fbpx
Wikipedia

Pope Leo XIII

Pope Leo XIII (Italian: Leone XIII; born Gioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi Pecci;[b] 2 March 1810 – 20 July 1903) was head of the Catholic Church from 20 February 1878 to his death in July 1903. Living until the age of 93, he was the oldest pope holding office, and the second-longest-lived pope in history after Benedict XVI as pope emeritus. He also had the fourth-longest reign of any pope, behind those of St. Peter, Pius IX (his immediate predecessor) and John Paul II.


Leo XIII
Bishop of Rome
Official photograph, 1898[a]
ChurchCatholic Church
Papacy began20 February 1878
Papacy ended20 July 1903
PredecessorPius IX
SuccessorPius X
Orders
Ordination31 December 1837
by Carlo Odescalchi
Consecration19 February 1843
by Luigi Lambruschini
Created cardinal19 December 1853
by Pius IX
Personal details
Born
Gioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi Pecci

2 March 1810
Died20 July 1903(1903-07-20) (aged 93)
Apostolic Palace, Rome, Kingdom of Italy (now Vatican City)
Previous post(s)
MottoLumen in coelo[1] (Light in Heaven)
Signature
Coat of arms
Other popes named Leo
Papal styles of
Pope Leo XIII
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious styleHoly Father
Posthumous styleNone
Ordination history of
Pope Leo XIII
History
Priestly ordination
Ordained byCarlo Odescalchi
Date31 December 1837
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorLuigi Lambruschini
Co-consecratorsFabio Maria Asquini
Giuseppe Maria Castellani
Date19 February 1843
Cardinalate
Elevated byPius IX
Date19 December 1853
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Pope Leo XIII as principal consecrator
Antonio Briganti19 November 1871
Carmelo Pascucci19 November 1871
Carlo Laurenzi24 June 1877
Edoardo Borromeo19 May 1878
Francesco Latoni1 June 1879
Jean Baptiste François Pitra1 June 1879
Bartholomew Woodlock1 June 1879
Agostino Bausa24 March 1889
Giuseppe Antonio Ermenegildo Prisco29 May 1898

He is well known for his intellectualism and his attempts to define the position of the Catholic Church with regard to modern thinking. In his famous 1891 encyclical Rerum novarum, Pope Leo outlined the rights of workers to a fair wage, safe working conditions, and the formation of trade unions, while affirming the rights of property and free enterprise, opposing both socialism and laissez-faire capitalism. With that encyclical, he became popularly titled as the "Social Pope" and the "Pope of the Workers", also having created the foundations for modern thinking in the church's social doctrine, influencing the thoughts of his successors. He influenced Mariology of the Catholic Church and promoted both the rosary and the scapular. Upon his election, he immediately sought to revive Thomism, the theology of Thomas Aquinas, desiring to refer to it as the official theological and philosophical foundation for the Catholic Church. As a result, he sponsored the Editio Leonina in 1879.

Leo XIII is particularly remembered for his belief that pastoral activity in political sociology was also a vital mission of the church as a vehicle of social justice and maintaining the rights and dignities of the human person. Leo XIII issued a record of eleven papal encyclicals on the rosary, earning him the title of the "Rosary Pope". In addition, he approved two new Marian scapulars and was the first pope to fully embrace the concept of Mary as Mediatrix. He was the first pope never to have held any control over the Papal States, which had been dissolved by 1870. Similarly, many of his policies were oriented towards mitigating the loss of the Papal States in an attempt to overcome the loss of temporal power, but nonetheless continuing the Roman Question.

After his death in 1903, he was buried in the grottos of St. Peter's Basilica before his remains were later transferred in 1924 to the Basilica of Saint John Lateran.

Early life and education, 1810–1836

 
 
Count and Countess Pecci, parents
 
The house in Carpineto Romano in which the Pecci brothers grew up

Born in Carpineto Romano, near Rome, he was the sixth of the seven sons of Count Ludovico Pecci (1767–1833) and his wife, Anna Francesca Prosperi Buzzi (1773–1824).[2] His brothers included Giuseppe and Giovanni Battista Pecci. Until 1818, he lived at home with his family "in which religion counted as the highest grace on earth, as through her, salvation can be earned for all eternity."[3] Together with Giuseppe, he studied in the Jesuit College in Viterbo until 1824.[4] He enjoyed Latin and was known to have written his own Latin poems at the age of eleven.

His siblings were:[5]

  • Carlo (1793–1879)
  • Anna Maria (1798–1870)
  • Caterina (1800–1867)
  • Giovanni Battista (1802–1881)
  • Giuseppe (1807–1890)
  • Fernando (1813–1830)

In 1824, he and Giuseppe were called to Rome, where their mother was dying. Count Pecci wanted his children near him after the loss of his wife and so they stayed with him in Rome and attended the Jesuit Collegium Romanum.

In 1828, the 18-year-old Vincenzo decided in favour of secular clergy, and Giuseppe entered the Jesuit order.[6] Vincenzo studied at the Academia dei Nobili, mainly diplomacy and law. In 1834, he gave a student presentation, attended by several cardinals, on papal judgments. For his presentation, he received awards for academic excellence and gained the attention of Vatican officials.[7] Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Lambruschini introduced him to Vatican congregations. During a cholera epidemic in Rome, he assisted Cardinal Sala in his duties as overseer of all the city hospitals.[8] In 1836, he received his doctorate in theology and doctorates of civil and Canon Law in Rome.

Provincial administrator, 1837–1843

On 14 February 1837, Pope Gregory XVI appointed the 27-year-old Pecci as personal prelate even before he was ordained a priest on 31 December 1837 by the Vicar of Rome, Cardinal Carlo Odescalchi. He celebrated his first Mass with his priest brother Giuseppe.[9] Shortly thereafter, Gregory XVI appointed Pecci as legate (provincial administrator) to Benevento, the smallest papal province, with a population of about 20,000.[8]

The main problems facing Pecci were a decaying local economy, insecurity from widespread bandits, and pervasive Mafia or Camorra structures, which were often allied with aristocratic families. Pecci arrested the most powerful aristocrat in Benevento and his troops captured others, who were either killed or imprisoned by him. With public order restored, he turned to the economy and a reform of the tax system to stimulate trade with the neighboring provinces.[10]

Pecci was first destined for Spoleto, a province of 100,000. On 17 July 1841, he was sent to Perugia with 200,000 inhabitants.[8] His immediate concern was to prepare the province for a papal visitation in the same year. Pope Gregory XVI visited hospitals and educational institutions for several days, asking for advice and listing questions. The fight against corruption continued in Perugia, where Pecci investigated several incidents. When it was claimed that a bakery was selling bread below the prescribed pound weight, he personally went there, had all bread weighed and confiscated it if below legal weight. The confiscated bread was distributed to the poor.[11]

Nuncio to Belgium, 1843

 
Archbishop Pecci as Nuncio in Brussels

In 1843, Pecci, at only 33, was appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium,[12] a position that guaranteed the cardinal's hat after completion of the tour.

On 27 April 1843, Pope Gregory XVI appointed Pecci Archbishop and asked his Cardinal Secretary of State Lambruschini to consecrate him.[12] Pecci developed excellent relations with the royal family and used the location to visit neighboring Germany, where he was particularly interested in the architectural completion of the Cologne Cathedral.

In 1844, upon his initiative, a Belgian College in Rome was opened; 102 years later, in 1946, the future Pope John Paul II would begin his Roman studies there. Pecci spent several weeks in England with Bishop Nicholas Wiseman, carefully reviewing the condition of the Catholic Church in that country.[13]

In Belgium, the school question was sharply debated between the Catholic majority and the liberal minority. Pecci encouraged the struggle for Catholic schools, but he was able to win the good will of the Court not only of the pious Queen Louise but also of King Leopold I, who was strongly liberal in his views. The new nuncio succeeded in uniting Catholics. At the end of his mission, the King granted him the Grand Cordon in the Order of Leopold.[14]

Archbishop-Bishop of Perugia, 1846–1878

Papal assistant

 
Archbishop Pecci enters Perugia in 1846.

In 1843, Pecci had been named papal assistant. From 1846 to 1877, he was considered a popular and successful Archbishop-Bishop of Perugia. In 1847, after Pope Pius IX granted unlimited freedom for the press in the Papal States,[15] Pecci, who had been highly popular in the first years of his episcopate, became the object of attacks in the media and at his residence.[16] In 1848, revolutionary movements developed throughout Western Europe, including France, Germany and Italy. Austrian, French and Spanish troops reversed the revolutionary gains but at a price for Pecci and the Catholic Church, who could not regain their former popularity.

Provincial council

Pecci called a provincial council in 1849 to reform the religious life in his dioceses in Spoleto and it was in this council that the need for a Syllabus of Errors was discussed.[17][18] He invested in enlarging the seminary for future priests and in hiring new and prominent professors, preferably Thomists. He called on his brother Giuseppe Pecci, a noted Thomist scholar, to resign his professorship in Rome and to teach in Perugia instead.[19] His own residence was next to the seminary, which facilitated his daily contacts with the students.

Charitable activities

 
Archbishop Pecci aids the poor in Perugia.

Pecci developed several activities[when?] in support of Catholic charities. He founded homeless shelters for boys, girls and elderly women. Throughout his dioceses, he opened branches of a Bank, Monte di Pietà, which focused on low-income people and provided low-interest loans.[20] He created soup kitchens, which were run by the Capuchins. Upon his elevation to the cardinalate in late 1853, and in light of continuing earthquakes and floods, he donated all resources for the festivities of his elevation to the victims. Much of the public attention turned on the conflict between the Papal States and Italian nationalism, which aimed at the Papal States' annihilation to achieve the Unification of Italy.

Cardinalate

In the consistory of 19 December 1853, he was elevated to the College of Cardinals, as Cardinal-Priest of S. Crisogono. Pope Gregory XVI originally intended to name him as a cardinal however, his death in 1846 put pause to that idea while the events that characterized the beginning of the papacy of Pius IX further postponed the idea of Pecci's elevation. By the time that Gregory XVI died, Leopold II repeatedly asked that Pecci be named as a cardinal.[21] While Pius IX strongly desired having Pecci as close to Rome as possible, and repeatedly offered him a suburbicarian see, Pecci continually refused due to his preference for Perugia, which is alleged to not be in accord with the wishes of Cardinal Antonelli, a noted opponent of Pecci. Further untrue are the allegations that Pius IX deliberately sent him to Perugia as a way of exiling him from Rome simply because Pecci's views were perceived to be liberalistic and conciliatory, as opposed to the conservatism of the papal court.[21]

Allegedly, Pecci had been a cardinal reserved "in pectore" by Gregory XVI in the consistory of 19 January 1846, with the pope's death just over four months later invalidating the appointment since his name was never actually revealed publicly.[5]

Defending the papacy

Pecci defended the papacy and its claims. When Italian authorities expropriated convents and monasteries of Catholic orders, turning them into administration or military buildings, Pecci protested but acted moderately. When the Italian state took over Catholic schools, Pecci, fearing for his theological seminary, simply added all secular topics from other schools and opened the seminary to non-theologians.[22] The new government also levied taxes on the Catholic Church and issued legislation[when?] according to which all episcopal or papal utterances were to be approved by the government before their publication.[23]

Organizing the First Vatican Council

On 8 December 1869, an ecumenical council, which became known as the First Vatican Council, was to take place in the Vatican per Pope Pius IX. Pecci was likely well informed since the Pope named his brother Giuseppe to help prepare the event.

During the 1870s, in his last years in Perugia, Pecci addressed the role of the church in modern society several times, defining the church as the mother of material civilization because it upheld human dignity of working people, opposed the excesses of industrialization and developed large-scale charities for the needy.[24]

In August 1877, on the death of Cardinal Filippo de Angelis, Pope Pius IX appointed him Camerlengo, which required him to reside in Rome.[25] Reportedly, Pius IX is alleged to have said to Pecci: "Monsignor, I have decided to summon you to the Senate of the Church. I feel sure this will be the first act of my pontificate that you will not feel called upon to criticize". These comments were reported to have been said due to the stories that Pecci and Pius IX had a mutual animosity for each other and disagreed with each other in terms of policy, however, this purported animosity has never been proven. It was further alleged that by this stage Pecci desired a change of scenery from Perugia and hoped for either the bishopric of Albano or the position of datary of the Apostolic Dataria. It has also been said that Pecci was reportedly in line to succeed Cardinal Alessandro Barnabò as the prefect for Propaganda Fide, however, it was stymied by his opponent, Cardinal Antonelli.[5]

Papacy, 1878–1903

Election

 
Depiction of Leo XIII's papal coronation – image c. 1900

Pope Pius IX died on 7 February 1878,[25] and during his closing years the liberal press had often insinuated that the Kingdom of Italy should take a hand in the conclave and occupy the Vatican.[citation needed] However the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) and the sudden death of King Victor Emmanuel II (9 January 1878) distracted the government's attention.

In the conclave, the cardinals faced varied questions and discussed issues like church–state relations in Europe, specifically Italy; divisions in the church and the status of the First Vatican Council. It was also debated that the conclave be moved elsewhere, but Pecci decided otherwise in his capacity as the camerlengo. On 18 February 1878, the conclave assembled in Rome. Cardinal Pecci was elected on the third ballot and chose the name Leo XIII.[25] He was crowned on 3 March 1878.

