Pope
Adrian I
From about 1 February, 772, till 25 December, 795; date of birth uncertain; d. 25
December, 795. His pontificate of twenty-three years, ten months, and twenty-four days was
unequalled in length by that of any successor of St. Peter until a thousand years later,
when Pius VI, deposed and imprisoned by the same Frankish arms which had enthroned the
first Pope-King, surpassed Adrian by a pontificate six months longer. At a critical period
in the history of the Papacy, Adrian possessed all the qualities essential in the founder
of a new dynasty. He was a Roman of noble extraction and majestic stature. By a life of
singular piety, by accomplishments deemed extraordinary in that iron age, and by valuable
services rendered during the pontificate of Paul I and Stephen III, he had so gained the
esteem of his unruly countrymen that the powerful chamberlain, Paul Afiarta, who
represented in Rome the interests of Desiderius, the Lombard king, was powerless to resist
the unanimous voice of the clergy and people demanding for Adrian the papal chair. The new
pontiff's temporal policy was, from the first, sharply defined and tenaciously adhered to;
the keynote was a steadfast resistance to Lombard aggression. He released from prison or
recalled from exile the numerous victims of the chamberlain's violence; and, upon
discovering that Afiarta had caused Sergius, a high official of the papal court, to be
assassinated in prison, ordered his arrest in Rimini, just as Afiarta was returning from
an embassy to Desiderius with the avowed intention of bringing the Pope to the Lombard
court, "were it even in chains." The time seemed propitious for subjecting all
Italy to the Lombard rule; and with less able antagonists than Adrian and Charles (to be
famous in later ages as Charlemagne), most probably the ambition of Desiderius would have
been gratified. There seemed little prospect of Frankish intervention. The Lombards held
the passes of the Alps, and Charles was engrossed by the difficulties of the Saxon war;
moreover, the presence in Pavia of Gerberga and her two sons, the widow and orphans of
Carloman, whose territories, on his brother's death, Charles had annexed, seemed to offer
an excellent opportunity of stirring up discord among the Franks, if only the Pope could
be persuaded, or coerced, to anoint the children as heirs to their father's throne.
Instead of complying, Adrian valiantly determined upon resistance. He strengthened the
fortifications of Rome, called to the aid of the militia the inhabitants of the
surrounding territory, and, as the Lombard host advanced, ravaging and plundering summoned
Charles to hasten to the defence of their common interests. An opportune lull in the Saxon
war left the great commander free to act. Unable to bring the deceitful Lombard to terms
by peaceful overtures, he scaled the Alps in the autumn of 773, seized Verona, where
Gerberga and her sons had sought refuge, and besieged Desiderius in his capital. The
following spring, leaving his army to prosecute the siege of Pavia, he proceeded with a
strong detachment to Rome, in order to celebrate the festival of Easter at the tomb of the
Apostles. Arriving on Holy Saturday, he was received by Adrian and the Romans with the
utmost solemnity. The next three days were devoted to religious rites; the following
Wednesday to affairs of state. The enduring outcome of their momentous meeting was the
famous "Donation of Charlemagne", for eleven centuries the Magna Charta of the
temporal power of the Popes. (See CHARLEMAGNE.) Duchesne's thorough and impartial
investigation of its authenticity in his edition of the Liber Pontificalis (I,
ccxxxv-ccxliii) would seem to have dissipated any reasonable doubt. Two months later Pavia
fell into the hands of Charles; the kingdom of the Lombards was extinguished, and the
Papacy was forever delivered from its persistent and hereditary foe. Nominally, Adrian was
now monarch of above two-thirds of the Italian peninsula; but his sway was little more
than nominal. Over a great portion of the district mentioned in the Donation, the papal
claims were permitted to lapse. To gain and regain the rest, Charles was forced to make
repeated expeditions across the Alps. We may well doubt whether the great King of the
Franks would have suffered the difficulties of the Pope to interfere with his more
immediate cares, were it not for his extreme personal veneration of Adrian, whom in life
and death he never ceased to proclaim his father and best friend It was in no slight
degree owing to Adrian's political sagacity, vigilance, and activity, that the temporal
power of the Papacy did not remain a fiction of the imagination.
His merits were equally great in the more spiritual concerns of the Church. In
cooperation with the orthodox Empress Irene, he laboured to repair the damages wrought by
the Iconoclastic storms. In the year 787 he presided, through his legates, over the
Seventh General Council, held at Nicaea, in which the Catholic doctrine regarding the use
and veneration of images was definitely expounded. The importance of the temporary
opposition to the decrees of the Council throughout the West, caused mainly by a defective
translation, aggravated by political motives, has been greatly exaggerated in modern
times. The controversy elicited a strong refutation of the so-called Libri Carolini
from Pope Adrian and occasioned no diminution of friendship between him and Charles. He
opposed most vigorously, by synods and writings, the nascent heresy of Adoptionism (q.v.),
one of the few Christological errors originated by the West. The Liber Pontificalis
enlarges upon his merits in embellishing the city of Rome, upon which he is said to have
expended fabulous sums. He died universally regretted, and was buried in St. Peter's. His
epitaph, ascribed to his lifelong friend, Charlemagne, is still extant. Rarely have the
priesthood and the empire worked together so harmoniously, and with such beneficent
results to the Church and to humanity, as during the lifetime of these two great rulers.
The chief sources of our information as to Adrian are the Life in the Liber
Pontificalis (q.v.), and his letters to Charlemagne, preserved by the latter in his Codex
Carolinus. Estimates of Adrian's work and character by modern historians differ with
the varying views of writers regarding the temporal sovereignty of the popes, of which
Adrian I must be considered the real founder.
Liber Pontificalis (ed. DUCHESNE), I, 486-523, and praef. CCXXXIV sq.; ID., Les
premiers ternps de l'état pontifical (Paris, 1898); JAFF , Regesta RR. PP. (2d ed.), I,
289-306, Il. 701; ID., Bibl. Rer. Germanic. (Codicis Carol. Epistolae), IV, 13-306; CENNI,
Monum. dominat. pontif. (1761), II, 289-316, also in P.L. XCVIII; MANN, The Lives of the
Popes in the Early Middle Ages (London, 1902), I, II, 395-496; HEFELE, History of the
Councils (tr.), III, passim; NIEHUES, Gesch. d. Verh ltnisses zwischen dem Kaiserthum u.
Papsthum im Mittelalter (Munster, 1877), I, 517-546; GOSSELIN, Power of the Pope in the
Middle Ages (Baltimore, 1853), I, 230 sq.; SCHN RER, Entstehung des Kirchenstaates
(Cologne, 1894). For a bibliography of Adrian I see CHEVALIER, Bio-Bibliogr. (2d ed.,
Paris, 1905), 55, 56.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I
Copyright © 1907 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, March 1, 1907. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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