Pope
Alexander IV
Pope from 1254-61 (Rinaldo Conti), of the house of Segni, which had already given two
illustrious sons to the Papacy, Innocent III and Gregory IX, date of birth uncertain; died
25 May, 1261, at Viterbo. He was created Cardinal-Deacon, in 1227, by his uncle Gregory
IX, and four years later Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia. Gregory also bequeathed to him his
solicitude for the Franciscan Order, which he had 80 well befriended. On the death of
Innocent IV, at Naples, 7 December, 1254, the aged Cardinal was unanimously chosen to
succeed him. We may well believe his protestation that he yielded very reluctantly to the
importunities of the Sacred College. Matthew of Paris has depicted him as "kind and
religious, assiduous in prayer and strict in abstinence, but easily led away by the
whispering of flatterers, and inclined to listen to the wicked suggetions of avaricious
persons". The "flatterers" and "avaricious persons" referred to
were those who induced the new Pontiff to continue Innocent's policy of a war of
extermination against the progeny of Frederick II. now reduced to the infant Conradin in
Germany and the formidable Manfred in Apulia. Many an historian at the present day agrees
with the shrewd chronicler, that it would have been far more statesmanlike and might have
averted the disasters that were in destiny for the Church, the Empire, and Italy, had
Alexander firmly espoused the cause of Conradin. Deterred by the precedent of the infant
Frederick, the "viper" that the Roman Church had nourished to become its
destroyer, and persuaded that iniquity was hereditary. in the whole brood of the
Hohenstaufens, he continued Innocent's dubious policy of calling in French or English
Beelzebubs to cast out the German Lucifers. On 25 March, 1255, he fulminated an
excommunication against Manfred and a few days afterwards concluded a treaty with the
envoys of Henry III of England by which he made over the vassal kingdom of the Two
Sicilies to Edmund of Lancaster, Henry's second son. In the contest for the German crown
which followed on the death of William of Holland (1256) the Pope supported the claims of
Richard of Cornwall against Alfonso of Castile. The pecuniary assistance which these
measures brought him was dearly bought by the embitterment of the English clergy and
people against the exactions of the Roman See. Manfred's power grew from day to day. In
August, 1258, in consequence of a rumour spread by himself, that Conradin had died in
Germany, the usurper was crowned king in Palermo and became the acknowledged head of the
Ghibelline party in Italy. Alexander lived to see the victor of Montaperti (1260) supreme
ruler of Central as well as Southern Italy. In the north of Italy he was more successful,
for his crusaders finally crushed the odious tyrant Ezzelino. In Rome, which was under the
rule of hostile magistrates and in alliance with Manfred, the papal authority was all but
forgotten. Meanwhile the Pope was making futile efforts to unite the powers of the
Christian world against the threatening invasion of the Tartars. The crusading spirit had
departed. The unity of Christendom was a thing of the past. Whether the result would have
been different had a great statesman occupied the Papal Chair during these seven critical
years, we can only surmise. Alexander IV ruled the spiritual affairs of the Church with
dignity and prudence. As Pope, he continued to show great favour to the children of St.
Francis. One of his first official acts was to canonize St. Clare. In a diploma he
asserted the truth of the impression of the stigmata. St. Bonaventure informs us that the
Pope affirmed in a sermon that he had seen them. In the violent controversies excited at
the University of Paris by William of St. Amour, Alexander IV took the friars under his
protection. He died, deeply afflicted by the sense of his powerlessness to stem the evils
of the age.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by Gerard Haffner
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I
Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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