The 1458 papal conclave (August 16–19), convened after the death of Pope Callixtus III, elected as his successor Cardinal Enea Silvio Piccolomini who took the name Pius II.

Papal conclave
August 1458
Dates and location
16–19 August 1458
Apostolic Palace, Papal States
Key officials
DeanGiorgio Fieschi
CamerlengoLudovico Trevisan
ProtopriestPetrus von Schaumberg
ProtodeaconProspero Colonna
Elected pope
Enea Silvio Bartolomeo Piccolomini
Name taken: Pius II
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Death of Callixtus III

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Pope Callixtus III, the first pope of the House of Borgia, died on August 6, 1458.[1] He was severely criticized due to his nepotism and devotion towards his compatriots of Catalonia, making him very unpopular among the rather xenophobic Roman populace. After the Pope's death an open revolt against him broke out and some of his partisans (e.g. his nephew Pedro Luis de Borja) had to flee Rome.[2]

List of participants

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At the time of Callixtus' death, there were 27 living cardinals, of whom 19 were in Rome, but on August 14 Cardinal Domenico Capranica, archpriest of the college, unexpectedly died. Participating in the conclave were 18 out of the 26 members of the Sacred College:[3]

Elector Nationality Cardinalatial Title Elevated Elevator Notes[4]
Giorgio Fieschi

(called Cardinal Fieschi)

Genovese Bishop of Ostia e Velletri 1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals; bishop of Albenga
Isidore of Kiev

(Cardinal of Ruthenia)

Greek Bishop of Sabina;

administrator of SS. Marcellino e Pietro

1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Latin Patriarch of Constantinople; administrator of the see of Nicosia
Bessarion

(Cardinal of Nicea)

Greek Bishop of Frascati;

commendatario of SS. XII Apostoli

1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Titular archbishop of Nicea and Tebe; administrator of the sees of Mazara del Vallo and Pamplona; Cardinal-protector of the Order of Basilians
Guillaume d'Estouteville, O.S.B.Cluny

(Cardinal of Rouen)

French Priest of SS. Martino e Silvestro 1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Archbishop of Rouen and administrator of the see of Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne; Archpriest of the patriarchal Liberian Basilica; Cardinal-protector of the Order of Augustinians
Juan de Torquemada, O.P.

(Cardinal of S. Sisto)

Castilian Priest of S. Maria in Trastevere 1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Administrator of the suburbicarian see of Palestrina; abbot commendatario of Subiaco
Pietro Barbo

(Cardinal of S. Marco)

Venetian Priest of S. Marco 1440, July 1 Pope Eugenius IV (cardinal-nephew) Bishop of Vicenza; Archpriest of the patriarchal Vatican Basilica
Antonio de la Cerda

(Cardinal of Messina)

Catalan Priest of S. Lucia in Septisolio 1448, February 16 Pope Nicholas V Bishop of Lerida; administrator of the see of Giovinazzo
Latino Orsini

(Cardinal Orsini)

Roman Priest of SS. Giovanni e Paolo 1448, December 20 Pope Nicholas V Administrator of the see of Bari; Archpriest of the patriarchal Lateran Basilica
Alain de Coëtivy

(Cardinal of Avignon)

French Priest of S. Prassede 1448, December 20 Pope Nicholas V Bishop of Avignon and administrator of the sees of Nîmes and Dol
Filippo Calandrini

(Cardinal of Bologna)

Bolognese Priest of S. Lorenzo in Lucina 1448, December 20 Pope Nicholas V (cardinal-nephew) Bishop of Bologna
Luis Juan del Mila y Borja

(Cardinal of Segorbe)

Catalan Priest of SS. IV Coronati 1456, February 20 Pope Callixtus III (cardinal-nephew) Administrator of the see of Segorbe; Legate in Bologna
Juan de Mella

(Cardinal of Zamora)

Castilian Priest of S. Prisca 1456, December 17 Pope Callixtus III Bishop of Zamora
Giovanni Castiglione

(Cardinal of Pavia)

