Pope
Benedict XII
(JACQUES FOURNIER)
Third of the Avignon popes, b. at Saverdun in the province of Toulouse, France, elected
20 December, 1334; d. at Avignon 24 April, 1342. Nothing is known of his parentage or
boyhood. In youth he became a Cistercian monk in the monastery of Boulbonne, whence he
moved to that of Fontfroide, whose abbot was his natural uncle, Arnold Novelli, by whose
name Fournier was also known. He studied at the University of Paris, where he received the
doctorate in theology. Meantime he was made Abbot of Fontfroide, succeeding his uncle who
was created cardinal 19 December, 1310. In December 1317, he became Bishop of his native
Diocese of Palmiers, was translated to Mirepoix 26 January, 1327, and was made cardinal by
Pope John XXII, 18 December, 1327. On the latter's death, 4 December, 1334, the cardinals
in conclave, most of whom opposed a return to Rome, demanded of Cardinal de Comminges
whose election seemed assured, the promise to remain at Avignon. His refusal precipitated
an unexpected canvass for candidates. On the first ballot, 20 December, 1334, many
electors, intending to sound the mind of the conclave, voted for the unlikely Cardinal
Fournier, who, though he was one of the few men of real merit in the college, was but
lightly regarded because of his obscure origin and lack of wealth and following. He amazed
the conclave by receiving the necessary two-thirds vote. On 8 January, 1335, he was
enthroned as Benedict XII.
Resolved to re-establish the papacy at Rome, Benedict signalized his accession by
providing for the restoration of St. Peter's basilica and the Lateran. He was prepared to
acquiesce in the petition of a Roman deputation soliciting his return, but his cardinals
pictured the impossibility of living in faction-rent Italy. They were right, whatever were
their motives, and Benedict yielded. Conscience- stricken during a critical illness, he
proposed as a compromise a transfer of his court to Bologna. The cardinals urged the
slender hope of securing obedience, and Benedict decided to remain at Avignon, where in
1339 he commenced to build the massive papal castle which still exists. Mindful always of
distracted Italy, he often sent money to succour the famine- stricken people and to
restore churches. Reform of abuse was Benedict's chief concern. Immediately after his
elevation he remanded to their benefices clerics not needed at Avignon, and menaced with
summary chastisement violators of the law of residence. He revoked the scandalous
"expectances" granted by his predecessors and forbade conferring benefices in
commendam. (See COMMENDATORY ABBOT.) He condemned unseemly "pluralities" and
conferred benefices with such conscientious discrimination that several were left long
vacant, and so gave colour to the calumny that he was himself harvesting their revenues.
He inveighed vigorously against greed for gain among ecclesiastics; regulated the taxes on
documents issued by papal bureaux; made episcopal visitation less of a financial burden to
the clergy; abolished the practice of countersigning requests for papal favours, which was
extremely lucrative to venal officials; and established the Registry of Supplications for
the control of such petitions. Abhorring nepotism, he granted preferment to but one
relative, naming the eminent John Bauzian Archbishop of Arles in deference to the
insistence of the cardinals; he compelled his only niece to discourage noble suitors, and
marry one of her own humble rank. A legend, vouched for by Ægidius of Viterbo (d. 1532),
accredits him with saying, "a pope should be like Melchisedech, without father,
mother, or genealogy". Monastic reform particularly engaged his zeal. Himself a
Cistercian, he sought to revive pristine monastic fervour and devotion to study. Pertinent
papal constitutions and visitations of monasteries attest his solicitude for a monastic
renaissance.
Being a learned theologian, he was as bishop, cardinal, and pope, keenly interested in
scholastic discussions. He terminated the controversy on the vexed question as to whether
the Beatific Vision was enjoyed before or only after the General Judgment. John XXII had
advocated the latter view and stirred up vigorous discussion. Eager to solve the question,
Benedict heard the opinions of those maintaining the theory of deferred vision, and, with
a commission of theologians, gave four months to patristic research. Their labours
terminated in the proclamation (29 January, 1336) of the Bull "Benedictus Deus"
defining the immediate intuitive vision of God by the souls of the just having no faults
to expiate. Zealous too for the preservation of the Faith, he stimulated the bishops of
infected districts to vigilance in the repression of heresy and urged the use of the
preventive remedies of the Inquisition. He combatted energetically the anti-papal
doctrines which the ecclesiastico- political theorists of the disturbed Avignon period had
spread, and which were unfortunately sustained by a school of misguided Franciscans. (See
FRATICELLI, MARSILIUS OF PADUA , WILLIAM OF OCCAM, MICHAEL OF CESENA.) Distressed by
disloyalty in Ireland, he tried to persuade Edward III to establish the Inquisition in his
realm and urged him to assist the Irish bishops to extirpate heresy. But, though the most
ardent foe of heresy, Benedict was remarkably patient and loving in dealing with heretics.
