The College of Cardinals, formerly styled Sacred College of Cardinals, is the body of all cardinals of the Catholic Church.[1]
Functions
A function of the college is to advise the Pope about church matters when he summons them to an ordinary consistory,[2] a term derived from the Roman Emperor's crown council. It also attends various functions as a matter of protocol, for example, during the canonization process.
It also convenes on the death or resignation of a pope as a papal conclave to elect a successor,[3] but is then restricted to eligible Cardinals under the age limit, which was set for the first time in 1970 by Pope Paul VI at 80.[4]
The college has no ruling power except during the sede vacante (papal vacancy) period, and even then its powers are extremely limited by the terms of the current law, which is laid down in the Apostolic constitution Universi Dominici gregis (1996) and the Fundamental Law of Vatican City State.
Historically, cardinals were the clergy serving parishes of the city of Rome under its bishop, the Pope. The College acquired particular importance following the crowning of Henry IV as King of Germany and Holy Roman Emperor at the age of six, after the unexpected death of Henry III in 1056. Until then, the Holy See was often bitterly fought for among Rome's aristocratic families and external secular authorities had significant influence over who was to be appointed Pope, and the Holy Roman Emperor in particular had the special power to appoint him. This was significant as the aims and views of the Holy Roman Emperor and the Church did not always coincide. Churchmen involved in what has become known as the Gregorian Reform took advantage of the new king's lack of power and in 1059 reserved the election of the Pope to the clergy of the Church in Rome. This was part of a larger power struggle, which became known as the Investiture Controversy, as the Church and the Emperor each attempted to gain more control over the appointment of bishops, and in doing so wield more influence in the lands and governments they were appointed to. Reserving to the cardinals the election of the Pope represented a significant shift in the balance of power in the Early Medieval world. From the beginning of the 12th century, the College of Cardinals started to meet as such, when the cardinal bishops, cardinal priests and cardinal deacons ceased acting as separate groups.[5]
Officials
The Dean of the College of Cardinals and the Sub-Dean are the president and vice-president of the college. Both are elected by and from the six Cardinal-bishops (cardinals of the highest order, holding suburbicarian dioceses), but the election requires Papal confirmation. Except for presiding and delegating administrative tasks, they have no authority over the cardinals, acting as primus inter pares (first among equals).
The Secretary of State, the prefects of the Congregations of the Roman Curia, the Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, the Vicar General of Rome, and the Patriarchs of Venice and Lisbon, are usually Cardinals, with few, usually temporary, exceptions. The Fundamental Law of Vatican City State requires that appointees to the state's legislative body, the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State, be cardinals.[6]
Origins
The word cardinal is derived from the Latin cardo, meaning "hinge." The office of cardinal as it is known today slowly evolved during the first millennium from the clergy of Rome. "The first time that the term cardinal appears in the Liber Pontificalis is in the biography of Pope Stephen III(IV) when in the Roman Synod of 769, it was decided that the Roman pontiff should be elected from among the deacons and cardinal priests."[7]
In 845 the Council of Meaux "required Bishops to establish Cardinal titles or parishes in their towns and outlining districts."[8] At the same time, the popes began referring to the cardinal priests of Rome to serves as legates and delegates within Rome at ceremonies, synods, councils, etc., as well as abroad on diplomatic missions and councils. Those who were assigned to the latter roles were given the titles of Legatus a latere (Cardinal Legate) and Missus Specialis (Special Missions).[9]
During the pontificate of Stephen V (816-17), the three classes of the College that are present today began to form. Stephen decreed that all cardinal-bishops were bound to say Mass on rotation at the high altar at St. Peter's Basilica, one per Sunday. The first class to form was that of the cardinal-deacons, direct theological descendants of the original seven ordained in Acts 6, followed by the cardinal-priests, and finally, the cardinal-bishops.[9]
The College played an integral part in various reforms within the Church as well, as early as the pontificate of Pope Leo IX (1050). In the 12th century, the Third Lateran Council declared that only Cardinals could assume the papacy, a requirement that has since lapsed. In 1130, under Urban II, all the classes were permitted to take part in papal elections; up to this point, only cardinal-bishops had this role.[9]
By the end of the 14th century, the practice of solely Italian cardinals had ceased. Between the 14th century and 17th century, there was much struggle for the College between the cardinals of the day and the reigning popes. The most effective way for a pope to increase his power was to increase the number of cardinals, promoting those who had nominated him. Those cardinals in power saw these actions as an attempt to weaken their influence. In 1517, Pope Leo X added another thirty-one cardinals, bringing the total to sixty-five so that he could have a supportive majority among the cardinalate. Paul IV brought the total to seventy. Pope Pius IV raised an additional six. By the papacy of Sixtus V, the number was set at seventy, divided among fourteen cardinal-deacons, fifty cardinal-priests, and six cardinal-bishops.[9]
Choosing the Pope
Under the terms of Pope Paul VI's motu proprio Ingravescentem Aetatem, cardinals who reached the age of 80 before a conclave opened had no vote in papal elections. Pope John Paul II's Universi Dominici gregis of 22 February 1996 modified that slightly, so that cardinals who have reached the age of 80 before the day the see becomes vacant do not have a vote.[3]
Although the canonical qualifications required of candidates for episcopacy[10] leave a broad field open to the cardinals, they have for over six centuries elected one of their own number to be Bishop of Rome. The last time they chose someone who was not a cardinal was at the 1378 election of Pope Urban VI. The conclave rules specify the procedures to be followed, should someone residing outside Vatican City or not yet a bishop be elected.[11]
Of the 117 cardinals under the age of 80 at the time of Pope Benedict XVI's resignation, 115 participated in the conclave of March 2013 that elected his successor. The two who did not participate were Julius Riyadi Darmaatmadja (for health reasons) and Keith O'Brien (following allegations of sexual misconduct).[12] Of the 115 cardinals who participated in the conclave that elected Pope Francis, 48 were appointed by Pope John Paul II, and 67 by Pope Benedict XVI.
