Pope
John XXII
(JACQUES D'EUSE)
Born at Cahors in 1249; enthroned, 5 September, 1316; died at Avignon, 4 December,
1334. He received his early education from the Dominicans in his native town, and later
studied theology and law at Montpellier and Paris. He then taught both canon and civil law
at Toulouse and Cahors, came into close relations with Charles II of Naples, and on his
recommendation was made Bishop of Frejus in 1300. In 1309 he was appointed chancellor of
Charles II, and in 1310 was transferred to the See of Avignon. He delivered legal opinions
favourable to the suppression of the Templars, but he also defended Boniface VIII and the
Bull "Unam Sanctam." On 23 December, 1312, Clement V made him Cardinal-Bishop of
Porto. After the death of Clement V (20 April, 1314) the Holy See was vacant for two years
and three and a half months. The cardinals assembled in Carpentras for the election of a
pope were divided into two violent factions, and could come to no agreement. The electoral
college was composed of eight Italian cardinals, ten from Gascony, three from Provence,
and three from other parts of France. After many weeks of unprofitable discussion as to
where the conclave should be held, the electoral assembly was entirely dissolved.
Ineffectual were the efforts of several princes to induce the cardinals to undertake an
election: neither party would yield. After his coronation Philip V of France was finally
able to assemble a conclave of twenty-three cardinals in the Dominican monastery at Lyons
on 26 June, 1316, and on 7 August, Jacques, Cardinal-Bishop of Porto, was chosen pope.
After his coronation at Lyons on 5 September as John XXII, the pope set out for Avignon,
where he fixed his residence.
His vast correspondence shows that John XXII followed closely the political and
religious movements in all countries, and sought on every possible occasion the
advancement of ecclesiastical interests. Nor was he less insistent than his predecessors
on the supreme influence of the papacy in political matters. For this reason he found
himself involved in grievous disputes which lasted throughout the greater portion of his
pontificate. Great difficulties were also raised for the pope by the controversies among
the Franciscans, which Clement V had tried in vain to settle. A number of Franciscans, the
so-called "Spirituals," or "Fraticelli," adherents of the most
rigorous views, refused to submit to that pope's decision, and after the deaths of Clement
V and Gonzalvez, General of the Minorites, they rebelled, especially in the South of
France and in Italy, declaring that the pope had no power to dispense them from their
rule, since this was nothing other than the Gospel. They then proceeded to drive the
Conventuals from their houses, and take possession of the same, thereby causing scandal
and much disorder. The new general, Michael of Cesena, appealed to John, who in 1317
ordered the refractory friars to submit to their superiors, and caused the doctrines and
opinions of the Spirituals to be investigated. On 23 January, 1318, many of their
doctrines were declared erroneous. Those who refused to yield were treated as heretics:
many were burned at the stake, and some escaped to Sicily.
These troubles among the Franciscans were increased by the quarrel about evangelical
poverty which broke out among the Conventuals themselves. The general chapter of Perugia,
through their general, Michael of Cesena, and other learned men of the order (including
William Occam), defended the opinion of Berenger Talon, that Christ and His Apostles had
no possessions either individually or in common. In 1322 Pope John declared this statement
null and void, and in 1323 denounced as heretical the assertion that Christ and the
Apostles had no possessions either individually or in common, and could not even
legitimately dispose of what they had for personal use. Not only the Spirituals, but also
the adherents of Michael of Cesena and William Occam, protested against this decree,
whereupon in 1324 the pope issued a new Bull, confirming his former decision, setting
aside all objections to it, and declaring those who opposed this decision heretics and
enemies of the Church. Summoned to appear at Avignon, Michael of Cesena obeyed the
summons, but refused to yield and, when threatened with imprisonment, sought safety in
flight. Leaving Avignon on 25 May, 1328, and accompanied by William Occam and Bonagratia
di Bergamo, he betook himself to Louis of Bavaria for protection.
Political conditions in Germany and Italy moved the pope to assert over the latter
far-reaching political claims, and similarly with regard to the German Crown, because of
the latter's union with the imperial office. On this score a violent quarrel broke out
between the pope and King Louis of Bavaria. During the vacancy that followed the death of
Clement V, there had arisen a disputed election for the throne of Germany, Louis of
Bavaria having been crowned at Aachen, and Frederick of Austria at Bonn (25 Nov., 1314).
