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Law of Guarantees

The Law of Guarantees (Italian: Legge delle guarentigie), sometimes also called the Law of Papal Guarantees,[1] was the name given to the law passed by the senate and chamber of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Italy, 13 May 1871, concerning the prerogatives of the Holy See, and the relations between state and church in the Kingdom of Italy. It guaranteed sovereign prerogatives to the pope, who had been deprived of the territory of the Papal States. The popes refused to accept the law, as it was enacted by a foreign government and could therefore be revoked at will, leaving the popes without a full claim to sovereign status. In response, the popes declared themselves prisoners of the Vatican. The ensuing Roman Question was not resolved until the Lateran Pacts of 1929.

Origins of the law edit

For a time, the most serious question that confronted Italy after 1870 was the hostility between Church and State.[1] The Italian government, which had declared that it entered Rome to safeguard the person of the Holy Father,[note 1] and which, in the very act of invading pontifical territory, had assured the people that the independence of the Holy See would remain inviolate,[note 2] felt obliged to secure in a legal and solemn way the executions of its aforesaid intention. It owed no less to its own Catholic subjects, and to Catholics the world over. Two ways were open to it for keeping its promise. It might call an international congress of all nations having a very large Catholic population, or it might pass a domestic Italian law.

A circular of the minister Emilio Visconti Venosta, addressed to all the powers, hinted at the former solution. But the lack of reaction by foreign Catholic governments to the occupation of Rome put an end to all thought of consulting them; and so a domestic law was passed. Before its adoption, however, Pope Pius IX, by a letter of his cardinal vicar, dated 2 March 1871, protested against the law "in which", he said, "it was no easy task to decide whether absurdity, cunning, or contempt played the largest part".

Provisions edit

 
Victor Emmanuel II, the first King of the united Italy

Parliament passed in 1871 the famous Law of Papal Guarantees, which proposed to solve the question on Cavour's principle of a free church in a free state.[2] The pope was declared an independent sovereign and, as such, was entitled to receive and to send ambassadors and to conduct diplomatic affairs without any interference from the Italian government. His territory, however, was limited to the district in Rome known as the "Leonine City", over which floated the Papal flag, and into which no Italian officer could enter without permission from the Papal authorities. The palaces, churches, museums, offices, villas, and gardens in the Leonine City were to be exempt from taxation, and the Papal government was to have free use of the Italian railway, postal, and telegraph systems. The church was guaranteed full freedom of self-government, and the old interference by the state in church affairs was declared terminated.[3]

The principal stipulations of the law may be summed up as follows:

  • the pope's person to be sacred and inviolable;[4]
  • insult or injury to the pope to be treated on a par with insult or injury to the king's person; discussion of religious matters to be absolutely free;[4]
  • royal honours to be paid to the pope; that he have the right to the customary guards;[4]
  • as an indemnity for the loss of his domains, as an annual sum in perpetuity, the pope was voted[3] 3,225,000 lire[note 3] to cover all the needs of the Holy See (College of Cardinals, Roman congregations, embassies, etc.) and the maintenance of church buildings;
  • the Lateran and Vatican palaces, as well as the Villa of Castel Gandolfo, to remain the property of the pope; these articles assure the pope and all engaged in the spiritual government of the Church, as well as the college of cardinals assembled in conclave, complete liberty of communication with the Catholic world, exempt them from all interference with their letters, papers, etc.;[4]
  • the clergy to have freedom of assembly;
  • the government to renounce the "Apostolic Legation" in Sicily, and the right of nomination to major benefices, with reservation, however, of the royal patronage; the bishops are not obliged to take the oath (of allegiance) on appointment;
  • the Exequatur to be maintained only for the major benefices (except in Rome, and in the suburbicarian sees) and for acts affecting the disposition of ecclesiastical property;
  • in spiritual matters no appeal to be allowed against ecclesiastical authority; the civil courts, however, to be competent to pass judgment on the juridical effects of ecclesiastical sentences. Provision to be made, by a future law, for the reorganization, conservation, and administration of all the church property in the kingdom.
  • the right to active and passive legation, and immunity of envoys accredited to the Holy See within Italian territory.[4]

