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Pope Innocent XI

Innocent XI
image:Pope Innocent XI.jpg
Name Benedetto Odescalchi
Papacy began October 4, 1676
Papacy ended August 12, 1689
Predecessor Pope Clement X
Successor Pope Alexander VIII
Born May 16, 1611
Place of birth Come, Italy
Died August 12, 1689
Place of death Rome, Italy

Innocent XI, born as Benedetto Odescalchi (May 16, 1611 - August 12, 1689) was pope from 1676 to 1689.

He was born at Como in 1611, studied law at Rome and Naples, held successively the offices of protonotary, president of the apostolic chamber, commissary of the Marco di Roma, and governor of Macarata; in 1647 Innocent X made him cardinal, and he afterwards successively became legate to Ferrara and bishop of Novara. In all these capacities, the simplicity and purity of character which he displayed combined with his unselfish and openhanded benevolence to secure for him a high place in the popular affection and esteem; and two months after the death of Clement X he was, on September 21, 1676, in spite of French opposition, chosen his successor. He lost no time in declaring and practically manifesting his zeal as a reformer of manners and a corrector of administrative abuses. He sought to abolish sinecures and to put the papal finances otherwise on a sound footing; beginning with the clergy, he sought to raise the laity also to a higher moral standard of living. In 1679 he publicly condemned sixty-five propositions, taken chiefly from the writings of Escobar, Suarez, and the like, as "propositiones laxorum moralistarum" and forbade anyone to teach them under penalty of excommunicaton.

Personally not unfriendly to Molinos, he nevertheless yielded to the enormous pressure brought to bear upon him to confirm in 1687 the judgement of the inquisitors by which sixty-eight Molinist propositions were condemned as blasphemous and heretical.

His pontificate was marked by the prolonged struggle with Louis XIV of France on the subject of the so-called "Gallican Liberties ", and also about certain immunities claimed by ambassadors to the papal court. He died after a long period of feeble health on August 12, 1689.

The case for his canonization was introduced in 1714 but the influence of France forced it to be suspended in 1744. In the 20th century it was reintroduced, and Pius XII announced his beatification on October 7, 1956.

The feast day of Innocent XI is August 12.

Robert Browning's work The Ring and the Book features Innocent as an important character, providing the theological monologue that makes up the tenth book of the poem.

Rita Monaldi & Francesco Sorti , in their novel Imprimatur (Mondadori ed., 2002), cast a different and more controversial light on that pope, building a very strong case against his canonization. They depict a selfish politician, betraying the Roman Catholic Church's interests in the hope of recovering a personal debt. Although the book doesn't pretend to be of scholar's grade value, an appendix of various notes and documents spanning about 40 pages at the end of the text allows a critical review of the authors' researches, and gives a final touch of credibility to the story.


Original text from the 9th edition (1880) of an unnamed encyclopedia

Last updated: 05-07-2005 07:20:56
Last updated: 05-13-2005 07:56:04