SEDE VACANTE 1605

(March 3, 1605—April 1. 1605)






SS Peter and Paul

AG
giulio (scudo)



STATVIT•SVPRA•PETRAM•PEDES•MEOS

•ROMA•


The two patron saints of the Roman church, Peter with a book and keys, Paul with a sword..

Arms of Cardinal Aldobrandini

SEDE•VACANTE•A•1621•



Arms of Pietro Card. Aldobrandini, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church (1599-1621), surmounted by the Ombrellone, crossed keys.




Berman, p. 132 #1638.






Born in Rome in 1571, PIETRO CARD. ALDOBRANDINI, the son of Pietro Aldobrandini and of Flaminia Ferracci, was nephew of Pope Clement VIII (1592-1605). He obtained a doctorate in Civil and Canon Law, and was named Protonotary Apostolic. He was created a cardinal deacon in 1593, and along with his cousin Cardinal Cincio took over the affairs of the papal government. On December 20, 1599 he was appointed Cardinal Chamberlain of the Holy Roman Church for life. He acted as Legate for the Pope to Henri IV of France, first to regularize his situation with the Church, and then to finalize the marriage of the king with Catherine de' Medici (1600-1601). He became Archbishop of Ravenna in 1604, and in 1620 was promoted Bishop of the Suburbicarian See of Sabina. He died on the day after the conclusion of the Conclave of 1621.

The Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals was Cardinal Ptolomeo Galli

 

The Secretary of the Conclave was Msgr. Muzio Riccerio [Gattico I, p. 345]

The Marshal of the Conclave was Paolo Savelli, Prince of Albano, Duke of Castel Gandolfo [Moroni, Dizionario storico-ecclesiastica 42, 283; 61, 301].

The Governor of the Conclave was Msgr. Orazio Spinola, Archbishop of Genoa (d. 1616). He was made a referendary by Sixtus V, Vice-Legate of Bologna by Clement VIII. After the Conclave Paul V made him Vice-Legate of Ferrara.  He was named a cardinal by Pope Paul V in 1606, with the title of St.Biagio

The Governor of the City of Rome was Msgr. Benedictus Ala of Cremona, Referendary of the Tribunal of the Two Signatures.  He later became Bishop of Urbino (1610-1620).

The Captain General was Don Giovanni Giorgio Aldobrandini.

 

The Papal Master of Ceremonies was Msgr. Paolo Alaleone, who left a diary of the proceedings [Vincenzo Forcella, Catalogo dei manoscritti relativi alla storia di Roma I (Roma 1879), p. 291 no. 828 (ms. Vat. Lat. 9246)]. He was assisted by Msgr. Guido Ascanio Praevostus, and by Msgr. Giovanni Paolo Mucanzio, who also left a diary covering the period from Gregory XIV to Paul V [Gauchat, 8 n. 1; Gattico, pp. 343-348; Bullarium Romanum (Turin edition) Volume XI, p. 212;  V. Forcella Catalogo dei manoscritti relativi alla storia di Roma I (Roma 1879), p. 44, no. 156].

 


 

Death of Pope Clement

Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini, the nephew of Pope Clement, was on his way to Ravenna, to take formal possession of the See; actually he was supposed to engage in negotiation with various parties, including Venice, over the Marquisate of Saluzzo, which had passed to the Dukes of Savoy by the Treaty of Lyon in 1601.  Pope Clement had in mind a project of creating a defensive alliance against the Spanish, which was to include Venice, Florence, and Savoy. Vincenzo Siri explains (probably paraphrasing reports of Cardinal du Perron to Henri IV) [Memorie recondite,  Dal anno 1601. sino al 1640.  Volume primo  (Ronco 1677), p. 334-335]:

Fino à questo ultimo Conclave il Cardinale Aldobrandini andò sempre negotiando coll' Ambasciadore di Savoia suo intimo amico per rannodare insieme il Re Cristianissimo, e 'l Duca di Savoia persuadendosi che ove riuscisse prosperevolmente un repentino, e portentoso cambiamento ne seguirebbe nelle pendenze d' Italia; e che di riverbero quelli di Fiandra ne riceverebbono un notabile miglioramento.  pareva che ciò fosse un residuo delle istruttioni di Papa Clemente; imperoche dopo la sua morte si riseppe che suo intendimento era stato di ordire una lega difensiva trà lui, e i Principi d' Italia in opposito de gli Spagnuoli subito che 'l Cardinale Aldobrandini saria ritornato da Ravenna.  E Paolino Datario [Bernardino Paolini, sub-datary under Cardinal Sasso (1590-1604), then pro-Datary]  per suo comandamento ne formò la bozza; e veniva destinato Cardinale Legato di Romagna affinche sotto il manto di quella Legatione potesse opportunamente manipolare l' unione con la Republica di Venetia, e col Granduca;  e rimettere in tavola il negotio del parentado trà lui, e il Duca di Savoia.  Dopo essersi il medesimo Cardinale Aldobrandini dato per inteso coll' Ambasciadore di Savoia circa l' onore fattogli dal Re di gradire che s' ingerisse della pendenza trà la M. S. e il Duca prese consiglio di spedire corriero à Torino per avvertirlo come andasse divisando di fare un viaggio fino à Ravenna affinche se voleva il Papa valersi della sua opera per trattare di qualche altra faccenda in quella Corte gliè lo notificasse avanti la sua mossa.

En route to Ravenna, on February 11, 1605, Cardinal Aldobrandini was overtaken by a courier who brought news that the Pope had fallen ill on the 10th with "un gagliarda convulsione di umori", and that he was in danger of his life.  Cardinal du Perron noted in a letter to M. de Villeroy on February 23, that the outcome of the Pope's illness was uncertain [Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 527]. On his return to Rome, Cardinal Aldobrandini did everything he could to find help for the Pope, but there was nothing to be done. [Histoire des conclaves; Platina IV, 282].  It is said that as soon as he had fallen ill Clement fell into a continuous delirium and that he had lost his memory [Novaes Elementi IX, 70]

Pope Clement VIII died on Thursday, March 3, 1605, around midnight, according to Cardinal de Joyeuse in a letter to Henri IV [Histoire du Cardinal de Joyeuse, p. 51; Gauchat Hierarchia catholica IV (1923),p. 3 n. 4: die Iovis 3 Mart. hora 5 noctis; Eubel, Hierarchia catholica  III, p. 55, wrongly gives the date of March 5]. The sede vacante lasted for twenty-eight days.

The King of France, Henri IV, received the news of the death of the pope at Chantilly, on March 13; the news of the election of his successor on Monday, April 11 [Champollion, Mémoires et registre-journal de Henri IV, 383-384]

 


 

Interests of the Crowns

On June 9, 1604, eight months before he died,  Clement VIII created eighteen new cardinals. This certainly disturbed the Courts of Europe, whose calculations for a future Conclave were completely upset.

Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini, the Camerlengo, the late pope's nephew, controlled some twenty-eight votes [Wahrmund, 112], not enough to elect a candidate, but sufficient to exclude anyone objectionable to him. Among his supporters were the French cardinals, and the whole group had sworn not to elect anyone but a member of their faction. Aldobrandini's candidate was Baronius, and the virtual exclusiva would be used against Montelparo, Sauli and Ascoli, who were the favorite soggetti of Cardinal Montalto (Peretti). Against Aldobrandini were ranged a number of cardinals: Sforza, Santa Cecilia (Sfondrati), Acquaviva, Farnese, D'Este, Doria, Colonna, to whom were added Montalto, Madrucci, and Borromeo [Conclavi, 30-31; Histoire des conclaves, 296]. Montalto was the arch-enemy of Galli, the Dean [according to the Duc d' Escalona: Couderc, 44].

The French cardinals were subject to the will of the King of France.   Henri IV had expressed his preferences in October, 1604, in a memorial to his ambassador and to Cardinal de Joyeuse:  Baronius and the Cardinal of Florence, Medici, were his first choices.  The King was also agreeable, however, to Cardinals Valier (Valerio), Sauli, Palotta, Bufalo, and Séraphin Olivier;  he was not opposed to Pompeio Arrigoni and Camillo Borghese.  The King most definitely did not want Como, Bernerio (Ascoli), Lorenzo Bianchetti, or Montelparo; he had no sympathy for Zacchia (S. Marcello) [Couzard, 347-348].  And on March 16, he repeated to Cardinal Joyeuse: "Je vous recommande sur toutes choses le cardinal de Florence, et aprés luy ceux sur lesquels vous sçavés que nous avons jetté les yeux." On March 16, King Henri also wrote to Ambassador de Béthune, "Partant si nous ne pouvons avoir pour pape Florence ou Baronius, j'aurai très agreable Vérone... Mais je désirerais fort que nous puissons avoir Florence par préférence a tout autre, et si nous sommes exclus et déboutés de Florence, donnons à l'un des deux autres" [Couzard, 349 n.].

Baronius himself, even before the Conclave began, had taken an oath that he would not accept the Papacy [Calenzio, p. 678].  He worked throughout the Conclave for the election of Alessandro de' Medici, the Cardinal of Florence. In a letter to his friend Father Talpa (April 25, 1605), he wrote [Calenzio, p. 680]:

.. innanzi che s'entrasse in Conclave, io per via secreta, come per Cuniculos cominciai a trattar per la personal dell' Illustrissimo Card. di Fiorenza per far da me diversione, indirizzando per la via il negozio, per la quale caminato, s' è venuto al desiderato fine, e Dio volse, che a me ancor toccasse peerfezionare il negozio spignendo io l' Illustrissimo Aldobrandino, qual stava ancor titubando, non poco, qual cosi volendo Dio, nell' istessa ora si risolse e fu finito il negozio.

Montalto became greatly annoyed by the tone and manner of the Adobrandini faction in the Congregations, where they tried to make themselves masters of the Conclave. And so he refused to make his votes available to them.

