
| Pope Leo XIII |
| Born 2 March, 1810, at Carpineto; elected pope 20 February, 1878; died 20 July, |
| 1903, at Rome. Gioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi was the sixth of the seven |
| sons of Count Lodovico Pecci and his wife Anna ProsperiBuzi. There was some |
| doubt as to the nobility of the Pecci family, and when the young Gioacchino |
| sought admission to the Accademia dei Nobili in Rome he met with a certain |
| opposition, whereupon he wrote the history of his family, showing that the Pecci |
| of Carpineto were a branch of the Pecci of Siena, obliged to emigrate to the |
| Papal States in the first half of the sixteenth century, under Clement VII, because |
| they had sided with the Medici. |
| At the age of eight, together with his brother Giuseppe, aged ten, he was sent to |
| study at the new Jesuit school in Viterbo, the present seminary. He remained |
| there six years (1818-24), and gained that classical facility in the use of Latin |
| and Italian afterwards justly admired in his official writings and his poems. Much |
| credit for this is due to his teacher, Padre Leonardo Garibaldi. When, in 1824, |
| the Collegio Romano was given back to the Jesuits, Gioacchino and his brother |
| Giuseppe entered as students of humanities and rhetoric. At the end of his |
| rhetoric course Gioacchino was chosen to deliver the address in Latin, and |
| selected as his subject, "The Contrast between Pagan and Christian Rome". Not |
| less successful was his three years' course of philosophy and natural sciences. |
| He remained yet uncertain as to his calling, though it had been the wish of his |
| mother that he should embrace the ecclesiastical state. Like many other young |
| Romans of the period who aimed at a public career, he took up meanwhile the |
| study of theology as well as canon and civil law. Among his professors were the |
| famous theologian Perrone and the scripturist Patrizi. In 1832 he obtained the |
| doctorate of theology, whereupon, after the difficulties referred to above, he asked |
| and obtained admission to the Academy of Noble Ecclesiastics, and entered |
| upon the study of canon and civil law at the Sapienza University. Thanks to his |
| talents, and to the protection of Cardinals Sala and Pacca, he was appointed |
| domestic prelate by Gregory XVI in January, 1837, while still in minor orders, and |
| in March of that year was made "referendario della Segnatura", which office he |
| soon exchanged for one in the Congregazione del Buon Governo, or Ministry of |
| the Interior for the Pontifical States, of which his protector Cardinal Sala was at |
| that time prefect. During the cholera epidemic in Rome he ably assisted Cardinal |
| Sala in his duties as overseer of all the city hospitals. His zeal and ability |
| convinced Cardinal Sala that Pecci was fitted for larger responsibilities, and he |
| again urged him to enter the priesthood, hinting in addition that before long he |
| might be promoted to a post where the priesthood would be necessary. Yielding |
| to these solicitations, he was ordained priest 31 Dec., 1837, by Cardinal |
| Odeschalchi, Vicar of Rome, in the chapel of St. Stanislaus on the Quirinal. The |
| post hinted at by Cardinal Sala was that of Delegate or civil Governor of |
| Benevento, a city subject to the Holy See but situated in the heart of the |
| Kingdom of Naples. Its condition was very unsatisfactory; the brigands of the |
| Neapolitan territory infested the country in great numbers, survivals of the |
| Napoleonic Wars and the guerrilla of the Sanfedisti. Gregory XVI thought a young |
| and energetic delegate necessary. Cardinal Lambruschini, secretary of state, |
| and Cardinal Sala suggested the name of Mgr. Pecci, who set out for Benevento |
| 2 February, 1838. On his recovery from an attack of typhoid fever, he set to work |
| to stamp out brigandage, and soon his vigilance, indomitable purpose, and |
| fearless treatment of the nobles who protected the brigands and smugglers, |
| pacified the whole province. Aided by the nuncio at Naples, Mgr. di Pietro, the |
| youthful delegate drew up an agreement with the Naples police for united action |
| against brigands. He also turned his attention to the roads and highways, and |
| arranged for a more just distribution of taxes and duties, until then the same as |
| those imposed by the invading French, and, though exorbitant, exacted with the |
| greatest rigour. Meanwhile the Holy See and Naples were discussing the |
| exchange of Benevento for a stretch of Neapolitan territory bordering on the Papal |
| States. When Mgr. Pecci heard of this he memorialized the Holy See so strongly |
