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    • Stroke

      • In 1254, the pope retaliated with a decree restricting the rights of Dominicans to preach and hear confessions. The Dominicans recited litanies and the pope suffered a stroke and died a few weeks later.
      www.worldhistory.org/Pope_Joan/
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  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Pope_JoanPope Joan - Wikipedia

    One version of the Chronicon gives an alternative fate for the female pope: she did not die immediately after her exposure but was confined and deposed, after which she did many years of penance. Her son from the affair eventually became Bishop of Ostia and ordered her entombment in his cathedral when she died.

  3. Pope Joan, legendary female pontiff who supposedly reigned for more than 25 months, from 855 to 858, under the title of John VIII. It has subsequently been proved that a gap of only a few weeks fell between Pope Leo IV and Pope Benedict III and that the story is entirely apocryphal.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Jun 10, 2015 · Some accounts allege that she died in childbirth, while others claim her enraged followers dragged her behind a horse and stoned her to death.

  5. Sep 16, 2018 · Joan’s fate, like her life, is the subject of contradictory reports. In one version of Martin’s chronicle, she is said to have died in the street, immediately after giving birth.

    • How did Pope Joan die?1
    • How did Pope Joan die?2
    • How did Pope Joan die?3
    • How did Pope Joan die?4
    • Jean de Mailly
    • Martin Strebsky
    • Boccaccio
    • Reformation
    • Debunking The Myth
    • Tarot
    • Enduring Interest

    The earliest surviving account of Joan’s papacy is in the Universal Metz Chroniclewritten in 1255 by Jean de Mailly. Jean was a Dominican in Metz, Lorraine. Although Jean does not give us the name of the pope in question, the text points us to an inscription on a tombor a monument somewhere in the vicinity of Rome. Perhaps he had a friend of a frie...

    The version of the story that was most widely accepted as historical was given in Chronicle of the Roman Popes and Emperors, written by Martin Strebsky of Troppau. The entry on Joan first appears in the 1277 edition. Strebsky was a Dominican in Prague and a papal chaplin: Strebsky gives us a second basis for the story, an allegedly shunned street b...

    Florentine writer Boccaccio produced the version of Joan’s story that people of the Middle Ages were most likely to be familiar with. In Concerning Famous Women (1362, De Mulieribus Claris), he placed her alongside goddesses and other mythical figures, so there is no attempt to hide that the story was fiction, or at least fictionalized. “Joan, an E...

    When Protestants questioned the authority of the pope during the Reformation, Catholics responded by appealing to the doctrine of apostolic succession. This is the idea that the pope’s authority is confirmed by an unbroken line that goes back to Peter. Rome is one of three apostolic sees, along with the churches of Antioch, also founded by Peter, a...

    Bordeaux magistrate and writer Florimond de Raemond debunked the story of Joan, at least as far as Catholics were concerned, in Erreur Populaire. The first edition published in 1587 was forty pages long. Enlarged editions were published in 1588 and 1594, suggesting enormous public interest in this subject. Florimond showed that a 1082 chronicle by ...

    The popess card in the tarot deck naturally brings Pope Joan to mind. The original card was part of a deck produced for the Visconti-Sforzas, the ruling family of Milan, in the mid-15th century. The cards in this deck are unlabeled, but the woman resembles images of Mother Church that were common at the time. (“"Papesse" as an allegory”) The name p...

    For over 700 years, Joan has been a popular subject with one generation of writers after another. Protestant writers used Joan to undermine the authority of the papacy. In the Enlightenment, she represented medieval backwardness and superstition. In the romantic 19th century, she represented joyous liberation from traditional roles, according to No...

  6. That caused rumors to swirl, making the legend of Pope Joan a fact of truth for many during the Middle Ages. Interestingly, one version of “Chronicon Pontificum et Imperatorum” gave Pope Joan a different fate. Instead of dying during childbirth, she survived. Of course, she was confined and deposed.

  7. Feb 6, 2024 · In this article, we delve into the debate around Pope Joan history, dissecting facts from fiction, and exploring the cultural and historical context that gave birth to such a tale. A Medieval Female Pope?