Antipope

{{short description|Person who claims to be, but is not recognized as, the legitimate pope}}

{{For|the book by Robert Rankin|The Antipope}}{{Distinguish|Anti-Papalism}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2023}}

{{Catholic Church sidebar|controversies}}

An antipope ({{langx|la|antipapa}}) is a person who claims to be Bishop of Rome and leader of the Roman Catholic Church in opposition to the legitimately elected pope.{{cite encyclopedia| title=Antipope| url=https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/28501/antipope| date=30 May 2023| encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica| access-date=26 June 2023}} Between the 3rd and mid-15th centuries, antipopes were supported by factions within the Church itself and secular rulers.

Sometimes it was difficult to distinguish which of two claimants should be called pope and which antipope, as in the case of Pope Leo VIII and Pope Benedict V.Of Pope Leo VIII, the Annuario Pontificio, the Holy See's yearbook, says: "At this point, as again in the mid-eleventh century, we come across elections in which problems of harmonizing historical criteria and those of theology and canon law make it impossible to decide clearly which side possessed the legitimacy whose factual existence guarantees the unbroken lawful succession of the Successors of Saint Peter. The uncertainty that in some cases results has made it advisable to abandon the assignation of successive numbers in the list of the Popes" (note 19 to the list of popes in the Annuario Pontificio). Of Pope Benedict V it says: "If Pope Leo VIII was lawful Pope, [...] Benedict V is an antipope" (note 20 to the list of popes).

History

Hippolytus of Rome (d. 235) is commonly considered to be the earliest antipope, as he headed a separate group within the Church in Rome against Pope Callixtus I.{{cite encyclopedia| title=Saint Hippolytus of Rome| url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Hippolytus-of-Rome |date=3 January 2020 |access-date=2021-12-06| encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica| language=en |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231021181732/https://www.britannica.com/biography/Saint-Hippolytus-of-Rome | archive-date=21 October 2023}} Hippolytus was reconciled to Callixtus's second successor, Pope Pontian, and both he and Pontian are honoured as saints by the Catholic Church with a shared feast day on 13 August. Whether two or more persons have been confused in this account of Hippolytus{{cite journal| url=https://www.vatican.va/jubilee_2000/magazine/documents/ju_mag_01091997_p-70_en.html| title=The catacombs the destination of the great jubilee| first=Enrico| last=Dal Covolo| date=September 1997| journal=Tertium Millennium| access-date=26 June 2023| archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20070910175629/https://www.vatican.va/jubilee_2000/magazine/documents/ju_mag_01091997_p-70_en.html| archive-date=10 September 2007| url-status=live}} and whether Hippolytus actually declared himself to be the Bishop of Rome remains unclear, since no such claim by Hippolytus has been cited in the writings attributed to him.

Eusebius quotesHistoria Ecclesiastica, V, 28 from an unnamed earlier writer the story of Natalius, a 3rd-century priest who accepted the bishopric of the Adoptionists,{{cite book| last1=Dix| first1=Gregory| last2=Chadwick|first2=Henry| title=The Treatise on the Apostolic Tradition of St Hippolytus of Rome, Bishop and Martyr| year=2013| publisher=Routledge| isbn=978-1-1361-0146-5| page=xvii| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=l8syjXASpNwC&pg=PR27| access-date=7 June 2017}} a heretical group in Rome. Natalius soon repented and tearfully begged Pope Zephyrinus to receive him into communion.Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature: Zephyrinus{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10448a.htm |last1=Chapman |first1=John |author1-link=John Chapman (priest) |title=Monarchians |encyclopedia=Catholic Encyclopedia| location=New York| publisher=Robert Appleton| year=1911| access-date=3 September 2007| via=New Advent| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070930012741/http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/10448a.htm| archive-date= 30 September 2007| url-status=live}}

Novatian (d. 258), another third-century figure, certainly claimed the See of Rome in opposition to Pope Cornelius, and if Natalius and Hippolytus were excluded because of the uncertainties concerning them, Novatian could then be said to be the first antipope.

