EIGHT
10 cardinals. 3 of them are eligible to elect a new pope.
About 70% of the population in Argentina is Roman Catholic. That would be about 28 million.
We do not know but he needed at least 77 of the 115 cardinals vote
Pontifical Catholic University of Argentina was created in 1958.
None, Catholic Cardinals are not elected, they are appointed by the Holy Father.
Argentina doesn't have a state religion however most people are catholic
Argentina is 76% Roman Catholic. Before 1994, the top leaders had to be Roman Catholic.
It's just Catholic, not Roman Catholic. Roman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the official Catholic Church. Below is a link to a list of currently living Cardinals (as of the end of February, there are approximately 91 Cardinals over the age of 80 who are not eligible to vote in the March 2013 Conclave, and maybe 115 or so Cardinals of voting age.)
Most people in Argentina are Roman Catholic.
Catholic cardinals do the same thing as archbishops just they can vote for a new pope [if there under 80].
Argentina does not have an official religion and many different types of houses of worship can be found there. Argentina's largest religious group is Catholics, so the most common house of worship in Argentina is a Catholic Church or Cathedral.