
How long does it take a papal conclave to elect a pope? It depends on the century
How long does it take a papal conclave to elect a pope? It depends on the century
The papal conclave, a gathering of 130 Roman Catholic cardinals who will elect the successor to Pope Francis, begins on May 7. No matter whom they choose, his place in church history is already assured.
Over the centuries, papal conclaves, like popes themselves, have been a mix of religion, politics and power.
The choice will signal how the Catholic Church, with its 1.4 billion adherents, will conduct itself in the coming years. It could continue the progressive legacy of Francis, who died April 21 at age 88, or return to a more traditional role.
As in the past, the cardinals will be sequestered in the Sistine Chapel to debate and vote in secret. Since 1846, cardinals have have taken two to five days to make decisions on the past 12 popes.
But it hasn't always been that quick.
How long have papal conclaves lasted?
You can't read about papal conclaves without learning of the longest one, the 33-month conclave of 1268-1271. After Pope Clement IV died in November 1268, cardinals met in Viterbo, Italy, about 68 miles from Rome, to vote on a successor.
The cardinals were divided by two powerful Italian families:
The Guelphs , who supported the pope, the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church.
, who supported the pope, the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church. The Ghibellines, who supported the holy Roman emperor, the secular leader of the Holy Roman Empire, a group of regions in Central Europe.
As disagreements dragged on, frustrated citizens of Viterbo locked the cardinals in the Episcopal Palace and 'even removed the roof to expose them to the elements, hoping to expedite the decision-making process,' according to ucatholic.com.
The Guelphs' side prevailed as the cardinals finally elected Pope Gregory X on Sept. 1, 1271.
Gregory's reforms helped reduce the length of future conclaves. Even so, two other conclaves that ended in 1316 and 1417 lasted two years or more.
The shortest conclave lasted only a few hours on Oct. 31, 1503. Cardinals elected the powerful and popular cardinal Giuliano della Rovere, who took the name Pope Julius II.
To get elected, Julius made a series of promises to his fellow cardinals and even used bribery for some of them, according to New Advent's Catholic Encyclopedia. He became known as "The Fearsome Pope" during his reign.
SOURCE USA TODAY Network reporting and research; Reuters; ucatholic.com; catholic-hierarchy.org; ewtnvatican.com; newadvent.org
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
19 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Clip of Pope Leo XIV addressing Burkina Faso leader is fake
What was claimed: A video shows Pope Leo XIV addressing a speech to Burkina Faso's military ruler Captain Ibrahim Traoré. Our verdict: This clip has been edited and likely includes deepfake audio of the Pope. He hasn't delivered such a speech and the edited clip was first shared with a note saying it was a work of fiction. A clip supposedly showing Pope Leo XIV addressing a speech to Burkina Faso's military ruler Capt Ibrahim Traoré is being shared on social media. But this is not a real speech and the clip was edited, most likely using artificial intelligence. The 36-minute video appears to show Pope Leo, who was elected head of the Catholic church on 8 May, reading a speech from sheets of paper. The speech begins: 'We will no longer sit at global summits in silence when African leaders are told to privatise their future. To His Excellency President Ibrahim [Traoré], president of the sovereign nation of Burkina Faso, son of the African soil, defender of his people, may grace and peace be multiplied.' He then continues to speak about colonialism in Africa, the church, and politics on the continent today, among other things. The video, which is grainy and glitchy, has music playing in the background and was shared by a Facebook page called Ghanaba News. Graphics saying 'Ghanaba News' appear at the start and end of the clip. It was shared with a caption saying: 'Pope Leo XIV speaks truth as he back [sic] Burkina Faso leader Captain Ibrahim Traore'. Captain Traoré became Burkina Faso's military leader after seizing power in a coup in September 2022. However, this is not a real speech delivered by the Pope. It was originally shared on YouTube on 17 May 2025 with a note low down in the description saying: 'This video is a work of fiction inspired by the life of Ibrahim Traoré. While some elements are based on real events, the situations and dialogues described are entirely imaginary and do not reflect any actual events'. While the footage used in the clip is genuine, we could find no evidence that this is real audio of the Pope speaking. It is very likely a deepfake audio clip created with artificial intelligence. The footage comes from a real recording of him delivering a speech in Italian on 12 May 2025, in which he called for press freedom to be defended, and urged the world to 'reject the paradigm of war'. The Pope can be seen shuffling his papers and looking up at the audience in the real footage [13:00], which matches his movements in the edited clip [9:58]. The Vatican published an official transcript translated into English, which shows the Pope was not addressing President Traoré, and did not mention Africa. Several things suggest the audio of Pope Leo speaking is a deepfake. Associate Professor from the University of Reading and expert in generative AI, Dr Dominic Lees, told Full Fact that the presence of an unlikely music soundtrack over a video like this is 'frequently used to mask the poor qualities of voice cloning'. Voice cloning is when AI uses a sample of someone speaking to identify speech patterns it then replicates. Dr Lees said: 'No official video of a speech by a Pope has ever been given a music backing, so this one by Pope Leo XIV has certainly been manipulated. Note that there is no room ambience around the voice in this fake video: the voice clone used here has been produced by a text-to-speech AI process, which is unable to create the natural sound of a recording made of a person in a room.' Another sign that this is a deepfake is that the Pope pronounces Capt Traoré's name differently in successive sentences [2:56]. The clip is also blurry around the mouth. Dr Lees has previously said this is a sign a deepfake has been poorly lip synced with footage because artificial intelligence finds it 'very difficult to generate a natural look in the teeth so often leave this blurry and out-of-focus.' While it is very likely that this is a deepfake, we can't be certain because there are other methods, such as different editing techniques or using a voice actor, that could have been used instead. We've contacted Ghanaba News and the Vatican for comment, and will update this article if we receive a response. As technology advances, deepfakes are becoming increasingly realistic and harder to distinguish from genuine footage. Our guide to spotting deepfake videos and AI audio provides practical tools to help tell whether they're genuine. This is not the first time we've fact checked content relating to Pope Leo XIV, including an altered image showing him with rappers and a quote widely attributed to him that we could find no evidence he actually said.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rachel Maddow Says the ‘Interesting Question' About Trump Is ‘What the Country Lets Him Get Away With'
