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  1. Boniface III made two significant changes to papal selections. The first was the enacting of a decree forbidding anyone during the lifetime of a pope to discuss the appointment of his successor under pain of excommunication. The second change established that no steps could be taken to provide for a papal successor until three days after a pope ...

  2. Boniface III was a pope from Feb. 19 to Nov. 12, 607. He was a deacon of the Roman Church when Pope St. Gregory I the Great sent him in 603 as a legate to Constantinople, where he obtained from the Byzantine emperor Phocas an edict recognizing the see of Rome as the head of all the churches.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Papal Election
    • The Papacy of Pope Boniface III
    • Quick Facts About Pope Boniface III
    • Interesting Facts About Pope Boniface III
    • A List of All The Popes Named “Boniface”

    During this era, bishops working for the Church had the right to name the next pope without going through a formal election or selection process. Noting the work that Boniface did in Constantinople, they chose him as the next pope. Though Boniface accepted the position, his work kept him in Constantinople. It took almost a year before he returned a...

    One of the biggest changes that he made as pope regarded how the next pope was selected. He issued a decree that stated no one could name or discuss the next pope while the current one was still alive. Those who violated the decree faced excommunication. A second decree stated that in honor of the last pope, the successor would not take the positio...

    Pope Boniface III was born circa 540 in Rome when it was part of the Byzantine Empire.
    Both his birth name and papal name was Boniface.
    He died on November 12, 607.
    Boniface III was around the age of 67 when he died of what was probably natural causes.
    In an official decree issued by the pope, he made Rome the head or the top church within all churches. This decree also stated that the top bishop in Rome was the Universal Bishop. The emperor agre...
    Boniface III was one of several popes who served for less than one year. Though he was only 67 at the time of his appointment, he passed away in less than nine months.
    His father worked as a physician and had the funds needed to educate his son. Boniface likely attended school in Rome before working for the Church.
    The emperor gave him permission to turn the Pantheon into a church. Records show that locals removed nearly 30 carts of bones from the catacombs below the Pantheon as part of this conversion.

    Boniface I (St.) (#42) (418 – 422) Boniface II (#55) (530 – 532) Boniface III (#66) (607) Boniface IV (St.) (#67) (608 – 615) Boniface IX (#204) (1389 – 1404) Boniface V (#69) (619 – 625) Boniface VI (#113) (896) Boniface VIII(#194) (1294 – 1303)

  3. 602–610); Boniface III had an important relationship with him. The son of Iohannes (John) Cataadioce, Boniface was of Roman extraction. [2] While serving as a deacon, Boniface impressed Pope Gregory I, who described him as a man "of tried faith and character" and selected him to be papal apocrisiarius to the imperial court in Constantinople ...

  4. Boniface III made two significant changes to papal selections. The first was the enacting of a decree forbidding anyone during the lifetime of a pope to discuss the appointment of his successor under pain of excommunication.

  5. Jun 4, 2018 · In 603, Pope Gregory again sent a papal nuncio to Constantinople, Boniface. Gregory admired Boniface, saying he was a “man of tried faith and character”. The tact and prudence Boniface displayed in his time at the capital made the new emperor regard the nuncio with favor. Boniface stayed for several years, throughout the papacy of Sabinian.

  6. The only other noteworthy event of Boniface's reign was his holding of a synod to regulate papal elections; this forbade, on pain of excommunication, all discussion of a successor to a pope or bishop during his lifetime and until three days after his death.