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August 1978 conclave

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Papal conclave
August 1978
Dates and location
25–26 August 1978
Sistine Chapel,Apostolic Palace,
Vatican City
Key officials
DeanCarlo Confalonieri
Sub-deanPaolo Marella
CamerlengoJean-Marie Villot
ProtopriestCarlos Vasconcellos Motta
ProtodeaconPericle Felici
SecretaryErnesto Civardi
Election
Electors111 (list)
CandidatesSeepapabili
Ballots4
Elected pope
Albino Luciani
Name taken:John Paul I
← 1963

Aconclave was held on 25 and 26 August 1978 to elect a newpope to succeedPaul VI, who had died on 6 August 1978. Of the 114 eligiblecardinal electors, all but three attended. On the fourth ballot, the conclave elected CardinalAlbino Luciani, thepatriarch of Venice. After accepting his election, hetook the nameJohn Paul I.

The first of the two conclaves held that same year, it was the first conclave since the promulgation ofIngravescentem aetatem (1970), which made cardinals who had reached the age of 80 by the day the conclave began ineligible to participate in the balloting. There were 15 cardinals excluded by that rule. The number of votes cast for Luciani on the final ballot was so great that even a theoretical uniform opposition of these 15 cardinals would not have changed the outcome.[1]

Papabili

[edit]
Main article:Papabile

Among thepapabili, or top candidates, were President of theSecretariat for Non-ChristiansSergio Pignedoli,Giuseppe Siri ofGenoa, andCorrado Ursi ofNaples.[citation needed] Others namedGiovanni Benelli ofFlorence, until recently Vatican deputysecretary of state;Sebastiano Baggio, prefect of theCongregation for Bishops; and non-cardinalAnastasio Ballestrero, archbishop ofTurin.[2] The non-Italian most often mentioned wasJohannes Willebrands, archbishop ofUtrecht.[3]Aloísio Lorscheider of Brazil, head of theEpiscopal Conference of Latin America, favouredAlbino Luciani, thepatriarch of Venice, while Luciani himself was believed to have favoured Lorscheider.[4]Time reported that the dean of the college,Carlo Confalonieri, who was excluded from participating due to age, had been the first to suggest Luciani.[5]

Proceedings

[edit]
Newly elected Pope John Paul I (on the left) with MonsignorVirgilio Noè, then papal master of ceremonies

The conclave was held for two days, from 25 August to 26 August 1978, at theSistine Chapel in theVatican. CardinalJohn Wright, an official of theRoman Curia, was in the U.S. for medical treatments and thus unable to attend.[6] Proceedings on 25 August 1978 began with aMass celebrated atSt. Peter's Basilica by the cardinal electors for divine guidance in their task to elect Pope Paul VI's successor. The cardinals processed into the Sistine Chapel six hours later, while the chapel choir sang the hymnVeni Creator Spiritus. MonsignorVirgilio Noè, thepapal master of ceremonies, gave the traditional command ofExtra omnes! ("Everybody out!"), the doors were locked, and then the actual conclave began, with Cardinal Villot presiding (as would happen again in October) due to being the senior cardinal bishop in attendance. The chapel windows remained closed, some sealed, and the summer heat was oppressive. Belgian CardinalLeo Suenens later wrote: "My room was an oven. My cell was a kind of like a sauna."[7] The traditional canopied thrones were replaced with twelve long tables to accommodate the electors. CardinalsKarol Wojtyła,Aloísio Lorscheider, andBernardin Gantin reportedly served asscrutineers during the balloting.

Luciani had told his secretary that he would decline the papacy if elected.[8] During the third ballot,Johannes Willebrands andAntónio Ribeiro, who sat on either side of Luciani, whispered words of encouragement to him as he continued to receive more votes.Jaime Sin told Luciani, "You will be the new pope."[9] Luciani was elected on the fourth ballot, and when CardinalJean-Marie Villot asked Luciani whether he accepted his election, he replied: "May God forgive you for what you have done," and accepted his election. In honor of his two immediate predecessors, he tookJohn Paul I as hispapal name. After the election, when Cardinal Sin paid him homage, the new pope noted: "You were a prophet, but my reign will be a short one."[9]

On 26 August 1978 at 18:24CEST (16:24UTC), the first signs of smoke appeared from the chimney of the Sistine Chapel. For over an hour, it was unclear whether the smoke was white to indicate a pope had been elected or black to indicate that balloting would continue. Some of the cardinals had personally deposited their notes and tally sheets in the stove, darkening what should have been white smoke.Pericle Felici, as thecardinal protodeacon, then stepped onto the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica and delivered theHabemus papam inLatin, announcing Luciani's election.[10] At 19:31 CEST, John Paul I appeared on the balcony and gave hisUrbi et Orbi blessing. When he appeared about to address the crowd, he was reminded that was not traditional and withdrew without speaking further.[7] He invited the cardinal electors to remain in conclave for another night and dined with them, occupying the same chair as he had at their earlier group dinners.[7]

Voting tallies

[edit]
All results of the ballots are speculative.

