John XIV (Pope)
John XIV , actually Petrus Canepanova , († August 20, 984 in Rome ) was Pope from 983 to 984.
He was Bishop of Pavia from 966 and was raised to Pope in November or early December 983 under the influence of the Reformation by Otto II , whose Arch Chancellor he was. When he died in the same year, the antipope Boniface VII, banished to Byzantium in 974, was able to return to Rome in April 984 and had Johannes captured with the help of the Crescentier and imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo , where he starved to death on August 20, 984. Otto III. As king under the reign of his mother Theophanu, he succeeded his late father, Emperor Otto II.
The later misinterpretation of his “active” rule and his imprisonment as two pontificate of different people resulted in confusion when counting the popes of his name. Hence the name John XX. not used to correct the alleged error.
John XIV gave up his real name and chose a papal name because he did not feel worthy to act under his birth name Peter and thus to place himself on a par with the apostle Peter .
Web links
literature
- Michael Tilly : John XIV (Pope). In: Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL). Volume 3, Bautz, Herzberg 1992, ISBN 3-88309-035-2 , Sp. 212.
- Entry in the Catholic Encyclopedia , Robert Appleton Company, New York 1913.
predecessor | Office | successor |
---|---|---|
Benedict VII |
Pope 983-984 |
Boniface VII |
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | John XIV. |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Petrus Canepanova |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Pope (983-984) |
DATE OF BIRTH | 9th century or 10th century |
DATE OF DEATH | August 20, 984 |
Place of death | Rome |