The Spanish interest, led by Francisco Cardinal de Avila, the official Protector of Spain, controlled around twenty-five votes. He was associated with Cardinals Montalto and Farnese. He too could exclude any candidate. The Spanish (at the request, as well, of the Duke of Mantua) certainly intended to exclude Baronius, as well as Cardinal Seraphin Olivier Razzali (who had been proposed by Aldobrandini). They were also opposed to some of the creature of Clement VIII, notably the Cardinal of San Marcello (Zacchia), the Cardinal of San Clemente (Biandrate di San Giorgio), Sannesio, Toschi, St. Pietro in vinculis (Agucchi), and Tarugi. They also gave the appearance of disliking the Cardinal of Florence (Medici) and the Cardinal of Verona (Valier).

Cardinal de' Medici, Archbishop of Florence, had been instructed by the Grand Duke of Tuscany to work with Cardinal Montalto and attempt to influence him in favor of the Grand Duke's candidates. [Histoire des conclaves, 299].  The Grand Duke himself wrote to his ambassador in Madrid, Bishop Sallustio Tarugi (March 23, 1605) [tr. Petruccelli II, p. 417], "Bref, vous direz franchement au duc de Lerme que nous désirons Firenze et excluons Como pour nous et pour Montalto, qui ayant marié sa sœur au marquis de Caravaggio, a intenté procès à Como pour certains fiefs. Nous exclurons Baronio, bien qu’il nous convienne, pour plaire au roi."  The decision about the exclusion of Como (Tolomeo Galli) was also conveyed to Cardinal del Monte and to Ambassador Belisario Vinta, with instructions not to mention it to Aldobrandini. The Grand Duke did not want Aldobrandini in a position to decide who the new pope was to be, and he had plans to win over the weaker members of Aldobrandini's faction to his point of view through various methods.  He warned his agents not to propose Medici until all of Aldobrandini's candidates had been rejected [Petruccelli, II, p. 418].  It should be remembered that the Grand Duke Ferdinand had once been Cardinal de' Medici, created in 1563.  After twenty-five years in the Sacred College, and having risen to be Protodeacon, he resigned to continue the family line as rulers of Florence and Tuscany.  He had been present as an elector in three conclaves, and he knew personally most of the senior Cardinals.

The Venetian Ambassador was Agostino Nani, who supported Aldobrandini, with the understanding that Aldobrandini would not promote a pro-Spanish candidate.  The French Ambassador was Philippe de Béthune, brother of Maximilien de Béthune, Duc de Sully, Minister of State of Henri IV. The Spanish Ambassador was the Marquis de Villena. The Tuscan ambassador was Cavaliere Belisario Vinta, Secretary of State of the Grand Duke of Tuscany.

 

The Cardinals

According to the Conclavi di pontefice romani (Volume II, p. 38-39), sixty cardinals entered Conclave on March 14.  They were later joined by Cardinal Dietrichstein. There was one surviving creatura of Pius V, Cardinal Galli, the Dean of the Sacred College. Four of Gregory XIII's cardinals were present: Medici, Valier, Joyeuse, and Sforza. Twelve cardinals of Sixtus V were in attendance: Pinelli, Ascoli (Bernerio), Pallo (Galli), Sauli, Palotta, Camerino (Pierbenedetti), Montepulciano, Giustiniani, Monte, Borromeo, and Montalto. Five cardinals of Gregory XIV were present: Santa Cecilia (Sfondrato), Aquaviva, Piatti, Pallavicini and Farnese. The only creatura of Innocent IX was Santi Quattro (Facchinetti). There were thirty-eight cardinals of Clement VIII: Aldobrandini, Tarugi, Bandino, Giuri (Givry), San Clemente, Borghese, Pianchetto, Baronius, Avila, Mantica, Arigone, Bevilaqua, Visconti, Tosco, San Marcello, Bellarmin, Sourdis, Seraphin, Spinelli, Conti, Madrucci, du Perron, Bufalo, Delfino, Sannesio, Valenti, San Pietro in vinculis (Agucchi), San Giorgio (Cinzio Aldobrandini), Cesi, Peretti, d'Este, Deti, San Cesario (Silvestro Aldobrandini), Doria, and Pio. Cardinal Dietrichstein was a late arrival. Five of the Cardinals were French  (Joyeuse, du Perron, Sourdis, Séraphin, and Givry). Forty-one votes were needed for the canonical election of a pope [Cardinal de Joyeuse, in Aubery, L' histoire du Cardinal duc de Joyeuse (1664), p. 66].  A list is given in Ciaconius-Olduin, IV, 369-371.

Ciaconius-Olduin provides a list of sixty-one cardinals who participated in the Election of Leo XI (IV, columns 369-371).

An official list of the Cardinals and their Conclavists is attached to the Bull   Romanum decet pontificem, issued by Pope Paul V on July 31, 1605 [Bullarium Romanum 11 (Augusta Taurinorum 1867), pp. 212-215].  It took into account the fact that Leo XI (Medici) had not had the opportunity to issue the appropriate bull during his brief pontificate of 27 days.

 

Cardinals attending:

  1. Tolomeo Galli di Como (aged 77), Suburbicarian Bishop of Ostia and Velletri, dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals.(died February 3, 1607)
    –The See of Porto was vacant.
  2. Alessandro Ottaviano de' Medici (aged 69), son of Ottaviano de' Medici and Francesca Salviati (niece of Leo X). Suburbicarian Bishop of Palestrina (died April 27, 1605).   Bishop of Pistoia (1573-1574). Archbishop of Florence (1574–1605). Legatus a latere in France (1596-1598). Mediator at the Congress of Vervins, between France and Spain (May 2, 1598) [Memoires et instructions, pour servir dans les negociations et affaires concernant les Droits du Roy de France (Amsterdam: Antoine Michel 1665)]; he presided at the solemn oath-taking by Henri IV on June 21 [Memoirs of the Duke of Sully (tr. C. Lennox)  Volume II ( Philadelphia 1817), Book IX, p. 228].  "Cardinal of Florence"   Elected Pope Leo XI.
  3. Domenico Pinelli (aged 63), Suburbicarian Bishop of Frascati (1603-June 1, 1605). ex-Professor of Law at Padua
  4. Girolamo Bernerio, OP (aged 65) [Corregio], Suburbicarian Bishop of Albano.[1603-1607] (died 1611)  "Ascoli" [A. Tournon, Histoire des hommes illustres de l' Ordre de St, Dominique V (Paris 1749), 1-11]. [See Bullarium Romanum IX (Augustae Taurinorum 1865), p. 433]  He was a follower of Cardinal Montalto.
  5. François de Joyeuse (aged 42) [French], son of Guillaume de Joyeuse, Marechal de la France, and Maria de Batarnay; brother of Anne, duc de Joyeuse, Peer and Admiral of France, Governor of the Duchy of Normandy.  Suburbicarian Bishop of Sabina.    Former Archbishop of Narbonne (1582-1589) [Gallia christiana 6, 117-118].  Archbishop of Toulouse (1589-1604) [Eubel III, 315; Gauchat IV, 340].   Archbishop of Rouen (1604–1615) [Gallia christiana 11, 103-107; Aubery, L' histoire du Cardinal duc de Joyeuse  (Paris 1654) 249-264].  He presided over the declaration of the nullity of the marriage of Henri IV and Marguerite de Valois in 1599.   Protector of France before the Holy See (1587-1589; 1596-1615)  (died 1615).  When he had been at Marseille in November, 1604, on his way to Rome,  he received a package of materials from the King which contained instructions for a future conclave. He was in Rome by November 29, 1604 [Recueil des lettres missives de Henri IV, p. 339].

