Chapter II
The Universal Scope of the Allocutions
to the Roman Patriciate and Nobility
The Situation of the Italian Nobility
in the Pontificate of Pius XII
1. Why Focus Specifically
on the Italian Nobility?
In 1947 the constitution
of the Italian Republic abolished all titles of nobility.1
The last blow was thus struck against the juridical
status of an age-old class—which lives on today as
a social reality—and a problem, complex in all its
aspects, was created.
Complexity was already perceptible in
the antecedents to the issue. Contrary to what occurs in
other European countries—France and Portugal, for
example—the makeup of the Italian nobility is highly
heterogeneous. Before the political unification of the Italian
peninsula in the nineteenth century, the various sovereigns
who ruled over different parts of the Italian territory
all bestowed titles of nobility. This holds true for the
emperors of the Holy Roman Empire; the kings of Spain, of
the Two Sicilies, and of Sardinia; the grand-dukes of Tuscany;
the dukes of Parma; and still others, including the patriciates
of cities such as Florence, Genoa, and Venice. It is principally
true—and this is of the utmost interest for the present
study—of the Popes. The Popes were temporal sovereigns
of the relatively extensive Papal States. They also granted
titles of nobility and continued to do so even after the
de facto extinction of their temporal sovereignty over these
states.
In 1870, when the unification of Italy
was consummated with the occupation of Rome by Piedmontese
troops, the House of Savoy attempted to amalgamate these
different nobilities.
The project failed both politically and
juridically. Many noble families remained faithful to the
dethroned dynasties from which they had received their titles.
Particularly, a considerable part of the Roman aristocracy,
maintaining tradition, continued to figure officially in
Vatican solemnities. They refused to recognize Rome's annexation
to Italy, rejected any rapprochement with the Quirinal,
and closed their salons as a sign of protest. To this mourning
nobility was given the name "Black Nobility."
Nevertheless, the amalgamation advanced
in no small scale in the social sphere through marriages,
social relations, and the like. As a result, the Italian
aristocracy in our day constitutes a whole, at least from
many points of view.
Article 42 of the 1929 Lateran Treaty,
however, assured the Roman nobility a special status, since
it recognized the Pope's right to grant new titles and accepted
those granted previously by the Holy See.2
Thus the Italian and Roman nobilities, by then already at
peace, continued to exist legally side by side.
The Concordat of 1985 between the Holy
See and the Italian Republic makes no mention to this matter.
* * *
The situation of the Italian nobility—and
of the European nobility in general—did not cease
to be complex.
In the Middle Ages, the nobility had constituted
a social class with specific functions within the State,
which entailed certain honors and corresponding obligations.
During modern times this situation had
gradually lost its stability, prominence, and brilliance,
so that even before the Revolution of 1789, the distinction
between the nobility and the people was considerably less
marked than in the Middle Ages.
Throughout the egalitarian revolutions
of the nineteenth century, the position of the nobility
suffered successive mutilations of such extent that its
political power in the Italian monarchy at the end of World
War II survived solely as a prestigious tradition, which
was seen, incidentally, with respect and affection by most
of society. The republican constitution attempted to deal
the final blow to the last vestiges of this tradition.3
As the aristocracy's political power declined,
its social and economic standing followed the same trend,
albeit more slowly. At the turn of the century, the nobles
were still at the apex of the social structure, due to their
rural and urban properties; their castles, palaces, and
artistic treasures; the social renown of their names and
titles; and to the excellent moral and cultural values of
their traditional household environments, manners, lifestyle,
and so on.
The crises resulting from World War I
brought some changes to this picture. They deprived part
of the noble families of their means of livelihood and forced
many of their members to secure subsistence through the
exercise of professions at variance, even when honest and
worthy, with the psychology, customs, and social prestige
of their class.
On the other hand, contemporary society,
increasingly shaped by finance and technology, produced
new relations and situations as well as new centers of social
influence that were usually alien to the aristocracy's traditional
surroundings. Thus, a whole new order of things arose alongside
the surviving old one, further diminishing the nobility's
social importance.
Finally, to all this was added an important
ideological factor, also detrimental to the nobility. The
worship of technological progress4
and the equality proclaimed by the Revolution of 1789 tended
to create an atmosphere of hatred, prejudice, defamation,
and sarcasm against the nobility, which is founded upon
tradition and transmitted in a way that egalitarian demagoguery
most hates: by blood and cradle.
