Nicholas IV (born September 30, 1227, near Ascoli Piceno, Papal States [Italy]—died April 4, 1292, Rome) was the pope from 1288 to 1292, the first Franciscan pontiff.
He joined the Franciscans when young and became their minister for Dalmatia. In 1272 Pope Gregory X sent him to Constantinople, where he took part in effecting a brief reunion with the Greeks. From 1274 to 1279 he was minister general of the Franciscans, and in 1281 Pope Martin IV made him cardinal bishop of Palestrina, Italy. He was elected on February 22, 1288, to succeed Pope Honorius IV, after the papacy had been vacant for almost 11 months.
Nicholas IV relied heavily on a powerful Italian family, the Colonna, and increased the number of Colonna cardinals. In a bull of 1289 he granted half of the church’s revenues and a share in its administration to the College of Cardinals, thereby increasing their importance in church and Papal States affairs. In 1290 he issued a new bull against the Apostolici, various Christian sects that sought to reestablish the life and discipline of the primitive church by a literal observance of continence and poverty.
Like his predecessors Popes Nicholas III, Martin IV, and Honorius IV, Nicholas IV strove to keep the balance between the sovereign dynasties of the Habsburgs (the German king Rudolf I) and the Anjous (the Sicilian king Charles I). As feudal overlord of Sicily, Nicholas tried vainly to force the royal house of Aragon to restore Sicily to the Anjous, and in 1291 he ended the conflict between France and the kingdom of Aragon.
Nicholas was unable to revive the Crusades, and in 1291 the last Christian Crusader state, the Palestinian fortress of Acre, fell to the Mamlūk sultan of Egypt. Nicholas’s wish to ally the Western powers with the Mongols against the Muslims had been given hope through the Il-Khan Arghūn of Persia, who sent urgent requests for joint action to Nicholas and Kings Philip IV of France and Edward I of England. Although the plan did not materialize, Nicholas sent the celebrated Franciscan missionary Giovanni da Montecorvino to Kublai Khan’s court, which led to establishment of the first Roman Catholic church in China. He also sent missionaries, mostly Franciscans, to the Balkans and the Middle East. He did much for Roman architecture and art, especially in restoring the basilicas of San Giovanni in Laterano and Santa Maria Maggiore.