Pope
St. Gregory III
(Reigned 731-741.)
Pope St. Gregory III was the son of a Syrian names John. The date of his birth is not
known. His reputation for learning and virtue was so great that the Romans elected him
pope by acclamation, when he was accompanying the funeral procession of his predecessor,
11 February, 731. As he was not consecrated for more than a month after his election, it
is presumed that he waited for the confirmation of his election by the exarch at Ravenna.
In the matter of Iconoclasm, he followed the policy of his predecessor. He sent legates
and letters to remonstrate with the persecuting emperor, Leo III, and held two synods in
Rome (731) in which the image-breaking heresy was condemned. By way of a practical protest
against the emperor's action he made it a point of paying special honour to images and
relics, giving particular attention to the subject of St. Peter's. Fragments of
inscriptions, to be seen in the crypts of the Vatican basilica, bear witness to this day
of an oratory he built therein, and of the special prayers he ordered to be there recited.
Leo, whose sole answer to the arguments and apologies for image worship which were
addressed to him from both East and West, was force, seized the papal patrimonies in
Calabria and Sicily, or wherever he had any power in Italy, and transferred to the
patriarch of Constantinople the ecclesiastical jurisdiction which the popes had previously
exercised both there, and throughout the ancient Prefecture of Illyricum. Gregory III
confirmed the decision of his predecessors as to the respective rights of the Patriarchs
of Aquileia and Grado, and sent the pallium to Antoninus of Grado. In granting it also to
Egbert of York, he was only following out the arrangements of St. Gregory I who had laid
it down that York was to have metropolitical rights in the North of England, as Canterbury
had to have them in the South. Both Tatwine and Nothelm of Canterbury received the pallium
in succession from Gregory III (731 and 736). At his request Gregory III extended to St.
Boniface the same support and encouragement which had been afforded him by Gregory II.
"Strengthened exceedingly by the help of the affection of the Apostolic See",
the saint joyfully continued his glorious work for the conversion of Germany. About 737
Boniface came to Rome for the third time to give an account of his stewardship, and to
enjoy the pope's "life-giving conversation", At Gregory's order the monk and
great traveller, St. Willibald, went to assist his cousin St. Boniface in his labours.
The close of Gregory's reign was troubled by the Lombards. Realizing the ambition which
animated Liutprand, Gregory completed the restoration of the walls of Rome which had been
begun by his predecessors, and bought back Gallese, a stronghold on the Flaminian Way,
from Transamund, Duke of Spoleto, which helped to keep open the communications between
Rome and Ravenna. In 739, Liutprand was again in arms. His troops ravaged the exarchate,
and he himself marched south to bring to subjection his vassals, the Dukes of Spoleto and
Benevento, and the Duchy of Rome. Transamund fled to Rome, and Gregory implored the aid of
the great Frankish chief, Charles Martel. At length ambassadors from the viceroy (subregulus)
of the Franks appeared in Rome (739). Their arrival, or the summer heats, brought a
momentary peace. But in the following year, Liutprand again took the field. This time the
Romans left their walls, and helped Transamund to recover Spoleto. When, however, he had
recovered his duchy, he would not or could not comply with Gregory's request, and
endeavour to recover for the pope "the four cities of the Roman duchy which had been
lost for his sake." In the midst of all these wars and rumours of war, Gregory died,
and was buried in the oratory of our Lady which he had himself built in St. Peter's. He
died in 741, but whether in November or December is not certain. It is however, on 28
November that he is commemorated in the Roman martyrology.
Codex Carolinus in JAFFE, Monumenta Carolina (Berlin, 1867), or in Mon. Germ. Hist.;
Epp., III (Berlin, 1892). See also bibliography of article GREGORY II.
HORACE K. MANN
Transcribed by Janet van Heyst
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VI
Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, September 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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