Apapal conclavetook place from 25 to 28 October following the death ofPope Pius XIIon 9 October 1958. On the eleventh ballot, the College of Cardinals elected CardinalAngelo Giuseppe Roncallias the newpope.He accepted the election andtook the nameJohn XXIII. He was the second patriarch of Venice to be elected pontiff in the 20th century afterPius X.
Papal conclave October 1958 | |
---|---|
Dates and location | |
25–28 October 1958 Sistine Chapel,Apostolic Palace, Vatican City | |
Key officials | |
Dean | Eugène Tisserant |
Sub-dean | Clemente Micara |
Camerlengo | Benedetto Aloisi Masella |
Protodeacon | Nicola Canali |
Secretary | Alberto di Jorio[1] |
Election | |
Ballots | 11 |
Elected pope | |
Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli Name taken:John XXIII | |
Some 51 of the 53 cardinals participated ascardinal electors.The Communist governments ofHungaryandYugoslaviaprevented CardinalsJózsef MindszentyandAloysius Stepinacfrom traveling to Rome. In comparison with theconclave of 1922,when three cardinals failed to reach Rome in time for the start of the conclave that opened on the tenth day following the pope's death as required, orthat of 1939,when three cardinals reached Rome on the morning the conclave opened under new rules 18 days after the pope's death, all the cardinals who made the trip reached Rome by 22 October,[2]with days to spare before the conclave began 16 days after Pius' death.[a]
For the first time, the speed of travel matched the internationalization of theCollege of Cardinals,thanks to the advancement in air travel. As one newspaper put it, "the Archbishop of New York can reach Rome today faster than the Archbishop of Palermo did a generation ago".[5]This conclave included cardinals from 21 countries, compared to 16 at the previous conclave, and 21 non-Europeans compared to seven.[6]The 17 Italians out of 51 represented their lowest percentage since 1455.[7]
Papabili
editThe cardinals anticipated a long conclave.[4]There was no "dominating personality" asPius XIIhad beenin 1939and the customary search for contrast suggested a "pastoral pope" to follow a "diplomatic pope".[8]Another analysis set the likely age range between 55 and 70, with a preference for an Italian outside the curia.[9]Severalpapabiliwere discussed. The conservative, supporting Vatican centralization of authority,Giuseppe Siriof Genoa was only 52 and his election would have meant another long papacy like that of Pius IX. The liberal, more disposed to granting independence to local authorities,Giacomo Lercaroof Bologna was 67.Angelo Giuseppe Roncalliwas now the Patriarch of Venice after more than 25 years in the diplomatic service of theHoly Seein Bulgaria, Turkey and France. Approaching 77, his age marked him as a possible compromise choice in expectation of a short pontificate, along with his "reputation for being broad-minded and conciliatory".[10]He also represented a combination of diplomatic and pastoral experience.[11]
Gregorio Pietro Agagianian,theCatholic ArmenianPatriarch of Cilicia,had spent much of his adult life in Rome.[b]He was relatively young at 63 and highly respected, but his non-Italian heritage would have made him a surprising choice. Other candidates mentioned wereErnesto Ruffiniof Palermo; and two curia officials,Valerio ValeriandAlfredo Ottaviani.Benedetto Masella,the 79-year-old chosen as camerlengo on 9 October,[1]a veteran diplomat, was also mentioned as a compromise candidate with "his chances diminished because of his age".[12]Also mentioned as a radical departure from tradition wasGiovanni Battista Montini,Archbishop of Milan, whom Pius had not made a cardinal.[8]The New York Timescast a wide net, offering more than a dozen names, including two non-Italians,Paul-Émile Légerof Montreal andManuel Goncalves Cerejeiraof Lisbon.[8]Lifemagazine's coverage included portraits of Agagianian, Lercaro, Montini, Ottaviani, Roncalli, Ruffini, Siri, and Valeri.[13]As the press speculated about interest in a transitional pope and possible discussions among the cardinal electors, the Vatican's mouthpieceL'Osservatore Romanodenounced the "irresponsible lightness" with which the press approached the subject, especially its reports of electioneering.[14]A Moscow radio broadcast criticized Pius for meddling in politics and hoped for a new pope devoted instead to "religious problems".[15]
Betting establishments reported Roncalli was favored by their clients, given 2 to 1 odds.[16]By the second day of the conclave, after four ballots produced no results, speculation centered on Roncalli, Valeri, Masella, and Agagianian, the first three elderly and the last an unlikely outsider.[10]
Participants
editPope Pius XIItried in theconsistory of 1953to bring the membership of theCollege of Cardinalsto the maximum of 70, the limit established byPope Sixtus Vin the sixteenth century. On that occasion he named 24 cardinals.[17]When one cardinal-designate,Carlo Agostini,died on 28 December at the age of 64,[18]the Vatican announced another cardinal designate the next day,Valerian Graciasof India, so the College reached its full complement of 70 members, with 26 of them Italian.[19]
Deaths in the intervening five years, including those ofCelso Costantinion 17 October[20]andEdward Mooneyof Detroit on 25 October just hours before the start of the conclave,[21]had reduced the College to 53 members.József Mindszentyfeared theCommunist government of Hungarywould not allow him to return if he attended the conclave,[22][c]and government authorities refused to grant him safe conduct despite a request by theU.S. State Departmentat the request of theCollege of Cardinals.[23]Aloysius Stepinacwas too ill to travel fromZagreb,and he was forbidden from leavingYugoslaviaas a condition of his release from prison in 1951.[22][d]
This reduced the number of attendees to 51, 15 of whom were in Rome on 9 October,[25]45 of whom were in or near Rome by 16 October.[26]All 51 reached Rome by 22 October.[2]Of the51 electorswho participated in the conclave, 17 were Italians.[27]The required two-thirds plus one majority was 35 votes.
