1 October
1404 A.D. Boniface IX (Piero Tomacelli)Dies—Rome’s
203rd; Not Well Educated; Avignon Papacy & Schism; Opposed by Robert of Geneva ("Clement VII")
(1378-1394), Pedro de Luna ("Benedict XIII")
(1394-1417) and Baldassare Cossa ("John XXIII")
(1400-1415), Called Antipopes; Worthless Cardinals, Bishops, and Clerks
Recriminating Each Other; Hater of John Wycliffe
Oestereich, Thomas. "Pope Boniface
IX." The
Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. New York: Robert
Appleton Company, 1907.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02670a.htm. Accessed 20 Sept 2014.
Pope Boniface IX
Elected at Rome, 2 November, 1389, as successor of the Roman Pope, Urban VI; d. there, 1 October, 1404. Piero (Perino, Pietro) Tomacelli came of an ancient but impoverished baronial family of Naples. He lacked good theological training and skill in the conduct of curial business, but was by nature tactful and prudent. His firm character and mild manner did much to restore respect for the papacy in the countries of his own obedience(Germany, England, Hungary, Poland, and the greater part of Italy). The Avignon Pope, Clement VII, had just crowned (1 November, 1389) as King of Naples the French prince, Louis of Anjou. Boniface took up the cause of the youthful Ladislaus, heir of Charles III of Naples and Margaret of Durazzo, had him crowned King of Naples at Gaeta (29 May, 1390), and for the next decade aided him efficiently to expel the Angevin forces from Italy. In the course of his reign Boniface extinguished the municipal independence of Rome and established the supremacy of the pope. He secured the final adhesion of the Romans (1398) by fortifying anew the Castle of Sant' Angelo, the bridges, and other points of vantage. He also took over the port of Ostia from its cardinal-bishop. In the Papal States Boniface gradually regained control of the chief strongholds and cities, and is the true founder of these States as they appear in the fifteenth century. Owing to the faithlessness and violence of the Romans he resided frequently at Perugia, Assisi, and elsewhere. Clement VII, the Avignon pope, died 16 September, 1394. Boniface had excommunicated him shortly after his own election, and in turn had been excommunicated by Clement. In 1392 Boniface attempted, but in vain, to enter into closer relations with Clement for the re-establishment of ecclesiastical unity, whereupon Boniface reasserted with vigour his own legitimacy. Clement was succeeded atAvignon, 28 September, 1394, by Cardinal Pedro de Luna, as Benedict XIII. Suffice it to say here that Bonifacealways claimed to be the true pope, and at all times rejected the proposal to abdicate even when it was supported by the principal members of his own obedience, e.g. Richard II of England (1396), the Diet of Frankfort(1397), and King Wenceslaus of Germany (Reims, 1398).
During the reign of Boniface two jubilees were celebrated at Rome. The first took place in 1396, in compliance with an ordinance of his predecessor Urban VI, and was largely frequented from Germany, Hungary, Poland, Bohemia, and England. Several cities of Germany obtained the privileges of the jubilee, but the preaching of the indulgences gave rise to abuses and to impositions on the part of unaccredited agents of the pope, so that he wasobliged to proceed against them with severity. The jubilee of 1400 drew to Rome great crowds of pilgrims, particularly from France. In spite of a disastrous plague Boniface remained at his post. In the latter part of 1399 bands of penitents, known as the Bianchi, or Albati (White Penitents), arose, especially in Provence and Italy. They went in procession from city to city, clad in white garments, with faces hooded, only the eyes being left uncovered, and wearing on their backs a red cross. For a while their penitential enthusiasm had some good results. After they had satisfied their spiritual ardour at Rome, Boniface gradually discountenanced these wandering crowds, an easy prey of agitators and conspirators, and finally dissolved them. In England the anti-papal virulence of Wycliff increased the opposition of both Crown and clergy to the methods of Boniface in the granting of such English benefices as fell vacant in the Roman Curia through the death or promotion of the incumbent. The Parliament confirmed and extended more than once the statutes of Provisors and Præmunire, ofEdward III. Boniface protested vigorously, particularly in 1391, but in the end found himself unable to execute his grants without the king's consent and sanction. "Thus ended", says Lingard (ad. an. 1393), "this long and angrycontroversy entirely to the advantage of the Crown." Nevertheless, at the Synod of London (1396), the EnglishChurch condemned the anti-papal teachings of Wyclif, and in 1398 the University of Oxford, consulted by Richard II, issued in favour of Boniface an influential document, while in 1390 and again in 1393 the spiritual peers upheld the right of the pope to excommunicate even those who obeyed the statutes of Provisors. In Germany theelectors had deposed at Rhense (20 August, 1400) the unworthy Wenceslaus, King of the Romans, and had chosen in his place Rupert, Duke of Bavaria and Rhenish Count Palatine. In 1403 Boniface abandoned his uncertain attitude towards both, approved the deposition of Wenceslaus as done by papal authority, and recognized the election of Rupert. In 1398 and 1399 Boniface appealed to Christian Europe in favour of EmperorEmmanuel, threatened at Constantinople by Sultan Bajazet. St. Bridget of Sweden was canonized by Boniface, 7 October, 1391. The universities of Ferrara (1391) and Fermo (1398) owe him their origin, and that of Erfurt itsconfirmation (1392). In 1404 Benedict XIII sent the last of his embassies to Boniface, who received the agents ofBenedict 29 September, but the interview ended unfavourably. The pope, highly irritated, took to his bed with an attack of gravel, and died after an illness of two days.
