1216_papal_election

1216 papal election

1216 papal election

Election of Pope Honorius III


The 1216 papal election (18 July), was convoked after the death of Pope Innocent III in Perugia (16 July 1216), elected Cardinal Cencio Camerario,[1] who took the name of Honorius III.

Quick Facts Papal election 1216, Dates and location ...

List of participants

There were 25 cardinals in the College of Cardinals in July 1216, including 23 curial cardinals and two "external cardinals", who did not reside in the papal curia[2] It is known that 17 of them participated in the election:[3]

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Absentee cardinals

Eight cardinals, including six curial and two "external cardinals", were absent:

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Election of Pope Honorius III

Perugia cityscape (15th century)

The cardinals assembled in Perugia two days after the death of Innocent III. They deliberated in the enclosure,[5] though it is not certain whether voluntarily or under pressure of the local authorities.[6] They decided to elect the new Pope by compromissum, it means, not by the whole Sacred College, but by the committee of few of them, empowered by the rest to appoint the new Pontiff. This time the committee included only two cardinal-bishops: Ugolino of Ostia and Guido of Palestrina.[7] On that same day, they elected Cardinal Cencio, called Camerario, aged 68, who accepted his election and took the name of Honorius III.


Notes

  1. The older sources refer him as member of Savelli family but modern scholars reject it
  2. The reconstruction of the Sacred College in July 1216 is based on W. Maleczek, Papst und Kardinalskolleg von 1191 bis 1216, Wien 1984. Maleczek has rectified the earlier reconstructions made by Alphonso Ciacconio in his Vitae et res gestae Pontificum Romanorum et S. R. E. Cardinalium (1677) and Conrad Eubel in his Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi (1913), which are the main sources for the lists in both electronic accounts listed below.
  3. W. Maleczek, op.cit., p. 357
  4. Pierre Duacensis and Peter of Benevento were actually different persons; Duacensis was never promoted to the cardinalate. See an article by John Wei, TWO LETTERS OF HONORIUS III TO CATALONIA, pp. 84–85 note 6
  5. For this reason, an account on Vatican History Archived 2011-05-27 at the Wayback Machine considers this election the "first papal conclave"
  6. Ambrogio Piazzoni, Historia wyboru papieży, Wyd. M, Kraków 2003, pp. 181–182

Sources


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