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Pope Innocent VI
Pope Innocent VI
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Papal styles of
Pope Innocent VI
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious styleHoly Father
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Pope Innocent VI (Latin: Innocentius VI; 1282 – 12 September 1362), born Étienne Aubert, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 18 December 1352 to his death, in September 1362. He was the fifth Avignon pope and the only one with the pontifical name of "Innocent".

Étienne Aubert, born in the Diocese of Limoges, was a civil law professor and held various positions in the church before being appointed as Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and Velletri by Pope Clement VI. He became Pope Innocent VI on 30 December 1352. As pope, he revoked an agreement asserting the college of cardinals' superiority over the pope and introduced important reforms in church administration. Through his legate, Cardinal Albornoz, he aimed to restore order in Rome.

Innocent VI played a significant role in the 1360 Treaty of Brétigny between France and England. Though he declined an offer to unite the Greek Orthodox Church with the Roman See in exchange for support, his papacy was marked by financial challenges due to wars in Italy and the aftermath of a plague. To address these challenges, he reduced the chapel staff and sold works of art.

Innocent VI was a patron of letters and is generally considered just and merciful, although criticized by some, such as St. Bridget of Sweden, for his actions against the Fraticelli. He died on 12 September 1362 and was succeeded by Urban V. His tomb is located in the Chartreuse du Val de Bénédiction in Villeneuve-lès-Avignon.

Early life

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Étienne, born during the late 1280s,[1] was the son of Adhemar Aubert, seigneur de Montel-de-Gelat in Limousin province. He was a native of the hamlet of Les Monts, Diocese of Limoges,[2] and, after having taught civil law at Toulouse, he became successively Bishop of Noyon in 1338 and Bishop of Clermont in 1340.[3] On 20 September 1342, he was raised to the position of Cardinal Priest of SS. John and Paul.[2] In September 1347, Etienne, assigned by Pope Clement VI, accompanied Cardinal Annibaldo as part of a peace envoy which resulted in the Truce of Calais.[4]

Etienne was made cardinal-bishop of Ostia and Velletri on 13 February 1352, by Pope Clement VI, whom he succeeded.[5]

His papacy

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Etienne was crowned pope on 30 December 1352 by Cardinal Gaillard de la Mothe after the papal conclave of 1352.[6] Upon his election, he revoked a signed agreement stating the college of cardinals was superior to the pope.[3] His subsequent policy compares favourably with that of the other Avignon Popes. He introduced many needed reforms in the administration of church affairs, and through his legate, Cardinal Albornoz, who was accompanied by Rienzi, he sought to restore order in Rome. In 1355, Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, was crowned in Rome with Innocent's permission, after having made an oath that he would quit the city on the day of the ceremony.[2] It was largely through the exertions of Innocent VI that the Treaty of Brétigny (1360) between France and England was brought about. During his pontificate, the Byzantine emperor John V Palaeologus offered to submit the Greek Orthodox Church to the Roman See in return for assistance against John VI Cantacuzenus. The resources at the disposal of the Pope, however, were all required for exigencies nearer home, and the offer was declined.

Most of the wealth accumulated by John XXII and Benedict XII had been lost during the extravagant pontificate of Clement VI. Innocent VI economised by cutting the chapel staff (capellani capelle) from twelve to eight. Works of art were sold rather than commissioned. His pontificate was dominated by the war in Italy and by Avignon's recovery from the plague, both of which made draining demands on his treasury. By 1357, he was complaining of poverty.

Innocent VI was a liberal patron of letters. If the extreme severity of his measures against the Fraticelli is ignored, he retains a high reputation for justice and mercy. However, St. Bridget of Sweden denounced him as a persecutor of Christians.[6] He died on 12 September 1362 and was succeeded by Urban V. Today, his tomb can be found in the Chartreuse du Val de Bénédiction, the Carthusian monastery in Villeneuve-lès-Avignon.