The period in which antipopes were most numerous was during the struggles between the popes and the Holy Roman Emperors of the 11th and 12th centuries. The emperors frequently imposed their own nominees to further their own causes. The popes, likewise, sometimes sponsored rival imperial claimants (anti-kings) in Germany to overcome a particular emperor.

The Western Schism – which began in 1378, when the French cardinals, claiming that the election of Pope Urban VI was invalid, elected antipope Clement VII as a rival to the Roman Pope – led eventually to two competing lines of antipopes: the Avignon line as Clement VII moved back to Avignon, and the Pisan line. The Pisan line, which began in 1409, was named after the town of Pisa, Italy, where the (Pisan) council had elected antipope Alexander V as a third claimant. To end the schism, in May 1415, the Council of Constance deposed antipope John XXIII of the Pisan line. Pope Gregory XII of the Roman line resigned in July 1415. In 1417, the council also formally deposed antipope Benedict XIII of Avignon, but he adamantly refused to resign. Afterwards, Pope Martin V was elected and was accepted everywhere except in the small and rapidly diminishing area of influence of Benedict XIII.

List of historical antipopes

The following table gives the names of the antipopes included in the list of popes and antipopes in the Annuario Pontificio, with the addition of the names of Natalius (in spite of doubts about his historicity) and Antipope Clement VIII (whose following was insignificant).{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09725a.htm| title=Pope Martin V| encyclopedia=Catholic Encyclopedia| via=New Advent}}

An asterisk marks those who were included in the conventional numbering of later popes who took the same name. More commonly, the antipope is ignored in later papal regnal numbers; for example, there was an Antipope John XXIII, but the new Pope John elected in 1958 was also called John XXIII. For the additional confusion regarding popes named John, see Pope John numbering.

The list of popes and antipopes in the Annuario Pontificio attaches the following note to the name of Pope Leo VIII (963–965):

At this point, as again in the mid-11th century, we come across elections in which problems of harmonising historical criteria and those of theology and canon law make it impossible to decide clearly which side possessed the legitimacy whose factual existence guarantees the unbroken lawful succession of the successors of Saint Peter. The uncertainty that in some cases results has made it advisable to abandon the assignation of successive numbers in the list of the popes.{{cite book| title=Annuario Pontificio| year=2012| publisher=Libreria Editrice Vaticana| isbn=978-88-209-8722-0| page=12}}

Thus, because of the obscurities about mid-11th-century canon law and the historical facts, the Annuario Pontificio lists Sylvester III as a pope, without thereby expressing a judgement on his legitimacy. The Catholic Encyclopedia places him in its List of Popes,{{cite encyclopedia| url=http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12272b.htm| title=List of Popes| encyclopedia=Catholic Encyclopedia| via=New Advent| access-date=20 August 2015}} but with the annotation: "Considered by some to be an antipope". Other sources classify him as an antipope.{{cite book| authorlink=Charles William Previté-Orton| first=Charles William |last=Previté-Orton| title=The Shorter Cambridge Medieval History| publisher=Cambridge University Press| edition=1975 |year=1952| isbn=978-0-5212-0962-5| volume=1| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mcI8AAAAIAAJ&q=sylvester+iii| page=477}}

As Celestine II resigned before being consecrated and enthroned in order to avoid a schism, Oxford's A Dictionary of Popes (2010) considers he "...is classified, unfairly, as an antipope",{{cite encyclopedia| url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/oi/authority.20110803095557402| title=Celestine (d. 1124) |encyclopedia=A Dictionary of Popes| edition=2| editor1-first=J. N. D.| editor1-last=Kelly| editor2-first=Michael J.| editor2-last=Walsh |editor1-link=John Norman Davidson Kelly |date=2010 |publisher=Oxford University Press| isbn=978-0-1992-9581-4}} an opinion historian Salvador Miranda also shares.{{cite web| url=https://cardinals.fiu.edu/bios1122.htm#| last=Boccapecora Miranda| first=Salvatore| title=Boccapecora, Teobaldo| work=The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church| publisher=Florida International University| year=2018| access-date=26 June 2023}}

Those with asterisks (*) were counted in subsequent papal numbering.

class="wikitable sortable"

