Pope Pius VII
Pius VII, né
Giorgio Barnaba Luigi Chiaramonti, (
August 14,
1740 -
August 20,
1823) was
Pope from
March 14,
1800 to
August 20,
1823.
Pope Pius VII
Barnaba Chiaramonti was born at
Cesena into a noble
Italian family. He was educated in Ravenna before joining the
Benedictine order in
1756 to continue his studies. He then became a teacher within the order. His career became a series of swift promotions following the election of a family friend Giovanni Braschi as
Pope Pius VI. Pius VI appointed him abbot of San Callisto in
Rome in
1776 and after making him a bishop made him a
cardinal in February
1785. Following the death of Pius in August
1799 the
conclave met in Venice on
November 30. There were three main candidates and after several months of stalemate Chiaramonti was elected as a compromise candidate. He was crowned Pius VII on
March 21,
1800.
As when he was cardinal the main concern of the new Pope was the French. The revolutionary regime of
Napoleon I led to the
Concordat of 1801 negotiated by Ercole Consalvi, which re-systemised the linkage between the French church and Rome. The Pope suffered a major loss of church lands in
Germany where following the Peace of Lunéville (
1801) a number of German princes compensated for their losses by seizing ecclesiastical property. Whatever hopes Pius may have had with Napoleon, the
Papal States were eventually taken by the French around
1800, and when Napoleon subsequently was
excommunicated, he had Pius arrested. Pius did not return to Rome until
1814. At the
Congress of Vienna (
1814-
15) the
Papal States were largely restored.
His monument (
1831) in
St. Peter's Basilica, Rome, is by the
Danish (
Protestant) sculptor
Bertel Thorvaldsen.
Pius 07