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It has been suggested that Modern antipope be merged into this article or section. () |
In its list of the Popes, the Holy See's annual directory, Annuario Pontificio, attaches to the name of Pope Leo VIII (963-965) the following note: "At this point, as again in the mid-eleventh century, we come across elections in which problems of harmonizing historical criteria and those of theology and canon law make it impossible to decide clearly which side possessed the legitimacy whose factual existence guarantees the unbroken lawful succession of the Successors of Saint Peter. The uncertainty that in some cases results has made it advisable to abandon the assignation of successive numbers in the list of the Popes." In all cases it is clear that whichever was the Pope, the other was an antipope, since the claim of each was widely accepted.
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History
Hippolytus (d. 235) is commonly recognized as the earliest antipope, as he protested against Pope Callixtus I and headed a separate group within the Roman Church. Hippolytus was later reconciled to Callixtus's second successor Pope Pontian, when both were condemned to the mines on the island of Sardinia. He has been canonized by the Church. Whether two or more persons have been confused in this account of Hippolytus,[1] and whether Hippolytus actually declared himself to be the Bishop of Rome, remains unclear, especially since no such claim is found in the writings attributed to him. The Catholic Encyclopedia also mentions a Natalius,[2] before Hippolytus, as first antipope, who, according to Eusebius's EH5.28.8-12, quoting the Little Labyrinth of Hippolytus, after being "scourged all night by the holy angels", covered in ash, dressed in sackcloth, and "after some difficulty", tearfully submitted to Pope Zephyrinus. As proof of the angels' actual intervention, Natalius displayed the wounds they had left on his back. Novatian (d. 258), another third-century figure, certainly claimed the See of Rome in opposition to Pope Cornelius, and is thus reckoned as the first unequivocal antipope.
The period when antipopes were most numerous was during the struggles between the Popes and the Holy Roman Emperors of the 11th and 12th centuries. The emperors frequently imposed their own nominees, in order to further their cause. (The popes, likewise, sometimes sponsored rival imperial claimants in Germany in order to overcome a particular emperor.) The Great Western Schism, which, on the grounds of the allegedly invalid election of Pope Urban VI, began in 1378 with the election of Clement VII, who took up residence in Avignon, France, led to two, and eventually three, rival lines of claimants to papacy: the Roman line, the Avignon line, and the Pisan line. The last-mentioned line was named after the town of Pisa, Italy, where the council that elected Alexander V as a third claimant was held. To end the schism, the Council of Constance deposed, in May 1415, John XXIII of the Pisan line, whose claim to legitimacy was based on a council's choice. Pope Gregory XII of the Roman line resigned in July 1415. The Council formally deposed Benedict XIII of the Avignon line, who refused to resign, in July 1417. Afterwards, Pope Martin V was elected and was accepted everywhere, except in the small and rapidly diminishing area that remained faithful to Benedict XIII. The scandal of the Great Schism created anti-papal sentiment and fed into the Protestant Reformation at the turn of the 16th century.
List of historical antipopes
The list of Popes and Antipopes in the Annuario Pontificio does not include Natalius (perhaps because of the uncertainty of the evidence) nor Antipope Clement VIII. It may be that the following of the latter was considered insufficiently significant, like that of "Benedict XIV", who is mentioned along with him in the Catholic Encyclopedia article on Pope Martin V. As for Sylvester III, sometimes listed as an Antipope, the Holy See's Annuario Pontificio classifies him as a Pope, not an Antipope. In line with its above-quoted remark on the obscurities about the canon law of the time and the historical facts, especially in the mid-eleventh century (see the second paragraph of this article), it makes no judgement on the legitimacy of his takeover of the position of Pope in 1045. The Catholic Encyclopedia places him in its List of Popes, though with the annotation: "Considered by some to be an antipope".
List of current claimants
Whilst all modern claimants to the Papacy in opposition to Pope Benedict XVI are technically antipopes, none of them have received wide enough recognition as defined earlier in this article to be considered true antipopes. Therefore the antipopes listed in this article have a very limited following, ranging from several hundreds of adherents, to about ten.
Colinites
In 1950, Frenchman Jean Colin claimed to receive revelations and to continue and to fulfil the 1873 message of Mélanie Calvat, the seer of La Salette. Subsequently, Pope Pius XII publicly declared him by name a vitandus excommunicate, one who should be avoided. Colin claimed to have been made Pope, even while Pope Pius XII was alive as pope Clement XV, and in 1963 founded the ultra-liberal, ultra-modernist The Renewed Church of Christ or Church of the Magnificat, based first in Lyons, then at St. Jovite, Quebec, Canada. The Colinites have since disintegrated into several factions, with one successor pope in France. Another, larger, faction is led by Jean-Gaston Tremblay, one of Colin's disciples, who declared himself constituted pope by apparition even before Colin had died and who calls himself pope John-Gregory XVII. He is now based in St. Jovite, as head of the Order of the Magnificat and The Apostles of the Latter Days. The 1846 secret of Mélanie Calvet, which called for the constitution of these Apostles of the Latter Days is central to his claims and mission.
Palmarian Catholic Church
- Clemente Domínguez y Gómez (Gregory XVII), mystically self-proclaimed (1978–2005) in Spain
- Manuel Alonso Corral (Peter II), succeeded Gregory XVII in 2005
The Palmarian Catholic Church regards as true popes those until 1978, including Pope Paul VI, who is revered by them as a martyr pope. Palmarians do not claim the see of Rome, but hold that the Pope of Rome is excommunicated and that the position of the Holy See has been transferred to the see of El Palmar de Troya, on the grounds of claimed Marian apparitions.