The electors of both candidates wrote to the future pope to obtain recognition of their
choice, and also to seek for him imperial coronation. On the day of his coronation (5
Sept., 1315) John wrote to both Louis and Frederick and also to the other German princes,
admonishing them to settle their disputes amicably. As there was no universally
acknowledged German king, and the pope had not given preference to either candidate,
neither could hope to exercise imperial authority. Nevertheless, in 1315 Louis appointed
Jean de Belmont imperial vicar for Italy, and at the same time supported Galeazzo Visconti
of Milan, then in open opposition to the pope. The latter maintained (13 March, 1317)
that, by reason of the vacancy of the Roman Empire, all imperial jurisdiction resided with
the pope, and, following the example of his predecessor Clement V, he appointed King
Robert of Sicily imperial vicar for Italy (July, 1317). On 28 September, 1322, Louis of
Bavaria informed the pope that he had overcome his opponent, Frederick of Austria, upon
which John wrote him a friendly letter.
Louis, however, took no further steps to effect a reconciliation with the pope. On the
contrary, he supported in their opposition to the papal legates the excommunicated
Visconti of Milan and the Italian Ghibellines, acted as legitimate emperor, and
proclaimed, on 2 March, 1323, Berthold von Neiffen imperial vicar for Italy. Thereupon
John, following the precedent of Gregory VII and Innocent III, warned Louis of Bavaria
that the examination and approval of the chosen German king with a view to the consequent
bestowal of the imperial dignity belonged to the pope; that he must refrain from
exercising royal rights until the legitimacy of his election had been settled; that he
must recall all commands already issued, give no further aid to the enemies of the Church
especially the Visconti of Milan, condemned as heretics and within three
months present himself before the pope. Should Louis not submit to this admonition, he was
threatened with excommunication. The subsequent behaviour of Louis was very equivocal. He
sent an embassy to the pope, asking for and obtaining a delay of two months before
appearing in the papal presence. At the same time he declared at Nuremberg on 16 November,
1323, that he did not recognize the pope's action or his claim to examine into the
election of a German king; he also accused John of countenancing heretics, and proposed
the calling of a general council to sit in judgment on him. During this respite,
lengthened at his own request, Louis took no steps towards a reconciliation, and on 23
March, 1324, John pronounced on the king the sentence of excommunication. On the other
hand the latter published at Sachsenhausen on 22 May, 1324, an appeal in which he accused
the pope of enmity to the empire, of heresy and protection of heretics, and appealed from
John's decision to a general council. An open breach henceforth existed, followed by
disastrous results. Louis persecuted the few German cardinals, who recognized the papal
Bull, whereupon John on 11 July, 1324, declared all his rights to imperial recognition
forfeited. The pope further ratified the treaty between Duke Leopold of Austria and
Charles I of France, in which the former promised to help the latter to the title of
German King, and then of Roman Emperor. However, as Leopold died on 28 Feb., 1326, and
Louis of Bavaria and Frederick of Austria became reconciled, the king's power in Germany
became firmly established.
The quarrel between John XXII and Louis of Bavaria stirred up a vigorous literary feud
concerning the relations of Church and State. Louis was supported by the Franciscan
Spirituals, e.g. Ubertino da Casale, Michael of Cesena, William Occam, Bonagratia di
Bergamo, and many others whose extreme ideas on the question of religious poverty had been
condemned by the pope; also by two theologians of the University of Paris, Marsilius of
Papua and John of Gentian (de Gentian), joint authors of the famous "Defensor
Paces," which was intended to prove that the only way to maintain peace is by the
complete subordination of the ecclesiastical power to that of the State. Denying the
primacy of the pope, the authors asserted that the emperor alone could authorize
ecclesiastics to exercise criminal jurisdiction, that all temporal goods of the Church
belonged to the emperor, etc. Other theologians e.g. Henry von Kelheim, provincial
of the Minorites, Ulrich Hanganoer, the king's private secretary, Abbot Engelbert of
Admont, Lupold of Bebenburg, afterwards Bishop of Bamberg, and William Occam, though not
so extreme in their views as the authors of the "Defensor Paces," willingly
exalted the imperial above the papal power. It was unfortunate for the fickle and, in
theological matters, inexperienced king that he fell into the hands of such advisers. The
"Defensor Paces" was anathematized by a papal Bull of 23 October, 1327, and some
of its theses were condemned as heretical by the University of Paris. Many theologians in
their writings defended the ecclesiastical hierarchy and the primacy of the pope, among
them the Augustinian Alexander a Sancto Elpidio, later Archbishop of Ravenna, the
Minorite, Alvarius Pelagius, the Augustinian Augustinus Triumphus of Ancona, and Conrad of
Megenberg. On their side, however, the defence was carried too far, some of them even
extolling the pope as absolute ruler of the world.
