Papal election 1181 | |
---|---|
Dates and location | |
1 September 1181 Rome | |
Key officials | |
Dean | Ubaldo Allucingoli |
Sub-dean | Konrad von Wittelsbach |
Protopriest | Alberto di Morra |
Protodeacon | Giacinto Bobone Orsini |
Elected pope | |
Ubaldo Allucingoli Name taken: Lucius III | |
The 1181 papal election followed the death of Pope Alexander III and resulted in the election of Pope Lucius III. This was the first papal election celebrated in accordance with the decree Licet de evitanda discordia , promulgated in the Third Lateran Council in 1179, which established that the pope is elected by a majority of two thirds votes.
The contested papal election, 1159, which resulted in the election of Pope Alexander III and Antipope Victor IV (1159–1164), created a schism in the Catholic Church that lasted almost twenty years (until 1178). In 1159 the cardinals were unable to achieve consensus, though an electoral compact had set that as its goal. [1] The cardinals had been divided into two parties, those who favored the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and those who favored William I of Sicily, and each of them elected their own pope. In August 1178 Antipope Callixtus III, the successor of Victor IV, finally submitted to Alexander III. [2] In the following year Alexander III celebrated the Third Lateran Council, which promulgated the decree Licet de evitanda discordia. [3] To avoid schism in the future, the decree established that the pope is elected with the majority of two thirds of the cardinals, if unanimity cannot be achieved. [4] It confirmed also that the cardinals are the sole electors of the pope. [5]
Pope Alexander III died on August 30, 1181, in Civita Castellana. [6] Two days later, on September 1, 1181, the cardinals assembled at Rome (probably at Lateran or Vatican Basilica) [7] and unanimously elected the senior member of the Sacred College, Cardinal Ubaldo of Lucca, Bishop of Ostia. He took the name Lucius III. On September 6, 1181, he was crowned by Cardinal Teodino of Porto at Velletri. [8]
There were probably 27 cardinals in the Sacred College of Cardinals in 1181. [9] Based on the examination of the subscriptions of the papal bulls in 1181 [10] and the available data about the external missions of the cardinals it is possible to establish that no more than 19 cardinals participated in the election:
Elector | Place of birth | Cardinalatial title | Elevated | Elevator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ubaldo Allucingoli | Lucca | Bishop of Ostia | December 16, 1138 | Innocent II | Dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals |
Theodinus | Arrone, Tuscany | Bishop of Porto e Santa Rufina | December 18, 1165 | Alexander III | |
Paolo Scolari | Rome | Bishop of Palestrina | September 21, 1179 | Alexander III | Archpriest of the patriarchal Liberian Basilica; future Pope Clement III (1187–1191) |
Alberto di Morra, C.R. | Benevento | Priest of S. Lorenzo in Lucina and Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church | December 21, 1156 | Adrian IV | Protopriest; future Pope Gregory VIII (1187) |
Joannes Anagninus (Giovanni dei Conti di Anagni) | Anagni | Priest of S. Marco | 1158/1159 | Adrian IV | Future bishop of Palestrina (1190–1196) |
Cinthius Capellus [11] | Rome (?) | Priest of S. Cecilia | March 14, 1158 | Adrian IV | nephew of Innocent II |
Pietro de Bono, Can.Reg. | Rome | Priest of S. Susanna | March 18, 1166 | Alexander III | |
Uguccione Pierleoni | Rome | Priest of S. Clemente | March 2, 1173 | Alexander III | Relative of Anacletus II (1130–1138) |
Laborans de Pontormo | Pontormo near Florence | Priest of S. Maria in Trastevere | September 21, 1173 | Alexander III | |
Viviano | Orvieto (?) | Priest of S. Stefano in Monte Celio | March 7, 1175 | Alexander III | |
Ardoino da Piacenza, Can.Reg. | Piacenza | Priest of S. Croce in Gerusalemme | June 2, 1178 | Alexander III | |
Matthieu d’Anjou | Angers | Priest of S. Marcello | December 22, 1178 | Alexander III | |
Giacinto Bobone | Rome | Deacon of S. Maria in Cosmedin | December 22, 1144 | Lucius II | Protodeacon; future Pope Celestine III (1191–1198) |
Ardicio Rivoltella | Piadena (Platina) near Cremona | Deacon of S. Teodoro | December 21, 1156 | Adrian IV | |
Rainiero da Pavia | Pavia | Deacon of S. Giorgio in Velabro | June 6, 1175 | Alexander III | |
Matteo, Can.Reg. | Unknown (possibly Rome) | Deacon of S. Maria Nuova | March 4, 1178 | Alexander III | |
Graziano da Pisa | Pisa | Deacon of SS. Sergio e Bacco | March 4, 1178 | Alexander III | Nephew of Pope Eugene III |
Rainier | Unknown | Deacon of S. Adriano | September 22, 1178 | Alexander III | |
Giovanni | Unknown | Deacon of S. Angelo in Pescheria | September 22, 1178 | Alexander III |
Thirteen electors were created by Pope Alexander III, four by Pope Adrian IV, one by Pope Innocent II and one by Lucius II.
