Pope
Nicholas III
(GIOVANNI GAETANI ORSINI)
Born at Rome, c. 1216; elected at Viterbo, 25 November, 1277; died at Soriano, near
Viterbo, 22 August, 1280. His father, Matteo Rosso, was of the illustrious Roman family of
the Orsini, while his mother, Perna Gaetana, belonged to the noble house of the Gaetani.
As senator Matteo Rosso had defended Rome against Frederick II and saved it to the papacy.
He was a friend of St. Francis of Assisi and belonged to his third order, facts not
without influence on the son, for both as cardinal and pope the latter was ever kindly
disposed towards the Franciscans. We have no knowledge of his education and early life.
Innocent IV, grateful for the services rendered to the Holy See by his father, created the
young Orsini (28 May, 1244) cardinal-deacon with the title of St. Nicholas in Carcere
Tulliano, and gave him benefices at York, Laon, and Soissons. Probably at an earlier date
the administration of the Roman churches of San Lorenzo in Damaso and of San Crisogono had
been entrusted to him. One of five cardinals, he accompanied Innocent IV in his flight
from Cività Vecchia to Genoa and thence to Lyons (29 June, 1244). In 1252 he was
dispatched on an unsuccessful mission of peace to the warring Guelphs and Ghibellines of
Florence. In 1258 Louis IX paid an eloquent tribute to his independence and impartiality
by suggesting his selection as equally acceptable to England and to France for the solemn
ratification of the peace concluded between the two countries. His integrity was likewise
above reproach, for he never accepted gifts for his services. So great was his influence
in the Sacred College that the election of Urban IV (1261) was mainly due to his
intervention. Urban named him general inquisitor (1262) and protector of the Franciscans
(1263). Under Clement IV (1265-68) he was a member of the delegation of four cardinals who
invested Charles of Anjou with the Kingdom of Naples (28 June, 1265). Later he played a
prominent part at the elections of Gregory X, who received the tiara at his hands, and of
John XXI, whose counsellor he became and who named him archpriest of St. Peter's. After a
vacancy of six months he succeeded John as Nicholas III.
True to his origin he endeavoured to free Rome from all foreign influence. His policy
aimed not only at the exclusion of the ever-troublesome imperial authority, but also
sought to check the growing influence of Charles of Anjou in central Italy. At his request
Rudolf of Habsburg renounced (1278) all rights to the possession of the Romagna, a
renunciation subsequently approved by the imperial princes. Nicholas took possession of
the province through his nephew, Latino, whom he had shortly before (12 March, 1278)
raised to the cardinalate. He created Berthold, another nephew, Count of the Romagna, and
on other occasions remembered his relatives in the distribution of honourable and
lucrative places. He compelled Charles of Anjou in 1278 to resign the regency of Tuscany
and the dignity of Roman Senator. To insure the freedom of papal elections, he ordained in
a constitution of 18 July, 1278, that thenceforward the senatorial power and all municipal
offices were to be reserved to Roman citizens to the exclusion of emperor, king, or other
potentate. In furtherance of more harmonious relations with the Byzantine court, the pope
also aimed at restricting the power of the King of Naples in the East. To his efforts was
due the agreement concluded in 1280 between Rudolf of Habsburg and Charles of Anjou, by
which the latter accepted Provence and Forcalquier as imperial fiefs and secured the
betrothal of his grandson to Clementia, one of Rudolf's daughters. The much-discussed plan
of a new division of the empire into four parts is not sufficiently attested to be
attributed with certainty to Nicholas. In this partition Germany, as hereditary monarchy,
was to fall to Rudolf, the Kingdom of Arles was to devolve on his son-in-law, Charles
Martel of Anjou, while the Kingdoms of Lombardy and Tuscany were to be founded in Italy
and bestowed on relatives of the pope. Nicholas's efforts for the promotion of peace
between France and Castile remained fruitless. Unable to carry out his desire of
personally appearing in Hungary, where internal dissensions and the devastations of the
Cumani endangered the very existence of Christianity, he named, in the fall of 1278,
Bishop Philip of Fermo his legate to that country. A synod, held at Buda in 1279 under the
presidency of the papal envoy, could not complete its deliberations owing to the violent
interference of the people. King Ladislaus IV, instigator of the trouble, was threatened
in a papal letter with spiritual and temporal penalties if he failed to reform his ways.
The king temporarily heeded this solemn admonition, and at a later date suppressed the
raids of the Cumani. The appointments of worthy incumbents to the Archbishoprics of Gran
and Kalocsa-Bacs made under this pontificate further helped to strengthen the cause of
Christianity.
The task of Nicholas III in his dealings with the Eastern Church was the practical
realization of the union accepted by the Greeks at the Second Council of Lyons (1274), for
political reasons rather than out of dogmatic persuasion. The instructions to the legates
whom he sent to Constantinople contained, among other conditions, the renewal by the
emperor of the oath sworn to by his representatives at Lyons. The maintenance of the Greek
Rite was granted only in so far as papal authority did not consider it opposed to unity of
faith; those of the clergy opposed to reunion were required to obtain absolution of the
incurred censures from the Roman envoys. These were more rigorous conditions than had been
imposed by his predecessors, but the failure of the negotiations for reunion can hardly be
attributed to them, for the Greek nation was strongly opposed to submission to Rome and
the emperor pursued temporal advantages under cover of desire for ecclesiastical harmony.
At the request of Abaga, Khan of the Tatars, the pope sent him in 1278 five Franciscan
missionaries who were to preach the Gospel first in Persia and then in China. They
encountered considerable obstacles in the former country and it was not until the
pontificate of Nicholas IV that their preaching produced appreciable results. The
realization of the pope's desire for the organization of a Crusade was frustrated by the
distracted state of European politics. On 14 August, 1279, he issued the constitution
"Exiit qui seminat", which is still fundamental for the interpretation of the
Rule of St. Francis and in which he approved the stricter observance of poverty (see
FRANCIS, RULE OF SAINT). While the Vatican had been occupied from time to time by some of
his predecessors, Nicholas III established there the papal residence, remodelled and
enlarged the palace, and secured in its neighbourhood landed property, subsequently
transformed into the Vatican gardens. He lies buried in the Chapel of St. Nicholas, built
by him in St. Peter's. He was an ecclesiastically-minded pontiff of great diplomatic
ability and, if we except his acts of nepotism, of unblemished character.
GAY, Les Registres de Nicolas III (Paris, 1898-1904); POTTHAST, Regesta
Pontif. Roman., II (Berlin, 1875), 1719-56; SAVIO, Niccolò III in Civiltà
Cattolica, ser. XV-XVI (Rome, 1894-5); DEMSKI, Papst Nikolaus III (Münster,
1903); STERNFELD, Der Kardinal Johann Gaetan Orsini (1244-77) (Berlin, 1905); MIRBP
in The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia, s. v.
N.A. WEBER.
Transcribed by Douglas J. Potter
Dedicated to the Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XI
Copyright © 1911 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1911. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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