Pope Gregory IX

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'''Pope Gregory IX''', born '''Ugolino di Conti''', was [[pope]] from March 19, 1227 to August 22, 1241. A nephew of Pope [[Innocent III]], he was educated at the [[University of Paris]] and came to prominence under [[Honorius III]].
  
'''Pope Gregory IX''', born '''Ugolino di Conti''', was [[pope]] from March 19, 1227 to August 22, 1241.
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A man of unquestioned personal piety, he was a supporter of the new monastic orders led by [[Saint Francis]] and [[Saint Dominic]]. However, his [[papacy]] is most remembered for his bitter and often violent power struggle against Emperor [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II]], whom he considered lax in his duty as a [[crusades|crusader]].
 
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The successor of [[Pope Honorius III]] (1216&ndash;27), he fully inherited the traditions of [[Pope Gregory VII]] (1073&ndash;85) and of his cousin [[Pope Innocent III]] (1198-1216), and zealously continued their policy of [[Papal supremacy]].
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Gregory was also a harsh opponent of all kinds of [[heresy]], and it was he who created the papal [[Inquisition]] under the supervision of the [[Dominicans]]. Intellectually, his promulgation of a new collection of papal decretals laid an important foundation for Catholic legal tradition which lasted for more than six centuries, and he restored the right of Catholic scholars to use [[Aristotle|Aristotelean]] [[physics]] and [[metaphysics]] in academic discourse.
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
 
===Early years===
 
===Early years===
 
[[Image:Gregory IX.jpg|thumb|left|Illustrated manuscript depicting Pope Gregory IX]]
 
[[Image:Gregory IX.jpg|thumb|left|Illustrated manuscript depicting Pope Gregory IX]]
Ugolino was born in [[Anagni]] around 1145 and was the nephew of the future Pope [[Innocent III]]. He received his education at the universities of [[Paris]] and [[Bologna]]. After Innocent's accession to the papal throne in January 1198, Ugolino was appointed papal chaplain, then archpriest of Saint [[Peter's Basilica]], and finally Cardinal Deacon of the Roman church of Sant Eustachio in 1198. In May, 1206, he was promoted to Cardinal Bishop of Ostia. A year later he became a papal ambassador to Germany during the succession struggle following the death of Emperor [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry VI]].
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Ugolino was born in [[Anagni]] around 1145. He received his education at the universities of [[Paris]] and [[Bologna]]. After his uncle [[Innocent III]]'s accession to the papal throne in January 1198, Ugolino was appointed papal chaplain, then archpriest of Saint [[Peter's Basilica]], and finally cardinal-[[deacon]] of the Roman church of Sant Eustachio in 1198. In May, 1206, he was promoted to [[cardinal bishop]] of Ostia. A year later he became a papal ambassador to Germany during the succession struggle following the death of Emperor [[Henry VI, Holy Roman Emperor|Henry VI]].
  
After the death of Innocent III in 1216, Ugolino was instrumental in the election of Pope [[Honorius III]]. During Honorius' papacy, Ugolino became a leading preacher of the [[Crusade]]. In January, 1217, Honorius III made Ugolino plenipotentiary legate for [[Lombardy]] and [[Tuscia]] and entrusted him with preaching the Crusade in those territories. He became dean of the [[College of Cardinals]] in 1219 and was also archpriest of the [[Vatican Basilica]]. Ugolino appreciated the role of the emerging mendicant orders, and at the request of [[Saint Francis]], Pope Honorius appointed Ugolino protector of the Franciscan order in 1220.
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After the death of Innocent III in 1216, Ugolino was instrumental in the election of Pope [[Honorius III]]. During Honorius' papacy, Ugolino became a leading preacher of the [[Crusades|Fifth Crusade]]. In January, 1217, Honorius III made Ugolino plenipotentiary legate for [[Lombardy]] and [[Tuscia]] and entrusted him with preaching the crusade in those territories. He became dean of the [[College of Cardinals]] in 1219 and was also archpriest of the [[Vatican Basilica]]. Ugolino appreciated the role of the emerging mendicant orders, and at the request of the future [[Saint Francis]], Pope Honorius appointed Ugolino protector of the Franciscan order in 1220.
  
At the coronation of Emperor [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II]] in Rome in 1220, the emperor accept the cross from Ugolino and made the vow to embark soon for the Holy Land. On March 14, 1221, Honorius commissioned Ugolino to preach the Crusade also in Central and Upper Italy.
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At the coronation of Emperor [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II]] in Rome in 1220, the emperor accepted the cross from Ugolino and made the vow to embark soon for the Holy Land on crusade. On March 14, 1221, Honorius commissioned Ugolino to preach the crusade also in Central and Upper Italy.
  
