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St. Peter (32-67) 1st Pope
He instituted the recitation of the Our Father
He was crucified upside down. Jn. 21:18 (“you will stretch your hands”)
His tomb is underneath present day St. Peter’s Cathedral
The Council of Jerusalem liberated Gentile converts’ circumcision and other Jewish traditions
The consumption of the Eucharist was strictly kept secret.  Garbled accounts of this created stories that these Christians were cannibals.

St. Mark was Peter’s scribe and disciple

 

 

St. Linus (67-76) 2nd Pope

 

He created the first 15 bishops.
During his pontificate, the evangelists Luke and Mark were martyred.
His name is mentioned by St. Paul in 2 Timothy 4:21
When Peter went to Jerusalem to preside at the first council, Peter left Linus in Rome as his vicar.

Jerusalem and the Temple were destroyed, severing the Church’s last connection with Jerusalem.

 

St. Cletus (76-88) 3rd Pope

 

He divided Rome into 25 parishes
He was a disciple of Peter
He designated a location on for the tombs of the Popes on Vatican Hill
He began the traditions of beginning papal letters with “Health and Apostolic Benediction.”

 

St. Clement I (88-97) 4th Pope

 

His name is mentioned in Phillipians 4:3
He instituted the use of “Amen” in religious ceremonies.

He instituted the notary public, recording the facts of the martyrdoms and persecutions.

His famous letter to the Church in Corinth sets for the doctrine of apostolic succession.

Russian Catholics, Rusian Orthodox, Ukranian Catholics, Ukranian Orthodox claim St. Clement I as their founder.

St. John, last of the Apostles, was still alive, when a schism in Corinth was resolved by St. Clement I

He restored the sacrament of confirmation according to the rite of St. Peter.

 

 

St. Anacletus (97) 5th Pope

 

He served as vicar to St. Clement I during his exile.
He ordered that a bishop should be consecrated by no less than three bishops.
He reigned as pope when John the Evangelist was brought to Rome to be tortured.
He further decorated the chapel by the tomb of St. Peter.
St. Evaristus (97-105) 6th Pope

 

He founded the first seven diaconates, considered to be the origin of the College of Cardinals

He ordered that Christian marriage vows must be pronounced and blessed before a priest

 

 

St. Alexander I (105-115) 7th Pope

 

He instituted the use of holy water in churches.
He prescribed that consecrated hosts be made from unleavened bread.
He ordered the mixing of wine and water at Mass.

 

He instructed that the Sanctus would
be recited by the priest and people
Sanctus:

 

St. Sixtus I (115-125) 8th Pope

 

“Holy, holy, holy, Lord, God of hosts,
Heaven and earth are full of your glory,
Hosanna in the highest,
Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord,
Hosanna in the highest.”

 

 

St. Telesphorus (125-136) 9th Pope

 

He introduced Midnight Mass of Christmas
He made fasting during Lent obligatory
Gnosticism begins to make its appearance in Church affairs
He composed and introduced the Gloria in Excelsis
Gloria in Excelsis:
“Glory to God in the highest,
and peace to his people on earth.
Lord God, heavenly King,
almighty God and Father,
we worship you, we give you thanks,
we praise you for your glory.
Lord Jesus Christ, only Son of the Father,
Lord God, Lamb of God,
you take away the sin of the world:
have mercy on us;
you are seated at the right hand of the Father:
receive our prayer.

 

for you alone are the Holy One,
you alone are the Lord,
you alone are the Most High,
Jesus Christ,
with the Holy Spirit,
in the glory of God the Father. Amen”

 

St. Hyginus (136-140) 10th Pope

 

He organized the clergy in a hierarchical basis
He instituted the practice of godparents to assist newly born
He decreed that all churches must be consecrated
He excommunicated Gnostics

St. Pius I (140-155) 11th Pope

 

He ordered that Easter must be
celebrated on a Sunday
He opposed Agnosticism and Gnosticism
Antonius Pius reigned as Roman emperor
He established rules for the conversion of Jews
He welcomed pagan turned Church apologist Justin Martyr

 

 

St. Anicetus (155-160) 12th Pope

 

He was first pope to public statement
against a heresy, Monatism
He deemed that clergy should not wear long hair.
Figuring the date of Easter became a long running controversy

 

St. Soter (166-175) 13th Pope

 

He ratified  matrimony valid only if blessed by a priest.
He reprimanded the sexual behavior and laxity of the Church at Corinth
He fought against the heresy of Monatism in Africa

 

St. Eleutherius (175-189) 14th Pope

 

He renewed condemnation of Monatism and Gnosticism
He sent missionaries to convert the Britains
A minor king in Britain became the first Christian king in Europe
He abolished some Jewish customs concerning purity and impurity of foods.

 

St. Victor I   (189-199) 15th Pope

 

He convened synods to settle the Easter issue
He condemned Monatism and Gnostacism
He decreed that baptism might be administered with any natural water

 

stzephyrinusi

 

St. Zephyrinus (199-217) 16th Pope

He consolidated the pontifical supremacy over the bishops

He renewed the discipline of the Church toward adultery and immorality

Masses were said on top of the tombs.  This started the practice of placing saints’s relics into altars.

Bitter arguments over the relationship between the human and divine nature of Jesus appear

The Church’s first formal schism appears

Some Christians believed that Jesus became man, not God.(Monarchianism)

Some Christians believed that it was the Father who died on the cross (Modalism)

callist1

 

St. Callixtus (217-22) 17th Pope

He was a slave who suffered for his faith

There were large numbers of Christians throughout all the cities of the empire

In Rome Christianity appealed to the highest and lowest classes

Previously, it had been custom to exclude sacraments from any Christian who committed adultery and fornication

In order to adapt to growing Christianity, He decreed that those guilty of sexual crimes might return to the sacraments after due penance.

He ruled that early baptism was preferable

He claimed altering this custom fell under the binding and loosing authority given to Peter and his successors

He declared that within the Church that slave and free were equal

He declared that the laws of the Church regarding marriage take precedence over laws of the state

He was responsible for the excavation of the catacombs on the Via Appia

His opposition lead to the creation of the first anti-pope, Hippolytus

 


st-urban-i

 

St. Urban I (222-230) 18th Pope

He consented to the acquisition of property by the Church

He ordered that chalices and patens were to be made of gold and silver

Because of persecutions, Christians began to gather in the catacombs for the Liturgy

 


stpontiani

 

St. Pontian  (230-235) 19th Pope

He ordered chanting of the Psalms

He convened a synod condemning that heresy that all men (including the devil) will eventually be reconciled with God (Origenism)

 

 

stanterusi

 

St. Anterus (235-236) 20th Pope

He wrote many epistles promoting tightening hierarchical relationships with the Church during the growing persecution

He ordered that the acts and relics of the martyrs be stored in churches

Some Christians followed a deterministic and dualistic Gnostic belief that the soul is good, but that matter is evil (Manicheanism)

pope-st-fabian

St. Fabian (236-250) 21st Pope

He reorganized the local clergy into diaconates for the administration of social welfare.

He was responsible for founding several churches in Gaul

He originated the consecration of holy oils on Holy Thursday

Upon his election of pope, a dove landed on his head

The persecution in Rome gave rise to the hermetical life of the anchorites.

 

 

pope-cornelius

 

St. Cornelius (251-253) 22nd Pope

The fierce persecution of the Church prevented the election of a new pope after St. Fabian for 16 months

Novation, the second anti-pope, was elected

Novation introduced the heresy that those guilty of grave sins were permanently excluded and prevented from receiving absolution from the Church (Novationism)

Some Christians became lapsi by renouncing their faith.  These lapsi offered incense to the gods or emperor, and turned over their bible to the Roman authorities.(traditores)

Cornelius convened a synod to deal with these lapsi who wished to return to the Church

The lapsi could rejoin the Church after a severe penance. Lapsi priests and bisho
p would lose their priestly authority

 

 

pope-saint-lucius-i-1

 

St. Lucius (253-254) 23rd Pope

He declared those who stole Church

assets to excommunicated.

He continued the policies of St. Cornelius toward the Lapsi

 

 

saint-stephen-i

 

St. Stephen I (254-257) 24th Pope

The main event of this pontificate was the dispute of the re-baptized

He reasserted the traditional Roman Catholic teaching that baptism, done in the Trinitarian formula, is valid

He ordered that vestments used at Mass could not be worn as everyday wear

 

 

pope-sixtus-ii

 

St. Sixtus II (257-258) 25th Pope

For fear of imperial confiscation, He ordered the remaining Church treasures to be distributed among the poor

 

 

pope-st-denis

 

St. Dionysius (Denis) (259-268) 26th Pope

The new emperor issued an edict of toleration, giving the Church its legal existence

The churches and cemeteries were restored to Catholic ownership

He reorganized the parishes in Rome that were disrupted during the persecution

He was elected a year after his successor because of the persecution

 

 

stfelixi

 

St. Felix I (269-274) 27th Pope

He began the practice of burying martyrs under church altars

He ordered that Masses should be celebrated on the tombs of the martyrs

He asserted the divinity and humanity of Jesus

He asserted the two natures, divinity and humanity, in one person

Some Christians believed that Jesus was merely a man, but had acted as the Temple of the Holy Spirit, in whom the Divine Word dwelt through its operation.

 

 

steutychiani

 

St. Eutychian (275-283) 28th Pope

Manicheanism spread throughout the empire, becoming very powerful, arousing great concern

He instituted blessing of the crops

He ordered that martyrs be covered with a Dalmatic, a cloak worn by the Roman emperors.

The Dalmatic is a sacred vestment worn by the deacon at solemn religious functions

 

 

m-caius-28

 

St. Caius (283-296) 29th Pope

He was the grandson of the emperor

He ordered that all bishops must through several degrees of the clergy

The bloodiest persecution of Diocletian occurs

 

 

stmarcellinusi

 

St. Marcellinus ( 296-304) 30th Pope

He was lenient toward the lapsi, which angered the Donatists and Novationists

 

 

stmarcellusi

 

St. Marcellus I (308-309) 31st Pope

The persecutions were so great that there was no pope for four years

He was very strict against those Christians who had been guilty of weakness and idolatry during the persecutions

For refusing to adore the idols, He was forced into slavery as stable horse groom

He decreed that a council could not be held without authorization by the pope

 

 

steusebiusi

 

St. Eusebius (310) 32nd Pope

He fought against Rigorists who refused to administer penance against people who lapsed during the persecutions.

He fought against Heraclius and others who demanded that the lapsi be readmitted to the sacraments without penance

 

 

img-pope-saint-miltiades-1

 

St. Miltiades (311-314) 33rd Pope

He was able to obtain the confiscated Church assets from the emperor

Constantine became the new emperor

Constantine allowed liberty to the Christians and the freedom of church building

In 313 Constantine enacted the Edict of Milan which allowed toleration of all religions in the empire

Birthrates and marriages dwindled sharply due to the decadent Roman lifestyle.  Abortion, homosexuality, widespread divorce, and contraception prevailed.

To combat these evils, Constantine ordered that new marriage laws be based on the Church’s principles

Constantine gave the Lateran Palace to the papacy.  This would be the place were the popes would preside. Today, it houses the administrative offices of the Diocese of Rome.

This cathederal is dedicated to John the Evangelist and John the Bapist.  It is the first cathedral in Rome

St. Miltiades convened a synod condemning the Donatists as heretics

Blessed bread dates from this time

 

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St. Sylvester I (314-335) 34th Pope

The Church continued to benefit from Constantine’s patronage.  The basilica of St. Peter, the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, and Nativity in Bethlehem were given to the Church.  Building and renovation of St. John Lateran continues.

