Pope
St. Celestine V
(PIETRO DI MURRONE.)
Born 1215, in the Neapolitan province of Moline; elected at Perugia 5 July, 1294;
consecrated and crowned at Aquila, 29 August; abdicated at Naples, 13 Dec., 1294; died in
the castle of Fumone, 19 May, 1296. He was of humble parentage, became a Benedictine at
the age of seventeen, and was eventually ordained priest at Rome. His love of solitude led
him first into the wilderness of Monte Morone in the Abruzzi, whence his surname, and
later into the wilder recesses of Mt. Majella. He took for his model the Baptist. His
hair-cloth was roughened with knots; a chain of iron encompassed his emaciated frame; he
fasted every day except Sunday; each year he kept four Lents, passing three of them on
bread and water; the entire day and a great part of the night he consecrated to prayer and
labour. As generally happens in the case of saintly anchorites, Peter's desire for
solitude was not destined to be gratified. Many kindred spirits gathered about him eager
to imitate his rule of life, and before his death there were thirty- six monasteries,
numbering 600 religious, bearing his papal name (Celestini). The order was approved, as a
branch of the Benedictines, by Urban IV, in 1264. This congregation of (Benedictine)
Celestines must not be confounded with other (Franciscan) Celestines, extreme Spirituals
whom Pope Celestine permitted (1294) to live as hermits according to the Rule of St.
Francis, but were pendent of the Franciscan superiors. In gratitude they called themselves
after the pope (Pauperes eremitę Domini Celestine), but were dissolved and
dispersed (1302) by Boniface VIII, whose legitimacy the Spirituals contested [Heimbucher,
Orden und Kongregationen (2nd ed. Paderborn, 1907); I, 280; II, 360]. In 1284, Pietro,
weary of the cares of government, appointed a certain Robert as his vicar and plunged
again into the depths of the wilderness. It would be well if some Catholic scholar would
devote some time to a thorough investigation of his relations to the extreme spiritual
party of that age; for though it is certain that the pious hermit did not approve of the
heretical tenets held by the leaders, it is equally true that the fanatics, during his
life and after his death, made copious use of his name.
In July, 1294, his pious exercises were suddently interrupted by a scene unparalleled
in ecclesiastical history. Three eminent dignitaries, accompanied by an immense multitude
of monks and laymen, ascended the mountain, announced that Pietro had been chosen pope by
unanimous vote of the Sacred College and humbly begged him to accept the honour. Two years
and three months had elapsed since the death of Nicholas IV (4 Apr., 1292) without much
prospect that the conclave at Perugia would unite upon a candidate. Of the twelve
Cardinals who composed the Sacred College six were Romans, four Italians and two French.
The factious spirit of Guelph and Ghibelline, which was then epidemic in Italy, divided
the conclave, as well as the city of Rome, into two hostile parties of the Orsini and the
Colonna, neither of which could outvote the other. A personal visit to Perugia, in the
spring of 1294, of Charles II of Naples, who needed the papal authority in order to regain
Sicily, only exasperated the affair, hot words being exchanged betrween the Angevin
monarch and Cardinal Gaetani, at that time the intellectual leader of the Colonna, later,
as Pope Boniface VIII, their bitter enemy. When the situation seemed hopeless, Cardinal
Latino Orsini admonished the fathers that God had revealed to a saintly hermit that if the
cardinals did not perform their duty within four months, He would visit the Church with
severe chastisement. All knew that he referred to Pietro di Murrone. The proposition was
seized upon by the exhausted conclave and the election was made unanimous. Pietro heard of
his elevation with tears; but, after a brief prayer, obeyed what seemed the clear voice of
God, commanding him to sacrifice his personal inclination on the altar of the public
welfare. Flight was impossible, even if he contemplated it; for no sooner did the news of
this extraordinary event spread abroad than multitudes (numbered at 200,000) flocked about
him. His elevation was particularly welcome to the Spirituals, who saw in it the
realization of current prophecies that the reign of the Holy Spirit ruling through the
monks was at hand; and they proclaimed him the first legitimate pope since Constantine's
donation of wealth and worldly power to "the first rich father" (Inferno, Canto
XIX). King Charles of Naples, hearing of the election of his subject, hastened with his
son Charles Martel, titular King of Hungary, ostensibly to present his homage to the new
pope, in reality to take the simple old man into honourable custody. Had Charles known how
to preserve moderation in exploiting his good luck, this windfall might have brought him
incalculable benefits; as it was, he ruined everything by excessive greed.
