Among my
earliest datable memories is the television news
coverage of the death of John XXIII and subsequent
ceremonies leading up to the coronation of Paul
VI. Not that I remember much: I was not yet three,
and all that sticks in my mind is a vague impression
of black and white images of men processing back
and forth in robes. By way of contrast, the ceremonies
surrounding the death of John Paul II and the
elevation of Benedict XVI are crystal clear in
my mind, not least because I was invited to comment
on the proceedings for the ABC network’s
fledgling 24 cable news network. Moreover, the
audience for John Paul’s funeral was much
larger: five million pilgrims streamed into Rome
to attend, and two billion watched on television.
But that was far from the only difference 42 years
made; the Papal funeral, election, and installation
ceremonies themselves had altered tremendously
from the 1963, which was substantially unchanged
from the method used for the preceding six centuries.
A large part of the reason for this was Paul VI’s
enormous paring down of the Papal Court; to understand
how the ceremonial changed, we must first look
at the body of men responsible for carrying out
the rituals, and at the traditional means of making
the transition from one Pope to another.
To begin with it must be borne in mind that the
Pope was and is a temporal sovereign as well as
a spiritual leader (in much the same way that
the Dalai Lama was/is). Until the problems of
1860-70, he ruled over Rome and a broad band of
central Italy; prior to the French Revolution,
the district around Avignon in southern France
also fell within his dominions. Just as Monarchs
like the Holy Roman Emperor and the Kings of France,
England, Spain and so on had glittering courts
that both lent glamour to the ruler’s palace
and assisted him in governing, so too with the
Holy See.
Since the Pope ruled both a universal Church and
a fairly small country, his court was correspondingly
made up of both clerical and lay positions. The
latter were recruited from the local nobility,
which in turn was made up of three categories.
One the one hand, the old Roman noble families
--- clans like the Colonna, Orsini, Pallavicini,
Chigi, and Cesarini --- claimed long histories
intertwined with the Papacy, sometimes as friends,
sometimes as foes, sometimes as occupants; the
last named even maintained that they were in fact
descendants of the Caesars. A few held themselves
to be descended from the pre-Christian aristocracy
of Rome, more dated their origins to subsequent
invaders and conquerors. Such families as the
Barberini, Borgia, and Borghese descended (usually
collaterally) from Popes themselves. Both of these
groupings built beautiful palaces and villas around
Rome --- most of which are now museums, government
offices, embassies and the like, but some few
of which remain in private hands. Lastly, as sovereigns
the Popes also created titles nobles for services
rendered to the Holy See --- princes, dukes, marquises,
counts, and barons.
When the Italians seized Rome in 1870, the Roman
nobility spilt into two groups --- the “Whites,”
who supported the new regime, and the “Blacks,”
who refused to. Staying loyal to Bl. Pius IX and
his successors, they prized their positions at
the Papal court, while their opposite numbers
graced that of the King of Italy at the Quirinal
Palace across town. This situation lasted until
1929, when the treaty of the Lateran, establishing
the Vatican City State and ending the Roman Question
permitted the two branches of Rome’s elite
to reunite socially.
The Papal Court was and is made up of two important
categories: the Papal Chapel and the Papal Household.
The First named consists of all the lay and clerical
dignitaries who accompany the Pope in solemn procession
into St. Peter’s. These include the various
Cardinals and other high-ranking prelates who
run the various departments of the Roman Curia,
various ecclesiastical protonotaries and chamberlains
(who are called monsignori; honorary holders of
these titles are senior priests all over the world
who are addressed, in English, as “monsignor”),
and, traditionally certain elevated laymen. Among
the most notable of these were the two Prince
Assistants at the Pontifical Throne, usually the
heads of the Colonna and Orsini families, who
succeeded each other in carrying out their office.
There were also the four “Marquises of the
Canopy,” the heads of the Patrizi, Sachetti,
Theodoli, and Costaguti clans, who, in return
for this service, received certain honorary privileges
reserved normally to Roman princes and dukes.
In addition there were the party around the sedia
gestatoria, the state chair, carried by six sediarii
in crimson damask uniforms. This included four
Swiss Guards, two lay privy chamberlains carrying
flabella, gigantic ostrich feather fans; the Commandant
and officers of the Swiss Guard, and the Commandants
of the Palatine Guard of Honor and the Noble Guard.
But if the Papal Chapel only really showed its
corporate existence during high ceremonies in
St. Peter’s, the Papal Household functioned
in the Apostolic Palace in the Vatican on a permanent
basis. Like the Papal Chapel, it was traditionally
a mixture of lay (usually noble) and clerical
personages. Its two top members were the “Palatine
Cardinals” --- the Cardinal Secretary of
State (then as now the second most powerful man
in the Vatican) and the Cardinal Datary, head
of the Apostolic Dataria, an office which vetted
candidates for positions in the Papal Court. Then
came the “Palatine Prelates:” the
Maestro di Camera, the principal chamberlain who
exercised authority over all the other chamberlains,
made all arrangements for papal ceremonies, and
acted as custodian of the Ring of the Fisherman
– he was the first to see the Pope each
day; the Auditor of His Holiness, who presided
over the Curial department that appointed Bishops;
and the Master of the Sacred Palace, the Pope’s
theologian, usually a Dominican. There were also
a number of ecclesiastical Privy Chamberlains
(monsignori), who actually gave daily service
to the Pope, such as the Master of the Alms and
the Guardian of the Papal Vestments.
Then, in precedence, followed the three great
hereditary lay officers of the Papal Household,
Roman nobles all. These were the Forriere Maggiore,
who was in charge of the repair and upkeep of
the Papal palaces (the current holder would be
the Marquis Giulio Sacchetti, Marques of Castel
Romano, currently the highest ranking layman in
the Papal service as “Delegate of the State
of the City of the Vatican”); the Cavallerizzo
Maggiore, or “Master of the Horse,”
who was at first in charge of the Papal stables
and horses (this office would today be held by
the Marquis Dr. Gregorio Serlupi Crescenzi, a
noted Roman Psychologist); and the Sopraintendente
Generale della Poste, who presided over the Papal
Post Office (the current office holder would be
Prince Don Filippo Massimo, Prince and Lord of
Arsoli, Duke of Anticoli Corrado).
There were also a number of degrees of lay privy
chamberlains, both honorary and regular, who came
from either noble families or were named in reward
for services to the Church. These wore knee breeches,
capes, and ruffed collars, sword at side --- very
much resembling the Renaissance portraits of gentlemen
so prized by collectors. Also on hand were the
Bussolanti, lay ushers in damask uniforms much
like those of the bearers of the Sedia Gestatoria.
These costumed folk lent great color to Papal
ceremonies of all kinds.
The most impressive portion of the Papal court
was, to be sure, the uniformed soldiers of the
Pontifical Army. After 1870, units like the Zouaves,
Dragoons, and Artillery were dispersed; but four
remained. Most illustrious of these were the Noble
Guard, made up of (as the name would suggest),
noblemen. The Captain Commander of the Noble Guard
was always a Roman Prince with the rank of Lieutenant
General (among the last holders were the Princes
Altieri, Aldobrandini, Barberini, Rospigliosi).
Among their number was also the Hereditary Standard
Bearer of the Holy Roman Church, who bore the
rank of Lieutenant-General (the holder today would
be the Marquis Patrizio Patrizi Naro Montoro,
another Marquis of the Canopy). Before 1929, their
numbers were recruited solely from among the nobility
of the pre-1870 Papal States; but after the Lateran
Treaty, any Italian noble was eligible. In 1930,
Alfonso XIII, King of Spain, had approached Pius
XI with the idea of admitting any Catholic nobleman,
but the Pope refused. At any rate, featured at
all major ceremonies, the Noble Guard were an
impressive sight, with their plumed cuirassier
helmets and red tunics. One of their number always
accompanied the Papal emissary bearing the red
hat to be delivered to overseas Cardinals.
