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{{Infobox Christian denomination
{{Infobox Christian denomination|name=Catholicism|native_name=Ecclesia Catholica|image=Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.jpg|scripture=Bible|theology=Catholic theology|leader_title1=Traditionalist leader|language=Latin|founded_date=1st century|leader_title2=Reformist leader|headquarters=Santiago, [[Spain]] (Papacy) </br> Rome, [[Latium]] (Supreme Apostolic Council)|founded_place=Palestine|polity=Episcopal (Papacy) </br> Parliamentary (Supreme Apostolic Council)|liturgy=See below|founder=Jesus, according to sacred Christian tradition|leader_name1=Pope|leader_name2=President of the Supreme Apostolic Council|area=Worldwide}}
|icon = Sede vacante.svg
|icon_width = 50px
|name = Catholic Church
|native_name = Ecclesia Catholica
|image = File:Giacomo van Lint - Rome, a view of the apse of Saint Peter's, with an artist sketching in the foreground.jpg
|imagewidth = 275px
|caption = St. Peter's Basilica, the most well-known Roman Catholic church
|abbreviation =
|main_classification = Catholic
|type =Western Christianity
|scripture = Bible
|theology = Catholic theology
|polity = Episcopal
|structure =
|leader_title = Government
|leader_name = [[Holy See]] </br> <small> (Pontifical Obedience) </small> </br> [[College of Cardinals]] </br> <small> (Conciliar Obedience) </small>
|leader_title1 = Administration
|leader_name1 = Roman Curia </br> <small> (Pontifical Obedience) </small> </br> Apostolic Secretariat </br> <small> (Conciliar Obedience) </small>
|leader_title2=
|leader_name2 =
|leader_title3 =
|leader_name3 =
|fellowships_type = Particular churches<br />''sui iuris''
|fellowships = Latin Church and 15 particular Churches </br> <small> (Pontifical Obedience) </small> </br> Latin Church and 28 particular Churches </br> <small> (Conciliar Obedience) </small>
|fellowships_type1 =
|fellowships1 =
|division_type = Schism
|division = [[Great Papal Schism]] </br> Pontifical Obedience <small> ([[Spain]]) </small> </br> Conciliar Obedience <small> ([[Latium]]) </small>
|division_type1 =
|division1 =
|division_type2 =
|division2 =
|division_type3 =
|division3 =
|associations =
|language = Ecclesiastical Latin
|liturgy = Seven main rites <small> (Latin, Ambrosian, Syriac, Nestorian, Byzantine, Alexandrian, Armenian, Chinese) <small>
|headquarters =
|founder = Jesus Christ
|founded_date = 1st century
|founded_place = Holy Land, Roman Empire
|parent =
|merger =
|absorbed =
|separations =
|merged_into =
|defunct =
|congregations_type =
|congregations =
|missionaries =
|churches =
|nursing_homes =
|aid =
|tax_status =
|tertiary =
|other_names =
|publications =
|slogan =
|logo =
|footnotes =
}}
 
The '''Catholic Church''' (Latin: ''Ecclesia Catholica''), isalso known as the largest'''Roman ChristianCatholic churchChurch''', andis the oldestlargest religious institution in the world. It isrepresents subdividedof intothe sixteenthree [https://religion.fandom.com/wiki/Particular_Churchprimary particularbranches churches]of and sevenChristianity, RitesCatholicism, along with theOrthodoxy Latinand ChurchProtestantism. beingThe theChurch mosttraces dominantits andorigin mostto populous.Jesus InChrist modern day,and the largestApostles, Catholicclaiming populationsto residebe inthe southernone Europe,and [[Mexico]],true [[Philippines|thecontinuation Philippines]],based [[Tussenland]],on andapostolic westernsuccession. Africa.
 
Since 1908, the Catholic Church has been in schism. This schism, known as the Great Papal Schism, was caused by vast theological, dogmatic, and political differences, particularly over the issues of papal primacy and infallibility. It is the first major schism to occur in the Church since the Great Occidental Schism of 1378.
The leadership of the Catholic Church has been contested between the Holy See and the Supreme Apostolic Council since [[Venice#Invasion of the Papal Adriatic (1908), and the Alps against Austria (1911-1912)|expulsion of the Pope in 1908]]. Both claim to be the worldwide leader of Catholic Christendom. From 1911, the papacy has been in exile in [[Spain]], seated at the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santiago_de_Compostela_Cathedral Archbasilica of Santiago de Compostela]. The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_ecumenical_councils ecumenical] Council of Rome, called in 1909 by the Doge of [[Venice]], established the permanent and executive Supreme Apostolic Council, seated in Rome. Today, the rivalry between [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conciliarism conciliarism] and [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_primacy papism] remain among the largest and most contentious religious predicaments in the world.
 
