Pope
Urban IV
Reigned 1216-64 (Jacques Pantaléon), son of a French cobbler, born at Troyes, probably
in the last years of the twelfth century; died at Perugia, 2 Oct., 1264. He became a canon
of Laon and later Archdeacon of Liège, attracted the attention of Innocent IV at the
Council of Lyons (1245), and in 1247 was sent on a mission to Germany. There his chief
work was the restoration of ecclesiastical discipline in Silesia and the reconciliation of
the Teutonic Knights with their Prussian vassals. He became Archdeacon of Laon two years
later, and in 1251 was sent into north Germany with the commission to obtain recruits for
the cause of William of Holland, the papal candidate for the empire. He was made Bishop of
Verdun in 1253 and Patriarch of Jerusalem in 1255, at a time of great difficulty and
distress for the Christians of the Holy Land. On the death of Alexander IV (25 May, 1261)
he had returned to the west and was at Viterbo. After a three months' conclave, protracted
by the jealousies of the eight cardinals who composed the whole Sacred College, the
Patriarch of Jerusalem was elected on 29 August, 1261. Alexander IV, the feeblest and most
pacific of the popes who were engaged in the struggle with the imperial house of Germany,
had left two heavy tasks for his successor to accomplish: the wresting of Sicily from the
Hohenstaufen and the restoration in Italy of the influence which the Holy See had lost
through his indecision. The Latin Empire of Constantinople came to an end with the capture
of the city by the Greeks a fortnight before Urban's election, and for a while he intended
a crusade for its re-establishment; but he felt that the tasks near home had the first
claim on him. In 1268 Conradin, the last of the Hohenstaufen, died on the scaffold at
Naples; it was Urban IV's action in calling Charles of Anjou into the field against
Manfred that brought this about. "The fact", says Ranke, "that Urban IV
contrived this combination, places him among the important popes."
His experience of affairs and his personal character fitted him for his work. He had
had an excellent education and was active, capable, self-reliant, and always ready for any
work that presented itself. His life was a full one, yet business had not banished piety.
"The Pope does what he will", reports a Sienese ambassador, "there has been
no Pope since Alexander III so energetic in word and deed . . .There is no obstacle to his
will . . .he does everything by himself without taking advice" (Pflug-Harttung,
"Iter Italicum", 675). Had his reign been longer, he would have been one of the
most striking figures in the history of the papacy. Urban's great antagonist was Manfred,
son of Frederick II, and usurper of the Sicilian crown. Manfred's chief gift was tact; as
an administrator he had his father's highly centralized system to rely on, but as a
warrior he was lacking in decision and boldness. After the battle of Montaperti, he became
the hero of half Italy, the centre of the Ghibelline party and of all opposition to the
papacy. He was anxious for peace and recognition from the pope, and Urban was able to keep
him in play until the long drawn-out negotiations with Charles of Anjou were nearly
complete. Within less than a year of his election the pope created fourteen new cardinals.
Of these six were relatives or dependents of the eight who had elected him, but seven were
Frenchmen, including his own nephew and three who had been St. Louis's counsellors. Thus
Urban was sure of a majority in the Sacred College, but he brought into being a French
party which was a principal factor in ecclesiastical policy for the rest of the thirteenth
century and in the fourteenth century became practically the whole College. Among the new
cardinals were the three future popes, Clement IV, Martin IV, and Honorius IV, who were to
have the greatest share in finishing and defending his work.
Urban's first step towards the restoration of his power in Italy was to put the
finances in order and pay his predecessor's debts. He changed the bankers of the Apostolic
Camera, employing a Sienese firm whose services did much to assure the ultimate success of
his plans. Urban's Italian policy gives a complete picture of his statesmanship--astute
and diplomatic on occasions, but with a marked predilection for energetic measures. He
aroused dissensions between rival Ghibelline cities and, by an adroit use of the then
generally acknowledged right of the Holy See to declare null all obligations towards
persons excommunicate, was able to throw their commercial affairs into confusion (for some
curious details see Jordan, "Origines", 337 sq.). He established an ascendancy
over his partisans and raised up a new Guelph party bound to him by personal interest,
which eventually furnished Charles of Anjou with monetary support without which his
expedition must have failed. In the Papal States new officers were appointed, important
points fortified, and the defensive system of Innocent III restored. At Rome Urban
obtained the recognition of his sovereignty, but he never risked a visit to the city. In
Lombardy his most important act was the strengthening of the traditional alliance between
the Holy See and the House of Este. By the middle of 1263 the general results of Urban's
extra-Sicilian Italian policy were seen in the almost complete restoration of order in the
Papal States, the weakening of Manfred's alliances in Lombardy, and the resurrection in
Tuscany of the crushed Guelphs.