! Pontificate

! Common English name

! Regnal (Latin) name

! Personal name

! Place of birth

! Age at election/
Death or resigned

! Years as
antipope
(days)

! Notes

! In opposition to

{{c.|199|200}}NataliusNataliusNataliusc. 159 Rome, Roman Empire38 / 48{{age in years and days|199|1|1|200|1|1}} ({{age in days|199|1|1|200|1|1}})Later reconciled (see above)Zephyrinus
rowspan = "3"| 20 Dec 217 – 28 Sep 235rowspan="3"| Saint Hippolytusrowspan="3"| Hippolytusrowspan="3"| Hippolytusrowspan="3"| 170 Rome. Roman Empirerowspan="3"| 45 / 65 (†66)rowspan="3"| {{age in years and days|217|12|20|235|9|28}} ({{age in days|217|12|20|235|9|28}})rowspan="3"| Later reconciled with Pope Pontian (see above)Callixtus I
Urban I
Pontian
rowspan = "4"| Mar 251 – Aug 258rowspan="4"|Novatianrowspan="4"| Novatianusrowspan="4"| Novatianrowspan="4"| c. 200 Rome, Roman Empirerowspan="4"| 51 / 58 (†93)rowspan="4"| {{age in years and days|251|3|1|258|8|1}} ({{age in days|251|3|1|258|8|1}})rowspan="4"| Founder of NovatianismCornelius
Lucius I
Stephen I
Sixtus II
20 Apr 309 – 16 Aug 310HeracliusHeracliusHeracliusc. 265 Rome, Roman Empire45 / 46{{age in years and days|309|4|20|310|8|16}} ({{age in days|309|4|20|310|8|16}})Eusebius
355 – 26 Nov 365Felix II*Felix secundusFelixc. 270 Rome, Roman Empire80 / 90{{age in years and days|355|1|1|365|11|26}} ({{age in days|355|1|1|365|11|26}})Installed by Roman emperor Constantius IILiberius
1 Oct 366 – 16 Nov 367UrsicinusUrsicinusUrsinusc. 300 Rome, Roman Empire66 / 67{{age in years and days|366|10|1|367|11|16}} ({{age in days|366|10|1|367|11|16}})Damasus I
27 Dec 418 – 3 Apr 419EulaliusEulaliusEulaliusc. 370 Rome, Roman Empire38 / 39 (†42){{age in years and days|366|10|1|367|11|16}} ({{age in days|366|10|1|367|11|16}})Boniface I
22 Nov 498 – Aug 506/08LaurentiusLaurentiusLorenzo Celioc. 460 Rome, Roman Empire38 / 46 (†48){{age in years and days|498|11|22|508|8|31}} ({{age in days|498|11|22|508|8|31}})Supported by Byzantine emperor Anastasius ISymmachus
22 Sep 530 – 14 Oct 530DioscorusDioscurusDióskorosc. 450 Alexandria70 / 70{{age in years and days|530|9|22|530|10|14}} ({{age in days|530|9|22|530|10|14}})Boniface II
21 Sep 687TheodoreTheodorusTheodorec. 599 Rome, Duchy of Rome88 / 88 (†92){{age in years and days|687|9|21|687|12|27}} ({{age in days|687|9|21|687|12|27}})rowspan="2"| Sergius I
21 Sep 687Paschal (I)PaschalisPascalec. 598 Rome, Duchy of Rome89 / 89 (†94){{age in years and days|687|9|21|687|12|27}} ({{age in days|687|9|21|687|12|27}})
28 Jun 767 – 6 Aug 768Constantine IIConstantinus secundusKonstantinusc. 700 Rome, Duchy of Rome67 / 68 (†69){{age in years and days|767|6|28|768|8|6}} ({{age in days|767|6|28|768|8|6}})Between Paul I and Stephen III