Milanese Priest of S. Clemente 1456, December 17 Pope Callixtus III Bishop of Pavia
Enea Silvio Piccolomini

(Cardinal of Siena)

Siena Priest of S. Sabina 1456, December 17 Pope Callixtus III Bishop of Siena and bishop of Warmia
Giacomo Tebaldi

(Cardinal of S. Anastasia)

Neapolitan Priest of S. Anastasia 1456, December 17 Pope Callixtus III Archbishop of Naples; Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals
Prospero Colonna

(Cardinal Colonna)

Roman Deacon of S. Giorgio in Velabro 1426, May 24 Pope Martin V (cardinal-nephew) Protodeacon of the Sacred College of Cardinals
Jaime de Portugal

(Cardinal of Portugal)

Portuguese Deacon of S. Eustachio 1456, February 20 Pope Callixtus III Archbishop of Lisbon; administrator of the see of Paphos
Rodrigo Borgia

(Cardinal Vicechancellor)

Catalan Deacon of S. Nicola in Carcere;

commendatario of S. Maria in Via Lata

1456, February 20 Pope Callixtus III (cardinal-nephew) Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church; Administrator of Valencia; generalissimo of the papal troops

Eight electors were Italian, five Spaniards, two French, two Greeks and one Portuguese. Seven of them were created by Callistus III, six by Eugenius IV, four by Nicholas V and one by Martin V.

Absentees

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Eight cardinals did not participate in this conclave:[3]

Elector Nationality Cardinalatial Title Elevated Elevator Notes[4]
Pierre de Foix, O.F.M.

(Cardinal of Foix)

French Bishop of Albano September, 1414 Antipope John XXIII Legate in Avignon; administrator of the sees of Arles, Lescar and Dax
Petrus von Schaumberg

(Cardinal of Augsburg)

German Priest of S. Vitale 1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Protopriest of the Sacred College of Cardinals; Bishop of Augsburg
Dénes Szécsi

(Cardinal of Esztergom)

Hungarian Priest of S. Ciriaco 1439, December 18 Pope Eugenius IV Archbishop of Esztergom; Chancellor of the Kingdom of Hungary
Ludovico Trevisan

(Cardinal of Aquileia)

Venetian Priest of S. Lorenzo in Damaso 1440, July 1 Pope Eugenius IV Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church; Patriarch of Aquileia; bishop of Cava; papal legate of the Mediterranean coasts and islands; Supreme Commander of the Papal Fleet; abbot commendatario of Montecassino
Juan Carvajal

(Cardinal of S. Angelo)

Castilian Priest of S. Lucia in Septisolio 1446, December 16 Pope Eugenius IV Bishop of Plasencia; papal legate in Germany, Poland and Hungary
Jean Rolin

(Cardinal of Autun)

French Priest of S. Stefano al Monte Celio 1448, December 20 Pope Nicholas V Bishop of Autun
Nicholas of Cues

(Cardinal of S. Pietro in Vincoli)

German Priest of S. Pietro in Vincoli 1448, December 20 Pope Nicholas V Bishop of Brixen; papal legate in Germany and England
Richard Olivier de Longueil

(Cardinal of Coutances)

French Priest [no titulus assigned] 1456, December 17 Pope Callixtus III Bishop of Coutances

Of the absentee cardinals four were creations of Eugenius IV, two of Nicholas V and one of Callixtus III. Pierre de Foix was the last surviving cardinal of the Great Western Schism and was elevated by Pisan Antipope John XXIII.

Among them there were three French, two Germans, one Spaniard, one Italian and the one Hungarian.