After the death of Honorius III on March 18, 1227, the cardinals could not immediately reach a decision on a new pope and decided on a compromise procedure empowering three cardinals to act as electors. Two of the three were Ugolino and Conrad of Urach. The other two cardinals apparently nominated Conrad, but he refused to accept since it might appear that he had elected himself. After this, on March 19, the cardinals unanimously elected Ugolino, alhough he was already more than 80 years of age. He took the name of Gregory IX.
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After the death of Honorius III on March 18, 1227, the cardinals could not immediately reach a decision on a new pope and decided on a compromise procedure empowering three cardinals to act as electors. Two of the three were Ugolino and Conrad of Urach. The other two cardinals apparently nominated Conrad, but he refused to accept since it might appear that he had elected himself. After this, on March 19, Ugolino was elected unanimously, although he was already more than 80 years of age. He took the name of Gregory IX.
  
 
==Papacy==  
 
==Papacy==  
 
===Struggles with Frederick II===
 
===Struggles with Frederick II===
[[Image:B Gregor IX2.jpg|thumb|250px|Gregory IX excommunicates Frederick II]]
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[[Image:Al-Kamil Muhammad al-Malik and Frederick II Holy Roman Emperor.jpg|thumb|180px|[[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II]] negotiates with Sultan Al-Kamil of Egypt]]
On of Gregory IX's first acts as pope was to move against Frederick II for failing to fulfill his vow to lead the [[Sixth Crusade]]. The emperor made a half-hearted attempt to comply but quickly returned to port, pleading illness. Gregory placed him under the ban of the Church and threatened him with [[excommunication]]. Frederick II appealed to the sovereigns of Europe concerning Gregory's harsh treatment of him. His imperial manifesto was read publicly on the steps of the Capitol in Rome, and the imperial party in Rome rose in protest against the pope. Gregory IX then publicly declared the emperor to be excommunicated on March 23, 1228. As a result, the pope was openly insulted and threatened by a pro-imperial mob, and was forced to flee from Rome to Perugia.
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One of Gregory IX's first acts as pope was to move against [[Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor|Frederick II]] for failing to fulfill his vow to involve himself personally in the [[Crusades]]. Frederick and his army had set sail from Brindisi for [[Acre]] in the Holy Land, but an epidemic forced Frederick to return to Italy. Gregory, sensing the same lack of resolve that kept Frederick from fulfilling his earlier vow to go on crusade, placed him under a ban of [[excommunication]].
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Frederick II appealed to the sovereigns of Europe concerning Gregory's harsh treatment of him. His imperial manifesto was read publicly by his [[Ghibelline]] allies in Rome, and the imperial party in Rome rose in protest against the [[pope]]. Gregory IX now publicly declared the emperor to be excommunicated on March 23, 1228. In reaction, a pro-imperial mob openly insulted the pope and forced him to flee from Rome to [[Perugia]]. In [[Germany]], the pope's actions had little effect. Only one bishop published his decree of excommunication against the emperor, and nearly all the princes and bishops remained faithful to the Frederick.
  
Determined to prove that he had intended to go on Crusade all along, Frederick now embarked for the Holy Land with a small army. The pope, however, denied that an excommunicated emperor had a right to undertake a holy war. He refused his blessing and released the crusaders from their oath of allegiance to him. The emperor, who was now in the Holy Land, now acknowledged the justice of his excommunication and began to take steps towards a reconciliation. Meanwhile, however, Rainald, the imperial Governor of Spoleto, had invaded the [[Papal States]] during the emperor's absence, causing Gregory to suspect the emperor's sincerity.
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Determined to prove that he had intended to go on crusade all along, Frederick now embarked for the [[Holy Land]] with a small army. The pope, however, denied that an excommunicated emperor had a right to undertake a [[holy war]]. He refused his blessing and released the crusaders from their oath of allegiance to Frederick. Despite dwindling support, Frederick was able to conquer [[Cyprus]] and successfully negotiated with Sultan [[Al-Kamil]] of [[Egypt]] for [[Jerusalem]], resulting in his temporary recognition as king of the Holy City.  
  
In Germany, the pope's actions had little effect. Only one bishop published his decree of excommunication against the emperor, and nearly all the princes and bishops remained faithful to Frederick.
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Meanwhile, a violent dispute with Rainald of Urslingen, the imperial governor of Spoleto, had caused Gregory to further suspect the emperor. Gregory sent his own forces to invade imperial territory in [[Sicily]]. In June, 1229, Frederick II returned from the Holy Land, routed the papal army in Sicily, and made new overtures of peace to the pope. Gregory, still a fugitive in Perugia since 1228, returned to Rome in February, 1230. A treaty was concluded at [[San Germano]] between the pope and the emperor, and on August 28 the two leaders met at Anagni and completed their reconciliation, at least temporarily.
  
