Pope
Gregory IX
(UGOLINO, Count of Segni).
Born about 1145, at Anagni in the Campagna; died 22 August, 1241, at Rome. He received
his education at the Universities of Paris and Bologna. After the accession of Innocent
III to the papal throne, Ugolino, who was a nephew of Innocent III, was successively
appointed papal chaplain, Archpriest of St. Peter's, and Cardinal-Deacon of Saint'
Eustachio in 1198. In May, 1206, he succeeded Octavian as Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and
Velletri. A year later he and Cardinal Brancaleone were sent as papal legates to Germany
to mediate between Philip of Swabia and Otto of Brunswick, both of whom laid claim to the
German throne subsequent to the death of Henry VI. By order of the pope the legates freed
Philip from the ban which he had incurred under Pope Celestine III on account of invading
the Pontifical States. Though the legates were unable to induce Otto of Brunswick to give
up his claims to the throne, they succeeded in effecting a truce between the two claimants
and returned to Rome in 1208 to treat with the pope concerning their future procedure. On
their way back to Germany early in June, 1208, they were apprised at Verona that Philip
had been murdered, and again returned to Rome. Early in January, 1209, they again
proceeded to Germany with instructions to induce the princes to acknowledge Otto of
Brunswick as king. They were successful in their mission and returned to Rome in June of
the same year. After the death of Pope Innocent III, 16 July, 1216, Ugolino was
instrumental in the election of Pope Honorius III on 18 July. In order to hasten the
choice the College of Cardinals had agreed to an election by compromise and empowered
Cardinals Ugolino and Guido of Preneste to appoint the new pope.
In January, 1217, Honorius III made Ugolino plenipotentiary legate for Lombardy and
Tuscia, and entrusted him with preaching the crusade in those territories. In this
capacity he became a successful mediator between Pisa and Genoa, in 1217, between Milan
and Cremona in 1218, and between Bologna and Pistoia in 1219. At the coronation of
Frederick II in Rome, 22 November, 1220, the emperor took the cross from Ugolino and made
the vow to embark for the Holy Land in August, 1221. On 14 March, 1221, Pope Honorius
commissioned Ugolino to preach the crusade also in Central and Upper Italy. After the
death of Pope Honorius III (18 March, 1227), the cardinals again agreed upon an election
by compromise and empowered three of their number, among whom were Ugolino and Conrad of
Urach, to elect the new pope. At first Conrad of Urach was elected, but he refused the
tiara lest it might appear that he had elected himself. Hereupon the cardinals unanimously
elected Ugolino on 19 March, 1227, and he reluctantly accepted the high honour, taking the
name of Gregory IX. Though he was already far advanced in age (being more than eighty
years old), he was still full of energy.
The important diplomatic positions which Gregory IX had held before he became pope had
acquainted him thoroughly with the political situation of Europe, and especially with the
guileful and dishonest tactics of Emperor Frederick II. Three days after his installation
he sternly ordered the emperor at last to fulfill his long delayed vow to embark for the
Holy Land. Apparently obedient to the papal mandate, Frederick II set sail from Brindial
on 8 September, 1227, but returned three days later under the plea that the Landgrave of
Thuringia, who was accompanying him, was on the point of death, and that he himself was
seriously ill. Gregory IX, knowing that Frederick II had on eight or nine previous
occasions postponed his departure for the East, distrusted the emperor's sincerity, and on
20 September, 1227, placed him under the ban of the Church. He tried to justify his severe
measures towards the emperor in a Brief to the Christian princes, while, on the other
hand, the emperor addressed a manifesto to the princes in which he condemns the actions of
the pope in very bitter terms. The imperial manifesto was read publicly on the steps of
the Capitol in Rome, whereupon the imperial party in Rome, under the leadership of the
Frangipam, stirred up an insurrection, so that when the pope published the emperor's
excommunication in the basilica of St. Peter, 23 March, 1228, he was openly insulted and
threatened by a Ghibelline mob, and fled first to Viterbo, and then to Perugia.
