- Jan Puzyna de Kosielsko
Prince Jan Maurycy Paweł Cardinal Puzyna de Kosielsko (
13 September 1842 in Gwoździec, Galicia –8 September 1911 in Kraków, Poland) was a Roman Catholicauxiliary bishop ofLwów (now Lviv,Ukraine ) from 1886 to 1895, and the bishop of Kraków from 1895 until his death in 1911. Receiving the red hat in 1901, he was known for his conservative views andauthoritarianism .Puzyna was born in 1842 in Galicia, a historial
Europe an region that included parts ofPoland andUkraine . Ordained a priest on1 December 1878 , he was raised toauxiliary bishop of Lwów, present-dayLviv , andtitular bishop of Memphis on26 February 1886 . He was consecrated a bishop on25 March of that same year byMieczysław Halka Ledóchowski , with Archbishop Franziskus von Schönborn ofPrague and Archbishop Josyf Sembratowicz of Ukrainian rite Lviv. On15 April 1901 , Puzyna was created a cardinal, with the title of "Ss. Vitale, Valeria, Gervasio e Protasio " byPope Leo XIII .During the conclave of 1903 he presented an exclusive
veto against the election of Mariano Cardinal Rampolla del Tindaro. Puzyna wanted to avoid the election of Rampolla, who was sympathetic toRussia andGermany . Among other things, Rampolla sought to curry favor with Russia by abolishing the Polish language and instituting Russian in the Russian partition's Catholic churches. Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria, too, did not wish to see Rampolla elected to the Chair of Peter. He held a grudge against Rampolla for opposing a properburial for his son Rudolf upon Rudolf's suicide. Rampolla also openly supported political forces inAustria that were hostile to the Emperor.infobox cardinalstyles
cardinal name=Jan Cardinal Puzyna de Kosielsko
dipstyle=His Eminence
offstyle=Your Eminence
See=Krakow|On his way to the conclave, Puzyna met in Vienna with the Emperor and proposed that the Emperor present his veto against Cardinal Rampolla. The Emperor subscribed to the idea, and Puzyna presented the veto on the third day of the conclave. It was the last time such a veto was used. The veto, that was already not recognized by the Church's law and as such non-binding, still carried much political weight, as the cardinals feared opposing the manifest will of one of the Christianmonarch s. The civil veto was abolished by the newly electedPope Pius X , who imposed the penalty ofexcommunication upon anyone that would dare to introduce a veto or otherwise interfere in the election of the Roman Pontiff. Pope Pius X further decreed that all cardinals should take anoath upon the beginning of the conclave, promising not to aid any civil power in an attempt to influence the election of the pope.See also
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Papal conclave, 1903 Related article
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List of Roman Catholic bishops of Kraków
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