During the conclave, he secured his election on the third scrutiny with 44 out of 61 votes, more than the requisite two-thirds majority. While the 1878 conclave was characterized by fewer political influences than in previous conclaves due to a variety of European political crises, it was generally believed that the long papacy of the conservative Pius IX led many of the cardinals to vote for Pecci due to his relatively young age, added to the fact that his health created expectations that his papacy would be somewhat brief.[26] Following the conclave, John Henry Newman is reported to have said, "In the successor of Pius I recognize a depth of thought, a tenderness of heart, a winning simplicity, and a power answering to the name of Leo, which prevent me from lamenting that Pius is no longer here".[26] In the conclave, Pecci was perceived as the main "papabile" candidate however, Cardinals Flavio Chigi and Tommaso Maria Martinelli were also considered as potential candidates. But some cardinals who opposed Pecci, and were alarmed at the rising votes he was securing, banded together to cast their ballots for Cardinal Alessandro Franchi, however, Franchi secured no votes in the final ballot that saw Pecci duly elected. Allegedly, those who were dedicated to thwarting his election were Cardinals Oreglia, Giannelli, Chigi, Lorenzo Ilarione Randi, Sacconi, Monaco, Amat, and Franzelin. It was also suggested that, before his death, Pius IX heavily favored Cardinal Bilio to succeed him, however, while many of the cardinals created by the late pope intended to vote for him to honor the man that elevated them in the first place, they feared that voting for an ultra-conservative could potentially evoke a veto from one of the European powers and stall the election more than was necessary. To that end, there had been early talks about Austria possibly vetoing Bilio however, this never occurred.[26] Before the conclave, Cardinals Domenico Bartolini, Monaco, Bilio, Manning, Nina, and Franchi (proposed by Pecci's opponents) all agreed on supporting Pecci's candidacy, also determining that the next pope needed to be an Italian. Both Manning and Edward Henry Howard agreed to persuade the foreign cardinals to back Pecci's candidacy.[27][26]

Upon his election, he announced that he would assume the name "Leo" in memory of Pope Leo XII due to his admiration for the late pope's interest in education and his conciliatory attitude toward foreign governments.[27] When asked what name he would take, the new pope responded: "As Leo XIII, in remembrance of Leo XII, whom I have always venerated". His election was formally announced to the people of Rome and the world at 1:15pm.[5]

He retained the administration of the Perugia see until 1880.

Pontificate

 
Pope Leo XIII and his inner court at the Vatican, photographed by Jules David in June 1878
 
Photogram of the 1896 film Sua Santitá papa Leone XIII, the first time a Pope appeared on film

As soon as he was elected to the papacy, Leo XIII worked to encourage understanding between the church and the modern world. When he firmly reasserted the scholastic doctrine that science and religion coexist, he required the study of Thomas Aquinas[28] and opened the Vatican Secret Archives to qualified researchers, among whom was the noted historian of the Papacy Ludwig von Pastor. He also refounded the Vatican Observatory "so that everyone might see clearly that the Church and her Pastors are not opposed to true and solid science, whether human or divine, but that they embrace it, encourage it, and promote it with the fullest possible devotion."[29]

Leo XIII was the first Pope of whose voice a sound recording was made. The recording can be found on a compact disc of Alessandro Moreschi's singing; a recording of his praying of the Ave Maria is available on the Web.[30] He was also the first Pope to be filmed by a motion picture camera. He was filmed by its inventor, W. K. Dickson, and blessed the camera while being filmed.[31] Born in 1810, he is also the earliest born person to appear in a film.

Leo XIII brought normality back to the Catholic Church after the tumultuous years of Pius IX. Leo's intellectual and diplomatic skills helped regain much of the prestige lost with the fall of the Papal States. He tried to reconcile the church with the working class, particularly by dealing with the social changes that were sweeping Europe. The new economic order had resulted in the growth of an impoverished working class who had increasing anticlerical and socialist sympathies. Leo helped reverse that trend.

Although Leo XIII was no radical in either theology or politics, his papacy moved the Catholic Church back to the mainstream of European life. Considered a great diplomat, he managed to improve relations with Russia, Prussia, Germany, France, Britain and other countries.

Pope Leo XIII was able to reach several agreements in 1896 that resulted in better conditions for the faithful and additional appointments of bishops. During the fifth cholera pandemic in 1891, he ordered the construction of a hospice inside the Vatican. That building would be torn down in 1996 to make way for construction of the Domus Sanctae Marthae.[32]

Leo was a drinker of the cocaine-infused wine tonic Vin Mariani.[33] He awarded a Vatican gold medal to the wine's creator, Angelo Mariani, and also appeared on a poster endorsing it.[34] Leo XIII was a semi-vegetarian. In 1903, he attributed his longevity to the sparing use of meat and the consumption of eggs, milk and vegetables.[35]

His favourite poets were Virgil and Dante.[36]

Foreign relations

 
Official portrait of Leo XIII taken in April 1878

Russia

Pope Leo XIII began his pontificate with a friendly letter to Tsar Alexander II in which he reminded the Russian monarch of the millions of Catholics living in his empire who would like to be good Russian subjects if their dignity were respected.

After the assassination of Alexander II, the Pope sent a high ranking representative to the coronation of his successor, Alexander III, who was grateful and asked for all religious forces to unify. He asked the Pope to ensure that his bishops abstain from political agitation. Relations improved further when Pope Leo XIII, because of Italian considerations, distanced the Vatican from the Rome-Vienna-Berlin alliance, and helped to facilitate a rapprochement between Paris and St. Petersburg.

Germany

Under Otto von Bismarck, the anti-Catholic Kulturkampf in Prussia led to significant restrictions on the Catholic Church in Imperial Germany, including the Jesuits Law of 1872. During Leo's papacy, compromises were informally reached and the anti-Catholic attacks subsided.[37]

The Centre Party in Germany represented Catholic interests and was a force for social change. It was encouraged by Leo's support for social welfare legislation and the rights of working people. Leo's forward-looking approach encouraged Catholic Action in other European countries, where the social teachings of the church were incorporated into the agenda of Catholic parties, particularly the Christian democratic parties, which became an acceptable alternative to socialist parties. Leo's social teachings were reiterated throughout the 20th century by his successors.

In his Memoirs,[38] Kaiser Wilhelm II discussed the "friendly, trustful relationship that existed between me and Pope Leo XIII." During Wilhelm's third visit to Leo: "It was of interest to me that the Pope said on this occasion that Germany must be the sword of the Catholic Church. I remarked that the old Roman Empire of the German nation no longer existed, and that conditions had changed. But he adhered to his words."

France

Leo XIII possessed a great affection for France, and feared that the Third Republic would take advantage of the fact that most French Catholics were Royalists to abolish the Concordant of 1801. At the advisement of Cardinal Rampolla, he urged French Catholics to "rally" to the republic.[39] Leo's decision upset many French monarchists, who felt they were being forced to betray their king for their faith. Ultimately, this move split the French Church politically and decreased its influence in France. Leo's move also failed to prevent the Concordant's eventual repealment, as it was later abrogated by the law of 1905 on the separation of Church and state.[40]

Italy

 
Silver medal celebrating Pope Leo XIII's 1891 inauguration of the new observatory

In the light of a climate hostile to the Catholic Church, Leo continued the policies of Pius IX towards Italy without major modifications.[41] In his relations with the Italian state, Leo continued the Papacy's self-imposed incarceration in the Vatican stance and continued to insist that Italian Catholics should not vote in Italian elections or hold any elected office. In his first consistory in 1879, he elevated his older brother, Giuseppe, to the cardinalate. He had to defend the freedom of the church against what Catholics considered Italian persecutions and attacks in the area of education, expropriation and violation of Catholic Churches, legal measures against the church and brutal attacks, culminating in anticlerical groups attempting to throw the body of the deceased Pope Pius IX into the Tiber on 13 July 1881.[42] The Pope even considered moving his residence to Trieste or Salzburg, two cities in Austria, an idea that Emperor Franz Joseph I gently rejected.[43]

United Kingdom

Among the activities of Leo XIII that were important for the English-speaking world, he restored the Scottish hierarchy in 1878. The following year, on 12 May 1879, he raised to the rank of cardinal the convert clergyman John Henry Newman,[44] who would eventually be beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 and canonized by Pope Francis in 2019. In British India, too, Leo established a Catholic hierarchy in 1886 and regulated some longstanding conflicts with the Portuguese authorities. A Papal Rescript (20 April 1888) condemned the Irish Plan of Campaign and all clerical involvement in it as well as boycotting, followed in June by the papal encyclical "Saepe Nos"[45] that was addressed to all the Irish bishops. Of outstanding significance, not least for the English-speaking world, was Leo's encyclical Apostolicae curae on the invalidity of the Anglican orders, published in 1896. In 1899, he declared Bede the Venerable a Doctor of the Church.

Spain/Catalonia

In 1880, the Santa Maria de Montserrat Abbey in Catalonia celebrated 1000 years of existence. On 11 September 1881, to coincide with the Catalan national day, Leo XIII proclaimed the Virgin of Montserrat to be Patron of Catalonia. This had implications beyond the purely religious sphere, influencing the development of Catalan nationalism.

Bulgaria

Leo XIII welcomed the elevation of Prince Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg (the later Ferdinand I of Bulgaria) to the Bulgarian Principality in 1886. A fellow Catholic, whose wife was a member of the Italian House of Bourbon-Parma, the two had a lot in common. However, relations between the two greatly soured when Ferdinand expressed his intention to convert his eldest son Crown Prince Boris (later Tsar Boris III) to Orthodoxy, the majority religion of Bulgaria. Leo strongly condemned the action, and when Ferdinand went through with the conversion anyway, Leo excommunicated him.

United States

 
In 1889, Pope Leo XIII authorized the founding of The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and granted it Papal degrees in theology.

The United States frequently attracted his attention and admiration. He confirmed the decrees of the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore (1884) and raised James Gibbons, the archbishop of that city, to the cardinalate in 1886.

Also in 1884, Pope Leo XIII established the See of Helena (St. Helena) in the territorial capital of Montana, which five years later would become the state capital.

On 10 April 1887, a pontifical charter from Pope Leo XIII founded the Catholic University of America, establishing the national university of the Catholic Church in the United States.

American newspapers criticized Pope Leo because they claimed that he was attempting to gain control of American public schools.[46] One cartoonist drew Leo as a fox unable to reach grapes that were labeled for American schools; the caption read "Sour grapes!"[47]

Brazil

Pope Leo XIII is also remembered for the First Plenary Council of Latin America held at Rome in 1899, and for his encyclical of 1888 to the bishops of Brazil, In plurimis, on the abolition of slavery. In 1897 he published the Apostolic Letter Trans Oceanum, which dealt with the privileges and ecclesiastical structure of the Catholic Church in Latin America.[48]

Chile

His role in South America will also be remembered, especially the pontifical benediction extended over Chilean troops on the eve of the Battle of Chorrillos during the War of the Pacific in January 1881. The Chilean soldiers thus blessed then looted the cities of Chorrillos and Barranco, including the churches, and their Chaplains headed the robbery at the Biblioteca Nacional del Perú, where the soldiers ransacked various items along with much capital, and Chilean Priests coveted rare and ancient editions of the Bible that were stored there.[49] Despite this, one year later Chilean President Domingo Santa Marìa issued the Laic Laws, which separated the Church from the State, considered a slap in the face for the papacy.

India

Pope Leo XIII urged "Filii tui India, administri tibi salutis" (Your own sons, O India, will be the heralds of your salvation)[50] and founded the national seminary, called Papal Seminary. He entrusted this task to the then Apostolic Delegate to India Ladislaus Michael Zaleski, who founded the Seminary in 1893.

Evangelization

Pope Leo XIII sanctioned the missions to Eastern Africa beginning in 1884.[44] In 1879 Catholic missionaries associated with the White Father Congregation (Society of the Missionaries of Africa) came to Uganda and others went to Tanganyika (present-day Tanzania) and Rwanda.

In 1887, he approved the foundation of Missionaries of St. Charles Borromeo, which were organized by the Bishop of Piacenza, Giovanni Battista Scalabrini. The missionaries were sent to North and South America to do pastoral care for Italian immigrants.

Theology

 
Giuseppe Pecci in 1887. At the urgent requests of the College of Cardinals, Leo XIII in 1879 elevated his brother, Giuseppe Pecci, a Jesuit and prominent Thomist theologian, into their ranks.[51]

The pontificate of Leo XIII was theologically influenced by the First Vatican Council (1869–1870), which had ended only eight years earlier. Leo XIII issued some 46 apostolic letters and encyclicals dealing with central issues in the areas of marriage and family and state and society. He also wrote two prayers for the intercession of Michael the Archangel after he allegedly had a vision of Michael and the end times,[52] but the story of the alleged vision may be merely apocryphal, as historians note that the story does not appear in any of his writings.[53]

Leo XIII also approved a number of Scapulars. In 1885, he approved the Scapular of the Holy Face, (also known as The Veronica) and elevated the Priests of the Holy Face to an archconfraternity.[54] He also approved the Scapular of Our Lady of Good Counsel and the Scapular of St. Joseph, both in 1893, and the Scapular of the Sacred Heart in 1900.[55]

Thomism

As Pope, he used all his authority for a revival of Thomism, the theology of Thomas Aquinas. On 4 August 1879, Leo XIII promulgated the encyclical Aeterni Patris ("Eternal Father"), which, more than any other single document, provided a charter for the revival of Thomism, the medieval theological system based on the thought of Aquinas – as the official philosophical and theological system of the Catholic Church. It was to be normative not only in the training of priests at church seminaries but also in the education of the laity at universities.

Pope Leo XIII then created the Pontifical Academy of St. Thomas Aquinas on 15 October 1879 and ordered the publication of the critical edition, the so-called Leonine Edition, of the complete works of the doctor angelicus. The superintendence of the leonine edition was entrusted to Tommaso Maria Zigliara, professor and rector of the Collegium Divi Thomae de Urbe, the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas, Angelicum. Leo XIII also founded the Angelicum's Faculty of Philosophy in 1882 and its Faculty of Canon Law in 1896.

Consecrations

 
The Blessed Sister Mary of the Divine Heart was a religious sister from the Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd who requested Pope Leo XIII to consecrate the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.[56]

Pope Leo XIII performed a number of consecrations, at times entering new theological territory. After he had received many letters from Sister Mary of the Divine Heart, the countess of Droste zu Vischering and Mother Superior in the Convent of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Porto, Portugal, asking him to consecrate the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, he commissioned a group of theologians to examine the petition on the basis of revelation and sacred tradition. The outcome of this investigation was positive and so in the encyclical letter Annum sacrum (on 25 May 1899), he decreed that the consecration of the entire human race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus should take place on 11 June 1899.

The encyclical letter also encouraged the entire Catholic episcopate to promote the First Friday Devotions, established June as the Month of the Sacred Heart, and included the Prayer of Consecration to the Sacred Heart.[57] His consecration of the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus presented theological challenges in consecrating non-Christians. Since about 1850, various congregations and countries had consecrated themselves to the Sacred Heart, and, in 1875, the consecration was made throughout the Catholic world.

