The
Suppression of the Jesuits in the Portuguese Empire, France
, the
Two Sicilies, Parma
and the
Spanish Empire
by 1767 was a result of a
series of political moves rather than a theological
controversy. By the brief
Dominus ac Redemptor (21 July
1773)
Pope Clement
XIV suppressed the
Society of
Jesus.
However in non-Catholic nations, particularly
in Prussia and Russia
, where papal
authority was not recognized, the order was ignored.
The
scholarly Jesuit Society of Bollandists
moved from Antwerp
to Brussels
, where they
continued their work in the monastery of the Coudenberg
; in 1788, the Bollandist
Society itself was suppressed by the Austrian
government
of the Low Countries.
Overview
The series of political struggles between various monarchs,
particularly France and Portugal, began with disputes over
territory in
1750 and culminated in suspension
of diplomatic relations and dissolution of the Society by the Pope
over most of Europe, and even some executions.
The Portuguese Empire, France
, the
Two Sicilies, Parma
and the
Spanish Empire
were involved to one degree or
another.
The conflicts began with trade disputes, in 1750 in Portugal, in
1755 in France, and in the late 1750s in the Two Sicilies. In 1758
the government of
Joseph I of
Portugal took advantage of the waning powers of
Pope Benedict XIV and deported Jesuits
from America after relocating the Jesuits and their native workers,
and then fighting a brief conflict, formally suppressing the order
in
1759. In 1762 the Parlement Français, (a
court, not a legislature), affirmed a ruling against the society in
a huge bankruptcy case, under pressure from a host of groups - from
within the Church to secular intellectuals to the king's mistress.
Austria and the two Sicilies suppressed the order by decree in
1767.
With the reaction against the anti-clerical excesses of the
Revolution, especially after
1815, the Catholic
church began to play a more welcome role in official European life
once more, and nation by nation the Jesuits made their way
back.
The modern view is that the suppression was the result of a series
of political and economic conflicts rather than a theological
controversy and the assertion of nation-state independence against
the Catholic Church. The expulsion of the
Society of Jesus from the
Roman Catholic nations of Europe and
their colonial empires is also seen as the first triumph of the
secularist notions of the
Enlightenment, which were said to
contribute to the anti-clericism of the
French Revolution. The suppression was
also seen as being an attempt by monarchs to gain control of
revenues and trade that were previously dominated by the Society of
Jesus. Catholic historians often point to a personal conflict
between
Clement XIII (1758-1769) and
his supporters within the church and the
crown cardinals backed by France.
Portugal
The expulsion of the Jesuits from Portugal has been reduced by the
Catholic Encyclopedia
to a personal quarrel with the prime minister of
Joseph I of Portugal, the reformist and
autocratic Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo,
Marquis de Pombal. Whether Pombal's or
Portugal's, the quarrel with the Jesuits began over an exchange of
South American colonial territory with Spain.
By a secret treaty of
1750, Portugal relinquished to Spain the contested colony of
San
Sacramento
at the mouth
of the Uruguay River in exchange for
the Seven Reductions of Paraguay, the autonomous Jesuit missions
that had been nominal Spanish colonial territory. The native
Guarani who peopled the mission territories
were ordered to quit their country and settle across the Uruguay,
an example of
population
transfer. Owing to the harsh conditions, the Indians rose in
arms against the transfer, and the so-called
Guarani War ensued, a disaster for the Guarani,
in which the Jesuits appeared, from the Portuguese perspective, to
have had a hand. In Portugal a battle of inflammatory pamphlets
denouncing or defending the Order escalated. The Jesuit fathers,
suspected of attempting to build an independent empire in the New
World, were forbidden to continue the local administration of their
former missions, and the Portuguese Jesuits were removed from
Court.