Meanwhil Gregory sent his own army to invade the imperial territory of Sicily. In June, 1229, Frederick II returned from the Holy Land, routed the papal army in Sicily, and made new overtures of peace to the pope. Gregory IX, sill a fugitive in Perugia since 1228, returned to Rome in February, 1230. A treaty was concluded at [[San Germano]] between the pope and the emperor, and on August 28 the two leaders met at Anagni and soon completed their reconciliation.
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[[Image:B Gregor IX2.jpg|thumb|250px|left|Gregory IX excommunicates a heretic]]
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In the long term, however, the papacy as conceived by Gregory IX and the empire as conceived by Frederick II could not exist together in peace. Moreover, the struggle between the [[Guelphs]], supporting the papacy, and the [[Ghibellines]], supporting the emperor, was intensifying. Consequently, the pope was again driven from his own capital by a pro-imperial revolt in June 1232. He was compelled to take refuge at [[Anagni]] and beg for the aid of Frederick II. A truce was arranged and there was peace between pope and emperor for several years. However, when Frederick II defeated the [[Lombard League]] in 1239, the possibility that he might dominate all of Italy became a very real threat. A new outbreak of hostility led to a fresh excommunication of the emperor and to a prolonged war.
  
In the long term, however, the papacy as conceived by Gregory IX and the empire as conceived by Frederick II could not exist together in peace. The pope was again driven from his own capital by a pro-imperial revolt in June 1232. He compelled to take refuge at [[Anagni]] and beg for the mercy of Frederick II. A truce was arranged, but when Frederick II defeated the [[Lombard League]] in 1239, the possibility that he might dominate all of Italy became a very real threat. A new outbreak of hostility led to a fresh excommunication of the emperor and to a prolonged war.
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Gregory IX now denounced Frederick II as a [[heresy|heretic]] and summoned a council at Rome to give point to his [[anathema]]. To frustrate these plans, Frederick II attempted to capture or sink as many ships carrying [[prelates]] to the synod as he could. The struggle was only terminated by the death of Gregory IX on August 22, 1241. It would be his successor, [[Innocent IV]] who finally brought an end to the [[Hohenstaufen]] threat by declaring a [[crusade]] against the emperor.
  
Gregory IX denounced Frederick II as a [[heresy|heretic]] and summoned a council at Rome to give point to his [[anathema]]. To frustrate these plans, Frederick II attempted to capture or sink as many ships carrying [[prelates]] to the synod as he could. The struggle was only terminated by the death of Gregory IX on August 22, 1241. He died before events could reach their climax. it was his successor, aptly named [[Pope Innocent IV]] (1243-54) who declared a [[crusade]] in 1245 that would finish the Hohenstaufen threat.
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==Other activities==
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[[Image:People burned as heretics.jpg|thumb|250px|Cathars burned at the stake during the [[Albigensian Crusade]].]]
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===Against 'heretics' and 'schismatics'===
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Gregory IX believed the problem of [[heresy]] needed serious attention and was not content with leaving it to the local [[bishop]]s. He thus extended central control over the suppression of heresy, and in 1231, he established the papal [[Inquisition]] to deal with it, placing the [[Dominicans]] in charge of the process.  
  
===Other activities===
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Gregory IX's policy toward heretics was a severe one. Those who opposed Church tradition, in those times, were looked upon as traitors and punished accordingly. Upon the request of King [[Louis IX]] of France, Gregory sent Cardinal Romanus as legate to assist the king in his crusade against the [[Albigensian Crusade|Albigenses]] (also known as the Cathars). During his papacy a number of the members of the reformist [[Pataria]] sect were arrested in Rome and burned at the stake in 1231, with others imprisoned in the Benedictine monasteries of [[Monte Cassino]] and Cava.
A remarkably skillful and learned lawyer, Gregory IX initiated the  ''Nova Compilatio decretalium'' (New Compilation of Decretals), which was promulgated in numerous copies in 1234. This work was the culmination of a long process of systematizing the mass of papal pronouncements that had accumulated since the early [[Middle Ages]], a process that had been under way since the first half of the twelfth century and had come to fruition in the ''[[Decretum]]'', compiled and edited by [[Gratian (jurist)|Gratian]] and published in 1140. Gregory's supplement completed this work, and helped provide the foundation for the mature papal legal theory.  
 
