Papal conclave, 1958
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - Cite This Source| Dates | October 25 – October 28, 1958 |
| Location | Sistine Chapel, Apostolic Palace, Vatican City |
| Dean | Eugène Tisserant |
| Vice Dean | Clemente Micara |
| Camerlengo | Benedetto Aloisi Masella |
| Protodeacon | Nicola Canali |
| Ballots | Pope elected after 11 ballots |
| Elected Pope | Angelo Roncalli (took name John XXIII) |
The conclave and its papabili
The conclave was held from October 25 to October 28, at the Sistine Chapel in the Vatican. In the absence of the popular Giovanni Battista Montini (who would become Pope Paul VI in 1963 but was not yet a cardinal at the time of this conclave), the papabili included the conservative Giuseppe Cardinal Siri, Archbishop of Genoa, and the liberal Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, Archbishop of Bologna.Because Pope Pius XII had held only two consistories (in 1946 and 1953) during his tenure, the College of Cardinals—whose maximum size, as set by Pope Sixtus V in the sixteenth century, was then seventy—was noticeably short of members. There were fifty-three cardinal electors, of whom twelve had been elevated by Pope Pius XI, but due to travel restrictions imposed by their Communist governments, József Cardinal Mindszenty and Aloysius Cardinal Stepinac were not able to travel to Rome. Hence, there were fifty-one electors who participated in the conclave, and thus a potential Pope needed only thirty-five votes.
Siri Speculation
Associates of Siri later claimed that the cardinal had actually achieved the two-thirds majority necessary to be pope and accepted his election, even announcing his regnal name would be Pope Gregory XVII, supposedly only to be pressured into deposing by liberal cardinals.Some sedevacantist groups base their existence on the supposed deposition of the valid Papa Siri and the election of a supposedly invalid replacement. However, Cardinal Siri unambiguously supported and submitted to the four pontiffs who were elected following his supposed election, was a candidate in 1978, continued as a respected archbishop of Genua and died highly respected in full communion with Rome. The papal conclave literature does not mention this alleged incident. His official biographer Raimondo Spiazzi, while describing Siri's role as papabile in the 1978 conclave, has not one word on the incident either. On the other hand, Father Andrew Greeley, in his book Making of the Popes: 1978, (portions of which were first serialized in Playboy Magazine) says that "It is alleged that Richard Cardinal Cushing of Boston came out of the conclave with the precise totals of each ballot written on his shirt cuff. This is, however, most unlikely, since Cushing was not a Cardinal at the time of the 1958 conclave. He was elevated to the College of Cardinals by Pope John XXIII on December 15, 1958, that is a few weeks after the conclave.
Electing Roncalli
Pope Pius had to that point been the longest reigning pope in the twentieth century; Pope Leo XIII, though he died in the beginning of the century, had begun his reign and spent most of it in the nineteenth century. Many churchmen felt it was time for a change of style in pontiff.
As with many papal conclaves, the man eventually chosen as pope was not one of the papabili, but rather the mild-mannered former diplomat of working class origins, 77-year old Angelo Cardinal Roncalli, the Patriarch of Venice and former Nuncio to France. The other compromise candidate had been the Armenian Patriarch of Cilicia, Grégoire-Pierre Cardinal Agagianian. However, Agagianian's non-Italian heritage and young age (63) greatly hindered his chances for election.
Roncalli's selection was a surprise to all, most particularly Roncalli, who arrived in Rome with a return train ticket to Venice and who hoped for a short conclave so that he could return home.
Allegedly French cardinals came to Rome determined to elect a man some had dismissed as over-the-hill. The Frenchmen held their votes together even when Roncalli’s candidacy seemed to slip, gathered allies, and eventually got their candidate elected. It is reported, perhaps apocryphally, that one elderly and confused cardinal kept voting for Achille Ratti throughout the balloting.
Roncalli accepted the election and when asked what his regnal name would be, he responded, "I choose John...a name sweet to Us because it is the name of Our father, dear to me because it is the name of the humble parish church where I was baptized, the solemn name of numberless cathedrals scattered throughout the world, including Our own basilica...We love the name of John because it reminds Us of John the Baptist, precursor of our Lord...and the other John, the disciple and evangelist...Perhaps We can, taking the name of this first series of holy Popes, have something of his sanctity and strength of spirit, even—if God wills it—to the spilling of blood". However, confusion was aroused as to what number pope Roncalli was to choose this name, but he impatiently insisted that he was to be known as John XXIII.
He became the first pope since Benedict XV to bestow his scarlet zucchetto on the Secretary of the conclave—in this instance, Alberto di Jorio—immediately after his election and thus make him a cardinal.
The newly-elected Pope John, with his brand new white cassock too tight on his portly figure, appeared on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica after Nicola Cardinal Canali had announced his election. It is said that Pope John had actually been given the medium-sized cassock by mistake (there are 3 sizes of robes, small, medium and large, available because the tailor does not know who the new pope will be); his measurements had been used for the large-size robes.
