![]() entry Exceptiones contra litteras et priuilegia). An Ordo iudiciarius exists which, at least in an early form, has been attributed to Innocent IV, but it seems very doubtful that he wrote such a work (cf. ![]() Innocent also wrote commentaries on his novelle, including an authoritative commentary on the Lyon deposition decree of Frederick II ( Ad apostolicae dignitatis apicem, VI 2.14.2). He prepared three collections of his own decretals, which included the constitutions of Lyon I ( Novelle Innocentii quarti). Innocent presided over the first general council of Lyon, in which the pope deposed Frederick II in absentia, and in which a number of important canons reforming aspects of ecclesiastical law and administration were enacted.Īs a jurist, Innocent IV wrote a lengthy and extremely influential Apparatus on the Decretals of Gregory IX, which he worked on over a long period of time and was finished c.1245. Innocent IV’s pontificate was notable for three things: a decisive struggle with the Emperor Frederick II, the Pope’s extended absence from Rome, and for his contributions to the canon law. ![]() He was elected Pope in 1243 after a long, rancorous vacancy following the brief pontificate of Celestine IV (1241). was made a cardinal by Pope Gregory IX in 1227. He worked as a jurist at the papal curia from 1226 and was for some time the auditor of the court of audientia litterarum contradictarum. ![]() Innocent studied law Parma and perhaps at Bologna Some accounts say that, early in his career, Innocent taught law in Bologna, but there is no evidence of this. Pope (also LC) Sinibaldus Fliscus Sinibaldo de’Fieschi Sinibaldo Fieschiīorn in Genoa before 1200. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |