Gui Foucois was born in Saint-Gilles-du-Gard in …
Years: 1265 - 1265
Gui Foucois was born in Saint-Gilles-du-Gard in the Languedoc region of France.
After reaching adulthood, he was an unlikely candidate for holy orders: widowed and the father of two young women before taking orders, he had been successively a soldier and a lawyer, and in the latter capacity had acted as secretary to King Louis IX, to whose influence he was chiefly indebted for his elevation to the cardinalate.
Upon the death of his wife, he had followed his father's example and abandoned up secular life for the Church.
His rise has been rapid: in 1257, he had been appointed Bishop of Le Puy; in 1259, he had been appointed Archbishop of Narbonne; and in December 1261, he had become the first cardinal created by Pope Urban IV, for the See of Sabina.
The papal legate in England between 1262 and 1264, he had been named grand penitentiary in 1263.
The Holy See is engaged in a conflict with Manfred of Sicily, the illegitimate son and designated heir of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II of Hohenstaufen, but whom papal loyalists, the Guelphs, call "the usurper of Naples".
Clement IV, who is in France at the time of his election on February 5, 1265, is compelled to enter Italy in disguise.
He immediately takes steps to ally himself with Charles of Anjou, his erstwhile patron's brother, the impecunious French claimant to the Neapolitan throne.
Charles is willing to recognize the Pope as his feudal overlord (a bone of contention with the Hohenstaufens) and is crowned by cardinals in Rome, where Clement IV, permanently established at Viterbo, dares not venture, since the anti-papal Ghibelline party is so firmly in control there.
Then, fortified with papal money and supplies, Charles marches into Naples.
Locations
People
- Charles I of Naples
- Louis IX of France
- Manfred
- Michael VIII Palaiologos
- Pope Clement IV
- Pope Urban IV
Groups
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Anjou, County of
- France, (Capetian) Kingdom of
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Sicily, Hohenstaufen Kingdom of
- Holy Roman Empire
