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Pope Joan

Pope Joan (Ioannes Anglicus, 855–857) was, according to legend, a woman who reigned as pope for two years[1] during the Middle Ages. Her story first appeared in chronicles in the 13th century and subsequently spread throughout Europe. The story was widely believed for centuries, but most modern scholars regard it as fictional.[2][3][4]

Illustrated manuscript depicting Pope Joan with the papal tiara. Bibliothèque nationale de France, c. 1560.
Depiction of "Pope John VII" in Hartmann Schedel's religious Nuremberg Chronicle, published in 1493

Most versions of her story describe her as a talented and learned woman who disguised herself as a man, often at the behest of a lover. In the most common accounts, owing to her abilities she rose through the church hierarchy and was eventually elected pope. Her sex was revealed when she gave birth during a procession and she died shortly after, either through murder or natural causes. The accounts state that later church processions avoided this spot and that the Vatican removed the female pope from its official lists and crafted a ritual to ensure that future popes were male.[5][6] In the 16th century, Siena Cathedral featured a bust of Joan among other pontiffs; this was removed after protests in 1600.[7]

Jean de Mailly's chronicle, written around 1250, contains the first mention of an unnamed female pope and inspired several more accounts over the next several years. The most popular and influential version is that interpolated into Martin of Opava's Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum later in the 13th century. Martin introduced details that the female pope's birth name was John Anglicus of Mainz, that she reigned in the 9th century and that she entered the church to follow her lover.[8] The existence of Pope Joan was used in the defence of Walter Brut in his trial of 1391.[9] The legend was generally accepted as true until the 16th century, when a widespread debate among Catholic and Protestant writers called the story into question: various writers noted the implausibly long gap between Joan's supposed lifetime and her first appearance in texts.[10][11] Protestant scholar David Blondel ultimately demonstrated the impossibility of the story.[12][13] Pope Joan is now widely considered fictional, though the legend remains influential in cultural depictions.[14][15]

Legends edit

The earliest mention of a female pope appears in the Dominican Jean de Mailly's chronicle of Metz, Chronica Universalis Mettensis, written in the early 13th century. In his telling the female pope is not named and the events are set in 1099. According to Jean:

Concerning a certain Pope or rather female Pope, who is not set down in the list of popes or Bishops of Rome, because she was a woman who disguised herself as a man and became, by her character and talents, a curial secretary, then a Cardinal and finally Pope. One day, while mounting a horse, she gave birth to a child. Immediately, by Roman justice she was bound by the feet to a horse's tail and dragged and stoned by the people for half a league, and, where she died, there she was buried, and at the place is written: "Petre, Pater Patrum, Papisse Prodito Partum" [Oh Peter, Father of Fathers, Betray the childbearing of the woman Pope]. At the same time, the four-day fast called the "fast of the female Pope" was first established.[16]

— Jean de Mailly, Chronica Universalis Mettensis

Jean de Mailly's story was picked up by his fellow Dominican Stephen of Bourbon, who adapted it for his work on the Seven Gifts of the Holy Ghost. However the legend gained its greatest prominence when it appeared in the third recension (edited revision) of Martin of Opava's Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum later in the 13th century. This version, which may have been by Martin himself, is the first to attach a name to the figure, indicating that she was known as John Anglicus or John of Mainz. It also changes the date from the 11th to the 9th century, indicating that Joan reigned between Leo IV and Benedict III in the 850s. According to the Chronicon:

John Anglicus, born at Mainz, was Pope for two years seven months and four days and died in Rome, after which there was a vacancy in the Papacy of one month. It is claimed that this John was a woman, who as a girl had been led to Athens dressed in the clothes of a man by a certain lover of hers. There she became proficient in a diversity of branches of knowledge, until she had no equal, and, afterward in Rome, she taught the liberal arts and had great masters among her students and audience. A high opinion of her life and learning arose in the city; and she was chosen for Pope. While Pope, however, she became pregnant by her companion. Through ignorance of the exact time when the birth was expected, she was delivered of a child while in procession from St. Peter's to the Lateran, in a lane once named Via Sacra (the sacred way) but now known as the "shunned street" between the Colosseum and St Clement's church. After her death, it is said she was buried in that same place. The Lord Pope always turns aside from the street, and it is believed by many that this is done because of abhorrence of the event. Nor is she placed on the list of the Holy Pontiffs, both because of her female sex and on account of the foulness of the matter.

— Martin of Opava, Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum

One version of the Chronicon gives an alternative fate for the female pope: she did not die immediately after her exposure but was confined and deposed, after which she did many years of penance. Her son from the affair eventually became Bishop of Ostia and ordered her entombment in his cathedral when she died.

Other references to the female pope are attributed to earlier writers, though none appears in manuscripts that predate the Chronica. The one most commonly cited is Anastasius Bibliothecarius (d. 886), a compiler of Liber Pontificalis, who was a contemporary of the female Pope by the Chronicon's dating. However the story is found in only one unreliable manuscript of Anastasius. This manuscript, in the Vatican Library, bears the relevant passage inserted as a footnote at the bottom of a page. It is out of sequence and in a different hand, one that dates from after the time of Martin of Opava. This 'witness' to the female pope is likely to be based on Martin's account and not a possible source for it. The same is true of Marianus Scotus's Chronicle of the Popes, a text written in the 11th century. Some of its manuscripts contain a brief mention of a female pope named Johanna (the earliest source to attach to her the female form of the name), but all these manuscripts are later than Martin's work. Earlier manuscripts do not contain the legend.

 
Illustration of Pope Innocent X having his testicles examined, from Roma Triumphans (1645)

Some versions of the legend suggest that subsequent popes were subjected to an examination whereby, having sat on a so-called sedia stercoraria or 'dung chair' containing a hole, a cardinal had to reach up and establish that the new pope had testicles before announcing "Duos habet et bene pendentes" ("He has two and they dangle nicely"),[17] or "habet" ("he has them") for short.[18]

There were associated legends as well. In the 1290s the Dominican Robert of Uzès recounted a vision in which he saw the seat "where, it is said, the pope is proved to be a man". Pope Joan has been associated with marvelous happenings. Petrarch (1304–1374) wrote in his Chronica de le Vite de Pontefici et Imperadori Romani that after Pope Joan had been revealed as a woman:

... in Brescia it rained blood for three days and nights. In France there appeared marvelous locusts, which had six wings and very powerful teeth. They flew miraculously through the air, and all drowned in the British Sea. The golden bodies were rejected by the waves of the sea and corrupted the air, so that a great many people died.

— Petrarch, Chronica de le Vite de Pontefici et Imperadori Romani

However the attribution of this work to Petrarch may be incorrect.[19]

Later development edit

 
An untitled popess on the Rosenwald Sheet of uncut Tarot woodcuts. Early 16th-century. Now in National Gallery in Washington, D.C.