When Louis of Bavaria saw his power firmly established in Germany, he set out early in
1327 for Italy, where in February, with the chiefs of the Italian Ghibellines, he held a
congress at Trent. In March he passed through Bergamo on his way to Milan. On 3 April John
XXII declared forfeited all rights of Louis to the German Crown, also to all fiefs held
from the Church and from former sovereigns, and finally to the Duchy of Bavaria. Moreover,
he summoned Louis to appear before the Holy See within six months, and accused him of
heresy for defending a doctrine which the Head of the Church had repudiated, and for
taking under his protection the heretics, Marsilius and John of Gentian. Louis paid no
attention to this notice, which indeed only aggravated his opposition to the pope. In
Milan he received (30 May) the crown of Lombardy from the hands of two deposed bishops,
and arbitrarily appointed several new bishops. The pope on his side appointed bishops to
sees falling vacant within the empire, and continued to fill the various reserved
prelacies, so that an open schism henceforth existed. In 1328 Louis set out for Rome,
where the Guelphs had been overthrown with their senator, King Robert of Naples. On 17
January, 1328, the excommunicated German king received in Rome the imperial crown from
Sciarra Colonna, who on 18 April, after a farcical proceeding, and in the name of Louis of
Bavaria, proclaimed John XXII a heretic, usurper, and oppressor of the Church, and
deprived him of all his papal dignities. A straw image of the pope was publicly burned in
Rome, and on 12 May the Franciscan Spiritual, Pietro Rainalducci of Corbario, was
proclaimed anti-pope by Louis, taking at his consecration (22 May) the name of Nicholas V.
But Louis had made himself so universally obnoxious in Italy, on account of his tax
levies, that the position of the anti-pope was untenable. Many Ghibelline cities and
rulers became reconciled with the pope, and finally Pietro of Corbario himself wrote to
John, asking for pardon and absolution. At Avignon on 25 August, 1330, he publicly
acknowledged his guilt in the presence of the pope and the cardinals, whereupon the former
gave him absolution and the kiss of peace. Nevertheless, Pietro was not allowed to leave
the city, where he spent the three remaining years of his life in voluntary penance and
study. By degrees the whole of Italy returned to the obedience of the legitimate pope. The
latter meanwhile had renewed his sentence against Louis of Bavaria, and proclaimed in
Italy a crusade against him (1328). At the same time he summoned the German princes to
hold another election, and excommunicated Michael of Cesena, William Occam, and
Bonagratia. The adherents of Louis in Lombardy soon dwindled away, and he returned to
Germany in the beginning of 1330. Here too, the people were weary of the long conflict,
and wished for peace, so that Louis was compelled to take steps towards a reconciliation
with the pope. In May, 1330, he entered into negotiations with Avignon through the
mediation of Archbishop Baldwin of Trier, King John of Bohemia, and Duke Otto of Austria.
The pope demanded from Louis renunciation of all claims on the imperial title. Louis on
that occasion refused to entertain the idea, but was later (1333) willing to discuss the
project of his abdication. The matter, however, was then postponed. Whether John XXII
arbitrarily severed Italy from the empire has never been definitely settled, for the
authenticity of the Bull "Ne praetereat" is not certain.
In the last years of John's pontificate there arose a dogmatic conflict about the
Beatific Vision, which was brought on by himself, and which his enemies made use of to
discredit him. Before his elevation to the Holy See, he had written a work on this
question, in which he stated that the souls of the blessed departed do not see God until
after the Last Judgment. After becoming pope, he advanced the same teaching in his
sermons. In this he met with strong opposition, many theologians, who adhered to the usual
opinion that the blessed departed did see God before the Resurrection of the Body and the
Last Judgment, even calling his view heretical. A great commotion was aroused in the
University of Paris when the General of the Minorites and a Dominican tried to disseminate
there the pope's view. Pope John wrote to King Philip IV on the matter (November, 1333),
and emphasized the fact that, as long as the Holy See had not given a decision, the
theologians enjoyed perfect freedom in this matter. In December, 1333, the theologians at
Paris, after a consultation on the question, decided in favour of the doctrine that the
souls of the blessed departed saw God immediately after death or after their complete
purification; at the same time they pointed out that the pope had given no decision on
this question but only advanced his personal opinion, and now petitioned the pope to
confirm their decision. John appointed a commission at Avignon to study the writings of
the Fathers, and to discuss further the disputed question. In a consistory held on 3
January, 1334, the pope explicitly declared that he had never meant to teach aught
contrary to Holy Scripture or the rule of faith and in fact had not intended to give any
decision whatever. Before his death he withdrew his former opinion, and declared his
belief that souls separated from their bodies enjoyed in heaven the Beatific Vision.