Candidates to the papacy

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The principal concerns in the conclave of 1458 arose from the rapid rise of the effective power and influence of the French monarchy in the closing years of the Hundred Years War, which had recently ended with the French victory. The principal Italian states – Kingdom of Naples, Republic of Genoa and Duchy of Milan – feared a rebirth of French interest in Italian affairs and tried to prevent the elevation of a French pope at all costs. The official candidate of the Milanese was Domenico Capranica. The campaign for his election in the pre-conclave period was so successful that it appeared almost certain that he would be elected to the papacy. But Cardinal Capranica died suddenly on August 14, 1458, two days before the beginning of the conclave, leaving his party in great confusion. Ottone de Carretto, ambassador of Milan in Rome, made the quick and unconsulted decision to support Cardinal Enea Piccolomini and managed to convince Latino Orsini, one of the most influential cardinals, to back him in this action. The principal candidate of the pro-French party was d'Estouteville. Bessarion, Torquemada and Calandrini also were considered papabile.[1]

The conclave

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Eighteen cardinals entered the conclave in Vatican on August 16. Initially they subscribed to the conclave capitulation, which obliged the elect to continue the crusade against the Ottoman Empire and to give more welfare to poorer cardinals.[5]

The first scrutiny took place only on August 18. Cardinals Piccolomini and Calandrini received five votes each, while none of the others obtained more than three.[1] At this point French Cardinal d'Estouteville started an intensive simoniacal campaign for his own candidature. He promised the office of Vice-Chancellor to the Cardinal of Avignon and offered other bribes to the Greek cardinals. On August 18 in the evening he was certain that he would obtain at least eleven votes on the following morning[6] But the opposite Italian party also lost no time. During the night Cardinal Pietro Barbo called together all the other Italian cardinals except Prospero Colonna and proposed to them that, of them all, the one most likely to obtain the required majority of two thirds was Piccolomini, and that all should support him on the following day.[1]

Election of Pius II

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The results of the second ballot on August 19 in the morning were a greatly disappointing surprise for d'Estouteville. He received only six votes – those of de Coëtivy, Colonna, Bessarion, Fieschi, Torquemada, and Castiglione. Cardinal Piccolomini obtained nine votes – those of Barbo, Orsini, Calandrini, Isidore of Kiev, de Mella, de La Cerda, Jaime de Portugal, del Mila y Borja, and that of d'Estouteville, who hesitated to vote for himself but certainly did not consider Piccolomini a serious rival. The votes of Rodrigo Borgia, Giacomo Tebaldi and Enea Piccolomini fell to other candidates. After announcing the results, Cardinal Dean opened the customary procedure of the accessus. There was a long silence broken by Rodrigo Borgia who changed his vote to Piccolomini. Then the partisans of d'Estouteville made an attempt to adjourn the session, but Cardinal Tebaldi also changed his vote to Piccolomini, who needed only one vote more for the election. At this point Cardinal Colonna arose to give his vote. Cardinals Rouen and Bessarion attempted to subdue him forcefully but Colonna was able to free himself from the scuffle to proclaim "I also vote for the Cardinal of Siena, and I make him Pope!" [7] The rest of the adherents of the Cardinal of Rouen could do nothing but change their votes too, and a few minutes later Cardinal Bessarion congratulated Piccolomini on his unanimous election to the papacy.[1]

Cardinal Enea Silvio Piccolomini accepted his election and took the name Pius II. On September 3, 1458, he was solemnly crowned on the steps of the patriarchal Vatican Basilica by Cardinal Prospero Colonna, protodeacon of S. Giorgio in Velabro.[8]

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The proceedings of the election of Pius II were the basis of the 2006 film The Conclave.

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e Francis Burkle-Young “Papal elections in the Fifteenth Century: the election of Pius II II
  2. ^ Ludwig von Pastor, History of the Popes vol. 2, p. 461
  3. ^ a b Miranda, Salvador. "Conclave of August 16 - 19, 1458 (Pius II)". The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church. Florida International University. OCLC 53276621. Retrieved 2019-06-02.
  4. ^ a b Notes according to biographical entries of the respective cardinals on The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: Consistories for the creation of Cardinals, 15th Century (1394-1503) by Salvador Miranda
  5. ^ Papst Pius II@vaticanhistory.de (German)
  6. ^ G. Noel, p. 30
  7. ^ Perie, The Triple Crown, Spring 1935 p.20
  8. ^ S. Miranda: Cardinal Enea Silvio Piccolomini

Sources

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