31 Jul 768PhilipPhilippusPhilipc. 701 Rome, Duchy of Rome68 / 68 (†99){{age in years and days|768|7|31|768|7|31}} ({{age in days|768|7|31|768|7|31}})Installed by envoy of Lombard King DesideriusStephen III
25 Jan – 31 May 844John VIIIJoannes octavusGiovannic. 800 Rome, Papal States44 / 44 (†91){{age in years and days|844|1|1|844|5|31}} ({{age in days|844|1|1|844|5|31}})Elected by acclamationSergius II
Jan 855 – 31 Mar 855Anastasius III BibliothecariusAnastasius tertiusAnastasiusc. 810 Rome, Papal States45 / 45 (†68){{age in years and days|855|1|1|855|3|31}} ({{age in days|855|1|1|855|3|31}})Benedict III
3 Oct 903 – 27 Jan 904ChristopherChristophorusChristoforoc. 850 Rome, Papal States53 / 54{{age in years and days|903|10|3|904|1|27}} ({{age in days|903|10|3|904|1|27}})Between Leo V and Sergius III
Jul 974rowspan="2"|Boniface VII*rowspan="2"| Bonifaciusrowspan="2"| Franco Ferruccirowspan="2"| c. 900 Rome, Papal Statesrowspan="2"| 73 / 73 and 84 / 85rowspan="2"| {{age in years and days|974|7|1|974|7|31}} ({{age in days|974|7|1|974|7|31}})
{{age in years and days|984|8|20|985|7|20}} ({{age in days|984|8|20|985|7|20}})
total 364 days (364 days)
rowspan="2"|Between Benedict VI and Benedict VII
20 Aug 984 – 20 Jul 985Between John XIV and John XV
Apr 997 – Feb 998John XVI*JoannesJohn Filagattoc. 941 Rossano, Calabria, Papal States (Italy)56 / 56 (†59){{age in years and days|997|2|1|998|2|1}} ({{age in days|997|2|1|998|2|1}})Supported by Byzantine emperor Basil IIGregory V
Jun 1012Gregory VIGregorius SextusGregorioc. 960 Rome, Papal States52 / 52 (†60){{age in years and days|1012|6|1|1012|6|30}} ({{age in days|1012|6|1|1012|6|30}})Benedict VIII
4 Apr 1058 – 24 Jan 1059Benedict X*Benedictus DecimusGiovanni Mincio dei Conti di Tusculoc. 1000 Rome, Papal States,58 / 59 (†80){{age in years and days|1058|4|4|1059|1|24}} ({{age in days|1058|4|4|1059|1|24}} )Supported by the Counts of TusculumNicholas II
July 1061 – 31 May 1064Honorius IIHonorius SecundusPietro Cadalus1010 Verona, Papal States51 / 54 (†62){{age in years and days|1061|7|1|1064|5|31}} ({{age in days|1061|7|1|1064|5|31}})Supported by Agnes, regent of the Holy Roman EmpireAlexander II
rowspan = "4"| 25 Jun 1080, 21 Mar 1084 – 8 Sep 1100rowspan="4"|Clement IIIrowspan="4"| Clemens Tertiusrowspan="4"| Guibert of Ravennarowspan="4"| c. 1029 Parma, Papal Statesrowspan="4"| 51 / 51, 54 / 71rowspan="4" |{{age in years and days|1080|6|25|1100|8|8}} ({{age in days|1080|6|25|1100|8|8}})rowspan="4"|Supported by Henry IV, Holy Roman EmperorGregory VII
Victor III
Urban II
Paschal II
