Pope St. Leo III
Date of birth unknown; died 816. He was elected on the very day his predecessor was buried (26 Dec., 795), and consecrated on the following day. It is quite possible that this haste may have been due to a desire on the part of the Romans to anticipate any interference of the Franks with their freedom of election. Leo was a Roman, the son of Atyuppius and Elizabeth. At the time of his election he was Cardinal-Priest of St. Susanna, and seemingly also vestiarius, or chief of the pontifical treasury, or wardrobe.With the letter informing Charlemagne that he had been unanimously elected pope, Leo sent him the keys of the confession of St. Peter, and the standard of the city. This he did to show that he regarded the Frankish king as the protector of the Holy See. In return he received from Charlemagne letters of congratulation and a great part of the treasure which the king had captured from the Avars. The acquisition of this wealth was one of the causes which enabled Leo to be such a great benefactor to the churches and charitable institutions of Rome.
Prompted by jealousy or ambition, or by feelings of hatred and revenge, a number of the relatives of Pope Adrian I formed a plot to render Leo unfit to hold his sacred office. On the occasion of the procession of the Greater Litanies (25 April, 799), when the pope was making his way towards the Flaminian Gate, he was suddenly attacked by a body of armed men. He was dashed to the ground, and an effort was made to root out his tongue and tear out his eyes. After he had been left for a time bleeding in the street, he was hurried off at night to the monastery of St. Erasmus on the Cœlian. There, in what seemed quite a miraculous manner, he recovered the full use of his eyes and tongue. Escaping from the monastery, he betook himself to Charlemagne, accompanied by many of the Romans. He was received by the Frankish king with the greatest honour at Paderborn, although his enemies had filled the king’s ears with malicious accusations against him. After a few months’ stay in Germany, the Frankish monarch caused him to be escorted back to Rome, where he was received with every demonstration of joy by the whole populace, natives and foreigners. The pope’s enemies were then tried by Charlemagne’s envoys and, being unable to establish either Leo’s guilt or their own innocence, were sent as prisoners to France (Frankland). In the following year (800) Charlemagne himself came to Rome, and the pope and his accusers were brought face to face. The assembled bishops declared that they had no right to judge the pope; but Leo of his own free will, in order, as he said, to dissipate any suspicions in men’s minds, declared on oath that he was wholly guiltless of the charges which had been brought against him. At his special request the death sentence which had been passed upon his principal enemies was commuted into a sentence of exile.
Pope St. Leo III crowning Charlemagne Painting by Josef Kehren
Leo had, however, many relations with England solely on his own account. By his command the synod of Beccanceld (or Clovesho, 803), condemned the appointing of laymen as superiors of monasteries. In accordance with the wishes of Ethelheard, Archbishop of Canterbury, Leo excommunicated Eadbert Praen for seizing the throne of Kent, and withdrew the pallium which had been granted to Litchfield, authorizing the restoration of the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the See of Canterbury “just as St. Gregory the Apostle and Master of the nation of the English had arranged it”. Leo was also called upon to intervene in the quarrels between Archbishop Wulfred and Cenulf, King of Mercia. Very little is known of the real causes of the misunderstandings between them, but, whoever was the more to blame, the archbishop seems to have had the more to suffer. The king appears to have induced the pope to suspend him from the exercise of his episcopal functions, and to keep the kingdom under a kind of interdict for a period of six years. Till the hour of his death (822), greed of gold caused Cenulf to continue his persecution of the archbishop. It also caused him to persecute the monastery of Abingdon, and it was not until he had received from its abbot a large sum of money that, acting, as he declared, at the request of “the lord Apostolic and most glorious Pope Leo”, he decreed the inviolability of the monastery.
The Oath of Pope St. Leo III, painting by Raphael.
During the pontificate of Leo, the Church of Constantinople was in a
state of unrest. The monks, who at this period were flourishing under
the guidance of such men as St. Theodore the Studite, were suspicious of
what they conceived to be the lax principles of their patriarch
Tarasius, and were in vigorous opposition to the evil conduct of their
emperor Constantine VI. To be free to marry Theodota, their sovereign
had divorced his wife Maria. Though Tarasius condemned the conduct of
Constantine, still, to avoid greater evils, he refused, to the profound
disgust of the monks, to excommunicate him. For their condemnation of
his new marriage Constantine punished the monks with imprisonment and
exile. In their distress the monks turned for help to Leo, as they did
when they were maltreated for opposing the arbitrary reinstatement of
the priest whom Tarasius had degraded for marrying Constantine to
Theodota. The pope replied, not merely with words of praise and
encouragement, but also by the dispatch of rich presents; and, after
Michael I came to the Byzantine throne, he ratified the treaty between
him and Charlemagne which was to secure peace for East and West.
The tomb of Pope St. Leo III
Leo III was buried in St. Peter’s (12 June, 816), where his relics are to be found along with those of Sts. Leo I, Leo II, and Leo IV. He was canonized in 1673. The silver denarii of Leo III still extant bear the name of the Frankish emperor upon them as well as that of Leo, showing thereby the emperor as the protector of the Church, and overlord of the city of Rome.
Liber Pontificalis, ed. DUCHESNE, II (Paris, 1892), 1 sqq.; Codex Carolinus, ed. JAFFÉ (Berlin, 1867); Annales Einhardi (so called) and other Chronicles, in Mon. Germ.: Script., I; Carmen de Carolo Magno, in P.L., XCVIII. Cf. BRYCE, The Holy Roman Empire (London, 1889A); KLEINKLAUSZ, L’Empire Carolingien (Paris, 1902); HODGKIN, Italy and her Invaders, VIII (Oxford, 1899); BÖHMER, Regesta Imperii, ed. MÜHLBACHER, I (Innsbruck, 1908); MANN, The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages, II (London, 1906), 1 sqq.
HORACE K. MANN (Catholic Encyclopedia)
Editorial comment: —
Pope St. Leo III’s crowning of Charlemagne on Christmas Day, 800 A.D. is one of History’s finest moments.There is no doubt the great Charles deserved the crown. His wars and conquests, the extent of his domains, his governing ability and promotion of learning, all underscored how worthy he was of receiving the title of Emperor of the West. Moreover, he had protected the Church and the Papacy and defended Christendom against the Muslims invading from the South and pagans from the North and East.
It is particularly beautiful that it was the Vicar of Christ who determined that Charles deserved the crown, and then bestowed it upon him. This gave an unsurpassable sublimity and nobility to the coronation act. That the coronation was done in Rome, in St. Peter’s basilica, and on Christmas Day, all add to the sublime majesty of the event.
The facts are not in dispute: after centuries of abandonment, the Empire of the West was restored by the Papacy.
http://nobility.org/2014/06/12/st-leo-iii/
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http://tradcatknight.blogspot.com/2014/10/pope-leo-xiii-against-recognize-resist.html
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