The Swiss Guard, with their Renaissance uniforms
designed by Michelangelo, were and are the most
famous of the Papal units. Founded in 1505, they
guarded (and guard) the entrances to the Vatican
and the Papal Apartments. Easily one of the most
photographed units in the world, for many people
they epitomize the Vatican.
A much less aristocratic unit were the Palatine
Guards of Honor, founded in 1850 as the Roman
militia in the Papal service. With their blue
uniforms and plumed blue busbies, they were quite
noticeable during Papal ceremonies. The Palatine
Guard was open to all Catholic natives of Rome,
although during World War II its ranks were thrown
open by Pius XII to Jews, in order to provide
refuge for them from the Holocaust. Between 1942
and December 1943, the numbers of the Guard ballooned
from 300 members to 4,000 --- all of them carrying
Vatican City passports, guarantees of safety.
Of these 4,000 new recruits, at least 400 were
Jews, 240 of whom were hidden in the Vatican itself.
Lastly came the Pontifical Gendarmerie, a unit
founded in 1816 as the police of the Papal States,
and after 1870 confined to guarding the Apostolic
Palace and the basilica of St. Peter. In bearskin
hats, they resembled nothing so much as French
Grenadiers of the army of Napoleon.
With such an array of glittering courtiers, ceremonies
at the Vatican were impressive, indeed, even if
after 1870 they were primarily confined to immediate
environs of St. Peter’s. There were, of
course, the major holidays of the Church year,
such as Christmas and Easter; the reception of
heads of state and other important guests; the
canonization of saints and the creation of cardinals;
accreditation of foreign envoys; the annual allocutions
to the diplomatic corps and to the Roman nobility;
and many other ceremonies besides. But none were
so impressive as the protocol surrounding the
death and funeral of an old Pope, and the election
and coronation of a new one.
However, in the Catholic Church as elsewhere during
the 1960s, there was a great outcry for simplification.
On the one hand, this showed itself in strictly
religious rites through the alteration in the
liturgies of the Church after Vatican II. But
at the same time, throughout Western Society ---
especially in those parts of it that retained
monarchies --- there was a great demand on the
part of the chattering classes of academia, media,
and politicians for an “updating”
or “democratization” of royal ritual.
At court after court, bowing or curtseying to
the Sovereign or his representative was abandoned,
ancient court offices were abolished, uniforms
and ceremonies altered or done away with, and
the nobility dispensed with --- all in the name
of “modernity” or “equality.”
Nor has this process quite finished, as might
be observed in Tony Blair’s expulsion of
hereditary peers from the House of Lords, abolition
of the millennium-old post of Lord Chancellor,
and outlawing of fox hunting (a notoriously aristocratic
sport). Of course, none of those chatterers responsible
for such changes have altered their own lavish
lifestyles, nor (in the case of the political
wing of the movement) become more noticeably efficient
or attentive to the needs of the people.
In any case, this wave of change did not stop
at the walls of the Vatican; far from it. Pius
XII initiated things by ordering Bishops not to
use whatever noble titles they might have possessed,
either personally or (as was the case for a number
of European cities) that were attached to their
dioceses; by forbidding the use of coronets and
the like in ecclesiastical heraldry; and by ending
the annual allocution to the Roman nobility. John
XXIII continued the process by doing away with
the traditional kissing of the papal slipper,
and purging the Roman Pontifical (the books of
episcopal ceremonies) of such rites as the coronation
of Kings and the dubbing of Knights.
But here too, it fell to Paul VI to make the most
radical changes. From 1968 to 1970, he cut through
the Papal court, abolishing age-old (and primarily
lay) titles, disbanding the Noble and Palatine
Guards, and taking away the uniforms of the Gendarmes.
In the latter year, he ended the privileges of
the Black Nobility, for the most part stripping
them of Vatican citizenship. In keeping with these
moves, he toned down Vatican pageantry considerably,
and removed a great deal of the lay element. The
chamberlains he renamed “Gentlemen of His
Holiness,” taking them out of their Renaissance
costumes and putting them into white tie and tails.
Above all, Paul VI wanted to minimize the Temporal
Rulership aspect of Papal ceremonial. The seeker
after gorgeous Pontifical uniforms will only find
them today in the Museum of the Pontifical Household
at the Lateran Palace. The Sedia Gestatoria continued
to be used by Paul VI; although John Paul I (who
had shown his opposition to this sort of pageantry
by abolishing his State entrance into Venice by
gondola, when made Patriarch of that city) did
not like to use it, he relented when it was pointed
out to him that people could not see him otherwise.
John Paul II replaced it entirely with his Popemobile.
Nevertheless, what remains is still quite impressive.
We will now examine the ceremonies surrounding
Papal death and election, as they were, and as
they have become in the past four decades.
A Pope is Dead
When the Pope is dying, he is given, like any
other Catholic, the Last Rites. These have of
course been somewhat simplified from the rites
of Extreme Unction to what is now called the Sacrament
of the Sick. In the case of a dying Pope, the
Cardinal Grand Penitentiary, the official heading
the highest court of the Church) who also supervised
the “Minor Penitentiaries,” the specially
chosen priests who hear confessions in the four
major basilicas) administered this rite. The Penitentiaries
in turn would also watch over the deathbed of
the Pope; when the Pontiff breathed his last,
they would wash his body and clothe him in his
vestments.
At the moment of death, the Church enters a period
called the Sede Vacante --- the Vacant Seat. The
Cardinal Camerlengo, head of the Apostolic Camera
(the body of the Curia that administers the temporal
goods and properties of the Holy See) becomes
the top man of the Church. Summoned to the dead
Pope’s chamber, he must certify that the
Pontiff has passed on. Up until the end of the
19th century he did this by lifting the linen
covering from the Pope’s face, after which
everyone in the room knelt in prayer. The Camerlengo
then called out the Pope’s lay name. Receiving
no answer, he would touch the forehead of the
Papal corpse with a small silver hammer three
times, successively calling out the name. The
Camerlengo would then turn to those present and
say solemnly, “The Pope is truly dead.”
Attending notaries, the master of Papal ceremonies,
and attending physician would sign the death certificate,
and hand it to the Camerlengo, who signed it himself,
and then affixed his seal to it. Although the
silver hammer was abandoned at the death of Leo
XIII in 1903, the remainder of the ceremony remained
the same.
The Camerlengo took charge of the Fisherman’s
ring, the Papal ring with the seal bearing the
name of the dead Pontiff and the image of St.
Peter in the Boat, and his second seal, pushed
into wax on important documents. This was done
to prevent creation of any fraudulent documents.
He them passed through the antechambers of the
Papal Apartments, and ordered the Swiss Guards
to keep all others out of them. The Camerlengo
then proceeded to his office, accompanied by two
if the Swiss in token of his powers. In the days
of Papal temporal rule, when the Camerlengo arrived,
the Cardinal Vicar (the official who actually
administers the diocese of which the Pope is head)
ordered the great bell on the Capitoline Hill
to sound, after which all the others in the City
would follow. Today the municipal government gives
this command. Prior to 1870 also, a town crier
with a drum would go to each prison in Rome and
announce an amnesty for the lesser criminals ---
this custom has not been revived.
The Pope was then embalmed or not, in accordance
with his will. That finished, the body was taken
to the Sistine Chapel, dressed in a white cassock
and mozzetta, and wearing a red tight fitting
cap edged with white fur, called a camauro. There
he lay on a bier, illuminated with white candles
and watched over by a detachment of Noble Guards
in full-dress uniform with black mourning bands
on their arms.
In the meantime, the Camerlengo destroyed the
former Pope’s seals; the next day the first
assembly of Cardinals would be presented with
the pieces, and each Cardinal inspect them individually.