The Conciliar Obedience, based in Rome, is non-papist, maintaining that the supreme authority of the Church lies with the College of Cardinals rather than a pope. They also uphold the idea of sedevacantism, where the position of Bishop of Rome is permanently vacant, with Jesus Christ being the sole and invisible head of the Roman Catholic Church. The Deacon of the College is the ''de facto primus inter pares'' leader of the Conciliarists.
== Etymology ==
 
None of the conciliarist churches are in full communion with the [[Holy See]], which has been based in Santiago de Compostela, [[Spain]], since 1909. The Pontifical Obedience, as it is called, conserves the doctrines of Petrine primacy, papal supremacy, and papal infallibility. The Pope remains the supreme head of the Church and the titular absolute monarch of the Papal States, assisted in administration by the Roman Curia and the [[Order of Malta]].
== History ==
 
Catholic communities around the world, since the start of the 20th century, have each declared their allegiance to either the Conciliar or Pontifical branches of the Church, while others have left the matter undecided and ambiguous. Today, Roman Catholicism is the primary religious denomination across much of Europe, the vast majority of America, swathes of Africa, and significant parts of Asia and Australasia. [[Mexico]] has the largest Catholic population in the world.
==== Premodern history (100-1309) ====
 
== Organization ==
==== Late Middle Ages (1309-1511) ====
{{Main|Holy See|College of Cardinals|Apostolic Secretariat}}
 
== Enlightenment: 1656—1797 ==
===== Papacy at Avignon =====
 
== ''Sēclum chaōrum'': 1797—1903 ==
==== The Reformation (1511-1715) ====
 
== Great Papal Schism: 1903—1910 ==
==== The Enlightenment (1715-1815) ====
In 1903, food shortages and increase in prices sparked bread riots across the Papal States. Demonstrations by citizens, peasants, and workers increasingly grew violent as the economic situation worsened. Secretary of State Lanfranco Chigi was assassinated on 17 February 1905 by republican sympathizers, consequentially triggering another wave of violence across the country. The same year, the ''Compagnia per la Riforma Repubblicana'' (lit. 'Society for Republican Reform'; CRR) was established, with its radical members advocating for the abolition of the State of the Church and its replacement with a democratic republic.
 
The [[Venice|Venetian]] army invaded the Papal States in 1908 due to security concerns, occupying the Adriatic apostolic provinces of Romagna and Marche. The principalities of Benevento and Pontecorvo revolted from the Papal States and allied with Venice shortly after. In the following weeks, the food riots became a famine, and civil unrest became a rebellion. In the August of 1908, Pope [[Boniface X]] was assassinated by insurgent [[Jacopo Marzullo]] while attempting to flee to Porto Ercole.
==== ''Seclum chao'' (1815-1901) ====
 
As a consequence, the Roman Curia, several cardinals, and members of the Papal nobility fled to [[Spain]], where they were welcomed by King [[Ferdinand VIII]]. In 1909, the Treaty of Pontevedra affirmed the Holy See's right to several properties in Santiago de Compostela, including the Cathedral of Santiago, Gelmírez Palace, and Fonseca Palace. A new papal College of Cardinals was established the same year. A papal conclave was held in 1910, where the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church under Boniface X, Leonardo Teodorico Theodoli, was elected Pope [[Callixtus IV]].
==== Catholic Schism (1901-1912) ====
{{Infobox ecumenical council|council_name=Council of Rome|convoked_by=Patriarch of Venice|accepted_by=Conciliar Obedience|attendance=~1,300|presided_by=Patriarch of Venice|council_date=13 January 1909 — 30 March 1910|topics=Governance of the Catholic Church </br> Authority of the pope </br> Conciliarism|location=Quirinal Palace, Rome, [[Latium]]|documents=Swiss Guard and Roman Curia disbanded, Bishop of Rome declared vacant, creation of 73 constitutional articles|imagewidth=250px|image=File:Palazzo del Quirinale durante una Visita ufficiale di Stato.jpg|caption=The Quirinal Palace in February 1909}}
The Latial Famines of 1901 to 1903 had triggered several popular revolts in the Papal States. Pope [[Innocent XVII]] became the main target of the public's wrath due to his and his predecessors' administration of the States. Innocent XVII proceeded to die in 1904. One of his favorite cardinals, Remondo di Muzio, was swiftly elected by the College of Cardinals as [[Boniface X]] soon after.
In Italy, the [[Latium|Latin Republic]] was declared, formally abolishing any Papal territories in Italy. The Patriarch of Venice convoked an ecumenical council in 1909, the Council of Rome, to discuss the future of the Roman Catholic Church and reform the Church's system of governance. From the outset, much of the Council's reforms were inspired by the writings of John of Paris, Henry of Segusio, Marsilius of Padua, and William of Ockham, which were pushed by liberal and republican theologians.
 
