by
Nicolas Cordier (1608), Lateran Basilica In 1482 and 1483, King
Louis XI of France donated the revenue from several southern French domains to the Canons Regular of the Lateran, including properties of the in
Clairac,
Guyenne, to help finance reconstruction works of
St. John's Basilica which had suffered fires in the 14th century and had been left in disrepair during the
Avignon Papacy. The corresponding payments lapsed after 1507. In 1604, the Canons claimed that revenue was due to them from the abbey under Louis XI's donation. Instead of accepting this claim, King
Henry IV of France, following a suggestion from Cardinal
Arnaud d'Ossat, gave the abbey itself to the Roman Canons, as a token of his and France's Catholic goodwill following the turmoil of the
French Wars of Religion.
Pope Paul V confirmed the abbey's union with the Canons Regular in a bull of October 1605, in turn ratified by Henry on 4 February 1606. As a consequence, half of the Clairac Abbey's income was reserved for St. John Lateran, while the other half went to the
Bishopric of Agen. The bull stipulated that the
Cardinal Vicar would give an annual mass in St John's Basilica for France's happiness and prosperity (
pro felici ac prospero statu Galliae), every year on Henry's birthdate on December 13, known in French as the '''' - a distinction that has not been granted to any other nation. Moreover, Henry and his successors would become "First and Only Honorary Canon" of the Canons Regular's congregation. In 1606, the Canons also heeded a suggestion by French ambassador , overcoming objections from pro-Spanish ultra-catholics who resented Henry's earlier Protestant allegiances, and commissioned a heroic statue of Henry IV from sculptor
Nicolas Cordier, which was erected in August 1609 under the Basilica's side portico. Clairac Abbey, however, was nationalized in 1792 and sold in 1799. The resulting financial dispute between the Vatican and the French state went through various arrangements and was finally settled in 1927. With some ups and downs since Henry IV, the Vatican has maintained the tradition of making French heads of state honorary canons of St. John Lateran, upon their visit to Rome. After many decades of neglect, the tradition was revived by President
René Coty in 1957 and upheld by his successors
Charles de Gaulle,
Valéry Giscard d'Estaing,
Jacques Chirac and
Nicolas Sarkozy. Even presidents who did not formally receive the title in Rome, namely
Georges Pompidou,
François Mitterrand and
François Hollande, accepted it - "by tradition", as Hollande put it despite being himself an
atheist.
Emmanuel Macron was the latest French President to receive the title of honorary canon on a visit to Rome and
Pope Francis, on 26 June 2018. ==References==