From the mid-13th century onward the legend was widely disseminated and believed. Joan was used as an exemplum in Dominican preaching. Bartolomeo Platina, the scholar who was prefect of the Vatican Library, wrote his Vitæ Pontificum Platinæ historici liber de vita Christi ac omnium pontificum qui hactenus ducenti fuere et XX in 1479 at the behest of his patron, Pope Sixtus IV. The book contains the following account of the female Pope:

Pope John VIII: John, of English extraction, was born at Mentz (Mainz) and is said to have arrived at popedom by evil art; for disguising herself like a man, whereas she was a woman, she went when young with her paramour, a learned man, to Athens, and made such progress in learning under the professors there that, coming to Rome, she met with few that could equal, much less go beyond her, even in the knowledge of the scriptures; and by her learned and ingenious readings and disputations, she acquired so great respect and authority that upon the death of Pope Leo IV (as Martin says) by common consent she was chosen pope in his room. As she was going to the Lateran Church between the Colossean Theatre (so called from Nero's Colossus) and St. Clement's her travail came upon her, and she died upon the place, having sat two years, one month, and four days, and was buried there without any pomp. This story is vulgarly told, but by very uncertain and obscure authors, and therefore I have related it barely and in short, lest I should seem obstinate and pertinacious if I had admitted what is so generally talked. I had better mistake with the rest of the world, though it be certain, that what I have related may be thought not altogether incredible.

 
Pope Joan giving birth. Woodcut from a German translation by Heinrich Steinhöwel of Giovanni Boccaccio's De mulieribus claris, printed by Johannes Zainer at Ulm ca. 1474 (British Museum)

References to the female Pope abound in the later Middle Ages and Renaissance. Jans der Enikel (1270s) was the first to tell the story in German. Giovanni Boccaccio wrote about her in De Mulieribus Claris (1353).[20] The Chronicon of Adam of Usk (1404) gives her a name, Agnes, and furthermore mentions a statue in Rome that is said to be of her. This statue had never been mentioned by any earlier writer anywhere; presumably it was an actual statue that came to be taken to be of the female pope. A late-14th-century edition of the Mirabilia Urbis Romae, a guidebook for pilgrims to Rome, tells readers that the female Pope's remains are buried at St. Peter's. It was around this time that a long series of busts of past Popes was made for the Duomo of Siena, which included one of the female pope, named as "Johannes VIII, Foemina de Anglia" and included between Leo IV and Benedict III.

At his trial in 1415 Jan Hus argued that the Church did not necessarily need a pope because, during the pontificate of "Pope Agnes" (as he also called her), it got on quite well. Hus's opponents at the trial insisted that his argument proved no such thing about the independence of the Church but they did not dispute that there had been a female pope at all.

During the Reformation edit

In 1587 Florimond de Raemond, a magistrate in the parlement de Bordeaux and an antiquary, published his first attempt to deconstruct the legend, Erreur Populaire de la Papesse Jeanne (also subsequently published under the title L'Anti-Papesse). The tract applied humanist techniques of textual criticism to the Pope Joan legend, with the broader intent of supplying sound historical principles to ecclesiastical history, and the legend began to come apart, detail by detail. Raemond's Erreur Populaire went through successive editions, reaching a fifteenth as late as 1691.[21]

In 1601, Pope Clement VIII declared the legend of the female pope to be untrue. The famous bust of her, inscribed Johannes VIII, Femina ex Anglia, which had been carved for the series of papal figures in the Duomo di Siena about 1400 and was noted by travelers, was either destroyed or recarved and relabeled, replaced by a male figure, that of Pope Zachary.[22]

The legend of Pope Joan was "effectively demolished" by David Blondel, a mid-17th-century Protestant historian, who suggested that Pope Joan's tale may have originated in a satire against Pope John XI, who died in his early 20s.[23] Blondel, through detailed analysis of the claims and suggested timings, argued that no such events could have happened.[23]

The 16th-century Italian historian Onofrio Panvinio, commenting on one of Bartolomeo Platina's works that refer to Pope Joan, theorized that the story of Pope Joan may have originated from tales of Pope John XII; John reportedly had many mistresses, including one called Joan, who was very influential in Rome during his pontificate.[24][25]

 
Engraving of Pope Joan giving birth, from A Present for a Papist (1675)

At the time of the Reformation, various Protestant writers took up the Pope Joan legend in their anti-Catholic writings, and the Catholics responded with their own polemic. According to Pierre Gustave Brunet,[26]

Various authors, in the 16th and 17th centuries, occupied themselves with Pope Joan, but it was from the point of view of the polemic engaged in between the partisans of Lutheran or Calvinist reform and the apologists of Catholicism.

An English writer, Alexander Cooke, wrote a book entitled Pope Joane: A Dialogue between a Protestant and a Papist, which purported to prove the existence of Pope Joan by reference to Catholic traditions.[27] It was republished in 1675 as A Present for a Papist: Or the Life and Death of Pope Joan, Plainly Proving Out of the Printed Copies, and Manscriptes of Popish Writers and Others, That a Woman called Joan, Was Really Pope of Rome, and Was There Deliver'd of a Bastard Son in the Open Street as She Went in Solemn Procession.[27][28] The book gives an account of Pope Joan giving birth to a son in plain view of all those around, accompanied by a detailed engraving showing a rather surprised looking baby peeking out from under the Pope's robes. Even in the 19th century, authors such as Ewaldus Kist and Karl Hase discussed the story as a real occurrence. However, other Protestant writers, such as David Blondel and Gottfried Leibniz, rejected the story.

Modern analysis and critique edit

 
The Popess tarot card from the Visconti-Sforza tarot deck, c. 1450

Most modern scholars dismiss Pope Joan as a medieval legend.[29] British historian John Julius Norwich dismissed the myth with a logical assessment of evidence.[30] The Oxford Dictionary of Popes[23] declares that there is "no contemporary evidence for a female Pope at any of the dates suggested for her reign", but nonetheless acknowledges that Pope Joan's legend was widely believed for centuries, even by Catholics.

The 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia elaborated on the historical timeline problem:

Between Leo IV and Benedict III, where Martinus Polonus places her, she cannot be inserted, because Leo IV died 17 July 855, and immediately after his death Benedict III was elected by the clergy and people of Rome; but, owing to the setting up of an Antipope, in the person of the deposed Cardinal Anastasius, he was not consecrated until 29 September. Coins exist which bear both the image of Benedict III and of Emperor Lothair, who died 28 September 855; therefore Benedict must have been recognized as pope before the last-mentioned date. On 7 October 855, Benedict III issued a charter for the Abbey of Corvey. Hincmar, Archbishop of Reims, informed Nicholas I that a messenger whom he had sent to Leo IV learned on his way of the death of this Pope, and therefore handed his petition to Benedict III, who decided it (Hincmar, ep. xl in P.L., CXXXVI, 85). All these witnesses prove the correctness of the dates given in the lives of Leo IV and Benedict III, and there was no interregnum between these two Popes, so that at this place there is no room for the alleged Popess.[31]

It has also been noted that enemies of the papacy in the 9th century make no mention of a female pope. For example, Photios I of Constantinople, who became Patriarch in 858 and was deposed by Pope Nicholas I in 863, was an enemy of the pope. He vehemently asserted his own authority as patriarch over that of the pope in Rome, and would have made the most of any scandal of that time regarding the papacy; but he never mentions the story once in any of his voluminous writings. Indeed, at one point he mentions "Leo and Benedict, successively great priests of the Roman Church".[32]

Rosemary and Darroll Pardoe, authors of The Female Pope: The Mystery of Pope Joan, theorize that if a female pope did exist, a more plausible time frame is 1086 and 1108, when there were several antipopes; during this time the reign of the legitimate popes Victor III, Urban II, and Paschal II was not always established in Rome, since the city was occupied by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor, and later sacked by the Normans.[32] This also agrees with the earliest known version of the legend, by Jean de Mailly, as he places the story in the year 1099. De Mailly's account was acknowledged by his companion Stephen of Bourbon.

