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conclave and elected
He received some votes in the 1605 conclaves which elected Pope Leo XI, Pope Paul V, and in 1621 when Pope Gregory XV was elected, but only in the second conclave of 1605 was he papabile.
At the next election ( 1724 ) he was himself proposed for the papal chair, and secured ten votes at the conclave that elected Benedict XIII.
During this conclave the Hands of the Cause decided that the situation of the Guardian having died without being able to appoint a successor was a situation not dealt with in the texts that define the Bahá ' í administration, and that it would need to be reviewed and adjudicated upon by the Universal House of Justice, which hadn't been elected yet.
* 1978 – Pope John Paul II is elected after the October 1978 Papal conclave.
The office-holder is Pope Benedict XVI, who was elected in a papal conclave on 19 April 2005.
The conclave in Konstanz where Pope Martin V was elected
The ballots are distributed and each cardinal elector writes the name of his choice on it and pledges aloud that he is voting for " one whom under God I think ought to be elected " before folding and depositing his vote on a plate atop a large chalice placed on the altar ( in the 2005 conclave, a special urn was used for this purpose instead of a chalice and plate ).
At the end of the conclave that elected Pope Benedict XVI, church bells were also rung to signal that a new pope had been chosen.
When Innocent X died, Chigi, the candidate favoured by Spain, was elected pope after eighty days in the conclave, on 7 April 1655, taking the name of Alexander VII.
Though his absence from the 1958 conclave did not make him ineligible – under Canon Law any Catholic male may be electedthe College of Cardinals usually chose the new Pope from among themselves.
After the long deadlocked vacancy in the papal see after the death of Clement IV, a vacant seat of three years, he was one of the six cardinals who finally elected Pope Gregory X by compromise on 1 September 1271 in a conclave held at Viterbo because conditions in Rome were too turbulent.
Martin was elected pope at the Council of Constance on St. Martin's Day, 11 November 1417, by a conclave consisting of twenty-three cardinals and thirty delegates of the council.
However, upon being elected Pope at the papal conclave of 1303, he released King Philip IV of France from the excommunication that had been laid upon him by Boniface VIII, and practically ignored Boniface's bull Unam sanctam, which asserted papal supremacy over secular rulers.
Fournier succeeded Pope John XXII as Pope in 1334, being elected on the first ballot of the papal conclave.
Cardinal Piccolomini participated in the conclave that elected Pope Paul II ( 1464 – 71 ) in 1464, but was absent when Pope Sixtus IV ( 1471 – 84 ) was elected in 1471.
He participated in the conclave of 1484 which elected Innocent VIII and in the conclave of 1492 which elected Alexander VI.
Ganganelli was elected Pope Clement XIV on 19 May 1769 and was installed on 4 June 1769, after a conclave that had been sitting since 15 February 1769, heavily influenced by the political manoeuvres of the ambassadors of Catholic sovereigns who were opposed to the Jesuits.
Grimoard was a compromise candidate who was elected due to the fact that none of the cardinals voting in the conclave wished to serve.
Instead, it elected Cardinal Giovanni Battista Pamphili as his successor at the papal conclave of 1644, who took the name of Innocent X.

