Pope
Gregory X
Born 1210; died 10 January, 1276. The death of Pope Clement IV 929 November, 1268) left
the Holy See vacant for almost three years. The cardinals assembled at Viterbo were
divided into two camps, the one French and the other Italian. Neither of these parties
could poll the two-thirds majority vote, nor was either willing to give way to the other
for the election of a candidate to the papacy. In the summer of 1270 the head and
burgesses of the town of Viterbo, hoping to force a vote, resorted to the expedient of
confining the cardinals within the episcopal palace, where even their daily allowance of
food was later on curtailed. A compromise was finally arrived at through the combined
efforts of the French and Sicilian kings. The Sacred College, which then consisted of
fifteen cardinals, designated six of their body to agree upon and cast a final vote in the
matter. These six delegates met, and on 1 September, 1271, united their ballots in choice
of Teobaldo Visconti, archdeacon of Liege, who, however, was not a cardinal himself nor
even a priest. The new pontiff was a native of Piacenza and had been at one time in the
service of Cardinal Jacopo of Palestrina, had become archdeacon of Liege, and accompanied
Cardinal Ottoboni on his mission to England, and at the time of his election happened to
be in Ptolemais (Acre), with Prince Edward of England, on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land.
Receiving a summons from the cardinals to return immediately, he began his homeward
journey on 19 November, 1271, and arrived at Viterbo on 12 February, 1272. He declared his
acceptance of the dignity and took the name of Gregory X. On 13 March he made his entry
into Rome, where on the nineteenth of the same month he was ordained to the priesthood.
His consecration as pope took place on 27 March. He plunged at once with all his energies
into the task of solving the weighty problems which then required his attention: the
restoration of peace between Christian nations and princes, the settlement of affairs in
the German empire, the amendment of the mode of life among clergy and people, the union of
the Greek Church with Rome, the deliverance of Jerusalem and the Holy Land. As early as
the fourth day after his coronation he summoned a general council, which was to open at
Lyons on 1 May, 1274 (see LYONS, COUNCILS OF). In Italy the pope sought to make peace
between the Guelphs and Ghibellines, whose factional war raged chiefly in Tuscany and
Lombardy. Against the city of Florence, the burgesses of which resisted these efforts to
bring about a reconciliation, he issued a decree of excommunication.
After the death of Richard of Cornwall (1272) Gregory advised the German princes to
select a new sovereign and refused the demand of Alfonso of Castile, rival of Richard, for
recognition as emperor. Rudolf of Hapsburg having been elected on 29 September , 1273,
Gregory X immediately recognized him and invited him to Rome to receive the imperial
crown. The pope and the emperor met at Lausanne in October of 1273. Gregory was then
returning from the Council of Lyons. Rudolf took here the customary oaths for the defence
of the Roman Church, took the cross, and postponed until the following year his journey to
Rome. The pope obtained from Alfonso of Castile the renunciation of his claims to the
German crown.
From the very beginning of his pontificate Gregory sought to promote the interests of
the Holy Land. Large sums were collected in France and England for this crusade. A
resolutions adopted at the Council of Lyons, which opened on 7 May, 1274, provided that
one-tenth of all benefices accruing to all churches in the course of six years should be
set aside for the benefit of the Holy Land, the object being to secure the means of
carrying on the holy war. This tithe was successfully raised, and preparations were at
once made in France and England for the expedition, which unfortunately was not carried
out. The ambassadors of the Grecian emperor, having arrived in Lyons on 24 June, swore, at
the fourth sitting of the council (July 6) that the emperor had renounced the schism, and
had returned to the allegiance due the Holy See. But this union, entered into by Michael
Palaeologus for purely political reasons, was in no sense destined to endure. At the close
of this council, over which Gregory had presided in person, he travelled by way of
Lausanne, Milan, and Florence, as far as Arezzo, where he died on 10 January, 1276. Though
his pontificate proved so short, the results which he achieved were of far-reaching
consequence, and he succeeded in maintaining unimpaired peace and harmony. On account of
his unusual virtues he is revered as a saint in Rome and in a number of dioceses (Arezzo,
Placenza, Lausanne), his feast being 16 February.
GUIRAUD, Les Registres de Gregoire X, Recueil des bulles de ce Pape in Bibliotheque des
Ecoles francaises de Rome et d"Athenes (Paris, 1892--); POTTHAST, Regesta Romanorum
Pontificum, II (Berlin, 1875), 1651 sq.; Vitae Gregorii X, ed. MURATORI in Rerum
Italicarum Scriptores, III, i, 597 sq., 599 sq.; III, ii, 424 sq.; Bibliotheca
hagiographica latina, I (Brussels, 1898-99), 545 sq.; BONUCCI, Istoria del pontefice
Gregorio X (Rome, 1711); PIACENZA, Compendio della storia del b. Gregorio X papa
(Piacenza, 1876); LOSERTH, Akten uber die Wahl Gregors X, in Neues Archiv (1895), XXI, 309
sq.; ZISTERER, Gregor X. und Rudolf von Habsburg in ihren gegenseitigen Bezichungen
(Freiburg im Br., 1891); WALTER, Die Politik der Kurie unter Gregor X. (Berlin, 1894);
OTTO, Die Beziehungen Rudolfs von Habsburg zu Papst Gregor X. (Innsbruck, 1895); VON
HIRSCH-GEREUTH, Studien zur Geschichte der Kreuzzuge, I: Die Kreuzzugpolitik Gregors X.
(Munich, 1896); PICHLER, Geschichte der kirchlichen Trennung zwischen Orient und Occident,
I (Munich, 1864), 342 sq.; DRABEKE, Der Kircheneinigungsversuch des Kaisers Michael VIII,
Paloeologus in Zeitschrift fur wissenschaftl. Theol. (1891), XXXIV, 325 sq.; HEFELE,
Konziliengeschichte, VI, 119 sq.
J.P. KIRSCH
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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