Cardinal electors in the 1978 papal conclaves

The papal conclaves of August 1978 and of October 1978 were respectively convened to elect a pope, the leader of the Catholic Church, to succeed Paul VI and John Paul I following their respective deaths on 6 August 1978 and on 28 September 1978. In accordance with the apostolic constitution Romano Pontifici eligendo, which governed the vacancy of the Holy See, only cardinals who had not passed their 80th birthday on the day on which the conclave began (in these cases, cardinals who were born on or after 25 August 1898 for the first conclave, and on or after 14 October 1898 for the second conclave) were eligible to participate.[1] Although not formal requirements, the cardinal electors invariably elected the pope from among their number and did so by secret ballot (Latin: per scrutinium).[1] Due to the brief duration between the conclaves, the respective lists of cardinal electors are nearly identical.

Photograph of Pope John Paul I
Cardinal Albino Luciani was elected Pope John Paul I by the first conclave on 26 August 1978.
Photograph of Pope John Paul II
Cardinal Karol Wojtyła was elected Pope John Paul II by the second conclave on 16 October 1978.

Of the 129 members of the Sacred College of Cardinals at the time of the beginning of the first conclave, there were 114 cardinal electors who were eligible to participate.[a][3] Three cardinal electors did not participate, decreasing the number in attendance to 111.[4] Two cardinals, both cardinal electors, died in the time between the conclaves.[5][6] Of the 126 members of the Sacred College of Cardinals at the time of the beginning of the second conclave, there were 111 cardinal electors who were eligible to participate;[b][7] all of whom were in attendance.[8] The number of votes required to be elected pope with a two-thirds-plus-one supermajority in either conclave was 75.[1]

Of the 112 cardinal electors who attended at least one of the two conclaves, 5 were cardinal bishops, 92 were cardinal priests, and 15 were cardinal deacons; 3 had been created cardinals by Pope Pius XII, 8 by Pope John XXIII, and 101 by Pope Paul VI; 28 worked in the service of the Holy See (such as in the Roman Curia), 77 were in pastoral ministry outside Rome, and 10 had retired.[c] The oldest cardinal elector in the conclaves was Joseph-Marie Trịnh Như Khuê, at the age of 79, and the youngest was Jaime Lachica Sin, at the age of 49–50. Another 15 cardinals were ineligible to participate in either conclave, for reasons of age.[3][7]

The cardinal electors entered the Sistine Chapel to begin the first conclave on 25 August 1978.[9] On 26 August, after four ballots over two days, they elected Cardinal Albino Luciani, Patriarch of Venice, who took the papal name John Paul I.[10] After his death 33 days into his papacy, the cardinal electors again entered the Sistine Chapel to begin the second conclave on 14 October.[11] On 16 October, after eight ballots over three days, they elected Cardinal Karol Wojtyła, Archbishop of Kraków, who took the papal name John Paul II.[12]

Cardinal electors

The Sacred College of Cardinals is divided into three orders – cardinal bishops (CB), cardinal priests (CP) and cardinal deacons (CD) – with formal precedence in that sequence. This was the order in which the cardinal electors entered the conclave, took the oath and cast their ballots.[1][4][8] For cardinal bishops (except the Eastern Catholic patriarchs), the dean is first in precedence, followed by the vice-dean and then by the remainder in order of appointment as cardinal bishops. For cardinal bishops who are Eastern Catholic patriarchs, cardinal priests, and cardinal deacons, precedence is determined by the date of the consistory in which they were created cardinals and then by the order in which they appeared in the official announcement or bulletin.[4][8]

Two of the cardinal electors in the 1978 conclaves were from the Eastern Catholic Churches: Stéphanos I Sidarouss (Coptic) and Joseph Parecattil (Syro-Malabar). In both conclaves, the senior cardinal bishop, the senior cardinal priest, the senior cardinal deacon and the junior cardinal deacon[d] were, respectively, Jean Villot, Giuseppe Siri, Pericle Felici and Mario Luigi Ciappi.[4][8] Villot was also the camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church, in charge of administering the Holy See during its vacancy.[1][13]

The 112 cardinal electors in the table below are those who participated in at least one of the two conclaves. Two cardinals participated in only one: Albino Luciani, elected Pope John Paul I in the first conclave and whose death prompted the second conclave;[14] and John Joseph Wright, who did not participate in the first conclave for health reasons owing to surgery.[15] Another two cardinal electors did not participate in the first conclave; both died before the second conclave began.[5][6] The data below are as of 25 August 1978 or 14 October 1978, the respective dates on which the conclaves began. Age ranges are given for some cardinals in the case of any differences in age as at the beginning of the two conclaves. All cardinals are of the Latin Church unless otherwise stated. Cardinals belonging to institutes of consecrated life or to societies of apostolic life are indicated by the relevant post-nominal letters.

