This chronological list of popes of the Catholic Church corresponds to that given in the Annuario Pontificio under the heading "I Sommi Pontefici Romani" (The Roman Supreme Pontiffs), excluding those that are explicitly indicated as antipopes. Published every year by the Roman Curia, the Annuario Pontificio no longer identifies popes by regnal number, stating that it is impossible to decide which pope represented the legitimate succession at various times.[1] The 2001 edition of the Annuario Pontificio introduced "almost 200 corrections to its existing biographies of the popes, from St Peter to John Paul II". The corrections concerned dates, especially in the first two centuries, birthplaces and the family name of one pope.[2]
The term pope (Latin: papa, lit. 'father') is used in several churches to denote their high spiritual leaders (for example Coptic pope). This title in English usage usually refers to the head of the Catholic Church. The Catholic pope uses various titles by tradition, including Summus Pontifex, Pontifex Maximus, and Servus servorum Dei. Each title has been added by unique historical events and unlike other papal prerogatives, is not incapable of modification.[3]
Hermannus Contractus may have been the first historian to number the popes continuously. His list ends in 1049 with Leo IX as number 154. Several changes were made to the list during the 20th century. Christopher was considered a legitimate pope for a long time but was removed due to how he obtained the papacy. Pope-elect Stephen was listed as Stephen II until the 1961 edition, when his name was removed. The decisions of the Council of Pisa (1409) were reversed in 1963 in a reinterpretation of the Western Schism, extending Gregory XII's pontificate to 1415 and classifying rival claimants Alexander V and John XXIII as antipopes.
A significant number of these popes have been recognized as saints, including 48 out of the first 50 consecutive popes, and others are in the sainthood process. Of the first 31 popes, 28 died as martyrs.
Chronological list of popes
edit1st millennium
edit1st century
editThe chronology of the early popes is heavily disputed. The first ancient lists of popes were not written until the late 2nd century, after the monarchical episcopate had already developed in Rome. These first lists combined contradictory traditions, and even the succession of the first popes is disputed. The first certain dates are AD 222 and 235, the elections of Urban I and Liberius. The years given for the first 30 popes follow the work of Richard Adelbert Lipsius, which often show a 3-year difference with the traditional dates given by Eusebius of Caesarea.[4] These are also the dates used by the Catholic Encyclopedia.[5]
Pontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 30 – c. 64 (approx. 34 years) |
St Peter PETRVS |
Bethsaida, Judaea, Roman Empire[birth 1] | Born as Shimon, son of Yonah, a Jew from Judaea. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Apostle of Jesus. According to Catholic tradition, he received the keys of the Kingdom of Heaven (Matthew 16:18–19). Feast day (Feast of Saints Peter and Paul) 29 June. The Catholic Church recognizes him as the first Bishop of Rome appointed by Christ, and therefore the first pope. Also revered as saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 29 June.[6] St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City is named after him. | |
2 | c. 64 – c. 76 (?) (11–12 years) |
St Linus LINVS |
Volterrae, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 2] | First Roman pope, being a Roman citizen born in Italia, the homeland of the ancient Romans.[birth 3][7] Feast day 23 September. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 7 June. Possibly mentioned in the New Testament (Second Epistle to Timothy 4:21).[8] | |
3 | c. 76 – c. 88 (?) (12 years) |
St Anacletus ANACLETVS |
Athenae, Achaea, Roman Empire[birth 4] | First Greek pope. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Feast day 26 April. Once erroneously split into Cletus and Anacletus.[9] | |
4 | c. 88 – c. 97 (?) (9 years) |
St Clement I CLEMENS |
Roma, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen, born in the capital of the Roman Empire. Feast day 23 November. The earliest Apostolic Father, issued 1 Clement which is said to be the basis of apostolic authority for the clergy. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 25 November. Possibly mentioned in the New Testament (Epistle to the Philippians 4:3).[10] He was martyred by being tied to an anchor and being thrown in the sea. | |
5 | c. 97 – c. 105 (?) (7–8 years) |
St Evaristus EVARISTVS |
Bethlehem, Iudaea, Roman Empire[birth 6] | Hellenized Jew. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Said to have divided Rome into parishes, assigning a priest to each. Feast day of 26 October. |
2nd century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
6 | c. 105 – c. 115 (?) (10 years) |
St Alexander I ALEXANDER |
Roma, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen, born in the capital of the Roman Empire. Inaugurated the custom of blessing houses with holy water. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 18 March. | |
7 | c. 115 – c. 125 (10 years) |
St Sixtus I SYXTVS |
42 Roma, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | A Roman of Greek descent, born in Italia, the homeland of the ancient Romans. Uncertain if he was a peregrinus (a free subject of the Roman Empire) or a Roman citizen. Feast day of 6 April. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 10 August. | |
8 | c. 125 – c. 136 (11 years) |
St Telesphorus TELESPHORVS |
Terra Nova, Italia, Roman Empire | A Roman of Greek descent, born in Italia, the homeland of the ancient Romans. Uncertain if he was a peregrinus (a free subject of the Roman Empire) or a Roman citizen. Feast day of 5 January. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 22 February. Church Father St. Irenaeus called him a great martyr; the earliest attested martyrdom of pope after St. Peter. | |
9 | c. 136 – c. 140 (4 years) |
St Hyginus HYGINVS |
Athens, Achaea, Roman Empire[birth 4] | Greek. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Tradition holds he was martyred; feast day 11 January. | |
10 | c. 140 – c. 155 (15 years) |
St Pius I PIVS |
Aquileia, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 7] | Roman citizen, born in Italia, the homeland of the ancient Romans. Was brother of Hermas. Martyred by sword; feast day 11 July. Decreed that Easter should only be celebrated on a Sunday. | |
11 | c. 155 – 166/7 (11–12 years) |
St Anicetus ANICETVS |
Emesa, Syria, Roman Empire[birth 8] | Hellenized Syrian; first Syrian pope. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Tradition holds he was martyred; feast day 17 April. Decreed that priests are not allowed to have long hair. | |
12 | 166/7 – 174/5 (8–9 years) |
St Soter SOTERIVS |
Fundi, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 7] | Roman citizen, born in Italia, the homeland of the ancient Romans. Tradition holds he was martyred; feast day 22 April. Declared that marriage was valid as a sacrament blessed by a priest; formally inaugurated Easter as an annual festival in Rome. | |
13 | 174/5 – 189 (14–15 years) |
St Eleutherius ELEVTHERIVS |
Nicopolis, Epirus, Roman Empire[birth 9] | Greek. A peregrinus, free provincial subject of the Roman Empire who was not a Roman citizen. Tradition holds he was martyred; feast day 6 May. | |
14 | 189 – 198/9 (9–10 years) |
St Victor I VICTOR |
Africa, Roman Empire[birth 10] | Roman Berber; first pope to have been born on the continent of Africa. Uncertain if it was a peregrinus (a free subject of the Roman Empire) or a Roman citizen. Known for excommunicating Theodotus of Byzantium. Quartodecimanism controversy. | |
15 | 198/199 – August/December 217 (18–19 years) |
St Zephyrinus ZEPHYRINVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen, born in the capital of the Roman Empire. Combated against the adoptionist heresies of the followers of Theodotus of Byzantium who were ruled by Theodotus and Asclepiodotus. Although not physically martyred (murdered), he is called a martyr for the suffering he endured. | |
— | c. 198/199 – c. 199/200 (1 year) |
Natalius NATALIVS |
Roma, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | — | Roman citizen, born in the capital of the Roman Empire. In opposition to pope Zephyrinus. Later reconciled. |
3rd century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
16 | August/December 217 – 14 October 222 (4 years, 2–4 months) |
St Callixtus I CALLIXTVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). Martyred; feast day 14 October. | |
— | 217 – 235 (18 years) |
St Hippolytus HIPPOLYTVS |
c. 170 | 47 / 65 | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). In opposition to Callixtus I, Urban I and Pontian. Later reconciled with Pontian (see below). |
17 | 7 June (?) 222 – 19 May 230 (7 years, 346 days) |
St Urban I VRBANVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 25 May. | |
18 | 21 July 230 – 28 September 235 (5 years, 69 days) |
St Pontian PONTIANVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. First to abdicate after exile to Sardinia by Emperor Maximinus Thrax. The Liberian Catalogue records his death on 28 September 235, the earliest exact date in papal history.[12][13] | |
19 | 21 November 235 – 3 January 236 (43 days) |
St Anterus ANTERVS |
Petelia, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). Feast day 3 January. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 5 August. | |
20 | 10 February 236 – 20 January 250 (13 years, 344 days) |
St Fabian FABIANVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Divided the communities of Rome into seven districts, each supervised by a deacon. Feast day 20 January. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 5 August. | |
21 | March 251 – June 253 (2 years, 3 months) |
St Cornelius CORNELIVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Died as a martyr through extreme hardship; feast day 16 September. | |
— | March 251 – 258 (7 years) |
Novatian NOVATIANVS |
c. 200–20 Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | 31–51 / 38–58 | Roman citizen. Founder of Novatianism. In opposition to Cornelius, Lucius I, Stephen I and Sixtus II. |
22 | 25 June 253 – 5 March 254 (253 days) |
St Lucius I LUCIVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Feast day 5 March. | |
23 | 12 March 254 – 2 August 257 (3 years, 143 days) |
St Stephen I STEPHANVS |
Rome, Italia, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). Martyred by beheading; feast day 2 August. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with the same feast day. | |
24 | 31 August 257 – 6 August 258 (340 days) |
St Sixtus II SYXTVS Secundus |
Athens, Achaea, Roman Empire[birth 4] | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). Martyred by beheading. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 10 August. | |
25 | 22 July 259 – 27 December 268 (9 years, 158 days) |
St Dionysius DIONYSIVS |
Terra Nova, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Greek descent (Constitutio Antoniniana). Feast day 26 December. | |
26 | 5 January 269 – 30 December 274 (5 years, 359 days) |
St Felix I FELIX |
Rome, Italy Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Feast day 30 December. | |
27 | 4 January 275 – 7 December 283 (8 years, 337 days) |
St Eutychian EVTYCHIANVS |
Luna, Italy, Roman Empire (Now Luni, Italy) | Roman citizen. Feast day 8 December. | |
28 | 17 December 283 – 22 April 296 (12 years, 127 days) |
St Caius CAIVS |
Salona, Dalmatia, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Martyred by beheading (according to legend). Feast day 22 April. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 11 August. | |
29 | 30 June 296 – 25 October 304 (8 years, 117 days) |
St Marcellinus MARCELLINVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Feast day 26 April. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 7 June. |
4th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
30 | 27 May 308 – 16 January 309 (234 days) |
St Marcellus I MARCELLVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire[birth 5] | Roman citizen. Feast day 16 January. Banished from Rome under Maxentius (309). | |
31 | 18 April 309 – 17 August 310 (1 year, 121 days) |
St Eusebius EVSEBIVS |
Achaea, Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Greek descent. Feast day 17 August. Banished by the emperor Maxentius, and died in exile. | |
32 | 2 July 311 – 10 January 314 (2 years, 192 days) |
St Miltiades (Melchiades) MILTIADES |
Africa, Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Berber descent. Feast day 10 January. First pope after the end of the persecution of Christians through the Edict of Milan (313 AD) issued by Constantine the Great. Presided over the Lateran council of 313. | |
33 | 31 January 314 – 31 December 335 (21 years, 334 days) |
St Sylvester I SILVESTER |
Fanum Sancti Angeli de Scala, Apulia et Calabria, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Feast day 31 December. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 2 January. Pope during the First Council of Nicaea (325), the first ecumenical council. Under him was built: the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran, Santa Croce in Gerusalemme and Old St. Peter's Basilica. Stated to be the recipient of the Donation of Constantine, which was later shown to be a forgery. | |
34 | 18 January 336 – 7 October 336 (263 days) |
St Mark MARCVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. One of Mark's undertakings was to compile stories of the lives of martyrs and bishops before his time. There is some reason to believe he founded two churches in the area of Rome. One of them is still known to this day as the Church of San Marco, although it is greatly changed since his time. The other church was at the Catacomb of Balbina, a cemetery. Emperor Constantine gave gifts of land and furnishing for both buildings. Feast day 7 October. | |
35 | 6 February 337 – 12 April 352 (15 years, 66 days) |
St Julius I IVLIVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. He was involved in the Arian controversy, supporting Athanasius of Alexandria. | |
36 | 17 May 352 – 24 September 366 (14 years, 130 days) |
Liberius LIBERIVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Banished by the Arian-leaning Emperor Constantius II and later yielding to him. Earliest pope not canonized by the Latin Church. Revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 27 August.[14] | |
— | 355 – 22 November 365 (10 years, 0 days) |
Felix II FELIX Secundus |
c. 300 Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | 55 / 65 | Roman citizen. In opposition to Pope Liberius. Installed by Arian-leaning Emperor Constantius II. |
37 | 1 October 366 – 11 December 384 (18 years, 71 days) |
St Damasus I DAMASVS |
c. 305 Egitania, Lusitania or Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | 60 / 78 | Roman citizen. The first pope from modern-day Portugal. Patron of Jerome, commissioned the Vulgate translation of the Bible. Pope during the First Council of Constantinople (381), the second ecumenical council. Council of Rome (382). First pope to be the official head of the church after the Emperor Gratian abdicates the title of "Pontifex Maximus". |
— | 1 October 366 – 16 November 367 (1 year, 46 days) |
