Amadeus VIII, Duke of Savoy
Antipope Felix V | |
---|---|
Count of Savoy | |
Reign | 1391–1416 |
Predecessor | Amadeus VII |
Regent | Bonne of Bourbon(1391–1397) |
Duke of Savoy | |
Reign | 1416–1440 |
Successor | Louis I |
Regent | Louis I(c. 1434– 5 February 1440) |
Spouse | |
Issue (among others) | |
House | Savoy |
Father | Amadeus VII, Count of Savoy |
Mother | Bonne of Berry |
Church | Catholic Church |
Papacy began | 24 July 1440 |
Papacy ended | 7 April 1449 |
Predecessor | Eugene IV Romanclaimant: |
Opposed to | Pope Eugene IV Pope Nicholas V |
Orders | |
Consecration | 24 July 1440 |
Personal details | |
Born | 4 September 1383 |
Died | 7 January 1451 Geneva | (aged 67)
Coat of arms |
Amadeus VIII(4 September 1383 – 7 January 1451), nicknamedthe Peaceful,wasCount of Savoyfrom 1391 to 1416 andDuke of Savoyfrom 1416 to 1440. He was a claimant to thepapacyfrom 1439 to 1449 asFelix V[a]in opposition toPopesEugene IVandNicholas V.
Count and duke
[edit]Amadeus was born inChambéryon 4 September 1383,[1]the son ofAmadeus VII, Count of SavoyandBonne of Berry.[2]Even as a boy he suffered fromstrabismus,which one of his father's physicians, Jean de Grandville, claimed he could cure.[3]He became count of Savoy in 1391 after his father's death on 2 November 1391, caused (it was said) by poisoning, or at least bad treatment at the hands of his physicians.[4]In his testament,[5]the Red Count, Amadeus VII, had appointed his mother Bonne de Bourbon rather than his wifeBonne de Berry,niece of KingCharles VI of France,as regent for Amadeus VIII. This set off a struggle at the court between the grandmother and the mother, eventually involving the dukes of Berry, Bourbon, Orléans, and King Charles VI of France.[6]Amadeus VIII's grandmother acted as regent until 1397, during hisminority.[1]
The Count's early rule saw the centralization of power and the territorial expansion of theSavoyard state,[1]and in 1416 Amadeus was elevated byEmperor Sigismundto duke of Savoy.[7]In 1418, his distant cousinLouis of Piedmont,his brother-in-law, the last male of the elder branch ofHouse of Savoy,died, leaving Amadeus as hisheir-general,thus finally uniting the male lines of the House of Savoy.
Amadeus increased his dominions and encouraged several attempts to negotiate an end to theHundred Years' War.From 1401 to 1422, he campaigned to recover the area around Geneva and Annecy. After the death of his wife in 1428, he founded theOrder of Saint Mauricewith six other knights in 1434.[8]They lived alone in the castle ofRipaille,[1]near Geneva, in a quasi-monastic state according to a rule drawn up by himself. He styled himselfDecanus Militum solitudinis Ripalliae.[9]He appointed his sonLouisregent of the duchy.[7]
Pope of the Council of Basel
[edit]Amadeus was sympathetic toconciliarism,the movement to have the Church managed byEcumenical councils,and to prelates likeCardinal Aleman of Arles,who wanted to set limits upon the doctrine ofpapal supremacy.He had close relations with the Council of Basel (1431–1449), even after most of its members joined theCouncil of Florence,convened byPope Eugene IVin 1438.
