Pope Leo V
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Pope Leo V was the bishop of Rome and nominal ruler of the Papal States in 903. He was pope immediately before the period known as the Saeculum obscurum, when popes wielded little temporal authority. His papacy occurred in the second half of 903, with exact months being difficult to discern.<ref name=":0" />
Leo V was born at a place called Priapi, near Ardea. Although he was a priest when he was elected pope following the death of Pope Benedict IV (900–903),<ref>Template:Citation</ref> he was not a cardinal priest of Rome.<ref>Mann, pg. 111</ref>
During his brief pontificate, Leo granted the canons of Bologna a special bull (epistola tuitionis) where he exempted them from the payment of taxes. However, after a reign of a little over two months, Leo was captured by Christopher, the cardinal-priest of San Lorenzo in Damaso, and thrown into prison. Christopher then had himself elected pope (903–904); until the 19th century he was often considered to have been a legitimate pope.<ref>Template:CathEncy</ref> Papal scholar Horace Kinder Mann on the other hand, argued in 1910 that Christopher was likely an antipope.<ref name=":0">Mann, pg. 112-115</ref>
Leo died shortly after being deposed.<ref name=O'Malley>O'Malley, John W., A History of the Popes, New York, Sheed & Ward, 2010</ref> He was either murdered on the orders of Christopher in 903, who was in turn executed by Sergius III (904–911) in 904, or, possibly, both were ordered to be killed at the beginning of Sergius’ pontificate, either on the orders of Sergius himself, or by the direction of Sergius' patron, Theophylact I of Tusculum.<ref>Mann, pgs. 114-116</ref> According to Mann, it is more likely that Leo died a natural death in prison or in a monastery.<ref>Mann, Horace. "Pope Leo V." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 21 September 2017</ref>
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ReferencesEdit
- DeCormenin, Louis Marie; Gihon, James L., A Complete History of the Popes of Rome, from Saint Peter, the First Bishop to Pius the Ninth (1857)
- Mann, Horace K., The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages, Vol. IV: The Popes in the Days of Feudal Anarchy, 891-999 (1910)
- Norwich, John Julius, The Popes: A History (2011) Template:ISBN
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