Ursinus VRSINVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | — | Roman citizen. In opposition to Damasus I. Banished to Gallia by Emperor Valentinian II after a war between two sects and died after 384. |
38 | 17 December 384 – 26 November 399 (14 years, 344 days) |
St Siricius SIRICIVS |
c. 334 Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | 50 / 65 | Roman citizen. His famous letters—the earliest surviving texts of papal decretals—focus particularly on religious discipline and include decisions on baptism, consecration, ordination, penance, and continence. Siricius' important decretal of 386 (written to Bishop Himerius of Tarragona), commanding celibacy for priests, was the first decree on this subject.[15] |
39 | 27 November 399 – 19 December 401 (2 years, 22 days) |
St Anastasius I ANASTASIVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Instructed priests to stand and bow their heads as they read from the Gospels. |
5th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
40 | 21 December 401 – 12 March 417 (15 years, 81 days) |
St Innocent I INNOCENTIVS |
Albanum, Latium et Campania, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Visigoth Sack of Rome (410) under Alaric I. | |
41 | 18 March 417 – 26 December 418 (1 year, 283 days) |
St Zosimus ZOSIMVS |
Messurga, Lucania et Bruttii, Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Greek descent. | |
— | 27 December 418 – 3 April 419 (97 days) |
Eulalius EVLALIVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. In opposition to Pope Boniface I. Elected on the eve of the election of Boniface, first benefited from the support of the emperor Honorius, but lost it quickly. Exiled in Campania, and died in 423. | |
42 | 28 December 418 – 4 September 422 (3 years, 250 days) |
St Boniface I BONIFACIVS |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. | |
43 | 10 September 422 – 27 July 432 (9 years, 321 days) |
St Celestine I CAELESTINVS |
Campania, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 8 April. Pope during the Council of Ephesus (431), the third ecumenical council recognized by the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Oriental Orthodox churches. | |
44 | 31 July 432 – 18 August 440 (8 years, 18 days) |
St Sixtus III SYXTVS Tertius |
Rome, Italy, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. | |
45 | 29 September 440 – 10 November 461 (21 years, 42 days) |
St Leo I "the Great" LEO MAGNVS |
Etruria, Italia, Roman Empire | Roman citizen. Convinced Attila the Hun to turn back his invasion of Italy. Convinced the Vandals to spare the lives of the citizenry of Rome during their sack of the city. Wrote the Tome which was instrumental in the Council of Chalcedon (451) and in defining the hypostatic union. Feast day 10 November. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 18 February. | |
46 | 19 November 461 – 29 February 468 (6 years, 102 days) |
St Hilary HILARIVS |
Sardinia, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen. | |
47 | 3 March 468 – 10 March 483 (15 years, 7 days) |
St Simplicius SIMPLICIVS |
Tibur, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the Kingdom of Italy. Papacy during the collapse of the Western Roman Empire and subsequent overtaking of Rome and Italy in general by Odoacer. | |
48 | 13 March 483 – 1 March 492 (8 years, 354 days) |
St Felix III FELIX Tertius |
Rome, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the Kingdom of Italy. Sometimes called Felix II. Great-great-grandfather of pope Gregory I. | |
49 | 1 March 492 – 21 November 496 (4 years, 265 days) |
St Gelasius I GELASIVS |
Mons Ferratus, Quinquegentiani, Africa, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Berber descent, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy; the last pope to have been born on the continent of Africa. The first pope called the "Vicar of Christ".[16] | |
50 | 24 November 496 – 19 November 498 (1 year, 360 days) |
Anastasius II ANASTASIVS Secundus |
Rome, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen of Greek descent, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. Tried to end the Acacian schism but it resulted in the Laurentian schism. Earliest pope not canonized by either the Latin Church or the Eastern Church. | |
51 | 22 November 498 – 19 July 514 (15 years, 239 days) |
St Symmachus SYMMACHVS |
Sardinia, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. | |
— | 22 November 498 – Aug 506/8 (7 years, 252 days) |
Laurence LAVRENTIVS |
Rome, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. In opposition to Symmachus. Elected on the same day as Symachus, King Theodoric settled in favour of his adversary. Took control of Rome in 501 and remained pope in fact until he died in 506/08. |
6th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
52 | 20 July 514 – 6 August 523 (9 years, 17 days) |
St Hormisdas HORMISDAS |
c. 450 Frusino, Italy, Western Roman Empire | 64 / 73 | Roman citizen, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. Father of Pope Silverius. Acacian schism. |
53 | 13 August 523 – 18 May 526 (2 years, 278 days) |
St John I IOANNES |
Sena Iulia, Italy, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. | |
54 | 12 July 526 – 22 September 530 (4 years, 72 days) |
St Felix IV FELIX Quartus |
Samnium, Kingdom of Odoacer | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy of Roman descent. Sometimes called Felix III. Built Santi Cosma e Damiano. | |
55 | 22 September 530 – 17 October 532 (2 years, 25 days) |
Boniface II BONIFACIVS Secundus |
Rome, Kingdom of Odoacer | Ostrogoth; Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. First Germanic pope. Changed the numbering of the years in the Julian Calendar from the Era of the Martyrs to Anno Domini. | |
— | 22 September 530 – 14 October 530 (22 days) |
Dioscore DIOSCORVS |
Alexandria, Aegyptus, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen of Greek descent. In opposition to Pope Boniface II. Candidate of the Byzantine party, elected by the majority of the cardinals and recognized by Constantinople, he died less than a month after his election. | |
56 | 2 January 533 – 8 May 535 (2 years, 126 days) |
John II IOANNES Secundus |
Rome, Western Roman Empire | Roman citizen, later a subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy. First pope not to use his personal name, as it was associated with a Roman god, Mercury. | |
57 | 13 May 535 – 22 April 536 (356 days) |
St Agapetus I AGAPETVS |
Rome, Kingdom of Odoacer | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy of Roman descent. Feast days 22 April and 20 September. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 17 April. | |
58 | 8 June 536 – 11 March 537 (276 days) |
St Silverius SILVERIVS |
Cicanum, Ostrogothic Kingdom | Subject of Kingdom of Italy under Odoacer and later under Ostrogoths. Was of Roman descent. Exiled; feast day 20 June, son of Hormisdas. | |
59 | 29 March 537 – 7 June 555 (18 years, 70 days) |
Vigilius VIGILIVS |
Rome, Kingdom of Odoacer | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Pope during the Second Council of Constantinople (553), the fifth ecumenical council recognized by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. | |
60 | 16 April 556 – 4 March 561 (4 years, 322 days) |
Pelagius I PELAGIVS |
Rome, Ostrogothic Kingdom | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Credited with the construction of the basilica of Santi Apostoli. | |
61 | 17 July 561 – 13 July 574 (12 years, 361 days) |
John III IOANNES Tertius |
Rome, Ostrogothic Kingdom | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Second Pope not to use his personal name. | |
62 | 2 June 575 – 30 July 579 (4 years, 58 days) |
Benedict I BENEDICTVS |
Rome, Ostrogothic Kingdom | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
63 | 26 November 579 – 7 February 590 (10 years, 73 days) |
Pelagius II PELAGIVS Secundus |
Rome, Ostrogothic Kingdom | Romanized Ostrogoth. Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Ordered the construction of the Basilica di San Lorenzo fuori le Mura. | |
64 | 3 September 590 – 12 March 604 (13 years, 191 days) |
St Gregory I "the Great" GREGORIVS MAGNVS |
c. 540 Rome, Eastern Roman Empire | 50 / 64 | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Great-great-grandson of pope Felix III. The first formally to employ the titles Servus servorum Dei and Pontifex Maximus. Established the Gregorian chant. Feast day 3 September. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 12 March. Known as "the Father of Christian Worship". Known as "St. Gregory the Dialogist" in Eastern Orthodoxy. |
7th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
65 | 13 September 604 – 22 February 606 (1 year, 162 days) |
Sabinian SABINIANVS |
Blera, Eastern Roman Empire | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. For the next two centuries the Roman popes were all controlled by the Byzantine Empire. | |
66 | 19 February 607 – 12 November 607 (266 days) |
Boniface III BONIFACIVS Tertius |
Rome, Eastern Roman Empire | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek descent. | |
67 | 15 September 608 – 8 May 615 (6 years, 235 days) |
St Boniface IV BONIFACIVS Quartus |
Marsica, Eastern Roman Empire | Subject of the (Ostrogothic) Kingdom of Italy, later a (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. First pope to bear the same name as his immediate predecessor. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | |
68 | 13 November 615 – 8 November 618 (2 years, 360 days) |
St Adeodatus I ADEODATVS or DEVSDEDIT |
Rome, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Sometimes called Deusdedit. The first pope to use lead seals on papal documents, which in time came to be called papal bulls. | |
69 | 23 December 619 – 25 October 625 (5 years, 306 days) |
Boniface V BONIFACIVS Quintus |
Neapolis, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
70 | 27 October 625 – 12 October 638 (12 years, 350 days) |
Honorius I HONORIVS |
Ceperanum, Campania, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Named a heretic and anathematized by the Third Council of Constantinople. (680) | |
71 | 28 May 640 – 2 August 640 (66 days) |
Severinus SEVERINVS |
Rome, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
72 | 24 December 640 – 12 October 642 (1 year, 292 days) |
John IV IOANNES Quartus |
Iadera, Dalmatia, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
73 | 24 November 642 – 14 May 649 (6 years, 171 days) |
Theodore I THEODORVS |
Hierosolyma, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. The last pope from Palestine. Planned the Lateran Council of 649, but died before it could open. | |
74 | 5 July 649 – 12 November 655 (6 years, 130 days) |
St Martin I MARTINVS |
Near Tuder, Umbria, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Last pope recognized as a martyr. Feast day of 12 November. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 14 April. | |
75 | 10 August 654 – 2 June 657 (2 years, 296 days) |
St Eugene I EVGENIVS |
Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
76 | 30 July 657 – 27 January 672 (14 years, 181 days) |
St Vitalian VITALIANVS |
Signia, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
77 | 11 April 672 – 17 June 676 (4 years, 67 days) |
Adeodatus II ADEODATVS Secundus |
Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Sometimes called Adeodatus, without a number, in reference to Adeodatus I sometimes being called Deusdedit. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | |
78 | 2 November 676 – 11 April 678 (1 year, 160 days) |
Donus DONVS |
Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. | |
79 | 27 June 678 – 10 January 681 (2 years, 197 days) |
St Agatho AGATHO |
c. 577 Panormus, Sicily, Eastern Roman Empire | 101 / 104 | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. Also revered as a saint in Eastern Christianity, with a feast day of 20 February. Pope during the Third Council of Constantinople (680), the sixth ecumenical council accepted by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. |
80 | 17 August 682 – 3 July 683 (320 days) |
St Leo II LEO Secundus |
Aydonum, Sicily, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. Feast day 3 July. | |
81 | 26 June 684 – 8 May 685 (316 days) |
St Benedict II BENEDICTVS Secundus |
Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Feast day 7 May. | |
82 | 23 July 685 – 2 August 686 (1 year, 10 days) |
John V IOANNES Quintus |
Antiochia, Syria, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. | |
83 | 21 October 686 – 21 September 687 (335 days) |
Conon CONON |
Thracia, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. | |
84 | 15 December 687 – 8 September 701 (13 years, 267 days) |
St Sergius I SERGIVS |
Palermo, Sicily, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was a Hellenized Syrian. Introduced the singing of the Lamb of God at mass.[16] |
8th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
85 | 30 October 701 – 11 January 705 (3 years, 73 days) |
John VI IOANNES Sextus |
Ioannes | Ephesus, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. The only pope who came from Asia Minor. | ||
86 | 1 March 705 – 18 October 707 (2 years, 231 days) |
John VII IOANNES Septimus |
Ioannes | Rossanum, Calabria, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. The second pope to bear the same name as his immediate predecessor. | ||
87 | 15 January 708 – 4 February 708 (20 days) |
Sisinnius SISINNIVS |
Sisinnius | Syria, Rashidun Caliphate | Born as subject of the Rashidun Caliphate. Was Syrian. | ||
88 | 25 March 708 – 9 April 715 (7 years, 15 days) |
Constantine CONSTANTINVS |
Constantinus | Tyre, Syria, Umayyad Caliphate | Born as subject of the Umayyad Caliphate. Was Syrian. Last pope to visit Greece while in office, until John Paul II in 2001. | ||
89 | 19 May 715 – 11 February 731 (15 years, 268 days) |
St Gregory II GREGORIVS Secundus |
Gregorius | 669 Rome, Duchy of Rome (Eastern Roman Empire) |
46 / 62 | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Feast day 11 February. Held the Synod of Rome (721). | |
90 | 18 March 731 – 28 November 741 (10 years, 255 days) |
St Gregory III GREGORIVS Tertius |
Gregorius | Syria, Umayyad Caliphate | Born as subject of the Umayyad Caliphate; the last pope from Syria. The third pope to come from a Muslim country. The third pope to bear the same name as his immediate predecessor. Last pope to have been born outside Europe until the election of Francis in 2013. | ||
91 | 3 December 741 – 22 March 752 (10 years, 110 days) |
St Zachary ZACHARIAS |
Zacharias | Sancta Severina, Calabria, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Greek ethnicity. Feast day 15 March. Built the church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva. | ||
— | 22 March 752 – 25 March 752 (3 days) (Never took office as pope) |
Stephen STEPHANUS |
Stephanus | Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen. Was of Roman ethnicity. Previously known as Stephen II. Died three days after his election, having never received episcopal consecration. Some lists still include him. The Vatican sanctioned his addition in the sixteenth century; removed in 1961. He is no longer considered a pope by the Catholic Church. | ||
92 | 26 March 752 – 26 April 757 (5 years, 31 days) |
Stephen II STEPHANVS Secundus |
Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen (was of Roman ethnicity), later the sovereign of the independent Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen III. The Donation of Pepin. Brother of Paul I. | |||
