词条 | 1294 papal conclave | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| month = December | year = 1294 | commonname = | dates = 23–24 December 1294 | location = Castel Nuovo, Naples | dean = Gerardo Bianchi | vicedean = | camerlengo = Tommaso d'Ocra | protopriest = Benedetto Caetani | protodeacon = Matteo Rosso Orsini | secretary = | candidates = | ballots = 1 | pope_elected= Benedetto Caetani | nametaken = Boniface VIII | image = Bonifatius viii papst.jpg | prevconclave_year=1292–94 | prevconclave_link=Papal election, 1292–94 | nextconclave_year=1303 | nextconclave_link=Papal conclave, 1303 }} The papal conclave of 1294 (23–24 December) was convoked in Naples after the resignation of Pope Celestine V on 13 December 1294. Celestine V had only months earlier restored the election procedures set forth in the papal bull Ubi periculum of Pope Gregory X, which had been suspended by Pope Adrian V in July 1276. Every papal election since then has been a papal conclave. It was the first papal conclave held during the lifetime of the preceding pontiff, an event not repeated until the papal conclave of 2013 following the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI. Abdication of Celestine VCelestine V, founder of the Order of Celestines, widely esteemed and venerated for his holiness, was elected to the papacy on 7 July 1294, as a compromise choice after an over two-years long sede vacante. It quickly became clear that this saintly eremite was wholly incompetent and unsuited for a job as pope. Admitting his own incompetence soon after his election, Celestine expressed the wish to abdicate and return to his solitary cave in the Abruzzi Mountains. However, before doing so he issued two bulls. The first bull established the regulations concerning the abdication of a pope. The second bull (Quia in futurum, 28 September 1294) restored the constitution Ubi periculum, which established the papal conclave; the constitution had been suspended by Pope Adrian V in July 1276. During his short papacy, he also created 13 cardinals.[1] Eventually, on 13 December 1294, Celestine V abdicated the papacy at Naples,[2] three days after confirming the restoration of the institution of the papal conclave.[3] It has been widely stated that the alleged great influence of the ambitious Cardinal Benedetto Caetani and the pressure he applied on Celestine V were important factors in Celestine's decision to abdicate, but it seems nearly as certain that it was an entirely voluntarily step of the Pope, with the role of Caetani limited to participation in the solution of the legal problems connected with the resignation of a pope. In particular, there were doubts whether a pope could resign at all, and who would be authorized to accept such a resignation.[4] List of participantsAll 22 living cardinals participated in the conclave; 12 of them were created by Celestine V, five by Nicholas IV, two by Nicholas III, one by Urban IV and one by Honorius IV:[5]
Election of Pope Boniface VIIIOn 23 December 1294, the cardinals assembled in the Castel Nuovo at Naples for the election of the successor of Celestine V. On the next day, Christmas Eve, Cardinal Benedetto Caetani received the required two-thirds majority and took the name of Boniface VIII. Caetani's nephew, who was an eyewitness, says that Caetani was elected after one scrutiny and an accessio: scrutinio accessioneque eligitur.[7] Soon after his election he returned to Rome, where on 23 January 1295 he received his episcopal consecration from Cardinal Hugh Aycelin, Bishop of Ostia.[8][9]{{efn|Also known as Hughes of Billom, of the French province of the Dominican Order, former lector at the studium of Santa Sabina in Rome. He had been Cardinal-Bishop of the suburbicarian see of Ostia since 1294, and one role of that office was the episcopal consecration of a newly elected pope.}} He was crowned by Matteo Rosso Orsini, who was prior Diaconorum of the Sacred College.[10] Notes{{Notelist}}References1. ^Salvador Miranda: Cardinals created by St. Celestine V 2. ^Celestine V 3. ^Salvador Miranda: The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Guide to the events and documents, 13th Century 4. ^(The Catholic Encyclopedia: Pope Boniface VIII) 5. ^F. Burkle-Young{{Unreliable source?|date=February 2016}}: notes to the papal election of 1294 on The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church (by S. Miranda); and K. Eubel, p. 11–12. F. Bourkle-Young lists one additional cardinal Francesco Ronci, priest of the title of S. Lorenzo in Damaso, as the only absentee but he actually died on 13 October 1294, two months before the conclave was held (K. Eubel, p. 12) 6. ^F. Burkle-Young lists Cardinal Nicolas l'Aide as priest of S. Lorenzo in Damaso, but he opted for that title only in 1295. At the time of this conclave he occupied his original title of S. Marcello (K. Eubel, p. 43) 7. ^A. Theiner (ed.), Caesaris Baronii Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus 23 (Bar-le-Duc 1871), under year 1294, § 23, p. 147; Ludovico Antonio Muratori, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores III pp. 616-617. There was another candidate (Matteo Rosso Orsini ?), according to Jacopo Caetani Stefaneschi, but Benedetto Caetani had a majority (but not the required two-thirds majority) on the first ballot. That would mean that at the scrutiny Caetani had at least twelve votes, but not the required fifteen. Several cardinals agreed to support him after the results of the ballot were announced. 8. ^{{cite web| quote=Frater Hugo de Bidiliomo provincie Francie, magister fuit egregius in theologia et mul 9. ^{{cite book| title=Rome Across Time and Space: Cultural Transmission and the Exchange of Ideas | date= 2011 |page= 275 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=xGiHbiqknLgC&pg=PA275&lpg=PA275& | accessdate= 7 October 2011}} 10. ^S. Miranda: Cardinal Benedetto Caetani (Pope Boniface VIII) SourcesKonrad Eubel, Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, volumen I, 1913 F. Burkle-Young: notes to the papal election of 1294 (The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church by S. Miranda)The Catholic Encyclopedia: Celestine VThe Catholic Encyclopedia:Boniface VIII{{Papal elections and conclaves from 1061|state=collapsed}}{{Subject bar |portal1= Catholicism |portal2= Oriental Orthodoxy |portal3= Eastern Christianity|b=y|b-search=Biblical Studies/Christianity/Roman Catholicism/History |commons=y|commons-search=Category:Papal conclave |n=y|n-search=Category:Roman Catholic Church |q=y|q-search=Category:Popes |s=y|s-search=Category:Popes |v=y|v-search=Category:Christian History |wikt=y|wikt-search=Pope |d=y|d-search= Q19546}} 5 : Papal conclaves|13th-century elections|1294|13th-century Catholicism|1294 in Europe |
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