" and his
monogram on the reverse In January 897,
Pope Stephen VI held what is known as the
Cadaver Synod. He had the body of
Pope Formosus, the rival of his ally,
Lambert of Spoleto, exhumed and tried for "perjury, violating the canons prohibiting the
translation of bishops, and coveting the papacy." After finding him guilty, the synod annulled all of Formosus' acts and ordinations. Formosus' body was reburied in a common grave, and then thrown in the river
Tiber. Supporters of Formosus rebelled, and seven months after the synod, Stephen VI was deposed, and died soon after in prison. Romanus was elected to succeed Stephen VI in August 897. He was generally considered to be pro-Formosan, and annulled all the acts and decrees of his predecessor. This was criticised by the 15th-century historian
Bartolomeo Platina, who wrote that "these popelings studied nothing else but to extinguish the memory and honour of their predecessors". During his short pontificate, he granted the
pallium to Abbot
Vitalis of Farfa, appointed him as the
patriarch of Grado, and bestowed a
privilege upon the
See of Grado. Romanus also confirmed the possessions of the bishops of
Girona and Elna of their sees. His short rule was regarded as a virtuous one by contemporary historian
Flodoard. == Death and aftermath ==