The  Papal  Conclave

(Lat. cum, with, and clavis, key; a place that may be securely closed)

                      The closed room or hall specially set aside and prepared for the
                      cardinals when electing a pope; also the assembly of the cardinals
                      for the canonical execution of this purpose. In its present form the
                      conclave dates from the end of the thirteenth century. Earlier
                      methods of filling the See of Peter are treated in the article PAPAL
                      ELECTIONS. In this article will be considered: (I) the history of the
                      actual method of papal election; (II) the ceremonial itself.

                                    I. HISTORY OF THE CONCLAVE

                      In 1271 the election that ended with the choice of Gregory X at
                      Viterbo had lasted over two years and nine months when the local
                      authorities, weary of the delay, shut up the cardinals within narrow
                      limits and thus hastened the desired election (Raynald, Ann. Eccl.,
                      ad ad. 1271). The new pope endeavoured to obviate for the future
                      such scandalous delay by the law of the conclave, which, almost in
                      spite of the cardinals, he promulgated at the fifth session of the
                      Second Council of Lyons in 1764 (Hefele, Hist. des Conciles, IX,
                      29). It is the first occasion on which we meeet with the word
                      conclave in connexion with papal elections. (For its use in English
                      literature see Murray's "Oxford Dictionary", s. v., and for its medieval
                      use Du Cange, Glossar. med. et infimæ Latinitatis, s. v.) The
                      provisions of his Constitution "Ubi Periculum" were stringent. When
                      a pope died, the cardinals with him were to wait ten days for their
                      absent brethren. Then, each with a single servant, lay or clereic, they
                      were to assemble in the palace where the pope was at his death, or,
                      if that were impossible, the nearest city not under interdict, in the
                      bishop's house or some other suitable place. All were to assemble
                      in one room (conclave), without partition or hanging, and live in
                      common. This room and another retired chamber, to which they
                      might go freely, were to be so closed in that no one could go in or
                      out unobserved, nor anyone from without speak secretly with any
                      cardinal. And if anyone from without had aught to say, it must be on
                      the business of the election and with the knowledge of all the
                      cardinals present. No cardinal might send out any message,
                      whether verbal or written, under pain of excommunication. There
                      was to be a window through which food could be admitted. If after
                      three days the cardinals did not arrive at a decision, they were to
                      receive for the next five days only one dish at their noon and evening
                      meals. If these five days elapsed without an election, only bread,
                      wine, and water should be their fare. During the election they might
                      receive nothing from the papal treasury, nor introduce any other
                      business unless some urgent necessity arose imperilling the Church
                      or its possessions. If any cardinal neglected to enter, or left the
                      enclosure for any reason other than sickness, the election was to go
                      on without him. But his health restored, he might re-enter the
                      conclave and take up the business where he found it. The rulers of
                      the city where the conclave was held should see to it that all the
                      papal prescriptions concerning enclosure of the cardinals were
                      observed. Those who disregarded the laws of the conclave or
                      tampered with its liberty, besides incurring other punishments, were
                      ipso facto excommunicated.

