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Nicholas V, né Tomaso Parentucelli (November 15, 1397 - March
24, 1455), pope from the March 6, 1447 to March
24, 1455, was born at Sarzana, Liguria, where his father was a physician. His
father died while he was young, but in Florence Parentucelli became a tutor in the families of the Strozzi and Albizzi, where he
made the acquaintance of the leading humanist scholars. He studied at Bologna,
gaining a degree in theology in 1422, whereupon the bishop, Nicholas Albergati, was so much struck with his capacities that he took him into his
service and gave him the chance to pursue his studies further, by sending him on a tour through Germany, France and England.
He was able to collect books, for which he had an intellectual's passion, wherever he went. Some of them survive, with his
marginal annotations in the beautiful new humanist's hand. He distinguished himself at the Council of Ferrara-Florence, and in 1444, when his patron died, he was appointed bishop of Bologna
in his place. Civic disorders at Bologna were prolonged, so Pope
Eugenius IV soon named him as one of the legates sent to Frankfort to negotiate an understanding between the Holy
See and the Holy Roman Empire, with regard to undercutting or
at least containing the reforming decrees of the Council of Basel.
His successful diplomacy gained him the reward, on his return to Rome, of the title of
cardinal priest of Santa Susanna (December 1446). He was elected pope in succession to Eugenius IV on 6 March of the following
year, taking the name of Nicholas in honour of his early benefactor.
The eight scant years of his pontificate were important in the political, scientific and literary history of the world.
Politically, he made the Concordat of Vienna, or Aschaffenburg (February 17, 1448) with the German king, Frederick III, by which the decrees of the Council of Basel against papal annates
and reservations were abrogated so far as Germany was concerned; and in the following year he secured a still greater tactical
triumph, when the resignation of the antipope Felix V (April 7) and
his own recognition by the rump of the council of Basel, assembled at Lausanne, put
an end to the papal schism. The next year, 1450, Nicholas held a jubilee at Rome; and the offerings of the numerous pilgrims who thronged to Rome gave him the
means of furthering the cause of culture in Italy, which he had so much at heart. In
March 1452 he crowned Frederick III as emperor in St Peter's, the last occasion of the coronation of an emperor at Rome.
Within the city of Rome, Nicholas V introduced the fresh spirit of the Renaissance. His plans were of embellishing the city
with new monuments worthy of the capital of the Christian world. His first care was practical, to reinforce the city's
fortifications, cleaning and even paving some main streets and restoring the water supply. The end of antique Rome is sometimes
dated from the destruction of its magnificent array of aqueducts by 6th century invaders. In the Middle Ages Romans depended for
water on wells and cisterns, and the poor dipped their water from the yellow Tiber. The "Aqua Virgo" aqueduct, originally
constructed by Agrippa, was restored by Nicholas, and emptied into a simple basin
that Leon Battista Alberti designed, the predecessor of
the Trevi Fountain
But the works on which he especially set his heart were the rebuilding of the Vatican, and St Peter's Basilica, where the reborn glories of the papacy were to
be focused. He got as far as pulling down part of the ancient basilica, and made some alterations to the Lateran Palace (of which some frescos
by Fra Angelico bear witness).
Under the generous patronage of Nicholas, humanism made rapid strides as well. The new humanist learning had been looked on
with suspicion in Rome, a possible source of schism and heresy, an unhealthy interest in paganism. Nicholas instead employed
Lorenzo Valla as a notary and kept hundreds (confirm; this seems
high) of copyists and scholars, with the special aim of wholesale translations of Greek works, pagan as well as Christian,
into Latin, giving as much as ten thousand gulden for a metrical translation of Homer.
This industry, coming just before the dawn of printing, contributed enormously to the sudden expansion of the intellectual
horizon. Nicholas founded a library of nine thousand volumes. Nicholas himself was a man of vast erudition, and his friend Aeneas
Silvius Piccolomini (later Pope Pius II) said of him that "what he does not
know is outside the range of human knowledge".
He was compelled, however, to add that the lustre of his pontificate would be forever dulled by the fall of Constantinople, which the Turks took in 1453. The pope bitterly felt this catastrophe as a double blow to
Christendom and to Greek letters. "It is a second death," wrote Aeneas Silvius, "to Homer and Plato". Nicholas preached a crusade, and endeavoured to reconcile the
mutual animosities of the Italian states, but without much success. He did not live long enough to see the effect of the Greek
scholars armed with unimagined manuscripts, who began to find their way to Italy.
In undertaking these works Nicholas was moved "to strengthen the weak faith of the populace by the greatness of that which it
sees". The Roman populace, however, appreciated neither his motives nor their results, and in 1452 a formidable conspiracy for
the overthrow of the papal government, under the leadership of Stefano Porcaro, was discovered and crushed. This revelation of disaffection, together
with the fall of Constantinople, darkened the last years of Nicholas; "As Thomas of Sarzana," he said, "I had more happiness in a
day than now in a whole year".
He died on March 24, 1455.
There was also an antipope with the name Nicholas V from 1328-1330.
External links
- Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911
- Catholic Encyclopedia 1908 : Nicholas V.
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