Antipope Theodoric
Antipope Clement III died on September 8, 1100. His followers in Rome met secretly at night in St. Peter's Basilica, where they elected and enthroned Cardinal Teodorico, the Bishop of Albano, who then went by the name of Theodoric.[1] Forced to abandon Rome, Theodoric was seized three and a half months later and brought before Pope Paschal II, where he was condemned and declared an antipope and then sent to the monastery of La Cava, Salerno, where he died in 1102, according to the epitaph in the crypt of the monastery.[2] A memorial plaque in La Cava commemorates him under the pontifical name of "Sylvester III", because Pope Sylvester III, at that time, was considered an antipope. His successor was Antipope Albert (1101).
Theodoric | |
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Papacy began | 8 September 1100 |
Papacy ended | 1101 |
Predecessor |
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Successor |
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Opposed to | Paschal II |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Teodoric |
Died | 1102 |
Theodoric was an antipope in 1100 and 1101.
See also
- Papal selection before 1059
- Papal conclave (since 1274)
References
- Imma Penn, Dogma Evolution and Papal Fallacies, (AuthorHouse, 2007), 233.
- Imma Penn, 233.