Benedict XIV
Bishop of Rome
Portrait of Benedict XIV by Pierre Subleyras, 1746
ChurchCatholic Church
Papacy began17 August 1740
Papacy ended3 May 1758
PredecessorClement XII
SuccessorClement XIII
Orders
Ordination2 July 1724 by Pope Benedict XIII
Consecration16 July 1724
by Benedict XIII
Created cardinal9 December 1726 (in pectore)
30 April 1728 (revealed)
by Benedict XIII
Personal details
Born
Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini

(1675-03-31)31 March 1675
Bologna, Papal States
Died3 May 1758(1758-05-03) (aged 83)
Rome, Papal States
Previous post(s)
MottoCurabuntur omnes
(Latin for 'All will be healed')[1]
Coat of armsBenedict XIV's coat of arms
Other popes named Benedict
Papal styles of
Pope Benedict XIV
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious styleHoly Father
Posthumous styleNone

Pope Benedict XIV (Latin: Benedictus XIV; Italian: Benedetto XIV; 31 March 1675 – 3 May 1758),[2] born Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 17 August 1740 to his death in May 1758.[note 1]

Perhaps one of the best scholars to sit on the papal throne, yet often overlooked, he promoted scientific learning, the Baroque arts, reinvigoration of Thomism, and the study of the human form. Firmly committed to carrying out the decrees of the Council of Trent and authentic Catholic teaching, Benedict removed changes previously made to the Breviary, sought peacefully to reverse growing secularism in European courts, invigorated ceremonies with great pomp, and throughout his life and his reign published numerous theological and ecclesiastical treatises. In governing the Papal States, he reduced taxation on some products, but also raised taxes on others; he also encouraged agriculture and supported free trade within the Papal States. A scholar, he created the Sacred and Profane Museums, now part of the present Vatican Museum. He can be considered a polymath to an extent due to his numerous studies of ancient literature, his publishing of ecclesiastical books and documents, his interest in the study of the human body, and his devotion to art and theology.

Towards the end of his papacy Benedict XIV was forced to contend with issues surrounding the Society of Jesus. He expelled them from Portugal at the behest of Joseph I in 1758, just before his death. The papacy reluctantly acceded to the anti-Jesuit demands while providing minimal theological justification for the suppressions.

Horace Walpole described him as "loved by papists, esteemed by Protestants, a priest without insolence or interest, a prince without favorites, a pope without nepotism, an author without vanity, a man whom neither intellect nor power could corrupt."[3]

Early life

Birth and studies

Lambertini was born into a noble family of Bologna, the third of five children of Marcello Lambertini and Lucrezia Bulgarini.[4] At the time of his birth, Bologna was the second largest city in the Papal States. His earliest studies were with tutors, and then he was sent to the Convitto del Porto, staffed by the Somaschi Fathers.[5] At the age of thirteen, he began attending the Collegio Clementino in Rome, where he studied rhetoric, Latin, philosophy, and theology (1689–1692). During his studies as a young man, he often studied the works of St. Thomas Aquinas, who was his favorite author and saint. While he enjoyed studying at Collegio Clementino, his attention turned toward civil and canon law. Soon after, in 1694 at the age of nineteen, he received the degree of Doctor of Sacred Theology and Doctor Utriusque Juris (both ecclesiastical and civil law).[6]

Ecclesiastical career

Lambertini became an assistant to Alessandro Caprara, the Auditor of the Rota. After the election of Pope Clement XI in November 1700, he was made a consistorial advocate in 1701.[7] Shortly after, he was created a Consultor of the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition, and then in 1708 Promoter of the Faith. As Promoter of the Faith, he achieved two major successes. The first was the canonization of Pope Pius V. The second was the composition of his treatise on the process of the beatification and canonization of saints.[8]

In 1712, Lambertini was named Canon Theologus of the Chapter of the Vatican Basilica and member of the Sacred Congregation of Rites; in 1713 he was named monsignor; and in 1718 secretary of the Sacred Congregation of the Council.[9]

On 12 June 1724, only two weeks after his election, Pope Benedict XIII appointed Lambertini titular bishop of Theodosia.[10] Lambertini was consecrated a bishop in Rome, in the Pauline Chapel of the Vatican Palace, on 16 July 1724, by Pope Benedict XIII. The co-consecrators were Giovanni Francesco Nicolai, titular Archbishop of Myra (Vicar of the Vatican Basilica), and Nicola Maria Lercari, titular Archbishop of Nazianzus (Papal Maestro di Camera).[11] In 1725, he served as the Canonist at the Roman Synod of Pope Benedict XIII.[12]

