Pope
Eugene IV
Gabriello Condulmaro, or Condulmerio, b. at Venice, 1388; elected 4 March, 1431; d. at
Rome, 23 Feb., 1447. He sprang from a wealthy Venetia family and was a nephew, on the
mother's side, of Gregory XII. His personal presence was princely and imposing. He was
tall, thin, with a remarkably winning countenance. Coming at an early age into the
possession of great wealth, he distributed 20,000 ducats to the poor and, turning his back
upon the world, entered the Augustinian monastery of St. George in his native city. At the
age of twenty-four he was appointed by his uncle Bishop of Siena; but since the people of
that city objected to the rule of a foreigner, he resigned the bishopric and, in 1408, was
created Cardinal-Priest of St. Clement. He rendered signal service to Pope Martin V by his
labours as legate in Picenum (March of Ancona) and later by quelling a sedition of the
Bolognesi. In recognition of his abilities, the conclave, assembled at Rome in the church
of the Minerva after the death of Martin V, elected Cardinal Condulmaro to the papacy on
the first scrutiny. He assumed the name of Eugene IV, possibly anticipating a stormy
pontificate similar to that of Eugene III. Stormy, in fact, his reign was destined to be;
and it cannot be denied that many of his troubles were owing to his own want of tact,
which alienated all parties from him. By the terms of the capitulation which he signed
before election and afterwards confirmed by a Bull, Eugene secured to the cardinals
one-half of all the revenues of the Church, and promised to consult with them on all
questions of importance relating to the spiritual and temporal concerns of the Church and
the Papal States. He was crowned at St. Peter's, 11 March, 1431.
Eugene continued on the throne his simple routine of monastic life and gave great
edification by his regularity and unfeigned piety. But his hatred of nepotism, the
solitary defect of his great predecessor, led him into a fierce and sanguinary conflict
with the house of Colonna, which would have resulted disastrously for the pope, had not
Florence, Venice, and Naples come to his aid. A peace was patched up by virtue of which
the Colonnesi surrendered their castles and paid an indemnity of 75,000 ducats. Scarcely
was this danger averted when Eugene became involved in a far more serious struggle,
destined to trouble his entire pontificate. Martin V had convoked the Council of Basle
which opened with scant attendance 23 July, 1431. Distrusting the spirit which was
reigning at the council, Eugene, by a Bull dated 18 Dec., 1431, dissolved it, to meet
eighteen months later in Bologna. There is no doubt that this exercise of the papal
prerogative would sooner or later have become imperative; but it seems unwise to have
resorted to it before the council had taken any overt steps in the wrong direction. It
alienated public opinion, and gave colour to the charge that the Curia was opposed to any
measures of reform. The prelates at Basle refused to separate, and issued an encyclical to
all the faithful in which they proclaimed their determination to continue their labours.
In this course they had the assurance of support from all the secular powers, and on 15
Feb., 1432, they reasserted the Gallican doctrine of the superiority of the council to the
pope (see COUNCIL OF CONSTANCE). All efforts to induce Eugene to recall his Bull of
dissolution having failed, the council, on 29 April, formally summoned the pope and his
cardinals to appear at Basle within three months, or to be punished for contumacy. The
schism which now seemed inevitable was for the time averted by the exertions of Sigismund,
who had come to Rome to receive the imperial crown, 31 May, 1433. The pope recalled the
Bull and acknowledged the council as oecumenical, 15 Dec., 1433. In the following May,
1434, a revolution, fomented by the pope's enemies, broke out in Rome. Eugene, in the garb
of a monk, and pelted with stones, escaped down the Tiber to Ostia, whence the friendly
Florentines conducted him to their city and received him with an ovation. He took up his
residence in the Dominican convent of Santa Maria Novella, and sent Vitelleschi, the
militant Bishop of Recanati, to restore order in the States of the Church.
The prolonged sojourn of the Roman Court in Florence, then the centre of the literary
activity of its age, gave a strong impetus to the Humanistic movement. During his stay in
the Tuscan capital, Eugene consecrated the beautiful cathedral, just then finished by
Brunelleschi. Meanwhile, the rupture between the Holy See and the revolutionists at Basle,
now completely controlled by the radical party under the leadership of Cardinal
d'Allemand, of Arles, became complete. This time our sympathies are entirely on the side
of the pontiff, for the proceedings of the little coterie which assumed the name of
authority of a general council were utterly subversive of the Divine constitution of the
Church. By abolishing all sources of papal revenue and restricting in every way the papal
prerogative, they sought to reduce the head of the Church to a mere shadow. Eugene
answered with a dignified appeal to the European powers. The struggle came to a crisis in
the matter of the negotiations for union with the Greeks. The majority at Basle were in
favour of holding a council in France or Savoy. But geography was against them. Italy was
much more convenient for the Greeks; and they declared for the pope. This so provoked the
radical party at Basle that on 3 July, 1437, they issued a monitum against Eugene,
heaping all sorts of accusations upon him. In reply the pope published (18 Sept.) a Bull
in which he transferred the council to Ferrara. Though the council declared the Bull
invalid, and threatened the pope with deposition, yet the Bull dealt a deadly blow to the
adversaries of papal supremacy. The better disposed leaders, notably Cardinals Cesarini
and Cusa, left them and repaired to Ferrara, where the council convened by Eugene opened,
