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URBAN VIII

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 791 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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URBAN VIII  . (Maffeo
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Barberini), pope from 1623 to 1644, was born in 1568, of a wealthy Florentine
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family . He early entered the prelacy, became prefect of Spoleto, twice
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nuncio to France, cardinal (16o6), and finally, on the 6th of August 1623, succeeded Gregory XV. as pope . Urban was vain, self-willed and extremely conscious of his position; he accepted the papacy chiefly as a temporal principality, and made it his first care to provide for its defence and to render it formidable . He built
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Castelfranco on the
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northern frontier; fortified the
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port of Civita Vecchia; and strengthened the Castel Sant' Angelo, equipping it with cannon made from the
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bronze of the Pantheon, an act of vandalism which the Romans punished by the
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epigram, " Quod non fecerunt barbari, fecerunt Barberini." He also established an
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arsenal and a factory of arms . But all this provision was to no purpose . The only territory gained during Urban's pontificate, the duchy of Urbino, the last addition to the papal states, was acquired by reversion (1631); and in his one war, with the duke of
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Parma, for the
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district of Castro, he met defeat and humiliation (1644) . The
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Thirty Years' War Urban professed to regard as waged for
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political, not for religious, ends . He therefore took counsel merely with his
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interest as a temporal prince, threw in his lot with France, supported the duke of
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Nevers in the Mantuan Succession, and, under stress of fear of Habsburg supremacy, suffered himself to be
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drawn into closer relations with the Protestants than beseemed his office, and incurred the reproach of rejoicing in the victories of heretics . Later, in keeping with his position, he opposed all concessions to the Protestants; but still showed himself so vacillating that the papacy ceased to be regarded as a serious political factor, and was entirely ignored in the final settlement of Westphalia, 1648 . Urban was the last pope to practise nepotism on a
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grand scale . He failed to found a princely house; but he enriched his family to an extent that astonished even the Romans .

Urban

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bore a hand in the condemnation of Galileo . He acknowledged the genius of the astronomer, and had not approved of the
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action of the Inquisition in 1616; but subsequently, believing himself to have been caricatured in the Dialogo, he. permitted the Inquisition to have its way and to compel an abjuration (1633) . Urban also denounced the doctrines of Jansen, 1644 (see
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JANSENISM) . He promulgated the famous bull In Coena Domini in its final form, 1627; published the latest revision of the Breviary, 1631; founded the College of the Propaganda for the
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education of missionaries, 1627; and accorded the title of " eminence " to the cardinals, 163o . Urban did much to embellish the city . Conspicuous among his
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works are the Barberini Palace, the College of the Propaganda, the Fountain of the
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Triton, and the baldachin of St Peter's . His
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hymns and poems, which have frequently been published, are evidence of his
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literary taste and ability . Urban died on the 29th of
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July 1644, and was succeeded by Innocent X . the French cardinals in Italy, he at length announced his intention of returning to France, avowedly to settle trouble between France and England . He took
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ship at Cometo on the 5th of September 1370, and, arriving at
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Avignon on the 24th of the same month, died on the 19th of December . Urban was serious and humble, opposed to all nepotism,
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simony, and secular pomp . He was himself of blameless morality and reformed many abuses in the
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curia .

He was honoured as a

saint immediately after his
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death, and beatified by
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Pius IX. in 187o . Urban's successor was Gregory XI . See H . J . Tomaseth, " Die
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Register u . Secretare Urbans V. u . Gregors XI." in Mitteilungen
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des Instituts fur osterreichische Geschichtsforschung (1898); Baluzius, Vitae Pap . Avenion., vol . 1 (Paris, 1693); L . Pastor,
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History of the Popes, vol . 1, trans. by F . I .

Antrobus (

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London, 1899) ; F . Gregorovius, Rome in the
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Middle Ages, vol . 6, trans. by Mrs G . W . Hamilton (London, 1900—2) ; J . P . Kirsch, Die Riickkehr der Papste Urban V. u . Gregor XI. von Avignon nach Rom (Paderborn, 1898) ; J . H . Albans, Actes anciens concernant le bienheureux Urbain V . (Paris, 1897) ; J . B .

Magnan, Histoire d' Urbain V . (2nd ed., Paris, 1863) ; H . J . Wurm, Cardinal

Albornoz (Paderborn, 1892); H . H . Milman, Latin
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Christianity, vol . 7 (London, 1896) ; J . B . Christophe, Histoire de la papaute pendant le XIVe'' siecle, vol . 2 (Paris, 1853) .

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