Papal response edit

 
Pope Pius IX

The popes refused to recognized the fait accompli which was supported by the Law of Guarantees,[5] and refused in principle to recognize in the Italian government any right to grant them prerogatives, or to make laws for them, a position that lasted until the resolution of the Roman Question in 1929.[6]

Pius IX indignantly refused to accept the terms of the "sub-Alpine" Government, as he termed the House of Savoy, whom he regarded as the despoiler of "God's vicar." Parliament regularly voted the annuity from 1871 onward, but the popes never accepted it, as to do so would be to recognize the Kingdom of Italy as a legitimate government, which no pope from 1871 to 1929 was willing to do. Pius IX shut himself in his tiny domain and refused to leave it under any circumstances, regarding himself as the "Prisoner of the Vatican"; his successors to 1929 followed the policy and never set foot outside the Vatican once they were elected pope.[3]

Indeed, each of the "concessions" carried with it a special servitude, while later events proved that they were not intended to be seriously observed. In the Encyclical of 15 May following, the pope declared that no guarantees could secure him the liberty and independence necessary in the exercise of his power and authority. He renewed this protest at the consistory of 27 October, arguing that a law voted by two houses of Parliament could with equal ease be abrogated by them at will. Indeed, part of the programme of the "Left" party in the Italian Parliament in this era was to suppress the Law of Guarantees. Pius IX, moreover, was unwilling to accept formally the arrangements made concerning the relations of Church and State, especially the Exequatur and the administration of ecclesiastical property. Moreover, if, as he hoped, the occupation of Rome was to be only temporary, the acceptance of this law seemed useless. Doubtless, too, such acceptance on his part would have been interpreted as at least a tacit recognition of accomplished facts, as a renunciation of the temporal power, and the property which had been taken from the Holy See (e.g., the Quirinal Palace). The abandonment of the "Apostolic Legation" in Sicily, for eight centuries an apple of discord between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Sicily,[7] and the endowment granted the pope, were truly but slight compensation for all that had been taken from him. Consequently, neither Pius IX nor his successors ever touched the aforesaid annual endowment, preferring to depend on the offerings of the faithful throughout the Catholic world. It may be added that the endowment was not sufficient to meet the needs of the Church, nor with their multiplication could it be increased.

Non expedit edit

Non expedit (Latin: "It is not expedient") were the words with which the Holy See enjoined upon Italian Catholics the policy of abstention from the polls in parliamentary elections. The encyclical also forbade Italian Catholics from holding office under the Crown of Italy.[3] This policy was adopted after a period of uncertainty and of controversy which followed the Proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy (1861), and which was intensified by laws hostile to the Church and, especially, to the religious orders (1865–66). To this uncertainty the Holy Penitentiary put an end by its decree of 29 February 1868, in which, in the above words, it sanctioned the motto; "Neither elector nor elected". Until then there had been in the Italian Parliament a few eminent representatives of Catholic interests—Vito d'Ondes Reggio, Augusto Conti, Cesare Cantù, and others. The principal motive of this decree was that the oath taken by deputies might be interpreted as an approval of the spoliation of the Holy See, as Pius IX declared in an audience of 11 October 1874. A practical reason for it, also, was that, in view of the electoral law of that day, by which the electorate was reduced to 650,000, and as the Government manipulated the elections to suit its own purposes, it would have been hopeless to attempt to prevent the passage of anti-Catholic laws. On the other hand, the masses seemed unprepared for parliamentary government, and as, in the greater portion of Italy (Parma, Modena, Tuscany, the Pontifical States, and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies), nearly all sincere Catholics were partisans of the dispossessed princes, they were liable to be denounced as enemies of Italy; they would also have been at variance with the Catholics of Piedmont and of the provinces wrested from Austria, and this division would have further weakened the Catholic Parliamentary group.

As might be expected, this measure did not meet with universal approval; the so-called Moderates accused the Catholics of failing in their duty to society and to their country. In 1882, the suffrage having been extended, Pope Leo XIII took into serious consideration the partial abolition of the restrictions established by the Non Expedit, but nothing was actually done (cf. "Archiv für kathol. Kirchenrecht", 1904, p. 396). On the contrary, as many people came to the conclusion that the decree Non Expedit was not intended to be absolute, but was only an admonition made to apply upon one particular occasion, the Holy Office declared (30 Dec., 1886) that the rule in question implied a grave precept, and emphasis was given to this fact on several subsequent occasions (Letter of Leo XIII to the Cardinal Secretary of State, 14 May 1895; Congregation of Extraordinary Affairs, 27 January 1902; Pius X, Motu proprio, 18 Dec., 1903). Later Pope Pius X, by his encyclical "Il fermo proposito" (11 June 1905) modified the Non Expedit, declaring that, when there was question of preventing the election of a "subversive" candidate, the bishops could ask for a suspension of the rule, and invite the Catholics to hold themselves in readiness to go to the polls.