Balloting
editThe cardinals were required to set the starting date of the conclave between the 15th and 18th days following the death of the pope, no earlier than 24 October and no later than 27 October.[25]On 11 October they set 25 October for its opening.[4]The conclave was held from 25 to 28 October at theSistine Chapelin theVatican.The voting patterns in the conclave are hard to establish, but some information is consistently reported. Identified as a group with a particular interest, French cardinals were thought to seek greater independence from Rome andStefan Wyszynskiof Poland was thought to be their ally.[28]Several of the French also knew that Roncalli, as nuncio in Paris, had been influential in the careers.[16]Roncalli himself had learned that he had many supporters in conversations with other cardinals before the conclave began.[29]One newspaper reported that CardinalPierre-Marie Gerlierof Lyon, asked whom the French cardinals supported as he entered the conclave, said "Roncalli".[30]Giovanni Battista Montini (laterPope Paul VI), a longtime curia official who had recently become Archbishop of Milan, consistently received two votes even though he was not yet a cardinal.[29]
There was no ballot on the first day. Four ballots on the second day proved inconclusive. Both times the smoke that reported the results of the morning and afternoon ballots appeared white at first, leading to excited false reports that the election was over.[31]The official responsible for arrangements outside the conclave notified the cardinals that the color of the smoke had been misread and provided them with "smoke torches from a fireworks factory". The third day's four ballots again failed to select a pope and there was no confusion about the color of the smoke. Requests from a doctor inside the conclave for medical records suggested several cardinals were ill.[32]It took a few ballots for supporters of Lercaro, "who was known to favor a simplified liturgy in local languages", and "the aggressively sententious" Siri to recognize they could not garner the necessary 35 votes.[33]The deadlock that then developed between Roncalli and Agagianian led CardinalEugène Tisserant,Dean of the College of Cardinals, to suggest Masella as a compromise candidate without success. Roncalli later said that his name and Agagianian's "went up and down like two chickpeas in boiling water".[34]Black smoke reported the ninth and tenth ballots were inconclusive on 28 October at 11:10am.[33]
Roncalli accepted his election shortly before 5 pm on 28 October, the fourth day of the conclave and the third day of balloting, and white smoke signaled his election at 5:08 pm.[35]When asked what his name would be, he responded with his surprising choice of a name that had been avoided for centuries:[36][37][38]
I will be called John. A name sweet to me because it is the name of my father, dear to me because it is the name of the humble parish church where I received baptism, the solemn name of numberless cathedrals scattered throughout the world, and in the first place of the most holy Lateran Church, Our Cathedral. A name that in the extremely ancient series of Roman Pontiffs has the primacy of plurality. Twenty-two Johns of indisputable legitimacy are numbered among the Supreme Pontiffs, and almost all had a brief pontificate. I have preferred to hide the smallness of my name behind this magnificent succession of Roman Pontiffs.
