PEOPLE KNOWN FOR: Roman Catholicism

759 Biographies
Filter By:
portrait of Charlemagne by Albrecht Dürer
Holy Roman emperor [747?–814]
Charlemagne, king of the Franks (768–814), king of the Lombards (774–814), and first emperor (800–814) of the Romans and of what was later called the Holy Roman Empire. Around the time of the birth of...
pope
St. Gregory the Great, ; Western feast day, September 3 [formerly March 12, still observed in the East]), pope from 590 to 604, reformer and excellent administrator, “founder” of the medieval papacy, which...
Pope John XXIII
pope
Saint John XXIII, ; beatified September 3, 2000canonized April 27, 2014; feast day October 11), one of the most popular popes of all time (reigned 1958–63), who inaugurated a new era in the history of...
St. Francis of Assisi
Italian saint
St. Francis of Assisi, ; canonized July 16, 1228; feast day October 4), founder of the Franciscan orders of the Friars Minor (Ordo Fratrum Minorum), the women’s Order of St. Clare (the Poor Clares), and...
Henry IV, undated copperplate engraving.
king of France
Henry IV, king of Navarre (as Henry III, 1572–89) and first Bourbon king of France (1589–1610), who, at the end of the Wars of Religion, abjured Protestantism and converted to Roman Catholicism (1593)...
Fra Bartolomeo: portrait of Girolamo Savonarola
Italian preacher
Girolamo Savonarola, Italian Christian preacher, reformer, and martyr, renowned for his clash with tyrannical rulers and corrupt clergy. After the overthrow of the Medici in 1494, Savonarola was the sole...
Newman, John Henry
British theologian
St. John Henry Newman, ; canonized October 13, 2019; feast day October 9), influential churchman and man of letters of the 19th century, who led the Oxford movement in the Church of England and later became...
Jan Hus
Bohemian religious leader
Jan Hus, the most important 15th-century Czech religious reformer, whose work was transitional between the medieval and the Reformation periods and anticipated the Lutheran Reformation by a full century....
Mary, Queen of Scots
queen of Scotland
Mary, queen of Scotland (1542–67) and queen consort of France (1559–60). Her unwise marital and political actions provoked rebellion among the Scottish nobles, forcing her to flee to England, where she...
Godfrey Kneller: painting of James II
king of England, Scotland, and Ireland
James II, king of England, Scotland, and Ireland from 1685 to 1688, and the last Stuart monarch in the direct male line. He was deposed in the Glorious Revolution (1688–89) and replaced by William III...
John Wycliffe
English theologian
John Wycliffe, English theologian, philosopher, church reformer, and promoter of the first complete translation of the Bible into English. He was one of the forerunners of the Protestant Reformation. The...
Merovingian king
Clovis I, king of the Franks and ruler of much of Gaul from 481 to 511, a key period during the transformation of the Roman Empire into Europe. His dynasty, the Merovingians, survived more than 200 years,...
Pope Leo IX
pope
St. Leo IX, ; feast day April 19), head of the medieval Latin church (1049–54), during whose reign the papacy became the focal point of western Europe and the great East-West Schism of 1054 became inevitable....
Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma, detail of an oil painting by J.B. Saive (byname J. de Namur); in the National Gallery, Parma, Italy.
regent of The Netherlands
Alessandro Farnese, duke of Parma and Piacenza, regent of the Netherlands (1578–92) for Philip II, the Habsburg king of Spain. He was primarily responsible for maintaining Spanish control there and for...
Jansen, engraving by Jean Morin
Flemish theologian
Cornelius Otto Jansen, Flemish leader of the Roman Catholic reform movement known as Jansenism. He wrote biblical commentaries and pamphlets against the Protestants. His major work was Augustinus, published...
Italian cardinal
Saint Peter Damian, ; feast day February 21), cardinal and Doctor of the Church, an original leader and a forceful figure in the Gregorian Reform movement, whose personal example and many writings exercised...
