List of popes by country

This page is a list of popes by country of origin. They are listed in chronological order within each section.

Coat of Arms of the Holy See.

As the office of pope has existed for almost two millennia, many of the countries of origin of popes no longer exist, and so they are grouped under their modern equivalents.

Overview edit

There have been 266 popes:

Statistics table edit

Nationality Number of popes
Africa Province (Roman Empire) 3
Argentina 1
Asia Minor 2
Croatia (Kingdom of the Lombards)
Dalmatia
2
England 1
Kingdom of France (medieval)
French part of Holy Roman Empire
16
German part of Holy Roman Empire
Modern Germany
6
Roman Greece
Byzantine Greece
4
Italian Peninsula (see table below) 217
Roman Galilee
Iudaea Province (Roman Empire)
Byzantine Palestine
3
Dutch part of Holy Roman Empire 1
People's Republic of Poland 1
Lusitania (Roman Empire)
Portugal
2
Roman Syria
Byzantine Syria
5
Spain (Valencia in the Crown of Aragon) 2
Total 266

Popes from the Roman and Byzantine Empire edit

Byzantine Italy edit

Byzantine Sicily edit

Greece edit

Lusitania Province edit

Lusitania corresponds to present-day Portugal.

Roman Africa edit

 
Roman African Pope Miltiades.

These popes are from the Roman province of Africa, which corresponds to the coastal parts of Tunisia, Libya and Algeria.

Roman and Byzantine Syria edit

Roman Dalmatia edit

Dalmatia was at the time part of the Roman and Byzantine Empires. It is now part of the modern Republic of Croatia.

Roman Galilee and Iudaea Province edit

Roman Italy edit

Roman Sardinia edit

Popes by nationality edit

The concept of nationality only arose during the Middle Ages.[citation needed]

Argentina edit

Austria edit

England edit

England is part of the modern United Kingdom.

France edit

French is the most common non-Italian papal ancestry. Seventeen popes have had French ancestry, all in the second half of the medieval era. The seven popes of the Avignon Papacy were French and are bolded. Since the end of the Avignon Papacy, no French person has been elected pope.

Kingdom of France (medieval) edit

 
French Pope Clement V.

Holy Roman Empire edit


Germany edit

Holy Roman Empire edit

Federal Republic of Germany edit

Italian peninsula edit

The Italian Peninsula, from the beginning of the Middle Ages until the proclamation of the Kingdom of Italy, was divided into numerous city-states and other political entities. Among these, the Papal States was the birthplace of most of the popes. Other Italian states where more popes were born were the Republic of Venice, the Kingdom of Naples, the Republic of Genoa, the Duchy of Milan and the Florentine Republic and its successor the Grand Duchy of Tuscany.

Ostrogothic Kingdom edit

Papal States edit

Kingdom of Naples edit

Italy in the Holy Roman Empire edit

Republic of Genoa edit

Republic of Venice edit

 
Venetian Pope Clement XIII.

Republic of Florence/Duchy of Florence/Grand Duchy of Tuscany edit

Duchy of Milan edit

Other Italian States edit

Kingdom of Italy (modern) and Italian Republic edit

Netherlands edit

Holy Roman Empire edit

Poland edit

Portugal edit

Spain edit

Valencia edit

The Kingdom of Valencia was then part of the possessions of the Crown of Aragon; it is now part of modern Spain.

Bibliography edit

  • Saints and Sinners, a History of the Popes. Yale University Press. 1997. ISBN 0-300-07332-1.
  • The Incredible Book of Vatican Facts and Papal Curiosities – a treasury of trivia, Gramercy Books, New York, 1998 ISBN 0-517-22083-0

References edit

  1. ^ western Libya, Tunisia, eastern Algeria

External links edit

  1. "Crónica de los Papas": of P.G. Maxwell Stuart,
  2. "Vatican facts": of Nino Lo Bello,
  3. "Saints and Sinners": of historian Eamon Duffy
  4. Liber Pontificalis