93 | 29 May 757 – 28 June 767 (10 years, 30 days) |
St Paul I PAVLVS |
Paulus | Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen (was of Roman ethnicity), later the sovereign of the independent Papal States. Brother of Stephen II. | ||
94 | 7 August 768 – 24 January 772 (3 years, 170 days) |
Stephen III STEPHANVS Tertius |
Stephanus | c. 720 Syracuse, Sicily, Eastern Roman Empire | 42 / 46 | (Eastern) Roman citizen (was of Greek ethnicity), later the sovereign of the independent Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen IV. He summoned the Lateran Council (769). | |
95 | 1 February 772 – 26 December 795 (23 years, 328 days) |
Adrian I HADRIANVS |
Hadrianus | Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen (was of Roman ethnicity), later the sovereign of the independent Papal States. Pope during the Second Council of Nicaea (787), the seventh ecumenical council accepted by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. | ||
96 | 26 December 795 – 12 June 816 (20 years, 169 days) |
St Leo III LEO Tertius |
Leo | Rome, Duchy of Rome, Exarchate of Ravenna, Eastern Roman Empire | (Eastern) Roman citizen (was of Roman ethnicity), later the sovereign of the independent Papal States. Crowned Charlemagne emperor on Christmas Day, 800, thereby initiating what would become the Holy Roman Empire, requiring the imprimatur of the pope for its ruler's legitimacy. |
9th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
97 | 22 June 816 – 24 January 817 (216 days) |
Stephen IV STEPHANVS Quartus |
Stephanus | Rome, Papal States | First pope born in Rome after breaking away from the Roman Empire. Sometimes called Stephen V. | ||
98 | 25 January 817 – 11 February 824 (7 years, 17 days) |
St Paschal I PASCHALIS |
Paschalis | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Son of Bonosus and Episcopa Theodora. Credited with finding the body of Saint Cecilia in the Catacomb of Callixtus, building the basilica of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere and the church of Santa Maria in Domnica. | ||
99 | 8 May 824 – 27 August 827 (3 years, 111 days) |
Eugene II EVGENIVS Secundus |
Eugenius | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
100 | 31 August 827 – 10 October 827 (40 days) |
Valentine VALENTINVS |
Valentinus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
101 | 20 December 827 – 25 January 844 (16 years, 36 days) |
Gregory IV GREGORIVS Quartus |
Gregorius | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Rebuilt the atrium of St. Peter's Basilica and in the newly decorated chapel transferred the body of Gregory I. | ||
102 | 25 January 844 – 27 January 847 (3 years, 2 days) |
Sergius II SERGIVS Secundus |
Sergius | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
103 | 10 April 847 – 17 July 855 (8 years, 98 days) |
St Leo IV LEO Quartus |
Leo | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States, was of Lombard ethnicity. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | ||
104 | 29 September 855 – 17 April 858 (2 years, 200 days) |
Benedict III BENEDICTVS Tertius |
Benedictus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
105 | 24 April 858 – 13 November 867 (9 years, 203 days) |
St Nicholas I "the Great" NICOLAVS MAGNVS |
Nicolaus | c. 800 Rome, Papal States | 58 / 67 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Encouraged missionary activity. | |
106 | 14 December 867 – 14 December 872 (5 years, 0 days) |
Adrian II HADRIANVS Secundus |
Hadrianus | c. 792 Rome, Papal States | 75 / 80 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Pope during the Council of Constantinople IV (869), the eighth ecumenical council of the Catholic Church. | |
107 | 14 December 872 – 16 December 882 (10 years, 2 days) |
John VIII IOANNES Octavus |
Ioannes | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. First pope to be assassinated. | ||
108 | 16 December 882 – 15 May 884 (1 year, 151 days) |
Marinus I MARINVS |
Marinus | Gallese, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Erroneously also known as Martin II. | ||
109 | 17 May 884 – 8 July 885 (1 year, 121 days) |
St Adrian III HADRIANVS Tertius |
Hadrianus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Feast day 8 July. Adrian I was possibly his ancestor. | ||
110 | September 885 – 14 September 891 (5 years, 355 days) |
Stephen V STEPHANVS Quintus |
Stephanus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen VI. | ||
111 | 6 October 891 – 4 April 896 (4 years, 181 days) |
Formosus FORMOSVS |
Formosus | c. 816 Ostia, Papal States | 75 / 80 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. In early 897 posthumously executed following the Cadaver Synod. His body was reburied with full Christian honours in 897. | |
112 | 11 April 896 – 26 April 896 (15 days) |
Boniface VI BONIFATIVS Sextus |
Bonifatius | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
113 | 22 May 896 – 14 August 897 (1 year, 84 days) |
Stephen VI STEPHANVS |
Stephanus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen VII. Held the infamous Cadaver Synod. | ||
114 | 14 August 897 – Nov 897 (92 days) |
Romanus ROMANVS |
Romanus | Gallese, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | ||
115 | December 897 – 20 December 897 (19 days) |
Theodore II THEODORVS Secundus |
Theodorus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States, of Greek ethnicity. | ||
116 | 18 January 898 – 5 January 900 (1 year, 352 days) |
John IX IOANNES Nonus |
Ioannes | Tivoli, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States, of Lombard ethnicity. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | ||
117 | 1 February 900 – 30 July 903 (3 years, 179 days) |
Benedict IV BENEDICTVS Quartus |
Benedictus | Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. |
10th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Name: English · Latin |
Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
118 | 30 July 903 – Dec 903 (124 days) |
Leo V LEO Quintus |
Ardea, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Deposed and murdered. | |
— | October 903 – January 904 (92 days) |
Christopher CHRISTOFORO |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Leo V. | |
119 | 29 January 904 – 14 April 911 (7 years, 75 days) |
Sergius III SERGIVS Tertius |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. "Saeculum obscurum" begins. The first pope to be depicted with the Papal Tiara. | |
120 | 14 April 911 – June 913 (2 years, 48 days) |
Anastasius III ANASTASIVS Tertius |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
121 | 7 July 913 – 5 February 914 (213 days) |
Lando LANDO |
Sabina, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Last to use a new and non-composed regnal name until Francis (2013-) | |
122 | March 914 – 28 May 928 (14 years, 88 days) |
John X IOANNES Decimus |
Tossignano, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
123 | 28 May 928 – Dec 928 (187 days) |
Leo VI LEO Sextus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
124 | 3 February 929 – 13 February 931 (2 years, 10 days) |
Stephen VII STEPHANVS Septimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen VIII. | |
125 | 15 March 931 – Dec 935 (4 years, 261 days) |
John XI IOANNES Undecimus |
c. 910 (?) Rome, Papal States | 21? / 25? | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Probably, according to the Liber Pontificalis and Liutprand of Cremona, the son of Pope Sergius III, and not of Alberic I of Spoleto, who was Marozia's husband. |
126 | 3 January 936 – 13 July 939 (3 years, 191 days) |
Leo VII LEO Septimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | |
127 | 14 July 939 – 30 October 942 (3 years, 108 days) |
Stephen VIII STEPHANVS Octavus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Sometimes called Stephen IX. | |
128 | 30 October 942 – 1 May 946 (3 years, 183 days) |
Marinus II MARINVS Secundus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Erroneously also known as Martin III. | |
129 | 10 May 946 – 8 November 955 (9 years, 182 days) |
Agapetus II AGAPETVS Secundus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
130 | 16 December 955 – 6 December 963 (8 years, 356 days) |
John XII IOANNES Duodecimus |
c. 930–37 Rome, Papal States | 18–25 / 26–33 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Third pope not to use his personal name (Octavian). Deposed in 963 by Emperor Otto invalidly; end of the "Saeculum obscurum". |
— | 6 December 963 – 26 February 964 (82 days) |
Leo VIII LEO Octavus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. Appointed antipope by Emperor Otto in 963 in opposition to John XII and Benedict V. His pontificate after the deposition of Benedict V is considered legitimate by the modern Catholic Church. | |
130 | 26 February 964 – 14 May 964 (78 days) |
John XII IOANNES Duodecimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Possibly murdered in 964. | |
131 | 22 May 964 – 23 June 964 (32 days) |
Benedict V BENEDICTVS Quintus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Elected by the people of Rome, in opposition to Leo VIII who was appointed by Emperor Otto; he accepted his own deposition in 964 leaving Leo VIII as the sole pope. | |
132 | 23 June 964 – 1 March 965 (251 days) |
Leo VIII LEO Octavus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. His pontificate from 963 to 964 is considered illegitimate by today's Catholic Church. An appointee of Emperor Otto I, his pontificate occurred during the period known as the Saeculum obscurum. | |
133 | 1 October 965 – 6 September 972 (6 years, 341 days) |
John XIII IOANNES Tertius Decimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Chronicled after his death as "the Good". | |
134 | 19 January 973 – 8 June 974 (1 year, 140 days) |
Benedict VI BENEDICTVS Sextus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States, was of Lombard ethnicity. Deposed and murdered. | |
— | July 974 – July 974 (30 days) |
Boniface VII BONFATIUS Septinus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States, born Francone Ferucci. In opposition to Benedict VI and Benedict VII. | |
135 | October 974 – 10 July 983 (8 years, 282 days) |
Benedict VII BENEDICTVS Septimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
136 | December 983 – 20 August 984 (263 days) |
John XIV IOANNES Quartus Decimus |
Pavia, Kingdom of Italy, Holy Roman Empire | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Fourth pope not to use his personal name (Pietro Canepanova). | |
— | 20 August 984 – 20 July 985 (334 days) |
Boniface VII BONFATIUS Septinus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to John XIV and John XV | |
137 | 20 August 985 – 1 April 996 (10 years, 225 days) |
John XV IOANNES Quintus Decimus |
Rome, Papal States | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. The first pope to formally canonize a saint. | |
138 | 3 May 996 – 18 February 999 (2 years, 291 days) |
Gregory V GREGORIVS Quintus |
c. 972 Stainach, Duchy of Carinthia, Holy Roman Empire | 24 / 27 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Carinthia, the first official German pope and fifth not to use his personal name (Bruno). Henceforth, this decision became tradition among future popes. |
— | April 997 – February 998 (306 days) |
John XVI IOANNES Sextus Decimus |
Rossanum, Calabria, Italy, Eastern Roman Empire | Born as an Eastern Roman citizen. In opposition to Gregory V | |
139 | 2 April 999 – 12 May 1003 (4 years, 40 days) |
Sylvester II SILVESTER Secundus |
c. 945 Belliac, France | 54 / 58 | Born Gerbert, a subject of the Kingdom of France, who was the first French (Occitan) pope. |
2nd millennium
edit11th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
140 | 16 May 1003 – 6 November 1003 (174 days) |
John XVII IOANNES Septimus Decimus |
Giovanni Sicco | c. 955 Rome, Papal States | 48 / 48 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
141 | 25 December 1003 – 18 July 1009 (5 years, 205 days) |
John XVIII IOANNES Duodevicesimus |
Giovanni Fasano | c. 965 Rapagnano, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire |
43 / 49 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. First pope born after the Papal States became a state of the Holy Roman Empire in 962. | |
142 | 31 July 1009 – 12 May 1012 (2 years, 286 days) |
Sergius IV SERGIVS Quartus |
Pietro Martino Boccadiporco O.S.B. |
c. 970 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 39 / 42 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
— | 12 June 1012 – 31 December 1012 (202 days) |
Gregory VI GREGORIVS Sextus |
Gregorio | Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | — | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Benedict VIII | |
143 | 18 May 1012 – 9 April 1024 (11 years, 327 days) |
Benedict VIII BENEDICTVS Octavus |
Teofilatto di Tuscolo | c. 980 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 32 / 44 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
144 | 14 May 1024 – 6 October 1032 (8 years, 145 days) |
John XIX IOANNES Undevicesimus |
Romano di Tuscolo | c. 975 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 49 / 57 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Brother of Benedict VIII. | |
145 | 21 October 1032 – 31 December 1044 (12 years, 71 days) |
Benedict IX BENEDICTVS Nonus |
Teofilatto di Tuscolo | Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 20 / 32 (†43) | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States; first term. | |
146 | 13 January 1045 – 10 March 1045 (56 days) |
Sylvester III SILVESTER Tertius |
Giovanni dei Crescenzi Ottaviani | c. 1000 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 45 / 45 (†63) | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Validity of election questioned; considered antipope; deposed at the Council of Sutri. | |
147 | 10 March 1045 – 1 May 1045 (52 days) |
Benedict IX BENEDICTVS Nonus |
Teofilatto di Tuscolo | Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 33 / 33 (†43) | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Second term; deposed at the Council of Sutri. | |
148 | 5 May 1045 – 20 December 1046 (1 year, 229 days) |
Gregory VI GREGORIVS Sextus |
Giovanni Graziano Pierleoni | c. 1000 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 45 / 46 (†48) | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Deposed at the Council of Sutri. | |
149 | 24 December 1046 – 9 October 1047 (289 days) |
Clement II CLEMENS Secundus |
Suidger von Morsleben-Hornburg | c. 967 Hornburg, Duchy of Saxony, Holy Roman Empire | 79 / 80 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Saxony. Appointed by King Henry III at the Council of Sutri; crowned Henry III as emperor. | |
150 | 8 November 1047 – 17 July 1048 (252 days) |
Benedict IX BENEDICTVS Nonus |
Teofilatto di Tuscolo | 1012 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 35 / 36 (†43) | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Third term; deposed and excommunicated. | |
151 | 17 July 1048 – 9 August 1048 (23 days) |
Damasus II DAMASVS Secundus |
Poppo de Curagnoni | c. 1000 Pildenau, Duchy of Bavaria, Holy Roman Empire | 48 / 48 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Bavaria. | |
152 | 12 February 1049 – 19 April 1054 (5 years, 66 days) |
St Leo IX LEO Nonus |