| against it that the negotiations were broken off. |
| The results obtained in three years by the delegate at Benevento led Gregory XVI |
| to entrust another delegation to him where a strong personality was required, |
| though for very different reasons. He was first destined for Spoleto, but on 17 |
| July, 1841, he was sent to Perugia, a hotbed of the anti-papal revolutionary party. |
| For three years he improved the material conditions of his territory and introduced |
| a more expeditious and economical administration of justice. He also began a |
| savings bank to assist small tradesmen and farmers with loans at a low rate of |
| interest, reformed educational methods, and was otherwise active for the |
| common welfare. |
| In January, 1843, he was appointed nuncio to Brussels, as successor of Mgr. |
| Fornari, appointed nuncio at Paris. On 19 Feb., he was consecrated titular |
| Archbishop of Damiata by Cardinal Lambruschini, and set out for his post. On his |
| arrival he found rather critical conditions. The school question was warmly |
| debated between the Catholic majority and the Liberal minority. He encouraged |
| the bishops and the laity in their struggle for Catholic schools, yet he was able to |
| win the good will of the Court, not only of the pious Queen Louise, but also of |
| King Leopold I, strongly Liberal in his views. The new nuncio succeeded in |
| uniting the Catholics, and to him is owing the idea of a Belgian college in Rome |
| (1844). He made a journey (1845) through Rhenish Prussia (Cologne, Mainz, |
| Trier), and owing to his vigilance the schismatic agitation of the priest Ronge, on |
| the occasion of the exposition of the Holy Coat of Trier in 1844, did not affect |
| Belgium. Meanwhile the See of Perugia became vacant, and Gregory XVI, moved |
| by the wishes of the Perugians and the needs of that city and district, appointed |
| Mgr. Pecci Bishop of Perugia, retaining however the title of archbishop. |
| With a very flattering autograph letter from King Leopold, Mgr. Pecci left Brussels |
| to spend a month in London and another in Paris. This brought him in touch with |
| both courts, and afforded him opportunities for meeting many eminent men, |
| among others Wiseman, afterwards cardinal. Rich in experience and in new |
| ideas, and with greatly broadened views, he returned to Rome on 26 May, 1846, |
| where he found the pope on his deathbed, so that he was unable to report to him. |
| He made his solemn entry into Perugia 27 July, 1846, where he remained for |
| thirty-two years. Gregory XVI had intended to make him a cardinal, but his death |
| and the events that troubled the opening years of the pontificate of Pius IX |
| postponed this honour until 19 December, 1853. Pius IX desired to have him near |
| his person, and repeatedly offered him a suburbicarian see, but Mgr. Pecci |
| preferred Perugia, and perhaps was not in accord with Cardinal Antonelli. It is |
| certainly untrue that Pius IX designedly left him in Perugia, much more untrue |
| that he did so because Pecci's views were liberalistic and conciliatory. As |
| Bishop of Perugia he sought chiefly to inculcate piety and knowledge of the |
| truths of Faith. He insisted that his priests should preach, and should catechise |
| not only the young but the grown up; and for this purpose he wished one hour in |
| the afternoon set apart on Sundays and feast days, thus forestalling one of the |
| regulations laid down by Pius X in 1905 for the whole Church. He brought out a |
| new edition of the diocesan catechism (1856), and for his clergy he wrote a |
| practical guide for the exercise of the ministry (1857). He provided frequently for |
| retreats and missions. After the Piedmontese occupation and the suppression of |
| the religious orders the number of priests was greatly diminished; to remedy this |
| lack of ecclesiastical ministers, he established an association of diocesan |
| missionaries ready to go wherever sent (1875). He sought to create a learned |
| and virtuous clergy, and for this purpose spent much care on the material, moral, |
| and scientific equipment of his seminary, which he called the apple of his eye. |
| Between 1846 and 1850 he enlarged its buildings at considerable personal |
| sacrifice, secured excellent professors, presided at examinations, and himself |
| gave occasional instruction. He introduced the study of the philosophy and |
| theology of St. Thomas, and in 1872 established an "Accademia di S. |
| Tommaso", which he had planned as far back as 1858. |
| In 1872 also he introduced the government standards for studies of the |