See also

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References

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Sources

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  • Coulombe, Charles A. (2003). Vicars of Christ: A History of the Popes. Citadel Press. ISBN 9780806523705.
  • Rollo-Koster, Joëlle (2015). Avignon and Its Papacy, 1309-1417: Popes, Institutions, and Society. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  • Modified text from the 9th edition (1879) of an unnamed encyclopedia[full citation needed]
  • Tomasello, Music and Ritual at Papal Avignon 1309–1403. Ann Arbor, Michigan: UMI Research Press, 1983.
  • Louis XI (king of France), Josepf Frederic, Louis Vaesen, Etienne Charavay, Bernard Edouard de Mandrot-1905.(Googles livres)[full citation needed]
  • Societe' d'etudes de la province de Cambrai, Lille-1907
  • Antoine Pellisier (1961). Innocent VI :le reformateur, deuxième pape Limousin (1352–1362) [full citation needed]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Pope Innocent VI (c. 1282 – 12 September 1362), born Étienne Aubert in Monts, Corrèze, France, was the 199th pope of the Roman Catholic Church, serving from his election on 18 December 1352 until his death in Avignon. A former professor of civil law at Toulouse and cardinal-bishop of Ostia, he ascended during the Avignon Papacy, the seventh decade of which saw the papal residence firmly established in southern France under heavy French monarchical influence, contributing to perceptions of the Holy See's subjugation and moral laxity. Innocent VI pursued administrative reforms to curb the excesses of his predecessor Clement VI's extravagant court, including revoking pre-election capitulations that elevated the College of Cardinals above papal authority and legislating against cardinals' luxurious households to enforce stricter discipline. He condemned the accumulation of multiple benefices by clergy, aimed to restore fiscal prudence by reducing papal staff and selling artworks, and mediated in the Hundred Years' War, with his legates facilitating the 1360 Treaty of Brétigny between England and France. Despite these efforts, his pontificate occurred amid the Black Death's devastation, which killed up to half of Europe's population and strained church resources, while nepotistic appointments undermined his reformist image; nonetheless, he ranks among the more austere and integrity-focused figures of the Avignon era, prioritizing moral and institutional renewal over territorial or political aggrandizement.

Early Life and Ecclesiastical Rise

Birth and Origins

Étienne Aubert, who reigned as Pope Innocent VI, was born circa 1282 in the village of (also recorded as Les Monts or near Pompadour) in the diocese of , within the historic region of central . This area, part of the at the time, was characterized by rural agrarian communities under feudal structures, with serving as a key ecclesiastical center. Little is documented about Aubert's origins, though indicate his father was named Adhémar Aubert, suggesting a lineage of local landowners or minor typical of the Limousin nobility's lower strata, without evident ties to high aristocracy or foreign influences. His upbringing in this provincial setting, amid the Kingdom of France's , positioned him within a culturally French, Catholic milieu that emphasized legal and for social advancement. No primary contemporary accounts detail unusual circumstances of his birth, aligning with the era's sparse biographical for non-royal figures. Étienne Aubert pursued legal studies at the , graduating in and subsequently teaching there from approximately 1321 to 1340. Traditional accounts describe his specialization as civil law, reflecting the integrated nature of in medieval , where Roman civil law influenced ecclesiastical jurisprudence. His academic career established him as a prominent , enabling advancement to high judicial positions, such as chief in under the seneschal's court. Aubert's training emphasized practical application of law in governance and dispute resolution, skills he later deployed in papal administration.

Advancement to Episcopate and Cardinalate

Étienne Aubert, having established a reputation as a of civil law at the , entered higher ecclesiastical offices during the pontificate of . In 1338, he was appointed of Noyon in northern , marking his initial elevation to the episcopate. Aubert's episcopal consecration was performed by himself, reflecting the pope's trust in his administrative and legal acumen amid the Avignon Papacy's need for capable jurists. Two years later, in 1340, Aubert was transferred to the more prestigious Bishopric of Clermont in the region, a with significant historical and importance. This promotion underscored his growing influence within the , where his expertise in canon and civil law proved invaluable for handling disputes and governance during a period of papal centralization in . Under , who succeeded Benedict XII in 1342, Aubert's ascent continued rapidly. That same year, he was elevated to the cardinalate as a cardinal-priest, entering the and gaining a pivotal role in papal deliberations. By early 1352, shortly before Clement VI's death, Aubert was further advanced to Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia and , the highest rank among cardinal-bishops and a traditional position for potential papal successors due to its proximity to and symbolic authority over episcopal ordinations. This sequence of promotions highlights Aubert's alignment with the Avignon curia's priorities, favoring learned administrators over aristocratic or politically connected figures, though it also drew scrutiny for consolidating French influence in the papacy.