Elector | Place of birth | Cardinalatial title | Elevated | Elevator | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Konrad von Wittelsbach | Bavaria | Bishop of Sabina and Archbishop of Salzburg | December 18, 1165 | Alexander III | Subdean of the Sacred College of Cardinals; external cardinal [12] |
Henri de Marsiac, O.Cist. | Château de Marcy, France | Bishop of Albano | March 1179 | Alexander III | Papal legate in France [13] |
Pietro da Pavia, Can.Reg. | Pavia or France | Bishop of Tusculum | September 21, 1173 | Aleksander III | Papal legate in France and Germany; archbishop-elect of Bourges [14] |
Giovanni da Napoli, Can.Reg. | Naples | Priest of S. Anastasia | September 21, 1150 | Eugenius III | Papal legate in Constantinople [15] |
Ruggiero di San Severino, O.S.B.Cas. | San Severino | Priest of S. Eusebio and Archbishop of Benevento | Circa 1178-1180 | Alexander III | External cardinal [16] |
Guillaume aux Blanches Mains | France | Priest of S. Sabina and Archbishop of Reims | March 1179 | Alexander III | External cardinal [17] |
Simeone Borelli, O.S.B.Cas. | Campagna | Deacon of S. Maria in Domnica | Circa 1157 | Adrian IV | Abbot of Subiaco (external cardinal) [18] |
Leonato de Manoppello, O.S.B. | Manoppello (?) | Deacon of the Holy Roman Church | March 21, 1170 | Alexander III | Abbot of S. Clemente in Casauria; external cardinal [19] |
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Pope Lucius III, born Ubaldo Allucingoli, reigned from 1 September 1181 to his death in 1185. Born of an aristocratic family of Lucca, prior to being elected pope, he had a long career as a papal diplomat. His papacy was marked by conflicts with Holy Roman Emperor Frederick I, his exile from Rome and the initial preparations for the Third Crusade.
Henry of Marcy, or Henry de Marsiac, was a Cistercian abbot, first of Hautecombe in Savoy (1160–1177), and then of Clairvaux, from 1177 until 1179. He was created Cardinal Bishop of Albano by Pope Alexander III at the Third Lateran Council in 1179.
The 1185 papal election was a convoked after the death of Pope Lucius III. It resulted in the election of Cardinal Uberto Crivelli of Milan, who took the name of Urban III.
The October 1187 papal election was convoked after the death of Pope Urban III. He and the papal court had escaped from the imperial blockade of Verona only the month before, and had taken refuge in Ferrara. The election, held in Ferrara the day after the pope's death, resulted in the election of Cardinal Alberto Sartori di Morra, who took the name of Gregory VIII. He was a partisan of the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, whose election delighted him. Gregory VIII reigned only two months.
Imar, O.S.B. Cluny was a French Benedictine abbot, who served as a bishop and cardinal.
The papal election held from 4 to 7 September 1159 following the death of Pope Adrian IV resulted in the election of two rival candidates. A majority of the cardinals elected Cardinal Rolando of Siena as Pope Alexander III, but a minority refused to recognize him and elected their own candidate, Ottaviano de Monticelli, who took the name Victor IV, creating a schism that lasted until 1178.
The 1153 papal election followed the death of Pope Eugene III and resulted in the election of Pope Anastasius IV.
In the category of the members of the College of Cardinals in the central Middle Ages, an external cardinal a Cardinal of the Holy Roman Church who did not reside in the Roman Curia, because of simultaneously being a bishop of the episcopal see other than suburbicarian, or abbot of an abbey situated outside Rome. In the wider sense, it may also concern cardinals who were appointed to the external episcopal sees and resigned their memberships in the College of Cardinals with this appointment. As well, it can concern cardinals who were generally curial cardinals, but for some time exercised the posts of administrators or prelates of the external churches.
The 1143 papal election followed the death of Pope Innocent II and resulted in the election of Pope Celestine II.
The 1144 papal election followed the death of Pope Celestine II and resulted in the election of Pope Lucius II.
The 1145 papal election followed the death of Pope Lucius II and resulted in the election of Pope Eugene III, the first pope of the Order of Cistercians.
Pope Eugene III (1145–1153) created sixteen cardinals in nine consistories:
Pope Lucius III created fifteen new cardinals.
Laborans de Pontormo was an Italian cardinal. His name in Italian is Laborante. He was a native of Pontormo, a suburb of the city of Florence on the left bank of the Arno River. He was a distinguished jurist and influential writer on canon law.
Graziano da Pisa was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a native of Pisa, and the nephew of Pope Eugenius III (1145-1153). He had studied law in Bologna, and held the rank of Magister. He was a prominent official in the papal chancery, and an accomplished papal diplomat.
Ardicio de Rivoltela was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a native of Piadena (Platina), in the diocese of Cremona in Lombardy. The appellation "de Rivoltela" is mentioned only once, and its significance is unclear.
Theodinus, O.S.B. was a Benedictine monk, and a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a native of Arrone, a hilltop town 15 km east of Terni. He became a cardinal priest, and then cardinal bishop of Porto. He served as a papal diplomat, in Normandy, in the Balkans, and in Venice. He participated in the papal elections of 1181 and 1185.
Pietro de Bono was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a native of Verona in Lombardy, signing his name at least once as D. Petri de Verona. He was not from Pisa, nor was he from Bologna. He belonged to the Canons Regular of S. Maria di Reno in Bologna.
Joannes Anagninus was a cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church. He was a native of Anagni, and belonged to the family of the Counts of Anagni, the same family which produced Pope Innocent III. His colleagues called him, and he called himself "Joannes Anagninus". In 1191, he subscribed himself Joannes comes Anagninus, episcopus cardinalis Praenestinus. He was successively cardinal deacon of S. Maria in Portico, cardinal priest of S. Marco, and cardinal bishop of Palestrina.