| secondary schools and colleges. When the funds of the seminary were converted |
| into state bonds, its revenues were seriously affected, and this entailed new |
| sacrifices on the bishop. With the exception of a few troublesome priests who |
| relied on the protection of the new government, the discipline of the clergy was |
| excellent. For the assistance of many priests impoverished by the confiscation of |
| church funds, he instituted in 1873 the Society of S. Gioacchino, and for |
| charitable works generally, conferences of St. Vincent de Paul. He remodelled |
| many educational institutions for the young and began others, for the care of |
| which he invited from Belgium nuns of the Sacred Heart and Brothers of Mercy. |
| During his episcopate thirty-six new churches were built in the diocese. His |
| charity and foresight worked marvels during the famine of 1854, consequent on |
| the earthquake which had laid waste a large part of Umbria. Throughout the |
| political troubles of the period, he was a strong supporter of the temporal power |
| of the Holy See, but he was careful to avoid anything that might give the new |
| government pretext for further annoyances. |
| Shortly after his arrival in Perugia there occurred a popular commotion which his |
| personal intervention succceeded in appeasing. In 1849, when bands of |
| Garibaldians expelled from Rome were infesting the Umbrian hills, the Austrians |
| under Prince Liechtenstein hastened to occupy Perugia, but Mgr. Pecci, |
| realizing that this foreign occupation would only increase the irritation of the |
| inhabitants, set out for the Austrian camp and succeeded in saving the town from |
| occupation. In 1859 a few outlaws set up in Perugia a provisional government; |
| when the cardinal heard that, few as they were, they were preparing to resist the |
| pontifical troops advancing under Colonel Schmidt he wrote a generous letter to |
| try and dissuade them from their mad purpose and to avoid a useless shedding |
| of blood. Unfortunately they spurned his advice, and the result was the so-called |
| "Massacre of Perugia" (20 June). In February, 1860, he wrote a pastoral letter on |
| the necessity of the temporal power of the Holy See; but on 14 September of that |
| year Perugia and Umbria were annexed to Piedmont. In vain he besought |
| General Fanti not to bombard the town; and during the first years that followed |
| the annexation he wrote, either in his own name or in the name of the bishops of |
| Umbria, eighteen protests against the various laws and regulations of the new |
| Government on ecclesiastical matters: against civil marriage, the suppression of |
| the religious orders and the inhuman cruelty of their oppressors, the "Placet" and |
| "Exequatur"in ecclesiastical nominations, military service for ecclesiastics, and |
| the confiscation of church property. But withal he was so cautious and prudent, |
| in spite of his outspokenness, that he was never in serious difficulties with the |
| civil power. Only once was he brought before the courts, and then he was |
| acquitted. |
| In August, 1877, on the death of Cardinal de Angelis, Pius IX appointed him |
| camerlengo, so that he was obliged to reside in Rome. Pope Pius died 7 |
| February, 1878, and during his closing years the Liberal press had often |
| insinuated that the Italian Government should take a hand in the conclave and |
| occupy the Vatican. However the Russo-Turkish War and the sudden death of |
| Victor Emmanuel II (9 January, 1878) distracted the attention of the Government, |
| the conclave proceeded as usual, and after the three scrutinies Cardinal Pecci |
| was elected by forty-four votes out of sixty-one |
| Shortly before this he had written an inspiring pastoral to his flock on the Church |
| and civilization. Ecclesiastical affairs were in a difficult and tangled state. Pius IX, |
| it is true, had won for the papacy the love and veneration of Christendom, and |
| even the admiration of its adversaries. But, though inwardly strengthened, its |
| relations with the civil powers had either ceased or were far from cordial. But the |
| fine diplomatic tact of Leo succeeded in staving off ruptures, in smoothing over |
| difficulties, and in establishing good relations with almost all the powers. |
| Throughout his entire pontificate he was able to keep on good terms with France, |
| and he pledged himself to its Government that he would call on all Catholics to |
| accept the Republic. But in spite of his efforts very few monarchists listened to |
| him, and towards the end of his life he beheld the coming failure of his French |
| policy, though he was spared the pain of witnessing the final catastrophe which |
| not even he could have averted. It was to Leo that France owed her alliance with |
| Russia; in this way he offset the Triple Alliance, hoped to ward off impending |
| conflicts, and expected friendly assistance for the solution of the Roman |
| question. With Germany he was more fortunate. On the very day of his election, |
| when notifying the emperor of the event, he expressed the hope of seeing |
| relations with the German Government re-established, and, though the emperor's |
| reply was coldly civil, the ice was broken. Soon Bismarck, unable to govern with |
| the Liberals, to win whose favour he had started the Kulturkampf (q. v.), found |
| he needed the Centre Party, or Catholics, and was willing to come to terms. As |
| early as 1878 negotiations began at Kissingen between Bismarck and |
| Aloisi-Masella, the nuncio to Munich; they were carried a step farther at Venice |
| between the nuncio Jacobini and Prince von Reuss; soon after this some of the |
| Prussian laws against the Church were relaxed. From about 1883 bishops began |
| to be appointed to various sees, and some of the exiled bishops were allowed to |
| return. By 1884 diplomatic relations were renewed, and in 1887 a modus vivendi |
| between Church and State was brought about. Bismarck proposed that Pope Leo |
| should arbitrate between Germany and Spain. The good feeling with Germany |
| found expression in the three visits paid Leo by William II (1888, 1893, and |
| 1903), whose father also, when crown prince (1883) had visited the Vatican. As a |
| sort of quid pro quo Bismarck thought the pope ought to use his authority to |
| prevent the Catholics from opposing some of his political schemes. Only once |
| did Leo interfere in a parliamentary question, and then his advice was followed. In |
| 1880 relations with the Belgian Government were again broken off à propos of the |
| school question, on the pretext that the pope was lending himself to duplicity, |
| encouraging the bishops to resist, and pretending to the Government that he was |
| urging moderation. As a matter of fact, the suppression of the Belgian embassy |
| to the Vatican had been settled on before the school question arose. In 1883 the |
| new Catholic Government restored it. During Pope Leo's pontificate the condition |
| of the Church in Switzerland improved somewhat, especially in the Ficino, in |
| Aargau, and in Basle. In Russia Soloviev's attempt on Alexander II (14 April, |
| 1879) and the silver jubilee of that czar's reign (1888) gave the pope an |
| opportunity to attempt a rapprochement. But it was not until after Alexander III |
| came to the throne (1883) that an agreement was reached, by which a few |
| episcopal sees were tolerated and some of the more stringent laws against the |
| Catholic clergy slightly relaxed. But when in 1884, Leo consented to present to |
| the czar a petition from the Ruthenian Catholics against the oppression they had |
| to suffer, the persecution only increased in bitterness. In the last year of |
| Alexander III (May, 1894) diplomatic relations were reestablished. On the day of |
| his election, Leo had expressed to this emperor the wish to see diplomatic |
| relations restored; Alexander, like William, though more warmly, answered in a |
| non-committal manner. In the meantime Leo was careful to exhort the Poles |
| under Russian domination to be loyal subjects. |
| Among the acts of Leo XIII that affected in a particular way the English-speaking |
| world may be mentioned: for England, the elevation of John Henry Newman to the |
| cardinalate (1879), the "Romanos Pontifices" of 1881 concerning the relations of |
| the hierarchy and the regular clergy, the beatification (1886) of fifty English |
| martyrs, the celebration of the thirteenth centenary of St. Gregory the Great, |
| Apostle of England (1891), the Encyclicals "Ad Anglos" of 1895, on the return to |
| Catholic unity, and the "Apostolicæ Curæ" of 1896, on the non-validity of the |
| Anglican orders. He restored the Scotch hierarchy in 1878, and in 1898 |
| addressed to the Scotch a very touching letter. In English India Pope Leo |
| established the hierarchy in 1886, and regulated there long-standing conflicts |
| with the Portugese authorities. In 1903 King Edward VII paid him a visit at the |
| Vatican. The Irish Church experienced his pastoral solicitude on many |
| occasions. His letter to Archbishop McCabe of Dublin (1881), the elevation of the |
| same prelate to the cardinalate in 1882, the calling of the Irish bishops to Rome |