Peter Stanford, a British writer and former editor of The Catholic Herald, concluded in The Legend of Pope Joan: In Search of the Truth (2000) "Weighing all th[e] evidence, I am convinced that Pope Joan was an historical figure, though perhaps not all the details about her that have been passed on down the centuries are true".[33] Stanford's work has been criticised as "credulous" by one mainstream historian, Vincent DiMarco.[34] Against the lack of historical evidence to her existence, the question remains as to why the Pope Joan story has been popular and widely believed. Philip Jenkins in The New Anti-Catholicism: The Last Acceptable Prejudice suggests that the periodic revival of what he calls this "anti-papal legend" has more to do with feminist and anti-Catholic wishful thinking than historical accuracy.[35]

The sedes stercoraria, the throne with a hole in the seat, now at St. John Lateran (the formal residence of the popes and center of Catholicism), is to be considered. This and other toilet-like chairs were used in the consecration of Pope Pascal II in 1099.[36] In fact, one is still in the Vatican Museums, another at the Musée du Louvre. The reason for the configuration of the chair is disputed. It has been speculated that they originally were Roman bidets or imperial birthing stools, which because of their age and imperial links were used in ceremonies by Popes intent on highlighting their own imperial claims (as they did also with their Latin title, Pontifex Maximus).[15]

Alain Boureau quotes the humanist Jacopo d'Angelo de Scarparia, who visited Rome in 1406 for the enthronement of Gregory XII. The pope sat briefly on two "pierced chairs" at the Lateran: "... the vulgar tell the insane fable that he is touched to verify that he is indeed a man", a sign that this corollary of the Pope Joan legend was still current in the Roman street.[37]

 
New Orleans: Mardi Gras revelers in Jackson Square, the French Quarter. A pregnant woman costumes as "Pope Joan."

Medieval popes, from the 13th century onward, did indeed avoid the direct route between the Lateran and St Peter's, as Martin of Opava claimed. However, there is no evidence that this practice dated back any earlier. The origin of the practice is uncertain, but it is quite likely that it was maintained because of widespread belief in the Joan legend, and it was thought genuinely to date back to that period.

Although some medieval writers referred to the female pope as "John VIII", a genuine Pope John VIII reigned between 872 and 882. Due to the Dark Ages' lack of records, confusion often reigns in the evaluation of events. The Pope Joan legend is also conflated with the gap in the numbering of the Johns.[38] In the 11th century, Pope John XIV was mistakenly counted as two popes. When Petrus Hispanus was elected pope in 1276, he believed that there had already been twenty popes named John, so he skipped the number XX and numbered himself John XXI.

In 2018, Michael E. Habicht, an archaeologist at Flinders University, published new evidence in support of an historical Pope Joan. Habicht and grapho-analyst Marguerite Spycher analyzed papal monograms on medieval coins and found that there were two significantly different monograms attributed to Pope John VIII. Habicht argues that the earlier monogram, which he dates from 856 to 858, belongs to Pope Joan, while the latter monogram, which he dates to after 875, belongs to Pope John VIII.[39][40]

In fiction edit

Pope Joan has remained a popular subject for fictional works. Plays include Ludwig Achim von Arnim's Päpstin Johanna (1813), a fragment by Bertolt Brecht (in Werke Bd 10) and a monodrama, Pausin Johanna, by Cees van der Pluijm (1996).

The Greek author Emmanuel Rhoides' 1866 novel, The Papess Joanne, was admired by Mark Twain and Alfred Jarry and freely translated by Lawrence Durrell as The Curious History of Pope Joan (1954). The legend also inspired Jarry's final written work before his death, The Pope's Mustard-Maker (1907), an operetta about a female pope known as Jane of Eggs, who operates under the papal name John VIII.

The American Donna Woolfolk Cross's 1996 historical romance, Pope Joan, was recently made into a German musical as well as the movie described below. Other novels include Wilhelm Smets' Das Mährchen von der Päpstin Johanna auf’s Neue erörtert (1829), Marjorie Bowen's Black Magic (1909), Ludwig Gorm's Päpstin Johanna (1912), Yves Bichet's La Papesse Jeanne (2005) and Hugo N. Gerstl's Scribe: The Story of the Only Female Pope (2005). Howard Pyle's The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood contains a reference.

There have been two films based on the story of Pope Joan: Pope Joan (1972), directed by Michael Anderson, was entitled The Devil's Imposter in the US. In 2009 it was recut to include more of John Briley's original script and released as She... who would be Pope. Also in 2009, another film with the title Pope Joan was released, this one a German, British, Italian and Spanish production directed by Sönke Wortmann and produced by Bernd Eichinger, based on Cross's novel.

The 1982 play Top Girls by Caryl Churchill featured Pope Joan as a character, who was invited to a restaurant along with other historically important women in the past by a modern-day woman, Marlene, to discuss the restriction of feminism in the past.

In the 2016 video game Persona 5, Pope Joan is referenced as the inspiration for Johanna, one of Makoto Niijima's titular personas (manifestations of the soul used by humans to battle demons).[41]

In July 2019 a theatrical show was held in Malta at Mdina ditch featuring Pope Joan as the main character.[42][43][44][45]