There is no evidence that he intrigued to obtain the papal office by sending the bishops of Savoy to Basel, though he did suggest that the bishops of Savoy attend the Council. Of the twelve bishops present, seven were Savoyards.[10]
In its Session XXXI, on 24 January 1438, the Council of Basel suspended Pope Eugene.[11]Then, on 25 June 1439, it formally deposed Eugene as aheretic.[12]The president of the Council, CardinalLouis Aleman,the archbishop of Arles, reminded the members that they needed to elect a rich and powerful pope to defend it from its adversaries.[10]
Election
[edit]Since Aleman was the only cardinal present, the Council decided to appoint a college of electors. consisting of thirty-three members, chosen from the five "nations" into which the council was divided. They entered into conclave on 31 October 1439.[13]In the first scrutiny (ballot), Amadeus received 16 votes; in the second, 19 votes; in the third, 21. On 5 November, he received 26 votes, sufficient to elect.[14]The Council itself then issued a decree on 17 November 1439, stating that Amadeus had been elected pope and giving the full details of the election.[15]
A delegation, which included the secretary and notaryAeneas Silvius Piccolomini,was sent to Ripaille, the residence of Amadeus. It arrived on 15 December 1439, and, after long negotiations, Amadeus acquiesced in his election on 5 February 1440. The choice of the papal name, Felix, was suggested by Cardinal Aleman.[16]Felix took the inaugural oath formulated by the Council of Basel.[17]At the same time, he completely renounced all further participation in the government of his domains; he named his son Louis Duke of Savoy, and his son Philip Count of Geneva.[7]He also appointed Piccolomini as his secretary.
Pope
[edit]Felix V is credited with formalizing the academic lectures held in Basel by establishing the "Alma universitas studii curiae Romanae" on 12 November 1440; it was inaugurated at a ceremony held on 5 November 1440. It would eventually lead to the foundation of theUniversity of Baselin 1460, byPope Pius II(Piccolomini) in the bull "Inter Ceteras" of 12 November 1459.[18]
He departed Basel for Lausanne, on the grounds of ill health, on 19 November 1442, thereby diminishing the importance of the Council of Basel.[19]
Bishop François de Mez of Geneva died on 7 March 1444,[20]and on 9 March the chamberlain of Pope Felix V, Jean de Grolée, took possession of the diocese in the name of the pope as administrator. On the same day, the pope's son, Duke Louis of Savoy, ordered the episcopal chateau of Thie to be put into the control of the cathedral Chapter of Geneva. The death of the cardinal had been foreseen and was provided for.[21]In 1446, Felix V named Bishop Bartholomew of Corneto as his Vicar in spiritualities and temporalities for the diocese of Geneva; in 1449 he was succeeded by Bishop Andrea of Hebron.[22]Cardinal Amadeus, as he had become in 1449, held the office of administrator until his death.[23]
On 20 July 1447, theEmperor Frederick IIIordered the Burgomeister of Basel to cancel the safe conducts which had previously been granted to the persons attending the Council of Basel, and to no longer allow the members of the council to remain in Basel. This was reinforced by an order in council of 24 May 1448, requiring the citizens of Basel, who had previously been reluctant, to expel them. The Council therefore moved its sessions to the city ofLausanne,where they held their first meeting on 25 July 1448, presided over by Pope Felix V.[24]
His reputation is marred by the account of him as a pontiff concerned with money, to avoid disadvantaging his heirs, found in theCommentariesofPius II.
After the death of his opponentPope Eugene IVin 1447, both obediences in the schism of the church favoured a settlement. On 7 April 1449, at the second session of the Council of Lausanne, Felix V accepted the authority ofPope Nicholas Vand resigned his papacy.[25]In its fourth session, on 19 April 1449, since the throne of Peter was vacant, the Council of Lausanne elected Nicholas V as its pope.[26]In its fifth and last session, it recognized Amadeus of Savoy to be Bishop of Sabina and papal legate in Savoy, and assigned him second rank in the Church after Pope Nicholas. It then adjourned permanently.[27]
Later life
[edit]After the renunciation of his papal office, Amadeus was named a cardinal byPope Nicholas Von 7 April 1449.[28]On 23 April 1449 he was appointed suburbicarian Bishop of Sabina,[29]andpapal legateand Vicar Apostolic in all of the territories in the domain of the Duke of Savoy, and in the diocese of Lausanne.[1][30]His complete itinerary, from 15 April 1449 to 6 January 1451, is given by Édouard Mallet, based on Cardinal Amadeus' registers.[31]
Amadeus died inGenevaon 7 January 1451,[32]and was buried at Ripaille on 9 January.[33]Pope Nicholas V wrote an apostolic brief, dated 30 April 1451, in appreciation of the life and career of Cardinal Amadeus.[34]
Marriage and issue
[edit]Count Amadeus marriedMary of Burgundy(1386–1428), daughter ofPhilip the Bold,Duke of Burgundy, at Arras in 1401.[35]She did not arrive in Savoy, however, until 1403.[36]They had nine children, only four of whom lived to mature adulthood:
- Margaret of Savoy (13 May 1405 – 1418).