| in 1885, the decree of the Holy Office (13 April, 1888) on the plan of campaign |
| and boycotting, and the subsequent Encyclical of 24 June, 1888, to the Irish |
| hierarchy represent in part his fatherly concern for the Irish people, however |
| diverse the feelings they aroused at the height of the land agitation. |
| The United States at all times attracted the attention and admiration of Pope |
| Leo. He confimed the decrees of the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore (1884), |
| and raised to the cardinalate Archbishop Gibbons of that city (1886). His |
| favourable action (1888), at the instance of Cardinal Gibbons, towards the |
| Knights of Labour won him general approval. In 1889 he sent a papal delegate, |
| Monsignor Satolli, to represent him at Washington on the occasion of the |
| foundation of the Catholic University of America. The Apostolic Delegation at |
| Washington was founded in 1892; in the same year appeared his Encyclical on |
| Christopher Columbus. In 1893 he participated in the Chicago Exposition held to |
| commemorate the fourth centenary of the discovery of America; this he did by |
| the loan of valuabel relics, and by sending Monsignor Satolli to represent him. In |
| 1895 he addressed to the hierarchy of the United States his memorable |
| Encyclical "Longinqua Oceani Spatia"; in 1898 appeared his letter "Testem |
| Benevolentiæ" to Cardinal Gibbons on "Americanism"; and in 1902 his admirable |
| letter to the American hierarchy in response to their congratulations on his |
| pontifical jubilee. In Canada he confirmed the agreement made with the Province |
| of Quebec (1889) for the settlement of the Jesuit Estates question, and in 1897 |
| sent Monsignor Merry del Val to treat in his name with the Government |
| concerning the obnoxious Manitoba School Law. His name will also long be held |
| in benediction in South America for the First Plenary Council of Latin America |
| held at Rome (1899), and for his noble Encyclical to the bishops of Brazil on the |
| abolition of slavery (1888). |
| In Portugal the Government ceased to support the Goan schism, and in 1886 a |
| concordat was drawn up. Concordats with Montenegro (1886) and Colombia |
| (1887) followed. The Sultan of Turkey, the Shah of Persia, the Emperors of Japan |
| and of China (1885), and the Negus of Abyssinia, Menelik, sent him royal gifts |
| and received gifts from him in return. His charitable intervention with the negus in |
| favour of the Italians taken prisoners at the unlucky battle of Adna (1898) failed |
| owing to the attitude taken by those who ought to have been most grateful. He |
| was not successful in establishing direct diplomatic relations with the Sublime |
| Porte and with China, owing to the jealousy of France and her fear of losing the |
| protectorate over Christians. During the negotiations concerning church property |
| in the Philippines, Mr. Taft, later President of the United States, had an |
| opportunity of admiring the pope's great qualities, as he himself declared on a |
| memorable occasion. |
| With regard to the Kingdom of Italy, Leo XIII maintained Pius IX's attitude of |
| protest, thus confirming the ideas he had expressed in his pastoral of 1860. He |
| desired complete independence for the Holy See, and consequently its |
| restoration as a real sovereignty. Repeatedly, when distressing incidents took |
| place in Rome, he sent notes to the various governments pointing out the |
| intolerable position in which the Holy See was placed through its subjection to a |
| hostile power. For the same reason he upheld the "Non expedit", or prohibition |
| against Italian Catholics taking part in political elections. His idea was that once |
| the Catholics abstained from voting, the subversive elements in the country would |
| get the upper hand and the Italian Government be obliged to come to terms with |
| the Holy See. Events proved he was mistaken, and the idea was abandoned by |
| Pius X. At one time, however, "officious" negotiations were kept up between the |
| Holy See and the Italian Government through the agency of Monsignor Carini, |
| Prefect of the Vatican Library and a great friend of Crispi. But it is not known on |
| what lines they were conducted. On Crispi's part there could have been no |
| question of ceding any territory to the Holy See. France, moreover, then irritated |
| against Italy because of the Triple Alliance, and fearing that any rapprochement |
| between the Vatican and the Quirinal would serve to increase her rival's prestige, |
| interfered and forced Leo to break off the aforesaid negotiations by threatening to |