Bruno von Egisheim-Dagsburg | 21 July 1002 Eguisheim, Duchy of Swabia, Holy Roman Empire | 47 / 51 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Swabia. In 1054, the mutual excommunications of Leo IX's legate, cardinal Humbert of Silva Candida, and Patriarch of Constantinople Michael I Cerularius began the East–West Schism. The anathematizations were rescinded by Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras in 1965.[17] | |
153 | 13 April 1055 – 28 July 1057 (2 years, 106 days) |
Victor II VICTOR Secundus |
Gebhard II von Calw-Dollnstein-Hirschberg | c. 1018 Duchy of Swabia, Holy Roman Empire | 37 / 39 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Swabia. | |
154 | 2 August 1057 – 29 March 1058 (239 days) |
Stephen IX STEPHANVS Nonus (Decimus) |
Frederich O.S.B. |
c. 1020 Duchy of Lorraine, Holy Roman Empire | 37 / 38 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Lorraine. Sometimes called Stephen X. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | |
— | 4 April 1058 – 24 January 1059 (295 days) |
Benedict X BENEDICTVS Decimus |
Giovanni Mincio di Tuscolo | Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | — | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Nicholas II. | |
155 | 6 December 1058 – 27 July 1061 (2 years, 233 days) |
Nicholas II NICOLAVS Secundus |
Gerald de Bourgogne | c. 980 Château de Chevron, County of Savoy, Holy Roman Empire | 78 / 81 | Born as a subject of the County of Savoy, was of French ethnicity. In 1059 the College of Cardinals was designated the sole body of pope electors in the document In nomine Domini. | |
— | 30 September 1061 – 1072 (10 years, 185 days) |
Honorius II HONORIVS Secundus |
Pietro Candalus | 1010 Verona, March of Verona, Holy Roman Empire | 61 / 72 | Born as a subject of the March of Verona, was of Italian ethnicity (born after the Placiti Cassinesi was written). In opposition to Pope Alexander II | |
156 | 30 September 1061 – 21 April 1073 (11 years, 203 days) |
Alexander II ALEXANDER Secundus |
Anselmo da Baggio | c. 1018 Baggio, Free Commune of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 46 / 58 | Citizen of the Free Commune of Milan. Authorized the Norman conquest of England in 1066. | |
157 | 22 April 1073 – 25 May 1085 (12 years, 33 days) |
St Gregory VII GREGORIVS Septimus |
Ildebrando Aldobrandeschi di Soana O.S.B. |
c. 1015 Sovana, March of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 48 / 60 | Subject of the March of Tuscany, was of Lombard ethnicity. Initiated the Gregorian Reforms. Restricted the use of the papal title to the bishop of Rome.[6] Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Political struggle with Emperor Henry IV, who had to go to Canossa (1077). | |
— | 25 June 1080 – 8 September 1100 (20 years, 75 days) |
Clement III CLEMENS Tertius |
Guibert of Ravenna | 1029 Ravenna, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 51 / 71 | In opposition to Pope Gregory VII, Pope Victor III, Pope Urban II and Pope Paschal II. | |
158 | 24 May 1086 – 16 September 1087 (1 year, 115 days) |
Bl. Victor III VICTOR Tertius |
Dauferio Epifani Del Zotto O.S.B. |
c. 1026 Benevento, Duchy of Benevento | 60 / 61 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Benevento, was of Lombard ethnicity. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Called the Synod of Benevento (1087) condemning lay investiture. | |
159 | 12 March 1088 – 29 July 1099 (11 years, 139 days) |
Bl. Urban II VRBANVS Secundus |
Odon de Lagery O.S.B. |
c. 1042 Châtillon-sur-Marne, County of Champagne, France | 46 / 57 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Preached and started the First Crusade. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. | |
160 | 13 August 1099 – 21 January 1118 (18 years, 161 days) |
Paschal II PASCHALIS Secundus |
Rainero Ranieri O.S.B. |
c. 1050 Bleda, March of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 49 / 68 | Born as a subject of the March of Tuscany, was of Lombard ethnicity. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Ordered the building of the basilica of Santi Quattro Coronati. | |
— | 8 September 1100 – January 1101 (115 days) |
Theodoric THEODORICVS |
Teodorico | c. 1030 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 70 / 71 | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States, was of Lombard ethnicity. In opposition to Pope Paschal II |
12th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
— | January 1101 – February 1102 (1 year, 31 days) |
Adalbert ADALBERTVS |
Adalberto O.S.B. |
Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | — | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States, was of Lombard ethnicity. In opposition to Pope Paschal II | |
— | 8 November 1105 – 11 April 1111 (5 years, 154 days) |
Sylvester IV SILVESTER Quartus |
Maguinulf | 1050 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 49 / 55 (†56) | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States, was of German ethnicity. In opposition to Paschal II. | |
161 | 24 January 1118 – 29 January 1119 (1 year, 5 days) |
Gelasius II GELASIVS Secundus |
Giovanni Caetani O.S.B. |
c. 1061 Gaeta, Duchy of Gaeta | 57 / 58 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Gaeta. | |
— |
10 March 1118 – 20 April 1121 (3 years, 41 days) |
Gregory VIII GREGORIVS Octavus |
Maurice Baurdain | c. 1060 Limousin, Occitania, France | 58 / 61 (†77) | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France, was of Occitan ethnicity. In opposition to Gelasius II and Callixtus II. | |
162 | 2 February 1119 – 13 December 1124 (5 years, 315 days) |
Callixtus II CALLISTVS Secundus |
Guy | c. 1060 Quingey, County of Burgundy, Holy Roman Empire | 59 / 64 | Born as a subject of the County of Burgundy, was of French ethnicity. Opened the First Council of the Lateran in 1123. | |
— |
16 December 1124– 16 December 1124 (0 days) |
Celestine II COELESTINVS Secundus |
Teobaldo Boccapecora | 1050 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 74 / 74 (†76) | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Honorius II. | |
163 | 21 December 1124 – 13 February 1130 (5 years, 54 days) |
Honorius II HONORIVS Secundus |
Lamberto Scannabecchi da Fiagnano Can.Reg. |
9 February 1060 Fiagnano, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 64 / 70 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Canon Regular of S. Maria di San Reno. Approved the new military order of the Knights Templar in 1128. | |
164 | 14 February 1130 – 24 September 1143 (13 years, 222 days) |
Innocent II INNOCENTIVS Secundus |
Gregorio Papareschi Can.Reg. |
c. 1082 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 48 / 61 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Canon regular of Lateran. Convened the Second Council of the Lateran, 1139. | |
— |
14 February 1130 – 25 January 1138 (7 years, 345 days) |
Anacletus II ANACLETUS Secundus |
Pietro Pierleoni O.S.B. |
1090 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 40 / 48 | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Innocent II. | |
— |
15 March 1138 – 29 May 1138 (75 days) |
Victor IV VICTOR Quartus |
Gregorio Conti | Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | — | Subject and later the claimant of throne the Papal States. In Opposition to Pope Innocent II | |
165 | 26 September 1143 – 8 March 1144 (164 days) |
Celestine II COELESTINVS Secundus |
Guido Guelfuccio de Castello | c. 1085 Città di Castello, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 58 / 59 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
166 | 12 March 1144 – 15 February 1145 (340 days) |
Lucius II LUCIVS Secundus |
Gherardo Caccianemici dall'Orso Can.Reg. |
c. 1079 Bologna, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 65 / 66 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Canon Regular of S. Frediano di Lucca. | |
167 | 15 February 1145 – 8 July 1153 (8 years, 143 days) |
Bl. Eugene III EVGENIVS Tertius |
Pietro dei Paganelli di Montemagno O.Cist.[18] |
c. 1080 Montemagno, Republic of Pisa, Holy Roman Empire | 44 / 73 | Citizen of the Republic of Pisa. Member of the Order of Cistercians. Announced the Second Crusade. | |
168 | 12 July 1153 – 3 December 1154 (1 year, 144 days) |
Anastasius IV ANASTASIVS Quartus |
Corrado Demitri della Suburra | c. 1073 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 80 / 81 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
169 | 4 December 1154 – 1 September 1159 (4 years, 271 days) |
Adrian IV HADRIANVS Quartus |
Nicholas Breakspear Can.Reg. |
c. 1100 Abbots Langley, Hertfordshire, Kingdom of England | 54 / 59 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of England. The only English (Anglo-Saxon) pope; purportedly granted Ireland to Henry II, King of England. Canon Regular of St. Rufus Monastery. | |
170 | 7 September 1159 – 30 August 1181 (21 years, 357 days) |
Alexander III ALEXANDER Tertius |
Rolando Bandinelli | c. 1100 Siena, March of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 59 / 81 | Born as a subject of the March of Tuscany. Convened the Third Council of the Lateran, 1179. | |
— |
7 September 1159 – 20 April 1164 (4 years, 226 days) |
Victor IV VICTOR Quartus |
Ottaviano dei Crescenzi Ottaviani di Monticelli | 1095 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 64 / 69 | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Pope Alexander III. | |
— |
28 April 1164 – 22 September 1168 (4 years, 147 days) |
Paschal III PASCALIS Tertius |
Guido di Crema | 1110 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 54 / 58 | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Alexander III. | |
— |
30 September 1168 – 29 August 1178 (9 years, 333 days) |
Callixtus III CALLIXTVS Tertius |
Giovanni di Struma O.S.B. |
1090 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 78 / 88 | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Alexander III. | |
— |
29 September 1179 – January 1180 (124 days) |
Innocent III INNOCENTIVS Tertius |
Lando di Sezze (or Lanzo) | 1120 Sezze, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 59 / 60 (†63) | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to Alexander III. | |
171 | 1 September 1181 – 25 November 1185 (4 years, 85 days) |
Lucius III LUCIVS Tertius |
Ubaldo Allucignoli | c. 1100 Lucca, March of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 81 / 85 | Born as a subject of the March of Tuscany. | |
172 | 25 November 1185 – 20 October 1187 (1 year, 329 days) |
Urban III VRBANVS Tertius |
Uberto Crivelli | c. 1120 Cuggiono, Holy Roman Empire | 65 / 67 | Was of Italian ethnicity. In the 21st century, Cuggiono is a small Italian town and comune in the Metropolitan City of Milan. | |
173 | 21 October 1187 – 17 December 1187 (57 days) |
Gregory VIII GREGORIVS Octavus |
Alberto de Morra Can.Reg. |
c. 1100 Benevento, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 87 / 87 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Canon Regular Premostratense. Proposed the Third Crusade. | |
174 | 19 December 1187 – 20 March 1191[19] (3 years, 91 days) |
Clement III CLEMENS Tertius |
Paolo Scolari | c. 1130 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 57 / 61 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
175 | 30 March 1191 – 8 January 1198 (6 years, 284 days) |
Celestine III COELESTINVS Tertius |
Giacinto Bobone Orsini | c. 1105 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 86 / 93 | Motto: Perfice gressus meos in semitis tuis ("Going in Thy path") Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Confirmed the statutes of the Teutonic Knights as a military order. | |
176 | 8 January 1198 – 16 July 1216 (18 years, 190 days) |
Innocent III INNOCENTIVS Tertius |
Lotario dei Conti di Segni | 1161 Gavignano, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 37 / 55 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Convened the Fourth Council of the Lateran, 1215. Initiated the Fourth Crusade but later distanced himself from it and threatened participants with excommunication when it became clear that the leadership abandoned a focus on conquest of the Holy Land and instead intended to sack Christian cities.[20] Endorsed the Franciscan Order. |
13th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
177 | 18 July 1216 – 18 March 1227 (10 years, 243 days) |
Honorius III HONORIVS Tertius |
Cencio Savelli | c. 1148–50 Rome, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 66–68 / 77–79 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Initiated the Fifth Crusade. Approved several religious and tertiary orders. | |
178 | 19 March 1227 – 22 August 1241 (14 years, 156 days) |
Gregory IX GREGORIVS Nonus |
Ugolino dei Conti di Segni, O.F.S | c. 1145–70 Anagni, Papal States, Holy Roman Empire | 57–82 / 71–96 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Initiated the inquisition in France and endorsed the Northern Crusades. | |
179 | 25 October 1241 – 10 November 1241 (16 days) |
Celestine IV COELESTINVS Quartus |
Goffredo Castiglioni | c. 1180–87 Free Commune of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 54–61 / 54–61 | Born as a citizen of the Free Commune of Milan. Died before coronation. | |
180 |
25 June 1243 – 7 December 1254 (11 years, 165 days) |
Innocent IV INNOCENTIVS Quartus |
Sinibaldo Fieschi | c. 1195 Genoa, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 48 / 60 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Convened the First Council of Lyons (1245). Issued the bull Ad extirpanda that permitted the torture of heretics (1252). | |
181 |
12 December 1254 – 25 May 1261 (6 years, 164 days) |
Alexander IV ALEXANDER Quartus |
Rinaldo dei Conti di Jenne | c. 1199 Jenne, Papal States | 55 / 62 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. First pope born after the Papal States ceased to be a state of the Holy Roman Empire. Established an Inquisition in France. | |
182 |
29 August 1261 – 2 October 1264 (3 years, 34 days) |
Urban IV VRBANVS Quartus |
Jacques Pantaléon | c. 1195 Troyes, County of Champagne, France | 66 / 69 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Instituted the feast of Corpus Christi (1264). | |
183 |
5 February 1265 – 29 November 1268 (3 years, 298 days) |
Clement IV CLEMENS Quartus |
Gui Faucoi | 23 November 1190 Saint-Gilles, Languedoc, France | 62 / 66 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. | |
— | 29 November 1268 – 1 September 1271 (2 years, 276 days) |
Interregnum | Almost three-year period without a valid pope elected. This was due to a deadlock among cardinals voting for the pope. | ||||
184 |
1 September 1271 – 10 January 1276 (4 years, 131 days) |
Bl. Gregory X GREGORIVS Decimus |
Tebaldo Visconti, O.F.S | c. 1210 Free Commune of Piacenza, Holy Roman Empire | 51 / 66 | Born as a citizen of the Free Commune of Piacenza, was of Italian ethnicity. Convened the Second Council of Lyons (1274), responsible for regulating all papal conclaves until the 20th century. | |
185 |
21 January 1276 – 22 June 1276 (153 days) |
Bl. Innocent V INNOCENTIVS Quintus |
Pierre de Tarentaise, O.P. | c. 1224/5 County of Savoy, Holy Roman Empire | 52 / 52 | Born as a subject of the County of Savoy, was of French ethnicity. Member of the Dominican Order. | |
186 |
11 July 1276 – 18 August 1276 (38 days) |
Adrian V HADRIANVS Quintus |
Ottobuono Fieschi | c. 1216 Genoa, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 60 / 60 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Annulled Gregory X's papal bull on the regulations of papal conclaves. | |
187 |
8 September 1276 – 20 May 1277 (254 days) |
John XXI IOANNES Vicesimus Primus |