Pope Joan appears as a Ruler class Servant in the mobile game Fate/Grand Order.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ the span is given as 855–857; see also quotes from "The Register of Bishop Trefnan" in The Trial of Walter Brut of 1391 in Blamires, p. 259
  2. ^ Boureau, Alain (2001). The Myth of Pope Joan. Translated by Lydia G. Cochrane. University of Chicago Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-226-06745-9.
  3. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  4. ^ Noble, Thomas F. X. (April 2013). "Why Pope Joan?". Catholic Historical Review. 99 (2): 219–220. doi:10.1353/cat.2013.0078. S2CID 159548215.
  5. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  6. ^ Noble, Thomas F. X. (April 2013). "Why Pope Joan?". Catholic Historical Review. 99 (2): 220. doi:10.1353/cat.2013.0078. S2CID 159548215.
  7. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. pp. 12–3. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  8. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  9. ^ Blamires, 250–260.
  10. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  11. ^ Noble, Thomas F. X. (April 2013). "Why Pope Joan?". Catholic Historical Review. 99 (2): 229. doi:10.1353/cat.2013.0078. S2CID 159548215.
  12. ^ David Blondel, Familier esclaircissement de la question si une femme a este assise au siege papal de Rome entre Leon IV et Benoit III (Amsterdam: Blaeu, 1647); discussed in Valerie R. Hotchkiss, "The Female Pope and the Sin of Male Disguise", in Clothes Make the Man: Female Cross Dressing in Medieval Europe (London: Routledge, 2012), 69. ISBN 1135231710
  13. ^ Duffy, Eamon (1997). Saints and Sinners: A History of the Popes (Third ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. p. 158. ISBN 978-0-300-11597-0.
  14. ^ Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-472-11544-0.
  15. ^ a b Norwich, John Julius (2011). A History of the Papacy. New York: Random House. p. 63. ISBN 978-0-679-60499-0.
  16. ^ Breverton, Terry (2011). Breverton's Phantasmagoria: A Compendium of Monsters, Myths and Legends. Lyons Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-7627-7023-6.
  17. ^ Clément, Catherine (1999). Opera: The Undoing of Women. U of Minnesota P. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-8166-3526-9. Retrieved 8 March 2012.
  18. ^ Leroy, Fernand (2001). Histoire de naître: de l'enfantement primitif à l'accouchement médicalisé. De Boeck Supérieur. pp. 100–101. ISBN 978-2-8041-3817-2.
  19. ^ Chronica delle vite de pontefici et imperatori romani. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 24 January 2015. The attribution to Petrarch is doubtful. 'Cette oeuvre est généralement considérée comme apocryphe.' – Bib. Nat. cat. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  20. ^ Ch. 99: "De Ioannae Anglica Papa;" it begins succinctly "Ioannes esto Vir nomine videbature, sexu tamen fœmina fuit."
  21. ^ Tinsley, Barbara Sher (Autumn 1987). "Pope Joan Polemic in Early Modern France: The Use and Disabuse of Myth". Sixteenth Century Journal. 18 (3): 381–398. doi:10.2307/2540724. ISSN 0361-0160. JSTOR 2540724. S2CID 165483898.
  22. ^ Stanford, Peter (1999). The She-Pope: a quest for the truth behind the mystery of Pope Joan. Arrow. ISBN 978-0-7493-2067-6.
  23. ^ a b c Kelly, J.N.D. (2005) [1988]. Oxford Dictionary of Popes. Oxford University Press. pp. 331–332. ISBN 0-19-861433-0.
  24. ^ McClintock, John; James Strong (1882). Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature, Volume 4. Harper. p. 980. Retrieved 23 March 2011.
  25. ^ Knight, Charles (1867). Biography: or, Third division of "The English encyclopedia". Bradbury, Evans & Co. p. 633. Retrieved 17 July 2016.
  26. ^ Pierre Gustave Brunet (1880). Gay; Doucé (eds.). La Papesse Jeanne: Étude Historique et Littéraire. Brussels. p. 8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  27. ^ a b Rustici, Craig M. (2006). The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England. University of Michigan Press. p. 43. ISBN 0472115448. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  28. ^ A present for a papist: or, The history of the life of pope Joan (2nd ed.). Cornhill, London: Olive Payne. 1740. pp. 1–88. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  29. ^ Lord, Lewis (24 July 2000). . U.S. News Online. U.S. News & World Report. Archived from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 22 March 2010.
  30. ^ Norwich, John Julius. Absolute Monarchs: A History of the Papacy. 2011. 'Pope Joan' Chapter VI, pp. 63–70. ISBN 978-0-679-60499-0
  31. ^ Kirsch, J.P. (1910). "Popess Joan". The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 22 March 2010.
  32. ^ a b Pardoe, Rosemary and Darroll (1988). "Chapter 3: 'Did Joan exist?'". The Female Pope: The Mystery of Pope Joan. The First Complete Documentation of the Facts behind the Legend. Crucible. ISBN 978-1-85274-013-9. Retrieved 22 March 2010.
  33. ^ "Legend of Pope Joan". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  34. ^ "The Medieval Popess", by Vincent DiMarco, in Misconceptions about the Middle Ages ed. Stephen Harris, Bryon L. Grigsby; Routledge, 18 Feb 2008, pp. 63–69, "... credulous studies include ... Peter Stanford, The Legend of Pope Joan ". At p. 68
  35. ^ Jenkins, Philip (2003). The New Anti-Catholicism: The Last Acceptable Prejudice. Oxford University Press. p. 89. ISBN 0-19-515480-0.
  36. ^ Boureau, Alain (1988). La Papesse Jeanne. Paris: Aubier. p. ?.
  37. ^ Boureau, Alain (1988). La Papesse Jeanne. Paris: Aubier. p. 23.
  38. ^ Riesman, David (Winter 1923). "A Physician in the Papal Chair". Annals of Medical History. V (4): 291–300.
  39. ^ Solly, Meilan (19 September 2018). "Why the Legend of Medieval Pope Joan Persists". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  40. ^ Habicht, Michael E. (2018). Päpstin Johanna: Ein vertuschtes Pontifikat einer Frau oder eine fiktive Legende? (in German). Berlin: epubli. ISBN 978-3746757360.
  41. ^ "Persona® 5". atlus.com. ATLUS. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  42. ^ "Dreaming of a female pope | Irene Christ on Pope Joan". MaltaToday.com.mt.
  43. ^ "Pope Joan and her relevance today". MaltaToday.com.mt.
  44. ^ "Pope Joan at Mdina". Times of Malta. 5 July 2019.
  45. ^ "Irene Christ takes on Pope Joan". independent.com.mt – The Malta Independent.

Further reading edit

Primary sources edit

Secondary sources edit

  • Gustave Brunet (1880). La papesse Jeanne etude historique et litteraire par Philomneste junior (in French) (second ed.). Bruxelles: J. Gay. p. 29.
  • Clement Wood, The Woman Who Was Pope, Wm. Faro, Inc., New York. 1931
  • Arturo Ortega Blake, Joanna Kobieta która zostala Papiezem, Edit. Philip Wilson, 2006. Published in Warszawa, ISBN 83-7236-208-4.
  • Alain Boureau, The Myth of Pope Joan, University of Chicago Press, 2000. Published in Paris as La Papesse Jeanne. The standard account among historians, ISBN 978-0226067452.
  • Stephen L. Harris, Bryon L. Grigsby, Misconceptions about the Middle Ages, Routledge, 2007. ISBN 978-0415871136.
  • Peter Stanford, The She-Pope. A Quest for the truth behind the Mystery of Pope Joan, Heineman, London 1998 ISBN 0-434-02458-9. Published in the US as The Legend of Pope Joan: In Search of the Truth, Henry Holt & Company, 1999. A popularized journalistic account.
  • "Top 5 Myths About the Papacy"
  • Joan Morris, Pope John VIII, an English Woman, Alias Pope Joan Vrai Publishers, London 1985 ISBN 978-0951027219.
  • Michael E. Habicht,Päpstin Johanna. Ein vertuschtes Pontifikat einer Frau oder eine fiktive Legende? epubli, Berlin 2018 ISBN 978-3-746757-36-0.
  • Michael E. Habicht,Pope Joan: The covered-up pontificate of a woman or a fictional legend? epubli, Berlin 2018 ISBN 978-3-746764-33-7.Legends of a Medieval Female Pope May Tell the Truth
  • Alcuin Blamires, ed., Woman Defamed and Woman Defended, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992.