8 Jan., 1438, under the presidency of Cardinal Albergati.
The deliberations with the Greeks lasted for over a year, and were concluded at
Florence, 5 July, 1439, by the Decree of Union. Though the union was not permanent, it
vastly enhanced the prestige of the papacy. The union with the Greeks was followed by that
of the Armenians, 22 Nov., 1439, the Jacobites, 1443, and the Nestorians, 1445. Eugene
exerted himself to the utmost in rousing the nations of Europe to resist the advances of
the Turks. A powerful array was formed in Hungary, and a fleet was despatched to the
Hellespont. The first successes of the Christians were followed, in 1444, by the crushing
defeat at Varna. In the mean time, the dwindling conventicle at Basle proceeded on the
path of schism. On 24 Jan., 1438, Eugene was pronounced suspended, and this step was
followed by his deposition on 25 June, 1439, on the charge of heretical conduct towards a
general council. To crown their infamy, the sectaries, now reduced to one cardinal and
eleven bishops, elected an anti-pope, Duke Amadeus of Savoy, as Felix V. But Christendom,
having recently experienced the horrors of a schism, repudiated the revolutionary step,
and, before his death, Eugene had the happiness of seeing the entire Christian world, at
least in theory, obedient to the Holy See. The decrees of Florence have since been the
solid basis of the spiritual authority of the papacy.
Eugene secured his position in Italy by a treaty, 6 July, 1443, with Alfonso of Aragon,
whom he confirmed as monarch of Naples, and after an exile of nearly ten years he made a
triumphant entry into Rome, on 28 Sept., 1443. He devoted his remaining years to the
amelioration of the sad condition of Rome, and to the consolidation of his spiritual
authority among the nations of Europe. He was unsuccessful in his efforts to induce the
French court to cancel the anti-papal Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges (7 July, 1438), but,
by prudent compromises and the skill of Æneas Silvius, he gained a marked success in
Germany. On the eve of his death he signed (5, 7 Feb., 1447) with the German nation the
so-called Frankfort, or Princes', Concordat, a series of four Bulls, in which, after long
hesitancy and against the advice of many cardinals, he recognized, not without diplomatic
reserve, the persistent German contentions for a new council in a German city, the
mandatory decree of Constance (Frequens) on the frequency of such councils, also its
authority (and that of other general councils), but after the manner of his predecessors,
from whom he declared that he did not intend to differ. On the same day he issued another
document, the so-called "Bulla Salvatoria", in which he asserted that
notwithstanding these concessions, made in his last illness when unable to examine them
with more care, he did not intend to do aught contrary to the teachings of the Fathers, or
the rights and authority of the Apostolic See (Hergenröther-Kirsch, II, 941-2). See PIUS
II; GREGORY OF HEIMBURG.
RAYNALDUS, Annales, ad ann. 1431-47; VESPASIANO DA
BISTICCI, Commentario della vita di Eugenio IV e Nicola V etc. in MURATORI, Script.
rer. Ital., XXV, 251; POCCOLOMINI, ibid., III (ii), 868-904; Tiara et
purpure Veneta (Venice, 1761), 5-15, 50-53, 344-48; CHRISTOPHE, Hist. de la
papauté au XV siècle (Paris, 1863), II, 94-359; ALBERT, Papst Eugen IV
(Mainz, 1885); ARNOLD, Rep. Germ. etc. (Berlin, 1897), I; GEBHARDT, Die
Gravamina d. deutsch. Nat. gegen den röm. Hof (Breslau, 1895); PASTOR, Gesch. der
Päpste, etc. (6th ed.), I, 280 sqq., ibid. tr. ANTROBUS (St. Louis, 1902);
HEFELE, Conciliengesch., VII (ii); DÜX, Der deutsche Kardinal Nich. Von Cusa
und die Kirche seiner Zeit (Ratisbon, 1847); MONTOR, Hist. of the Popes (New
York, 1867), II; see also literature on the Councils of Basle and Florence and on Humanism
and Renaissance in CHEVALIER, Bio-bibl., 1399-40, and HERGENRÖTHER-KIRSCH, dKirchengesch.
(1904), II, 907-9.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
Transcribed by WGKofron
With thanks to Fr. John Hilkert, Akron, Ohio
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume V
Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, May 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
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