  
His [[Papal bull|bull]] ''[[University of Paris strike of 1229|Parens scientiarum]]'' of 1231 resolved differences between the philosophically minded professors of his alma mater, the [[University of Paris]], and more conservative local authorities. He warned the professors against the growing tendency of subjecting theology to philosophy by making the truth of the mysteries of faith dependent on philosophical proofs. On the other hand, he removed the prohibition of Aristotelean physics and metaphysics from as the basis of basis of [[scholasticism|scholastic philosophy]].
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Gregory also endorsed the [[Northern Crusades]] and the [[Teutonic Order]]'s attempts to conquer [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] [[Russia]]. Unlike some other popes, however, he did not approve of the use of [[torture]] as a tool for the investigation of heresy or for [[penance]].
  
Gregory IX believed the problem of [[heresy]] needed serious attention and was not content with leaving it to the bishops, but extended central control over this subject. In 1231, he established the papal [[Inquisition]] to deal with it. Unlike some other popes, he did not approve the use of torture as a tool of investigation or for penance.
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===Legal and intellectual reforms===
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A remarkably skillful and learned lawyer, Gregory IX initiated the ''Nova Compilatio decretalium'' (New Compilation of Decretals), which was promulgated in numerous copies in 1234. This work was the culmination of a long process of systematizing the mass of papal pronouncements that had accumulated since the early [[Middle Ages]], a process that had been under way since the first half of the twelfth century and had come to fruition in the ''[[Decretum]]'', compiled by [[Gratian (jurist)|Gratian]] and published in 1140. Gregory's supplement completed Gratian's work, and helped provide the foundation for the mature papal legal theory.  
  
Gregory IX appointed ten cardinals and [[canonization|canonized]] saints [[Elisabeth of Hungary]], [[Saint Dominic|Dominic]], [[Anthony of Padua]], and [[Francis of Assisi]], of whom he had been  an early patron. His encroachments upon the rights of the [[England|English]] Church during the reign of [[Henry III of England]] (1216-72) are well known; similar attempts against the liberties of the national church of [[France]] were supposedly the occasion of the [[Pragmatic Sanction]] of [[Louis IX of France]] (1226-70), now generally thought to be a 14th-century [[forgery]].
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His [[Papal bull|bull]] ''[[University of Paris strike of 1229|Parens scientiarum]]'' of 1231 resolved differences between the philosophically minded professors of his alma mater, the [[University of Paris]], and more conservative local authorities. He warned the professors against the growing tendency of subjecting theology to philosophy by making the truth of the mysteries of faith dependent on philosophical proofs. On the other hand, he removed the prohibition of Aristotelean [[physics]] and [[metaphysics]] as the basis of [[scholasticism|scholastic philosophy]].
  
Gregory also endorsed the [[Northern Crusades]] and the[[Teutonic Order]]'s attempts to conquer [[Eastern Orthodox Church|Orthodox]] [[Russia]]. In 1232, he requested the [[Livonian Brothers of the Sword]] to send troops to protect [[Finland]], whose semi-[[pagan]] people were fighting against Novgorod Republic in the [[Finnish-Novgorodian wars]].
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===Support for saints and new orders===
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[[Image:Hermann von Salza Painting.jpg|thumb|150px|Hermann von Salza Painting, grand master of the [[Teutonic Order]] under Gregory IX]]
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Gregory IX had been a personal friend and supporter of the future saints [[Francis of Assisi|Francis]] and [[Saint Dominic|Dominic]]. Among the ten cardinals he appointed were several members of these new orders, who rejected personal wealth and brought a reforming spirit to the College of Cardinals. Gregory [[canonization|canonized]] saints [[Elisabeth of Hungary]], Dominic, [[Anthony of Padua]], and Francis of Assisi.
  
The mendicant orders found a friend and patron in Gregory IX. In them he saw a excellent means for counteracting of counteracting the love of luxury that had affected many clerics, and a powerful weapon for suppressing heresy among the masses. However, despite his support the rising mendicant orders he did not neglect the older ones. In 1227, he approved the old privileges of the Camaldolese, in the same year he introduced the Premonstratensians into Livonia and Courland. In April, 1229, he gave new statutes to the Carmelites. He financially and otherwise assisted the Cistercians and the Teutonic Order. In January, 1235, he approved the Order of Our Lady of Mercy for the redemption of captives. He sent missionaries to Tunis, Morocco, and other places, where not a few suffered martyrdom. He also worked to alleviate the hard lot of the Christians in the Holy Land.  
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For Gregory, the mendicant orders constituted an excellent means of counteracting the love of luxury that had affected many clerics, and were also a powerful weapon for suppressing [[heresy]] among the masses. His support of the rising mendicant orders did not, however, cause him to neglect the older ones. In 1227, he approved the old privileges of the Camaldolese, in the same year he introduced the Premonstratensians into Livonia and Courland. In April, 1229, he gave new statutes to the [[Carmelites]]. He financially and otherwise assisted the [[Cistercians]] and the [[Teutonic Order]]. In January, 1235, he approved the [[Order of Our Lady of Mercy]] for the redemption of non-Christian captives. He also sent missionaries to Tunis, Morocco, and other places, where some suffered martyrdom. He also worked to alleviate the hard lot of the Christians in the Holy Land.
  