Legal status of the Holy See under the Law of Guarantees edit

There was occasional controversy between writers on international law and on Italian ecclesiastical legislation over various matters connected with this law: whether in the eyes of the Italian government the pope is a sovereign, whether he enjoys the privilege of extraterritoriality (not expressly recognized to him, though granted to foreign embassies to the Holy See), etc. As far as the Holy See was concerned, these controversies had no meaning; it had never ceased to assert its sovereign status and corresponding rights.

Some writers saw the Law of Guarantees as constitutive of the legal personality of the Holy See after 1870, conferring a legal personality subject to unilateral abrogation by the Kingdom of Italy. Other writers viewed the Law of Guarantees as a declarative instrument of the extant sovereignty of the Holy See.[8]

Civil effects in Italian law edit

The question arose as to whether this untouched endowment would be confiscated by the Italian treasury at the end of every five years, as is usual with other public debts of the Kingdom of Italy. The Civiltà Cattolica maintained that it could not be confiscated, but the Italian courts decided differently. They reasoned that since Pius IX had not accepted the endowment, he had never come into possession of it, and therefore the funds were not actually being confiscated but still belonged to the Italian State. Pius IX expressly rejected this income on 13 November 1872.

Resolution of the Roman Question edit

 
Territory of Vatican City State, established by the Lateran Accords

After the papal rejection of the Law of Guarantees, the popes existed in a self-imposed state as "Prisoner of the Vatican" in diplomatic protestation of the Kingdom of Italy's claims to the Papal States. The popes refused to leave the Vatican.[5] At first the situation appeared embarrassing or even dangerous to Italians, who feared that France or Austria might champion the cause of the Pope and compel Italy to evacuate Rome. But the defeat of these two Catholic nations by Prussia and, especially, the establishment of an anticlerical Republic in France, made such an event only a remote possibility, and the "Prisoner of the Vatican" became a polite fiction. As time went on there began a rapprochement between the Vatican and the Quirinal,[note 4] though, in theory, the successors of Pius IX continued to advocate the restoration of their temporal power.[9] The situation was finally resolved in 1929 by the Lateran Pacts which created the State of Vatican City as an independent sovereign state to guarantee the political and legal independence of the pope from the Italian government.[6] There is a treaty as well as a concordat, which together form a juridical whole.[10]

Legacy edit

Although in principle the popes refused to accept the Law of Guarantees, in practice they tacitly accepted some of its provisions.[11] They allowed clergy to accept revenues from the Italian state deriving from their benefices.[11] The popes began appointing all Italian bishops.[11] Previously, various Italian civil authorities had had the right of presentation, but the Law of Guarantees had given the right of free conferral back to the pope.[11] Since the Italian territories had more bishoprics than in any other part of Christendom,[11] by 1870 Victor Emmanuel had the right to present 237 bishops for appointment,[11] more than any other king in Christian history.[11] Such immense powers of appointment would now be exercised by the popes directly, which changed the relationship between the papacy and the Italian episcopate and shifted views on who should appoint bishops in general.[11] A new and growing assumption was that it was for the pope to directly appoint bishops.[11] The loss of temporal power greatly enhanced papal control over the church in Italy.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Schapiro, European History, pg. 446.
  2. ^ Schapiro, European History, pp. 446–447.
  3. ^ a b c d Schapiro, Modern History, pg. 447.
  4. ^ a b c d e Cismas, Religious Actors and International Law, pg. 162, footnote #45.
  5. ^ a b Metz, What is Canon Law?, pg. 130.
  6. ^ a b Eric O. Hanson, The Catholic Church in World Politics (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1987) 43.
  7. ^ Sentis, "La Monarchia Sicula", Freiburg im Br., 1864
  8. ^ Cismas, Religious Actors and International Law, pg. 162.
  9. ^ Schapiro, Modern History, pp. 447-448.
  10. ^ Metz, What is Canon Law?, pg. 131.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Duffy, Saints & Sinners, pg. 233.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Visconti-Venosta, circular of 7 September 1870; the autograph letter of Victor Emmanuel to Pius IX, dated 29 Aug., received 10 Sept.; again the king's answer to the Roman deputation which brought him the result of the plebiscite
  2. ^ General Cadorna's proclamation at Terni, 11 Sept.
  3. ^ In 1913, roughly US$622,425 or GB£127,933 (cf. Catholic Encyclopedia). In 1921, roughly US$645,000 (cf. Schapiro, Modern History, pg. 447).
  4. ^ The Vatican is the palace of the pope, and the Quirinal was the palace of the king (originally the summer residence of the pope), but they are used figuratively to mean the Papacy and Italian government respectively (cf. Schapiro, Modern History, p. 447 footnote 1 & p. 448 footnote 1).

