All of these councils took place in the West and were attended by Western bishops.
First Council of the Lateran Successors of
Charlemagne insisted increasingly on the right to appoint bishops on their own, which led to the
Investiture Controversy with the popes. The
Concordat of Worms signed by
Pope Calixtus II included a compromise between the two parties, by which the pope alone appoints bishops as spiritual head while the emperor maintains a right to give secular offices and honors. Pope Calixtus invoked the council to ratify this historic agreement. There are few documents and protocols left from the sessions and 25 canons approved. The council met in the
Lateran Palace from 18 March to 5 April 1123.
Second Council of the Lateran After the death of
Pope Honorius II (1124–1130), two popes were elected by two groups of cardinals. Sixteen cardinals elected
Pope Innocent II, while others elected antipope
Anacletus II who was called
the Pope of the Ghetto, in light of his
Jewish origins. The council deposed the antipope and his followers. In important decisions regarding the
celibacy of Catholic priests, clerical marriages of priests and monks, which up to 1139 were considered illegal, were defined and declared as non-existing and invalid. The council met under Pope Innocent II in April 1139 and issued 30 canons.
Third Council of the Lateran The council established the two-thirds majority necessary for the election of a pope. This two-thirds majority existed until Pope John Paul II. His change was reverted to the old two-thirds majority by
Pope Benedict XVI in his Moto Proprio, De Aliquibus Mutationibus, from June 11, 2007. Still valid today are the regulations that outlawed
simony, and the elevation to Episcopal offices for anyone under thirty. The council also ruled it illegal to sell arms or goods which could assist armaments to Muslim powers.
Saracens and
Jews were forbidden from keeping Christian slaves. All cathedrals were to appoint teachers for indigent and low-income children.
Catharism was condemned as a
heresy. This council is well documented: Reports include the saga of an Irish bishop whose income consisted in the milk from three cows. If one of the cows would stop giving milk, the faithful were obliged to donate another animal. The council met in March 1179 in three sessions and issued 27 chapters, which were all approved by
Pope Alexander III.
Fourth Council of the Lateran The council mandated every Christian in serious sin is to go at least once a year on
Easter to
confession and to receive the Holy
Eucharist. The council formally repeated Catholic teaching, that Christ is present in the Eucharist and thus clarified
transubstantiation. It dealt with several heresies without naming names but intended to include the
Catharists and several individual Catholic theologians. It made several political rulings as well. It met in only three sessions in November 1215 under
Pope Innocent III and issued 70 chapters.
First Council of Lyon The council continued the political rulings of the previous council by deposing
Frederick II, as German king and as emperor. Frederick was accused of heresy, treason and arresting a ship with about 100 prelates willing to attend a meeting with the pope. Frederick outlawed attendance at the council and blocked access to Lyon from Germany. Therefore, the majority of council fathers originated from Spain, France and Italy. The council met in three sessions from 28 June 1245, and issued 22 chapters all approved by
Pope Innocent IV.
Second Council of Lyon Pope Gregory X defined three aims for the council: aid to Jerusalem, union with the Greek Orthodox Church and reform of the Catholic Church. The council achieved a short-lived unity with the Greek representatives, who were denounced for this back home by the hierarchy and the emperor. A teaching on
purgatory was defined.
Papal conclaves were regulated in
Ubi periculum, which specified that electors must be locked up during the conclave and, if they could not agree on a pope after eight days, would receive water and bread only.
Franciscan,
Dominican, and other orders had become controversial in light of their increasing popularity. The council confirmed their privileges.
Pope Gregory X approved all 31 chapters, after modifying some of them, thus clearly indicating papal prerogatives. The council met in six sessions from 7 May to 17 July 1274, under his leadership.
Council of Vienne Pope Clement V solemnly opened the council with a
liturgy, which has been repeated since in all Catholic ecumenical councils. He entered the Cathedral in liturgical vestments with a small procession and took his place on the
papal throne. Patriarchs, followed by cardinals, archbishops and bishops, were the next in rank. The Pope gave a blessing to the choir, which intoned the
Veni Sancte Spiritus. The Pope issued a prayer to the Holy Spirit, the
litany of saints was recited and only after additional prayer did the Pope actually address the council and open it formally. He mentioned four topics, the Order of
Knights Templar, the regaining of the
Holy Land, a reform of public morality and freedom for the Church. Pope Clement had asked the bishops to list all their problems with the Order. The Templars had become an obstacle to many bishops because they could act independently of them in such vital areas as filling parishes and other positions. Many accusations against the Order were not accepted as the Pope ruled that
confessions under
torture were inadmissible. He withdrew canonical support for the Order but refused to turn over its properties to the French king. The council fathers discussed another
crusade, but were convinced instead by
Raimundus Lullus that knowledge of foreign languages is the only way to Christianize
Muslims and
Jews. He successfully proposed the teaching of
Greek,
Hebrew, and
Arabic languages in Catholic universities. With this the council is considered to have begun modern
missionary policies. In the three sessions, the council discussed further Franciscan poverty ideals. It met from October 1311 until May 1312. == Reform Councils (15th–16th centuries) ==