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 Pope Pius VI - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pius VI, born Giovanni Angelo Braschi (December 27, 1717 – August 29, 1799), Pope from 1775 to 1799, was born at Cesena.
At the outbreak of the French Revolution, Pius VI witnessed the suppression of the old Gallican Church, the confiscation of pontifical and ecclesiastical possessions in France, and an effigy of himself burnt by the Parisians at the Palais Royal.
Those who suffered under his conscientious economies cunningly convinced Pope Clement XIV (1769–74) to make him cardinal-priest of Sant' Onofrio on April 26, 1773 – a promotion which rendered him, for a time, innocuous.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Pope_Pius_VI   (1039 words)

  
 Pius, VI Biography / Biography of Pius, VI Biography
Pius VI temporized and attempted to bring about some improvement in the relations between the Church and the French government; however, when an oath of loyalty to the new French constitution was demanded of the clergy, the Pope formally denounced the Civil Constitution and the entire Revolutionary movement on March 10, 1791.
Pius VI (1717-1799), who was pope from 1775 to 1799, reigned during one of the most critical periods in the history of the Church.
Pius VI was born Gianangelo Braschi at Cesena, Italy, on Dec. 25, 1717.
www.bookrags.com /biography-pius-vi   (544 words)

  
 Cultural Catholic - Pope Pius VI
Pope Pius VI was deposed, made a prisoner in exile, and taken to Sienna, then to Florence, and despite Pope Pius VI's illness and frailty, the French pressed on to Turin, Grenoble, and finally Valence where Pope Pius VI died on August 29, 1799.
Pope Pius VI was initially buried in Valences, France but on February 17, 1802 his remains were transferred to Saint Peter’s Basilica where a statue by Canova of Pope Pius VI in a kneeling position was placed in 1822.
Pope Pius VI released some of the Jesuits who were imprisoned by Clement XIV in Catherine the Great's Russia, but he dared not do more because there was widespread disagreement with the Jesuits.
www.culturalcatholic.com /PopePiusVI.htm   (624 words)

  
 The Papacy and the French Revolution (Michael Broach)
Pope Pius VI was arrested as “Citizen Pope” and taken prisoner in 1798 by the French Republican forces, forced into exile and driven north away from the holy city.
Although the church in France isolated and limited the relationship of the Pope with French Catholics, the monarchy and the papacy had a traditional and historical relationship that continued to exist between King Louis XVI and Pope Pius VI, partly because the monarch was anointed and divinely blessed by God.
Olf quotes Pope Pius VI as inquiring, “who can doubt, [that] the King of France was put to death in hatred of the faith, and because he followed Catholic dogmas?”
www.broachweb.com /docs/history/papacy-frenchrev.htm   (4804 words)

  
 Patron Saints Index: Pope Pius VI
Pope in 1775 despite the efforts of the rulers of Spain, Portugal and France who opposed his presumed support of the Jesuits.
Pius was surrounded by attempts to limit the power and influence of the papacy.
The prince-bishops of Mayence, Treves, and Cologne issued a Febronian manifesto known as the Punctuation of Ems of 1786 which claimed that the pope was not superior to all bishops, and that Catholic kings should reduce the papal power.
www.catholic-forum.com /saints/pope0250.htm   (382 words)

  
 Pope Pius IX
Pope Pius IX Beatification and canonization in the Church involve judgments of sanctity on the merits and holiness of an individual’s life.
In 1797, Pope Pius VI was forced by a young Napoleon to accept the virtual destruction of the Papal States, the “patrimony of St. Peter” that the popes had ruled for over a thousand years.
The future Pope Pius IX was born Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti in Senagallia in the Papal States, the ninth child of a minor count in 1792.
www.catholiceducation.org /links/jump.cgi?ID=1722   (11731 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Additions
Text of the apostolic constitution Sancti Hadriani Ecclesia, of Pope Pius XII, January 25, 1946, suppressing the deaconry of S. Adriano and transferring it to the church of S. Paolo Apostolo in Arenula.
Pope John Paul II accepted the resignation to the pastoral government of the archdiocese of Toledo, Spain, submitted by Cardinal Francisco Álvarez Martínez, according to canon 401, par.
Pope John Paul II accepted the resignation to the pastoral government of the archdiocese of Milan, Italy, submitted by Cardinal Carlos Maria Martini, S.J., according to canon 401, par.
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/additions-02.htm   (4582 words)

