| Pope Pius VII |
| (BARNABA CHIARAMONTI). |
| Born at Cesena in the Pontifical States, 14 August, 1740; elected at Venice 14 |
| March, 180; died 20 August, 1823. |
| His father was Count Scipione Chiaramonti, and his mother, of the noble house |
| of Ghini, was a lady of rare piety who in 1763 entered a convent of Carmelites at |
| Fano. Here she foretold, in her son's hearing, as Pius VII himself later related, his |
| elevation to the papacy and his protracted sufferings. Barnaba received his early |
| education in the college for nobles at Ravenna. At the age of sixteen he entered |
| the Benedictine monastery of Santa Maria del Monte, near Cesena, where he |
| was called Brother Gregory. After the completion of his philosophical and |
| theological studies, he was appointed professor at Parma and at Rome in |
| colleges of his order. He was teaching at the monastery of San Callisto in the |
| latter city at the accession of Pius VI, who was a friend of the Chiaramonti family |
| and subsequently appointed Barnaba abbot of his monastery. The appointment |
| did not meet with the universal approbation of the inmates, and complaints were |
| soon lodged with the papal authority against the new abbot. Investigation, |
| however, proved the charges to be unfounded, and Pius VI soon raised him to |
| further dignities. After conferring upon him successively the Bishoprics of Tivoli |
| and Imola he created him cardinal 14 Feb., 1785. When in 1797 the French |
| invaded northern Italy, Chiaramonti as Bishop of Imola addressed to his flock the |
| wise and practical instruction to refrain from useless resistance to the |
| overwhelming and threatening forces of the enemy. The town of Lugo refused to |
| submit to the invaders and was delivered up to a pillage which had an end only |
| when the prelate, who had counselled subjection, suppliantly cast himself on his |
| knees before General Augereau. That Chiaramonti could adapt himself to new |
| situations clearly appears from a Christmas homily delivered in 1797, in which he |
| advocates submission to the Cisalpine Republic, as there is no opposition |
| between a democratic form of government and the constitution of the Catholic |
| Church. In spite of this attitude he was repeatedly accused of treasonable |
| proceedings towards the republic, but always successfully vindicated his |
| conduct. |
| According to an ordinance issued by Pius VI, 13 Nov., 1798, the city where the |
| largest number of cardinals was to be found at the time of his death was to be |
| the scene of the subsequent election. In conformity with these instructions the |
| cardinals met in conclave, after his death (29 Aug., 1799), in the Benedictine |
| monastery of San Giorgio at Venice. The place was agreeable to the emperor, |
| who bore the expense of the election. Thirty-four cardinals were in attendance on |
| the opening day, 30 Nov., 1799; to these was added a few days later Cardinal |
| Herzan, who acted simultaneously as imperial commissioner. It was not long |
| before the election of Cardinal Bellisomi seemed assured. He was, however, |
| unacceptable to the Austrian party, who favoured Cardinal Mattei. As neither |
| candidate could secure a sufficient number of votes, a third name, that of |
| Cardinal Gerdil, was proposed, but his election was vetoed by Austria. At last, |
| after the conclave had lasted three months, some of the neutral cardinals, |
| including Maury, suggested Chiaramonti as a suitable candidate and, with the |
| tactful support of the secretary of the conclave, Ercole Consalvi, he was elected. |
| The new pope was crowned as Pius VII on 21 March, 1800, at Venice. He then |
| left this city in an Austrian vessel for Rome, where he made his solemn entry on |
| 3 July, amid the universal joy of the populace. Of all-important consequence for |
| his reign was the elevation on 11 Aug., 1800, of Ercole Consalvi, one of the |
| greatest statesmen of the nineteenth century, to the college of cardinals and to |
| the office of secretary of state. Consalvi retained to the end the confidence of the |
| pope, although the conflict with Napoleon forced him out of office for several |
| years. |
| With no country was Pius VII more concerned during his reign than with France, |
| where the revolution had destroyed the old order in religion no less than in |
| politics. Bonaparte, as first consul, signified his readiness to enter into |
| negotiations tending to the settlement of the religious question. These advances |