Sylvester helped Constantine in his continuing education in Christiantity

Some Christians believed that Christ was the highest of God’s creatures (not God) (Arianism)

Sylvester and Constantine jointly convened the First Council at Nicaea, the imperial summer home.

Sylvester send Bishop Hosius of Cordova to preside over the 250 bishops in his name

The council condemened Arianism and composed the Nicene Creed used at Mass today

The Nicene Creed affirms Christ’s status as 2nd Person of the Holy Trinity

Sylvester instituted Sunday as a holy day in memory of the resurrection

Contstantine was most likely baptized at his deathbed

 

 

img-pope-saint-marcus

 

St. Marcus I (336) 35th Pope

He decreed the use of the pallium to be worn by only popes, denoting their authority.

This a wool garment from a previously blessed lamb, decorated with black crosses

 

 

julius-i

 

St. Julius I (337-352) 36th Pope

He convened a synod condemning Arianism

He convened a council reaffirming the decrees of Nicaea against the Arians. This This council allowed deposed bishops to appeal to the pope.

He ordered that the Church should celebrate Christmas on December 25

He is considered to be founder of the archives of the Holy See

 

 

pope-liberius

 

Liberius (352-366) 37th Pope

He was the first pope not to be canonized in the Western Church.

He ordered the building of the basilica of St. Mary Major. This site was signified by a Marian apparition and confirmation by a miraculous fall of snow on the lot in the middle of August

The Arian heresy was at its height in influence. The emperor and all but five of the bishops followed Arianism

Bishops, like St. Athanasius, were driven from their dioceses.

Arianism appealed to the intellectuals because it was easily accessible to human reason

Arianism appealed to Jews and the more literate pagans because of its simple monotheism

Arianism de-divinizing of Jesus snipped the tension filled bridge between heaven and earth

Denial of the incarnation put God safely away in heaven, appealing to emperors to reign peacefully on earth

The emperor exiled Liberius and appointed the third anti-pope, Felix II.  The emperor convened a “council”, approving several ambiguous semi-Arian creeds.

Under great pressure, Liberius endorsed these semi-Arian creeds in return for being allowed to return to Rome in 358

Similar pressure led Liberius to excommunicate St. Athanasius for a time.

Liberius received opposition for offering pardon for those Arian bishops who would renounce their heresy

Anti Pope Felix II was forced out of Rome. He refused to accept Arianism

 

 

stdamasusi

 

St. Damasus I (366-383) 38th Pope

Althought he continued to struggle against Arianism, the tide had turned against this heresy

Some Christians believed that Christ had a human body

but no human intellect or free will. His flesh was united with His Godhood. Christ was neither God nor man. (Apollinarianism)

In 368 he convened a synod which condemned Apollinarism

There were three patriarchates in existence: Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch

The defeat and death of the emperor at the hands of the Visogoths (Barbarians) signified the beginning of the end of the Roman empire

The next emperor Theodesius I made Christianity the official religion of the empire. Official Roman citizenship was granted to all who were baptized

Damasus and Theodesius I convened the Council of Constantinople approving the final version of the Nicene Creed as recited today. This council defined and approved the Canon of Scripture

Damasus beautified churches and transformed the catacombs into shrines

He revised the Roman liturgy

He commissioned St. Jerome to make a new translation of the Bible from Hebrew into Latin, becoming the Vulgate

He authorized singing of the psalms by alternate choirs (Abrosian Rite).

He introduced the use of the Hebrew term “alleluia”.

Ursicinus became the fourth anti-pope as a result of opposition to Pope Liberius. Ursicinus, banished by the emperor, eventually converted to Ariansim

 

 

st-siricius

 

St. Siricius (384-399) 39th Pope

He was strong advocate of the Roman primacy

He issued many decrees for all the churches

His letter to Bishop Himerius of Tarragona is the earliest actual papal decree still existing

He assumed the title of Pope (Papa) from the Greek “Father”

Papa-anagram for Petri Apostoli Potestatem Accipiens

He upheld the necessity of celibacy for priests

 

 

pope_anastasius_i

 

St. Anastasius I (399-401) 40th Pope

He condemned the Origensists (who promote abuses in the Origen’s theology)

He condemned the Donatists

He declared that baptism by Donatists’ clergy to be valid

He declared that repentant Donatist clergy may return to their churches

He maintained that the Divinity was also hidden in material things.

He decreed that priests should remain standing during the gospel

 

 

 

st-innocent-i

 

St. Innocent I (401-417) 41st Pope

Two weak emperors ruled the empire

He consolidated papal supervision of the Church

He issued decrees promoting celibacy and combating adultery

Alaric, king of the Visigoths entered Italy and the emperor fled to Ravenna

Alaric sacked Rome, but spared the Churches and monastery, out of deference to Innocent I

The remaining pagans claimed that Rome fell because it had abandoned worship of the old gods.

St. Augustine refuted this claim in his work City of God

Innocent ordered that the repentant dying people cannot be refused final absolution

He decreed that only bishops should give the sacrament of confirmation

Some Christians believed in the heresy that denied both original sin and divine grace. This heresy held that one’s own personal will, good intentions and works, regardless of belief or sacraments, will win one’s salvation (Pelagiansism)

He established the Roman rite

He persuaded the emperor to gladiator contests in the arenas

 

 

st-zosimus

 

St. Zosimus (417-418) 42nd Pope

He reconfirmed the condemnation of Pelagiansim

He insisted on the rights of the Church against foreign interference’

 

 

 

st-boniface-i

 

St. Boniface I (418-422) 43rd Pope

He continued the fight against Pelagianism

He enforced the law forbidding slaves to become priests

This time marks the beginning of secular interference in the election of popes

 

 

st-celestine-i

 

St. Celestine I (422-432) 44th Pope

Some Christians believed in the heresy that there were two persons in Christ, one human, one divine.

Because of this, the Virgin Mary could not be called the Mother of God, but only Mother of Christ (Nestorianism)

A Roman synod and the council of Ephesus condemned Nestorianism.

Ephesus was the location where Mary was placed in the care of John until her death

The condemnation of the council carried the force of the law, because Church laws were civil as well

Nestorianism spread into the Persian frontier. Nestorians took control of churches in Persia.

Persian authorities persucted Christians tied to Rome

St. Celestine sent missionaries to Britian and Ireland to evangelize and combat Pelagianism

Mention is first made in this period of the pastoral staff

 

 

st-sixtus-iii

 

St. Sixtus III (432-440) 45th Pope

He was very lenient against the Nestorians and Pelagians

He rebuilt the basilica of St. Mary Major in commemoration of the council of Ephesus reaffirmation of Mary’s divine motherhood

He restored the baptistery of the basilica of St. John Lateran

 

 

 

st-leo-i

 

St. Leo I (440-461) 46th Pope

Against the background of crumbling imperial authority and barbarian invasions, He took a firm hand in Church affairs

Some Christians believed in the heresy that the human body is evil (Priscillianism)

Some Christians believed in the heresy that Christ had a single divine nature. (Monophystism)

He convened the council at Chalcedon which condemned Monophystism

Through misinterpretation of the council, many Christians in the East separated from the main body of the Church

Those Christians in the East did not separate were called Melkites (Royalists)

Attila the Hun came south into Italy. St. Leo convinced Attila to spare Rome

Gaiseric, king of the Vandals, came north into Italy. St. Leo convinced Gaiseric to spare Rome

St. Leo is called “Great” because of his energetic work in maintaining the unity of the Church

 

 

 

st-hilarius

 

St. Hilarius (461-468) 47th Pope

He decreed that popes and bishops should not nominate their successors

He ordered that annual synods be held in southern Gaul

 

 

st-simplicius

 

St. Simplicius ( 468-483) 48th Pope

The Church was ever more threatened by external and internal enemies

The Western emperor was deposed by the Odoacer, head of his Germanic guards

Arian Vandals ruled north Africa

Arian Visogoths ruled Spain and southern Gaul

Pagan Franks ruled northern Gaul

Odoacer proclaimed himself king of Italy, saying that empire needed one ruler

He resisted the Constantinople archbishops desire for greater power

The two older eastern patriarchates were in a virtual state of civil war

The struggle against Monophysitism was severe. This heresy was favored by three successive emperors

The Coptic Orthodox and Syriac Orthodox Churches developed as a result of these struggles in the East

For the first time since Constantine, there was not a single Catholic king on earth

He regulated the distribution of offerings to pilgrims and for new churches

 

 

st-felix-ii

 

St. Felix III (483-492) 49th Pope

His grandson was to become Pope St. Gregory I

He had to deal with the ongoing struggle of Monophytism

He condemned the emperor, leading to another schism

He decreed strict regulations for the readmission into the Church of those who had accepted Arianism

 

 

st-gelasius_i

 

St. Gelasius I (492-496) 50th Pope

He also continued to struggle with schism

Pelagiansim and Manicheanism continued

He ordered that the laity to receive from the cup, contradicting the Manichean claim that wine is evil

He ended the pagan festival of Lupercalia. This festival featured goat sacrifices and physical striking

He was a great liturgist, instituting the code for ceremonies and rites

He inserted the Kyrie eleison, a responsorial psalm in the opening rite in the Mass. Kyrie eleison is Greek for “Lord have mercy.”

 

 

 

anastasiusii

 

Anastasius II ( 496-498) 51st Pope

Clovis, king of France, was baptized. This was the first of the barbarian kings to Catholicism

Anastasius continued to fight against schism

He maintained that sacraments given by schismatic priest were valid.

He condemned the heresy Traducianism. This heresy teaches that human souls were handed down to children by their parents, rather than creations by God at the moment of conception

 

 

 

st-symmachus

 

St. Symmachus (498-514) 52nd Pope

He was a convert from paganism

He issued regulations regarding papal elections

He ordered that the Gloria was to be sung at all Sunday Masses

He consolidated Church property

He ransomed all slaves, giving them their desired freedom

He started the first construction of the Vatican Palace

Laurentius was chosen as the 5th anti-pope. He was chosen by those who were lenient toward the schismatic

 

 

st-hormisdas

 

St. Hormisdas (514-523)  53rd Pope

He was a widower before he went into major orders

His son Silverius would later some day be pope

The Acacian schism at long last ended
The eastern bishops accepted the council of Chalcedon and the authority of Rome in matters of faith

During this time St. Benedict founded the Benedictine Order

He decreed that the office of bishop not bestowed with privilege

 

 

st-john-i

 

St. John I (523-526)  54th Pope

He inherited a church at peace

The emperor turned over the Arian churches to the Catholics. The emperor ordered all the Arian Goths to convert

The papacy and empire were now closely aligned

He crowned the emperor

He was the first pope to go to Constantinople

 

 

st-felix-iii

 

St. Felix (526-530)  55th Pope

Pelagianim had been defeated

A moderated form (semi-Pelagianism) had become popular in southern Gaul. This was condemned by the pope

He approved the local council of Orange which explained Original Sin and condemned Pelagianism

The new emperor intended to reconquer the West from the barbarians. The next several pontificates would be deeply affected by this-for good or bad

The emperor’s political needs tended to compete with his religious aspirations

Owing to the papacy’s interest in doctrinal orthodoxy regardless of political result, conflict would be inevitable

The emperor at times favored compromise that successive popes found intolerable

 

 

st-boniface-ii

 

St. Boniface II (530-532)  56th Pope

The old Roman families who had produced the many popes were in decline

The priest were divided into factions

Thus set the stage for the first pope of Germanic origin, considered by some as a “barbarous foreigner”

The majority of the Roman clergy refused to accept Boniface. They elected an anti-pope Dioscurus.