| renew hostilities against the Church in France. The death of Monsignor Carini |
| shortly after this (25 June, 1895) gave rise to the senseless rumour that he had |
| been poisoned. Pope Leo was no less active concerning the interior life of the |
| Church. To increase the piety of the faithful, he recommended in 1882 the Third |
| Order of St. Francis, whose rules in 1883 he wisely modified; he instituted the |
| feast of the Holy Family, and desired societies in its honour to be founded |
| everywhere (1892); many of his encyclicals preach the benefits of the Rosary; |
| and he favoured greatly devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. |
| Under Leo the Catholic Faith made great progress; during his pontificate two |
| hundred and fortyeight episcopal or archiepiscopal sees were created, and |
| forty-eight vicariates or prefectures Apostolic. Catholics of Oriental rites were |
| objects of special attention; he had the good fortune to see the end of the schism |
| which arose in 1870 between the Uniat Armenians and ended in 1879 by the |
| conversion of Mgr. Kupelian and other schismatical bishops. He founded a |
| college at Rome for Armenian ecclesiastical students (1884), and by dividing the |
| college of S. Atanasio he was able to give the Ruthenians a college of their own; |
| already in 1882 he had reformed the Ruthenian Order of St. Basil; for the |
| Chaldeans he founded at Mossul a seminary of which the Dominicans have |
| charge. In a memorable encyclical of 1897 he appealed to all the schismatics of |
| the East, inviting them to return to the Universal Church, and laying down rules |
| for governing the relations between the various rites in countries of mixed rites. |
| Even among the Copts his efforts at reunion made headway. |
| The ecclesiastical sciences found a generous patron in Pope Leo. His Encyclical |
| "Æterni Patris" (1880) recommended the study of Scholastic philosophy, |
| especially that of St. Thomas Aquinas, but he did not advise a servile study. In |
| Rome he established the Apollinare College, a higher institute for the Latin, |
| Greek, and Italian classics. At his suggestion a Bohemian college was founded |
| at Rome. At Anagni he founded and entrusted to the Jesuits a college for all the |
| dioceses of the Roman Campagna, on which are modelled the provincial or |
| "regional" seminaries desired by Pius X. Historical scholars are indebted to him |
| for the opening of the Vatican Archives (1883), on which occasion he published a |
| splendid encyclical on the importance of historical studies, in which he declares |
| that the Church has nothing to fear from historical truth. For the administration of |
| the Vatican Archives and Library he called on eminent scholars (Hergenröther, |
| Denifle, Ehrle; repeatedly he tried to obtain Janssen, but the latter declined, as |
| he was eager to finish his "History of the German People"). For the convenience |
| of students of the archives and the library he established a consulting library. The |
| Vatican Observatory is also one of the glories of Pope Leo XIII. To excite Catholic |
| students to rival non-Catholics in the study of the Scriptures, and at the same |
| time to guide their studies, he published the "Providentissimus Deus" (1893), |
| which won the admiration even of Protestants, and in 1902 he appointed a |
| Biblical Commission. Also, to guard against the dangers of the new style of |
| apologetics founded on Kantism and now known as Modernism, he warned in |
| 1899 the French clergy (Encycl. "Au Milieu"), and before that, in a Brief |
| addressed to Cardinal Gibbons, he pointed out the dangers of certain doctrines |
| to which had been given the name of "Americanism" (22 Jan., 1899). In the Brief |
| "Apostolicæ Curæ"(1896) he definitively decided against the validity of Anglican |
| Orders. In several other memorable encyclicals he treated of the most serious |
| questions affecting modern society. They are models of classical style, |
| clearness of statement, and convincing logic. The most important are: "Arcanum |
| divinæ sapientiæ" (1880) on Christian marriage; "Diuturnum illlud" (1881), and |
| "Immortale Dei" (1885) on Christianity as the foundation of political life; |
| "Sapientiæ christianæ" (1890) on the duties of a Christian citizen; "Libertas" |
| (1888) on the real meaning of liberty; "Humanum genus" (1884) against |
| Freemasonry (he also issued other documents bearing on this subject). |
| Civilization owes much to Leo for his stand on the social question. As early as |
| 1878, in his encyclical on the equality of all men, he attacked the fundamental |