Gregory IX was very severe towards heretics, who in those times were universally looked upon as traitors and punished accordingly. Upon the request of King Louis IX of France, he sent Cardinal Romanus as legate to assist the king in his crusade against the Albigenses. At the synod which the papal legate convened at Toulouse in November, 1229, it was decreed that all heretics and their allies should be delivered to the secular nobles and magistrates for punishment, which was often death.  In February, 1231 the pope enacted a similar law for Rome. In pursuance of this law a number of the members of the reformist [[Pataria]] sect were arrested in Rome in 1231 and burned at the stake, with other imprisoned in the Benedictine monasteries of Monte Cassino and Cava. Up to the time of Gregory IX, the duty of searching out heretics belonged to the bishops in their respective dioceses. It was Grerory who appointed the Dominicans as the official inquisitors for all dioceses of France.
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===Relations with the Orthodox Churches===
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For a time Gregory IX lived in hope that he might effect a reunion of the [[Roman Catholic|Roman Catholic]] and [[Eastern Orthodox Church]]es. Germanos, Patriarch of Constantinople, had written a letter to Gregory, in which he acknowledged the papal primacy, but also complained of the persecution of the Greeks by the Catholic crusaders. Gregory IX sent him a cordial answer and commissioned four learned monks (two Franciscans and two Dominicans) to discuss the possibility of reunion.
  
For a time Gregory IX lived in hope that he might effect a reunion of the Latin and Greek Churches. Germanos, Patriarch of Constantinople, addressed a letter to Gregory IX, in which he acknowledged the papal primacy, but complained of the persecution of the Greeks by the Latins. Gregory IX sent him a cordial answer and commissioned four learned monks (two Franciscans and two Dominicans) to treat with the patriarch concerning the reunion. The papal messengers were kindly received both by the Eastern Emperor Vatatzes and by Germanos, but the patriarchs said that he could make no concessions on matters of faith without the consent of the Patriarchs of Jersusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria. A synod of the patriarchs was held at Nympha in Bithynia, to which the papal messengers were invited. The [[filioque clause]] proved an insurmountable obstacle however, and the patriarch also insisted that the Roman practice of consecrating unleavened bread was unacceptable. Thus Gregory IX failed, like many other popes before and after him, in his efforts to reunite the two Churches.
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The papal messengers were kindly received both by the Eastern Emperor Vatatzes and by Germanos. However, the patriarch indicated that he could make no concessions on matters of faith consulting of the patriarchs of [[Jerusalem]], [[Antioch]], and [[Alexandria]]. A [[synod]] of the patriarchs was held at Nympha in Bithynia, to which the papal messengers were invited. The [[filioque clause]] proved an insurmountable obstacle, however, and the patriarchs also insisted that the Roman practice of consecrating unleavened bread was unacceptable. Thus Gregory IX failed, like many other popes before and after him, in his efforts to reunite the two churches.
  
==See also==
 
*[[Papacy]]
 
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==
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Gregory IX's power struggle against the secular power of the emperor was nothing new for the [[papacy]], but his open warfare against Frederick II created an ugly spectacle. His creation of the papal [[Inquisition]] under the leadership of the [[Dominicans]] likewise left an unfortunate legacy, in which the papacy would forever be linked with [[heresy]]-hunting and the deaths of thousands who dared to disagree with [[Rome]] on matters of doctrine and practice.
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On the other hand, his standards of person piety were beyond reproach, and his support of the mendicant orders constituted a step toward reforming the luxurious culture of the [[Catholic Church]]'s upper echelons. His restoration of the right of scholars to use [[Aristotle]] as an authority was an important and progressive intellectual reform. Finally, his promulgation of a new collection of papal decretals in 1234 constituted an important foundation for Catholic ecclesiastical law which lasted well into the twentieth century.
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{{Pope|
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Predecessor=[[Pope Honorius III|Honorius III]]|
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Successor=[[Pope Celestine IV|Celestine IV]]|Dates=1227&ndash;41}}
  