After Dioscurus died, Boniface was accepted by all

He dealt with matters of whether or not appointing papal successors. This was later rejected

He approved the second council of Orange which condemned semi-Pelagianism

 

 

st-john-ii

 

John II (533-535)  57th Pope

Problems appeared with the process of appointing papal successors.  Simony and promising of votes were outlawed

His original name was Projectus, a pagan god’s name. He was the first pope to change his name

Another dispute over the Trinity had broken out in the East. He settled this matter

He solved some jurisdictional problems in southern Gaul

The emperor invaded Africa, defeating the Vandals. The Church was freed from persecution

The pope was recognized as head of the bishops of the whole world

 

 

 

st-agapetus-i

St. Agapetus I (535-536)  58th Pope

He was immediately faced with the question of lapsed Arian bishops in Africa

He ruled that these Arian bishops could be readmitted to the Church, but without their former clerical authority

He was poisoned by emperor’s  wife Theodora in Constantinople

He deposed a semi-Monophysite patriarch in Constantinople

 

 

st-silverius

St. Silverius (536-537)  59th Pope

He was the son of Pope St. Hormisdas

He was appointed by a Goth king and later ratified by the Roman clergy. The Gothic ruler wanted to a loyal pope in Rome

Italy and Rome were once again reoccupied by the Emperor.

The empress Theodora pursued her goal of making Monophysitism the religion of Church and empire.

Empress Theodora sought to arrange Vigillius to be the next pope. This next pope would revoke St. Agapetus’s condemnation of the semi-Monophysite patriach and eventual rejection of the Council of Chalcedon

Silverius was accused by high treason, being appointed by a Goth King

 

 

pope-vigilius

Vigilius (537-555)  60th Pope

The empress Theodora sought to make an ally of him

The majority of the Roman clergy initially refused to recognize him

He reiterated his approval of the teachings of Ephesus and Chalcedon and the condemnation of the eastern patriarch

The emperor conceded to the pope certain aspects of the civil administration in Italy

 

 

pope_pelagius_i

 

Pelagius I (556-561)  61st Pope

Rome was no a province of the Byzantine empire

He persuaded the emperor to condemn Origenism

He used his personal fortunes to relieve the starving city of Rome

His reputation was tarnished

He reorganized the Church’s estates

He organized tribunals to deal with clerical abuses that had grown over the years

 

 

pope-john-iii

John III (561-574)  62nd Pope

Like Pelagius, he helped the poor and renovated Italy

He saved Italy from the Lombard barbarians

He rallied all the Italians against the Lombards

 

 

popebenedicti

 

Benedict I (575-579) 63rd Pope

 

The Lombards had succeeded in isolating Rome

Famine appeared throughout Italy

He ordered selling and reassigning Church properties to bring relief to the starving

He tried to restore order in Italy and France

He confirmed the council of Constantinople

 

 

popepelagiusii

 

Pelagius II (579-590)  64th Pope

He was born at Rome of a Gothic father

He convinced the Lombards to cease from their siege of Rome

The empire was exhausted by constant wars and constant skirmishing

He looked to the west to the kingdom of the Franks.

The Franks successfully held off the Lombards. The Lombards bribed the Franks to go home

Plague swept Rome

 

 

 

st-gregory-i

St. Gregory I (590-604)  65th Pope

He bought and freed some slaves

He kept open table for the poor.

He codified the Roman canon of the Mass(called the Eucharist prayer I) into its present form

He regulated the chants to be used in the liturgy. (Gregorian chants)

He wrote many sermons, commentaries, and letters

He fought against Arianism, paganism, simony, Manichaenism, and Donatism

He was able to begin the conversion of the Lombards

He reaffirmed the civil authority of the pope

 

 

pope-sabinian

 

Sabinian (604-606) 66th Pope

The Lombards went on the warpath again

He replaced many of Pope Gregory’s monks with secular monks

He regulated the ringing of the bells for meditation and prayer

He decreed that sanctuary lamps be always kept burning in the churches

 

 

pope-boniface-iii

 

Boniface III (607)  67th Pope

He held a synod which excommunicated anyone who discussed or lobbied a pope or bishop’s successor

He decreed that the only universal bishop was that of Rome, the pope

He forbid arrangements for election of the new pope until three days have passed since the death of the predecessor

 

 

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St. Boniface IV (608-615) 68th Pope

He turned an old pagan temple into a church

He led a synod dealing with affairs of the English Church

The Persians took control over Syria, Persia, Palestine, and Jerusalem

He instituted All Saints Day on November 1st

He sanctioned moral and material improvements for the lower clergy

 

 

 

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St. Deusdedit I (615-618)  69th Pope

He ordered that churches too small to hold their congregation, Masses could be held twice on Sunday

He tended lepers and the plague stricken.

His is the oldest pontifical seat preserved in the Vatican

He was the first to affix leaden seals (Bullae) to his decrees.  Hence the common word for a document, a “bull.”

 

 

 

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St. Boniface V (619-625) 70th Pope

He immediately work on administrative questions that previous pontificates had ignored

He established the right of sanctuary, whereby criminals could elude their pursuers for a period if they could reach a church

He further enacted that notaries must follow the laws of the empire in their work

He ruled that acolytes could not move from one church to another

Mohammed began preaching during this time

 

 

 

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Honorius I (625-638)  71st Pope

He was much concerned with English affairs of the Church, granting authority to the archbishops at York and Canturbury

He oversaw the reorganization of the Church in Spain. After the Visogoths converted, Catholicism became the state church

The southern Irish bishops expressed fidelity to the papacy

He reconciled many of the schismatic churches of northern Italy and restored a number of northern churches

The emperor drove out the Persians out of the empire territories

The Monophysite followers helped paved the way for the easy fall of the provinces to the Persians

Followers of Mohammed felt obligated to subject the whole world to their idea of God, Allah

The emperor felt some compromise formula was needed that both Catholics and Monophysites could accept in order to maintain the empire

This compromise formula created the heresy, that although there were indeed two natures in Christ, there was one “will” between them. (Monothelitism)

However, there is a problem with this statement.  If these two wills were united, Jesus would cease to be perfect Man and perfect God.

He was asked to provide a clarification of these doctrinal matters.  He avoided this matter by neither defining nor condemning these teachings. He did not speak in an official teaching manner, nor attempting to bind the Church.

He was the first pope ever to be condemned as a heretic by an ecumenical council. The notion of papal infallibility was unclearly defined and determined

The Persians retook Syria, Palestine, and Jerusalem, and northern Africa, changing the Christian landscape

Most of the flourishing cities turned to ruins

Fertile fields and green forests became desert

Churches were turned into mosques

Small bands of native Christians remained in the Near East

The emperor decreed that all residents of the empire accept Monothelitism

 

 

pope-severinus

Severinus (640) 72nd Pope

He declared once again that Christ had two wills and two natures

Monothelites believed their formula was the only method for reuniting the Copts and Syrians with Constantinople in the face of the Muslim threat. These believers saw the orthodox as stiff-neck fanatics willing to endanger the military security of the empire for mere religious beliefs

In refusing to accept Monothelitism, the emperor punished the pope by ransacking the Latern basilica and palace

 

 

 

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John IV (640-642) 73rd Pope

He asked the northern Irish bishops to observe Easter in the Roman calendar.

He renewed his predecessor’s condemnation of Monothelitism

He himself ordained priests and bishops

 

 

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Theodore I (642-649) 74th Pope

He was a benefactor of the poor

He repaired churches

He added the title “Sovereign” to “Pontiff’

He restored order to the internal jurisdiction of the clergy

 

 

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St. Martin I (649-655) 75th Pope

He was aware of the Monoethelite problems

He held a council at Lateran, condemning Monothelitism

He was arrested and exiled for this action

 

 

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St. Eugene I (654-657)  76th Pope

He reiterated the condemnations made by his predecessor

He decreed the observance of chastity for all priests

The emperor was fighting against Arabs, Avars, and Slavs

 

 

 

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St. Vitalin (657-672) 77th Pope

He sought to bring the English Church in agreement to observation of Easter in the Roman calendar

He was the first pope to regulate the liturgical use of the organ, using it during religious ceremonies

In 671 the Lombards were converted to Christianity

 

 

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Adeodatus II (672-676)  78th Pop

He defended orthodoxy against the Monothelites

He was an avid restorer of churches

He took the monasteries in Canterbury and France under direct papal protection

Constantinople was under siege by the Arabs

He sent missionaries to convert the Marionites

He was the first pope to use the in his letters, “Health and Apostolic Benediction

 

 

 

popedonus

Donus (676-678)  79th Pope

He paved the courtyard in front of St. Peter’s

He ended the schism of the Church in Ravenna

He encouraged the bishops to support new schools in Gaul and Cambridge

 

 

 

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St. Agatho (678-681)  80th Pope

He presided over a council condemning the Monothelites.

Pope Honorius was posthumously condemned as a heretic by that council

He sought to reintroduce the Gregorian Chant into England

He performed many miracles, receiving the title, “Healer”

He maintained strong relationships with the English bishops

He encourages Ireland as a center of culture

 

 

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St. Leo II (682-683)  81st Pope

He reformed the Gregorian Chant

He condemned Honorious I

He reconciled the last holdouts of the Northern schism

He celebrated the sacred functions with great pomp in order to make the faithful more aware of the majesty of God

He introduced the sprinkling of the people with holy water during religious functions

 

 

 

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St. Benedict II (684-685)  82nd Pope

He succeeded in liberating the emperor confirming the pope

He restored the privilege of sanctuary

He was known for his singing ability and knowledge of scripture

He work to suppress Monothelitism

He helped the clergy and supported the care for the poor

 

 

 

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John V (685-686) 83rd Pope

He was able to have emperor reduce the taxes on papal states

He was known for his generosity to the poor

 

 

 

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Conon (686-687) 84th Pope

He had a reputation for holiness

His pontificate was deeply disturbed by the anarchy which prevailed in the Church

 

 

 

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St. Sergius I (687-701) 85th Pope

He refused to accept disciplinary canon authorized by the emperor

He was much concerned with internal Church affairs

He added the Agnus Dei (Lamb of God) to the Roman Mass

Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.

Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, have mercy on us.

Lamb of God, you take away the sins of the world, grant us peace

He instituted processions of the feasts of the Nativity, Purification, Annunciation, and the Assumption of the Virgin Mary

He had sought to end the schism in Rome

 

 

John VI (701-705)  86th Pope

The Lombards marched on Rome

He defended the Church against the emperor

He ransomed many slaves

 

 

John VII (705-707)  87th Pope

He renovated and built churches

The Lombards returned papal states in northern Italy

He faced  pressure from the emperor

He convinced English priests in Rome to wear the collar

 

 

 

Sisinnius  (708)  88th Pope

He fortified the walls of Rome against invaders

 

 

Constantine (708-715)  89th Pope

Famine broke out around Rome for about four years

The Moors invaded Spain

He encouraged the Christians in Spain in their struggles against the Moors

He succeeded in bring some form of peace between the Church and the empire

 

 

 

St. Gregory II (715-731)  90th Pope

He was much interested in missionary work

The emperor violently opposed the use of images in churhes. (Inconoclasm)

He condemned the emperor’s actions

 

 

 

St. Gregory III (731-741)  91st Pope

He condemned iconoclasm and excommunicated the emperor

He sought help form Charles Martel, leader of the Franks, for protection from the Lombards

 

 

St. Zachary (741-752)  92nd Pope

He dealt with the Lombard problem, creating a truce

The Frankish Church was reorganized and revitalized

The reign of the “do nothing kings” ended

Pepin became the first in the Carolingian kings

He consecrated Pepin, the first investiture of a king by a pope

 

 

 

Stephen II (752-752)  93rd Pope

He died of a stroke while dealing with Church affairs.