That evening, the Pope’s body would be carried
into St. Peter’s Basilica, to rest in the
Chapel of the Holy Sacrament. By this time, he
had been changed into pontifical vestments ---
a red and gold chasuble and a cape consisting
of two oval pieces of white silk striped with
red and gold called a fanon, a vestment reserved
to the Pope --- with a gold miter on his head.
Being buried in a gold miter was a privilege reserved
to the Pope; all other bishops being interred
with white ones.
Here Noble Guards again protected the Pope’s
corpse, lying on a bier in the chapel. Twenty
candles were lit in candelabras, six before the
bier, six on the steps of the altar, and four
on each side of the catafalque. This sort of lying
in state, complete with candles and guards is
called a chapelle ardente, and is reserved to
Monarchs. Most recent examples of it were seen
at the obsequies of Queen Elizabeth the Queen
Mother and Prince Rainier III of Monaco. As with
those worthies, the Pope’s subjects (in
this case, the people of Rome) were allowed to
pass through in their thousands to say farewell.
On the third day after the Papal demise, the cardinals
who had been created by the late Pontiff carried
his bier to the apse of St. Peter’s basilica.
The basilica was filled with mourners --- the
Papal Household, the deceased Pope’s family,
heads of state, the diplomatic corps, visiting
ecclesiastics, the Roman Nobility, and the like.
The funeral itself was like that of any Catholic.
At the end of the Requiem, the body received absolution,
the first of nine the Pope would eventually receive
(Bishops only got five).
After the body was absolved, it would be placed
with gold, silver, and copper medals bearing the
Pope’s likeness (in the same number as the
length of years he had reigned) into the first
of three coffins, this one made of cypress, to
symbolize that Pope was a man like all others.
The Ponitiff’s face and hands were covered
with veils made of purple silk, and the whole
covered with a red ermine blanket. The first coffin
was the seal and tied with red ribbons.
This coffin was in turn laid into one of lead,
into which were also placed important documents,
and (by the Camerlengo) the broken Papal seals.
The lead coffin was then put into a third made
of elm, the most precious wood in the neighborhood
of Rome; this was to signify the exalted office
of the dead man.
All of this completed, the triple coffin was lowered
into the crypt of St. Peter’s through the
“confession of St. Peter.” There it
would wait until conveyed to wherever the Pope’s
will had decreed it should rest permanently.
This was the start of the nine prescribed days
of mourning, the first of a series of Requiem
Masses (called Novemdiales), this one having been
offered by the Dean of the College of Cardinals,
the other eight were to be said by various of
his brother cardinals. But rather than wearing
red, during this period the cardinals wore purple
cassocks in token of mourning.
After the Pope’s coffins were ensconced
in the crypt, the sanctuary party adjourned to
the Vatican Palace, the Cardinal Vicar alone remaining
behind to chant the office for the Dead. At this
point, all the Vatican officials whose offices
were only occupied during the lifetime of the
Pope lost their jobs. The Camerlengo now needed
to concentrate on the other half of his duties
during the Sede Vacante --- preparing for the
Conclave.
Of course, the changes in the Papal Court and
ceremonial that Paul VI wrought had an affect
on Pontifical funerals. For one thing, with the
Noble and Palatine Guards abolished, the Swiss
Guard had to assume all details requiring uniformed
troops. So it is now to the Swiss that the honor
of guarding the Pope’s body falls --- an
honor that of course started with Paul VI’s
death.
He died on the evening of August 6, 1978, at Castle
Gandolfo, the Papal Summer residence outside Rome.
As per his request (and in keeping with his spurning
of the usual Papal paraphernalia) his body was
not dressed in the fanon, although he was given
both red-and gold chasuble and the gold miter
(both privileges of Popes). On his chest was placed
the rather ugly pectoral cross he liked. Around
his neck was the pallium of his office. The Swiss
Guard attended his corpse as he lay in state at
the Hall of the Swiss Guard in the Papal Villa;
all that night the members of his household prayed
for him. He had been placed in a simple cypress
coffin.
In the morning, a hearse brought the remains of
Paul VI back to Rome, at the head of a cortege
of thirty cars guarded by seven motorcycle police.
On the way to St. Peter’s, the procession
stopped at St. John Lateran. While the body remained
in the hearse, the Cardinal Vicar of Rome prayed
the Office for the Dead by its side, in sight
of Paul’s cathedral as Bishop of Rome. After
a blessing of Holy Water, the cortege continued
on to St. Peter’s. The hearse drove up to
the Basilica, the Italian troops and the Swiss
Guard saluted, and Paul was taken by forty Cardinals
into St. Peter’s.
After the standard ritual for reception of a body,
the dead Pontiff was placed on view in the Confession
of St. Peter, rather than the Chapel of the Holy
Sacrament, as had been customary. In place of
the Chapelle Ardente, with its twenty-four candles,
Paul had opted for only a single Paschal Candle,
although he would be attended by the Swiss Guard
in place of the Noble one he had abolished. Thus
began the Novemdiales of Paul VI.
The late Pontiff had also directed that his funeral
should take place in St. Peter’s Square,
rather than the Basilica, so that as many might
attend as wished to. Some 60,000,000 watched on
television. As has always been the custom, Paul’s
obsequies differed little, other than in a few
points, from those of ordinary Catholics. But
he had changed those rites as well; instead of
the black vestments and the mournful Dies Irae
of a solemn Requiem, the Pope was given the white
trappings of a “Mass of Christian Burial.”
This concluded, he was lowered into an earthen-floored
vault beneath the floor of the crypt of St. Peter’s,
in the three-coffined arrangement (a tradition
he maintained).
Except for the sudden and dramatic death which
led to so many questions, the ritual side of John
Paul I’s demise was much like that of Paul
VI. But with John Paul II, further changes were
made. For starters, he gave up, in the vestments
placed on his corpse, his Papal prerogatives:
his red chasuble would have gold, and his miter
would be white, as with all other bishops. But
his rooms were sealed up and his ring defaced
in accordance with custom. He too wished to have
his funeral in St. Peter’s Square.
After four days of lying in state in St. Peter’s,
on April 8, 2005, the Cardinal Camerlengo, Joseph
Cardinal Ratzinger, and a number of other high
clerical officials of the Papal Court, gathered
by the cypress coffin in the traditional manner.
Archbishop Piero Marini, the Papal Master of ceremonies,
placed a white veil over John Paul’s face.
The coffin was then closed, and accompanied by
Latin psalms.
The concelebrating Cardinals were wearing red
vestments rather than white, as they carried the
coffins bearing the fallen Pope outside the Basilica
to the place in the square reserved for him. Five
million pilgrims had come to Rome, and 2.5. billion
were watching on television. The Mass itself was
--- apart from being primarily in Latin (except
the readings and Prayers of the Faithful), accompanied
by Gregorian Chant, and offered in a great spirit
of reverence --- very like any Catholic’s
funeral Mass. But there were some distinguishing
traits and interesting changes.
After the end of the Mass, on behalf of the Church
of Rome, the Cardinal Vicar recited the Litany
of the Saints and a prayer for the dead Pontiff.
But then, the Eastern Patriarchs chanted the Byzantine
Office for the dead, in an unprecedented demonstration
of unity. The Cardinal Dean the sprinkled the
coffin with holy water, and, as is usual, the
In Paradisum was chanted. The Cardinal Camerlengo
said the prayers as the coffin was brought back
into St. Peter’s, and down in the crypt
near the grave of the first Pope. The cypress
coffin was placed into the other two, and all
sealed, while the party of clerics sang the Salve
Regina. Then all were seal up in the sepulcher.
John Paul II had joined his predecessors.
A Pope is Elected
It is and was during the Sede Vacante that the
College of Cardinals truly enters into their own.
