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Antipope John VIII

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antipope

John VIII
Papacy began25 January 844
Papacy endedc. 25 January 844
PredecessorRoman claimant:
Gregory IV
Antipapal claimant:
Constantine II
Philip
SuccessorRoman claimant:
Sergius II
Antipapal claimant:
Anastasius III
Opposed toPope Sergius II
Other post(s)Deacon of Rome

Antipope John VIII or Antipope John was an antipope of the Roman Catholic church, in the year 844. On the death of Pope Gregory IV (25 January 844), the populace of Rome declared John, a deacon with no known links to the aristocracy as his successor.[1] They seized the Lateran Palace and enthroned him there. However, the lay aristocracy elected as pope the elderly, nobly born archpriest Sergius, ejected John from the Lateran, and swiftly crushed the opposition. Pope Sergius II's consecration was rushed through immediately, without waiting for imperial ratification from the Frankish court. Although some of his supporters wanted John put to death for what they considered his presumption, Sergius intervened to save his life and John was confined to a monastery. Nothing further is known about him.[1]

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Transcription

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Walsh, Michael J., ed. (2015), "John", A Dictionary of Popes (3 ed.), Oxford University Press, ISBN 9780191795459

Further reading

  • Liber Pontificalis, ed. L. Duchesne (Paris, 1886–92). A collection of papal biographies from St Peter to Pius II (d. 1464), compiled in its first redaction in the middle of the 6th century and extended by later hands. While much of the material embodied, especially in the earlier section, is apocryphal, the work is in the main based on valuable sources, and while it is often biased it is indispensable for the history of the papacy.
  • P. Jaffé, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum ab condita Ecclesia ad Annum post Christum natum MCXCVIII, 2nd edn. by G. Wattenbach (Leipzig, 1885–8; photo-repr. Graz, 1956)
  • P. Levillain (ed.), The Papacy: An Encyclopedia (London and New York, 2002)
  • Enciclopedia cattolica (Vatican City, 1949–54)
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This page was last edited on 17 November 2022, at 01:20
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