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Pope Clement XI

Pope Clement XI was born with the given name of Giovanni Francesco Albani in the year 1649 A.D., and died in 1721 A.D. He began his reign as Pope in the year 1700 A.D. and ended his reign in the year 1721 A.D., during the Early Modern. Clement XI was from Urbino, and his papal number is: 243 out of 267 officially recognized Roman Catholic Popes.

Summary: Long-reigning pope who faced Jansenism, missions, and dynastic wars.

Biography:

Clement XI presided over a complex early eighteenth-century Church entangled in theological disputes, missionary questions, and the wars of European succession. His long reign required persistent diplomatic and doctrinal engagement.

He is especially associated with the bull Unigenitus against Jansenist propositions, a document that had vast consequences in French and wider Catholic life. He also supported missions and learning with notable energy.

Clement XI’s legacy is that of a cultured and diligent pope navigating a Church increasingly shaped by global horizons and internal theological controversy.