As of 14 April 2016, there are a total of 215 cardinals, of whom 116 are under 80. The Holy See announced on 20 March 2015 that Pope Francis had accepted the resignation by Cardinal Keith O'Brien of the rights and privileges of a Cardinal, although he will retain the title.[13] As a result, only 115 cardinals are eligible to participate in a future papal election. Of those 115, 27 were appointed by Pope John Paul II, 57 by Pope Benedict XVI, and 31 by Pope Francis.
Karl Lehmann will be the next cardinal to reach the age of 80, on 16 May 2016, and lose his right to participate in a conclave.
Members of the College of Cardinals
The following is the list of all cardinals living as of 31 March 2016. Cardinals appear in order of precedence, based on seniority by date of appointment. Paulo Evaristo Arns is the most senior member of the College by length of service (the Protopriest) and the last survivor from the 1973 consistory. Angelo Sodano has the highest precedence as a Cardinal Bishop and Dean of the College of Cardinals. Roger Etchegaray has second highest precedence as a fellow Cardinal Bishop and Sub-Dean of the College of Cardinals. The oldest living cardinal is Loris Francesco Capovilla, born in 1915.
Within the College of Cardinals, there are three categories, the highest-ranked Cardinal Bishops, then Cardinal Priests, and finally Cardinal Deacons. Within each category, cardinals are ranked by seniority of appointment to that category. Despite these titles, almost every cardinal is, since the pontificate of Pope John XXIII (1958–1963), a bishop. Any one not a bishop when his appointment is announced has generally been consecrated bishop before his formal installation, although a few priests appointed cardinals when near or over 80 have obtained permission not to become bishops.
Most of the cardinals are from the Latin Church; those who are from the Eastern Catholic Churches have their church indicated.
College of Cardinals
Consistory | Name | Country | Born | Age | Title(s) |
Cardinals of the Order of Bishops |
Titular Bishops of Seven Suburbicarian Sees |
28 June 1991 | Angelo Sodano | Italy | 23 November 1927 | 88 | Bishop of Ostia and Cardinal Bishop of Albano, Dean of the College of Cardinals, Cardinal Secretary of State Emeritus |
30 June 1979 | Roger Etchegaray | France | 25 September 1922 | 93 | Cardinal Bishop of Porto-Santa Rufina, Sub-Dean of the College of Cardinals, President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace |
21 February 2001 | Giovanni Battista Re | Italy | 30 January 1934 | 82 | Cardinal Bishop of Sabina-Poggio Mirteto, Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Bishops |
25 May 1985 | Francis Arinze | Nigeria | 1 November 1932 | 83 | Cardinal Bishop of Velletri-Segni, Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments |
21 October 2003 | Tarcisio Bertone, SDB | Italy | 2 December 1934 | 81 | Cardinal Bishop of Frascati, Camerlengo Emeritus of the Holy Roman Church and Cardinal Secretary of State Emeritus |
21 February 2001 | José Saraiva Martins, CMF | Portugal | 6 January 1932 | 84 | Cardinal Bishop of Palestrina, Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints |
Patriarchs of Eastern Catholic Churches |
28 February 1994 | Nasrallah Pierre Sfeir | Lebanon | 15 May 1920 | 95 | Patriarch Emeritus of Antioch (Maronite Catholic Church) |
20 November 2010 | Antonios Naguib | Egypt | 18 March 1935 | 81 | Patriarch Emeritus of Alexandria (Coptic Catholic Church) |
24 November 2012 | Bechara Boutros al-Rahi | Lebanon | 25 February 1940 | 76 | Patriarch of Antioch (Maronite Catholic Church) |
Cardinals of the Order of Priests |
5 March 1973 | Paulo Evaristo Arns, OFM | Brazil | 14 September 1921 | 94 | Archbishop Emeritus of São Paulo, Cardinal Protopriest since 9 July 2012 |
30 June 1979 | Franciszek Macharski | Poland | 20 May 1927 | 88 | Archbishop Emeritus of Kraków |
2 February 1983 |
Michael Michai Kitbunchu | Thailand | 26 January 1929 | 87 | Archbishop Emeritus of Bangkok |
Alexandre do Nascimento | Angola | 1 March 1925 | 91 | Archbishop Emeritus of Luanda |
Godfried Danneels | Belgium | 4 June 1933 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Mechelen-Brussels |
Thomas Stafford Williams | New Zealand | 20 March 1930 | 86 | Archbishop Emeritus of Wellington |
Joachim Meisner | Germany | 25 December 1933 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Cologne |
25 May 1985 |
Miguel Obando y Bravo, SDB | Nicaragua | 2 February 1926 | 90 | Archbishop Emeritus of Managua |
Ricardo Vidal | Philippines | 6 February 1931 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Cebu |
Henryk Gulbinowicz | Poland | 17 October 1923 | 92 | Archbishop Emeritus of Wrocław |
