"Martin II" redirects here. For Martin II, king of Sicily, see Martin of Aragon.
Pope
Marinus I
Bishop of Rome
Church
Catholic Church
Papacy began
16 December 882
Papacy ended
15 May 884
Predecessor
John VIII
Successor
Adrian III
Personal details
Born
830
Gallese, Papal States
Died
(884-05-15)15 May 884 (aged c. 54) Rome, Papal States[1]
Previous post(s)
bishop of Caere
Other popes named Marinus
Pope Marinus I (/məˈraɪnəs/; died 15 May 884) was the bishop of Rome and ruler of the Papal States from 882 until his death. Controversially at the time, he was already a bishop when he became pope, and had served as papal legate to Constantinople. He was also erroneously called Martin II (Martinus II) leading to the second pope named Martin to take the name Martin IV.
^The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica. "Marinus I". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 30 August 2016.
PopeMarinusI (/məˈraɪnəs/; died 15 May 884) was the bishop of Rome and ruler of the Papal States from 882 until his death. Controversially at the time...
modern-day Israel (Pope Peter, Pope Evaristus, and Pope Theodore I) 3 from Africa Proconsularis (Pope Victor I, Pope Miltiades, Pope Gelasius I) 2 from Dalmatia...
another”. The new Pope Adrian II refused Boris' request for a similar nomination of either Formosus or Deacon Marinus (later PopeMarinusI), after which...
saints. PopeMarinusI did not canonize any saints. Pope Adrian III did not canonize any saints. Pope Stephen V did not canonize any saints. Pope Formosus...
Martin: Pope Martin I (649–655) is followed by Martin IV (1281–1285). Due to the similarity between the Latin names Marinus and Martinus, MarinusI and Marinus II...
Constantine. According to Anura Gurugé, Romanus was supposedly the nephew of PopeMarinusI, who had also come from Gallese. Romanus was installed as the cardinal...
of Theophylact I of Tusculum. He was ordained as a subdeacon by PopeMarinusI, followed by his being raised to the diaconate by Pope Stephen V. During...
Charlemagne." PopeMarinusI (882–884) was consecrated "without waiting for the consent of the incompetent emperor, Charles the Fat." Pope Stephen V (885-891)...
16 – Pope John VIII is assassinated at Rome after a 10-year reign, probably the victim of a political conspiracy. He is succeeded by MarinusI, as the...
Pontificalis: the biographies of Pope John VIII, PopeMarinusI, and Pope Adrian III are missing and the biography of Pope Stephen V (885–891) is incomplete. From...
Charles the Fat travels to Nonantola (Northern Italy), where he meets PopeMarinusI. He receives complaints of Guy II of Spoleto, who is the official "protector"...
as early as 817 and fully ignored it from 882 with the election of PopeMarinusI, the Bishop of Caere. Nicholas II, in the synod of 1059, formally codified...
and a Greek mother.[dubious – discuss] He was elected pope on 10 May 946 after the death of Marinus II. The existence of an independent republic of Rome...
that Mabillon confused Adrian III, who succeeded MarinusI, with Agapetus II, who succeeded Marinus II a century later. Adrian laboured hard to alleviate...
Bulgarian archbishop, Marinus. Deacon Marinus at this time was a papal legate in Constantinople and did not have an eparchy, but the Pope refused. Instead...
A collection of popes have had violent deaths through the centuries. The circumstances have ranged from martyrdom (Pope Stephen I) to war (Lucius II)...
Peter Kirsch suggests that the pope may have viewed the cardinal as a potential rival. In 883, John VIII's successor, MarinusI, restored Formosus to his suburbicarian...
Cronica Book VII, chapter 58 (ed. Dragomanni) Tome I (Firenze 1844), pp. 391–392. PopesMarinusI and Marinus II, by an old error of the papal chancery, were...
was chosen as the place of a conference between Charles the Fat and PopeMarinusI. In 900 the monastery and church were completely destroyed by invading...
Marinus (/məˈriːnəs/; Italian: San Marino) was an Early Christian and the founder of a chapel and monastery in 301 from whose initial community the state...
by Marinus II. According to the late 13th century chronicler Martin of Opava, Stephen VIII was described as being a German, who was elected pope due...
16 – Pope John VIII is assassinated at Rome after a 10-year reign, probably the victim of a political conspiracy. He is succeeded by MarinusI, as the...
Sixty years later, the Constitutio Romana was temporarily revoked by PopeMarinusI when he issued a decree stating that the emperors would not interfere...