Pope Paul III
Pope Paul III was pope from 1534 to 1549. He was the pontiff who excommunicated king Henry VIII of England in 1538, when Henry divorced his wife, Catherine of Aragon. He also called the Council of Trent in 1545.
Text adapted from the Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religion:
Born Alessandro Farnese in
Carino, in Tuscany, he came
through his mother from the Gaetani family, which
had also produced Pope Boniface VIII.
He received
his instruction at Rome and Florence from
distinguished humanists, and became a protonotary at
the Curia under Pope Innocent VIII.
From Pope Alexander VI he received rapid promotion, becoming cardinal
in 1493. He came near succeeding Pope Leo X and
Pope Adrian VI.
Under Pope Clement VII he became cardinal
bishop of Portus (Ostia) and dean of the sacred
college, and on the death of Clement VII, in 1534,
received election as pope.
His first appointment to the cardinalate on Dec.
18, 1534, made it clear that nepotism had come to
the front once more; since the red hat fell to his
nephews Alessandro Farnese and Ascanio Sforza,
aged fourteen and sixteen years respectively; yet
subsequent appointments included Gasparo
Contarini, Sadoleto, Pole, and Giovanni Pietro Caraffa,
subsequently Pope Paul IV.
Paul III was
in earnest in the matter of improving the ecclesiastical
situation, and on June 2, 1536, he issued a bull
convoking a general council to sit at Mantua in 1537.
But at the very start the German Protestant estates
declined to send any delegates to a council in Italy,
while the duke of Mantua himself put forth such
large requirements that Paul first deferred for a year
and then discarded the whole project.
In 1536
Paul invited nine eminent prelates, distinguished
by learning and piety alike, to act in committee and
to report as to the reformation and rebuilding of the
Church. In 1537 they turned in their celebrated
Concilium de emendenda ecclesia
(in J. le Plat,
Monumenta ad historiam Concilii Tridentini, ii. 596-597,
Louvain, 1782), exposing gross abuses in the Curia,
in the church administration and public worship;
and proffering many a bold and earnest word in
behalf of abolishing such abuses. This report was
printed not only at Rome, but at Strasburg and
elsewhere.
But to the Protestants it seemed far from
thorough; Martin Luther had his edition (1538) prefaced
with a vignette showing the cardinals cleaning the
Augean stable of the Roman Church with their
foxtails instead of with lusty brooms. Yet the pope
was in earnest when he took up the problem of
reform. He clearly perceived that the emperor
would not rest until the problem were grappled in
earnest, and that the surest way to convoke a
council without prejudice to the pope was by an
unequivocal mode of procedure that should leave no
room for doubt of his own readiness to make
amendments. Yet it is clear that the Concilium bore no
fruit in the actual situation, and that in Rome no
results followed from the committee's recommendations.
On the other hand, serious political complications
eventuated. In order to vest his grandson Ottavio
Farnese]] with the dukedom of Camerino, Paul
forcibly wrested the same from the duke of Urbino
(1540). He also incurred virtual war with his own
subjects and vassals by the imposition of burdensome
taxes. Perugia, renouncing its obedience,
was besieged by Pier Luigi, and forfeited its freedom
entirely on its surrender. The burghers of Colonna
were duly vanquished, and Ascanio was banished
(1541). After this the time seemed ripe for annihilating heresy.
While it was not foreseen at Rome in 1540, when
the Church officially recognized the young society
forming about Ignatius Loyola (see Jesuits),
what large results this new organization was
destined to achieve; yet a deliberate and gradual course
of action against Protestantism dates from this
period. The second visible stage in the process
becomes marked by the institution, or reorganization,
in 1542, of the Holy Office (see Inquisition).
On another side, the emperor was insisting that Rome should forward his designs toward a peaceable recovery of the German Protestants. Accordingly the pope despatched the nuncio Morone to Hagenau and Worms, in 1540; while, in 1541, Cardinal Contarini took part in the adjustment proceedings at the Conference of Regensburg.
