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Pope Saint Leo IX

Pope Saint Leo IX was born with the given name of Bruno of Egisheim-Dagsburg in the year 1002 A.D., and died in 1054 A.D. He began his reign as Pope in the year 1049 A.D. and ended his reign in the year 1054 A.D., during the High Middle Ages. Saint Leo IX was from Alsace, and his papal number is: 152 out of 267 officially recognized Roman Catholic Popes.

Summary: Great reform pope who renewed papal authority and confronted the East-West rupture.

Biography:

Saint Leo IX stands among the major architects of the eleventh-century reform papacy. A man of noble background and personal sanctity, he traveled widely, held synods, opposed simony and clerical abuses, and gave the papacy new moral and administrative energy.

His pontificate also coincided with the tragic widening of division between Rome and Constantinople in 1054. Although the causes were complex and longstanding, his reign is closely linked with the moment traditionally associated with the Great Schism.

Leo IX’s legacy is twofold: he was a saintly reformer of great vitality and a central figure in one of Christianity’s most consequential ecclesial ruptures.