In reply to the request of the cardinals, that he should come to Perugia to be crowned,
Pietro, at the instigation of Charles, summoned the Sacred College to meet him at Aquila,
a frontier town of the Kingdom of Naples. Reluctantly they came, and one by one, Gaetani
being the last to appear. Seated on an humble ass, the rope held by two monarchs, the new
pontiff proceeded to Aquila, and, although only three of the cardinals had arrived, the
king ordered him to be crowned, a ceremony which had to be repeated in traditional form
some days later, the only instance of a double papal coronation. Cardinal Latino was so
grief- stricken at the course which affairs were evidently taking that he fell sick and
died. Pietro took the name of Celestine V. Urged by the cardinals to cross over into the
States of the Church, Celestine, again at the behest of the king, ordered the entire Curia
to repair to Naples. It is wonderful how many serious mistakes the simple old man crowded
into five short months. We have no full register of them, because his official acts were
annulled by his successor. On the 18th of September he created twelve new cardinals, seven
of whom were French, and the rest, with one possible exception, Neapolitans, thus paving
the road to Avignon and the Great Schism. Ten days later he embittered the cardinals by
renewing the rigorous law of Gregory X, regulating the conclave, which Adrian V had
suspended. He is said to have appointed a young son of Charles to the important See of
Lyons, but no trace of such appointment appears in Gams or Eubel. At Monte Cassino on his
way to Naples, he strove to force the Celestine hermit-rule on the monks; they humoured
him while he was with them. At Benevento he created the bishop of the city a cardinal,
without observing any of the traditional forms. Meanwhile he scattered privileges and
offices with a lavish hand. Refusing no one, he was found to have granted the same place
or benefice to three or four rival suitors; he also granted favours in blank. In
consequence, the affairs of the Curia fell into extreme disorder. Arrived in Naples, he
took up his abode in a single apartment of the Castel Nuovo, and on the approach of Advent
had a little cell built on the model of his beloved hut in the Abruzzi. But he was ill at
ease. Affairs of State took up time that ought to be devoted to exercises of piety. He
feared that his soul was in danger. The thought of abdication seems to have occurred
simultaneously to the pope and to his discontented cardinals, whom he rarely consulted.
That the idea originated with Cardinal Gaetani the latter vigorously denied, and
maintained that he originally opposed it. But the serious canonical doubt arose: Can a
pope resign? As he has no superior on earth, who is authorized to accept his resignation?
The solution of the question was reserved to the trained canonist, Cardinal Gaetani, who,
basing his conclusion on common sense and the Church's right to self-preservation, decided
affirmatively.
It is interesting to notice how curtly, when he became Boniface VIII, he dispatches the
delicate subject on which the validity of his claim to the papacy depended. In the
"Liber Sextus" I, vii, 1, he issued the following decree: "Whereas some
curious persons, arguing on things of no great expediency, and rashly seeking, against the
teaching of the Apostle, to know more than it is meet to know, have seemed, with little
forethought, to raise an anxious doubt, whether the Roman Pontiff, especially when he
recognizes himself incapable of ruling the Universal Church and of bearing the burden of
the Supreme Pontificate, can validly renounce the papacy, and its burden and honour: Pope
Celestine V, Our predecessor, whilst still presiding over the government of the aforesaid
Church, wishing to cut off all the matter for hesitation on the subject, having
deliberated with his brethren, the Cardinals of the Roman Church, of whom We were one,
with the concordant counsel and assent of Us and of them all, by Apostolic authority
established and decreed, that the Roman Pontiff may freely resign. We, therefore, lest it
should happen that in course of time this enactment should fall into oblivion, and the
aforesaid doubt should revive the discussion, have placed it among other constitutions ad
perpetuam rei memoriam by the advice of our brethren."
When the report spread that Celestine contemplated resigning, the excitement in Naples
was intense. King Charles, whose arbitrary course had brought things to this crisis,
organized a determined opposition. A huge procession of the clergy and monks surrounded
the castle, and with tears and prayers implored the pope to continue his rule. Celestine,
whose mind was not yet clear on the subject, returned an evasive answer, whereupon the
multitude chanted the Te Deum and withdrew. A week later (13 December) Celestine's
resolution was irrevocably fixed; summoning the cardinals on that day, he read the
constitution mentioned by Boniface in the "Liber Sextus", announced his
resignation, and proclaimed the cardinals free to proceed to a new election. After the
lapse of the nine days enjoined by the legislation of Gregory X, the cardinals entered the
conclave, and the next day Benedetto Gaetani was proclaimed Pope as Boniface VIII. After
revoking many of the provisions made by Celestine, Boniface brought his predecessor, now
in the dress of a humble hermit, with him on the road to Rome. He was forced to retain him
in custody, lest an inimical use should be made of the simple old man. Celestine yearned
for his cell in the Abruzzi, managed to effect his escape at San Germano, and to the great
joy of his monks reappeared among them at Majella. Boniface ordered his arrest; but
Celestine evaded his pursuers for several months by wandering through the woods and
mountains. Finally, he attempted to cross the Adriatic to Greece; but, driven back by a
tempest, and captured at the foot of Mt. Gargano, he was delivered into the hands of
Boniface, who confined him closely in a narrow room in the tower of the castle of Fumone
near Anagni (Analecta Bollandiana, 1897, XVI, 429-30). Here, after nine months passed in
fasting and prayer, closely watched but attended by two of his own religious, though
rudely treated by the guards, he ended his extraordinary career in his ninety-first year.
That Boniface treated him harshly, and finally cruelly murdered him, is a calumny. Some
years after his canonization by Clement V in 1313, his remains were transferred from
Ferentino to the church of his order at Aquila, where they are still the object of great
veneration. His feast is celebrated on 19 May.
Acta SS. May, IV, 419; Bibl. hagiogr. Latina, 979 seq.; Analecta
Bollandiana (1897), XVI, 365-82 (the oldest life of Celestine); CELIDONIO, Vita
di S. Pietro del Morrone, Celestino papa quinta, scritta su' documenti coevi (Sulmona,
1896); IDEM, La non-autenticita degli Opuscula Coelestina (ibid., 1896; these opuscula
edited by TELERA, Naples, 1640, may have been dictated, but not composed by Celestine);
ROVIGLIO, La rinuncia de Celestino V (Verona, 1894); AUTINORI, Celestino V ed il
sesto anniversario della sua coronazione (Aquila, 1894); RAYNALDUS, Ann. eccl. ad
ann. 1294-96; HEFELE, Conciliengeschichte, V; also the histories of the City of
Rome by VON REUMONT and by GREGOROVIUS.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by WGKofron
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume III
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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