Saeculum obscurum (Latin: the dark age) is a name given to a period in the history of the Papacy during the first half of the 10th century, beginning with the installation of Pope Sergius III in 904 and lasting for sixty years until the death of Pope John XII in 964.
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The period was first identified and named by the Italian Cardinal and ecclesiastical historian Caesar Baronius in his Annales Ecclesiastici in the sixteenth century.[1] Baronius' primary source for his history of this period was Liutprand of Cremona. Other scholars have dated the period more broadly or narrowly, and other terms, such as the Pornocracy (German: Pornokratie, from Greek pornokratiā, "prostitute rule") and the Rule of the Harlots (German: Hurenregiment), were coined by Protestant German theologians in the nineteenth century.
Historian Will Durant refers to the period from 867 to 1049 as the "nadir of the papacy".[2] The Foundation for Medieval Genealogy covers the period 872-1048.[3]
During this period, the Popes were influenced strongly by a powerful and corrupt aristocratic family, the Theophylacti, and their relatives.[4] The family originated from Theophylactus, who held positions of increased importance in the Roman nobility such as Judex, vestararius, gloriosissimus dux, consul and senator, and magister militum.[5] His wife Theodora and daughters, Theodora and Marozia held a great influence over the papal selection and religious affairs in Rome through conspiracies, affairs and marriages.[6]
Marozia became the concubine of Pope Sergius III when she was 15 and later took other lovers and husbands.[7] She ensured that her son John was seated as Pope John XI according to Antapodosis sive Res per Europam gestae (958–62), by Liutprand of Cremona (c. 920–72). Liutprand affirms that Marozia arranged the murder of her former lover Pope John X (who had originally been nominated for office by Theodora) through her then husband Guy of Tuscany possibly to secure the elevation of her current favourite as Pope Leo VI.[8] There is no record substantiating that Pope John X had definitely died before Leo VI was elected since John X was already imprisoned by Marozia and was out of public view.
Theodora and Marozia undoubtedly held great sway over the Popes during this time. In particular, as political rulers of Rome they had effective control over the election of new Popes. Much that is alleged about the saeculum obscurum comes from the histories of Liutprand, bishop of Cremona. Liutprand took part in the Assembly of Bishops which deposed Pope John XII and was a political enemy of the Roman aristocracy and its control over Papal elections. He is described by the Catholic Encyclopedia as "ever a strong partisan and frequently unfair towards his adversaries."
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Theophylact I, Count of Tusculum 864–924 |
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Theodora | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Hugh of Italy 887-924-948 (also married Marozia) |
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Alberic I of Spoleto d. 925 |
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Marozia 890–937 |
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Pope Sergius III 904–911 |
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Alda of Vienne |
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Alberic II of Spoleto 905–954 |
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David or Deodatus |
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Pope John XI 931–935 |
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Gregory I, Count of Tusculum |
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Pope John XII 955–964 |
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Pope Benedict VII 974-983 |
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Pope Benedict VIII Pope 1012–1024 |
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Alberic III, Count of Tusculum d. 1044 |
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Pope John XIX Pope 1024–1032 |
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Peter, Duke of the Romans |
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Gaius |
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Octavianus |
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Pope Benedict IX 1012–1055 |
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After several Crescentii family Popes up to 1012, the Theophylacti still occasionally nominated sons as Popes:
Pope Benedict IX went so far as to sell the Papacy to his religious Godfather, who became the unfortunate Pope Gregory VI (1045-46). He then changed his mind, seized the Lateran Palace and became Pope for the third time in 1047-48.
The Tusculan Papacy was finally ended by the election of Pope Nicholas II, who was lucky to be assisted by Hildebrand of Sovana against Antipope Benedict X. Hildebrand was elected Pope Gregory VII in 1073 and introduced the Gregorian Reforms, increasing the power and independence of the papacy.
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