Scriptures

In his 1893 encyclical Providentissimus Deus, he described the importance of scriptures for theological study. It was an important encyclical for Catholic theology and its relation to the Bible, as Pope Pius XII pointed out 50 years later in his encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu.[58]

Relations with Eastern Orthodox Churches

Pope Leo XIII fostered relations of goodwill, particularly towards the churches of the East not in communion with the Apostolic See. He also opposed efforts to Latinize the Eastern Rite Churches and stated that they constitute a most valuable ancient tradition and symbol of the divine unity of the Catholic Church. He expressed that in his encyclical "Orientalium Dignitas" of 1894 and wrote, "The Churches of the East are worthy of the glory and reverence that they hold throughout the whole of Christendom in virtue of those extremely ancient, singular memorials that they have bequeathed to us."

Theological research

 
John Henry Newman was raised into the College of Cardinals by Pope Leo XIII.

Leo XIII is credited with great efforts in the areas of scientific and historical analysis. He opened the Vatican Archives and personally fostered a 20-volume comprehensive scientific study of the Papacy by Ludwig von Pastor, an Austrian historian.[59]

Mariology

His predecessor, Pope Pius IX, became known as the Pope of the Immaculate Conception because of his dogmatization in 1854. Leo XIII, in light of his unprecedented promulgation of the rosary in 11 encyclicals, was called the Rosary Pope because he promulgated Marian devotion. In his encyclical on the 50th anniversary of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception, he stresses Mary's role in the redemption of humanity and calls her Mediatrix and Co-Redemptrix. While allowing the title "Mediatrix", recent popes, following on the Second Vatican Council, have warned away from the term "co-redemptrix" as derogating from the one mediator, Jesus Christ.[60][61][62]

Social teachings

Church and state

Leo XIII worked to encourage understanding between the Catholic Church and the modern world, but he preferred a cautious view on freedom of thought, stating that it "is quite unlawful to demand, defend, or to grant unconditional freedom of thought, or speech, of writing or worship, as if these were so many rights given by nature to man." Leo's social teachings are based on the Catholic premise that God is the Creator of the world and its Ruler. Eternal law commands the natural order to be maintained, and forbids that it be disturbed; men's destiny is far above human things and beyond the earth.[citation needed]

Rerum novarum
 
Charles M. Johnson, Pope Leo XIII, 1899, National Gallery of Art
 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1900

His encyclicals changed the church's relations with temporal authorities; the 1891 encyclical Rerum novarum, for the first time, addressed social inequality and social justice issues with papal authority by focusing on the rights and duties of capital and labour. He was greatly influenced by Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler, a German bishop who openly propagated siding with the suffering working classes in his book Die Arbeiterfrage und das Christentum. Since Leo XIII, papal teachings have expanded on the rights and obligations of workers and the limitations of private property: Pope Pius XI's Quadragesimo anno, the social teachings of Pope Pius XII on a huge range of social issues, John XXIII's Mater et magistra in 1961, Pope Paul VI's Populorum progressio on world development issues, Pope John Paul II's Centesimus annus, commemorating the 100th anniversary of Rerum novarum, and Pope Francis' Laudato si' on the use of the goods of creation.

Leo had argued that both capitalism and communism are flawed. Rerum novarum introduced the idea of subsidiarity, the principle that political and social decisions should be taken at a local level, if possible, rather than by a central authority, into Catholic social thought. (See list of Encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII.)

Consistories

Throughout his pontificate, Leo XIII elevated 147 cardinals in 27 consistories. While the limit of the College of Cardinals had been set at 70 since the papacy of Pope Sixtus V, Leo XIII never exceeded nor reached the limit, only ever coming close at 67 in 1901.[63] Amongst the noteworthy cardinals whom he elevated, he named John Henry Newman as a cardinal while also elevating his own brother Giuseppe Pecci, though not a nepotistic act (it was based purely on recommendation and merit), in the same consistory. In 1893, he elevated Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto to the cardinalate, who would go on to be his immediate successor, Pope Pius X in 1903. The Pope also nominated the brothers, Serafino and Vincenzo Vannutelli and the cousins Luigi and Angelo Jacobini to the Sacred College. Other noteworthy inclusions were Andrea Carlo Ferrari (later beatified in 1987) and Girolamo Maria Gotti (whom he favoured as his successor).

Of the 147 cardinals he elevated, 85 were Italian since Leo XIII nominated cardinals from beyond Europe, including the first cardinals from Australia,[64] Canada,[65] Slovenia,[66] and Armenia,[67] the latter of which would be the first Oriental selection since 1439.

In 1880, the Pope named three cardinals "in pectore", announcing them in 1882 and 1884. In 1882, he named another cardinal in pectore, announcing the name later that same year. On 30 December 1889, Leo XIII named only one cardinal whom he reserved in pectore, only announcing the name roughly six months later. In early 1893, he named another two cardinals in pectore, announcing their names in 1894 and 1895, while in April 1901 announcing the names of another two cardinals whom he had reserved in pectore in June 1899. In June 1896, Leo XIII named two other cardinals in pectore, announcing in March 1898 that both had died, hence, vacating the red hats he would have bestowed upon them.[68]

With the elevation of Newman in 1879, it was widely praised throughout the English-speaking world, not simply on the account of Newman's virtues and reputation, but on the basis that Leo XIII had a broader episcopal vision in mind than Pius IX ever did. His similar appointments of two prominent participants of the First Vatican Council, Lajos Haynald and Friedrich Egon von Fürstenberg both in 1879 was also noteworthy due to their roles in the short-lived Council. It was even alleged that Félix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup, a vocal opponent of papal infallibility like Newman, would have been elevated to the cardinalate in 1879 had he not died in October 1878.[26] Additionally, in 1884, the Polish priest and former Curial official Stefan Zachariasz Pawlicki was offered but refused an offer of elevation. Leo XIII later intended to name the Archbishop of Santiago Mariano Santiago Casanova Casanova as a cardinal in 1895, however, the Pope abandoned the idea after the Peruvian Church objected that the Archbishop of Lima was the Primate of South America and hence the one that needed to be made a cardinal. In order to avoid a conflict between Chile and Peru, the Pope abandoned the idea reluctantly.[68]

In 1897, the Pope intended to name the Archbishop of Turin Davide Riccardi as a cardinal however, the cardinal died before the promotion could take place. In 1891 and again in 1897, the Pope offered the cardinalate to Johannes Montel Edler von Treuenfels, the dean of the Sacred Rota, though he refused the honor (he refused again in 1908 when invited by Pope Pius X). In 1899, Leo XIII hoped to nominate the Dominican procurator general Hyacinthe-Marie Cormier (later beatified) to the cardinalate however, he was unable to do so because the French government did not favor a cardinal from a religious order to seek its best interests as a Curial member.[68] In 1901, he planned to name Agapito Panici as a cardinal at the next consistory, but Panici died before the nomination could take place in 1903. Allegedly, before deciding to name him, Leo XIII asked his brother Diomede to renounce his claim to the red hat, but when Agapito died in 1902, the Pope informed Diomede that he would ignore his previous missive asking him to renounce his claim to the red hat, a position that Diomede was never then given. According to witnesses, Leo XIII failed three times to invite Vincenzo Tarozzi (whose cause for beatification has since been launched) to receive the red hat. According to a conversation in 1904 between Pope Pius X and Antonio Mele-Virdis, the former is alleged to have said, "he should have been in my place".[68]

Canonizations and beatifications

Leo XIII canonized the following saints during his pontificate:

Leo XIII beatified several of his predecessors: Urban II (14 July 1881), Victor III (23 July 1887) and Innocent V (9 March 1898). He canonized Adrian III on 2 June 1891.

He also beatified the following:

He approved the cult of Cosmas of Aphrodisia. He beatified several of the English martyrs in 1895.[69]

Doctors of the Church

Leo XIII named four individuals as Doctors of the Church:

Audiences

 
In 1901, Pope Leo XIII welcomed Eugenio Pacelli, later Pope Pius XII, on his first day of 57 years of service in the Vatican (1901–1958).

One of the first audiences that Leo XIII granted was to the professors and students of the Collegio Capranica, where in the first row knelt in front of him the young seminarian Giacomo Della Chiesa, the future Pope Benedict XV, who would reign from 1914 to 1922.

On a pilgrimage with her father and sister in 1887, Thérèse of Lisieux attended a general audience with Pope Leo XIII and asked him to allow her to enter the Carmelite order. Even though she was strictly forbidden to speak to him because she was told that it would prolong the audience too much, she wrote in her autobiography, Story of a Soul, that after she kissed his slipper and he presented his hand, instead of kissing it, she took it in her own hand and said through tears, "Most Holy Father, I have a great favor to ask you. In honor of your Jubilee, permit me to enter Carmel at the age of 15!" Leo XIII answered, "Well, my child, do what the superiors decide." Thérèse replied, "Oh! Holy Father, if you say yes, everybody will agree!" Finally, the Pope said, "Go... go... You will enter if God wills it" [italics hers]. Two guards lifted her (still on her knees in front of the Pope) by her arms and carried her to the door, where a third gave her a medal of the Pope. Shortly thereafter, the Bishop of Bayeux authorized the prioress to receive Thérèse, and in April 1888, she entered Carmel at the age of 15.

There are several versions of a story of how Leo came to compose the Prayer to Saint Michael. Various dates are given. A common account says that on the morning of 13 October 1884, Leo XIII celebrated Mass but as he finished, he turned to step down the stairs and allegedly collapsed, falling into what was originally thought to be a coma, but was rather a mystical ecstasy. As the priests and cardinals rushed to his side, Leo XIII rose and visibly shaken, brushed off his aides and rushed back towards his apartment where he immediately wrote the Prayer to Saint Michael the Archangel. Leo XIII reportedly saw a vision of demons being released from Hell, however, just as the vision ended, he saw Saint Michael charge in and drive them all back into Hell. Leo XIII mandated that the prayer be said after every Mass from that point forth.

In 1934, a German writer, Fr. Bers, tried to trace the origin of the story and declared that, though the story was widespread, nowhere could he find a trace of proof. Sources close to the institution of the prayer in 1886, including an account of a conversation with Leo XIII about his decision, say nothing of the alleged vision. Bers concluded that the story was a later invention that spread like a virus.[70]

Health

 
Pope Leo XIII in 1887

At the time of his election in 1878, the Pope had started to experience a slight tremor in his hand due to a poorly undertaken bloodletting procedure for a previous malady.[71]

In March 1899, it had been believed that the Pope was gravely ill and that he was nearing death. Originally, it was presumed that the Pope was suffering from a violent case of pneumonia and that the alarm was raised regarding his health. However, it was soon discovered that the reason for the Pope's illness was the sudden inflammation of a cyst which had been troubling him for almost thirty years and which had never been previously removed. The only reason it had never been of any particular concern was due to incisions designed for pain relief. While Leo XIII strongly rejected the notion of surgery at first, he was persuaded by Cardinal Mariano Rampolla del Tindaro that it was necessary to ensure his good health. Before the pope was taken for surgery, he asked that his chaplain celebrate Mass in his private chapel while the operation was taking place. Reportedly, the cyst removed was the size of an ordinary-sized orange.[71][72]

Towards the end of his life, Leo XIII resorted to using a gold-headed cane when going on walks, as he often found it difficult to do so. While Leo XIII was certainly able to walk without it, he only did so if he felt truly comfortable in doing so. When there were ever rumors about his health, Leo XIII was known to mischievously walk about briskly to dispel the rumors.[5]

Death

 
Pope Leo XIII lying in state in July 1903.
 
The monument and tomb to Leo XIII in the Basilica of Saint John Lateran.

On 30 June 1903, Leo XIII reported slight feelings of dyspepsia and said that he would take a dose of castor oil to help himself recuperate, shrugging off concerns about his health. While it seemed to work, and the Pope resumed his duties with a renewed vigor, it was not to last.[72]

Leo XIII originally contracted a cold while taking an outing on the Vatican grounds on 3 July 1903; however, his condition rapidly deteriorated to the point that he had contracted pneumonia. That night, he immediately went to bed and lost consciousness.[72][73] Originally, the pope refused his doctor's desire to secure a second opinion from a colleague, insisting on a doctor who had previously tended to him in 1899 when he suffered a previous serious illness.[74] When the doctor was immediately summoned to the Pope's bedside, he determined that the castor oil had disturbed his stomach and exacerbated his condition.[72] The pope's nephews were immediately notified of their uncle's illness, as were Cardinals Mariano Rampolla del Tindaro and Luigi Oreglia di Santo Stefano in their capacities as the Secretary of State and Camerlengo respectively. On 4 July, he made his last confession to Cardinal Serafino Vannutelli before the Pope was barely able to recite the profession of faith.[74] That very same day, he experienced a loss of appetite and suffered from shortness of breath.[71] On 5 July, the doctor said reported that the hepatisation affected the upper and middle lobes of the right lung, while Leo XIII suffered from considerable cardiac weakness and difficulties in breathing, while reporting the absence of any fever or coughing fits.[72] That same day, after having received the sacraments, the pope said, "I am now near my end. I do not know if all I have done has been good, but I certainly obeyed my conscience and our faith".[5]

On 6 July 1903, he was administered an injection to ease the pain that he was experiencing, while it was reported that the pneumonia he had contracted was starting to spread to the left lung. The Pope, who had an imperceptible pulse, had a restless night and was given oxygen by his doctors. When given the oxygen, Leo XIII replied, "That is much better. Before I felt as though I had lost my liberty".[5] That morning, he intimated to those with him that he would prefer it if Cardinal Girolamo Maria Gotti succeeded him in the next conclave.[75] When doctors ordered him to rest, so as not to further aggravate his declining health, Leo XIII said: "If it were only of any use, but I do not believe it would be. The brief remainder of my life must be given to God's Church, not to my own poor comfort". The pope lost consciousness but was awake to receive the sacraments at 9:00pm before experiencing yet another restless night, marveling, "God's will be done. Who would have believed it when only ten days ago I was presiding over a public consistory?"[75] Leo XIII only slept three hours but severe pain saw him immediately awaken, complaining of pain on both sides of the thorax that forced doctors to move his frail form for better comfort. His situation had previously been critical that afternoon when he was given the Last Rites, while his doctors apprised him of his sudden deterioration. On 7 July, the feeble Pope asked that the shutters of his window be opened, saying "I wish to see once more, perhaps for the last time, the rays of the sun".[74] In the nights following, the Pope suffered from several coughing fits, perspiring heavily due to his rising fever. The Pope felt slightly better enough on 10 July to receive a group of Hungarian pilgrims, however, the Pope was exhausted and collapsed after the meeting.[73]

Leo XIII deteriorated further until he died at 3:55 pm on 20 July 1903, whispering a final blessing before he died. However, Vatican officials gave the time of the Pope's death as 4:04 pm when officials officially confirmed that the Pope had indeed died. Officially, Leo XIII had died of pneumonia, followed by hemorrhagic pleurisy.[76]

Leo XIII was the first Pope to be born in the 19th century and was also the first to die in the 20th century, living to the age of 93.[77] He is the oldest Pope to have served in the office, and the second-oldest person to have been Pope, surpassed only by Pope Benedict XVI as "Pope emeritus" (as of 2022). At the time of his death, Leo XIII was the second-longest-reigning Pope (25 years), exceeded only by his immediate predecessor, Pius IX (31 years).

