Pope Nicholas IV

Nicholas IV
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Name Girolamo Masci
Papacy began February 22, 1288
Papacy ended April 4, 1292
Predecessor Honorius IV
Successor Celestine V
Born September 30, 1227
Place of birth Lisciano, Italy
Died April 4, 1292
Place of death Rome, Italy

Nicholas IV, né Girolamo Masci (Lisciano, a small village near Ascoli Piceno, September 30, 1227 - April 4, 1292), was pope from February 22, 1288 to April 4, 1292. A Franciscan monk, he had been legate to the Greeks under Pope Gregory X in 1272, succeeded Bonaventure as general of his order in 1274, was made Cardinal Priest of Santa Prassede and Latin Patriarch of Constantinople by Pope Nicholas III, Cardinal Bishop of Palestina by Pope Martin IV, and succeeded Pope Honorius IV after a ten-months' vacancy in the papacy.

He was a pious, peace-loving monk with no ambition save for the Church, the crusades and the extirpation of heresy. He steered a middle course between the factions at Rome, and sought a settlement of the Sicilian question. In May 1289 he crowned King Charles II of Naples and Sicily after the latter had expressly recognized papal suzerainty, and in February 1291 concluded a treaty with Alfonso III of Aragon and Philip IV of France looking toward the expulsion of James II of Aragon from Sicily. The loss of Acre in 1291 stirred the pope to renewed enthusiasm for a crusade. He sent missionaries, among them the celebrated Franciscan missionary, John of Monte Corvino, to labour among the Bulgarians, Ethiopians, Tatars and Chinese.

He issued an important constitution on July 18, 1289, which granted to the cardinals one-half of all income accruing to the Roman see and a share in the financial management, and thereby paved the way for that independence of the college of cardinals which, in the following century, was to be of detriment to the papacy. Nicholas died in the palace which he had built beside Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore.

This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.

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Preceded by:
Honorius IV
Pope
1288–1292
Succeeded by:
Saint Celestine V


See also: Pope Nicholas IV