POPE ADRAIN II
107TH Pope (867-872)
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After the death of St.
Nicholas I, the Roman clergy and people elected, much against his will, the
venerable Cardinal Adrian, universally beloved for his charity and amiability,
descended from a Roman family which had already given two pontiffs to the
Church, Stephen III and Sergius II. Adrian was now seventy-five years old, and
twice before had refused the dignity. He had been married before taking
orders, and his old age was saddened by a domestic tragedy. As pope, he
followed closely in the footsteps of his energetic predecessor. He strove to
maintain peace among the greedy and incompetent descendants of Charlemagne. In
an interview at Monte Cassino he admitted to communion the repentant King
Lothair of Lorraine, after exacting from him a public oath that he had held no
intercourse with his concubine since the pope's prohibition, that he would
take back his lawful wife Theutberga, and abide by the final decision of the
Roman See. He upheld with vigour against Hincmar of Reims the unlimited right
of bishops to appeal to the Sovereign Pontiff. At the Eighth General Council,
which he convened at Constantinople in 869, and presided over through ten
legates, he effected the deposition of Photius and the restoration of unity
between the East and the West. He was unsuccessful in retaining the Bulgarians
for the western patriarchate; that nation unwisely determined to adhere to
Constantinople, a course which was destined to bring upon it ruin and
stagnation. Adrian saved the western Slavs from a similar fate by seconding
the efforts of the saintly brothers, Cyril and Methodius. Of enduring
influence, for good or evil, was the endorsement he gave to their rendering of
the liturgy in the Slavonic tongue. Adrian died towards the close of the year
872.
Liber Pontif. (ed. DUCHESNE),
173-190; JAFFÉ, Regesta RR. PP. (2d ed.), I, 368-375, II, 703, 704, 745, 746;
MANSI Coll. Conc., XV, 819 sq.; WATTERICH, Vitae Rom. Pont 631 sq.; LAPOTRE,
Hadrien II et les fausses d cr tales, in Rev. des Quest. Hist. (1880), XXVII,
377-431; ARTAUD DE MONTOR, Lives and Times of the Roman Pontiffs (tr. New
York, 1867), I, 225, 226; GORINI, Defense de l'Eglise (1866), III, 20-38,
160-176; ALEX. NATALIS, Hist. Eccl. (1778), VI, 399-409.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
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