The College of Cardinals officially replaced the Holy See as the central organ of the Roman Catholic Church, claiming apostolic succession. The College was defined as ''legislator'', having efficient cause of the law and the authority to determine and execute laws and delegate powers. It is said to represent the ''congregatio fidelium'' (body of the faithful, the Church), of which it is its ''valentior pars'' (prevailing part). The representatives, the cardinals, stand ''pars pro toto'' for the Church as a whole with ''plenitudo potestatis'' (fullness of power). Despite this, the Church is not considered to be without a ''caput'' (a head), as Jesus is considered the invisible and permanent head of the Roman Catholic Church.
[[Venice#Invasion of the Papal Adriatic (1908), and the Alps against Austria (1911-1912)|Venice invaded the Papal States]] in 1908, exacerbating the severity of the revolts and further destabilizing the Papal States. A few weeks later, [[Boniface X]] was assassinated by radical republican [[Jacopo Marzullo]] in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ponte_(rione_of_Rome) Ponte district] of Rome. Marzullo was allegedly in collaboration with an unnamed bishop. Soon after the incident, the members of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hereditary_officers_of_the_Roman_Curia Roman Curia] were expelled while the College of Cardinals was thrown into chaos. In 1909, the Doge of [[Venice]] would convoke the 20th Catholic ecumenical council, the Council of Rome. The same year, several members of the Curia, the College, and the Roman aristocracy sought refuge in the holy city of Santiago de Compostela, where they were welcomed by the [[Spain|Spanish government]].
 
Within the College, a council of the seven cardinal bishops, officially known as the Sacred Episcopal Council, is the ''pars principans'' (principal part) of the ''valentior pars''. While it does not supersede the authority of the College as a whole, it maintains a higher status and certain responsibilities, such as the appointment of cardinals and the convocation of councils. The Council consists of the six titular suburbicarian bishops as well as the Patriarch of Venice. One among the Council is elected Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, who acts as the ''de facto'' leader of the Church, ''primus inter pares'' (first among equals). The Dean may also be referred to as the Procurator-General ''ad negotia.'' The Patriarch of Venice often fills the role of spokesperson and presides over celebrations and events.
== Holy See of Santiago ==
==== Flight to Spain ====
 
The Apostolic Secretariat, created in 1910, is the administrative body of the Church, replacing the Roman Curia. It consists of numerous institutions that manage the daily affairs of the Church, its properties, and matters of justice. It is directly accountable to the College of Cardinals.
==== Callistian era (1910-1932) ====
 
==== Leonian era (1932-1973) ====
 
==== Assassination of Clement XIII ====
 
==== Hadrian era (1975-1981) ====
 
===== Council of Salamanca (1980) =====
 
== Supreme Apostolic Council ==
{{Infobox ecumenical council|council_name=Council of Rome|council_date=1909|accepted_by=Some members of the Catholic Church|convoked_by=Doge of [[Venice]]|previous=[[Council of Saturnia]]|presided_by=Patriarch of [[Venice]]|topics=Papal supremacy </br> Conciliarism </br> Sedevanticism|attendance=Approx. 3,000|location=Quirinal Palace, Rome, [[Latium]]|next=[[Council of Salamanca]]}}
 
==== Council of Rome (1909) ====
In 1909, the Doge of [[Venice]] convoked the 21st recognised ecumenical council, the Council of Rome, in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quirinal_Palace Quirinal Palace]. The Council, mediated and organised by the concurrent [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patriarch_of_Venice Patriarch of Venice], primarily addressed the issue of papal supremacy and the popularity of conciliarism, sedevanticism, and other forms of anti-Pontifical Catholicism. The historical ecumencial councils of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Ephesus Ephesus (431)] and of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Florence Basel (1431)] were cited as evidential examples of a long-standing desire to severely restrict or eliminate the power of the Pope.
 
