First Council of the Lateran | |
---|---|
Date | 1123 |
Accepted by | Catholic Church |
Previous council | Fourth Council of Constantinople |
Next council | Second Council of the Lateran |
Convoked by | Pope Callixtus II |
President | Pope Callixtus II |
Attendance | 300–1000 |
Topics | Investiture Controversy |
Documents and statements | twenty-two canons, pope's right to invest bishops, condemnation of simony, "Truce of God" (war allowed only Monday–Wednesday, and only in the summer and fall) |
Chronological list of ecumenical councils |
Part of a series on the |
Ecumenical councils of the Catholic Church |
---|
4th–5th centuries |
6th–9th centuries |
12th–14th centuries |
15th–16th centuries |
19th–20th centuries |
Catholicism portal |
The First Council of the Lateran was the 9th ecumenical council recognised by the Catholic Church. The first ecumenical council to be held in Western Europe & the first since the Great Schism of 1054, it was convoked by Pope Callixtus II in December 1122, immediately after the Concordat of Worms. The council sought to bring an end to the practice of the conferring of ecclesiastical benefices by people who were laymen, free the election of bishops and abbots from secular influence, clarify the separation of spiritual and temporal affairs, re-establish the principle that spiritual authority resides solely in the Church and abolish the claim of the Holy Roman Emperor to influence papal elections.
The council was significant in size: 300 bishops and more than 600 abbots assembled at Rome's Lateran Palace in March 1123, and Callixtus II presided in person. During the council, the decisions of the Concordat of Worms were read and ratified. Various other decisions were promulgated.