Mary I
queen of England
Mary I, the first queen to rule England (1553–58) in her own right. She was known as Bloody Mary for her persecution of Protestants in a vain attempt to restore Roman Catholicism in England. The daughter...
Pius V, contemporary medallion; in the coin collection of the Vatican Library
pope
Saint Pius V, ; canonized May 22, 1712; feast day April 30), Italian ascetic, reformer, and relentless persecutor of heretics, whose papacy (1566–72) marked one of the most austere periods in Roman Catholic...
Byzantine emperor
Michael VIII Palaeologus, Nicaean emperor (1259–61) and then Byzantine emperor (1261–82), who in 1261 restored the Byzantine Empire to the Greeks after 57 years of Latin occupation and who founded the...
Pope Urban II.
pope
Urban II, head of the Roman Catholic Church (1088–99) who developed ecclesiastical reforms begun by Pope Gregory VII, launched the Crusade movement, and strengthened the papacy as a political entity. Odo...
Władysław II Jagiełło, sarcophagus figure, Wawel Cathedral, Kraków, Poland
king of Poland
Władysław II Jagiełło, grand duke of Lithuania (as Jogaila, 1377–1401) and king of Poland (1386–1434), who joined two states that became the leading power of eastern Europe. He was the founder of Poland’s...
Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte Guyon
French mystic
Jeanne-Marie Bouvier de La Motte Guyon, French Roman Catholic mystic and writer, a central figure in the theological debates of 17th-century France through her advocacy of Quietism, an extreme passivity...
Mother Teresa
Roman Catholic nun
Mother Teresa, ; canonized September 4, 2016; feast day September 5), founder of the Order of the Missionaries of Charity, a Roman Catholic congregation of women dedicated to the poor, particularly to...
Michael Servetus
Spanish theologian
Michael Servetus, Spanish physician and theologian whose unorthodox teachings led to his condemnation as a heretic by both Protestants and Roman Catholics and to his execution by Calvinists from Geneva....
Henry de Guise
French noble
Henri I de Lorraine, 3e duc de Guise, popular duke of Guise, the acknowledged chief of the Catholic party and the Holy League during the French Wars of Religion. Henri de Lorraine was 13 years old at the...
Reginald Pole, detail of a portrait attributed to Fra Sebastiano del Piombo; in a private collection
archbishop of Canterbury
Reginald Pole, English prelate who broke with King Henry VIII over Henry’s antipapal policies and later became a cardinal and a powerful figure in the government of the Roman Catholic queen Mary Tudor....
English bishop and statesman
Stephen Gardiner, English bishop and statesman, a leading exponent of conservatism in the first generation of the English Reformation. Although he supported the antipapal policies of King Henry VIII (ruled...
English saint
Saint Wilfrid, ; feast day October 12), one of the greatest English saints, a monk and bishop who was outstanding in bringing about close relations between the Anglo-Saxon Church and the papacy. He devoted...
Félicité Lamennais, oil on canvas by Paulin-Guérin, 1826; in the Musée National de Versailles et des Trianons, France.
French priest
Félicité Lamennais, French priest and philosophical and political writer who attempted to combine political liberalism with Roman Catholicism after the French Revolution. A brilliant writer, he was an...
French cardinal
Humbert of Silva Candida, cardinal, papal legate, and theologian whose ideas advanced the 11th-century ecclesiastical reform of Popes Leo IX and Gregory VII. His doctrinal intransigence, however, occasioned...
French theologian
Berengar Of Tours, theologian principally remembered for his leadership of the losing side in the crucial eucharistic controversy of the 11th century. Having studied under the celebrated Fulbert at Chartres,...
Edith Stein
German nun
Edith Stein, ; canonized October 11, 1998; feast day August 9), Roman Catholic convert from Judaism, Carmelite nun, philosopher, and spiritual writer who was executed by the Nazis because of her Jewish...