Pedro Julião (a.k.a. Petrus Hispanus and Pedro Hispano) | c. 1215 Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal | 60 / 70 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Portugal. Due to a confusion over the numbering of popes named John in the 13th century, the ordinal XX was skipped. | |
188 |
25 November 1277 – 22 August 1280 (2 years, 271 days) |
Nicholas III NICOLAVS Tertius |
Giovanni Gaetano Orsini | c. 1216 Rome, Papal States | 61 / 64 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Planned the Sicilian Vespers. | |
189 |
22 February 1281 – 28 March 1285 (4 years, 34 days) |
Martin IV MARTINVS Quartus |
Simon de Brion | c. 1210 Meinpicien, Touraine, France | 71 / 75 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. | |
190 |
2 April 1285 – 3 April 1287 (2 years, 1 day) |
Honorius IV HONORIVS Quartus |
Giacomo Savelli | c. 1210 Rome, Papal States | 75 / 77 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. | |
191 |
22 February 1288 – 4 April 1292 (4 years, 42 days) |
Nicholas IV NICOLAVS Quartus |
Girolamo Masci, O.F.M. | 30 September 1227 Lisciano, Papal States | 60 / 64 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Franciscan Order. | |
— | 4 April 1292 – 5 July 1294 (2 years, 92 days) |
Interregnum | Two-year period without a valid pope elected. This was due to a deadlock among cardinals voting for the pope. | ||||
192 |
5 July 1294 – 13 December 1294 (161 days) |
St Celestine V COELESTINVS Quintus |
Pietro Angelerio, O.S.B. | 1215[21] Sant'Angelo Limosano, Kingdom of Sicily | 79 / 79 (†81) | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Sicily. One of the few popes who abdicated voluntarily. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Founded the Celestines. Resigned from office and rumoured to have been murdered in prison by Boniface VIII. | |
193 |
24 December 1294 – 11 October 1303 (8 years, 291 days) |
Boniface VIII BONIFATIVS Octavus |
Benedetto Caetani | c. 1230–36 Anagni, Papal States | 59–64 / 68–73 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Formalized the Jubilee in 1300. Issued Unam Sanctam (1302) which proclaimed papal supremacy and pushed it to its historical extreme. |
14th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
194 |
22 October 1303 – 7 July 1304 (259 days) |
Bl. Benedict XI BENEDICTVS Undecimus |
Niccolò Boccasini, O.P. | c. 1240 Treviso, Papal States | 63 / 64 | Motto: Illustra faciem Tuam super servum Tuum ("Let Your Face shine upon Your servant")
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Dominican Order. Reverted Boniface VIII's Unam Sanctam. | |
195 |
5 June 1305 – 20 April 1314 (8 years, 319 days) |
Clement V CLEMENS Quintus |
Raymond Bertrand de Gouth | c. 1264 Villandraut, Gascony, France | 41 / 50 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Convened the Council of Vienne (1311–1312). Initiated the persecution of the Knights Templar with the bull Pastoralis Praeeminentiae under pressure from King Philip IV of France. | |
— | 20 April 1314 – 7 August 1316 (2 years, 79 days) |
Interregnum | Two-year period without a valid pope elected. This was due to a deadlock among cardinals voting for the pope. | ||||
196 |
7 August 1316 – 4 December 1334 (18 years, 119 days) |
John XXII IOANNES Vicesimus Secundus |
Jacques d'Euse; Jacques Duèse | c. 1244–49 Cahors, Quercy, France | 67–72 / 85–90 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Controversial for his views on the beatific vision. Opposed the Franciscan understanding of the poverty of Christ and his apostles, famously leading William of Ockham to write against unlimited papal power | |
— |
12 May 1328– 25 July 1330 (2 years, 74 days) |
Nicholas V NICOLAVS Quintus |
Pietro Rainalducci, O.F.M. |
1260 Corvaro, Papal States | 68 / 70 (†73) | Subject and later the claimant of the throne of the Papal States. In opposition to John XXII. | |
197 |
20 December 1334 – 25 April 1342 (7 years, 126 days) |
Benedict XII BENEDICTVS Duodecimus |
Jacques Fournier, O.Cist. | c. 1280–85 Saverdun, County of Foix, France | 49–54 / 57–62 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Member of the Order of Cistercians. Known for issuing the Apostolic constitution Benedictus Deus (1336). A careful pope who reformed monastic orders and opposed nepotism. | |
198 |
7 May 1342 – 6 December 1352 (10 years, 213 days) |
Clement VI CLEMENS Sextus |
Pierre Roger, O.S.B. | c. 1291 Maumont, Limousin, France | 51 / 61 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Reigned during the Black Death and absolved those who died of it of their sins. | |
199 |
18 December 1352 – 12 September 1362 (9 years, 268 days) |
Innocent VI INNOCENTIVS Sextus |
Étienne Aubert | c. 1282 Les Monts, Limousin, France | 70 / 80 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Through his exertions the Treaty of Brétigny (1360) was brought about. | |
200 |
28 September 1362 – 19 December 1370 (8 years, 82 days) |
Bl. Urban V VRBANVS Quintus |
Guillaume (de) Grimoard, O.S.B. | c. 1309–10 Grizac, Languedoc, France | 52–53 / 60–61 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Reformed areas of education and sent missionary movements across Europe and Asia. His pontificate witnessed the Alexandrian and Savoyard crusades. | |
201 |
30 December 1370 – 27 March 1378 (7 years, 87 days) |
Gregory XI GREGORIVS Undecimus |
Pierre Roger de Beaufort | c. 1329 Maumont, Limousin, France | 41 / 49 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Pope at Avignon; returns to Rome. The last French pope. | |
202 |
8 April 1378 – 15 October 1389 (11 years, 190 days) |
Urban VI VRBANVS Sextus |
Bartolomeo Prignano | c. 1318 Naples, Kingdom of Naples | 60 / 71 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Western Schism. Last pontiff to be elected outside the College of Cardinals. | |
— |
20 September 1378 – 16 September 1394 (15 years, 353 days) |
Clement VII CLEMENS Septimus |
Robert de Genève | 1342 Chateau d'Annecy, County of Savoy, H.R.E. | 36 / 52 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. In opposition to Urban VI (1378–89) and Boniface IX (1389–1404) | |
— |
28 September 1394 – 23 May 1423 (28 years, 237 days) |
Benedict XIII BENEDICTVS Tertius Decimus |
Pedro Martínez de Luna y Pérez de Gotor | 25 November 1328 Illueca, Aragon | 66 / 94 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Aragon. In opposition to Boniface IX (1389–1404), Innocent VII (1404–06), Gregory XII (1406–15), Martin V (1417–31) and Pisan Antipopes Alexander V (1409–10) and John XXIII (1410–15) | |
203 |
2 November 1389 – 1 October 1404 (14 years, 334 days) |
Boniface IX BONIFATIVS Nonus |
Pietro Tomacelli Cybo | c. 1348–50 Naples, Kingdom of Naples | c. 39-41 / c. 54-56 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Western Schism. |
15th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
204 |
17 October 1404 – 6 November 1406 (2 years, 20 days) |
Innocent VII INNOCENTIVS Septimus |
Cosimo Gentile Migliorati | 1336–39 Sulmona, Kingdom of Naples | 65–68 / 67–71 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Reigned during the Western Schism. | |
205 |
30 November 1406 – 4 July 1415 (8 years, 216 days) |
Gregory XII GREGORIVS Duodecimus |
Angelo Correr | 1327 Venice, Republic of Venice[22] | c. 79 / 88 (†90) | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Venice. Reigned during the Western Schism. Abdicated. | |
— |
30 June 1409 – 3 May 1410 (307 days) |
Alexander V ALEXANDER Quintus |
Pétros Philárgēs, O.F.M. |
1339 Neapoli, Candia, Republic of Venice | 70 / 71 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Venice. Was of Greek ethnicity. Western Schism. In opposition to Gregory XII. Considered a legitimate pope until 1963 and is numbered as such to this day. | |
— |
25 May 1410 – 30 May 1415 (5 years, 5 days) |
John XXIII IOANNES Vicesimus Tertius |
Baldassarre Cossa | 1365 Procida, Naples | 45 / 50 (†54) | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Western Schism. In opposition to Gregory XII. Convened Council of Constance. Deposed. Became dean of the College of Cardinals in 1417. Was considered a legitimate pope until 1958. | |
— | 4 July 1415 – 11 November 1417 (2 years, 136 days) |
Interregnum | Two-year period without a valid pope elected. The Council of Constance called on all three papal claimants to abdicate, but only Gregory XII (Roman) did. John XXIII (Pisan) was deposed, Benedict XIII (Avignon) was excommunicated, and a new pope was elected. | ||||
206 |
11 November 1417 – 20 February 1431 (13 years, 101 days) |
Martin V MARTINVS Quintus |
Oddone Colonna, O.F.S | Jan/Feb 1369 Genazzano, Papal States | 48 / 62 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. His election effectively ended the Western Schism (1378–1417). Convened the Council of Basel (1431). Initiated the Hussite Wars. | |
— |
10[23] or 20[24] June 1423 – 26 July 1429 (6 years, 36 days) |
Clement VIII CLEMENS Octavus |
Gil Sánchez Muñoz y Carbón | 1369 Teruel, Aragon, Crown of Aragon | 54 / 60 (†77) | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Aragon. Western Schism. In opposition to Martin V. | |
1424 – 1429 |
Antipope Benedict XIV | Bernard Garnier | France | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Two antipope claimants[25] | |||
1430 – 1437 |
Antipope Benedict XIV | Jean Carrier | France | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. Two antipope claimants[26] | |||
207 |
3 March 1431 – 23 February 1447 (15 years, 357 days) |
Eugene IV EVGENIVS Quartus |
Gabriele Condulmer, O.S.A. | 1383 Venice, Republic of Venice | 48 / 64 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Venice. Member of the Augustinian Order. Nephew of Gregory XII. Crowned Emperor Sigismund at Rome in 1433. Transferred the Council of Basel to Ferrara. It was later transferred again, to Florence, because of the Bubonic plague. Issued the bull "Creator Omnium", rescinding any recognition of Portugal's right to conquer the Canary Islands, still pagan. He excommunicated anyone who enslaved newly converted Christians, the penalty to stand until the captives were restored to their liberty and possessions. | |
— |
5 November 1439 – 7 April 1449 (9 years, 153 days) |
Felix V FELIX Quintus |
Amadeus | 4 September 1383 Chambéry, France | 56 / 65 (†67) | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of France. In opposition to Eugene IV[27] and Nicholas V.[28] Also ruled as count of Savoy. | |
208 |
6 March 1447 – 24 March 1455 (8 years, 18 days) |
Nicholas V NICOLAVS Quintus |
Tommaso Parentucelli | 13 November 1397 Sarzana, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 49 / 57 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Held the Jubilee of 1450. Crowned Emperor Frederick III at Rome (1452). Issued the bull Dum Diversas allowing Portugal's right to conquer and subjugate Saracens and pagans (1452). Created a library in the Vatican which would eventually become the Bibliotheca Apostolica Vaticana. | |
209 |
8 April 1455 – 6 August 1458 (3 years, 120 days) |
Callixtus III CALLISTVS Tertius |
Alfonso de Borja | 31 December 1378 Xàtiva, Kingdom of Valencia, Crown of Aragon | 76 / 79 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Valencia (and therefore subject to the monarch of the Crown of Aragon). The first Spanish (Valencian) pope. Ordered the Feast of the Transfiguration to be celebrated on 6 August. Ordered the retrial of Joan of Arc, in which she was vindicated. Appointed two nephews as cardinals, one of whom became Pope Alexander VI. | |
210 |
19 August 1458 – 15 August 1464 (5 years, 362 days) |
Pius II PIVS Secundus |
Enea Silvio Piccolomini | 18 October 1405 Corsignano, Republic of Siena, Holy Roman Empire | 52 / 58 | Citizen of the Republic of Siena. Displayed a great interest in urban planning. Founded Pienza near Siena as the ideal city in 1462. Known for his work on the Commentaries. | |
211 |
30 August 1464 – 26 July 1471 (6 years, 330 days) |
Paul II PAVLVS Secundus |
Pietro Barbo | 23 February 1417 Venice, Republic of Venice | 47 / 54 | Citizen of the Republic of Venice. The nephew of Eugene IV. Built the Palazzo San Marco (now Palazzo Venezia). Approved the introduction of printing in the Papal States. | |
212 |
9 August 1471 – 12 August 1484 (13 years, 3 days) |
Sixtus IV SYXTVS Quartus |
Francesco della Rovere, O.F.M. | 21 July 1414 Celle Ligure, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 57 / 70 | Citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Member of the Franciscan Order. Commissioned the Sistine Chapel and created the Vatican Archives. Authorized the Spanish Inquisition targeting converted Jewish Christians in Spain at the request of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain. A patron of the arts, he brought together the group of artists who ushered the Early Renaissance into Rome with the first masterpieces of the city's new artistic age. Noted for his nepotism and involved in the Pazzi conspiracy. | |
213 |
29 August 1484 – 25 July 1492 (7 years, 331 days) |
Innocent VIII INNOCENTIVS Octavus |
Giovanni Battista Cybo | 1432 Genoa, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 52 / 60 | Citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Appointed Tomás de Torquemada. Endorsed the prosecution of witchcraft in the bull Summis desiderantes affectibus (1484). | |
214 |
11 August 1492 – 18 August 1503 (11 years, 7 days) |
Alexander VI ALEXANDER Sextus |
Roderic Llançol i de Borja | 1 January 1431 Xàtiva, Kingdom of Valencia, Crown of Aragon | 61 / 72 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Valencia (and therefore subject to the monarch of the Crown of Aragon). Spanish (Valencian); Nephew of Callixtus III; father to Cesare Borgia and Lucrezia Borgia. Divided the extra-European world between Spain and Portugal in the bull Inter caetera (1493). Considered one of the most controversial of the Renaissance popes, partly because he acknowledged fathering several children by his mistresses. As a result, his Italianized Valencian surname, Borgia, became a byword for libertinism and nepotism, which are traditionally considered as characterizing his pontificate |
16th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
215 |
22 September 1503 – 18 October 1503 (26 days) |
Pius III PIVS Tertius |
Francesco Todeschini Piccolomini | 29 May 1439 Siena, Republic of Siena, Holy Roman Empire | 64 / 64 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Siena. Nephew of Pius II. Founded the Piccolomini Library in the Siena Cathedral. | |
216 |
31 October 1503 – 21 February 1513 (9 years, 113 days) |
Julius II IVLIVS Secundus |
Giuliano della Rovere, O.F.M. | 5 December 1443 Albisola, Republic of Genoa, Holy Roman Empire | 59 / 69 | Born as a citizen of the Republic of Genoa. Nicknamed the 'Warrior Pope' or the 'Fearsome Pope'. Nephew of Sixtus IV; convened the Fifth Council of the Lateran (1512). Took control of all the Papal States for the first time. Became Pope in the context of the Italian Wars, a period in which the major powers of Europe fought for primacy in the Italian peninsula. Established the Vatican Museums and initiated the rebuilding of the St. Peter's Basilica. The same year he organized the famous Swiss Guard for his personal protection and commanded a successful campaign in Romagna against local lords. The interests of Julius II lay also in the New World as he ratified the Treaty of Tordesillas, establishing the first bishoprics in the Americas and beginning the catholicization of Latin America. In 1508, he commissioned the Raphael Rooms and Michelangelo's paintings in the Sistine Chapel.
