal authority under the papacy, reaffirming the Pope's supremacy in defining Catholic teachings against Protestant innovations, thereby laying foundational support for ultramontane centralization.[25] Jesuit theologian Robert Bellarmine further advanced these principles in his Disputationes de Controversiis Christianae Fidei (1586–1593), arguing scripturally and historically for papal primacy over the universal Church while distinguishing spiritual from temporal jurisdiction.[26] These efforts aimed to unify the Church amid fragmentation, yet jurisdictional tensions persisted, particularly where monarchs sought to curtail Roman influence. In France, Gallicanism posed a direct challenge, emphasizing the "liberties" of the national church and subordinating papal decisions to royal and episcopal consent. The Assembly of the French Clergy's Four Gallican Articles of March 19, 1682, declared that the Pope held no temporal power over kings, was subject to general councils in doctrinal matters, and required acceptance of conciliar decrees by the universal Church; these assertions, promoted under Louis XIV, provoked papal condemnation from Innocent XI and strained relations until partial reconciliation in 1693.[27] Such movements reflected broader Counter-Reformation conflicts between ultramontane universalism and state-driven ecclesial autonomy, with Gallican proponents viewing excessive papal intervention as incompatible with monarchical sovereignty. The Enlightenment intensified these challenges through rationalist critiques of ecclesiastical hierarchy and statist reforms prioritizing reason and national control over religious authority. In the Holy Roman Empire, Febronianism—articulated in Johann Nikolaus von Hontheim's pseudonymous De Statu Ecclesiae et Legitima Potestate Romani Pontificis (1763)—advocated limiting the Pope to honorary primacy, vesting jurisdictional power in bishops and councils, and influenced German princes' demands for episcopal independence at the Congress of Ems (1786).[28] Similarly, Josephinism under Emperor Joseph II of Austria (r. 1765–1790, sole rule 1780–1790) imposed state oversight on the Church, dissolving over 700 contemplative monasteries by 1790, requiring placet for papal documents, and restricting clerical communications with Rome to assert Habsburg dominance.[29] These developments, including the suppression of the Jesuits in 1773 amid European pressure, underscored Enlightenment-era efforts to diminish ultramontane centralization in favor of enlightened absolutism and episcopalism, prompting Catholic apologists to defend papal jurisdiction as essential to doctrinal unity against secular encroachments.[30] Despite setbacks, such resistance preserved ultramontane ideals, setting the stage for their resurgence amid revolutionary upheavals.Nineteenth-Century Revival Amid Revolutions
 and subsequent Napoleonic era profoundly weakened national church structures, particularly Gallicanism in France, as many bishops and clergy accommodated revolutionary oaths and civil constitutions, contrasting with papal resistance that culminated in Pope Pius VI's capture and death in French custody on August 29, 1799.[31][32] This discrediting of local autonomies fostered a resurgence of ultramontanism, prioritizing papal supremacy to safeguard ecclesiastical independence from state encroachment.[31] Pope Pius VII's survival and 1801 Concordat with Napoleon Bonaparte, followed by the Congress of Vienna's restorations in 1815, enabled the Church's reorganization under centralized Roman authority, further marginalizing Gallican and Josephinist models blamed for vulnerability to revolutionary upheavals.[32] The 1814 revival of the Society of Jesus, historically aligned with ultramontane principles, bolstered this trend by promoting disciplined loyalty to the Holy See across Europe.[31] In France, ultramontanes seized the initiative against Gallican remnants accused of revolutionary complicity, while in Germany, they positioned themselves as defenders against state interference akin to Febronianism.[31] Subsequent revolutionary waves, including the 1830 uprisings in France and Belgium and the widespread 1848 "Springtime of Nations" across Europe, intensified ultramontanist appeals as liberal and nationalist movements assaulted clerical privileges and promoted secular governance.[33] Pope Pius IX, elected on June 16, 1846, initially pursued reforms like amnesties and a constitution, but the November 1848 Roman Republic forced his exile to Gaeta until French forces restored him on July 15, 1849, transforming his stance into staunch opposition to liberalism.[33] This papal ordeal galvanized Catholic loyalty, evident in France through Louis Veuillot's L'Univers newspaper, which championed Roman primacy over national compromises.[31] By the 1850s, ultramontanism manifested in institutional advances, such as the restoration of the English Catholic hierarchy on September 29, 1850, under Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman, signaling defiance of Protestant state dominance amid industrial and political shifts.[34] Pius IX's 1864 encyclical Quanta cura and attached Syllabus of Errors explicitly condemned revolutionary ideologies, rationalism, and indifferentism, solidifying ultramontanism as the Church's bulwark against modernity's secular assaults.[31] This revival positioned the papacy as the transcendent authority amid fragmented national churches, culminating in preparations for the First Vatican Council.[32]Central Events and Doctrinal Milestones