Election to the Papacy

Context of Succession

The death of on December 6, 1352, in , , created a papal vacancy amid the lingering effects of the , which had ravaged from 1347 to 1351 and killed an estimated 30-60% of the continent's population, exacerbating ecclesiastical disarray, moral critiques of clerical wealth, and calls for reform. Clement's decade-long pontificate (1342-1352) had seen the Church's administration strained by plague-induced depopulation of clergy, fiscal dependencies on annuities and indulgences, and growing resentment over the Papacy's French-centric orientation, which distanced the from and fueled perceptions of monarchical influence from the French crown. The College of Cardinals, comprising 18 electors almost entirely of French origin and loyal to the Avignon establishment, assembled in conclave on December 16, 1352, within the Apostolic Palace in Avignon. In a bid to curb papal autocracy—evident in prior popes' expansions of curial power—the cardinals negotiated the first documented election capitulation, pledging that the future pope would share revenues with the College, limit cardinal appointments to 15-20 members, consult the body on major decisions, and avoid unilateral reforms. This agreement underscored tensions between collective cardinal authority and monarchical papal rule, heightened by the Avignon's isolation from Italian temporal challenges like brigandage in the Papal States. Étienne Aubert, a Limousin native and former professor of civil law at Toulouse who had risen under Clement VI to become Bishop of Clermont (1340), cardinal-priest (1342), and Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia (1352)—the senior cardinalate rank—was elected on December 18, 1352, adopting the name Innocent VI. His prompt selection, after just two days of deliberation, likely stemmed from his juridical expertise, ascetic reputation contrasting Clement's opulent court, and alignment with reformist sentiments seeking to restore discipline without alienating French interests, though he immediately invalidated the capitulation as contrary to divine law and tradition.

Election Process and Initial Challenges

The death of Pope Clement VI on December 6, 1352, prompted the convening of a papal conclave in Avignon on December 16, with 24 of the 25 eligible cardinals participating. The conclave lasted two days, concluding on December 18 when Cardinal Étienne Aubert, the bishop of Ostia, was elected pope; he chose the regnal name Innocent VI. This election marked the first documented instance of cardinals drafting an election capitulation, a binding agreement stipulating that the new pope share power and revenues with the college; Innocent VI immediately declared it null and void, invoking the divine origin of papal authority over such constraints. Innocent VI was crowned on December 30, 1352, by Cardinal Gaillard de la Mothe in , formalizing his accession amid the ongoing Avignon Papacy's detachment from . challenges included reasserting fiscal and administrative in a weakened by his predecessor's lavish expenditures and the recent Black Death's devastation, which had halved 's population and strained papal finances through lost revenues and aid demands. To curb abuses, he promptly repealed select reservations made by Clement VI, prohibited clerical pluralities, and mandated fixed incomes for Rota auditors to ensure judicial impartiality, signaling an early commitment to reform despite resistance from entrenched interests. Security threats compounded these pressures, as roving freebooters—exploiting the Hundred Years' War's chaos in —imperiled the papal residence; Innocent ordered Avignon's fortifications strengthened, though bandits attacked before completion, forcing a . These incursions, alongside Italy's anarchic wars and the plague's lingering economic fallout, imposed immediate treasury burdens, limiting resources for broader initiatives like reclaiming papal territories.

Pontificate

Administrative and Curial Reforms

Upon his election on 18 December 1352, Innocent VI promptly annulled the capitulations imposed by the during the conclave, which had asserted their collective superiority over the papacy and limited papal authority in appointments and finances. This action restored within the , countering the concessions extracted from his predecessor Clement VI and reasserting the pope's independent governance amid the residency's administrative complexities. Innocent pursued fiscal restraint by shrinking the , curtailing lavish expenditures inherited from Clement VI's opulent court, and redirecting resources toward curial efficiency rather than extravagance. He revoked numerous reservations and commendations of s made by Clement VI, limited the accumulation of multiple s by individual clerics, and disapproved of pluralism to curb abuses in . These measures aimed to streamline allocation and reduce in distribution, though enforcement faced resistance from entrenched curial interests. To enhance judicial impartiality, Innocent assigned fixed stipends to the auditors of the Sacra Romana Rota, whose previously gratuitous services had risked bias from litigant gratuities; this reform sought a more professional and unbiased administration of cases. He also enforced episcopal residence in dioceses and promoted clerical discipline, extending curial oversight to monastic orders while supporting efforts to restore Dominican discipline under their grand master. Despite these initiatives, the reforms' impact was tempered by the ongoing and post-plague economic strains, limiting full implementation across the fragmented church structure.

