
Pope Francis has died at the age of 88, the Vatican has announced.
The Argentinian was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio in Buenos Aires on the 17th of December 1936.
Seen as an outsider when he was chosen to succeed Benedict the 16th in 2013, the Argentinian was the first Latin American and the first Jesuit to lead the Roman Catholic Church.
The Pontiff appeared to the public for the final time on Sunday, as he delivered an Easter blessing to hundreds of worshippers.
Speaking to the crowd, he paid tribute to the victims global conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza as he shared a message of peace in his final public appearance.
Announcing his death, Cardinal Farrell said: “Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis.
“At 7.35am this morning, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father. His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and His Church.
“He taught us to live the values of the Gospel with fidelity, courage and universal love, especially in favour of the poorest and most marginalised.
“With immense gratitude for his example as a true disciple of the Lord Jesus, we commend the soul of Pope Francis to the infinite merciful love of the One and Triune God.”
As the son of a railway worker who came from humble beginnings, and remained humble throughout his illustrious career, seen driving his old car and wearing simple clothes despite his high status.
An educated man, he earned a Master’s in chemistry and philosophy before going on to receive a doctorate in theology. He briefly worked in the food processing industry before cutting short his career after being compelled to join the church, becoming an ordained Catholic priest in 1969.
He later became the Archbishop of Buenos Aires before being sworn in as the 266th pope at 76 years old in 2013.
He has left behind an important legacy – Strong on social justice, with a tolerant tone on issues of women, abortion and homosexuality.
Pope Francis defied many who had expected a younger leader at the helm and was praised for his common touch and determination to root out Vatican bureaucracy and corruption.
He garnered plaudits when he addressed the horrific legacy of child sexual abuse head on.
The 88-year-old made his mark on the papacy from an early stage, abandoning the roomy penthouse apartment used by Popes for the past century in favour of a tiny suite at the Vatican guesthouse. In popular culture, Pope Francis was famously depicted by Jonathan Pryce in the Academy Award-winning film “The Two Popes”.
The film examining the relationship between the two after Pope Benedict in an unprecedented move decided to step down from the position. He was still active up until shortly before his death, visiting numerous countries, but he was plagued with illness, including several days in hospital and abdominal surgery as a result of a hernia and repeated lung infections.
Pope Francis was named by Fortune Magazine as the greatest world leader in 2014, and is estimated to have represented over 1-point-3 billion Roman Catholics during his reign.
In 2015, he received a standing ovation after addressing the US Congress.
At the age of 21 he underwent surgery to have part of one of his lungs removed thanks to a severe bout of pleurisy which was to leave him vulnerable to the winter weather.
It was around that time that he felt his vocation, which hit him when he stopped off at church on his way to join friends to celebrate a holiday.
“It surprised me, caught me with my guard down,” he later recalled.
He entered the Jesuit novitiate in 1958 and, after studying humanities, philosophy and theology in Chile and Argentina, was ordained a priest in 1969.
In 1973, he was made Superior of the Jesuit province of Argentina, a post he held for six years. It was a period which included one of the most controversial episodes of his entire career.
Following a military coup in 1976, two Jesuit priests who had been preaching left-wing liberation theology in the slums, were abducted and tortured by regime loyalists. They were found five months later semi-naked and drugged.
One of the priests, Orlando Yorio, accused Bergoglio of effectively handing them over to the death squads by refusing to endorse their work, although his colleague, Francisco Jalics, later accepted that he had had no part in their kidnapping.
Pope Francis defied many who had expected a younger leader at the helm and was praised for his common touch and determination to root out Vatican bureaucracy and corruption.
He garnered plaudits when he addressed the horrific legacy of child sexual abuse head on.
The 88-year-old made his mark on the papacy from an early stage, abandoning the roomy penthouse apartment used by Popes for the past century in favour of a tiny suite at the Vatican guesthouse. In popular culture, Pope Francis was famously depicted by Jonathan Pryce in the Academy Award-winning film “The Two Popes”.
The film examining the relationship between the two after Pope Benedict in an unprecedented move decided to step down from the position. He was still active up until shortly before his death, visiting numerous countries, but he was plagued with illness, including several days in hospital and abdominal surgery as a result of a hernia and repeated lung infections.