  
 The Pope Pius XII Controversy
Pius XII was not merely rationalizing his decision not to speak out forcefully by saying it made things worse; he was referring to a reality that was obvious to those coping at the time with the war and the evils it had brought in its train.
Pope Pius XII issued his five-point peace plan shortly after his election to the papacy, just as Pope Benedict XV had issued his five-point peace plan during World War I. This was one of the ways the popes believed it was appropriate to speak out.
In other words, the assistance specifically provided by the pope and the Church to the Jews was rendered to them along with the aid provided to other wartime victims, It was the Church's policy, as well as the Church's boast, that whatever assistance she could give would be given impartially.
www.catholicleague.org /pius/piuswhitehead.htm   (11715 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI: Proceedings of the Conclave that led to his election.
All these excitements so affected Pius VI that he fell seriously ill, and his court and family, thinking he was going to die, made the most of their opportunities, with the result that the large sums of money which had already been collected to meet the fine entirely vanished.
Pius was so moved by the ovation he received that he kept rising in the carriage to allow the faithful a better view of his person as he lifted his arms to bless them.
Pius VI has been accused of having led a futile and immoral life, of having neglected his duties and of having been bad-tempered and even brutal with his attendants.
www.pickle-publishing.com /papers/triple-crown-pius-vi.htm   (5051 words)

  
 Catholic World News : Pope Praises Memory of Pius VI
Pope John Paul's message alluded to the "unhappy period" in which Pope Pius VI was exiled from Rome by Napoleon Bonaparte.
VATICAN (CWNews.com) -- At ceremonies commemorating the life of Pope Pius VI, participants heard a message in which Pope John Paul II praised that pontiff, and urged French Catholics to "take an active part" in the life of their country, and especially to encourage "recognition of the spiritual and religious dimensions" of life.
It was delivered during ceremonies marking the 200th anniversary of the death of Pope Pius VI.
www.cwnews.com /news/viewstory.cfm?recnum=10972   (222 words)

  
 The Episcopal Lineage of Pope Pius VI
POPE PIUS VI Consecrated 22 February 1775 at Rome, in Saint Peter`s Basilica, by Giovanni Francesco Cardinal Albani, Bishop of Ostia e Velletri, Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, assisted by Henry Benedict Mary Cardinal Stuart, Duke of York, Bishop of Frascati, and by Carlo Cardinal Rezzonico, Bishop of Sabina.
The Episcopal Lineage of Pope Pius VI Apostolic Succession in the Roman Catholic Church
Consecrated 21 September 1760 at Rome, Basilica of the Twelve Apostles, by Pope Clement XIII, assisted by Giuseppe Cardinal Spinelli, Bishop of Ostia and Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, by Flavio Cardinal Chigi, by Camillo Cardinal Paolucci, Bishop of Frascati, and by Carlo Cardinal Cavalchini, Bishop of Albano.
home1.gte.net /res7gdmc/aposccs/id15.html   (175 words)

  
 PetersNet: John Paul II, Human Rights Rest on Moral Values
One remembers Christ's words to Peter, which parallel what Pope Pius VI experienced that year, 1799: "When you are old, you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish to go" (Jn 21:18).
Pius VI accepted his trial with serenity and prayer, and forgave his enemies at the moment of his death, thereby gaining their admiration.
The pontificate of Pius VI calls to mind the merits of the papacy which, down the centuries, was eager to defend the Church's freedom from the claims of civil powers.
www.petersnet.net /browse/1265.htm   (1047 words)

  
 Monument to Pope Pius VII
Pius VII, never bore any resentment towards his persecutor and when Napoleon was exiled on the island of St. Helena, the pope made efforts to render the ordeal less bitter.
The successor to Pope Pius VI (1775-1799) who died in exile at Valance, France, victim of Napoleon's power, was the Benedictine monk Barnaba Gregorio Chiaramonti who took the name of Pius VII (1800-182J).
The dignified effigy of the pope shows fatigue and the signs of" his long exile, and yet he is portrayed as blessing both friends and enemies alike.
www.miraclerosarymission.org /piusvll.html   (230 words)

