Pope Boniface V Naples
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Boniface Naples

Boniface (Pope Boniface V) Naples
Born [date unknown] in Naples, Exarchate of Ravenna, Byzantine Empiremap
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[spouse(s) unknown]
[children unknown]
Died [location unknown]
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Profile last modified | Created 21 Jul 2021
This page has been accessed 292 times.
Preceded by
Deusdedit or Adeotatus I
69th Pope of the Roman Catholic Church
23 December 619 - 23 October 625
Succeeded by
Honorius I

Biography

Notables Project
Pope Boniface V Naples is Notable.

Boniface, son of John was born in Naples.[1][2]

He became pope on 23 December 619.[1]

He died on 23 October 625 and was buried in St Peter's Basilica on 25 October 625.[1][2]

Flocknote Popes in a Year [3] tells us:

Pope from December 23, 619 - October 25, 625 A.D.
Died: October 25, 625 A.D.
Pronounced: BAHN-ih-fuss (not “bony face”)
Boniface was a native of Naples, but little else is known about him prior to his papacy. He was elected nearly a year after the death of St. Adeodatus I, taking office two days before Christmas in 619. After that, Boniface was relatively busy. He decided that those in the minor orders shouldn’t be allowed to transport relics, nor should they replace deacons in performing baptisms. He decreed that men whose lives were sought after could take asylum in churches, but that was nevertheless conveniently forgotten by pursuers many times. Boniface also had a cemetery completed and consecrated to St. Nicomedes on the Via Nomentana.
According to the Liber Pontificalis he had a great love for the clergy, and was described as “the mildest of men.” Boniface V died October 25, 625 and was buried in St. Peter’s Basilica.
Known for having held the young English Church close to his heart, Boniface V did much to help the faith grow in that part of the world. The Venerable St. Bede noted in some of his writings that this pope wrote often to his brothers to the west, in one instance granting the Archbishop of Canterbury permission to consecrate new bishops as needed. He also wrote a letter of congratulations to the first Christian king of Northumbria (modern-day northern England) after the latter's recent conversion.
Boniface V helped to further the tradition of following a person’s last will and testament after death. One of his acts as pope was to command that the sanctity of wills be kept, since at that point they were being drawn up by clerics and ecclesiastical notaries.
In 620, the town of Cholula was first settled in Central Mexico. It’s thought to be the oldest continuously occupied town on the entire continent.

Research Notes

This profile is being updated by the Popes Project.

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Vatican
  2. 2.0 2.1 Wikipedia: Pope Boniface V
  3. Flocknote Popes in a Year
    SOURCES (and further reading)
    John, E. (1964). The Popes: A concise biographical history. New York: Hawthorn Books.
    Pope Boniface V - http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/02661a.htm
    Pope Boniface V - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Boniface_V
    620s - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/620s




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