In 1718, the Istituto delle scienze ed Arti Liberali in Bologna had begun construction of a chapel for everyday convenience dedicated to the Annunication of the Virgin Mary. In 1725, Bishop Prospero Lambertini of Theodosia, who was working in the Roman Curia but was mindful of his origins, ordered the chapel to be painted. He handed over the work to Carlo Salarolo, who had the walls of the chapel adorned. Lambertini also ordered and paid for the painting above the main altar, an image of the Virgin being greeted by the angel, the work of Marcantonio Franceschini.[13]

He was made Bishop of Ancona on 27 January 1727, and was permitted to retain the title of Archbishop, as well as all the offices which he had already been granted. He was also allowed to continue as Abbot Commendatory of the Camaldolese monastery of S. Stefano di Cintorio (Cemeterio) in the diocese of Pisa.[14] In 1731, the new bishop had the main altar and the choir of the cathedral restored and renovated. Once he became pope, Lambertini remembered his former diocese, sending an annual gift to the Church of Ancona, of sacred vessels of gold or silver, altar appointments, vestments, and other items.[15]

Cardinal

Bishop Lambertini was created a Cardinal on 9 December 1726, though the public announcement of his promotion was postponed until 30 April 1728.[16] He was assigned the titular church of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme on 10 May 1728.[17] He participated in the 1730 conclave.

On 30 April 1731, Cardinal Lambertini was appointed Archbishop of Bologna by Pope Clement XII.[18] During his time as archbishop, he composed an extensive treatise in three volumes, De synodo dioecesana, on the subject of the diocesan synod, presenting a synthesis of the history, Canon Law, practices, and procedures for the holding of those important meetings of the clergy of each diocese.[19] He was in fact preparing the ground for the holding of a synod of his own for the diocese of Bologna, an expectation he first announced in a Notificazione of 14 October 1732. When the first edition of the De Synodo was published in 1748, however, the synod still had not taken place.[20] He continued in the office of Archbishop of Bologna even after he became Pope, not finally resigning until 14 January 1754.[21]

Election to the papacy

Cardinal Lambertini c. 1740.

After the death of Pope Clement XII on 6 February 1740, Cardinal Lambertini attended the papal conclave to choose a successor. The Conclave opened on 18 February, but Lambertini did not arrive until 5 March. He was not one of the 'papabili', not being one of the favorites of any of the factions (Imperialists, Spanish, French, Zelanti). The Conclave lasted for six months.[22] At first Cardinal Ottoboni, the Dean of the Sacred College, was favored to be elected, but a number of cardinals were opposed to him because he was the protector of France in the Papal Curia.[23] His death on 29 February 1740 eliminated him from consideration.[24]

Cardinal Domenico Riviera of Urbino received a respectable number of votes for a while, and then, in July, Cardinal Pompeio Aldrovandi of Bologna. He had enemies, however, who assembled enough votes to ensure that he would never get the two-thirds needed to be elected. His greatest enemy, the Camerlengo Cardinal Annibale Albani, chose instead to support Cardinal Giacomo de Lanfredini of Florence, who worked in Rome in the Curia. In mid-August, Albani asked the leader of the Imperialist faction, Cardinal Niccolò del Giudice, to give a thought to Lambertini. After long deliberations, Lambertini was put forth to the cardinal electors as a compromise candidate, and it is reported that he said to the members of the College of Cardinals "If you wish to elect a saint, choose Gotti; a statesman, Aldrovandi; an honest man, me."[25] Vincenzo Ludovico Gotti (1664–1742) was professor of philosophy at the College of Saint Thomas, and perhaps the leading Thomist of his time.[26][27] Cardinal Aldrovandi was a canon lawyer.

This witticism appears to have assisted his cause, which also benefited from his reputation for deep learning, gentleness, wisdom, and conciliation in policy.[28] On the evening of 17 August 1740 at around 9:00 pm, on the 255th ballot, he was elected pope and took the throne name of Benedict XIV in honour of Pope Benedict XIII to whom he owed his ecclesiastical career.[29] He was solemnly crowned by the protodeacon on 21 August 1740. By 30 August 1740 the famous ephemeral baroque structures of the Festival of the Chinea and the triumphal arch of Benedict XIV were erected by Charles III of Spain, who was then King of Naples and a papal vassal.

