1492 papal conclave
{{Short description|none}}
{{Infobox papal conclave
| month = August
| year = 1492
| commonname =
| dates = 6–11 August 1492
| location = Sistine Chapel, Apostolic Palace,
Papal States
| dean = Roderic de Borja
| vicedean = Oliviero Carafa
| camerlengo = Raffaele Riario
| protopriest = {{ubl|Luis Juan del Mila y Borja|Girolamo Basso della Rovere}}
| protodeacon = Francesco Piccolomini
| secretary =
| ballots = 4
| pope_elected= Roderic de Borja
| nametaken = Alexander VI
| image = Pope Alexander Vi.jpg
| prevconclave_year=1484
| prevconclave_link=1484 papal conclave
| nextconclave_year=September 1503
| nextconclave_link=September 1503 papal conclave
}}
A papal conclave was held from 6 to 11 August 1492 to elect a new pope to succeed Innocent VIII, who had died on 25 July 1492. Of the 27 eligible cardinal electors, all but four attended. On the fourth ballot, the conclave elected Cardinal Rodrigo Borja, the vice chancellor of the Roman Catholic Church. After accepting his election, he took the name Alexander VI.
The first papal conclave to be held in the Sistine Chapel, Cardinal Rodrigo Borja was elected unanimously on the fourth ballot as Pope Alexander VI. The election is notorious for allegations that Borja bought the votes of his electors, promising them lucrative appointments and other material gifts. Concerns about this conclave were among the reasons that Pope Julius II—who was at the time of the election one of the foremost candidates and participants, as Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere—enacted stronger rules against simony in 1503, shortly after Alexander VI's death in the same year. In the 1492 conclave, Charles VIII of France reportedly bankrolled 200,000 ducats (plus 100,000 ducats from the Doge of Genoa) for the election of Giuliano della Rovere.
Cardinal electors
Of the 23 cardinals participating in the conclave, fourteen had been elevated by Pope Sixtus IV.Pastor, Ludwig. 1906. The History of Popes. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd. p. 416 The cardinals of Sixtus IV, known as the "Sistine Cardinals" and led by Giuliano della Rovere, had controlled the conclave of 1484, electing one of their own, Giambattista Cibo as Pope Innocent VIII.Signorotto, Gianvittorio, and Visceglia, Maria Antonietta. 2002. Court and Politics in Papal Rome, 1492–1700. Cambridge University Press. {{ISBN|0-521-64146-2}}, p. 17 Since 1431 the composition of the College of Cardinals had been radically transformed, increasing the number of cardinal-nephews (from 3 to 10), crown-cardinals (from 2 to 8), and representatives of powerful Roman noble families (from 2 to 4).Burke-Young, Francis A. 1998. "[http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/election-alexandervi.htm The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: Papal elections in the Fifteenth Century: The election of Pope Alexander VI (1492)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180214030647/http://www2.fiu.edu/~mirandas/election-alexandervi.htm |date=2018-02-14 }}." Retrieved 28 August 2009 With the exception of three curial officials and one pastor, the cardinals were "secularly-minded princes largely unconcerned with the spiritual life of either the Latin church or its members."
At the time of Innocent VIII's death, the names of Cardinals Gherardo and Sanseverino (both created in pectore), had not been published, thus making them ineligible to participate in the conclave; however, both were published as an act of the College in sede vacante, Gherardo having been pushed by Giovanni Battista Orsini and Sanseverino by Ascanio Sforza. Gherardo was assigned the title of Santi Nereo e Achilleo, which it was believed Innocent VIII had intended for him; Sanseverino was given the poor and undesirable diaconate of San Teodoro to ensure that the future pontiff would confirm his assignment.
According to the account of bishop ambassador Giovanni Andrea Boccaccio, at least seven cardinals considered themselves papabile, having dismantled the furnishings of their palaces as a precaution against the traditional pillaging of the pope-elect's residence by the Roman populace: da Costa, di Campofregoso, Michiel, Piccolomini, Domenico della Rovere, Savelli, and Zeno.
