| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | THE UNIVERSAL HISTORY OF CHRISTIANITY |  | 
| FROM JUSTINIAN TO LUTHER. AD 518-1517CHAPTER XI.THE PAPACY SUPREME
         
         FREDERIC I (1152-1190), Roman Emperor, surnamed by the
        Italians Barbarossa, Redbeard, was determined to realize the ideals of
        Charlemagne as to Church and State. Chaste and courageous, hard
          working and sagacious, he was one of the ablest rulers that Germany
        produced in the Middle Ages. He was chosen German king at Frankfurt in 1152 and
        after some difficulties with Pope Hadrian IV, whose stirrup he at first refused
        to hold, he was crowned emperor at Rome in 1155. He was in constant conflict
        with the Italians, whom he treated as if they were aliens, and with the popes,
        whom he regarded as rivals. In 1166 he marched on Rome, stormed the Leonine
        city, and procured the enthronement in St. Peter's of an antipope, Paschal III.
        He made peace in 1177 with Pope Alexander III, who had previously
        excommunicated him, kissed his foot, and agreed to submit to arbitration his
        dispute with the Pope as to which of the two had the right to possess the vast
        estates which had been left by Matilda, