The two hundred and ninety-one bishops attending …
Years: 1179 - 1179
The two hundred and ninety-one bishops attending the third Lateran Council, convoked in 1179 by Pope Alexander III, study the Peace of Venice, by which Frederick Barbarossa had agreed in 1177 to withdraw support from his antipope and to restore the church property he had seized, leaving Italy in the hands of local rulers and the Pope.
The council establishes a two-thirds majority of the College of Cardinals as a requirement for papal election and stipulates that candidates for bishop must be thirty years old and of legitimate birth.
The council reaffirms the prescription of imprisonment and confiscation of property as punishment for heresy, and, like the Second Lateran council, threatens to excommunicate princes who fail to punish heretics.
The council officially ends the eighteen-year schism of the antipope Callixtus III and his predecessors, and also limits papal electors to members of the Sacred College of Cardinals.
Henceforth, it will be by virtue of the Cardinals’ decision that each new pope inherits his official titles, ancient and modern, secular and sacred: bishop of Rome, vicar of Jesus Christ, successor of the prince of the apostles, supreme pontiff of the universal Church, patriarch of the West, primate of Italy, archbishop and metropolitan of the Roman province, sovereign of the state of Vatican City, servant of the servants of God.
The heretical Cathari (or Albigenses) are condemned, and Christians are authorized to take up arms against vagabond robbers.
The Council also adopts a new canon: Jews are prohibited from having Christian servants, the testimony of Christians is to be accepted against Jews in suits, and Jews who convert are permitted to keep their possessions.
The council also attacks the practice of usury, essentially a Jewish business.
