Papa Clemente XIII (Pope Clement XIII) - Prato della Valle, Padova, Italy
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member vraatja
N 45° 23.859 E 011° 52.610
32T E 725163 N 5031152
Statue of Pope Clement XIII(Pontiff number 248) made by Giovanni Ferrari in 1787 on the largest square in Italy, Prato della Valle in Padova.
Waymark Code: WMX56G
Location: Veneto, Italy
Date Posted: 11/28/2017
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NW_history_buff
Views: 0

The statue of Pope Clement XIII AKA Carlo della Torre Rezzonico (1693 – 1769) made of Vicenza stone is one of the 78 statues located around a huge elliptical channel on a largest square in Italy and one of the largest ones in the Europe, Prato della Valle in Padova. The statues were made between 1775 and 1883 by various artists. Pope Clement XIII is depited here wearing a long pope robe, with a papal tiara on his head wand blessing with his right hand. The statue is a work of the sculptor Giovanni Ferrari and it was commissioned by his brothers in 1787.

Biography

Clement XIII, original name Carlo della Torre Rezzonico (born March 7, 1693, Venice—died Feb. 2, 1769, Rome), pope from 1758 to 1769.

In 1716 Rezzonico, who had studied under the Jesuits in Bologna, was ordained and appointed governor of Rieti, in the Papal States, becoming governor of Fano in 1721. He then served numerous church offices and was made cardinal by Pope Clement XII in 1737. On July 6, 1758, he was elected pope at a time when anti-Romanism amid European princes was revealed most explicitly in the Bourbons’ plan to destroy the Society of Jesus, then at the peak of its influence. Concurrently, the anti-Roman movement received further impetus from the spread of Febronianism, a German doctrine claiming to restrict papal power and akin to its French counterpart, Gallicanism. In 1764 Clement condemned Febronianism and on May 21 promulgated a brief that commanded all German bishops to suppress it. The papal condemnation met with a mixed reception, however.

The Jesuit issue dominated Clement’s pontificate and that of his successor, Clement XIV. He did everything in his power to save the Jesuits from the Bourbon absolutists, who confederated with the Jansenists (advocates of a heretical doctrine deemphasizing freedom of the will and teaching that redemption through Christ’s death is open to some but not all) and the Freemasons, whose beliefs and observances were considered pagan and unlawful by the Roman Catholic Church. The greatest opposition came from countries where, for 200 years, the Jesuits had been strongest: Spain, France, and Portugal. The statesmen of those countries believed that an attack on the church was the best way to uphold the political status quo. The Jesuits, because of their intimate connection with the papacy, became the immediate target.

During Clement’s reign, the Jesuits were ruthlessly expelled successively from Portugal (1759), France and the French dominions (1764), Spain and the Spanish dominions (1767), and the Kingdom of Naples and Sicily and the duchy of Parma (1768). Their property was confiscated, and their flourishing missions in India, the Far East, and North and South America were ruined. Clement received the destitute exiles into the Papal States, but their enemies pursued. In January 1769 the ambassadors of Spain, Naples, and France personally demanded that Clement completely suppress the Society of Jesus throughout the world. He summoned a consistory to discuss the matter but suffered a stroke and died before it met.

Biography cited from (visit link)
Associated Religion(s): Roman Catholic Church

Statue Location: largest square in Italy Prato della Valle in Padova

Entrance Fee: free

Artist: Giovanni Ferrari detto Torretto (5 June 1744 – 2 November 1826)

Website: Not listed

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