In order to prove to the Christian world that the pope was too hasty in placing him
under the ban, the emperor resolved to proceed to the Holy Land and embarked from Brindial
with a small army on 28 June, 1228, having previously asked the blessing of Gregory IX
upon his enterprise. The pope, however, denying that an excommunicated emperor had a right
to undertake a holy war, not only refused his blessing, but put him under the ban a second
time and released the crusaders from their oath of allegiance to him. While in the Holy
Land the emperor, seeing that he could accomplish nothing as long as he was under the ban,
changed his tactics toward the pope. He now acknowledged the justice of his
excommunication and began to take steps towards a reconciliation. Gregory IX distrusted
the advances of the emperor, especially since Rainald, the imperial Governor of Spoleto,
had invaded the Pontifical States during the emperor's absence. But the papal anathema did
not have the effect which Gregory IX had hoped for. In Germany only one bishop, Berthold
of Strasburg, published the Bull of excommunication, and nearly all the princes and
bishops remained faithful to the emperor. Cardinal Otto of San Nicolo, whom Gregory IX had
sent to Germany to publish the emperor's excommunication, was entirely unsuccessful,
because Frederick's son Henry, his representative in Germany, forbade the bishops and
abbots to appear at the synods which the cardinal attempted to convene. Equally futile
were Gregory's efforts to put Duke Otto of Brunswick on the German throne. In June, 1229,
Frederick II returned from the Holy Land, routed the papal army which Gregory IX had sent
to invade Sicily, and made new overtures of peace to the pope. Gregory IX, who had been a
fugitive at Perugia since 1228, returned to Rome in February, 1230, upon the urgent
request of the Romans, who connected an overwhelming flood of the Tiber with their harsh
treatment of the pontiff. He now opened negotiations with Hermann of Salza (q. V.), the
Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, whom the emperor had sent as his representative. On 20
July, 1230, a treaty was concluded at San Germano between the pope and the emperor, by
force of which that part of the Pontifical States which was occupied by imperial troops
and the papal possessions in Sicily were restored to the pope. After the ban was removed
from the emperor by Cardinals John of Sabina and Thomas of Capua in the imperial camp near
Ceperano on 28 August, 1230, pope and emperor met at Anagni and completed their
reconciliation during the first three days of September.
The peace concluded between the pope and the emperor was, however, to be only
temporary. The papacy as conceived by Gregory IX and the empire as conceived by Frederick
II could not exist together in peace. The emperor aimed at supreme temporal power with
which the pope should have no right to interfere. At least in Italy he tried to establish
a rule of absolutism by suppressing all municipal liberty and holding the cities in
subjection by a revived sort of feudalism. The pope, on the other hand, , citing the
example of Constantine, who exchanged Rome for Constantinople in deference to the pope,
thought that the pope should be the supreme ruler in Italy and by force of his spiritual
suthority over the whole Christian world the papacy should in all things hold the
supremacy over the empire. For a time the emperor assisted the pope in suppressing a few
minor revolts in the Pontifical States, as was stipulated in the conditions of peace.
Soon, however, he began again to disturb the peace by impeding the liberty of the Church
in Sicily and by making war upon Lombardy. The freedom of the Lombard cities was a strong
and necessary bulwark for the safety of the Pontifical States and it was only natural that
the pope should use all his influence to protect these cities against the imperial
designs. As arbiter between the emperor and the Lombard cities the pope had a few times
decided in favour of the latter. The emperor, therefore, no longer desired the services of
the pope as mediator and began open hostilities against the Lombard League. He gained a
signal victory at Cortenuova on 27 November, 1237. To save Lombardy from the despotic rule
of the emperor and to protect the Pontifical States, the pope entered into an alliance
with the Tuscans, Umbrians, and Lombards to impede the imperial progress. The continuous
victories of the emperor spurred his pride to further action. He declared his intention to
unite with the empire not only Lombardy and Tuscany, but also the Patrimony of St. Peter
and practically the whole of Italy. On 12 March, 1239, the pope again excommunicated the
emperor and another disasterous struggle between the papacy and the empire ensued.
Henceforth the pope was convinced that as long as Frederick was emperor there was no
possibility of peace between the papacy and the empire, and he left nothing undone to
bring about his disposition. He ordered a crusade to be preached against him in Germany,
instructed his Germna legate Albert of Behaim, the Archdeacon of Passau, to urge the
election of a new king upon the princes, and to place under the ban all those that
continued to side with the excommunicated emperor. Despite papal anathemas many bishops
and princes remained loyal to the emperor who, encouraged by his large following, decided
to humiliate the pope by making himself master of the Pontifical States. In this great
distress the pope ordered all bishops to assemble in Rome for a general council at Easter
(31 March), 1241. But the emperor prevented the meeting of the council by forbidding the
bishops to travel to Rome and by capturing all those that undertook the journey despite
his prohibition. He himself marched towards Rome with an army and lay encamped near the
city, when Gregory IX suddenly died at the age of almost one hundred years.
