Pope Clement III

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Distinguish". Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Ordination Pope Clement III (Template:Langx; 1130 – 20 March 1191), was the head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 19 December 1187 to his death in 1191. He ended the conflict between the Papacy and the city of Rome, by allowing the election of magistrates, which reinstalled the Papacy back in the city after a six-year exile. Clement, faced with a deplete college of cardinals, created thirty-one cardinals over three years, the most since Hadrian IV. He died 20 March 1191 and was quickly replaced by Celestine III.

Family

Paolo Scolari was born in 1130 in Rome, at the Rione of the Pigna, into a family of high social level but not noble, son of Giovanni and of his consort Maria and according to some scholars related to the mother of Pope Innocent III.[1]Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Pope Alexander III appointed him archpriest of the patriarchal Liberian Basilica, cardinal-deacon of Sergio e Bacco, and finally cardinal bishop of Palestrina in December 1180.

Election

Paolo was elected as the new Pope on December 19, 1187, two days after the death of Gregory VIII.Template:Sfn He was the cardinals' second choice, but their first choice, cardinal Theobald of Ostia, refused the papal throne.Template:Sfn Clement was the second Roman pope since Innocent II.Template:Sfn

Two months before being elected pope, Paolo Scolari had been rejected as a papal candidate by the cardinals due to being in poor health.Template:Sfn Even during his office as pope his health was a cause of concern. An instance of his poor health was six months after he was elected in June 1188 the cardinals thought Clement was going to die and had pope-elect Cardinal Bishop Teobald of Ostia on hand for when Clement died.Template:Sfn Though Clement was old and ill, he was still elected as pope and could have something to do with the small number of cardinals, only eight Cardinals and three of them having been known Romans, at the election of Clement.Template:Sfn The electors of Clement may have been aiming for the possibility of returning the curia to Rome, which would in fact happen during his time as pope.Template:Sfn

Papacy

Shortly after his accession at the conclusion of the papal election of December 1187, Clement succeeded in allaying the conflict which had existed for half a century between the popes and the citizens of Rome, with an agreement by which the citizens were allowed to elect their magistrates, while the nomination of the governor of the city remained in the hands of the pope. In March 1188 Clement III had agreed that the Roman Church would reimburse numerous Roman citizensTemplate:Sfn who have not received any beneficia since Pope Lucius III, a probable cause of the conflict between the pope and Romans.Template:Sfn On 31 May 1188 he concluded a treaty with the Romans which removed long standing difficulties, thus returning the papacy to Rome.Template:Sfn Clement wrote a letter to Archbishop of Toledo, Gonzalo Perez, where he bemoaned the power conflicts and political division among Spain's Christian population.Template:Sfn The pope emphasized in this letter that the Christian war in Spain, the Reconquista, against Muslims was comparable to the Crusades in the Holy Land and urged for effective unity and the formation of a powerful army to combat them.Template:Sfn

Clement also inherited a depleted college of cardinals, consisting of no more than twenty cardinals. He orchestrated three series of promotions (March 1188, May 1189 and October 1190) that resulted in thirty-one cardinals.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn This number of cardinals had not been seen since 1159, under Hadrian IV.Template:Sfn During Clement's papacy, the majority of cardinals were Romans, possibly due to Clement III being Roman as well and wanting to fill the Church with Romans.Template:Sfn

Actions

Clement sent the Archbishop of Tyre, Josias, to persuade King Henry II of England and King Philip II of France to undertake the Third Crusade.Template:Sfn

Though the relationship between Rome and Sicily had been turbulent, before 1188 the Romans had become increasingly frustrated with Papal governence which led to two rival factions in the College of Cardinals, one faction inclined toward an alliance with the Sicily, the other side seeking reconciliation with the Holy Roman Emperor.Template:Sfn

In April 1189, Clement ended the conflict with Frederick I Barbarossa. Despite agreeing to crown Henry VI as Holy Roman Emperor, Clement III angered him by bestowing Sicily on Tancred, son of Roger III, Duke of Apulia.Template:Sfn The crisis was acute when the Pope died in the latter part of March 1191.Template:Sfn

Pope Alexander III had prohibited supplying goods and military information to Muslims. Pope Clement increased the list of banned items in a series of decretals and called for a full trade embargo with the Islamic world.Template:Sfn

Clement settled a controversy with King William I of Scotland concerning the choice of the archbishop of St Andrews, and on 13 March 1188 removed the Scottish church from the legatine jurisdiction of the Archbishop of York, thus making it independent of all save Rome.Template:Sfn[2]

Death

Clement died on 10 April 1191, Celestine III who was 85, was elected the day of Clements death unanimously.Template:Sfn Celestine was not involved with either of the sides or factions that were the 'imperialists' nor the 'Sicilians'.Template:Sfn

See also

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References

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  1. Pope Clement III
  2. Blair, D. Oswald Hunter, History of the Catholic Church of Scotland, (Willian Blackwood and Sons, 1887), 329.

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Sources

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Attribution:

  • Wikisource This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainScript error: No such module "template wrapper".

Further reading

External links

Catholic Church titles
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/check Pope
1187–91 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by

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