Third Council of the Lateran

Third Council of the Lateran
Date 1179
Accepted by Catholicism
Previous council
Second Council of the Lateran
Next council
Fourth Council of the Lateran
Convoked by Pope Alexander III
President Pope Alexander III
Attendance 302
Topics Catharism and Waldensianism, church discipline
Documents and statements
twenty-seven canons, limitation of papal election to the cardinals, condemnation of simony
Chronological list of Ecumenical councils

The Third Council of the Lateran met in March 1179 as the eleventh ecumenical council. Pope Alexander III presided and 302 bishops attended.

By agreement reached at the Peace of Venice in 1177 the bitter conflict between Alexander III and Emperor Frederick I was brought to an end. When Pope Adrian IV died in 1159, the divided cardinals elected two popes: Roland of Siena, who took the name of Alexander III, and Octavian of Rome who, though nominated by fewer cardinals, was supported by Frederick and assumed the name of Pope Victor IV.[1] Frederick, wishing to remove all that stood in the way of his authority in Italy, declared war upon the Italian states and especially the Church which was enjoying great authority. A serious schism arose out of this conflict, and after Victor IV's death in 1164, two further antipopes were nominated in opposition to Alexander III: Paschal III (11641168) and Callistus III (11681178). Eventually, at the Peace of Venice, when Alexander gained victory, he promised Frederick that he would summon an ecumenical council.

Besides removing the remains of the recent schism, the Council condemned the Cathar heresies and pushed for the restoration of ecclesiastical discipline. It also became the first general Council of the Church to legislate against sodomy. Three sessions were held, on 5, 14, and 19 March, in which 27 canons were promulgated.

The most important of these were:

Among the many attendees at the Council was William of Tyre, the famous historian and, at the time, archbishop of Tyre. William was sent by Baldwin IV as the representative of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and wrote about the journey to the Council in his history.[4]

Footnotes

  1. J. P. Adams, Conclave, Sede Vacante 1159, retrieved: 2017-03-21.
  2. Nicholas Orme, Medieval Schools, New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2006.
  3. Karen Sullivan Truth and the heretic: crises of knowledge in medieval French literature (2005) p. 120
  4. William of Tyre, XXI.26
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