Erudite, gentle, honest man was chosen as a compromise
Pope Benedict XIV succeeded Clement XII as a compromise candidate after a six-month conclave |
Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini began his reign as Pope Benedict
XIV on this day in 1740 in Rome.
Considered one of the greatest ever Christian scholars, he
promoted scientific learning, the baroque arts and the study of the human form.
Benedict XIV also revived interest in the philosophies of
Thomas Aquinas, reduced taxation in the Papal States, encouraged agriculture
and supported free trade.
As a scholar interested in ancient literature, and who
published many ecclesiastical books and documents himself, he laid the
groundwork for the present-day Vatican Museum.
Lambertini was born into a noble family in Bologna in 1675.
At the age of 13 he started attending the Collegium Clementinum in Rome, where
he studied rhetoric, Latin, philosophy and theology. Thomas Aquinas became his
favourite author and saint. At the age of 19 he received a doctorate in both
ecclesiastical and civil law.
Benedict XIV's monument by Pietro Bracci in St Peter's Basilica in Rome |
Following the death of Pope Clement XII, Lambertini was
elected pope on the evening of August 17, 1740, having been put forward as a
compromise candidate after a papal conclave that had lasted six months.
During his reign he carried out many religious reforms and
issued a papal bull against the enslavement of the indigenous peoples of the
Americas.
He also set in motion the cataloguing of the contents of the
Vatican Library.
At the University of Bologna, he revived the practice of
anatomical studies and established a chair of surgery and he was one of the
first popes to voice displeasure about the use of castrated males in church
choirs.
After a battle with gout, Benedict XIV died in 1753 at the
age of 83. His final words to the people surrounding his deathbed were: ‘I
leave you in the hands of God.’ He was buried in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome.
Horace Walpole later described him as ‘a priest without
insolence or interest, a prince without favourites, a pope without nephews.’
The anatomical theatre in the Archiginnasio at the University of Bologna |
Travel tip:
The world’s first university was established in Bologna in
1088 and attracted popes and kings as well as students of the calibre of Dante,
Copernicus and Boccaccio. Benedict XIV revived anatomical studies and
established a chair of surgery there while he was pope. You can visit the
university’s former anatomy theatre in the oldest university building, the
Archiginnasio, in Piazza Galvani. It is open Monday to Saturday from 9am to 1pm,
admission free.
Travel tip:
The monument to Benedict XIV in St Peter’s Basilica in Rome
was created by Pietro Bracci in 1769 in the late baroque tradition. It shows
the Pope standing and blessing his flock with statues of Wisdom and
Unselfishness at his feet, to reflect his character.
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