Fiction edit

  • Donna Woolfolk Cross, Pope Joan: A Novel Three Rivers Press, 2009.
  • Lawrence Durrell, The Curious History of Pope Joan. London: Derek Verschoyle, 1954. Freely translated from the Greek Papissa Joanna, 1886, by Emmanuel Rhoides.
  • Emmanuel Rhoides, Papissa Joanna translated by T. D. Kriton, Govostis, Athens, 1935.

External links edit

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Popess Joan". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  • ABC Prime time Looking for Pope Joan
  • "Pope Joan" by Dennis Barton gives timeline esp. of stories appearance in written histories.
  • Mystery Files: Pope Joan 2012, Episode 10. Smithsonian Channel. Retrieved 17 February 2014.
  • Dunning, Brian (12 March 2013). "Skeptoid #353: Pope Joan". Skeptoid.

pope, joan, other, uses, disambiguation, ioannes, anglicus, according, legend, woman, reigned, pope, years, during, middle, ages, story, first, appeared, chronicles, 13th, century, subsequently, spread, throughout, europe, story, widely, believed, centuries, m. For other uses see Pope Joan disambiguation Pope Joan Ioannes Anglicus 855 857 was according to legend a woman who reigned as pope for two years 1 during the Middle Ages Her story first appeared in chronicles in the 13th century and subsequently spread throughout Europe The story was widely believed for centuries but most modern scholars regard it as fictional 2 3 4 Illustrated manuscript depicting Pope Joan with the papal tiara Bibliotheque nationale de France c 1560 Depiction of Pope John VII in Hartmann Schedel s religious Nuremberg Chronicle published in 1493 Most versions of her story describe her as a talented and learned woman who disguised herself as a man often at the behest of a lover In the most common accounts owing to her abilities she rose through the church hierarchy and was eventually elected pope Her sex was revealed when she gave birth during a procession and she died shortly after either through murder or natural causes The accounts state that later church processions avoided this spot and that the Vatican removed the female pope from its official lists and crafted a ritual to ensure that future popes were male 5 6 In the 16th century Siena Cathedral featured a bust of Joan among other pontiffs this was removed after protests in 1600 7 Jean de Mailly s chronicle written around 1250 contains the first mention of an unnamed female pope and inspired several more accounts over the next several years The most popular and influential version is that interpolated into Martin of Opava s Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum later in the 13th century Martin introduced details that the female pope s birth name was John Anglicus of Mainz that she reigned in the 9th century and that she entered the church to follow her lover 8 The existence of Pope Joan was used in the defence of Walter Brut in his trial of 1391 9 The legend was generally accepted as true until the 16th century when a widespread debate among Catholic and Protestant writers called the story into question various writers noted the implausibly long gap between Joan s supposed lifetime and her first appearance in texts 10 11 Protestant scholar David Blondel ultimately demonstrated the impossibility of the story 12 13 Pope Joan is now widely considered fictional though the legend remains influential in cultural depictions 14 15 Contents 1 Legends 2 Later development 3 During the Reformation 4 Modern analysis and critique 5 In fiction 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 8 2 Secondary sources 8 3 Fiction 9 External linksLegends editThe earliest mention of a female pope appears in the Dominican Jean de Mailly s chronicle of Metz Chronica Universalis Mettensis written in the early 13th century In his telling the female pope is not named and the events are set in 1099 According to Jean Concerning a certain Pope or rather female Pope who is not set down in the list of popes or Bishops of Rome because she was a woman who disguised herself as a man and became by her character and talents a curial secretary then a Cardinal and finally Pope One day while mounting a horse she gave birth to a child Immediately by Roman justice she was bound by the feet to a horse s tail and dragged and stoned by the people for half a league and where she died there she was buried and at the place is written Petre Pater Patrum Papisse Prodito Partum Oh Peter Father of Fathers Betray the childbearing of the woman Pope At the same time the four day fast called the fast of the female Pope was first established 16 Jean de Mailly Chronica Universalis Mettensis Jean de Mailly s story was picked up by his fellow Dominican Stephen of Bourbon who adapted it for his work on the Seven Gifts of the Holy Ghost However the legend gained its greatest prominence when it appeared in the third recension edited revision of Martin of Opava s Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum later in the 13th century This version which may have been by Martin himself is the first to attach a name to the figure indicating that she was known as John Anglicus or John of Mainz It also changes the date from the 11th to the 9th century indicating that Joan reigned between Leo IV and Benedict III in the 850s According to the Chronicon John Anglicus born at Mainz was Pope for two years seven months and four days and died in Rome after which there was a vacancy in the Papacy of one month It is claimed that this John was a woman who as a girl had been led to Athens dressed in the clothes of a man by a certain lover of hers There she became proficient in a diversity of branches of knowledge until she had no equal and afterward in Rome she taught the liberal arts and had great masters among her students and audience A high opinion of her life and learning arose in the city and she was chosen for Pope While Pope however she became pregnant by her companion Through ignorance of the exact time when the birth was expected she was delivered of a child while in procession from St Peter s to the Lateran in a lane once named Via Sacra the sacred way but now known as the shunned street between the Colosseum and St Clement s church After her death it is said she was buried in that same place The Lord Pope always turns aside from the street and it is believed by many that this is done because of abhorrence of the event Nor is she placed on the list of the Holy Pontiffs both because of her female sex and on account of the foulness of the matter Martin of Opava Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum One version of the Chronicon gives an alternative fate for the female pope she did not die immediately after her exposure but was confined and deposed after which she did many years of penance Her son from the affair eventually became Bishop of Ostia and ordered her entombment in his cathedral when she died Other references to the female pope are attributed to earlier writers though none appears in manuscripts that predate the Chronica The one most commonly cited is Anastasius Bibliothecarius d 886 a compiler of Liber Pontificalis who was a contemporary of the female Pope by the Chronicon s dating However the story is found in only one unreliable manuscript of Anastasius This manuscript in the Vatican Library bears the relevant passage inserted as a footnote at the bottom of a page It is out of sequence and in a different hand one that dates from after the time of Martin of Opava This witness to the female pope is likely to be based on Martin s account and not a possible source for it The same is true of Marianus Scotus s Chronicle of the Popes a text written in the 11th century Some of its manuscripts contain a brief mention of a female pope named Johanna the earliest source to attach to her the female form of the name but all these manuscripts are later than Martin s work Earlier manuscripts do not contain the legend nbsp Illustration of Pope Innocent X having his testicles examined from Roma Triumphans 