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LEO XI

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Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 437 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LEO XI  . (Alessandro de' Medici) was elected pope on the 1st of
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April 16o5, at the age of seventy . He had long been archbishop of Florence and
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nuncio to Tuscany; and was entirely
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pro-French in his sympathies . He died on the 27th day of his pontificate, and was succeeded by Paul V . See the contemporary
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life by Vitorelli, continuator of Ciaconius, Vitae et res gestae summorum Pontiff . Rom . ; Ranke, Popes (Eng. trans., ,Austi, ii . 330; v..Reumont, Gesch. der Stadt Rom. iii . 2, 604; Broach, Gesch.
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des Kirchenstaates (1880), i . 350 . LEo XIL (Annibale della Genga), pope from 1823 to 1829, was born of a noble
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family, near Spoleto, on the 22nd of August 1760 . Educated at the Accademia dei Nobili ecclesiastici at Rome, he was ordained priest in 1783, and in 1790 attracted favourable attention by a tactful sermon commemorative of the emperor Joseph II .

In 1792

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Pius VI. made him his private secretary, in 1793 creating him titular archbishop of Tyre and despatching him to Lucerne as nuncio . In 1794 he was transferred to the nunciature at Cologne, but owing to the war had to make his residence in Augsburg . During the dozen or more years he spent in Germany he was entrusted with several honourable and difficult missions, which brought him into contact with the courts of
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Dresden,Vienna, Munich and
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Wurttemberg, as well as with
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Napoleon . It is, however, charged at one time during this period that his finances were disordered, and his private life not above suspicion . After the abolition of the States of the Church, he was treated by the French as a state prisoner, and lived for some years at the abbey of Monticelli, solacing himself with
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music and with
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bird-
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shooting, pastimes which he did not eschew even after his election as pope . In 1814 he was chosen to carry the pope's congratulations to Louis XVIII.; in 1816 he was created cardinal-priest of
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Santa Maria Maggiore, and appointed to the see of Sinigaglia, which he resigned in 1818 . In 182o Pius VII. gave him the distinguished
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post of cardinal vicar . In the conclave of 1823, in spite of the active opposition of France, he was elected pope by the zelanti on the 28th of September . His election had been facilitated because he was thought to be on the edge of the
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grave; but he unexpectedly rallied . His
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foreign policy, entrusted at first to Della Somaglia and then to the more able Bernetti, moved in general along lines laid down by Consalvi; and he negotiated certain concordats very advantageous to the papacy . Personally most frugal, Leo reduced taxes, made justice less costly, and was able to find
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money for certain public improvements; yet he
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left the finances more confused than he had found them, and even the elaborate jubilee of 1825 did not really mend matters . His domestic policy was one of extreme reaction .

He condemned the

Bible societies, and under Jesuit influence reorganized the educational
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system . Severe
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ghetto
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laws led many of the Jews to emigrate . He hunted down the Carbonari and the Freemasons; he took the strongest
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measures against
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political agitation in theatres . A well-nigh ubiquitous system of espionage, perhaps most fruitful when directed against official corruption, sapped the
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foundations of public confidence . Leo, temperamentally stern, hard-working in spite of bodily infirmity, died at Rome on the loth of
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February 18x9 . The
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news was received by the populace with unconcealed joy . He was succeeded by Pius VIII .

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