Pope John XVII
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John XVII | |
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Birth name | Sicco |
Papacy began | June 13, 1003 |
Papacy ended | December, 1003 |
Predecessor | Silvester II |
Successor | John XVIII |
Born | ??? Rome, Italy |
Died | December, 1003 Rome, Italy |
Other popes named John |
John XVII (died December, 1003), born in Sicco, was a native of Rome who succeeded Pope Silvester II (999–1003) as Pope on June 13, 1003, but died less than five months later. Before entering the priesthood, Sicco had been married and had three sons who also became bishops.
John XVII was nominated to the papacy by John Crescentius, a Roman noble who held power in the city in opposition to Emperor Otto III (983–1002). John XVII's successor, Pope John XVIII (1004–09), was also selected by Crescentius.
The previous legitimate Pope John is generally considered to be John XV (985–996). John XVI (997–998) was an antipope, according to conventional wisdom, and thus his regnal number XVI should have been reused. But this did not occur, and the sequencing has never been corrected. Also, since there was never a Pope John XX, this means there have only been 21 legitimate Popes named John, not 23 as the regnal number of Pope John XXIII (1958–63) would suggest. But some historians (at the request of Pope John XXI), however, often called him Pope John XVIII or "John XVII (XVIII)" due to the legend of another Pope John between Pope John XIV and the true Pope John XV (whom historians sometimes thus called XVI). This legend of a pope between John XIV and John XV, and the antipapacy of John XVI, is why there is so much confusion of the numbering of Popes John, and why the sequence of Johns is now two off.
[edit] References
- "Pope John XVII" in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia.
Roman Catholic Church titles | ||
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Preceded by Silvester II |
Pope 1003 |
Succeeded by John XVIII |
This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.