Antipope Antipope

Antipope - Definition and Overview

During certain periods of turbulence in the Roman Catholic Church, Papal elections were conducted which were not considered valid by the Roman Catholic Church, either at the time of the election itself, or were subsequently declared invalid. These elections have set up claimants to the Papacy. They were usually in opposition to a specific person chosen as pope by the Roman Catholic Church. A person chosen by such an external election is known as an antipope. The earliest of these, Hippolytus, was elected in protest against Pope Callixtus I by a schismatic group in the city of Rome in the 3rd century. Hippolytus ended his life, however, in exile during Roman imperial persecution in the mines on the island of Sardinia in the company of Callixtus' successor Pope Pontian, and was reconciled to the Catholic Church.

The late 14th and early 15th century saw a series of rival popes elected, one line of which is counted by the Roman Catholic Church as popes and the other as antipopes. The scandal of multiple claimants added to the demands for reform that produced the Protestant Reformation at the turn of the 16th century. See Western Schism, Antipope Benedict XIII.

It would not necessarily have been evident, during periods when two (or three) rival claimants existed, which was the antipope, and which was the pope, and the clear-cut distinctions made between them in retrospect can give a false sense that certainty existed among their contemporaries. Supporters might offer assistance to a given candidate, but could not know which would be determined to have been an antipope, and which the pope, until events had run their course.

There has not been an antipope since 1449, unless sedevacantist antipopes are counted (see below). Other schisms like the Church of England are controlled by lay sovereigns who do not want to have an ecclesiastical rival or begin like the Old Catholic Church and the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association in a rejection of a primary dogma of the papacy.

Today the act of becoming an Antipope is considered a schismatic act by the Roman Catholic Church. This would result in automatic excommunication for the person who became Antipope.

List of antipopes

  1. St. Hippolytus (reconciled with Pope St. Pontian and died as martyr to the church), 217235
  2. Novatian, 251258
  3. Felix II (confused with a martyr with the same name and thus considered an authentic pope until recently), 355365
  4. Ursicinus (Ursinus), 366367
  5. Eulalius, 418419
  6. Laurentius, 498499, 501506
  7. Dioscorus (legitimate perhaps as opposed to Boniface II but died 22 days after election), 530
  8. Theodore (opposed to antipope Paschal), 687
  9. Paschal (opposed to antipope Theodore), 687
  10. Theofylact, 757
  11. Constantine II, 767768
  12. Philip (replaced antipope Constantine II briefly; reigned for a day and then returned to his monastery), 768
  13. John, 844
  14. Anastasius III Bibliothecarius, 855
  15. Christopher, 903904
  16. Boniface VII, 974, 984985
  17. John Filagatto (John XVI), 997998
  18. Gregory VI, 1012
  19. Sylvester III, 1045
  20. John Mincius (Benedict X), 10581059
  21. Pietro Cadalus (Honorius II), 10611064
  22. Guibert of Ravenna (Clement III), 1080 & 10841100
  23. Theodoric, 11001101
  24. Adalbert, 1101
  25. Maginulf (Sylvester IV), 11051111
  26. Maurice Burdanus (Gregory VIII), 11181121
  27. Thebaldus Buccapecuc (Celestine II) (legitimate but submitted to opposing pope, Honorius II and afterwards considered an antipope), 1124
  28. Pietro Pierleoni (Anacletus II), 11301138
  29. Gregorio Conti (Victor IV), 1138
  30. Ottavio di Montecelio (Victor IV), 11591164
  31. Guido di Crema (Paschal III), 11641168
  32. Giovanni of Struma (Callixtus III), 11681178
  33. Lanzo of Sezza (Innocent III), 11791180
  34. Pietro Rainalducci (Nicholas V), antipope in Rome, 13281330
  35. Robert of Geneva (Clement VII), antipope of the Avignon line, 20 September 137816 September 1394
  36. Pedro de Luna (Benedict XIII), antipope of the Avignon line, 13941423
  37. Pietro Philarghi Alexander V, antipope of the Pisan line, 14091410
  38. Baldasssare Cosa John XXIII, antipope of the Pisan line, 14101415
  39. Gil Sanchez Munoz (Clement VIII), antipope of the Avignon line, 14231429
  40. Bernard Garnier (Benedict XIV), antipope of the Avignon line, 14251430?
  41. Jean Carrier (Benedict XIV ‘II’), antipope of the Avignon line, 1433–?
  42. Duke Amadeus VIII of Savoy (Felix V), 5 November 14397 April 1449

Sedevacantist antipopes

Some breakaway Catholics today, called sedevacantists, (see Sedevacantism) claim the current Popes are heretics for replacing the Tridentine Latin Mass with what they call the Novus Ordo Missae and allowing the celebration of the Mass in the vernacular. Some of them have their own popes to replace the popes they reject. They are sometimes called antipopes, although it should be noted that in contrast to historical antipopes, the number of their followers is minuscule.

Sedevacantist antipopes frequently refer to the conventional successors of Pope Pius XII as an series of antipapacies, though never in the Church's history has an Antipope opposed a sede vacante.

Among modern Twentieth/Twenty-first century "antipopes" are:


Example Usage of Antipope

sdswift: Antipope http://ff.im/b55Eb
fluffcthulhu: The twentacles PNG is here, if you want to add them to other avatars you have: http://www.Antipope.org/feorag/fluffcthulhu/twentacles.png
weaselville: Post Halloween secretly meeting with the Antipope John XXIII sur le Pont d'Avignon. Dancing to follow.
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