Pope
Honorius III
(Cencio Savelli)
Born at Rome, date of birth unknown; died at Rome, 18 March, 1227. For a time he was
canon at the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, then he became papal chamberlain in 1188 and
Cardinal-Deacon of Santa Lucia in Silice in 1193. Under Pope Innocent III he became
Cardinal- Priest of Santi Giovanni et Paolo and, in 1197, tutor of the future Emperor
Frederick II, who had been given as ward to Innocent III by the Empress-widow Constantia.
On 18 July, 1216, nineteen cardinals assembled at Perugia (where Innocent had died two
days previously) with the purpose of electing a new pope. The troublous state of affairs
in Italy, the threatening attitude of the Tatars, and the fear of a schism, induced the
cardinals to agree to an election by compromise. Cardinals Ugolino of Ostia (afterwards
Gregory IX) and Guido of Praeneste were empowered to appoint the new pope. Their choice
fell upon Cencio Savelli, who accepted the tiara with reluctance and took the name of
Honorius III. He was consecrated at Perugia 24 July, was crowned at Rome 31 August, and
took possession of the Lateran 3 September. The Roman people were greatly elated at the
election, for Honorius III was himself a Roman and by his extreme kindness had endeared
himself to the hearts of all.
Though already far advanced in age, his pontificate was one of strenuous activity. Like
his famous predecessor Innocent III, he had set his mind on the achievement of two great
things, the recovery of the Holy Land and a spiritual reform of the entire Church; but
quite in contrast with him he sought these achievements by kindness and indulgence rather
than by force and severity. Immediately upon his accession to the papal throne he sent
letters to the ecclesiastical and the temporal rulers of Europe in which he admonishes and
encourages them to continue in their preparation for the general crusade which, as had
been provided at the Lateran Council of 1215, was to be undertaken in 1217. To procure the
means necessary for this colossal undertaking, the pope and the cardinals were to
contribute the tenth part, and all other ecclesiastics the twentieth part, of their income
for three years. The bishops under the supervision of the papal legates in the various
countries were entrusted with the collection of these moneys. Honorius III ordered the
crusade to be preached in all the churches of Christendom. Though the money thus collected
was considerable, it was by no means sufficient for a general crusade as planned by
Honorius III. Moreover, in preaching the crusade the great mistake was made of trying to
gather as many crusaders as possible, without considering whether they were fit for war.
The result was that cripples, old men, women, also robbers, thieves, adventurers, and
others composed a great part of the crusaders. In some instances the uselessness of such
soldiers was not thought of until they had been transported to distant seaports at public
expense. Most rulers of Europe were engaged in wars of their own and could not leave their
country for any length of time. Andrew II of Hungary and, somewhat later, a fleet of
crusaders from the region along the Lower Rhine finally departed for the Holy Land, took
Damietta and a few other places in Egypt; but lack of unity among the Christians, also
rivalry between the leaders and the papal legate Pelagius, to some extent perhaps also the
incompetency of the latter, resulted in failure.
Honorius III was aware that there was only one man in Europe who could bring about the
recovery of the Holy Land, and that man was his former pupil Frederick II of Germany. Like
many other rulers, Frederick II had taken an oath to embark for the Holy Land in 1217. As
long as his rival Otto IV was living, the pope did not urge him to fulfil his oath; when,
however, his rival had died on 19 May, 1218, Honorius III insisted that he embark as soon
as possible and Frederick promised to set sail for the Holy Land on 24 June, 1219. He then
obtained permission to postpone his departure repeatedly, first till 29 September, 1219,
then successively till 21 March, 1220, 1 May, 1220, August, 1221, June, 1225, and finally,
at the meeting of the pope and the emperor at San Germano on 25 July, 1225, till August,
1227. It must not be ascribed merely to weakness on the part of Honorius III that he
allowed one postponement after the other.
He knew that without the co-operation of the emperor a successful crusade was
impossible and feared that by using harsh measures he would cause a complete break with
the emperor and indefinitely destroy the possibility of a crusade. For the same reason he
yielded to the emperor in many things which under different circumstances he would have
strenuously opposed. Thus he reluctantly approved the election of Frederick's son Henry as
King of the Romans, which practically united the Sicilian kingdom and the empire in one
person; a union which by its very nature was detrimental to the papacy and which Honorius
III had every reason to oppose. Hoping to hasten the departure of Frederick for the Holy
Land, he crowned him emperor at Rome on 22 November, 1220. Finally, however, seeing that
his extreme indulgence was only abused by the emperor for selfish purposes, he had
recourse to severer measures. The emperor's encroachment upon the papal rights in the
appointment of bishops in Apulia, and his unworthy treatment of King John of Jerusalem,
whom Honorius III had appointed governor over part of the papal patrimony, brought the
tension between the pope and the emperor to its height; but the rupture between the
emperor and the papacy did not take place until Honorius III had died.
