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See also: pope from 1769 to 1774, son of a physician of St Arcangelo, near See also: Rimini, was See also: born on the 31st of See also: October 1705, entered the Franciscan See also: order at the age of seventeen, and became a teacher of See also: theology and philosophy
.
As See also: regent of the See also: college of S
.
See also: Bonaventura, See also: Rome, he came under the See also: notice of Benedict XIV., who conceived a high opinion of his talents and made him consulter of the Inquisition
.
Upon the recommendation of See also: Ricci, general of the See also: Jesuits, See also: Clement XIII. made him a See also: cardinal; but, owing to his disapproval of the pope's policy, he found himself out of favour and without influence
.
The conclave following the See also: death of Clement XIII. was the most momentous of at least two centuries
.
The See also: fate of the Jesuits hung in the balance; and the Bourbon princes were determined to have a pope subservient to their hostile designs
.
The struggle was prolonged three months
.
At length, on the Igth of May 1769, Ganganelli was chosen, not as a declared enemy of the Jesuits, but as being least objection-able to each of the contending factions
.
The See also: charge of See also: simony was inspired by Jesuit hatred; there is absolutely no evidence that Ganganelli pledged himself to suppress the order
.
The outlook for the papacy was dark; See also: Portugal was talking of a patriarchate; See also: France held See also: Avignon; Naples held See also: Ponte Corvo and See also: Benevento; See also: Spain was See also: ill-affected; See also: Parma, defiant; Venice, aggressive; Poland meditating a restriction of the rights of the See also: nuncio
.
Clement realized the imperative See also: necessity of conciliating the See also: powers
.
He suspended the public See also: reading of the bull In Coena Domini, so obnoxious to See also: civil authority; resumed relations with Portugal; revoked the monitorium of his predecessor against Parma
.
But the powers were bent upon the destruction of the Jesuits, and they had the pope at their mercy
.
Clement looked abroad for help, but found none
.
Even Maria See also: Theresa, his last hope, suppressed the order in See also: Austria
.
Temporizing and partial concessions were of no avail
.
At last, convinced that the See also: peace of the See also: Church demanded the sacrifice, Clement signed the brief Dominus ac Redemptor, dissolving the order, on the 21st of
See also: July 1773
.
The powers at once gave substantial proof of their satisfaction; Benevento, Ponte Corvo, Avignon and the' Venaissin were restored to the See also: Holy See
.
But it would be unfair to accept this as evidence of a bargain
.
Clement had formerly indignantly rejected the See also: suggestion of such an See also: exchange of favours
.
There is no question of the legality of the pope's See also: act; whether he was morally culpable, however, continues to be a See also: matter of bitter controversy
.
On the one See also: hand, the suppression is denounced as a See also: base surrender to the forces of tyranny and irreligion, an act of treason to See also: conscience, which reaped its just punishment of remorse; on the other hand, it is as ardently maintained that Clement acted in full See also: accord with his conscience, and that the order merited its fate by its own mischievous activities which made it an offence to See also: religion and authority alike
.
But whatever the See also: guilt. or innocence of the Jesuits, and whether their suppression were ill-advised or not, there appears to be no ground for impeaching the motives of Clement, or of doubting that he had the approval of his conscience
.
The stories of his having swooned after See also: signing the brief, and of having lost hope and even reason, are too absurd to be entertained
.
The decline in See also: health, which set in shortly after the suppression, and his death (on the 22nd of,See also: September 1774) proceeded from wholly natural causes
.
The testimony of his physician and of his See also: confessor ought to be sufficient to discredit the oft-repeated See also: story of slow poisoning (see Duhr, Jesuiten Fabeln, 4th ed., 1904, pp
.
69 seq.)
.
The suppression of the Jesuits bulks so large in the pontificate of Clement that he has scarcely been given due See also: credit for his praiseworthy attempt to reduce the burdens of See also: taxation and to reform the See also: financial administration, nor for his liberal encouragement of See also: art and learning, of which the museum Pio-Clementino is a lasting monument
.
No pope has been the subject of more diverse judgments than Clement XIV
.
Zealous defenders credit him with all virtues, and bless him as the instrument divinely ordained to restore the peace of the Church; virulent detractors charge him with in-gratitude, cowardice and See also: double-dealing
.
The truth is at neither extreme
.
Clement's was a deeply religious and poetical nature, animated by a lofty and refined spirit
.
Gentleness, equanimity and benevolence were native to him
.
He cherished high purposes and obeyed a lively conscience
.
But he instinctively shrank from conflict; he lacked the resoluteness and the sterner sort of courage that grapples with a crisis
.
Caraccioli's See also: Vie de Clement XIV (See also: Paris, 1775) (freq. translated), is incomplete, uncritical and too laudatory
.
The See also: middle of the 19th century saw quite a spirited controversy over Clement XIV
.
; St See also: Priest, in his His'. de la chute See also: des Jesuites (Paris, 1846), represented Clement as lamentably, almost culpably, weak; Cretineau- Joly, in his Dist
.
. de la Comp. de Jesus (Paris, 1844-1845, and his Clement XIV et See also: les Jesuites (Paris, 1847), was outspoken and bitter in his condemnation; this provoked Theiner's Gesch. des Pontificals Clemens' XIV
.
(See also: Leipzig and Paris, 1852), a vigorous defence based upon See also: original documents to which, as custodian of the Vaticah archives, the author had freest See also: access; Cretineau-Joly replied with Le Pape Clement XIV; Lettres au P
.
Theiner (Paris, 1852)
.
Ravignan's Clem
.
XIII. e Clem
.
XIV
.
(Paris, 1854) is a weak, See also: half-hearted See also: apology for Clement XIV
.
See also v
.
See also: Reumont, Ganganelli, Pepsi Clemens XIV
.
( Berlin, 1847); and Reinerding, Clemens XIV. u. d . Aufhebung der Gesellschaft Jesu (Augsburg, 1854) . The letters of Clement have frequently been printed; the genuineness of Caraccioli's collection (Paris, 1776; freq. translated) has been questioned, but most of the letters are now generally accepted as genuine; see also Clementis XIV . Epp. ac Brevia, ed . Theiner (Paris, 1852) . An extended bibliography is to be found in Hergen- rother, Allg . Kirchengesch . (188o), iii . 510 seq . (T . F . |
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