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INNOCENT XI . (Benedetto Odescalchi), See also: pope from 1676 to 1689, was See also: born at See also: Como on the 16th of May 1611
.
He studied See also: law in See also: Rome and Naples, entered the See also: Curia under See also: Urban VIII
.
(his alleged military service seems to be questionable), and became successively protonotary, president of the Apostolic Chamber, governor of Macerate and commissary of See also: Ancona
.
Innocent X. made him a See also: cardinal (1647), See also: legate to See also: Ferrara, and, in 165o, See also: bishop of See also: Novara
.
His See also: simple and blameless See also: life, his conscientious discharge of duty, and his devotion to the needs of the poor had won for him such a name that, despite the opposition of See also: France, he was chosen to succeed See also: Clement X. on the 21st of See also: September 1676
.
He at once applied himself to moral and administrative reform; declared against nepotism, introduced See also: economy, abolished sinecures, wiped out the deficit (at the same See also: time reducing rents), closed the gaming-houses, and issued a number of sumptuary ordinances
.
He held monks strictly to the performance of their vows; took care to satisfy himself of the fitness of candidates for bishoprics; enjoined See also: regular catechetical instruction, greater simplicity in preaching, and greater reverence in worship
.
The moral teaching of the See also: Jesuits incurred his condemnation (1679) (see LIGUORI), an See also: act which the society never forgave, and which it partially revenged by forcing, through the Inquisition, the condemnation of the quietistic doctrines of See also: Molinos (1687), for which Innocent entertained some sympathy (see MoaINOS)
.
The pontificate of Innocent See also: fell within an important See also: period in See also: European politics, and he himself played no insignificant role
.
His protest against See also: Louis XIV.'s extended claim to regalian rights called forth the famous Declaration of Gallican Liberties by a subservient French
See also: synod under the See also: lead of See also: Bossuet (1682), which the pope met by refusing to confirm Louis's clerical appointments
.
His determination to restrict the ambassadorial right of See also: asylum, which had been grossly abused, was resented by Louis, who defied him in his own capital, seized the papal territory of See also: Avignon, and talked loudly of a See also: schism, without, however, shaking the pope in his See also: resolution
.
The preponderance of France Innocent regarded as a menace to See also: Europe
.
He opposed Louis's See also: candidate for the electorate of Cologne (1688), approved the See also: League of Augsburg, acquiesced in the designs of the See also: Protestant See also: William of Orange, even in his supplanting
See also: James II., whom, although a
See also: Roman Catholic, he distrusted as a tool of Louis
.
The See also: great See also: object of Innocent's See also: desire was the repulse of the See also: Turks, and his unwearying efforts to that end entitled him to share in the See also: glory of relieving Vienna (1683)
.
Innocent died on the 12th of See also: August 1689, lamented by his subjects
.
His character and life were such as to suggest the propriety of See also: canonization, but hostile influences have defeated every move in that direction
.
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The life of Innocent has been frequently written
.
See Guarna ci, Vitae et res gestae Pontiff
.
Rom
.
(Rome, 1751), i
.
105 sqq.; Palazzi, Gesta Pontiff
.
Rom
.
(Venice, 169o) ; also the lives by Albrizzi (Rome, 1695); Buonamici (Rome, 1776); and Immich (Berlin, 1900)
.
Particular phases of Innocent's activity have been treated by See also: Michaud, Louis XIV. et Innoc.XI.(See also: Paris,1882 sqq., 4 vols.) ; Dubruel, La Correspond.... du Card
.
Carlo Pio, &c
.
(see Rev. See also: des quest. hist. lxxv
.
(1904) 602 sqq.); and Gerin, in Rev. des quest. hist., 1876, 1878, 1886
.
For See also: correspondence of Innocent see See also: Colombo, Notzzie biogr. e lettere di P
.
Innoc
.
XI
.
(See also: Turin, 1878); and See also: Berthier, Innoc
.
PP
.
XI
.
Epp. ad Principes (Rome, 1890 sqq.)
.
An extended bibliography may be found in Herzog-Hauck, Realencyklopadie, s.v
.
" Innocenz XI." (T . F . |
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