Blessed John Paul I
- Latin:
- Johannes Paulus
- Original name:
- Albino Luciani
- Born:
- October 17, 1912, Forno di Canale, Italy
- Died:
- September 28, 1978, Rome (aged 65)
- Title / Office:
- pope (1978-1978)
- Notable Works:
- “Illustrissimi”
- On the Web:
- BBC - Witness History - Pope John Paul I�s sudden death (Apr. 25, 2025)
Blessed John Paul I (born October 17, 1912, Forno di Canale, Italy—died September 28, 1978, Rome; beatified September 4, 2022) was the pope, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, in 1978. His 33-day pontificate was the shortest in modern times. He was the first pope to choose a double name and did so in commemoration of his two immediate predecessors, John XXIII and Paul VI. He was also the first pope in centuries to refuse to be crowned, opting instead for the simple pallium of an archbishop, and he was known affectionately as “the Smiling Pope” on account of the smile he often displayed in public. In September 2022 he was beatified by Pope Francis, becoming Blessed John Paul I.
(Read Britannica’s article “What Do Cardinals and Popes Wear?”)
Born of a poor family, Albino Luciani was ordained a priest in 1935. Appointed deputy director of the seminary in the Belluno diocese, he taught moral theology, canon law, and sacred art. He earned a doctorate in sacred theology from the Pontifical Gregorian University in 1947 and was made vicar-general of his diocese the following year. He remained concerned with the teaching of church doctrine and wrote Catechetica in briciole (1949; “Catechism in Crumbs”) in order to instruct less-educated Roman Catholics.

Read about why the name a pope chooses matters
In 1958 Luciani was appointed bishop of Vittorio Veneto. He was made archbishop of Venice in 1969 and became a cardinal in 1973. In 1976 he published a creative work, Illustrissimi (“To the Illustrious Ones”), a compilation of letters addressed both to historical figures such as Jesus and Mark Twain and to fictional characters such as those in Charles Dickens’s The Pickwick Papers.
Luciani was elected pope on August 26, 1978, becoming the first pope since Pius X (reigned 1903–14) to have a pastoral rather than a diplomatic or scholarly background. His sudden death, the apparent result of a heart attack, led to rumors of foul play. He was succeeded by Pope John Paul II.