  6. Agostino Valier (aged 73), Cardinal Priest of San Marco (died 1606) Bishop of Verona.
  7. Antonio Maria Galli (aged 51), Cardinal Priest of Santa Prassede    Bishop of Osimo (1591-1620).   (died 1620)
  8. Antonio Maria Sauli (aged 64),  son of Ottavio Sauli, a senator of Genoa.; his  mother was a Giustiniani.  His brother had been Doge of Genoa.  A cousin of Cardinal Visconti's mother.  Cardinal Priest of S. Maria in Trastevere [1603-1607].  Former Bishop of Genoa (1585-1591) [Ughelli-Colet, Italia sacra IV, 901-902].  (died 1623) Doctorate in law (Padua)
  9. .
  10. Giovanni Evangelista Pallotta (aged 63), Cardinal Priest of S. Lorenzo in Lucina (died 1623) Archpriest of the Vatican Basilica.
  11. Mariano Pierbenedetti (aged 66), Cardinal Priest of SS. Marcellino e Pietro (died 1611).  Former Prefect of Rome [Forcella, Inscrizioni XI, p. 60 no. 120]  "Camerino"   A follower of Cardinal Montalto.
  12. Gregorio Petrocchini, OESA (aged 70), Cardinal Priest of S. Agostino (1590–1608)  Former Prior-General of the Hermits of S. Augustine (1587–1591)   (died 1612)   "Montelparo" [See Bullarium Romanum IX (Augustae Taurinorum 1865), p. 433]
  13. Paolo Emilio Sfondrato (aged 45), Cardinal Priest of Santa Cecilia [1591-1618] (died 1618). Legate in Bologna and the Romangna "Montepulciano"  Nephew of Gregory XIV.
  14. Benedetto Giustiniani (aged 60), Cardinal Priest of Santa Prisca (died 1621)
  15. Francesco Maria Bourbon del Monte Santa Maria (aged 55), Cardinal Priest of Santa Maria in Aracoeli (died 1627). Prefect of the SC of the Council of Trent.
  16. Ottavio d'Aquaviva d'Aragona (aged 45), Cardinal Priest of SS. Giovanni e Paolo [1602-June 5, 1605] (died 1612). Doctor in utroque iure, Perugia
  17. Flaminio Piatti (aged 52), Cardinal Priest of Santa Maria della Pace (died 1611).
  18. Ottavio Paravicini (aged 52), Cardinal Priest of S. Alessio (died 1611).  Pro-Datary of Clement VIII.
  19. Federico Borromeo (aged 40), Cardinal Priest of Santa Maria degli Angeli. Archbishop of Milan (1595–1631). Doctorate in law, Pavia.  He ultimately participated in eight Conclaves (from Urban VII to Urban VIII).
  20. Giovanni Antonio Facchinetti de Nuce (aged 30), Cardinal Priest of Santi Quattro Coronati (died 1606).
  21. Pietro Aldobrandini (aged 33), son of Pietro Aldobrandini, brother of Ippolito Aldobrandini (Pope Clement VIII). Cardinal Priest of S. Pancrazio, previously, at the age of 22, Cardinal Deacon of S. Nicolo in Carcere (1593–1604). nipote of Pope Clement VIII. Educated by the Oratorians. Doctor in utroque iure. Consistorial Advocate.  Prefect of the Castel S. Angelo.  Sent as Legatus a latere in 1598 to take possession of Ferrara on behalf of the Papacy. Major Penitentiary. Cardinal Camerlengo   [V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiese di Roma  I, p. 214, no. 824 (A.D.1602)] (died February 10, 1621)
  22. Francesco Maria Tarugi, Orat. (aged 80), Cardinal Priest of S. Maria sopra Minerva (died 1608) Archbishop of Siena.
  23. Ottavio Bandini (aged 46)  He was born in Florence (October 25, 1558), and educated at Florence, Paris, Salamanca and Pisa (where he obtained a law degree, Doctor in utroque iure). He served as a lawyer and administrator in the Papal States from 1572. Gregory XIII made him a Protonotary Apostolic. Sixtus V made him governor of Fermo in 1586, and in 1590 he was Presidente delle Marche. At the Conclave of 1590 he was Governor of the Conclave and Prefect of the Borgo. Gregory XIV wanted to appoint him Datary in 1590, but the Olivares objected.  Clement VIII made him Governor of Bologna in 1592.   He became Archbishop of Fermo in 1595. Bandini was named Cardinal on June 5, 1596, and assigned the titulus of S. Sabina on June 21, 1596. In 1598 the Cardinal was sent to Picenum as legate to restore order in the face of brigands.   In 1621 he was promoted to be Cardinal Bishop of Palestrina, which he exchanged for Porto and Santa Rufina in 1624. He became Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals and Bishop of Ostia on September 7, 1626. He died in Rome on August 1, 1629 at the age of 72. He participated in the two Conclaves of 1605, and those of 1621 and 1623.
  24. Anne d'Escars de Givry, OSB (aged 59) [France, born in Paris], of the family of the Counts of Limoges, son of Jacques de Perusse, Seigneur d'Escars; and Françoise de Longuy, Dame de Givry, whose first husband had been Philippe Chabot, Comte de Brion and Admiral of France;   Anne was also nephew of Claude de Longuy. Cardinal Priest of S. Susanna (1604–1612).  He took the Benedictine habit at the monastery of S. Benigne de Dijon, and later became its Vicar-General on behalf of the Cardinal de Châtillon, and then Abbot (1570); at the time of his appointment he was in Rome.  He was already abbot of Poithières, Barberi, Champagne (diocese of Mans), and Molesmes. Out of a loathing of protestantism he became one of the most zealous leaders of the League.   Bishop of Lisieux (1584-1599).  In October 1592 he is attested as being in Rome, as agent for the League, along with Desportes-Baudouin, the secretary of the Duc de Mayenne; he did not believe that Henri IV's return to Catholicism was sincere. He was one of the co-consecrators of the Bishop of Evreux, Jacques Davy du Perron, on December 27, 1595, at the church of S. Luigi degli Francesi [Amelot de la Houssaie (ed.), Letres du Cardinal d'Ossat  I (Paris 1698), letre no. XCLIII (January 16, 1596), p. 197].  He returned to France, finally convinced on Henri's sincerity after the reconciliation on September 17, 1595.  In 1596 he was formally reconciled with the King, through the good offices of the Papal Nuncio, Cardinal de' Medici.  Clement VIII made him a cardinal in 1596. Coadjutor of Langres (1603–1608), for Charles d'Escars (d. 1614).  Bishop of Metz (1608-1612).  Co-Protector of France, on the nomination of Henri IV.    He died on April 19, 1612, in his house at Vic-sur-Seille, where he had spent the last twenty months of his life; he was buried in his cathedral of Metz.  
  25. Giovanni Francesco Biandrate di San Giorgio (aged 60), Cardinal Priest of San Clemente (died July 16, 1605) Bishop of Faenza.
  26. Camillo Borghese (aged 52), son of Marcantonio Borghese [Senensis], Consistorial Advocate and Advocatus Pauperum in the Apostolic Camera, and Flaminia Astalli [Romana].  Cardinal Priest of San Crisogono (died 1621)  Vice-Legate of Bologna (1588). Auditor of the Apostolic Camera (Innocent XIV, 1590), in place of his deceased brother Orazio [[V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiese di Roma  III, p. 145, no. 375].  Nuncio Extraordinary to King Philip II of Spain. Created Cardinal Priest of S. Eusebio by Clement VIII (1596-1599).  Bishop of Jesi (1597-1599).  Bishop of Montalcino (1600-1607). Secretary of the Inquisition, Vicar-General of Rome (1603-1605).
  27. Cesare Baronio, Orat. (aged 66) [Sora],  son of Camillo Baronio and Porzia Febea. Studied Theology and Law at Naples, but obtained his doctorate in law in Rome. Brought to Rome in 1557 and placed in the care of S. Philip Neri. He was ordained a priest on May 27, 1564.  He served at the church of S. Giovanni dei Fiorentini until 1575. His work on the Martirologio Romano was published in 1586, and a revised edition in 1589. The first volume of his Annales Ecclesiastici was published in 1588, ultimately filling twelve volumes by his death, and reaching the 12th century; it was continued by several successors, first of which was the notoriously biased Rinaldi (Reynaldus); their work throughout exhibits the siege mentality of the Counter-Reformation and a bias in favor of the papal point-of-view on every issue.   Protonotary Apostolic (November 25, 1589).  Confessor of Clement VIII.   Created a cardinal on June 5, 1596.  Cardinal Priest of SS. Nereo ed Achilleo (June 25, 1596)    Bibliothecarius S. R. E. (1597-1607), in succession to Cardinal Marcantonio Colonna, who died on March 14, 1597.  Baronio died on June 11, 1607, at the age of seventy-nine, and was buried in the Oratory (S. Maria in Valicella) [V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiese di Roma IV, p. 154, no. 366].
  28. Lorenzo Bianchetti (aged 59), Cardinal Priest of San Lorenzo in Panisperna (died 1612). Doctor of Law, Bologna.  Said (by du Perron) to have been an out and out Spaniard [de Ligny, Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 545].
  29. Francisco de Ávila (aged 56 ?), Cardinal Priest of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme [1599-1606] (died 1606). Cardinal Protector of Spain
  30. Francesco Mantica (aged 71) [Udine], son of Andrea Mantica and Fontina de Fontanabona.   Cardinal Priest of San Tommaso in Parione.  He studied at Bologna and Padua, where he was the student of Tiberio Deciani.  In 1560 he lectured on the Institutes of Justinian at Padua, in 1564 on Canon Law, and in 1566 on Civil Law. Doctor in utroque iure, Padua.  Under Sixtus V, in 1586, he was named Auditor of the Sacred Roman Rota for the Venetians; he took his seat on December 10, 1586 [E. Cerchiari, Capellani Papae et Apostolicae Sedis ...Sacra Romana Rota  II (Romae 1920), pp. 116-117].  He was created cardinal on June 5, 1596, and assigned the titulus of S. Tommaso in Parione on January 24, 1597.   He died on Wednesday night, January 29, 1614; his funeral took place the next day, and he was buried at S. Maria del Popolo.  He was the author of De coniecturis ultimarum voluntatum libri XII (1587), and Lucubrationes Vaticanae, seu de tacitis et ambiguis conventionibus libri XXVII.
  31. Pompeio Arrigoni (aged 53), Cardinal Priest of Santa Balbina (died 1616) Doctor in utroque iure, Padua.  Named pro-Datary by Leo XI.
  32. Bonifacio Bevilacqua Aldobrandini (aged 34), Cardinal Priest of S Anastasia [1599-1611] (died 1627) Legate in Perugia and Umbria. Prefect of the Council of the Index. law degree, Padua
  33. Alfonso Visconti (aged 53), Cardinal Priest of S. Sisto (died 1608) Archbishop of Spoleto (1601-1608).  Doctor in utroque iure, Pavia
  34. Domenico Toschi (aged 70) [Castellarano in the diocese of Reggio], son of Giambattista Toschi, a notary and procurator, and and Onesta Bardiani. From 1545-1551 he lived in Reggio with his uncle Giovanni, a scholar and poet, where he was educated.  He travelled to Rome and entered the service of Msgr. Giambattista Brugnolo, nephew of Msgr. Filippo Archinto, the Vicar General of Rome.  After some financial reverses and a year back in Reggio with his uncle, he acquired the post of chamberlain and scriptor of Msgr. Archinto. When Archinto was sent as Nuncio to Venice, Toschi accompanied him as his Auditor; and when Archinto was named Archbishop of Milan in 1556, Toschi accompanied him there as well; problems with the Imperial governor, however, caused Archinto to withdraw, and he returned to Rome.  As Toschi was passing through Pavia, he met Sigismondo d'Este, Marchese di San Martino e Castellarano, Governor of Pavia, who appointed him his Auditor (Private Secretary); the post allowed him to study law at the University of Pavia.  He received his doctoral degree on April 17, 1562. He continued to serve the d'Este until 1566, when he returned to Rome and became Procurator of Sig. Angiolo Cesi and client of Cardinal Pier Donato Cesi.  His 39 months in Bologna made his fortune.  In 1575 he became a Procurator of the Sacred Roman Rota.  When Cardinal Cesi was named Legate in Bologna, Toschi went with him as his Auditor. He was Cardinal Cesi's Conclavist in 1585.  When Cardinal Salviati became Legate in Bologna in 1585, he was granted permission by Cardinal Cesi to take Toschi with him.  In 1586, he was acting governor of the city between the end of Cardinal Salviati's appointment and the arrival of Cardinal Caetani.  In September of 1586 he returned to Rome, only to find Cardinal Cesi dying.  Toschi returned to the practice of Law.  But in 1587, when Cardinal Ferdinando de' Medici became Grand Duke of Tuscany, he appointed Toschi as Auditor of the Office of Consiglieri in Florence. In 1592 the new pope, Clement VIII summoned him to Rome and appointed him Auditor of the Consultà.  Bishop of Tivoli (1595). Governor of Rome.  Cardinal Priest of San Onofrio [1604-1610].    [G. Tiraboschi, Biblioteca modenese V (Modena 1784), pp. 277-282].  He died in 1620, and was buried in S. Pietro in Montorio [V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiesa di Roma V, p. 271, no. 759].
  35. Paolo Emilio Zacchia (aged 51), Cardinal Priest of San Marcello (died May 31, 1605). Bishop of Montefiascone and Corneto.  Cardinal du Perron was told by the Grand Duke of Tuscany and by his Ambassador,  Belisario Vinta, that San Marcello was strongly Spanish  in loyalty [de Ligny, Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 540].  He was the favorite, however, of Aldobrandini and of the Duke of Savoy [Petruccelli II, p. 420].
  36. Franz von Dietrichstein (aged 34), Cardinal Priest of San Silvestro in Capite (died 1636) Archbishop of Olomouc (cf. Histoire des conclaves, 325-326)
  37. Roberto Bellarmino, SJ (aged 62), [Politianus, a subject of the Grand Duke of Tuscany]; his mother was the sister of Cardinal Cervini, who became Pope Marcellus II.  Cardinal Priest of S. Maria in Via (1599–1605).  He had joined the Jesuits at the age of 18. He was educated at various Jesuit houses of study, including the new Collegio Romano, and then at Padua and Louvain.  He preached publicly in Louvain against the Lutherans with great success.  He was ordained in Ghent in 1570 by Bishop Cornelius Jansen ab Hulst (1565-1576).  He then taught at the Collegio Romano in Rome for eleven years. In 1590 he was a member of Cardinal Enrico Caetani's legation to the French League of the Guises. He was Rector of the Collegio Romano from 1592 to 1594.  He then served for three years as Provincial of the Neapolitan province of the Jesuits (1594-1597).  In 1597 Clement VIII named him Consultor of the Holy Inquisition and Examiner of Bishops.  On March 3, 1599 he was named a cardinal.  He himself was appointed Archbishop of Capua in 1602, and was granted the pallium, but after three years and three diocesan synods, he resigned following the Conclaves of 1605.   (died 1621)  His ambition for the papacy shows in a number of letters written at the time of the Conclaves, in which he imagines his election and then imagines reasons why he should reject election.  To one of his Conclavists, Pietro Guidotti, who wanted him to visit Cardinal Aldobrandini, he remarked, "Ah, vous voulez me faire pape, et moi pour le devenir je ne consentirais pas même à sortir de cette chambre, ni même à me lever d'ici." [cf. Couderc, 15-18].  See also his autobiography, in Dollinger and Reusch, p. 43.
  38. François d'Escoubleau de Sourdis (aged 30), eldest son of François, Marquis d' Alluye and Sieur de Sourdis; and Isabella de la Bourdaisière. Cardinal Priest of SS. XII Apostoli (died 1628).  Archbishop of Bordeaux (1599-1628) [Gallia christiana 2, 851-853].  He was in Paris in 1610 when Henri IV was struck down, and was able to give the King absolution before he died.  De Sourdis died in Bordeaux on February 8, 1628, and was buried in the Church of the Carthusians.
  39. Séraphin Olivier Razali (aged 67) [Born in Lyon, brought up in Bologna, his mother's home; he is alleged to have been the bastard son of the Chancellor of France, by Jacques-Auguste de Thou Histoire, Book 131; he was actually the (posthumous) son of Pierre Olivier, a bourgeois of Lyon. Rozali or Razali, or Razzali was his step-father's name],  Cardinal Priest of S. Salvatore in Lauro (1604-1609).  He studied humanities in Tournon, but in due course obtained the Doctorate in utroque iure, Bologna.  He became praelector in Law at the University. In 1562, he occupied a chair in law at Bologna.  He was appointed to the College of Civil Judges.  After two years in that post, Pius IV brought him to Rome in 1564 and made him Auditor of the Rota for France, a post he held for nearly 40 years. Dean 1590 to August, 1602, and thereafter Auditor again until June 9, 1604.  In 1573, he was sent to Paris by Gregory XIII, bearing the Golden Rose, to congratulate Henri d'Anjou on his election to the throne of Poland  [de Thou, Histoire 57. 1].  Sixtus V sent him to Paris again in 1589, with instructions on how to solve the French accession crisis; he failed.  Henri IV named him Bishop of Rennes in 1600, but he never took possession of the See; Amelot de la Houssiae conjectures that he did not want to have to take up residence in Brittany.  In December, 1596, Pope Clement VIII awarded the Abbey of S. Nicolas des Prez near Verdun to Razali, but King Henri had already awarded the benefice to Arnaud d' Ossat, Bishop of Rennes;  Msgr. Aussat, in a letter to King Henri, begged the King to allow the abbey to go to Msgr. Razali, and wrote at length about Razali's services and qualities [Amelot de la Houssaie (ed.), Letres du Cardinal d'Ossat  II (Amsterdam 1708), letre no. XCIV, pp. 349-352].  When Ossat resigned his see of Rennes in 1600 (He had never taken possession) for the See of Bayeux, he requested that the See of Rennes be given to his friend Razali [Amelot de la Houssaie (ed.), Letres du Cardinal d'Ossat  III (Amsterdam 1708), letre no. CCXXIV, pp. 530-545]. Razali resigned the appointment to the See of Rennes on August 26, 1602, and was instead appointed Latin Patriarch of Alexandria (1602-1604), until his promotion to the cardinalate.  On June 9, 1604 he was appointed a cardinal by Clement VIII, on the recommendation of Henri IV, and assigned the titulus of S. Salvatore in Lauro. 
            His famous remark to Clement VIII (if it is in fact his)  about losing England by the excommunication of Henry VIII by Clement VII shows Séraphin's tenuous grasp on historical facts;  England was lost by Pius V's excommunication of Elizabeth I.  He was suffering from 'gout' during the Sede Vacante  [Letter of Cardinal Joyeuse to Henri IV:  Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 55]. [Prosper Marchand, Dictionnaire historique II (The Hague 1759),107-111].  He died in Rome on February 10, 1609 (as recorded in the Acta Consistorialia), and was buried in the Church of Santissima Trinità al Monte Pincio.
  40. Filippo Spinelli (aged 39), Cardinal Priest of San Bartolommeo all' Isola (died 1616) Bishop of Policastro.  He objected to the candidacy of Medici, because Medici had a grand-niece who was married to the son of the Regent of Naples [Aubery, L' histoire du Cardinal duc de Joyeuse, p. 53].
  41. Carlo Conti (aged 48),  son of Torquato Conti, duke of Poli; and Violante Farnese.  Doctor in utroque iure, Perugia.   Referendary of the Apostolic Signatura. Bishop of Ancona (1585–1615), in succession to Alessandro Farnese. Governor of Perugia (1594), then of Umbria (1595). Under Clement VIII he was governor of the Marches. Pro-Legate of Avignon (1599-1604) [Gallia christiana  I (1716), 846].  Created cardinal on June 9, 1604, Cardinal Priest without title.  He was granted the title of S. Crisogono on June 1, 1605, which he held until August 17;  and that of S. Clemente from 1605-1613.  He held the title of S. Prisca from 1613 to his death in 1615. He died on December 3, 1615, and was buried in S. Lorenzo in Lucina.  
  42. Carlo Gaudenzio Madruzzo (aged 43), Cardinal Priest without title (died 1629) Prince-Bishop of Trento. Doctor in utroque iure, Pavia
  43. Jacques Davy du Perron (aged 48) [St. Lo, Normandy],  son of Julien Davy, sieur du Perron, a Calvinist nobleman, and Ursine Le Cointe.   Cardinal Priest of S. Agnese in Agone (died 1618).  Originally a client of the Cardinal de Bourbon. He had composed the Speech given by Henri III at the Estates General on October 16, 1588 [Jean-Lévesque de Burigny, Vie du Cardinal du Perron, p. 52].  He supported Henri IV during the difficult years of his accession to the throne. Henri named him Bishop of Evreux and Senior Chaplain to the King in 1589, but the Papal Court was not minded to act positively to provide the appropriate bulls for his consecration until 1592 (1592-1608) [Gallia christiana XI (1759), 613-616].  In  June, 1595 he had been sent to Rome by Henri IV, to arrange for his absolution from his heresy [Laemmer, Meletematum, 240, from the Acta Consistorialia]. 
            In 1604, he had left Fontainebleau for Rome on October 29, with orders to visit Florence [Recueil des lettres missives de Henri IV   IV, p. 328].  On November 22, he was in Turin and had conversations with the Duke of Savoy; at Casale he met with the Duke of Mantua.    En route,  he stopped in Florence and had conversations about candidates with the Grand Duke [de Ligny,   Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 540;  Siri, Memorie recondite, 326].  He made his solemn entry into Rome on December 18, 1604 [Burigny,  Vie du Cardinal du Perron, p. 220-221]: "Je fus principalement envoyé à Rome pour le fait d' Angleterre, pour aviser aux moins d'amener le Roi d' Angleterre à la Religion Catholique."   Baccio Giovannini (Tuscan ambassador in France) to the Grand Duke of Tuscany (June 2, 1605):  "E. Duperron scrive le più frivole e le più inette cose, come appunto fanno i ragazzi che vanno alla scuola; e il Re mostra le sue lettere come oracoli!" [A. Desjardins, Négociations diplomatiques de la France avec la Toscane  Tome V (Paris 1875) 553].  He died on September 5, 1618.
  44. Innocenzo del Bufalo Cancellieri (aged 39), Cardinal Priest of S. Tommaso in Parione (died 1610) Bishop of Camerino. Doctor of law (Rome)
  45. Giovanni Delfino (aged 60) [Venetus], Cardinal Priest of San Matteo (died 1622). Bishop of Vicenza.    His nephew raised and led a regiment of soldiers for the Spanish  in Flanders [de Ligny,   Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 541].
  46. Giacomo Sannesio (aged ca. 45), Cardinal Priest of San Stefano Rotondo (died 1621).
  47. Erminio Valenti (aged 41) [Trevi, in the diocese of Spoleto], son of Attilio Valenti and Lavinia Greggi. Cardinal Priest of S. Maria in Traspontina (1604–1618).  Secretary of Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandino (nephew of Clement VIII).  Protonotary Apostolic de numero participantium.  Canon of the Vatican Basilica.  He helped to negotiate the peace between Henri IV of France and Carlo of Savoia (1600-1601).   On June 9, 1604, Clement VIII named him a cardinal (September 12, 1602).   He was made Bishop of Faenza by Paul V on August 3, 1605, and was consecrated by Cardinal Aldobrandino on September 18.   (died August 22, 1618; buried in the church of the Madonna delle Lagrime in Trevi).
  48. Girolamo Agucchi (aged 50) [Bononiensis], Cardinal Priest of S. Pietro in Vinculis (died April 27, 1605, the same day as Pope Leo XI)  [V. Forcella, Inscrizioni delle chiese di Roma IV, p. 84 no. 191]
  49. Girolamo Pamphili (aged ca. 60), Auditor of the Rota (Gregory XIII),  Dean of the Rota. Cardinal Priest of San Biagio (died 1610; buried at S. Maria in Vallicella [V. Forcella  Inscrizione delle chiese di Roma 4, p. 155, no. 369]).
  50. Ferdinando Taverna (aged 47) [Milan], son of Senator Cesare Taverna. Degree in law (Pavia).  Governor of Rome; he made himself hated by the Romans because of his execution of Onofrio Santacroce, Marchese d'Oriolo (decapitated on the Ponte S. Angelo in 1601).  Cardinal Priest of San Eusebio, on June 9, 1604. He was the original owner of the Villa Borgese at Frascati, which he presented to Paul V.  Legate of the Marches (July 5, 1605).    Bishop of Novara (1615-1619)  He died at Novara on August 29, 1619, and was buried in the Cathedral.
  51. Anselmo Marzato, OFM Cap (aged 62) [Monopoli]; his father's family were from Sorrento, his mother, Cornelia de' Tolomei, was from Siena.  His father was Governor of Monopoli when Anselmo (his baptismal name was Claudio) was born. He joined the Capuccini  of the Province of Otranto.  He completed his studies in Rome where he was made Lector in Philosophy and Theology in his Order. He also earned a reputation in various towns of Italy and France as a preacher.  He was elected Provincial of the Roman Province.  He was elected Definitor General in the General Chapter of 1592, after which he was promoted to the post of Procurator General of the Order.  Clement VIII appointed Marzato Preacher of the Apostolic Palace, a position he held for nine years.  He was also appointed a Consultor at the Holy Office, and Theologian of the SC de auxiliis.  When Cardinal Aldobrando was sent as Legate to France in 1599, Father Marzato was sent along with him as his Theologian.  Clement VIII created him a cardinal in the Consistory of June 9, 1604, and named him Cardinal Priest of San Pietro in Montorio.  He became ill during the second Conclave of 1605, and on medical advice, was transferred to the Capuchin Convent in Frascati (Tusculum),  On February 12, 1607, Pope Paul V named him Archbishop of Chieti.  He died at Tusculum on August 17, 1607 (according to the Acta Consistorialia); his body was transferred to Rome and buried in his church of S. Pietro in Montorio.   "Cardinal of Monopoli", his birthplace.