- Anthony of Savoy (September 1407 – bef. 12 December 1407).
- Anthony of Savoy (1408 – aft. 10 October 1408).
- Marie(end January 1411 – 22 February 1469), marriedFilippo Maria Visconti,duke of Milan.[37]
- Amadeus of Savoy (26 Mar 1412 – 17 August 1431), Prince of Piedmont, the heir apparent until his premature death.
- Louis(24 February 1413 – 29 January 1465), his successor.
- Bonne of Savoy (September 1415 – 25 September 1430).
- Philip of Savoy (1417 – 3 March 1444), Count of Genève
- Margaret(7 August 1420 – 30 September 1479), married firstlyLouis III,titularking of Naples,[38]secondlyLouis IV, Count Palatine of the Rhine[39]and thirdlyUlrich V, Count of Württemberg.
Notes
[edit]- ^Whennumbering of the popesbegan to be used,Antipope Felix IIwas counted as one of the popes of that name. The second officialPope Felixis thus known by the number III, and the third was given the number IV. It also affected the name taken by Amadeus, who would have been the fourth Pope Felix.
References
[edit]- ^abcdeFelix VinGerman,FrenchandItalianin the onlineHistorical Dictionary of Switzerland.
- ^Hand 2016,appendix 4.
- ^Bruchet,Le château de Ripaille,pp. 42, 82, 424.
- ^Bruchet,pp. 43-48; 50-54.
- ^Guichenon,pp. 232-235.
- ^Guichenon,pp. 240-242.
- ^abcKirsch 1909.
- ^Pinder 2002,p. 44.
- ^Mallet,p. 271.
- ^abCreighton 1892,p. 211.
- ^Stieber,pp. 49-51.J.D. Mansi (ed.),Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio,editio novissima,(in Latin),Vol. 29 (Venice: A. Zatta 1788), pp. 165-169.
- ^Stieber,pp. 54-58.
- ^Bruchet,pp. 119-120,with a list of the electors at p. 120, note 1.
- ^Bruchet,p. 122.Eubel II, p. 9.Staehelin, Ernst."Die Universität Basel in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart".Archiv für das schweizerische Unterrichtswesen:7–8..
- ^Guichenon,pp. 314-316.
- ^Bruchet,pp. 122-123.
- ^Report of Cardinal Aleman to the Council of Basel: Guichenon,pp. 316-317.
- ^Wilhelm Vischer,Geschichte der Universität Basel von der Gründung 1460 bis zur Reformation 1529,(in German and Latin),(H. Georg, 1860), pp. 268-270.Staehelin, Ernst."Die Universität Basel in Vergangenheit und Gegenwart".Archiv für das schweizerische Unterrichtswesen:7–8.
- ^Bruchet,p. 130.
- ^De Mez had been named a cardinal by Felix V on 12 October 1440. Eubel II, p. 9, no. 9.
- ^Édouard Mallet, "Mémoire historique sur l'élection des évêques de Genève. Second partie,"(in French),in:Mémoires et documents de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie,Volume 5 (Genève: La Société/F. Ramboz, 1847), pp. 127-354, at p. 146.
- ^Mallet,pp. 279-281.Eubel II, p. 137.
- ^Eubel II, p. 158.
- ^Carl Joseph Hefele,Histoire des Conciles: d'aprés les documents originaux,(in French),Volume 11 (Paris: A. Le Clere 1876), pp. 573-574.
- ^Hefele,Histoire des Conciles,pp. 575-576.Guichenon,pp. 328-329.
- ^Guichenon,pp. 330-331.
- ^Hefele,Histoire des Conciles,p. 576-577.
- ^Eubel II, p. 7, no. 8.
- ^Eubel II, p. 29, no. 123.
- ^Lorenzo Cardella,Memorie storiche de' cardinali della santa Romana chiesa,(in Italian),Vol. 3 (Roma: Pagliarini, 1793), p. 120.
- ^Édouard Mallet, "Mémoire historique sur l'élection des évêques de Genève. Second partie,"(in French),in:Mémoires et documents de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie,Volume 5 (Genève: La Société/F. Ramboz, 1847), pp. 127-354, at p. 154, note 1.
