, was a native of Trevigi, belonging to the state of Venice, and the
, was a native of Trevigi, belonging to the state of Venice, and the son of a shepherd,
or, as some say, of a notary. His name was Nicholas
Bocasini. For some time he earned a livelihood by teaching children at Venice, but becoming afterwards a Dominican, he applied himself diligently to his studies, and
acquired such superiority among his order, that in 1298
he was appointed general; and, by Boniface VIII. created
cardinal bishop of Sabina, from which he was soon after
translated to that of Ostia. He discharged likewise several embassies with great reputation, and having returned
from Hungary when Boniface was taken and imprisoned in
his own palace at Anagni, he was one of the two cardinals
who remained with him, when all the others fled. On the
death of that pope, in 1303, our cardinal bishop was
chosen to succeed him, and took the name of Benedict,
the Christian name of his predecessor, in honour of him
who had been the cause of his advancement from a low
station. Among his first measures he granted absolution
to the king of France, and annulled the decrees of Boniface against him, which restored peace to that country, and
this he farther promoted by reinstating the Colonna family
in all their honours and possessions. He made it his study
to quiet the disturbances that his predecessor had raised,
not only in France, but in most other kingdoms, and to
regain by conciliatory measures those whom the haughty
and imperious behaviour of his predecessor had alienated
from the apostolic see; but his pontificate was short. He
died the year following his election, July 6, 1304, not
without suspicion of poison, administered, as some think,
by the relations of Boniface? in revenge for his having received that pope’s enemies into favour, but others impute
this crime to the Florentines, whose city he had laid under
an interdict, when it was distracted by two barbarous factions, called the Neri and the Bianchi. The writers of
Benedict’s time concur in reporting that he was a man
exemplary in every respect, inclined to peace and conciliation, and one who had no desire to enrich his family.
One trait of his character seems to support this last instance
of forbearance. His mother approaching him in a very
rich dress to congratulate him on his promotion, he affected to consider her as an impostor, and said: “My
mother is not a princess, but a poor woman;
” but next
day, when she returned in her ordinary dress, he embraced
her with affection, and treated her with every mark of respect. He wrote comments on the gospel of St. Matthew,
the book of Job, and the Revelations, besides several
sermons, and letters to the king of France and other
princes, concerning the reformation of abuses that had
crept into the church in their respective kingdoms; but of
his works, the only one printed is a comment on the fifth
chapter of Matthew, and some letters in Rainald, Wadding, and Cherubini.