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Pope John XXI

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Pope John XXI
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{{Short description|Head of the Catholic Church from 1276 to 1277}}







factoids
, now at the Archbishops Gallery of Braga, Portugal| birth_name = Pedro Julião| church = Catholic Church| term_start = 8 September 1276| term_end = 20 May 1277| predecessor = Adrian VPope Nicholas III>Nicholas III {edih}| ordination = May 1275| cardinal = 3 June 1273| created_cardinal_by = Gregory X1215}}| birth_place = Lisbon, Kingdom of Portugal127720df=y}}| death_place = Viterbo, Papal States| coat_of_arms = C o a Johannes XXI.svg| other = John}}Pope John XXI (, ; {{circa|lk=no|1215}} â€“ 20 May 1277), born Pedro JuliãoBOOK, Os Papas: De São Pedro à João Paulo II, Richard McBrien, 1997, Edições Loyola, Barbara Theoto Lambert, 229, 8515019132, (), was the bishop of Rome and head of the Catholic Church from 8 September 1276 to his death. He is the only Portuguese pope in history.Richard P. McBrien, Lives of the Popes, (Harper Collins, 1997), 222. He is sometimes identified with the logician and herbalist Peter of Spain (; ), which would make him the only pope to have been a physician.{{anchor|Biography}}

Early life

Pedro Julião was born in Lisbon between 1210 and 1220 to Julião Pais, chancellor of Sancho I and Afonso Henriques,{{sfn|Branco|2001|p=524}} and his wife Mor Mendes. He started his studies at the episcopal school of Lisbon Cathedral and later joined the University of Paris, although some historians claim that he was educated at Montpellier. Wherever he studied, he concentrated on medicine, theology, logic, physics, metaphysics, and Aristotle's dialectic. He is traditionally and usually identified with the medical author Peter of Spain, an important figure in the development of logic and pharmacology. Peter of Spain taught at the University of Siena in the 1240s and his was used as a university textbook on Aristotelian logic for the next three centuries. At the court in Lisbon, he was the councilor and spokesman for King Afonso III in church matters. Later, he became prior of Guimarães.He was Archdeacon of Vermoim (Vermuy) in the Archdiocese of Braga.Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi Tomus I, editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 144. He tried to become bishop of Lisbon but was defeated. Instead, he became the Master of the school of Lisbon. Peter became the physician of Pope Gregory X (1271–1276) early in his reign. In March 1273, he was elected Archbishop of Braga, but did not assume that post; instead, on 3 June 1273, Pope Gregory X created him Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum (Frascati).Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi Tomus I, editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 9.

Papacy

File:Luogo del primo sepolcro di vari papi, con resti del monumento di giovanni xxi, 01.jpg|thumb|Tomb of Pope John XXI in Viterbo CathedralViterbo CathedralAfter the death of Pope Adrian V on 18 August 1276, Peter was elected pope on 8 September. He was crowned a week later on 20 September. One of John XXI's few acts during his brief reign was the reversal of a decree recently passed at the Second Council of Lyon (1274); the decree had not only confined cardinals in solitude until they elected a successor pope, but also progressively restricted their supplies of food and wine if their deliberations took too long. Though much of John XXI's brief papacy was dominated by the powerful Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, who succeeded him as Pope Nicholas III, John attempted to launch a crusade for the Holy Land, pushed for a union with the Eastern church, and did what he could to maintain peace between the Christian nations. He also launched a mission to convert the Tatars, but he died before it could start.Johann Peter Kirsch (1910). "(wikisource:Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Pope_John_XXI_(XX)|Pope John XXI (XX))". In Catholic Encyclopedia. 8. New York.To secure the necessary quiet for his medical studies, he had an apartment added to the papal palace at Viterbo, to which he could retire when he wished to work undisturbed. On 14 May 1277, while the pope was alone in this apartment, the ceiling collapsed; John was rescued alive from beneath the rubble; however, he died of his serious injuries on 20 May, possibly an early recorded case of crush syndrome.JOURNAL, De Santo, Natale G, Bisaccia, Carmela, De Santo, Luca S, Cucu, Andrei I, Costea, Claudia F, April 2021, John XXI, the Pope Philosopher and Physician-Scientist of Portuguese Origins Died of Crush Syndrome in 1277, J Relig Health, 60, 2, 1305–1317, 10.1007/s10943-020-01096-3, 33141403, 226231611, He was buried in the Duomo di Viterbo, where his tomb can still be seen. The original porphyry sarcophagus was destroyed during the cathedral's 16th-century refurbishment, and was replaced with a more modest one in stone with the pope's effigy. In the 19th century, the Duke of Saldanha, as Portuguese Ambassador to the Holy See, had the pope's remains transferred to a new sarcophagus sculpted by (:it:Filippo Gnaccarini|Filippo Gnaccarini). In 2000, the Lisbon City Council, led by Mayor João Soares, successfully had a new funeral monument built in lioz stone, topped by the original stone effigy of the pope, placed in a more condign location in the transept.EPISODE, Mistério em Viterbo,weblink 13 September 2021, O Lugar da História, Anabela, Saint-Maurice, RTP2, 19 February 2000, pt, NEWS, 18 April 2005, Dois papas nascidos em Portugal, Two popes born in Portugal,weblink pt, Diário de Notícias, 13 September 2021,

