Clement VIII (born Feb. 24, 1536, Fano, Papal States—died March 5, 1605, Rome) was the pope from 1592 to 1605, the last pontiff to serve during the Counter-Reformation. The holder of numerous church offices, he was made cardinal in 1585 by Pope Sixtus V and elected pope as Clement VIII on Jan. 30, 1592.
Between 1562 and 1598, France was afflicted with civil wars between the Protestant Huguenots and Roman Catholics, which resulted in a problem of succession to the French throne. King Philip II of Spain, a power behind the Counter-Reformation, was one of the pretenders to the French throne, but he was a constant irritant to the papacy. Thus, after Henry IV’s conversion to Roman Catholicism in 1593, Clement recognized him as the rightful king of France and absolved him (Sept. 17, 1595) from excommunication. Clement then moderated the dominance of the Spanish among the cardinals, reducing their influence on future conclaves of the church. Henry IV pacified the Protestants in France and concurrently promoted the Counter-Reformation.
In 1598 Clement incorporated the duchy of Ferrara into the Papal States, which by 1605 had become consolidated and provided the economic support of the papacy. The secular authorities of the Kingdom of Naples and of the Venetian republic constantly provoked Clement’s remonstration in violating ecclesiastical rights, but he never retaliated. Clement’s principal concern was with his spiritual functions. He encouraged the Counter-Reformative efforts of St. Francis de Sales, whom he made bishop of Geneva in 1602, and was responsible for printing a corrected edition of the Vulgate (the standard version of the Latin Bible) and other key liturgical books. He also expanded the Index of Forbidden Books and intensified the activity and scope of the Inquisition. In 1597 Clement established a commission to investigate a controversy between the Jesuits and the Dominicans on divine grace and free will, but the issue was not resolved until after his death. Despite his failure in this controversy, he managed to restore the prestige of the papacy.