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Pope Innocent II

Pope Innocent II (Latin: Innocentius II; died 24 September 1143), born Gregorio Papareschi, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 14 February 1130 to his death in 1143. His election as pope was controversial and the first eight years of his reign were marked by a struggle for recognition against the supporters of Anacletus II. He reached an understanding with King Lothair III of Germany who supported him against Anacletus and whom he crowned as Holy Roman emperor. Innocent went on to preside over the Second Lateran council.

Pope

Innocent II
Bishop of Rome
Excerpt from a mosaic in the Roman church Santa Maria in Trastevere, built by Innocent II
ChurchCatholic Church
Papacy began14 February 1130
Papacy ended24 September 1143
PredecessorHonorius II
SuccessorCelestine II
Orders
Ordination22 February 1130
Consecration23 February 1130
by Giovanni Vitale
Created cardinal1088
by Urban II
Personal details
Born
Gregorio Papareschi

Died(1143-09-24)24 September 1143
Rome, Papal States
DenominationCatholic
Other popes named Innocent

Early years

Gregorio Papareschi came from a Roman family,[1] probably of the rione Trastevere. Formerly a Cluniac monk,[2] he was made cardinal deacon of San Angelo in 1116 by Pope Paschal II.[3] Gregorio was selected by Pope Callixtus II for various important and difficult missions, such as the one to Worms for the conclusion of the Concordat of Worms, the peace accord made with Holy Roman Emperor Henry V in 1122,[3] and also the one that made peace with King Louis VI of France in 1123. In 1124, he became a close advisor to Pope Honorius II.[3]

Election as Pope

On the evening of 13 February 1130, Pope Honorius II died,[4] Gregorio was hastily elected as Pope Innocent II by a commission of six cardinals led by papal chancellor Haimeric.[5] He was consecrated on 14 February, the day after Honorius' death.[5] The other cardinals announced that Innocent had not been canonically elected and chose Anacletus II, a Roman whose family were the enemy of Haimeric's supporters, the Frangipani.[6] Anacletus' mixed group of supporters were powerful enough to take control of Rome while Innocent was forced to flee north.[6]

Papacy

Anacletus had control of Rome, so Innocent II took ship for Pisa, and thence sailed by way of Genoa to France, where the influence of Bernard of Clairvaux readily secured his cordial recognition by the clergy and the court.[7][8] In October of 1130, he was duly acknowledged by King Lothair III of Germany and his bishops at the synod of Würzburg.[9][10] In January 1131, he had also a favourable interview with Henry I of England at Chartres,[11] and in August 1132 Lothar III undertook an expedition to Italy for the double purpose of setting aside Anacletus as antipope and of being crowned by Innocent. Anacletus and his supporters being in secure control of St. Peter's Basilica, the coronation ultimately took place in the Lateran Basilica (4 June 1133), but otherwise the expedition proved abortive. Innocent II invested Lothair as emperor and the territories belonging to Matilda of Tuscany in return for an annuity of 100 pounds of silver paid to the pope.[12]

After Lothar's hasty departure from Rome, Innocent fled to Pisa.[13] In May 1135, Innocent convened the council of Pisa, which was attended by over one hundred clerics and abbots.[14] Innocent II had the council declare antipope Anacletus II and his supporters excommunicated.[14]

The second expedition by Lothar III in 1136 was no more decisive in its results, and the protracted struggle between the rival pontiffs was terminated only by the death of Anacletus II on 25 January 1138.

In March 1139, in the Omne Datum Optimum, Innocent II declared that the Knights Templar—a religious and military organization then twenty-one years old—should in the future be answerable only to the papacy.[15]

Second Lateran Council

At the Second Lateran council of April 1139, King Roger II of Sicily, Innocent II's most uncompromising foe, was excommunicated.[16] Can. 29 of the Second Lateran Council under Pope Innocent II in 1139 banned the use of crossbows, as well as slings and bows, against Christians.[17]

Treaty of Mignano

On 22 July 1139, at Galluccio, Roger II's son Roger III of Apulia ambushed the papal troops with a thousand knights and captured Innocent.[18] On 25 July 1139, Innocent was forced to acknowledge the kingship and possessions of Roger with the Treaty of Mignano.[19] Innocent II died on 24 September 1143[20] and was succeeded by Pope Celestine II.[21]

