Christianity: Details about 'Pope Joan'
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According to legend, Pope Joan was an alleged female pope who reigned from 850 to 870. Pope Joan is regarded by most historians as an invention, possibly originating as an anti-papal satire, though it enjoys an air of plausibility due to certain elements related in the story.
The legendThe story of Pope Joan is known mainly from the 13th century Polish chronicler Martin of Opava (Martin von Trappau to Germans, also known as Martin Polonus, "Martin the Pole"). In his Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatum, Martin writes:
Thus, this event would have occurred in between the reigns of Pope Leo IV and Pope Benedict III, in the 850s. Versions of the story appear in sources earlier than Martin; the one most commonly cited is Anastasius Bibliothecarius (d. 886) a compiler of Liber Pontificalis, who would have been a contemporary of the female Pope. However, the story is not found in reliable manuscripts of Anastasius. In fact, only one manuscript of Anastasius' Liber Pontificalis contains a reference to the female Pope. This manuscript, in the Vatican Library, bears the relevant passage inserted as a footnote at the bottom of a page, out of sequence, and in a different hand, one that certainly dates from after the time of Martin von Trappau. In other words, this "witness" to the female Pope is likely to be based upon Martin's account, and certainly not a possible source for it. The same is true of Marianus Scotus's Chronicle of the Popes a text written in the 11th century. Some manuscripts of it contain a brief mention of a female Pope named Joanna (the earliest source to identify her with a specific name), but all these manuscripts are, again, later than Martin's work. Earlier manuscripts do not contain the legend. There is only one source for a female Pope which certainly antedates Martin of Opava, and this is Jean de Mailly, who wrote slightly earlier in the 13th century. In his chronicle of Mainz, Chronica Universalis Mettensis, he dates the scandal not to the 850s but to 1099, and writes:
From the mid-13th century onwards, then, the legend was widely disseminated and believed. Bartolomeo Platina, the scholar who was prefect of the Vatican Library, wrote his Vitæ Pontificum Platinæ historici liber de vita Christi ac omnium pontificum qui hactenus ducenti fuere et XX in 1479 at the behest of his patron Pope Sixtus IV. The book contains the following account of the female Pope:
References to the female Pope abound in the later Middle Ages and Renaissance. The 14th century writer Giovanni Boccaccio wrote about her in De Claris Mulieribus. The Chronicon of Adam of Usk (1404) gives her a name, Agnes, and furthermore mentions a statue in Rome which is said to be of her. This statue had never been mentioned by any earlier writer anywhere; presumably it was an actual statue that came to be taken to be of the female Pope. A late 14th century edition of the Mirabilia Urbis Romae, a guidebook for pilgrims to Rome, tells readers that the female Pope's remains are buried at St Peter's. It was around this time when a long series of busts of past Popes was made for the Duomo of Siena, which included one of the female Pope, named as "Johannes VIII, Foemina de Anglia" and included between Leo IV and Benedict III. At his trial in 1415, Jan Hus argued that the Church does not necessarily need a Pope, because during the pontificate of "Pope Agnes" (as he also called her), it got on quite well. Hus' opponents at this trial insisted that his argument proved no such thing about the independence of the Church, but they did not dispute that there had been a female Pope at all. The Tarot, which surfaced in the mid-15th century, includes a Papesse with its Pape (since the late 19th century called the High Priestess and the Hierophant in English). It is often suggested, with some plausibility although no real proof, that this image was inspired by the legend of the female Pope. There were associated legends as well. In the 1290s the Dominican Robert of Usèz recounted a vision in which he saw the seat "where, it is said, the Pope is proved to be a man". By the 14th century, it was believed that two ancient marble seats, called the sedia stercoraria, which were used for enthroning new Popes in the Basilica of St. John Lateran had holes in the seats that were used for determining the gender of the new Pope. It was said that the Pope would have to sit on one of the seats naked, while a committee of cardinals peered through the hole