conclave and him
During the conclave, he had been hostile to Chigi's election, but was in the end compelled to accept him as a compromise.
After his election at the papal conclave of 1389, Germany, England, Hungary, Poland, and the greater part of Italy accepted him as Pope.
Whether this was true or not, it is likely that the future pope had conditions laid down for him by the conclave of cardinals.
He was made cardinal-priest of Santi Nereo e Achilleo and administrator of the bishopric of Avignon by Benedict XII in 1338 and was chosen to succeed him as pope at the papal conclave of 1342.
He made himself useful to Pope Martin V and was quickly elected to succeed him in the papal conclave of 1431.
In order to rally Gian Gastone to its cause, Spain, concerned that another Medicean cardinal — Gian Gastone's uncle, Francesco Maria de ' Medici, already enjoyed that dignity — would tip the scales in favour of France at a Papal conclave, offered to create him " General of the Spanish Seas ".
In 1769 he went to Rome to assist at the conclave which resulted in the election of Pope Clement XIV, and the talent which he displayed on that occasion procured him the appointment of ambassador in Rome, where he spent the remainder of his life.
Cardinals Francis Spellman and James McIntyre granted him absolution before departing for the conclave.
* The first occasion, according to him, was the Papal conclave, 1963.
Although Cesare managed to seize the remnants of the Papal treasury for his own use, he was unable to secure Rome itself, as French and Spanish armies converged on the city in an attempt to influence the Papal conclave ; the election of Pius III ( who soon died, to be replaced by Julius II ) stripped Cesare of his titles and relegated him to commanding a company of men-at-arms.
On 20 October 1958, the cardinals, before their conclave – not Pope John as some claimed, since there existed no pope that day – dismissed him.
Cappellari appeared as an alternative to both De Gregorio and Macchi only when the conclave was well-advanced, but even though Albani worked against him, Cappellari eventually took the lead and won election.
In 1734 he was appointed archbishop with personal title to the diocese of Montefiascone and participated in the conclave of 1740, where the elections were stalled for forty days because many cardinals kept voting for him, despite their being unable to bring about a decision in his favour.
He was also the Protodeacon ( senior Cardinal-Deacon ) during the conclave, and as such, he had the honour of announcing Montini's election and crowning him on 30 June with the triregnum.
He was one of the cardinal electors who participated in the 2005 papal conclave that selected Pope Benedict XVI, who later confirmed him to office ( on 21 April 2005 ).
He had French troops at the gates of Rome, by means of which he could easily have frightened the conclave and induced them to elect him ; but he was persuaded to trust to his influence ; the troops were dismissed, and an Italian was appointed as Pius III ( 1503 ); and again, on the death of Pius within the month, another Italian, Julius II ( 1503 – 13 ), was chosen.

conclave and had
Fosterite bishops, after secret conclave, announced the Church's second Major Miracle: Supreme Bishop Digby had been translated bodily to Heaven and spot-promoted to Archangel, ranking with-but-after Archangel Foster.
He had certain ceremonial duties in the conclave that have effectively ceased because he would generally have already reached age 80, at which cardinals are barred from the conclave.
The conclave believed he was strongly opposed to the nepotism that had been a feature of previous popes.
Following the death of Benedict XI in 1304, there was a year's interregnum occasioned by disputes between the French and Italian cardinals, who were nearly equally balanced in the conclave, which had to be held at Perugia.
Immediately following the conclave, most of the cardinals fled Rome before the mob could learn that not a Roman ( though not a Frenchman either ), but a subject of Queen Joan I of Naples, had been chosen.
On the death of Clement VI, after each cardinal had bound himself to a particular line of policy should he be elected, Aubert was chosen at a papal conclave on 18 December 1352, taking the name of Innocent VI.
Philip II of Spain's ( 1556 – 1598 ) high-handed interference at the previous conclave was not forgotten: he had barred all but seven cardinals.
They held a conclave in his cabin on the Kalmar Nyckel, and he persuaded the sachems to sign deeds he had prepared for the purpose to solve any issue with the Dutch.
Following the impasse during the previous conclave and to escape from the infighting of the powerful families that had produced earlier Popes, such as the Colonna and the Orsini, the Roman Church looked for a safer place and found it in Avignon, which was surrounded by the lands of the papal fief of Comtat Venaissin.
Pope Pius died on 7 February 1878, and during his closing years the Liberal press had often insinuated that the Italian Government should take a hand in the conclave and occupy the Vatican.
However, the third vote had already begun, and thus the conclave had to continue with the voting, which resulted in no clear winner, though it did indicate that many of the conclave wished to turn their support to Sarto, who had 21 votes upon counting.
On the following morning, the fifth vote of the conclave was taken, and the count had Rampolla with 10 votes, Gotti with two votes, and Sarto with 50 votes.
Additionally, he had been deeply saddened by the Austro-Hungarian veto and vowed to rescind these powers and excommunicate anyone who communicated such a veto during a conclave.

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