Innocent X | Baroque art, papal election, papal power | Britannica (original) (raw)

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Original name:

Giambattista Pamfili

Also Known As:

Giambattista Pamfili

Innocent X (born May 7, 1574, Rome—died Jan. 7, 1655, Rome) was the pope from 1644 to 1655.

Pamfili was a church judge under Pope Clement VIII and a papal representative at Naples for Pope Gregory XV. He was made ambassador to Spain and cardinal (1626) by Pope Urban VIII, whom he succeeded on Sept. 15, 1644. Having been supported by cardinals who had opposed his predecessor, the elderly Innocent reversed Urban’s policies, as demonstrated by his condemnation of the Peace of Westphalia—the collective name for the settlements of 1648, which brought to an end the Eighty Years’ War between Spain and the Dutch and the German phase of the Thirty Years’ War and alienated Catholic lands. But he reigned at a time when popes were no longer consulted by nations in settling war or making peace, and his protest went unnoticed by both sides.

Innocent’s relationship with his relatives was questionable, for he was guilty of nepotism, and much of his pontificate was dominated by his avaricious sister-in-law, Olimpia Maidalchini. Innocent supported the Spanish Habsburgs—a branch of one of the great sovereign dynasties of Europe—by refusing to recognize the independence of Portugal, then at war with Spain. In Rome, Innocent attacked Urban’s relatives, the Barberini, for extortion and confiscated their property. He clashed with France when the Barberini took refuge in Paris with Cardinal Mazarin, whose threat to invade Italy forced Innocent to yield. In theological matters he intervened in the quarrel between the Jesuits and the Jansenists and in a bull of 1653 condemned five propositions concerning the nature of grace as interpreted by Bishop Cornelius Jansen, the founder of Jansenism. A century of controversy with the Jansenists ensued, which was particularly damaging to the French Church. By the time of Innocent’s death, papal prestige had seriously declined.

Christ as Ruler, with the Apostles and Evangelists (represented by the beasts). The female figures are believed to be either Santa Pudenziana and Santa Praxedes or symbols of the Jewish and Gentile churches. Mosaic in the apse of Santa Pudenziana, Rome,A Britannica Quiz Pop Quiz: 19 Things to Know About Christianity

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