Alleged results
| Ballot: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ernesto Cardinal Ruffini | 17 | 17 | 15 | 5 | 5 | 1 |
| Grégoire-Pierre Cardinal Agagianian | 13 | 13 | 12 | 8 | 6 | 1 |
| Angelo Cardinal Roncalli | 7 | 7 | 8 | 15 | 20 | 38 |
| Benedetto Cardinal Aloisi Massella | 5 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
| Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani | 2 | 5 | 8 | 16 | 15 | 9 |
The Case of Giovanni Battista Montini
Giovanni Battista Montini had been one of the stars of the Roman Curia in the 1930s and 1940s. A skilled diplomat and the Substitute (or deputy) Secretary of State, many presumed that he would surely be raised to the College of Cardinals in one of Pope Pius's consistories. For most of his reign, with the exception of the five years Luigi Cardinal Maglione was Secretary of State, Pius himself acted as his own Secretary of State, a position that he had held under the previous pope, Pius XI. Unexpectedly, Pius removed Montini from the Curia in 1955 and appointed him as the Archbishop of Milan, one of the most senior dioceses in Italy, and one which had produced many popes. Milanese archbishops are invariably made cardinals at the next consistory, which took place in 1958 after the death of Pius XII. Pius XII. had only two constitories during his pontificate, in 1946 and 1953. He offered the red hat to Montini and Tardini an 1953, but they turned it down. At the Secret Consistory in 1952 Pope Pius revealed himself to the assembled cardinals in 1953, that two (Tardini and Montini) were of the very top of his list but turned it down. Montini and Tardini had declined the cardinalate. Montini did not get the red hat after 1954, because the Pope did not have a third consistory before his death in 1958. This meant that all archbishops, appointed after 1953, who could expect the honor because of tradition and importance of their city, did not get the red hat, (Montini (Milan), O’Hara (Philadelphia), Cushing (Boston), König (Vienna), Godfrey (Westminster), Barbieri (Montevideo), Castaldo (Naples), Richaud (Bordeaux), and others).Possibly Montini declined the red hat because his counterpart as the Substitute Secretary of State, Msgr. Domenico Tardini, had already declined elevation to the cardinalate. As Montini felt that he could not accept it as long as Tardini had not, he declined the promotion. Whatever the reason he was not promoted, the situation persisted as a stalemate between the two men's promotion until Montini was promoted to be the new Archbishop of Milan in 1955. Both Montini and Tardini received the regalia of as bishops, without being ordained at the time. Tardini remained in Rome as the sostituto Secretary of State. Montini was ordained in St. Peter after his appointment to Milan by Cardinal Tisserant, while Pope Pus XII delivered a eulogy from his sick bed over the radio. It wasn't until Pius XII died in 1958 that Tardini himself, already of poor health and very much against his own will, was promoted to being Secretary of State in his own right, and was promoted to cardinal as well. He died within three years.
For whatever reason, Montini, who was widely tipped as the likely next pope had he had been a member of the College of Cardinals, was excluded, though even as Archbishop of Milan he still managed to pick up some votes, given that the cardinals are not restricted to choosing a pope from among their ranks. Montini was made a cardinal by the new Pope John XXIII and succeeded him as Pope Paul VI. As a sign of his admiration—and some say also his sympathy for his friend's exile to Milan—Pope John XXIII listed Montini at the top of his list of his first consistory of cardinals. This gave Montini the privilege of being the individual who would celebrate the yearly mass, at the pope's own pleasure, which would commemorate the pope's election as Supreme Pontiff. John XXIII would also go on to consult closely with Cardinal Montini about all his plans concerning the planning and execution of the upcoming Second Vatican Council, whose first session began in 1962.
| Duration | 4 days |
|---|---|
| Number of ballots | 11 |
| Electors | 53 |
| Present | 51 |
| Absent | 2 |
| Africa | 2 |
| Latin America | 9 |
| North America | 4 |
| Asia | 3 |
| Europe | 33 |
| Oceania | 1 |
| Italians | 17 |
| DECEASED POPE | PIUS XII (1939-1958) |
| NEW POPE | JOHN XXIII (1958-1963) |
See also
Footnotes
Notes
- Department of State secret dispatch, "John XXIII," issue date: November 20, 1958, declassified: November 11, Paul L. Williams, The Vatican Exposed (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2003), pp. 90-92.
- The Tablet, November 1, 1958
- Department of State secret file, "Cardinal Siri," issue date: April 10, 1961, declassified: February 28, 1994, William, Op. Cit pp.90-92.
- Greeley, Andrew: The Making of the Popes: 1978 (Kansas City, MO: Andrews and McMeel, 1979)
References
External links
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