An antipope (Latin: antipapa) is a person who, in opposition to a sitting Bishop of Rome, makes a widely accepted claim to be the Pope.[1] In the past, antipopes were typically those supported by a fairly significant faction of cardinals and kingdoms. Persons who claim to be the pope but have few followers, such as the modern sedevacantist antipopes, are not generally classified as antipopes, and therefore are ignored for regnal numbering.
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 harmonising 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.[2]
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Saint Hippolytus (d. 235) is commonly considered to be the earliest antipope, as he protested against Pope Callixtus I and headed a separate group within the Church in Rome. 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,[3] and whether Hippolytus actually declared himself to be the Bishop of Rome, remains unclear, especially since no such claim has been cited in the writings attributed to him.
Papal styles of the Antipope |
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Reference style | His Holiness |
Spoken style | Your Holiness |
Religious style | Holy Father |
Posthumous style | N/A |
Eusebius of Caesarea quotes[4] from an unnamed earlier writer the story of a Natalius who accepted the bishopric of a heretical group at Rome, but who soon repented and tearfully begged Pope Zephyrinus (Pope from 199 to 217) to receive him into communion.[5][6] If Natalius claimed to be Bishop of Rome rather than only of a small group in the city, he could be considered an antipope earlier than Hippolytus and indeed the first antipope.
Novatian (d. 258), another third-century figure, certainly claimed the See of Rome in opposition to Pope Cornelius, and if Natalius and Hippolytus were excluded because of the uncertainties concerning them, Novatian could then be said to be the first antipope.
The period in which 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 to further their own causes. The popes, likewise, sometimes sponsored rival imperial claimants (antikings) in Germany to overcome a particular emperor.
The Great Western Schism—which began in 1378, when the French cardinals, claiming that the election of Pope Urban VI was invalid, elected Clement VII as Pope—led to two, and eventually three, rival lines of claimants to papacy: the Roman line, the Avignon line (Clement VII took up residence in Avignon, France), 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, in May 1415, the Council of Constance deposed 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. In 1417, the Council also formally deposed Benedict XIII of the Avignon line, but he refused to resign. 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.
Pontificate | Common English name | Regnal (Latin) name | Personal name | Place of birth | Age at Election / Death or Resigned | # years as Antipope | Notes | In opposition to |
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c. 200 | Natalius | Natalius | later reconciled (see above) | Zephyrinus | ||||
217–235 | Saint Hippolytus | Hippolytus | later reconciled with Pope Pontian (see above) | Callixtus I | ||||
Urban I | ||||||||
Pontian | ||||||||
251–258 | Novatian | Novatianus | founder of Novatianism | Cornelius | ||||
Lucius I | ||||||||
Stephen I | ||||||||
Sixtus II | ||||||||
355–365 | Felix II | Felix secundus | installed by Roman Emperor Constantius II | Liberius | ||||
366–367 | Ursicinus | Ursicinus | Ursinus | Damasus | ||||
418–419 | Eulalius | Papa Eulalius | Boniface I | |||||
498–499 501–506 |
Laurentius | Papa Laurentius | supported by Byzantine emperor Anastasius I | Symmachus | ||||
530 | Dioscorus | Papa Dioscurus | Boniface II | |||||
687 | Theodore | Papa Theodorus | Sergius I | |||||
687 | Paschal (I) | Papa Paschalis | ||||||
767–768 | Constantine II | Papa Constantinus secundus | Stephen III | |||||
768 | Philip | Papa Philippus | installed by envoy of Lombard King Desiderius | |||||
844 | John VIII | Papa Joannes octavus | elected by acclamation | Sergius II | ||||
855 | Anastasius III Bibliothecarius | Papa Anastasius tertius | Benedict III | |||||
903–904 | Christopher | Papa Christophorus | between Leo V and Sergius III | |||||
974 | Boniface VII | Papa Bonifacius septimus | between Benedict VI and Benedict VII | |||||
984–985 | between John XIV and John XV | |||||||
997–998 | John XVI | Papa Joannes sextus decimus | John Filagatto | supported by Byzantine emperor Basil II | Gregory V | |||
1012 | Gregory VI | Papa Gregorius sextus | Benedict VIII | |||||
1058–1059 | Benedict X | Papa Benedictus decimus | John Mincius | supported by the Counts of Tusculum | Nicholas II | |||
1061–1064 | Honorius II | Papa Honorius secundus | Pietro Cadalus | supported by Agnes, regent of the Holy Roman Empire | Alexander II | |||
1080, 1084–1100 | Clement III | Papa Clemens tertius | Guibert of Ravenna | supported by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor | Gregory VII | |||
Victor III | ||||||||
Urban II | ||||||||
Paschal II | ||||||||
1100–1101 | Theodoric | Papa Theodoricus | successor to Clement III | Paschal II | ||||
1101 | Adalbert or Albert | Papa Adalbertus | successor to Theodoric | |||||
