Cardinals created by John Paul II


created 231 cardinals in nine consistories held at roughly three-year intervals. Three of those cardinals were first created in pectore, that is, without their names being announced, and only identified by the pope later. He named a fourth in pectore as well but never revealed that name. At his 2001 consistory, where he elevated 42 prelates and announced the names of two created in pectore earlier, he created more cardinals at one time than ever before or since. His consistories in 1985, 1994, and 2003 were among the largest ever.
In his first three consistories, John Paul adhered to the limit of 120 that Pope Paul VI set on the number of cardinal electors in 1975. and he included that maximum when he reformed the papal conclave procedures in 1996. His appointments exceeded that number for the first time in 1988 when the number of electors rose to 121, and then again in 1998 when it reached 122. In each of his last two consistories, in 2001 and 2003, he raised the number to 135, a figure not yet surpassed by his successors.
He was the first pope to allow someone not a bishop to become a cardinal since Pope John XXIII mandated that cardinals be bishops in 1962. His appointments included one future pope, Pope Francis.

30 June 1979

John Paul created fourteen cardinals at his first consistory and he announced he was withholding the name of a fifteenth. That additional cardinal's name was not made public until 1991. All those named were archbishops, including six Italians and two Poles. These appointments, excluding the name withheld, brought the number of cardinals who had not passed their 80th birthday to 120, the maximum set by Pope Paul VI, while the entire membership of the College of Cardinals reached 135.
  1. Agostino Casaroli
  2. Giuseppe Caprio
  3. Marco Cé
  4. Egano Righi-Lambertini
  5. Joseph-Marie Trịnh Văn Căn
  6. Ernesto Civardi
  7. Ernesto Corripio y Ahumada
  8. Joseph Asajiro Satowaki
  9. Roger Etchegaray
  10. Anastasio Ballestrero
  11. Tomás Ó Fiaich
  12. Gerald Emmett Carter
  13. Franciszek Macharski
  14. Władysław Rubin
  15. Ignatius Kung Pin-mei, created in pectore, revealed 29 May 1991

    2 February 1983

John Paul created 18 cardinals on 2 February 1983, including the first resident of the Soviet Union and four others from countries with Communist governments. This brought the College to 138 members, of whom 120 were young enough to serve as electors in a papal conclave. Another cardinal was created in pectore or secretly. John Paul granted a dispensation from the requirement that all cardinals be bishops to Henri de Lubac, the first such dispensation since Pope John XXIII established the rule in 1962.
  1. Anthony Peter Khoraish
  2. Bernard Yago
  3. Aurelio Sabattani
  4. Franjo Kuharić
  5. Giuseppe Casoria
  6. José Lebrún Moratinos
  7. Joseph Bernardin
  8. Michael Michai Kitbunchu
  9. Alexandre do Nascimento
  10. Alfonso López Trujillo
  11. Godfried Danneels
  12. Thomas Williams
  13. Carlo Maria Martini
  14. Jean-Marie Lustiger
  15. Józef Glemp
  16. Julijans Vaivods
  17. Joachim Meisner
  18. Henri de Lubac

    25 May 1985

John Paul created 28 cardinals on 25 May 1985 in a ceremony held outdoors for the first time in St. Peter's Square. They included the first from Ethiopia and Nicaragua and an archbishop of the Ukrainian Rite. It raised the College's membership to 152, with 120 eligible to vote for a new pope.
  1. Luigi Dadaglio
  2. Duraisamy Simon Lourdusamy
  3. Francis Arinze
  4. Juan Francisco Fresno
  5. Antonio Innocenti
  6. Miguel Obando y Bravo
  7. Paul Mayer
  8. Ángel Suquía Goicoechea
  9. Jean Jérôme Hamer
  10. Ricardo Vidal
  11. Henryk Gulbinowicz
  12. Paulos Tzadua
  13. Jozef Tomko
  14. Myroslav Ivan Lubachivsky
  15. Andrzej Maria Deskur
  16. Paul Poupard
  17. Louis-Albert Vachon
  18. Albert Decourtray
  19. Rosalio Lara
  20. Friedrich Wetter
  21. Silvano Piovanelli
  22. Adrianus Johannes Simonis
  23. Édouard Gagnon
  24. Alfons Maria Stickler
  25. Bernard Francis Law
  26. John Joseph O'Connor
  27. Giacomo Biffi
  28. Pietro Pavan