Though the general crusade planned by Honorius III was never realized, he deserved the
gratitude of the world as the great pacificator of his age. Knowing that the crusade was
impossible as long as the Christian princes were at war with one another, he began his
pontificate by striving to establish peace throughout Europe. In Italy there was scarcely
a city or province at peace with its neighbour. Rome itself rebelled against the rule of
Honorius, so that in June, 1219, he found it advisable to leave the city. He went first to
Rieti, then to Viterbo, returning to Rome in September, 1220, after the Romans were
reconciled to him through the intervention of Frederick II, then on his way to Rome to be
crowned emperor. In the war that followed between the Conti and the Savelli, the Romans
sided with the Conti, and the pope, being of the family of the Savelli, was again forced
to flee to Rieti in June, 1225. He returned to Rome in January, 1226, after Angelo di
Benincasa, a friend of Honorius III, was elected senator of Rome. Through his legate
Ugolino (afterwards Gregory IX) Honorius effected the reconciliation of Pisa and Genoa in
1217, Milan and Cremona in 1218, Bologna and Pistoia in 1219, and through his notary
Pandulf he prevailed upon the Duchy of Spoleto to become papal territory, and upon the
cities of Perugia, Assisi, Foligno, Nocera, and Terni, to restore what had formerly
belonged to the pope.
In England the authority of the pope was paramount ever since that country had become a
fief of the Apostolic See under Innocent III. The cruel King John had died on 16 October,
1216, leaving his ten- year-old son Henry III as successor. The cruelty and faithlessness
of King John may have justified the English barons in rebelling against him and offering
the English crown to Louis, the son of King Philip of France, but now it became their duty
to be loyal to the lawful king, Henry III. Honorius III ordered Gualo, his legate in
England, to urge the recalcitrant barons to return to their natural allegiance and gave
him power to excommunicate all who continued to adhere to Prince Louis of France. On 19
January, 1217, he wrote to William, Earl of Pembroke, who was the young king's guardian
and the regent of England, to prepare for war against Prince Louis and the faithless
English barons. It was due to the severe measures taken against the barons by the papal
legate that peace was finally restored and that Henry III was acknowledged the undisputed
King of England on 11 September, 1217. After the death of Pembroke in May, 1219, the
regency of England was nominally in the hands of the king's ministers; actually, however,
England was ruled by Honorius III through Pandulf, who had meanwhile succeeded Gualo as
papal legate in England. The influence of Honorius III continued to be paramount in
England during his entire pontificate, for Henry III was still in his minority, and he as
well as the barons and the people acknowledged the pope as the suzerain of the kingdom.
The untiring activity of Honorius III in the interests of justice and peace was felt
throughout the Christian world. In Bohemia he safeguarded the rights of the Church against
the encroachments of King Ottocar, through his legate Gregorius de Crescentio in 1223. In
Hungary he protected King Andrew II against his rebellious son Bela IV by threatening the
latter with excommunication. For Denmark he effected in 1224 the liberation of its King
Waldemar from the captivity in which he was held by Count Henry of Schwerin. In Sweden he
protected the rights of the Church against the encroachments of King John, and urged
celibacy upon the clergy. For the Latin Empire in the Orient he crowned Peter of Courtenay
as Emperor of Constantinople, in Rome on 12 April, 1217, and protected his successor
Robert and King Demetrius of Thessalonica against Theodore Comnenus. In Cyprus he abated
the quarrels between the Greeks and the Latins. In Spain he effected a lasting peace
Between King Ferdinand III and Alfonso IX of Leon, undertook a crusade against the Moors
(1218-1219), and protected the boy-king Jaime of Aragon against Counts Sancho and
Fernando. In Portugal he defended Archbishop Estevao Suarez against the excommunicated
King Alfonso II (1220-1223). In France he induced King Louis VIII to undertake a crusade
against the Albigenses in 1226. He also assisted Bishop Christian of Prussia in the
conversion of the pagan Prussians, and at the bishop's suggestion called upon the
ecclesiastical provinces of Mainz, Magdeburg, Cologne, Salzburg, Gnesen, Lund, Bremen,
Trier, and Camin in 1222 to prepare a crusade against them.