  52. Francesco Sforza di Santa Fiora (aged 42), Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria in Via Lata [1588-1617] (died 1624) Cardinal Protodeacon
  53. Alessandro Damasceni Peretti de Montalto (aged 33), Cardinal Deacon of S. Lorenzo in Damaso [1589-1623] (died 1623) Grand-nephew of Sixtus V. Vice-Chancellor of the S. R. E.
  54. Odoardo Farnese (aged 31), son of Alessandro Farnese, third duke of Parma and Piacenza, and Princess Maria of Portugal.  Cardinal Deacon of San Eustachio [1595-1617] (died 1626). Great-grandson of Pope Paul III.  Of the Spanish faction, and no friend of the Aldobrandini.
  55. Bartolomeo Cesi (aged 39), son of Angelo Cesi, Lord of Monticelli, San Polo, Acquasparta, Porcaria, Civitella Cesi, Poggio Cesi and Marcellina, and brother of Don Federico Cesi, 1st Duke of Acquasparta and 1st Prince of San Polo e Sant'Angelo. His mother was Beatrice Caetani, daughter of the Duke of Sermoneta.   Doctor in utroque iure (Perugia, 1587). Referendary of the Two Signatures. Domestic Prelate of Clement VIII. Protonotary Apostolic de numero participantium  (1586), Cleric of the Apostolic Camera (1589).  Treasurer General S. R. E. (1589).  Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria in Portico (1596).  Governor of Tivoli (1597-1605).  Governor of Benevento (1605).
  56. Andrea Baroni Peretti Montalto (aged 32), Cardinal Deacon of S. Angelo in Pescheria [1600-1617] (died 1629) cousin of Pope Sixtus V
  57. Alessandro d'Este (aged 36), Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria Nuova (died 1624). Brother of the Duke of Modena
  58. Cinzio Passeri Aldobrandini (aged 54) [Senigallia], son of Aurelio Passeri and Elisabetta Aldobrandini [Cardella VI, p. 11], sister of Clement VIII. Cousin of Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini. Cardinal Deacon of S. Giorgio in Velabro [1598-June 1, 1605] (died 1610) Nephew of Pope Clement VIII
  59. Giovanni Battista Deti (aged 25); Clement VIII's mother was a Deti.  Cardinal Deacon of Santa Maria in Cosmedin (died 1630).  Noted for his disorderly lifestyle [Cardella VI, 84-85].
  60. Silvestro Aldobrandini (aged 17), son of Giovanni Francesco Aldobrandini; brother of Ippolito; nephew of Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini; grand-nephew of Clement VIII. Cardinal Deacon of San Cesareo (died 1612).  Prior of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem from 1598 to 1612 [Cardella, VI, 85-86;  F. Bonazzi, Elenco dei cavalieri del S. M. Ordine di S. Giovanni di Gerusalemme I (Napoli 1897) p. 16]
  61. Giovanni Doria (aged 32), Cardinal Deacon without title (died 1642).  A Spanish supporter.
  62. Carlo Emmanuele Pio di Carpi (aged 20), Cardinal Deacon of San Nicola in Carcere [1604-1623] (died 1641).