* Elected pope
RankNameCountryBornOrderConsistoryOfficeRef.
1Jean VillotFrance11 October 1905
(age 72–73)
CB22 February 1965
Paul VI
Secretary of State, Camerlengo of the Holy Roman Church and President of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum[e][13]
2Antonio SamorèItaly4 December 1905
(age 72)
CB26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archivist and Librarian of the Holy Roman Church[16]
3Francesco CarpinoItaly18 May 1905
(age 73)
CB26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop emeritus of Palermo[17]
4Sebastiano BaggioItaly16 May 1913
(age 65)
CB28 April 1969
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Bishops[18]
5Stéphanos I Sidarouss CMEgypt22 February 1904
(age 74)
CB22 February 1965
Paul VI
Patriarch of Alexandria
(Coptic Catholic Church)
[19]
6Giuseppe SiriItaly20 May 1906
(age 72)
CP12 January 1953
Pius XII
Archbishop of Genoa[20]
7Stefan WyszyńskiPoland3 August 1901
(age 77)
CP12 January 1953
Pius XII
Archbishop of Gniezno and of Warsaw[21]
8Paul Émile Léger PSSCanada26 April 1904
(age 74)
CP12 January 1953
Pius XII
Archbishop emeritus of Montreal[22]
9José María Bueno y MonrealSpain11 September 1904
(age 73–74)
CP15 December 1958
John XXIII
Archbishop of Seville[23]
10Franz KönigAustria3 August 1905
(age 73)
CP15 December 1958
John XXIII
Archbishop of Vienna and President of the Secretariat for Non-Believers[24]
11Bernardus Johannes AlfrinkNetherlands5 July 1900
(age 78)
CP28 March 1960
John XXIII
Archbishop emeritus of Utrecht[25]
12Laurean RugambwaTanzania12 July 1912
(age 66)
CP28 March 1960
John XXIII
Archbishop of Dar-es-Salaam[26]
13José Humberto Quintero ParraVenezuela22 September 1902
(age 75–76)
CP16 January 1961
John XXIII
Archbishop of Caracas[27]
14Juan Landázuri Ricketts OFMPeru19 November 1913
(age 64)
CP19 March 1962
John XXIII
Archbishop of Lima[28]
15Raúl Silva Henríquez SDBChile27 September 1907
(age 70–71)
CP19 March 1962
John XXIII
Archbishop of Santiago de Chile[29]
16Leo-Jozef SuenensBelgium16 July 1904
(age 74)
CP19 March 1962
John XXIII
Archbishop of Mechelen–Brussels[30]
17Thomas Benjamin Cooray OMISri Lanka28 December 1901
(age 76)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop emeritus of Colombo[31]
18Maurice RoyCanada25 January 1905
(age 73)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop of Quebec[32]
19Owen McCannSouth Africa29 June 1907
(age 71)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop of Cape Town[33]
20Léon-Étienne DuvalAlgeria9 November 1903
(age 74)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop of Algiers[34]
21Ermenegildo FloritItaly5 July 1901
(age 77)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop emeritus of Florence[35]
22Franjo ŠeperYugoslavia2 October 1905
(age 72–73)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith[36]
23Paul Zoungrana MAfrUpper Volta3 September 1917
(age 60–61)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop of Ouagadougou[2]
24Agnelo RossiBrazil14 May 1910
(age 68)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples[37]
25Giovanni ColomboItaly6 December 1902
(age 75)
CP22 February 1965
Paul VI
Archbishop of Milan[38]
26Gabriel-Marie GarroneFrance12 October 1901
(age 76–77)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education and Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals[39]
27Egidio VagnozziItaly26 February 1906
(age 72)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
President of the Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See[40]
28Maximilien de FurstenbergBelgium23 October 1904
(age 73)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Grand Master of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre[41]
29José Clemente Maurer CSsRBolivia13 March 1900
(age 78)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Sucre[42]
30John Joseph KrolUnited States26 October 1910
(age 67)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Philadelphia[43]
31John Patrick CodyUnited States24 December 1907
(age 70)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Chicago[44]
32Corrado UrsiItaly26 July 1908
(age 70)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Naples[45]
33Alfred BengschEast Germany[f]10 September 1921
(age 56–57)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop-Bishop of Berlin[46]
34Justinus DarmojuwonoIndonesia2 November 1914
(age 63)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Semarang[47]
35Karol Wojtyła*Poland18 May 1920
(age 58)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Kraków[48]
36Michele PellegrinoItaly25 April 1903
(age 75)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop emeritus of Turin[49]
37Alexandre-Charles RenardFrance7 June 1906
(age 72)
CP26 June 1967
Paul VI
Archbishop of Lyon[50]
38Alfredo Vicente SchererBrazil5 February 1903
(age 75)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Porto Alegre[51]
39Julio Rosales y RasPhilippines18 September 1906