A foreign conqueror for Sicily was necessary to attain the expulsion of Manfred, for
after the defeat of Alexander IV's forces at Foggia (20 Aug., 1255) all hope was lost of a
direct conquest by the papacy. In 1252 Innocent IV had granted the crown of Naples to the
English Henry III for his second son, Edmund; but the king had his hands too full at home
and was himself too prodigal to allow him to embark on the very costly Sicilian adventure.
Charles of Anjou, though he had refused the offer of Innocent IV, had both the power and
the ambition necessary for such an undertaking. St. Louis's scruples as to the rights of
Conradin and Edmund were overcome, and though he refused the crown for himself or his
sons, he finally permitted its offer to his brother. In the mind of the holy king the
Sicilian expedition appeared as a preliminary to a great crusade: he saw that Sicily
would, in the hands of a French prince, be an ideal starting-point. Yet Louis had been
desirous of peace between the pope and Manfred, and even the pope for a time seemed
prepared to recognize him as King of Sicily, but the negotiations finally failed. Urban
made it his business to prove that the fault lay with his opponent, for European opinion
was interested in a struggle in which great princes such as Alphonsus of Aragon and
Baldwin, the exiled Latin Emperor of Constantinople, had intervened on the side of peace.
It was about May, 1263, that St. Louis made up his mind, and shortly afterwards the envoy
of Charles of Anjou appeared in Rome. The chief conditions laid down by Urban were as
follows: Sicily must never be united to the empire, its king must pay an annual tribute,
take an oath of fealty to the pope, and abstain from acquiring any considerable dominion
in Northern Italy; the succession also was strictly regulated. The treaty in fact
"was to be the last link in the long chain of acts which had established the
suzerainty of the Holy See over Sicily" (Jordan, 443).
The negotiations dragged on slowly as long as the pope felt no acute need of French
intervention in Italy, but by May, 1264, the fortunes of the Church were threatening to
decline quickly, in face of the rising activity and fortunes of the Ghibellines. Urban
sent the French Cardinal Simon de Brion to France as his legate with power to concede
certain disputed points: he was, however, to insist on a guarantee that Charles would not
retain in perpetuity the Senatorship of Rome; vows to go on a crusade to the Holy Land
were to be commuted for the crusade against Manfred and his Saracens, which was to be
preached throughout France and Italy. Urban's position was daily growing more dangerous in
spite of the incomprehensible inactivity of Manfred. He feared a simultaneous attack from
north and south, and even attempts to assassinate himself and Charles of Anjou by the
emissaries of Manfred's reputed ally, the "Old Man of the Mountains". In August
St. Louis's last objections to the treaty were overcome, and various concessions made to
Charles's demands. The legate held several synods to obtain from the French clergy the
tithes granted by the pope for the expedition. In Italy fortune continued to favour the
Ghibellines; a Guelph army was defeated in the Patrimony, and Lucca deserted to the enemy.
Sienese intrigue threatened Urban's security at Orvieto, and on 9 Sept. he set out for
Perugia, where he died.
"Thus the man, whose bold initiative was to influence so greatly the destinies of
three great countries, to bring to a close the most glorious period of medieval Germany by
the ruin of the Hohenstaufen, to introduce a new dynasty into Italy, and to direct French
policy in a direction as yet unknown, quitted the stage before he had seen the
consequences of his acts at the very hour when the negotiations, commenced at his
accession and continued throughout his reign, had reached completion" (Jordan, op.
cit., 513).
If Urban's treatment of Manfred appear harsh and unscrupulous, it must be remembered
how the Church had suffered at the hands of the Hohenstaufen ever since the days of
Frederick I. In the eyes of feudal law Manfred was a usurper without rights: he had
callously seized his nephew Conradin's crown, and even that nephew could not inherit from
a grandfather who had been deprived of his fief for rebellion against his suzerain. At
this period, too, the papal Government, owing in part to its very weakness, stood for
municipal freedom, while the Hohenstaufen had in Sicily substituted for the aristocratic
hierarchy of feudalism a bureaucratic despotism supported by the arms of their devoted
Saracens.
Two other points in Urban's policy must be noted: his dealings with the Byzantine
Empire and with England. Manfred's designs on the territories of Palaeologus, together
with the exiled Baldwin's secret attempt to reconcile Manfred with St. Louis, made the
Greek emperor, politically, at least, the natural ally for a pope fearful of an increase
in the power of the Sicilian king. Urban sought an understanding with Michael Palaeologus,
and here too gave a lasting direction to papal policy, setting it on the path which led to
the union (inoperative though it was) of Lyons in 1274. In England Urban's collectors of
money were exceedingly busy; like St. Louis, he supported Henry III against the barons. He
absolved the king from his promise to observe the Provisions of Oxford, declared oaths
taken against him to be unlawful, and condemned the rising of the barons. He was buried in
the cathedral at Perugia. The Feast of Corpus Christi (q.v.) was instituted by Urban IV.
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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