He was entombed in Saint Peter's Basilica only briefly after his funeral; he was later moved to the Basilica of Saint John Lateran, his cathedral church as the Bishop of Rome, and a church in which he took a particular interest. He was moved there in late 1924. As of 2023, he is the last Pope not to be buried in St. Peter's Basilica.[78]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Portrait from the archives of the United States Library of Congress
  2. ^ Italian: [dʒoakˈkiːno vinˈtʃɛntso raffaˈɛːle luˈiːdʒi ˈpettʃi]; English: Joachim Vincent Raphael Louis Pecci.

References

  1. ^ Gifford, Don (1982). Joyce Annotated: Notes for Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. University of California Press. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-520-04610-8.
  2. ^ "Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi Pecci, aka Pope Leo XIII". www.familysearch.org. Retrieved 3 January 2023.
  3. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 7.
  4. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 12.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g James Martin Miller (1908). "The life of Pope Leo XIII: containing a full and authentic account of the illustrious pontiff's life and work". Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  6. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 20.
  7. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 23.
  8. ^ a b c "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope Leo XIII". www.newadvent.org.
  9. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 24.
  10. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 31.
  11. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 37.
  12. ^ a b Miranda, Salvador. "Pecci, Gioacchino", The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church
  13. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 52.
  14. ^ Laatste Nieuws (Het) 1 January 1910
  15. ^ Kühne 62
  16. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 66.
  17. ^ Lang, Ariella (2008). A Modern Inquisition and the Unification of Italy (1st ed.). United Kingdom: PALGRAVE MACMILLAN. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-349-37407-6.
  18. ^ "Notices of books". The Dublin Review. 104: 483. 1888.
  19. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 76.
  20. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 78.
  21. ^ a b "Pope Leo XIII". New Advent. 1910. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  22. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 102.
  23. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 105.
  24. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 129.
  25. ^ a b c BERNARD O'REILLY, D. D. (1886). Life of Pope Leo XIII. unknown library.
  26. ^ a b c d e Hutton, Arthur Wollaston; Bryant, Margaret (1911). "Leo (popes)/Leo XIII" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). pp. 437–439.
  27. ^ a b Roger-François-Marie Aubert. "Leo XIII". Britannica. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  28. ^ (encyclical), Catholic forum, 4 August 1879, archived from the original on 25 February 2007.
  29. ^ Pecci, Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi (14 March 1891), Ut Mysticam (in Latin).
  30. ^ Pope Leo XIII, 1810–1910, Archive, 30 November 1902.
  31. ^ Abel, Richard (1 August 2004), Encyclopedia of early cinema, p. 266, ISBN 978-0-415-23440-5.
  32. ^ . EWTN. 22 February 1996. Archived from the original on 12 July 2018. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  33. ^ Nesi, Thomas (2008). Poison Pills: The Untold Story of the Vioxx Drug Scandal (1st ed.). New York: Thomas Dunne Books. pp. 53. ISBN 9780312369590. OCLC 227205792.
  34. ^ Inciardi, James A. (1992). The War on Drugs II. Mayfield Publishing Company. p. 6. ISBN 978-1-55934-016-8.
  35. ^ The Elusive Secret of Long Life. Arizona Republican. (9 March 1903). p. 2
  36. ^ "Pope Leo XIII and his Household" in The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, p. 596
  37. ^ Ross, Ronald J. (1998). The failure of Bismarck's Kulturkampf: Catholicism and state power in imperial Germany, 1871–1887. Washington: Catholic University of America Press. ISBN 978-0-81320894-7.
  38. ^ Emperor), William I.I. (German (1922). Memoirs. pp. 204–207. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
  39. ^ Coulombe, Charles A. (2003). A History of the Popes: Vicars of Christ. MJF Books. pp. 404–405.
  40. ^ Fehér, Ferenc (1990). . University of California Press. p. 55. ISBN 9780520071209. Archived from the original on 29 May 2010. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  41. ^ Schmidlin 1934, p. 409.
  42. ^ Schmidlin 1934, p. 413.
  43. ^ Schmidlin 1934, p. 414.
  44. ^ a b Martire, Egilberto (1951). Enciclopedia Cattolica [Catholic Encyclopedia] (in Italian). Vol. 7. Firenze: Casa Editrice G. C. Sansoni.
  45. ^ Pecci, Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi, Sæpe nos (in Latin), New Advent.
  46. ^ "The Public Schools". Minneapolis Daily Times. Vol. VIII (1,630 ed.). Minneapolis, Minnesota. 19 March 1894. p. 5. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  47. ^ LLC, CRIA. . www.criaimages.com. Archived from the original on 29 November 2019.
  48. ^ Pecci, Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi (18 April 1897). "Trans Oceanum, Litterae apostolicae, De privilegiis Americae Latinae" [Over the Ocean, Apostolic letter on Latin American privileges] (in Latin). Rome, IT: Vatican. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
  49. ^ Caivano, Tomas (1907), Historia de la guerra de América entre Chile, Perú y Bolivia [History of the American war between Chile, Peru and Bolivia] (in Spanish).
  50. ^ Mathias, Joseph Benedict (June 2015). "Priestly Formation in Indian Context :A New Pedagogy for Integral Formation of Candidates to Priesthood in India". Catholic Theology and Thought (75): 11–45.
  51. ^ Kühne 1880, p. 247.
  52. ^ "Archangel Michael".
  53. ^ Cekada, Rev. Anthony (1992). "Russia and the Leonine Prayers" (PDF). TraditionalMass.org. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  54. ^ Henry Charles Lea, 2002, A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church, Adamant Media Corp. ISBN 1-4021-6108-5 p. 506
  55. ^ Francis de Zulueta, 2008, Early Steps In The Fold, Miller Press, ISBN 978-1-4086-6003-4 p. 317
  56. ^ Chasle, Louis (1906), Sister Mary of the Divine Heart, Droste zu Vischering, religious of the Good Shepherd, 1863–1899, London: Burns & Oates.
  57. ^ Ball, Ann (2003), Encyclopedia of Catholic Devotions and Practices, p. 166, ISBN 978-0-87973-910-2.
  58. ^ Divino Afflante Spiritu, 1–12.
  59. ^ von Pastor, Ludwig (1950), Errinnerungen (in German).
  60. ^ Frederick William Faber (1858). The foot of the Cross; or, The sorrows of Mary. Thomas Richardson and Son. p. 448.
  61. ^ "Co-Redemptrix as Dogma? : University of Dayton, Ohio". udayton.edu. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  62. ^ "Pope Francis on "Co-Redemptrix"". cruxnow.com. 12 December 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2020.
  63. ^ Clarke, Richard Henry (1903). The Life of His Holiness Pope Leo XIII. Philadelphia: P.W. Ziegler & Co. p. 607. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  64. ^ "Australian Cardinal Dead". The New York Times. 17 August 1911. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  65. ^ Hopkins, John Castell (1924). The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs. Toronto. p. 458. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  66. ^ "Missia Jakob (1838–1902)". Dizionario Biografico dei Friulani (in Italian). Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  67. ^ B. Miller (21 January 2015). "An Armenian As Pope? – A British Diplomatic Report on Cardinal Agagianian, 1958". Horizon Weekly. Retrieved 12 February 2022. First published: Window Quarterly, Vol. V, No. 3 & 4, 1995, pp 11–13.
  68. ^ a b c d Salvador Miranda. "Lep XIII (1878–1903)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Retrieved 12 February 2022.
  69. ^ "St. Cosmas – Saints & Angels". Catholic Online. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  70. ^ "Like a perpetual sickness" – "Die Gebete nach der hl. Messe", Theol-Prakt. Quartalschrift 87 (1934), 162–163
  71. ^ a b c "The Illness of His Holiness". The Pilot. 25 March 1899. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  72. ^ a b c d e "The Illness and Death of the Pope". The Lancet. 162 (4169): 253–255. 25 July 1903. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(01)50670-4. Retrieved 21 February 2022.
  73. ^ a b "Pope Leo XIII suffering from severe attack of pneumonia". The Lafayette News. 11 July 1903. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  74. ^ a b c "Pope Leo XIII facing death". The Pilot. 11 July 1903. Retrieved 10 February 2022.
  75. ^ a b "Leo forecasts death, expresses desire that Gotti succeed him". The Saint Paul Globe. 6 July 1903. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  76. ^ "Lumen de coelo nunc est lumen in coelo". The Catholic Telegraph. 23 July 1903. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  77. ^ John-Peter Pham, Heirs of the Fisherman: Behind the Scenes of Papal Death and Succession, (Oxford University Press, 2004), 98.
  78. ^ "Popes Buried in St. Peter's". stpetersbasilica.info. Retrieved 5 November 2022.

Bibliography

In English

  • Chadwick, Owen. A History of the Popes 1830–1914 (2003). online pp 273–331.
  • Chadwick, Owen. The Popes and European Revolution (1981) 655pp excerpt; also online
  • Duffy, Eamon (1997), Saints and Sinners, A History of the Popes, Yale University Press.
  • Thérèse of Lisieux (1996), Story of a Soul – The Autobiography of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, Clarke, John Clarke trans (3rd ed.), Washington, DC: ICS.
  • Quardt, Robert, The Master Diplomat; From the Life of Leo XIII, Wolson, Ilya trans, New York: Alba House.
  • O'Reilly, Bernard (1887), Life of Leo XIII – From An Authentic Memoir – Furnished By His Order, New York: Charles L Webster & Co.

In German

  • Ernesti, Jörg (2019), Leo XIII – Papst und Staatsmann (in German), Freiburg, Herder.
  • Bäumer, Remigius (1992), Marienlexikon [Dictionary of Mary] (in German), et al, St Ottilien, Eos.
  • Franzen, August; Bäumer, Remigius (1988), Papstgeschichte (in German), Freiburg: Herder.
  • Kühne, Benno (1880), Papst Leo XIII [Pope Leo XIII] (in German), New York & St. Louis: C&N Benzinger, Einsideln.
  • Quardt, Robert (1964), Der Meisterdiplomat [The Master Diplomat] (in German), Kevelaer, DE: Butzon & Bercker
  • Schmidlin, Josef (1934), Papstgeschichte der neueren Zeit (in German), München.

In Italian

  • Regoli, Roberto (2009). "L'elite cardinalizia dopo la fine dello stato pontificio". Archivum Historiae Pontificiae. 47: 63–87. JSTOR 23565185.

Further reading

External links

  • Pecci, Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi. "Encyclicals and other documents" (Etexts).
  • "Pope Leo XIII" (texts & biography). Vatican City: The Vatican.
  • . Catholic Community Forum. Archived from the original on 3 June 2004.
  • "Pope Leo XIII in Carriage" (silent film, available in UK only). 1898 – via BFI. The Pope arrives in a carriage and bestows a blessing
  • Film of Pope Leo XIII in 1896 on YouTube with recording of Leo XIII chanting the Ave Maria in Latin in 1903
  • Colorized film of Pope Leo XIII in 1896 on YouTube
  • "Pope Leo XIII" (text with concordances and frequency list). Intra text.
  • Works by or about Pope Leo XIII at Internet Archive
    • Keller, Rev. Joseph E., ed. (1883). Life and Acts of Pope Leo XII (New and Enlarged ed.). New York, Cincinnati, and St. Louis: Benziger Brothers – via Internet Archive.
  • Works by Pope Leo XIII at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Newspaper clippings about Pope Leo XIII in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium
1843–1846
Succeeded by
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Giovanni Giacomo Sinibaldi
— TITULAR —
Archbishop of Tamiathis
1843–1846
Succeeded by
Diego Planeta
Preceded by
Carlo Filesio Cittadini
Archbishop-Bishop of Perugia1
1846–1878
Succeeded by
Federico Pietro Foschi
Preceded by Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church
22 September 1877 – 20 February 1878
Succeeded by
Preceded by Pope
20 February 1878 – 20 July 1903
Succeeded by
Notes and references
1. Retained personal title