Honorius III was also a liberal patron of the two great mendicant orders and bestowed
numerous privileges upon them. He approved the Rule of St. Dominic in his Bull
"Religiosam vitam", dated 22 December, 1216, and that of St. Francis in his Bull
"Solet annuere", dated 29 November, 1223. Many authorities maintain that
Honorius III had granted the famous Portiuncula indulgence to St. Francis as early as
1216, others hold [Kirsch in "Theologische Quartalschrift", LXXXVIII (Tubingen,
1906), fasc. 1 and 2] that this indulgence is of later origin and that the indulgence
which Honorius granted to St. Francis is essentially different from the so-called
Portiuncula indulgence. On 30 January, 1226, he approved the Carmelite Order in his Bull
"Ut vivendi normam". He also approved the religious congregation "Val des
Ecoliers" (Vallis scholarium, Valley of scholars), which had been founded by four
pious professors of theology at the University of Paris. The Bull of approbation
"Exhibita nobis" is dated 7 March, 1219. The congregation was united with that
of St. Genevieve by Innocent X in 1646. It is remarkable that four out the six or seven
saints that were canonized by Honorius III were English or Irish. On 17 May, 1218, he
canonized William, Archbishop of Bourges (d. 1209); on 18 February, 1220, Hugh, Bishop of
Lincoln (d. 1200); on 21 January, 1224, William, Abbot of Roschild in Denmark (d. 1203);
on 18 March, 1226, William, Archbishop of York (d. 1154).
He also appointed a committee to investigate the alleged miracles of the Cistercian
abbot, St. Maurice of Cornoet (d. 1191). The latter was never formally canonized, but his
cult dates back to the pontificate of Honorius III. His feast is celebrated by the
Cistercians on 13 October. Honorius III probably canonized also St. Raynerius, Bishop of
Forconium, now Aquila, in Italy (d. 1077). Being a man of learning, Honorius insisted that
the clergy should receive a thorough training, especially in theology. In the case of a
certain Hugh whom the chapter of Chartres had elected bishop, he withheld his approbation
because the bishop-elect did not possess sufficient knowledge, "quum pateretur in
litteratura defectum", as the pope states in a letter dated 8 January, 1219 (Horoy,
loc. cit infra, III, 92). Another bishop he even deprived of his office on account of
illiteracy (Raynaldus, ad annum 1221). He bestowed various privileges upon the
Universities of Paris and Bologna, the two greatest seats of learning during those times.
In order to facilitate the study of theology in dioceses that were distant from the great
centres of learning, he ordered in his Bull "Super specula Domini" that some
talented young men should be sent to a recognized theological school to study theology
with the purpose of teaching it afterwards in their own dioceses.
Honorius III acquired some fame as an author. His letters, many of which are of great
historical value, and his other literary productions, were collected and edited by Horoy
in "Medii aevi bibliotheca patristica", series I (5 vols., Paris, 1879-83).
While he was papal chamberlain (whence his general appellation of Cencius Camerarius) he
compiled the "Liber censuum Romanae ecclesiae", perhaps the most valuable source
for the history of papal economics during the Middle Ages. It comprises a list of the
revenues of the Apostolic See, a record of donations received, privileges granted, and
contracts made with cities and rulers. It was begun under Clement III and completed in
1192 under Celestine III. Muratori inserted it in his "Antiquitates Italicae medii
aevi", V (Milan, 1739-43), 851-908. A new edition was prepared for the
"Bibliotheque des ecoles francaises d'Athene et de Rome" by Fabre and Duchesne,
fasc. i (Paris, 1889), fasc. ii and iii (1902), fasc. iv (1903). The original manuscript
of the "Liber Censuum", which is still in existence (Vaticanus, 8486), concludes
with a catalogue of the Roman pontiffs and the emperors from St. Peter to Celestine III in
1101. It was edited separately by Weiland in "Archiv der Gesellschaft fur altere
deutsche Geschichtskunde", XII (Hanover, 1874), 60-77. Honorius III wrote also a life
of Celestine III (Horoy, loc. cit., I, 567-592); a life of Gregory VII (ibid., I,
568-586); an "Ordo Romanus", which is a sort of ceremonial containing the rites
of the Church for various occasions (ibid., I, 35-94, and Mabillon, in "Museum
Italicum", II, 167-220); and 34 sermons (Horoy, I, 593-976). His collection of
decretals known as "Compilatio quinta" has been treated under DECRETALS.
PRESSUTI, Regesta Honorii III (2 vols., Rome, 1888-95); CLAUSEN, Papst Honorius III
(Bonn, 1895). The preceding work is not sufficiently critical and has been corrected and
supplemented by KNEBEL, Kaiser Friedrich II. und Papst Honorius III. in ihren
gegenseitigen Beziehungen von der Kaiserkronung Friedrichs bis zum Tode der Legaten des
Papstes, 1220-27 (Munster, 1905); POKORNY, Die Wirksamkeit der Legaten des Papstes
Honorius III. in Frankreich und Deutschland (Krems, 1886); MASETTI, I pontefici Onori III,
Gregorio IX ed Innocenzo IV a fronte dell' imperatore Federico II (Rome, 1884); CAILLEMER,
Le pape Honorius III et le droit civil (Lyons, 1881); VERNET, Etudes sur les sermons
d'Honorius III, these (Lyons, 1888). For his relation with England see GASQUET, Henry the
Third and the Church (London, 1905), 27-107. See also the bibliography to FREDERICK II.
MICHAEL OTT
Transcribed by Herman F. Holbrook
"Prayer was made without ceasing by the Church unto God for Peter."
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VII
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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