Legacy

In 1134, Innocent elevated as cardinal-nephew his nephew, Gregorio Papareschi. He did the same for his brother Pietro Papareschi, whom he made cardinal in 1142. Another nephew, Cinthio Capellus (died 1182), was also a cardinal, raised to the cardinalate in 1158, after Innocent's death.[22]

Aside from the complete rebuilding of the ancient church of Santa Maria in Trastevere, which boldly features Ionic capitals from former colonnades in the Baths of Caracalla and other richly detailed spolia from Roman monuments,[23] the remaining years of Innocent's life were almost as barren of permanent political results as the first had been. In the Lateran palace, he had a portrait painted depicting Lothar's oath to preserve the privileges of the city of Rome.[24] Innocent's efforts to undo the mischief wrought in Rome by the long schism were almost entirely neutralized by a quarrel with his erstwhile supporter, Louis VII of France over the candidate for archbishop of Bourges, in the course of which that kingdom was laid under an interdict to press for the papal candidate,[25] and by a struggle with the town of Tivoli in which he became involved. As a result, Roman factions that wished Tivoli annihilated took up arms against Innocent.

In 1143, as the pope lay dying, the Commune of Rome, to resist papal power, began deliberations that officially reinstated the Roman Senate the following year.[26] The pope was interred in a porphyry sarcophagus that contemporary tradition asserted had been the Emperor Hadrian's.

See also

References

  1. ^ Robinson 1990, p. 72.
  2. ^ Aurell 2020, p. 176.
  3. ^ a b c Duggan 2016, p. 272.
  4. ^ Schwaiger 2002, p. 732.
  5. ^ a b Robinson 1990, p. 75.
  6. ^ a b Robinson 1995, p. 373.
  7. ^ Robinson 1990, p. 361.
  8. ^ Somerville 1970, p. 101.
  9. ^ Clark 2016, p. 11.
  10. ^ Lees 1998, p. 34.
  11. ^ Truax 2017, p. 27.
  12. ^ Robinson 1990, p. 246.
  13. ^ Somerville 1970, p. 100-101.
  14. ^ a b Robinson 1990, p. 138.
  15. ^ Bagni 2020, p. 6.
  16. ^ Houben 2002, p. 70.
  17. ^ Schroeder 1937, p. 195-213.
  18. ^ Rogers 1997, p. 118.
  19. ^ Pacaut 2002, p. 784.
  20. ^ Robinson 1990, p. 525.
  21. ^ Robinson 1990, p. 206.
  22. ^ Duggan 2000, p. 277.
  23. ^ Kinney 1986, p. 379-397.
  24. ^ Morris 1989, p. 187.
  25. ^ Montaubin 2016, p. 147.
  26. ^ Cotts 2012, p. 31.