Jozef Tomko | Slovakia | 11 March 1924 | 92 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Committee for International Eucharistic Congresses |
Paul Poupard | France | 30 August 1930 | 85 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Culture |
Friedrich Wetter | Germany | 20 February 1928 | 88 | Archbishop Emeritus of Munich and Freising |
Silvano Piovanelli | Italy | 21 February 1924 | 92 | Archbishop Emeritus of Florence |
Adrianus Johannes Simonis | Netherlands | 26 November 1931 | 84 | Archbishop Emeritus of Utrecht |
Bernard Francis Law | United States | 4 November 1931 | 84 | Archpriest Emeritus of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore |
28 June 1988 |
Eduardo Martínez Somalo | Spain | 31 March 1927 | 89 | Camerlengo Emeritus of the Holy Roman Church |
Achille Silvestrini | Italy | 25 October 1923 | 92 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches |
José Freire Falcão | Brazil | 23 October 1925 | 90 | Archbishop Emeritus of Brasília |
Alexandre José Maria dos Santos, OFM | Mozambique | 18 March 1924 | 92 | Archbishop Emeritus of Maputo |
Christian Wiyghan Tumi | Cameroon | 15 October 1930 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Douala |
28 June 1991 |
Edward Idris Cassidy | Australia | 5 July 1924 | 91 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity |
Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez | Dominican Republic | 31 October 1936 | 79 | Archbishop of Santo Domingo, Primate of the Americas |
Roger Mahony | United States | 27 February 1936 | 80 | Archbishop Emeritus of Los Angeles |
Camillo Ruini | Italy | 19 February 1931 | 85 | Vicar General Emeritus of Rome |
Henri Schwery | Switzerland | 14 June 1932 | 83 | Bishop Emeritus of Sion |
26 November 1994 |
Miloslav Vlk | Czech Republic | 17 May 1932 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Prague |
Julius Riyadi Darmaatmadja, SJ | Indonesia | 20 December 1934 | 81 | Archbishop Emeritus of Jakarta |
Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino | Cuba | 18 October 1936 | 79 | Archbishop Emeritus of San Cristóbal de la Habana |
Gilberto Agustoni | Switzerland | 26 July 1922 | 93 | Prefect Emeritus of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura |
Emmanuel Wamala | Uganda | 15 December 1926 | 89 | Archbishop Emeritus of Kampala |
William Henry Keeler | United States | 4 March 1931 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Baltimore |
Adam Joseph Maida | United States | 18 March 1930 | 86 | Archbishop Emeritus of Detroit |
Vinko Puljić | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 8 September 1945 | 70 | Archbishop of Vrhbosna (Sarajevo) |
Juan Sandoval Íñiguez | Mexico | 28 March 1933 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Guadalajara |
21 February 1998 |
Jorge Medina Estévez | Chile | 23 December 1926 | 89 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments |
Darío Castrillón Hoyos | Colombia | 4 July 1929 | 86 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Commission Ecclesia Dei and Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Clergy |
James Francis Stafford | United States | 26 July 1932 | 83 | Major Penitentiary Emeritus |
Salvatore De Giorgi | Italy | 6 September 1930 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Palermo |
Serafim Fernandes de Araújo | Brazil | 13 August 1924 | 91 | Archbishop Emeritus of Belo Horizonte |
Antonio María Rouco Varela | Spain | 24 August 1936 | 79 | Archbishop Emeritus of Madrid |
Dionigi Tettamanzi | Italy | 14 March 1934 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Milan |
Polycarp Pengo | Tanzania | 5 August 1944 | 71 | Archbishop of Dar-es-Salaam |
Christoph Schönborn, OP | Austria | 22 January 1945 | 71 | Archbishop of Vienna |
Norberto Rivera Carrera | Mexico | 6 June 1942 | 73 | Archbishop of Mexico |
Marian Jaworski | Ukraine | 21 August 1926 | 89 | Archbishop Emeritus of Lviv |
Jānis Pujāts | Latvia | 14 November 1930 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Riga |
21 February 2001 |
Agostino Cacciavillan | Italy | 14 August 1926 | 89 | President Emeritus of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See |
Sergio Sebastiani | Italy | 11 April 1931 | 85 | President Emeritus of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See |
Zenon Grocholewski | Poland | 11 October 1939 | 76 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Catholic Education |
Crescenzio Sepe | Italy | 2 June 1943 | 72 | Archbishop of Naples |
Walter Kasper | Germany | 5 March 1933 | 83 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity |
Ivan Dias | India | 14 April 1936 | 80 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples |
Geraldo Majella Agnelo | Brazil | 19 October 1933 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of São Salvador da Bahia |
Pedro Rubiano Sáenz | Colombia | 13 September 1932 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Bogotá |
Theodore Edgar McCarrick | United States | 7 July 1930 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Washington |
Desmond Connell | Ireland | 24 March 1926 | 90 | Archbishop Emeritus of Dublin |
Audrys Juozas Bačkis | Lithuania | 1 February 1937 | 79 | Archbishop Emeritus of Vilnius |
Francisco Javier Errázuriz Ossa, PSchoenstatt | Chile | 5 September 1933 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Santiago de Chile |
Wilfrid Fox Napier, OFM | South Africa | 8 March 1941 | 75 | Archbishop of Durban |
Oscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga, SDB | Honduras | 29 December 1942 | 73 | Archbishop of Tegucigalpa |
Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne | Peru | 28 December 1943 | 72 | Archbishop of Lima |
Francisco Álvarez Martínez | Spain | 14 July 1925 | 90 | Archbishop Emeritus of Toledo |
Cláudio Hummes, OFM | Brazil | 8 August 1934 | 81 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Clergy |
Severino Poletto | Italy | 18 March 1933 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Turin |
Cormac Murphy-O'Connor | United Kingdom | 24 August 1932 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Westminster |
Lubomyr Husar, MSU | Ukraine | 26 February 1933 | 83 | Major Archbishop Emeritus of Kyiv-Halych (Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church) |
Karl Lehmann | Germany | 16 May 1936 | 79 | Bishop of Mainz |
21 October 2003[lower-alpha 1] |
Jean-Louis Tauran | France | 3 April 1943 | 73 | Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church and President of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue |
Julián Herranz Casado | Spain | 31 March 1930 | 86 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts |
Javier Lozano Barragán | Mexico | 26 January 1933 | 83 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Health Care Workers |
Attilio Nicora | Italy | 16 March 1937 | 79 | President Emeritus of the Financial Information Authority |
Angelo Scola | Italy | 7 November 1941 | 74 | Archbishop of Milan |
Anthony Olubumni Okogie | Nigeria | 16 June 1936 | 79 | Archbishop Emeritus of Lagos |
Bernard Panafieu | France | 26 January 1931 | 85 | Archbishop Emeritus of Marseille |
Gabriel Zubeir Wako | Sudan | 27 February 1939 | 77 | Archbishop of Khartoum |
Carlos Amigo Vallejo, OFM | Spain | 23 August 1934 | 81 | Archbishop Emeritus of Seville |
Justin Francis Rigali | United States | 19 April 1935 | 81 | Archbishop Emeritus of Philadelphia |
Keith O'Brien | United Kingdom | 17 March 1938 | 78 | Archbishop Emeritus of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh |
Eusebio Oscar Scheid, SCI | Brazil | 8 December 1932 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro |
Ennio Antonelli | Italy | 18 November 1936 | 79 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for the Family |
Peter Kodwo Appiah Turkson | Ghana | 11 October 1948 | 67 | President of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace |
Telesphore Placidus Toppo | India | 13 October 1939 | 76 | Archbishop of Ranchi |
George Pell | Australia | 8 April 1941 | 75 | Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy |
Josip Bozanić | Croatia | 20 March 1949 | 67 | Archbishop of Zagreb |
Jean-Baptiste Phạm Minh Mẫn | Vietnam | 5 March 1934 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Ho Chi Minh City |
Philippe Barbarin | France | 17 October 1950 | 65 | Archbishop of Lyon |
Péter Erdő | Hungary | 25 June 1952 | 63 | Archbishop of Esztergom-Budapest |
Marc Ouellet, PSS | Canada | 8 June 1944 | 71 | Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops |
24 March 2006 |
Agostino Vallini | Italy | 17 April 1940 | 76 | Vicar General of Rome |
Jorge Urosa Savino | Venezuela | 28 August 1942 | 73 | Archbishop of Caracas |
Gaudencio Borbon Rosales | Philippines | 10 August 1932 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Manila |
Jean-Pierre Ricard | France | 25 September 1944 | 71 | Archbishop of Bordeaux |
Antonio Cañizares Llovera | Spain | 15 October 1945 | 70 | Archbishop of Valencia |
Nicolas Cheong Jin-suk | South Korea | 7 December 1931 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Seoul |
Seán Patrick O'Malley, OFM Cap | United States | 29 June 1944 | 71 | Archbishop of Boston |
Stanisław Dziwisz | Poland | 27 April 1939 | 76 | Archbishop of Kraków |
Carlo Caffarra | Italy | 1 June 1938 | 77 | Archbishop Emeritus of Bologna |