Cardinals absent:

  1. Domenico Ginnasi (aged 53), Cardinal Priest of S. Pancrazio (died 1639) Archbishop of Manfredonia. Nuncio in Spain
  2. Antonio Zapata y Cisneros (aged 54), Cardinal Priest without title (died 1635)  Former Canon of Toledo,  Inquisitor of Toledo, Bishop of Cadiz (1587-1596), Bishop of Pamplona (1596-1600), Archbishop of Burgos (1600-1604).
  3. Ascanio Colonna (aged 44), Cardinal Priest of S. Pudenziana (died 1608). Prior of the Sovereign Order of Malta, Venice
  4. Pierre de Gondi (aged 72), Cardinal Priest of San Silvestro in Capite (died 1616) ex-Archbishop of Paris. Doctor in utroque iure, Paris
  5. Charles III de Lorraine-Vaudemont, Cardinal Priest of S. Agata dei Goti [1591-1607].  Bishop of Metz (1578–1607).
  6. Fernando Niño de Guevara (aged 64), Cardinal Priest of S. Martino ai Monti [1598-1609] (died 1609) Archbishop of Seville
  7. Bernardo de Rojas y Sandoval (aged 58), Cardinal Priest of S. Anastasia (died 1618) Archbishop of Toledo
  8. Bernard Maciejowski (57), Cardinal Priest of S. Giovanni a Porta Latina.  Cantor of Gniesen. Canon of Krakow (His uncle had been Bishop of Krakow, 1546-1550) [Eubel III, 180].  Dean of Warsaw.  Bishop of Luck (Poland) (1587-1600).  Ambassador of King Sigmund III Vasa of Poland before the Holy See, 1590-1591).  He acted as papal Legate to the Synod of Brest, convoked by the Metropolitan of Kiev, on December 2, 1594, to discuss the union of Greek and Roman churches.   Archbishop of Krakow (1600-1606).  (died in Krakow, January 19, 1608)

 

Controversies

Cardinal Cesare Baronio

At the First Congregation, on Friday, March 4, a dispute arose over the status of Cardinal Conti.  He had been named a Cardinal by Clement VIII in his last Consistory for the creation of Cardinals, on June 9, 1604.  Cardinal Conti had duly appeared in Rome, and at the first Consistory thereafter he was received by the Pope and had his mouth closed, all according to custom.  During the Consistory, however, the Pope specifically stated that if a cardinal had not had his mouth opened by the time of the next Conclave, he should not have a place or a vote.  This turned out to be the case with Cardinal Conti.  He appeared at the First Congregation, nonetheless, demanding his rights as a cardinal, stating that he would protest the invalidity of the election if he were not accommodated. The Cardinal Dean, who was a member of the Spanish party like Conti himself, attempted to refer the matter for decision by a three-member committee to be appointed by him (all members of the Spanish party).  Cardinal Baronius protested, demanding that the will of the late Pope be followed. The College of Cardinals decided to appoint a committee composed Cardinal Giustiniani and all former Auditors of the Rota to study the matter and make a report.

