Pope
Nicholas IV
(GIROLAMO MASCI)
Born at Ascoli in the March of Ancona; died in Rome, 4 April, 1292. He was of humble
extraction, and at an early age entered the Franciscan Order. In 1272 he was sent as a
delegate to Constantinople to invite the participation of the Greeks in the Second Council
of Lyons. Two years later he succeeded St. Bonaventure in the generalship of his order.
While he was on a mission to France to promote the restoration of peace between that
country and Castile, he was created cardinal-priest with the title of Santa Pudenziana
(1278) and in 1281 Martin IV appointed him Bishop of Palestrina. After the death of
Honorius IV (3 April, 1287), the conclave held at Rome was for a time hopelessly divided
in its selection of a successor. When fever had carried off six of the electors, the
others, with the sole exception of Girolamo, left Rome. It was not until the following
year that they reassembled and on 15 February, 1288, unanimously elected him to the
papacy. Obedience and a second election however (22 February) were alone capable of
overcoming his reluctance to accept the supreme pontificate. He was the first Franciscan
pope, and in loving remembrance of Nicholas III he assumed the name of Nicholas IV.
The reign of the new pope was not characterized by sufficient independence. The undue
influence exercised at Rome by the Colonna is especially noteworthy and was so apparent
even during his lifetime that Roman wits represented him encased in a column the
distinctive mark of the Colonna family out of which only his tiara-covered head
emerged. The efforts of Rudolf of Habsburg to receive the imperial crown at the hands of
the new pope were not successful. His failure was partly due to the estrangement
consequent upon the attitude assumed by the pope in the question of the Sicilian
succession. As feudal suzerain of the kingdom, Nicholas annulled the treaty, concluded in
1288 through the mediation of Edward I of England, which confirmed James of Aragon in the
possession of the island, He lent his support to the rival claims of the House of Anjou
and crowned Charles II King of Sicily and Naples at Rieti, 29 May, 1289, after the latter
had expressly acknowledged the suzerainty of the Apostolic See and promised not to accept
any municipal dignity in the States of the Church. The action of the pope did not end the
armed struggle for the possession of Sicily nor did it secure the kingdom permanently to
the House of Anjou. Rudolf of Habsburg also failed to obtain from the pope the repeal of
the authorization, granted the French king, to levy tithes in certain German districts for
the prosecution of the war against the House of Aragon. When he appointed his son Albert
to succeed Ladislaus IV of Hungary (31 August, 1290), Nicholas claimed the realm as a
papal fief and conferred it upon Charles Martel, son of Charles II of Naples.
In 1291 the fall of Ptolemais put an end to Christian dominion in the East. Previous to
this tragic event, Nicholas had in vain endeavoured to organize a crusade. He now called
upon all the Christian princes to take up arms against the Mussulman and instigated the
holding of councils to devise the means of sending assistance to the Holy Land. These
synods were to discuss likewise the advisability of the union of the Knights Templars and
Knights of St. John, as the dissensions among them had partly caused the loss of
Ptolemais. The pope himself initiated the preparations for the crusade and fitted out
twenty ships for the war. His appeals and his example remained unheeded, however, and
nothing of permanent value was accomplished.
Nicholas IV sent missionaries, among them the celebrated John of Montecorvino (q. v.),
to the Bulgarians, Ethiopians, Tatars, and Chinese. By his constitution of 18 July, 1289,
the cardinals were granted one half of the revenues of the Apostolic See and a share in
the financial administration. In 1290 he renewed the condemnation of the sect known as the
Apostolici (q. v.). Nicholas was pious and learned; he contributed to the artistic beauty
of Rome, building particularly a palace beside Santa Maria Maggiore, the church in which
he was buried and where Sixtus V erected an imposing monument to his memory.
LANGLOIS, Les Registres de Nicolas IV (Paris, 1886-93); POTTHAST, Regesta
pontificum Romanorum, II (Berlin, 1875), 1826-1915; KALTENBRUNNER, Aktenstücke zur
Gesch, des Deutschen Reiches unter Rudolf I und Albrecht I (Vienna, 1889); REUMONT, Gesch,
der Stadt Rom, II (Berlin, 1867), 611-14; SCHIFF, Studien zur Gesch. Papst
Nikolaus, IV (Berlin, 1897); MASSI, Niccolò IV (Sinigaglia, 1905); SCHAFF, History
of the Christian Church, V, pt. I (New York, 1907), 207, 287, 410.
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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