Cardinals created by Pius X
Pope Pius X created 50 cardinals in seven consistories. Twenty of them were Italians. He created 17 cardinals at four consistories in four years from 1903 to 1907 and then, after several postponements and allowing the membership of the College of Cardinals to fall to 47, created 19 cardinals in 1911, announcing 18 and reserving the name of one, the largest number of cardinals at a single consistory in a century.
Those he made cardinals included Giacomo della Chiesa, who succeeded him as Pope Benedict XV in 1914, [Joaquim Joaquim Arcoverde de Albuquerque Cavalcanti|Arcoverde de Albuquerque Cavalcanti|Arcoverde], the first from Brazil and the first born in Latin America, and van Rossum, the first from the Netherlands in centuries. He created just one cardinal in pectore.
9 November 1903
Pope Pius created two cardinals at a secret consistory on 9 November 1903, an Italian and a Spaniard. They and three cardinals created at Pope Leo XIII's last consistory the previous June received their red galeri and their titular church assignments at a public consistory on 12 November. Press accounts differ dramatically in their accounts of Pius' first public consistory. According to The Tablet, Pius used the occasion to launch his campaign to eliminate applause from religious celebrations, Pius was not carried on the sedia gestatoria as was traditional. He arrived on foot wearing a cope and mitre at the end of the procession of prelates, "almost hidden behind the double line of Palatine Guards through which he passed". The New York Times, on the other hand, described the "perfect storm of applause" that greeted the pope "borne high in the sedia gestatoria by eight scarlet-clad sediari, flanked by the great feather fans, giving a mediaeval tone to the scene".| Name | Title when named cardinal | Country | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Rafael Merry del Val | Pro-Secretary of State of Apostolic Secretariat | |187411 December 1905Pius created four cardinals on 11 December 1905, each one from Brazil, Hungary, Italy, and Spain. Three belonged to the order of cardinal priests and one to the order of cardinal deacons. Afterwards, Pius gave Arcoverde and Cagiano de Azevedo their cardinal's rings. Customarily, only new cardinals residents in Rome were on hand to participate in the public consistory following immediately upon the secret consistory where they were created cardinals. The presence of Arcoverde is an exception. He was the first Brazilian cardinal and the first cardinal born in Latin America.
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|1874
Austria-Hungary
Italy|1861