 

 

 

Stephen III (752-757)  94th Pope

He sought the aid of Pepin in defeating the Lombards

The emperor convened a council condemning the use of images

Pepin bestowed sovereign papal states to the papacy

From this time popes would be temporal and spiritual leaders

He was loved by the Roman poor

He built hospitals around St. Peters church

 

 

 

St. Paul (757- 767)  95th Pope

He was the brother of Stephen II

He aligned himself with the Franks, enjoying peace with the Lombards

He welcomed monks who fled to escape persecution for their love of images

He freed prisoners condemned with debts

He forgave the injuries the Lombards had done to the Church.

 

 

 

Stephen IV (768-772)  96th Pope

Several political groups sought to name candidates for pope

In response to recent events, the council of Lateran in 769 declared that only cardinals could be elected pope

He was not able to restrain the Roman mob killed his rivals despite his protest.

The Frankish leaders returned back to the Vatican some previously confiscated lands.

 

 

 

Adrian I (772-795)  97th Pope

The “Donation of Charlemagne” provided the future papal states

Charlemagne became the King of the Franks and Lombards, becoming the official protector of Rome and the papacy

He restored the walls of Rome and the ancient aqueducts

 

 

 

St. Leo III (795-816) 98th Pope

He elevated Cologne and Salzburg into archdioceses

Some Christians believed in the heresy that Jesus was not God but merely a man whom special graces were given (Adoptionism)

He fled Rome seeking the aid of Charlemagne

He returned to Rome with an escort of Frankish nobles

He crowned, anointed and swore allegiance to Charlemagne

Charlemagne is the first Holy Roman emperor

The Roman and Gaulish rites were fused

Charlemagne united all of Europe, providing the foundation of modern Europe

The matter of clarification of the Trinity comes up in Spain. The Nicene Creed in its original form specifies that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father

Charlemagne urged Leo to add Filoque (“and the son”) to the Nicene Creed.  This custom of adding Filoque spread from Spain to Gaul

 

 

Stephen V (816-817)   99th Pope

He was renowned for his generosity to the poor

He was the first to administer the oath of allegiance to the emperor

 

 

 

St. Paschal I (817-824)  100th Pope

He commissioned the evangelization of Denmark

The emperor in the east reverted to iconoclasm and renewed his persecution

He helped in the discovery and preservation of the catacombs

 

 

 

Eugene II (824-827)  101st Pope

He was very forceful in protecting and preserving the rights of the Church

A clerical group and an imperial leaning group sought their influence to name a pope

He and the emperor developed principals of the relationship between the  pope and the emperor

Those under Papal or Imperial protection were inviolable and were to be obeyed

Church property was not be plundered after the death of a pope

Only those who were permitted, cardinals, could participate in papal elections

He established schools at cathedral

He deposed ignorant of illiterate preists

He is attributed to the institution of seminaries

He put into effect canons and law, becoming the origin present Roman Curia

 

 

Valentine (827)  102nd Pope

He was capable at reconciling all parties

He was loved by the people

 

 

Gregory IV (827-844)  103rd Pope

He was known by his piety.

He made himself known through his work for the poor.

Imperial concerns would dominate his pontificate.

Viking raids increased.

Muslims took Siciliy and intervened in Southern Italy.

He appointed Nov. 1 as Feast of All Saints.

The Gregorian Chant spread through Europe.

 

 

 

Sergius II (844-847)  104th Pope

He suffered physical pain and gout

The Muslims came very close to seizing Rome

He carried out improvements on churches and aqueducts

 

 

 

St. Leo IV (847-855) 105th Pope

He sought to strengthen the defenses of Rome against the Muslims

He built up the walls around Rome

He repaired and beautified St. Peter’s

He was the first pope to put the date on official documents

 

 

 

Benedict III (855-858)  106th Pope

The Frankish Church suffered from squabbles between the Carolingians

Many of these bishops were fearful to speak out against evils

 

 

 

St. Nicholas I (858-867)  107th Pope

Both secular rulers and archbishops sought to run Church affairs as their own

He was known for his fearlessness and piety

He faced difficult resistance among the secular rulers

The schism between east and west begin during this time

The Slavic alphabet “Cyrillic” is invented to teach Christianity to the Slavs

He encourages the missionary activity of the Church

He rebuilt and endowed several churhes

He constantly encourage religious vocations

He appointed August 15 as Feast of the Assumption

 

 

 

Adrian II (867-872)  108th Pope

He tried to settle the deep quarrels among the catholic people

He crowned the first sovereign blessed English king

The governance of the Church fell into the hands of a clique of unscrupulous clerics

 

 

 

 

John VIII (872-882)  109th Pope

He could not clean out corruption in Church affairs for fear of reprisal

He later eventually moved to clean up the Roman administration

He excommunicated a Church official in exchange for return of land to the Latin Church

He was defeated by the Arabs

The Christians were slowly were reconquering Spain from the Muslims

 

 

 

Marinus (882-884)  110th Pope

He tried to end the factionalism in Rome

He sought to take action against the schism in the east

 

 

 

St. Adrian III (884-885)  111st Pope

Rome was beset with a famine

 

 

Stephen VI (885-891)  112nd Pope

A plague of locusts reduced Rome to
starvation

He used his father’s fortune to buy food, free prisoners, and to repair churches

He forbade trial by fire or water

 

 

 

Formosus (891-896)  113th Pope

The Vikings besieged Paris

The French decided to have a king of their own

The Bulgarians were converted to Christianity

 

 

 

Boniface VI (896)  114th Pope

The papacy was at the mercy of the great feudal families of Italy

 

 

 

Stephen VII (896-897)  115th Pope

He had the pope’s body thrown into the Tiber river after a mock trial

He incorrectly declared that Formosus’ sacramental acts as invalid

 

 

 

 

Romanus (897)  116th Pope

He had a reputation of virtue

He help rehabilitated the memory of Formosus

 

 

 

Theodore II (897)  117th Pope

He restored full pontifical honors to Formosus

He reinstated clerics deposed by Stephen

He declared Formosus’ sacramental acts as valid

 

 

 

John IX (898-900)  118th Pope

He sought to eliminate the anarchy that overwhelmed Rome and Italy because of factionalism and the breakdown of the empire

He restored the clerics deposed by Stephen

He ordered an end to the plunder of the papal states

He reaffirmed the supremacy of the Church over Rome and its territories

He reestablished the right of imperial intervention in the consecration of popes

 

 

 

 

Benedict IV (900-903)   119th Pope

He succeeded in maintain the integrity of the papacy

He constantly sought out the way of justice

 

 

 

 

Leo V (903)   120th Pope

He was known for his holiness

He was elected in hopes that an outsider would be above the bitter factionalism that was destroying the Church

 

 

 

 

Sergius III (904-911)    121st Pope

He officially reinstated the posthumous trial of Formosus

He declared Formosus appointments invalid, creating sacramental confusion

He defended the rights of the Church against feudal lords

 

 

 

Anastasius III (911-913)    122nd Pope

He was known for moderation

The papacy was beset with persistent internal disorders

 

 

 

 

Lando (913-914)   123rd Pope

His appointment was a result of  the actions of a political faction

 

 

 

 

John X (914-928)    124th Pope

His efforts were in fighting the Muslims

He consented to a royal appoint in return for the release of a king

His election was due to political intrigues

 

 

 

 

Leo VI (928-929)   125th Pope

His election was due to political intrigues

He tried to restore peace among the various factions

 

 

 

Stephen VIII  (929-931)   126th Pope

His election was due to political intrigues

 

 

 

 

John XI (931-935)   127th Pope

This papacy was truly one of the most depressing in history

He tried to settle the political intrigues

 

 

 

Leo VII (936-939)    128th Pope

He forbade the forcible conversion of Jews

He wrote to France and Germany condemnation of witches and fortune tellers

He reformed and reorganized monastic life

 

 

 

Stephen IX (939-942)    129th Pope

He compelled the French nobles to remain loyal to the Carolingian king

He tried to convert the lords of the east and west to the Gospel

 

 

 

 

Marinus II (942-946)    130th Pope

He initiated reform

He looked after both the poor and the repair of churches

He restored Rome as the moral capital of the world

He modified the rules of orders

 

 

 

 

Agapetus II (946-955)    131st Pope

He worked on the repair of churches and relief of the poor

He encouraged the growth of Catholicism among the Danes

He did his utmost to raise the moral condition of the clergy

 

 

 

 

John XII (955-964)    132nd Pope

His election had been arranged in advance

The Lateran palace was called a brothel

He unwittingly set into motion the cleansing of Rome by the imperial army

The emperor rescued the papal states

From this time forward, popes were to swear allegiance to the emperors

He insisted on the temporal rights of the Church

He died in the arms of his mistress

 

 

 

 

Leo VIII (963-965)    133rd Pope

Pope John XII was deposed by the emperor.

He was elected as a lay person by the emperor. All of the holy orders were hurriedly bestows upon him

His reign dealt with issues with his predecessor and successor

Pope John XII degraded all the clerics ordained and appointed by him

 

 

 

 

Benedict V (964)    134th Pope

The clergy and the Roman citizens elected him.

He was exiled to Hamburg by the emperor

His investiture was recognized upon the death of his predecessor

 

 

 

 

John XIII (965-972)    135th Pope

The death of Leo VIII prompted the Romans to petition the emperor to return Benedict V. The emperor refused. John XIII was elected

The Roman nobility resented and imprisoned him. He fled Rome

The Romans asked him to return to Rome

He convened synods

He and the emperor cooperated in a worthy manner

The papal-imperial alliance was sealed

The two imperial traditions were united. The western emperor’s son was married to a Byzantine princess

Missionary work was undertaken in the now central Germany and Czech Republic

He introduced the custom of blessing and giving names to bells

 

 

 

Benedict VI (972-974)    136th Pope

He was imprisoned and killed

He granted various privileges to churches and monasteries

He converted the Hungarian people to Christianity

He was replaced by the anti-pope by those who killed him

 

 

 

 

Benedict VII (974-983)    137th Pope

He was being menaced by that anti-pope’s advocates

He promoted the growth of monastaries

He gave aid to the persecuted Christians of North Africa who were being strangled out of existence by the Muslims

He tried to stem the debauchery and ignorance that pervaded Italy and the Christian world

He promoted the development of agriculture

 

 

 

 

John XIV (983-984)   138th Pope

The anti-pope Boniface VII overthrew and murdered him

 

 

 

 

John XV (985-996)    139th Pope

He was restricted access by a political faction.

