St. Alexander I (105-115AD) was the sixth pope.
Answer
Pope Sixtus I is traditionally recognised as the sixth pope, or bishop of Rome. The coincidence of the sixth pope being named Sixtus has raised the question of whether the name is fictitious, and may have led soon after to him being named in what are now some of the oldest documents as Xystus. In any case, Francis A. Sullivan SJ (From Apostles to Bishops) says that most scholars are of the opinion that, in spite of Church tradition, the church of Rome was led by a group of presbyters, and that bishops were not appointed to the church in Rome until later in the second century. In other words, there can have been no Pope Sixtus (or Xystus), although it is conceivable there was a presbyter of than name.
Based on what we now know, the first true, monepiscopal bishop of Rome was probably Pius I or Anicetus, meaning that Zephyrinus (199-217) or Callixtus I (217-222) might have been the sixth real bishop of Rome.
There are a considerable number of Popes who have shared names, there were also quite a few popes who were almost unique in the number of names that they have had (there has, for example, only been one Pope Linus or Pope Peter).
The most common names for pontiffs have included:
23 John
16 Gregorie
14 Clement
13 Innocent
13 Leo
12 Pius
9 Boniface
8 Alexander
8 Urban
6 Paul
6 Adrian
There have been a number of other common names including Xystus/Sixtus, Honorious, etc.
St. Eleuterus who reigned from 174-189 was the 13th pope.
Pope Alexander I (Saint Alexander)
Paul has been the name of 6 popes.
No, there was never a pope named Alexander Sexton. There was also a Pope Alexander Sextus meaning Pope Alexander the Sixth (VI).
Pius III became pope after Alexander VI in 1503. When Alexander VI died on September 22, 1503, Francesco Todeschini Piccolomini was named pope and he took the name Pius III.
It is called a Gregorian chantand it is first made by Pope Gregory the great.
The line determined by Pope Alexander the sixth which split South America between Spain and Portugal is named the Line of Demarcation.
Traditional Sixth Station: Veronica wipes the face of Jesus [no documented bibical reference] Scriptural Way of the Cross Sixth Station (established by Pope John Paul II on Good Friday 1991; approved by Pope Benedict XVI): Jesus is scourged [John 19:1] and crowned with thorns [John 19:2, 19:5]
Sistino is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "of or relating to the sixth."Specifically, the Italian word is the masculine form of an adjective that relates to the sixth one, that is, to Pope Sixtus IV (July 21, 1414 - August 12, 1484). The pronunciation is "see-STEE-noh." The feminine form, sistina, is pronounced "see-STEE-nah."
In brief, it began in the sixth century in England, when Pope Gregory the Great sent St. Augustine to Britain to bring a more disciplined Apostolic succession to the Celtic Christians at that time
Pope Paul VI was elected pope after the death of Pope John XXIII.
John Paul II
There is no pope named Pope XXIII. If you are referring to Pope John XXIII, he became pope in 1958.
yes
Pope Francis is the reigning pope in 2013.