  
 Patron Saints Index: Pope Pius VII
Created cardinal by Pope" Pius VI on 14 February 1785.
It permitted the civil government to nominate bishops and archbishops, but left it to the Pope to confirm them.
Pius was captured and imprisoned in Fontainebleau, France and Savona, Italy, and forced to sign on to another concordat, which he later disavowed.
www.catholic-forum.com /saints/pope0251.htm   (311 words)

  
 Pius VI on Encyclopedia.com
A total of 63 popes are buried in crypts in the grotto including popes Innocent IX, Benedicts XII and XV, Pius XI and Paul VI.
The ambassador & the pope: Pius XII, Jacques Maritain & the Jews.
The Roman Theatres in the Age of Pius VI.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/p/pius6.asp   (591 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope Pius VI
Pius VI refused to accept the bishops that were nominated by the king and, as a result, there were in 1784 thirty vacant sees in the Kingdom of Naples alone, which number had increased to sixty in 1798.
Pius VI resolved to go to Vienna; he left Rome on 27 Feb., 1782, and arrived in Vienna on 22 March.
The pope's co-operation with the Allies against the French Republic, and the murder of the French attaché, Basseville, at Rome, brought on by his own fault, led to Napoleon's attack on the Papal States.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/12131a.htm   (1245 words)

  
 ScienceDaily: Pope pius vi
Look for Pope pius vi in the Commons, our repository for free images, music, sound, and video.
Check for Pope pius vi in the deletion log, or visit its deletion vote page if it exists.
Look for Pope pius vi in Wiktionary, our sister dictionary project.
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/pope_pius_vi   (905 words)

  
 Portrait of Pius VI
In his left hand he holds a sheet of paper on which, in the version of the Museum of Rome, is written "To the Holiness of Our Lord Pope Pius VI for P. Batoni Pinxit 1775".
Important personages of his time wished to be portrayed by him and among these was of course Pius VI (pontiff from 1775 to 1799), who contacted Batoni immediately after his papal election.
The Vatican painting which is in a preliminary state is considered to be a study, quite likely from life, for the official portrait of the Pope (now in the Museum of Rome).
mv.vatican.va /3_EN/pages/x-Schede/PINs/PINs_Sala15_02_058.html   (173 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI Blessing the People on Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo by GUARDI, Francesco
Pope Pius VI visited Venice from 15 till 19 May 1782, returning from an unsuccessful diplomatic mission to the Austrian emperor Joseph II in Vienna.
In May 1782, Pope Pius VI visited the city of Venice.
The highpoint of the festivities was the blessing of the people on Pentecost, the day on which the Pope was scheduled to leave.
www.wga.hu /html/g/guardi/francesc/4/guard403.html   (547 words)

  
 POPE PIUS VI - DOCUMENT UNSIGNED 02/09/1797
Pope Pius VI died at the age of 82 at Valence in 1799.
Angelo Cardinal Braschi became Pope Pius VI in 1775.
Pius condemned this new Gallican church and forbade the clergy to take the oaths.
www.galleryofhistory.com /archive/1_2004/religion/POPE_PIUS_VI.htm   (335 words)

  
 Oracles of Nostradamus: Pius VI
Pius VI THE next four quatrains refer to Rome and Pope Pius VI.
By this the Pope lost Avignon and Venaissin in France, Bolognia, Ferrara, and the Romagnia in Italy, and this he calls the two rocks.
Oracles of Nostradamus: Pius VI Sacred Texts Nostradamus Index Previous Next
www.sacred-texts.com /nos/oon/oon18.htm   (1190 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI and the French Revolution
On the night of February 20, 1798, under constant guard of French dragoons Pius VI was first transferred to Sienna.
The overthrow of the pope in 1798 was the culmination of attacks upon the Catholic Church by the French National Assembly.
The Pope's condemnation caused a crisis of conscious for sincere French Catholics.
www.history1700s.com /articles/article1076.shtml   (408 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI 13 April 1791 Civil Oath in France
Pope Pius VI Encyclical promulgated on 13 April 1791.
They had received no commission to do so from the Apostolic See; they omitted the oath of obedience to the Pope; they neglected the examination and confession of faith which are prescribed in the Roman pontifical which should be observed universally; and they broke and despised all laws.
So today the Pope as a duty of his office appoints bishops for each of the churches, and no lawful consecration may take place in the entire Catholic Church without the order of the Apostolic See (Trent, session 24, chap.
www.ewtn.com /library/ENCYC/P6CHARIT.HTM   (4630 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI on Ambiguity and the Deceptive Methods of Benedict XVI
Pope Pius VI on Ambiguity and the Deceptive Methods of Benedict XVI
  Pope Pius VI teaches us that if someone veils a heresy in ambiguity, a Catholic must hold him to the heretical meaning and denounce the heretical meaning which is camouflaged in ambiguity.
Those who say that heretics cannot be held to their heretical meanings because they often state precisely the opposite – even sometimes within the same context – or because they veil it in ambiguity, aid and abet heretics, assist the destruction of the Faith and contradict the authoritative teaching of the Church.
www.mostholyfamilymonastery.com /ambiguityandBenedictXVI.html   (2255 words)