He sought the empress help to prevent this

He was the first pope to canonize a saint, St. Ulrich, bishop of Hapsburg

The king of England and Duke of Normandy were locked in a dispute that foreshadowed the Normandy invasion of England

 

 

 

 

Gregory V (996-999)     140th Pope

He was the emperor’s cousin

He faced political forces and was forced out of Rome. An antipope was appointed
He instituted the commemoration of the dead

 

 

 

 

Sylvester II (999-1003)     141st Pope

He was the first Frenchman to become pope

He promulgated many bulls

He was so well educated that he became one of the greatest scientists in Christendom

He strongly contributed to the adoption of the decimal system in Europe

He was a great instructor

He intervened everywhere in the West

In collaboration with the emperor, he created two new national churches in Poland and Hungary

He was a reconciler, unifier and bridge builder between the Eastern empire and Western empire

He tried to repress the debauchery

Many considered the year 1000 crucial for the Final Judgment

 

 

John XVII (1003)    142nd Pope

He was a lay person elected by a powerful political faction

 

 

 

John XVIII (1003-1009)    143rd Pope

He was elected through the actions of a powerful political faction

He confirmed or extended privileges to churches and abbeys

He briefly renewed the union between the Latin and Greek churches

He worked zealously to spread the Christianity to the barbarians and pagans

 

 

 

Sergius IV (1009-1012)    144th Pope

He greatly relieved the sufferings of the poor during a famine

He tried in vain to reduce the immorality among the bishop and powerful abbots

 

 

 

Benedict VIII (1012-1024)    145th Pope

He was elected to the papacy by force

He was a strong, pious man

The emperor confirmed papal rule over Ravenna

He help defeat the Muslims in another assault

He befriended the Normans who were beginning to take over southern Italy

He condemned simony and clerical marriage

 

 

John XIX (1024-1032)    146th Pope

He was Benedict VIII’s brother

He sought to find some reconciliation with the Byzantine emperor

Many reformers in Italy and France objected, stating that the Eastern church was corrupt

He was elected a lay person. He rapidly received all the holy orders in sucession.

He confirmed and extended the Pax Dei, a custom that clerics, religious and noncombatants would be exempt from warfare. Church and monasteries are off limits. Sundays would be a day of truce

Guido of Arezzo invents solfeggio (do-re-me…). He was inventor of the 7 musical notes

 

 

 

Benedict IX (1032-1045)     147th Pope

His two uncles had been pope. He regard the papacy as a family legacy

He led a disgusting personal life

One of the political factions drove him out of Rome. He vacated the papacy

The people elected John (soon to be Sylvester III)

 

 

 

 

Sylvester III (1045)    148th Pope

Benedict IX returned and expelled Sylvester

Benedict IX sold the papacy to John  (soon to be Gregory V)

After Benedict IX sold the papacy, Sylvester III resigned his claim to the papacy in favor of Gregory V

Sylvester III reasserted his claim to the papacy

The emperor deposed Benedict IX and Gregory V

He is sometimes called an antipope

He was elected by one of the political factions

The Church recognizes him as a legitimate pope

 

 

 

Benedict IX (1045)     149th Pope

He sold the papacy to his godfather John (soon to be Gregory V) for money so that he can get married

 

 

 

Gregory VI (1045-1046)    150th Pope

John was only too happy to get Benedict IX out of the picture

The Romans and others welcomed him as the new pope

He faced an empty treasury and many problems

Sylvester III  and Benedict IX were soon plotting their respective returns

The Roman clergy under Benedict IX had become extremely immoral

The opposing factions under Sylvester III and Benedict IX were powerful

Each of the three papal claimants occupied a major basilica

The city of the popes became a present day Belfast

A large number of the clergy appealed to the King of Germany to sort this situation out

Sylvester III and Benedict IX were deposed.

Convinced that he had committed simony by paying Benedict IX to leave, Gregory V voluntarily abdicated the papacy

The emperor selected Suidger, bishop of Germany, (soon to be Clement II) to become the next pope

He is attributed to forming the first pontifical army

 

 

 

Clement II (1046-1047)     151st Pope

He was born in Homborg, Germany

He had a reputation for holiness

He convened a synod which condemned simony

He was preoccupied with the arrogance of the Count-Bishops, the cause of much bitter fighting among vassals

 

 

 

 

Benedict IX (1047-1048)     152nd Pope

Taking advantage of Clement II’s death, he returned to rule in Rome. He was again driven out of Rome

He once and for all abdicated

He gave up his sinful ways and died a penitent death

 

 

 

Damasus II (1048)     153rd Pope

The emperor appointed Poppo (soon to be Damasus II)

Benedict IX was driven out of Rome

 

 

St. Leo IX (1049-1054)     154th Pope

He freely elected by the clergy and people of Rome

He entered Rome barefoot as a sign of humility

He began to reorganize the extremely muddled affairs of the church

He convened synods which condemned simony, lave investiture, clerical immorality

He condemned a heretic who denied the Real Presence in the Eucharist

The Normans were gobbling up more territories in southern Italy

The Normans defeated the imperial army and captured Leo IX

Ecclesiastical politics was becoming very nasty

He excommunicated Michael Cerularis who was responsible for causing the schism of the Greek Church with the Latin Church

In response Michael Cerularis repeated charges made by past patriarchs against Rome, closed ass Latin churches in Constantinople, desecrated hosts in their tabernacles

This was the final stroke of the schism between East and West

At this point time East and West both believed in: the common enemy of the Muslims, Apostolic succession, commonality of doctrine on most points, the idea that schism was wrong

 

 

 

Victor II (1055-1057)     155th Pope

He accepted being pope on condition that the emperor restore to the Holy See certain territories taken by the emperor and his predecessors

He fought simony, priestly fornication, other misdeeds

He assisted the emperor in imperial reform

 

 

 

 

Stephen X (1057-1058)     156th Pope

He shown an early commitment to reform

He sought to enforce reform of clerical morality

He planned to reopen negotiations with Constantinople

He south to work against the growing Norman power

He forbad matrimony between blood relations

On his deathbed, he asked the cardinals to wait until his cardinal aide to return to Rome

The imperially powered reform popes were unable to stamp out the political faction who supported Benedict IX

The Cardinals were forced by corruption or threat to elect John Mincius (soon to be Benedict X). This reign of this anti-pope was short lived

 

 

 

Nicholas II (1058-1061)     157th Pope

He set about repairing the damage inflicted on Rome by the political faction of Benedict, who were still carrying out guerilla warfare in the papal states

The Normans at last removed the last traces of Byzantium rule in Italy

He made an alliance with the Normans.  In return in for recognizing Norman authority, the Normans were sent to root out this political faction of Benedict.

He was able to correct some abuses and confirm children

In Milan the clergy were sunk deep in simony and vice

H declared that papal elections needed to be more clearly defined and regulated. Henceforth, the cardinals alone were to vote for the pope. The clergy and the people of Rome still had the right to acclaim the elect.  A similar right was given to the emperor

He negotiated with the Norman dukes and princes.  In return for retaking lands occupied by the Muslims, the pope would recognize their Norman control over these lands.  They would pay tribute to the Holy See and hold the lands as a papal vassal

The Normans forced the Benedictine political faction to surrender

He convened a synod which forbade the investiture of bishops without papal authorization

 

 

 

Alexander II (1061-1073)     158th Pope

Two main political factions exerted their influences to select the next pope.

Most of the cardinals chose Anselm (soon to be Alexander II)

The immoral clerics, Roman nobles, and pro-imperialists chose the immoral Bishop Cadalus of Parma

The empress favored Cadalus. The empress convened a council without cardinals to declare Cadalus as pope. Thus Cadalus (soon to be Honorius II) became anti-pope

Alexander had some advantages: a Norman alliance and the friendship of a power countess in Tuscany.  Rome stayed safely in papal hands

The new regent (overthrowing the empress) recognized Alexander II as pope

He sought to put down simony, vice, immoral prelates

He blessed the banners of William the Conquer, a Normon, invading England and Roger Guiscard invading Sicily

William the Conqueror took in the fugitive Prince Edward of England. Edward would promise his throne to William

William the Conqueror sought the required legality and authority by the emperor. Thus the pope was able to support William in his invasion of England

Muslim Turks retook Asia Minor, remaining Muslim ever since

He institute the feast of the Holy Trinity on the Sunday following Pentecost

Honorius II’s forces defeated forces loyal to Alexander II

Honorius II was driven out by Tuscan forces

 

 

 

Gregory VII (1073-1085)     159th Pope

He promulgated decrees against simony, clerical immorality, and lay investiture

Because he refused to accept the emperor’s appointment and investiture of bishops with their clerical insignia, the emperor declared Gregory VII deposed

The emperor set up an antipope Clement III, besieging Gregory VII in the process. The Norman Robert Guiscard rescued Gregory VII

A council declared that the pope is universal. No one can judge him

Clement III’s “pontificate” extended no further than the lands held by the emperor

Clement III continued to as anti-pope for the next three pontificates

 

 

 

Blessed Victor III (1086-1087)     160th Pope

He was a great statesman

He reconfirmed all of Gregory VII’s condemnations and policies

He excommunicated Clement III
He took residence on the fortified Tiber Island

 

 

 

Blessed Urban II (1088-1099)     161th Pope

Henry’s and Clement III’s forces were in control of Rome, forcing him out

He traveled to France where he advocated a prohibition against lay investiture and bishops and abbots doing homage to lay magnates

He preached the first Crusade

There was little that Urban do with the aftermath of the Great Schism

The Muslim Turks extorted and tortured Christian natives and pilgrims

The Muslims destroyed holy places in Palestine

He was a holy man

He persuaded the fractious western kings and nobles to drop their petty differences and unite under the Cross to free the holy place, secure the Byzantium empire, and drive out the Muslims back from where they had come

These Crusades were actually defensive actions, launched for justifiable reasons. However, today most people deplore the Crusades for the many excesses that occurred. In fact, Pope John Paul II has apologized to the Muslims for them

There were seven crusades

An unexpected byproduct of the Crusade was that some of its leaders would see the recovery of Rome as a more immediate goal. Rome was still in control of Clement III’s faction

 

 

 

Paschal II (1099-1118)     162nd Pope

He continued the flow of Crusades to the East to help maintain and consolidate the conquests there

The new German king continued to give out dioceses to friends.

Paschall II again denounced lay investiture again

An accord was made. The king would renounce investitures while the pope ordered all bishops and abbots to restore the properties to imperial jurisdiction.

The Roman diocese was exempted from this confiscation

His traveling endeared him to the Catholic people

The antipope Clement III was succeeded by Theodorus, Alberic, and Sylvester III

His personal emissary Maurice Bourdin defected to the king’s faction

 

 

 

St. Gelasius II (1118-1119)    163rd Pope

He was captured, dragged, and thrown into a dungeon.