Pontificate

Bust of Benedict XIV by Pietro Bracci, Museum of Grenoble

Benedict XIV's papacy began in a time of great difficulties, fueled by anticlericalism and chiefly caused by the disputes between Catholic rulers and the papacy about governmental demands to nominate bishops rather than leaving the appointment to the church. He managed to overcome most of these problems – the Holy See's disputes with the Kingdom of Naples, Sardinia, Spain, Venice, and Austria were settled.[30]

Pastoralis Romani Pontificis

The apostolic constitution Pastoralis Romani Pontificis,[31] which was Benedict's revision of the traditional Coena Domini anathematization, was promulgated on 30 March 1741. In it Benedict again excommunicated all members of Protestant sects, including Lutherans, Calvinists, Zwinglians, and Huguenots. It ordered that ecumenical councils not be resorted to by opponents of papal decisions.[32] Its most stringent clause was §20:[33]

We excommunicate all those who shall by themselves or others, directly or indirectly, under whatever title or pretext, presume to invade, destroy, occupy and detain, wholly or in part, the City of Rome, the Kingdom of Sicily, the islands of Sardinia and Corsica, the territories on this side of Lesina, the patrimony of St. Peter in Tuscany, the Duchy of Spoleto, the Counties of Venaissin, and Sabina, the March of Ancona, Massa Trebaria, Romagna, Campagna, and the maritime provinces and their territories and places, and the territories under special commission of the Arnulfi, and our cities of Bologna, Cesena, Rimini, Benevento, Perugia, Avignon, Citta di Castello, Todi, Ferrara, Comachio, and other cities, territories and places, or rights, belonging to the Roman Church, and mediately or immediately subject to the said Roman Church; and likewise those who presume to usurp de facto, to disturb, to retain, or in various ways to trouble, the supreme jurisdiction, belonging in them to Us and to the said Roman Church; and likewise their adherents, patrons, and protectors, or those who aid, counsel or abet them in any way whatsoever.

This clause, if applied, excommunicated the governments of Spain, France, and the Empire, in addition to lesser princes who held, without papal grant or investiture, territory claimed by the Papacy. The bull was smiled at even by Benedict himself, who once said, "I like to leave the Vatican lightnings asleep." Its application to the Duchy of Parma by Pope Clement XIII in 1768 had major consequences, including the beginning of expulsions of Jesuits from European states.[34]

Finances

At the beginning of his reign, the papal government was heavily in debt, to the amount of 56,000,000 scudi, and was running an annual deficit of more than 200,000 scudi. Benedict attempted to improve the finances of the Papal States, but even at his death the administration was still running a deficit.[35] His greatest economic action was the reduction in the size of the papal army, which had become ineffectual in terms of contemporary military practice, even in keeping order inside the Papal States; and he severely reduced the pay of both officers and soldiers.[36] He instituted economies in his own household and in the bureaucracy, but these were insignificant in terms of the debt and deficit. In 1741, on the advice of Cardinal Aldovrandini (who had nearly been elected pope instead of Benedict), he instituted a new tax, a duty on stamped paper on legal documents; it did not produce the revenue expected, and it was abolished in 1743. He reduced taxes on imported cattle, oil, and raw silk, but imposed new taxes on lime, china clay, salt, wine, straw, and hay. In 1744 he raised taxes on land, house rents, feudal grants to barons, and pensions derived from prebends.[37]

Despite these fiscal problems, the Papacy was able to buy two frigates in England, and in April 1745 Benedict personally christened a galley, named the Benedetta, which he had ordered constructed. He also ordered the modernization of the harbor of Anzio, but the work was so expensive that it had to be abandoned in 1752.[38]

He encouraged agriculture and free trade and drastically cut the military budget, but was unable to completely reform the administration, still corrupt from previous papacies. At the University of Bologna he revived the practice of anatomical studies and established a chair of surgery. He had a clear view of ecclesiastical problems, had respect for differing opinions and an ability to distinguish between dogma and theory.

Other activities

Benedict XIV in 1741, portrait by Subleyras

On 22 December 1741, Benedict XIV issued the Bull Immensa Pastorum Principis and sent an Apostolic Brief to the Bishops of Brazil and King John of Portugal, against the enslavement of the indigenous peoples of the Americas and other countries. It excommunicated any person who, for whatever motive, enslaved a native Brazilian. It did not address the case of black Africans. The Bull ordered the Jesuits to cease engaging in commerce, which was strictly forbidden by their own statutes, and meddling in politics. The bull went unenforced in Brazil.[39]

The Apostolic constitution Sacramentum Poenitentiae of 1741[40] assigned to the Supreme Sacred Congregation of the Roman and Universal Inquisition the responsibility of safeguarding the sanctity of the sacrament of penance.