Most of us know them during Papal reigns simply
as the heads of larger dioceses, such as Paris,
New York, or Los Angeles. But the dignity of such
prelates as Cardinals is actually separate from
their role as local bishops. For, in origin, the
Cardinals were purely the electors of the Bishop
of Rome. Roger Cardinal Mahony, for example, although
Archbishop of Los Angeles, is a Papal elector
purely by virtue of being Cardinal-Priest of the
church of the Four Crowned Martyrs (Quattro Coronati)
in Rome. According to diplomatic protocol, a Cardinal
ranks as an equal with the princes of royal houses
(the phrase “Prince of the Church”
is not merely symbolic). He might, under such
law, properly be addressed as My Lord Cardinal,
or even Most Eminent Prince --- although in recent
times, driven as we are by purest equality, these
titles are rarely if ever used, the less regal
sounding “His Eminence” generally
being used. The red color of their vestments symbolizes
their right to die for the Faith.
There are inequalities even among the College
of Cardinals, which are divided into three groups:
Bishops, Priests, and Deacons. Cardinal-Bishops
are usually about seven in number, and are usually
high curial officials who occupy one of the nearby
(suburbicarian) dioceses clustering around Rome.
Cardinal-Priests, usually holders of various archdioceses
or dioceses, occupy one of the titles (tituli)
--- these were originally about 70 of the oldest
parishes in the city, but their number has expanded
greatly since 1958, in keeping with the explosion
in the College’s size since then. Cardinal
Deacons are generally titular archbishops or bishops,
being either auxiliary bishops or else curia functionaries.
Their numbers have fluctuated wildly through the
ages; by the 13th century, the number had fallen
to seven. In reaction, their numbers grew until
at last, in 1587, Sixtus V limited the cardinalate
to 70 members (six Cardinal Bishops, 50 Cardinal
Priests, and 14 Cardinal Deacons), in emulation
of the same number of governing elders among the
Jews, and the number of the first disciples. Since
John XXIII, however, successive Popes appointed
as many as they chose: today there are 182. But
in the fateful year of 1970, Paul VI decreed that
cardinals over the age of eighty could not vote,
and increased the limit on the number of cardinal
electors to 120. John Paul II altered the rule
so that cardinals who were under eighty on the
day the Pope died but would turn eighty before
the conclave started might still be electors.
Today, 116 are under eighty years of age, and
thus eligible to participate in an election. If,
through some terrible mishap, all of the Cardinals
died, the prerogative of electing the Pope would
fall upon the canons of the Basilica of St. John
Lateran, which is actually the Pope’s cathedral
as bishop of Rome. Oddly enough, this would give
the President of France a vote, since he is, in
succession to the Kings of his country, a canon
of that basilica. (The custom of making monarchs
canons of Roman basilicas is not uncommon; the
King of Spain holds that office at St. Mary Major,
the Holy Roman Emperor was a canon of both the
Lateran and St. Peter’s, and, prior to the
Reformation, the King of England held that position
at St. Paul without the Walls, in return for which
the abbot of that place was the prelate of the
Order of the Garter).
Although the Cardinal Camerlengo becomes the highest-ranking
cleric in the Church at the death of the Pope,
power passes to the College as a body, although
they are severely limited in what they can do.
The Dean of the College of Cardinals convokes
the General Congregation of Cardinals, which must
be attended by all their eminences, save those
who are over eighty (who nevertheless may attend
if they so please). From their number is recruited
the Particular Congregation, which deals with
those few day-to-day matters concerning the Church
that are in their care of the Cardinals during
the Sede Vacante. It includes the Cardinal Camerlengo
and three Cardinal Assistants --- one each Cardinal
Bishop, Cardinal Priest and Cardinal Deacon ---
chosen by lot from the whole of the College every
three days. The Particular Congregation are responsible,
among other things, for maintaining the forthcoming
conclave’s secrecy.
One reality which the alterations under Paul VI
and his successors did not change is that the
Congregations decide the date and time when the
conclave. The conclave shall begin. Until 1922,
ten days were the prescribed interval between
the death of the Pope and the start of the Conclave
to elect his successor. But those rues dated from
before the spread of the Cardinalate to dioceses
outside Europe. The result was that in 1914, Cardinal
Begin of Quebec, Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore,
and Cardinal O’Connell of Boston did not
get to Rome in time for the election of Benedict
XV. In 1922 the last named prelate arrived the
same day that the new Pope, Pius XI, was announced
--- these two frenzied (and unsuccessful) overseas
voyages, plus his twice annually steamship trip
from Boston to his palatial winter home in the
Bahamas and back led to O’Connell’s
nickname of “Gang-plank Bill.” Instructed
by the last missed opportunity for American participation,
Pius XI decreed that the interval between death
and election should be fifteen to eighteen days.
Ironically, with modern air travel, the original
time frame probably could be managed.
As shown in the body of this book, methods of
electing the Pope have altered gradually over
two millennia, with successive Pontiffs altering
regulations in response to the world around them;
thus in earliest times, the people and clergy
of Rome together chose the Pope. In time, this
became subject to the approval of the Emperor,
successively Roman, Byzantine, and Holy Roman.
In time this was sloughed off, as was lay participation
in the process --- a development made necessary
by the unworthy men put on the throne of St. Peter
either or both through the Roman mob and nobility.
Thus, select members of the Roman clergy --- who
eventually became the College of Cardinals ---
became the sole electors. A simple majority of
these were required for an election until 1179;
in that year Lateran III increased the required
majority to two-thirds. Moreover, Cardinals were
not allowed to vote for themselves. To ensure
this an elaborate procedure grew up, which also
maintained secrecy. But in 1945 Pius XII allowed
Cardinals to vote fro themselves, while increasing
the requisite majority to two-thirds plus one.
Fifty-one years later, John Paul II restored the
two-thirds majority requirement, but continued
to allow cardinals to vote for themselves. He
also abolished the two other methods of selecting
a Pope, should a conclave be hopelessly deadlock:
acclamation and compromise.
Via acclamation, the cardinals unanimously declared
the new Pope quasi afflati Spiritu Sancto (as
if inspired by the Holy Spirit). Compromise permitted
a deadlocked College of Cardinals to select a
committee of cardinals to conduct an election.
The last election by compromise was that of John
XXII (1316), and the last election by acclamation
was that of Gregory XV (1621).
After the events leading to the election of Bl.
Pope Gregory X in 1271 (see p. 270), that Pontiff,
as part of his package of reforms, decided to
eliminate any possible repetition of the scandalous
goings on which preceded his election by making
the conclave far less pleasant for the participants
than had been the case. Cardinals were to be secluded
in a closed area without separate rooms --- this
experiment in communal living would, he thought,
help speed up the process. Moreover, each cardinal
would be allowed only one servant unless ill.
Food would be supplied through a window. If a
Pope was not elected after three days, the cardinals
were to receive only one dish a day; after five
days, they were to receive just bread and water.
It was only in the 14th century that Rome was
established as the permanent locale for the conclave;
prior to that time the cardinals met wherever
the Pope had died --- which, in the days when
the pontiffs maintained many residences outside
the city, or even, as during the Avignon interlude,
outside Italy, was frequently outside Rome. But
the end of the Great Schism saw the desire of
the Popes never to leave their city again made
concrete by insistence that the election would
never again take place anywhere else. The one
exception to this rule was in 1800, when Rome
was occupied by enemy troops. That conclave was
held in Venice under Austrian protection. After
the Holy See regained Rome in 1815, subsequent
conclaves were held in the Pauline Chapel, at
the main residence of the Popes, the Quirinal
Palace, until the election of Bl. Pius IX in 1846.
After the Italian conquest in 1870, that palace
became the residence of the Kings (and later presidents)
of Italy, while the conclaves were held in the
Sistine Chapel of the Vatican Palace, where they
have been held ever since.