(age 71–72)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Cebu[37]
40Gordon Joseph GrayUnited Kingdom10 August 1910
(age 68)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Saint Andrews and Edinburgh[52]
41Paolo BertoliItaly1 February 1908
(age 70)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Prefect emeritus of the Sacred Congregation for the Causes of Saints[53]
42Joseph ParecattilIndia1 April 1912
(age 66)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Ernakulam and President of the Pontifical Commission for the Revision of the Code of Oriental Canon Law
(Syro-Malabar Catholic Church)
[54]
43John Francis DeardenUnited States15 October 1907
(age 70)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Detroit[47]
44François MartyFrance16 May 1904
(age 74)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Paris[55]
45George Bernard Flahiff CSBCanada26 October 1905
(age 72)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Winnipeg[35]
46Paul GouyonFrance24 October 1910
(age 67)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Rennes[5]
47Mario Casariego y Acevedo CRSGuatemala13 February 1909
(age 69)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Guatemala[56]
48Vicente Enrique y TarancónSpain14 May 1907
(age 71)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Madrid[57]
49Joseph MalulaZaire12 December 1917
(age 60)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Kinshasa[58]
50Pablo Muñoz Vega SJEcuador23 May 1903
(age 75)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Quito[59]
51Antonio PomaItaly12 June 1910
(age 68)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Bologna[60]
52John Joseph CarberryUnited States31 July 1904
(age 74)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of St. Louis[61]
53Terence James CookeUnited States1 March 1921
(age 57)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of New York[62]
54Stephen Kim Sou-hwanSouth Korea8 May 1922
(age 56)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Seoul[63]
55Eugênio de Araújo SalesBrazil8 November 1920
(age 57)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of São Sebastião do Rio de Janeiro[64]
56Joseph HöffnerWest Germany24 December 1906
(age 71)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Cologne[65]
57John Joseph Wright[g]United States18 July 1909
(age 69)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Clergy[66]
58Johannes WillebrandsNetherlands4 September 1909
(age 68–69)
CP28 April 1969
Paul VI
Archbishop of Utrecht and President of the Secretariat for Christian Unity[67]
59Albino Luciani*[h]Italy17 October 1912
(age 65)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Patriarch of Venice[48]
60António RibeiroPortugal21 May 1928
(age 50)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Patriarch of Lisbon[68]
61James Robert KnoxAustralia2 March 1914
(age 64)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Sacraments and Divine Worship[63]
62Avelar Brandão VilelaBrazil13 June 1912
(age 66)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of São Salvador da Bahia[69]
63Joseph CordeiroPakistan19 January 1918
(age 60)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Karachi[70]
64Aníbal Muñoz DuqueColombia3 October 1908
(age 69–70)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Bogotá[59]
65Luis Aponte MartínezPuerto Rico
(United States)[i]
4 August 1922
(age 56)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of San Juan de Puerto Rico[71]
66Raúl Francisco PrimatestaArgentina14 April 1919
(age 59)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Córdoba[72]
67Salvatore PappalardoItaly23 September 1918
(age 59–60)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Palermo[54]
68Marcelo González MartínSpain16 January 1918
(age 60)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Toledo[73]
69Louis-Jean GuyotFrance7 July 1905
(age 73)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Toulouse[74]
70Ugo PolettiItaly19 April 1914
(age 64)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Vicar General for Rome and Archpriest of the Papal Basilica of Saint John Lateran[75]
71Timothy ManningUnited States15 November 1909
(age 68)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Los Angeles[58]
72Maurice Michael OtungaKenyaJanuary 1923
(age 55)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Nairobi[76]
73José Salazar LópezMexico12 January 1910
(age 68)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Guadalajara[77]
74Humberto Sousa MedeirosUnited States6 October 1915
(age 62–63)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Boston[78]
75Paulo Evaristo Arns OFMBrazil14 September 1921
(age 56–57)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of São Paulo[79]
76James Darcy FreemanAustralia9 November 1907
(age 70)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Sydney[80]
77Narciso Jubany ArnauSpain12 August 1913
