List_of_cardinals_excommunicated_by_the_Catholic_Church

List of cardinals excommunicated by the Catholic Church

List of cardinals excommunicated by the Catholic Church

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Only a few dozen cardinals of the Roman Catholic Church have been excommunicated by the Catholic Church. A cardinal is a Roman Catholic priest, deacon, or bishop entitled to vote in a papal election. They are collectively known as the College of Cardinals.

Excommunicationliterally, the denial of communionusually means that a person is barred from participating in the Sacraments or holding ecclesiastical office. Ne Romani (1311), promulgated by Pope Clement V during the Council of Vienne, extended suffrage in papal election to excommunicated cardinals in an attempt to limit schisms.[1]

This list includes only cardinals who have been explicitly excommunicated by a pope or ecumenical council, rather than those who (depending on one's interpretation) may have been excommunicated latae sententiae. For example, several precepts of papal election law prescribed automatic excommunication, such as Licet de vitanda of the Lateran Council which prohibited election by one-third, and Pope Pius X's Commissum Nobis, which made the exercise of the jus exclusivae by any cardinal punishable by excommunication.[2][3] It also does not include excommunicated quasi-cardinals (cardinals elevated by antipopes) or clerics excommunicated before receiving the red hat.

Many excommunicated cardinals reconciled (most often with the successor of their excommunicator) and had their offices restored. Some would later be elected pope; for example, Formosus and Sergius III.

9th century

Pope Formosus, who was posthumously exhumed and tried in the Cadaver Synod, had previously been excommunicated by his predecessor as pope; all the participants in the Cadaver Synod themselves were later excommunicated
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11th century

Francisco de Borja died before learning of his excommunication.
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12th century

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13th century

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15th century

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16th century

Pope Julius II excommunicated all cardinals who participated in the Council of Pisa (1511).
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18th century

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See also


References

  1. Miranda, S. 1998. "Guide to documents and events". Florida International University.
  2. Miranda, S. 1998. "Guide to documents and events". Florida International University.
  3. Miranda, S. 1998. "Guide to documents and events". Florida International University.
  4. Miranda, S. 1998. "19th Century (795-900)". Florida International University.
  5. Miranda, S. 1998. "11th Century (999-1099)". Florida International University.
  6. Miranda, S. 1998. "Consistory of 1078 (V)". Florida International University.
  7. Miranda, S. 1998. "12th Century (1099-1198)". Florida International University.
  8. Miranda, S. 1998. "13th Century (1198-1303)". Florida International University.
  9. Klaus Ganzer: Die Entwicklung des auswärtigen Kardinalats im hohen Mittelalter, Max Niemeyer Verlag Tübingen 1963, pp. 169-171 no. 86.
  10. Miranda, S. 1998. "Consistory of December 19, 1449 (IV)". Florida International University.
  11. Miranda, S. 1998. "Consistory of September 28, 1500 (IX)". Florida International University.
  12. Miranda, S. 1998. "Conclaves of the 16th Century (1503-1592)". Florida International University.
  13. Miranda, S. 1998. "18th Century (1700-1799)". Florida International University.

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