The mendicant orders which began to shed great lustre over the Christian Church in the
first half of the thirteenth century found a devoted friend and liberal patron in Gregory
IX. In them he saw an excellent means for counteracting by voluntary poverty the love of
luxury and splendour which was possessing many ecclesiastics; a powerful weapon for
suppressing heresy within the Church; and an army of brave soldiers of Christ who were
ready to preach His Gospel to the pagans even at the risk of their life. When still
Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia, Gregory IX would often don the dress of St. Francis, walk about
barefoot with the saint and his disciples, and talk of holy things. Saint Francis loved
him as his father and in a prophetic spirit addressed him at times as "the bishop of
the whole world and the father of all nations". Upon the special request of Saint
Francis, Pope Honorius III appointed him protector of the order in 1220. He was also a
devoted friend of St. Dominic and promoted the interests of his order in many ways. At the
death of St. Dominic he held the funeral services and buried the saint at Bologna in 1221.
St. Clare and her order stood likewise under the protection of Gregory IX, as is attested
by the convents he founded for the order in Rome, Lombardy, and Tuscia. However, despite
his great liberality towards the rising mendicant orders he did not neglect the older
ones. On 28 June, 1227, he approved the old privileges of the Camaldolese, in the same
year he introduced the Premonstratensians into Livonia and Courland, and on 6 April, 1229,
he gave new statutes to the Carmelites. He financially and otherwise assisted the
Cistercians and the Teutonic Order in the Christianization of Prussia and the neighboring
countries of the North. On 17 January, 1235, he approved the Order of Our Lady of Mercy
for the redemption of captives. With the help of the religious orders he planned the
conversion of Asia and Africa and sent missionaries out of their ranks to Tunis, Morocco,
and other places, where not a few suffered martyrdom. He also did much to alleviate the
hard lot of the Christians in the Holy Land, and would have done still more, if his plans
to recover the Holy Land for the Christians had not been frustrated by the indifference of
Frederick II. The calendar of saints was enriched with some of the most popular names by
Gregory IX. On 16 July, 1228, he canonized St. Francis of Assisi, and on the next day he
laid the cornerstone of the church and monastery which were erected in honour of the
saint. He took part in the composition of the Office of St. Francis and also wrote some
hymns in his honour. It was also at his command that Thomas of Celano wrote a biography of
the saint (latest and best edition by d'Alencon, Rome, 1906). On 30 May, 1232, he
canonized St. Anthony of Padua, at Spoleto; on 10 June, 1233, St. Virgil, Bishop of
Salzburg and Apostle of Carinthia; on 8 July, 1234, St. Dominic, at Rieti; and on 27 May,
1235, St. Elizabeth of Thuringia, at Perugia.
Gregory IX was very severe towards heretics, who in those times were universally looked
upon as traitors and punished accordingly. Upon the request of King Louis IX of France, he
sent Cardinal Romanus as legate to assist the king in his crusade against the Albigenses.
At the synod which the papal legate convened at Toulouse in November, 1229, it was decreed
that all heretics and their abettors should be delivered to the nobles and magistrates for
their due punishment, which, in case of obstinacy, was usually death. When in 1224
Frederick II ordered that heretics in Lombardy should be burnt at the stake, Gregory IX,
who was then papal legate for Lombardy, approved and published the imperial law. During
his enforced absence from Rome (1228-1231) the heretics remained unmolested and became
very numerous in the city. In February, 1231, therefore, the pope enacted a law for Rome
that heretics condemned by an ecclesiastical court should be delivered to the secular
power to receive their "due punishment". This "due punishment" was
death by fire for the obstinate and imprisonment for life for the penitent. In pursuance
of this law a number of Patarini were arrested in Rome in 1231, the obstinate were burned
at the stake, the others were imprisoned in the Benedictine monasteries of Monte Cassino
and Cava (Ryccardus de S. Germano, ad annum 1231, in Mon. Germ. SS., XIX, 363). It must
not be thought, however, that Gregory IX dealt more severely with heretics than other
rulers did. Death by fire was the common punishment for heretics and traitors in those
times. Up to the time of Gregory IX, the duty of searching out heretics belonged to the
bishops in their respective dioceses. The so-called Monastic Inquisition was established
by Gregory IX, who in his Bulls of 13, 20, and 22 April, 1233, appointed the Dominicans as
the official inquisitors for all dioceses of France (Ripoil and Bremond, "Bullarium
Ordinia Fratrum Praedicatorum", Rome, 1729, I, 47).
