- Jus
exclusivae (Latin for "right of exclusion";
sometimes called the
papal veto) was the
right claimed by
several Catholic monarchs of
Europe to veto a...
- last man to have his
candidacy for
papal election vetoed through jus
exclusivae by a
Catholic monarch.
Rampolla is in the
episcopal lineage of Pope Francis...
-
appointment during this
period would later result in the ****tive jus
exclusivae, i.e., the
claimed but
invalid right to veto the
selection that Catholic...
- and Pope Pius X's
Commissum Nobis,
which made the
exercise of the jus
exclusivae by any
cardinal punishable by excommunication. It also does not include...
- the
election of
Bishops of Rome, they
could claim the
right (Latin: jus
exclusivae) to veto a
papal candidate (last
exercised in 1903 by His
Imperial and...
-
would last
intermittently until 1887. In 1903,
Franz Joseph's veto of Jus
exclusivae of
Cardinal Mariano Rampolla's
election to the
papacy was transmitted...
-
papal decision. From
about 1600,
certain Catholic monarchs claimed a jus
exclusivae (right of exclusion), i.e. a veto over
papal elections,
exercised through...
-
renunciation Reforms of Pope
Benedict XVI
Historical ****
proxime Jus
exclusivae Papal appointment Aeterni Patris Filius Romano Pontifici eligendo Ingravescentem...
-
Franz Joseph,
Emperor of Austria,
exercised the Emperor's
right of jus
exclusivae, that is, to veto one candidate. At
first there were
objections and some...
-
Emperor Franz Joseph (1848–1916) of Austria-Hungary,
proclaimed a veto (jus
exclusivae)
against Rampolla's election. Many in the
conclave protested, and it was...