Diplomatic Initiatives and Peacemaking

Innocent VI prioritized mediation in the Hundred Years' War, dispatching legates to negotiate truces between England and France amid the devastation following the Black Death and battles like Poitiers in 1356. His efforts culminated in the Treaty of Brétigny on May 8, 1360, which established a fragile peace by ceding significant territories in Aquitaine and other regions to England while securing the release of King John II of France, though hostilities resumed within years due to non-compliance. To stabilize relations with the and leverage imperial influence for broader European pacification, Innocent VI permitted the of IV as emperor in on April 5, 1355, extracting an oath from Charles to depart the immediately afterward to prevent unrest. This diplomatic concession aimed to counterbalance French dominance and facilitate mediation in , though tensions arose later over Charles's , which formalized electoral processes excluding papal , prompting Innocent to protest the document's infringement on ecclesiastical authority. In Italy, where papal territories were fragmented by local tyrants, Innocent VI appointed Cardinal Gil de Albornoz as legate in 1353 with plenary powers to reclaim the Papal States through a mix of negotiation and military action, restoring control over regions like Bologna by 1355 and fostering temporary pacts with figures such as the Visconti of Milan. He also brokered a peace between the rival maritime republics of Venice and Genoa, ending their conflict that had disrupted Mediterranean trade since 1350. These initiatives reflected a pragmatic approach to curbing anarchy in the peninsula, though Albornoz's campaigns often blended diplomacy with coercion to enforce papal suzerainty.

Territorial and Military Engagements

In 1353, Pope Innocent VI appointed Cardinal Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz as legate to with unlimited authority to reclaim the , which had been overrun by local despots and condottieri during the Avignon Papacy's absence from . Albornoz arrived with a modest force of mercenaries and systematically subdued rebellious lords through a combination of military action, alliances, and conditional amnesties, beginning with the capture of key strongholds in the and Marches. Albornoz's campaigns achieved notable successes, including the reconquest of Bologna from the Visconti in 1355 and the subjugation of much of Umbria, Ancona, and surrounding territories by 1360, restoring approximately 20,000 square kilometers to papal suzerainty. He employed professional soldiers such as the notorious Fra Moriale for offensives against figures like Bertoldo da Marsiglia, while issuing the Constitutiones Aegidianae in 1357 to codify governance and prevent future fragmentation. These efforts relied on papal revenues funneled from Avignon, though they strained finances amid ongoing European conflicts. Innocent VI also fortified Avignon against marauding companies of mercenaries ravaging southern France, though the works remained incomplete when he paid a substantial ransom to one such band in 1357 to avert siege. He contemplated a crusade against Muslim powers and sought Eastern Church reunion, issuing preparatory bulls, but these initiatives yielded no expeditions due to fiscal constraints and political instability. Indirectly, his excommunication of Queen Joanna I of Naples in 1355 over the murder of her husband Andrew of Hungary escalated tensions with the Angevin kingdom, prompting support for rival claimants without direct papal military involvement.

