- Ernesto Pacelli
Ernesto Pacelli (died June 13, 1925) ["New York Times". "Ernesto Pacelli dies."
June 14 ,1925 . p. 25.] was a financial adviser toPope Leo XIII ,Pope Pius X , andPope Benedict XV and the founder and president of theBanco di Roma fromMarch 9 ,1880 until 1916. Pacelli also served as a unofficial link between the Vatican and the Italian government. Papal historianJohn Pollard calls him the "first of the great laymen to be associated with the finances of theHoly See ." [Pollard, 2005, p. 69.]His cousin, Eugenio Pacelli, became
Pope Pius XII .Career
Pacelli's involvement in the Vatican began when he secured financial compensation for
Leo XIII from the Italian government in the aftermath of the collapse of theBanco Romano , the former bank of thePapal States . [Lai, 1979, p. 150-151.]Pacelli discretely supplied financial advice and loans, and jobs to relatives of several prominent members of the
Roman Curia , notablyPietro Gasparri . Lai speculates that this may have contributed to a perception of Gasparri as nepotistic in the 1922 papal conclave. [Lai, 1979, p. 162-163.]Banco di Roma
Due to the legal uncertainty of papal assets during the period of the
Roman Question , several papal properties and stocks were nominally held by Pacelli's name, in no small part because of his position in the Banco di Roma. [Pollard, 2005, p. 72.]At the time of the election of
Pope Benedict XV in 1914, theHoly See owned approximately a fourth of the Banco di Roma. Following massive public withdrawals from the bank in early 1915, under the spectre ofWorld War I , Benedict XV arranged a salvage package to the tune of ₤ 9 million—guaranteed by the Vatican's shares in the bank—fromCredito Nazionale , a subset of theCatholic Banking Federation in March 1915. [De Rosa, p. 2.] This action further aggravated Italian police informants within the Vatican, who in November 1915 began reporting that Benedict XV planned to transform the bank into an essentially Catholic "confessional" institution, [ACS, Ministero del Interno (MdI), DGPS, 1917, b. 113, H4, Notizie vaticane, report ofJune 12 ,1917 .] and Pacelli was replaced byCarlo Santucci in 1916 as president of the Banco di Roma.By April 1916, the bank's confidence crisis worsened, and Benedict XV authorized Pacelli, who was deeply indebted to the bank, to hand over 425,000 shares to the bank (purchased for ₤42.5 million but worth less than ₤15 million at the time), which had been held by Pacelli on behalf of the
Administration of the Assets of the Holy See (ABSS); Gasparri then authorized Pacelli to hand over another 90,000 shares in return for the proceeds from the sale of Pacelli's villa. [De Rosa, 1984, p. 101.] Following these handovers, the Vatican no longer controlled any significant shares in the Banco di Roma, although it did still retain deposits.Catholic media
In September 1907, Pacelli set up—through the Banco di Roma—the
Società Editrice Romana (SER) with ₤150,000 of the bank's capital to bail out the Catholic daily "Il Corriere d'Italia ". SER would later bail out other Catholic dailies such as "L'Avvenire d'Italia " inBologna , "L'Italia " inMilan , "Il Momento " inTurin , "Il Messaggero Toscano " inPisa , and "La Sicilia Cattolica " inPalermo . [Lai, 1979, p. 245.]In November 1907, Pacelli founded
Società Tipografica Editrice Romama , also to provide financial assistance to Catholic presses, but with ₤100,000 of the company's ₤150,000 in start-up capital coming directly from the ABSS. [Lai, 1979, p. 246.]Quotes
References
*it_icon De Rosa, G. (1984). "Storia del Banco di Roma, III".
*it_icon Lai, B. (1979). "Finanze e finanzieri vaticani tra l'Ottocento e il Novecento da Pio IX a Benedetto XV".
*Pollard, John F. (2005). "Money and the Rise of the Modern Papacy: Financing the Vatican, 1850–1950". Cambridge University Press.Notes
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