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Pope Urban V

Blessed Pope
Urban V
Papa Urbanus Quintus.jpg
Papacy began 28 September 1362
Papacy ended 19 December 1370
Predecessor Innocent VI
Successor Gregory XI
Orders
Ordination 1334
Consecration 6 November 1362
by Andouin Aubert
Personal details
Birth name Guillaume de Grimoard
Born 1310
Grizac, Languedoc, Kingdom of France
Died 19 December 1370(1370-12-19) (aged 60)
Avignon, Papal States
Previous post
  • Abbot of the Abbey of Saint Victor (1361-1362)
  • Abbot Ordinary of Monte Cassino (1366-1369)
  • Administrator of Avignon (1366-1367)
Coat of arms {{{coat_of_arms_alt}}}
Sainthood
Feast day 19 December
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Title as Saint Blessed
Beatified 10 March 1870
by Pope Pius IX
Attributes
Patronage
  • Architects
  • Educators
  • Benedictines
  • Missionaries

Pope Urban V (Latin: Urbanus V; 1310 – 19 December 1370), born Guillaume de Grimoard, was Pope from 28 September 1362 to his death in 1370 and was also a member of the Order of Saint Benedict. He was the sixth Avignon Pope, and the only Avignon pope to be beatified.

Even after his election as pontiff, he continued to follow the Benedictine Rule, living simply and modestly. His habits did not always gain him supporters who were used to lives of affluence.

Urban V pressed for reform throughout his pontificate and also oversaw the restoration and construction of churches and monasteries. One of the goals he made upon his election to the Papacy was the reunion of the Eastern and Western Churches. He came as close as some of his predecessors and successors, but did not succeed.

Guillaume de Grimoard was born in 1310 in the Castle of Grizac in the French region of Languedoc (today part of the commune of Le Pont-de-Montvert, department of Lozère), the second son of Guillaume de Grimoard, Lord of Bellegarde, and of Amphélise de Montferrand. He had two brothers, Étienne and Anglic, the future cardinal, and a sister Delphine.

In 1327, Guillaume Grimoard became a Benedictine monk in the small Priory of Chirac, near his home, which was a dependency of the ancient Abbey of St. Victor near Marseille. He was sent to St. Victor for his novitiate. After his profession of monastic vows, he was ordained a priest in his own monastery in Chirac in 1334. He studied literature and law at Montpellier, and then he moved to the University of Toulouse, where he studied law for four years. He earned a doctorate in Canon Law on 31 October 1342.


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