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Pope Stephen VII (December, 928 – February, 931). Stephen was a Roman by birth. He was elected – probably handpicked – by Marozia from the Tusculani family, the unquestioned mistress of Rome during this period, as a stop-gap measure until her own son John was ready to assume the throne of Peter. This was what some Catholic sources considered the darkest period of papal history, a period in which clans of the nobility in Rome turned the papacy into a "temporal" fiefdom. Little is known of Stephen's reign, except that he confirmed the privileges of a few religious houses in France and Italy. He may, like several popes in this period, have been assassinated.
The validity of his papacy is disputed. Like his predecessor, Pope Leo VI, he was elected while Pope John X was still alive and in prison. Thus, if John's removal from office was invalid, then neither the election of Leo nor of Stephen was valid and they weren't genuine popes. In any event, they had brief reigns, are not well remembered, and are not likely to have impacted Catholic policy very much. Stephen's reign was brief and few records remain.
External Links
cs:Štěpán VII. de:Stephan VII. eo:Stefano la 8-a es:Esteban VII fi:Stefanus VII fr:Étienne VII hu:VIII. István pápa it:Papa Stefano VIII ko:교황 스테파노 8세 la:Stephanus VIII nl:Paus Stefanus VII (VIII) pl:Stefan VIII pt:Papa Estêvão VIII ru:Стефан VII (VIII) (папа римский) sv:Stefan VII th:สมเด็จพระสันตะปาปาสตีเฟนที่ 7 uk:Стефан VII (VIII)
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