Pope John XI

De Montor, Lives of the Popes, volume 1, page 245: John XI, a Roman, of the Conti family, son of Alberic, consul of Rome, was elected about the 13th of March, 931, at the age of twenty years, as some maintain, or twenty-five, according to others.
John was surrounded by evil men, who had raised him to authority and possessed more of it than he did.  He governed four years and ten months, always submissive to Marozia, whom many authors regard as his mother; or to his brother Alberic, who kept him in prison from the year 933.  He died there at the commencement of January 936, the victim of the ambition of his supposed mother, and of the cruelty of his brother.  He was interred at Saint John Lateran.

Catholic Encyclopedia: Date of birth unknown, became pope in 931; d. 936. He was the son of Marozia by her first marriage with Alberic; some, taking Liutprand and the "Liber Pontificalis" as their authority, assert that he was the natural son of Sergius III ("Johannes, natione Romanus ex patre Sergio papa", "Liber Pont." ed. Duchesne, II, 243). Through the intrigues of his mother, who ruled at that time in Rome, he was raised to the Chair of Peter, and was completely under the influence of the Senatrix et Patricia of Rome. To strengthen her own power Marozia married her brother-in-law Hugh, King of Provence and Italy, whose reign in Rome was so tyrannical that a strong opposition party sprang up among the nobles under the leadership of Alberic II, the younger son of Marozia. This party succeeded in overthrowing the rule of Marozia and Hugh; Marozia was cast into prison, but her husband escaped from the city. In this way Alberic became ruler of Rome, and the pope, who suffered by his mother's fall, now became almost entirely subject to his brother, being only free in the exercise of his purely spiritual duties. All other jurisdiction was exercised through Alberic. This was not only the case in secular, but also in ecclesiastical affairs. It was at the instance of Alberic that the pallium was given to Theophylactus, Patriarch of Constantinople (935), and also to Artold, Archbishop of Reims (933). It was this pope who sat in the Chair of Peter during its deepest humiliation, but it was also he who granted many privileges to the Congregation of Cluny, which was later on so powerful an agent of Church reform.

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