POPE AGAPETUS II
130TH Pope (946-955)
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A Roman by birth, elected to
the papacy 10 May, 946; he reigned, not ingloriously, for ten years, during
what has been termed the period of deepest humiliation for the papacy. He
proved that the true spiritual dignity of the papacy can be successfully
upheld by a saintly and resolute pontiff amid the most untoward surroundings.
The temporal power had practically vanished and Rome was ruled by the vigorous
Princeps and Senator Albericht, who was the prototype of the later Italian
tyrants. Nevertheless, the name and virtues of Agapetus were respected
throughout the entire Christian world. He labored incessantly to restore the
decadent discipline in churches and cloisters. He succeeded eventually in
quieting the disturbances in the metropolitan see of Reims. He supported the
Emperor Otto the Great in his plans for the evangelization of the heathens of
the North. Seeing no other way of putting an end to anarchy in Italy, he
joined with other Italian nobles in persuading the Emperor to make his first
expedition into the peninsula. During his lifetime, his successor was
virtually appointed in the person of Albericht's notorious son Octavian, later
John XII, whose father forced the Romans to swear that they would elect him as
their temporal and spiritual lord upon the demise of Agapetus. The Pope died
in August, 956, leaving an unsullied name, and was buried in St. John Lateran.
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