Pope Clement XIII

Religious Figure 1693 – 1769
Underrated
#847
Historical Importance
48K
2025 Wikipedia Views
+74.1%
Year-over-Year
-17%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Pope Clement XIII

Pope Clement XIII, born Carlo Rezzonico, served as the head of the Catholic Church from 1758 until his death in 1769. His tenure was largely defined by his efforts to navigate the growing political pressures exerted by powerful Catholic monarchies, particularly France and Spain, who sought greater control over church affairs within their borders. A significant action of his pontificate was the ratification of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) Constitutions, solidifying their structure, though he struggled to fully curb anti-Jesuit sentiment that would eventually lead to the Order's suppression shortly after his death. This influence on Church governance secures his rank as the #847 most historically important figure in the Pantheon index.

Despite this historical placement, Clement XIII shows a significant modern attention gap. In 2025, his Wikipedia pageviews annualized to just 48K, placing him vastly underrepresented relative to his importance, calculating to an Attention Gap of -7x. To contrast, Pope Paul IV, ranked only slightly higher at #936 in importance, still commanded 91K annual views. Furthermore, other religious figures like Catherine of Aragon (#932) draw 2.0M views, illustrating the magnitude of this disconnect between historical rank and contemporary internet traffic.

Interestingly, while his overall volume is low, Clement XIII is currently experiencing a surge in online curiosity, with his 2025 pageviews growing by +74.1% year-over-year. However, this upward trend shows recent cooling, as the momentum calculation comparing Q1 to Q3 indicates a -17% drop in interest across the year.