1105–1111 | Sylvester IV | Papa Sylvester quartus | Maginulf | supported by Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor | ||||
1118–1121 | Gregory VIII | Papa Gregorius octavus | Maurice Burdanus | Gelasius II | ||||
Callixtus II | ||||||||
1124 | Celestine II | Papa Cœlestinus secundus | Thebaldus Buccapecus | Honorius II | ||||
1130–1138 | Anacletus II | Papa Anacletus secundus | Pietro Pierleoni | Innocent II | ||||
1138 | Victor IV | Papa Victor quartus | Gregorio Conti | successor to Anacletus II | ||||
1159–1164 | Victor IV | Papa Victor quartus | Ottavio di Montecelio | supported by Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperor | Alexander III | |||
1164–1168 | Paschal III | Papa Paschalis tertius | Guido di Crema | |||||
1168–1178 | Callixtus III | Papa Callixtus tertius | Giovanni of Struma | |||||
1179–1180 | Innocent III | Papa Innocentius tertius | Lanzo of Sezza | |||||
1328–1330 | Nicholas V | Papa Nicolaus quintus | Pietro Rainalducci | supported by Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor | John XXII | |||
1378–1394 | Clement VII | Papa Clemens septimus | Robert of Geneva | Avignon | Urban VI | |||
Boniface IX | ||||||||
1394–1423 | Benedict XIII | Papa Benedictus tertius decimus | Pedro de Luna | Avignon | ||||
Innocent VII | ||||||||
Gregory XII | ||||||||
Martin V | ||||||||
1409–1410 | Alexander V | Papa Alexander quintus | Pietro Philarghi | Pisa | Gregory XII | |||
1410–1415 | John XXIII | Papa Joannes vicesimus tertius | Baldassare Cossa | Pisa | ||||
1423–1429 | Clement VIII | Papa Clemens octavus | Gil Sánchez Muñoz | Martin V | ||||
1424–1429 | Benedict XIV | Papa Benedictus quartus decimus | Bernard Garnier | |||||
1430–1437 | Benedict XIV | Papa Benedictus quartus decimus | Jean Carrier | |||||
Eugene IV | ||||||||
5 November 1439 – 7 April 1449 |
Felix V | Papa Fœlix quintus | Duke Amadeus VIII of Savoy | elected by the Council of Basel | ||||
Nicholas V |
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.[7]
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 regarding the legitimacy of his takeover of the position of pope in 1045. The Catholic Encyclopedia places him in its List of Popes,[8] though with the annotation: "Considered by some to be an antipope". Until first years of XX century, he was classified as an antipope, so Robert Hugh Benson, in Lord of the World, calls the Last Pope "Sylvester III", not "Sylvester IV". Benson calls Sylvester's predecessor "John XXIV" and not "John XXIII" because, in 1907, Pisan Antipopes Alexander V and John XXIII were considered true popes.
Many antipopes created cardinals, known as quasi-cardinals, and a few created cardinal-nephews, known as quasi-cardinal-nephews.
Quasi-cardinal | Nephew of | Elevated | Notes |
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Giacomo Alberti | Antipope Nicholas V | 15 May 1328 | Excommunicated by Pope John XXII.[9] |
Amedeo Saluzzo | Antipope Clement VII | 23 December 1383 | Abandoned Avignon Pope Benedict XIII after having been deposed by him on 21 October 1408; participated in the Council of Pisa, the election of Pope Alexander V (now regarded as an antipope), the Council of Constance, and the conclave of Pope Martin V.[9] |
Tommaso Brancaccio | Antipope John XXIII | 6 June 1411 | Attended the Council of Constance, and the conclave of Pope Martin V.[10] |
Gil Sánchez Muñoz | Antipope Clement VIII | 26 July 1429 | Submitted to Pope Martin V after his uncle abdicated.[11] |
As well as antipopes, in the historical sense of the term, there have been and are people who, with a very limited following, ranging from very few to some hundred, claim to be Pope.
They thus do not fit the Encyclopædia Britannica's definition of "antipope": "one who opposes the legitimately elected Bishop of Rome, endeavours to secure the papal throne, and to some degree succeeds materially in the attempt."[12] Except by their followers, whose number is minuscule, they are not regarded as serious claimants.
They are usually religious leaders of breakaway Roman Catholic groups that reject the commonly recognized popes (sedevacantist groups). For this reason they are often called "sedevacantist antipopes". Claiming to have elected a pope in a "conclave" of perhaps half a dozen laypeople, as in the case of David Bawden, they hold that, because of their action, the See of Rome is no longer vacant, and that they are no longer sedevacantists (conclavism).
A significant number of them have taken the name Peter II, owing to its special significance.
The Roman Catholic Church regards them as excommunicated schismatics, and in some cases as heretics.
The Palmarian Catholic Church regards Pope Paul VI, whom they revere as a martyr, and his predecessors as true popes, but hold, on the grounds of claimed apparitions, that the Pope of Rome is excommunicated and that the position of the Holy See has, since 1978, been transferred to the See of El Palmar de Troya.
The following organised their elections by allegedly faithful Catholics, none of whom was a recognized cardinal. The smallest such conclave was attended by only three electors; the largest is claimed to have comprised more than sixty-one electors. Examples are:
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.
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