1645 Some versions of the legend suggest that subsequent popes were subjected to an examination whereby having sat on a so called sedia stercoraria or dung chair containing a hole a cardinal had to reach up and establish that the new pope had testicles before announcing Duos habet et bene pendentes He has two and they dangle nicely 17 or habet he has them for short 18 There were associated legends as well In the 1290s the Dominican Robert of Uzes recounted a vision in which he saw the seat where it is said the pope is proved to be a man Pope Joan has been associated with marvelous happenings Petrarch 1304 1374 wrote in his Chronica de le Vite de Pontefici et Imperadori Romani that after Pope Joan had been revealed as a woman in Brescia it rained blood for three days and nights In France there appeared marvelous locusts which had six wings and very powerful teeth They flew miraculously through the air and all drowned in the British Sea The golden bodies were rejected by the waves of the sea and corrupted the air so that a great many people died Petrarch Chronica de le Vite de Pontefici et Imperadori Romani However the attribution of this work to Petrarch may be incorrect 19 Later development edit nbsp An untitled popess on the Rosenwald Sheet of uncut Tarot woodcuts Early 16th century Now in National Gallery in Washington D C From the mid 13th century onward the legend was widely disseminated and believed Joan was used as an exemplum in Dominican preaching Bartolomeo Platina the scholar who was prefect of the Vatican Library wrote his Vitae Pontificum Platinae historici liber de vita Christi ac omnium pontificum qui hactenus ducenti fuere et XX in 1479 at the behest of his patron Pope Sixtus IV The book contains the following account of the female Pope Pope John VIII John of English extraction was born at Mentz Mainz and is said to have arrived at popedom by evil art for disguising herself like a man whereas she was a woman she went when young with her paramour a learned man to Athens and made such progress in learning under the professors there that coming to Rome she met with few that could equal much less go beyond her even in the knowledge of the scriptures and by her learned and ingenious readings and disputations she acquired so great respect and authority that upon the death of Pope Leo IV as Martin says by common consent she was chosen pope in his room As she was going to the Lateran Church between the Colossean Theatre so called from Nero s Colossus and St Clement s her travail came upon her and she died upon the place having sat two years one month and four days and was buried there without any pomp This story is vulgarly told but by very uncertain and obscure authors and therefore I have related it barely and in short lest I should seem obstinate and pertinacious if I had admitted what is so generally talked I had better mistake with the rest of the world though it be certain that what I have related may be thought not altogether incredible nbsp Pope Joan giving birth Woodcut from a German translation by Heinrich Steinhowel of Giovanni Boccaccio s De mulieribus claris printed by Johannes Zainer at Ulm ca 1474 British Museum References to the female Pope abound in the later Middle Ages and Renaissance Jans der Enikel 1270s was the first to tell the story in German Giovanni Boccaccio wrote about her in De Mulieribus Claris 1353 20 The Chronicon of Adam of Usk 1404 gives her a name Agnes and furthermore mentions a statue in Rome that is said to be of her This statue had never been mentioned by any earlier writer anywhere presumably it was an actual statue that came to be taken to be of the female pope A late 14th century edition of the Mirabilia Urbis Romae a guidebook for pilgrims to Rome tells readers that the female Pope s remains are buried at St Peter s It was around this time that a long series of busts of past Popes was made for the Duomo of Siena which included one of the female pope named as Johannes VIII Foemina de Anglia and included between Leo IV and Benedict III At his trial in 1415 Jan Hus argued that the Church did not necessarily need a pope because during the pontificate of Pope Agnes as he also called her it got on quite well Hus s opponents at the trial insisted that his argument proved no such thing about the independence of the Church but they did not dispute that there had been a female pope at all During the Reformation editIn 1587 Florimond de Raemond a magistrate in the parlement de Bordeaux and an antiquary published his first attempt to deconstruct the legend Erreur Populaire de la Papesse Jeanne also subsequently published under the title L Anti Papesse The tract applied humanist techniques of textual criticism to the Pope Joan legend with the broader intent of supplying sound historical principles to ecclesiastical history and the legend began to come apart detail by detail Raemond s Erreur Populaire went through successive editions reaching a fifteenth as late as 1691 21 In 1601 Pope Clement VIII declared the legend of the female pope to be untrue The famous bust of her inscribed Johannes VIII Femina ex Anglia which had been carved for the series of papal figures in the Duomo di Siena about 1400 and was noted by travelers was either destroyed or recarved and relabeled replaced by a male figure that of Pope Zachary 22 The legend of Pope Joan was effectively demolished by David Blondel a mid 17th century Protestant historian who suggested that Pope Joan s tale may have originated in a satire against Pope John XI who died in his early 20s 23 Blondel through detailed analysis of the claims and suggested timings argued that no such events could have happened 23 The 16th century Italian historian Onofrio Panvinio commenting on one of Bartolomeo Platina s works that refer to Pope Joan theorized that the story of Pope Joan may have originated from tales of Pope John XII John reportedly had many mistresses including one called Joan who was very influential in Rome during his pontificate 24 25 nbsp Engraving of Pope Joan giving birth from A Present for a Papist 1675 At the time of the Reformation various Protestant writers took up the Pope Joan legend in their anti Catholic writings and the Catholics responded with their own polemic According to Pierre Gustave Brunet 26 Various authors in the 16th and 17th centuries occupied themselves with Pope Joan but it was from the point of view of the polemic engaged in between the partisans of Lutheran or Calvinist reform and the apologists of Catholicism An English writer Alexander Cooke wrote a book entitled Pope Joane A Dialogue between a Protestant and a Papist which purported to prove the existence of Pope Joan by reference to Catholic traditions 27 It was republished in 1675 as A Present for a Papist Or the Life and Death of Pope Joan Plainly Proving Out of the Printed Copies and Manscriptes of Popish Writers and Others That a Woman called Joan Was Really Pope of Rome and Was There Deliver d of a Bastard Son in the Open Street as She Went in Solemn Procession 27 28 The book gives an account of Pope Joan giving birth to a son in plain view of all those around accompanied by a detailed engraving showing a rather surprised looking baby peeking out from under the Pope s robes Even in the 19th century authors such as Ewaldus Kist and Karl Hase discussed the story as a real occurrence However other Protestant writers such as David Blondel and Gottfried Leibniz rejected the story Modern analysis and critique edit nbsp The Popess tarot card from the Visconti Sforza tarot deck c 1450 Most modern scholars dismiss Pope Joan as a medieval legend 29 British historian John Julius Norwich dismissed the myth with a logical assessment of evidence 30 The Oxford Dictionary of Popes 23 declares that there is no contemporary evidence for a female Pope at any of the dates suggested for her reign but nonetheless acknowledges that Pope Joan s legend was widely believed for centuries even by Catholics The 