On 18 May 1743, Benedict XIV signed a document addressed to the Archbishops and Bishops of the Kingdom of Poland regarding marriage,[41] communicating his dissatisfaction with the dissolution of Christian marriages, some even long-stable ones, by the Ecclesiastical Courts of Poland without due cause or in violation of canon law.[42] Troubles arose from what are called "clandestine marriages", a secret arrangement between partners, usually for the purpose of marrying a person of choice rather than entering into an "arranged marriage".[43]

Benedict XIV was also responsible, along with Cardinal Passionei, for beginning the catalogue of the oriental manuscripts in the Vatican Library.[44] The Pope added some 3,300 of his own books to the collection. In 1741 the collection of manuscripts relating to Chinese religion and history were left to the Vatican Library by bequest of Fouchet, a one-time missionary.[45] During his reign the library of Marchese Alessandro Capponi was acquired through bequest. The collection of the antiquarian Filippo Stosch of Florence also came to the Vatican Library after his death, including a large collection of manuscripts that went back as far as the twelfth century.[46]

In 1747, Benedict promulgated the bull Postremo mense superioris anni, which summarised and restated certain aspects of Catholic teaching on infant baptism, in particular that 1) it is generally not licit to baptise a child of a Jewish family without parental consent, 2) it is licit to baptise a Jewish child in danger of death without parental consent, 3) once such a baptism had occurred (whether licit or not), the ecclesiastical authorities have a duty to remove the child from its parents' custody in order to provide it with a Christian education.[47][48]

Oriental rites

Since his days as a Consultor at the Holy Office (Inquisition), Benedict had been involved in issues pertaining to the missions, both those seeking to convert non-Christians, and those seeking to reconcile heretics and schismatics to the Roman Church.[49] One concern was the Coptic Christians in upper Egypt, where efforts to seek union with the Coptic Patriarch had not been successful. Numbers of Coptic priests and laity had entered into union with Rome, but had no bishop to serve their needs. In the Bull Quemadmodum ingenti of 4 August 1741, Benedict entrusted their care to the one Coptic bishop who was in union with Rome, the Patriarch Athanasius of Jerusalem, who was given extensive powers to supervise uniate Copts in Egypt.[50]

In his encyclical Allatae Sunt, promulgated on 26 July 1755, and sent to missionaries working under the direction of the Congregation de propaganda fide,[51] Pope Benedict addressed the numerous problems arising in dealing with the clergy and laity belonging to various eastern rites, particularly the Armenian and Syriac rites. He reminded the missionaries that they were converting people from schism and heresy:[52]

We also wanted to make clear to all the good will which the Apostolic See feels for Oriental Catholics in commanding them to observe fully their ancient rites which are not at variance with the Catholic religion or with propriety. The Church does not require schismatics to abandon their rites when they return to Catholic unity, but only that they forswear and detest heresy. Its great desire is for the preservation, not the destruction of different peoples  in short, that all may be Catholic rather than all become Latin.

Benedict XIV, however, echoing the words of Pope Gelasius I, universally banned the practice of females serving the priest at the altar, noting that the practice had spread to certain Oriental Rites.[53]

Chinese rites and Indian rites

Benedict XIV presents his encyclical Ex Omnibus to the Comte de Stainville Étienne François, later the Duc de Choiseul.

He had a very active papacy, reforming the education of priests, the calendar of feasts of the church, and many papal institutions. Perhaps the most important act of Benedict XIV's pontificate was the promulgation of his famous laws about missions in the two bulls, Ex quo singulari (11 July 1742),[54] and Omnium sollicitudinum (12 September 1744).[55] In these bulls he ruled on the custom of accommodating non-Christian words and usages to express Christian ideas and practices of the native cultures, which had been extensively done by the Jesuits in their Indian and Chinese missions. An example of this is the statues of ancestors – there had long been uncertainty whether honour paid to one's ancestors was unacceptable 'ancestor worship,' or if it was something more like the Catholic veneration of the saints. This question was especially pressing in the case of an ancestor known not to have been a Christian. The choice of a Chinese translation for the name of God had also been debated since the early 17th century. Benedict XIV denounced these practices in these two bulls. The consequence of this was that many of these converts left the church.[56]