Joseph Zen Ze-Kiun, SDB | Hong Kong[lower-alpha 2] | 13 January 1932 | 84 | Bishop Emeritus of Hong Kong |
24 November 2007 |
Seán Brady | Ireland | 16 August 1939 | 76 | Archbishop Emeritus of Armagh |
Lluís Martínez Sistach | Spain | 29 April 1937 | 78 | Archbishop Emeritus of Barcelona |
André Armand Vingt-Trois | France | 7 November 1942 | 73 | Archbishop of Paris |
Angelo Bagnasco | Italy | 14 January 1943 | 73 | Archbishop of Genoa |
Théodore-Adrien Sarr | Senegal | 28 November 1936 | 79 | Archbishop Emeritus of Dakar |
Oswald Gracias | India | 24 December 1944 | 71 | Archbishop of Bombay |
Francisco Robles Ortega | Mexico | 2 March 1949 | 67 | Archbishop of Guadalajara |
Daniel DiNardo | United States | 23 May 1949 | 66 | Archbishop of Galveston-Houston |
Odilo Pedro Scherer | Brazil | 21 September 1949 | 66 | Archbishop of São Paulo |
John Njue | Kenya | 31 December 1944[lower-alpha 3] | 71 | Archbishop of Nairobi |
Estanislao Esteban Karlic | Argentina | 7 February 1926 | 90 | Archbishop Emeritus of Paraná |
20 November 2010 |
Raúl Eduardo Vela Chiriboga | Ecuador | 1 January 1934 | 82 | Archbishop Emeritus of Quito |
Laurent Monsengwo Pasinya | Democratic Republic of the Congo | 7 October 1939 | 76 | Archbishop of Kinshasa |
Paolo Romeo | Italy | 20 February 1938 | 78 | Archbishop Emeritus of Palermo |
Donald William Wuerl | United States | 12 November 1940 | 75 | Archbishop of Washington |
Raymundo Damasceno Assis | Brazil | 15 February 1937 | 79 | Archbishop of Aparecida |
Kazimierz Nycz | Poland | 1 February 1950 | 66 | Archbishop of Warsaw |
Malcolm Ranjith | Sri Lanka | 15 November 1947 | 68 | Archbishop of Colombo |
Reinhard Marx | Germany | 21 September 1953 | 62 | Archbishop of Munich and Freising |
José Manuel Estepa Llaurens | Spain | 1 January 1926 | 90 | Military Archbishop Emeritus of Spain |
18 February 2012 |
George Alencherry | India | 19 April 1945 | 71 | Major Archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamaly (Syro-Malabar Catholic Church) |
Thomas Christopher Collins | Canada | 16 January 1947 | 69 | Archbishop of Toronto |
Dominik Duka, OP | Czech Republic | 26 April 1943 | 73 | Archbishop of Prague |
Wim Eijk | Netherlands | 22 June 1953 | 62 | Archbishop of Utrecht |
Giuseppe Betori | Italy | 25 February 1947 | 69 | Archbishop of Florence |
Timothy Michael Dolan | United States | 6 February 1950 | 66 | Archbishop of New York |
Rainer Maria Woelki | Germany | 18 August 1956 | 59 | Archbishop of Cologne |
John Tong Hon | Hong Kong | 31 July 1939 | 76 | Bishop of Hong Kong |
Lucian Mureșan | Romania | 23 May 1931 | 84 | Major Archbishop of Făgăraş and Alba Iulia (Romanian Greek-Catholic Church) |
24 November 2012 |
Baselios Cleemis | India | 15 June 1959 | 56 | Major Archbishop of Trivandrum (Syro-Malankara Catholic Church) |
John Onaiyekan | Nigeria | 29 January 1944 | 72 | Archbishop of Abuja |
Rubén Salazar Gómez | Colombia | 22 September 1942 | 73 | Archbishop of Bogotá |
Luis Antonio Tagle | Philippines | 21 June 1957 | 58 | Archbishop of Manila |
22 February 2014 |
Pietro Parolin | Italy | 17 January 1955 | 61 | Cardinal Secretary of State |
Vincent Gerard Nichols | United Kingdom | 8 November 1945 | 70 | Archbishop of Westminster |
Leopoldo José Brenes Solórzano | Nicaragua | 7 March 1949 | 67 | Archbishop of Managua |
Gérald Cyprien Lacroix, ISPX | Canada | 27 July 1957 | 58 | Archbishop of Québec |
Jean-Pierre Kutwa | Côte d'Ivoire | 22 December 1945 | 70 | Archbishop of Abidjan |
Orani João Tempesta, OCist | Brazil | 23 June 1950 | 65 | Archbishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro |
Gualtiero Bassetti | Italy | 7 April 1942 | 74 | Archbishop of Perugia-Città della Pieve |
Mario Aurelio Poli | Argentina | 29 November 1947 | 68 | Archbishop of Buenos Aires |
Andrew Yeom Soo-jung | South Korea | 5 December 1943 | 72 | Archbishop of Seoul |
Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, SDB | Chile | 7 January 1942 | 74 | Archbishop of Santiago de Chile |
Philippe Nakellentuba Ouédraogo | Burkina Faso | 25 January 1945 | 71 | Archbishop of Ouagadougou |
Orlando Beltrán Quevedo, OMI | Philippines | 11 March 1939 | 77 | Archbishop of Cotabato |
Chibly Langlois | Haiti | 29 November 1958 | 57 | Bishop of Les Cayes |
Loris Francesco Capovilla | Italy | 14 October 1915 | 100 | Prelate Emeritus of Loreto |
Fernando Sebastián Aguilar, CMF | Spain | 14 December 1929 | 86 | Archbishop Emeritus of Pamplona y Tudela |
Kelvin Edward Felix | Saint Lucia | 15 February 1933 | 83 | Archbishop Emeritus of Castries |
14 February 2015 |
Manuel José Macário do Nascimento Clemente | Portugal | 16 July 1948 | 67 | Patriarch of Lisbon |
Berhaneyesus Demerew Souraphiel, CM | Ethiopia | 14 July 1948 | 67 | Archbishop of Addis Abeba (Ethiopian Catholic Church) |