In 1910, the Council had come to a conclusion. They agreed to form the permanent executive body of the Supreme Apostolic Council, created in the image of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Council_of_Nicaea First Nicaean Council], in order to replace the Holy See as the highest authoritative institution of the Catholic Church. The Apostolic Council officially claimed [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostolic_succession apostolic succession] while explicitly rejecting the concept of [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apostolic_see apostolic sees] and formally abolishing the position of Bishop of Rome. The provisions of the Council of Rome laid out the structure of the Supreme Apostolic Council:
 
* The Supreme Apostolic Council is to have a President, elected by the Council. The President can preside for life, but may be removed by the members of the Council through a plurality or majority vote. The position of President is in no way alike to the Pope, and is not invested with the same powers.
* The Patriarch of [[Venice]] shall be recognised as the sole Primate of Italia and may substitute for the President is he is absent or if the position is vacant. The position of Primate of Italia is in no way alike to the Pope, and is not invested with the same powers.
* There will be 600 members of the Council, consisting of a reasonably fair assortment of bishops in regards to population of their respective jurisdictions.
* The [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quirinal_Palace Quirinal Palace] will be the seat of the Supreme Apostolic Council. The defence of the Apostolic Council and the Council's right to convene at the Quirinal Palace is is sanctioned by the heads of state of [[Venice]] and [[Latium Republic|Latium]]; the Doge and the President.
* All members of the Council are to convene at the Quirinal Palace at a minimum of every three months to participate in Apostolic Conferences.
* Apostolic Conferences are distinct from [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecumenical_council ecumenical councils], which may be seldom convoked by the Supreme Apostolic Council via a majority vote in order to address special, extraordinary, and/or unforeseen matters & circumstances surrounding the Catholic Church.
 
==== Consolidation of the Council (1909-1911) ====
 
== Organisation ==
 
==== Autonomous particular churches ====
There are fifteen autonomous particular churches (''sui iuris'') within the Catholic Church besides the Latin Church, which ''de jure'' are in full communion with the Papacy. Each particular church may have their own distinct Catholic tradition, expression, and liturgical practices.
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible"
!Name
!Establishment
!Rite
!Seat's location (''cathedra'')
!Polity type
!Group
|-
|Latin Church (''fka'' Roman Catholic Church)
|1st century
|Roman
|Santiago DC, Galicia, [[Spain]]
Quirinial Palace, Rome, [[Latium]]
|Patriarchate
| rowspan="4" |Western
|-
|Catholic Church of Padania
|1916
|Ambrosian
|Milan, [[Lombardy|Lombard Republic]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Maronite Catholic Church
|4th century
| rowspan="2" |Maronite
|Beirut, Mt. Lebanon, [[Ottoman Empire]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Syrian Catholic Church
|1722
|[[Jerusalem|Jerusalem Free State]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Syrian Malabar Church
|1st century
| rowspan="3" |Nestorian
|Cochin, [[Carnatic|Dominion of the Carnatic]]
|Metropolis
| rowspan="10" |Eastern
|-
|Chaldean Catholic Church
|1552
|Baghdad City, [[Baghdad|State of Baghdad]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Chinese Nestorian Church
|1868
|Loyang, [[China]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Melkite Greek Catholic Church
|1727
| rowspan="4" |Greek
|Damascus, Syria, [[Ottoman Empire]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Galician Catholic Church
|1910
|Lwow, [[Poland]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Ruthenian Uniate Church
|1596
|Minsk, [[Poland]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Wallachian Greek Catholic Church
|1697
|Curtea de Argeș, [[Wallachia]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Coptic Catholic Church
|1731
| rowspan="2" |Alexandrine
|Alexandria, [[Egypt]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Abyssinian Catholic Church
|1878
|Girga, [[Egypt]]
|Metropolis
|-
|Armenian Catholic Church
|1742
|Armenian
|Erevan, [[Persia]]
|Patriarchate
|-
|Chinese Catholic Church
|1729
| rowspan="2" |Sinitic
|Zaiton, [[China]]
|Patriarchate
| rowspan="2" |Far Eastern
|-
|Japanese Eastern Catholic Church
|1757
|Nagasaki, [[Japan]]
|Metropolis
|}
 
==== Local particular churches ====
Local particular churches, also known as dioceses, eparchies, or vicariates, are non-autonomous particular churches.
 