- ^Mallet,p. 154.
- ^Bruchet,p. 131.Cardella,pp. 120-121,cites authors who state that he died in Geneva, Lausanne or at Ripaille.
- ^Guichenon,p. 341.
- ^Vaughan 2005,p. 82.
- ^Vaughan 2005,p. 53.
- ^Wilkins & Wilkins 1996,p. 107.
- ^Kekewich 2008,p. 54.
- ^Kekewich 2008,p. 214.
Sources
[edit]- Andenmatten, B.; Paravicini Bagliani, A. (ed.) (1992).Amédée VIII-Félix V, premier duc de Savoie et pape (1383–1451). Colloque international, Ripaille-Lausanne, 23–26 octobre 1990.Lausanne 1992.(in French)
- Bruchet, M. (1907).Le château de Ripaille.(in French).Paris: Ch. Delagrave 1907. See: pp. 49–182.
- Cognasso, Francesco (1930).Amadeo VIII (1383–1451).2 vols. Turin, 1930.(in Italian)
- Decaluwe, Michiel; Izbicki, Thomas M.; Christianson, Gerald, eds. (2017).A Companion to the Council of Basel.Brill.
- Creighton, Mandell (1892).The Council of Basel.Longmans, Green, and Company.
- Guichenon, Samuel (1660).Histoire Généalogique De La Royale Maison De Savoye:Iustifiée Par Titres, Fondations de Monasteres, Manuscripts, anciens Monuments, Histoires & autres preuves autentiques. Enrichie De Plusieurs Portraits, Seaux, Monnoyes, Sepultures & Armoires.Livre VI, Contenant Les Preuves.(in French and Latin).Lyon: Barbier, 1660.
- Hand, Joni M. (2016).Women, Manuscripts and Identity in Northern Europe, 1350–1550.Routledge.appendix 4
- Hildesheimer, E. (1970). "Le Pape du Concile, Amédée VIII de Savoie,"Annales de la Société des Lettres, Sciences et Arts des Alpes-Maritime,61 (1969–1970), pp. 41–48.(in French)
- Kirsch, Johann Peter (1909)."Felix V".The Catholic Encyclopedia.Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
- Mallet, Édouard (1847). "Mémoire historique sur l'élection des évêques de Genève. Second partie,"(in French),in:Mémoires et documents de la Société d'histoire et d'archéologie,Volume 5 (Genève: La Société/F. Ramboz, 1847), pp. 127-354.
- Manger, Hugo (1901).Die Wahl Amadeo's von Savoyen zum Papste durch das Basler Konzil (1439).(in German).Marburg: R. Friedrich, 1901.
- Stieber, Joachim W. (1978).Pope Eugene IV, the council of Basel, and the secular and ecclesiastical authorities in the Empire: the conflict over supreme authority and power in the Church.Leiden: Brill 1978.
For further reading
[edit]- Kekewich, Margaret L. (2008).The Good King: René of Anjou and Fifteenth Century Europe.Palgrave Macmillan.
- Pinder, Kymberly N., ed. (2002).Race-ing Art History: Critical Readings in Race and Art History.Routledge.
- Vaughan, Richard (2005).Philip the Bold: The Formation of the Burgundian State.Boydell Press.
- Wilkins, David G.; Wilkins, Rebecca L. (1996).The Search for a Patron in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance.E. Mellen Press.
External links
[edit]- Media related toAmadeus VIII, Duke of Savoyat Wikimedia Commons
- Works by or aboutAmadeus VIII of SavoyatWikisource
- Cognasso, Francesco (2000)."Felice V, antipapa".Enciclopedia dei Papi(Treccani 2000)(in Italian)
- Bernard Andenmatten:Felix V.inGerman,FrenchandItalianin the onlineHistorical Dictionary of Switzerland.
- Amadeus VIII, Duke of Savoy
- 1383 births
- 1451 deaths
- 14th-century counts of Savoy
- 15th-century dukes of Savoy
- Princes of Savoy
- People from Chambéry
- Counts of Geneva
- Monarchs who abdicated
- Antipopes
- 15th-century Italian cardinals
- Cardinal-bishops of Sabina
- Medieval child monarchs
- Deans of the College of Cardinals
- 15th-century antipopes
- People excommunicated by the Catholic Church