Role in Pre-Vatican I Papal Policies
Pope Pius IX's pontificate (1846–1878) marked a pivotal era for ultramontanism, as papal policies increasingly emphasized centralized authority to counter the threats of liberalism, nationalism, and secularism following the European revolutions of 1848. In response to the upheaval that forced Pius IX to flee Rome temporarily, he pursued administrative reforms to strengthen Roman control over the universal Church, including the establishment of a special curial congregation for religious orders and systematic encouragement of greater centralization in ecclesiastical governance.[35] These measures aimed to diminish national influences like Gallicanism and Josephinism, prioritizing direct papal oversight in episcopal appointments and disciplinary matters. Doctrinal assertions further embodied ultramontane principles. On December 8, 1854, Pius IX promulgated the apostolic constitution Ineffabilis Deus, defining the Immaculate Conception of Mary without convening a council, thereby exercising and demonstrating the extraordinary magisterium of the papacy—a move that previewed the later dogma of infallibility and bolstered confidence in papal prerogative over tradition-mediated consensus.[36] This was complemented by the encyclical Quanta Cura (December 8, 1864), which condemned contemporary errors, with its attached Syllabus of Errors listing 80 propositions rejected by the Church, including the notions of church-state separation (#55) and the pope's reconciliation with modern progress (#80), thereby reinforcing Rome's supreme doctrinal authority against accommodations to civil powers or rationalist ideologies.[37] In personnel policies, Pius IX favored ultramontane figures to implement this vision. He appointed Henry Edward Manning, a convert and staunch advocate of papal supremacy, as Archbishop of Westminster in 1865, overriding liberal objections within the English hierarchy to ensure loyalty to Roman directives over local Anglican-influenced traditions.[38] Politically, the non expedit policy, originating in a 1850 decree and reiterated amid Italian unification, prohibited Italian Catholics from participating in parliamentary elections of the Kingdom of Italy, as such oaths could imply acceptance of the Holy See's temporal spoliation, thus demanding undivided allegiance to the pope over emergent nation-states.[39] These policies collectively fortified ultramontanism as a bulwark against fragmentation, setting the stage for the First Vatican Council's formal definitions.Proceedings of the First Vatican Council
Pope Pius IX convoked the First Vatican Council through the apostolic letter Aeterni Patris issued on June 29, 1868, aiming to address contemporary errors in faith and reason while reinforcing papal authority amid rising secular challenges. [7] The council opened with its first public session on December 8, 1869, in St. Peter's Basilica, attended by approximately 700 bishops, marking a significant gathering after three centuries without an ecumenical council.[7] This assembly reflected the ultramontane push for centralized ecclesiastical governance under the pope, countering nationalistic tendencies within the Church.[40] The proceedings began with preparatory commissions drafting schemata on key topics, including the Catholic faith and Church constitution. Debates commenced on December 28, 1869, focusing first on a schema against rationalism and indifferentism, culminating in the dogmatic constitution Dei Filius promulgated on April 24, 1870, during the third public session.[7] This document affirmed the harmony of faith and reason, rejecting modern philosophical errors, and aligned with ultramontane efforts to safeguard doctrinal purity from Enlightenment influences.[41] Subsequent discussions shifted to papal primacy and infallibility, where ultramontane leaders like Cardinal Henry Edward Manning advocated strongly for explicit definitions, overcoming resistance from bishops concerned about the timing amid political instability.[40] Intense debates on the Church's constitution led to the fourth public session on July 18, 1870, where the council approved Pastor Aeternus, defining the pope's full and supreme jurisdiction over the universal Church and his infallibility in ex cathedra pronouncements on faith and morals.[7] The vote passed overwhelmingly, 533 to 2, with only two bishops dissenting, signaling the doctrinal victory of ultramontanism by enshrining papal supremacy as a matter of faith.[42] Proceedings halted thereafter due to the Franco-Prussian War and the advancing Italian unification forces, with the council suspending indefinitely on September 20, 1870, following the breach of Rome's Porta Pia.[40] This abrupt end underscored the geopolitical tensions ultramontanism sought to transcend through enhanced papal independence.[41]Definition and Immediate Aftermath of Papal Infallibility