pope, xiii, italian, leone, xiii, born, gioacchino, vincenzo, raffaele, luigi, pecci, march, 1810, july, 1903, head, catholic, church, from, february, 1878, death, july, 1903, living, until, oldest, pope, holding, office, second, longest, lived, pope, history,. Pope Leo XIII Italian Leone XIII born Gioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi Pecci b 2 March 1810 20 July 1903 was head of the Catholic Church from 20 February 1878 to his death in July 1903 Living until the age of 93 he was the oldest pope holding office and the second longest lived pope in history after Benedict XVI as pope emeritus He also had the fourth longest reign of any pope behind those of St Peter Pius IX his immediate predecessor and John Paul II PopeLeo XIIIBishop of RomeOfficial photograph 1898 a ChurchCatholic ChurchPapacy began20 February 1878Papacy ended20 July 1903PredecessorPius IXSuccessorPius XOrdersOrdination31 December 1837by Carlo OdescalchiConsecration19 February 1843by Luigi LambruschiniCreated cardinal19 December 1853by Pius IXPersonal detailsBornGioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi Pecci2 March 1810Carpineto Romano departement of Rome French EmpireDied20 July 1903 1903 07 20 aged 93 Apostolic Palace Rome Kingdom of Italy now Vatican City Previous post s Titular Archbishop of Tamiathis 1843 46 Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium 1843 46 Archbishop Bishop of Perugia 1846 80 Cardinal Priest of San Crisogono 1853 78 Camerlengo of the Apostolic Chamber 1877 78 MottoLumen in coelo 1 Light in Heaven SignatureCoat of armsOther popes named LeoPapal styles of Pope Leo XIIIReference styleHis HolinessSpoken styleYour HolinessReligious styleHoly FatherPosthumous styleNoneOrdination history of Pope Leo XIIIHistoryPriestly ordinationOrdained byCarlo OdescalchiDate31 December 1837Episcopal consecrationPrincipal consecratorLuigi LambruschiniCo consecratorsFabio Maria AsquiniGiuseppe Maria CastellaniDate19 February 1843CardinalateElevated byPius IXDate19 December 1853Episcopal successionBishops consecrated by Pope Leo XIII as principal consecratorAntonio Briganti19 November 1871Carmelo Pascucci19 November 1871Carlo Laurenzi24 June 1877Edoardo Borromeo19 May 1878Francesco Latoni1 June 1879Jean Baptiste Francois Pitra1 June 1879Bartholomew Woodlock1 June 1879Agostino Bausa24 March 1889Giuseppe Antonio Ermenegildo Prisco29 May 1898He is well known for his intellectualism and his attempts to define the position of the Catholic Church with regard to modern thinking In his famous 1891 encyclical Rerum novarum Pope Leo outlined the rights of workers to a fair wage safe working conditions and the formation of trade unions while affirming the rights of property and free enterprise opposing both socialism and laissez faire capitalism With that encyclical he became popularly titled as the Social Pope and the Pope of the Workers also having created the foundations for modern thinking in the church s social doctrine influencing the thoughts of his successors He influenced Mariology of the Catholic Church and promoted both the rosary and the scapular Upon his election he immediately sought to revive Thomism the theology of Thomas Aquinas desiring to refer to it as the official theological and philosophical foundation for the Catholic Church As a result he sponsored the Editio Leonina in 1879 Leo XIII is particularly remembered for his belief that pastoral activity in political sociology was also a vital mission of the church as a vehicle of social justice and maintaining the rights and dignities of the human person Leo XIII issued a record of eleven papal encyclicals on the rosary earning him the title of the Rosary Pope In addition he approved two new Marian scapulars and was the first pope to fully embrace the concept of Mary as Mediatrix He was the first pope never to have held any control over the Papal States which had been dissolved by 1870 Similarly many of his policies were oriented towards mitigating the loss of the Papal States in an attempt to overcome the loss of temporal power but nonetheless continuing the Roman Question After his death in 1903 he was buried in the grottos of St Peter s Basilica before his remains were later transferred in 1924 to the Basilica of Saint John Lateran Contents 1 Early life and education 1810 1836 2 Provincial administrator 1837 1843 3 Nuncio to Belgium 1843 4 Archbishop Bishop of Perugia 1846 1878 4 1 Papal assistant 4 2 Provincial council 4 3 Charitable activities 4 4 Cardinalate 4 5 Defending the papacy 4 6 Organizing the First Vatican Council 5 Papacy 1878 1903 5 1 Election 5 2 Pontificate 5 3 Foreign relations 5 3 1 Russia 5 3 2 Germany 5 3 3 France 5 3 4 Italy 5 3 5 United Kingdom 5 3 6 Spain Catalonia 5 3 7 Bulgaria 5 3 8 United States 5 3 9 Brazil 5 3 10 Chile 5 3 11 India 5 3 12 Evangelization 5 4 Theology 5 4 1 Thomism 5 4 2 Consecrations 5 4 3 Scriptures 5 4 4 Relations with Eastern Orthodox Churches 5 4 5 Theological research 5 4 6 Mariology 5 4 7 Social teachings 5 4 7 1 Church and state 5 4 7 2 Rerum novarum 5 5 Consistories 5 6 Canonizations and beatifications 5 6 1 Doctors of the Church 5 7 Audiences 6 Health 7 Death 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 11 1 In English 11 2 In German 11 3 In Italian 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life and education 1810 1836 Edit Count and Countess Pecci parents The house in Carpineto Romano in which the Pecci brothers grew up Born in Carpineto Romano near Rome he was the sixth of the seven sons of Count Ludovico Pecci 1767 1833 and his wife Anna Francesca Prosperi Buzzi 1773 1824 2 His brothers included Giuseppe and Giovanni Battista Pecci Until 1818 he lived at home with his family in which religion counted as the highest grace on earth as through her salvation can be earned for all eternity 3 Together with Giuseppe he studied in the Jesuit College in Viterbo until 1824 4 He enjoyed Latin and was known to have written his own Latin poems at the age of eleven His siblings were 5 Carlo 1793 1879 Anna Maria 1798 1870 Caterina 1800 1867 Giovanni Battista 1802 1881 Giuseppe 1807 1890 Fernando 1813 1830 In 1824 he and Giuseppe were called to Rome where their mother was dying Count Pecci wanted his children near him after the loss of his wife and so they stayed with him in Rome and attended the Jesuit Collegium Romanum In 1828 the 18 year old Vincenzo decided in favour of secular clergy and Giuseppe entered the Jesuit order 6 Vincenzo studied at the Academia dei Nobili mainly diplomacy and law In 1834 he gave a student presentation attended by several cardinals on papal judgments For his presentation he received awards for academic excellence and gained the attention of Vatican officials 7 Cardinal Secretary of State Luigi Lambruschini introduced him to Vatican congregations During a cholera epidemic in Rome he assisted Cardinal Sala in his duties as overseer of all the city hospitals 8 In 1836 he received his doctorate in theology and doctorates of civil and Canon Law in Rome Provincial administrator 1837 1843 EditOn 14 February 1837 Pope Gregory XVI appointed the 27 year old Pecci as personal prelate even before he was ordained a priest on 31 December 1837 by the Vicar of Rome Cardinal Carlo Odescalchi He celebrated his first Mass with his priest brother Giuseppe 9 Shortly thereafter Gregory XVI appointed Pecci as legate provincial administrator to Benevento the smallest papal province with a population of about 20 000 8 The main problems facing Pecci were a decaying local economy insecurity from widespread bandits and pervasive Mafia or Camorra structures which were often allied with aristocratic families Pecci arrested the most powerful aristocrat in Benevento and his troops captured others who were either killed or imprisoned by him With public order restored he turned to the economy and a reform of the tax system to stimulate trade with the neighboring provinces 10 Pecci was first destined for Spoleto a province of 100 000 On 17 July 1841 he was sent to Perugia with 200 000 inhabitants 8 His immediate concern was to prepare the province for a papal visitation in the same year Pope Gregory XVI visited hospitals and educational institutions for several days asking for advice and listing questions The fight against corruption continued in Perugia where Pecci investigated several incidents When it was claimed that a bakery was selling bread below the prescribed pound weight he personally went there had all bread weighed and confiscated it if below legal weight The confiscated bread was distributed to the poor 11 Nuncio to Belgium 1843 Edit Archbishop Pecci as Nuncio in Brussels In 1843 Pecci at only 33 was appointed Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium 12 a position that guaranteed the cardinal s hat after completion of the tour On 27 April 1843 Pope Gregory XVI appointed Pecci Archbishop and asked his Cardinal Secretary of State Lambruschini to consecrate him 12 Pecci developed excellent relations with the royal family and used the location to visit neighboring Germany where he was particularly interested in the architectural completion of the Cologne Cathedral In 1844 upon his initiative a Belgian College in Rome was opened 102 years later in 1946 the future Pope John Paul II would begin his Roman studies there Pecci spent several weeks in England with Bishop Nicholas Wiseman carefully reviewing the condition of the Catholic Church in that country 13 In Belgium the school question was sharply debated between the Catholic majority and the liberal minority Pecci encouraged the struggle for Catholic schools but he was able to win the good will of the Court not only of the pious Queen Louise but also of King Leopold I who was strongly liberal in his views The new nuncio succeeded in uniting Catholics At the end of his mission the King granted him the Grand Cordon in the Order of Leopold 14 Archbishop Bishop of Perugia 1846 1878 EditPapal assistant Edit Archbishop Pecci enters Perugia in 1846 In 1843 Pecci had been named papal assistant From 1846 to 1877 he was considered a popular and successful Archbishop Bishop of Perugia In 1847 after Pope Pius IX granted unlimited freedom for the press in the Papal States 15 Pecci who had been highly popular in the first years of his episcopate became the object of attacks in the media and at his residence 16 In 1848 revolutionary movements developed throughout Western Europe including France Germany and Italy Austrian French and Spanish troops reversed the revolutionary gains but at a price for Pecci and the Catholic Church who could not regain their former popularity Provincial council Edit Pecci called a provincial council in 1849 to reform the religious life in his dioceses in Spoleto and it was in this council that the need for a Syllabus of Errors was discussed 17 18 He invested in enlarging the seminary for future priests and in hiring new and prominent professors preferably Thomists He called on his brother Giuseppe Pecci a noted Thomist scholar to resign his professorship in Rome and to teach in Perugia instead 19 His own residence was next to the seminary which facilitated his daily contacts with the students Charitable activities Edit Archbishop Pecci aids the poor in Perugia Pecci developed several activities when in support of Catholic charities He founded homeless shelters for boys girls and elderly women Throughout his dioceses he opened branches of a Bank Monte di Pieta which focused on low income people and provided low interest loans 20 He created soup kitchens which were run by the Capuchins Upon his elevation to the cardinalate in late 1853 and in light of continuing earthquakes and floods he donated all resources for the festivities of his elevation to the victims Much of the public attention turned on the conflict between the Papal States and Italian nationalism which aimed at the Papal States annihilation to achieve the Unification of Italy Cardinalate Edit In the consistory of 19 December 1853 he was elevated to the College of Cardinals as Cardinal Priest of S Crisogono Pope Gregory XVI originally intended to name him as a cardinal however his death in 1846 put pause to that idea while the events that characterized the beginning of the papacy of Pius IX further postponed the idea of Pecci s elevation By the time that Gregory XVI died Leopold II repeatedly asked that Pecci be named as a cardinal 21 While Pius IX strongly desired having Pecci as close to Rome as possible and repeatedly offered him a suburbicarian see Pecci continually refused due to his preference for Perugia which is alleged to not be in accord with the wishes of Cardinal Antonelli a noted opponent of Pecci Further untrue are the allegations that Pius IX deliberately sent him to Perugia as a way of exiling him from Rome simply because Pecci s views were perceived to be liberalistic and conciliatory as opposed to the conservatism of the papal court 21 Allegedly Pecci had been a cardinal reserved in pectore by Gregory XVI in the consistory of 19 January 1846 with the pope s death just over four months later invalidating the appointment since his name was never actually revealed publicly 5 Defending the papacy Edit Pecci defended the papacy and its claims When Italian authorities expropriated convents and monasteries of Catholic orders turning them into administration or military buildings Pecci protested but acted moderately When the Italian state took over Catholic schools Pecci fearing for his theological seminary simply added all secular topics from other schools and opened the seminary to non theologians 22 The new government also levied taxes on the Catholic Church and issued legislation when according to which all episcopal or papal utterances were to be approved by the government before their publication 23 Organizing the First Vatican Council Edit On 8 December 1869 an ecumenical council which became known as the First Vatican Council was to take place in the Vatican per Pope Pius IX Pecci was likely well informed since the Pope named his brother Giuseppe to help prepare the event During the 1870s in his last years in Perugia Pecci addressed the role of the church in modern society several times defining the church as the mother of material civilization because it upheld human dignity of working people opposed the excesses of industrialization and developed large scale charities for the needy 24 In August 1877 on the death of Cardinal Filippo de Angelis Pope Pius IX appointed him Camerlengo which required him to reside in Rome 25 Reportedly Pius IX is alleged to have said to Pecci Monsignor I have decided to summon you to the Senate of the Church I feel sure this will be the first act of my pontificate that you will not feel called upon to criticize These comments were reported to have been said due to the stories that Pecci and Pius IX had a mutual animosity for each other and disagreed with each other in terms of policy however this purported animosity has never been proven It was further alleged that by this stage Pecci desired a change of scenery from Perugia and hoped for either the bishopric of Albano or the position of datary of the Apostolic Dataria It has also been said that Pecci was reportedly in line to succeed Cardinal Alessandro Barnabo as the prefect for Propaganda Fide however it was stymied by his opponent Cardinal Antonelli 5 Papacy 1878 1903 EditElection Edit Main article 1878 papal conclave Depiction of Leo XIII s papal coronation image c 1900 Pope Pius IX died on 7 February 1878 25 and during his closing years the liberal press had often insinuated that the Kingdom of Italy should take a hand in the conclave and occupy the Vatican citation needed However the Russo Turkish War 1877 1878 and the sudden death of King Victor Emmanuel II 9 January 1878 distracted the government s attention In the conclave the cardinals faced varied questions and discussed issues like church state relations in Europe specifically Italy divisions in the church and the status of the First Vatican Council It was also debated that the conclave be moved elsewhere but Pecci decided otherwise in his capacity as the camerlengo On 18 February 1878 the conclave