(age 65)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Archbishop of Barcelona[81]
78Hermann VolkWest Germany27 December 1903
(age 74)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Bishop of Mainz[82]
79Pio Taofinuʻu SMWestern Samoa8 December 1923
(age 54)
CP5 March 1973
Paul VI
Bishop of Samoa and Tokelau[83]
80Octavio Antonio Beras RojasDominican Republic16 November 1906
(age 71)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Santo Domingo[84]
81Juan Carlos AramburuArgentina11 February 1912
(age 66)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Buenos Aires[71]
82Joseph-Marie Trịnh Như KhuêVietnam11 December 1898
(age 79)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Hanoi[85]
83Hyacinthe ThiandoumSenegal2 February 1921
(age 57)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Dakar[86]
84Emmanuel NsubugaUganda11 November 1914
(age 63)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Kampala[87]
85Lawrence Trevor Picachy SJIndia7 August 1916
(age 62)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Calcutta[88]
86Jaime Lachica SinPhilippines31 August 1928
(age 49–50)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Manila[89]
87William Wakefield BaumUnited States21 November 1926
(age 51)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Washington[90]
88Aloísio Lorscheider OFMBrazil8 October 1924
(age 53–54)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Fortaleza[91]
89Reginald DelargeyNew Zealand10 December 1914
(age 63)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Wellington[92]
90László LékaiHungary12 March 1910
(age 68)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Esztergom[93]
91George Basil Hume OSBUnited Kingdom2 March 1923
(age 55)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Westminster[94]
92Victor Razafimahatratra SJMadagascar8 September 1921
(age 56–57)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Tananarive[95]
93František TomášekCzechoslovakia30 June 1899
(age 79)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Archbishop of Prague[96]
94Dominic Ignatius EkandemNigeria1917
(age 60–61)
CP24 May 1976
Paul VI
Bishop of Ikot Ekpene[57]
95Giovanni BenelliItaly12 May 1921
(age 57)
CP27 June 1977
Paul VI
Archbishop of Florence[97]
96Joseph RatzingerWest Germany16 April 1927
(age 51)
CP27 June 1977
Paul VI
Archbishop of Munich and Freising[98]
97Pericle FeliciItaly1 August 1911
(age 67)
CD26 June 1967
Paul VI
Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura and President of the Pontifical Commissions for the Revision of the Code of Canon Law and for the Interpretation of the Decrees of the Second Vatican Council (Protodeacon)[99]
98Silvio OddiItaly14 November 1910
(age 67)
CD28 April 1969
Paul VI
Pontifical Legate for the Basilica of Saint Francis of Assisi[100]
99Giuseppe PaupiniItaly25 February 1907
(age 71)
CD28 April 1969
Paul VI
Major Penitentiary[101]
100Mario Nasalli Rocca di CornelianoItaly12 August 1903
(age 75)
CD28 April 1969
Paul VI
Prefect emeritus of the Apostolic Palaces[102]
101Sergio GuerriItaly25 December 1905
(age 72)
CD28 April 1969
Paul VI
Pro-President of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State[103]
102Sergio PignedoliItaly4 June 1910
(age 68)
CD5 March 1973
Paul VI
President of the Secretariat for Non-Christians[104]
103Umberto MozzoniArgentina29 June 1904
(age 74)
CD5 March 1973
Paul VI
President of the Commission of Cardinals for the Pontifical Shrines of Pompeii and Loreto[105]
104Paul-Pierre Philippe OPFrance16 April 1905
(age 73)
CD5 March 1973
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Oriental Churches[106]
105Pietro PalazziniItaly19 May 1912
(age 66)
CD5 March 1973
Paul VI
Secretary emeritus of the Sacred Congregation for the Clergy and of the Commission of Cardinals for the Pontifical Shrines of Pompeii and Loreto[107]
106Opilio RossiItaly14 May 1910
(age 68)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
President of the Pontifical Councils for the Laity and for the Family[108]
107Giuseppe Maria SensiItaly27 May 1907
(age 71)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
Apostolic Nuncio emeritus to Portugal[36]
108Corrado BafileItaly4 July 1903
(age 75)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Causes of Saints[109]
109Joseph SchröfferWest Germany20 February 1903
(age 75)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
Secretary emeritus of the Sacred Congregation for Catholic Education[110]
110Eduardo Francisco PironioArgentina3 December 1920
(age 57)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Religious and Secular Institutes[111]
111Bernardin GantinBenin8 May 1922
(age 56)
CD27 June 1977
Paul VI
President of the Pontifical Commission for Justice and Peace and of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum[j][112]
112Mario Luigi Ciappi OPItaly6 October 1909
(age 68–69)
CD27 June 1977
Paul VI
Pro-Theologian of the Pontifical Household[113]

