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   » » Wiki: Jus Exclusivae
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Jus exclusivae ( for "right of exclusion"; sometimes called the papal veto) was the right claimed by several of to veto a candidate for the . Although never formally recognized by the Catholic Church, the monarchs of France, Spain and Austria claimed this right at various times, making known to a , through a , that the monarch deemed a particular candidate for the papacy objectionable.


Early history
The right exercised by Byzantine () and Holy Roman emperors to confirm the election of a pope, which was last exercised in the Early Middle Ages, appears unrelated to the early modern legal claim of jus exclusivae by the Holy Roman Empire, France, and Spain. Pope Pius IV, in his bull In Elgidendis (1562), excluded formal support of the Church to such rights and external interventions in the conclave. It was explicitly forbidden in 1904 with the bull Commissum Nobis of Pope Pius X.

In the 17th century, in defence of this right first appear. It was notably invoked in 1644 by both Spain and France. Spain used it to exclude the election of Giulio Cesare Sacchetti, whereas France failed to veto the election of Giovanni Battista Pamphili (who became Pope Innocent X).


Right asserted since 1644
  • 1644 Papal conclave – Giulio Cesare Sacchetti, by King Philip IV of Spain
    (2025). 9780198797449, Oxford University Press. .
  • 1655 Papal conclave – Giulio Cesare Sacchetti, by King Philip IV of Spain
  • 1669–70 Papal conclave – Benedetto Odescalchi, by King of France
  • 1700 Papal conclave – Galeazzo Marescotti, by King Louis XIV of France
  • 1721 Papal conclave – Fabrizio Paolucci, by Emperor Charles VI; and Francesco Pignatelli by King Philip V of Spain
  • 1730 Papal conclave – Giuseppe Renato Imperiali, by King Philip V of Spain
  • 1758 Papal conclave – Carlo Alberto Guidoboni Cavalchini, by King Louis XV of France
  • 1774–75 Papal conclave - Giovanni Carlo Boschi, by the Bourbon courts
  • 1823 Papal conclave – by Emperor Francis I of Austria
    (2025). 9780739101148, Lexington Books. .
  • 1830–31 Papal conclave – Giacomo Giustiniani, by King Ferdinand VII of Spain
  • 1903 Papal conclave – , by Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria

At the 1846 Papal conclave, Austrian Chancellor Klemens von Metternich confided Austria's veto of to Cardinal Carlo Gaetano Gaisruck, Archbishop of Milan, who arrived too late. Mastai-Ferretti would reign as Pius IX for over thirty-one years.


Papal attitude toward the jus exclusivae
The right has never been formally recognized by the papacy, though conclaves have considered it expedient to recognize secular objections to certain , that is, candidates for the papacy, and to accept secular interference as an unavoidable abuse. By the In eligendis of 9 October 1562 Pope Pius IV ordered the cardinals to elect a pope without deference to any secular power. The bull Aeterni Patris Filius by Pope Gregory XV (15 November 1621) forbids cardinals to conspire to exclude any candidate. These pronouncements however, did not specifically condemn the jus exclusivae. In the apostolic constitution In hac sublimi of 23 August 1871 Pope Pius IX forbade any kind of secular interference in papal elections.

The most recent attempt to exercise the right to exclude Cardinal Rampolla in 1903 was rejected by the conclave, although over the course of several ballots Rampolla, who had been the leading candidate, lost support until the conclave elected Cardinal Sarto, Saint . The following year, Pius X forbade the jus exclusivae in the apostolic constitution Commissum Nobis of 20 January 1904:

Since then the cardinals in conclave have been enjoined to take this oath: "We shall never in any way accept, under any pretext, from any civil power whatever, the office of proposing a veto of exclusion even under the form of a mere desire… and we shall never lend favour to any intervention, or intercession, or any other method whatever, by which the lay powers of any grade or order may wish to interfere in the election of a pontiff."

No power has openly attempted to exercise the right since 1903. had become a republic in 1870. After World War I, the and were dissolved. Spain became a republic and eventually a constitutional monarchy. During the 1963 conclave, Generalissimo made an unsuccessful attempt to block the election of Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini. He sent the College of Cardinals some "advice" through Cardinal , a native of Spain who was then the Prefect of the Congregation of Rites. It was carefully drafted to fall outside the forms of influence that Pius X had prohibited, but the cardinals nevertheless thought it outrageous.

(2025). 9780739101148, Lexington Books. .


See also
  • Investiture Controversy
  • Papal appointment
  • Papal deposing power


Notes

Sources
  • Catholic Encyclopedia, Right of Exclusion. (article by Johannes Baptist Sägmüller, 1909).
  • .
  • Ludwig Wahrmund, Das Ausschliessungs-recht (jus exclusivae) der katholischen Staaten Österreich, Frankreich und Spanien bei den Papstwahlen (Wien: Holder 1888).
  • Ludwig Wahrmund, "Beiträge zur Geschichte des Exclusionsrechtes bei den Papstwahlen aus römischen Archiven," Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserliche Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien, philosophisch-historische Klasse, Band CCXXII, xiii (Wien 1890).
  • J. B. Sägmüller, Die Papstwahlbullen und das staatliche Recht der Exklusive (Tuebingen: H. Laupp 1892).
  • Ludwig Wahrmund, "Die Bulle "Aeterni Patris Filius" und der staatliche Einfluss auf die Papstwahlen," Archiv für katholisches Kirchenrecht 72 (Mainz 1894) 201-334.
  • Ludwig Wahrmund, Zur Geschiste des exclusionrechtes bei den Papstwahlen im 18 Jahrhundert. Neue Beitrage aus römischen Archiven (Mainz 1892).
  • William J. Hegarty, "The Lay Veto," American Catholic Quarterly Review 37 (1912), pp. 419–439.
  • Herbert Plock, Das "Jus exclusivae" der Staaten bei der Papstwahl und sein Verbotdurch die päpstliche Bulle "Commissum nobis" (Göttingen: Druck von L. Hofer, 1910).
  • Peter Frei, Die Papstwahl des Jahres 1903: unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des österreichisch-ungarischen Vetos (Bern and Frankfurt a.M.: Peter Lang, 1977).

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