It was Contarini who led to the stating of a definition
in connection with the article of justification in
which occurs the famous formula "by faith alone
are we justified," with which was combined, however,
the Roman Catholic doctrine of good works. At
Rome, this definition was rejected in the consistory
of May 27, and Luther declared that he could
accept it only provided the opposers would admit that
hitherto they had taught differently from what was
meant in the present instance.
The general results
of the conference and the attitude of the Curia,
including its rejection of Contarini's propositions,
shows a definite avoidance of an understanding
with the Protestants. All that could henceforth
be expected of the pope was that he would
cooperate in the violent suppression of "heretics" in
Germany, as he had done in Italy, by creating for
their annihilation the arm of the revived Inquisition.
Yet, even now, and particularly after the Regensburg
Conference had proved in vain, the emperor
did not cease to insist on convening the council, the
final result of his insistence being the
Council of Trent,which, after several postponements, was
finally convoked by the bull Laetare Hierusalem,
Mar. 15, 1545.
Meanwhile, after the peace of Crespy (Sep., 1544),
the situation had so shaped itself that Charles V
began to put down Protestantism by force. Pending
the diet of 1545 in Worms, the emperor concluded a
covenant of joint action with the papal legate,
Cardinal Alessandro Farnese. The pope was to aid
in the projected war against the German Evangelical
princes and estates. The prompt acquiescence of
Paul III in the war project was probably grounded
on personal motives. The moment now seemed
opportune for him, since the emperor was sufficiently
preoccupied in the German realm, to acquire for his
son Pier Luigi the duchies of Parma and Piacenza.
Although these belonged to the Papal States,
Paul thought to overcome the reluctance of the
cardinals by exchanging the duchies for the less
valuable domains of Camerino and Nepi. The emperor
agreed, because of his prospective compensation to
the extent of 12,000 infantry, 500 troopers, and
considerable sums of money.
In Germany the
campaign began in the west, where Protestant movements
had been at work in the archbishopric of Cologne
since 1542. The Reformation was not a complete
success there, because the city council and the
majority of the chapter opposed it; whereas on Apr. 16,
1546, Herman of Wied was excommunicated,
his rank forfeited, and he was, in Feb., 1547,
compelled by the emperor to abdicate.
In the mean time open warfare had begun against
the Evangelical princes, estates, and cities allied
in the Schmalkald League (see Philip of Hesse).
By the close of 1546, Charles V succeeded in
subjugating South Germany, while the victorious battle
at Muhlberg, on Apr. 24, 1547, established his imperial
sovereignty everywhere in Germany and
delivered into his hands the two leaders of the league.
But while north of the Alps, in virtue of his
preparations for the Interim and its enforcement, the
emperor was widely instrumental in recovering
Germany to Roman Catholicism, the pope now held
aloof from him because the emperor himself had
stood aloof in the matter of endowing Pier Luigi
with Parma and Piacenza, and the situation came to
a total rupture when the imperial vice-regent,
Ferrante Gonzaga, proceeded forcibly to expel Pier
Luigi.
The pope's son was assassinated at Piacenza,
and Paul III believed that this had not come to
pass without the emperor's foreknowledge. In the
same year, however, and after the death of the French
King Francis I, with whom the pope had once again
sought an alliance, the stress of circumstances
compelled him to do the emperor's will and accept the
ecclesiastical measures adopted during the Interim.
With reference to the assassinated prince's
inheritance, the restitution of which Paul III demanded
ostensibly in the name and for the sake of the Church,
the pope's design was thwarted by the emperor,
who refused to surrender Piacenza, and by Pier
Luigi's heir in Parma, Ottavio Farnese.
In consequence
of a violent altercation on this account
with Cardinal Farnese, the pope, at the age of
eighty-one years, became so overwrought that an attack
of sickness ensued from which he died, Nov. 10,
1549.
He proved unable to suppress the Protestant Reformation,
although it was during his pontificate that
the foundation was laid for the counter-Reformation.
Referenced By
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