The Spirituals, always in close alliance with Louis of Bavaria, profited by these
events to accuse the pope of heresy, being supported by Cardinal Napoleon Orsini. In union
with the latter, King Louis wrote to the cardinals, urging them to call a general council
and condemn the pope. The incident, however, had no further consequences. With untiring
energy, and in countless documents, John followed up all ecclesiastical or
politico-ecclesiastical questions of his day, though no particular grandeur is remarkable
in his dealings. He gave salutary advice to ruling sovereigns, especially to the Kings of
France and of Naples, settled the disputes of rulers, and tried to restore peace in
England. He increased the number of sees in France and Spain, was generous to many
scholars and colleges, founded a law library at Avignon, furthered the fine arts, and
dispatched and generously maintained missionaries in the Far East. He caused the works of
Petrus Olivi and Meister Eckhardt to be examined, and condemned the former, while he
censured many passages in the latter's works. He published the "Clementines" as
the official collection of the "Corpus Juris Canonici," and was the author of
numerous decretals ("Extravagantes Johannis XXII" in "Corp. Jur.
Can."). He enlarged and partly reorganized the papal Curia, and was particularly
active in the administration of ecclesiastical finances.
The usual revenues of the papacy grew very meagre, owing to the disturbed condition of
Italy, especially of the Papal States, consequent on the removal of the Papacy from its
historic seat at Rome. Moreover, since the end of the thirteenth century the College of
Cardinals had enjoyed one half of the large income from tributary kingdoms, the servitia
communia of the bishops, and some less important sources. Pope John, on the other
hand, had need of large revenues, not only for the maintenance of his Court, but
particularly for the wars in Italy. Since the thirteenth century the papal treasury had
exacted from the minor benefices, when conferred directly by the pope, a small tax
(annata. See ANNATES; APOST0LIC CAMERA). In 1319 John XXII reserved to himself all
minor benefices falling vacant in the Western Church during the succeeding three years,
and in this way collected from each of them the aforesaid annates, as often as they were
conferred by the pope. Moreover, many foreign benefices were already canonically in the
papal gift, and the annates from them were paid regularly into the papal treasury. John
also made frequent use of the right known as jus spolii, or right of spoils, which
permitted him under certain circumstances to divert the estate of a deceased bishop into
the papal treasury. He procured further relief by demanding special subsidies from various
archbishops and their suffragans. France, in particular, furnished him the most financial
aid. The extensive reservation of ecclesiastical benefices was destined to exercise a
prejudicial influence on ecclesiastical life. The centralized administration took on a
highly bureaucratic character, and the purely legal standpoint was too constantly in
evidence. The pope's financial measures, however, were highly successful at the time,
though in the end they evoked no little resistance and dissatisfaction. In spite of the
large expenditures of his pontificate, John left an estate of 800,000 gold florins
not five millions as stated by some chroniclers.
John XXII died on 4 December, 1334, in the eighty-fifth year of his age. He was a man
of serious character, of austere and simple habits, broadly cultivated, very energetic and
tenacious. But he held too persistently to canonico-legal traditions, and centralized
overmuch the ecclesiastical administration. His financial measures, more rigorously
applied by his successors, made the Curia of Avignon generally detested. The transfer of
the papacy from Rome to Avignon was esteemed to have taken place in the interests of
France, which impression was strengthened by the preponderance of French cardinals, and by
the long-continued conflict with King Louis of Bavaria. In this way was aroused a
widespread distrust of the papacy, which could not fail to result in consequences
detrimental to the interior life of the Church.