    28 June 1988

On 29 May 1988 John Paul announced he would create 25 new cardinals in 28 June, though the death of Hans Urs von Balthasar of Switzerland reduced that number to 24. This consistory took the number of cardinal electors from 97 to 121, which fell within a month to the maximum of 120, a majority of them appointed by John Paul. It brought the total number of cardinals to a new high of 160, of whom John Paul named 84.
  1. Eduardo Martínez Somalo
  2. Achille Silvestrini
  3. Angelo Felici
  4. Paul Grégoire
  5. Antony Padiyara
  6. José Freire Falcão
  7. Michele Giordano
  8. Alexandre José Maria dos Santos
  9. Giovanni Canestri
  10. Antonio María Javierre Ortas
  11. Simon Pimenta
  12. Mario Revollo Bravo
  13. Edward Bede Clancy
  14. Lucas Moreira Neves
  15. James Aloysius Hickey
  16. Edmund Szoka
  17. László Paskai
  18. Christian Tumi
  19. Hans Hermann Groër
  20. Jacques-Paul Martin
  21. Franz Hengsbach
  22. Vincentas Sladkevičius
  23. Jean Margéot
  24. John Wu

    28 June 1991

On 29 May 1991, John Paul announced he would create 22 cardinals at a consistory on 28 June and revealed the name of one he had created in pectore in 1979, Ignatius Kung Pin-mei. This increased the number of cardinal electors to 120 from 100. It also raised to 13 the number cardinals from the Soviet Union and nations of the recently dissolved Warsaw Pact. The total number of cardinals reached 162 after the consistory.
  1. Angelo Sodano
  2. Alexandru Todea
  3. Pio Laghi
  4. Edward Cassidy
  5. Robert-Joseph Coffy
  6. Frédéric Etsou-Nzabi-Bamungwabi
  7. Nicolás de Jesús López Rodríguez
  8. Jose Tomas Sanchez
  9. Virgilio Noè
  10. Antonio Quarracino
  11. Fiorenzo Angelini
  12. Roger Mahony
  13. Juan Jesús Posadas Ocampo
  14. Anthony Bevilacqua
  15. Giovanni Saldarini
  16. Cahal Daly
  17. Camillo Ruini
  18. Ján Chryzostom Korec
  19. Henri Schwery
  20. Georg Sterzinsky
  21. Guido del Mestri
  22. Paolo Dezza

    26 November 1994

On 30 October 1994, John Paul announced the names of 30 new cardinals from 24 countries, scheduling the consistory for 26 November. He said others were deserving but he "thought it appropriate to adhere to the limit set by my Predecessor Paul VI". The total number of cardinals reached 167 after the consistory.
, made a cardinal on 26 November 1994.
, made a cardinal on 26 November 1994.
, made a cardinal on 26 November 1994.
  1. Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir
  2. Miloslav Vlk
  3. Luigi Poggi
  4. Peter Shirayanagi
  5. Vincenzo Fagiolo
  6. Carlo Furno
  7. Carlos Oviedo Cavada
  8. Thomas Winning
  9. Adolfo Suárez Rivera
  10. Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino
  11. Julius Darmaatmadja
  12. Jan Pieter Schotte
  13. Pierre Eyt
  14. Gilberto Agustoni
  15. Emmanuel Wamala
  16. William Henry Keeler
  17. Augusto Vargas Alzamora
  18. Jean-Claude Turcotte
  19. Ricardo María Carles Gordó
  20. Adam Maida
  21. Vinko Puljić
  22. Armand Razafindratandra
  23. Phạm Đình Tụng
  24. Juan Sandoval Íñiguez
  25. Bernardino Echeverría Ruiz
  26. Kazimierz Świątek
  27. Ersilio Tonini
  28. Mikel Koliqi
  29. Yves Congar
  30. Aloys Grillmeier

    21 February 1998

John Paul announced on 18 January 1998 that he would create 22 new cardinals, but withheld the names of two of them. He had also planned to include Josip Uhač, a Vatican diplomat and curial official who died that morning. The consistory was scheduled for 21 February. Excluding the two not named, this brought the membership of the College of Cardinals to 165, of whom 122 were eligible to vote in a conclave.
  1. Jorge Medina Estévez
  2. Alberto Bovone
  3. Darío Castrillón Hoyos
  4. Lorenzo Antonetti
  5. James Stafford
  6. Salvatore De Giorgi
  7. Serafim Fernandes de Araújo
  8. Antonio María Rouco Varela
  9. Aloysius Ambrozic
  10. Jean Marie Balland
  11. Dionigi Tettamanzi
  12. Polycarp Pengo
  13. Christoph Schönborn
  14. Norberto Rivera Carrera
  15. Francis George
  16. Paul Shan Kuo-Hsi
  17. Adam Kozłowiecki
  18. Giovanni Cheli
  19. Francesco Colasuonno
  20. Dino Monduzzi
  21. Marian Jaworski, created in pectore, revealed 29 January 2001
  22. Jānis Pujats, created in pectore, revealed 29 January 2001