  
 Pope Pius VI
Pope Pius VI Feb. 15, 1775 - Aug. 29, 1799
www.papalencyclicals.net /Pius06   (34 words)

  
 WHKMLA : History of the Papal State, 1789-1799
France responded by invading the ramainder of the Papal State (Feb. 10th); Rome was occupied on Feb. 15th, Pope Pius VI.
Encyclical of Pope Pius VI, on the civil constitution of the clergy (1791, Caritas, quae docente Paulo), posted by EWTN
In the TREATY OF TOLENTINO Feb. 19th 1797, the pope had, in addition, to cede the Avignon and the Venaissin, Bologna, Ferrara and the ROMAGNA (which was proclaimed the ANCONITAN REPUBLIC), to pay an even higher indemnity and to hand over more art treasures.
www.zum.de /whkmla/region/italy/papalstate17891799.html   (629 words)

  
 ~Destroy Freemasonry~ - Pope Pius VI 1795-1799
During the last quarter of this 18th century during which Masonry had spent 72 years to prepare for 1789 and the bloodshed which was to last many years, Peter's Seat had been occupied by Pius VI, who was destined to die in exile.
His first Encyclical of December 25, 1775, is the acknowledgment of the tears he has shed, "Nostrarum Vim Pacrymarum Exquirit," those tears caused by the so-called philosophers, fanatical enemies of the Church, professors of lies.
Those "Sects of Perdition" at the hour of the Revolution dragged along too many members of the regular and secular Clergy whose names appear on the lists of Masonic lodges: "Corruptio optimi pessima." What of the situation today?
www.destroyfreemasonry.com /chapter4.htm   (162 words)

  
 Zenit News Agency - The World Seen From Rome
This is the effect of the newly opened exhibit, "Popes in Pose," housed in the Palazzo Braschi (former residence of Pope Pius VI) which overlooks Rome's Piazza Navona.
On the other hand, the Medici pope is painted in a symphony of reds, using the rich Venetian technique of blending shades to confer a visual sumptuousness.
The portraits of Pope St. Pius V and Pope St. Pius X, though separated by 400 years, share an austerity in both surroundings and facial expression, indicative of their focus on the spiritual over the temporal.
www.zenit.org /english/visualizza.phtml?sid=62958   (1676 words)

  
 The American Spectator
Pope Pius VI warned that the misnamed "Enlightenment" would destroy Europe's God-centered culture, decimate its moral foundations, and turn government into a pitiless impostor god.
A liberal Pope, as far as they are concerned, would be even better than a liberal Chief Justice on the Supreme Court.
This Op-Ed is worth remembering when the liberals, both outside and inside the Church, begin their march for "reforms" on the grave of Pope John Paul II.
www.spectator.org /dsp_article.asp?art_id=7994   (558 words)

  
 ~Destroy Freemasonry~ - Pope Pius XI 1922
Then again remember the Encyclical of His Holiness Pius XI against irreligious teaching in schools and his encouragement to me to continue my anti-Judeo-Masonic fight, and you will thus have before you a chain whose links are inseparably united.
As to the unity of action of the Popes, it is also worthy of attention.
For the first time the word "Laicism" (which means irreligious teaching) is to be found in a Pontifical document; it is the fatal and sought for result of both the Masonic doctrine and its direct action.
www.destroyfreemasonry.com /chapter13.htm   (1067 words)

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