COULON, Lettres secretes et curiales du pape Jean XXII, relatives a la France (Paris,
1900-); MOLLAT, Lettres communes du pape Jean XXII (Paris, 1901-); GUERARD, Documents
pontificaux sur la Gascogne, Pontificat de Jean XXII, I-II (Paris, 1897); FAYEN, Lettres
de Jean XXII, I (Brussels, 1908); RAYNALDUS, Annales ecclesiastici ad ann. 1316-1334, XXIV
(Bar-le-Duc, 1872-); RIEZLER, Vatikanische Akten zur deutschen Gesch. in der Zeit Koenig
Ludwigs des Bayern (Innsbruck, 1891); BLISS, Calendar of Papal Letters, II (London, 1895);
SAUERLAND, Urkunden u. Regesten zur Gesch. des Rheinlandes aus dem vatikanischen Archiv,
I-Il (Bonn, 1902-3); BROM, Bullar. Trajectense, (2 vols., The Hague, 1891-6); RIEDER,
Roem. Quellen zur Konstanzer Bistumsgesch. zur Zeit der Paepste in Avignon (Innsbruck,
1908): LANG, Die Urkunden über die Bezichungen der paepstlichen Kurie zur Provinz u.
Dioezese Salzburg 1316-1378 (Graz, 1903); BALUZE, Vitae paparum Avinionensium, I (Paris,
1693); VILLAVI, Cronica (Florence, 1823); VERLAQUE, Jean XXII, sa vie et ses oeuvres
(Paris, 1883); MUELLER, Der Kampf Ludwigs des Bayern mit der rom. Kurie, I (Tübingen,
1879); IDEM, Ludwigs d. Bayern Appellationen gegen Johann XXII. in Zeitschr. fuer
Kirchenrecht, XIX (1884), 239 sqq.; SCHAPER, Die Sachsenhaeuser Appellation (Berlin,
1888); ENGELMANN, Der Anspruch der Paepste auf Konformation bei den deutschen
Koenigswahlen (Breslau, 1886); ALTMANN, Der Roemerzug Ludwigs des Bayern (Berlin, 1886);
CHROUST, Die Romfahrt Ludwigs d.B. (Gotha, 1887); FELTEN, Die Bulle Ne praetereat u. die
Rekonziliationsverhandlungen Ludwigs d.B. mit Johann XXII. (2 vols., Trier, 1885-7);
RIEZLER, Die literar. Widersacher der Paepste zur Zeit Ludwigs d.B. (Leipzig, 1874);
MARCOUR, Anteil der Minoriten am Kampfe zwischen Ludwig d.B. und Johann XXII (Emmerich,
1874); EHRLE, Die Spiritualen, ihr Verhaeltnis zum Franziskanerorden u. den Fraticellen in
Archiv for Literatur- u. Kirchengesch. des Mittelalters (1885), 509 sqq.: (1886), 106
sqq.; (1887), 553 sqq.; IDEM, Ludwig d.B. und die Fraticellen u. Ghibellinnen von Todi u.
Amelia im Jahre 1328, ibid. (1886). 653 sqq.; IDEM, Olivi u. die Sachsenhaeuser
Appellation, ibid. (1887), 540 sqq.; MUELLER, Aktenstuecke zur Gesch. der Streitigkeiten
unter den Minoriten in Zeitschr. fuer Kirchengesch. (1884), 63 sqq.; TANGL, Die
paepstlichen Kanzleiordnungen (Innsbruck, 1894); HAYN, Das Almosenwesen unter Johann XXII.
in Roem. Quartalschr. (1892), 209 sqq.; FAUCON, La librairie des papes d'Avignon (2 vols.,
Paris, 1886-); EHRLE, Hist. Bibl. Roman. Pontif. tum Bonifatianoe tum Avinionensis, I
(Rome, 1890); KOENIG, Die paepstliche Kammer unter Klemens V. u. Johann XXII (Vienna,
1894); SAMARAN AND MOLLAT, La fiscalite pontificale en France au XIV siecle (Paris, 1905);
GOELLER, Die Einnahmen der apstol. Kammer unter Johann XXII (Paderborn, 1909). See also
the bibliographies of ANNATES and APOSTOLIC CAMERA; ANDRE, Hist. de la papaute a Avignon
(2nd ed., Avignon, 1888); CHRISTOPHE, Hist. de la papaute pendant le XIV siecle (3 vols.,
Paris, 1853); HOEFLER, Die avignones. Paepste (Vienna, 1871); MOLTENSEN, De Avignoske
Pavers forhold til Danmark (Copenhagen, 1896); PASTOR, Gesch. der Paepste, I, (4th ed.,
Freiburg im Br., 1901), 67 sqq.; HEFELE, Konziliengesch., VI (2nd ed.), 575 sqq.
J.P. KIRSCH
Transcribed by John Fobian
In memory of Helen L. Johnson
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VIII
Copyright © 1910 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, October 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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