Pope Adrian VI
| Adrian VI | |
|---|---|
| Papacy began | 9 January 1522 |
| Papacy ended | 14 September 1523 (1 year, 8 months, 5 days) |
| Predecessor | Leo X |
| Successor | Clement VII |
| Orders | |
| Ordination | 30 June 1490 |
| Consecration | by Diego Ribera de Toledo |
| Created Cardinal | 1 July 1517 |
| Personal details | |
| Birth name | Adriaan Florenszoon Boeyens |
| Born | 2 March 1459 Utrecht, Bishopric of Utrecht, Holy Roman Empire |
| Died | 14 September 1523 (aged 64) Rome, Papal States |
| Other Popes named Adrian | |
| Papal styles of Pope Adrian VI |
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|---|---|
| Reference style | His Holiness |
| Spoken style | Your Holiness |
| Religious style | Holy Father |
| Posthumous style | None |
Pope Adrian VI (Latin: Hadrianus VI, Dutch: Adrianus VI), born Adriaan Florenszoon Boeyens[1] (2 March 1459 – 14 September 1523), served as the 218th Pope of the Catholic Church from 9 January 1522 until his death on 14 September 1523, 1 year and 248 days later. Pope Adrian VI was born in the Prince-Bishopric of Utrecht in the Low Countries, and he was the last non-Italian Pope until Pope John Paul II, 455 years later, and is, together with Pope Marcellus II, one of only two modern popes to retain his baptismal name after election.
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[edit] Early life
Adriaan Florenszoon Boeyens was born on 2 March 1459 in the city of Utrecht, which was then the capital of the Prince-Bishopric of Utrecht, a part of the Burgundian Netherlands in the Holy Roman Empire. He was born in into modest circumstances as the son of Florens Boeyens van Utrecht, also born in Utrecht, and his wife Gertruid. He is the only Dutchman to have ever become pope. He is often called a 'German pope'[2], because prior to the 16th-century national identity in the Low Countries was fledgling[3] and 'Dutch' and 'German' were not yet distinct concepts.[4]
Adrian was probably born in a house on the corner of the Brandsteeg and Oude Gracht that was owned by his grandfather Boudewijn (Boeyen for short). His father, a carpenter and likely shipwright, died when Adrian was 10 years or younger.[5] Adrian VI studied from a very young age under the Brethren of the Common Life, either at Zwolle or Deventer and was also a student of the Latin school (now Gymnasium Celeanum) in Zwolle.[6] In June 1476, he started his studies at the University of Leuven, where he pursued philosophy, theology and Canon Law, due to a scholarship granted by Margaret of York, Duchess of Burgundy, becoming a Doctor of Theology in 1491, Dean of St. Peter's and vice-chancellor of the university. His lectures were published, as recreated from his students' notes; among those who attended was the young Erasmus.
[edit] Early career
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In 1507 he was appointed tutor to Emperor Maximilian I's (1493–1519) seven year old grandson, Charles, who was later to become Emperor Charles V (1519 – 56). In 1515 Adrian was sent to Spain on a diplomatic errand, and after his arrival at the Imperial Court in Toledo, Charles V secured his succession to the See of Tortosa, and on 14 November 1516 commissioned him Inquisitor General of Aragon. The following year, Pope Leo X (1513–21) made Adrian a cardinal, naming him Cardinal Priest of the Basilica of Saints John and Paul.
During the minority of Charles V, Adrian was named to serve with Cardinal Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros as co-regent of Spain. After the death of Jimenez, Adrian was appointed (14 March 1518) General of the Reunited Inquisitions of Castile and Aragon, in which capacity he acted until his departure for Rome. During this period, Charles V left for the Netherlands in 1520, making the future pope Regent of Spain, during which time he had to deal with the Revolt of the Comuneros.