Successive Popes have often altered details of
the process; Pius XII’s Vacantis Apostolicae
Sedis of 1945 governed the conclave of 1958, and
Bl. John XXIII’s Summi Pontificis Electio
of 1962 that of the following year. But in essence,
despite changes in venue, the ceremonies had remained
more or less the same since the 15th century until
Paul VI’s bull Romano Pontifici Eligendo
of 1975.
After the last of the Novemdiale had been celebrated,
the last of the preparations for the conclave
finished, and the exact date of the Conclave was
set, the 70 Cardinals made preparation to be cut
off from the outside world for some time. On the
actual day the Conclave was set to begin, the
Cardinals arrived at St. Peter’s Basilica
with their “Conclavists” --- the assistants
each prelate was allowed. As a rule there were
two of these per Cardinal, one priest and one
layman. Neither could be related to his patron,
nor could the priest be a member of the same religious
order as the Cardinal, if His Eminence belonged
to one; nor yet could he be any sort of prelate.
In rare cases, a third conclavist --- such as
a male nurse --- could be permitted if the Cardinal’s
special circumstances required one. All the Cardinals
had already sworn to the Camerlengo to follow
the rules of the Conclave and to obey the requirement
of secrecy. All of the precautions we will observe
were born of centuries of trying to avoid outside
interference from whatever quarter on the election.
The Dean of the Sacred College then offered the
Mass of the Holy Ghost, clad in red vestments.
When the liturgy concluded and the dean returned
from the sacristy, an exhortation to the electors
would be delivered in Latin by whichever cleric
in the Vatican was most skilled in that language.
In his speech, the prelate would tell the Cardinals
that they must put aside their personal preferences,
and concentrate on the Will of God and the needs
of the Church alone in selecting a candidate.
Moreover, he would warn them to act as speedily
as possible.
This oration concluded, a procession formed up
to bring the participants from St. Peter’s
to the Sistine Chapel. At the head of the line
were the Conclavists and the choir, followed by
the Papal Cross. Then cane the Cardinals themselves,
each accompanied by a Noble Guard, in toke of
the fact that each of the electors was a potential
Pope, and so merited protection by one of the
Pontiff’s personal bodyguards. With them
came three to six masters of ceremonies and the
Secretary of the Sacred College, now magically
transformed into the Secretary of the Conclave.
Then came the Governor of the Conclave, a high-ranking
prelate responsible for discipline inside the
gathering once it was sealed off from the outside
world, and the Marshal of the Conclave (this was
another hereditary post, held by the Princes Chigi-Albani),
who would ensure that the Conclave was undisturbed.
Following them were the Confessor of the Conclave
(always a Capuchin friar), the Architect of the
Conclave (who had built various temporary structures
in the Sistine Chapel), and various physicians,
pharmacists, and workmen.
Once arrived at the Chapel, the Dean of the College
recited a prayer, read aloud to the Cardinals
the rules governing the Conclave, listened as
they swore an oath to maintain them, and then
exhorted their eminences to obey them. Then the
Governor and the Marshal entered; each swore the
oath separately, followed by the conclavists and
others who would be sharing the Cardinals’
isolation.
The Sistine Chapel and the immediate area of the
Vatican palace surrounding it had already been
set apart from the outside world by the Architect
of the Conclave: windows and doors were all securely
sealed off. A kitchen had already been installed,
and partitions erected to provide small rooms
for the Cardinals and the others. One door was
left open to the Conclave area. Now, while the
Cardinals and Conclavists went into the Sistine
Chapel and each of the latter identified to the
assembly by the former, the Prefect of the Masters
of Ceremonies and the Architect of the Conclave
went from room to room, checking for unauthorized
people, messages, and items in closets, doors,
and anything else. From time to time, one or the
other would shout exeunt omnes --- “everybody
out!” This was of course addressed to those
not part of the Conclave. After the search was
finished, they returned to the one remaining entrance,
and waited. Then the Noble Guards followed them
out.
Now it was time for the closing of the Conclave.
The Marshal stood outside, and the Governor inside
the remaining entrance; together they closed the
door, and then the Marshal turned the key from
the exterior. Moments later, the Governor did
the same inside. At that moment, the standard
of the Chigi-Albani family was raised over the
Vatican Palace. From that moment on, until the
election of the Pope, the Marshal was supreme
in the Vatican. He and the troops at his command
kept the Conclave safe from anyone attempting
to enter, or to leave, and were vowed to defend
it to the death.
Meanwhile, inside, the rooms were Spartan; although
an improvement from the days when the Cardinals
were forced to room together, the whole point
of the somewhat lackluster accommodations was
to force the electors to do their job swiftly.
My former confessor, the late James Francis Cardinal
McIntyre, retired Archbishop of Los Angeles who
participated in the conclaves of 1958 and 1963,
remarked to me once how surprised he was when,
during one or the other conclave, one of the Third
World Cardinals observed that his living quarters
there were so much better than what he had at
home.
It was not intended, in any case, that the Cardinals
should spend much time in their rooms. The election
itself was conducted in the Sistine Chapel, the
altar of which was covered with a tapestry upon
which was a picture of the Holy Ghost descending
upon the Apostles. Above it hung a purple canopy
edged with gold, and along the walls were the
thrones of the Cardinal Electors. Above each of
these was another canopy of purple, to show that
all of the throne-holders were potential Popes.
Up to and including the Conclave of 1903, each
Pontificate was assigned a color, and the canopy
of a Cardinal bore the shade of the Pope who had
created him. But St. Pius X, on the basis that
longevity in the College should not be any sort
of factor in a Conclave, abolished the practice.
In front of each throne was a desk bearing the
name of its respective Cardinal in Latin, a pen
and ink set, and the like.
At the center of the chapel were four larger tables,
covered with purple cloth, where the votes were
to be counted. Before the altar was a still larger
one, upon which were a paten and a chalice. When
a Cardinal would cast a ballot, he would first
place it on the paten and then in the chalice,
which served as a sort of ballot box. Near this
table was the famous stove, in which the ballots
were burned after each vote --- with straw if
the voting did not give the world a Pope, in order
to, via the resulting black smoke, warn the faithful
that no Pontiff was yet elected. When a candidate
was elected, the straw would be withheld and the
white smoke warned the public that a new Pope
had been named.
The first day of the Concave saw the Cardinals
and Conclavists attend Mass together in the Sistine
Chapel, after which the Conclavists left the Cardinals
to their work. The Master of Ceremonies and the
Secretary of the Conclave distributed ballots
to Their Eminences as they sat at their thrones.
Each of the ballots was a three-by-three inch
slip of paper, divided in two. On the upper part
in Latin were the words “I choose as Sovereign
Pontiff_____.” On the lower was written,
“His Eminence Cardinal_____.” The
distribution finished, the Master of Ceremonies
left the Chapel, since the actual deliberations
may be witnessed only members of the Sacred College.
The lowest ranking Cardinal Deacon closed the
door behind him, and the voting began; usually
it lasted about a half hour.
In order of seniority, each of the Cardinals rose
and carried his filled-out ballot to the altar,
clutching it between his index and forefinger.
He then placed the paper momentarily on the paten,
then dropping it into the chalice, turned to his
brethren, and swore in Latin: “I take to
witness Christ Our Lord Who is Judge to me that
I hereby vote for him who, before God, I feel
should be elected.” The Cardinal then returned
to his throne to be followed by each in turn until
all had voted.