Not in attendance

RankNameCountryBornOrderConsistoryOfficeReason for absenceRef.
1Valerian GraciasIndia23 October 1901
(age 76)
CP12 January 1953
Pius XII
Archbishop of BombayIll health; died on 11 September 1978, before the second conclave[5]
2Bolesław FilipiakPoland1 September 1901
(age 76–77)
CD24 May 1976
Paul VI
Dean emeritus of the Sacred Roman RotaIll health; died on 14 October 1978, the day on which the second conclave began[6]

Cardinal electors by continent and by country

The 112 attending cardinal electors in either conclave were from 49 countries[k] on all six inhabited continents. The countries with the greatest number of cardinal electors were Italy (twenty-six in the first conclave, twenty-five in the second conclave), the United States (eight in the first conclave, nine in the second conclave; excluding Puerto Rico) and France (seven in both conclaves).

* Continent/country of elected pope
Cardinal electors by continent
(October 1978)
ContinentNumberPercentage
Africa1210.8%
North America1614.4%
South America1614.4%
Asia98.1%
Europe*5448.6%
Oceania43.6%
Total111100.0%

Cardinal electors by country
(October 1978)
CountryContinentNumber
AlgeriaAfrica1
ArgentinaSouth America4
AustraliaOceania2
AustriaEurope1
BelgiumEurope2
BeninAfrica1
BoliviaSouth America1
BrazilSouth America6
CanadaNorth America3
ChileSouth America1
ColombiaSouth America1
CzechoslovakiaEurope1
Dominican RepublicNorth America1
EcuadorSouth America1
EgyptAfrica1
FranceEurope7
East GermanyEurope1
West GermanyEurope4
GuatemalaNorth America1
HungaryEurope1
IndiaAsia2
IndonesiaAsia1
ItalyEurope25
KenyaAfrica1
South KoreaAsia1
MadagascarAfrica1
MexicoNorth America1
NetherlandsEurope2
New ZealandOceania1
NigeriaAfrica1
PakistanAsia1
PeruSouth America1
PhilippinesAsia2
Poland*Europe2
PortugalEurope1
Puerto Rico (United States)[i]North America1
SenegalAfrica1
South AfricaAfrica1
SpainEurope4
Sri LankaAsia1
TanzaniaAfrica1
UgandaAfrica1
United KingdomEurope2
United StatesNorth America9
Upper VoltaAfrica1
VenezuelaSouth America1
VietnamAsia1
Western SamoaOceania1
YugoslaviaEurope1
ZaireAfrica1
Total111

See also

Notes

References

Sources