Other movements
These antipopes are for the most part not self-proclaimed in the strictest sense. They organized elections by alleged faithful Catholics, none of whom was a recognized cardinal. The verifiable smallest of these conclaves was attended by only six electors, the largest is claimed to have comprised more than sixty-one electors. Examples are:
- Gino Frediani (Emmanuel I) (1973-1974–1984) in Italy, pope of the New Church of the Holy Heart of Jesus
- Chester Olszewski (Peter II) (since 1980), self-proclaimed in Pennsylvania, USA
- Reinaldus Michael Benjamins (Gregory XIX), (since 1983), self-proclaimed in New York, United States of America
- Aimé Baudet (Peter II) (since 1984), self-proclaimed in Belgium
- Pierre Henri Bubois (Peter II) (since 1985), self-proclaimed in Brussels, Belgium
- David Bawden (Michael I), (since 1990) elected in Kansas, United States of America
- Valeriano Vestini (Valerian I) (since 1990) in Chieti, Italy
- Victor von Pentz (Linus II) (since 1994), either self-proclaimed in Hertfordshire, United Kingdom or elected by several sedevacantists in Assisi, Italy (disputed).
- Maurice Archieri (Peter II) (since 1995), self-proclaimed in Le Perreux, France as Vicar of Christ for the Last Days
- Lucian Pulvermacher (Pius XIII) (since 1998), elected in Montana, United States of America, pope of the True Catholic Church.
- Julius Tischler (Peter II) (since 1998), self-proclaimed in Germany
- Oscar de la Compasion (Leo XIV) (since 2006), self-proclaimed in Luján, Argentina
- William Kamm (future pope Peter II), of the Order of Saint Charbel-movement of Australia
- Elijah Clark (Thelonius II), the order of B & P-movement of Seattle, United States
- Raphael Titus Otieno (since 2004), third of the Legio Maria popes (since 1962) of western Kenya
Antipopes in fiction
Antipopes have appeared as fictional characters. These may be either in historical fiction, as fictional portraits of well-known historical antipopes or in the guise of imaginary antipopes.
- Jean Raspail's novels of — L'Anneau du pêcheur (The Fisherman's Ring) — and Gérard Bavoux — Le Porteur de lumière (The Light-bringer) feature two antipopes.[3][4] From two rather different perspectives these recount the fictional history of a parallel hierarchy, by which in secret French cardinals nominated the true Pope. As it is told, the antipope Benedict XV', Pierre Tifane, was recognised as pope in Avignon from 1437 to 1470. His successor, the antipope Benedict XVI (not to be confused with the validly-elected 21st century Pope Benedict XVI), Jean Langlade, reigned there from 1470 to 1499. These books build on claims that Jean Carrier, the second antipope Benedict XIV, nominated cardinals who were to continue this antipapal line, in the Great Schism.
- Robert Rankin's first part of his comic fantasy The Brentford Trilogy is called The Antipope, and features the resurrected Pope Alexander VI, the last Borgia pope.
- Walter M. Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz makes repeated reference to an Antipope Vissarion, leader of the Vissarionist Schism of ca. 3000 AD. Several popes in the sequel, the post-apocalyptical novel Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman are called antipopes during or after their papacies.
- The fictional synth-pop artist Zladko Vladcik claims to be The Anti-Pope in one of his songs.
- Dan Simmons's novels Endymion and Rise of Endymion feature a Father Paul Duré who is the routinely murdered antipope Teilhard I.
- S.M. Stirling's Dies the Fire and its sequels feature an antipope named Leo, who is set up by one of the surviving communities of Western Oregon after the "the Change." After communications with Europe are reestablished, and the death of this antipope and his secular sponsor, his followers are reconciled with the Church.
Ralph MacInerney's novel THE RED HAT features a schism between liberals and conservatives following the election of a conservative African Pope; the liberal faction, taking as pretext the exclusion from a previous conclave of a number of cardinals who had been named but not formally appointed before the Pope's death, elect an Italian cardinal who calls himself "Pius XIII". (It is not explained why a liberal claiming to represent the true spirit of Vatican II takes a title associated with papal conservatism, rather than (say) "John XXIV").
Notes
- ^ The catacombs the destination of the great jubilee. Vatican City. Retrieved on 2007-09-03.
- ^ Monarchians - Dynamists, or Adoptionists. Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved on 2007-09-03.
- ^ Jean Raspail, L'Anneau du pêcheur, Paris : Albin Michel, 1994. 403 p. ISBN 2-226-07590-9
- ^ Gérard Bavoux, Le Porteur de lumière, Paris : Pygmalion, 1996. 329 p. ISBN 2-85704-488-7
References
- Antipope in the Catholic Encyclopaedia
- Antipope in The Pope Encyclopaedia
- Kelly, J.N.D, The Oxford Dictionary of Popes, Oxford University Press, USA (June 1, 1986), ISBN 0-19-213964-9
- Raspail, Jean, L'Anneau du pêcheur, Paris : Albin Michel, 1994. 403 p. ISBN 2-226-07590-9
- Bavoux, Gérard, Le Porteur de lumière, Paris : Pygmalion, 1996. 329 p. ISBN 2-85704-488-7
See also
Antipopes of the Roman Catholic Church | |
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| Hippolytus · Novatian · Felix II · Ursicinus · Eulalius · Laurentius · Dioscorus · Theodore · Paschal · Constantine II · Philip · John VIII · Anastasius · Christopher · Boniface VII · John XVI · Gregory VI · Sylvester III · Benedict X · Honorius II · Clement III · Theodoric · Adalbert · Sylvester IV · Gregory VIII · Celestine II · Anacletus II · Victor IV (1138) · Victor IV (1159–1164) · Paschal III · Callixtus III · Innocent III · Nicholas V · Clement VII · Benedict XIII · Alexander V · John XXIII · Clement VIII · Benedict XIV · Felix V | |