On Tuesday March 8, the Marquis de Villena, the Spanish Ambassador, made his formal appearance before the College of Cardinals, and presented the condolences and respects of the King of Spain [Couzard, 354].

On Wednesday, March 9, the Dean of the Sacred College had a letter read out in Spanish to the Congregation of Cardinals. The Duke of Feria, Viceroy of Sicily, had written a letter to the late Pope Clement and another to to the Sacred College, as yet unaware of the Pope's death, to complain about the treatment the question of the Kingdom of Sicily had received in Volume XI of the Annales of Cardinal Baronius (published in November of 1604). He begged the Sacred College to do something about this matter. He demanded that Baronius' works be suppressed, in particular the Annales. At that point Cardinal Baronius arose, and apologized gracefully for his writings, stating that what he published was only based on what was in the Vatican Library, and his pieces had been read and reread by Cardinal Aldobrandini and published with consent of three other cardinals; that he had always had respect for the King of Spain, whose subject he had been born; and that the charge made by the Spanish that the French had dictated what he wrote was false [cf. Laemmer, Analecta Romana 142-143; Meletematum Romanorum Mantissa, p. 281, 360; Calenzio, pp. 656 ff.; 667]. Cardinal d' Avila, who had read out the letter at the Congregation, asked pardon for having read the letter before knowing its contents, and stated that there was good reason to have regard for the honor of His Catholic Majesty, a great prince, devoted to the Church, who had such great means to serve it. Upon that statement there arose a great murmuring among the cardinals, with sharp accents, from Bandini and S. Giorgio on one side, in Baronius' defense, while others were saying that great regard indeed should be had for the King of Spain, but the situation also involved the reputation of a Cardinal of the Church who had published on the urging of the recently dead Pope. [Laemmer, Meletematum, p. 360 n. 1; the conclavist is evidently a supporter of Baronius; Conclavi, 33-34; Histoire des conclaves, 297].  D'Avila demanded to know who had brought the Dean the letter.  The Dean replied that he had been given it by a Secretary of the Pope, one Argentio.  When Argentio was summoned, he denied that he had ever carried the letter.  The Dean had nothing to say in reply [letter of Cardinal de Joyeuse to King Henri IV (April 13, 1605): Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 60].  The whole business was obviously a trick, concocted by the Spanish, to ruin the reputation of Baronius in order to prevent his becoming pope.   This was certainly the opinion of Cardinal du Perron [Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 538-539]:

 Du Cardinal Baronius, je n'en dirai autre chose ... que Mercredy au matin, les Espagnols voyans la partie Françoise si forte pour luy, qu'ils se désiroient d'y pouvoir resister, s'aviserent de luy joiier un plaisant stratageme; qui fut, que le Cardinal de Come presenta en la Congregation des lettres du VIceroy de Sicile, addressees au College des Cardinaux, pour les prier d'interceder envers le Pape, à ce qu'il fist raison au Roy d'Espagne et à ses Ministres, des livres du Cardinal Baronius, par lesquels il avoit attaque sa Majesté Catholique et ses officiers... De maniere que toute la tragedie des Espagnols se convertit en une farce qui leur conurit le visage de honte et de confusion, chacun croyant que c' estoient lettrés forgées a Rome, pour mettre sur le front du Cardinal Baronius, ceste exception, que comrne partial et ennemy declaré du Roy d‘Espagne il n'estoit pas propre à estre pere commun, ny par consequent à estre Pape.

The Dean, Cardinal Tolomeo Galli, was greatly blamed by many cardinals for having raised the issue, hoping (as they alleged) to base his own fortunes on the ruins of another's—he was, after all, the candidate of Spain.  The letters he presented were not the originals, but the Dean could not explain how he had come by his copies. Nonetheless, Farnese defended him, which led to a discussion of the conduct of Cardinal del Monte and then an examination of the conduct of the cardinals who had been Auditors of the Rota. Cardinal Giustiniani undertook to defend Cardinal del Monte. [Another account ot the same General Congregation was written by Father Severani, Orat., to a colleague at the Oratory in Naples: Calenzio, 666-670].

After lunch on the 9th, Cardinal de Joyeuse paid a call on Cardinal de' Medici and informed him in detail about the negotiations which were being conducted on his behalf with Cardinal Aldobrandini, and the reasons which prompted the French to acquiesce in the candidacies of Biandrate di San Giorgio and Zacchia, which were so dear to Aldobrandini.

On Thursday, March 10, at the General Congregation the assignments for the various cells in the Conclave were allotted.

On Friday, March 11, the General Congregation received the draft of proposed Capitulations, which had been drawn up by a working committee.  A Turkish war was demanded.  A solution to the problem de auxiliis was demanded [See: de Ligny (editor), Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron, p. 546; Daniel Mortier, Histoire des maîtres généraux de l Ordre des Frères Prêcheurs VI (Paris 1913) 68-99].   Means should be assigned to the cardinals so that they could live in an appropriate style.  The cardinals should be absolved of all crimes, however great and horrible, which they had committed.  Both the content and the wording of the last article were much objected to. Cardinal Aquaviva attempted to insert an article that would forbid popes to name their nephews as Chamberlain; the move was correctly judged to be intended as an insult to Cardinal Aldobrandini, and was rejected. Cardinal Sourdis proposed a clause that popes had to communicate their business with Princes to Consistory;  Cardinal Valenti objected to that. It may be that there was a proposal to revise the size of the sums sent to Hungary.   The Congregation also received the French Ambassador, Philippe de Béthune, who made his formal address to the College of Cardinals on behalf of the King of France [Couzard, 354].

On Saturday, March 12,  the committee which had been appointed to study the credentials and the law applying to Cardinal Conti made their report. Cardinal Giustiniani stated that in justice his place and vote in the Conclave could not be denied.  Cardinal de Joyeuse demanded facts and reasons for this report, so that the Cardinals could consider their conclusions and vote on what to do.  Only seven or eight cardinals, however, supported him, and thereupon the secret ballot was taken.  The vote in Conti's favor had only a single dissenting voice, that of Cardinal Baronius [Calenzio, pp. 662-663].

 

Opening of the Conclave

Before the opening, the favorites were Cardinals Paolo Emilio Zacchia (of Genoa, Bishop of Citta-Castellana, who died on May 31, 1605), Giovanni Francesco Biandrata (Bishop of Acqui) and Alessandro Ottaviano de' Medici (Bishop of Palestrina). Cesare Cardinal Baronius, the famous church historian and polemicist, was a major candidate, but he was opposed by the Spanish Court, both because of his assistance in bringing Henri IV to the French throne and because of his negative attitude to the Spanish claims to the Sicilian monarchy. A report survives in the Archivas of Simancas, sent by the Spanish Ambassador in Rome, the Duc d' Escalona, to the King of Spain, on April 24, 1605, between the two conclaves, characterizing each of the cardinals [Couderc, 38-46].

The Conclave opened on Monday, March 14 [Gauchat, 8 n. 1; Gattico I, p. 343].  The Oration de pontifice eligendo was pronounced in St. Peter's Basilica by Msgr. Marcello Vestrio Barbiani, Secretary of Briefs to Princes and Canon of the Vatican Basilica [Novaes, Introduzione I, p. 291]. The usual solemn procession escorted the Cardinals to the Pauline Chapel. The papal bulls regulating conclaves were read and sworn to by the Cardinals. The various officials of the Conclave were sworn in by the Cardinal Dean of the Sacred College in a ceremony in the Capella Paolina.  The various Ambassadors paid their courtesy calls on the various cardinals throughout the rest of the day [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 64].   There were Capitulations, as a manuscript, Codex Vaticanus Ottobonianus 2440, c. 245, testifies [Francesco Cerroti (editor), Bibliografia di Roma medievale e moderna, I (1893), no. 5242].

 

Balloting begins

On the morning of Tuesday, March 15, the Cardinals vested in the Aula Regia and proceded to the Capella Paolina. The Dean of the Sacred College, Cardinal Tolomeo Galli di Como, read the Mass of the Holy Spirit, and the Cardinals received Holy Communion. The Masters of Ceremonies then withdrew and the Cardinals began their balloting [Diary of Joannes Paulus Mucantio: Gattico, I, p. 344]. On the first vote, on Tuesday, March 15, Cardinal Robert Bellarmin received 11 votes and Baronius 8 [Couderc, 25]; Farnese, Doni and Pio each had one, and Montalto two (Histoire des conclaves, 301). It was noticed that an alliance was being formed against Cardinal Aldobrandini [Laemmer, Meletematum, p. 361 n.].  At the same time, the French were trying to press Aldobrandini to join their effort to make Baronius pope.  Joyeuse believed that they might have perhaps forty votes.  Aldobrandini, however, stubbornly insisted that the pope should be one of his creatures.  They could not even get him to make any committments as to exclusions.   This gave some considerable concern to Cardinal del Monte, who was representing the interests of the Grand Duke of Tuscany.  Aldobrandini's promotion of his close friend, San Marcello (Paolo Emilio Zacchia), presented a barrier to the success of Tuscan interests, the election of Alessandro de' Medici.  Del Monte approached Cardinal de Joyeuse about an exclusion against San Marcello, but he was frustrated when Joyeuse refused to cooperate.  He believed that the French were deserting the Grand Duke—which was not the case.  Joyeuse, however, did not want to alienate Aldobrandini at this early stage in the Conclave;  he hoped, once Aldobrandini realized the futility of his promotion of his own favorites, that Aldobrandini would be open to listening to French proposals and would come to back de' Medici.