[edit] Election as Bishop of Rome
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In the conclave after the death of the Medici Pope Leo X, his cousin, Cardinal Giulio de' Medici was the leading figure. With Spanish and French cardinals in a deadlock, the absent Adrian was proposed as a compromise and on 9 January 1522 he was elected by an almost unanimous vote. Charles V was delighted upon hearing that his tutor had been elected to the papacy but soon realised that Adrian VI was determined to reign impartially. Francis I of France, who feared that Adrian would become a tool of the Emperor, and had uttered threats of a schism, later relented and sent an embassy to present his homage. Fears of a Spanish Avignon based on the strength of his relationship with the Emperor as his former tutor and regent proved baseless, and Adrian left for Italy at the earliest opportunity, making his solemn entry into Rome on 29 August. He was crowned in St. Peter's Basilica on 31 August 1522, at the age of sixty-three and immediately entered upon the path of the reformer. The 1908 edition of the Catholic Encyclopedia characterised the task that faced him:
- "To extirpate inveterate abuses; to reform a court which thrived on corruption, and detested the very name of reform; to hold in leash young and warlike princes, ready to bound at each other's throats; to stem the rising torrent of revolt in Germany; to save Christendom from the Turks, who from Belgrade now threatened Hungary, and if Rhodes fell would be masters of the Mediterranean-- these were herculean labours for one who was in his sixty-third year, had never seen Italy, and was sure to be despised by the Romans as a 'barbarian'.[7]
His plan was to attack notorious abuses one by one; however, in his attempt to improve the system of indulgences he was hampered by his cardinals. He found reduction of the number of matrimonial dispensations to be impossible, as the income had been farmed out for years in advance by Pope Leo X.
Adrian, who had never before been to Rome, was so ignorant of affairs that he had written asking that some suitable lodgings be obtained for him in Rome whence he could discharge his duties as pope.
[edit] Papacy
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The Italians saw him as a pedantic foreign professor, blind to the beauty of classical antiquity. Musicians such as Carpentras, the composer and singer from Avignon who was master of the papal chapel under Leo X, left Rome due to Adrian VI's indifference to the arts. Thus musical standards at the Vatican declined significantly during his tenure.
Adrian was not successful as a peacemaker among Christian princes, whom he hoped to unite in a war against the Turks. In August 1523 he was forced into an alliance with the Empire, England, and Venice against France; meanwhile, in 1522 the Sultan Suleiman I (1520–66) had conquered Rhodes.
In his reaction to the early stages of the Lutheran revolt, Adrian VI did not completely understand the gravity of the situation. At the Diet of Nuremberg, which opened in December 1522, he was represented by Francesco Chiericati, whose private instructions contain the frank admission that the disorder of the Church was perhaps the fault of the Roman Curia itself, and that it should be reformed.[8] However, the former professor and Inquisitor General was strongly opposed to any change in doctrine (In Catholic doctrine, the Church's dogmata are infallible) and demanded that Luther be punished for teaching heresy.
The pope was mocked by the people of Rome on the Pasquino, and the Romans, who had never taken a liking to a man they saw as a "barbarian", rejoiced at his death.
Adrian VI died in Rome on 14 September 1523, after a somewhat brief tenure as pope. Most of his official papers were lost after his death. He published Quaestiones in quartum sententiarum praesertim circa sacramenta (Paris, 1512, 1516, 1518, 1537; Rome, 1522), and Quaestiones quodlibeticae XII. (1st ed., Leuven, 1515). He is buried in the Santa Maria dell'Anima church in Rome.
[edit] Pope Adrian VI in popular culture
Pope Adrian VI was a character in Christopher Marlowe's theatre play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus (published 1604).
Italian writer Luigi Malerba used the confusion among the leaders of the Catholic Church, which was created by Adrian's unexpected election, as a backdrop for his 1995 novel, Le maschere (The Masks), about the struggle between two Roman cardinals for a well-endowed church office.