On April 1, 1758, a brief was obtained from the aged
Pope Benedict XIV, appointing the
Portuguese
Cardinal
Saldanha, recommended by Pombal, to investigate allegations
against the Jesuits that had been raised in the name of the King of
Portugal. Benedict was skeptical as to the gravity of the alleged
abuses. He ordered a minute inquiry, but so as to safeguard the
reputation of the Society, all serious matters were to be referred
back to himself. Benedict died the following month, however, on
May 3. On
May 15,
Saldanha, having received the papal brief only a fortnight before,
omitting the thorough visitation of Jesuit houses that had been
ordered, and pronouncing on the issues which the pope had reserved
to himself, declared that the Jesuits were guilty of having
exercised illicit, public, and scandalous commerce, both in
Portugal and in its colonies. Pombal moved quickly during the papal
sede vacante: in three weeks'
time the Jesuits had been stripped of all Portuguese possessions,
and before Cardinal Rezzonico had been made pope, as
Clement XIII, on July 6, 1758, the
Portuguese dispossession of the Society was a
fait
accompli.
The last straw for the Court of Portugal was the attempted
assassination of the king on
September
3, 1758, of which the Jesuits were supposed to have had prior
knowledge (see
Távora affair).
Among those arrested and executed was
Gabriel Malagrida, the Jesuit confessor of
Leonor of Távora. The Jesuits
were expelled from the kingdom, and important non-Portuguese
members of the Order were imprisoned. In 1759, the Order was
civilly suppressed.
The Portuguese ambassador was recalled from
Rome
and the papal nuncio
sent home in disgrace. Relations between Portugal and Rome
were broken off until 1770.
France
The
suppression of the Jesuits in France began in the French island
colony of Martinique
, where the Society of Jesus had a major commercial
stake. They did not and could not engage in trade, buying
and selling to make a profit, any more than any other religious
order could do, but their large mission plantations included large
local populations that worked under the usual conditions of
tropical colonial agriculture of the 18th century, not easily
distinguishable from the
hacienda system.
As the
Catholic Encyclopedia expressed it in 1908, "this
was allowed, partly to provide for the current expenses of the
mission, partly in order to protect the simple, childlike natives
from the common plague of dishonest intermediaries."
Father
Antoine La Vallette,
Superior of the Martinique missions, managed these transactions
with great success, and like secular proprietors of plantations he
needed to borrow money to expand the large undeveloped resources of
the colony. But on the
outbreak of war
with England, ships carrying goods of an estimated value of
2,000,000
livres were captured, and La Vallette suddenly
went bankrupt for a very large sum.
His creditors turned to the Order's
Procurator at Paris
to demand
payment, but the Procurator refused responsibility for the debts of
an independent mission— though he offered to negotiate for a
settlement. The creditors went to the courts, and an order
was made in 1760, obliging the Society to pay, and giving leave to
distrain in the case of non-payment.
The Fathers, on the advice of their lawyers, appealed to the
Parlement of Paris. This turned
out to be an imprudent step. For not only did the Parlement support
the lower court, May 8, 1761, but having once gotten the case into
its hands, the Jesuits' enemies in that assembly determined to
strike a blow at the Order.
Enemies of every sort combined. The
Jansenists were numerous among the enemies of the
orthodox party.
The Sorbonne
joined the Gallican,
the Philosophes, and the
Encyclopédistes. Louis XV was weak; his wife and children
were in favor of the Jesuits; his able first minister, the
Duc de Choiseul,
played into the hands of the Parlement, and the royal mistress,
Madame de Pompadour, to whom the
Jesuits had refused absolution, for she was living in sin with the
King of France, was a determined opponent. The determination of the
Parlement of Paris in time bore down all opposition.
The attack on the Jesuits was opened by the Jansenist sympathizer,
the
Abbé Chauvelin, April 17,
1762, who denounced the Constitution of the Jesuits, which was
publicly examined and exposed in a hostile press. The
Parlement issued its
Extraits des
assertions assembled from passages from Jesuit theologians and
canonists, in which they were alleged to teach every sort of
immorality and error. On August 6, 1762, the final
arrêt
was issued condemning the Society to extinction, but the king's
intervention brought eight months' delay and meantime a compromise
was suggested by the Court. If the French Jesuits would separate
from the order, under a French vicar, with French customs, as with
the
Gallican church, the Crown would
still protect them. In spite of the dangers of refusal the Jesuits
would not consent. On April 1, 1763 the colleges were closed, and
by a further
arrêt of
March 9,
1764, the Jesuits were required to renounce their vows under pain
of banishment.