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia elaborated on the historical timeline problem Between Leo IV and Benedict III where Martinus Polonus places her she cannot be inserted because Leo IV died 17 July 855 and immediately after his death Benedict III was elected by the clergy and people of Rome but owing to the setting up of an Antipope in the person of the deposed Cardinal Anastasius he was not consecrated until 29 September Coins exist which bear both the image of Benedict III and of Emperor Lothair who died 28 September 855 therefore Benedict must have been recognized as pope before the last mentioned date On 7 October 855 Benedict III issued a charter for the Abbey of Corvey Hincmar Archbishop of Reims informed Nicholas I that a messenger whom he had sent to Leo IV learned on his way of the death of this Pope and therefore handed his petition to Benedict III who decided it Hincmar ep xl in P L CXXXVI 85 All these witnesses prove the correctness of the dates given in the lives of Leo IV and Benedict III and there was no interregnum between these two Popes so that at this place there is no room for the alleged Popess 31 It has also been noted that enemies of the papacy in the 9th century make no mention of a female pope For example Photios I of Constantinople who became Patriarch in 858 and was deposed by Pope Nicholas I in 863 was an enemy of the pope He vehemently asserted his own authority as patriarch over that of the pope in Rome and would have made the most of any scandal of that time regarding the papacy but he never mentions the story once in any of his voluminous writings Indeed at one point he mentions Leo and Benedict successively great priests of the Roman Church 32 Rosemary and Darroll Pardoe authors of The Female Pope The Mystery of Pope Joan theorize that if a female pope did exist a more plausible time frame is 1086 and 1108 when there were several antipopes during this time the reign of the legitimate popes Victor III Urban II and Paschal II was not always established in Rome since the city was occupied by Henry IV Holy Roman Emperor and later sacked by the Normans 32 This also agrees with the earliest known version of the legend by Jean de Mailly as he places the story in the year 1099 De Mailly s account was acknowledged by his companion Stephen of Bourbon Peter Stanford a British writer and former editor of The Catholic Herald concluded in The Legend of Pope Joan In Search of the Truth 2000 Weighing all th e evidence I am convinced that Pope Joan was an historical figure though perhaps not all the details about her that have been passed on down the centuries are true 33 Stanford s work has been criticised as credulous by one mainstream historian Vincent DiMarco 34 Against the lack of historical evidence to her existence the question remains as to why the Pope Joan story has been popular and widely believed Philip Jenkins in The New Anti Catholicism The Last Acceptable Prejudice suggests that the periodic revival of what he calls this anti papal legend has more to do with feminist and anti Catholic wishful thinking than historical accuracy 35 The sedes stercoraria the throne with a hole in the seat now at St John Lateran the formal residence of the popes and center of Catholicism is to be considered This and other toilet like chairs were used in the consecration of Pope Pascal II in 1099 36 In fact one is still in the Vatican Museums another at the Musee du Louvre The reason for the configuration of the chair is disputed It has been speculated that they originally were Roman bidets or imperial birthing stools which because of their age and imperial links were used in ceremonies by Popes intent on highlighting their own imperial claims as they did also with their Latin title Pontifex Maximus 15 Alain Boureau quotes the humanist Jacopo d Angelo de Scarparia who visited Rome in 1406 for the enthronement of Gregory XII The pope sat briefly on two pierced chairs at the Lateran the vulgar tell the insane fable that he is touched to verify that he is indeed a man a sign that this corollary of the Pope Joan legend was still current in the Roman street 37 nbsp New Orleans Mardi Gras revelers in Jackson Square the French Quarter A pregnant woman costumes as Pope Joan Medieval popes from the 13th century onward did indeed avoid the direct route between the Lateran and St Peter s as Martin of Opava claimed However there is no evidence that this practice dated back any earlier The origin of the practice is uncertain but it is quite likely that it was maintained because of widespread belief in the Joan legend and it was thought genuinely to date back to that period Although some medieval writers referred to the female pope as John VIII a genuine Pope John VIII reigned between 872 and 882 Due to the Dark Ages lack of records confusion often reigns in the evaluation of events The Pope Joan legend is also conflated with the gap in the numbering of the Johns 38 In the 11th century Pope John XIV was mistakenly counted as two popes When Petrus Hispanus was elected pope in 1276 he believed that there had already been twenty popes named John so he skipped the number XX and numbered himself John XXI In 2018 Michael E Habicht an archaeologist at Flinders University published new evidence in support of an historical Pope Joan Habicht and grapho analyst Marguerite Spycher analyzed papal monograms on medieval coins and found that there were two significantly different monograms attributed to Pope John VIII Habicht argues that the earlier monogram which he dates from 856 to 858 belongs to Pope Joan while the latter monogram which he dates to after 875 belongs to Pope John VIII 39 40 In fiction editPope Joan has remained a popular subject for fictional works Plays include Ludwig Achim von Arnim s Papstin Johanna 1813 a fragment by Bertolt Brecht in Werke Bd 10 and a monodrama Pausin Johanna by Cees van der Pluijm 1996 The Greek author Emmanuel Rhoides 1866 novel The Papess Joanne was admired by Mark Twain and Alfred Jarry and freely translated by Lawrence Durrell as The Curious History of Pope Joan 1954 The legend also inspired Jarry s final written work before his death The Pope s Mustard Maker 1907 an operetta about a female pope known as Jane of Eggs who operates under the papal name John VIII The American Donna Woolfolk Cross s 1996 historical romance Pope Joan was recently made into a German musical as well as the movie described below Other novels include Wilhelm Smets Das Mahrchen von der Papstin Johanna auf s Neue erortert 1829 Marjorie Bowen s Black Magic 1909 Ludwig Gorm s Papstin Johanna 1912 Yves Bichet s La Papesse Jeanne 2005 and Hugo N Gerstl s Scribe The Story of the Only Female Pope 2005 Howard Pyle s The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood contains a reference There have been two films based on the story of Pope Joan Pope Joan 1972 directed by Michael Anderson was entitled The Devil s Imposter in the US In 2009 it was recut to include more of John Briley s original script and released as She who would be Pope Also in 2009 another film with the title Pope Joan was released this one a German British Italian and Spanish production directed by Sonke Wortmann and produced by Bernd Eichinger based on Cross s novel The 1982 play Top Girls by Caryl Churchill featured Pope Joan as a character who was invited to a restaurant along with other historically important women in the past by a modern day woman Marlene to discuss the restriction of feminism in the past In the 2016 video game Persona 5 Pope Joan is referenced as the inspiration for Johanna one of Makoto Niijima s titular personas manifestations of the soul used by humans to battle demons 41 In July 2019 a theatrical show was held in Malta at Mdina ditch featuring Pope Joan as the main character 42 43 44 45 Pope Joan appears as a Ruler class Servant in the mobile game Fate Grand Order See also editLegends surrounding the papacy Marozia Saeculum obscurum Theodora senatrix The High PriestessReferences