==Notes==
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==See also==
{{reflist}}
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*[[Crusades]]
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*[[Albigensian Crusade]]
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*[[Dominicans]]
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
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*Abulafia, David. ''Frederick II: A Medieval Emperor''. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 9780195080407
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*Christiansen, Eric H. ''The Northern Crusade: The Baltic and the Catholic Frontier, 1100-1525''. New studies in medieval history. London: Macmillan, 1980. ISBN 9780333263952
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*Hartmann, Wilfried, and Kenneth Pennington. ''The History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period, 1140-1234: From Gratian to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX''. History of medieval canon law. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2008. ISBN 9780813214917
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* Hinnebusch, William A. ''The History of the Dominican Order''. Alba House, 1966. ISBN 9780818902666
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*Pennington, Kenneth. ''Popes, Canonists, and Texts, 1150-1550''. Aldershot, Hampshire, Great Britain: Variorum, 1993. ISBN 9780860783879
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*Proctor, David J. ''Imperial Christ: Perceptions of Authority in Medieval Western Europe''. Thesis (M.A.)—Tufts University, 2001. {{OCLC|190834105}}
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06796a.htm Pope Gregory IX in the ''Catholic Encyclopedia'']. ''www.newadvent.org''
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All links retrieved July 17, 2017.
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*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06796a.htm Pope Gregory IX] ''Catholic Encyclopedia''.  
  
{{Pope|
 
Predecessor=[[Pope Honorius III|Honorius III]]|
 
Successor=[[Pope Celestine IV|Celestine IV]]|Dates=1227&ndash;41}}
 
 
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Latest revision as of 21:25, 17 July 2017

Gregory IX
Gregory IX bas-relief in the U.S. House of Representatives chamber.jpg
Birth name Ugolino di Conti
Papacy began March 19, 1227
Papacy ended August 22, 1241
Predecessor Honorius III
Successor Celestine IV
Born between 1145 and 1170
Anagni, Italy
Died August 22 1241
Rome, Italy

Pope Gregory IX, born Ugolino di Conti, was pope from March 19, 1227 to August 22, 1241. A nephew of Pope Innocent III, he was educated at the University of Paris and came to prominence under Honorius III.

A man of unquestioned personal piety, he was a supporter of the new monastic orders led by Saint Francis and Saint Dominic. However, his papacy is most remembered for his bitter and often violent power struggle against Emperor Frederick II, whom he considered lax in his duty as a crusader.

Gregory was also a harsh opponent of all kinds of heresy, and it was he who created the papal Inquisition under the supervision of the Dominicans. Intellectually, his promulgation of a new collection of papal decretals laid an important foundation for Catholic legal tradition which lasted for more than six centuries, and he restored the right of Catholic scholars to use Aristotelean physics and metaphysics in academic discourse.

Biography

Early years

Illustrated manuscript depicting Pope Gregory IX

Ugolino was born in Anagni around 1145. He received his education at the universities of Paris and Bologna. After his uncle Innocent III's accession to the papal throne in January 1198, Ugolino was appointed papal chaplain, then archpriest of Saint Peter's Basilica, and finally cardinal-deacon of the Roman church of Sant Eustachio in 1198. In May, 1206, he was promoted to cardinal bishop of Ostia. A year later he became a papal ambassador to Germany during the succession struggle following the death of Emperor Henry VI.

After the death of Innocent III in 1216, Ugolino was instrumental in the election of Pope Honorius III. During Honorius' papacy, Ugolino became a leading preacher of the Fifth Crusade. In January, 1217, Honorius III made Ugolino plenipotentiary legate for Lombardy and Tuscia and entrusted him with preaching the crusade in those territories. He became dean of the College of Cardinals in 1219 and was also archpriest of the Vatican Basilica. Ugolino appreciated the role of the emerging mendicant orders, and at the request of the future Saint Francis, Pope Honorius appointed Ugolino protector of the Franciscan order in 1220.

At the coronation of Emperor Frederick II in Rome in 1220, the emperor accepted the cross from Ugolino and made the vow to embark soon for the Holy Land on crusade. On March 14, 1221, Honorius commissioned Ugolino to preach the crusade also in Central and Upper Italy.

After the death of Honorius III on March 18, 1227, the cardinals could not immediately reach a decision on a new pope and decided on a compromise procedure empowering three cardinals to act as electors. Two of the three were Ugolino and Conrad of Urach. The other two cardinals apparently nominated Conrad, but he refused to accept since it might appear that he had elected himself. After this, on March 19, Ugolino was elected unanimously, although he was already more than 80 years of age. He took the name of Gregory IX.

