Pius IX was the last pope who also functioned as a secular ruler and the monarch of the
Papal States, ruling over some 3 million subjects from 1846 to 1870, when the newly founded
Kingdom of Italy seized the remaining areas of the Papal States by force of arms. Contention between Italy and the Papacy was only resolved legally by the 1929
Lateran Treaty (
Lateran Pacts or
Lateran Accords) between the Kingdom of Italy under
Mussolini and the
Holy See, the latter receiving financial compensation for the loss of the Papal States and recognition of the Vatican City State as the sovereign independent territory of the Holy See.
Italy Though he was well aware upon his accession of the political pressures within the
Papal States, Pius IX's first act was a general
amnesty for
political prisoners, despite the potential consequences. The freed revolutionaries resumed their previous political activities, and his concessions only provoked greater demands as patriotic Italian groups sought not only a constitutional government – to which he was sympathetic – but also the
unification of Italy under his leadership and a
war of liberation to free the northern Italian provinces from the rule of Catholic Austria. By early 1848, all of Western Europe began to be convulsed in various
revolutionary movements. The Pope, claiming to be above national interests, refused to go to war with Austria, which reversed Pius' popularity in his native Italy. In a calculated, well-prepared move,
Prime Minister Rossi was assassinated on 15 November 1848, and in the days following, the
Swiss Guards were disarmed, making the Pope a prisoner in his palace. However, he succeeded in escaping Rome several days later. A
Roman Republic was declared in February 1849. Pius responded from his exile by excommunicating all participants. After the suppression of the republic later that year, Pius appointed a conservative government of three cardinals known as the
Red Triumvirate to administer the Papal States until his return to Rome in April 1850. He visited the hospitals to comfort the wounded and sick, but he seemed to have lost both his liberal tastes and his confidence in the Romans, who had turned against him in 1848. Pius decided to move his residence from the
Quirinal Palace inside Rome to the Vatican, where popes have lived ever since.
End of the Papal States After defeating the Papal army on 18 September 1860 at the
Battle of Castelfidardo, and on 30 September at
Ancona,
Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia took all the Papal territories except
Latium with Rome and took the title
King of Italy. Rome itself was
invaded on 20 September 1870 after a few-hours siege. Italy instituted the
Law of Guarantees (13 May 1871) which gave the Pope the use of the Vatican but denied him sovereignty over this territory, nevertheless granting him the right to send and receive ambassadors and a budget of 3.25 million
lira annually. Pius IX officially rejected this offer (encyclical
Ubi nos, 15 May 1871), since it was a unilateral decision which did not grant the papacy international recognition and could be changed at any time by the secular parliament. Pius IX refused to recognize the new Italian kingdom, which he denounced as an illegitimate creation of revolution. He excommunicated the nation's leaders, including King Victor Emmanuel II, whom he denounced as "forgetful of every religious principle, despising every right, trampling upon every law," whose reign over Italy was therefore "a sacrilegious usurpation."
Mexico , Jalisco, Mexico In response to the upheavals faced by the Papal States during the 1848 revolutions, the
Mexican government offered Pope Pius IX asylum, which the pope responded to by considering the creation of a Mexican cardinal and granting an award to President
José Joaquín de Herrera. With French Emperor
Napoleon III's
military intervention in Mexico and establishment of the
Second Mexican Empire under
Maximilian I in 1864, the church sought relief from a friendly government after the anti-clerical actions of
Benito Juárez, who had suspended payment on foreign debt and seized ecclesial property. Pius blessed Maximilian and his wife
Charlotte of Belgium before they set off for Mexico to begin their reign. But the friction between the Vatican and Mexico would continue with the new emperor when Maximilian insisted on freedom of religion, which Pius opposed. Relations with the Vatican would only be resumed when Maximilian sent the recently converted American Catholic priest Father Agustin Fischer to Rome as his envoy. Contrary to Fischer's reports back to Maximilian, the negotiations did not go well and the Vatican would not budge. Maximilian sent his wife Charlotte to Europe to plead with Napoleon III against the withdrawal of French troops from Mexico. After unsuccessful meetings with Napoleon III, Charlotte travelled to Rome to plead with Pius in 1866. As the days passed, Charlotte's mental state deteriorated. She sought refuge with the pope, and she would eat and drink only what was prepared for him, fearful that everything else might be poisoned. The pope, though alarmed, accommodated her, and even agreed to let her stay in the Vatican one night after she voiced anxiety about her safety. She and her assistant were the first women to stay the night inside the Vatican.
England and Wales England for centuries was considered missionary territory for the Catholic Church. In the wake of
Catholic emancipation in the
United Kingdom (which included all of Ireland), Pius IX changed that with the bull
Universalis Ecclesiae (29 September 1850). He re-established the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales, under the newly appointed Archbishop and Cardinal
Nicholas Wiseman with 12 additional episcopal seats:
Southwark,
Hexham,
Beverley,
Liverpool,
Salford,
Shrewsbury,
Newport,
Clifton,
Plymouth,
Nottingham,
Birmingham, and
Northampton. Some violent street protests against the "papal aggression" resulted in the passage of the
Ecclesiastical Titles Act 1851, which forbade any Catholic bishop to use an episcopal title "of any city, town or place, or of any territory or district (under any designation or description whatsoever), in the United Kingdom". The law was never enforced and was
repealed twenty years later.