Response to Post-Plague Crises and Heresies

The Black Death (1347–1351) decimated the Catholic clergy, with mortality rates among priests estimated at 40–60% in many regions, leading to severe shortages in sacramental administration, pastoral neglect, and a surge in anticlerical sentiment as unqualified replacements were hastily ordained and many survivors abandoned posts to evade infection. This crisis eroded ecclesiastical authority amid broader social upheaval, including economic collapse and millenarian expectations that fueled irregular religious movements. Pope Innocent VI, ascending in December 1352, prioritized stabilizing the Church's finances—depleted by plague-related expenditures and reduced tithes—and restoring discipline to address these vulnerabilities, adopting an austere approach that included reducing papal staff and curbing court luxuries to redirect resources toward recovery efforts. Innocent's reforms extended to curbing pluralism, limiting bishops to fewer benefices to ensure diocesan residency and improve local oversight amid clergy gaps, while supporting efforts to discipline strained by losses. These measures aimed at countering the post-plague decline in clerical morale and competence, which had intensified perceptions of corruption and divine disfavor. Regarding heresies, Innocent confronted persistent threats from the , a radical Spiritual Franciscan sect deemed heretical for insisting on , rejecting papal dispensations on Franciscan property, and promoting schismatic communities—doctrines that gained traction amid the existential despair following the plague. In 1354, he authorized the public burning of two friars in after trials for their erroneous teachings on poverty and ecclesiastical obedience, marking a severe enforcement of prior condemnations to deter resurgence. This action, though isolated, underscored his commitment to orthodoxy in a period when apocalyptic fervor and distrust of institutional wealth amplified such dissent, though broader suppression relied on local inquisitorial mechanisms rather than new papal bulls.

Relations with Religious Orders and Patronage

Innocent VI pursued reforms within the religious orders to enforce stricter discipline and curb excesses, shrinking the papal household and advocating for monastic renewal amid post-plague laxity. He targeted the Spiritual Franciscans, a radical faction insisting on apostolic poverty and rejecting communal property, as heretical; under his directives, the Inquisition imprisoned or burned several of their adherents at the stake. This severity reflected his commitment to doctrinal orthodoxy over fringe interpretations of Franciscan poverty, distinguishing mainstream observance from what he viewed as fanaticism. Conversely, Innocent VI upheld the privileges of the mendicant orders—Dominicans, Franciscans, and others—renewing papal grants challenged by secular clergy, including Archbishop Richard Fitzralph of Armagh, who criticized their exemption from episcopal oversight and preaching rights. These renewals, issued amid ongoing tensions, preserved the friars' role in pastoral care and countered secular encroachments without endorsing all mendicant practices. In patronage, Innocent VI supported contemplative orders by donating his cardinalatial palace at Villeneuve-lès-Avignon to the around 1356, converting it into the Charterhouse monastery to foster eremitic life near the papal court. He commissioned frescoes by the Sienese artist Matteo Giovannetti for the monastery's chapel of Saint John the Baptist, depicting scenes that integrated papal imagery with Carthusian themes. Giovannetti, previously employed by Clement VI, executed these works under Innocent's , extending to papal decorations like the Great Audience Hall frescoes of prophets, blending artistic patronage with fiscal restraint—he sold extraneous artworks to fund defenses and reforms. This selective support prioritized utility and piety over extravagance, aligning with his broader curial economies.

Criticisms and Controversies

Accusations of Nepotism

Pope Innocent VI faced accusations of during his pontificate (1352–1362), particularly for appointing relatives to prominent ecclesiastical positions amid the Papacy's entrenched favoritism toward French kin and allies. The most direct instance involved his elevation of nephew Andouin Aubert to the cardinalate on 15 February 1353, a move that exemplified the era's tradition, which later inspired the term "" itself. Aubert, son of Innocent's brother Guy de Beaufort (also known as Étienne Aubert in some records), received the title of Cardinal-Deacon of , thereby securing familial representation in the . Such appointments were criticized as perpetuating corruption within the curia, where popes routinely distributed benefices and offices to nephews and cousins to consolidate influence and protect assets during the Hundred Years' War and post-plague instability. However, contemporaries and later historians assessed Innocent's nepotism as comparatively restrained; unlike Clement VI, who lavished twelve cardinal hats on relatives including brothers and nephews, Innocent confined favoritism to limited bounds, creating only one such cardinal-nephew. This moderation aligned with his broader administrative reforms, including decrees to curb the sale of benefices and excessive curial appointments, though detractors argued these measures hypocritically spared his own kin. The Catholic Encyclopedia describes Innocent as "tainted with nepotism" yet ranks him among the Avignon popes' better exemplars, citing his moral integrity and patronage of arts over predecessors' extravagance. Similarly, assessments in ecclesiastical histories emphasize that while the appointment of Aubert drew scrutiny, Innocent's overall efforts to stabilize papal finances and discipline—such as reducing the College of Cardinals from 25 to 15 members initially—mitigated perceptions of systemic abuse, positioning his tenure as a partial corrective to Avignon's familial excesses rather than their amplification. No evidence exists of further extensive familial benefices under Innocent, distinguishing him from later Renaissance popes whose nepotism involved vast territorial grants and military commands.

