Pope
St. Nicholas I
Born at Rome, date unknown; died 13 November, 867; one of the great popes of the Middle
Ages, who exerted decisive influence upon the historical development of the papacy and its
position among the Christian nations of Western Europe. He was of a distinguished family,
being the son of the Defensor Theodore, and received an excellent training. Already
distinguished for his piety, benevolence, ability, knowledge, and eloquence, he entered,
at an early age, the service of the Church, was made subdeacon by Pope Sergius II
(844-47), and deacon by Leo IV (847-55). After Benedict's death (7 April, 858) the Emperor
Louis II, who was in the neighbourhood of Rome, came into the city to exert his influence
upon the election. On 24 April Nicholas was elected pope, and on the same day was
consecrated and enthroned in St. Peter's in the presence of the emperor. Three days after,
he gave a farewell banquet to the emperor, and afterward, accompanied by the Roman
nobility, visited him in his camp before the city, on which occasion the emperor came to
meet the pope and led his horse for some distance.
Christianity in Western Europe was then in a most melancholy condition. The empire of
Charlemagne had fallen to pieces, Christian territory was threatened both from the north
and the east, and Christendom seemed on the brink of anarchy. Christian morality was
despised; many bishops were worldly and unworthy of their office. There was danger of a
universal decline of the higher civilization. Pope Nicholas appeared as a conscientious
representative of the Roman Primacy in the Church. He was filled with a high conception of
his mission for the vindication of Christian morality, the defence of God's law against
powerful bishops. Archbishop John of Ravenna oppressed the inhabitants of the papal
territory, treated his suffragan bishops with violence, made unjust demands upon them for
money, and illegally imprisoned priests. He also forged documents to support his claims
against the Roman See and maltreated the papal legates. As the warnings of the pope were
without result, and the archbishop ignored a thrice-repeated summons to appear before the
papal tribunal, he was excommunicated. Having first visited the Emperor Louis at Pavia,
the archbishop repaired, with two imperial delegates. To Rome, where Nicholas cited him
before the Roman synod assembled in the autumn of 860. Upon this John fled from Rome.
Going in person to Ravenna, the pope then investigated and equitably regulated everything.
Again appealing to the emperor, the archbishop was recommended by him to submit to the
pope, which he did at the Roman Synod of November, 861. Later on, however, he entered into
a pact with the excommunicated Archbishops of Trier and Cologne, was himself again
excommunicated, and once more forced to make his submission to the pope. Another conflict
arose between Nicholas and Archbishop Hincmar of Rims: this concerned the prerogatives of
the papacy. Bishop Rothad of Soissons had appealed to the pope against the decision of the
Synod of Soissons, of 861, which had deposed him; Hincmar opposed the appeal to the pope,
but eventually had to acknowledge the right of the papacy to take cognizance of important
legal causes (causæ majores) and pass independent judgment upon them. A further
dispute broke out between Hincmar and the pope as to the elevation of the cleric Wulfad to
the archiepiscopal See of Bourges, but here, again, Hincmar finally submitted to the
decrees of the Apostolic See, and the Frankish synods passed corresponding ordinances.
Nicholas showed the same zeal in other efforts to maintain ecclesiastical discipline,
especially as to the marriage laws. Ingiltrud, wife of Count Boso, had left her husband
for a paramour; Nicholas commanded the bishops in the dominions of Charles the Bold to
excommunicate her unless she returned to her husband. As she paid no attention to the
summons to appear before the Synod of Milan in 860, she was put under the ban. The pope
was also involved in a desperate struggle with Lothair II of Lorraine over the
inviolability of marriage. Lothair had abandoned his lawful wife Theutberga to marry
Waldrada. At the Synod of Aachen, 28 April, 862, the bishops of Lorraine, unmindful of
their duty, approved of this illicit union. At the Synod of Metz, June, 863, the papal
legates, bribed by the king, assented to the Aachen decision, and condemned the absent
Theutberga. Upon this the pope brought the matter before his own tribunal. The two
archbishops, G????nther of Cologne and Thietgaud of Trier, who had come to Rome as
delegates, were summoned before the Lateran Synod of October, 863,when the pope condemned
and deposed them as well as John of Ravenna and Hagano of Bergamo. The Emperor Louis II
took up the cause of the deposed bishops, while King Lothair advanced upon Rome with an
army and laid siege to the city, so that the pope was confined for two days in St. Peter's
without food. Yet Nicholas did not waver in his determination; the emperor, after being
reconciled with the pope, withdrew from Rome and commanded the Archbishops of Trier and
Cologne to return to their homes. Nicholas never ceased from his efforts to bring about a
reconciliation between Lothair and his lawful wife, but without effect. Another
matrimonial case in which Nicholas interposed was that of Judith, daughter of Charles the
Bold, who had married Baldwin, Count of Flanders, without her father's consent. Frankish
bishops had excommunicated Judith, and Hincmar of Reims had taken sides against her, but
Nicholas urged leniency, in order to protect freedom of marriage. In many other
ecclesiastical matters, also, he issued letters and decisions, and he took active measures
against bishops who were neglectful of their duties.
In the matter of the emperor and the patriarchs of Constantinople Nicholas showed
himself the Divinely appointed ruler of the Church. In violation of ecclesiastical law,
the Patriarch Ignatius was deposed in 857 and Photius illegally raised to the patriarchal
see. In a letter addressed (8 May, 862) to the patriarchs of the East, Nicholas called
upon them and all their bishops to refuse recognition to Photius, and at a Roman synod
held in April, 863, he excommunicated Photius. He also encouraged the missionary activity
of the Church. He sanctioned the union of the Sees of Bremen and Hamburg, and confirmed to
St. Anschar, Archbishop of Bremen, and his successors the office of papal legate to the
Danes, Swedes, and Slavs. Bulgaria having been converted by Greek missionaries, its ruler,
Prince Boris, in August, 863, sent an embassy to the pope with one hundred and six
questions on the teaching and discipline of the Church. Nicholas answered these inquiries
exhaustively in the celebrated "Responsa Nicolai ad consulta Bulgarorum" (Mansi,
"Coll. Conc.", XV, 401 sqq.). The letter shows how keen was his desire to foster
the principles of an earnest Christian life in this newly-converted people. At the same
time he sent an embassy to Prince Boris, charged to use their personal efforts to attain
the pope's object. Nevertheless, Boris finally joined the Eastern Church.
At Rome, Nicholas rebuilt and endowed several churches, and constantly sought to
encourage religious life. His own personal life was guided by a spirit of earnest
Christian asceticism and profound piety. He was very highly esteemed by the citizens of
Rome, as he was by his contemporaries generally (cf. Regino, "Chronicon", ad an.
868, in "Mon. Germ. Hist." Script.", I, 579), and after death was regarded
as a saint. A much discussed question and one that is important in judging the position
taken by this pope is, whether he made use of the forged pseudo-Isidorian papal decretals.
After exhaustive investigation, Schrörs has decided that the pope wasneither acquainted
with the pseudo-Isidorian collection in its entire extent, nor did he make use of its
individual parts; that he had perhaps a general knowledge of the false decretals, but did
not base his view of the law upon them, and that he owed his knowledge of them solely to
documents which came to him from the Frankish Empire [Schrörs, "Papst Nikolaus I.
und Pseudo-Isidor" in "Historisches Jahrbuch", XXV (1904), 1 sqq.; Idem,
"Die pseudoisidorische 'Exceptio spolii' bei Papst Nikolaus I" in
"Historisches Jahrbuch", XXVI (1905), 275 sqq.].
J.P. KIRSCH
Transcribed by Chris Hidley
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XI
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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