Papacy

Struggles with Frederick II

Frederick II negotiates with Sultan Al-Kamil of Egypt

One of Gregory IX's first acts as pope was to move against Frederick II for failing to fulfill his vow to involve himself personally in the Crusades. Frederick and his army had set sail from Brindisi for Acre in the Holy Land, but an epidemic forced Frederick to return to Italy. Gregory, sensing the same lack of resolve that kept Frederick from fulfilling his earlier vow to go on crusade, placed him under a ban of excommunication.

Frederick II appealed to the sovereigns of Europe concerning Gregory's harsh treatment of him. His imperial manifesto was read publicly by his Ghibelline allies in Rome, and the imperial party in Rome rose in protest against the pope. Gregory IX now publicly declared the emperor to be excommunicated on March 23, 1228. In reaction, a pro-imperial mob openly insulted the pope and forced him to flee from Rome to Perugia. In Germany, the pope's actions had little effect. Only one bishop published his decree of excommunication against the emperor, and nearly all the princes and bishops remained faithful to the Frederick.

Determined to prove that he had intended to go on crusade all along, Frederick now embarked for the Holy Land with a small army. The pope, however, denied that an excommunicated emperor had a right to undertake a holy war. He refused his blessing and released the crusaders from their oath of allegiance to Frederick. Despite dwindling support, Frederick was able to conquer Cyprus and successfully negotiated with Sultan Al-Kamil of Egypt for Jerusalem, resulting in his temporary recognition as king of the Holy City.

Meanwhile, a violent dispute with Rainald of Urslingen, the imperial governor of Spoleto, had caused Gregory to further suspect the emperor. Gregory sent his own forces to invade imperial territory in Sicily. In June, 1229, Frederick II returned from the Holy Land, routed the papal army in Sicily, and made new overtures of peace to the pope. Gregory, still a fugitive in Perugia since 1228, returned to Rome in February, 1230. A treaty was concluded at San Germano between the pope and the emperor, and on August 28 the two leaders met at Anagni and completed their reconciliation, at least temporarily.

Gregory IX excommunicates a heretic

In the long term, however, the papacy as conceived by Gregory IX and the empire as conceived by Frederick II could not exist together in peace. Moreover, the struggle between the Guelphs, supporting the papacy, and the Ghibellines, supporting the emperor, was intensifying. Consequently, the pope was again driven from his own capital by a pro-imperial revolt in June 1232. He was compelled to take refuge at Anagni and beg for the aid of Frederick II. A truce was arranged and there was peace between pope and emperor for several years. However, when Frederick II defeated the Lombard League in 1239, the possibility that he might dominate all of Italy became a very real threat. A new outbreak of hostility led to a fresh excommunication of the emperor and to a prolonged war.

Gregory IX now denounced Frederick II as a heretic and summoned a council at Rome to give point to his anathema. To frustrate these plans, Frederick II attempted to capture or sink as many ships carrying prelates to the synod as he could. The struggle was only terminated by the death of Gregory IX on August 22, 1241. It would be his successor, Innocent IV who finally brought an end to the Hohenstaufen threat by declaring a crusade against the emperor.

Other activities

Cathars burned at the stake during the Albigensian Crusade.

Against 'heretics' and 'schismatics'

Gregory IX believed the problem of heresy needed serious attention and was not content with leaving it to the local bishops. He thus extended central control over the suppression of heresy, and in 1231, he established the papal Inquisition to deal with it, placing the Dominicans in charge of the process.

Gregory IX's policy toward heretics was a severe one. Those who opposed Church tradition, in those times, were looked upon as traitors and punished accordingly. Upon the request of King Louis IX of France, Gregory sent Cardinal Romanus as legate to assist the king in his crusade against the Albigenses (also known as the Cathars). During his papacy a number of the members of the reformist Pataria sect were arrested in Rome and burned at the stake in 1231, with others imprisoned in the Benedictine monasteries of Monte Cassino and Cava.

Gregory also endorsed the Northern Crusades and the Teutonic Order's attempts to conquer Orthodox Russia. Unlike some other popes, however, he did not approve of the use of torture as a tool for the investigation of heresy or for penance.

Legal and intellectual reforms

A remarkably skillful and learned lawyer, Gregory IX initiated the Nova Compilatio decretalium (New Compilation of Decretals), which was promulgated in numerous copies in 1234. This work was the culmination of a long process of systematizing the mass of papal pronouncements that had accumulated since the early Middle Ages, a process that had been under way since the first half of the twelfth century and had come to fruition in the Decretum, compiled by Gratian and published in 1140. Gregory's supplement completed Gratian's work, and helped provide the foundation for the mature papal legal theory.