8 Sep 1100 – Jan 1101TheodoricTheodoricusTheodoroc. 1030 Rome, Papal States,70 / 71 (†72){{age in years and days|1100|9|2|1101|1|1}} ({{age in days|1100|9|2|1100|1|1}})Successor to Clement IIIrowspan="3"|Paschal II
Jan 1101 – Feb 1102Adalbert or AlbertAdalbertusAlbertc. 1046 Atella, Campania, Papal States,55 / 56 (†85){{age in years and days|1101|1|1|1101|2|1}} ({{age in days|1101|1|1|1101|2|1}})Successor to Theodoric
8 Nov 1105 – 11 Apr 1111Sylvester IVSylvester QuartusMaginulfc. 1050 Rome, Papal States49 / 55 (†56){{age in years and days|1105|11|8|1111|9|28}} ({{age in days|1101|1|1|1101|2|1}})rowspan="3"| Supported by Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor
rowspan = "2"|10 Mar 1118 – 22 Apr 1121rowspan="2"|Gregory VIIIrowspan="2"| Gregorius Octavusrowspan="2"|Maurice Burdainrowspan="2"|c. 1057 Limousin, Occitania, Francerowspan="2"| 61 / 65 (†72)rowspan="2"|{{age in years and days|1118|3|10|1121|4|22}} ({{age in days|1118|3|10|1121|4|22}})Gelasius II
Callixtus II
16 Dec 1124Celestine IICœlestinus SecundusTeobaldo Boccapeccic. 1050 Rome, Papal States74 / 74 (†86){{age in years and days|1124|12|16|1124|12|16}} ({{age in days|1124|12|16|1124|12|16}})Honorius II
14 Feb 1130 – 25 Jan 1138Anacletus IIAnacletus SecundusPietro Pierleonic. 1090 Rome, Papal States48 / 48{{age in years and days|1130|2|14|1138|1|25}} ({{age in days|1130|2|14|1138|1|25}})rowspan="2"| Innocent II
23 Mar 1138Victor IVVictor QuartusGregorio Contic. 1057 Ceccano, Papal States81 / 81 (†90){{age in years and days|1138|3|23|1138|5|25}} ({{age in days|1138|3|23|1138|5|25}})Successor to Anacletus II
7 Sep 1159 – 20 Apr 1164Victor IVVictor QuartusOttavio di Montecelioc. 1095 Tivoli, Papal States64 / 69{{age in years and days|1159|9|7|1164|4|20}} ({{age in days|1159|9|7|1164|4|20}})rowspan="4"| Supported by Frederick I, Holy Roman Emperorrowspan="4"| Alexander III
22 Apr 1164 – 28 Sep 1168Paschal IIIPaschalis TertiusGuido di Cremac. 1110 Crema, Lombardy, Papal States54 / 58{{age in years and days|1164|4|22|1168|9|28}} ({{age in days|1164|4|22|1168|9|28}} days)
Sep 1168 – 29 Aug 1178Callixtus IIICallixtus TertiusGiovanni of Strumac. 1090 Arezzo, Papal States78 / 88 (†90){{age in years and days|1168|9|1|1178|8|29}} ({{age in days|1168|9|1|1178|8|29}} days)
29 Sep 1179 – Jan 1180Innocent IIIInnocentius TertiusLanzo of Sezzac. 1120 Sezze, Papal States59 / 60 (†63){{age in years and days|1179|9|28|1180|1|1}} ({{age in days|1179|9|28|1180|1|1}} days)
12 May 1328 – 12 Aug 1330Nicholas VNicolaus QuintusPietro Rainalduccic. 1258 Corvaro, Papal States70 / 74{{age in years and days|1328|5|12|1330|8|12}} ({{age in days|1328|5|12|1330|8|12}} days)Supported by Louis IV, Holy Roman EmperorJohn XXII
rowspan="2" | 20 Sep 1378 – 16 Sep 1394

