Pope John X

E911992

Pope John X was a 10th-century pope known for his efforts to strengthen papal authority amid Italian political turmoil and for supporting diverse liturgical traditions within the Western Church.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Pope John X canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Catholic priest
Christian religious leader
human
pope
alsoKnownAs John X NERFINISHED
associatedWith Roman nobility
authorityScope Western Church NERFINISHED
birthName Giovanni NERFINISHED
centuryOfActivity 10th century
chronologicalOrderAmongPopes early 10th-century pope
countryOfCitizenship Papal States
deathApproximateYear 928
deathPlace Papal States
Rome
era Saeculum obscurum NERFINISHED
governedTerritory Papal States NERFINISHED
historicalRegionOfActivity central Italy
historicalRole medieval pope
jurisdiction Diocese of Rome NERFINISHED
Latin Church NERFINISHED
knownFor involvement in Italian political conflicts
role in the politics of the Roman nobility
strengthening papal authority in Italy
supporting diverse liturgical traditions in the Western Church
languageOfLiturgicalActivity Latin
memberOf clergy of the Catholic Church
officeContested papacy
operatedInPoliticalContext Italian political turmoil
papacyLocation Rome NERFINISHED
papalNumber 122nd pope (traditional count)
placeOfBurial Rome NERFINISHED
positionHeld Pope
surface form: Bishop of Rome

Patriarch of the West NERFINISHED
Pope
predecessor Pope Lando NERFINISHED
reignEnd 928
reignStart 914
religion Roman Catholicism
surface form: Catholic Church

Christianity
successor Pope Leo VI NERFINISHED
supportedLiturgicalTraditions Roman rite GENERATED
diverse Western liturgical usages GENERATED
title Servant of the Servants of God NERFINISHED
Supreme Pontiff
typeOfLeadership religious leadership
temporal leadership in the Papal States

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

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

Mozarabic Mass approvedBy Pope John X