Pope Clement VII

Religious Figure 1478 – 1534
Steady
#430
Historical Importance
354K
2025 Wikipedia Views
+23.5%
Year-over-Year
-5%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Pope Clement VII

Pope Clement VII (1478–1534) was a significant religious figure who served as Pope from 1523 until his death. His papacy was defined by the escalating crisis of the Protestant Reformation, a pivotal moment in Western history that ultimately fractured the unity of the Catholic Church. A key event during his tenure was his inability to annul the marriage of King Henry VIII of England to Catherine of Aragon, which directly led to the English Reformation and Henry VIII’s establishment of the Church of England. This action, born from Clement VII’s political maneuvering and fear of the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, cemented his #430 rank in historical importance.

Despite this profound historical influence, Clement VII’s modern digital footprint is relatively modest. He garnered approximately 354K annualized Wikipedia views in 2025. This level of attention places him in an 'Attention Gap' ratio of roughly 1x, meaning his online visibility aligns closely with his historical impact, which is an unusual equilibrium. For contrast, figures of lesser historical importance, such as Saul (#896 importance), drew nearly double his traffic at 750K views in the same period.

Interestingly, while his overall attention is measured, his immediate digital trajectory shows mixed signals. His year-over-year growth was strong at +23.5%, suggesting recent academic or cultural renewed interest, yet his 2025 momentum from Q1 to Q3 slipped by -5%, indicating that the initial surge may be tapering off.

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