Fabio
Chigi, born at Sienna, 13 February, 1599; elected 7
April, 1655; died at Rome, 22 May, 1667. The Chigi of
Sienna were among the most illustrious and powerful of
Italian families. In the Rome of Renaissance times, an
ancestor of Alexander VII was known as the
"Magnificent". The future Pope's father, Flavio Chigi,
nephew of Pope Paul V, though not as prosperous as his
forebears, gave his son a suitable training. The latter
owed much also to his mother, a woman of singular power
and skill in the formation of youth. The youth of Fabio
was marked by continued ill-health, consequent upon an
attack of apoplexy in infancy. Unable to attend school,
he was taught first by his mother, and later by able
tutors, and displayed remarkable precocity and love of
reading. In his twenty-seventh year, he obtained the
doctorates of philosophy, law, and theology in the
University of Sienna, and in December, 1626, he entered
upon his ecclesiastical career at Rome. In 1627 he was
appointed by Urban VIII Vice-Legate of Ferrara, and he
served five years under the Cardinals Sacchetti and
Pallotta, whose commendations won for him the important
post of Inquisitor of Malta, together with the episcopal
consecration. In 1639 he was promoted to the nunciature
of Cologne; and in 1644 was made envoy extraordinary of
Innocent X to the conference of Münster, in which post
he energetically defended papal interests during the
negotiations that led, in 1648, to the Peace of
Westphalia. (See THIRTY-YEARS WAR.) Innocent X called
him to Rome in 1651 to be his secretary of state, and in
February, 1652, made him Cardinal. In the conclave of
1655, famous for its duration of eighty days, and for
the clash of national and factional interests, Cardinal
Chigi was unanimously elected Pope. The choice was
considered providential. At a time when churchmen were
being forced to realize the deplorable consequences,
moral and financial, of nepotism, there was needed a
pope who would rule without the aid of relatives. For a
year the hopes of Christendom seemed to be realized.
Alexander forbade his relatives to come to Rome. His own
sanctity of life, severity of morals, and aversion to
luxury made more resplendent his virtues and talents.
But in the consistory of 24 April, 1656, influenced by
those who feared the weakness of a papal court
unsustained by ties of family interest, he proposed to
bring his brother and nephews to assist him. With their
advent came a marked change in the manner of life of the
pontiff. The administration was given largely into the
hands of his relatives, and nepotic abuses came to weigh
as heavily as ever upon the papacy. The endeavours of
the Chigi to enrich their family were too indulgently
regarded by the Pope; but, ever pious and devout, he was
far from having a share in the excesses of his
luxury-loving nephews. His burden being in this way
lightened, he passed much of his time in literary
pursuits and in the society of the learned; but the
friends whom he favoured were those who could be best
relied on as counsellors.
The pontificate of Alexander VII was shadowed by
continual difficulties with the young and ill-advised
Louis XIV of France, whose representatives were a
constant source of annoyance to the Pope. The French
prime minister, Cardinal Mazarin, had not forgiven the
legate who resolutely opposed him at the conferences of
Munster and Osnabrueck, or the papal secretary of state
who stood in the way of his anti-Roman policy. During
the conclave he had been bitterly hostile to Chigi, but
was in the end compelled to accept his election as a
compromise. However, he prevented Louis XIV from sending
the usual embassy of obedience to Alexander VII, and,
while he lived, hindered the appointment of a French
ambassador to Rome, diplomatic affairs being meantime
conducted by cardinal protectors, generally personal
enemies of the Pope. In 1662 the equally hostile Duc de
Crequi was made ambassador. By his high-handed abuse of
the traditional right of asylum granted to ambassadorial
precincts in Rome, he precipitated a quarrel between
France and the papacy, which resulted in the Pope's
temporary loss of Avignon and his forced acceptance of
the humiliating treaty of Pisa in 1664. Emboldened
by these triumphs, the French Jansenists, who recognized
in Alexander an old enemy, became insolently assertive,
professing that the propositions condemned in 1653 were
not to be found in the "Augustinus" of Cornelius Jansen.
Alexander VII, who as adviser of Innocent X had
vigorously advocated the condemnation, confirmed it in
1665 by the Bull "Ad Sacram" declaring that it applied
to the aforesaid work of Jansen and to the very meaning
intended by him; he also sent to France his famous
"formulary", to be signed by all the clergy as a means
of detecting and extirpating Jansenism. His reign is
memorable in the annals of moral theology for the
condemnation of a number of erroneous propositions.
Cardinal Hergenröther praises (Kirchengesch. III, 414)
his moderation in the heated dogmatic controversies of
the period. During his reign occurred the conversion of
Queen Christina of Sweden, who, after her abdication,
came to reside in Rome, where on Christmas Day, 1655,
she was confirmed by the Pope, in whom she found a
generous friend and benefactor. He assisted the
Venetians in combating the Turks who had gained a
foothold in Crete, and obtained in return the
restoration of the Jesuits, exiled from Venice since
1606. The inimical relations between Spain and Portugal
occasioned by the latter's establishment of independence
(1640) were a source of grave trials for Alexander, as
for other popes before and after him. Alexander VII did
much to beautify Rome. Houses were levelled to make way
for straighter streets and broad piazzas, the Collegio
Romano. The decorations of the church of Sta. Maria del
Popolo, titular church of more than one of the Chigi
cardinals, the Scala Regia, the Chair of St. Peter in
the Vatican Basilica, and the great colonnade before
that edifice bespeak alike the genius of Bernini and the
munificence of his papal patron. He was also a patron of
learning, modernized the Roman University, known as
Sapienza, and enriched it with a magnificent library. He
also made extensive additions to the Vatican Library.
His tomb by Bernini is one of the most beautiful
monuments in St. Peter's. |