"G" is For "Gregory"
![]() |
| "Son of a...this thing is squeezing my head like a grape!" |
Pope Gregory XIII
was the...uh...thirteenth pope of the Roman Catholic Church (come to think of
it, that’s pretty redundant. There’s no
such thing as a pope of the Eastern Orthodox Church) from 1572 to 1585.
He was born Ugo
Boncampagni on June 7, 1502 in Bologna, Italy
(“Italy” technically wouldn’t actually be a country until unification in
the 19th century). No
baloney.
![]() |
| "Mmmmmmmm......Italian baloney.........." |
He became a Jesuit priest and taught jurisprudence (something to do with the law. I think.) at the University of Bologna from 1531-1539.
He was bumped up the company ladder when Pope Pius IV made him a cardinal and papal emissary to Spain in 1565.
![]() |
| Wrong cardinal |
![]() |
| Wrong cardinals |
![]() |
| That's better. |
NOTE: Spain then being in the thick of things with American exploration since they actually found gold. This was discussed in my last post about Ferdinand II.
Ugo was elected pope on May 14, 1572, due in large part to the influence wielded by the Spanish king, Phillip or Charles or whoever. I don’t know and don’t feel like looking it up.
NOTE: I’ve been doing enough research. Get off my back.
Ugo took the name
of Gregory, mostly because it was easier to spell than “Boncampagni” and the
invitations were already written for Gregory’s investiture.
He is mostly known for his reforms of the Catholic Church in response to all the Protestant bitching going. He really couldn’t do anything about Henry VIII and the Church of England, however.
![]() |
| "Power of Boners, my dude." NOTE: Picture used for entertainment purposes. Henry was long since dead. |
This was inelegantly known as the “Counter Reformation” after one of his advisor’s first recommendation, “Hey Protestants? Up Yours!” was rejected by a conclave of cardinals.
![]() |
| "Okay, we get rid of indulgences. Agreed?" "Can we still keep Bingo?" "Of course. We're not savages." |
He also instituted a system of seminaries, meant for the training for the training of Catholic priests, including its first lecture, “Keeping It In Your Pants.”
Mostly, though,
Pope Gregory is known for implementing what is known as the Gregorian
Calendar. The Julian Calendar, in use
since 46 BC (BCE, to you politically-correct ninnies) was showing its age. Its inaccurate estimation of the solar year
(365.2422 days-yeah, I looked that up.
You think I knew the exact number?), lead to the world edging closer to
the seasons being all out of whack.
The biggest change
to the calendar (besides the name, which was a huge FU to Julius Caesar, was
how leap years were estimated. Rather
than EVERY four years having a February with 29 days, only those divisible by
400 would have a longer Black History Month.
| "Yeah, so what? I still get a month. And sometime after the middle of March, the Senate is supposed to change the 'Bay of Naples' to the 'Bay of Julius.'" |
Meaning, 1800 and 1900 would not be leap years, while 2000 would. The year 2100 would NOT have a leap year, though.
That’s okay,
though. Most of us will be dead by then,
anyway.
I know what you’re
thinking. That’s all???? Well, besides the calendar advancing ten days
from October 4 to October 15, yeah that’s about it.
But, it was enough to throw people all in a tizzy (personally, I would think they had enough to worry about. You know, like the Black Death).
![]() |
| "Death of Color." |
Whiners, mostly Protestants, accused the Pope of being the Anti-Christ who was trying to pull off a decidedly pro-Catholic agenda.
![]() |
| "That's cute. We all know who the Anti-Christ is!" |
Eventually, though, they came to be at peace with the changes. Especially since they thought Julius Caesar was a narcissist who didn’t rate his own calendar. And those rats were starting to be a real problem.
Although, Russia
didn’t adopt the Gregorian Calendar (or pants) until 1918.
Pope Gregory XIII
died, of death, on April 15, 1585. He
went to his heavenly reward knowing that he made a real difference in the
world, if for nothing else bestowing on us a calendar which would have us
sunbathing in January.
![]() |
| "Surf's up!" "What the f...are you nuts?" |
NOTE: Sigh....yes, yes...I know, it’s hot in January in the Southern Hemisphere. You know what I mean. Shut up.












He died, of death - that's amusing. The whole leap year thing still confuses me so do I owe this confusing to Gregory? Not that I care for an answer but those born in the leap year must be a little mad about that.
ReplyDeleteHave a lovely day.
lissa@postcards from the bookstore
Unsolicited Nerdism: The Julian Calendar had leap years, as well. Gregory just made it more complicated.
DeleteYour A to Z posts are very entertaining! :-) I don't think Gregory XIII was the 13th pope. He was the 13th Gregory, maybe.
ReplyDeleteYeah, big doofus whoops. I neglected to include "named Gregory." Peter was the first Pope.
DeleteRelated: the last sentence of the final paragraph should read- "...for nothing else bestowing on us a calendar which wouldn't have us sunbathing in January."
DeleteI need to fire my proofreader.
😆
DeleteLove the caption on Obama’s pic!
ReplyDeleteWiseguy.
DeleteIt's what I do...lol.
In all seriousness---which appears to be hard for you---you put a LOT of time and work into these Challenge posts: the research, the finding images to making up satire that sneaks up on readers. I'm enjoying your style a lot.
ReplyDeleteThank you! It's not easy all the time. My first question when I settle on a topic? Can I make some of this funny? If there's no laughs to mine, I move on.
DeleteOh, and I love putting in zingers that sneak up on readers!
DeleteI would rather br called Gregory than Udo it sounds like some board game. He died of death...lol
ReplyDeleteI'm sure it hurt.
Deleteit boggles my mind that russia didn't adopt the gregorian calender until 1918.
ReplyDeleteWhole big Czarist rejection of Roman Catholicism, I would think. Then, the Soviets DID adopt Roman Catholicism (which is just as odd).
DeleteI find the adoption of the Gregorian calendar fascinating. It took the British until sometime in the 1700s. I thought I read somewhere that because Russia hadn't adopted it, they missed an Olympics. (They showed up late.)
ReplyDeleteThat's actually pretty funny.
Delete