                      The stringency of these regulations at once aroused opposition; yet
                      the first elections held in conclave proved that the principle was
                      right. The first conclave lasted only a day and the next but seven
                      days. Unfortunately there were three popes in the very year
                      succeeding the death of Gregory X (1276). The second, Adrian V,
                      did not live long enough to incorporate in an authoritative act his
                      openly expressed opinion of the conclave. Pope John XX lived only
                      long enough to suspend officially the "Ubi Periculum". Immediately
                      the protracted elections recommenced. In the eighteen years
                      intervening between the suspension of the law of the conclave in
                      1276 and its resumption in 1294 there were several vacancies of
                      from six to nine months; that which preceded the election of
                      Celestine V lasted two years and nine months. About the only
                      notable act of the latter pope was to restore the conclave. Boniface
                      VIII confirmed the action of his predecessor and ordered the "Ubi
                      Periculum" of Gregory X to be incorporated in the canon law (c. 3, in
                      VI°, I, 6), since which time all papal elections have taken place in
                      conclave. Pope Gregory XI in 1378 empowered the cardinals (for
                      that occasion only) to proceed to an election outside of conclave,
                      but they did not do so. The Council of Constance (1417) modified
                      the rules of the conclave to such an extent that the cardinals of the
                      three "obediences" took part in it as well as six prelates from each
                      of the five nations. This precedent (which however resulted happily
                      in the election of the Roman, Martin V) is perhaps the reason why
                      Julius II (1512), Paul III (1542), Pius IV (1561), and Pius IX (1870)
                      provided that in case of their death during an œcumenical council
                      the election of the new pope should be in the hands of the cardinals,
                      not in those of the council. Pius IV by the Bull "In Eligendis" (1562)
                      provided that the election might take place either in or out of the
                      conclave, but this was revoked by Gregory XIII. This liberty of action
                      is found again in the legislation (1798) of Pius VI (Quum nos
                      superiore anno) which leaves it in the power of the cardinals to
                      modify the rules of the conclave touching enclosure, etc. Again Pius
                      IX by the Bull "In hac sublimi" (23 August, 1871) allowed a majority
                      of the cardinals to dispense with the traditional enclosure. Other
                      important documents of Pius IX dealing with the conclave are his
                      Constitutions "Licet per Apostolicas Litteras" (8 September, 1874)
                      and "Consulturi" (10 October, 1877), also his "Regolamento da
                      osservarsi dal S. Collegio in occasione della vacanza
                      dell'Apostolica Sede" (10 January, 1878).

                      As a matter of fact these precautions, taken in view of the danger of
                      interference by secular governments, have so far been unnecessary,
                      and elections of popes take place as they always did since the law
                      of the conclave became finally effective. Many popes have
                      legislated on this subject, either to confirm the actions of their
                      predecessors or to define (or add to) previous legislation. Clement
                      V decreed that the conclave must take place in the diocese in which
                      the pope dies (Ne Romani, 1310) and also that all cardinals,
                      whether excommunicated or interdicted, provided they were not
                      deposed, should have the right to vote. Clement VI (1351) permitted
                      a slight amelioration in the fare and in the strict practice of common
                      life. In the sixteenth century Julius II (1505) by the Bull "Cum tam
                      divino" declared invalid any simoniacal election of a pope.
                      Following the example of Pope Symmachus (499), Paul IV, by the
                      Bull "Cum Secundum" (1558), denounced and forbade all cabals
                      and intrigues during the lifetime of a pope. The aforesaid
                      Constitution of Pius IV "In Eligendis" (1562) is a codification and
                      re-enactment of all the laws pertaining to the conclave since the time
                      of Gregory X. In it he insists forcibly on the enclosure, which had
                      come to be rather carelessly observed. The finally directive
                      legislation on the conclave is that of Gregory XV. In his short reign
                      (1621-1623) he published two Bulls, "Æterni Patris" (1621), and
                      "Decet Romanum Pontificem" (1622), followed by a Cæremoniale
                      for the papal election (Bullar. Luxemb., III, 444 sqq.). Every detail of
                      the conclave is described in these documents. Subsequent
                      legislation has either confirmed these measures, e. g. the "Romani
                      Pontificis" of Urban VIII (1625), or regulated the expenditure of
                      money on the papal obsequies, e. g. the Brief of Alexander VIII
                      (1690), or determined their order, e. g. the "Chirografo" of Clement
                      XII (1732). The more recent legislation of Pius VI, Pius VII, and Pius
                      IX provides for all contingencies of interference by secular powers.
                      Pius VI (who designated a Catholic country in which the majority of
                      the cardinals happened to be) and Pius IX (who left the matter to the
                      judgment of the Sacred College) allowed the widest liberty as to the
                      place of the conclave.