John Atcherley Dew | New Zealand | 5 May 1948 | 67 | Archbishop of Wellington |
Edoardo Menichelli | Italy | 14 October 1939 | 76 | Archbishop of Ancona-Osimo |
Pierre Nguyễn Văn Nhơn | Vietnam | 1 April 1938 | 78 | Archbishop of Hanoi |
Alberto Suárez Inda | Mexico | 30 January 1939 | 77 | Archbishop of Morelia |
Charles Maung Bo, SDB | Myanmar | 29 October 1948 | 67 | Archbishop of Yangon |
Francis Xavier Kriengsak Kovithavanij | Thailand | 27 June 1949 | 66 | Archbishop of Bangkok |
Francesco Montenegro | Italy | 22 May 1946 | 69 | Archbishop of Agrigento |
Daniel Fernando Sturla Berhouet, SDB | Uruguay | 4 July 1959 | 56 | Archbishop of Montevideo |
Ricardo Blázquez Pérez | Spain | 13 April 1942 | 74 | Archbishop of Valladolid |
José Luis Lacunza Maestrojuán, OAR | Panama | 24 February 1944 | 72 | Bishop of David |
Arlindo Gomes Furtado | Cape Verde | 15 November 1949 | 66 | Bishop of Santiago de Cabo Verde |
Soane Patita Paini Mafi | Tonga | 19 December 1961 | 54 | Bishop of Tonga |
José de Jesús Pimiento Rodríguez | Colombia | 18 February 1919 | 97 | Archbishop Emeritus of Manizales |
Luis Héctor Villalba | Argentina | 11 October 1934 | 81 | Archbishop Emeritus of Tucumán |
Júlio Duarte Langa | Mozambique | 27 October 1927 | 88 | Bishop Emeritus of Xai-Xai |
Cardinals of the Order of Deacons[lower-alpha 4] |
21 October 2003 | Renato Raffaele Martino | Italy | 23 November 1932 | 83 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace, Cardinal Protodeacon since 12 June 2014 |
24 March 2006 |
William Joseph Levada | United States | 15 June 1936 | 79 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith |
Franc Rode, CM | Slovenia | 23 September 1934 | 81 | Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life |
Andrea Cordero Lanza di Montezemolo | Italy | 27 August 1925 | 90 | Archpriest Emeritus of the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls |
Albert Vanhoye, SJ | France | 23 July 1923 | 92 | formerly rector of the Pontifical Biblical Institute and secretary of the Pontifical Biblical Commission |
24 November 2007 |
Leonardo Sandri | Argentina | 18 November 1943 | 72 | Prefect of the Congregation for the Oriental Churches |
Giovanni Lajolo | Italy | 3 January 1935 | 81 | President Emeritus of the Governorate of Vatican City State |
Paul Josef Cordes | Germany | 5 September 1934 | 81 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum |
Angelo Comastri | Italy | 17 September 1943 | 72 | Archpriest of St. Peter's Basilica, Vicar General for the Vatican City State, and President of the Fabric of St. Peter |
Stanisław Ryłko | Poland | 4 July 1945 | 70 | President of the Pontifical Council for the Laity |
Raffaele Farina, SDB | Italy | 24 September 1933 | 82 | Librarian and Archivist Emeritus of the Holy Roman Church |
Giovanni Coppa | Italy | 9 November 1925 | 90 | Apostolic Nuncio Emeritus to Czech Republic |
20 November 2010 |
Angelo Amato, SDB | Italy | 8 June 1938 | 77 | Prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints |
Robert Sarah | Guinea | 15 June 1945 | 70 | Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments |
Francesco Monterisi | Italy | 28 May 1934 | 81 | Archpriest Emeritus of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls |
Raymond Leo Burke | United States | 30 June 1948 | 67 | Patron of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta |
Kurt Koch | Switzerland | 15 March 1950 | 66 | President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity |
Paolo Sardi | Italy | 1 September 1934 | 81 | Patron Emeritus of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta |
Mauro Piacenza | Italy | 15 September 1944 | 71 | Major Penitentiary |
Velasio de Paolis, CS | Italy | 19 September 1935 | 80 | President Emeritus of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See |
Gianfranco Ravasi | Italy | 18 October 1942 | 73 | President of the Pontifical Council for Culture |
Elio Sgreccia | Italy | 6 June 1928 | 87 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Academy for Life |
Walter Brandmüller | Germany | 26 January 1929 | 87 | President Emeritus of the Pontifical Committee for Historical Sciences |
18 February 2012 |
Fernando Filoni | Italy | 15 April 1946 | 70 | Prefect of the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples |
Manuel Monteiro de Castro | Portugal | 29 March 1938 | 78 | Major Penitentiary Emeritus |
Santos Abril y Castelló | Spain | 21 September 1935 | 80 | Archpriest of the Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore |
Antonio Maria Vegliò | Italy | 3 February 1938 | 78 | President of the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerants |
Giuseppe Bertello | Italy | 1 October 1942 | 73 | President of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State |
Francesco Coccopalmerio | Italy | 6 March 1938 | 78 | President of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts |
João Braz de Aviz | Brazil | 24 April 1947 | 69 | Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life |
Edwin Frederick O'Brien | United States | 8 April 1939 | 77 | Grand Master of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem |
Domenico Calcagno | Italy | 3 February 1943 | 73 | President of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See |
Giuseppe Versaldi | Italy | 30 July 1943 | 72 | Prefect of the Congregation for Catholic Education |
Prosper Grech, OSA | Malta | 24 December 1925 | 90 | Docent at various Roman universities and Consultor of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith |
24 November 2012 |
James Michael Harvey | United States | 20 October 1949 | 66 | Archpriest of the Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls |
22 February 2014 |
Lorenzo Baldisseri | Italy | 29 September 1940 | 75 | Secretary General of the Synod of Bishops |
Gerhard Ludwig Müller | Germany | 31 December 1947 | 68 | Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith |
Beniamino Stella | Italy | 18 August 1941 | 74 | Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy |
14 February 2015 |
Dominique Mamberti | France | 7 March 1952 | 64 | Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura |
Luigi de Magistris | Italy | 23 February 1926 | 90 | Major Pro-Penitentiary Emeritus |
Karl-Josef Rauber | Germany | 11 April 1934 | 82 | Apostolic Nuncio (retired) |
Cardinals from Italy over time (percentage)
Italian cardinals as percentage
of total College of Cardinals
(1903–2013)
February 2013 |
22.60 |
April 2005 |
17.09 |
October 1978 |
22.50 |
August 1978 |
22.80 |
1963 |
35.36 |
1958 |
35.80 |
1939 |
54.80 |
1922 |
51.60 |
1914 |
50.76 |
1903 |
56.25 |
Cardinals vs. geographic distribution of Catholics
2013 World Representation in the College of Cardinals
Region |
Total Population |
Catholics |
% Catholic |
% of Catholic total |
% of College of Cardinals |
Africa |
885,103,542 |
135,211,325 |
15.27% |
12.57% |
8.17% |
Asia and Middle East |
3,889,093,723 |
123,851,272 |
3.18% |
11.51% |
9.62% |
Europe |
750,072,510 |
283,916,457 |
37.85% |
26.37% |
57.65% |
Continental Central America |
42,883,849 |
32,317,384 |
75.36% |
3.00% |
1.00% |
North America and Caribbean |
472,952,469 |
192,274,838 |
40.65% |
17.88% |
12.98% |
South America |
371,363,897 |
299,570,011 |
80.66% |
27.87% |
10.58% |
Oceania |
30,686,468 |
7,747,654 |
25.24% |
0.72% |
1.92% |
Cardinals by nationality as of 14 April 2016
Number of cardinals |
Nationality |
47 |
Italy |
15 |
United States |
11 |
Spain |
10 |
Brazil, Germany |
9 |
France |
6 |
Poland |
5 |
India, Mexico |
4 |
Argentina, Colombia, Philippines, |
3 |
Canada, Chile, Nigeria, Portugal, Switzerland, United Kingdom |
2 |
Australia, Czech Republic, Hong Kong, Ireland, Lebanon, Mozambique, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nicaragua, South Korea, Thailand, Ukraine, Vietnam |
1 |
Angola, Austria, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, Croatia, Cuba, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Haiti, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia, Kenya, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Myanmar, Panama, Peru, Romania, Saint Lucia, Senegal, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Tanzania, Tonga, Uganda, Uruguay, Venezuela |
Size of the College of Cardinals
As of 14 April 2016, the College had 215 members, 115 of whom were eligible to participate in a conclave. The group's size has historically been limited by popes, ecumenical councils, and even the College itself. From 1099 to 1986, the total number of cardinals appointed was approximately 2,900 (excluding possibly undocumented 12th-century cardinals, cardinals appointed during the Western Schism by pontiffs now considered to be antipopes, and subject to some other sources of uncertainty), nearly half of whom were created after 1655.[14]
See also
Notes
- ↑ In 2003 Pope John Paul II announced he was also creating one cardinal secretly (in pectore). This appointment would have taken effect if it had been announced before the Pope's death. There was press speculation that it was his senior personal secretary, Stanisław Dziwisz, or a resident of the mainland of the People's Republic of China. On 6 April 2005 the Vatican spokesman revealed that Pope John Paul II had not announced the name of this cardinal before witnesses prior to his death and that the appointment was therefore without effect.