edit the span is given as 855 857 see also quotes from The Register of Bishop Trefnan in The Trial of Walter Brut of 1391 in Blamires p 259 Boureau Alain 2001 The Myth of Pope Joan Translated by Lydia G Cochrane University of Chicago Press p 8 ISBN 0 226 06745 9 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press p 8 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 Noble Thomas F X April 2013 Why Pope Joan Catholic Historical Review 99 2 219 220 doi 10 1353 cat 2013 0078 S2CID 159548215 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 Noble Thomas F X April 2013 Why Pope Joan Catholic Historical Review 99 2 220 doi 10 1353 cat 2013 0078 S2CID 159548215 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press pp 12 3 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 Blamires 250 260 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 Noble Thomas F X April 2013 Why Pope Joan Catholic Historical Review 99 2 229 doi 10 1353 cat 2013 0078 S2CID 159548215 David Blondel Familier esclaircissement de la question si une femme a este assise au siege papal de Rome entre Leon IV et Benoit III Amsterdam Blaeu 1647 discussed in Valerie R Hotchkiss The Female Pope and the Sin of Male Disguise in Clothes Make the Man Female Cross Dressing in Medieval Europe London Routledge 2012 69 ISBN 1135231710 Duffy Eamon 1997 Saints and Sinners A History of the Popes Third ed New Haven Yale University Press p 158 ISBN 978 0 300 11597 0 Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press p 2 ISBN 978 0 472 11544 0 a b Norwich John Julius 2011 A History of the Papacy New York Random House p 63 ISBN 978 0 679 60499 0 Breverton Terry 2011 Breverton s Phantasmagoria A Compendium of Monsters Myths and Legends Lyons Press p 81 ISBN 978 0 7627 7023 6 Clement Catherine 1999 Opera The Undoing of Women U of Minnesota P p 105 ISBN 978 0 8166 3526 9 Retrieved 8 March 2012 Leroy Fernand 2001 Histoire de naitre de l enfantement primitif a l accouchement medicalise De Boeck Superieur pp 100 101 ISBN 978 2 8041 3817 2 Chronica delle vite de pontefici et imperatori romani University of Pennsylvania Retrieved 24 January 2015 The attribution to Petrarch is doubtful Cette oeuvre est generalement consideree comme apocryphe Bib Nat cat a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Ch 99 De Ioannae Anglica Papa it begins succinctly Ioannes esto Vir nomine videbature sexu tamen fœmina fuit Tinsley Barbara Sher Autumn 1987 Pope Joan Polemic in Early Modern France The Use and Disabuse of Myth Sixteenth Century Journal 18 3 381 398 doi 10 2307 2540724 ISSN 0361 0160 JSTOR 2540724 S2CID 165483898 Stanford Peter 1999 The She Pope a quest for the truth behind the mystery of Pope Joan Arrow ISBN 978 0 7493 2067 6 a b c Kelly J N D 2005 1988 Oxford Dictionary of Popes Oxford University Press pp 331 332 ISBN 0 19 861433 0 McClintock John James Strong 1882 Cyclopaedia of Biblical Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature Volume 4 Harper p 980 Retrieved 23 March 2011 Knight Charles 1867 Biography or Third division of The English encyclopedia Bradbury Evans amp Co p 633 Retrieved 17 July 2016 Pierre Gustave Brunet 1880 Gay Douce eds La Papesse Jeanne Etude Historique et Litteraire Brussels p 8 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Rustici Craig M 2006 The Afterlife of Pope Joan Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England University of Michigan Press p 43 ISBN 0472115448 Retrieved 24 January 2015 A present for a papist or The history of the life of pope Joan 2nd ed Cornhill London Olive Payne 1740 pp 1 88 Retrieved 24 January 2015 Lord Lewis 24 July 2000 The lady was a pope A bestseller revives the outlandish tale of Joan U S News Online U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on 24 March 2010 Retrieved 22 March 2010 Norwich John Julius Absolute Monarchs A History of the Papacy 2011 Pope Joan Chapter VI pp 63 70 ISBN 978 0 679 60499 0 Kirsch J P 1910 Popess Joan The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Retrieved 22 March 2010 a b Pardoe Rosemary and Darroll 1988 Chapter 3 Did Joan exist The Female Pope The Mystery of Pope Joan The First Complete Documentation of the Facts behind the Legend Crucible ISBN 978 1 85274 013 9 Retrieved 22 March 2010 Legend of Pope Joan Publishers Weekly Retrieved 24 January 2015 The Medieval Popess by Vincent DiMarco in Misconceptions about the Middle Ages ed Stephen Harris Bryon L Grigsby Routledge 18 Feb 2008 pp 63 69 credulous studies include Peter Stanford The Legend of Pope Joan At p 68 Jenkins Philip 2003 The New Anti Catholicism The Last Acceptable Prejudice Oxford University Press p 89 ISBN 0 19 515480 0 Boureau Alain 1988 La Papesse Jeanne Paris Aubier p Boureau Alain 1988 La Papesse Jeanne Paris Aubier p 23 Riesman David Winter 1923 A Physician in the Papal Chair Annals of Medical History V 4 291 300 Solly Meilan 19 September 2018 Why the Legend of Medieval Pope Joan Persists Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 25 September 2020 Habicht Michael E 2018 Papstin Johanna Ein vertuschtes Pontifikat einer Frau oder eine fiktive Legende in German Berlin epubli ISBN 978 3746757360 Persona 5 atlus com ATLUS Retrieved 26 April 2017 Dreaming of a female pope Irene Christ on Pope Joan MaltaToday com mt Pope Joan and her relevance today MaltaToday com mt Pope Joan at Mdina Times of Malta 5 July 2019 Irene Christ takes on Pope Joan independent com mt The Malta Independent Further reading editPrimary sources edit Jean de Mailly Chronica Universalis Mettensis 1254 Martin of Opava Chronicon pontificum et imperatorum 1278 Secondary sources edit Gustave Brunet 1880 La papesse Jeanne etude historique et litteraire par Philomneste junior in French second ed Bruxelles J Gay p 29 Clement Wood The Woman Who Was Pope Wm Faro Inc New York 1931 Arturo Ortega Blake Joanna Kobieta ktora zostala Papiezem Edit Philip Wilson 2006 Published in Warszawa ISBN 83 7236 208 4 Alain Boureau The Myth of Pope Joan University of Chicago Press 2000 Published in Paris as La Papesse Jeanne The standard account among historians ISBN 978 0226067452 Stephen L Harris Bryon L Grigsby Misconceptions about the Middle Ages Routledge 2007 ISBN 978 0415871136 Peter Stanford The She Pope A Quest for the truth behind the Mystery of Pope Joan Heineman London 1998 ISBN 0 434 02458 9 Published in the US as The Legend of Pope Joan In Search of the Truth Henry Holt amp Company 1999 A popularized journalistic account Top 5 Myths About the Papacy Joan Morris Pope John VIII an English Woman Alias Pope Joan Vrai Publishers London 1985 ISBN 978 0951027219 Michael E Habicht Papstin Johanna Ein vertuschtes Pontifikat einer Frau oder eine fiktive Legende epubli Berlin 2018 ISBN 978 3 746757 36 0 Michael E Habicht Pope Joan The covered up pontificate of a woman or a fictional legend epubli Berlin 2018 ISBN 978 3 746764 33 7 Legends of a Medieval Female Pope May Tell the Truth Alcuin Blamires ed Woman Defamed and Woman Defended Oxford Clarendon Press 1992 Fiction edit Donna Woolfolk Cross Pope Joan A Novel Three Rivers Press 2009 Lawrence Durrell The Curious History of Pope Joan London Derek Verschoyle 1954 Freely translated from the Greek Papissa Joanna 1886 by Emmanuel Rhoides Emmanuel Rhoides Papissa Joanna translated by T D Kriton Govostis Athens 1935 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pope Joan nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Popess Joan Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company ABC Prime time Looking for Pope Joan Pope Joan by Dennis Barton gives timeline esp of stories appearance in written histories Golden Age of Female Trannies in Medieval Europe Mystery Files Pope Joan 2012 Episode 10 Smithsonian Channel Retrieved 17 February 2014 Dunning Brian 12 March 2013 Skeptoid 353 Pope Joan Skeptoid Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pope Joan amp oldid 1212046762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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