                                  II. CEREMONIAL OF THE CONCLAVE

                      Immediately on the death of a pope the cardinal camerlengo who,
                      as representative of the Sacred College, assumes charge of the
                      papal household, verifies by a judicial act the death of the pontiff. In
                      the presence of the household he strikes the forehead of the dead
                      pope three times with a silver mallet, calling him by his baptismal
                      name. The fisherman's ring and the papal seals are then broken. A
                      notary draws up the act which is the legal evidence of the pope's
                      death. The obsequies last nine days. Meanwhile the cardinals have
                      been notified of the impending election and those resident in Rome
                      (in Curia) await their absent brethren, assisting in the meantime at
                      the functions for the deceased pontiff. All cardinals, and they alone,
                      have the right to vote in the conclave; they must, however, be
                      legitimately appointed, have the use of reason, and be present in
                      person, not through a procurator or by letter. This right is
                      acknowledged even if they are subject to ecclesiastical censures (e.
                      g. excommunication), or if the solemn ceremonies of their "creation"
                      have yet to be performed. During the aforesaid nine days, and until
                      the election of a successor, all cardinals appear with uncovered
                      rochets, just as all have canopies over their seats at the conclave, to
                      show that the supreme authority is in the hands of the whole College.
                      The cardinal camerlengo is assisted by the heads of the three
                      cardinalitial orders, known as the "Capita Ordinum"
                      (cardinal-bishops, -priests, -deacons). There are frequent meetings,
                      or "congregations", of these four cardinals to determine every detail
                      both of the obsequies of the pope and of the preparations for the
                      conclave. All matters of importance are referred to the general
                      congregations, which since 1870 are held in the Vatican. The
                      cardinal dean (always the Bishop of Ostia) presides over these
                      congregations, in which the cardinals take rank and precedence
                      from the date of their elevation to the purple. Formerly they had also
                      to provide for the government of the Papal States and to repress
                      frequent disorders during the interregnum. In the first of these
                      congregations the various Constitutions which govern the conclave
                      are read and the cardinals take an oath to observe them. Then, in
                      the following days, the various officers of the conclave, the
                      conclavists, confessors, and physicians, servants of various kinds,
                      are examined or appointed by a special commission. Each cardinal
                      has a right to take into the conclave a secretary and a servant, the
                      secretary being usually an ecclesiastic. In case of illness a third
                      conclavist may be allowed, with agreement of the general
                      congregation. All are equally sworn to secrecy and also not to hinder
                      the election. After the conclave certain honorary distinctions and
                      pecuniary emoluments are awarded to the conclavists.

                      Meanwhile a conclave, formerly a large room, now a large part of
                      the Vatican palace, including two or three floors, is walled off, and
                      the space divided into apartments, each with three or four small
                      rooms or cells, in each of which are a crucifix, a bed, a table and a
                      few chairs. Access to the conclave is free through one door only,
                      locked from without by the Marshal of the Conclave (formerly a
                      member of the Savelli, since 1721 of the Chigi, family), and from
                      within by the cardinal camerlengo. There are four openings provided
                      for the passage of food and other necessaries, guarded from within
                      and without, on the exterior by the authority of the marshal and
                      major-domo, on the interior by the prelate assigned to this duty by
                      the three cardinals mentioned above, representative of the three
                      cardinalitial orders. Once the conclave begins the door is not again
                      opened until the election is announced, except to admit a cardinal
                      who is late in arriving. All communication with the outside is strictly
                      forbidden under pain of loss of office and ipso facto
                      excommunication. A cardinal may leave the conclave in case of
                      sickness (certified under oath by a phisician) and return; not so a
                      conclavist. It may be noted at once, with Wernz, that a papal election
                      held outside of a properly organized conclave is canonically null and
                      void.