assembled in Rome Cardinal Pecci was elected on the third ballot and chose the name Leo XIII 25 He was crowned on 3 March 1878 During the conclave he secured his election on the third scrutiny with 44 out of 61 votes more than the requisite two thirds majority While the 1878 conclave was characterized by fewer political influences than in previous conclaves due to a variety of European political crises it was generally believed that the long papacy of the conservative Pius IX led many of the cardinals to vote for Pecci due to his relatively young age added to the fact that his health created expectations that his papacy would be somewhat brief 26 Following the conclave John Henry Newman is reported to have said In the successor of Pius I recognize a depth of thought a tenderness of heart a winning simplicity and a power answering to the name of Leo which prevent me from lamenting that Pius is no longer here 26 In the conclave Pecci was perceived as the main papabile candidate however Cardinals Flavio Chigi and Tommaso Maria Martinelli were also considered as potential candidates But some cardinals who opposed Pecci and were alarmed at the rising votes he was securing banded together to cast their ballots for Cardinal Alessandro Franchi however Franchi secured no votes in the final ballot that saw Pecci duly elected Allegedly those who were dedicated to thwarting his election were Cardinals Oreglia Giannelli Chigi Lorenzo Ilarione Randi Sacconi Monaco Amat and Franzelin It was also suggested that before his death Pius IX heavily favored Cardinal Bilio to succeed him however while many of the cardinals created by the late pope intended to vote for him to honor the man that elevated them in the first place they feared that voting for an ultra conservative could potentially evoke a veto from one of the European powers and stall the election more than was necessary To that end there had been early talks about Austria possibly vetoing Bilio however this never occurred 26 Before the conclave Cardinals Domenico Bartolini Monaco Bilio Manning Nina and Franchi proposed by Pecci s opponents all agreed on supporting Pecci s candidacy also determining that the next pope needed to be an Italian Both Manning and Edward Henry Howard agreed to persuade the foreign cardinals to back Pecci s candidacy 27 26 Upon his election he announced that he would assume the name Leo in memory of Pope Leo XII due to his admiration for the late pope s interest in education and his conciliatory attitude toward foreign governments 27 When asked what name he would take the new pope responded As Leo XIII in remembrance of Leo XII whom I have always venerated His election was formally announced to the people of Rome and the world at 1 15pm 5 He retained the administration of the Perugia see until 1880 Pontificate Edit Pope Leo XIII and his inner court at the Vatican photographed by Jules David in June 1878 Photogram of the 1896 film Sua Santita papa Leone XIII the first time a Pope appeared on film As soon as he was elected to the papacy Leo XIII worked to encourage understanding between the church and the modern world When he firmly reasserted the scholastic doctrine that science and religion coexist he required the study of Thomas Aquinas 28 and opened the Vatican Secret Archives to qualified researchers among whom was the noted historian of the Papacy Ludwig von Pastor He also refounded the Vatican Observatory so that everyone might see clearly that the Church and her Pastors are not opposed to true and solid science whether human or divine but that they embrace it encourage it and promote it with the fullest possible devotion 29 Leo XIII was the first Pope of whose voice a sound recording was made The recording can be found on a compact disc of Alessandro Moreschi s singing a recording of his praying of the Ave Maria is available on the Web 30 He was also the first Pope to be filmed by a motion picture camera He was filmed by its inventor W K Dickson and blessed the camera while being filmed 31 Born in 1810 he is also the earliest born person to appear in a film Leo XIII brought normality back to the Catholic Church after the tumultuous years of Pius IX Leo s intellectual and diplomatic skills helped regain much of the prestige lost with the fall of the Papal States He tried to reconcile the church with the working class particularly by dealing with the social changes that were sweeping Europe The new economic order had resulted in the growth of an impoverished working class who had increasing anticlerical and socialist sympathies Leo helped reverse that trend Although Leo XIII was no radical in either theology or politics his papacy moved the Catholic Church back to the mainstream of European life Considered a great diplomat he managed to improve relations with Russia Prussia Germany France Britain and other countries Pope Leo XIII was able to reach several agreements in 1896 that resulted in better conditions for the faithful and additional appointments of bishops During the fifth cholera pandemic in 1891 he ordered the construction of a hospice inside the Vatican That building would be torn down in 1996 to make way for construction of the Domus Sanctae Marthae 32 Leo was a drinker of the cocaine infused wine tonic Vin Mariani 33 He awarded a Vatican gold medal to the wine s creator Angelo Mariani and also appeared on a poster endorsing it 34 Leo XIII was a semi vegetarian In 1903 he attributed his longevity to the sparing use of meat and the consumption of eggs milk and vegetables 35 His favourite poets were Virgil and Dante 36 Foreign relations Edit Official portrait of Leo XIII taken in April 1878 Russia Edit Main articles Pope Leo XIII and Russia and Pope Leo XIII and Poland Pope Leo XIII began his pontificate with a friendly letter to Tsar Alexander II in which he reminded the Russian monarch of the millions of Catholics living in his empire who would like to be good Russian subjects if their dignity were respected After the assassination of Alexander II the Pope sent a high ranking representative to the coronation of his successor Alexander III who was grateful and asked for all religious forces to unify He asked the Pope to ensure that his bishops abstain from political agitation Relations improved further when Pope Leo XIII because of Italian considerations distanced the Vatican from the Rome Vienna Berlin alliance and helped to facilitate a rapprochement between Paris and St Petersburg Germany Edit Under Otto von Bismarck the anti Catholic Kulturkampf in Prussia led to significant restrictions on the Catholic Church in Imperial Germany including the Jesuits Law of 1872 During Leo s papacy compromises were informally reached and the anti Catholic attacks subsided 37 The Centre Party in Germany represented Catholic interests and was a force for social change It was encouraged by Leo s support for social welfare legislation and the rights of working people Leo s forward looking approach encouraged Catholic Action in other European countries where the social teachings of the church were incorporated into the agenda of Catholic parties particularly the Christian democratic parties which became an acceptable alternative to socialist parties Leo s social teachings were reiterated throughout the 20th century by his successors In his Memoirs 38 Kaiser Wilhelm II discussed the friendly trustful relationship that existed between me and Pope Leo XIII During Wilhelm s third visit to Leo It was of interest to me that the Pope said on this occasion that Germany must be the sword of the Catholic Church I remarked that the old Roman Empire of the German nation no longer existed and that conditions had changed But he adhered to his words France Edit Leo XIII possessed a great affection for France and feared that the Third Republic would take advantage of the fact that most French Catholics were Royalists to abolish the Concordant of 1801 At the advisement of Cardinal Rampolla he urged French Catholics to rally to the republic 39 Leo s decision upset many French monarchists who felt they were being forced to betray their king for their faith Ultimately this move split the French Church politically and decreased its influence in France Leo s move also failed to prevent the Concordant s eventual repealment as it was later abrogated by the law of 1905 on the separation of Church and state 40 Italy Edit Silver medal celebrating Pope Leo XIII s 1891 inauguration of the new observatory In the light of a climate hostile to the Catholic Church Leo continued the policies of Pius IX towards Italy without major modifications 41 In his relations with the Italian state Leo continued the Papacy s self imposed incarceration in the Vatican stance and continued to insist that Italian Catholics should not vote in Italian elections or hold any elected office In his first consistory in 1879 he elevated his older brother Giuseppe to the cardinalate He had to defend the freedom of the church against what Catholics considered Italian persecutions and attacks in the area of education expropriation and violation of Catholic Churches legal measures against the church and brutal attacks culminating in anticlerical groups attempting to throw the body of the deceased Pope Pius IX into the Tiber on 13 July 1881 42 The Pope even considered moving his residence to Trieste or Salzburg two cities in Austria an idea that Emperor Franz Joseph I gently rejected 43 United Kingdom Edit Among the activities of Leo XIII that were important for the English speaking world he restored the Scottish hierarchy in 1878 The following year on 12 May 1879 he raised to the rank of cardinal the convert clergyman John Henry Newman 44 who would eventually be beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010 and canonized by Pope Francis in 2019 In British India too Leo established a Catholic hierarchy in 1886 and regulated some longstanding conflicts with the Portuguese authorities A Papal Rescript 20 April 1888 condemned the Irish Plan of Campaign and all clerical involvement in it as well as boycotting followed in June by the papal encyclical Saepe Nos 45 that was addressed to all the Irish bishops Of outstanding significance not least for the English speaking world was Leo s encyclical Apostolicae curae on the invalidity of the Anglican orders published in 1896 In 1899 he declared Bede the Venerable a Doctor of the Church Spain Catalonia Edit In 1880 the Santa Maria de Montserrat Abbey in Catalonia celebrated 1000 years of existence On 11 September 1881 to coincide with the Catalan national day Leo XIII proclaimed the Virgin of Montserrat to be Patron of Catalonia This had implications beyond the purely religious sphere influencing the development of Catalan nationalism Bulgaria Edit Leo XIII welcomed the elevation of Prince Ferdinand of Saxe Coburg the later Ferdinand I of Bulgaria to the Bulgarian Principality in 1886 A fellow Catholic whose wife was a member of the Italian House of Bourbon Parma the two had a lot in common However relations between the two greatly soured when Ferdinand expressed his intention to convert his eldest son Crown Prince Boris later Tsar Boris III to Orthodoxy the majority religion of Bulgaria Leo strongly condemned the action and when Ferdinand went through with the conversion anyway Leo excommunicated him United States Edit In 1889 Pope Leo XIII authorized the founding of The Catholic University of America in Washington D C and granted it Papal degrees in theology The United States frequently attracted his attention and admiration He confirmed the decrees of the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore 1884 and raised James Gibbons the archbishop of that city to the cardinalate in 1886 Also in 1884 Pope Leo XIII established the See of Helena St Helena in the territorial capital of Montana which five years later would become the state capital On 10 April 1887 a pontifical charter from Pope Leo XIII founded the Catholic University of America establishing the national university of the Catholic Church in the United States American newspapers criticized Pope Leo because they claimed that he was attempting to gain control of American public schools 46 One cartoonist drew Leo as a fox unable to reach grapes that were labeled for American schools the caption read Sour grapes 47 Brazil Edit Pope Leo XIII is also remembered for the First Plenary Council of Latin America held at Rome in 1899 and for his encyclical of 1888 to the bishops of Brazil In plurimis on the abolition of slavery In 1897 he published the Apostolic Letter Trans Oceanum which dealt with the privileges and ecclesiastical structure of the Catholic Church in Latin America 48 Chile Edit His role in South America will also be remembered especially the pontifical benediction extended over Chilean troops on the eve of the Battle of Chorrillos during the War of the Pacific in January 1881 The Chilean soldiers thus blessed then looted the cities of Chorrillos and Barranco including the churches and their Chaplains headed the robbery at the Biblioteca Nacional del Peru where the soldiers ransacked various items along with much capital and Chilean Priests coveted rare and ancient editions of the Bible that were stored there 49 Despite this one year later Chilean President Domingo Santa Maria issued the Laic Laws which separated the Church from the State considered a slap in the face for the papacy India Edit Pope Leo XIII urged Filii tui India administri tibi salutis Your own sons O India will be the heralds of your salvation 50 and founded the national seminary called Papal Seminary He entrusted this task to the then Apostolic Delegate to India Ladislaus Michael Zaleski who founded the Seminary in 1893 Evangelization Edit Pope Leo XIII sanctioned the missions to Eastern Africa beginning in 1884 44 In 1879 Catholic missionaries associated with the White Father Congregation Society of the Missionaries of Africa came to Uganda and others went to Tanganyika present day Tanzania and Rwanda In 1887 he approved the foundation of Missionaries of St Charles Borromeo which were organized by the Bishop of Piacenza Giovanni Battista Scalabrini The missionaries were sent to North and South America to do pastoral care for Italian immigrants Theology Edit Main article Theology of Pope Leo XIII Giuseppe Pecci in 1887 At the urgent requests of the College of Cardinals Leo XIII in 1879 elevated his brother Giuseppe Pecci a Jesuit and prominent Thomist theologian into their ranks 51 Further information List of Encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII The pontificate of Leo XIII was theologically influenced by the First Vatican Council 1869 1870 which had ended only eight years earlier Leo XIII issued some 46 apostolic letters and encyclicals dealing with central issues in the areas of marriage and family and state and society He also wrote two prayers for the intercession of Michael the Archangel after he allegedly had a vision of Michael and the end times 52 but the story of the alleged vision may be merely apocryphal as historians note that the story does not appear in any of his writings 53 Leo XIII also approved a number of Scapulars In 1885 he approved the Scapular of the Holy Face also known as The Veronica and elevated the Priests of the Holy Face to an archconfraternity 54 He also approved the Scapular of Our Lady of Good Counsel and the Scapular of St Joseph both in 1893 and the Scapular of the Sacred Heart in 1900 55 Thomism Edit As Pope he used all his authority for a revival of Thomism the theology of Thomas Aquinas On 4 August 1879 Leo XIII promulgated the encyclical Aeterni Patris Eternal Father which more than any other single document provided a charter for the revival of Thomism the medieval theological system based on the thought of Aquinas as the official philosophical and theological system of the Catholic Church It was to be normative not only in the training of priests at church seminaries but also in the education of the laity at universities Pope Leo XIII then created the Pontifical Academy of St Thomas Aquinas on 15 October 1879 and ordered the publication of the critical edition the so called Leonine