Pope Pius XSaint Pius X, né Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto, (2 June 1835 - 20 August 1914) was Pope from 1903 to 1914. He succeeded Pope Leo XIII in 1903. He was the first pope for centuries (since the time of the Counter-Reformation Pope St. Pius V) to be named a saint of the Roman Catholic Church. Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto was born Riese, Province of Treviso, in Venice. His parents were Giovanni Battista Sarto, a postman, and Margarita. Sarto was ordained a priest in 1858. As a young priest he studied both Saint Thomas and the Catholic Church's Canon Law. In 1875 he was made a canon of the cathedral of Treviso, becoming in 1878 vicar-capitular. On the 10 November 1884, Sarto joined the episcopate by becoming Bishop of Mantua. In June, 1893 Sarto was named a cardinal in a secret consistory. In 1896 he was publicly named as the Cardinal Patriarch of Venice. However a political difficulty arose over his assumption of the patriarchy, as the Royal Italian Government claimed the right to nominate a clergyman to that position, based on an alleged role in the appointment previously exercised by the Emperor of Austria. The anticlericalism of the Italian Royal Court and the attitudes in the Papal Court to the liberation of Rome from papal rule in 1870 complicated relationships. Eventually the Italian state backed down and Cardinal Sarto was able to assume control of his post. Following the death of the much loved and very elderly Pope Leo XIII, Sarto was elected to the See of Peter on 4 August 1903 by a vote of 55 out of a possible 60 votes in the Papal Conclave. This Conclave was noted for being the last time the veto was used to block a candidate to the throne - being used on behalf of Austria against Cardinal Mariano Rampolla (Papal Secretary of State). Pius X subsequently abolished the veto. Pius' coronation, using the traditional Papal Tiara, took place on the following Sunday, 9 August 1903.![]() \nSaint Pius X's signature ![]() \nThe canonisation of Pope Pius X in 1954 The remains of Pope Pius X, which though not embalmed in 1914 had not decayed, were displayed in a glass coffin in St. Peter's Basilica for the ceremony See also\n* text of official documents including encyclicals at the Holy See\n* Society of St. Pius X Pius 10\nPius 10\n\n\n\n\n |
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