Blessed Benedict XI (born 1240, Treviso, March of Trevigiana—died July 7, 1304, Perugia, Umbria; beatified April 24, 1736feast day July 7) was the pope from 1303 to 1304. His brief reign was taken up with problems he inherited from the quarrel of his predecessor, Boniface VIII, with King Philip IV the Fair of France and the King’s allies (the Colonna family of Rome).
He entered the Dominican order in 1254, becoming its general in May 1296. Created cardinal in 1298, he was legate to Hungary in 1302. He was one of two cardinals who stood by Boniface VIII at his palace at Anagni, near Rome, when the Pope, about to excommunicate Philip, was seized (Sept. 7, 1303) by the King’s supporters, who sought to depose him from the papacy. The Pope was freed by the local populace but died shortly thereafter. The quarrel had originated over the King’s wish to wrest taxes from the French clergy. The Colonna had become allies of Philip because they viewed the growing power of the Pope’s family as a threat to their own.
Benedict was unanimously elected pope (Oct. 22, 1303) and did much to conciliate his predecessor’s enemies. While he demanded no retribution for the outrage done to Boniface at Anagni, he refused to pardon both Sciarra Colonna, who led the attack, and Guillaume de Nogaret, Philip’s chief adviser, who denounced Boniface at Paris in 1303. Benedict died suddenly in Perugia, and many at the time believed he was poisoned.