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John XII | Pope, Death, Roman Catholicism, & Facts

John XII (born 937?, Rome [Italy]—died May 14, 964) was the pope, the leader of the Roman Catholic Church, from 955 to 964. He was the youngest pope in history.

He was the only son of Duke Alberic II of Spoleto, then ruler of Rome, who ordered Octavian’s election (December 16, 955) as pope when he was only about 18 years of age.

The young pope changed his name to John (becoming only the second pope in history to change his name), and he crowned the German king Otto I the Great and his wife, Adelaide, as Holy Roman emperor and empress on February 2, 962. But he rebelled when Otto issued his controversial Privilegium Ottonianum (“Ottonian Privilege”), which ordered John to take an oath of obedience to the emperor. On November 6, 963, Otto called a council at St. Peter’s in Rome, which on December 4, 963, deposed John for instigating an armed conspiracy against Otto and for dishonorable conduct. The council replaced John with Pope Leo VIII. In February 964, after Otto left, Leo was deposed by a synod conducted by John. Soon afterward John died, allegedly in the arms of his mistress, ending a private life marked by gross immorality.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by René Ostberg.

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