Now, each Cardinal is supposed to be motivated
purely by what he believes the will of the God
and the needs of the Church demand in a Pope at
the given moment in history in which the Conclave
is taking place. While there are no official “parties”
among the Electors, there are --- and probably
always have been --- identifiable factions among
them. The provisional nature of these groupings
and the changing conditions of the world make
them somewhat difficult to trace, however. From
the Reformation until the French Revolution, each
of the major Catholic powers --- France, Spain,
and the Holy Roman Empire, for example --- would
have a certain number of Cardinals loyal to them,
and desirous of electing a Pope who would be friendly
to the interests of their temporal sponsor, or
at least preventing the accession of one who would
be inimical. To be fair, of course, such Cardinals
generally believed that their own most favored
nation would be a better sponsor of the work of
the Church in the world than the others --- and
each had some reason for their view. A fourth
faction developed, however, the Zelanti or “Zealots,”
who felt just as strongly that the Church should
depend purely on her spiritual resources, and
make no concessions to any earthly power whatsoever.
Since no one group commanded a majority of Cardinals,
in practice this mean that a candidate representing
a compromise between the Zelanti and one or more
of the national groupings would be elected.
The 19th century and the rise of the Liberal,
non-religious State saw the Zelanti transform
in into the “Intransigents,” who were
against any compromise with “modernity,”
and those who felt that the Church’s mission
required some accommodation with the powers that
were. After World War II, this devolved into the
Modernist, Liberal, Conservative, and Traditionalist
factions of modern Conclaves. But, again to be
fair, probably a simple majority of each Conclave
has not been a member of a faction in an ideological
sense. This has forced those who are to prove
their case for their candidate, and favored usually
the selection of a compromise candidate who pleases
(or at least, does not displease) the majority.
Occasionally, however, the severity of conditions
in the Church has favored an “ideological”
candidate. This may have been behind the outcome
of the Conclave of 2005.
Beyond the existence of national factions in the
College, however, the selection of a Pope has
always been of interest to temporal rulers. While
St. Gregory VII was the last Pontiff who felt
compelled to ask the approval of his election
from the Holy Roman Emperor, in later years the
Catholic powers claimed the right of veto over
any single candidate --- that is, that while they
no longer claimed the right of approval over an
elected Pope, they demand the power to disqualify
any one Cardinal judged inimical to their interests.
Inheriting the rights of the Holy Roman Emperor
in this as so many other areas, the Austrian Emperor
attempted to cast a veto over Cardinal Mastai
Ferretti in the Conclave of 1846. While Mastai
Ferretti was seen as too pro-Liberal (and favoring
the Italian nationalists), the Cardinal-Archbishop
of Vienna arrived in the Eternal City too late
to cast the veto, arriving in time to hear Mastai
Ferretti proclaimed Pope Bl. Pius IX. In 1903,
the Cardinal-Archbishop of Cracow did successfully
veto the pro-French and liberal Cardinal Rampolla,
thus indirectly bringing about the lection of
Pope St. Pius X. That Pontiff, however, officially
abolished the very veto he owed his elevation
to the papacy to.
In any case, when the ballots were all cast, the
“Scrutators,” three Eminences chosen
from their number by the Cardinals to count the
ballots, set to work. The senior among them covered
the chalice with the paten and shook it. The ballots
were then counted; if there were more or less
ballots then Cardinals present, the whole bunch
were burned without being looked at. Presuming
that all was in order, however, the first scrutator
opened the first ballot, read it in silence, and
passed it on to the second, who did the same,
and passed it on to the third. He in turn would
read the name of the candidate and mark it down
on a sheet. All the other Cardinals at their thrones
did the same. When all the ballots were read,
the numbers accruing to each were announced. If
none had two thirds plus one, a second vote would
be held; two in the morning and two in the afternoon
were permitted. After every second fruitless attempt,
the ballots were burnt with straw in the stove,
emitting the black smoke that announced to the
world that the vote had not given a majority.
When, at last, the required majority was reached
and announced, all the Cardinals stood up, but
remained in front of their thrones. The lowest
ranking Cardinal Deacon sounded a bell and opened
the door of the Sistine Chapel. The Secretary
of the Conclave, the Master of Ceremonies, and
the Sacristan of the Vatican entered; then they
proceeded, with the Dean of the Sacred College
and the Camerlengo to the place where stood the
elected Cardinal. This Eminence was then asked
in a loud voice by the Dean, “Acciptasne
Electionem?” --- Do you accept the Election?
--- Surely the most tension-filled question any
man could ever be asked. The chosen Cardinal had
to reply in seconds, either accepting or rejecting
the honor. From the moment he uttered the word
“Accepto,” he was Bishop of Rome and
Servant of the Servants of God. It was and is
a heavy burden; like the first Pope, the newest
will be taken where he would not go --- either
figuratively or literally.
Immediately, each of the Cardinals pulls a string
and lowers the canopy of his throne, leaving only
the new Pope’s extended. No longer were
they equals, but assistants to the successor of
St. Peter in the governing of the Universal Church.
Then the Dean asked the new Pope, “Quo modo
vis vocari?” --- “What will you be
called?” At that point, the Pontiff declared
his new name, by which he would be known until
his death.
His Holiness then knelt in prayer in front of
the altar, and shortly after entered into the
sacristy (called the “Room of Tears”
to signify a new Pontiff’s probable emotions)
with the Master of Ceremonies, the Sacristan,
and the Secretary of the Conclave. Therein, the
Secretary approached the Pope, offering the white
zucchetto; very often the Pontiff then removed
his own red one and placed it on the Secretary’s
head, to show that he would appoint this prelate
a Cardinal. The Pope was then vested in the white
silk cassock, pectoral cross, purple silk slippers
embroidered with gold crosses, red mantle trimmed
with ermine, and gold embroidered white stole
proper to his new office (there had been three
sets of vestments placed in the room, large, small,
and medium).. At the same time, the ballots were
dumped in the stove, and white smoke billowed
out of the Palace.
In the Piazza San Pietro, the crowds who had assembled
every day in the square since the Conclave opened
greeted this signal with joy. Meanwhile, the newly
vested Pope proceeded back into the Sistine Chapel,
and sat down on the empty throne in front of the
altar. His Holiness then stood and gave his first
pontifical blessing to the Cardinals. He sat down
and one by one the cardinals approached and kissed
his hands. This done, the Camerlengo, accompanied
by the Master of Ceremonies, genuflected and put
the now-seal-less ring of the fisherman on his
finger. The Pope then removed it and gave it to
the Master of Ceremonies who would see to putting
a new seal bearing the Pontiff’s name on
it.
Then each of the Cardinals came up to render homage
a second time. As His Holiness sat on his throne,
the red mantle covering his hands, each Cardinal
came up to him. Genuflecting, the Cardinal kissed
first his feet and then his hands through the
mantle. Pope and Cardinal then embraced, first
from the right and then from the left, until all
of the Sacred College had shown their obedience.
While this ceremony was going on, the senior Cardinal
Deacon appeared on the balcony of St. Peter’s
Basilica, and lifted his right hand, quieting
the cheering crowd. “Annuntio vobis gaudium
magnum; habemus Papam!” --- I announce to
you a great joy; we have a Pope!” Halting
momentarily, he continued, “Eminentissimum
ac Reverenidissmum ___ Dominum Cardinale ___ qui
sibi nomen…imposuit..!” --- “His
Eminence the Most Reverend Lord ___ Cardinal___,
who chooses the following name, ___!”
As the cheers grow ever louder, the new Pontiff
made his way from the Sistine Chapel to the balcony
of St. Peter’s, blessing all whom he encountered.
Once on the balcony, he faced the cheering faithful,
and gave them the blessing Urbi et Orbi, “to
the City and the World.” So it was that
the Universal Church began to get acquainted with
her new ruler.