[edit] Bibliography
- Luther Martin. Luther's Correspondence and Other Contemporary Letters, 2 vols., tr.and ed. by Preserved Smith, Charles Michael Jacobs, The Lutheran Publication Society, Philadelphia, Pa. 1913, 1918. vol.I (1507-1521) and vol.2 (1521-1530) from Google Books. Reprint of Vol.1, Wipf & Stock Publishers (March 2006). ISBN 1-59752-601-0
- Gross, Ernie. This Day In Religion. New York:Neal-Schuman Publishers, Inc, 1990. ISBN 1-55570-045-4.
- Malerba Luigi. e maschere, Milan: A. Mondadori, 1995. ISBN 88-04-39366-1
[edit] Notes
- ^ Dedel, according to Collier's Encyclopedia.
- ^ Frey, Fundamentalism, p. 370; Mandell, History of the Papacy, vol. 6 p. 260; Schlabach, Unlearning Protestantism, chapter 1, n. 15
- ^ Duke, "The Elusive Netherlands", pp. 9-57; Adrian's contemporary "countryman" Erasmus once joked that he didn't know if he was "Gallus" or "Germanus" and on that account could be considered "two-headed"; Duke, "The Elusive Netherlands", p. 11
- ^ Howell, "The Low Countries", p. 131; Duke, "The Elusive Netherlands", pp. 24-26, writes that in Adrian's time, English lumped Germanic-speaking aliens indiscriminately, using the terms 'Flemish', 'Theotonici', and in the early 16th century mostly 'Dutch' (Doch/Douch, etc.) for all.
- ^ Gerard Weel Life and times of Adrian of Utrecht (in Dutch)
- ^ Coster. "De Latijnse School te Zwolle". Metamorfoses. pp. 17, 19.
- ^ Catholic Encyclopedia (1908)
- ^ Pigafetta, Antonio and Theodore J. Cachey, The first voyage around the world, 1519-1522, (University of Toronto Press, 2007), 128.
[edit] References
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.- Coster, Wim (2003), Metamorfoses. Een geschiedenis van het Gymnasium Celeanum, Zwolle: Waanders, ISBN 90-400-8847-0
- Creighton, Mandell (1919), A History of the Papacy from the Great Schism to the Sack of Rome, 6, New York: Longmans, Green
- Duke, Alastair (2009), "The Elusive Netherlands: The Question of National Identity in the Early Modern Low Countries on the Eve of the Revolt", in Duke, Alastair; Pollmann,, Judith; Spicer, Andrew, Dissident identities in the early modern Low Countries, Farnham: Ashgate Publishers, pp. 9–57, ISBN 978-0-7546-5679-1
- Frey, Rebecca Joyce (2007), Fundamentalism, New York: Infobase Publishing, ISBN 0-8160-6767-8
- Howell, Robert B. (2000), "The Low Countries: A Study in Sharply Contrasting Nationalisms", in Barbour, Stephen; Carmichael, Cathie, Language and nationalism in Europe, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 130–50, ISBN 0-19-823671-9
- Schlabach, Gerald W. (2010), Unlearning Protestantism: Sustaining Christian Community in an Unstable Age, Grand Rapids: Brazos Press, ISBN 978-1-58743-111-1
[edit] External links
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Hadrianus VI |
- Pope Adrian VI Catholic Encyclopedia
- Pope Adrian VI to Francesco Chieregati, Nov. 25, 1522
- Luther, corruption in the Catholic Church, the need for reform, etc.
- Writings of Pope Adrian VI in Latin
- Pope Hadrian VI at Catholic-Hierarchy.org
| Catholic Church titles | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Luis Mercader Escolano |
Bishop of Tortosa 1516–22 |
Succeeded by Willem van Enckenvoirt |
| Preceded by Luis Mercader Escolano |
Grand Inquisitor of Spain 1516–22 |
Succeeded by Alonso Manrique de Lara |
| Preceded by Francisco de Remolins |
Cardinal priest of Ss. Giovanni e Paolo 1517–22 |
Succeeded by Willem van Enckenvoirt |
| Preceded by Leo X |
Pope 1522–23 |
Succeeded by Clement VII |
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