At the end of November 1764, the king signed
an edict dissolving the Society throughout his dominions, for they
were still protected by some provincial parlements, as in Franche-Comté
, Alsace
, and
Artois
. But
in the draft of the edict, he canceled numerous clauses that
implied that the Society was guilty, and writing to Choiseul, he
concluded "If I adopt the advice of others for the peace of my
realm, you must make the changes I propose, or I will do nothing. I
say no more, lest I should say too much."
Spain and Naples
The Suppression in Spain and in the Spanish colonies, and in its
dependency, the
Kingdom of Naples,
was carried through in secrecy, and the ministers of
Charles III kept their deliberations to
themselves, as did the king who acted upon "urgent, just, and
necessary reasons, which I reserve in my royal mind;".
The correspondence of
Bernardo Tanucci, the anti-clerical
minister of Charles III in Naples
contain all
the ideas which from time to time guided Spanish policy.
Charles conducted his government through
Count Aranda, a
reader of
Voltaire, and other liberals. At
a council meeting of January 29, 1767, the expulsion of the Society
of Jesus was settled. Secret orders, which were to be opened at
midnight between the first and second of April, 1767, were sent to
the magistrates of every town where a Jesuit resided. The plan
worked smoothly.
That morning, 6000 Jesuits were marching
like convicts to the coast, where they were deported, first to the
Papal
States
, and ultimately to Corsica
, which was a dependency of Genoa
. Due
to the isolation of the
Spanish Missions of
California, the decree for expulsion did not arrive in June of
1767, as in the rest of
New Spain, but was
delayed until the new governor,
Portolà, arrived with the news on
November 30.
Jesuits from the
fourteen operating missions at the moment reunited in Loreto
, whence they left for exile on February 3,
1768. It took until 1768 for the Royal order to
reach the Jesuit missions in the south of the Philippines
, but by the end of the year, the Jesuits had been
dispossessed throughout the Spanish dominions.
Tanucci pursued a similar policy in
Bourbon Naples. On
November 3 the Jesuits, without a trial or even
an accusation, were simply marched across the frontier into the
Papal States, and threatened with death if they returned.
The change in the Spanish colonies in the New World was
particularly great, as the far-flung settlements were often
dominated by missions. Almost overnight in the mission towns of
Sonora and Arizona, the "black robes" (as the Jesuits were often
known) disappeared and the "gray robes" (
Franciscans) replaced them .
Parma
The independent
Duchy of Parma was
the smallest Bourbon court, where Louis XV's favorite daughter was
Duchess. So aggressive in its anti-clericalism was the Parmesan
reaction to the news of the expulsion of the Jesuits from Naples,
that Clement XIII addressed to it (January 30, 1768) a public
warning, threatening the Duchy with ecclesiastical censures, not a
tactful move. At this all the Bourbon courts turned in fury against
the
Holy See, and demanded the entire
dissolution of the Jesuits. As a preliminary, Parma at once drove
the Jesuits out of its territories, confiscating all their
possessions.
Papal defender, Clement XIII
See
Pope Clement XIII
The Jesuits Return
As the
Napoleonic Wars were
approaching their end in
1814, the old
political order of
Europe was to a
considerable extent restored at the
Congress of Vienna after years of
fighting and revolution, during which the Church had been
persecuted as an agent of the old order and abused under the rule
of
Napoleon. With the political climate
of Europe more stable and the powerful monarchs who had called for
the suppression of the Society no longer in power,
Pope Pius VII issued an order restoring the
Society of Jesus in the Catholic countries of Europe. For its part,
the Society of Jesus made the decision at the first General
Congregation held after the restoration to keep the organization of
the Society the way that it had been before the suppression was
ordered in
1773.
References
- See e.g.: Richard F. Pourade, The History of San Diego, Chap. 6: Padres
Lead the Way
External links