Pope Anastasius IV

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Anastasius IV
Birth name Corrado di Suburra (or della Suburra)
Papacy began July 9, 1153
Papacy ended December 3, 1154
Predecessor Eugene III
Successor Adrian IV
Born  ???
Rome, Italy
Died December 3, 1154
Rome, Italy
Other popes named Anastasius

Pope Anastasius IV (died December 3, 1154), born Corrado di Suburra (or della Suburra), was Pope from 1153 to 1154.

He was a Roman, son of Benedictus, and at the time of his election, on the 9th of July 1153, was cardinal bishop of Sabina. He had taken part in the double election of 1130, had been one of the most determined opponents of antipope Anacletus II (1130–38) and, when Pope Innocent II (1130–43) fled to France, had been left behind as his vicar in Italy. During his short pontificate, however, he played the part of a peacemaker; he came to terms with the Emperor Frederick I in the vexed question of the appointment to the see of Magdeburg and closed the long quarrel, which had raged through four pontificates, about the appointment of William Fitzherbert (d. 1154) – commonly known as St William of York – to the see of York, by sending him the pallium, in spite of the continued opposition of the powerful Cistercian order. Pope Anastasius IV died on the 3rd of December 1154, and was succeeded by Cardinal Nicholas of Albano as Pope Adrian IV (1154–59).


Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Eugene III
Bishop of Rome, Vicar of Peter (deprecated A.D. 495), Vicar of Christ, Successor of the Prince of the Apostles
Supreme Pontiff (Pontifex Maximus)
Patriarch of the West (deprecated 2006), Primate of Italy,
Archbishop and Metropolitan of the Roman Province
Servant of the Servants of God
Pope

1153–54
Succeeded by
Adrian IV


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