World War II brought additional and more
extensive economic ruin to many noble families, worsening
yet further the multiple problems the aristocracy had to
face. In this way, the crisis of a great social class became
acute and firmly entrenched. It was with this picture before
him that Pius XII addressed the current situation of the
Italian nobility in his allocutions to the Roman Patriciate
and Nobility, which had obvious relevance for all the European
nobility.
2. Pius XII and
the Roman Nobility
This situation, and particularly
the way it affected the Roman Nobility, was known to Pius
XII in all its details.
He belonged to a noble family, whose sphere
of relations was naturally among the nobility. In 1929,
one prominent member of his family was graced with the title
of marquis; and the Pope's nephews, Don Carlo Maria, Don
Marcantonio, and Don Giulio Pacelli, each received the hereditary
title of prince from King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy.5
There was something imponderable in that
Pope which evoked nobility: his tall, slim bearing, his
way of walking, his gestures, even his hands. This Pontiff,
so universal in spirit and so friendly to the lowly and
poor, was also very Roman and had his attention, consideration,
and affection also turned toward the Roman Nobility.
In the Roman Patriciate and Nobility
We see and love an array of sons and daughters whose merit
and bond and hereditary loyalty to the Church and the
Roman Pontiff, whose love for the Vicar of Christ arises
from the deep root of faith and does not diminish with
the passing of the years and the vicissitudes of the ages
and of men. In your midst We feel more Roman by custom,
by the air we have breathed and still breathe, by the
very sky, the very sun, the very banks of the Tiber on
which Our cradle was laid, by that soil that is sacred
down to the remotest passages of its viscera, whence Rome
draws for her children auspices of an eternity in Heaven.6
3. The Universal
Scope of the Allocutions of Pius XII to the Roman Patriciate
and Nobility
Having thus enunciated the theme, it may
seem at first glance that the allocutions to the Roman Patriciate
and Nobility are of interest to Italy alone.
In reality, the crisis undermining the
Italian nobility also affects, mutatis mutandis,
all the countries with a monarchical and aristocratic past.
It also affects those countries presently living under monarchical
regimes whose respective nobilities find themselves in a
situation analogous to that in Italy before the fall of
the Savoy dynasty in 1946.
Even in countries with no monarchical
past, aristocracies were constituted by the natural course
of events, in fact if not in law.7
In these countries, too, the wave of demagogic egalitarianism
born of the 1789 Revolution and brought to its height by
communism, created in certain environments an atmosphere
of resentment and misunderstanding in relation to the traditional
elites.
The allocutions of His Holiness Pope Pius
XII thus have a universal scope.
This scope is enhanced by the fact that,
in his analysis of the Italian situation, the Pope rises
to high doctrinal considerations and, therefore, reaches
a perennial and universal dimension. An example of this
is his allocution of December 26, 1941, to the Pontifical
Noble Guard. From considerations about the nobility, Pius
XII ascends to the highest philosophical and religious reflections:
Yes, faith renders your rank more noble
still, for all nobility comes from God, the noblest Being
and source of all perfection. Everything in Him is nobility
of being. When Moses, sent to deliver the people of Israel
from Pharaoh's yoke, asked God atop Mount Horeb what should
be the name whereby He would be made manifest to the people,
the Lord replied to him: "I am Who am: Ego sum
qui sum. Thus shalt thou say to the children of Israel:
He Who is—Qui est, hath sent me to you"
(Exod. 3:14). What, therefore, is nobility? "All
nobility of any thing," teaches the Angelic Doctor
Saint Thomas Aquinas, "appertains to it in accordance
with its being; indeed the nobility that man gains from
wisdom would be nothing if through such wisdom he were
not made wise; and so it is with the other perfections
as well. Therefore the measure of a thing's nobility corresponds
to the measure in which it possesses being, inasmuch as
a thing is said to be more or less noble according to
whether its being is restricted to a particularly greater
or lesser degree of nobility.... Now God, who is His being,
possesses being in accordance with all the virtue of being
itself; thus He cannot lack any nobility that belongs
to any thing" (Summa Contra Gentiles, 1,
I, q. 28).