    21 February 2001

On 21 January 2001, Pope John Paul II announced plans to raise 37 prelates to the rank on cardinal at a consistory in February. He also said that at the consistory he would announce the names of two cardinals he named in pectore in 1998. He followed that by announcing the names of five more on 28 January and revealed the two made cardinals secretly in 1998, Marian Jaworski and Janis Pujats. The 44 cardinals created at this consistory was the largest ever created at a consistory. It increased the number of cardinals eligible to vote in a papal election to 135, despite the maximum of 120 set by Pope Paul VI in 1975 and reiterated by John Paul II in 1996; he said in each of his announcements that he was setting aside this limit. The total number of cardinals reached 183 after the consistory.
and Godfried Danneels.
, made a cardinal on 21 February 2001.
  1. Giovanni Battista Re
  2. Nguyen Van Thuan
  3. Agostino Cacciavillan
  4. Sergio Sebastiani
  5. Zenon Grocholewski
  6. José Saraiva Martins
  7. Crescenzio Sepe
  8. Jorge María Mejía
  9. Ignatius Moses I Daoud
  10. Mario Francesco Pompedda
  11. Walter Kasper
  12. Johannes Joachim Degenhardt
  13. Antonio José González Zumárraga
  14. Ivan Dias
  15. Geraldo Majella Agnelo
  16. Pedro Rubiano Sáenz
  17. Theodore Edgar McCarrick, resigned from the College in 2018
  18. Desmond Connell
  19. Audrys Bačkis
  20. Francisco Javier Errázuriz Ossa
  21. Julio Terrazas Sandoval
  22. Wilfrid Napier
  23. Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga
  24. Bernard Agré
  25. Louis-Marie Billé
  26. Ignacio Velasco
  27. Juan Luis Cipriani Thorne
  28. Francisco Álvarez Martínez
  29. Cláudio Hummes
  30. Varkey Vithayathil
  31. Jorge Mario Bergoglio
  32. José Policarpo
  33. Severino Poletto
  34. Cormac Murphy-O'Connor
  35. Edward Egan
  36. Lubomyr Husar
  37. Karl Lehmann
  38. Stéphanos II Ghattas
  39. Jean Marcel Honoré
  40. Roberto Tucci
  41. Leo Scheffczyk
  42. Avery Dulles

    21 October 2003

Pope John Paul II announced on 28 September 2003 that he would create 31 new cardinals in an October consistory, but withheld the name of one of them, apparently a resident of a country where Catholicism was the object of government persecution. Twenty-six of those publicly named were young enough to vote in a papal conclave, and seven of those were members of the Roman Curia. This consistory increased the number of cardinal electors from 109 to 135. The total number of cardinals reached 194 after the consistory. Because the withheld name was never published, that cardinal's appointment expired when the Pope died.
  1. Jean-Louis Tauran
  2. Renato Martino
  3. Francesco Marchisano
  4. Julián Herranz Casado
  5. Javier Lozano Barragán
  6. Stephen Fumio Hamao
  7. Attilio Nicora
  8. Angelo Scola
  9. Anthony Olubunmi Okogie
  10. Bernard Panafieu
  11. Gabriel Zubeir Wako
  12. Carlos Amigo Vallejo
  13. Justin Francis Rigali
  14. Keith Michael Patrick O'Brien
  15. Eusébio Scheid
  16. Ennio Antonelli
  17. Tarcisio Bertone
  18. Peter Turkson
  19. Telesphore Toppo
  20. George Pell
  21. Josip Bozanić
  22. Phạm Minh Mẫn
  23. Rodolfo Quezada Toruño
  24. Philippe Barbarin
  25. Péter Erdő
  26. Marc Ouellet
  27. Georges Cottier
  28. Gustaaf Joos
  29. Tomáš Špidlík
  30. Stanisław Nagy

    Demographic adjustment

In 2004, the birth year of Cardinal Henryk Gulbinowicz, long reported as 1928, was corrected to 1923. The adjustment meant he was past his 80th birthday and no longer counted as a cardinal elector. In 1942, as a young man, Gulbinowicz had falsified his birth records to escape being sent to a Nazi labor camp. The correct birth date was reported in the Italian press as early as March 2004 and printed in the Pontifical Yearbook presented to John Paul on 31 January 2005.