initiated against the late
Pope Boniface VIII; instead, Clement V made a wide array of concessions to Philip IV. The cardinals besought de Got upon his election to join them in
Perugia and thereafter to travel to
Rome for his
papal coronation; however, he ordered them to travel to
Lyon for his coronation on 4 November 1305, at which
Philip IV of France ("the Fair") was present. During the ensuing public procession a collapsing wall knocked Clement V from his horse (resulting in the loss of a
carbuncle from the
Papal Tiara) and killed both the brother of Clement V and the aged
Matteo Orsini Rosso (a participant in twelve conclaves). The next day, another brother of Clement V was killed in a dispute between his servants and the retainers of the
College of Cardinals. Philip IV immediately demanded of Clement V that the memory of
Pope Boniface VIII be condemned, that his name be stricken from the list of popes, that his bones be disinterred and burned, that his ashes be scattered to the wind, and that he be declared a heretic, blasphemer, and immoral priest. Clement V delayed such an action without explicitly refusing it and in the meantime made several important concessions to Philip IV: he extended the absolution granted by Benedict XI, created nine French cardinals (a mix of
crown-cardinals and
cardinal-nephews), restored the cardinalates of Giacomo and Pietro Colonna (which had been deprived by Boniface VIII), gave Philip IV a five-year title to a variety of church property, withdrew the
papal bull Clericis laicos (1296) and limited the bull
Unam sanctam (1302, both of Boniface VIII), granted some church revenues to
Charles of Valois, pretender to the Byzantine throne, and made concessions weakening the
Knights Templar. However, Philip IV wanted to a see a process similar to the
Cadaver Synod initiated against Boniface VIII, which Clement V seemingly yielded to, setting a date of 2 February 1309; however, as this process proved to be dilatory and likely favorable to the deceased pontiff, Philip IV moved to cancel it in February 1311; by the time the
Council of Vienne (which ultimately sided with Boniface VIII) had been called, Philip IV demanded only that he be absolved of responsibility for the various processes against Boniface VIII, which he was. Between 1305 and 1309, Clement V moved from
Bordeaux to
Poitiers to
Toulouse before taking up residence as a guest in the Dominican monastery of
Avignon (at the time, a fief of
Naples, and part of the
Comtat Venaissin, a territory directly subject to the
Holy See since 1228). Clement V's decision to relocate the papacy to France was one of the most contested issues in the
papal conclave, 1314–1316 following his death, during which the minority of Italian cardinals were unable to engineer the return of the papacy to Rome. Avignon remained a territory of Naples until
Pope Clement VI purchased it from
Joan I of Naples for 80,000 gold
gulden in 1348. ==Notes==