| led to the conclusion of the historic Concordat of 1801, which for over a hundred |
| years governed the relations of the French Church with Rome (on this compact; |
| the journey of Pius VII to Paris for the imperial coronation; his captivity and |
| restoration, see CONCORDAT OF 1801, CONSALVI; and NAPOLEON I). After the fall of |
| Napoleon a new concordat was negotiated between Pius VII and Louis XVIII. It |
| provided for an additional number of French bishoprics and abrogated the Organic |
| Articles. But liberal and Gallican opposition to it was so strong that it could never |
| be carried out. One of its objects was later realized when in 1822 the |
| circumscription Bull "Paternæ Caritatis" erected thirty new episcopal sees. |
| At the Peace of Lunéville in 1801, some German princes lost their hereditary |
| rights and dominions through the cession of the left bank of the Rhine to France. |
| When it became known that they contemplated compensating their loss by the |
| secularization of ecclesiastical lands, Pius VII instructed Dalberg, Elector of |
| Mainz, on 2 Oct., 1802, to use all his influence for the protection of the rights of |
| the Church. Dalberg, however, displayed more ardour for his own advancement |
| than zeal in the defence of religious interests, and the seizure of ecclesiastical |
| property was permitted in 1803 by the Imperial Deputation at Ratisbon. The |
| measure resulted in enormous loss for the Church, but the pope was powerless |
| to resist its execution. The ecclesiastical reorganization of Germany now |
| became a pressing need. Bavaria soon opened negotiations in view of a |
| concordat and was shortly after followed by Würtemburg. But Rome would rather |
| treat with the central imperial government than with individual states, and after |
| the suppression of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806, Napoleon's aim was to |
| obtain a uniform concordat for the whole Confederation of the Rhine. Subsequent |
| events prevented any agreement before Napoleon's downfall. At the Congress of |
| Vienna (1814-15) Consalvi in vain advocated the restoration of the former |
| ecclesiastical organization. Soon after this event the individual German States |
| separately entered into negotiations with Rome and the first concordat was |
| concluded with Bavaria in 1817. In 1821 Pius VII promulgated in the Bull "De |
| salute animarum" the agreement concluded with Prussia, and the same year |
| another Bull, "Provida Solersque", made a fresh distribution of dioceses in the |
| ecclesiastical province of the Upper Rhine. An arrangement with Rome based on |
| mutual concessions was likewise contemplated in England in regard to Irish |
| ecclesiastical affairs, notably episcopal nominations (the veto). The papal |
| administration favoured the project the more readily seeing that common |
| resistance to Napoleon had brought the Holy See and the British Government |
| more closely together, and that it still stood in need of the assistance of English |
| might and diplomacy. But Irish opposition to the scheme was so determined that |
| nothing could be done, and the Irish clergy remained free from all state control. |
| Similar freedom prevailed in the growing Church of the United States, in which |
| country Pius VII erected in 1808 the Dioceses of Boston, New York, |
| Philadelphia, and Bardstown, with Baltimore as the metropolitan see. To these |
| dioceses were added those of Charleston and Richmond in 1820, and that of |
| Cincinnati in 1821. |
| One of the most remarkable successes of his pontificate was the restoration of |
| the Pontifical States, secured at the Congress of Vienna by the papal |
| representative Consalvi. Only a small strip of land remained in the power of |
| Austria, and this usurpation wa protested. In the temporal administration of these |
| states some of the features making for uniformity and efficiency introduced by |
| the French were judiciously retained, the feudal rights of the nobility were |
| abolished, and the ancient privileges of the municipalities suppressed. |
| Considerable opposition developed against these measures, and the Carbonari |
| even threatened rebellion; but Consalvi had their leaders prosecuted and on 13 |
| Sept., 1821, Pius VII condemned their principles. Of a more serious nature was |
| the revolution which in 1820 broke out in Spain and which, owing to its |