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style="width:*;" scope=col| Elector
! style="width:5%;" scope=col| NationalitySource: the respective biographical entries by Miranda, Salvador (1998–2009) [http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/conclave-xv.htm#1492 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: conclave of 1492] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180102235943/http://www2.fiu.edu/~mirandas/conclave-xv.htm#1492 |date=2018-01-02 }}. Retrieved 28 August 2009 ! style="width:*;" scope=col| Order and titleMiranda, Salvador (1998–2009) [http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/conclave-xv.htm#1492 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: conclave of 1492] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180102235943/http://www2.fiu.edu/~mirandas/conclave-xv.htm#1492 |date=2018-01-02 }}. Retrieved 28 August 2009 ! style="width:*;" data-sort-type="date" scope=col| Elevated ! style="width:*;" scope=col| Elevator |
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|Cardinal-Bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina |20 February 1456 |Vice-Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church, Administrator of Valencia |
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|18 September 1467 |Vice Dean of the College of Cardinals |
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|Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and Velletri |16 December 1471 |Dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal-nephew, bishop of Bologna, administrator of Avignon |
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|21 November 1468 |
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|Cardinal-Bishop of Palestrina |21 November 1468 |
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|16 December 1476 |Archbishop of Lisbon; Crown cardinal of Afonso V of Portugal |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Crisogono |10 December 1477 |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Clemente |10 February 1478 |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Sisto |15 May 1480 |Former ruler of Genoa; archbishop of Genoa |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Vitale |15 November 1483 | |
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|Milanese |Cardinal-Priest of S. Cecilia |15 November 1483 |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Marco |9 March 1489 |Cardinal-nephew; archbishop of Benevento |
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|Cardinal-Priest of Ss. Giovanni e Paolo |9 March 1489 |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Prassede |9 March 1489 |
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|Cardinal-Priest of Ss. Nereo e Achilleo |9 March 1489 (created in pectore) |Not published before death of Innocent VIII; patriarch of Venice |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Eustachio |5 March 1460 |Protodeacon, bishop of Siena, future Pope Pius III, Cardinal-nephew |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Lorenzo in Damaso |12 December 1477 |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Nicola in Carcere Tulliano |15 May 1480 |Former Governor of Bologna |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Maria in Aquiro |15 May 1480 | |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Maria Nuova |15 November 1483 | |
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|Milanese |Cardinal-Deacon of Ss. Vito e Modesto |6 March 1484 |House of Sforza, ruling family member of Milan |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Maria in Domnica |9 March 1489 |Future Pope Leo X, member of the ruling family of Florence |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Teodoro |9 March 1489 (created in pectore) |
=Absent cardinals=
There is no evidence that the 4 absent cardinals made an attempt to reach Rome for the conclave.
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style="width:*;" scope=col| Elector
! style="width:*;" scope=col| Nationality ! style="width:*;" scope=col| Order and title ! style="width:*;" scope=col| Elevated ! style="width:*;" scope=col| Elevator ! style="width:*;" class=unsortable scope=col| Notes |
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|Cardinal-Priest of Ss. IV Coronati |20 February 1456 |Archpriest of the Sacred College; bishop of Lérida; de facto retired |
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|Cardinal-Priest of S. Croce in Gerusalemme |7 May 1473 |Archbishop of Toledo; Had not left Iberian Peninsula since elevation |
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|Cardinal-Priest of Ss. Silvestro e Martino ai Monti |9 March 1489 |Archbishop of Bordeaux, and Lyon; Crown cardinal of Charles VIII of France |
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|Cardinal-Deacon of S. Adriano |9 March 1489 |Grand Master of Knights Hospitaller |
Procedures
File:Cappella Sistina - 2005.jpg]]
As dictated by the prescriptions Ubi periculum and Ne Romani, the conclave should have begun on 4 August, ten days after the death of Innocent VIII; however, the conclave was delayed to await the slow arrival of the aged Gherardo, bearing a letter from Venice's Council of Ten urging his acceptance into the College. The cardinals had decided as early as their first meeting on 24 July to use the Sistine Chapel for the balloting and assembly of the conclave.
Johann Burchard, the German papal master of ceremonies, who presided over the conclave, as well as the previous one in 1484, kept an extensive diary, noting that each cardinal was provided:Chamberlin, 2003, p. 169
{{cquote|A table, a chair, a stool. A seat for the dischargement of the stomach. Two urinals, two small napkins for the table of the lord. Twelve little napkins for the same lord and four hand towels. Two little cloths for wiping cups. Carpet. A chest or box for the garments of the lord, his shirts, rochets, towels for wiping the face and a handkerchief. Four boxes of sweets for provisions. One vessel of sugared pine-seeds. Marzipan. Cane sugar. Biscuits. A lump of sugar. A small pair of scales. A hammer. Keys. A spit. A needle case. A writing case with penknife, pen, forceps, reed pens, and pen stand. A quire of paper for writing. Red wax. A water jug. Salt cellar. Knives. Spoons. Forks [...].}}
The Mass of the Holy Spirit (celebrated by Giuliano della Rovere rather than Borja who as Dean would traditionally have been the celebrant) and then a speech by Bernardino Lopez de Carvajal, a Spaniard and the ambassador to Ferdinand and Isabella, on the "evils afflicting the Church" preceded the beginning of the conclave on 6 August 1492.Bellonci, Maria. 2003. Lucrezia Borgia. Sterling Publishing Company, Inc. {{ISBN|1-84212-616-4}}, p. 7 Another Spaniard, Gonzalo Fernandez de Heredia, archbishop of Tarragona, was appointed prefect of the Vatican. Two important offices during sede vacante were filled with compatriots of Cardinal Borja, and it is believed that they both were chosen by Borja in his capacity as Dean to strengthen his position before the conclave.