===== The Latin Patriarchs =====
Unlike Patriarchs of ''sui iuris'' churches, the minor Latin patriarchs do not have any administrative functions and only provides pastoral, spiritual, and community leadership. They are ranked after the Pope and patriarchs in the Latin Church hierarchy.
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
!Name
!Establishment
!Residence
!Area served
|-
|Patriarch of Jerusalem
|1099
|[[Jerusalem]]
|Levant
|-
|Patriarch of Constantinople
|1204
|Constantinople
|[[Ottoman Empire]], [[Russia]]
|-
|Patriarch of Alexandria
|1215
|Seville, [[Spain]]
|Africa
|-
|Patriarch of Antioch
|1098
|Naples, [[Naples]]
|Levant, Mesopotamia, [[Persia]]
|-
|Patriarch of Venice
|1451
|Venice, [[Venice]]
|Italian peninsula
|-
|Patriarch of Lisbon
|1716
|Lisbon, [[Portugal]]
|Iberia
|-
|Patriarch of the West Indies
|1524
|San Agustín, [[Florida]]
|America
|-
|Patriarch of Flores
|1803
|Larantúca, [[Timor]]
|Southeast & south Asia
|-
|Patriarch of Nagasaki
|1752
|''vacant''
|[[Japan]], [[Corea]], [[China]]
|}
 
===== Primates =====
'Primate' is a title bestowed upon particularly important (arch)bishop who has precedence in a particular area, and may have certain administrative privileges. A list of notable and relevant primates will follow.
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
!Name
!Area served
!Ecclesiastical district
!Notes
|-
|Primate of the Gauls
|[[France]]
|Lyon
|
|-
|Primate of the Spains
|Iberia
|Toledo, Santiago, '''or''' Braga
|
|-
|Primate of All Ireland
|[[Ireland]]
|Armagh
|
|-
|Primate of Ireland
|Ireland
|Dublin
|
|-
|Primate of Quebecq
|[[New France]]
|Quebecq
|
|-
|Primate of Normandy
|Normandy
|Rouen
|
|-
|Primate of Germania
|Central Europe
|Salzburg '''or''' Mainz
|
|-
| rowspan="2" |Primate of Italia
| rowspan="2" |Italian peninsula
|[[Venice]], Dalmatia
|Also the Patriarch of Venice
|-
|[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Catholic_Suburbicarian_Diocese_of_Ostia Ostia]
|Papal loyalist
|-
|Primate of Sicily
|[[Sicily]], [[Malta]]
|Syracuse '''or''' Palermo
|
|-
|Primate of Batavia
|[[Netherlands]]
|Utrecht
|
|-
|Primate of Poland
|[[Poland]]
|Gniezno '''or''' Lwow
|
|-
|Primate of the East
|India
|Goa
|
|-
|Primate of the [[Philippines]]
|Southeast Asia
|Manila
|
|-
|Primate of Saint Dominic
|Caribbean
|[[Saint-Domingue]]
|
|-
| rowspan="2" |Primate of Brazil
| rowspan="2" |Colonial Brazil
|Salvador, [[Bahia]]
|Anti-colonial
|-
|Rio de Janeiro, [[Portugal#Creation of the Autonomous Territory of Brazil|Brazil]]
|Portuguese loyalist
|-
|Primate of Tussenland
|[[Tussenland]]
|Peoria '''or''' Sault Ste. Marie
|
|-
|Primate of America
|[[New Netherland]]
|[[New Amsterdam]]
|
|-
|Primate of All Mexico
|[[Mexico]]
|Mexico City
|
|-
|Primate of California
|North Mexico
|Goudhaven '''or''' San Diego
|
|-
|Primate of Colombia
|[[Colombia]]
|Bogotá
|
|}
 
== List of leaders ==
 
==== Roman Pontiffs ====
The '''Pope''' (Latin and Spanish: ''Papa''), also known as the '''Roman Pontiff''', the '''Spanish Pontiff''', or the '''Supreme Pontiff''' (''pontifex maximus''), was created in the 1st century and was unequivocally confirmed as the head of the worldwide Catholic Church in the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Council_of_Nicaea Second Nicaean Council]. Since the expulsion of the Pope from Rome in 1908, the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_supremacy supremacy of the Papacy] has been widely contested.
 