Julius II was described by Machiavelli in his works as the ideal prince. Pope Julius II allowed people seeking indulgences to donate money to the Church which would be used for the construction of Saint Peter's Basilica. | |
217 |
9 March 1513 – 1 December 1521 (8 years, 267 days) |
Leo X LEO Decimus |
Giovanni di Lorenzo de' Medici | 11 December 1475 Florence, Republic of Florence, Holy Roman Empire | 37 / 45 | Citizen of the Republic of Florence. Son of Lorenzo the Magnificent. Closed the Fifth Council of the Lateran. Remembered for granting indulgences to those who donated to rebuild St. Peter's Basilica; excommunicated Martin Luther (1521). Extended the Spanish Inquisition into Portugal. Borrowed and spent money without circumspection and was a significant patron of the arts. Under his reign, progress was made on the rebuilding of St. Peter's Basilica and artists such as Raphael decorated the Vatican rooms. Leo also reorganized the Roman University, and promoted the study of literature, poetry and antiquities. The last pope to not have been in priestly orders at the time of his election to the papacy. | |
218 |
9 January 1522 – 14 September 1523 (1 year, 248 days) |
Adrian VI HADRIANVS Sextus |
Adriaan Floriszoon Boeyens | 2 March 1459 Utrecht, Bishopric of Utrecht, Holy Roman Empire (now Netherlands) | 62 / 64 | Motto: Patere et sustine ("Respect and wait")[29]
Born as a subject of the Bishopric of Utrecht. The only Dutch pope; last non-Italian to be elected pope until John Paul II in 1978. Tutor of Emperor Charles V. Came to the papacy in the midst of one of its greatest crises, threatened not only by Lutheranism to the north but also by the advance of the Ottoman Turks to the east. He refused to compromise with Lutheranism theologically, demanding Luther's condemnation as a heretic. However, he is noted for having attempted to reform the Catholic Church administratively in response to the Protestant Reformation. Adrian's remarkable admission that the turmoil of the Church was the fault of the Roman Curia itself was read at the 1522–1523 Diet of Nuremberg. His efforts at reform, however, proved fruitless, as they were resisted by most of his Renaissance ecclesiastical contemporaries, and he did not live long enough to see his efforts through to their conclusion. | |
219 |
26 November 1523 – 25 September 1534 (10 years, 303 days) |
Clement VII CLEMENS Septimus |
Giulio di Giuliano de' Medici | 26 May 1478 Florence, Republic of Florence, Holy Roman Empire | 45 / 56 | Motto: Candor illæsus ("Unharmed candor")[30]
Citizen of the Republic of Florence. Cousin of Leo X. Rome sacked by imperial troops (1527). Forbade the divorce of Henry VIII; crowned Charles V as emperor at Bologna (1530). Commissioned Michelangelo's painting of The Last Judgment in the Sistine Chapel (1533). Approved Copernicus' heliocentric universe theory (1533). However Copernicus made very few astronomical observations and based his new model squarely on his mathematical calculations. Natural philosophers of that time (professionals who began to be called scientists only in the 19th century) noted that if the earth rotated there would be observable Coriolis effects. Secondly, a revolving earth would imply a stellar parallax. Given that neither of these effects were observed at the time (would be observed decades later) , Copernicus' model still did not prove heliocentrism. The niece of the pope was married to the future Henry II of France (1533). Recognized the Order of Friars Minor Capuchin (Capuchins). | |
220 |
13 October 1534 – 10 November 1549 (15 years, 28 days) |
Paul III PAVLVS Tertius |
Alessandro Farnese | 29 February 1468 Canino, Lazio, Papal States | 66 / 81 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Opened the Council of Trent (1545). His illegitimate son became the first duke of Parma. Decreed the second and final excommunication of King Henry VIII of England. Appointed Michelangelo to supervise construction of St. Peter's Basilica (1546). Recognized the Order of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits). | |
221 |
7 February 1550 – 29 March 1555 (5 years, 50 days) |
Julius III IVLIVS Tertius |
Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte | 10 September 1487 Rome, Lazio, Papal States | 62 / 67 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Established the Collegium Germanicum (1552). Reconvened the Council of Trent. The Innocenzo Scandal. | |
222 |
9 April 1555 – 1 May 1555 (22 days) |
Marcellus II MARCELLVS Secundus |
Marcello Cervini degli Spannochi | 6 May 1501 Montefano, Marche, Papal States | 53 / 53 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. The last to use his birth name as the regnal name. Instituted immediate economies in Vatican expenditures. The Missa Papae Marcelli composed in his honour. | |
223 |
23 May 1555 – 18 August 1559 (4 years, 87 days) |
Paul IV PAVLVS Quartus |
Giovanni Pietro Carafa, C.R. | 28 June 1476 Capriglia Irpina, Campania, Kingdom of Naples | 78 / 83 | Motto: Dominus mihi adjutor ("The Lord is my helper")[31]
Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Founder and member of the Theatines. Established the Roman Ghetto in Cum Nimis Absurdum (1555) and established the Index of Forbidden Books. Ordered Michelangelo to repaint the nudes of The Last Judgment modestly. | |
224 |
26 December 1559 – 9 December 1565 (5 years, 348 days) |
Pius IV PIVS Quartus |
Giovanni Angelo Medici | 31 March 1499 Milan, Duchy of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 60 / 66 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Milan. Reopened and closed the Council of Trent. Ordered public construction to improve the water supply of Rome. Instituted the Tridentine Creed. | |
225 |
7 January 1566 – 1 May 1572 (6 years, 115 days) |
St Pius V PIVS Quintus |
Antonio Ghislieri, O.P. | 17 January 1504 Bosco, Piedmont, Duchy of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 61 / 68 | Motto: Utinam dirigantur viæ meæ ad custodiendas ("O that my ways may be steadfast in keeping thy statutes")
Born as a subject of the Duchy of Milan. Member of the Dominican Order. Excommunicated Queen Elizabeth I of England (1570). Battle of Lepanto (1571); instituted the feast of Our Lady of Victory. Issued the 1570 Roman Missal. | |
226 |
13 May 1572 – 10 April 1585 (12 years, 332 days) |
Gregory XIII GREGORIVS Tertius Decimus |
Ugo Boncompagni | 7 January 1502 Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Papal States | 70 / 83 | Motto: Aperuit et clausit ("Opened and closed")[32]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Reformed the calendar (1582); built the Gregorian Chapel in the Vatican. The first pope to bestow the Immaculate Conception as patroness to the Philippine Islands through the bull Ilius Fulti Præsido (1579). Strengthened diplomatic ties with Asian nations. | |
227 |
24 April 1585 – 27 August 1590 (5 years, 125 days) |
Sixtus V SYXTVS Quintus |
Felice Peretti di Montalto, O.F.M. Conv. | 13 December 1521 Grottammare, Marche, Papal States | 63 / 68 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Conventual Franciscan Order. Known for fixing and completing building works to major basilicas in Rome. Limited the College of Cardinals to 70 in number; doubled the number of curial congregations. | |
228 |
15 September 1590 – 27 September 1590 (12 days) |
Urban VII VRBANVS Septimus |
Giovanni Battista Castagna | 4 August 1521 Rome, Lazio, Papal States | 69 / 69 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Supported by the Spanish. Shortest-reigning pope; died before coronation. Set the first known worldwide smoking ban, banning smoking in and near all churches. | |
229 |
5 December 1590 – 16 October 1591 (315 days) |
Gregory XIV GREGORIVS Quartus Decimus |
Niccolò Sfondrati | 11 February 1535 Somma Lombardo, Lombardy, Duchy of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 55 / 56 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Milan. Modified the constitution Effraenatam of Sixtus V so that the penalty for abortion did not apply until the foetus became animated (1591). Made gambling on papal elections punishable by excommunication. | |
230 |
29 October 1591 – 30 December 1591 (62 days) |
Innocent IX INNOCENTIVS Nonus |
Giovanni Antonio Facchinetti | 20 July 1519 Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Papal States | 72 / 72 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Supported the cause of King Philip II of Spain and the Catholic League against King Henry IV of France in the French Wars of Religion. Prohibited the alienation of church property. | |
231 |
30 January 1592 – 3 March 1605 (13 years, 32 days) |
Clement VIII CLEMENS Octavus |
Ippolito Aldobrandini | 24 February 1536 Fano, Marche, Papal States | 55 / 69 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Initiated an alliance of European Christian powers to partake in the war with the Ottoman Empire known as The Long War (1595). Convened the Congregatio de Auxiliis which addressed doctrinal disputes between the Dominicans and Jesuits regarding free will and divine grace.[33] |
17th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
232 |
1 April 1605 – 27 April 1605 (26 days) |
Leo XI LEO Undecimus |
Alessandro Ottaviano de' Medici | 2 June 1535 Florence, Duchy of Florence, Holy Roman Empire | 69 / 69 | Born as a subject of the Duchy of Florence. The great-nephew of Leo X. Called "Papa Lampo" (Lightning Pope) for his brief pontificate. | |
233 |
16 May 1605 – 28 January 1621 (15 years, 257 days) |
Paul V PAVLVS Quintus |
Camillo Borghese | 17 September 1550 Rome, Lazio, Papal States | 55 / 70 | Motto: Absit nisi in te gloriari ("May it be absent, except to glory in you")[34]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Known for various building projects which included the facade of St Peter's Basilica. Established the Bank of the Holy Spirit (1605); restored the Aqua Traiana. During his pontificate Galileo's scientific contributions caused difficulties for theologians and natural philosophers of the time, as they contradicted scientific and philosophical ideas based on those of Aristotle and Ptolemy and closely associated with the Catholic Church at that time. Not all Catholic priests at the time were against Galileo's discoveries. Christoph Grienberger, one of the Jesuit scholars, was sympathetic to Galileo's theories, but was invited to defend the Aristotelian point of view by Claudio Acquaviva, the Jesuits' Father General. Not all scientists at the time supported Galileo. Opposition from Tycho Brahe and others arose from the fact that, if heliocentrism were true, an annual stellar parallax should be observed, although no such evidence existed at the time. (Only in 1838 was Friedrich Bessel able to accurately observe it.) Galileo's arguments – based on sunspots and the action of tides – were flawed and were refuted and rejected by other scholars at the time. | |
234 |
9 February 1621 – 8 July 1623 (2 years, 149 days) |
Gregory XV GREGORIVS Quintus Decimus |
Alessandro Ludovisi | 9 January 1554 Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, Papal States | 67 / 69 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Established the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith (1622). Issued the bull Aeterni Patris (1621) which imposed conclaves to be by secret ballot. Issued the constitution Omnipotentis Dei against magicians and witches (1623). | |
235 |
6 August 1623 – 29 July 1644 (20 years, 358 days) |
Urban VIII VRBANVS Octavus |
Maffeo Barberini | 5 April 1568 Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 55 / 76 | Born as a subject of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Trial against Galileo Galilei. The last pope to expand papal territory by force of arms. Issued a 1624 bill that made the use of tobacco in holy places punishable by excommunication. | |
236 |
15 September 1644 – 7 January 1655 (10 years, 114 days) |
Innocent X INNOCENTIVS Decimus |
Giovanni Battista Pamphilj | 6 May 1574 Rome, Lazio, Papal States | 70 / 80 | Motto: Alleviatæ sunt aquæ super terram ("Water on earth")[35]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. The great-great-great-grandson of Alexander VI. Erected the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi in Piazza Navona. Promulgated the apostolic constitution Cum occasione (1653) which condemned five doctrines of Jansenism as heresy. | |
237 |
7 April 1655 – 22 May 1667 (12 years, 45 days) |
Alexander VII ALEXANDER Septimus |
Fabio Chigi | 13 February 1599 Siena, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 56 / 68 | Born as a subject of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Great-nephew of Paul V. Commissioned St. Peter's Square. Issued the constitution Sollicitudo Omnium Ecclesiarum that set the doctrine of the Immaculate Conception almost identical to that of Pius IX centuries later. | |
238 |
20 June 1667 – 9 December 1669 (2 years, 172 days) |
Clement IX CLEMENS Nonus |
Giulio Rospigliosi | 28 January 1600 Pistoia, Grand Duchy of Tuscany, Holy Roman Empire | 67 / 69 | Motto: Aliis non sibi Clemens ("Clement to others, not to himself")[36]
Born as a subject of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Mediated in the peace of Aachen (1668). | |
239 |
29 April 1670 – 22 July 1676 (6 years, 84 days) |
Clement X CLEMENS Decimus |
Emilio Bonaventura Altieri | 13 July 1590 Rome, Lazio, Papal States | 79 / 86 | Motto: Bonum auget malum minuit ("He increases good and diminishes evil")[37]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Canonized the first saint from the Americas: St. Rose of Lima (1671). Decorated the bridge of Sant' Angelo with the ten statues of angels and added one of the two fountains that adorn the piazza of St. Peter's. Established regulations for the removal of relics of saints from cemeteries. | |
240 |
21 September 1676 – 12 August 1689 (12 years, 325 days) |
Bl. Innocent XI INNOCENTIVS Undecimus |
Benedetto Odescalchi | 16 May 1611 Como, Lombardy, Duchy of Milan, Holy Roman Empire | 65 / 78 | Motto: Avarus non Implebitur ("The covetous man is not satisfied")[38]
Born as a subject of the Duchy of Milan. Condemned the doctrine of mental reservation (1679) and initiated the Holy League. Extended the Holy Name of Mary as a universal feast (1684). Admired for positive contributions to catechesis. During his pontificate Isaac Newton published the Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, which placed heliocentrism on a firm theoretical foundation. | |
241 |
6 October 1689 – 1 February 1691 (1 year, 118 days) |
Alexander VIII ALEXANDER Octavus |
Pietro Vito Ottoboni | 22 April 1610 Venice, Republic of Venice | 79 / 80 | Citizen of the Republic of Venice. Condemned the so-called philosophical sin (1690). | |
242 |
12 July 1691 – 27 September 1700 (9 years, 77 days) |
Innocent XII INNOCENTIVS Duodecimus |
Antonio Pignatelli, O.F.S | 13 March 1615 Spinazzola, Apulia, Kingdom of Naples | 76 / 85 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Issued the bull Romanum decet Pontificem to stop nepotism (1692). Erected various charitable and educational institutions. |
18th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
243 |
23 November 1700 – 19 March 1721 (20 years, 116 days) |
Clement XI CLEMENS Undecimus |
Giovanni Francesco Albani | 23 July 1649 Urbino, Marche, Papal States | 51 / 71 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. The Chinese Rites controversy. Patronized the first archaeological excavations in the Roman catacombs and made the feast of the Immaculate Conception universal. The Inquisition's ban on reprinting Galileo's works was lifted in 1718 when permission was granted to publish an edition of his works (excluding the condemned Dialogue) in Florence.[16][39] | |
