Pope Clement V
(1264-1314)



Pope Clement V was born, Bertrand de Got in 1264 CE at Villandraut in Gascony. He was coronated as Pope in Lyons, about a year after the death of Benedict. De Got was a friend of King Philip of France, but at the same time had been a strong supporter of Pope Boniface VIII, who was an enemy of Philip's. The King of France had publicly burned Boniface's Papal Bull, Unum Sanctum.

Clement settled in Avignon France in 1309. Until this time all Popes had resided in Rome. Avignon would be the home of Popes until 1378, with but one brief exception. This period at Avignon is often referred to as the Babylonian Captivity. Seated in Avignon, Clement and the other Avignon Popes would keep their hands on the controls of Rome through the use of Vicars.

Many historians believe that Clement V was a weak and subservient Pope. Clement was afraid of the manipulative French King Phillip and this fact is seen through his following of Philip's every whim. Philip Le Bel, who as mentioned earlier, was an enemy of Pope Boniface. So deep was his hatred of the man that he tried to have him posthumously branded as a heretic. Clement actually began to start a proceeding to do just that. It was only because Clement stalled long enough for Phillip to change his mind on the matter, that Boniface was not labled a heretic. This was not the last time that Phillip would use Clement to brand a group as heretics as in 1307 the pair would orchestrate the arrest of the Knights Templar.

Clement V And The Downfall Of The Noble Knights Templar

After the final collapse of Outremer in 1291, the Templars had lost some clout and a great deal of face. There is no doubt that the fortune and power amassed since their humble beginnings two centuries earlier, had made many jealous. It was this jealousy combined with greed and a nearly bankrupt nation that perhaps prompted Phillip to make his move on October 13th, 1307, to arrest all the Templars in France. Under the inquisitors torture methods, all manner of confessions were extracted. Clement hearing of these confessions, made his move some years later suppressing the order of the Templars in 1312. What follows are the two Papal Bulls that crushed the Knights Templar.

Pope Clement's Papal Bulls Disolving The Knights Templar



The Death Of Pope Clement V

Jacques de Molay, the last Grand Master of the Knights Templar, while about to burn to death as a relapsed heretic, allegedly issued a curse to both Phillip IV and Clement V to meet him in heaven within a year to face God for their wrongful accusations. Whether this curse was actually spoken or not, will perhaps always remain a mystery. The fact is that both Phillip and Clement did die within a year of De Molay. Clement V (Bernard de Got) died on April 20th, 1314.



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