Bibliography

  • Aurell, Jaume (2020). Medieval Self-Coronations: The History and Symbolism of a Ritual. Cambridge University Press.
  • Bagni, Giampiero (2020). "A multidisciplinary approach to the production of wine on Templar estates: The Bologna commandery". In Morton, Nicholas (ed.). The Military Orders Volume VII: Piety, Pugnacity and Property. Routledge.
  • Clark, Anne L. (2016). Elisabeth of Schonau: A Twelfth-Century Visionary. University of Pennsylvania Press.
  • Cotts, John D. (2012). Europe's Long Twelfth Century: Order, Anxiety and Adaptation, 1095-1229. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Duggan, Anne J., ed. (2000). The Correspondence of Thomas Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury, 1162-1170: Letters. Vol. I: 1-175. Clarendon Press.
  • Duggan, Anne J. (2016). "Jura sua unicuique tribuat: Innocent II and the advance of the learned laws". In Doran, John; Smith, Damian J. (eds.). Pope Innocent II (1130-43), The World vs The City. Routledge. pp. 272–310.
  • Houben, Hubert (2002). Roger II of Sicily: Ruler between East and West. Translated by Loud, Graham A.; Milburn, Diane. Cambridge University Press.
  • Kinney, Dale (1986). "Spolia from the Baths of Caracalla in Sta. Maria in Trastevere". The Art Bulletin. 68.3 (September) (3): 379–397. doi:10.1080/00043079.1986.10788359.
  • Lees, Jay Terry (1998). Anselm of Havelberg: Deeds Into Words in the Twelfth Century. Brill.
  • Montaubin, Pascal (2016). "Innocent II and Capetian France". In Smith, Damian J.; Doran, John (eds.). Pope Innocent II (1130-43): The World Vs the City. Routledge. pp. 107–151.
  • Morris, Colin (1989). The Papal Monarchy: The Western Church from 1050 to 1250 (Oxford History of the Christian Church). Clarendon Press.
  • Pacaut, Marcel (2002). "Innocent II". In Levillain, Philippe (ed.). The Papacy: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 2: Gaius-Proxies. Routledge. pp. 783–785.
  • Robinson, I.S. (1990). The Papacy, 1073-1198. Cambridge University Press.
  • Robinson, I.S. (1995). "The Papacy, 1122-1198". In Luscombe, David; Riley-Smith, Jonathan (eds.). The New Cambridge Medieval History. Vol. 4, C.1024–c.1198, Part 2. Cambridge University Press.
  • Rogers, Randall (1997). Latin Siege Warfare in the Twelfth Century. Clarendon Press.
  • Schroeder, H. J. (1937). Disciplinary Decrees of the General Councils: Text, Translation and Commentary. B. Herder.
  • Schwaiger, Georg (2002). "Honorius II". In Levillain, Philippe (ed.). The Papacy: An Encyclopedia. Vol. 2: Gaius-Proxies. Routledge. pp. 732–733.
  • Somerville, Robert (1970). "The Council of Pisa, 1135: A Re-Examination of the Evidence for the Canons". Speculum. The University of Chicago Press. 45, No. 1 (Jan.) (1): 98–114. doi:10.2307/2855987. JSTOR 2855987. S2CID 162871829.
  • Truax, Jean (2017). Aelred the Peacemaker: The Public Life of a Cistercian Abbot. Liturgical Press.
  • Wheeler, Bonnie; McLaughlin, Mary Martin, eds. (2009). The Letters of Heloise and Abelard: A Translation of Their Collected Correspondence and Related Writings. Palgrave Macmillan.


Further reading

  • Tenth Ecumenical Council: Lateran II 1139. Internet Medieval Source Book. 1 November 1996. Retrieved 5 May 2007.



Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Pope
1130–43
Succeeded by

pope, innocent, gregorio, papareschi, redirects, here, cardinal, nephew, gregorio, papareschi, cardinal, latin, innocentius, died, september, 1143, born, gregorio, papareschi, head, catholic, church, ruler, papal, states, from, february, 1130, death, 1143, ele. Gregorio Papareschi redirects here For the cardinal nephew see Gregorio Papareschi cardinal Pope Innocent II Latin Innocentius II died 24 September 1143 born Gregorio Papareschi was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 14 February 1130 to his death in 1143 His election as pope was controversial and the first eight years of his reign were marked by a struggle for recognition against the supporters of Anacletus II He reached an understanding with King Lothair III of Germany who supported him against Anacletus and whom he crowned as Holy Roman emperor Innocent went on to preside over the Second Lateran council PopeInnocent IIBishop of RomeExcerpt from a mosaic in the Roman church Santa Maria in Trastevere built by Innocent IIChurchCatholic ChurchPapacy began14 February 1130Papacy ended24 September 1143PredecessorHonorius IISuccessorCelestine IIOrdersOrdination22 February 1130Consecration23 February 1130by Giovanni VitaleCreated cardinal1088by Urban IIPersonal detailsBornGregorio PapareschiRome Papal StatesDied 1143 09 24 24 September 1143Rome Papal StatesDenominationCatholicOther popes named Innocent Contents 1 Early years 2 Election as Pope 3 Papacy 3 1 Second Lateran Council 3 2 Treaty of Mignano 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Further readingEarly years EditGregorio Papareschi came from a Roman family 1 probably of the rione Trastevere Formerly a Cluniac monk 2 he was made cardinal deacon of San Angelo in 1116 by Pope Paschal II 3 Gregorio was selected by Pope Callixtus II for various important and difficult missions such as the one to Worms for the conclusion of the Concordat of Worms the peace accord made with Holy Roman Emperor Henry V in 1122 3 and also the one that made peace with King Louis VI of France in 1123 In 1124 he became a close advisor to Pope Honorius II 3 Election as Pope EditMain article Papal election 1130 On the evening of 13 February 1130 Pope Honorius II died 4 Gregorio was hastily elected as Pope Innocent II by a commission of six cardinals led by papal chancellor Haimeric 5 He was consecrated on 14 February the day after Honorius death 5 The other cardinals announced that Innocent had not been canonically elected and chose Anacletus II a Roman whose family were the enemy of Haimeric s supporters the Frangipani 6 Anacletus mixed group of supporters were powerful enough to take control of Rome while Innocent was forced to flee north 6 Papacy EditAnacletus had control of Rome so Innocent II took ship for Pisa and thence sailed by way of Genoa to France where the influence of Bernard of Clairvaux readily secured his cordial recognition by the clergy and the court 7 8 In October of 1130 he was duly acknowledged by King Lothair III of Germany and his bishops at the synod of Wurzburg 9 10 In January 1131 he had also a favourable interview with Henry I of England at Chartres 11 and in August 1132 Lothar III undertook an expedition to Italy for the double purpose of setting aside Anacletus as antipope and of being crowned by Innocent Anacletus and his supporters being in secure control of St Peter s Basilica the coronation ultimately took place in the Lateran Basilica 4 June 1133 but otherwise the expedition proved abortive Innocent II invested Lothair as emperor and the territories belonging to Matilda of Tuscany in return for an annuity of 100 pounds of silver paid to the pope 12 After Lothar s hasty departure from Rome Innocent fled to Pisa 13 In May 1135 Innocent convened the council of Pisa which was attended by over one hundred clerics and abbots 14 Innocent II had the council declare antipope Anacletus II and his supporters excommunicated 14 The second expedition by Lothar III in 1136 was no more decisive in its results and the protracted struggle between the rival pontiffs was terminated only by the death of Anacletus II on 25 January 1138 In March 1139 in the Omne Datum Optimum Innocent II declared that the Knights Templar a religious and military organization then twenty one years old should in the future be answerable only to the papacy 15 Second Lateran Council Edit Main article Second Council of the Lateran At the Second Lateran council of April 1139 King Roger II of Sicily Innocent II s most uncompromising foe was excommunicated 16 Can 29 of the Second Lateran Council under Pope Innocent II in 1139 banned the use of crossbows as well as slings and bows against Christians 17 Treaty of Mignano Edit On 22 July 1139 at Galluccio Roger II s son Roger III of Apulia ambushed the papal troops with a thousand knights and captured Innocent 18 On 25 July 1139 Innocent was forced to acknowledge the kingship and possessions of Roger with the Treaty of Mignano 19 Innocent II died on 24 September 1143 20 and was succeeded by Pope Celestine II 21 Legacy EditIn 1134 Innocent elevated as cardinal