Humbert of Silva Candida

E1008081

Humbert of Silva Candida was an 11th-century Benedictine monk, cardinal, and papal legate best known for his role in the events leading to the East–West Schism of 1054.

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Statements (42)

Predicate Object
instanceOf 11th-century Christian monk
Benedictine monk
Catholic cardinal
human
papal legate
theologian
activeIn Curia of the Roman Church NERFINISHED
associatedWith Papal reform movement of the 11th century
authored Adversus Graecorum calumnias NERFINISHED
Libri tres adversus Simoniacos NERFINISHED
birthDate circa 1000
centuryOfActivity 11th century
countryOfCitizenship Holy Roman Empire
deathDate 1061
era High Middle Ages
honorificPrefix Cardinal
knownFor influencing the formalization of the schism between Eastern and Western Churches
rigid and uncompromising negotiating style
languageOfWorkOrName Latin
memberOf Order of Saint Benedict NERFINISHED
monasticOrder Benedictines NERFINISHED
notableFor defense of papal primacy
delivering papal bull of excommunication in Hagia Sophia in 1054
polemical writings against the Eastern Church
role in events leading to the East–West Schism of 1054
occupation cardinal
monk
papal legate
participatedIn East–West Schism of 1054 NERFINISHED
placeOfDeath Rome
positionHeld Cardinal-bishop of Silva Candida
papal legate to Constantinople
religion Roman Catholicism
surface form: Catholic Church
religiousOrder Order of Saint Benedict NERFINISHED
roleInEvent papal legate in negotiations with Patriarch Michael I Cerularius
servedUnder Pope Leo IX NERFINISHED
Pope Nicholas II NERFINISHED
Pope Stephen IX NERFINISHED
theologicalPosition critic of certain Eastern Orthodox practices
supporter of papal supremacy over the universal Church
title Cardinal-bishop
Legate of the Apostolic See

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Cardinal Humbert of Silva Candida alsoKnownAs Humbert of Silva Candida