For a time Gregory IX lived in hope that he might effect a reunion of the Latin and
Greek Churches. Germanos, Patriarch of Constantinople, after a conversation on the
religious differences between the Greeks and the Latins, which he had with some
Franciscans at Nice, in 1232, addressed a letter to Gregory IX, in which he acknowledged
the papal primacy, but complained of the persecution of the Greeks by the Latins. Gregory
IX sent him a cordial answer and commissioned four learned monks (two Franciscans and two
Dominicans) to treat with the patriarch concerning the reunion. The papal messengers were
kindly received both by the Emperor Vatatzes and by Germanos, but the patriarchs said that
he could make no concessions on matters of faith without the consent of the Patriarchs of
Jersusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria. A synod of the patriarchs was held at Nympha in
Bithynia, to which the papal messengers were invited. But the Greeks stubbornly adhered to
their doctrine concerning the procession of the Holy Ghost and asserted that the Latins
could not validly consecrate unleavened bread. Thus Gregory IX failed, like many other
popes before and after him, in his efforts to reunite the two Churches. In 1237 the
Patriarch of the Syrian Monophysites and many of his bishops and monks renounced their
heresy and submitted to the pope (Raynaldus ad annum 1237, n. 87 sq.), but their
conversion was only temporary.
During the thirteen years and four months of his pontificate he created about fourteen
cardinals, many of whom were members of religious orders. The best known among them are
Sinibald of Fiesco, a learned canonist, who afterwards ascended the papal throne as
Innocent IV; Raynald of Segni, a nephew of Gregory IX, who succeeded Innocent IV as
Alexander IV; Otto of Montferrat, who spent over three years (1237-1240) as papal legate
in England; Jacob of Vitry, an author, confessor of St. Mary of Oignies, whose life he
wrote (Acta SS., June, IV, 636-66); St. Francis Nonatus; and the learned and pious
Englishman, Robert of Somercote, who, it is said, would have succeeded Gregory IX on the
papal throne had he not died during the conclave (26 Sept., 1241). Gregory IX was also a
man of learning, which he encouraged in various ways. He bestowed many privileges on the
University of Paris, his Alma Mater, but also watched carefully over its professors, whom
he warned repeatedly against the growing tendency of subjecting theology to philosophy by
making the truth of the mysteries of faith dependent on philosophical proofs. He also
possesses the great merit of having again made Aristotelianism the basis of scholastic
philosophy, after the Physics of Aristotle had been prohibited in 1210; and his
Metaphysics in 1215. The prohibition of Aristotle was meant only for the perverted Latin
translation of his works and their Averroistic commentaries. Gregory IX commissioned
William of Auvergne and other learned men to purge the works of Aristotle of their errors
and thus made them again accessible to students. Among the greatest achievements of
Gregory IX must be counted the collection of papal decretals, a work with which he
entrusted Raymond of Pennaforte and which was completed in 1234 (see DECRETALS). The
numerous letters of Gregory IX were first collected and published by Pamelius (Antwerp,
1572). Rodenburg edited 485 letters of Gregory IX, selected by Perts from the papal
registers of the thirteenth century, and published them in "Mon. Germ. Epist. Rom.
Pontif." (Berlin, 1883), I, 261-728. Lucian Auvray began (Paris, 1890) to edit
"Les Registres de Gregoire IX, recueil des bulles de ce pape, publiées ou analysées
d'après les manuscrits originaux du Vatican", of which the eleventh fasccle appeared
in 1908.
A Life of Gregory IX, Vita Gregorii IX, was written by a comtemporary of Gregory IX,
perhaps JOANNES DE FERENTINO. It was published by MURATORI in Rerum Italicorum Scriptores
(Milan, 1728), III, i, 577-588. Concerning it see MARX, Die Vita Gregorii IX
quellenkritisch untersucht (Berlin, 1889). The two best modern references are: BALAN,
Storia di Gregorio IX e dei suoi tempi, 3 vol. (Modena, 1872-3); FELTEN, Papsi Gregor IX.
(Freiburg, 1886); see also KOEHLER, VerhaltnissFriedrichs II zu den Papsien seiner Zeit
(Breslau, 1888); HUILLARD-BREHOLLER, Historia diplomatica Frederici II, 12 vols. (Paris,
1852-61); BOEHMER-FICKER, Regesten des Kaiser-reiches (Innsbruck, 1879-81); WINKELMANN,
Acta imperii inedita soec. XIII et XIV, 2 vols. (Innsbruck, 1880-85); PAGI, Breviarium
Gestorum Pont. Rom. (Venice, 1730), III, 214-243.
MICHAEL OTT
Transcribed by Janet van Heyst
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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