Role in the Avignon Captivity

Pope Innocent VI's pontificate (18 December 1352 – 12 September 1362) occurred entirely within the Avignon Papacy, during which the papal court remained in Avignon, France, amid ongoing instability in the Italian peninsula and dependence on French royal influence. Elected in Avignon following the death of Clement VI, Innocent inherited a curia criticized for extravagance and fiscal excess, yet he perpetuated the residence there, viewing the restoration of papal temporal authority in the Papal States as a necessary precondition for any relocation to Rome. His administration emphasized internal reforms to enhance ecclesiastical discipline, including mandates for ecclesiastics to reside at their benefices under threat of excommunication, the repeal of certain benefice reservations, the condemnation of pluralities, and prohibitions on courtly luxuries among cardinals to curb perceived moral laxity. These measures aimed to restore the papacy's spiritual credibility while in exile from its traditional seat, though they provoked resentment due to increased taxation necessitated by military expenditures. A key aspect of Innocent's strategy to address the Avignon "captivity" involved delegating Cardinal Gil Álvarez de Albornoz as legate to Italy in 1353, tasking him with reconquering and stabilizing the Papal States from local tyrants and communal upheavals. Albornoz's campaigns proved successful, reasserting papal control over territories such as Bologna and the Romagna by 1355–1357 through a combination of military force and the promulgation of the Constitutiones Aegidianae, a legal framework for governance that endured beyond Innocent's reign. In 1354, Innocent also briefly supported the tribune Cola di Rienzo's attempt to revive republican order in Rome, though Rienzo's volatile rule ended in failure and execution, underscoring the persistent chaos that deterred an immediate papal return. Upon election, Innocent revoked a capitulation by the cardinals asserting their superiority over the pope, reaffirming papal primacy and laying groundwork for eventual independence from Avignon dependencies. Despite these initiatives, Innocent did not relocate the curia to during his tenure, as his death in on 12 September 1362 preempted longstanding plans to do so once Italian affairs stabilized. He was interred in the Charterhouse of Villeneuve-lès-, a he had founded, symbolizing the entrenched establishment. Historians assess his role in the as comparatively constructive among popes, marked by moral rigor and efforts to mitigate French partisanship, though limited by nepotistic appointments and the era's geopolitical constraints, including mediation in the 1360 Treaty of Brétigny between and . These actions facilitated the papacy's later under Gregory XI in 1377, without fully resolving the underlying perceptions of fostered by prolonged French residence and curial centralization.

Doctrinal and Ecclesial Disputes

Innocent VI's pontificate encountered notable ecclesial friction between secular clergy and mendicant friars, epitomized by the protracted conflict initiated by Richard FitzRalph, Archbishop of Armagh (r. 1347–1360). FitzRalph, initially sympathetic to the orders, increasingly denounced their exemptions from episcopal oversight, arguing that their privileges to preach, hear confessions, and solicit alms without diocesan license undermined parochial authority and genuine apostolic poverty, as outlined in his treatise De pauperie Salvatoris (c. 1356). These critiques echoed broader theological debates on evangelical perfection and friars' mendicancy, with FitzRalph preaching against the orders in Avignon consistories as early as 1350 under Clement VI and escalating his campaign upon returning to England in 1356. As a former Dominican master, Innocent VI upheld the mendicants' traditional exemptions, renewing their privileges amid the dispute despite FitzRalph's appeals. On October 1, 1358, the pope issued a bull appointing a commission of cardinals to adjudicate the charges, mandating examination of the friars' practices while preserving their papal grants. FitzRalph journeyed to Avignon in 1357 to press his case directly before Innocent VI, but no definitive ruling ensued; he died at the curia on November 15, 1360, leaving the controversy unresolved and the orders' status intact. This intervention reflected Innocent VI's commitment to curial oversight of such tensions, prioritizing mendicant contributions to pastoral care over secular clergy demands. The pope also asserted doctrinal primacy in ecclesial governance by invalidating capitulations—pre-election pledges by cardinals to limit papal authority—decreed shortly after his , 1352, . He maintained that such restrictions violated the divine origin of the papal office, independent of human conditions. Similarly, Innocent VI contested Charles IV's of January 10, 1356, which formalized imperial electoral processes without requiring papal investiture or confirmation of the king-emperor, interpreting it as a derogation from over temporal rulers. In 1359, he initially rebuffed Charles's unilateral proposals for German clerical reforms but later acquiesced after negotiations, balancing papal claims with pragmatic . A peripheral ecclesial matter involved the rehabilitation of Cola di Rienzo, the Roman tribune excommunicated by Clement VI in 1352 for rebellion deemed heretical. Innocent VI absolved him in August 1352 and dispatched him with Cardinal Gil Álvarez Carrillo de Albornoz to reclaim papal territories, though Rienzo's erratic governance led to his lynching on October 8, 1354. No major bulls condemning emergent heresies, such as lingering post-plague fanaticism, are recorded under Innocent VI, distinguishing his reign from predecessors' direct suppressions.