244 |
8 May 1721 – 7 March 1724 (2 years, 304 days) |
Innocent XIII INNOCENTIVS Tertius Decimus |
Michelangelo dei Conti | 13 May 1655 Poli, Lazio, Papal States | 65 / 68 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Prohibited the Jesuits from prosecuting their mission in China ordering that no new members should be received into the order. Issued the papal bull Apostolici Ministerii (1724) to revive ecclesiastical discipline in Spain. | |
245 |
29 May 1724 – 21 February 1730 (5 years, 268 days) |
Servant of God Benedict XIII BENEDICTVS Tertius Decimus |
Pietro Francesco Orsini, O.P. | 2 February 1649 Gravina in Puglia, Bari, Kingdom of Naples | 75 / 81 | Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Naples. Member of the Dominican Order; third and last member of the Orsini family to be pope. Originally called Benedict XIV due to the antipope but reverted to XIII. Repealed the worldwide tobacco smoking ban set by Urban VII and Urban VIII. During his pontificate James Bradley discovered the stellar aberration, proving the relative motion of the Earth in its orbit around the Sun. | |
246 |
12 July 1730 – 6 February 1740 (9 years, 209 days) |
Clement XII CLEMENS Duodecimus |
Lorenzo Corsini, O.F.S | 7 April 1652 Florence, Grand Duchy of Tuscany | 78 / 87 | Motto: Dabis discernere inter malum et bonum ("You shall deign to distinguish between good and evil")[40]
Born as a subject of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany. Completed the new façade of the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran (1735). Commissioned the Trevi Fountain in Rome (1732). Condemned Freemasonry in In eminenti apostolatus (1738). | |
247 |
17 August 1740 – 3 May 1758 (17 years, 259 days) |
Benedict XIV BENEDICTVS Quartus Decimus |
Prospero Lorenzo Lambertini | 31 March 1675 Bologna, Papal States | 65 / 83 | Motto: Curabuntur omnes ("All will be healed")[41]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Reformed the education of priests and the calendar of feasts. Completed the Trevi Fountain and affirmed the teachings of Thomas Aquinas; founded academies of art, religion and science. Authorized the publication of an edition of Galileo's complete scientific works which included a mildly censored version of the Dialogue. | |
248 |
6 July 1758 – 2 February 1769 (10 years, 211 days) |
Clement XIII CLEMENS Tertius Decimus |
Carlo della Torre di Rezzonico | 7 March 1693 Venice, Republic of Venice | 65 / 75 | Citizen of the Republic of Venice. Provided the famous fig leaves on nude male statues in the Vatican. Defended the Society of Jesus in "Apostolicum pascendi" (1765). During his pontificate (or at the end of his predecessor's pontificate), the general prohibition against works advocating heliocentrism was removed from the Index of prohibited books, although the specific ban on uncensored versions of the Dialogue and Copernicus's De Revolutionibus remained. | |
249 |
19 May 1769 – 22 September 1774 (5 years, 126 days) |
Clement XIV CLEMENS Quartus Decimus |
Giovanni Vincenzo Antonio Ganganelli, O.F.M. Conv. | 31 October 1705 Sant' Arcangelo di Romagna, Papal States |
63 / 68 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Conventual Franciscan Order. Suppressed the Society of Jesus in the brief "Dominus ac Redemptor" (1773). | |
250 |
15 February 1775 – 29 August 1799 (24 years, 195 days) |
Pius VI PIVS Sextus |
Count Giovanni Angelo Braschi | 25 December 1717 Cesena, Emilia-Romagna, Papal States | 57 / 81 | Motto: Floret in domo domini ("It blossoms in the house of God")[42]
Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Condemned the French Revolution; expelled from the Papal States by French troops from 1798 until his death. The last pope to be a patron of Renaissance art. During his pontificate, the astronomer William Herschel, studying the movement of stars, was the first to realize that the Solar System is moving in space, and determined the approximate direction of movement. Also discovered that the Milky Way (which in the late 18th century was believed to be the entire Universe) is flat, disk-shaped and with the Sun at its center (assertion discovered to be wrong decades later, because today it is known that the Sun is not located in the Galactic Center). | |
— | 29 August 1799 – 14 March 1800 (197 days) |
Interregnum | Six-month period without a valid pope elected. This was due to unique logistical problems (the old pope died a prisoner and the conclave was in Venice) and a deadlock among cardinals voting. |
19th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
251 |
14 March 1800 – 20 August 1823 (23 years, 159 days) |
Servant of God Pius VII PIVS Septimus |
Count Barnaba Niccolò Maria Luigi Chiaramonti, O.S.B. | 14 August 1742 Cesena, Emilia-Romagna, Papal States | 57 / 81 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Member of the Order of Saint Benedict. Present at Napoleon's coronation as emperor of the French. Expelled from the Papal States by the French between 1809 and 1814. | |
252 |
28 September 1823 – 10 February 1829 (5 years, 135 days) |
Leo XII LEO Duodecimus |
Count Annibale Francesco Clemente Melchiore Girolamo Nicola Sermattei della Genga | 22 August 1760 Genga, Marche, Papal States | 63 / 68 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Placed the Catholic educational system under the control of the Jesuits through Quod divina sapientia (1824). Condemned the Bible societies. | |
253 |
31 March 1829 – 30 November 1830 (1 year, 244 days) |
Pius VIII PIVS Octavus |
Francesco Saverio Castiglioni | 20 November 1761 Cingoli, Marche, Papal States | 67 / 69 | Subject and later the sovereign of the Papal States. Accepted Louis Philippe I as king of the French. Condemned the masonic secret societies and modernist biblical translations in the brief Litteris altero (1830). | |
254 |
2 February 1831 – 1 June 1846 (15 years, 119 days) |
Gregory XVI GREGORIVS Sextus Decimus |
Bartolomeo Alberto Cappellari, O.S.B. Cam. | 18 September 1765 Belluno, Veneto, Republic of Venice | 65 / 80 | Citizen of the Republic of Venice. Member of the Camaldolese; last non-bishop to be elected to the papacy. Politically opposed democratic and modernising reforms in the Papal States. Regarding scientific thinking, all traces of official opposition to heliocentrism by the church disappeared in 1835 when the uncensored versions of Dialogue and De Revolutionibus were finally dropped from the Index. | |
255 |
16 June 1846 – 7 February 1878 (31 years, 236 days) |
Bl. Pius IX PIVS Nonus |
Count Giovanni Maria Mastai-Ferretti, O.F.S. | 13 May 1792 Senigallia, Marche, Papal States | 54 / 85 | Subject and later the last sovereign of the Papal States, becoming an Italian citizen. Opened the First Vatican Council; lost the Papal States to Italy. Defined the dogma of the Immaculate Conception and defined papal infallibility. Issued the controversial Syllabus of Errors. Longest-serving pope since Peter (c. AD 30–64).
During his pontificate, Augustinian friar Gregor Mendel published the Experiments on Plant Hybridization and Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species. At the time, no high-level Church pronouncement attacked head-on the theory of evolution as applied to non-human species.[43] Even before the development of the scientific method, Catholic theology had allowed for biblical texts to be read as allegorical rather than literal where they appeared to contradict that which could be established by science or reason. Thus, Catholicism has been able to refine its understanding of scripture in light of scientific discoveries.[44][45] | |
256 |
20 February 1878 – 20 July 1903 (25 years, 150 days) |
Leo XIII LEO Tertius Decimus |
Gioacchino Vincenzo Raffaele Luigi Pecci, O.F.S. | 2 March 1810 Carpineto Romano, Lazio, French Empire | 67 / 93 | Motto: Lumen in coelo ("Light in Heaven") Born as a French citizen, of Italian ethnicity, later became a subject of the Papal States and finally an Italian citizen. Issued the encyclical Rerum novarum; supported Christian democracy against Communism. Had the third-longest reign after Pius IX, and John Paul II. Promoted the rosary and the scapular and approved two new Marian scapulars; first pope to fully embrace the concept of Mary as mediatrix. First Pope to be filmed by a motion picture camera and the first pope with voice recorded. |
20th century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
257 |
4 August 1903 – 20 August 1914 (11 years, 16 days) |
St Pius X PIVS Decimus |
Giuseppe Melchiorre Sarto | 2 June 1835 Riese, Treviso, Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia | 68 / 79 | Motto: Instaurare Omnia in Christo ("Restore all things in Christ")
Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, later became an Italian citizen. Encouraged and expanded reception of the Eucharist. Combatted Modernism; issued the oath against it. Advocated the Gregorian Chant and reformed the Roman Breviary. | |
258 |
3 September 1914 – 22 January 1922 (7 years, 141 days) |
Benedict XV BENEDICTVS Quintus Decimus |
Giacomo Paolo Giovanni Battista Della Chiesa | 21 November 1854 Pegli, Genoa, Kingdom of Sardinia | 59 / 67 | Motto: In te, Domine, speravi: non confundar in aeternum. ("In thee, o Lord, have I trusted: let me not be confounded for evermore.")
Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Sardinia, later became an Italian citizen. Credited for intervening for peace during World War I. Issued the 1917 Code of Canon Law; supported the missionaries in Maximum illud. Remembered by Benedict XVI as a "prophet of peace". | |
259 |
6 February 1922 – 10 February 1939 (17 years, 4 days) |
Pius XI PIVS Undecimus |
Achille Ambrogio Damiano Ratti | 31 May 1857 Desio, Milan, Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia | 64 / 81 | Motto: Pax Christi in Regno Christi ("The Peace of Christ in the Kingdom of Christ")
Born as a subject of the Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, later became an Italian citizen. Signed the Lateran Treaty with Italy (1929) establishing Vatican City as a sovereign state. Inaugurated Vatican Radio (1931). Re-founded the Pontifical Academy of Sciences (1936). Created the feast of Christ the King. Opposed Communism and Nazism. | |
260 |
2 March 1939 – 9 October 1958 (19 years, 221 days) |
Ven. Pius XII PIVS Duodecimus |
Eugenio Maria Giuseppe Giovanni Pacelli | 2 March 1876 Rome, Italy | 63 / 82 | Motto: Opus Justitiae Pax ("The work of justice [shall be] peace")
Italian citizen. Invoked papal infallibility in the encyclical Munificentissimus Deus; defined the dogma of the Assumption. Eliminated the Italian majority of cardinals. Credited with intervening for peace during World War II; controversial for his reactions to the Holocaust. Published the Humani generis, the first encyclical to specifically refer to evolution and took up a neutral position, concentrating on human evolution: "The Church does not forbid that ... research and discussions, on the part of men experienced in both fields, take place with regard to the doctrine of evolution, in as far as it inquires into the origin of the human body as coming from pre-existent and living matter."[46] | |
261 |
28 October 1958 – 3 June 1963 (4 years, 218 days) |
St John XXIII IOANNES Vicesimus Tertius |
Angelo Giuseppe Roncalli | 25 November 1881 Sotto il Monte, Bergamo, Italy | 76 / 81 | Motto: Obedientia et Pax ("Obedience and peace")
Italian citizen. Opened the Second Vatican Council; called "Good Pope John". Issued the encyclical Pacem in terris (1963) on peace and nuclear disarmament; intervened for peace during the Cuban Missile Crisis (1962). | |
262 |
21 June 1963 – 6 August 1978 (15 years, 46 days) |
St Paul VI PAVLVS Sextus |
Giovanni Battista Enrico Antonio Maria Montini | 26 September 1897 Concesio, Brescia, Italy | 65 / 80 | Motto: Cum Ipso in Monte ("With Him on the mount")
Italian citizen. Last pope to be crowned. First pope since 1809 to travel outside Italy. Closed the Second Vatican Council. Issued the encyclical Humanae vitae (1968) condemning artificial contraception. Revised the Roman Missal (1969). | |
263 |
26 August 1978 – 28 September 1978 (33 days) |
Bl. John Paul I IOANNES PAVLVS Primus |
Albino Luciani | 17 October 1912 Forno di Canale, Belluno, Italy | 65 / 65 | Motto: Humilitas ("Humility")
Italian citizen. Abolished the coronation and opted for the papal inauguration. First pope to use 'the First' in papal name; first with two names for two immediate predecessors. Last pope to use the sedia gestatoria. | |
264 |
16 October 1978 – 2 April 2005 (26 years, 168 days) |
St John Paul II IOANNES PAVLVS Secundus |
Karol Józef Wojtyła | 18 May 1920 Wadowice, Poland | 58 / 84 | Motto: Totus Tuus ("Totally yours")
Polish citizen, first pope of Slavic origin. First non-Italian pope since Adrian VI (1522–1523). Travelled extensively, visiting 129 countries during his pontificate. Second-longest reign after Pius IX. Founded World Youth Day (1984) and the Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences (1994). Canonized more saints than any of his predecessors. Youngest individual to start his papacy since Pius IX (1846). |
3rd millennium
edit21st century
editPontiff number |
Pontificate | Portrait | Name: English · Latin |
Personal name | Date and Place of birth | Age at start/ end of papacy |
Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
265 |
19 April 2005 – 28 February 2013 (7 years, 315 days) |
Benedict XVI BENEDICTVS Sextus Decimus |
Joseph Aloisius Ratzinger | 16 April 1927 Marktl, Bavaria, Germany |
78 / 85 (†95) | Motto: Cooperatores Veritatis ("Cooperators of the truth")
German citizen. Oldest to become pope since Clement XII (1730). Elevated the Tridentine Mass to a more prominent position and promoted the use of Latin; re-introduced several disused papal garments. Authorized the creation of Anglican ordinariates (2009). First pope to renounce the papacy on his own initiative since Celestine V (1294),[47] becoming pope emeritus.[48] Longest-lived pope on record. Died on 31 December 2022, in Vatican.[49] | |
266 |
13 March 2013 – present (11 years, 281 days) |
Francis FRANCISCVS |
Jorge Mario Bergoglio, S.J. | Flores, Buenos Aires, Argentina | 17 December 193676 | Motto: Miserando atque Eligendo ("Lowly but chosen", literally 'by having mercy, by choosing him')[50]
Argentine citizen. First pope to be born outside Europe since Gregory III (731–741) and the first from the Americas; first pope from the Southern Hemisphere. First pope from a religious institute since Gregory XVI (1831–1846); first Jesuit pope. First to use a new and non-composed regnal name since Lando (913–914). First pope to visit and celebrate a mass on the Arabian Peninsula.[51] |
Religious orders
edit51 popes and 6 antipopes (in italics) have been members of religious orders, including 12 members of third orders. They are listed by order as follows:
Numbering of popes
editRegnal numbers follow the usual convention for European monarchs. The first pope who chooses a unique name is not usually identified by an ordinal, John Paul I being the exception. Antipopes are treated as pretenders, and their numbers are reused by those considered to be legitimate popes. However, there are anomalies in the numbering of the popes. Several numbers were mistakenly increased in the Middle Ages because the records were misunderstood. Several antipopes were also kept in the sequence, either by mistake or because they were previously considered to be true popes.[52]
- Alexander: Antipope Alexander V (1409–1410) was listed in the Annuario Pontificio as a legitimate pope until the 20th century,[53] when the Pisan popes were reclassified as antipopes. There had already been three more Alexanders by then, so there is now a gap in the numbering sequence.