He forgave his captor

 

 

 

Callixtus (1119-1124)    164th Pope

He spent much of his time suppressing lay investiture

Lay investiture was declared heretical

He had a familial connection with the kings of Germany, France, England, and Denmark.  It was considered that he would be able to deal with the King on equal terms

Most bishops in Medieval Europe were also feudal lords. These prelates owed their lands and fealty to the emperor or the kings

Temporal authorities sought control over the spiritual side of the bishops’ office as well

An agreement was reached. The king would invest the bishops as their feudal overlord, with lands of the diocese. But the ring and mitre, spiritual authority would be given by the Church

The papacy emerged as the victor in this dispute.  The weakening of the stature of the imperial office contributed to instability in Italy and Germany

 

 

 

 

Honorius II (1124-1130)    165th Pope

He reconciled the king to the Church

He abdicated his office because of a schism among the cardinals

The king of England was nibbling away at the Church’s rights. The king stated that archbishop of Cantuerbury was the only papal legate in the realm

He renewed friendly relations with the European courts

 

 

 

Innocent II (1130-1143)    166th Pope

He was forced to flee Rome

Along with three saintly supporters, he conquered the Catholic world

Anacletus II was chosen as antipope by other opposing cardinals. The antipope plundered churches. Anacletus II crowned a Norman duke as a king of Italy. Anacletus II’s sucessor was Victor IV. Victor IV eventually submitted to Innocent II

 

 

 

 

 

Celestine II (1143-1144)    167th Pope

He had a great love of France

He earned a reputation of holiness

He settled the internal differences of the Church

He tried to end the war between England and Scotland

 

 

 

Lucius II (1144-1145)    168th Pope

He was librarian and chancellor of the Church

He intervened in a number of foreign questions

Rome independent Senate was demanding that clergy cease to occupy any political role

He decided to lead his own army against the Senate

This time begins the end of the Middle Ages

 

 

 

 

Blessed Eugene III (1145-1153)    169th Pope

Various Crusader stronghold had fallen to the Muslims

He called for the second Crusade

The leadership of the Senate revolutions proclaimed the city’s second republic

He convened as synod to combat clerical corruption

He signed a treaty with the emperor, binding the empire to protect the papacy

He began construction of the Papal Palace

 

 

 

Anastasius IV (1153-1154)    170th Pope

The Pantheon was restored

He was much concerned with German affairs

He wrote a treatise on the Trinity

He succeeded in bringing about the pacification of temporal domains of the Church

 

 

 

 

Adrian IV (1154-1159)    171st Pope

He is the only Englishman to hold the papal throne

He was called the Apostle of the North

The Roman republicans were in control of Rome. The robber barons were plundering where they could

The western emperor deserted the pope in a battle. The eastern emperor came to the pope’s aid

Ireland was ruled by many kings, breaking down into endemic warfare.

He made King Henry II of England “lord” of Ireland in hopes of imposing order to bring peace. This resulted in an invasion of Ireland by the Anglo-Normans and the beginning of the troubles that continue to this day

He was a strenuous defender of papal supremacy

 

 

 

Alexander III (1159-1181)    172nd Pope

The first great European university was in the process of developing

He was the leader of the “independence” party of the cardinals who wanted to free the papacy from imperial influence through the Norman alliance

He was driven out of Rome after being chosen as pope

An antipope (Victor IV) was chosen by a small number of cardinals

He convened a council limiting the vote for pope to 2/3 or more of the cardinals

He encouraged growth of the new university movement, whereby scholars concentrate with teachers in a given town.

 

 

 

Lucius III (1181-1185)    173rd Pope

The republican were making life difficult for him

He convened a synod condemning the resurgent heresy Manicheanism

The papacy had been able to exert some independence from the emperor through the alliance with the Normans. This would soon come to an end with the upcoming betrothal of Norman heiress and the emperor

He exhorted all those in authority to suppress heresy by force of arms

 

 

 

 

Urban III (1185-1187)     174th Pope

The cardinals quickly selected him as to prevent the emperor from interfering in this process

The Tuscan and Norman estates were claimed by the emperor

 

 

 

 

Gregory VIII (1187)    175th Pope

The Muslims had retaken Jerusalem

All of the petty squabbles of Christendom, for the moment, receded into the background. All Christendom became aware of the setback it had sustained

He investigated the murder of St. Thomas Becket

He assisted the Christians in the Holy Land

He sent letters to all kings, princes in Europe to make peace

 

 

 

 

Clement III (1187-1191)    176th Pope

He organized the third Crusade

 

 

 

 

Celestine III (1191-1198)    177th Pope

He was elected at age 85

He granted many privileges to Templars

He sustained the indissolubility of marriage

 

 

 

Innocent III (1198-1216)    178th Pope

When elected pope, he secured the Papal State

In Germany, two candidates for emperor appeared

He declared that imperial coronation gives the pope the right to rule upon the suitability of the candidate

He acted in the affairs of many nations

He preached a Crusade against the Spanish Muslims

His greatest interest was the healing of the Eastern Schism and recovery of the Holy Land

The fourth Crusade was to attack Constantinople. Horrible sacrileges occurred which the Greeks have never forgiven

A Latin emperor and patriarch were installed

Byzantium princes fled, harboring bitter hatred toward the Latins

Relics from the East were taken to pay for the funds of the Crusade

In southern France some believed a heresy that matter was evil, created by an evil god. By contrast, the good god created spirit. This good god was the object of Albigense worship (Albgensinism)

He went missionaries to convert the Albigenses

He convened a council with needed disciplinary decrees, a call for a new Crusade, an new creed.

This council helped defined the term transubstantiation. This term is perhaps the greatest legacy of Innocent’s pontificate

He was all too aware of the decline in the quality and apostolic character of the clergy

He recognized a dream of his as a sign to approve a new order, the Franciscans

He also approved the Dominican order and the Trinitarians

The Fransicans maintained as special devotion to poverty and evangelization

The Dominicans had a special devotion to skilled preaching

The Trinitarians raised money to pay for ransoms and substituted themselves for those captured

He authorized the sending missionaries to Prussia

He help established the institution of the modern hospital, of which he founded in Rome.  The notion of putting a number of doctors under one roof, with the poor paying little or nothing for their services, was quite revolutionary at the time

He reestablished the temporal authority within the papal states

 

 

 

Honorius III (1216-1227)     179th Pope

This was the first time that cardinals compromised in choosing a pope

He sought to achieve moral reformation of the Church

He sought to carry out a Crusade

He encourages evangelization of Prussia

He granted privileges to the universities,

He canonized a number of saints

He wrote a great deal

He defined the rights of the popes

Christianity spread into Estonia

 

 

 

Gregory IX (1227-1241)     180th Pope

A standard conclave was used to elect him

He was an experienced diplomat

He and the emperor vision of the Church and empire were irreconciable

He was a close friend of Saints Francis and Dominic, patronizing their orders and canonizing them and St. Anthony of Padua

He enacted a curriculum for parish schools, the world’s first for primary education

Manicheanism grew in Italy

He decreed that unrepentant heretics might be handed over to the secular authorities for punishment. Heresy was considered as treason to the state

He is looked upon as the originator of the Inquisition

The Inquisitions would be staffed with Dominicans and Franciscans. Its scope included both transgressions against Faith and morals

 

 

 

Celestine IV (1241)     181st Pope

He was elected in the first recognizable conclave

The word conclave (under lock and key)

 

 

 

 

Innocent IV (1243-1254)     182nd Pope

The Latins retained their hold on Constaninople

He safeguarded Henry VIII’ throne in England

He instituted the feast of the Visitation

He was a celebrated canonist

 

 

 

 

Alexander IV (1254-1261)     183rd Pope

He was a great friend and defender of the orders of friars

He canonized St. Clair of Assis, having seen her stigmata himself

He forbade summary trials for heresy

He condemned the flagellanti (self-floggers)

 

 

 

Urban IV (1261-1264)     184th Pope

Constaninople fell to the Greeks
He began the creation of new cardinals

He approved the feast of Corpus Christi

 

 

 

Clement IV (1265-1268)     185th Pope

He was a man of the world

He was a renowned lawyer

 

 

 

Blessed Gregory X (1271-1276)     186th Pope

He reformed the life of the Church

He sought papal control of the Papal States

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blessed Innocent V (1276)    187th Pope

He joined the Dominican order

He extended Christianity to far off Mongolia by baptizing foreign ambassadors

 

 

 

Adrian V (1276)     188th Pope

He annulled Bl. Gregory X’s rigid rules on conclaves
He decreed ecclesiastical laws

 

 

 

John XXI (1276-1277)     189th Pope

He acquired a reputation as a magician

He was much attracted to the philosophy of Aristotle

He issued new rules for the conclave and order punishment for those who rioted

He obtained the promise that churches and their income would be respected in the kingdom

 

 

 

Nicholas III (1277-1280)     190th Pope

He was a great friend of St. Francis and his order

He became renowned for his honesty

He sought to keep the papacy independent from the emperor

He promulgated a decree forbidding imperial interference in the selection of Roman senators and magistrates. He hoped to safeguard papal elections from secular interference

He was the first to permanently reside in the Vatican

He began to layout the famous gardens

 

 

 

Martin IV (1281-1285)     191st Pope

He strove to unite the kings and lords in the bonds of charity

 

 

 

Honorius (1285-1287)     192nd Pope

He was so old that he had to have his hands mechanically lifted during the elevation at Mass

All the Papal States were returned to the papacy

He was a great friend to the Franciscans, Carmelites, Augustinians

He condemned those who claimed to live the life of the original Apostles in absolute poverty (Apostolici)

He sought to establish closer relations with the Greek Church

He tried to reach some agreement with Islam

 

 

 

Nicholas IV (1288-1292)    193rd Pope

He was the first Franciscan pope

The Crusader strongholds fell in Palestine

He urged the merger of the Templars and Hospitallers

He renewed condemnation of the Apostolici

 

 

 

St. Celestine V (1294)    194th Pope

He became a Benedictine

He was unable to govern and resigned. It if for this act that Dante put him in hell

He refused to be a mere instrument in the hands of the lords

He decreed that the newly elected pope has the right to refuse his election

 

 

 

Bonface VII (1294-1303)    195th Pope

He was zealous for the rights of the Church

He felt compelled to safeguard the Celestine V under house arrest

He issued a clerical bull which renewed prohibitions against lay authorities taxing the clergy

 

 

 

Blessed Benedict XI (1303-1304)     196th Pope

He became a Dominican

He was respected for his holiness

 

 

 

Clement V (1305-1314)   197th Pope

The papal tiara was lost

He settled in Avignon, beginning the “Babylonian captivity” of the papacy. This region would be known for it vineyards (wine)

A council pronounced a decree on baptism

He codified canon law

He founded the University of  Oxford

 

 

 

John XXII (1316-1334)     198th Pope

He repeated papal declarations that during such vacancies, imperial appointments rested with the pope
He reconstructed the financial affairs of the Church

He had a habit of privately teaching erroneous opinions

He instituted the feast of the Most Holy Trinity

The emperor appointed an anti-pope Nicholas V

 

 

 

Benedict XII (1334-1342)     199th Pope

He immediately funded the restoration of St. Peter’s and St. John Lateran

He put to an end to many of the financial abuses whereby church bureaucrats had found ways of extracting money

He used the stick of the Inquisition and gentle persuasion to combat heresy

He required bishops to live in their dioceses

 

 

 

Clement VI (1342-1352)     200th Pope

He was completely devoted to the interests of France

He took the name of Clement in honor of the pontiff who had removed the papacy to France

The Canary Island would be Europe’s first colonial effort

He worked for the poor

The Black Plague hit Avignon in 1348-1349

He visited the highly contagious sick

Many superstitious blamed the Jews of being plague carriers

He protected the Jews

 

 

 

Innocent VI (1352-1362)     201st Pope

He ordered all non-resident clerics back to their dioceses and parishes

He  ended all luxury at the Papal Court

He restored a great deal of papal prestige

He fostered arts and culture

 

 

 

Blessed Urban V (1362-1370)     202nd Pope

He was a Benedictine

He was known for his holiness and dedication

The eastern emperor sought reconcilation with the papacy

He happily received and reconciled the eastern emperor

The refusal of the Western princes to rally to the aid of the eastern Christians doomed this effort

The Turks were now loose in Asia Minor. Constantinople was under siege by the Turks

He added the third crown (imperial power) to royal and spiritual power

 

 

 

Gregory XI (1370-1378)     203rd Pope

He was noted for his learning in theology and piety

He was concerned with reunion with the Greeks

St. Catherine of Sienna called on Gregory XI to return to Rome

He condemned the heretical teachings of John Wycliff. These errors included the denial of Transubstantiation,, the primacy of preaching over the sacraments, sola scriptura, and the denial of papal primacy

The Roman senate donated a part of Vatican Hill to him

 

 

 

Urban VI (1378-1389)     204th Pope

The French wanted another Frenchman for the papacy.  They wanted to return to Avignon

Their Italian counterparts and Italian mob wanted an Italian

He was anxious to reform the Church, which the French cardinals resented

The malcontents declared that the papal election to be invalid.  They appointed the anti-pope Clement VII who moved the papacy to Avignon

This began the Great Western Schism, which lasted forty years

This was the first conclave to be held in the Vatican

 

 

 

Boniface IX (1389-1404)    205th Pope

He had a number of difficulties to deal with

Owing to the great lack of money in papal coffers, he issued a new tax on Christians

This helped pave the way for problems in the next century
He appealed for a crusade to assist the hard-pressed Eastern emperor. This received little response

He made little headway the resolving the schism with the anti-pope

Benedict XIII replaced Clement VII as the next anti-pope

Negotiations for both popes to resign faltered.

