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Pope Anastasius IV

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Papacy began
  
8 July 1153

Predecessor
  
Pope Eugene III

Successor
  
Pope Adrian IV


Name
  
Pope IV

Papacy ended
  
3 December 1154

Term ended
  
December 3, 1154

Pope Anastasius IV

Birth name
  
Corrado Demetri della Suburra

Died
  
December 3, 1154, Rome, Italy

Pope Anastasius IV | Wikipedia audio article


Pope Anastasius IV (c. 1073 – 3 December 1154), born Corrado Demetri della Suburra, was Pope from 8 July 1153 to his death in 1154. He is the last pope to take the name "Anastasius" upon his election.

Contents

Pope Anastasius IV FilePope Anastasius IVjpg Wikimedia Commons

Early life

He was a Roman, son of Benedictus de Suburra, probably of the family of Demetri, and became a secular clerk. He was created cardinal-priest of S. Pudenziana by Pope Paschal II no later than in 1114. In 1127 or 1128 Pope Honorius II promoted him to the suburbicarian See of Sabina. He had taken part in the double papal election of 1130, had been one of the most determined opponents of Antipope Anacletus II and, when Pope Innocent II fled to France, had been left behind as his vicar in Italy. At the time of his election to the papacy in July 1153 he was Dean of the College of Cardinals and probably the oldest member of that body.

Pontificate

During his short pontificate he played the part of a peacemaker; he came to terms with the Emperor Frederick I in the vexing question of the appointment to the See of Magdeburg and closed the long quarrel, which had raged through four pontificates, about the appointment of William Fitzherbert (commonly known as Saint William of York) to the see of York by sending him the pallium in spite of the continued opposition of the powerful Cistercian order. Pope Anastasius IV died on 3 December 1154 and was succeeded by Cardinal Nicholas of Albano as Pope Adrian IV.

References

Pope Anastasius IV Wikipedia