Pope
Urban III
Reigned 1185-87, born at Milan; died at Ferrara, 19 October, 1187. Uberto, of the noble
Milanese family of the Crivelli, was created cardinal by Lucius III in 1182 and Archbishop
of Milan in 1185. On 25 November of this year Lucius died at Verona, and the archbishop
was elected to succeed him on the same day; he was crowned on 1 December. This haste was
probably due to fear of imperial interference. Urban inherited from his predecessor a
legacy of feud with the great Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, and this was embittered by
personal enmity, for at the sack of Milan in 1162 the emperor had caused several of the
pope's relatives to be proscribed or mutilated. It has been noticed that the breach
between Lucius III and Frederick coincided with the arrival in Northern Italy (August,
1185) of Constance, the heiress of the Kingdom of Sicily, who was betrothed to Frederick's
son Henry. The marriage, which was celebrated at Milan on 4 Jan., 1186, six weeks after
Urban's accession, "constituted for the papacy the gravest check it had suffered for
a long time. By it was ruined the whole political edifice so laboriously raised by the
popes of the eleventh and twelfth centuries to keep in check the power of the Emperors in
Italy and to assure the independence of the Papal States" (Chalandon, II, 390). By
this marriage was lost that Norman support on which the papacy had so long relied in its
contest with the empire. Nor was this the only cause of quarrel. The treaty of 1177 had
left unsettled the question of the succession to the estates of Matilda of Tuscany, while
Frederick had seized the revenues of vacant German bishoprics and suppressed nunneries for
the sake of their property.
Urban maintained the refusal of Lucius III to crown Henry, and the Patriarch of
Aquileia was induced by the emperor to perform the office, although it belonged to the
pope in right of the Archbishopric of Milan which he had retained, possibly to that end,
after his election. Urban replied by excommunicating the patriarch and the bishops who had
assisted at the ceremony. On 31 May he promoted to the cardinalate the archdeacon Folmar,
and next day consecrated him as Archbishop of Trier, contrary to a promise he had made to
the emperor, for though Folmar had been canonically elected, Frederick had granted
investiture to Rudolf, the candidate of the minority. The emperor clossed the passes of
the Alps against the pope's messengers to Germany, and sent Henry to ravage the Papal
States. Urban had hoped for support from the German bishops, but at the Diet of Gelnhausen
(April or May, 1187), from which the papal legate, Philip von Heinsberg, Archbishop of
Cologne, was excluded, Frederick won the bishops to his side and caused them to send
letters to the pope urging him "to do justice to the Emperor in those things which
were justly demanded of him" (Arnold of Lübeck, III, 18). Urban replied by summoning
the emperor to appear before his tribunal at Verona, and was only prevented from
pronouncing excommunication against him by the Veronese, who, as Frederick's subjects,
would not permit the sentence to be promulgated in their city. Urban set out for Venice,
where he would have been able to carry out his threat, but died at Ferrara, after a
pontificate of a year and eleven months. His death is ascribed by Benedict of Peterborough
to grief at the news of the utter defeat of the crusaders at the battle of Hattin, and it
is commonly stated that it was caused by the news of the fall of Jerusalem, but William of
Newburgh assures us that the report of the disaster of Hattin (3-4 July) did not reach the
Holy See till after the election of Gregory VIII, so it is hardly probable that Urban III
ever heard of the surrender of the Holy City which took place on 2 October.
A curious story is told by Peter of Blois, Archdeacon of Bath, who claims to have been
intimate with the pope ("in scholis Urbani socius et descipulus fueram
Maldyebyrig") and connects his death with his wrath against Baldwin, Archbishop of
Canterbury. At the very beginning of his pontificate Urban had granted the request made to
his predecessor by Henry II of England, and appointed Baldwin Apostolic legate in the
Province of Canterbury, but in the latter's quarrel with the monks of his cathedral the
pope had taken the part of the monks, and the archbishop had proved obdurate. Perhaps this
was not the only cause of the pope's anger; for Baldwin, moved probably by jealousy, had
persuaded the king to conduct back to Normandy the legates sent to crown John as King of
Ireland (Benedict of Peterborough, "Gesta regis Henrici Secundi"). The pope even
sent a gold crown ("coronam auro contextam") for this purpose. He exerted
himself to bring about peace between England and France, and on 23 June, 1187, his legates
by threats of excommunication prevented a pitched battle between the armies of the rival
kings near Châteauroux, and brought about a two years' truce. Urban's letters show zeal
for the Holy Land and a desire to promote peace among the quarrelling Christian potentates
of Syria. Unfortunately, it cannot be ascertained whether the interesting letter addressed
to Philip of France (Jaffé, "Regesta", 15,924) really belongs to this pope. The
number of privileges in favour of the Knights Hospitallers is remarkable. The letters and
privileges of Urban III are given in P.L., CCII. His tomb, "a handsome sarcophagus
resting on four columns" (Gregorovius), may still be seen in Ferrara cathedral.
RAYMUND WEBSTER
Transcribed by Carol Kerstner
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XV
Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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