During his papacy, Benedict XIV commissioned a team of architects, led by Nicola Salvi and Luigi Vanvitelli, to design a large palace that was to be 'more complex and with greater baroque style than the box of a palace Vanvitelli designed in Caserta'. The palace was to be built south of St. Peter's Basilica, but was never built, as the plans were quietly ignored by Benedict's successor, Clement XIII. They were brought up once more by Pius VI late in his papacy, but had to stop due to the possibility of invasion. On 15 December 1744, Benedict XIV blessed the baroque chapel (Chapel of St. John the Baptist) in Sant'Antonio dei Portoghesi in Rome, which featured mosaics on the sides, floor, and wall behind the altar made of semi-precious stones. The chapel, which had been commissioned by King John V of Portugal in 1740, was designed by Nicola Salvi and Luigi Vanvitelli. When complete, it was then shipped to Portugal to be placed in the Igreja de Sāo Roque, the Jesuit church in Lisbon.[57]

The Capuchins, under the leadership of Italian priest Joseph Mary Bernini, grew the community of Bettiah Christians in colonial India.[58] He was invited to spread Catholic Christianity by Maharaja Dhurup Singh of the Bettiah Raj, an appointment that was blessed by Pope Benedict XIV on 1 May 1742 in a personal letter to the king.[58]

Consistories

Benedict XIV created 64 cardinals in seven consistories; among the new cardinals he elevated into the cardinalate was the Henry Benedict Stuart (1747). The pope also reserved one cardinal in pectore and revealed that name at a later time, therefore validating the creation.

Canonizations and beatifications

The pope canonized seven saints during his pontificate including Camillus de Lellis and Fidelis of Sigmaringen. He also beatified several individuals such as Charlemagne and Niccolò Albergati.

Jubilee

On 5 May 1749, Pope Benedict XIV declared a Holy Year, to begin on Christmas Eve, 1749 and to extend throughout the next year until Christmas 1750.[59] During the month of April 1750, 43,000 meals were served to the poor at the Trinita Hospital.[60] Later that year, the Pope banned card games.[61]

With the papal bull Peregrinantes, Benedict XIV convoked a Jubilee in 1750. Furthermore, the pope called upon Saint Leonard of Port Maurice to preach; both had a close relationship and the year previously saw Benedict XIV ask him to give sermons on penance and conversion in Rome. Among the initiatives that the pope designed for the Jubilee were the call for Christian unity and organizing for proper accommodation for those pilgrims who flocked to Rome.

Upon the advice of Saint Leonard, the pope was the first to institute the Via Crucis at the Colosseum, which he consecrated as a site of martyrdom for the early Christians. The pope placed the stations of the Cross in the arena, however, these were removed in 1874 before being restored in 1925.

Personality

Benedict XIV was considered one of the best scholars to have sat on the papal throne, noted for his keen intellect and his consistent morals. Noted for his modesty, Horace Walpole procured for the pope a statue of him with an accompanying plaque. When the copy of the inscription was forwarded to Rome for approval, Benedict XIV smiled upon reading it and, shaking his head, exclaimed: "Alas! I am like the statues of the Piazza San Pietro – admirable at a distance but monstrous when seen at close quarters!"[62]

However, Benedict XIV also had his personal faults, unable to resist gambling in cards and was known for the use of profane language which one of his early biographers classified as "unfortunate phraseology". Despite his best efforts, the pontiff was unable to completely cut out bad language. A deeply pious man, Benedict XIV had a crucifix placed in every room, and it is said that the sight of a crucifix helped to restrain his poor language more often than not.[62]

Despite his faults, Benedict XIV was jovial and was lucid until the very end. To those who knew him, his blue eyes seemed to sparkle with humor and cordiality.[62]

Death and burial

Tomb of Benedict XIV, St. Peter's Basilica.

Benedict XIV had suffered from kidney problems for years. His health worsened in 1758 and, after a battle with gout, he died on 3 May 1758 at the age of 83.[63] His final words to those surrounding him on his deathbed were, "I leave you in the hands of God."[64] Despite those words, the pope is alleged to have recited the famous Latin phrase "Sic transit gloria mundi" before poignantly adding "I now fall into silence and forgetfulness, the only place that belongs to me".

Benedict XIV originally demonstrated symptoms of illness on 26 April 1758 after having previously rallied from a serious illness that included gout that February. However, a contracted fever aggravated his asthma and he suffered from difficulties in urinating. However, his condition deteriorated rapidly in the following days after his gout and contracted kidney disease increased his sufferings. Despite this, his appetite had not diminished which was interpreted as a sign that he could potentially rally from his malady. However, into May, his condition had worsened considerably, though the pope remained lucid until the end, able to impart one last blessing before he died on 3 May.[65]

Following his funeral, he was interred in Saint Peter's Basilica and a large catafalque was erected in his honour.

