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The Sistine Chapel in the Vatican Museums is pictured in this March 9, 2013, file photo, as preparations began for the conclave that elected Pope Francis. (CNS photo/Paul Haring)

Papal elections at a glance: Curiosities about age, nationality, firsts and lasts

April 28, 2025
By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service
Filed Under: 2025 Conclave, News, Remembering Pope Francis, Vatican, World News

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Pope Francis made history with his election in 2013 as the first Latin American as well as the first Jesuit ever elected.

He was elected at the age of 76, which seemed counterintuitive after what Pope Benedict XVI had said when announcing his resignation just 30 days prior. The 85-year-old German pope had said that “both strength of mind and body are necessary” to carry out the papal ministry in the modern world.

Pope Benedict was elected in 2005, just after his 78th birthday. Of the 103 popes whose exact age at election is known, Pope Benedict and Pope Francis were two of 18 churchmen elected bishop of Rome while between the ages of 71 and 80.

Ambrogio Piazzoni, then-vice prefect of the Vatican Library and author of a book on the history of papal elections, distributed a sheet of “some curiosities” about the elections to reporters in 2013, after Pope Benedict announced his resignation and before Pope Francis was elected.

Pope John Paul II, who later became St. John Paul II, blesses a baby during an annual baptism liturgy in the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel Jan. 13, 2002. (OSV News photo from Catholic Press Photo)

On the topic of the age of the pope at election, he said:

— Three popes were under the age of 25. The last was Pope Gregory V, who was 24 when elected in 996.

— Seven were between 25 and 40 years old. The last was Pope Leo X, who was 37 in 1513.

— Eleven were between 41 and 50. The last was Pope Clement VII, who was elected in 1523 at the age of 44.

— 24 popes were in their 50s. The most recent was St. John Paul II, who was 58 years old when he began his papal ministry in 1978.

— 37 were between 61 and 70 years old. The last was Pope John Paul I, who was 65 when he began his 33-day papacy in 1978.

— Only three popes were over 80 when elected. The last, chosen by cardinals in 1406, was Pope Gregory XII. He was 81.

Piazzoni also provided a list of “lasts”:

— The last pope who was not a cardinal yet when elected was Pope Urban VI in 1378.

Pope Benedict XVI smiles as he bids the crowd farewell after celebrating Mass at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C., in this file photo dated April 17, 2008. (OSV News photo/Nancy Wiechec, CNS)

— The last who was not even a priest yet was Pope Leo X.

— The last born in Rome was Pope Pius XII, elected in 1939. He was also the last serving Vatican secretary of state elected.

— The last African was Pope Gelasius, elected in 492.

— The last native of Dalmatia, an ancient Roman province, was Pope John IV in 640.

— The last Frenchman elected was Pope Gregory XI, in 1370.

— The last Greek was Pope Zachary in 741.

— The last Englishman was Pope Adrian IV in 1154.

— The last Italian was Pope John Paul I.

— The last Dutchman was Pope Adrian VI in 1522.

— The last Palestinian was Pope Theodore in 642.

— The last Pole was Pope John Paul II in 1978.

— The last Portuguese was Pope John XXI in 1276.

— The last Syrian was Pope Gregory III in 731.

— The last Spaniard was Pope Alexander VI in 1492.

— The last German was Pope Benedict XVI. When he was elected in 2005, it had been 950 years since a German — Pope Victor II — had been elected.

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Copyright © 2025 Catholic News Service/U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

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