Several authors have provided what they claim to be the vote totals at the conclave. Cardinals were not required to destroy notes they took during the conclave.

Yallop

[edit]

As presented byDavid Yallop, who claimed thatJohn Paul I was murdered.[11]

  • First ballot:Siri 25,Luciani 23,Pignedoli 18,Lorscheider 12,Baggio 9, scattered 24.
  • Second ballot: Siri 35, Luciani 30, Pignedoli 15, Lorscheider 12, scattered 19.
  • Third ballot: Luciani 68, Siri 15, Pignedoli 10, scattered 18.
  • Fourth ballot: Luciani 99, Siri 11, Lorscheider 1 (cast by Luciani). This ballot (and the alleged murder of John Paul I) appears in the filmThe Godfather Part III, except that the fictionalizedCardinal Lamberto stands in for Luciani.

Burkle-Young

[edit]

As presented by Francis A. Burkle-Young,[12] based on the notes of CardinalMario Casariego, Archbishop ofGuatemala City.[7]

  • First ballot: Siri 25, Luciani 23, Pignedoli 18, Baggio 9,König 8,Bertoli 5,Pironio 4, Felici 2, Lorscheider 2, fifteen others 1 each.
  • Second ballot: Luciani 53, Siri 24, Pignedoli 15, Lorscheider, Baggio, Cordeiro,Wojtyła 4 each, Felici 3.
  • Third ballot: Luciani 92, Pignedoli 17, Lorscheider 2.
  • Fourth ballot: Luciani 102, Lorscheider 1 (cast by Luciani),Nemini (no-one) 8.

Thomas-Witts

[edit]

As presented byGordon Thomas andMax Morgan-Witts.[13]

  • First ballot: same as Burkle-Young's count except 5 votes for Pironio, fourteen candidates with 1.
  • Second ballot: Luciani 46, Pignedoli 19, Lorscheider 14, Baggio 11, Bertoli 4, others unspecified.
  • Third ballot: Luciani 66, Pignedoli 21, Lorscheider 1 (cast byAramburu), others unspecified.
  • Fourth ballot: Luciani 96, Pignedoli 10, Lorscheider 1 (cast by Aramburu).

According to one report of the balloting, French traditionalist ArchbishopMarcel Lefebvre received a small number of votes—variously reported as three or "several"—causing some consternation among the cardinals.[14]

See also

[edit]
Cardinal electors by region
RegionNumber
Italy26
Rest of Europe29
North America15
South America16
Asia9
Oceania4
Africa12
Total111

References

[edit]
  1. ^Reese, Thomas (1998).Inside the Vatican. Harvard University Press. p. 101.ISBN 9780674418028. Retrieved22 June 2018. According to Reese, 16 cardinals were excluded from voting because of their age.
  2. ^Tanner, Henry (7 August 1978)."Pope Paul VI Is Dead of a Heart Attack at 80; Guided the Church Through Era of Change".The New York Times. Retrieved22 June 2018.
  3. ^Hofmann, Paul (9 August 1978)."Choice of Non-Italian Pope Held Possible but Unlikely".The New York Times. Retrieved22 June 2018.
  4. ^Reese, Thomas (1998).Inside the Vatican. Harvard University Press. p. 93.ISBN 9780674418028. Retrieved22 June 2018.
  5. ^"A Swift, Stunning Choice".Time. 4 September 1978.
  6. ^"Leading U.S. Cardinal To Miss Papal Voting".New York Times. 9 August 1978. Retrieved31 October 2017.
  7. ^abcd"A look back at the Conclave that elected Albino Luciani Pope".La Stampa. 25 August 2015. Retrieved22 June 2018.
  8. ^Allen Jr., John L. (2 November 2012)."Debunking four myths about John Paul I, the 'Smiling Pope'".National Catholic Reporter.
  9. ^abKnowles, Leo (2003).Modern Heroes of the Church. Our Sunday Visitor.ISBN 1931709467.[page needed]
  10. ^Nossiter, Bernard D. (27 August 1978)."Venice Cardinal Elected Pope".Washington Post. Retrieved22 June 2018.
  11. ^Yallop, David (2007).In God's Name. Basic Books.ISBN 978-0-553-05073-8. Retrieved22 June 2018.[page needed]
  12. ^Burkle-Young, Frances A. (1999).Passing the Key: Modern Cardinals, Conclaves, and the Election of the Next Popes. Madison Books. pp. 255–257.ISBN 1-56833-130-4.
  13. ^Thomas, Gordon; Morgan-Witts, Max (1983).Pontiff:The Vatican, the KGB, and the Year of the Three Popes. Doubleday.ISBN 0-451-12951-2.[page needed]
  14. ^White, David Allen (2006).The Horn of the Unicorn. Angelus Press.ISBN 189233139X.[page needed]

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