Edition of the complete works of the doctor angelicus The superintendence of the leonine edition was entrusted to Tommaso Maria Zigliara professor and rector of the Collegium Divi Thomae de Urbe the future Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas Angelicum Leo XIII also founded the Angelicum s Faculty of Philosophy in 1882 and its Faculty of Canon Law in 1896 Consecrations Edit The Blessed Sister Mary of the Divine Heart was a religious sister from the Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd who requested Pope Leo XIII to consecrate the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus 56 Pope Leo XIII performed a number of consecrations at times entering new theological territory After he had received many letters from Sister Mary of the Divine Heart the countess of Droste zu Vischering and Mother Superior in the Convent of the Good Shepherd Sisters in Porto Portugal asking him to consecrate the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus he commissioned a group of theologians to examine the petition on the basis of revelation and sacred tradition The outcome of this investigation was positive and so in the encyclical letter Annum sacrum on 25 May 1899 he decreed that the consecration of the entire human race to the Sacred Heart of Jesus should take place on 11 June 1899 The encyclical letter also encouraged the entire Catholic episcopate to promote the First Friday Devotions established June as the Month of the Sacred Heart and included the Prayer of Consecration to the Sacred Heart 57 His consecration of the entire world to the Sacred Heart of Jesus presented theological challenges in consecrating non Christians Since about 1850 various congregations and countries had consecrated themselves to the Sacred Heart and in 1875 the consecration was made throughout the Catholic world Scriptures Edit In his 1893 encyclical Providentissimus Deus he described the importance of scriptures for theological study It was an important encyclical for Catholic theology and its relation to the Bible as Pope Pius XII pointed out 50 years later in his encyclical Divino Afflante Spiritu 58 Relations with Eastern Orthodox Churches Edit Pope Leo XIII fostered relations of goodwill particularly towards the churches of the East not in communion with the Apostolic See He also opposed efforts to Latinize the Eastern Rite Churches and stated that they constitute a most valuable ancient tradition and symbol of the divine unity of the Catholic Church He expressed that in his encyclical Orientalium Dignitas of 1894 and wrote The Churches of the East are worthy of the glory and reverence that they hold throughout the whole of Christendom in virtue of those extremely ancient singular memorials that they have bequeathed to us Theological research Edit John Henry Newman was raised into the College of Cardinals by Pope Leo XIII Leo XIII is credited with great efforts in the areas of scientific and historical analysis He opened the Vatican Archives and personally fostered a 20 volume comprehensive scientific study of the Papacy by Ludwig von Pastor an Austrian historian 59 Mariology Edit Main article Mariology of Pope Leo XIII His predecessor Pope Pius IX became known as the Pope of the Immaculate Conception because of his dogmatization in 1854 Leo XIII in light of his unprecedented promulgation of the rosary in 11 encyclicals was called the Rosary Pope because he promulgated Marian devotion In his encyclical on the 50th anniversary of the Dogma of the Immaculate Conception he stresses Mary s role in the redemption of humanity and calls her Mediatrix and Co Redemptrix While allowing the title Mediatrix recent popes following on the Second Vatican Council have warned away from the term co redemptrix as derogating from the one mediator Jesus Christ 60 61 62 Social teachings Edit Main article List of encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII Church and state Edit Leo XIII worked to encourage understanding between the Catholic Church and the modern world but he preferred a cautious view on freedom of thought stating that it is quite unlawful to demand defend or to grant unconditional freedom of thought or speech of writing or worship as if these were so many rights given by nature to man Leo s social teachings are based on the Catholic premise that God is the Creator of the world and its Ruler Eternal law commands the natural order to be maintained and forbids that it be disturbed men s destiny is far above human things and beyond the earth citation needed Rerum novarum Edit Charles M Johnson Pope Leo XIII 1899 National Gallery of Art Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1900 His encyclicals changed the church s relations with temporal authorities the 1891 encyclical Rerum novarum for the first time addressed social inequality and social justice issues with papal authority by focusing on the rights and duties of capital and labour He was greatly influenced by Wilhelm Emmanuel von Ketteler a German bishop who openly propagated siding with the suffering working classes in his book Die Arbeiterfrage und das Christentum Since Leo XIII papal teachings have expanded on the rights and obligations of workers and the limitations of private property Pope Pius XI s Quadragesimo anno the social teachings of Pope Pius XII on a huge range of social issues John XXIII s Mater et magistra in 1961 Pope Paul VI s Populorum progressio on world development issues Pope John Paul II s Centesimus annus commemorating the 100th anniversary of Rerum novarum and Pope Francis Laudato si on the use of the goods of creation Leo had argued that both capitalism and communism are flawed Rerum novarum introduced the idea of subsidiarity the principle that political and social decisions should be taken at a local level if possible rather than by a central authority into Catholic social thought See list of Encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII Consistories Edit Main article Cardinals created by Leo XIII Throughout his pontificate Leo XIII elevated 147 cardinals in 27 consistories While the limit of the College of Cardinals had been set at 70 since the papacy of Pope Sixtus V Leo XIII never exceeded nor reached the limit only ever coming close at 67 in 1901 63 Amongst the noteworthy cardinals whom he elevated he named John Henry Newman as a cardinal while also elevating his own brother Giuseppe Pecci though not a nepotistic act it was based purely on recommendation and merit in the same consistory In 1893 he elevated Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto to the cardinalate who would go on to be his immediate successor Pope Pius X in 1903 The Pope also nominated the brothers Serafino and Vincenzo Vannutelli and the cousins Luigi and Angelo Jacobini to the Sacred College Other noteworthy inclusions were Andrea Carlo Ferrari later beatified in 1987 and Girolamo Maria Gotti whom he favoured as his successor Of the 147 cardinals he elevated 85 were Italian since Leo XIII nominated cardinals from beyond Europe including the first cardinals from Australia 64 Canada 65 Slovenia 66 and Armenia 67 the latter of which would be the first Oriental selection since 1439 In 1880 the Pope named three cardinals in pectore announcing them in 1882 and 1884 In 1882 he named another cardinal in pectore announcing the name later that same year On 30 December 1889 Leo XIII named only one cardinal whom he reserved in pectore only announcing the name roughly six months later In early 1893 he named another two cardinals in pectore announcing their names in 1894 and 1895 while in April 1901 announcing the names of another two cardinals whom he had reserved in pectore in June 1899 In June 1896 Leo XIII named two other cardinals in pectore announcing in March 1898 that both had died hence vacating the red hats he would have bestowed upon them 68 With the elevation of Newman in 1879 it was widely praised throughout the English speaking world not simply on the account of Newman s virtues and reputation but on the basis that Leo XIII had a broader episcopal vision in mind than Pius IX ever did His similar appointments of two prominent participants of the First Vatican Council Lajos Haynald and Friedrich Egon von Furstenberg both in 1879 was also noteworthy due to their roles in the short lived Council It was even alleged that Felix Antoine Philibert Dupanloup a vocal opponent of papal infallibility like Newman would have been elevated to the cardinalate in 1879 had he not died in October 1878 26 Additionally in 1884 the Polish priest and former Curial official Stefan Zachariasz Pawlicki was offered but refused an offer of elevation Leo XIII later intended to name the Archbishop of Santiago Mariano Santiago Casanova Casanova as a cardinal in 1895 however the Pope abandoned the idea after the Peruvian Church objected that the Archbishop of Lima was the Primate of South America and hence the one that needed to be made a cardinal In order to avoid a conflict between Chile and Peru the Pope abandoned the idea reluctantly 68 In 1897 the Pope intended to name the Archbishop of Turin Davide Riccardi as a cardinal however the cardinal died before the promotion could take place In 1891 and again in 1897 the Pope offered the cardinalate to Johannes Montel Edler von Treuenfels the dean of the Sacred Rota though he refused the honor he refused again in 1908 when invited by Pope Pius X In 1899 Leo XIII hoped to nominate the Dominican procurator general Hyacinthe Marie Cormier later beatified to the cardinalate however he was unable to do so because the French government did not favor a cardinal from a religious order to seek its best interests as a Curial member 68 In 1901 he planned to name Agapito Panici as a cardinal at the next consistory but Panici died before the nomination could take place in 1903 Allegedly before deciding to name him Leo XIII asked his brother Diomede to renounce his claim to the red hat but when Agapito died in 1902 the Pope informed Diomede that he would ignore his previous missive asking him to renounce his claim to the red hat a position that Diomede was never then given According to witnesses Leo XIII failed three times to invite Vincenzo Tarozzi whose cause for beatification has since been launched to receive the red hat According to a conversation in 1904 between Pope Pius X and Antonio Mele Virdis the former is alleged to have said he should have been in my place 68 Canonizations and beatifications Edit Main article List of saints canonized by Pope Leo XIII Leo XIII canonized the following saints during his pontificate 8 December 1881 Clare of Montefalco d 1308 John Baptist de Rossi 1696 1764 Lawrence of Brindisi d 1619 and Benedict Joseph Labre 1748 1783 15 January 1888 Seven Holy Founders of the Servite Order Peter Claver 1581 1654 John Berchmans 1599 1621 and Alphonsus Rodriguez 1531 1617 27 May 1897 Antonio Maria Zaccaria 1502 1539 and Peter Fourier 1565 1640 24 May 1900 John Baptist de la Salle 1651 1719 and Rita of Cascia 1381 1457 Leo XIII beatified several of his predecessors Urban II 14 July 1881 Victor III 23 July 1887 and Innocent V 9 March 1898 He canonized Adrian III on 2 June 1891 He also beatified the following Giancarlo Melchiori on 22 January 1882 Edmund Campion and Ralph Sherwin in 1886 John Haile on 29 December 1886 John Baptist de la Salle whom he later canonized on 19 February 1888 Ines of Beniganim on 26 February 1888 Antonio Maria Zaccaria whom he later canonized on 3 January 1890 Giovanni Giovenale Ancina on 9 February 1890 Pompilio Maria Pirrotti on 26 January 1890 Gerard Majella on 29 January 1893 Leopoldo Croci on 12 May 1893 Antonio Baldinucci on 16 April 1893 Rodolfo Acquaviva and 4 Companions on 30 April 1893 Diego Jose Lopez Caamano on 22 April 1894 Bernardino Realino on 12 January 1896 Francois Regis Clet on 27 May 1900 Ignatius Delgado y Cebrian as one of 64 Martyrs of Vietnam on 27 May 1900 Louis Gabriel Taurin Dufresse on 27 May 1900 John Lantrua of Triora on 27 May 1900 Maria Maddalena Martinengo on 3 June 1900 Denis Berthelot of the Nativity and Redento Rodriguez of the Cross on 10 June 1900 citation needed Jeanne de Lestonnac on 23 September 1900 Antonio Grassi on 30 September 1900He approved the cult of Cosmas of Aphrodisia He beatified several of the English martyrs in 1895 69 Doctors of the Church Edit Leo XIII named four individuals as Doctors of the Church Cyril of Alexandria 28 July 1882 he named him as Doctor Incarnationis Doctor of the Incarnation Cyril of Jerusalem 28 July 1882 John of Damascus 29 August 1890 Bede the Venerable 13 November 1899 he named him as Anglorum doctor Doctor of the English Audiences Edit In 1901 Pope Leo XIII welcomed Eugenio Pacelli later Pope Pius XII on his first day of 57 years of service in the Vatican 1901 1958 One of the first audiences that Leo XIII granted was to the professors and students of the Collegio Capranica where in the first row knelt in front of him the young seminarian Giacomo Della Chiesa the future Pope Benedict XV who would reign from 1914 to 1922 On a pilgrimage with her father and sister in 1887 Therese of Lisieux attended a general audience with Pope Leo XIII and asked him to allow her to enter the Carmelite order Even though she was strictly forbidden to speak to him because she was told that it would prolong the audience too much she wrote in her autobiography Story of a Soul that after she kissed his slipper and he presented his hand instead of kissing it she took it in her own hand and said through tears Most Holy Father I have a great favor to ask you In honor of your Jubilee permit me to enter Carmel at the age of 15 Leo XIII answered Well my child do what the superiors decide Therese replied Oh Holy Father if you say yes everybody will agree Finally the Pope said Go go You will enter if God wills it italics hers Two guards lifted her still on her knees in front of the Pope by her arms and carried her to the door where a third gave her a medal of the Pope Shortly thereafter the Bishop of Bayeux authorized the prioress to receive Therese and in April 1888 she entered Carmel at the age of 15 There are several versions of a story of how Leo came to compose the Prayer to Saint Michael Various dates are given A common account says that on the morning of 13 October 1884 Leo XIII celebrated Mass but as he finished he turned to step down the stairs and allegedly collapsed falling into what was originally thought to be a coma but was rather a mystical ecstasy As the priests and cardinals rushed to his side Leo XIII rose and visibly shaken brushed off his aides and rushed back towards his apartment where he immediately wrote the Prayer to Saint Michael the Archangel Leo XIII reportedly saw a vision of demons being released from Hell however just as the vision ended he saw Saint Michael charge in and drive them all back into Hell Leo XIII mandated that the prayer be said after every Mass from that point forth In 1934 a German writer Fr Bers tried to trace the origin of the story and declared that though the story was widespread nowhere could he find a trace of proof Sources close to the institution of the prayer in 1886 including an account of a conversation with Leo XIII about his decision say nothing of the alleged vision Bers concluded that the story was a later invention that spread like a virus 70 Health Edit Pope Leo XIII in 1887 At the time of his election in 1878 the Pope had started to experience a slight tremor in his hand due to a poorly undertaken bloodletting procedure for a previous malady 71 In March 1899 it had been believed that the Pope was gravely ill and that he was nearing death Originally it was presumed that the Pope was suffering from a violent case of pneumonia and that the alarm was raised regarding his health However it was soon discovered that the reason for the Pope s illness was the sudden inflammation of a cyst which had been troubling him for almost thirty years and which had never been previously removed The only reason it had never been of any particular concern was due to incisions designed for pain relief While Leo XIII strongly rejected the notion of surgery at first he was persuaded by