Legacy

After his death, it was rumored that John XXI had actually been a necromancer (see also Communion of the Saints), a suspicion frequently directed towards the few scholars among medieval popes (see, e.g., Sylvester II). It was also said that his death had been an act of God, stopping him from completing a heretical treatise.Odorico Raynaldi, sub anno 1227, no. 19. Since the works of "Peter of Spain" continued to be studied and appreciated, however, Dante Alighieri placed "Pietro Spano" in his Paradiso's (Paradiso (Dante)#Fourth Sphere (The Sun: The Wise)|Sphere of the Sun) with the spirits of other great religious scholars.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}

Bibliography

  • BOOK, Establishing the King in his Kingdom: The Chancellor Julião Pais and his Jurists, Maria João, Branco, The Medieval World, Peter, Linehan, Janet L., Nelson, Routledge, 2001, 524,
  • Guiraud, J. and L. Cadier (editors), Les registres de Grégoire X et de Jean XXI (1271–1277) (Paris, 1892–1898) [Bibliothèque de l'Ecole française à Rome, série 2, 12] (in Latin)
  • Walter, Fritz, Die Politik der Kurie unter Gregor X (Berlin, 1894) (in German)
  • Stapper, Richard, Papst Johannes XXI. Eine Monographie (Münster 1898) [Kirchengeschichtliche Studien, volume 4, no. 4] (in German)
  • Gregorovius, Ferdinand, History of Rome in the Middle Ages, volume V, part 2, second edition, revised (London: George Bell, 1906)
  • H. D. Sedgwick, Italy in the Thirteenth Century Volume II (Boston-New York, 1912)
  • Mazzi-Belli, V., "Pietro Hispano papa Giovanni XXI," Rivista di storia della medicina 15 (1971), 39–87 (in Italian)
  • Morceau, Joseph, "Un pape portugais : Jean XXI, dénommé Pierre d'Espagne", Teoresi 24 (1979), 391–407 (in French)
  • Maxwell-Stuart, P. G. Chronicle of the Popes: The Reign-by-Reign Record of the Papacy from St. Peter to the Present, Thames & Hudson, 2002, p. 119. {{ISBN|0-500-01798-0}}.
  • {{EnciclopediaDeiPapi|Verfasser=José Francisco Meirinhos|ID=giovanni-xxi_(Enciclopedia-dei-Papi)/|Lemma=Giovanni XXI|Band=2|SeiteVon=|SeiteBis=|Kommentar=|kurz=}}
  • {{DBI|first= José Francisco |last= Meirinho|title= Giovanni XXI, papa|url =weblink |volume= 55}}
  • Jean Claude Bologne: La Naissance Interdite ; stérilité, avortement, contraception au Moyen-Age. Orban, Paris, 1988 {{ISBN|2-85565-434-3}}.
  • {{BBKL|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070629093211weblink |band=3|autor=Michael Hanst|spalten=224-228|artikel=Johannes XXI}}
  • Joachim Telle: Petrus Hispanus in der altdeutschen Medizinliteratur und Texte unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Thesaurus pauperum‘. 2 vol., Heidelberg, 1972.

External links

{{Commons category|Ioannes XXI|Pope John XXI}}
  • {{DNB-Portal|118557904}}
  • {{DDB|Person|118557904}}
  • J. P. Kirsch: Art. Pope John XXI (XX), in: The Catholic Encyclopedia, Vol. VIII (1910)
  • Salvino Leone: {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080623214358weblink |date=June 23, 2008 |title=John XXI: The physician who became pope }}
  • Joke Spruyt: Peter of Spain (2001), in: Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
{{Commons category|Ioannes XXI|John XXI}}{{Popes}}{{Catholicism}} {{History of the Catholic Church}}{{Authority control}}

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