- Source: Order of Pope Pius IX
The Order of Pope Pius IX (Italian: Ordine di Pio IX), also referred as the Pian Order (Italian: Ordine Piano, pronounced [piˈaːno]), is a papal order of knighthood originally founded by Pope Pius IV in 1560. Currently, it is the highest honor conferred by the Holy See (being the Order of Christ and the Order of the Golden Spur currently dormant). The awarding of the order fell into disuse and was re-instituted by Pope Pius IX as a continuation on 17 June 1847.
The highest rank awarded by the Pope is the Collar of the Order, usually to Catholic heads of state on the occasion of official visits to the Holy See. The Grand Cross is the highest Papal award given to lay men and women, ordinarily given to resident Ambassadors accredited to the Holy See after two years in post and rarely to exceptional Catholics in the wider world for particular services, mainly in the international field and for outstanding deeds for Church and society.
The rank of Knight is almost never awarded, and when it happens, it is given in recognition of high-profile services rendered to the Holy See or directly to the person of the Pontiff, by Catholic faithful of distinguished status, almost always belonging to ancient European noble families.
The other two ranks (Commander and Commander with Star) are granted sparingly to lay Catholics, usually in diplomatic roles, for extraordinary merit or deeds for the Church and society. The order is awarded to Catholics and, on occasion and only for diplomatic reasons, to non-Catholics and non-Christians as well.
History of the Order
The Order was founded on 17 June 1847, by Pope Pius IX with the decree Romanis Pontificibus, placing it as the continuation of the ancient order established by Pope Pius IV with the bull Pii patris amplissimi on March 1559. These noble knights formed the lay court of the Roman Pontiff, being defined participants, since they "participated" in the life of the Pontiff, offering him an escort and often residing in the Apostolic Palace; they often shared the table with the Pontiff and accompanied him during his daily tasks.
The subsequent decree Cum Hominum Mentes of 17 June 1849, confirmed the ancient privilege of personal nobility through membership in the Pian Order, thus creating it the only ennobler of the Holy Apostolic See. With another decree dated 11 November 1856, the Roman Pontiff himself divided the Order into three classes: Knight Grand Cross, Commander, and Knight.
Pope Pius X reformed the Pontifical orders with the decree Multum ad excitandos of 7 February 1905, the new class of Commander with star (correspondent to the class of Grand Officer) was created.
The Pian Order was then reformed again by Pope Pius XII, with a Bull dated 11 November 1939, which suppressed the privilege of nobility. From the historical point of view, the Knighthood of the Grand Cross of the Pian Order has held the role that was of the Militia Aurata before the reform of Gregory XVI, namely that of title of rank and ennobling of the Holy See from the sixteenth century to 1841.
Order of Classes
The Order comprises five classes:
Knight with the Collar (GCCPO): who wear a gold chain around their shoulders which is decorated with the papal tiara and two doves, and on the breast a large star. It is the highest active papal decoration, and is reserved for heads of state.
Knight/Dame Grand Cross (GCPO): who wear a wide dark blue silk ribbon (sash) bordered with red which extends saltire-wise from the left shoulder to the right side where the insignia of the order is suspended by a rosette, and on the breast a large diamond-studded star. It is commonly awarded to the ambassadors accredited to the Holy See.
Knight/Dame Commander with Star (KC*PO/DC*PO): who in addition to the badge wear a star of smaller design than that of Knights of the Grand Cross on the breast.
Knight/Dame Commander (KCPO/DCPO): who wear the decoration at the neck.
Knight/Dame (KPO/DPO): who wear the star on the left breast.
Insignia and uniform
The decoration is a regular octagram made of blue enamel, the spaces between the rays filled with gold flames. On the white medallion in the center the name of the founder surrounded by the words Virtuti et Merito ("Virtue and Merit") is engraved. The reverse side is the same save for the substitution of Anno 1847 for Pius IX. The rarely worn official uniform consists of an elaborately embroidered dark blue evening coat with golden epaulettes, white trousers, and a white-plumed bicorne.