Bibliography edit

  • Cismas, Ioana. Religious Actors and International Law (New York: Oxford University Press, 2014). ISBN 9780198712824
  • Duffy, Eamon. Saints & Sinners: A History of the Popes (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997). ISBN 0300073321
  • Hanson, Eric O. The Catholic Church in World Politics (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1987).
  • Metz, René. What is Canon Law? (New York: Hawthorn Books/Publishers, 1960). Michael Derrick (translator of the French original).
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainUmberto Benigni (1913). "Law of Guarantees". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. GIOBBIO, Lezioni di diplomazia ecclesiastica (Rome, 1899), I, passim; CASTELLARI, La Santa Sede (Milan, 1903), I, 108 sqq.; II, 488–608; GEFFCKEN, Die völkerrechtliche Stellung des Papsttums (Rome, 1887), 172; Gazetta Ufficiale, series II, no. 214; Acta Pii IX (Rome, s. d.), pt. I, vol. V, 286 sqq., 306 sqq., 352 sqq.; Acta Sanctœ Sedis (Rome, 1870–1871), VI.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainUmberto Benigni (1913). "Non Expedit". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Civiltà Cattolica (Rome), ser. VIII, IV, 652; VI, 51; VIII, 653; VIII, 3l62; Questioni politico-religiose (Rome, 1905).
  •   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain: Modern and Contemporary European History (1815–1921) by J. Salwyn Schapiro, Ph.D. (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1921).