                      Within, the cardinals live with their conclavists in the cells. Formerly
                      every cardinal had to provide his own food, which was carried in
                      state by his men-in-waiting to one of the four openings nearest the
                      cell of the prelate. Since 1878 the kitchen is a part of the conclave.
                      Though all meals are taken in private they are served from a
                      common quarter, but great care is taken to prevent written
                      communication by this way. The cells of the cardinals are covered
                      with cloth, purple if they are of the last pope's "creation", green if not.
                      When they wish to be undisturbed they close the door of their cell,
                      the frame-work of which is in the shape of a St. Andrew's cross. The
                      conclave opens officially on the evening of the tenth day after the
                      pope's decease, unless another day has been assigned. Every
                      precaution is observed to exclude those who have no right within the
                      enclosure, and also unnecessary communication with the outside.
                      Papal legislation has long since forbidden the once customary
                      "capitulations", or ante-election agreements binding on the new
                      pope; it is also forbidden to cardinals to treat of the papal
                      succession among themselves during the pope's lifetime; the pope
                      may, however, treat of the matter with the cardinals. Absolutely
                      necessary modifications of the conclave legislation, during the
                      conclave itself, are temporary only. All true cardinals, as stated, may
                      enter the conclave, but those only who have received deacon's
                      orders have a right to vote, unless they have received a special
                      indult from the late pope. Cardinals who have been preconized, but
                      not yet elevated to the purple, are entitled by a decision of St. Pius V
                      (1571) both to be present and to vote.

                      Including the cardinals, prelates, and conclavists, there are perhaps
                      two hundred and fifty persons in the enclosure. The government of
                      the conclave is in the hands of the cardinal camerlengo and of the
                      three representative cardinals who succeed one another in order of
                      seniority every three days. About seven or eight o'clock on the
                      morning of the eleventh day the cardinals assemble in the Pauline
                      Chapel and assist at the Mass of the cardinal dean. Formerly they
                      wore the special garment of the conclave, called the crocea. They
                      receive Communion from the hands of the cardinal dean, and listen
                      to a Latin allocution on their obligations to select the most worthy
                      person for the Chair of Peter. After Mass they retire for a few
                      moments, and then assemble in the Sistine Chapel, where the
                      actual voting takes place. There six candles are lighted on the altar
                      on which rest the paten and chalice to be used in voting. Over the
                      chair of each cardinal is a baldachinum. The papal throne is
                      removed. Before each chair is also a small writing desk. When
                      ready to vote they enter the Sistine Chapel accompanied by their
                      conclavists bearing their portfolios and writing materials. Prayers
                      are said by the bishop sacristan; the ballots are distributed and then
                      all are excluded except the cardinals, one of whom bolts the door.

                      Though since Urban VI (1378-89) none but a caridnal has been
                      elected pope, no law reserves to the cardinals alone this right.
                      Strictly speaking, any male Christian who has reached the use of
                      reason can be chosen, not, however, a heretic, a schismatic, or a
                      notorious simonist. Since 14 January, 1505 (Julius II, "Cum tam
                      divino") a simoniacal election is canonically invalid, as being a true
                      and indisputable act of heresy (Wernz, "Jus Decret.", II, 658, 662;
                      see "Hist. Pol. Blätter", 1898, 1900, and Sägüuller, "Lehrbuch d.
                      Kirchenrechts", 1900, I, 215). There are four possible forms of
                      election: scrutinium, compromissum, accessus, quasi-inspiratio.
                      The usual form is that of scrutinium, or secret ballot, and in it the
                      successful candidate requires a two-thirds vote exclusive of his own.
                      When there is a close vote, and only then, the ballot of the pope-
                      elect, which, like all the others, is distinguishable by a text of
                      Scripture written on one of its outside folds, is opened to make sure
                      that he did not vote for himself. Each cardinal deposits his vote in
                      the chalice on the altar and at the same time takes the prescribed
                      oath: "Testor Christum Dominum qui me judicaturus est me eligere
                      quem secundum Deum judice eligi debere et quod idem in accessu
                      præstabo"-"I call to witness the Lord Christ, Who will be my judge,
                      that I am electing the one whom according to God I think ought to be
                      elected", etc. (For the form of the oath see Lucius Lector, "Le
                      Conclave", 615, 618.) The ballot reads: "Ego, Cardinalis N., eligo in
                      summum Pontificem R. D. meum D. Card. N."