The remainder of 6 August was consumed by the drafting and subscription to the conclave capitulation, which—although not extant—is known to have restricted the number of new cardinals which could be created by the new pope.
Vote count
class="wikitable" style="width:350px; float:right; margin:0 0 1em 1em; text-align:center;"
|+ Nationality of cardinal electors |
|Country
!|Number of electors |
---|
style="font-weight:bold;"|Papal States, Savona
|4 each |
style="font-weight:bold;"|Genoa, Milan, Naples, Venice
|3 each |
style="font-weight:bold;"|Florence, Portugal, Spain
|1 each |
The first ballot ("scrutiny"), held on 8 August was said to have resulted in nine votes for Carafa, seven for Borja, Costa, and Michiel, and five for Giuliano della Rovere, with Sforza notably receiving zero votes.Bellonci, 2003, p. 6
The second ballot produced nine for Carafa, eight for Borja, seven for Michiel, and five for Giuliano della Rovere.
According to the Florentine Ambassador, one of the guards of the conclave, as of 10 August there had been three unsuccessful ballots, favoring Costa and Carafa,Pastor, 1902, p. 381 but in no way indicating Borja might be chosen.Setton, Kenneth Meyer. 1984. The Papacy and the Levant, 1204–1571: The 13th & 14th Centuries. {{ISBN|0-87169-127-2}}, p. 433 According to Sigismondo de' Conti, papal secretary and chronicler, the vote was unanimous on the fourth ballot, taken early in the morning on 11 August although Borja had only 15 votes prior to the accessus;Bellonci, 2003, p. 8 other accounts say Borja received all the votes except for his own, which he gave to Carafa.
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, the election of Rodrigo Borja was "almost entirely due to" Giambattisti Orsini.{{Cite CE1913|wstitle=Orsini}}
Allegations of simony
File:Alexander VI - Pinturicchio detail.jpg, painted by Pinturicchio]]
According to Pastor, 'the corruption during the reign of Pope Innocent VIII had increased to such an extent that it became possible by bribery to procure the election of such a successor as Pope Alexander VIPastor, The History of the Popes vol V, p. 170
The Venetian envoy to Milan informed his confrère in Ferrara: "that by simony and a thousand villanies and indecencies the papacy has been sold, which is a disgraceful and detestable business", adding that he expected Spain and France to withhold their support from the new pontiff. After the conclave, a ubiquitous epigram within Rome was: "Alexander sells the Keys, the Altar, Christ Himself—he has a right to for he bought them."Chamberlin, 2003, p. 170
On 10 August after the third ballot, Ascanio Sforza allegedly came to believe his own ambitions of being elected pope were impossible and became susceptible to Borja's offer: the office of Vice-Chancellor and the associated Palazzo Borgia, the Castle of Nepi, the bishopric of Erlau (with annual revenue of 10,000 ducats) and other benefices.Pastor, 1902, p. 382Setton, 1984, p. 434 Sforza was also reputed to have received four mule-loads of silver (some sources say gold), which Borja ordered to be delivered immediately after the deal was struck.Setton, 1984, p. 435Chamberlin, 2003, pp. 170–171 The price of the other cardinals was as follows: Orsini, the fortified towns of Monticelli and Soriano, the legation of the Marches, and the bishopric of Cartagena (with annual revenue of 5,000 ducats);Pastor, 1902, pp. 382–383 Colonna, the abbey of Subiaco and its environs (with annual revenue of 3,000 ducats);Pastor, 1902, p. 383 Savelli, Civita Castellana and the bishopric of Majorca; Pallavicini, the bishopric of Pampeluna (Pamplona); Michiel, the suburbicarian see of Porto;Pastor, 1902, p. 384 Riario, Spanish benefices with annual income of 4,000 ducats and the return of a house in the Piazza Navona (which Sforza had occupied) to the children of Count Girolamo. Sanseverino's compensation included Rodrigo Borgia's house in Milan. Cardinals Sclafenati and Domenico della Rovere were to receive abbacies and/or benefices. Cardinals Andicino della Porta and Conti followed Sforza, whom they had originally supported.