The doctrine of papal infallibility was formally defined in the dogmatic constitution Pastor Aeternus, promulgated by the First Vatican Council on July 18, 1870. It states that the Roman Pontiff, when speaking ex cathedra—that is, in the exercise of his office as pastor and teacher of all Christians, by virtue of his supreme apostolic authority, defines a doctrine concerning faith or morals to be held by the whole Church—is possessed of that infallibility which the Redeemer willed his Church to enjoy in defining doctrine concerning faith or morals; therefore, such definitions are irreformable in themselves and not by the consent of the Church.[7][43] The definition was approved by a vote of 533 to 2, with the two dissenting bishops being Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff of Breslau and Theodor de Geouffre de la Rada of Tournai; many opponents had already departed the council before the final vote.[44] This declaration represented the culmination of ultramontane efforts to affirm the Pope's supreme jurisdiction and doctrinal authority over the universal Church, countering nationalistic tendencies like Gallicanism that subordinated papal power to episcopal or state influence.[45] Proponents, including figures like Cardinal Henry Edward Manning, viewed it as essential for preserving Catholic unity amid 19th-century secular revolutions and liberal challenges.[46] In the immediate aftermath, the dogma elicited strong support from ultramontane Catholics, who celebrated it as a divine safeguard against error, but provoked schism among dissenters. A minority of theologians and clergy, led by historian Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger, rejected the definition as historically unsubstantiated and an innovation, leading to the formation of the Old Catholic Church in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland; Döllinger was excommunicated in 1871 for refusing submission.[47] The council itself was suspended indefinitely on October 20, 1870, due to the Franco-Prussian War and the subsequent Italian capture of Rome on September 20, 1870, which ended the Papal States and intensified perceptions of papal isolation from temporal power.[3] Despite the schism, which affected fewer than 100,000 Catholics initially, the vast majority of the Church hierarchy and laity accepted the dogma, reinforcing ultramontane centralization and papal prestige under Pius IX until his death in 1878.[48] Critics in Protestant and liberal circles decried it as absolutist, while some internal voices warned of potential overreach, though the definition's strict conditions—limited to rare ex cathedra pronouncements—mitigated broader fears of unchecked papal whim.[49]Key Figures and Influences
Papal Champions
Pope Gregory XVI (r. 1831–1846) advanced ultramontanist principles through a monarchical conception of the papacy, emphasizing centralized Roman authority over national churches amid rising liberal influences in Europe.[50] His 1832 encyclical Mirari Vos condemned liberalism and indifferentism, reinforcing papal supremacy as essential to doctrinal purity and church unity against secular encroachments.[51] Gregory's tenure positioned the Holy See as the unyielding guardian of tradition, fostering a climate where ultramontanism gained traction as a bulwark against Gallican and Febronian tendencies that diluted papal jurisdiction. Pope Pius IX (r. 1846–1878) epitomized ultramontanism's zenith, transforming defensive papal stances into assertive doctrinal assertions during an era of revolutionary upheavals. Elected amid Italian unrest, he initially supported constitutional reforms but pivoted after the 1848 revolutions stripped papal temporal power, redirecting focus to spiritual supremacy.[52] His 1864 encyclical Quanta Cura, accompanied by the Syllabus of Errors, explicitly rejected modern errors like rationalism and separation of church and state, galvanizing ultramontane loyalty by framing papal authority as infallible in faith and morals.[52] Pius IX convoked the First Vatican Council on June 29, 1868, which opened December 8, 1869, and culminated in the 1870 definition of papal infallibility under Pastor Aeternus, codifying the pope's ex cathedra pronouncements as irreformable.[32] This doctrine, debated amid minority opposition, entrenched ultramontanism as orthodoxy, with Pius viewing it as vital for ecclesiastical cohesion post-temporal losses, including Rome's annexation by Italy in 1870.[32]