Anantipopehad used the name John XXIII during theWestern Schismin the 15th century when three men claimed to be the pope, but Roncalli's mention of 22 "of indisputable legitimacy" established that he wanted to beJohn XXIII.[39]Some historians thought the question of the earlier John XXIII's legitimacy was unresolved, but Roncalli was less interested in ancient disputes than in the associations he had for the nameJohnand a desire to break with the popes namedPiusthat preceded him.[40][e]Later he gave CardinalMaurice Feltinof Paris another reason: "in memory of France and in the memory of John XXII who continued the history of the papacy in France".[41]
Following an old tradition, immediately after his election, Pope John gave his scarletzucchettoto the Secretary of the conclave,Alberto di Jorio.This indicated that John would include him when he first named cardinals.[1][f]Nicola Canaliannouncedthe results of the election and Roncalli's choice of name. Pope John appeared on the balcony ofSt. Peter's Basilicaand gave his blessing. At his request, the cardinals did not leave their enclosure but remained in the conclave overnight.[42]He joined the cardinals for dinner that evening, but did not eat. The conclave ended the next day after Mass in the Sistine Chapel and an address by Pope John to the cardinals which was broadcast on radio. He set the date of his coronation for 4 November, sooner than is traditional and a Tuesday rather than the traditional Sunday, perhaps because it was the feast of SaintCharles Borromeo,whom Roncalli had made the subject of a five-volume study.[43]He was reported to have expressed regret that he would "never again see Venice".[44][45]
Early reports said that Roncalli led in the balloting on the morning of the third day and then received almost unanimous support in that afternoon's single ballot.[35]With the election of a 77-year-old, many churchmen interpreted the choice of Roncalli as picking a "pope of transition".[46]John XXIII himself said, when he took possession of the Lateran Basilica on 23 November 1958: "We do not have the right to see a long way ahead of us."[47]In early November, Pope John wrote letters to Mindszenty and Stepinac expressing regret that they were unable to participate in the conclave.[48]On 17 November, he announced a consistory to create new cardinals on 15 December. Ignoring the longstanding maximum of 70 members, he increased the size of the College to 74 members.[49][g]
Siri thesis
editSomeSedevacantistsbelieved that Cardinal Siri was actually elected Pope in the 1958 papal conclave on 26 October, taking the name ofGregory XVII,but that his election was then suppressed, duress having been applied to him, especially by the French Cardinals led by the Dean of the College of Cardinals,Eugène Tisserant,who would have brought up the threat of anti-Catholic turmoils in USSR-dominated Eastern Europe, if Cardinal Siri, considered a staunch anti-Communist, became the new Pope. There was confusion prior to the final election concerning the smoke and who was really elected pope. While Siri was a favourite for election before the conclave, he failed to secure enough votes from traditionalist cardinals once the conclave started[citation needed]because at 52 a long pontificate would have been anticipated, and his election would have likely prevented other cardinals who wished to be pope from being elected.[51]
Conclave reform
editJohn XXIII waited several years before issuing amotu proprioto modify certain aspects of the procedures for a papal conclave. InSummi Ponitificis electio,issued on 5 September 1962, he laid out additional rules for impressing all participants with the need for secrecy, even warning the cardinals about communications with their staff (paragraph XIV). His one practical modification reversed his predecessor:Pius XIIhad required a vote of two-thirds plus one for election. John XXIII returned the margin to two-thirds (paragraph XV).[52][53][54]
Statistics
editDuration | 4 days |
---|---|
Number of ballots | 11 |
Electors | 53 |
Present | 51 |
Absent | 2 |
Africa | 1 |
Latin America | 9 |
North America | 4 |
Asia | 3 |
Europe | 33 |
Oceania | 1 |
Italians | 17 |
DECEASED POPE | PIUS XII (1939–1958) |
NEW POPE | JOHN XXIII (1958–1963) |
Balloting reported by Greeley[55] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ballot: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | final |
Ernesto Ruffini | 17 | 17 | 15 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
Gregorio Pietro Agagianian | 13 | 13 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 1 |
Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli | 7 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 20 | 38 |
Benedetto Aloisi Masella | 5 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Alfredo Ottaviani | 2 | 5 | 8 | 16 | 15 | 9 |
See also
editNotes
edit- ^Cardinal Spellman of New York, at sea en route to New York when Pius died, disembarked in the Azores and flew to Rome[3]and then considered flying to New York and back in time for the start of the conclave.[4]
- ^He was a faculty member or administrator at several Roman institutions from 1921 to 1937, was named President of the Pontifical Commission for the Revision of the Code of Oriental Canon Law in 1955, and joined the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith in 1958.
- ^Mindszenty had been living in the U.S. Legation in Budapest since 4 November 1956.[23]
- ^He had not come to Rome when he was made a cardinal in January 1953 for fear of not being allowed to return to Yugoslavia.[24]
- ^"[N]either the Council of Constance (1412–15) nor Pope Martin V, chosen by the Council, later wanted to decide who had been pope in the decades of the schism."[40]
- ^He was made a cardinal at Pope John's first consistory in December 1958.Pius XIhad done this in 1922; Pius XII had not in 1939.
- ^It would have had 75 members had not CardinalJosé María Caro Rodríguezof Chile died between Pope John's announcement of new cardinals on 17 November and the consistory on 15 December.[50]
References
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Twice during the day the famous chimney... emitted dense black smoke.... Both signals gave the impression at first that a Pope had been elected.... The smoke that appeared shortly before noon appeared white at first and came in a thin stream.... A few minutes later, however, the smoke signal was repeated and this time it was unmistakably black.
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