===== Popes residing in Rome =====
 
* Alexander VII (1655-1667)
* Clement IX (1667-1669)
* Alexander VIII (1667-1676)
* Innocent XI (1676-1677)
* Gregory XVI (1677-1683)
* Clement X (1683-1689)
* Innocent XII (1689-1703)
* [[Pope Clement XI|Clement XI]] (1703-1736)
* Clement XII (1736-1740)
* Alexander IX (1740-1749)
* Sixtus VI (1749-1754)
* Gregory XVII (1754-1780)
* Innocent XIII (1780-1782)
* Innocent XIV (1782-1799)
* Alexander X (1799-1828)
* Leo XII (1828)
* Innocent XV (1828-1833)
* Pius VI (1833-1845)
* Sixtus VII (1845-1851)
* Alexander XI (1851-1866)
* ''Interregnum'' (1866)
* Paul VI (1866-1877)
* Innocent XVI (1877-1889)
* Alexander XII (1889-1890)
* Paul VII (1890-1893)
* Leo XIII (1893-1898)
* Innocent XVII (1898-1904)
* [[Boniface X]] (1904-1908)
 
===== Popes residing in Santiago de Compostela =====
 
* ''Interregnum'' (1908-1910)
* [[Callixtus IV]] (1910-1932)
* Leo XIV (1932-1956)
* Leo XV (1956-1973)
* Clement XIII (1973-1975)
* [[Adrian VII]] (1975-1981)
* [[Martin VI]] (1981-2002)
 
== See also ==

Revision as of 07:13, 12 January 2023


Catholic Church
Ecclesia Catholica
St. Peter's Basilica, the most well-known Roman Catholic church
TypeWestern Christianity
ClassificationCatholic
ScriptureBible
TheologyCatholic theology
PolityEpiscopal
GovernmentHoly See
(Pontifical Obedience)
College of Cardinals
(Conciliar Obedience)
AdministrationRoman Curia
(Pontifical Obedience)
Apostolic Secretariat
(Conciliar Obedience)
Particular churches
sui iuris
Latin Church and 15 particular Churches
(Pontifical Obedience)
Latin Church and 28 particular Churches
(Conciliar Obedience)
SchismGreat Papal Schism
Pontifical Obedience (Spain)
Conciliar Obedience (Latium)
LanguageEcclesiastical Latin
LiturgySeven main rites (Latin, Ambrosian, Syriac, Nestorian, Byzantine, Alexandrian, Armenian, Chinese)
FounderJesus Christ
Origin1st century
Holy Land, Roman Empire

The Catholic Church (Latin: Ecclesia Catholica), also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the largest religious institution in the world. It represents of the three primary branches of Christianity, Catholicism, along with Orthodoxy and Protestantism. The Church traces its origin to Jesus Christ and the Apostles, claiming to be the one and true continuation based on apostolic succession.

Since 1908, the Catholic Church has been in schism. This schism, known as the Great Papal Schism, was caused by vast theological, dogmatic, and political differences, particularly over the issues of papal primacy and infallibility. It is the first major schism to occur in the Church since the Great Occidental Schism of 1378.

The Conciliar Obedience, based in Rome, is non-papist, maintaining that the supreme authority of the Church lies with the College of Cardinals rather than a pope. They also uphold the idea of sedevacantism, where the position of Bishop of Rome is permanently vacant, with Jesus Christ being the sole and invisible head of the Roman Catholic Church. The Deacon of the College is the de facto primus inter pares leader of the Conciliarists.

None of the conciliarist churches are in full communion with the Holy See, which has been based in Santiago de Compostela, Spain, since 1909. The Pontifical Obedience, as it is called, conserves the doctrines of Petrine primacy, papal supremacy, and papal infallibility. The Pope remains the supreme head of the Church and the titular absolute monarch of the Papal States, assisted in administration by the Roman Curia and the Order of Malta.

