Pope Paul's insistence of ecclesiastical jurisdiction leads…
April 1606 CE
Pope Paul's insistence of ecclesiastical jurisdiction leads to a number of quarrels between the Church and the secular governments of various states, notably Venice, where patricians, such as Ermolao Barbaro (1548–1622) of the noble Barbaro family, argue in favor of the exemption of the clergy from the jurisdiction of the civil courts.
Venice has passed two laws obnoxious to Paul, one forbidding the alienation of real estate in favor of the clergy, the second demanding approval of the civil power for the building of new churches (in essence, a Venetian stance that the powers of the church must remain separate from those of the state).
Two priests have been found guilty and committed to prison.
Paul insists that they be released to the Church.
The Venetian position is ably defended by a canon lawyer, Paolo Sarpi, who extends the matter to general principles defining separate secular and ecclesiastical spheres.
The Pope excommunicates the entire government of Venice in April 1606 and places an interdict on the city.
The rest of the Catholic clergy sides with the city, however, with the exception of the Jesuits, the Theatines, and the Capuchins, who are expelled from Venetian territories.
Caravaggio's biographer Giovanni Bellori records that the artist painted a seated portrait of Camillo Borghese as Pope, which must place the work between Borghese's election on May 16 1605 and Caravaggio's flight from Rome in May 1606 following the death of Ranuccio Tommassoni.