Order of Pope Pius IX

Order of Pope Pius IX
Ordine di Pio IX (Italian)
Knight's cross of the Order of Pius IX
Awarded by the  Holy See
TypePapal order of knighthood
Established17 June 1847; 177 years ago (1847-06-17)[1]
Religious affiliationCatholic
Motto
StatusCurrently constituted
First headPope Pius IV
SovereignPope Francis
Classes
  • Knight/Dame with the Collar (GCCPO)
  • Knight/Dame Grand Cross (GCPO)
  • Knight/Dame Commander with Star (KC*PO/DC*PO)
  • Knight/Dame Commander (KCPO/DCPO)
  • Knight/Dame (KPO/DPO)
Precedence
Next (higher)Order of the Golden Spur
Next (lower)Order of St. Gregory the Great

Ribbon bar of the order

The Order of Pope Pius IX (Italian: Ordine di Pio IX), also referred as the Pian Order (Italian: Ordine Piano, pronounced [piˈaːno]), is a papal order of knighthood originally founded by Pope Pius IV in 1560. Currently, it is the highest honor conferred by the Holy See (being the Order of Christ and the Order of the Golden Spur currently dormant). The awarding of the order fell into disuse and was re-instituted by Pope Pius IX as a continuation on 17 June 1847.[1]

The highest rank awarded by the Pope is the Collar of the Order, usually to Catholic heads of state on the occasion of official visits to the Holy See. The Grand Cross is the highest Papal award given to lay men and women, ordinarily given to resident Ambassadors accredited to the Holy See after two years in post and rarely to exceptional Catholics in the wider world for particular services, mainly in the international field and for outstanding deeds for Church and society.

The rank of Knight is almost never awarded, and when it happens, it is given in recognition of high-profile services rendered to the Holy See or directly to the person of the Pontiff, by Catholic faithful of distinguished status, almost always belonging to ancient European noble families.

The other two ranks (Commander and Commander with Star) are granted sparingly to lay Catholics, usually in diplomatic roles, for extraordinary merit or deeds for the Church and society. The order is awarded to Catholics and, on occasion and only for diplomatic reasons, to non-Catholics and non-Christians as well.

  1. ^ a b c Rock, P.M.J. (1913). "Pontifical Decorations" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.