VATICAN CITY — ''Conclave'' the film may have introduced moviegoers to the spectacular ritual and drama of a modern conclave, but the periodic voting to elect a new pope has been going on for centuries and created a whole genre of historical trivia.
Here are some facts about conclaves past, derived from historical studies including Miles Pattenden's ''Electing the Pope in Early Modern Italy, 1450–1700,'' and interviews with experts including Elena Cangiano, an archaeologist at Viterbo's Palazzo dei Papi (Palace of the Popes).
The longest conclave in history
In the 13th century, it took almost three years — 1,006 days to be exact — to choose Pope Clement IV's successor, making it the longest conclave in the Catholic Church's history. It's also where the term conclave comes from — "under lock and key," because the cardinals who were meeting in Viterbo, north of Rome, took so long the town's frustrated citizens locked them in the room.
The secret vote that elected Pope Gregory X lasted from November 1268 to September 1271. It was the first example of a papal election by ''compromise,'' after a long struggle between supporters of two main geopolitical medieval factions — those faithful to the papacy and those supporting the Holy Roman Empire.
‘One meal a day' rule
Gregory X was elected only after Viterbo residents tore the roof off the building where the prelates were staying and restricted their meals to bread and water to pressure them to come to a conclusion. Hoping to avoid a repeat, Gregory X decreed in 1274 that cardinals would only get ''one meal a day'' if the conclave stretched beyond three days, and only ''bread, water and wine'' if it went beyond eight. That restriction has been dropped.
The shortest conclave ever