Ireland Pius donated money to
Ireland during the
Great Famine. In 1847, he addressed the suffering Irish people in the encyclical
Praedecessores nostros.
Netherlands The Dutch government instituted religious freedom for Catholics in 1848. In 1853, Pius erected the
Archdiocese of Utrecht and four dioceses in
Haarlem,
Den Bosch,
Breda, and
Roermond under it. As in England, this resulted in a brief popular outburst of anti-Catholic sentiment.
Spain Traditionally Catholic Spain offered a challenge to Pius IX as anti-clerical governments came to power in 1832, resulting in the expulsion of religious orders; the closing of convents, Catholic schools and libraries; the seizure and sale of churches and religious properties; and the inability of the church to fill vacant dioceses. In 1851, Pius IX concluded a concordat with Queen
Isabella II stipulating that unsold ecclesial properties were to be returned, while the church renounced properties that had already passed to new owners. This flexibility of Pius led to Spain guaranteeing the freedom of the church in religious education.
United States as the first American to the
College of Cardinals on 15 March 1875 Pope Pius IX approved on 7 February 1847 the unanimous request of the American bishops that the
Immaculate Conception be invoked as the
Patroness of the United States. Beginning in October 1862, the Pope began sending public letters to Catholic leaders in the United States calling for an end to the "destructive
Civil War." According to historian
Don H. Doyle, however, "During the American Civil War, the pope ... urged American bishops to call for peace at a time when peace meant separation, and privately he expressed strong sympathies with the South. The Confederacy sent envoys to enlist Pio Nono in their cause and came away boasting the most powerful pontiff in Europe had recognized the Confederacy. The pope said nothing to refute such claims...." The Vatican never recognized the
Confederate States of America or sent any diplomats to it. However, in 1863 the pope did meet privately with a Confederate envoy and suggested gradual emancipation. A letter of Pius IX to
Jefferson Davis in December 1863, addressing him as "Praesidi foederatorum Americae regionum" (President of the federated regions of America), was not seen as recognition of the Confederacy, even by its own officials: Confederate Secretary of State
Judah P. Benjamin interpreted it as "a mere inferential recognition, unconnected with political action or the regular establishment of diplomatic relations" without the weight of formal recognition. Pius IX elevated Archbishop
John McCloskey of New York as the first American to the
College of Cardinals on 15 March 1875.
Canada Pius IX increased the number of Canadian dioceses from four to 21, with 1,340 churches and 1,620 priests in 1874.
Concordats Pius IX signed concordats with Spain, Austria,
Tuscany,
Portugal,
Haiti,
Honduras,
Ecuador,
Nicaragua,
El Salvador, and
Russia.
Austria The
1848 revolution had mixed results for the Catholic Church in
Austria-Hungary. It freed the church from the heavy hand of the state in its internal affairs, which was applauded by Pius IX. Similar to other countries, Austria-Hungary had significant anti-Catholic political movements, mainly
liberals, which forced the emperor
Franz-Joseph I in 1870 to renounce the
Concordat of 1855 with the Vatican. Austria had already in 1866 nullified several of its sections concerning the freedom of Catholic schools and prohibition of civil marriages. After diplomatic approaches failed, Pius responded on 7 March 1874 with the encyclical
Vix dum a nobis, demanding religious freedom and freedom of education. Despite these developments, there was no equivalent to the German
Kulturkampf in Austria, and Pius created new dioceses throughout Austria-Hungary.
German Empire In
Germany, the state of
Prussia, under the leadership of
Otto von Bismarck, saw Catholicism as a dangerous foreign influence, and in 1872–1878 fought hard to reduce the power of the pope and the bishops. After years of struggle in the
Kulturkampf, the Catholics fought back by mobilising their voters in Prussia and in Germany as a whole. After Pius died, Bismarck came to terms with the new
Pope Leo XIII. He dropped his alliance with the anti-Catholic Liberals and instead formed a political coalition with the Catholic
Centre Party.
Russian Empire The
Pontificate of Pius IX began in 1847 with an "Accomodamento", a generous agreement, which allowed Pius to fill vacant
episcopal sees of the Latin rites both in Russia (specifically the Baltic countries) and in the Polish provinces of Russia. The short-lived freedoms were undermined by the
Russian Orthodox Church, Polish political aspirations in the occupied lands, and the tendency of imperial Russia to act against any dissent. Pius first tried to position himself in the middle, strongly opposing revolutionary and violent opposition against the Russian authorities and appealing to them for more ecclesiastical freedom. After the failure of the
Polish uprising in 1863, Pius sided with the persecuted Poles, protesting against their persecutions, and infuriating the Tsarist government to the point that all Catholic dioceses were eliminated by 1870. Pius criticized the Tsar – without naming him – for expatriating whole communities to Siberia, exiling priests, condemning them to
labour camps and abolishing Catholic dioceses. He pointed to Siberian villages
Tounka and
Irkout, where in 1868, 150 Catholic priests were awaiting death. ==Plans to leave Rome==