guarantees, italian, legge, delle, guarentigie, sometimes, also, called, papal, guarantees, name, given, passed, senate, chamber, parliament, kingdom, italy, 1871, concerning, prerogatives, holy, relations, between, state, church, kingdom, italy, guaranteed, s. The Law of Guarantees Italian Legge delle guarentigie sometimes also called the Law of Papal Guarantees 1 was the name given to the law passed by the senate and chamber of the Parliament of the Kingdom of Italy 13 May 1871 concerning the prerogatives of the Holy See and the relations between state and church in the Kingdom of Italy It guaranteed sovereign prerogatives to the pope who had been deprived of the territory of the Papal States The popes refused to accept the law as it was enacted by a foreign government and could therefore be revoked at will leaving the popes without a full claim to sovereign status In response the popes declared themselves prisoners of the Vatican The ensuing Roman Question was not resolved until the Lateran Pacts of 1929 Contents 1 Origins of the law 2 Provisions 3 Papal response 3 1 Non expedit 4 Legal status of the Holy See under the Law of Guarantees 4 1 Civil effects in Italian law 5 Resolution of the Roman Question 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 BibliographyOrigins of the law editFurther information Capture of Rome For a time the most serious question that confronted Italy after 1870 was the hostility between Church and State 1 The Italian government which had declared that it entered Rome to safeguard the person of the Holy Father note 1 and which in the very act of invading pontifical territory had assured the people that the independence of the Holy See would remain inviolate note 2 felt obliged to secure in a legal and solemn way the executions of its aforesaid intention It owed no less to its own Catholic subjects and to Catholics the world over Two ways were open to it for keeping its promise It might call an international congress of all nations having a very large Catholic population or it might pass a domestic Italian law A circular of the minister Emilio Visconti Venosta addressed to all the powers hinted at the former solution But the lack of reaction by foreign Catholic governments to the occupation of Rome put an end to all thought of consulting them and so a domestic law was passed Before its adoption however Pope Pius IX by a letter of his cardinal vicar dated 2 March 1871 protested against the law in which he said it was no easy task to decide whether absurdity cunning or contempt played the largest part Provisions edit nbsp Victor Emmanuel II the first King of the united ItalyParliament passed in 1871 the famous Law of Papal Guarantees which proposed to solve the question on Cavour s principle of a free church in a free state 2 The pope was declared an independent sovereign and as such was entitled to receive and to send ambassadors and to conduct diplomatic affairs without any interference from the Italian government His territory however was limited to the district in Rome known as the Leonine City over which floated the Papal flag and into which no Italian officer could enter without permission from the Papal authorities The palaces churches museums offices villas and gardens in the Leonine City were to be exempt from taxation and the Papal government was to have free use of the Italian railway postal and telegraph systems The church was guaranteed full freedom of self government and the old interference by the state in church affairs was declared terminated 3 The principal stipulations of the law may be summed up as follows the pope s person to be sacred and inviolable 4 insult or injury to the pope to be treated on a par with insult or injury to the king s person discussion of religious matters to be absolutely free 4 royal honours to be paid to the pope that he have the right to the customary guards 4 as an indemnity for the loss of his domains as an annual sum in perpetuity the pope was voted 3 3 225 000 lire note 3 to cover all the needs of the Holy See College of Cardinals Roman congregations embassies etc and the maintenance of church buildings the Lateran and Vatican palaces as well as the Villa of Castel Gandolfo to remain the property of the pope these articles assure the pope and all engaged in the spiritual government of the Church as well as the college of cardinals assembled in conclave complete liberty of communication with the Catholic world exempt them from all interference with their letters papers etc 4 the clergy to have freedom of assembly the government to renounce the Apostolic Legation in Sicily and the right of nomination to major benefices with reservation however of the royal patronage the bishops are not obliged to take the oath of allegiance on appointment the Exequatur to be maintained only for the major benefices except in Rome and in the suburbicarian sees and for acts affecting the disposition of ecclesiastical property in spiritual matters no appeal to be allowed against ecclesiastical authority the civil courts however to be competent to pass judgment on the juridical effects of ecclesiastical sentences Provision to be made by a future law for the reorganization conservation and administration of all the church property in the kingdom the right to active and passive legation and immunity of envoys accredited to the Holy See within Italian territory 4 Papal response editMain articles Etsi multa and Prisoner in the Vatican nbsp Pope Pius IXThe popes refused to recognized the fait accompli which was supported by the Law of Guarantees 5 and refused in principle to recognize in the Italian government any right to grant them prerogatives or to make laws for them a position that lasted until the resolution of the Roman Question in 1929 6 Pius IX indignantly refused to accept the terms of the sub Alpine Government as he termed the House of Savoy whom he regarded as the despoiler of God s vicar Parliament regularly voted the annuity from 1871 onward but