(1409), which created a third line of claimants. The majority of the cardinals who had elected Urban VI quickly regretted their decision and removed themselves to
Anagni. Meeting at
Fondi, thirteen cardinals elected
Count Robert of Geneva as
Pope Clement VII on 20 September 1378. The dissident cardinals argued that the election of Urban VI was invalid because it had been out of fear of the rioting Roman crowds. Unable to maintain himself in Anagni, and following the defeat of his forces at the Battle of Marino, Clement VII fled to
Naples, which was ruled by one of his supporters, Queen
Joanna I of Naples. Despite being met regally by Joanna, Clement was met with the populace chanting (Long Live Pope Urban) and (Death to the
Antichrist), which convinced him to leave. He took a ship to
Avignon and reestablished the
papal court there. King
Charles V of France, who seems to have been irked beforehand by the choice of the Roman pontiff, soon became his greatest protector. Besides
France, Clement eventually succeeded in winning to his cause
Castile,
Aragon,
Navarre,
Poland,
Lithuania,
Hungary,
Scotland, and most of Italy besides Naples and
Savoy. Years later,
Owain Glyndŵr's
rebellion in
Wales also recognized the Avignonian
antipope Benedict XIII. King
John I of Portugal, the founder of the
House of Aviz, who
took the throne with English support signed the
Treaty of Windsor in 1386 and firmly sided with Urban VI. Unlike their relatives, the
Angevin kings of
Hungary (
Louis I and
Mary) supported Rome.
Joanna I of Naples, who sided with Clement VII was deposed and replaced by
Charles III in 1381. Charles III would later take the throne of Hungary from Mary and her husband
Sigismund; for this she was
excommunicated by Urban VI.
Consequences In the intense partisanship that was characteristic of the
Middle Ages, the schism engendered a fanatical hatred noted by
Johan Huizinga: Sustained by such national and factional rivalries, the schism continued after the deaths of both Urban VI in 1389 and Clement VII in 1394.
Boniface IX was crowned in
Rome in 1389, and
Benedict XIII, who was elected against the wishes of King
Charles VI of France, reigned in
Avignon from 1394. When Pope Boniface died in 1404, the eight cardinals of the Roman conclave offered to refrain from electing a new pope if Benedict would resign; but when Benedict's legates refused on his behalf, the Roman party then proceeded to
elect Pope
Innocent VII. Discussions continued instead with Innocent, but quickly stalled and by February 1405, and Benedict's envoys had returned to Avignon. Benedict quickly excommunicated Innocent and with an army started marching towards Rome, in May 1405. He occupied
Genoa for a year and awaited French military support, which never came. Innocent died 6 November 1406, and the Roman cardinals
elected Angelo Correr as
Gregory XII. The suggestion for a
church council to resolve the Schism, first made in 1378, was not adopted initially, because
canon law required that a pope call a council. Eventually theologians like
Pierre d'Ailly and
Jean Gerson, adopted arguments that permitted the Church to call a council to resolve this issue, while
Francesco Zabarella argued that a council could only be convoked by an
emperor. == Three popes ==