Paul VI made a number of alterations in the election;
since the Noble Guard were abolished, their part
in the assembling of the Conclave ended. Having
dispensed with the Marshal of the Conclave, the
Lay Assistant at the Pontifical Throne locked
the door under the new dispensation. Rather than
kissing the new Pope’s hands and slipper,
Paul VI decreed that the Cardinals should simply
embrace the new Pontiff and kiss his ring. The
thrones and canopies were done away with, and
replaced with simple chairs. There would be no
more Conclavists --- their place would be taken
by a staff provided by the Vatican to attend to
the needs of the Cardinals. But there were more
radical changes. Paul intended that the voting
should take place in his new Audience Hall, (called
the “Nervi” after the architect who
designed it), a building of truly breathtaking
ugliness; there would be no colored smoke to signal
the progress of the voting, and rather than making
his first blessing to the City and the World from
the balcony of St. Peter’s, the new Pontiff
would do so from the main stage of the Nervi.
The biggest break from tradition, however was
to deprive all Cardinals over 80 of their voting
privileges. Paul VI apparently wanted to minimize
the possibility of his many changes to the Church
being overturned.
But there was no proviso in Paul’s 1975
Bull laying down his new procedures, Romani Pontifici
Eligendo, to prevent the Cardinals from altering
these provisions once they, as a body, took over
the running of the Church during the Sede Vacante.
They voted to return the election to the Sistine
Chapel and to use the smoke signals as before.
An attempt to re-enfranchise the elderly Eminences,
however, was defeated. From this altered set of
regulations emerged the election of John Paul
I, and, a short time later, John Paul II.
The latter Pontiff, in his turn, promulgated in
1996 another Apostolic Constitution, Universi
Dominici Gregis, to govern the Conclave. While
the new document retained the use of the Sistine
Chapel and smoke system (and restored the Conclavists),
it also kept the over-80 Cardinals out of the
picture. The new bull also prohibited media such
as newspapers, the radio, and television, and
prescribed all sorts of electronic devices to
be used in sweeping for bugs and the like. John
Paul II also abolished affirmation and compromise
as possible means of selecting a new Pope, and
reduced the majority required to a mere two thirds
(in the event that the Conclave continued to grind
on for weeks, a simple majority would suffice).
But above all, it ordered the erection of a new
building, the Domus Sanctæ Marthæ,
(at some distance from the Apostolic Palace itself)
to house the Cardinals during their deliberations.
The accommodations provided were far more comfortable
than what had been the case, and led Roger Cardinal
Mahony of Los Angeles, when asked his views on
them by a television crew, to reply with obvious
relish, “there’ll be no lack of chocolates
and fine wines.” Because of this change
in housing, all of the ceremonial around the sealing
of the Conclave vanished, although the Sistine
Chapel was to remain off limits to non-Cardinals
and carefully guarded. Perhaps mindful of his
own experiences at the Conclaves of 1978, John
Paul II also laid down that the Cardinals could
not alter the regulations he decreed.
Unchanged was the drama on the balcony after the
election, when the new Pope met his people ---
save that the red mantle the Pontiff wore was
no longer trimmed in ermine.
A Pope is Crowned
The Papal coat-of-arms --- both the generic ones
used as a symbol of the Holy See in the abstract,
and the personal ones designed for each successive
Pontiff (save as we shall see, for Benedict XVI)
is topped by a unique headdress, the Tiara. Called
the “Triregnum” in Latin (Italian,
Triregno), it is a round, rather bulbous hat,
generally made of cloth-of-silver and encrusted
with jewels, and bearing three gold crowns with
two lappets hanging down in the back. These three
crowns have been variously interpreted. Some hold
that it refers to the threefold authority of the
Pope as Universal Pastor (top), as holding Universal
Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction (middle), and as maintaining
Temporal Power (bottom). Others see in it the
three spiritual powers of ruling, teaching, and
sanctifying. Still others view it as symbolic
of the Church Triumphant in Heaven, the Church
Suffering in Purgatory, and the Church Triumphant
here on Earth. Another idea is that it shows forth
the three-fold office of Christ, who is Priest,
Prophet and King.
In origin, the Tiara was simply the crownless
headdress of the Pope; after the assumption of
temporal power by the Popes, a crown was added
to it. In 1298, Boniface VIII added the second
to show his spiritual authority, and one way or
another the third had appeared by 1315.
The Tiara was for formal ceremonial processions
to and from St. Peter's Basilica or St. John Lateran,
usually when the pope was being carried in the
sedia gestatoria. It was used for “solemn
acts of jurisdiction” where the pope appeared
“in state,” as when making an ex cathedra
pronouncement (using Papal Infallibility). So
too, the Pope used it when giving his Urbi et
Orbi blessing from a balcony. During the period
of the Papal States, he would wear it when making
state pronouncements. Rather than the Tiara, the
Pope wore (and wears) a miter at strictly liturgical
functions.
There was and is not, however, only one actual,
physical Tiara. Rulers, cities, and groups of
people often made gifts of Tiaras to various Popes.
Although almost all were stolen in the 1798 sack
of Rome by the French Revolutionaries (Pius VII
had to do with one made of papier-mâché
at his accession in 1800), almost immediately
replacements started coming in, starting with
a gift from Napoleon in 1804. They came from Sovereigns
like Franz Josef of Austria, Kaiser Wilhelm I
of Germany, and Queen Isabella II of Spain; from
the Catholics of Paris, and from the University
of Notre Dame. All in all, between 1804 and 1963
twelve of the precious items were sent to various
Popes, and almost all duly worn at one time or
another, depending upon the given Pope’s
taste and comfort.
The last of these, given to Paul VI by the artisans
of his former archdiocese, Milan, was certainly
the ugliest. He in turn gave it to the Catholics
of the United States, where it may be seen on
permanent display in the crypt of the Basilica
of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
In most of Christian Europe, the various nations’
sovereigns wore crowns bound up with their people’s
history and often that of their own ancestors.
The crowns of Charlemagne possessed by the Holy
Roman Empire and France, Hungary’s Holy
Crown of St. Stephen, Italy’s Iron Crown,
England’s Crown of St. Edward, the Honours
of Scotland, the Czech Crown of St. Wenceslas,
and many, many more had an enormous psychological
hold on the psyches of both their wearers and
their wearers’ subjects. While, as mentioned,
there were a number of actual Tiaras used by Popes
through history, the Tiara’s significance
was even greater than that of those earthly diadems.
These crowns were first placed upon their Kings’
or Emperors’ heads in the course of a ceremony
called the “Coronation.” Performed
by the leading cleric in the respective realm
(the Archbishop of Rheims in France, the Archbishop
of Canterbury in England, and so on), it was considered
a sacred ritual, an “eighth sacrament.”
Accompanied by many prayers, the coronation in
most countries consisted of four basic actions:
the swearing of an oath to maintain the realm,
the Church, and their laws; the anointing of the
sovereign with holy oil by the prelate; said cleric’s
placing of the crown on the head of the anointed;
and homage by the chief nobles and ecclesiastics
of the country followed by acclamation of the
people. The last example seen in recent times
was that of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. But just
as the Popes wore the greatest of Crowns, so they
too must have the greatest of Coronations.
Just as the original residence of the Popes after
Constantine was the Lateran Palace, so too the
first coronations took place in St. John Lateran.
During the “Babylonian Captivity”
of the Papacy at Avignon, they took place in that
city. But, with the exception of that of 1800
(which, like the attendant Conclave occurred at
the Church of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice),
they have occurred in the neighborhood of St.
Peter’s since the return of the Popes to
Rome in 1378. >From then on, the usual place
was on the balcony of St. Peter’s, up to
and including the coronation of Bl. Pius IX in
1846. But the seizure of Rome by the Piedmontese
in 1870 meant that much of the public life of
the Papal court was curtailed. So Leo XIII, St.
Pius X, and Benedict XV were all crowned in the
Sistine Chapel. Pius XI’s coronation, as
part of his policy of gradually ending the Holy
See’s isolation, was held at the dais in
front of the High Altar of St. Peter’s.
Thanks to the 1929 Lateran Treaty, Pius XII, Bl.