Rachel Maddow belittled Donald Trump on Monday night whilechatting with her MSNBC colleague Lawrence O'Donnell, declaring that Trump's latest 'dictator' actions have made him 'very boring.' Not that she argued the current situation isn't serious, only that Trump is acting like, as she joked, a blonde copy of the extremely corrupt former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. But Maddow also clarified that the 'really interesting question' about all of this is 'what the country lets him get away with. The comment came up at the start of 'The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell,' as the duo discussed how Trump's current actions — calling in the national guard over the objections of California Gov. Gavin Newsom to quell lawful protests — are the exact opposite of what he said he could legally do in 2020 during the George Floyd protests. At that time, Trump said it would be unlawful for him to do so without a request of a state governor. 'I mean the difference,' Maddow said, is that 'he's decided that he's throwing it all out. You know, 'dictator on day from day one,' and you know, going to terminate parts of the Constitution. And he's decided that he doesn't matter what Congress does, and it doesn't matter what the courts do, that he's just the strong man he's going to be.' 'He's decided to throw out all the rules,' Maddow continued. 'The thing that that has done, as far as I'm concerned, is make him very boring, because it's like it's all on the table. We know exactly what he's doing. We know exactly what his intentions are. He's blonde Berlusconi. This is, I mean, he's just trying to do the same thing all the other strongmen and would be dictators do all over the country. I think the really interesting question is, what the country lets him get away with, and we're seeing a really interesting test of that right now, all over the country, especially this week.' Later in the discussion, Maddow argued that the issue isn't that Trump has changed his mind over what he can and cannot legally do, it's that 'we can probably intuit that what he's being told is, 'yeah, it's illegal, therefore, go do it.' I think that the more laws he breaks, the more blatantly unconstitutional things he both proposes and tries, I think the more they think power accrues to him, because he's less constrained by things that don't actually stop him.' 'And so ultimately, I mean, the courts are pushing him back. Congress, to a certain extent, is pushing him back a little bit, although I think a little bit more than they're giving credit for, but mostly it's people pushing him back. He's deeply, deeply, deeply unpopular and underwater on every issue, and he is absolutely panicked by the protests against him, to the point where he's already playing the biggest cards that he's gotten. He's not even six months into this term. I just think, I think we're getting the test really early, and I think that he's failing.' Maddow later noted that Trump's rhetoric and response to the protests is vastly out of proportion with the scope of them, but 'even if these protests were 100 times the size that they are, there still wouldn't be an operational reason to bring in active duty troops or federalized National Guard. I mean, it's just, it's not, it's not that sort of thing. This is obviously not operationally necessitated, right, in terms of the security of the city. He's doing this because he's panicking and thinks that he looks weak, and therefore he has to do something that seems strong.' 'And so we will have tanks destroying the streets of Washington this Saturday, and we will have National Guardsmen and active duty US Marines standing around Los Angeles, wondering what their what this has to do with their military careers. And it's all because he has no freaking idea how to deal with this politically. And he's absolutely panicking about the, I think, trenchant and joyful and sustainable opposition against him.' Maddow added. Watch the whole conversation below: The post Rachel Maddow Says the 'Interesting Question' About Trump Is 'What the Country Lets Him Get Away With'| Video appeared first on TheWrap.


CNBC
2 hours ago
- CNBC
Europe to follow global markets higher as China-U.S. trade talks continue in London
The City of London is a blend of old and new, with St Paul's Cathedral close to skyscrapers as well as Roman ruins. Shomos Uddin | Moment | Getty Images Good morning from London, welcome to CNBC's live blog covering all the action in European financial markets as well as the latest regional and global business news, data and earnings. Futures data from IG suggests London's FTSE will open 11 points higher at 8,838, Germany's DAX up 62 points at 24,234, France's CAC 40 up 23 points at 7,807 and Italy's FTSE MIB 83 points higher at 40,545. Global markets have been buoyed by trade talks that are taking place between U.S. and Chinese officials in London this week, with hopes rising that both sides can avert large-scale punitive tariffs and a trade war. Global markets will be keeping an eye on the talks, which are set to continue Tuesday. The latest U.K. unemployment figures are also due, but there are no other significant earnings or data reports Tuesday. — Holly Ellyatt Global markets climbed overnight amid hopes that the U.S. and China will find a way to resolve their trade dispute, with talks between trade officials set to continue in London on Tuesday. Asia-Pacific markets and U.S. stock futures rose Monday night as investors waited for more insights into trade discussions between the U.S. and China. Traders are looking for signs of a deal that doesn't involve the world's two largest economies slapping extravagant tariffs on each other. A car with U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent leaves a residence where trade talks between Chinese and U.S. delegations take place in Geneva, Switzerland, May 10, 2025. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse Denis Balibouse | Reuters President Donald Trump's top trade officials met their Chinese counterparts in London on Monday, with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and Trade Representative Jamieson Greer negotiating on behalf of the U.S. Trump has authorized Bessent's team to potentially remove U.S. restrictions on the sales of chipmaking software, jet engine parts and ethane, The Wall Street Journal reported, citing sources familiar with the matter. Trump said Monday that the talks were going well and he was "only getting good reports," according to Reuters. — Holly Ellyatt