Contemporary and later chroniclers praise the political virtues of Boniface, also the purity of his life, and the grandeur of his spirit. Some, like Dietrich of Niem, charge him with an inordinate love of money, dishonest traffic in benefices, the sale of dispensations, etc. But Dietrich is no impartial writer and is blamed by Reynaldus for being bitter and unjust (acertus et iniquis). In his gossipy pages one misses a proper appreciation of the difficulties that surrounded Boniface—local sources of revenue lost in the long absence of the papacy from Rome, foreign revenue diminished by the schism, extraordinary expenses for the restoration of papal Rome and the reconquest of the Papal States, the constant wars necessitated by French ambition, the inheritance of the financial methods of Avignon, and the obligation of conciliating supporters in and out of Italy. Boniface sought nothing for himself and died poor. He is also charged with nepotism and he certainly provided generously for his mother, brothers, and nephews. It may be said, however, that in the semi-anarchic conditions of the time goodgovernment depended upon such personal support as a temporal ruler could gather and retain, i.e. could reward, while fidelity was best secured by close domestic ties. Boniface was the first pope to introduce the form ofrevenue known as annates perpetuæ, or reservation of one-half the first year's fruits of every benefice granted in the Roman Court, this in addition to other traditional expenses. It must be remembered that at this time thecardinals claimed a large part of these revenues, so that the Curia was perhaps more responsible than the popefor new financial methods destined in the next century to arouse bitter feelings against Rome, particularly in Germany.
Sources
DIETRICH
(THEODERICUS) VON NIEM, De Scismate libri III, ed. ERLER (Leipzig,
1890); GOBELINUS PERSONA, Cosmidromius
(Cosmodromium), ed. JANSEN (1904);
RAYNALDUS, Ann. eccl. ad. ann.
1389-1404, containing many
important documents; others are found in D'ACHÉRY, Spicilegium (Paris, 1655), MARTÊNE
AND DURAND, Thesaur. nov.
anecdotorum (Paris, 1717); Vet. Script. coll.
ampliss. (Paris, 1724); Vita Bonifatii IX, in MURATORI, Rev. Ital. Script., III, ii, 830 sqq.; Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, II, 507,
530, 549; the histories of the city of Rome by GREGOROVIUS and by VON REUMONT;
JUNGMANN, Dissert. Selecta (1886) VI, 272;
CREIGHTON, A History of the Papacy
during the Period of the Reformation (London, 1892), I,
98-161; PASTOR, History of the Papacy; LINGARD, History of England, III, c. iv; ERLER, Die historischen
Schriften Dietrichs von Nieheim (Leipzig, 1887);
HEFELE, Conciliengesch., VI, 812 sqq.; N.
VALOIS, La France et le grand
schisme d'Occident (Paris, 1896-1902);
ROCQUAIN, La Cour de Rome et
l'esprit de réforme avant Luther (Paris, 1897); M.
JANSEN,Papst
Bonifatius IX. und seine Beziehungen zur deutschen Kirche (Freiburg, 1904). For
the Bulls of Boniface concerning Hungary see Mon. Vaticana hist. regni
Hung. illustr. (Budapest, 1888), Ser.
I, III, 1389-96; for Bohemia, KROFTA, Acta Urb. VI. et Bonif.
IX, p. I, in Mon. Vaticana res
gestas Bohemiæ illustrantia (Prague, 1903), V.
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