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Callixtus III canonized the following four saints during his pontificate: Vincent Ferrer (3 June 1455), Osmund (1 January 1457), Albert of Trapani (15 October 1457), and Rose of Viterbo (1457). Callixtus III elevated nine new cardinals into the cardinalate in two consistories on 20 February 1456 and 17 December 1456, [12] two of whom were ...
Pope Callixtus III was instrumental in ordering the retrial of Joan of Arc in 1455 after receiving a petition from her family. Of the three, the Archbishop of Rheims was the most prestigious, occupying the highest ecclesiastical seat in France.
Bishop Pierre Cauchon in 1457 by Pope Callixtus III for his persecution and condemnation of Joan of Arc. [61] The town of Prudnik in Silesia on 23 March 1464 by Pope Pius II for refusing to pay the debt of Duke Konrad IV the Elder. [62] Girolamo Savonarola in 1497 by Pope Alexander VI. [63]
Callixtus III (also Calixtus III or Callistus III; died between 1180 and 1184) was an antipope from September 1168 until his resignation in August 1178. He was the third antipope elected in opposition to Pope Alexander III during the latter's struggle with the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Callixtus' baptismal name was John.
Spanish (Valencian); Nephew of Callixtus III; father to Cesare Borgia and Lucrezia Borgia. Divided the extra-European world between Spain and Portugal in the bull Inter caetera (1493). Considered one of the most controversial of the Renaissance popes, partly because he acknowledged fathering several children by his mistresses.
Celebrating Hunyadi’s victory, Pope Callixtus III ordered churches all over the world to ring their bells each day at noon. They still do so, down to this day. The 10-episode series is set to ...
Patriarch Callistus I of Constantinople, patriarch from 1350 to 1353 and from 1354 to 1363; Patriarch Callistus II of Constantinople, patriarch in 1397; Saint Callixtus I, pope from c. 217 to 222; Pope Callixtus II, pope from 1119 to 1124; Antipope Callixtus III, antipope from 1168 to 1178; Pope Callixtus III, pope from 1455 to 1458
Pope Callixtus III, the first pope of the House of Borgia, died on August 6, 1458. [1] He was severely criticized due to his nepotism and devotion towards his compatriots of Catalonia, making him very unpopular among the rather xenophobic Roman populace.