Cardinal Mariano Rampolla del Tindaro that it was necessary to ensure his good health Before the pope was taken for surgery he asked that his chaplain celebrate Mass in his private chapel while the operation was taking place Reportedly the cyst removed was the size of an ordinary sized orange 71 72 Towards the end of his life Leo XIII resorted to using a gold headed cane when going on walks as he often found it difficult to do so While Leo XIII was certainly able to walk without it he only did so if he felt truly comfortable in doing so When there were ever rumors about his health Leo XIII was known to mischievously walk about briskly to dispel the rumors 5 Death Edit Pope Leo XIII lying in state in July 1903 The monument and tomb to Leo XIII in the Basilica of Saint John Lateran On 30 June 1903 Leo XIII reported slight feelings of dyspepsia and said that he would take a dose of castor oil to help himself recuperate shrugging off concerns about his health While it seemed to work and the Pope resumed his duties with a renewed vigor it was not to last 72 Leo XIII originally contracted a cold while taking an outing on the Vatican grounds on 3 July 1903 however his condition rapidly deteriorated to the point that he had contracted pneumonia That night he immediately went to bed and lost consciousness 72 73 Originally the pope refused his doctor s desire to secure a second opinion from a colleague insisting on a doctor who had previously tended to him in 1899 when he suffered a previous serious illness 74 When the doctor was immediately summoned to the Pope s bedside he determined that the castor oil had disturbed his stomach and exacerbated his condition 72 The pope s nephews were immediately notified of their uncle s illness as were Cardinals Mariano Rampolla del Tindaro and Luigi Oreglia di Santo Stefano in their capacities as the Secretary of State and Camerlengo respectively On 4 July he made his last confession to Cardinal Serafino Vannutelli before the Pope was barely able to recite the profession of faith 74 That very same day he experienced a loss of appetite and suffered from shortness of breath 71 On 5 July the doctor said reported that the hepatisation affected the upper and middle lobes of the right lung while Leo XIII suffered from considerable cardiac weakness and difficulties in breathing while reporting the absence of any fever or coughing fits 72 That same day after having received the sacraments the pope said I am now near my end I do not know if all I have done has been good but I certainly obeyed my conscience and our faith 5 On 6 July 1903 he was administered an injection to ease the pain that he was experiencing while it was reported that the pneumonia he had contracted was starting to spread to the left lung The Pope who had an imperceptible pulse had a restless night and was given oxygen by his doctors When given the oxygen Leo XIII replied That is much better Before I felt as though I had lost my liberty 5 That morning he intimated to those with him that he would prefer it if Cardinal Girolamo Maria Gotti succeeded him in the next conclave 75 When doctors ordered him to rest so as not to further aggravate his declining health Leo XIII said If it were only of any use but I do not believe it would be The brief remainder of my life must be given to God s Church not to my own poor comfort The pope lost consciousness but was awake to receive the sacraments at 9 00pm before experiencing yet another restless night marveling God s will be done Who would have believed it when only ten days ago I was presiding over a public consistory 75 Leo XIII only slept three hours but severe pain saw him immediately awaken complaining of pain on both sides of the thorax that forced doctors to move his frail form for better comfort His situation had previously been critical that afternoon when he was given the Last Rites while his doctors apprised him of his sudden deterioration On 7 July the feeble Pope asked that the shutters of his window be opened saying I wish to see once more perhaps for the last time the rays of the sun 74 In the nights following the Pope suffered from several coughing fits perspiring heavily due to his rising fever The Pope felt slightly better enough on 10 July to receive a group of Hungarian pilgrims however the Pope was exhausted and collapsed after the meeting 73 Leo XIII deteriorated further until he died at 3 55 pm on 20 July 1903 whispering a final blessing before he died However Vatican officials gave the time of the Pope s death as 4 04 pm when officials officially confirmed that the Pope had indeed died Officially Leo XIII had died of pneumonia followed by hemorrhagic pleurisy 76 Leo XIII was the first Pope to be born in the 19th century and was also the first to die in the 20th century living to the age of 93 77 He is the oldest Pope to have served in the office and the second oldest person to have been Pope surpassed only by Pope Benedict XVI as Pope emeritus as of 2022 update At the time of his death Leo XIII was the second longest reigning Pope 25 years exceeded only by his immediate predecessor Pius IX 31 years He was entombed in Saint Peter s Basilica only briefly after his funeral he was later moved to the Basilica of Saint John Lateran his cathedral church as the Bishop of Rome and a church in which he took a particular interest He was moved there in late 1924 As of 2023 update he is the last Pope not to be buried in St Peter s Basilica 78 See also EditCardinals created by Leo XIII Distributism List of popes List of popes by length of reign Papal Navy Prayer to Saint Michael Restoration of the Scottish hierarchyNotes Edit Portrait from the archives of the United States Library of Congress Italian dʒoakˈkiːno vinˈtʃɛntso raffaˈɛːle luˈiːdʒi ˈpettʃi English Joachim Vincent Raphael Louis Pecci References Edit Gifford Don 1982 Joyce Annotated Notes for Dubliners and A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man University of California Press p 106 ISBN 978 0 520 04610 8 Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi Pecci aka Pope Leo XIII www familysearch org Retrieved 3 January 2023 Kuhne 1880 p 7 Kuhne 1880 p 12 a b c d e f g James Martin Miller 1908 The life of Pope Leo XIII containing a full and authentic account of the illustrious pontiff s life and work Retrieved 21 February 2022 Kuhne 1880 p 20 Kuhne 1880 p 23 a b c CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA Pope Leo XIII www newadvent org Kuhne 1880 p 24 Kuhne 1880 p 31 Kuhne 1880 p 37 a b Miranda Salvador Pecci Gioacchino The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Kuhne 1880 p 52 Laatste Nieuws Het 1 January 1910 Kuhne 62 Kuhne 1880 p 66 Lang Ariella 2008 A Modern Inquisition and the Unification of Italy 1st ed United Kingdom PALGRAVE MACMILLAN p 178 ISBN 978 1 349 37407 6 Notices of books The Dublin Review 104 483 1888 Kuhne 1880 p 76 Kuhne 1880 p 78 a b Pope Leo XIII New Advent 1910 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Kuhne 1880 p 102 Kuhne 1880 p 105 Kuhne 1880 p 129 a b c BERNARD O REILLY D D 1886 Life of Pope Leo XIII unknown library a b c d e Hutton Arthur Wollaston Bryant Margaret 1911 Leo popes Leo XIII Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed pp 437 439 a b Roger Francois Marie Aubert Leo XIII Britannica Retrieved 12 February 2022 Aeterni Patris On the Restoration of Christian Philosophy encyclical Catholic forum 4 August 1879 archived from the original on 25 February 2007 Pecci Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi 14 March 1891 Ut Mysticam in Latin Pope Leo XIII 1810 1910 Archive 30 November 1902 Abel Richard 1 August 2004 Encyclopedia of early cinema p 266 ISBN 978 0 415 23440 5 Domus Sanctae Marthae amp The New Urns Used in the Election of the Pope EWTN 22 February 1996 Archived from the original on 12 July 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2010 Nesi Thomas 2008 Poison Pills The Untold Story of the Vioxx Drug Scandal 1st ed New York Thomas Dunne Books pp 53 ISBN 9780312369590 OCLC 227205792 Inciardi James A 1992 The War on Drugs II Mayfield Publishing Company p 6 ISBN 978 1 55934 016 8 The Elusive Secret of Long Life Arizona Republican 9 March 1903 p 2 Pope Leo XIII and his Household in The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine p 596 Ross Ronald J 1998 The failure of Bismarck s Kulturkampf Catholicism and state power in imperial Germany 1871 1887 Washington Catholic University of America Press ISBN 978 0 81320894 7 Emperor William I I German 1922 Memoirs pp 204 207 Retrieved 23 June 2013 Coulombe Charles A 2003 A History of the Popes Vicars of Christ MJF Books pp 404 405 Feher Ferenc 1990 The French Revolution and the Birth of Modernity University of California Press p 55 ISBN 9780520071209 Archived from the original on 29 May 2010 Retrieved 17 September 2021 Schmidlin 1934 p 409 Schmidlin 1934 p 413 Schmidlin 1934 p 414 a b Martire Egilberto 1951 Enciclopedia Cattolica Catholic Encyclopedia in Italian Vol 7 Firenze Casa Editrice G C Sansoni Pecci Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi Saepe nos in Latin New Advent The Public Schools Minneapolis Daily Times Vol VIII 1 630 ed Minneapolis Minnesota 19 March 1894 p 5 Retrieved 15 August 2022 LLC CRIA CRIA Commercial Research Image Archives www criaimages com Archived from the original on 29 November 2019 Pecci Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi 18 April 1897 Trans Oceanum Litterae apostolicae De privilegiis Americae Latinae Over the Ocean Apostolic letter on Latin American privileges in Latin Rome IT Vatican Retrieved 23 June 2013 Caivano Tomas 1907 Historia de la guerra de America entre Chile Peru y Bolivia History of the American war between Chile Peru and Bolivia in Spanish Mathias Joseph Benedict June 2015 Priestly Formation in Indian Context A New Pedagogy for Integral Formation of Candidates to Priesthood in India Catholic Theology and Thought 75 11 45 Kuhne 1880 p 247 Archangel Michael Cekada Rev Anthony 1992 Russia and the Leonine Prayers PDF TraditionalMass org Retrieved 29 September 2017 Henry Charles Lea 2002 A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgences in the Latin Church Adamant Media Corp ISBN 1 4021 6108 5 p 506 Francis de Zulueta 2008 Early Steps In The Fold Miller Press ISBN 978 1 4086 6003 4 p 317 Chasle Louis 1906 Sister Mary of the Divine Heart Droste zu Vischering religious of the Good Shepherd 1863 1899 London Burns amp Oates Ball Ann 2003 Encyclopedia of Catholic Devotions and Practices p 166 ISBN 978 0 87973 910 2 Divino Afflante Spiritu 1 12 von Pastor Ludwig 1950 Errinnerungen in German Frederick William Faber 1858 The foot of the Cross or The sorrows of Mary Thomas Richardson and Son p 448 Co Redemptrix as Dogma University of Dayton Ohio udayton edu Retrieved 7 July 2020 Pope Francis on Co Redemptrix cruxnow com 12 December 2019 Retrieved 7 July 2020 Clarke Richard Henry 1903 The Life of His Holiness Pope Leo XIII Philadelphia P W Ziegler amp Co p 607 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Australian Cardinal Dead The New York Times 17 August 1911 Retrieved 12 February 2021 Hopkins John Castell 1924 The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs Toronto p 458 Retrieved 12 February 2022 Missia Jakob 1838 1902 Dizionario Biografico dei Friulani in Italian Retrieved 12 February 2022 B Miller 21 January 2015 An Armenian As Pope A British Diplomatic Report on Cardinal Agagianian 1958 Horizon Weekly Retrieved 12 February 2022 First published Window Quarterly Vol V No 3 amp 4 1995 pp 11 13 a b c d Salvador Miranda Lep XIII 1878 1903 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church Retrieved 12 February 2022 St Cosmas Saints amp Angels Catholic Online Retrieved 15 February 2010 Like a perpetual sickness Die Gebete nach der hl Messe Theol Prakt Quartalschrift 87 1934 162 163 a b c The Illness of His Holiness The Pilot 25 March 1899 Retrieved 21 February 2022 a b c d e The Illness and Death of the Pope The Lancet 162 4169 253 255 25 July 1903 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 01 50670 4 Retrieved 21 February 2022 a b Pope Leo XIII suffering from severe attack of pneumonia The Lafayette News 11 July 1903 Retrieved 7 February 2022 a b c Pope Leo XIII facing death The Pilot 11 July 1903 Retrieved 10 February 2022 a b Leo forecasts death expresses desire that Gotti succeed him The Saint Paul Globe 6 July 1903 Retrieved 7 February 2022 Lumen de coelo nunc est lumen in coelo The Catholic Telegraph 23 July 1903 Retrieved 7 February 2022 John Peter Pham Heirs of the Fisherman Behind the Scenes of Papal Death and Succession Oxford University Press 2004 98 Popes Buried in St Peter s stpetersbasilica info Retrieved 5 November 2022 Bibliography EditIn English Edit Chadwick Owen A History of the Popes 1830 1914 2003 online pp 273 331 Chadwick Owen The Popes and European Revolution 1981 655pp excerpt also online Duffy Eamon 1997 Saints and Sinners A History of the Popes Yale University Press Therese of Lisieux 1996 Story of a Soul The Autobiography of St Therese of Lisieux Clarke John Clarke trans 3rd ed Washington DC ICS Quardt Robert The Master Diplomat From the Life of Leo XIII Wolson Ilya trans New York Alba House O Reilly Bernard 1887 Life of Leo XIII From An Authentic Memoir Furnished By His Order New York Charles L Webster amp Co In German Edit Ernesti Jorg 2019 Leo XIII Papst und Staatsmann in German Freiburg Herder Baumer Remigius 1992 Marienlexikon Dictionary of Mary in German et al St Ottilien Eos Franzen August Baumer Remigius 1988 Papstgeschichte in German Freiburg Herder Kuhne Benno 1880 Papst Leo XIII Pope Leo XIII in German New York amp St Louis C amp N Benzinger Einsideln Quardt Robert 1964 Der Meisterdiplomat The Master Diplomat in German Kevelaer DE Butzon amp Bercker Schmidlin Josef 1934 Papstgeschichte der neueren Zeit in German Munchen In Italian Edit Regoli Roberto 2009 L elite cardinalizia dopo la fine dello stato pontificio Archivum Historiae Pontificiae 47 63 87 JSTOR 23565185 Further reading EditRichard H Clarke 1903 The Life of His Holiness Leo XIII Philadelphia P W Ziegler amp Co Hutton Arthur Wollaston Bryant Margaret 1911 Leo popes Leo XIII Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed pp 437 439 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article Pope Leo XIII Wikimedia Commons has media related to Leo XIII Wikisource has original works by or about Leo XIII Wikiquote has quotations related to Pope Leo XIII Pecci Vincenzo Gioacchino Raffaele Luigi Encyclicals and other documents Etexts Pope Leo XIII texts amp biography Vatican City The Vatican Pope Leo XIII overview of pontificate Catholic Community Forum Archived from the original on 3 June 2004 Pope Leo XIII in Carriage silent film available in UK only 1898 via BFI The Pope arrives in a carriage and bestows a blessing Film of Pope Leo XIII in 1896 on YouTube with recording of Leo XIII chanting the Ave Maria in Latin in 1903 Colorized film of Pope Leo XIII in 1896 on YouTube Pope Leo XIII text with concordances and frequency list Intra text Works by or about Pope Leo XIII at Internet Archive Keller Rev Joseph E ed 1883 Life and Acts of Pope Leo XII New and Enlarged ed New York Cincinnati and St Louis Benziger Brothers via Internet Archive Works by Pope Leo XIII at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Newspaper clippings about Pope Leo XIII in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWDiplomatic postsPreceded byRaffaele Fornari Apostolic Nuncio to Belgium1843 1846 Succeeded byInnocenzo FerrieriCatholic Church titlesPreceded byGiovanni Giacomo Sinibaldi TITULAR Archbishop of Tamiathis1843 1846 Succeeded byDiego PlanetaPreceded byCarlo Filesio Cittadini Archbishop Bishop of Perugia11846 1878 Succeeded byFederico Pietro FoschiPreceded byFilippo de Angelis Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church22 September 1877 20 February 1878 Succeeded byCamillo di PietroPreceded byPius IX Pope20 February 1878 20 July 1903 Succeeded byPius XNotes and references1 Retained personal title Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pope Leo XIII amp oldid 1142914582, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.