After lunch, the Conclavists were screened by the three Cardinals who were the senior members of each Order, with the assistance of the Secretary of the Conclave and the Masters of Ceremonies. The cardinals who were infirm were allowed three conclavists.   In the afternoon, there was a meeting in Visconti's cell, and comparison of notes gave Cardinal de Joyeuse the hope that Cardinal Baronius could be made pope that evening.  Late in the evening, Cardinal Delfini came to Joyeuse to tell him that Aldobrandini had at least agreed, and he would swear to it, that he would exclude Bianchetti [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 67].

There were Electoral Capitulations, containing twenty-eight points.   Point twenty-five obligated the Electus to promulgate a new constitution on papal conclaves within six months.  These were also used, in a slightly expanded form at the second conclave of 1605 [Wahrmund, Archiv für katholisches Kirchenrecht 72 (Mainz 1894), 204, n. 2, with a summary of all thirty points at pp. 219-221;  a copy of the full document is to be found in the Vatican Library in Codex Ottobonianus 2440: V. Forcella, Catalogo dei manoscritti relativi alla storia di Roma II (Roma 1880), p. 139 no. 270].

On Wednesday, March 16, the Sacristan read the Mass for the Election of the Supreme Pontiff in the Capella Paolina. After Mass, the Bulls of Pope Clement VIII and Pius V were read and sworn to. Then Cardinals Cesi and Pio presented and had read the Breves which granted them permission to participate and vote in the Conclave, despite the fact that they had not taken holy orders as Deacons. Cardinals Deti and Doria presented testimony that they had been ordained to the Diaconate; these too were read out. In the scrutiny, Cardinal Baronius received 19 votes, with none joining him at the accessio. Verona (Valier) and Visconti each had 7  [Histoire des conclaves, 301].

On the 17th, the Cardinal of Santa Cecilia (Sfondrati) became ill of the tertian fever, and decided that he had to leave the Conclave. A General Congregation of the Cardinals was called after lunch in the Paoline Chapel. The Spanish faction was alarmed, and attempted to convince him to remain. They wanted to remove him to the chamber reserved for a hospital, where he would be cared for. Medicines were sent for. But Aldobrandini pointed out that the papal Bulls forbade a cardinal to change cells, even if he was ill. The Cardinals heard a report from the doctors stating that Sfondrati was seriously ill and that the facilities to treat him adequately did not exist inside the Conclave. They were compelled to swear to the testimony. The Congregation of Cardinals considered Sfondrati's request to be removed from the Conclave with great reluctance, despite the fact that the litter and wagons were already prepared outside the Conclave. During the night his fever became worse, and on the 18th he was carried to his palazzo, leaving fifty-nine cardinals to continue deliberations. In the scrutiny of the 17th, Cardinal Baronius received only 12 votes, and Cardinal Bellarmin 8. For the next few days there was little change. Cardinal Silvestro Aldobrandini also became ill, with a "catarrh" ("fluxion").  Farnese also came down with a fever, and produced blood; he was given a third conclavist to attend to his needs [Conclavi, 45-48; Histoire des conclaves, 304-307].

On March 18,  Cardinals Sfondrati, Bufalo and Deti were forced to leave the Conclave due to illness [Novaes VIII, p. 77].

On Saturday, March 19, Cardinal Franz von Dietrichstein appeared at the Door of the Conclave, still dressed in his traveling clothes (which caused a scandal, since he looked every bit a layman); he and his two conclavists were allowed entry by the Cardinal Camerlengo and the heads of the three orders.  He would be an anti-Baronius vote [Cardinal de Joyeuse: Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 70].

From the 18th to the 20th, more names were proposed, and discarded. Aldobrandini engaged in frequent conversations with Cardinal d' Avila. The Spanish faction complained that Aldobrandini was wrong in wanting to exclude all of the creature of Sixtus V, among whom were several worthy candidates (that is, Spanish candidates).

On Sunday, March 20, Quadragesima Sunday, the Sacristan said the usual Mass for the Election of a Pope. Cardinal Sauli was ill and unable to appear in the Capella Paolina. The daily Congregation therefore met in his room. [Gattico, 345].  Cardinal de Joyeuse had already begun actively canvassing for Cardinal Toschi, though he had not informed Cardinal Aldobrandini, who was still completely wrapped up with the candidacy of Cardinal Zacchia (S. Marcello),  heedless of the hopelessness of that cause [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 71].

On Wednesday, March 23, Cardinal Baronius had 17 votes, and Cardinal Seraphin Olivier 10 (Conclavi, 65).  That night, Cardinals Aldobrandini, Delfini, and Joyeuse assembled in the cell of Cardinal Cesi, and decided to make a push to elect Cardinal Seraphin Olivier. Some cardinals, who were not part of the Aldobrandini faction, would be told that this was just a gesture of respect toward Cardinal Seraphin, and if sufficient numbers cast their votes on the Scrutiny, Aldobrandini would throw in all of their forces at the accessio. The plan was leaked, however, and the next day there was nothing but failure and embarassment.

On Thursday, March 24, Cardinal Baronius had 23 votes [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 74], and a rumor was going around that next day at the accessio would bring him victory; his opponents gathered around d' Avila, seeking to put together an exclusiva.

On Friday, March 25, the Feast of the Annunciation, Baronius had 27 votes The opposition was greatly irritated, and Cardinal Montalto remarked that they were dealing with children.  He was so disturbed, however, that he sent with great haste for Cardinal Paolo Emilio Sfondrato, who was convalescing outside the Conclave.

On Saturday, March 26, Baronius had thirty-one votes, a majority, but still nine votes short of canonical election.

On Sunday, March 27,  which was Passion Sunday, Baronius received thirty-one votes (Conclavi, 76). Cardinal d' Avila was so annoyed that he remarked loudly that those who were giving so many votes to an enemy of the King of Spain were insulting him.

On March 28, Baronius still had his thirty votes, Cardinal Sauli had ten, and Cardinal Bernerio (Ascoli) 10 (Conclavi, 79).  D'Avila was as annoyed as ever. When some cardinals went to call on Aldobrandini in his cell, they found him out making the rounds ceaselessly. He was imitated by Cardinals Sannesio, Valenti, Cesi, Vicenza (Delfini), Spinelli, and others. On the same day Cardinal Deti had to leave the conclave, suffering from a tertian fever (Conclavi, 82)

On Tuesday, March 29, Baronius had 30 votes, and Medici 11 (Conclavi, 82, 88). The tedium of being locked in conclave, with no progress for all of Aldobrandini's efforts, began to have its effects  [ Histoire des conclaves, 327-328]. At night, Aldobrandini himself turned up in de Joyeuse's cell very upset; he had agreed to choose one of the cardinals from Montalto's following to be pope, in order to solve the impasse.  He had chosen Bianchetti.  Aldobrandini was followed by a group of his own cardinals, complaining about his choice.  Joyeuse himself was not happy, since Bianchetti was one of the cardinals whom Henri IV had excluded. It seemed as though the anti-Spanish would go into revolt against their own leaders.  Joyeuse called in Cardinal Borromeo, and all the cardinals present demanded that Aldobrandini go to talk to d'Avila and explain the unhappy situation. When they finally came together Aldobrandini called d'Avila a liar, for making unauthorized promises that he could not keep, something which touched d'Avila's honor.  In reply d'Avila impugned Aldobrandini's birth [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 86].

On Wednesday, March 30, Baronius had 32 votes [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, p. 87], Medici 12, Sauli 11, and Aquaviva d' Aragona 10. [Conclavi, 91, 93; cf. Laemmer, Meletematum, p. 361 n.].

On Thursday, March 31, at 10:00 p.m., an audience was granted by the Cardinals to the Spanish Ambassador, at his urgent demand, at the small window of the Conclave. The Ambassador informed the Cardinals that Count de Fuentes, Governor of Milan, had discovered that 500 English heretics, pretending to be pilgrims, had entered Italy with the intention of pillaging the shrine of the Holy House of Loreto; he presented a letter from the Governor to that effect as well. He was thanked for his message [Diary of Joannes Paulus Mucantio, in Gattico, 346].  The Protector of the Holy House of Loreto was Cardinal Ptolemeo Galli, the Cardinal Dean, and it was widely believed that this was nothing but an electoral stunt by the Spanish to advance his candidacy.  Cardinal de Joyeuse wrote to Henri IV [Aubery, Histoire du Cardinal de Ioyeuse, pp. 89-90]:

Tellement que je puis dire que de toutes les impertinences que je vis jamais en ma vie, celle-là estoit la plus solemnelle.  Aussi tous les Cardinaux de cette faction en eurent tres-grande honte, ne pouvant trouver des paroles suffisantes pour l'excuser, et les autres s’en mocquoient bien fort.

 

Election

On Friday, April 1, after the Scrutiny, there was a stunning change in direction. Cardinal de Joyeuse first of all had a meeting with Aldobrandini on the subject of Medici of Florence, going over with him again the arguments that he had already supplied by way of Delfini.  He then spent more than five hours in continual conversation with one cardinal after another. When he finally able to start out for the Pauline Chapel for the afternoon accessio, he immediately noticed Cardinal Aldobrandini walking and conversing with Cardinal de' Medici. He had one more conversation with Cardinal Aldobrandini, as other cardinals began to pay more attention to Medici.   It was, Joyeuse urged, the moment to strike;  otherwise every opportunity might be lost permanently. Cardinals Deti and del Bufalo were summoned to return to the Conclave [Diary of Mucanzio in Gattico, p. 347]. Cardinal Doria, however, attempted to draw him away from Medici, alleging that Medici was an enemy of the King of Spain.  Cardinal d'Avila was putting on the same show with another group of Cardinals who were gathered in one of the conclave halls in their rochets, threatening even his own followers with their ruin if they supported Medici.  Cardinals Sfondrato and Farnese were working the other side, and accusing d'Avila of 'impudence'. The arrogant and hysterical behavior of the Spanish faction, however, was having the opposite effect to what was intended.  Medici, who had gone back to his cell after meeting with Aldobrandini was receiving courtesy calls from one after another of the Cardinals, including Montalto and all his followers. Medici began to speak as though he were already Pope, and announced that he wished to be called Leo XI (after his relative, Leo X). At that point Aldobrandini arrived, too late to claim any credit for what was happening. The entire group then proceeded toward the Pauline Chapel.  At the door, they came upon d'Avila, who stopped them and begged them to excuse him for what he had been doing on the command of the King of Spain to oppose him.  The reply was that the King of Spain had never had a part (Il luy répondit: le Roy d’Espagne n’en avoit jamais eu sujet).

