Norway •
Pope Innocent III placed the Kingdom of
Norway under interdict in October 1198. Although
King Sverre forged letters to show the interdict had been lifted, he and his subjects technically remained under interdict until Sverre's death in 1202.
England •
Pope Innocent III also placed the kingdom of
England under
an interdict for six years between March 1208 and July 1214, after
King John refused to accept the pope's appointee
Stephen Langton as
Archbishop of Canterbury.
Scotland • Following the rejection by
Robert the Bruce (crowned
King of Scotland in 1306) of papal mediation between
England and
Scotland,
Pope John XXII placed Scotland under interdict in 1317 or 1318 because of continuing Scots raids into England; in 1328 the same Pope lifted the interdict in the light of the
Treaty of Edinburgh–Northampton.
Hungary • The town of
Buda was placed under interdict by papal legate
Niccolò Boccasini in 1303, who was sent there to build support for
Charles of Anjou,
Pope Boniface VIII's favoured candidate for the
Hungarian Crown. The burghers of Buda retaliated by
excommunicating the Pope and all his loyal bishops and priests.
Italy • Rome itself was placed under interdict by
Pope Adrian IV in 1155 a result of
a rebellion led by the preacher,
Arnold of Brescia. •
Pope Gregory XI placed the city of
Florence under interdict in March 1376 during the
War of the Eight Saints. •
Pope Sixtus IV decreed an interdict against the
Republic of Florence in 1478 in response to the hanging of Bishop
Francesco Salviati in response to his involvement in the
Pazzi conspiracy. • On 23 June 1482,
Pope Sixtus IV decreed an interdict against the
Republic of Venice, unless it abandoned within 15 days its siege of
Ferrara. The Venetians managed to evade it by an appeal to a future council. • On 27 April 1509, as he entered the
War of the League of Cambrai, aiming to recover papal control of the
Romagna, where Venice had seized several cities in 1503,
Pope Julius II placed Venice under interdict until it accepted peace terms on 14 February 1510, when it was lifted. • The
Venetian Interdict of 1606–1607 is a better-known and more lengthy case.
Pope Paul V placed the
Republic of Venice under interdict in 1606 after the civil authorities jailed two priests. • In 1909, the town of
Adria in Italy was placed under interdict for 15 days after a local campaign against the move of a bishop.
Malta • On 1 May 1930, the bishops of Malta published a
Pastoral letter which placed voters of the progressive Compact parties (
Constitutional Party,
Labour Party) under interdict. This intervention in politics led to Governor
Du Cane proclaiming a state of emergency and cancelling the 1930 Election on the basis that the elections were not free due to the interdict. This interdict was eventually lifted on June 3, 1932, however the Church still advised against voting for the Compact parties in the
1932 elections, leading to a win by the
Nationalist Party. • On 8 April 1961, the bishops of Malta personally interdicted the entire executive of the
Malta Labour Party. Following this, the bishops would also impose the mortal sin on supporters of the Labour Party, specifically readers, distributors of and advertisers in the Party papers and voters and candidates of the Party. The
1962 elections were fought with the interdict still in place, with a clear proof of this being MLP supporters being buried in an unconsecrated part of the
Addolorata Cemetery (known as the "Miżbla"),
absolution being denied to supporters of the MLP, and Church bells ringing during MLP meetings in order to attempt at censoring
Dom Mintoff and his party. These conditions led to a win by the
Nationalist Party and the other parties who were in the anti-Communist coalition known as the "Umbrella Coalition". The Interdict was only lifted on 4 April 1969, with the help of Mgr Emanuel Gerada, leading to the Church and the MLP reaching a formal peace.
France •
Pope Innocent III put the whole
Kingdom of France under interdict on 13 January 1200 to force
Philip II of France to take his wife
Ingeborg of Denmark back. After a reconciliation ceremony, the interdict was lifted on 12 September 1200.
United States • In 1955, white parishioners had
refused a black priest entry to a chapel about 20 miles from
New Orleans.
Archbishop Joseph Rummel placed that chapel under interdict. ==Notable personal canonical interdicts==