Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Pope Victor II
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
== Papacy == After the death of [[Pope Leo IX]], a delegation of Roman clergy and people, headed by Hildebrand, later [[Pope Gregory VII]], travelled to Mainz and asked the emperor to nominate Gebhard as successor. At a court Diet held at Ratisbon in March, 1055, Gebhard accepted the papacy, provided that the emperor restore to the Apostolic See all the possessions that had been taken from it. When the emperor agreed, Gebhard, taking the name Victor II, moved to [[Rome]], where, in [[St. Peter's Basilica]] on 13 April 1055, he was officially chosen pope by the clergy and hailed by the people; he was immediately enthroned by the cardinals.<ref>Jaffé, p. 549, quoting Bonitho, "Liber ad amicum".</ref> By 27 May 1055, Pope Victor was back in Florence, where he was present at the imperial court. On 4 June 1055, the feast of Pentecost, Victor met the emperor at [[Florence]] and held a council, attended by some 120 bishops, which reinforced [[Pope Leo IX]]'s condemnation of clerical marriage, [[simony]], and the loss of the church's properties. He remained in Florence until November 1055.<ref>Jaffé, p. 549.</ref> When Henry III returned to Germany, he assigned Pope Victor the powers of Imperial Vicar for Italy, and the task of containing the ambitions of [[Godfrey the Bearded|Duke Godfrey of Lorraine]], the husband of Beatrice of Tuscany.<ref>Gregorovius, p. 96.</ref> The pope held the title of ''dux et marchio''.<ref>{{cite book|author=Monaldo Leopardi|title=Series Rectorum Anconitanae Marchiae Quam Collexit Monaldus Leopardus Recanatensis|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gVVfAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA11|year=1824|publisher=J. Morici|location=Recaneti|language=Latin|pages=7–8}} {{cite book|author1=Giovanni Benedetto Mittarelli|author2=Anselmo Costadoni|title=Annales camaldulenses ordinis Sancti Benedicti|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=x9MsmYlRgrEC|volume=Tomus secundus|year=1756|publisher=aere monasterii sancti Michaelis de Muriano|location=Venice|language=Latin|pages=166, and Appendix p. 162}}</ref> Victor excommunicated both Count [[Ramon Berenguer I of Barcelona]] and [[Almodis de la Marche]] for adultery at the behest of [[Ermesinde of Carcassonne]] in 1055.<ref>Bernard F. Reilly, ''The Contest of Christian and Muslim Spain, 1031-1157'', (Blackwell Publishing, 1995), 67.</ref><ref>Patricia Humphrey, "Ermessenda of Barcelona. The status of her authority," ''Queens, Regents and Potentates'', ed. Theresa M. Vann, (Academia Press, 1993), p. 34.</ref> In south Italy, one Teuto and his sons had attacked and were in possession of castles and property which belonged to the bishop of Teramo, who had been dispossessed. Pope Victor sent his count Gerardus to rectify the outrage, and then himself visited Teramo early in July 1056. He held a judicial assize at the castle of La Vitice in the diocese of Teramo, and oversaw the restoration of the bishop and the return of his property. Pope Victor, according to the notary who recorded the proceedings, was acting as ''Sedis Apostolicae praesul Urbis Romae gratia Dei, Italiae egregius universali p. p. regimine successus, Marcam Firmanam et Ducatum Spoletinum.''<ref>Jaffé, p. 551, no. 4348. {{cite book|author=Ferdinando Ughelli|editor=Niccolò Coleti|title=Italia sacra sive De Episcopis Italiae, et insularum adjacentium|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zTkOnHgYhFgC|volume=Tomus primus|year=1717|publisher=apud Sebastianum Coleti|location=Venice|language=Latin|pages=352–353}}</ref> Later in the summer 1056, the pope travelled to the imperial court again, ''pro causis papatus'', and intending to complain to the emperor because he was being badly treated by the Romans, ''per Romanos male tractatus''.<ref>Gregorovius, p. 96, with note 1, quoting Radulphus' "Life of S. Lietbertus": {{cite book|author=Martin Bouquet|title=Recueil des historiens des Gaules et de la France |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=m31ZAAAAYAAJ|volume=Tome onzieme (11)|year=1767|publisher=I.F. Delatour|location=Paris|language=French, Latin |page=481}} Gregorovius dates the trip in July 1056.</ref> He was with Henry III when he died at [[Bodfeld]] in the [[Harz]] on 5 October 1056. As guardian of Henry III's infant son [[Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry IV]] and adviser of [[Empress Agnes]], Henry IV's mother, Victor wielded enormous power, which he used to maintain peace throughout the empire and to strengthen the papacy against the aggressions of the barons. During the rivalry between Archbishop [[Anno II]] of Cologne and other senior clergymen and the empress, Victor backed Agnes and her supporters. Many of her close followers would be promoted, men like Bishop [[Henry II of Augsburg]], who would later become Emperor Henry's nominal regent; several German princes were given high court and church offices. At the beginning of Lent 1057, Victor and his court began their journey to Rome.<ref>Jaffé, p. 552,</ref> On 18 April 1057, Pope Victor held a general council in the Lateran Basilica. The diocese of the Marsi, which had been divided in two by Pope Benedict IX (Theophylact), was reunited into a single diocese. In the same council, the dispute concerning jurisdiction over a parish between the diocese of Siena and the diocese of Arezzo was heard for the first time.<ref>Jaffé, p. 552.</ref> In May the pope began a trip to Tuscany. He spent eight days in Florence, in conference with [[Godfrey the Bearded|Duke Godfrey]]. Godfrey's position had been greatly strengthened by the death of his enemy the Emperor Henry III the previous autumn, and the pope saw the advantages in a close relationship with the brother of his chancellor, Frederick of Lorraine.<ref>Gregorovius, pp. 95-99.</ref> The suit between the bishops of Siena and Arezzo resumed during the papal visit, and the pope took the trouble to visit the area of dispute, and talk to parishioners and local aristocracy. He then held a synod at the palace of S. Donato near Arezzo,<ref>Jaffé, p. 553.</ref> and issued a bull, assigning the disputed parish to the diocese of Arezzo.<ref>Jaffé, p. 552. {{cite book|author=Giuseppe Cappelletti|title=Le chiese d'Italia: dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0x1XAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA3|volume=decimosettimo (17)|year=1862|publisher=G. Antonelli|language=Italian, Latin|pages=428–431}}</ref> On 14 June 1057, Pope Victor appointed his chancellor, Frederick of Lorraine, to the position of [[cardinal-presbyter]] of [[San Crisogono, Rome|San Crisogono]].<ref>Gregorovius IV. 1, pp. 98-99.</ref> Cardinal Frederick took part in a synod at Arezzo on 23 July, and then was consecrated the thirty-sixth abbot of Montecassino by Pope Victor on 24 June 1057.<ref>Klaus Ganzer (1963), ''Die Entwicklung des auswärtigen Kardinalats im hohen Mittelalter'' (in German) (Tübingen: Niemeyer), p. 16.</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)