| anticlerical character, gave great concern to the papacy. It restricted the |
| authority of ecclesiastical courts (26 Sept., 1830); decreed (23 Oct.) the |
| suppression of a large number of monasteries, and prohibited (14 April, 1821) the |
| forwarding of financial contributions to Rome. It also secured the appointment of |
| Canon Villaneuva, a public advocate of the abolition of the papacy, as Spanish |
| ambassador to Rome, and, upon the refusal of Pius VII to accept him, broke off |
| diplomatic relations with the Holy See in 1823. This same year, however, the |
| armed intervention of France suppressed the revolution and King Ferdinand VII |
| repealed the anti-Catholic laws. |
| During the latter part of the reign of Pius VII, the prestige of the papacy was |
| enhanced by the presence in Rome of several European rulers. The Emperor and |
| Empress of Austria, accompanied by their daughter, made an official visit to the |
| pope in 1819. The King of Naples visited Rome in 1821 and was followed in 1822 |
| by the King of Prussia. The blind Charles Emmanuel IV of Savoy, and King |
| Charles IV of Spain and his queen, permanently resided in the Eternal City. Far |
| more glorious to Pius VII personally is the fact that, after the downfall of his |
| persecutor Napoleon, he gladly offered a refuge in his capital to the members of |
| the Bonaparte family. Princess Letitia, the deposed emperor's mother, lived |
| there; likewise did his brothers Lucien and Louis and his uncle, Cardinal Fesch. |
| So forgiving was Pius that upon hearing of the severe captivity in which the |
| imperial prisoner was held at St. Helena, he requested Cardinal Consalvi to plead |
| for leniency with the Prince-Regent of England. When he was informed of |
| Napoleon's desire for the ministrations of a Catholic priest, he sent him the Abbé |
| Vignali as chaplain. |
| Under Pius's reign Rome was also the favourite abode of artists. Among these it |
| suffices to cite the illustrious names of the Venetian Canova, the Dane |
| Thorwaldsen, the Austrian Führich, and the Germans Overbeck, Pforr, Schadow, |
| and Cornelius. Pius VII added numerous manuscripts and printed volumes to the |
| Vatican Library; reopened the English, Scottish, and German Colleges at Rome, |
| and established new chairs in the Roman College. He reorganized the |
| Congregation of the Propaganda, and condemned the Bible Societies (q.v.). In |
| 1805 he received at Florence the unconditional submission of Scipione Ricci, the |
| former Bishop of Pistoia-Prato, who had refused obedience to Pius VI in his |
| condemnation of the Synod of Pistoia. The suppressed Society of Jesus he |
| re-established for Russia in 1801, for the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies in 1804; for |
| America, England, and Ireland in 1813, and for the Universal Church on 7 August, |
| 1814. |
| On 6 July, 1823, Pius VII fell in his apartment and fractured his thigh. He was |
| obliged to take to his bed, never to rise again. During his illness the magnificent |
| basilica of St. Paul Without the Walls was destroyed by fire, a calamity which |
| was never revealed to him. The gentle but courageous pontiff breathed his last in |
| the presence of his devoted Consalvi, who was soon to follow him to the grave. |
| BIBLIOGRAPHY. The Bulls of Pius VII are partly in Bullarii Romani continuatio, ed. BARBERI, |
| XI-XV (Rome, 1846-53); DROCHON, Mémoires de cardinal Consalvi (Paris, 1896); PACCA, tr. HEAD, |
| Historical Memoirs of Cardinal Pacca (London, 1850); ARTAUD DE MONTOR, Histoire du Pape Pie |
| VII (3rd ed., Paris, 1839); WISEMAN, Recollections of the Last Four Popes (Boston, 1858); ALLIES, |
| The Life of Pope Pius VII (2nd ed., London, 1897); MACCAFFREY, History of the Catholic Church in |
| the Nineteenth Century (2nd ed., Dublin and St. Louis, 1910); ACTON, The Cambridge Modern |
| History: vol. X, The Restoration (New York, 1907); SAMPSON, Pius VII and the French Revolution, |
| in Amer. Cath. Quarterly Rev. (Philadelphia, Apr., 1908). See also bibliographies to CONCORDAT |
| OF 1801; CONSALVI, ERCOLE; NAPOLEON I (BONAPARTE). |
| N.A. WEBER |
| Transcribed by WGKofron |
| With thanks to St. Mary's Church, Akron, Ohio |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XII |
| Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company |
| Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight |
| Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor |
| Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York |