Gregory IV

pope
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Quick Facts
Died:
Jan. 25, 844, Rome
Title / Office:
pope (827-844)

Gregory IV (born, Rome—died Jan. 25, 844, Rome) was the pope from 827 to 844.

Cardinal priest of St. Mark’s Basilica, Rome, he succeeded Valentine as pope and is chiefly remembered for his mediation in the Carolingian dynastic struggle between Lothar I, the co-emperor, and the emperor Louis the Pious, when his father Louis granted part of his kingdom to Lothar’s half-brother Charles the Bald. Reacting against this endowment, Lothar, whom Gregory supported, led a revolt and deposed Louis (833). Gregory promulgated the observance of the Feast of All Saints (November 1) and conferred the pallium—i.e., granted the symbol of metropolitan jurisdiction—on the Frankish missionary St. Ansgar, the apostle of Scandinavia.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.