A number of cardinals elect deposed these two popes and select another pope.  Now there were three who claimed to be pope

 

 

 

Innocent VII (1404-1406)     206th Pope

He had taken an oath to end the schism in any way possible

He was a man of great culture but of weak character

He failed to resolve the schism

He enlarged the faculties of Greek and Medicine

 

 

 

Gregory XII (1406-1415)     207th Pope

The Roman cardinals took an oath, that if elected, they would resign the tiara to bring reunion with Avignon

He notified Benedict X111 that he would abdicate if Benedict would also abdicate. Benedict refused

A council of cardinals deposed both popes and elected the next anti-pope Alexander V

Another anti-pope was selected

 

 

 

Martin V (1417-1431)     208th Pope

The council of Constance was, in a real sense, the ultimate governing authority of the Church for a short period of time

The papacy had been severely tarnished by the behavior of its multiple holders

The cardinals were blamed for the terrible state of affairs that had just ended

The state of the clergy was very poor in Europe because of poor supervision

Civil war in various places contributed to general unrest in Europe

The Turks were encroaching

The cardinals could not be trusted in electing a pope by themselves

Reform measures were passed by Church authorities

The council Fathers condemned Jan Hus, a Czech priest, who was a disciple of Wyclif

The fourteenth century left Rome and the Papal States in poor shape.  The churches were neglect and is in disabuse.  Mercenaries occupied portions of the city

He immediately began work rebuilding Rome, bringing in artists and architects from Florence

He was dealing with the idea that church councils becoming more superior to the popes (Conciliarism)

This time began the beginning of the Renaissance

For the first time a “holy door” was opened in the basilica of St. John Lateran

 

 

 

Eugene IV (1431-1447)     209th Pope

He was extremely holy

He had a hatred of nepotism, infuriating powerful families and cardinals

The Medici ruled the Humanist movement in Florence. The Humanists sought to base learning culture and learning upon the examples of Greece and Rome

A Christian movement advocated giving the Eucharist and cup to the laity.  (Calixtines, “men of the cup” Calix-L. chalice, cup

The Turks were probing the Danube frontier pressuring Constantinople

The council ruled that the pope was superior to the council

Those opposed elected an anti-pope Felix V

 

 

 

Paus Nicolaas V

 

Nicholas V (1447-1455)     210th Pope

He became friendly with some of the leading Humanists of his time

He had an immense learning and administrative skills

He loved learning and the arts

He resolved to make Rome a center of Humanism, of beauty and knowledge

He is credited for the Vatican library and the current appearance of the Papal palace

He called a Jubilee year in 1450

He quashed the proceedings against St. Joan of Arch, paving the way for her canonization

Mass was preached to open air assemblies. Countless people of all ages returned to the practice of the Faith and reception of the sacraments

The Sultan was now master of the Balkans, outside Constantinople

Few in the west responded to the Eastern emperor’s plea for help against the Turks

The Turks overtook Constantinople

The eastern Emperor’s daughter married the prince of Muscovy. She brought her imperial throne in dowry. From this time, Muscovite rulers called themselves “Tsar” (Emperor, becoming practical heads of Eastern Orthodoxy

He began construction of the present St. Peter’s basilica

 

 

 

Callixtus III (1455-1458)     211st Pope

He was renowned for his penitential lifestyle and humble manner

His first interest was to pursue the Crusade and free Constantinople

He ordered the universal ringing of bell at noon everyday

He brought about the growth of Christianity in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark

He instituted the feast of the Transfiguration

 

 

 

Pius II (1458-1464)     212th Pope

He had live a past immoral life

He put his efforts in promoting a crusade

He found that the petty and personal strife of Europe was important to the continent’s rulers than their sworn obligations to the Church

He was very reform minded

He issued legislation reforming monastic life

 

 

 

Paul II (1464-1471)     213rd Pope

He introduced elaborate carnival celebrations at Rome in imitation of his native Venice

He was in general a patron of Humanism

He fought various Manichean-style heretics

He ordered that only cardinals wear the read caps

 

 

 

Sixtus IV (1471-1484)     214th Pope

He was a Franciscan

He first interest was the crusade. However, there was little interest in this

He built the Sistine Chapel and the bridge across the Tiber river

Nepotism became his only major vice

He was a generous patron of the arts

He instituted Father’s day

 

 

 

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Innocent VIII (1484-1492)     215th Pope

He father children out of wedlock

He sought to launch a crusade

He confirmed the rights of Henry VII and his heirs to occupy the throne

He issued a bull against withcraft

Heresy was seen as a threat to individuals, communites, Church and state

He was known for his backing for witch hunting

Crime ran rampant in Rome

He assisted Columbus endeavor to discover the New World

 

 

 

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Alexander VI (1492-1503)   216th Pope
He is seen as one of the worst popes

As a cardinal, he had a mistress

He had to deal with the question of the New World. Since membership in the Church was essential for salvation, he had to decide how to evangelize those natives

He divided the world into two parts.  The Portugueese colonized the East Indes and Brazil.  The Spanish would look after the rest of the New World and the Phillipines

The cultural divide between Brazil and the rest of Latin is attributed to him

He cracked down heavily on crime in Rome, laying the foundation for modern Rome’s police authority

He passed anti-witch and anti-black magic legislation

He encouraged Humanism

He encouraged the arts

 

 

 

Pius III (1503)     217th Pope

His ill health forced him to celebrate Mass while sitting

 

 

 

 

Julius II (1503-1513)     218th Pope

Though not too pastoral, he was an energetic pope

He led a series of campaigns to retake the Papal States

He established the first diocese in Latin America

He declared that bribery nullified papal elections

He was a patron of the arts

He commissioned Michangelo’s frescoes on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

He completed the construction of St. Peter’s

 

 

 

Leo X (1513-1521)     219th Pope

He was generous to a fault

He had a love of secular amusements of all kind

Rome became a haven for artists, scholars, poets, playwright, musicians

He emptied the treasury. He created offices and sold them

He was loved in Rome and by the Humanists

Priests were living in sin. Clerics of all sorts were no longer wearing clerical garb. Many bishops and abbots were more concerned with revenue collection. Many places neglected catechetical teaching. Knowledge of church dogma hardly existed.

This vacuum caused heresy and witchcraft to flourish

Pawn shops for the poor were created for the issuance of low interest loans’

Luther nailed his 95 Theses. Luther was initially annoyed with the Church’s abuse of indulgences

Luther preached salvation through faith alone. He preached private judgment that the Holy Spirit will tell each person what the bible means (sola scriptura). This would provide the starting point for New Age philosophy (create your own reality)

Luther called upon princes to reform the Church by taking over complete control of it in their respective realms

The Reformation merged private judgment and state control.  Anyone may believe what they like, so long as it is private. The state maintains absolute power to legislate right and wrong.

The power of the papacy was destroyed in virtually all countries in Europe

 

 

 

 

Adrian VI (1522-1523)     220th Pope

He would be the last non-Italian pope elected until 1978

He immediately set to reform the curia

He could do little about the Protestant threat

 

 

 

Clement VII (1523-1534)     221st Pope

He was a very indecisive person

He wanted to convert all the Americas, reform the Church conciliate the Lutherans, reunite with the Eastern Church and launch a crusade

All over the Protestant world, enemies devastated churches, desecrated the Blessed Sacrament, and destroyed priceless artwork

Nuns were raped and clerics were killed

The Reformation was spreading beyond imperial boundaries

He refused to approve of King Henry VIII’s marriage

He commissioned Michaelangelo to do the famous last judgment for the Sistine Chapel

He approved formation of the Capuchins

 

 

 

Paul III (1534-1549)     222nd Pope

He was very pious

He faced opposition with the reform he put into place

He wanted to reaffirm the Church’s teachings as clearly as possible

The council of Trent defined the Catholic teaching on scriptures, the sacraments, and other matters

He approve the formation of the Jesuits

He was a great patron of culture and the arts

 

 

 

Julius III (1550-1555)    223rd Pope

Reform had progressed

The Jesuits flourished

 

 

 

Marcellus II (1555)     224th Pope

He was renowned for his love of piety and learning

He stamped his own sense of austerity and justice to the curia

 

 

 

 

Paul IV (1555-1559)     225th Pope

He joined the Dominican orders

He continued the work of reform

He used the Inquisition to oppose the Lutheran heresy

 

 

 

Pius IV (1559-1565)     226th Pope

He issued a bull summarizing the doctrines Catholics must believe

He pardoned all sinners

 

 

 

St. Pius V (1566-1572)     227th Pope

He help to spread liturgical reform

As a Dominican, he continued to wear the white habit of his order. The popes have worn white ever since

He issued the Catechism of Trent

Some say he launched the Counter-Reformation, a movement of orders that reformed and purified the Church

Preaching and doctrinally rich hymns became a priority

Baroque architecture would develop

He promoted culture among people to prevent the spread of heresy

He decreed the use of the Roman missal

 

 

 

Gregory XIII (1572-1585)     228th Pope

His major goals were to combat the spread of Protestantism, reconvert those nations fallen to it, evangelize the Americas, Asia, and Africa

He further the work of reform in the Church

He appointed a commission to correct the Julian calendar, creating the Gregorian calendar

He opened seminaries throughout Europe

 

 

 

Sixtus (1585-1590)     229th Pope

He made many improvements in the Roman infrastructure

He organized the system of congregations

 

 

 

Urban VII (1590)     230th Pope

He ordered that a list of all the poor in Rome be made up in order to relieve them

He required his entourage make sacrifices to pay for these expenses

He left all his wealth for works of charity

 

 

 

Gregory XIV (1590-1591)     231st Pope

He was known for his piety

He confirmed an order whose special vocation was to assist the dying

He ordered the freedom of all slaves made by the Spanish in the Phillipines

He is partly responsible for the Phillipines being a Catholic nation

 

 

 

Innocent IX (1591)     232nd Pope

He wrote many writing attacking Machiavelli’s idea of pragmatism

 

 

 

Clement VIII (1592-1605)     233rd Pope

He was know for his personal holiness

He immediately began visiting all the churches, hospitals, charitable and educational institutions in Rome

He instituted 40 hours devotion before the Blessed Sacrament

He fought the lawless Roman nobility

 

 

 

Leo XI (1605)     234th Pope

He was a very generous person

He led an ascetical life

 

 

 

Paul V (1605-1621)     235th Pope

His first act was to send all prelates and cardinals to their dioceses

A Catholicizing element appeared in Lutheranism, which looked toe the Church Fathers and early Middle Ages for inspiration

He sought to prevent the persecution of Christians in Japan and China

He encouraged astronomy but did nothing to impede the condemnation of Copernicus

 