See also

Notes

  1. Pope Benedict X (1058–1059) is now considered an antipope. At the time, however, this status was not recognized by church historians, and so the tenth legitimate pontiff by this name is the one who took the official name Benedict XI (1303–1304). This has advanced the numbering of all subsequent Popes Benedict by one. Popes Benedict XI–XVI are therefore the tenth through fifteenth popes by that name.

References

Footnotes

  1. "Pope Benedict XIV (Prospero Lambertini)". www.gcatholic.org. Retrieved 23 May 2022.
  2. Rosa, Mario (1966). "Benedetto XIV, papa". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani (in Italian). Vol. 8.
  3. Benedict XIV and the Enlightenment, p. 370.
  4. Following his father's untimely death at the age of forty-two, his mother, aged twenty-four and a widow for only three months, married Count Luigi Bentivoglio. Giuseppe de Novaes (1822). Elementi della storia de'sommi pontefici da San Pietro, sino al Pio papa VII (in Italian). Vol. Tomo decimoquarto (14). Roma: Francesco Bourlie. p. 4. Pastor, Vol. 35, p. 23. Mario Fanti; Giancarlo Roversi (1999). Papi a Bologna e papi bolognesi: giubilei e pellegrinaggi (in Italian). Bologna: HitStudio. p. 28.
  5. Pastor, Vol. 35, p. 24.
  6.  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Healy, Patrick (1907). "Pope Benedict XIV". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  7. Pastor, Vol. 35, pp. 24–25.
  8. Pastor, pp. 25–26. Benedicti XIV pont. opt. max. Doctrina de servorum dei beatificatione et beatorum canonizatione (in Latin) (novissima ed.). Venice: Jacobus Caroboli et Dominicus Pompeati. 1765. The first edition was published in Bologna in four volumes: De servorum Dei beatificatione et beatificatorum canonizatione, Bononiae 1734–1738.
  9. Schulte, p. 503.
  10. Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1952). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi. Vol. Tomus V (1667–1730). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. p. 375.
  11. Nagy, Ferenc (1979). "La comune genealogia episcopale di quasi tutti gli ultimi papi (1700–1978)". Archivum Historiae Pontificiae. 17: 433–453, at 439. JSTOR 23563928.
  12. Mario Rosa, "Benedetto XIV," in: Enciclopedia dei Papi (Treccani 2000). (in Italian) L. Fiorani, Il concilio romano del 1725 (Roma 1978), pp. 144–146, 209.
  13. [Anonymus AC09784421] (1731). De Bononiensi Scientiarum Et Artium Instituto Atque Academia Commentarii (in Latin). Laelii A Vulpe. p. 24.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  14. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 83 with note 3.
  15. Giuseppe Cappelletti (1848). Le chiese d'Italia: dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni (in Italian). Vol. settimo. Venezia: G. Antonelli. pp. 131–138.
  16. Ritzler-Sefrin, p. 37 no. 18.
  17. Ritzler-Sefrin, p. 45.
  18. Ritzler, Remigius; Sefrin, Pirminus (1958). Hierarchia catholica medii et recentis aevi. Vol. Tomus VI (1730–1799). Patavii: Messagero di S. Antonio. p. 126.
  19. Pope Benedict XIV (1760). Sanctissimi domini nostri Benedicti papae XIV De synodo dioecesana libri tredecim in duos tomos distributi (in Latin). Vol. Tomus I. Ferrara: Joannes Manfre.
  20. Fattori, p. 444, with note 86: chiesa. Quando uscì la prima edizione del De Synodo, nel 1748, Lambertini dichiarò di non avere potuto celebrare il sinodo diocesano per alcune difficoltà. Prospero Lambertini (1760). Raccolta di alcune notificazioni, editti, ed istruzioni, pubblicate pel buon gouerno della sua diocesi dall'eminentissimo e reverendissimo signor cardinale Prospero Lambertini ... ora Benedetto 14. sommo pontefice (in Italian). Vol. Tomo primo. Venezia: Francesco Pitteri. pp. 32–38.
  21. Ritzler-Sefrin, VI, p. 126, note 2.
  22. F. Petruccelli della Gattina Histoire diplomatique des Conclaves IV (Paris 1866) pp. 108–133.
  23. Artaud de Montor, Alexis Francois (1911). The Lives and Times of the Popes. Vol. VII. New York: Catholic Publication Society of America. p. 4.
  24. Ritzler-Sefrin, V, p. 16 no. 1.
  25. Walsh, Michael J. (2006). Pocket Dictionary of Popes. A&C Black. p. 21. ISBN 978-0860124207.