The aforementioned cardinals plus Borja's own vote numbered 14, one short of the required two-thirds majority. However, Cardinals Carafa, Costa, Piccolomini, Cibò, and Zeno, followed by Medici, were unwilling to be bribed. Cardinal Giuliano della Rovere, followed by Basso, was intractably opposed to Borja's election. Thus, the eighty-six-year-old Gherardo, the Cardinal Patriarch of Venice, who was paid only 5,000 ducats,Chamberlin, 2003, p. 171 constituted the deciding vote.Pastor, 1902, p. 385
According to Professor Picotti, who extensively researched the conclave and came to the conclusion that simony had occurred, no accounts of papal income and expenditure exist in the registers of Introitus et Exitus for August 1492, and debts from the Apostolic Camera to Cardinals Campofregoso, Domenico della Rovere, Sanseverino, and Orsini appeared soon afterwards.Setton, 1984, pp. 433–434 The Spannocchi bank, which housed much of Borja's wealth, was said to have nearly crashed after the conclave due to the velocity of transactions.
Some sources say that Charles VIII of France had bankrolled 200,000 ducats (plus 100,000 ducats from the Doge of Genoa) for the election of Giuliano della Rovere, although several otherwise bribable cardinals were hostile to French interference.Chamberlin, 2003, pp. 169–170
Other historians regard politics as a stronger factor within the conclave than pure simony, with the personal rivalry between Giuliano della Rovere and Ascanio Sforza (who had met to discuss the upcoming conclave in Castel Gandolfo even before Innocent VIII had diedShaw, Christine. 1993. Julius II: The Warrior Pope. Blackwell Publishing. {{ISBN|0-631-20282-X}}, p. 84) substituting for the ancient struggle between Naples and Milan,Ady, Cecilia M. 1928. "Review of La giovinezza di Leone X." English Historical Review. 43: p. 627 with the intractability between the two parties making Borja a viable candidate.
Aftermath
When Giuliano della Rovere was elected Pope Julius II in 1503, he issued a bull annulling any papal election brought about by simony, and defrocking and excommunicating any cardinal who sold his vote. Although the twenty-six day reign of Pope Pius III intervened between Alexander VI and Julius II, the alleged unscrupulousness of the Borgia pope was still firmly in the institutional memory of the Roman Curia. While cardinal during the reign of Alexander VI, Julius II had been assailed politically and often militarily outside the sturdy wall of his Castle of Ostia.Sladen, Douglas Brooke Wheelton, and Bourne, Francis. 1907. The Secrets of the Vatican. Hurst and Blackett Limited, p. 50
Media
The conclave is fictionalized in the 2011 premiere episode of the Showtime series The Borgias, with Jeremy Irons as Borja and Colm Feore as della Rovere, and across several episodes of Tom Fontana's Borgia of the same year, with John Doman as Borja and Dejan Čukić as della Rovere.[https://www.rottentomatoes.com/tv/borgia/s01/ Borgia: Season 1], Rotten Tomatoes
For multiple years, academic and author Ada Palmer has regularly held a course at the University of Chicago simulating the 1492 papal conclave.{{Cite web |date=2025-04-18 |title=Ada Palmer on Learning From the Past and the Future |url=https://www.gettingsmart.com/podcast/ada-palmer-on-learning-from-the-past-and-the-future/ |access-date=2025-04-22 |website=Getting Smart |language=en-US}}{{Cite news |last=Graham |first=Ruth |date=2025-05-06 |title=‘The Only Person in the World Claiming to Be the Pope Right Now’ |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/us/conclave-pope-class.html |access-date=2025-05-06 |work=The New York Times |language=en-US |issn=0362-4331}}"[https://soundcloud.com/youarenotsosmart/096-progress Progress]", [https://www.youarenotsosmart.com You Are Not So Smart], #96.
References
- Chamberlin, Eric Russell. 2003. The Bad Popes. Barnes & Noble Publishing. {{ISBN|0-88029-116-8}}
- Pastor, Ludwig. 1902. The History of Popes. K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co., Ltd.
- Picotti, Giovanni Battista (1951). "Nuovi Studi e documenti intorno a papa Alessandro VI," Rivista di storia della Chiesa in Italia, V (1951), 243–247.
Notes
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{{Papal elections and conclaves from 1061|state=collapsed}}
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Category:15th-century elections
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