|rowspan="2" | Clement VII

|rowspan="2" | Clemens

|rowspan="2" | Robert of Geneva

|rowspan="2" |1342 Annecy, France

|rowspan="2" | 36/52

|rowspan="2" | {{age in years and days|1378|9|20|1394|9|16}} ({{age in days|1378|9|20|1394|9|16}} days)

|rowspan="2" | Avignon

|Urban VI

rowspan = "2" | Boniface IX
rowspan="4" | 28 Sep 1394 – 23 May 1423

|rowspan="4" | Benedict XIII

|rowspan="4" | Benedictus

|rowspan="4" | Pedro de Luna

|rowspan="4" | 25 November 1328 Illueca, Aragon

|rowspan="4" | 65/94

|rowspan="4" | {{age in years and days|1394|9|28|1423|5|23}} ({{age in days|1394|9|28|1423|5|23}} days)

|rowspan="4" | Avignon

Innocent VII
Gregory XII
Martin V
25 Jun 1409 – 3 May 1410Alexander V*AlexanderPietro Philarghic. 1339 Crete, Republic of Venice70 / 71{{age in years and days|1409|6|25|1410|5|3}} ({{age in days|1409|6|25|1410|5|3}} days)Pisarowspan="2"|Gregory XII
25 May 1410 – 29 May 1415John XXIIIIoannes Vicecimus TertiusBaldassare Cossac. 136545 / 50 (†54){{age in years and days|1410|5|25|1415|5|31}} ({{age in days|1410|5|25|1415|5|31}} days)Pisa
10 Jun 1423 – 26 Jul 1429Clement VIIIClemens OctavusGil Sánchez Muñoz y Carbón1370 Teruel, Aragon52 / 59 (†77){{age in years and days|1423|6|10|1429|7|29}} ({{age in days|1423|6|10|1429|7|29}} days)Avignonrowspan="3"| Martin V
1424–1430Benedict XIVBenedictus Quartus DecimusBernard Garnier1370 France54 / 59 (†89){{age in years and days|1424|1|1|1430|7|31}} ({{age in days|1424|1|1|1430|7|31}} days)Claimed successor to Benedict XIII – aka "The hidden pope"  
1430–1437Benedict XIVBenedictus Quartus DecimusJean Carrierc. 1370 France59 / 66{{age in years and days|1430|1|1|1437|8|31}} ({{age in days|1430|1|1|1437|8|31}} days)
rowspan="2" | 5 Nov 1439 – 7 Apr 1449

|rowspan="2" | Felix V

|rowspan="2" | Fœlix

|rowspan="2" | Duke Amadeus VIII of Savoy

|rowspan="2" | 4 September 1383 Chambéry, Savoy

|rowspan="2" | 56/65 (†67)

|rowspan="2" | {{age in years and days|1439|11|5|1449|4|7}} ({{age in days|1439|11|5|1449|4|7}})

|rowspan="2" | Elected by the Council of Basel

|Eugene IV

Nicholas V

= Quasi-cardinal-nephews =

{{Main|List of cardinal-nephews}}

Many antipopes created cardinals, known as quasi-cardinals, and a few created cardinal-nephews, known as quasi-cardinal-nephews.

class="wikitable sortable" style="width:100%"

! width="10%" | Quasi-cardinal

! width="11%" | Nephew of

! width="10%" | Elevated

! width="*" | Notes

valign="top"

|Giacomo Alberti

|Antipope Nicholas V

|15 May 1328

|Excommunicated by Pope John XXII.{{cite web| last=Miranda| first=Salvador| year=1998| url=http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/consistories-xiv.htm |title=14th Century (1303–1404)| work=The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church| publisher=Florida International University| access-date=26 June 2023}}

Amedeo Saluzzo

|Antipope Clement VII

|23 Dec 1383

|Abandoned Antipope Benedict XIII after having been deposed by him on 21 October 1408; participated in the Council of Pisa, the election of Pope Alexander V (now regarded as an antipope), the Council of Constance, and the conclave of Pope Martin V.

Tommaso Brancaccio

|Antipope John XXIII

|6 Jun 1411

|Attended the Council of Constance, and the conclave of Pope Martin V.{{cite web| last=Miranda| first=Salvador| year=1998| url=http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1411.htm#Lando |work=The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church: Biographical Dictionary| title=Antipope] John XXIII (1410–1415): Consistory of 6 June 1411 (I)| publisher=Florida International University| access-date=26 June 2023}}

Gil Sánchez Muñoz

|Antipope Clement VIII

|26 Jul 1429

|Submitted to Pope Martin V after his uncle abdicated.{{cite web| last=Miranda| first=Salvador| year=1998| url=http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/consistories-xv.htm| title=15th Century (1404–1503)| work=The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church| publisher=Florida International University}}

Modern minor claimants

Antipopes still exist today, but all are minor claimants, without the support of any Cardinal. Examples include Palmarians, Apostles of Infinite Love Antipopes, and an unknown number of many other Sedevacantist claimants.