The moment of election was finally at hand. The details are provided by the Ceremoniere, Msgr. Giovanni Paolo Mucanzio (Gauchat, 8 n. 1):

Die 1 Apr. 1605 mane fuit ultimum scrutinium in quo rev(erendissi)mus Baronius 28 vota habuit. Hora prima noctis ei(u)sdem diei omnes card(ina)les praeter card(ina)lem Avilam ad electionem venerunt et ab eis el(ectus) fuit Alexander de Medicis card(inal) de Florentia nuncupatus. Et statim cardinales accesserunt ad cellulam dicti rev(erendissi)mi card(inalis) de Florentia (quia cum illis non fuerat), ut illum ducerent ad sacellum Paulinum, et in Sum(mum) Pont(ifi)cem eligerent. Tamen expectaverunt parumper, donec ad conclave redirent re(verendissi)mi card(ina)les Detus et de Bubalis, qui infirmitatis causa exiverant. Post adventum dictorum duorum card(ina)lium fere omnes card(ina)les accesserunt ad cellam rev(erendissi)mi card(inalis) de Florentia, et illum duxerunt in sacellum Paulinum, in quo, exclusis omnibus conclavistis, omnes card(ina)les sederunt in loco sup, et per vota aperta et viva suffragia elegerunt in Sum(mum) Pont(ifi)cum dictum card(ina)lem de Florentia qui assumpsit nomen Leonis XI.... Card(ina)les in conclavi fuerunt 61, et 60 fecerunt suffragia in dictum card(ina)lem de Florentia.

In the Pauline Chapel a vote was taken openly viva voce. Medici was elected unanimously. He immediately accepted, and, when asked by the Cardinal Dean to choose a name by which he would be known, he replied Leo XI. He retired to the Sacristy to vest in papal attire, and when he returned to the Chapel he was seated on the papal Sedia Gestatoria. Cardinal Aldobrandini, the Camerlengo, presented him with the ring of the Fisherman. Each cardinal came forward to congratulate the new Pope, and received the customary kiss in return. By that time it was the third hour of the night or later, and it was decided not to open the doors of the conclave. This would avoid the customary sacking of the property of the cardinals. When the new Pope retired to his cell in the Conclave, however, he discovered that it had already been sacked by the Conclavists.  He spent the night instead in the cell of Cardinal Farnese.

In the early morning of Saturday, April 2, therefore, the new Pope Leo XI (Alessandro de Medici) was vested in the Capella Paolina. Cardinal Sforza then made the traditional announcement of the election, and the cardinals procededed to the ceremony of kissing the Pope's foot, hand and cheek. Thereupon the gates of the Conclave were opened and the Pope was escorted to the Vatican Basilica where a Te Deum was sung.

He was crowned Pope Leo XI in St. Peter's Basilica on April 10, Easter Sunday, by Cardinal Francesco Sforza, the Cardinal Protodeacon (Gauchat, 8 n. 3).  Cardinal Cinzio Passeri Aldobrandini was named Major Penitentiary.  Cardinal Pompeio Arrigoni was named pro-Datary, a position which was confirmed by Paul V.  One week later, on April 17, he took possession of his cathedral, the Lateran Basilica (Gauchat, 8 n.4). He died on April 27, 1605, after a reign of twenty-seven days.

Before his death, however, he had decided to move forward on the matter of the reform of Conclave procedures, which had been discussed for fifteen years. He reappointed a committee of Cardinals to draft a bull, which would include clauses revoking the old traditional option of electing a pope by acclamation (Adoration) [Cardinal du Perron, in Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron  (Paris 1629) 308; Wahrmund, 205].  It was John Paul II who finally instituted the reform.




 

Bibliography


Conclavi de' Pontefici romani, quali si sono potuti trovari fin a questo giorno (Roma 1667) 312-316.  Conclavi de' Pontifici Romani (Cologne 1692) Volume 2 [augmented edition, by Gregorio Leti], 26-108.     Histoire des conclaves depuis Clément V, jusqu' à présent [Innocent XII], augmentée... (Cologne: 1694) [translation of the Conclavi de' Pontefici Romani, by Vanel], 294-337.  Agostino Cameroni, Gregorio Leti. Un scrittore avventuriero del secolo XVII (Milano 1893).

 

Vittorio Siri, [Consigliere di Stato et Historiografo della Maestà Christianissima,]   Memorie recondite,  Dal anno 1601. sino al 1640.  Volume primo  (Ronco 1677). 

 

Lorenzo Cardella, Memorie storiche de' cardinali della Santa Romana Chiesa Tomo Quinto, Tomo Sesto (Roma 1793).   P.O. v. Torne, Ptolémée Gallio, Cardinal de Côme (Paris 1907).  Maria Teresa Fattori, Clemente VIII e il Sacro Collegio, 1592-1605: meccanismi istituzionali ed accentramento di governo (Stuttgart: Anton Hiersemann 2004) [Päpste und Papsttum, 33].

 

Giuseppe Novaes, Elementi della storie de Sommi Pontefice Tomo Nono, terza edizione (Roma 1822) 77-81.. Gaetano Moroni, Dizionario di erudizione storico-ecclesiastica Volume 38 (Venezia 1846) 48-50. Alexis François Artaud de Montor, Histoire des souverains pontifes romains Volume V (Paris 1851) 164-169.  F. Petruccelli della Gattina, Histoire diplomatique des conclaves   Volume II (Paris: 1864), 405-451.   Ludwig Wahrmund, Das Ausschliessungs-recht (jus exclusiva) (Wien 1888) 111-117.   J.-B.Couderc, SJ, Le Vénérable Cardinal Bellarmin Volume II (Paris 1893) 26-27.

 

 

 

Anton Gindely, "Zur Geschichte der Einwirkung Spaniens auf die Papstwahlen namentlich bei Gelegenheit der Wahl Leos XI im Jahre 1605,"  Sitzungsberichte der kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften phil.-hist. Klasse 36 (Wien 1862)

 

Leone Caetani, "Vita e Diario di Paolo Alaleone de Branca, Maestro di cerimonie pontificie, 1582-1638," Archivio della R. Società Romana di Storia Patria 16 (1893) 5-39.

 

Patritium Gauchat, OM Conv. (ed.), Hierarchia catholica Medii et Recentioris Aevi Volumen Quartum (Monasterii 1935).

 

Remi Couzard, Une ambassade à Rome sous Henri IV (Septembre 1601–Juin 1605) (Tonneins: Georges Ferrier 1900).  

 

On Cardinals:  Pietro Aldobrandino,  La legazione in Francia del Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandino, narrata da lui medesimo (edited by Luigi Fumi) (Citta di  Castello 1903) [1598:  the embassy was led by Cardinal Alessandro de' Medici].  Generoso Calenzio, Orat. La vita e gli scritti del Cardinale Cesare Baronio, Orat. (Roma: Tipografia Vaticana 1907) [fulsome apologist].  Antoine Aubery, L' histoire du Cardinal duc de Joyeuse (Paris: chez Robert Denain, 1664).  Cesar de Ligny (editor),   Les ambassades et negotiations de l' Illustrissime et Reverendissime Cardinal du Perron dernière edition (Paris: chez Pierre Lamy 1633).   Jean-Lévesque de Burigny,  Vie du Cardinal du Perron, Archevêque de Sens et Grand-Aumônier de France (Paris: De Bure 1768).  Pierre Feret, Le cardinal du Perron (Paris: Didier 1876).  Raymundus Alberici, "De vita et scriptis venerabilis cardinalis Caesare Baronii Libri Duo,"  in  Raymundis Albericius, Ven. Caesaris Baronii S. R.E. Cardinalis  Bibliothecarii Epistolae  Tomus Primus (Romae 1759), 1-112.     Domenico Sarra, Vita del ven. card. Cesare Baronio  (Roma: 1862), 156-168.  Amabel Kerr, The Life of Cesare Cardinal Baronius (London 1898).  Generoso Calenzio,  La vita e gli scritti del Cardinale Cesare Baronio (Roma: Tipografia Vaticana 1907).

 

E. Timpe,  "Die Kirchenpolitischen Ansichten und Bestrebungen des Kardinals Bellermin,"  Kirchengeschichliche Abhandlungen III (edited by Max Sdralek) (Breslau 1905), 3-133.  Joseph de la Servière, SJ, "Les idées politiques  du Cardinal Bellermin," Revue des questions historiques  41 (1907);  42 (1908), 56-90. [extremely sympathetic].  J. J. I. von Döllinger and Fr. Heinrich Reusch,  Die Selbstbiographie des Cardinals Bellarmine (Bonn 1887) [Latin and German].

 

Francesco Rivola, Vita di Federico Borromeo, Cardinale del titolo di Santa Maria degli Angeli ed Arcivescovo di Milano (Milano: Giuseppe Gariboldi 1656).

 

Mario Domenico Pettoello,  Un giureconsulto udinese del XVIe secolo (Francesco Mantica) (Udine: Tipografia Giuseppe Vatri 1910).

 

Champollion-Figeac (editors), Nouvelle collection des Mémoires pour servir à l' Histoire de France.  Deuxième partie du tome premier.  Registre-Journal de Henri IV et de Louis XIII (Paris 1837).   Berger de Xivrey (editor), Recueil des lettres missives de Henri IV Tome VI, 1603-1606 (Paris: Imprimerie Impériale 1853).

 

Ludwig Wahrmund, "Die Bulle «Aeterni Patris Filius» und der staatliche Einfluss auf der Papstwahlen," Archiv für katholisches Kirchenrecht 72 (Mainz 1894), 201-334.



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