26 March 752 A.D. Stephen III Consecrated—Rome’s 93rd; Pleads with Franks for Deliverance from Byzantine Exarchs; Conflict with Archbishop of Ravenna
26 March 752 A.D. Stephen III Consecrated—Rome’s 93rd; Pleads with Franks for Deliverance from Byzantine
Exarchs; Conflict with Archbishop of
Ravenna
Pope Stephen (II) III
Unanimously elected in St. Mary Major's and consecrated on 26 March (or 3 April),
752; d. 26 April, 757. He had at once to face the Lombards who were resolved to
bring all Italy under their sway. With
the capture of Ravenna (751), they had put an
end to the power of the Byzantine exarchs and were preparing to
seize the Duchy of Rome.
In vain did Stephen apply for help to Constantinople and freely spent his
money to induce them to keep the peace they had made with him, and to refrain
from hostilities. He accordingly devoted himself to prayer and endeavoured to obtain
assistance from Pepin and the Franks.
As a last resource he went himself to Gaul to plead his cause before
the Frankish king. Receiving a most
favourable reception, he crowned Pepin as King of the Franks,
and at Kiersey was solemnly assured by him that he
would defend him, and would restore the exarchate to St. Peter. Failing to
make any impression on Aistulf, the Lombard king, by repeated
embassies, Pepin forced the passes of the
Alps, and compelled him to swear to restore Ravenna and the other cities he
had taken (754). But no sooner had Pepin withdrawn from Lombardy than Aistulf roused the wholeLombard nation, appeared in arms
before the walls of Rome (Jan., 756), ravaged the
neighbourhood, and made a desparate attempt to capture the
city. After receiving one appeal for help after another
from the pope, Pepincrossed the Alps a
second time (756), and again forced Aistulf to submission. This time Stephen was put in possession of
the cities of the exarchate and of the Pentapolis, and became
practically the first pope-king.
Towards the close of this same year Aistulf died amid preparations
for once more violating his engagements. On his death two rivals claimed the Lombard throne, Desiderius, Duke of
Istria and Ratchis, brother of Aistulf, who in 749 had resigned the Lombard crown, and had taken the monastic habit in Monte Cassino. Desiderius at once invoked the assistance of the pope,
and, on condition of his help, promised to restore to Rome certaincities in the exarchate and the Pentapolis which still remained in
the hands of the Lombards, and to give thepope a large sum of money. Stephen at once sent envoys to
both the rivals, and, impressing on Ratchis theduty of being true to his monastic vows,
succeeded in bringing about peace, and preventing civil war. Ratchisreturned to his monastery and Desiderius was recognized as king
(about March, 757). The latter, however, did not fulfill his promise to the pope in its entirety. He gave
up Faenza, Ferrara, and two small towns, but retained Bologna, Imola,
and other towns in the Pentapolis till his overthrow by Charlemagne. Stephen had scarcely established
a system of government in the exarchate when he had to quell the
rebellion of Sergius,Archbishop of Ravenna, whom he had made its governor. He, however, caused the rebel to be brought
to Rome, and kept him there whilst he lived. Stephen corresponded with the Emperor Constantine on the subject of the
restoration of the sacred images, and himself
restored many of the ancient churches of the city. Remarkable
for his love of the poor, Stephen built hospitals for them near St. Peter's, in which church he was buried.
Sources
Mann, Horace. "Pope Stephen (II)
III." The
Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 14. New York: Robert Appleton
Company, 1912.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14288c.htm. Accessed 30 Jul 2014.
Pope Stephen (II) III
Sources
Ed.
DUCHESNE, Liber Pontificalis, I (Paris, 1886), 440 sq.;
ed. JAFFE, Codex Carolinus (Berlin, 1867); Mon. Ger. Hist.; Epp., III (Berlin, 1892); Script., I; Script. rerum Langob. Most of these sources
will be found in HALLER, Die Quellen zur Gesch.
der Entstehung der Kirchenstaates (Leipzig, 1907); HODGKIN, Italy and her Invaders, VII (Oxford, 1899);
DUCHESNE, The Beginning of the
Temporal Sovereignty of the Popes (London, 1908), iii, iv;
MANN, Lives of the Popes in
the Early Middle Ages, I, pt. ii (London, 1902),
289 sqq.
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