  26. Salvador Miranda, The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, "Gotti, O.P., Vincenzo Ludovico"; Retrieved 7 February 2011.
  27. "Catholic Encyclopedia: Vincent Louis Gotti".
  28. Cicognani, Amleto Giovanni; O'Hara, Joseph Michael; Brennan, Francis (1934). Canon law: I. Introduction to the study of canon law. II. History of the sources of canon law. III. A commentary on book 1 of the code. p. 401.
  29. Pastor, Vol. 35, pp. 3–22. Benedict XIV wrote a letter about the Conclave to his friend Francesco Peggi: F.S. Kraus (editor), Briefe Benedikts XIV an den Canonicus Pier Francesco Peggio in Bologna (1729–1758), zweite Ausgabe (Freiburg im Breisgau 1888), pp. 171–173.
  30. Ludwig von Pastor, Vol. 36, pp. 140–142, attempts a defense of Benedict.
  31. Benoît, X.I.V (1777). Bullarium Sanctissimi Domini Nostri Benedicti Pape Benedicti XIV Bullarium. Vol. Tomus primus (recentior, auctior, et emendatoir ed.). pp. 29–34.
  32. Item excommunicamus, et anathematizamus omnes, singulos cujuscumque gradus, seu conditionis fuerint; Universitates vero, Collegia, & Capitula quocumque ncmine nuncupentur, interdicimus, ab ordinationibus, seu mandatis Nostris. ut Romanorum Pontificum pro tempore existentium ad universale futurum Concilium appellantes; nec non eos, quorum auxilio, concilio, vel favore appellatum fuerit.
  33. G.E. Biber (1848). The papal bull, 'In cœnâ Domini', translated into English. With a short historical introduction. London: John Hatchard. pp. 9–10, 17–18.
  34. Owen Chadwick (1980). The Popes and European Revolution. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 366, 369. ISBN 978-0-19-152054-9. Dale K. Van Kley (2018). Reform Catholicism and the International Suppression of the Jesuits in Enlightenment Europe. New Haven CT: Yale University Press. pp. 346–349. ISBN 978-0-300-23561-6. Johann Friedrich Le Bret (1769). Pragmatische Geschichte der Bulle " in Coena Domini" und ihren fürchterlichen Folgen für den Staat und die Kirche (in German). Vol. Erster Theil. pp. 131–133, 191–196, 212–213.
  35. Moritz Brosch (1882). Geschichte des Kirchenstaates (in German). Vol. Zweiter Band. Gotha: F. A. Perthes. pp. 93–96.
  36. Pastor, Vol. 35, p. 141.
  37. Pastor, p. 142.
  38. Pastor, p. 154.
  39. João Capistrano de Abreu (1998). Chapters of Brazil's Colonial History 1500–1800. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 210. ISBN 978-0-19-510302-1. Pius Onyemechi Adiele (2017). The Popes, the Catholic Church and the Transatlantic Enslavement of Black Africans 1418–1839. Hildesheim: Georg Olms Verlag AG. pp. 377–378, 532–534. ISBN 978-3-487-42216-9.
  40. Benedict XIV (1777). Bullarium Sanctissimi Domini Nostri Benedicti Pape Benedicti XIV Bullarium (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus (recentior, auctior, et emendatoir ed.). Venice: Occhi. pp. 65–68, no. XX.
  41. Benedict, XIV, "Nimiam Licentiam: To Bishops of Poland: On Validity of Marriages", May 18, 1743 Benedict XIV (1777). Bullarium Sanctissimi Domini Nostri Benedicti Pape Benedicti XIV (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus. Venice: Occhi. pp. 301–306.
  42. Benedict wrote, "At times it is argued that the marriage was entered upon by force or by fear, in either case without the free consent of one or the other of the contracting parties; at other times a legitimate and canonical impediment is alleged, which could have been known before the marriage was contracted if it had not been purposefully concealed; also at times, and this happens more frequently, a marriage is annulled because it was contracted before another priest, even with the consent of the parish priest or of the ordinary bishop but without the necessary and usual formalities. Certainly it is clear that these dissolutions of marriages in Poland are a source of evil and an open door to crime."
  43. Benedict wrote, "We had learned that an evil custom of hidden marriages, more popularly known as marriages of joint knowledge, has spread throughout much of the Christian world. Among the resulting irregularities is that hidden marriages of this sort were themselves being dissolved where other marriages were publicly celebrated." Michael Joseph Schuck (1991). That They be One: The Social Teaching of the Papal Encyclicals, 1740-1989. Washington DC: Georgetown University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-87840-489-6.
  44. Isidoro Carini (1893). La Biblioteca Vaticana, proprietà della Sede apostolica (in Italian). Rome: Tipografia Vaticana. p. 118.
  45. Carini, p. 114.
  46. Domenico Zanelli (1857). La Biblioteca Vaticana dalla sua origine fino al presente (in Italian). Rome: Tipografia delle belle arti. pp. 82–83, 86–87.
  47. Cunningham, James J. (2006). Summa Theologiae: Volume 57, Baptism and Confirmation: 3a. 66–72. Cambridge University Press. p. 112. ISBN 978-0521029650.
  48. Carlen, Claudia (1990). Papal Pronouncements, a Guide, 1740–1978: Benedict XIV to Paul VI. Pierian Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-0876502730. Retrieved 13 January 2018.
  49. Lambertini had composes a survey of the history of the Malabar rites in India. Pastor, pp. 463–464.
  50. Benedictus XIV (1826). Benedicti papae XIV. Bullarium: In quo continentur constitutiones, epistolae, aliaque edita ab initio pontificatus usque ad annum MDCCXLVI (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus, Volumen 1. Mechlin: P. J. Hanicq. pp. 125–127. Pastor, p. 404.
  51. Benedictus XIV (1758). Hieronymus Mainardi (ed.). Sanctissimi domini nostri Benedicti Papae XIV Bullarium (in Latin). Vol. Tomus quartus. Rome: Bartholomaeus Occhi. pp. 175–193.
  52. Benedict XIV, Allatae sunt, § 48. Agnes de Dreuzy (2016). The Vatican and the Emergence of the Modern Middle East. Washington DC: CUA Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-8132-2849-5.
  53. Benedict XIV, Allatae sunt, § 29.
  54. Benedictus XIV (1826). Benedicti papae XIV. Bullarium: In quo continentur constitutiones, epistolae, aliaque edita ab initio pontificatus usque ad annum MDCCXLVI (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus, Volumen 1. Mechlin: P. J. Hanicq. pp. 388–422. Pastor, Vol. 35, pp. 433–460.
  55. Benedictus XIV (1826). Sanctissimi Domini nostri Benedicti papae XIV bullarium (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus, Volumen 2 (editio nova ed.). Mechlin: Hanicq. pp. 369–428, no. CVII.
  56. Pastor, Vol. 35, pp. 433–458.
  57. Barry Hatton (2018). Queen of the Sea: A History of Lisbon. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 143. ISBN 978-1-84904-997-9. Anthony Blunt, Guide to Baroque Rome New York: Harper & Row, 1982.
  58. 1 2 "Diocese of Bettiah". Union of Catholic Asian News. Retrieved 15 November 2020.
  59. Benedict XIV, "Peregrinantes" (Proclaiming a Holy Year for 1750), 5 May 1749 Juan Facundo Raulin (1751). Año Santo dentro y fuera de Roma: Sirve para ella en este Año Santo de 1750. Para España en el de 1751 y en los siguientes para las Indias (in Spanish). Zaragoza: Francisco Moreno. pp. 4–12.
  60. Kunst, Richard. "Benedict XIV", Papal Artifacts James A. Campbell, "The Year of Jubilee," in: The American Catholic Quarterly Review. Vol. 25. Philadelphia: Hardy and Mahony. 1900. pp. 240–252.
  61. The Dublin Gazette (Number 26). Dublin: Richard James and John Butler, 1750. Context: "In the Edict lately published against all Games on the Cards, it is enacted, that the Penalty on Delinquents shall be a Fine of 500 Crowns ; but if any Persons of high Rank or Distinction are convicted of suffering or promoting Gaming of that Kind in their house, they shall incur the Pope's Indignation, and be liable to such arbitrary Punishment as to his Holiness shall seem meet."
  62. 1 2 3 "Pope Benedict XIV: Proceedings of the Conclave that led to his election". Pickle Publishing. 2005. Retrieved 16 March 2022.
  63. Artaud de Montor, Alexis Francois (1911). The Lives and Times of the Popes. Vol. VII. New York: Catholic Publication Society of America. pp. 35–36.
  64. Haynes, Renée (1970). Philosopher King: The Humanist Pope Benedict XIV. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  65. John Paul Adams (29 September 2015). "Sede Vacante 1758". CSUN. Retrieved 16 March 2022.

Bibliography

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