nephew his nephew Gregorio Papareschi He did the same for his brother Pietro Papareschi whom he made cardinal in 1142 Another nephew Cinthio Capellus died 1182 was also a cardinal raised to the cardinalate in 1158 after Innocent s death 22 Aside from the complete rebuilding of the ancient church of Santa Maria in Trastevere which boldly features Ionic capitals from former colonnades in the Baths of Caracalla and other richly detailed spolia from Roman monuments 23 the remaining years of Innocent s life were almost as barren of permanent political results as the first had been In the Lateran palace he had a portrait painted depicting Lothar s oath to preserve the privileges of the city of Rome 24 Innocent s efforts to undo the mischief wrought in Rome by the long schism were almost entirely neutralized by a quarrel with his erstwhile supporter Louis VII of France over the candidate for archbishop of Bourges in the course of which that kingdom was laid under an interdict to press for the papal candidate 25 and by a struggle with the town of Tivoli in which he became involved As a result Roman factions that wished Tivoli annihilated took up arms against Innocent In 1143 as the pope lay dying the Commune of Rome to resist papal power began deliberations that officially reinstated the Roman Senate the following year 26 The pope was interred in a porphyry sarcophagus that contemporary tradition asserted had been the Emperor Hadrian s See also EditBull of Gniezno List of popes Cardinals created by Innocent IIReferences Edit Robinson 1990 p 72 Aurell 2020 p 176 a b c Duggan 2016 p 272 Schwaiger 2002 p 732 a b Robinson 1990 p 75 a b Robinson 1995 p 373 Robinson 1990 p 361 Somerville 1970 p 101 Clark 2016 p 11 Lees 1998 p 34 Truax 2017 p 27 Robinson 1990 p 246 Somerville 1970 p 100 101 a b Robinson 1990 p 138 Bagni 2020 p 6 Houben 2002 p 70 Schroeder 1937 p 195 213 Rogers 1997 p 118 Pacaut 2002 p 784 Robinson 1990 p 525 Robinson 1990 p 206 Duggan 2000 p 277 Kinney 1986 p 379 397 Morris 1989 p 187 Montaubin 2016 p 147 Cotts 2012 p 31 Bibliography EditAurell Jaume 2020 Medieval Self Coronations The History and Symbolism of a Ritual Cambridge University Press Bagni Giampiero 2020 A multidisciplinary approach to the production of wine on Templar estates The Bologna commandery In Morton Nicholas ed The Military Orders Volume VII Piety Pugnacity and Property Routledge Clark Anne L 2016 Elisabeth of Schonau A Twelfth Century Visionary University of Pennsylvania Press Cotts John D 2012 Europe s Long Twelfth Century Order Anxiety and Adaptation 1095 1229 Palgrave Macmillan Duggan Anne J ed 2000 The Correspondence of Thomas Becket Archbishop of Canterbury 1162 1170 Letters Vol I 1 175 Clarendon Press Duggan Anne J 2016 Jura sua unicuique tribuat Innocent II and the advance of the learned laws In Doran John Smith Damian J eds Pope Innocent II 1130 43 The World vs The City Routledge pp 272 310 Houben Hubert 2002 Roger II of Sicily Ruler between East and West Translated by Loud Graham A Milburn Diane Cambridge University Press Kinney Dale 1986 Spolia from the Baths of Caracalla in Sta Maria in Trastevere The Art Bulletin 68 3 September 3 379 397 doi 10 1080 00043079 1986 10788359 Lees Jay Terry 1998 Anselm of Havelberg Deeds Into Words in the Twelfth Century Brill Montaubin Pascal 2016 Innocent II and Capetian France In Smith Damian J Doran John eds Pope Innocent II 1130 43 The World Vs the City Routledge pp 107 151 Morris Colin 1989 The Papal Monarchy The Western Church from 1050 to 1250 Oxford History of the Christian Church Clarendon Press Pacaut Marcel 2002 Innocent II In Levillain Philippe ed The Papacy An Encyclopedia Vol 2 Gaius Proxies Routledge pp 783 785 Robinson I S 1990 The Papacy 1073 1198 Cambridge University Press Robinson I S 1995 The Papacy 1122 1198 In Luscombe David Riley Smith Jonathan eds The New Cambridge Medieval History Vol 4 C 1024 c 1198 Part 2 Cambridge University Press Rogers Randall 1997 Latin Siege Warfare in the Twelfth Century Clarendon Press Schroeder H J 1937 Disciplinary Decrees of the General Councils Text Translation and Commentary B Herder Schwaiger Georg 2002 Honorius II In Levillain Philippe ed The Papacy An Encyclopedia Vol 2 Gaius Proxies Routledge pp 732 733 Somerville Robert 1970 The Council of Pisa 1135 A Re Examination of the Evidence for the Canons Speculum The University of Chicago Press 45 No 1 Jan 1 98 114 doi 10 2307 2855987 JSTOR 2855987 S2CID 162871829 Truax Jean 2017 Aelred the Peacemaker The Public Life of a Cistercian Abbot Liturgical Press Wheeler Bonnie McLaughlin Mary Martin eds 2009 The Letters of Heloise and Abelard A Translation of Their Collected Correspondence and Related Writings Palgrave Macmillan Further reading EditTenth Ecumenical Council Lateran II 1139 Internet Medieval Source Book 1 November 1996 Retrieved 5 May 2007 Catholic Church titlesPreceded byHonorius II Pope1130 43 Succeeded byCelestine II Pope Innocent II at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Texts from Wikisource Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pope Innocent II amp oldid 1130804598, 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