Pope Adrian III explained

Type:Pope
Honorific-Prefix:Pope Saint
Adrian III
Bishop of Rome
Church:Catholic Church
Term Start:17 May 884
Term End:8 July 885
Predecessor:Marinus I
Successor:Stephen V
Birth Place:Rome, Papal States
Death Date:8 July 885
Death Place:Modena, Carolingian Empire
Feast Day:8 July
Venerated:Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodox Church
Canonized Date:2 June 1891
Canonized Place:Rome, Kingdom of Italy
Canonized By:Leo XIII
Other:Adrian

Pope Adrian III or Hadrian III (Latin: Adrianus or Hadrianus; died July 885) was the bishop of Rome and ruler of the Papal States from 17 May 884 to his death. He served for little more than a year, during which he worked to help the people of Italy in a very troubled time of famine and war.

Background

Adrian III was born in Rome. According to Jean Mabillon, his birth name was Agapitus. Reginald L. Poole believes that Mabillon confused Adrian III, who succeeded Marinus I, with Agapetus II, who succeeded Marinus II a century later.[1]

Pontificate

Adrian laboured hard to alleviate the misery of the people of Italy, prey to famine and to continuous war.[2] He is also known to have written a letter condemning the Christians of both Muslim-ruled and Christian-ruled parts of Spain for being too friendly with the Jews in these lands.[3] Adrian also sent Theodosius, the bishop of Brindisi and Oria, to Constantinople to deliver a synodal letter about faith and the filioque to patriarch Photius I.[4]

Adrian died in July 885 at San Cesario sul Panaro (Modena), not long after embarking on a trip to Worms, in the Rhineland. The purpose of the journey was to attend an Imperial Diet after being summoned by Emperor Charles the Fat to settle the imperial succession[5] and discuss the rising power of the Saracens.

Adrian's death and subsequent burial in the church of San Silvestro Nonantola Abbey near Modena[6] is commemorated in the sculpted reliefs that frame the doorway of this church. His relics are found near the high altar, and his tomb at once became a popular place of pilgrimage. His cult was confirmed by Pope Leo XIII on 2 June 1891, and his feast day is celebrated on 8 July.[6] Orthodox Feasts dates are 8 and 30 July.[7]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Reginald L. Poole (1917), "The Names and Numbers of Medieval Popes", The English Historical Review, 32 (128), 465–78, at 467.
  2. Web site: Monks of Ramsgate. "Hadrian III". Book of Saints, 1921. CatholicSaints.Info. 1 September 2013.
  3. Book: Bernard S. Bachrach. Early Medieval Jewish Policy in Western Europe. 1977. University of Minnesota Press. 9780816608140. 190. reprint.
  4. Book: Dvornik . Francis . The Photian Schism . 1948 . CUP Archive . 228–230 . 20 January 2024 . en.
  5. Richard P. McBrien, Lives of the Popes: The Pontiffs from St. Peter to John Paul II, (HarperCollins, 2000), 143.
  6. François Bougard (2002), "Hadrian III", in Philippe Levillain, ed., The Papacy: An Encyclopedia, vol. 2 (New York and London: Routledge), 682.
  7. Web site: АДРИАН III РИМСКИЙ - Древо . 2023-05-13 . drevo-info.ru . ru.