- Benedict: Antipope Benedict X (1058–1059) was kept in the numbering sequence.[54]
- Boniface: Antipope Boniface VII (974 and 984–985) was kept in the numbering sequence.[54]
- Donus: The name has only been used by one pope. The apocryphal Pope Donus II resulted from confusion between the Latin word dominus (lord) and the name Donus.
- Felix: Antipope Felix II (356–357) was kept in the numbering sequence.[54]
- John: The numbering of the Popes John is particularly confused. In the modern sequence, they are identified by the numbers they used during their reigns.
- Antipope John XVI (997–998) was kept in the numbering sequence.[54]
- Pope John XXI (1276–1277) chose to skip the number XX, believing that there had been another Pope John between XIV and XV. In reality, John XIV had been counted twice.[55]
- By the 16th century, the numbering error had been conflated with legends about a female Pope Joan, whom some authors called John VIII. She was never listed in the Annuario Pontificio.[56]
- Antipope John XXIII (1410–1415) was listed in the Annuario Pontificio as a legitimate pope until the 20th century.[53] After the Pisan popes were classified as antipopes, Pope John XXIII (1958–1963) chose to reuse the number, citing "twenty-two [sic] Johns of indisputable legitimacy."[57]
- Martin: Pope Martin I (649–655) is followed by Martin IV (1281–1285). Due to the similarity between the Latin names Marinus and Martinus, Marinus I and Marinus II were mistakenly considered to be Martin II and III.[58]
- Stephen: Pope-elect Stephen (752) died before being consecrated. He was previously known as Stephen II, but the Vatican removed him from the official list of popes in 1961.[55] The remaining Stephens are now numbered Pope Stephen II (752–757) to Pope Stephen IX (1057–1058).
See also
editLists
edit- List of canonized popes
- List of popes who died violently
- List of popes by nationality
- List of popes from the Borgia family
- List of popes from the Conti family
- List of popes from the Medici family
- List of popes sorted alphabetically
- List of sexually active popes
- List of Sovereigns of the Vatican City State
- List of popes (graphical)
Notes
edit- ^ No longer inhabited; located in the present-day Golan Heights.
- ^ Now Volterra, Italy.
- ^ Roman citizenship was recognized to the rest of the Italians by the end of the Social War in 87 BC.
- ^ a b c Now Athens, Greece.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Now Rome, Italy.
- ^ Now Bethlehem, Palestine.
- ^ a b Now Aquileia, Italy.
- ^ Now Homs, Syria.
- ^ Nicopolis is now a Roman ruin near the city of Preveza, Greece.
- ^ It is not clear when Pope Victor I was born, and where he was born, although some[11] suggest he was born in Leptis Magna, now a part of Libya.
References
edit- ^ Annuario Pontificio (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2012 ISBN 978-88-209-8722-0), p. 12
- ^ "Corrections Made to Official List of Popes". ZENIT. 5 June 2001. Archived from the original on 19 January 2009. Retrieved 21 October 2008.
- ^ "Papal Primacy of honour: titles and insignia". Newadvent.org. 1 June 1911. Archived from the original on 31 May 2018. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ^ Lipsius, Richard Adelbert (1869). Chronologie der römischen Bischöfe bis zur Mitte des vierten Jahrhunderts [Chronology of the Roman bishops until the middle of the fourth century] (in German). Kiel: Schwersche Buchhandlung.
- ^ The List of Popes. The Catholic Encyclopedia, 1911. The exception is Saint Peter, who is given the traditional death date of AD 67.
- ^ a b Fahlbusch, Erwin; et al., eds. (2005). "Pope, Papacy". Evangelisches Kirchenlexikon [The encyclopedia of Christianity]. Vol. 4. Translated by Bromiley, Geoffrey William. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. pp. 272–282. ISBN 978-0-8028-2416-5. Retrieved 7 September 2011.
- ^ Against Heresies 3:3.3
- ^ Kirsch, Johann Peter (1910). "Pope St. Linus". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 9. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Archived from the original on 9 May 2012. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
- ^ The fourth pope Archived 8 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine Discussed in the article on Clement I
- ^ Cross, Frank Leslie; Livingstone, Elizabeth A. (2005). The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Oxford University Press. p. 363. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3. Archived from the original on 25 November 2023. Retrieved 21 October 2022.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Fisher, Max (13 March 2013). "WorldViews Sorry, Jorge Mario Bergoglio is not the first non-European pope". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 8 May 2021. Retrieved 24 November 2017.
- ^ Mcbrien, Richard P. (2006). The Pocket Guide to the Popes. HarperCollins. pp. 30–31. ISBN 978-0-06-113773-0. Archived from the original on 10 March 2024. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
- ^ "The Chronography of 354 AD. Part 13: Bishops of Rome". pp. from Theosodr Mommsen, MGH Chronica Minora I (1892), pp. 73–76. Archived from the original on 6 October 2018. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
- ^ "OCA – St Liberius the Pope of Rome". Ocafs.oca.org. Archived from the original on 29 October 2012. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
- ^ "Saint Siricius". Archived from the original on 11 April 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
- ^ a b c "Papal Timeline". 2005. Archived from the original on 20 July 2014. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ Deno John Geanakoplos (15 September 1989). Constantinople and the West: essays on the late Byzantine (Palaeologan) and Italian Renaissances and the Byzantine and Roman churches. Univ of Wisconsin Press. pp. 263–. ISBN 978-0-299-11884-6. Archived from the original on 10 March 2024. Retrieved 3 March 2012.
- ^ "Blessed Eugene III". Archived from the original on 11 July 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
- ^ For the dates of death of Clement III and the election of Celestine III see Katrin Baaken: Zu Wahl, Weihe und Krönung Papst Cölestins III. Deutsches Archiv für Erforschung des Mittelalters Volume 41 / 1985, pp. 203–211
- ^ Philip Hughes, "Innocent III & the Latin East", History of the Church, vol. 2, p. 371, Sheed & Ward, 1948.
- ^ Loughlin, JF (1908). "Pope St. Celestine V". . Vol. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Archived from the original on 9 May 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2022.
- ^ Ott, Michael. "Pope Gregory XII." The Catholic Encyclopedia Archived 2 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 30 December 2015
- ^ Kelly, J. N. D.; Walsh, Michael (2015). Dictionary of Popes. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-104479-3. Archived from the original on 10 March 2024. Retrieved 18 October 2020.
- ^ "Clement (VIII) | antipope". 24 December 2023. Archived from the original on 4 July 2020. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
- ^ The Deaths of the Popes: Comprehensive Accounts, Including Funerals, Burial Places and Epitaphs. McFarland. 2010. ISBN 978-0-7864-6116-5. Archived from the original on 7 April 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
- ^ Papal Genealogy: The Families and Descendants of the Popes. McFarland. 2004. ISBN 978-0-7864-2071-1. Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
- ^ "Amadeus VIII | antipope and duke of Savoy". 3 January 2024. Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
- ^ "Nicholas V | Vatican Library & Dum Diversas". 11 November 2023. Archived from the original on 20 December 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
- ^ "Pope Adrian VI (1522–1523)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 21 July 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
- ^ "Pope Clement VII (1523–1534)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 21 July 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
- ^ "Pope Paul IV (1555–1559)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 21 July 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
- ^ "Pope Gregory XIII (1572–1585)". Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ John Henry Blunt (1874). "Jansenists". Dictionary of Sects, Heresies, Ecclesiastical Parties, and Schools of Religious Thought. Rivingtons. pp. 234–240. Archived from the original on 10 March 2024. Retrieved 11 August 2012.
- ^ "Pope Alexander VII (1655–1667)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 2 July 2018. Retrieved 1 April 2014.
- ^ "Pope Innocent X (1644–1655)". Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ "Pope Clement IX (1667–1669)". Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ "Pope Clement X (1670–1676)". Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ "Pope Innocent XI (1676–1689)". Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 3 August 2014.
- ^ Heilbron, John L. (2005). "Censorship of Astronomy in Italy after Galileo". In McMullin, Ernan (ed.). The Church and Galileo. University of Notre Dame Press. p. 299. ISBN 978-0-268-03483-2.
- ^ "Pope Clement XII (1730–1740)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 10 August 2023. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
- ^ "Pope Benedict XIV (1740–1758)". GCatholic. Archived from the original on 26 March 2023. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
- ^ "The Wind was too Strong". Rome Art Lover. Archived from the original on 5 March 2016. Retrieved 12 February 2014.
- ^ Harrison, especially Conclusion section 2
- ^ "Catholic Education Resource Center". Archived from the original on 13 January 2021. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ "The Contemporary Relevance of Augustine". Archived from the original on 12 July 2018. Retrieved 7 August 2023.
- ^ Pius XII, encyclical Humani generis 36 Archived April 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Brown, Andrew (11 February 2013). "Benedict, the placeholder pope who leaves a battered, weakened church". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 1 March 2013. Retrieved 12 February 2013.
- ^ Pianigiani, Gaia; Povoledo, Elisabetta (27 February 2013). "Benedict XVI to Keep His Name and Become Pope Emeritus". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 21 July 2018. Retrieved 27 February 2017.
- ^ "The 95-year-old Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI passed away at the Vatican's Mater Ecclesiae Monastery". Vatican News. 31 December 2022. Archived from the original on 31 December 2022. Retrieved 1 January 2023.
- ^ Scarisbrick, Veronica (22 March 2013). "Pope Francis : "Miserando atque eligendo"..." Vatican Radio. The Holy See. Vatican Radio. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
- ^ "Pope Francis celebrates first papal mass in Arabian Peninsula". 5 February 2019. Archived from the original on 15 April 2023. Retrieved 6 September 2022.
- ^ Louis Duchesne, "Le nombre des papes", in: Miscellanea di storia ecclesiastica e studi ausiliare Archived 10 March 2024 at the Wayback Machine Vol. 2 (Roma: 1903–1904), pp. 3–7.
- ^ a b Annuario pontificio per l'anno 1942. Rome. 1942. p. 21.
205. Gregorio XII, Veneto, Correr (c. 1406, cessò a. 1409, m. 1417) – Pont. a. 2, m. 6. g. 4. 206. Alessandro V, dell'Isola di Candia, Filargo (c. 1409, m. 1410). - Pont. m. 10, g. 8. 207. Giovanni XXII o XXIII o XXIV, Napoletano, Cossa (c. 1410, cessò dal pontificare 29 mag. 1415
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c d Paschal Robinson (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- ^ a b Paschal Robinson (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- ^ Paschal Robinson (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
- ^ "I Choose John ..." Time. 10 November 1958. p. 91. Archived from the original on 24 November 2022. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
- ^ Paschal Robinson (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).
Sources
edit- The Early Papacy: To the Synod of Chalcedon in 451, Adrian Fortescue, Ignatius Press, 2008.
- The Oxford Dictionary of Popes, John N.D. Kelly, Oxford University Press, 1986.
- Catholicism, Henri de Lubac, Ignatius Press, 1988.
- Rome and the Eastern Churches, Aidan Nichols, Ignatius Press, 2010.
- I Papi. Venti secoli di storia, Pontificia Amministrazione della Patriarcale Basilica di San Paolo, Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2002.
- Rome Sweet Home, Scott Hahn, Ignatius Press, 1993.
- Enciclopedia dei Papi, AA.VV., Istituto dell'Enciclopedia italiana, 2000.
External links
edit- Catholic Online: The List of Popes
- Popes & Anti-Popes (2019 archived copy)