You too have being from God; He it was
who made you, and not you yourselves—"Ipse
fecit nos, et non ipsi nos" (Ps. 99:3). He gave
you nobility of blood, nobility of valor, nobility of
virtue, nobility of faith and Christian grace. Your nobility
of blood you place at the service of the Church and employ
in the defense of Saint Peter's Successor; it is a nobility
of good works by your forebears, which will ennoble you
as well if day by day you take care to add to it the nobility
of virtue.... Indeed nobility joined with virtue shines
so worthy of praise that the light of virtue often eclipses
the glimmer of nobility; and oftentimes in the annals
and halls of the great families, the name of virtue alone
remains the sole nobility, as even the pagan Juvenal did
not hesitate to assert (Satyr. VIII, 19-20):
"Tota licet veteres exornent undique cerae atria,
nobilitas sola est atque unica virtus" [Even
though old wax figures adorn the palaces of the great
families on all sides, their only and exclusive nobility
is virtue].8
1 This
chapter, dealing particularly with the Italian nobility,
is necessary to understand the allocutions of Pius XII commented
herein. Still, these allocutions will also interest the
aristocracies worldwide, as we have emphasized and shall
reaffirm (Chapter
I, 2, and Chapter
II, 3).
Throughout this work, the author
has in mind, in a general way, the nobility and analogous
traditional elites of Europe and the Americas. Naturally,
he illustrates or documents his assertions with historical
examples. Regarding the European nobility, these examples
refer more often than not to the nobilities of France, Spain,
and Portugal, or—inevitably—to the Roman Nobility.
To give examples of every European nobility would greatly
overburden the present work. This would be the case even
if the author were to limit himself to adding but four nobilities—those
of Italy, Austria, Germany, and England—that played
roles of primordial importance in European history and culture.
Indeed, the admirable plurality of aspects of the European
nobilities would demand a special edition of this book for
each, containing illustrative examples of their respective
origins, development, and decadence. The author may yet
undertake this work, if his duties as president of the National
Council of the Brazilian Society for the Defense of Tradition,
Family and Property (TFP) allow the necessary respite.
2 The
Treaty of February 11, 1929, specified:
Art. 42 - "Italy will admit,
by Royal Decree, the recognition of nobiliary titles conferred
by the Supreme Pontiffs, including those granted after 1870,
and those to be conferred in the future."
The "fee" referred to
in this paragraph of the treaty was a symbolic sum that
the Italian state required from the nobles of pre-unification
states in order for them to obtain recognition of their
titles and of their filiation with the nobility. The exemption
from such a fee, in certain cases, was the only and very
reduced tributary privilege granted the pontifical nobles
by the treaty.
3 To help
the study of the pontifical allocutions herein commented,
addressed to the Roman Patriciate and Nobility and, in some
way, to the Italian nobility at large, it is useful to say
something about the nobility's status in the successive
constitutions of unified Italy, both monarchical and republican.
The Albertine Statute, in force
until 1947, was the constitution of the kingdom of Sardinia
promulgated on March 4, 1848, by King Charles Albert. This
statute was successively enforced in all the states annexed
by that kingdom and was later adopted as the constitution
of unified Italy. Regarding titles of nobility, it established:
Art. 79 - "The titles of nobility
of those who have a right to them are hereby upheld. The
King may confer new titles."
Art. 80 - "No one may receive
decorations, titles, or pensions from a foreign power without
the authorization of the king" (Statuto del Regno,
annotated by Carlo Gallini [Turin: Unione Tipografico Editrice,
1878], p. 102).
The Italian Constitution of 1947,
in turn, establishes in its Transitional and Final Provisions:
Art. 14 - "Titles of nobility
are not recognized."
The "predicate" of the
title is made up by the name of the old territory appended
to the family name (as, for example, Prince Colonna di Paliano).
The constitution of 1947 authorizes this compound name to
appear in documents as long as it predates fascism.
As far as the author knows, the College
of Heraldry of the monarchical era was a specific tribunal
for cases of disputed titles, coats of arms, and the like.
It has been replaced today by the Italian Nobility Corps,
which, without legal force but with great moral and historical
authority, has an advisory panel for the admission of members
to entities such as the Knights of Malta, the Circolo
della Caccia (the Hunting Society), the Circolo
degli Scacchi (the Chess Society), and so on.
No form of political or tax privilege
for nobles is recognized, either by the old or the new Italian
constitutions since the Albertine Statute recognized the
nobility only as a mere reminiscence of the past.
4 The
expression may appear a bit exaggerated to some readers.
They will find it useful to consider the comments of Pius
XII regarding this in his 1953 Christmas radio address cited
in Chapter V,
3 c.
5 Cf.
Libro d'oro della nobilt… Italiana, 19th
ed. (Rome: Collegio Araldico, 1986-1989), Vol. 20.
6 RPN
1941, p. 363.
7 See
Chapter V, 1
8 PNG
1941, 20pp. 337-338.
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