                      For this election by secret ballot three cardinals (scrutatores) are
                      chosen by lot each time to preside over the operation of voting,
                      three others (revisores) to control the count of their colleagues, and
                      still three others (infirmarii) to collect the ballots of the sick and
                      absent cardinals. If the sick cardinals cannot attend the balloting,
                      then the three infirmarii go to their cells and bring back their votes in
                      a box to the three cardinals presiding, who count them and put them
                      in the chalice with the others. Then, all the ballots having been
                      shaken up and counted, if the number agrees with the number of
                      electors, the chalice is brought to the table and the ballots, on the
                      outside of which appear the names of the candidates, are passed
                      from hand to hand to the third cardinal who reads the names aloud.
                      All present are provided with lists on which the names of all the
                      cardinals appear, and it is customary for the cardinals to check off
                      the votes as they are read. Then the three cardinal revisors verify the
                      result which is proclaimed as definite.

                      If, upon the first ballot, no candidate receives the necessary
                      two-thirds vote, recourse is often had to the form of voting known as
                      accessus. At the election of Pius X (Rev. des Deux Mondes, 15
                      March, 1904, p. 275) the cardinal dean did not allow the accessus,
                      though it is a recognized usage of conclaves, regulated by Gregory
                      XI, designed primarily to hasten elections, and usually considered to
                      favour the chances of the candidate who has the most votes. It
                      consists practically of a second ballot. All use the ordinary blanks
                      again, with this difference, that if the elector wishes his vote to count
                      for his first choice he writes Accedo nomini; if he changes his vote
                      he introduces the name of his latest choice. Then the two series of
                      ballots have to be compared and identified by the text on the
                      reverse face of the ballot, so as to prevent a double vote for the
                      same candidate by any elector. When the required two-thirds are
                      not obtained, the ballots are consumed in a stove whose chimney
                      extends through a window of the Sistine Chapel. When there is no
                      election, straw is mixed with the ballots to show by its thick smoke
                      (sfumata) to those waiting outside that there has been no election.
                      There are always two votes taken every day, in the morning and in
                      the evening; they occupy from two to three hours each. When the
                      voting is over one of the cardinals opens the door outside of which
                      are gathered the conclavists, and all retire to their cells. Other forms
                      of election, made almost impossible by the legislation of Gregory
                      XV, are known as quasi- inspiration and compromise. The former
                      supposes that before a given session there had been no agreement
                      among the cardinals and that then one of the cardinals, addressing
                      the assembly, proposes the name of a candidate with the words
                      Ego eligo (I elect, etc.), whereupon all the cardinals, as though
                      moved by the Holy Spirit, proclaim aloud the same candidate,
                      saying Ego eligo, etc. An election by compromise supposes that
                      after a long and hopeless contest the cardinals unanimously
                      delegate a certain number of their body to make a choice. It has not
                      been employed since the fourteenth century.

