Titles Historically, papal nobility has included the titles of
prince,
duke,
marquis,
count,
viscount,
baron,
lord,
knight,
nobile and
patrician. At times, certain rulers paid a type of feudal homage to the papacy (
Poland, 991;
England, 1213). Inversely, the Pope claimed the authority to create and anoint rulers (
Holy Roman Empire, 800, 962, etc.;
Sicily, 1059;
Crown of Aragon, 1204;
Latin Empire of Constantinople, 1217; Sicily, 1265), to depose them (Holy Roman Empire, 1076, 1245;
Portugal, 1247), to elevate them (
Croatia, 925;
Hungary, 1001; Sicily, 1130; Portugal, 1179;
Tuscany, 1569), and to decide disputes between them (
Corsica, 1217;
Treaty of Tordesillas, 1493). The Pope also had strong claims to the
feudal sovereignty of Naples-Sicily. While some titles were traditionally linked to territorial privileges to a fief of the
Papal States, others were associated only with privileges of court, notably,
Prince Assistant to the Papal Throne. Within the ecclesiastical hierarchy
cardinals are referred to as
princes of the Church, and are considered analogous to temporal princes within a kingdom. Historically, many popes have designated a member of their family as an official
cardinal-nephew. Certain offices of the
Curia and the
Papal Household carry honorifics, such as the style . Just as Catholic monarchs sometimes exercised veto powers in papal elections, bishops and abbots were historically represented in the
parliaments or "estates-general" (legislative and consultative assemblies) of many countries. The archbishops of
Mainz,
Trier, and
Cologne served as
prince-electors of the
Holy Roman Empire. Within the Empire,
prince-primates,
prince-bishops and
prince-abbots often held territorial privileges.
Counts and countesses Count/
countess () is one of the noble titles still granted by the pope as a mark of personal distinction without any territorial entailment. The holder is styled "Count(ess) [Surname]" and may be informally referred to as a
papal count/
papal countess or, more rarely, as a
Roman count/
Roman countess. The comital title, which can be for life or hereditary, has been awarded in various forms by popes and
Holy Roman emperors since the Middle Ages, and the pope continued to grant the comital and other noble titles even after 1870, when the
Papal States were
taken from the pope. Recipients of such honours included both Italians – especially those close to the papacy (some of whom were/are papal relatives) – and prominent non-Italian Catholics, including Irish tenor
John McCormack, Irish art historian and politician
George Noble Plunkett, American financier George MacDonald, American philanthropist
Katherine E. Price, and
Rose Kennedy (mother of U.S. president
John F. Kennedy). American
Francis Augustus MacNutt was a papal
marquis, and Argentine
Mercedes Castellanos de Anchorena was a papal marchioness. During the 1920s,
Genevieve and
Nicholas Frederic Brady of New York were granted papal
dukedoms. All pontifical noble titles are within the personal gift of the pontiff, and they are not recorded in the Official Acts of the Holy See.
Fiefs of the State of the Church From the sixteenth century forward, strong
statehood developed in Italy and vague, overlapping territorial claims were gradually determined and settled through conquest and treaty. Although temporal rule in Italy was theoretically shared with the
Holy Roman Emperor, the papacy held most of
Lazio,
Umbria,
Marche, and parts of
Emilia-Romagna directly from the
Carolingian period to the
Risorgimento by right of treaty or donation from secular rulers (
Donation of Sutri, 728;
Donation of Pepin, 756;
Otto IV, 1201;
Rudolf I, 1278). Within this territory, known as the
State of the Church, the pope had authority to dispose of certain hereditary fiefs, notably: •
The Duchy of Urbino (1155,
Frederick Barbarossa cr. Antonio da
Montefeltro Imperial Vicar of Urbino; 1213, elevated to county by
Frederick II; 1443, elevated to duchy by
Eugene IV; 1508, inherited by
Francesco Maria I della Rovere the son of Giovanna da Montefeltro; 1516, given to
Lorenzo II de' Medici, Lord of Florence, during the
War of the League of Cambrai; 1521, restored to Della Rovere; 1625–1631, willed to Papacy by
Francesco Maria II) •
The Duchy of Ferrara (756, part of the Donation of Pepin; 1187, signory held by the Marquis d'Este; 1278, part of the donation of
Rudolf I; 1288, Modena and Reggio gained by the d'Este; 1293, Ferrara, Modena and Reggio elevated to Marquisates; 1308–1309, succession crisis, Papacy defeats Venetian attempts to control Ferrara; 1317, d'Este restored with papal support; 1452, Emperor
Frederick III elevates Modena and Reggio to Duchies; 1571, Paul II elevates Ferrara to duchy; 1598, Ferrara devolves to the Papacy, Modena and Reggio to d'Este heirs recognized by the Emperor) •
The Duchy of Parma and Piacenza (In 1512, during the
War of the League of Cambrai, territories of Parma and Piacenza ceded to
Julius II by the Sforza-controlled Duchy of Milan under terms of the Congress of Mantua, Este duchies of
Modena and
Reggio also confirmed as a papal fief; in 1516, after reverses of fortune, Parma ceded back to French-controlled Milan and claims to Modena renounced under the terms of the Congress of Bologna; in 1521, during the
Four Years' War, Parma captured by Hispano-Papal forces, confirmed to the papacy in the Treaty of Rome of 1525, Milan ceded to Imperial party and Sforza re-instated; 1545,
Pier Luigi Farnese is created Duke of Parma and Piacenza by
Pope Paul III, his father; 1547, Pier Luigi assassinated by Ferrante Gonzaga, Imperial Governor of Milan, and Piacenza occupied by Imperial troops,
Ottavio Farnese succeeds in Parma; 1549, in an attempt to ensure direct papal control against Imperial-Milanese encroachment, Ottavio dispossessed, 1550, reinstated by
Julius III; in 1551, Ottavio, threatened by the ambitions of
Charles V, places himself under the protection of France initiating the
War of Parma; 1552, Treaty of Chambord, France distracts Imperial forces to Germany, Julius III negotiates a truce with Farnese who is tentatively restored; 1556, Charles V abdicates Milan to his son,
Philip II of Spain, and Ottavio Farnese submits to his protection in the Treaty of Ghent) •
The Principality and Duchy of Paliano (Colonna) • The Principalities of
Palestrina,
Valmontone,
Anticoli and
Roviano (Barberini),
Arsoli,
Roccasecca dei Volsci,
Prossedi,
Triggiano (Massimo),
Canino and Musignano (Bonaparte),
Farnese and
Campagnano (Farnese), and
Meldola (of the Doria-Pamphilj),
Cerveteri,
Parrano, Poggio Suasa • The Lombard
Duchy of Benevento (1805–1814, Napoleon elevates Benevento and
Pontecorvo to Principalities) • The Duchies of
Castro and
Latera (Farnese), the Duchy of Ariccia (of the Chigi), the
Duchy of Bracciano, the Duchy of Fiano, the
Duchy of Camerino (of the Da Varano), the
Duchy of Spoleto, the Duchy of Romagna, the Duchy of Giove, the Duchy of Cerveteri, the Duchy of Monterotondo, Duchy of Nemi,
Calcata,
Rignano,
Ferentillo • The Counties of
Tusculum,
Segni,
Spello and
Bettona,
Fondi,
Vignanello, Falcino,
Ronciglione • The Marquisates (or Marches) of
Ancona,
Fermo,
Riano,
Belmonte • The Lordships (Signories) of
Perugia,
Foligno,
Fano,
Pesaro,
Rimini,
Cesena,
Forlì,
Faenza and
Imola Noble houses Examples of Italian
noble houses of the papacy include: ==See also==