the popes never accepted it as to do so would be to recognize the Kingdom of Italy as a legitimate government which no pope from 1871 to 1929 was willing to do Pius IX shut himself in his tiny domain and refused to leave it under any circumstances regarding himself as the Prisoner of the Vatican his successors to 1929 followed the policy and never set foot outside the Vatican once they were elected pope 3 Indeed each of the concessions carried with it a special servitude while later events proved that they were not intended to be seriously observed In the Encyclical of 15 May following the pope declared that no guarantees could secure him the liberty and independence necessary in the exercise of his power and authority He renewed this protest at the consistory of 27 October arguing that a law voted by two houses of Parliament could with equal ease be abrogated by them at will Indeed part of the programme of the Left party in the Italian Parliament in this era was to suppress the Law of Guarantees Pius IX moreover was unwilling to accept formally the arrangements made concerning the relations of Church and State especially the Exequatur and the administration of ecclesiastical property Moreover if as he hoped the occupation of Rome was to be only temporary the acceptance of this law seemed useless Doubtless too such acceptance on his part would have been interpreted as at least a tacit recognition of accomplished facts as a renunciation of the temporal power and the property which had been taken from the Holy See e g the Quirinal Palace The abandonment of the Apostolic Legation in Sicily for eight centuries an apple of discord between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Sicily 7 and the endowment granted the pope were truly but slight compensation for all that had been taken from him Consequently neither Pius IX nor his successors ever touched the aforesaid annual endowment preferring to depend on the offerings of the faithful throughout the Catholic world It may be added that the endowment was not sufficient to meet the needs of the Church nor with their multiplication could it be increased Non expedit edit Non expedit Latin It is not expedient were the words with which the Holy See enjoined upon Italian Catholics the policy of abstention from the polls in parliamentary elections The encyclical also forbade Italian Catholics from holding office under the Crown of Italy 3 This policy was adopted after a period of uncertainty and of controversy which followed the Proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy 1861 and which was intensified by laws hostile to the Church and especially to the religious orders 1865 66 To this uncertainty the Holy Penitentiary put an end by its decree of 29 February 1868 in which in the above words it sanctioned the motto Neither elector nor elected Until then there had been in the Italian Parliament a few eminent representatives of Catholic interests Vito d Ondes Reggio Augusto Conti Cesare Cantu and others The principal motive of this decree was that the oath taken by deputies might be interpreted as an approval of the spoliation of the Holy See as Pius IX declared in an audience of 11 October 1874 A practical reason for it also was that in view of the electoral law of that day by which the electorate was reduced to 650 000 and as the Government manipulated the elections to suit its own purposes it would have been hopeless to attempt to prevent the passage of anti Catholic laws On the other hand the masses seemed unprepared for parliamentary government and as in the greater portion of Italy Parma Modena Tuscany the Pontifical States and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies nearly all sincere Catholics were partisans of the dispossessed princes they were liable to be denounced as enemies of Italy they would also have been at variance with the Catholics of Piedmont and of the provinces wrested from Austria and this division would have further weakened the Catholic Parliamentary group As might be expected this measure did not meet with universal approval the so called Moderates accused the Catholics of failing in their duty to society and to their country In 1882 the suffrage having been extended Pope Leo XIII took into serious consideration the partial abolition of the restrictions established by the Non Expedit but nothing was actually done cf Archiv fur kathol Kirchenrecht 1904 p 396 On the contrary as many people came to the conclusion that the decree Non Expedit was not intended to be absolute but was only an admonition made to apply upon one particular occasion the Holy Office declared 30 Dec 1886 that the rule in question implied a grave precept and emphasis was given to this fact on several subsequent occasions Letter of Leo XIII to the Cardinal Secretary of State 14 May 1895 Congregation of Extraordinary Affairs 27 January 1902 Pius X Motu proprio 18 Dec 1903 Later Pope Pius X by his encyclical Il fermo proposito 11 June 1905 modified the Non Expedit declaring that when there was question of preventing the election of a subversive candidate the bishops could ask for a suspension of the rule and invite the Catholics to hold themselves in readiness to go to the polls Legal status of the Holy See under the Law of Guarantees editSee also Legal status of the Holy See There was occasional controversy between writers on international law and on Italian ecclesiastical legislation over various matters connected with this law whether in the eyes of the Italian government the pope is a sovereign whether he enjoys the privilege of extraterritoriality not expressly recognized to him though granted to foreign embassies to the Holy See etc As far as the Holy See was concerned these controversies had no meaning it had never ceased to assert its sovereign status and corresponding rights Some writers saw the Law of Guarantees as constitutive of the legal personality of the Holy See after 1870 conferring a legal personality subject to unilateral