Background
He was a son of the Salian Otto I, Duke of Carinthia, who was a grandson of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.
He was a son of the Salian Otto I, Duke of Carinthia, who was a grandson of Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor.
Gregory V succeeded Pope John XV when only twenty-four years of age. Gregory V was the first German Pope. Sometimes Pope Boniface II (530–532) is considered the first German Pope, although he was in fact an Ostrogoth.
Politically, Gregory V acted consistently as the Emperor"s representative in Rome and granted many exceptional privileges to monasteries within the Holy Roman Empire.
One of his first acts was to crown Otto III Emperor on 21 May 996. Together, they held a synod a few days after the coronation in which Arnulf, Archbishop of Reims, was ordered to be restored to his See of Reims, and Gerbert of Aurillac, the future Pope Sylvester II, was condemned as an intruder.
The revolt of Crescentius II was decisively suppressed by the Emperor, who marched upon Rome. John XVI fled, and Crescentius II shut himself up in the Castel Sant"Angelo.
The Emperor"s troops pursued the antipope, captured him, cut off his nose and ears, cut out his tongue, blinded him, and publicly degraded him before Otto III and Gregory V. He was sent to the monastery of Fulda in Germany, where he lived until 1013.
The Castel Sant"Angelo was besieged, and when it was taken in 998, Crescentius II was hanged upon its walls. Gregory V died suddenly, not without suspicion of foul play, on 18 February 999. He is buried in Saint Peter"s Basilica near Pope Pelagius I. His successor was Gerbert, who took the name Sylvester World War II