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INNOCENT VII . (Cosimo dei Migliorati), See also: pope from the 17th of See also: October 1404 to the 6th of See also: November 1406, was See also: born of See also: middle-class parentage at See also: Sulmona in the Abruzzi in 1339
.
On account of his knowledge of See also: civil and See also: canon See also: law, he was made papal See also: vice-See also: chamberlain and archbishop of
See also: Ravenna by See also: Urban VI., and appointed by Boniface IX. See also: cardinal See also: priest of Sta Croce in Gerusalemme, See also: bishop of Bologna, and papal See also: legate to See also: England
.
He was unanimously chosen to succeed Boniface, after each of the cardinals had solemnly bound himself to employ all lawful means for the restoration of the See also: church's unity in the event of his election, and even, if necessary, to resign the papal dignity
.
The election was opposed at
See also: Rome by a considerable party, but See also: peace was maintained by the aid of See also: Ladislaus of Naples, in return for which Innocent made a promise, inconsistent with his previous See also: oath, not to come to terms with the antipope Benedict XIIL, except on condition that he should recognize the claims of Ladislaus to Naples
.
Innocent issued at the close of 1404 a summons for a general council to heal the See also: schism, and it was not the pope's fault that the council never assembled, for the See also: Romans See also: rose in arms to secure an extension of their liberties, and finally maddened by the See also: murder of some of their leaders by the pope's See also: nephew, Ludovico dei Migliorati, they compelled Innocent to take See also: refuge at See also: Viterbo (6th of See also: August 1405)
.
The Romans, recognizing later the pope's innocence of the outrage, made their submission to him in See also: January 1406
.
He returned to Rome in See also: March, and, by bull of the 1st of
See also: September, restored the city's decayed university
.
Innocent was extolled by contemporaries as a See also: lover of peace and honesty, but he was without energy, guilty of nepotism, and showed no favour to the proposal that he as well as the antipope should resign
.
He died on the 6th of November 1406 and was succeeded by See also: Gregory XII
.
See L
.
Pastor, See also: History of the Popes, vol. i., trans. by F
.
I . Antrgbus ( See also: London, 1899) ; M
.
See also: Creighton, History of the Papacy, vol. i
.
(London, 1899); N
.
Valois, La See also: France et le See also: grand,, schisme d'occident (See also: Paris, 1896—1902) ; See also: Louis Gayet, Le Grand Schisme d'occident (Paris, 1898) ;
J
.
Loserth, Geschichte
See also: des spateren Mittelalters (1903) ; Theodorici de Nyein, De schismate libri tres, ed. by G
.
Eyler (See also: Leipzig, 1890);
K
.
I. von See also: Hefele, Conciliengeschichte, Bd
.
6, 2nd ed.; J. von Haller, Papsttum u
.
K2rchenreform (Berlin, 1903)
.
(C
.
H
.
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