Antipope of Alexandria

As the Patriarch of Alexandria (Egypt) has historically also held the title of pope, a person who, in opposition to someone who is generally accepted as a legitimate pope of Alexandria, claims to hold that position may also be considered an antipope. Coptic lector Max Michel became an antipope of Alexandria, calling himself Maximos I. His claim to the Alexandrine papacy was dismissed by both the Coptic Orthodox Pope Shenouda III and Pope Theodore II of the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria.{{cite web |url=http://www.copticpope.org/downloads/commondec/commondec-2-2006eng.pdf |title=Common Statement Between The Coptic Orthodox Church and the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria and all Africa Regarding Max Michel |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080511170645/http://www.copticpope.org/downloads/commondec/commondec-2-2006eng.pdf |archive-date=2008-05-11 |access-date=3 October 2016 |url-status=dead}} The Coptic pope of Alexandria and the Greek pope of Alexandria currently view one another, not as antipopes, but rather as successors to differing lines of apostolic succession that formed as a result of christological disputes in the fifth century.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}}

In fiction

Antipopes have appeared as fictional characters. These may be either in historical fiction, as fictional portraits of well-known historical antipopes or as purely imaginary antipopes.

  • Jean Raspail's novel l'Anneau du pêcheur (the fisherman's ring), and Gérard Bavoux's Le Porteur de lumière (the light-bringer).Jean Raspail, L'Anneau du pêcheur, Paris: Albin Michel, 1994. 403 p. {{ISBN|2-226-07590-9}}Gérard Bavoux, Le Porteur de lumière, Paris: Pygmalion, 1996. p. 329 {{ISBN|2-85704-488-7}}
  • The fictional synth-pop artist Zladko Vladcik claims to be "The Anti-Pope" in one of his songs.{{cite AV media|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NYo5SHzIz5s| archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211122/NYo5SHzIz5s| archive-date=2021-11-22 | url-status=live|title=Zladko Vladcik – I am the Antipope|date=21 January 2007|via=YouTube|access-date=20 August 2015}}{{cbignore}}
  • Dan Simmons's novels Endymion and The Rise of Endymion feature a Father Paul Duré who is the routinely murdered{{what|date=January 2025}} antipope Teilhard I. At the end of the last novel, it is mentioned that the person calling himself the pope of the Technocore loyal Catholics is recognized by very few even among those, and he is referred to as an antipope.
  • In the Girl Genius comics series, set in a gaslamp fantasy version of Europe thrown into chaos by mad science (among other things), there is a brief reference to the existence of seven popes—all of whom apparently ordered a particular text burned.
  • Ralph McInerny's novel The Red Hat features a schism between liberals and conservatives following the election of a conservative African Pope; the liberal faction elect an Italian cardinal who calls himself "Pius XIII".
  • In the video game Crusader Kings II by Swedish developer Paradox Interactive, Catholic rulers may appoint one of their bishops as an antipope. An emperor-tier ruler such as the Holy Roman Emperor may declare war on the Papal States to install their antipope as the "true" pope, thereby vassalizing the papacy.
  • In the video game Age of Empires II the third scenario in the game's Barbarossa campaign is called "Pope and Antipope" and is based on the Siege of Crema and the subsequent Wars of the Guelphs and Ghibellines.
  • In episode 3 of The Black Adder (set in the late 15th century), "The Archbishop", Baldrick remarks on selling counterfeit papal pardons, that one for the highest crimes requires the signatures of "both popes" (implying one pope and one antipope). At the end of the episode, the Mother Superior of the local convent informs Edmund that he has been excommunicated by "all three popes".
  • The Last Fisherman by Randy England features an anti-pope John XXIV elected in opposition to Pope Brendan I.
  • Bud McFarlane's Pierced by a Sword includes an anti-pope John XXIV who is elected when the assassination attempt on Pope Patrick (fictional successor to John Paul II) is believed to have succeeded. He commits suicide at the end of the book.
  • Chilling Adventures of Sabrina features an antipope who leads the Churches of Darkness. This antipope reigns in the Vatican Necropolis beneath Rome.
  • In The New Pope, after the fictional Pius XIII is put in a coma, Pope Francis II is elected as a replacement. Francis II later dies and is replaced by John Paul III, the titular protagonist. Pius XIII later wakes up, creating a situation where both men have a claim on the Papacy.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}