Death and Legacy

Final Years and Succession

In the closing phase of his pontificate, Innocent VI persisted in managing the papal finances amid persistent Italian warfare and the lingering economic aftermath of the , which had severely depleted Avignon's resources by the late 1350s. His efforts included ongoing curial reforms and diplomatic overtures, though specific initiatives in 1360–1362 are sparsely documented, reflecting a period of relative stability after earlier crises. Afflicted by the infirmities of advanced age—estimated between 67 and 80 years—Innocent VI died peacefully in on September 12, 1362. Following his death, the , numbering 20 members, convened a conclave in starting September 22, 1362. Cardinal Hugues Roger, O.S.B., secured 15 votes but declined , paving the way for the unanimous selection of the non-cardinal Guillaume de Grimoard, abbot of Saint-Victor in , as on September 28. This rapid succession, completed within a week, underscored the cardinals' preference for a reform-minded outsider amid ongoing challenges.

Historical Assessment

Pope Innocent VI (r. 1352–1362) is generally evaluated by historians as one of the more competent and reform-oriented pontiffs of the Avignon Papacy, a period characterized by administrative centralization, fiscal excesses, and perceived subservience to French monarchs. His tenure marked a shift toward internal Church discipline amid the devastation of the Black Death, which claimed an estimated 30-50% of Europe's population between 1347 and 1351, exacerbating clerical shortages and moral laxity. Innocent prioritized curbing pluralism—the holding of multiple benefices by single clerics—by limiting bishops to fewer positions and enforcing residency in dioceses to combat absenteeism and simony. He also revoked a prior agreement from 1352 that had elevated the College of Cardinals above papal authority, reasserting monarchical control over the curia. These measures aimed to restore fiscal prudence and ecclesiastical order, including reductions in papal court extravagance and the dismissal of idle bishops. Despite these initiatives, Innocent's reforms yielded mixed results, as entrenched interests and the ongoing Hundred Years' War hindered broader implementation. He dispatched legates to Italy in unsuccessful bids to reclaim papal territories and suppress local disorders, while mediating truces between England and France, such as the 1355 extensions of the 1347 ceasefire. Critics, including later Protestant reformers, highlighted the Avignon era's overall corruption, but contemporary and Catholic scholars distinguish Innocent as less partisan than predecessors like Clement VI, crediting him with efforts to suppress flagellant movements and heretical excesses post-plague. His failure to relocate the papacy to Rome—despite nominal plans—perpetuated the "Babylonian Captivity" narrative, fueling conciliarist critiques of papal centralization. In retrospective assessments, Innocent's legacy underscores the tensions between reformist intent and structural constraints of the Avignon system, where papal revenues relied heavily on French annates and indulgences. Roman Catholic historians rank him among the period's stronger figures for advancing administrative efficiency and doctrinal vigilance, though secular evaluations emphasize how his pontificate exemplified the era's geopolitical entanglements without resolving the curia's Roman alienation. Empirical records, such as curial registers, document over 1,000 provisions issued under his rule, many aimed at merit-based appointments over nepotism, reflecting a pragmatic causality in stabilizing Church governance amid demographic collapse.

References

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