                      When a candidate has obtained the required two-thirds vote in a
                      scrutiny or ballot (the choice, since Adrian VI, 1522, falling on one
                      present and invariably on an Italian cardinal), the cardinal dean
                      proceeds to ask him whether he will accept the election and by what
                      name he wishes to be known. Since the time of John XII (955-64;
                      Sägmüller says Sergius IV, 1009-1012) each pope takes a new
                      name in imitation of St. Peter's change of name (see Knöpfler, "Die
                      Namensänderung der Päpste" in "Compte rendu du congrés
                      internat. cath. à Fribourg", 1897, sec. v, 158 sqq.). The doors have
                      previously been opened by the secretary of the conclave; the
                      masters of ceremonies are present, and formal cognizance is taken
                      of the pope's answers. Immediately the masters of ceremonies
                      lower the canopies of all the cardinals' chairs save that of the
                      pope-elect, and he is conducted to a neighbouring room where he is
                      clothed in the papal garments (immantatio). The cardinals then
                      advance and pay him the first "obedience", or homage (adoratio).
                      The pope then either confirms or appoints the cardinal camerlengo,
                      who puts upon his finger the Fisherman's Ring. Then follows the
                      proclamation to the people made by the senior cardinal-deacon,
                      formerly from the central balcony of St. Peter's overlooking the great
                      Piazza, but since 1870 in St. Peter's itself. The conclave then usually
                      terminates, the masons remove the temporary walls, and the
                      cardinals retire to their various lodgings in the city, awaiting a
                      reassembling for the second and third adoratio and for the solemn
                      enthroning. If the pope happens not to be a bishop, he must be
                      consecrated at once and, according to immemorial tradition, by the
                      Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia. If already a bishop, there takes place only
                      the solemn benedictio or blessing. However, he enjoys full
                      jurisdiction from the moment of his election. On the following Sunday
                      or Holy Day takes place, at the hands of the senior cardinal-deacon,
                      the papal "coronation" from which day the new pope dates the years
                      of his pontificate. The last act is the formal taking possession
                      (possessio) of the Lateran Church, omitted since 1870. For the
                      so-called Veto, occasionally exercised in the past by the Catholic
                      Powers (Spain, Austria, France), see EXCLUSION, RIGHT OF.

                      The actually valid legislation concerning the conclave is found in all manuals of
                      canon law, e. g. WERNZ, Jus. Decret. (Rome, 1899), II, 653-665; SÄGMÜLLER,
                      Lehrbuch des Kirchenrechts (Freiburg, 1900), 313-19; HERGENRÖTHER- HOLWECK,
                      Lehrbuch des cath. Kirchenrechts (Freiburg, 1903), 268-73; LAURENTIUS, Instit.
                      jur. eccl. (Freiburg, 1903), nos. 99-103; cf. BOUIX, De Curiâ Romanâ, 120, and De
                      Papâ, III, 341-44.-The history of the conclave and its ceremonial use fully
                      described in the (illustrated) work of LUCIUS LECTOR (Mgr. Guthlin), Le Conclave
                      (Paris, 1894). It replaces advantageously the earlier work of VANEL on the history
                      of the conclaves (Paris, 1689; 3rd ed., Cologne, 1703). English descriptions like
                      those of TROLLOPE (London, 1876) and CARTWRIGHT (Edinburgh, 1868) are
                      generally unreliable, being largely inspired by the anti-papal histories of
                      conclaves written by the mendacious and inexact GREGORIO LETI (s. l., 1667,
                      1716), and the inaccurate and maliciously gossipy PETRUCCELLI DELLA GATTINA
                      (Brussles, 1865). See Dublin Reviewd (1868), XI, 374-91, and Civiltá Cattolica
                      (1877), I, 574-85; also CREIGHTON in Academy (1877), XI, 66. See La nouvelle
                      législation du conclave in Université cath. (Lyons, 1892), 5-47, and TEELING, The
                      Development of the Conclave in The Dolphin (Philadelphia, 1908). For a
                      catalogue of studies (often documentary) on special conclaves, see CLEROTI,
                      Bibliografia di Roma papale e medievale (Rome, 1893). The conclave that
                      elected Pius X is described by an eyewitness (Un Témoin), said to be Cardinal
                      Mathieu, in Revue des Deux Mondes, 15 March, 1904. See other valuable recent
                      literature in the articles PAPAL ELECTIONS, and EXCLUSION, RIGHT OF.

                                                                             Austin  Dowling

                      Transcribed by WGKofron
                      With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio

                                        The Catholic Encyclopedia Volume IV
                                     Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
                                     Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
                                          Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor
                                    Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York

The Catholic Encyclopedia:  NewAdvent.org