Pope
Gelasius II
Born at Gaeta, year unknown; elected 24 Jan., 1118; died at Cluny, 29 Jan., 1119. No
sooner had Paschal II ended his stormy pontificate, than the cardinals, knowing that the
emperor, Henry V, had concerted measures with a faction of the Roman nobility to force the
selection of a pliant imperial candidate, met secretly in a Benedictine monastery on the
Palatine. Having dispatched a messenger to Monte Cassino, to summon the aged chancellor,
Cardinal John of Gaeta, they turned a deaf ear to his entreaties and unanimously declared
him pope.
John was of a noble family, probably the Gaetani. Early in his life he entered the
monastery of Monte Cassino, where he made such progress in learning and became so
proficient in Latin, that, under successive pontiffs, he held the office of chancellor of
the Holy See. He was the trusted advisor of Paschal II; shared his captivity and shielded
him against the zealots who charged the pope with heresy for having, under dire
compulsion, signed the "Privilegium", which constituted the emperor lord and
master of papal and episcopal elections (see PASCHAL II and INVESTITURES). When the news
spread that the cardinals had elected a pope without consulting the emperor, the
imperialist party broke down the doors of the monastery; and their leader, Cenzio
Frangipani, seized the new pontiff by the throat, cast him to the ground, stamped on him
with spurred feet, dragged him by the hair to his neighbouring castle, and threw him,
loaded with chains, into a dungeon. Indignant at this brutal deed, the Romans rose in
their might; and, surrounding the robber's den, demanded the instant liberation of the
pontiff. Frangipani, intimidated, released the pope, threw himself at his feet, and begged
and obtained absolution. A procession was formed, and amidst shouts of joy Gelasius II (so
he termed himself) was conducted into the Lateran and enthroned.
The triumph was of short duration; for, 2 March, the formidable figure of Henry V was
seen in St. Peter's. As soon as he had heard of the proceedings at Rome, he left his army
at Lombardy and hastened to the capital. Gelasius immediately determined upon flight. On a
stormy night, the pope and his court proceeded in two galleys down the Tiber, pelted by
the imperialists with stones and arrows. After several mishaps Gelasius at length reached
Gaeta, where he was received by the Normans with open arms. Being only a deacon, he
received successively priestly ordination and episcopal consecration. Meanwhile, the
emperor, ignoring the action of the cardinals, placed on the throne of St. Peter a senile
creature of royal power, Maurice Burdinus, Archbishop of Braga in Portugal, who had the
audacity to take the venerated name of Gregory. Gelasius pronounced a solemn
excommunication against both of them; and as soon as the emperor, frustrated of his prey,
left Rome, he returned secretly; but soon took the resolution of taking refuge in France.
He went by way of Pisa, where he consecrated its splendid marble cathedral, and Genoa. He
was received by the French with the utmost reverence. The powerful minister of Louis VI,
the Abbot Suger, conducted him to the monastery of Cluny. Gelasius was perfecting plans
for the convocation of a great council at Remis, when he succumbed to pleurisy, leaving
the consummation of the fifty years' war for freedom to his successor, Callistus II.
Baronius and Reumont agree in pronouncing that no historical personage ever compressed
so many misfortunes into the short space of a year and five days. There seems to be no
reason why the Benedictine Order should not take up his case for canonization. Benedict
XIV tells us ("De Beat. et Canon.", I, xli, n. 30) that in his time the question
was mooted; but for one reason or another it was overlooked. The life of Gelasius was
written by his intimate friend, Pandulphus of Pisa, an eye-witness to what he narrates; it
is in Muratori, "Rer. ital. Scr.", III, 1 sqq.
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, II, 311-12, 376; WATTERICH, Pontificum Romanorum
Vitę (1862), II, 91-114; BARONIUS, Ann. Eccl. ad ann. 1118, 1119; GAETANI, Vita del
pontefice Gelasio II (Rome, 1802, 1811); histories of medieval Rome by GREGOROVIUS; VON
REUMONT.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by Jeffrey Palenik
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VI
Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, September 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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