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  1. Pope Pius VII (Italian: Pio VII; born Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti; [a] 14 August 1742 – 20 August 1823) was head of the Catholic Church from 14 March 1800 to his death in August 1823. He ruled the Papal States from June 1800 to 17 May 1809 and again from 1814 to his death.

  2. This is an incomplete list of papal bulls, listed by the year in which each was issued. The decrees of some papal bulls were often tied to the circumstances of time and place, and may have been adjusted, attenuated, or abrogated by subsequent popes as situations changed. [1]

    Year
    Bull
    Issuer
    Description
    1113 (February 15)
    Pie Postulatio Voluntatis ("The most ...
    Confirming the establishment and ...
    c. 1120
    Sicut Judaeis ("Thus to the Jews")
    Provides protection for the Jews who ...
    1136 (July 7)
    Ex commisso nobis ("From [the office] ...
    Split Archbishop of Magdeburg from the ...
    1139 (March 29)
    Omne Datum Optimum ("Every perfect ...
    Endorses the Knights Templar.
  3. www.vatican.va › content › pius-viiPius VII - Vatican

    Pius VII. 251st Pope of the Catholic Church.

    • 14,21.III.1800
    • 20.VIII.1823
    • Cesena
    • Barnaba (Gregorio) Chiaramonti
    • Life Before The Papacy.
    • Papal Legacy
    • Quick Facts About Pope Pius VII.
    • Six Interesting Facts About Pope Pius VII.

    Barnaba was the youngest of Count Scipione Chiaramonti’s sons. Due to some extended familial connections through his maternal grandfather, the Marquess Ghini, he was related to Pope Pius VI. Much like his other brothers, he attended Ravenna’s Collegio dei Nobili; unlike his brothers whom joined the Order of Saint Benedict, he chose to join Cesena’s...

    He allegedly performed a miraculous levitation to the altar during the feast of the Assumption in 1811.
    He established a handful of new dioceses along the east coast of the United States, as well as within Cincinnati.
    He commended the American involvement of the First Babary War as having done more work for God than any other Christian power.
    He despised secret organizations like the Freemasons and Carbonari, excommunicating anyone found to have connections to such groups.
    He was born within Cesena, then a city within the Papal States, on August 14th, 1742.
    His full given name was Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti.
    He died on August 20th, 1823.
    While his health hit a steep decline upon hitting the age of 80, a disastrous fall on July 6th of 1823 left him with a fractured hip that he never truly recovered from. Indeed, he was left bound to...
    His papal motto means “Rapacious eagle” in English.
    He spoke English, French, Italian and Latin.
    Due to circumstances regarding Pius VI’s death, it would be six months his papacy began.
    His canonization began in 2007.
  4. Nov 29, 2022 · Napoleon's arrival to power coincided with the election of Pope Pius VII (served 1800-1823). Napoleon desired to establish religious peace and Pius desired to restore the unity of the Church.

  5. PIUS VII, POPE. Pontificate: March 14, 1800, to Aug. 20, 1823; b. Barnaba Chiaramonti, Cesena (Emilia), Italy, Aug. 14, 1742. PREPAPAL CAREER. He was from an old aristocratic family with a tradition of culture. Among his ancestors were the astronomer Scipione, famous for discussing with Galileo the nature of comets; jurists; and physicians of ...

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  7. Born at Cesena in the Pontifical States, 14 August, 1742; elected at Venice 14 March, 1800; died 20 August, 1823. His father was Count Scipione Chiaramonti, and his mother, of the noble house of Ghini, was a lady of rare piety who in 1763 entered a convent of Carmelites at Fano.

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