He looked also to the union of the Eastern Church with Rome through a delegate of the
Emperor Andronicus, whose sincerity, however, Benedict was forced to question; manifested
his solicitude for the Church in Armenia which, in the early fourteenth century, suffered
from Mohammedan invasions, succouring the unfortunates in temporal matters and healing
doctrinal differences which had long rent Armenia with schism.
In purely ecclesiastical affairs Benedict's pontificate was creditable to himself and
productive of good to the Church. Pious, prudent, and firm, he strove conscientiously to
meet the Church's needs at a critical period. In political relations, however, he was not
so successful. Inexperienced in politics, he had little taste for diplomacy and an
imperfect knowledge of men and affairs of the world. Conflicting political motives
confused him, and hesitancy and vacillation contrasted painfully with his firmness and
decision in ecclesiastical matters. Though determined to act independently of Philip VI of
France, the latter generally succeeded in committing the pope to his policy. He helped to
prevent his return to Rome. He frustrated his desire to make peace with the Emperor Louis
of Bavaria whom John XXII had excommunicated for fomenting sedition in Italy, proclaiming
himself King of the Romans, and intruding an anti-pope. Willing to absolve him should he
but submit to the Church, Benedict exposed to Louis's delegates his generous terms of
peace (July, 1335). But Philip, aided by the cardinals, persuaded the pope that his
generosity encouraged heresy and rebellion. Benedict yielded. Thrice the imperial envoys
came to Avignon, but French influence prevailed, and, on 11 April, 1337, Benedict declared
it impossible to absolve Louis. The latter, as Benedict feared, allied himself with Edward
III of England against France. In vain the pope tried to avert war, but he was no match
for the kings and their allies. His good offices were spurned; and he was humiliated by
Philip's later alliance with Louis, who had also allied to himself the pope's political
and ecclesiastical enemies, and by the emperor's denial of the pope's authority over him,
and, worst insult of all, by his usurpation of papal power in declaring the nullity of the
marriage of John Henry of Bohemia and Margaret Maultasch, that the latter might marry his
son, Louis of Brandenburg. The French king hindered Benedict's projected crusade against
the infidels, making the war with England an excuse to forego his promise to lead the
armies, and even diverting the money subscribed for it to financing his own wars, despite
the protests of the conscientious pope. Benedict's crusading ardour found solace in Spain,
where he encouraged the campaign against the Mohammedans who in 1339 invaded the
peninsula.
Benedict XII has not escaped calumny. Reformer, foe of heresy, builder of the Avignon
papal palace, unwilling ally of France and enemy of Germany, he made many enemies whose
misrepresentations have inspired most non- Catholic appreciations of his character. Much
harm was done to his memory by the satires of Petrarch, who, though befriended and
honoured by Benedict, yet bitterly resented his failure to return to Rome. His natural
obesity, too, stimulated caricature and undeserved criticism. But history offers a
vindication and testifies that, though he failed to cope successfully with the political
difficulties to which he fell heir, his piety, virtue, and pacific spirit, his justice,
rectitude, and firmness in ruling, his zeal for doctrinal and moral reform, and his
integrity of character were above reproach.
RAYNALDUS, in BARONIUS, Annales (Bar-le-Duc,
1872), XXV, 20-274; CHRISTOPHE, Hist. de la papauté pendant le XIVe siècle
(Paris, 1853), II, 36-79; ROCQUAIN, La Cour de Rome (Paris, 1895), II, 437-463;
PASTOR-ANTROBUS, History of the Popes (St. Louis, 1898), I, 83-86; VIDAL, Benoît
XII: Lettres (Paris, 1902); DAUMET, Benoît XII: Lettres (Paris, 1889); Acta
SS., XIII, 83-86; Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE (Paris, 1886), II, 486, 527;
MURATORI, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores f(Milan, 1734), III-XIII; LE BACHELET in Dict.
théol. cath., II, 653-704, an exhaustive theological study with a good bibliography.
JOHN B. PETERSON
Transcribed by WGKofron
In memory of Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio
Fidelis servus et prudens, quem constituit Dominus super familiam suam
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume II
Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
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