 

 

 

Gregory XV (1621-1623)     236th Pope

His first interest was to end outside manipulation of papal elections. He outlined precisely how to conduct conclaves and w
hat ceremonies to perform. This methodology would basically remain untouched

He founded the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith. This had jurisdiction over mission territories

He also founded a number of religious orders

He encouraged the Irish

 

 

 

Urban VIII (1623-1644)     237th Pope

The new St. Peter’s was completed

He hired many artists and architects to beautify churches, piazzas, and streets in Rome

He revised the Roman Missal

He sent more missionaries to the Far East

He forbad the use of American Indians as slaves

He ordered bishops to live in their dioceses

Galileo was condemned for pushing the Copernican system. Galileo was condemned becasues the popes respected the opinions of the contemporary scientific community

He had a problem with nepotism

 

 

 

Innocent X (1644-1655)     238th Pope

He recognized the independence of Portugal

He condemned the idea that emphasized the justice of God to the exclusion of His mercy (Jansenism)

 

 

 

Alexander VII (1655-1667)     239th Pope

He had problems with nepotism

He spent a great deal of time with literary pursuits

He was a great patron of the arts

He used every means to try to prevent the spread of Protestantism

 

 

 

Clement IX (1667-1669)     240th Pope

He was charitable and approachable

He bought the grain monopoly, causing prices to fall

He beatified Rose of Lima, the first saint born in the Americas

He straightened out the papal finances

 

 

 

Clement X (1670-1676)     241th Pope

He canonized a number of saints

He beautified Rome

 

 

 

 

Blessed Innocent XI (1676-1689)     242nd Pope

His first interest was to reform the curia

He decreed heavy penalties against nepotism

He passed decrees for the propagation of morals in Rome

He outlawed immodest dress in women

He shut down gambling homes

He condemned heretical notions that if one quieted one’s will, and subordinated to God, one would be incapable of sin no matter what he physically did (Quietism, Laxism)

He abolished the right of legal immunity

 

 

 

Alexander VIII (1689-1691)     243rd Pope

He was elected because of his extreme age

 

 

 

Innocent XII (1691-1700)     244th Pope

He decreed that no pope could appoint more than one of his nephews as a cardinal

He built a number of charitable and educational buildings

He condemned Jansensim and Quietism

He ordered priest to wear cassocks daily and to make retreats at regular intervals

 

 

 

Clement XI (1700-1721)     245th Pope

He was renowned for his piety and wit

He reformed prison administration, pioneered public works, and distributed vast amounts of charity

He declared the feast of the Conception of the Virgin as a holy day of obligation

He condemned Jansenism

He was a man of great culture and patron of the arts

 

 

 

 

Innocent XIII (1721-1724)     246th Pope

He renewed the condemnation of Jansenism

 

 

 

Benedict XIII (1724-1730)     247th Pope

He joined the Dominican order

He sought to abolish the worldly pomp and luxury among cardinals

He renewed the ban on Jansenism

 

 

 

Clement XII (1730-1740)     248th Pope

He was slowly going blind

He work to clear up financial problems of his predecessor

He filled up the treasury

He initiated public works of every sort

He became totally blind in his second year in office

He help assisted the Passionists

He condemned the Freemasons, because of their materialist nature of their creed, and secrecy

He canonized several saints

 

 

 

Benedict XIV (1740-1758)     249th Pope

He was elected because of his honesty and his reputation

He was a truly Renaissance in the best sense of the term

He had a deep personal piety

He did not fear the so-called Enlightenment

He was a prolific writer

He was interested in every facet of Church and civil life

He revised the calendar and the martyrology

He originated the current encyclical

He was one of the most cultured popes

 

 

 

Clement XIII (1758-1769)     250th Pope

He was noted for his personal holiness and public charity

Regalism and Enlightenment were two strains that united in Catholic Europe

Regalism saw a force in the church that must be subordinated to the secular power for the good of the state

Enlightenment measured all things by human reason, all else was dismissed as superstition

The practical effect of this union was to create a ruling class that looked with envy to the complete power Protestant princes exercised over their pet clergy. They sought to purge the Church of anything that seemed repellent to the spirit of the age

Devotions, pilgrimages, orders, Latin in the liturgy should be eliminated

They further frown on evangelizing non Catholics because they believed in universal salvation

Some thought they were saving the Church by keeping the Church relevant to the times

The Jesuits had spread all over the world, making inroads in Protestantism. They were eventually expelled

He was faithful to conservative ideas, not being very popular in many Catholic countries

 

 

 

Clement XIV (1769-1774)      251st Pope

He tolerated the suppression of the Jesuits

The expelling of the Jesuits created a shortage of clergy in the Latin America. This suppression contributed to the revolutionary storm that would soon break out in Europe. This would also lead to the independence movement in Latin America

 

 

 

Pius VI (1775-1799)     252nd Pope

The emperor sought to regulate the life of the Church. Seminary training was henceforth to be regulated by the state. It was the express goal priest good subjects to the state

After the U.S. won its independence, the Catholic organization need reorginazation.  American authorities would look with disfavor an appointment made my and English official.

He sought the advice from Benjamin Franklin and John Carroll as the first bishop of Baltimore

The French Revolution also occurred at this time

The French Catholic Church was separated from Rome

Napolean conquered Rome and captured him

 

 

 

Pius VII (1800-1823)      253rd Pope

Napolean was anxious to reconcile his country with the Church

Catholicism was later recognized as the religion of the state in France

He started to reorganize the shattered Church in Europe. This task was made easier by the wave of piety that swept Catholic Europe, starting at the turn of the 18th century

This was partly spearheaded by the Romantic movement. This led to a tremendous rise in faith. Many sought the past was more preferable to the present situation

He created the papal flag

 

 

 

Leo XII (1823-1829)     254th Pope

He managed to rein in the curia officials who had become very venal and bribable

He worked very hard to prevent Protestant proselytizing

He reinstated Galileo’s works

 

 

 

Pius VIII (1829-1830)      255th Pope

He decreed that priest could bless mixed marriage provided that the non-Catholic promised to raise children as Catholic

He strengthened missionary activity

Gregory XVI (1831-1846)      256th Pope

He was renowned for his learning

He condemned democracy, believing that it would inevitably degenerate into oligarchy

At his death, a rise of liberal opinion was rising through Europe

 

 

 

 

Blessed Pius IX (1846-1878)     257th Pope

He became the first pope to be photographed

He began to acquire a reputation for liberalism

He was known for his amiability and wit

Popes clung to temporal possessions to maintain neutrality in order to maintain his spiritual mission as father of all.

It was a matter of sacrilege.

Donated to the Holy See, these possessions were sacred

He defined the Immaculate Conception in 1854

He convened Vatican I. They declared papal infallibility as gift of the Holy Spirit.

When speaking from the chair of Peter in matters of doctrine and faith, the pope is protected by the Holy Spirit in teaching error.

This cause a firestorm of protest

“Old Catholics” rejected papal infallibility as an innovation. They broke away from the Church.

A network of liberal Catholics wanted to reinterpret many of the Church’s doctrines

He established 26 new dioceses in the United States

He has been pope the longest of all popes

Rome became the capitol of Italy

 

 

 

Leo XIII (1878-1903)      258th Pope

 

New orders and devotions were growing in every Catholic country

The Industrial Revolution created a great underclass of workers who lived in abysmal poverty. These workers were often cut off from religion and earlier traditions.  They were looking for something to believe in

Differing groups of socialists and anarchists were filling this ideological vaccuum. They were offering secular salvation

The Church of England experienced a resurgence of faith.  John Neuman converted to Catholicism

The US consumed his interest.  There developed tension between Ireland-oriented group and Rome-oriented Catholic cardinals

The Europeans expanded their empires all over the globe. He ensured that missionaries evangelize and protect the locals from explotiation

He favored Catholic social action to assist the working class

He is considered the first modern pope

He is first pope to be filmed

 

 

 

St. Pius X (1903-1914)     259th Pope

He wanted to first spread Eucharistic devotions among the faithful. At this time reception of Communion was received only around Easter

He began a campaign to revive frequent or daily communion

He encouraged frequent confession to receive the sacrament worthily

Young people had generally made their First Communion only after being confirmed. He changed the law, urging children to receive Communion

He encouraged devotions to the Virgin Mary

The struggle with Modernism was the major spiritual problem of his papacy

Many believed that the Church’s government and doctrines had to evolve to the current times. Doctrines were watered down, downplayed, dismissed as not true (Modernism)

Modernism has continued to persist

He concluded codification of canon law

He decreed elevation of the Host and chalice

 

 

 

Benedict XV (1914-1922)     260th Pope

Opponents of the Modernists appeared

WWI took up a large part of his papacy

He sent huge sums of war relief to afflicted on both sides of the war

The Russian revolution and others occurred

Three Portuguese claimed to have a vision of Our Lady at Fatima

He beautified Joan of Arc

 

 

 

Pius XI (1922-1939)     261st Pope

He faced many problems brought about by WWI

There were no Christian emperors or powers

Russia was exporting revolution

He initiated relief efforts

Power vacuum by the destruction of Austria-Hungarian empire and creation of the Weimar republic created instability

Poorly established democratic regimes were followed by totalitarian regimes

Abortion and artificial contraception came to the forefront

The Soviet Union was the first nation to legalize abortion, in keeping with their view that the human individual is subordinate to the state

There was a general lowering of standard of modesty of dress

Freud linked every human endeavor to repressed sexuality

The rise of nationalism appeared in Europe

There was a literary revival all over the Catholic world

There were resurgences in devotions and evangelization

He called for the general recognition of the Kingship of Christ over people

He declared against the Fascists and Communists that the parents were the primary educators, in terms of Christian education

The papacy was on the verge of bankruptcy

 

 

 

Pius XII (1939-1958)     262nd Pope

He aided the Jews in WWII

He used the Vatican to take in Jewish refugees

He also has been accused of being a nazi collaborator

He labored to help the many Catholics were persecuted in Russia and China

He saw the US as the protector of the free world

He was very concerned about the modernist theologians

The liturgical movement sought to restore liturgical rites

Missals in Latin and the vernacular were in the hands of the faithful

He proclaimed the dogma of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary

He forbade bishops from using titles of nobility they may have born with

He discovered the tomb of St. Peter

 

 

 

Blessed John XXIII (1958-1963)     263rd Pope

He was to provide quiet stopgap leadership between the traditionalist and progressives

He convened Vatican II. Its purpose was to renew the Church to make her more holy

Soon after his death, the cause for his canonization was opened

He sought to safeguard what is essential in Catholicism by adapting to current needs

 

 

 

 

Paul VI (1963-1978)      264th Pope

He had a desire to be a “modern” to streamline the Church

His first interest was to continue the work of Vatican II

It was declared that the vernacular should be given a larger role

He issued his new Mass, which had so many variations

He permitted Communion in the hand in areas where it would increase devotion to the Blessed Sacrament

A sort of anarchy appeared to descend upon the Church at all levels outside the Vatican

Whenever one spoke of liturgical or doctrinal abuses, no one seemed responsible

Liturgy, architecture, statues were torn out with new Mass

The wild alteration of sexual mores appeared in the West

He spoke out against the legalization of contraception

He issued Humanae vitae, foretelling the evils of contraception

From 1968 on, He did not really assert his authority against dissent within the Church

For all practical purposes, he abdicated control of most of the local hierarchies

 

 

 

 

John Paul I (1978)      265th Pope

He was the first pope to choose a double name

The History of the Papacy

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