John XXIII, and Paul VI all returned to the balcony
of the basilica. Pius XII’s coronation was
the first filmed and broadcast live on radio.
Despite the gathering war clouds, as the first
public coronation since 1846, Pius XII’s
attracted a stellar crowd of crowned heads: the
Prince of Piedmont, heir to the Italian throne
(later Umberto II), Ferdinand I of Bulgaria and
Alfonso XIII of Spain, the Duke of Norfolk (representing
George VI), and Éamon de Valera. Of course,
in days gone by, Papal coronations had seen most
of the great ones of Christian Europe present
or represented.
In the days of the Temporal Power, the sight most
beloved by the Roman people was a Papal procession
--- a cavalcate papale. Whether on Corpus Christi,
or Christmas, or any day at which the celebration
of the Pontifical Mass required the Pope to go
to a Basilica at some distance from where he was
living --- the Lateran, Quirinal, or Vatican Palaces
--- the entire Papal Court formed a glittering
cortège surrounding the Pope, and reminding
the crowds whose Vicar he was. The ending of His
Holiness’ rule over the Eternal City spelled
an end to these spectacles, but the Lateran Treaty
of 1929 allowed them to revive for the Coronation.
Whatever the case, whenever the balcony of St.
Peter’s was to be used, the Sampietrini,
as the often-hereditary workmen of the great basilica
were and are called, began readying the place
for the coronation almost as soon as the white
smoke billowed from the Conclave. Much had to
be done. On the right and left sides of the apse,
benches covered with red cloth would be set up
for cardinals and bishops. Behind them were placed
seats for Heads of State, the Diplomatic Corps,
and senior members of the Roman Nobility. In all,
five thousand or so of the eighty thousand guests
in the basilica would be seated, and the normally
chairless space had to be prepared.
The route of the Papal procession through St.
Peter’s had to be covered with red carpet,
brocades hung on the pillars and many sections
of the walls, and the hundred and sixty altars
festooned with flowers and thousands of candles.
Four Papal thrones had to be set up: at the end
of the apse, in the Gregorian Chapel, in the portico,
and on the balcony. Thousand more lights were
required to illuminate the façade of the
Basilica; candles, before the invention of electricity.
By itself, St. Peter’s is an awe-inspiring
sight; even more so at great feasts like Christmas
and Easter. But never, perhaps, has it been shown
off so well as at a Papal Coronation.
On the morning of the Sunday or feast day when
the ceremony was to be held, there were guards
everywhere: the Swiss Guard manned the entrances
of St. Peter’s and the Apostolic Palace.
About 20 or so yards from the portico, a temporary
fence was erected, and along this, detachments
of the Palatine Guards of Honor were stationed.
Along the border of St. Peter’s Square stood
Papal Gendarmes, and after 1929 Italian troops
in full dress faced them. This show of manpower
was not simply for decoration, brilliant though
their uniforms were. The Square filled with thousands
of onlookers, even as the unassigned places in
the basilica filled up. In the afore-mentioned
seats, the invited guests were already in place:
Bishops in their vestments, religious in all their
many habits, heads of state and roman nobility
in white-tie, envoys in diplomatic dress, and
military officers of many nations in their respective
gala uniforms.
Meanwhile, the procession was forming up in the
Vatican Palace. Prior to 1870, of course, when
the Popes lived at the Quirinal, this grand parade
would make its way from that centrally located
building through the streets of Rome to the cheers
of the crowd; crossing the Ponte St. Angelo, it
arrived at last at St. Peter’s. After the
Piedmontese takeover, it went merely from the
Vatican to the neighboring Basilica, but it preserved
both its pomp and its order of march, preserved
inviolate for centuries.
At the Sala Paramenti (Vesting Hall) of the Vatican
Palace, the College of Cardinals assembled to
greet the new Pope. He in turn, clad in white
cassock and a purple mantle trimmed with ermine,
flanked by two Noble and two Swiss Guards, followed
by his doctor and his valet (both in white tie),
and surrounded by chamberlains in the Spanish
Renaissance uniforms of their office, proceeded
through the ten rooms separating the papal apartment
from the Sala Clementina. There he was vested
in white alb, stole, and mantle, and put on a
pectoral cross and a “precious” miter
--- that is, one of gold with jewels.
That accomplished, he moved on to greet the cardinals
and mount the sedia gestatoria. On either side
were the flabelli, and (since 1870) four prelates
doing duty for the marquises of the canopy. The
procession formed up, and began their slow progress
to the Basilica. In keeping with standard procedure,
the Pope and his immediate party would come toward
the end of the line that people saw, as befitting
their importance. Various papal ushers, guards,
couriers, and chamberlains would flank the entire
line.
What the witnesses in the Square observed first
were the friars: Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians,
Mercedarians, and Minims. These orders, the “Mendicants,”
have always claimed the greatest humility, and
so their representatives started the procession.
Following them were the Monks --- Benedictines,
Cistercians, and Camaldolese. At last came the
Canons Regular. Norbertines, Canons Regular of
St. Austine, of the Lateran, of the Holy Cross,
and so on; all orders renowned for learning.
Then came the priests of the Diocese of Rome in
black cassocks and white albs. The clergy of the
collegiate churches and Basilicas of Rome, whose
leaders carried crosses and ombrellones, followed
these. The ombrellone is a sort of umbrella with
alternating stripes of yellow and white, which
is a symbol of Papal authority. It is mounted
prominently in every Basilica throughout the world,
from California to India, to show that they are
directly under the Pope. During the Sede Vacante,
it is used on documents (topping the keys of St.
Peter) to show that Papal authority continues
to exist between Pontificates. The last of these
clerics were the Canons of the Lateran; they are
permitted to carry two crosses, as signs that
their Basilica holds pre-eminent status over all
the churches in the world. All told, these religious
number about 500 people.
Two Swiss Guards carrying halberds were then seen,
followed by the Papal Court. After the guards
came the auditor of the Sacred Rota, carrying
the Papal Cross. Then came the various types of
lay chamberlains in their ruffs. Then came a host
of clerical officials of the Household: the Apostolic
Preacher, the Pope’s confessor, and various
chaplains and chamberlains, both working and honorary.
These latter came form all over the world, being
the same Monsignori so prominent on the local
Catholic scene in every country. Ecclesiastical
judges followed, after which, marching alone,
was the Master of the Sacred Palace. In those
pre-Vatican II days, he was the Pope’s theologian,
and the ultimate arbiter of the Index of Forbidden
Books; during the Temporal Power, he was also
the head of the censorship of the Papal States.
Then a crowd of bussolanti processed, surrounding
a prelate bearing the Tiara on a cushion. The
two chaplains carried the pair of miters to be
used by the Pope during the Mass, after whom came
the Master of the Sacred Hospice, an office hereditary
in the family of the Princes Ruspoli. Four other
leading noble lay chamberlains marches with him.
After them came prelates bearing the vestments
and candles the Pope would use at Mass.
On then, came mitered abbots, as well as the chaplains
serving the hospitals of Rome. Bishops, Archbishops,
and the Patriarchs of the Catholic East followed,
the latter in their exotic vestments. These preceded
the College of Cardinals, each followed by a trainbearer.
A lay contingent then made its appearance. The
first of these were the Mazzieri Pontifici, the
Papal Macebearers, in their open jackets, tight
fitting trunks and hose, and blue berets; this
uniform was unchanged since the Renaissance, and
had once been worn by such a worth as the great
artist Raphael. Another set of lay ushers followed
them, each bearing a purple stick called the virga
rubea. In the days of the temporal power, these
had acted as crowd control. The Noble Guard in
turn succeeded them.
The Vice-Camerlengo and the two Prince Assistants
at the throne were next, followed by two Cardinals
who would assist the Pope at Mass. The Master
of Ceremonies and his assistant, the Co