Papal Elections Aren’t Always as Dramatic as ‘Conclave’ – But the History Behind the Process Is

The coronation of the pope, depicted in the ‘Chronicle of the Council of Constance’ by Ulrich von Richenthal, from the 15th century.
The coronation of the pope, depicted in the ‘Chronicle of the Council of Constance’ by Ulrich von Richenthal, from the 15th century.
Share
The coronation of the pope, depicted in the ‘Chronicle of the Council of Constance’ by Ulrich von Richenthal, from the 15th century.
The coronation of the pope, depicted in the ‘Chronicle of the Council of Constance’ by Ulrich von Richenthal, from the 15th century.
Papal Elections Aren’t Always as Dramatic as ‘Conclave’ – But the History Behind the Process Is
Copy

I’m a historian of the medieval papacy and editor of the forthcoming three volumes of the Cambridge History of the Papacy. So it was more or less mandatory for me to see the new movie “Conclave.”

Based on Robert Harris’ 2016 novel, the film shows the politics behind electing a pope to lead the world’s 1.36 billion Catholics. Any researcher who has spent some time at the Vatican will find familiarity in the characters’ speeches and behaviors, which are acted spot-on.

What the movie does not do, though, is explain where the word “conclave” comes from, and how the mysterious system was created in the first place. Conclave is formed from the Latin words for “with key,” referring to how cardinals are sequestered to elect a pope – inside the Vatican, today; but wherever a pope died, in the Middle Ages.

Why sequestered? Because it took centuries for the church to develop an electoral system free from manipulations and violence – which should resonate with contemporary politics.

Read the full article on The Conversation here.

Judge calls the Justice Department’s request a “fishing expedition” for sensitive voter information
The city council approved the Providence Rent Stabilization Act on Thursday, which would have placed a 4% cap on annual rent increases for most Providence apartments
Officials project $38 million a year once tolling resumes, but spending obligations have outpaced revenue by millions
The Providence City Council is still one vote short of a supermajority that could override Mayor Brett Smiley’s expected veto. The policy would cap annual rent increases at 4% with exceptions for owner-occupants.
Mayor Ken Hopkins says a 7.4% tax increase is necessary to maintain city services and close the existing budget gap
Plus: the Rhode Island Black Film Festival, opening day at the drive-in and more