|
See also: pope from 1572 to 1585, was See also: born on the 7th of See also: January 1502, in Bologna, where he received his See also: education, and subsequently taught, until called to See also: Rome (1530) by See also: Paul III., who employed him in various offices
.
He See also: bore a prominent See also: part in the council of Trent, 1562-1563
.
In 1564 he was made See also: cardinal by See also: Pius IV., and, in the following See also: year, sent to See also: Spain as See also: legate
.
On the 13th of May 1572 he was chosen pope to succeed Pius V
.
His previous See also: life had been rather worldly, and 'not wholly See also: free from spot; but as pope he gave no occasion of offence
.
He submitted to the influence of the rigorists, and carried forward the war upon See also: heresy, though not with the savage vehemence of his predecessor
.
However, he received the See also: news of the See also: massacre of St Bartholomew (23rd of See also: August 1572) with joy, and publicly celebrated the event, having been led to believe, according to his apologists, that See also: France had been miraculously delivered, and that the See also: Huguenots had suffered justly as traitors
.
Having failed to rouse Spain and Venice against the See also: Turks, See also: Gregory attempted to See also: form a general coalition against the Protestants
.
He subsidized See also: Philip II. in his
See also: wars in the See also: Netherlands; aided the Catholic See also: League in France; incited attacks upon See also: Elizabeth by way of
See also: Ireland
.
With the aid of the See also: Jesuits, whose privileges he multi-plied, he conducted a vigorous propaganda
.
He established or endowed above a score of colleges, among them the Collegium Romanum (founded by See also: Ignatius See also: Loyola in 1550), and the Collegium Germanicum, in Rome
.
Among his noteworthy achievements are the reform of the See also: calendar on the 24th of See also: February 1582 (see CALENDAR) ; the improved edition of the Corpus See also: juris canonici, 1582; the splendid Gregorian See also: Chapel in St See also: Peter's; the fountains of the Piazza Navona; the Quirinal Palace; and many other public See also: works
.
To meet the expenses entailed by his liberality and extravagance, Gregory resorted to confiscation, on the pretext of defective titles or long-See also: standing arrearages
.
The result was disastrous to the public See also: peace: nobles armed in their defence; old feuds revived; the country became infested with bandits; not even in Rome could See also: order be maintained
.
Amid these disturbances Gregory died, on the Toth of See also: April 1585, leaving to his successor, See also: Sixtus V., the task of pacifying the See also: state
.
See the contemporary lives by Cicarella, continuator of Platina, De sills pontiff
.
Rom
.
; Ciaconius, Vitae et res gestae summorum pontiff
.
Rom
.
(Rome, 1601-1602); and Ciappi, Comp. dell' attioni e See also: santa vita di Gregorio XIII (Rome, 1591)
.
See also Bompiano, Hist. pontificatus Gregorii XIII
.
(Rome, 1655) ; See also: Ranke, Popes (Eng. trans., See also: Austin), i
.
428 seq
.
; v . See also: Reumont, Gesch. der Stadt Rom, iii
.
2, 566 seq.; and for numerous references upon Gregory's relation to the massacre of St Bartholomew, Cambridge Mod
.
Hist. iii
.
771 seq
.
|
|
|
[back] GREGORY XII |
[next] GREGORY XIV |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.