Knights with the Collar wear a gold decorated chain around the neck, and a star on the left side of the breast; Knights Grand Cross wear a sash and a star on the left side of the breast; Commanders wear a cross around the neck; and Knights wear a smaller cross on the left breast of the uniform:
Notable members
= Royal houses and nobility
=Juan Carlos I, former King of Spain, first and honorary canon of the Basilica of Saint Mary Major, with Collar
Fra' Andrew Bertie, 78th Prince and Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, with Collar
Henri, Grand Duke of Luxembourg, with Collar
Albert II, King of the Belgians, with Collar
Carl XVI Gustaf, King of Sweden, with Collar
Franz Joseph II, Prince of Liechtenstein, with Collar
Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia
Mwambutsa IV, King of Burundi
Bhumibol Adulyadej, King of Thailand, with Collar
Gabriel García Moreno y Morán de Butrón, Duke of the Holy Faith (pontifical), former President of Ecuador, with Collar
Miles Fitzalan-Howard, 17th Duke of Norfolk, Earl Marshal, Premier Duke in the Peerage of England
Herman, Count Van Rompuy, former prime minister of Belgium
Charles de Broqueville, 1st Comte de Broqueville, former prime minister of Belgium.
Paul Joseph, Comte de Smet de Naeyer, former prime minister of Belgium
Charles, Count Woeste, Belgian Minister
= Heads of State and Politicians
=Emir Abdelkader, Algerian leader insurgent against French colonial rule.
Sergio Mattarella, current President of Italy
Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa, current President of Portugal
Nicos Anastasiades, former President of Cyprus
Giorgio Napolitano, former President of Italy
Carlo Azeglio Ciampi, former President of Italy
Oscar Luigi Scalfaro, former President of Italy
Francesco Cossiga, former President of Italy
Jacques Chirac, former President of France
Marco Fidel Suárez, former President of Colombia
Konstantinos Stephanopoulos, former President of Greece
Diosdado Macapagal, former President of the Philippines
Juscelino Kubitschek, former President of Brazil
Carlos Menem, former President of Argentina
Demetris Christofias, former President of Cyprus
Urho Kekkonen, former President of Finland
Saitō Makoto, former Prime Minister of Japan
Władysław Grabski, former Prime Minister of Poland
George Papandreou, former Prime Minister of Greece
Franz Von Papen, former Vice-Chancellor of Germany
Juan Vicente Gómez, former President of Venezuela
Sukarno, former President of Indonesia
W.T. Cosgrave, former President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State
Sean T. O'Kelly, former President of Ireland
Sarit Thanarat, former Prime Minister of Thailand
Nikol Pashinyan, current Prime Minister of Armenia
Ivo Miro Jović, former member of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Giorgio Borg Olivier, former Prime Minister of Malta
Constantin Isopescu-Grecul, Romanian politician, jurist and university professor.
= Diplomats to the Holy See
=Callista Gingrich, former United States Ambassador to the Holy See
Mercedes Arrastia Tuason, former Philippine Ambassador to the Holy See
William A. Wilson, former United States Ambassador to the Holy See
Francis Joseph Shakespeare, former United States Ambassador to the Holy See
Thomas Patrick Melady, former United States Ambassador to the Holy See
Raymond Flynn, former mayor of Boston, Massachusetts, former Ambassador to the Holy See
Lindy Boggs, former Member of Congress, former Ambassador to the Holy See
Khétévane Bagration de Moukhrani, former Georgian Ambassador to the Holy See
Tim Fischer, former Australian Deputy Prime Minister and former Australian Ambassador to the Holy See
= Other notable members
=Jean-Pierre Mazery, Grand Chancellor of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta
Virgil C. Dechant, former vice-president for the Vatican Bank & Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus
See also
Papal Orders of Knighthood
References
External links
Association of Papal Orders in Great Britain
Association of Papal Orders in Great Britain of Pius IX, Saint Gregory and Saint Sylvester: The Pontifical Order of Pius IX
The Knights of Christ's Mercy: Order of Pius IX
National Association of Papal Honorees: Roll of US Members of the Order of Pius IX
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Bhumibol Adulyadej
- Djatikoesoemo
- Silvia dari Swedia
- Soekarno
- Sergio Mattarella
- Carl XVI Gustaf dari Swedia
- Daftar gelar dan tanda Kehormatan Haile Selassie
- Paul Biya
- Paus Benediktus XV
- Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa
- Order of Pope Pius IX
- Pope Pius IX and France
- Archduke Karl Ludwig of Austria
- Charlotte, Grand Duchess of Luxembourg
- Myron Charles Taylor
- Maximilian I of Mexico
- Napoleon III
- KPO
- Franz Joseph II, Prince of Liechtenstein
- Theology of Pope Pius IX