Pope Francis was named by Fortune Magazine as the greatest world leader in 2014, and is estimated to have represented over 1-point-3 billion Roman Catholics during his reign.
In 2015, he received a standing ovation after addressing the US Congress.
At the age of 21 he underwent surgery to have part of one of his lungs removed thanks to a severe bout of pleurisy which was to leave him vulnerable to the winter weather.
It was around that time that he felt his vocation, which hit him when he stopped off at church on his way to join friends to celebrate a holiday.
“It surprised me, caught me with my guard down,” he later recalled.
He entered the Jesuit novitiate in 1958 and, after studying humanities, philosophy and theology in Chile and Argentina, was ordained a priest in 1969.
In 1973, he was made Superior of the Jesuit province of Argentina, a post he held for six years. It was a period which included one of the most controversial episodes of his entire career.
Following a military coup in 1976, two Jesuit priests who had been preaching left-wing liberation theology in the slums, were abducted and tortured by regime loyalists. They were found five months later semi-naked and drugged.
One of the priests, Orlando Yorio, accused Bergoglio of effectively handing them over to the death squads by refusing to endorse their work, although his colleague, Francisco Jalics, later accepted that he had had no part in their kidnapping.
In response, Esquire magazine named him their “best-dressed man” of the year.
The new pope also moved swiftly to clean up the scandal-ridden Vatican Bank – which had become a byword for corruption and money laundering – and overhaul the curia, the Vatican bureaucracy.
In one early intervention, he surprised both traditionalists and liberals by criticising the church for having become “obsessed” with issues such as homosexuality, abortion and birth control.
But in what to some was to become a recurring pattern, the following year he spoke out against same-sex marriage, defended the “traditional” family and reaffirmed the church’s opposition to abortion.
In 2015 he issued an encyclical warning that environmental degradation was a “moral issue”, driven by unchecked capitalism, linking sinful actions against the natural world with economic exploitation of the poor.
But it was his exhortation, Amoris laetitia (the joy of love), a wide-ranging pronouncement on family issues the following year, which was to set off a firestorm within the church.
In a call for more welcoming and less judgmental attitudes, it said divorcees who had remarried but not obtained an annulment, might be permitted to receive holy communion through the guidance of a priest.
To supporters it amounted to no more than bureaucratic recognition to a system that already existed, but to some conservatives it was overturning centuries of church teaching.
An open letter signed by 62 disaffected Catholics, including one retired bishop, accused the pope of heretical teaching, while, in what was seen as a direct challenge to his authority, four cardinals formally asked for a series of clarifications.
Meanwhile, the pope was also having to deal with the legacy of decades of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests covering countries round the world.
During a visit to Ireland in 2018, he acknowledged the “grave scandal” of the church’s failure to confront the issue but disappointed many by failing to address demands by survivors for action.
The outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic posed further challenges. In March 2020 he performed an extraordinary Urbi et Orbi blessing – normally reserved for festivals such as Christmas and Easter – in a dark and deserted St Peter’s Square as he prayed for the outbreak to end.
He sought to tackle scepticism about the vaccines, urging people to get inoculated saying that healthcare was a “moral obligation”.
In the period that followed there were growing health issues as he was forced to cancel or postpone engagements as a bout of sciatica was followed by colon surgery, while he began using a wheelchair because of knee problems.
The man who once said “Who am I to judge?” when it came to homosexuality, found himself having to apologise after complaining there was too much “frociaggine” – which roughly translates as “faggotry” – among young seminarians.
There was a sense that his time was drawing to a close when he consecrated 21 new cardinals, seen by some as an attempt to secure his legacy, increasing the likelihood that the next conclave would elect a successor who would continue his reforms.
He also disclosed plans to be buried at the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore – a sign of his devotion to the Virgin Mary – rather than the Vatican, in yet another break with papal tradition.
Even as his health failed he continued to engage on those issues that defined his papacy, denouncing US President Donald Trump’s plans for the mass deportation of migrants from the US, with a warning it was bound to “end badly”.