Pope Calixtus III (December 31, 1378 – August 6, 1458), né
Alfonso de Borja, was
Pope from April 8, 1455 to his death in 1458.
Biography
Alfonso de Borja was born in La Torreta, now a neighbourhood of Canals,
València, today
Spain but then
Kingdom of Valencia under the
Crown of Aragon. His early career was spent as a professor of
law at
University of Lleida and then as a
diplomat in the service of the Kings of
Aragon, especially during the
Council of Basel (1431–1439). He became a
cardinal after reconciling
Pope Eugene IV (1431–1447) with King
Alfonso V of Aragon (1416–1458).
He was raised to the papal chair in 1455 as Calixtus III at a very advanced age as a compromise candidate. He was viewed by historians as being feeble and incompetent. In the same year, he issued a
papal bull (bulletin/edict) to Portugal. This bull authorized the Portuguese to reduce
infidels to servitude. Thus, the Catholic Church gave permission to Portugal and its other subjugate countries to engage in the
trans-Atlantic African slave trade. By doing this the pope gave tacit consent that the enslavement of Africans was not contradictory to the word of God nor the teachings of the church itself - without fear of retaliation or penalization from either.
The great object of his policy was the urging of a
crusade against the
Turks, who had captured
Constantinople in 1453, but he did not find the Christian princes responsive to his call despite his every effort.
Pope Calixtus III made two of his nephews cardinals, one of whom, Roderic de Borgia, later became
Pope Alexander VI (1492–1503) and was infamous for corruption.
On June 29, 1456, he ordered the bells to be rung at noon (see
noon bell) in all Catholic churches to call Christians for prayer. As news spread with some delay, this order became connected with the crusade to lift the
Siege of Belgrade (which happened on July 22), which was a signal victory against the Turks. To commemorate this victory, Calixtus III ordered the feast of the
Transfiguration to be held on August 6.
He ordered a new trial for
St. Joan of Arc (c. 1412–1431), at which she was posthumously vindicated after being controversially tried and executed.
Calixtus III's pre-papal
coat of arms featured a grazing ox.
The "bull against the comet"
According to one story, first appearing in a posthumous biography in 1475 and later embellished and popularized by
Pierre-Simon Laplace, Calixtus III
excommunicated the 1456 apparition of
Halley's Comet, believing it to be an ill omen for the Christian defenders of
Belgrade, who were at that time being besieged by the armies of the
Ottoman Empire. No known primary source supports the authenticity of this account. Calixtus III's
papal bull of June 29, 1456, which called for public prayer for the success of the crusade, makes no mention of the comet, and by August 6, when the Turkish siege was broken, the comet had not been visible from Europe or Turkey for several weeks.
Category:1378 birthsCategory:1458 deathsCategory:People from CosteraCategory:PopesCategory:Spanish popesCategory:15th-century Spanish peopleCategory:15th-century Roman Catholic archbishopsCategory:Archbishops of ValenciaCategory:BorgiaCategory:Burials at Santa Maria in Monserrato degli Spagnoli church, RomeCategory:Articles lacking sources (Erik9bot)af:Pous Callixtus IIIar:كاليستوس الثالثbs:Papa Kalist IIIca:Calixt IIIcs:Kalixtus III.de:Kalixt III. (Papst)et:Calixtus IIIes:Calixto IIIeo:Kaliksto la 3-afa:کالیکتوس سومfr:Calixte IIIgl:Calisto III, papako:교황 갈리스토 3세hr:Kalist III.id:Paus Kallistus IIIit:Papa Callisto IIIjv:Paus Kallixtus IIIsw:Papa Callixtus IIIla:Callistus IIIhu:III. Kallixtusz pápamk:Папа Каликст IIImr:पोप कॅलिक्स्टस तिसराnl:Paus Calixtus IIIja:カリストゥス3世 (ローマ教皇)no:Callistus IIIpl:Kalikst IIIpt:Papa Calisto IIIro:Papa Calixt al III-learu:Каликст III (папа римский)sk:Kalixt III.sl:Papež Kalist III.sr:Папа Калист IIIfi:Calixtus IIIsv:Calixtus IIItl:Calixto IIIth:สมเด็จพระสันตะปาปาคาลิกซ์ตุสที่ 3uk:Калікст IIIvec:Papa Całisto IIIzh:卡利克斯特三世