Pope
Benedict III
Date of birth unknown; d. 17 April, 858. The election of the learned and ascetic Roman,
Benedict, the son of Peter, was a troubled one. On the death of Leo IV (17 July, 855)
Benedict was chosen to succeed him, and envoys were despatched to secure the ratification
of the decree of election by the Emperors Lothaire and Louis II. But the legates betrayed
their trust and allowed themselves to be influenced in favour of the ambitious and
excommunicated Cardinal Anastasius. The imperial missi, gained over in turn by them,
endeavoured to force Anastasius on the Roman Church. Benedict was insulted and imprisoned.
Most of the clergy and people, however, remained true to him, and the missi had to yield.
Benedict was accordingly consecrated on the 29th of September, or 6th of October, 855, and
though his rival was condemned by a synod, he admitted him to lay communion. Owing to
dissensions and attacks from without, the kingdom of the Franks was in disorder, and the
Church within its borders was oppressed. Benedict wrote to the Frankish bishops,
attributing much of the misery in the empire to their silence (cf. "Capitularia regum
Francorum", ed. Boretius, II, 424); and to lessen its internal evils endeavoured to
curb the powerful subdeacon Hubert (Ep. Bened., in Mon. Germ. Epp., V, 612), who was the
brother-in-law of Lothaire II, King of Lorraine, and defied the laws of God and man till
he was slain, in 864. In an appeal made to Benedict from the East, he held the balance
fair between St. Ignatius, Patriarch of Constantinople, and Gregory, Bishop of Syracuse.
He was visited by the Ango-Saxon King Ethelwulf with his famous son Alfred, and completed
the restoration of the Schola Anglorum, destroyed by fire in 847. He continued the work of
repairing the damage done to the churches in Rome by the Saracen raid of 846. He was
buried near the principal gate of St. Peter's. One of his coins proves there was no Pope
Joan between Leo IV and himself [Garampi, "De nummo argenteo Bened. III" (Rome,
1749)].
The most important source for the history of the first nine popes who bore the name of
Benedict is the biographies in the Liber Pontificalis, of which the most useful edition is
that of Duchesne, Le Liber Pontificalis (Paris, 1886-92), and the latest that of Mommsen,
Gesta Pontif. Roman. (to the end of the reign of Constantine only, Berlin, 1898). Jaffé,
Regesta Pont. Rom. (2d ed., Leipzig, 1885), gives a summary of the letters of each pope
and tells where they may be read at length. Modern accounts of these popes will be found
in any large Church history, or history of the City of Rome. The fullest account in
English of most of them is to be read in Mann, Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages
(London, 1902, passim).
HORACE K. MANN
Transcribed by Kryspin J. Turczynski
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume II
Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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