from beneath, before declaring, "Testiculos habet et bene pendentes" — "He has testicles, and they dangle nicely." Not until the late 15th century, however, was it said that this peculiar practice was instituted in response to the scandal of the 9th century female Pope. According to other research what was said is as follows, "Mas nobis nominus est"- "Our nominee is a man" In 1601, Pope Clement VIII declared the legend of the female Pope to be untrue. The famous bust of her, inscribed Johannes VIII, femina ex Anglia, which had been carved for the series of papal figures in the Duomo of Siena about 1400 and was noted by travellers was either destroyed or recarved and relabeled, replaced by a male figure, of Pope Zacharias (Stanford 1999; J.N.D. Kelly, Oxford Dictionary of Popes). One legend says that Joan was the illegitimate daughter of a former Pope and had a vision from God that she should succeed her father and become Pope. Another legend says that a street in Italy is named after her and her body is buried beneath it. In some legends, Pope Joan is not murdered after being revealed as a woman. Instead she is deposed, lives the rest of her life in a convent and her son is made Bishop of Hostia. Here is a passage from a Berlin Manuscript:
Since the 14th Century, the figure of Pope Joan has taken on a somewhat "Saintly" figure. There are stories of her figure appearing and performing miracles. Franceso Petrarch (1304-74) wrote in his Chronica de le Vite de Pontefici et Imperadori Romani that after Pope Joan had been revealed as a woman:
AnalysisMost scholars dismiss Pope Joan as the medieval equivalent of an urban legend (see ). The Oxford Dictionary of Popes (1988, ISBN 0192820850) acknowledges that this legend was widely believed for centuries, even among Catholic circles, but declares that there is "no contemporary evidence for a female pope at any of the dates suggested for her reign," and goes on to say that "the known facts of the respective periods make it impossible to fit in." (pg. 329) The legend of Pope Joan was initially discredited by David Blondel, a mid-17th century Protestant historian, who suggested that Pope Joan's tale may have originated in a satire against Pope John XI, who upon his death was in his early 20s. Blondel, through detailed analysis of the claims and suggested timings, argued that no such events could have happened. The Catholic Encyclopedia elaborates on the historical timeline problem:
It is also notable that enemies of the Papacy in the 9th century make no mention of a female Pope. For example, Photius I of Constantinople, who became patriarch in 858 and was deposed by Pope Nicholas I in 863, was understandably an enemy of the Pope. He vehemently asserted his own authority as patriarch over that of the Pope in Rome, and would certainly have made the most of any scandal of that time regarding the Papacy. But he never mentions the story once in any of his voluminous writings. Indeed, at one point he mentions "Leo and Benedict, successively great priests of the Roman Church"., are theorizing that a more plausible timeframe would be 1086-1108, when there were a lot of antipopes, and the reign of the legitimate popes Victor III, Urban II and Paschal II was not always established in Rome, since this city was occupied by Emperor Henry IV, and later sacked by the Normans.This is all in agreement with the earliest known version of the myth, by Jean de Mailly, as he places the story in the year 1099. De Mailly's story was also acknowledged by his companion Stephen of Bourbon. It has been argued that manuscripts and historical records were tampered with in the 17th century, when Pope Clement VIII decreed that there had never been a Pope Joan. But this claim is highly unlikely. It would have required an immense effort to remove her name from all documents, in every library and monastery across Europe. Such a vast conspiracy would have been almost impossible to carry out. Moreover, any such tampering would be easily detectable by modern scholars. Either passages would have to be physically erased from manuscripts - something that obviously leaves marks - or the manuscripts would have to be completely destroyed and replaced with forgeries. However, scholars can date manuscripts quite accurately on the basis of the materials used, handwriting styles, and so on. There was no mass destruction, forgery or alteration of manuscripts in the seventeenth century. On the contrary, all the evidence of tampering in relation to the Pope Joan story indicates that books from before the thirteenth