American priest and poet
Daniel Berrigan, American writer, Roman Catholic priest, and antiwar activist whose poems and essays reflect his deep commitment to social, political, and economic change in American society. Berrigan,...
Jerome of Prague
Czech philosopher
Jerome of Prague, Czech philosopher and theologian whose advocacy of sweeping religious reform in the Western church made him one of the first Reformation leaders in central Europe. A student at the Charles...
English priest
Saint John Fisher, ; canonized May 19, 1935; feast day July 9), English humanist, martyr, and prelate, who, devoted to the pope and to the Roman Catholic church, resisted King Henry VIII of England by...
French politician and historian
Charlest, count de Montalember, orator, politician, and historian who was a leader in the struggle against absolutism in church and state in France during the 19th century. Born in London during the exile...
British architect and author
A.W.N. Pugin, English architect, designer, author, theorist, and leading figure in the English Roman Catholic and Gothic revivals. Pugin was the son of the architect Augustus Charles Pugin, who gave him...
Pope Honorius I
pope
Honorius I, pope from 625 to 638 whose posthumous condemnation as a heretic subsequently caused extensive controversy on the question of papal infallibility. Nothing is known of his life before he became...
Bernard Cardinal Law
American prelate
Bernard Cardinal Law, American prelate who was head (1984–2002) of the Roman Catholic archdiocese of Boston before he resigned in disgrace after it was revealed that he had protected sexually abusive priests...
Arnold of Brescia
Italian religious reformer
Arnold of Brescia, radical religious reformer noted for his outspoken criticism of clerical wealth and corruption and for his strenuous opposition to the temporal power of the popes. He was prior of the...
Bohemian theologian
John Milíč, theologian, orator, and reformer, considered to be the founder of the national Bohemian religious reform movement. Milíč was educated at Prague and ordained about 1350, entering the imperial...
French theologian
Alfred Firmin Loisy, French biblical scholar, linguist, and philosopher of religion, generally credited as the founder of Modernism, a movement within the Roman Catholic Church aimed at revising its dogma...
Gregory XIII
pope
Gregory XIII, pope from 1572 to 1585, who promulgated the Gregorian calendar and founded a system of seminaries for Roman Catholic priests. Educated at the University of Bologna, he taught jurisprudence...
Scottish conspirator
George Gordon, 1st marquess and 6th earl of Huntly, Scottish Roman Catholic conspirator who provoked personal wars in 16th-century Scotland but was saved by his friendship with James VI (James I of England)....
François de Montmorency Laval, portrait by Frère Luc
French bishop
François de Montmorency Laval, the first Roman Catholic bishop in Canada, who laid the foundations of church organization in France’s North American possessions. Born into one of the greatest families...
George Jeffreys, detail of an oil painting attributed to H. Claret; in the National Portrait Gallery, London
English judge
George Jeffreys, 1st Baron Jeffreys, English judge notorious for his cruelty and corruption. He presided over the “Bloody Assizes” of 1685 following the failure of the duke of Monmouth’s rebellion and...
French theologian
Nicholas Of Clémanges, theologian, humanist, and educator who denounced the corruption of institutional Christianity, advocated general ecclesiastical reform, and attempted to mediate the Western Schism...
French humanist and theologian
Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples, outstanding French humanist, theologian, and translator whose scholarship stimulated scriptural studies during the Protestant Reformation. Ordained a priest, Lefèvre taught philosophy...
Byzantine scholar and statesman
Demetrius Cydones, Byzantine humanist scholar, statesman, and theologian who introduced the study of the Greek language and culture to the Italian Renaissance. Cydones was a student of the Greek classical...
Greek Orthodox patriarch
Isidore Of Kiev, Greek Orthodox patriarch of Russia, Roman cardinal, Humanist, and theologian who strove for reunion of Greek and Latin Christendom but was forced into exile because of concerted opposition,...