abrogation by the Kingdom of Italy Other writers viewed the Law of Guarantees as a declarative instrument of the extant sovereignty of the Holy See 8 Civil effects in Italian law edit The question arose as to whether this untouched endowment would be confiscated by the Italian treasury at the end of every five years as is usual with other public debts of the Kingdom of Italy The Civilta Cattolica maintained that it could not be confiscated but the Italian courts decided differently They reasoned that since Pius IX had not accepted the endowment he had never come into possession of it and therefore the funds were not actually being confiscated but still belonged to the Italian State Pius IX expressly rejected this income on 13 November 1872 Resolution of the Roman Question edit nbsp Territory of Vatican City State established by the Lateran AccordsMain articles Roman Question and Lateran Treaty After the papal rejection of the Law of Guarantees the popes existed in a self imposed state as Prisoner of the Vatican in diplomatic protestation of the Kingdom of Italy s claims to the Papal States The popes refused to leave the Vatican 5 At first the situation appeared embarrassing or even dangerous to Italians who feared that France or Austria might champion the cause of the Pope and compel Italy to evacuate Rome But the defeat of these two Catholic nations by Prussia and especially the establishment of an anticlerical Republic in France made such an event only a remote possibility and the Prisoner of the Vatican became a polite fiction As time went on there began a rapprochement between the Vatican and the Quirinal note 4 though in theory the successors of Pius IX continued to advocate the restoration of their temporal power 9 The situation was finally resolved in 1929 by the Lateran Pacts which created the State of Vatican City as an independent sovereign state to guarantee the political and legal independence of the pope from the Italian government 6 There is a treaty as well as a concordat which together form a juridical whole 10 Legacy editAlthough in principle the popes refused to accept the Law of Guarantees in practice they tacitly accepted some of its provisions 11 They allowed clergy to accept revenues from the Italian state deriving from their benefices 11 The popes began appointing all Italian bishops 11 Previously various Italian civil authorities had had the right of presentation but the Law of Guarantees had given the right of free conferral back to the pope 11 Since the Italian territories had more bishoprics than in any other part of Christendom 11 by 1870 Victor Emmanuel had the right to present 237 bishops for appointment 11 more than any other king in Christian history 11 Such immense powers of appointment would now be exercised by the popes directly which changed the relationship between the papacy and the Italian episcopate and shifted views on who should appoint bishops in general 11 A new and growing assumption was that it was for the pope to directly appoint bishops 11 The loss of temporal power greatly enhanced papal control over the church in Italy 11 See also editConcordat Foreign relations of the Holy See Lateran treaty Legal status of the Holy See Risorgimento Roman QuestionReferences edit a b Schapiro European History pg 446 Schapiro European History pp 446 447 a b c d Schapiro Modern History pg 447 a b c d e Cismas Religious Actors and International Law pg 162 footnote 45 a b Metz What is Canon Law pg 130 a b Eric O Hanson The Catholic Church in World Politics Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1987 43 Sentis La Monarchia Sicula Freiburg im Br 1864 Cismas Religious Actors and International Law pg 162 Schapiro Modern History pp 447 448 Metz What is Canon Law pg 131 a b c d e f g h i j Duffy Saints amp Sinners pg 233 Notes edit Visconti Venosta circular of 7 September 1870 the autograph letter of Victor Emmanuel to Pius IX dated 29 Aug received 10 Sept again the king s answer to the Roman deputation which brought him the result of the plebiscite General Cadorna s proclamation at Terni 11 Sept In 1913 roughly US 622 425 or GB 127 933 cf Catholic Encyclopedia In 1921 roughly US 645 000 cf Schapiro Modern History pg 447 The Vatican is the palace of the pope and the Quirinal was the palace of the king originally the summer residence of the pope but they are used figuratively to mean the Papacy and Italian government respectively cf Schapiro Modern History p 447 footnote 1 amp p 448 footnote 1 Bibliography edit Cismas Ioana Religious Actors and International Law New York Oxford University Press 2014 ISBN 9780198712824 Duffy Eamon Saints amp Sinners A History of the Popes New Haven Yale University Press 1997 ISBN 0300073321 Hanson Eric O The Catholic Church in World Politics Princeton NJ Princeton University Press 1987 Metz Rene What is Canon Law New York Hawthorn Books Publishers 1960 Michael Derrick translator of the French original nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Umberto Benigni 1913 Law of Guarantees In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company GIOBBIO Lezioni di diplomazia ecclesiastica Rome 1899 I passim CASTELLARI La Santa Sede Milan 1903 I 108 sqq II 488 608 GEFFCKEN Die volkerrechtliche Stellung des Papsttums Rome 1887 172 Gazetta Ufficiale series II no 214 Acta Pii IX Rome s d pt I vol V 286 sqq 306 sqq 352 sqq Acta Sanctœ Sedis Rome 1870 1871 VI nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Umberto Benigni 1913 Non Expedit In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Civilta Cattolica Rome ser VIII IV 652 VI 51 VIII 653 VIII 3l62 Questioni politico religiose Rome 1905 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Modern and Contemporary European History 1815 1921 by J Salwyn Schapiro Ph D Houghton Mifflin Company 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Law of Guarantees amp oldid 1180584461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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