| error of Socialism. The Encyclical "Rerum novarum" (18 May, 1891) set forth with |
| profound erudition the Christian principles bearing on the relations between |
| capital and labour, and it gave a vigorous impulse to the social movement along |
| Christian lines. In Italy, especially, an intense, wellorganized movement began; |
| but gradually dissensions broke out, some leaning too much towards Socialism |
| and giving to the words "Christian Democracy" a political meaning, while others |
| erred by going to the opposite extreme. In 1901 appeared the Encyclical "Graves |
| de Communi", destined to settle the controverted points. The "Catholic Action" |
| movement in Italy was recognized, and to the "Opera dei Congressi" was added |
| a second group that took for its watchword economic-social action. Unfortunately |
| this latter did not last long, and Pius X had to create a new party which has not |
| yet overcome its internal difficulties. |
| Under Leo the religious orders developed wonderfully; new orders were founded, |
| older ones increased, and in a short time made up for the losses occasioned by |
| the unjust spoliation they had been subjected to. Along every line of religious and |
| educational activity they have proved no small factor in the awakening and |
| strengthening of the Christian life of the whole country. For their better guidance |
| wise constitutions were issued; reforms were made; orders such as the |
| Franciscans and Cistercians, which in times past had divided off into sections, |
| were once more united; and the Benedictines were given an abbot-primate, who |
| resides at St. Anselm's College, founded in Rome under the auspices of Pope |
| Leo (1883). Rules were laid down concerning members of religious orders who |
| became secularized. |
| In canon law Pope Leo made no radical change, yet no part of it escaped his |
| vigilance, and opportune modifications were made as the needs of the times |
| required. On the whole his pontificate of twenty-five years was certainly, in |
| external success, one of the most brilliant. It is true the general peace between |
| nations favoured it. The people were tired of that anticlericalism which had led |
| governments to forget their real purpose, i.e. the well-being of the governed; and, |
| on the other hand, prudent statesmen feared excessive catering to the elements |
| subversive of society. Leo himself used every endeavour to avoid friction. His |
| three jubilees (the golden jubilees of his priesthood and of his episcopate, and |
| the silver jubilee of his pontificate) showed how wide was the popular sympathy |
| for him. Moreover, his appearance either at Vatican receptions or in St. Peter's |
| was always a signal for outbursts of enthusiasm. Leo was far from robust in |
| health, but the methodical regularity of his life stood him in good stead. He was a |
| tireless worker, and always exacted more than ordinary effort from those who |
| worked with him. The conditions of the Holy See did not permit him to do much |
| for art, but he renewed the apse of the Lateran Basilica, rebuilt its presbytery, |
| and in the Vatican caused a few halls to be painted. |
| BACH, Leonis XIII Carmina. Inscriptiones, Numismata (1903), tr HENRY (Philadelphia); Acta Leonis |
| XIII, 26 vols. (Rome, 1878-1903); Scelta di atti apostolici del card. Pecci (Rome, 1879); |
| Conventiones de rebus ecclesiasticis (14 vols., Rome, 1878-93); biographies by O'REILLY (1886); |
| T'SERCLAES (3 vols., Paris, 1894-1906); SCHNEIDER (1901); JUSTIN MCCARTHY (London, 1896); |
| FUREY (New York, 1903); SPAHN (1905); JEAN DARRAS (Paris, 1902); GUILLERMIN (Paris, 1902); |
| BOYER DAGEN, La Jeunesse de Léon XIII (Tours, 1896); IDEM, La Prélature de Léon XIII (ibid., |
| 1900); DE GERMINY, La Politique de Léon XIII (Paris, 1902); LEFEBVRE DE BÉHAINE, Léon XIII et |
| le prince Bismarck (Paris, 1898); GEFFKEN, Léon XIII devant l'Allemagne (Paris, 1896); DE |
| CESARE, Il conclave di Leone XIII (3rd ed., Città di Castello, 1887); BONACINA, Continuazione |
| della storia eccl. di Rohrbacher e di Balan (Turin, 1899); DE MEESTER, Leone XIII e la chiesa |
| greco (Rome, 1905); PROTZNER, Die Entwickelung des kirchlichen Eherechts unter Leo XIII |
| (Salzburg, 1908). Cf. also The Great Encyclicals of Leo XIII, ed. WYNNE (New York, 1902). |
| U. BENIGNI |
| Transcribed by WGKofron |
| With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume IX |
| Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company |
| Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight |
| Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, Censor |
| Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York |