His bull Parens scientiarum of 1231 resolved differences between the philosophically minded professors of his alma mater, the University of Paris, and more conservative local authorities. He warned the professors against the growing tendency of subjecting theology to philosophy by making the truth of the mysteries of faith dependent on philosophical proofs. On the other hand, he removed the prohibition of Aristotelean physics and metaphysics as the basis of scholastic philosophy.

Support for saints and new orders

Hermann von Salza Painting, grand master of the Teutonic Order under Gregory IX

Gregory IX had been a personal friend and supporter of the future saints Francis and Dominic. Among the ten cardinals he appointed were several members of these new orders, who rejected personal wealth and brought a reforming spirit to the College of Cardinals. Gregory canonized saints Elisabeth of Hungary, Dominic, Anthony of Padua, and Francis of Assisi.

For Gregory, the mendicant orders constituted an excellent means of counteracting the love of luxury that had affected many clerics, and were also a powerful weapon for suppressing heresy among the masses. His support of the rising mendicant orders did not, however, cause him to neglect the older ones. In 1227, he approved the old privileges of the Camaldolese, in the same year he introduced the Premonstratensians into Livonia and Courland. In April, 1229, he gave new statutes to the Carmelites. He financially and otherwise assisted the Cistercians and the Teutonic Order. In January, 1235, he approved the Order of Our Lady of Mercy for the redemption of non-Christian captives. He also sent missionaries to Tunis, Morocco, and other places, where some suffered martyrdom. He also worked to alleviate the hard lot of the Christians in the Holy Land.

Relations with the Orthodox Churches

For a time Gregory IX lived in hope that he might effect a reunion of the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches. Germanos, Patriarch of Constantinople, had written a letter to Gregory, in which he acknowledged the papal primacy, but also complained of the persecution of the Greeks by the Catholic crusaders. Gregory IX sent him a cordial answer and commissioned four learned monks (two Franciscans and two Dominicans) to discuss the possibility of reunion.

The papal messengers were kindly received both by the Eastern Emperor Vatatzes and by Germanos. However, the patriarch indicated that he could make no concessions on matters of faith consulting of the patriarchs of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria. A synod of the patriarchs was held at Nympha in Bithynia, to which the papal messengers were invited. The filioque clause proved an insurmountable obstacle, however, and the patriarchs also insisted that the Roman practice of consecrating unleavened bread was unacceptable. Thus Gregory IX failed, like many other popes before and after him, in his efforts to reunite the two churches.

Legacy

Gregory IX's power struggle against the secular power of the emperor was nothing new for the papacy, but his open warfare against Frederick II created an ugly spectacle. His creation of the papal Inquisition under the leadership of the Dominicans likewise left an unfortunate legacy, in which the papacy would forever be linked with heresy-hunting and the deaths of thousands who dared to disagree with Rome on matters of doctrine and practice.

On the other hand, his standards of person piety were beyond reproach, and his support of the mendicant orders constituted a step toward reforming the luxurious culture of the Catholic Church's upper echelons. His restoration of the right of scholars to use Aristotle as an authority was an important and progressive intellectual reform. Finally, his promulgation of a new collection of papal decretals in 1234 constituted an important foundation for Catholic ecclesiastical law which lasted well into the twentieth century.


Roman Catholic Popes
Preceded by:
Honorius III
Bishop of Rome
1227–41
Succeeded by:
Celestine IV


See also

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Abulafia, David. Frederick II: A Medieval Emperor. New York: Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 9780195080407
  • Christiansen, Eric H. The Northern Crusade: The Baltic and the Catholic Frontier, 1100-1525. New studies in medieval history. London: Macmillan, 1980. ISBN 9780333263952
  • Hartmann, Wilfried, and Kenneth Pennington. The History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period, 1140-1234: From Gratian to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX. History of medieval canon law. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2008. ISBN 9780813214917
  • Hinnebusch, William A. The History of the Dominican Order. Alba House, 1966. ISBN 9780818902666
  • Pennington, Kenneth. Popes, Canonists, and Texts, 1150-1550. Aldershot, Hampshire, Great Britain: Variorum, 1993. ISBN 9780860783879
  • Proctor, David J. Imperial Christ: Perceptions of Authority in Medieval Western Europe. Thesis (M.A.)—Tufts University, 2001. OCLC 190834105

External links

All links retrieved July 17, 2017.

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