- ↑ Hong Kong is a Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China, with which the Holy See does not currently maintain diplomatic relations.
- ↑ Cardinal Njue's date of birth is unknown. The Vatican provides only the year 1944.
- ↑ Cardinal-Deacons have the right to apply to become Cardinal-Priests after ten years as a Cardinal-Deacon. All living eligible Cardinal-Deacons have exercised this right, with the sole exception of Renato Raffaele Martino.
References
- ↑ 1983 CIC, Bk. II, Pt. II, Sec. I, Chap. III The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church
- ↑ CIC 1983, can. 349
- 1 2 John Paul II, Ap. Const. Universi Dominici gregis in AAS 88 (1996)
- ↑ Walsh, Michael (2011). The Cardinals: Thirteen Centuries of the Men Behind the Papal Throne. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 17. Retrieved 1 March 2016.
- ↑ Broderick, J.F. 1987. "The Sacred College of Cardinals: Size and Geographical Composition (1099–1986)." Archivum historiae Pontificiae, 25: 8.
- ↑ Pope John Paul II (26 November 2000). "Fundamental Law of Vatican City State" (PDF). Retrieved 11 April 2008.
- ↑ Miranda, S. (2003). The New Catholic Encyclopedia, 2nd Edition. Detroit: Gale.
- ↑ van Lierde, Peter C. (1964). What Is a Cardinal?. New York: Hawthorne Books Inc. p. 14.
- 1 2 3 4 Noonan, James-Charles (2012). The Church Visible: The Ceremonial Life and Protocol of the Roman Catholic Church, Revised Edition. New York: Sterling Ethos. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-1-40278730-0.
- ↑ canon 378
- ↑ Universi Dominici gregis, 88–90
- ↑ Pigott, Robert (25 February 2013). "Cardinal Keith O'Brien resigns as Archbishop". BBC News. Retrieved 25 February 2013.
- ↑ Allen Jr., John L. (20 March 2015). "In rare step, Scottish prelate caught in sex scandal quits as cardinal". Crux. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
- ↑ Broderick, 1987, p. 11.
External links
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- R. d'Elci (1670–1761) (1737, 1755)
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- C. Cavalchini (1683–1774) (1743, 1763)
- G. Albani (1720–1803) (1747, 1774)
- H. Stuart (1725–1807) (1747, 1803)
- L. Antonelli (1730–1811) (1775, 1807)
- A. Mattei (1744–1820) (1779, 1814)
- G. della Somaglia (1744–1830) (1795, 1820)
- B. Pacca (1756–1844) (1801, 1830)
- L. Micara (1775–1847) (1824, 1844)
- V. Macchi (1770–1860) (1826, 1847)
- M. Mattei (1792–1870) (1832, 1860)
- C. Naro (1798–1876) (1834, 1870)
- L. di San Filippo e Sorso (1796–1878) (1837, 1876)
- C. di Pietro (1806-1884) (1853, 1878)
- C. Sacconi (1808-1889) (1861, 1884)
- R. Monaco La Valletta (1827-1896) (1868, 1889)
- L. Oreglia di Santo Stefano (1828–1913) (1873, 1896)
- S. Vannutelli (1834-1915) (1887, 1913)
- V. Vannutelli (1836-1930) (1889, 1915)
- G. Granito Pignatelli di Belmonte (1851-1948) (1911, 1930)
- F. Marchetti-Selvaggiani (1871-1951) (1930, 1948)
- E. Tisserant (1884-1972) (1936, 1951)
- A. G. Cicognani (1883-1973) (1958, 1972)
- L. Traglia (1895-1977) (1960, 1974)
- C. Confalonieri (1893-1986) (1958, 1977)
- A. Rossi (1913-1995) (1965, 1986)
- B. Gantin (1922-2008) (1977, 1993)
- J. Ratzinger (1927-) (1977, 2002)
- A. Sodano (1927-) (1991, 2005)
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