Catholic communities around the world, since the start of the 20th century, have each declared their allegiance to either the Conciliar or Pontifical branches of the Church, while others have left the matter undecided and ambiguous. Today, Roman Catholicism is the primary religious denomination across much of Europe, the vast majority of America, swathes of Africa, and significant parts of Asia and Australasia. Mexico has the largest Catholic population in the world.

Organization

Enlightenment: 1656—1797

Sēclum chaōrum: 1797—1903

Great Papal Schism: 1903—1910

In 1903, food shortages and increase in prices sparked bread riots across the Papal States. Demonstrations by citizens, peasants, and workers increasingly grew violent as the economic situation worsened. Secretary of State Lanfranco Chigi was assassinated on 17 February 1905 by republican sympathizers, consequentially triggering another wave of violence across the country. The same year, the Compagnia per la Riforma Repubblicana (lit. 'Society for Republican Reform'; CRR) was established, with its radical members advocating for the abolition of the State of the Church and its replacement with a democratic republic.

The Venetian army invaded the Papal States in 1908 due to security concerns, occupying the Adriatic apostolic provinces of Romagna and Marche. The principalities of Benevento and Pontecorvo revolted from the Papal States and allied with Venice shortly after. In the following weeks, the food riots became a famine, and civil unrest became a rebellion. In the August of 1908, Pope Boniface X was assassinated by insurgent Jacopo Marzullo while attempting to flee to Porto Ercole.

As a consequence, the Roman Curia, several cardinals, and members of the Papal nobility fled to Spain, where they were welcomed by King Ferdinand VIII. In 1909, the Treaty of Pontevedra affirmed the Holy See's right to several properties in Santiago de Compostela, including the Cathedral of Santiago, Gelmírez Palace, and Fonseca Palace. A new papal College of Cardinals was established the same year. A papal conclave was held in 1910, where the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church under Boniface X, Leonardo Teodorico Theodoli, was elected Pope Callixtus IV.

Council of Rome
The Quirinal Palace in February 1909
Date13 January 1909 — 30 March 1910
Accepted byConciliar Obedience
Convoked byPatriarch of Venice
PresidentPatriarch of Venice
Attendance~1,300
TopicsGovernance of the Catholic Church
Authority of the pope
Conciliarism
Documents and statements
Swiss Guard and Roman Curia disbanded, Bishop of Rome declared vacant, creation of 73 constitutional articles
LocationQuirinal Palace, Rome, Latium
Chronological list of ecumenical councils

In Italy, the Latin Republic was declared, formally abolishing any Papal territories in Italy. The Patriarch of Venice convoked an ecumenical council in 1909, the Council of Rome, to discuss the future of the Roman Catholic Church and reform the Church's system of governance. From the outset, much of the Council's reforms were inspired by the writings of John of Paris, Henry of Segusio, Marsilius of Padua, and William of Ockham, which were pushed by liberal and republican theologians.

The College of Cardinals officially replaced the Holy See as the central organ of the Roman Catholic Church, claiming apostolic succession. The College was defined as legislator, having efficient cause of the law and the authority to determine and execute laws and delegate powers. It is said to represent the congregatio fidelium (body of the faithful, the Church), of which it is its valentior pars (prevailing part). The representatives, the cardinals, stand pars pro toto for the Church as a whole with plenitudo potestatis (fullness of power). Despite this, the Church is not considered to be without a caput (a head), as Jesus is considered the invisible and permanent head of the Roman Catholic Church.

Within the College, a council of the seven cardinal bishops, officially known as the Sacred Episcopal Council, is the pars principans (principal part) of the valentior pars. While it does not supersede the authority of the College as a whole, it maintains a higher status and certain responsibilities, such as the appointment of cardinals and the convocation of councils. The Council consists of the six titular suburbicarian bishops as well as the Patriarch of Venice. One among the Council is elected Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, who acts as the de facto leader of the Church, primus inter pares (first among equals). The Dean may also be referred to as the Procurator-General ad negotia. The Patriarch of Venice often fills the role of spokesperson and presides over celebrations and events.

The Apostolic Secretariat, created in 1910, is the administrative body of the Church, replacing the Roman Curia. It consists of numerous institutions that manage the daily affairs of the Church, its properties, and matters of justice. It is directly accountable to the College of Cardinals.

See also