century were altered to put her in, not leave her out.It was also said that a bust of Joan even stood among those of all the other popes in Siena Cathedral until 1601, when Clement VIII ordered it to be replaced by that of Pope Zacharias. Against the weight of historical evidence to the contrary, then, why has the Pope Joan story been so often believed, and so often revisited? Some, such as writer Philip Jenkins (The New Anti-Catholicism, 2005, ISBN 0195154800) have suggested that the periodic revival of what Jenkins calls this "anti-papal legend" has more to do with feminist and anti-Catholic wishful thinking than historical accuracy (pg. 89). At any rate, the controversy is likely to continue, especially in light of the recent attention given the story by the ABC television program Primetime Live ("On the Trail of Pope Joan", broadcast 12/29/2005). This article incorporates text from the public domain Catholic Encyclopedia. Related issuesThe thrones with holes in them at St John Lateran's did indeed exist. In fact, one is still in the Vatican Museums today, and it does indeed have a hole in the seat. The reason for the hole is disputed, but as both the seats and their holes predated the Pope Joan story, and indeed Catholicism by centuries, they clearly have nothing to do with a need to check the sex of a pope. It has been speculated that they originally were Roman bidets or imperial birthing stools, which because of their age and imperial links were used in ceremonies by popes intent on highlighting their own imperial claims (as they did also with their Latin title, Pontifex Maximus). Medieval Popes, from the thirteenth century onwards, did indeed avoid the direct route between the Lateran and St Peter's, as Martin of Opava claimed. However, there is no evidence that this practice dated back any earlier, let alone that it originated in the ninth century as a deliberate rebuff to the memory of the female Pope. The origin of the practice is uncertain, but it is quite likely that it was maintained because of widespread belief in the Joan legend and that it was thought genuinely to date back to that period. Although some medieval writers referred to the female Pope as "John VIII", the real Pope John VIII reigned between 872 and 882, and his life does not resemble that of the fictional female Pope in any way. A problem sometimes connected to the Pope Joan legend is the fact that there is no Pope John XX in any official list. It is sometimes said that this reflects a renumbering of the Popes to exclude the woman from history. In fact, shortly after Pope John XXI became Pope in 1276, there arose a legend that there had been an "extra" Pope John between Pope John XIV and Pope John XV in the 10th century. Martin of Opava mentions this Pope in his chronicle. In reality, the Antipope Boniface VII occupied the Papal throne at this time. However, John XXI accordingly renumbered himself (when he should really have been John XX) and all Popes John since XIV to take account of this legendary "extra" Pope John. This discrepancy in Papal numbering thus has nothing to do with the Pope Joan story. Art and filmA film Pope Joan was released in 1972 with Liv Ullmann as Joan, and also starring Olivia de Havilland and Trevor Howard as Pope Leo. A new German film is scheduled for a 2006 release. A popular British stageplay called Top Girls has Pope Joan among the characters in the first act. The play was made into an independent film in the 1980s. Diane Sawyer of ABC News conducted an interview for Primetime Live with Donna Woolfolk Cross, author of the book Pope Joan, to discuss the evidence for and against Joan's existence. The program aired Thursday 29 December 2005 at 10 PM EST. The myth about Pope Joan was the basis for the story Giovanna of the Phantom comic strip. It was written by Ingebjørg Berg Holm, drawn by Dick Giordano and first published in 2003. A songwriter by the name of includes a song titled 'The Legend of Pope Joan' on his album 'War and Peace' Pope Joan is also the name of a British card game. The earliest reference to the game Pope Joan appears in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1732, although it did not become truly popular until the 19th century, and it did not appear in Hoyle until 1826. It is an ancestor to the modern games of Tripoli, or Michigan Rummy See alsoBooks
Papisa Juana Johana (papino) Papesse Jeanne האפיפיורית יוהנה Papessa Giovanna Pausin Johanna 女教皇ヨハンナ Papieżyca Joanna Papisa Joana Иоанна (папесса) Johanna (påvinna)
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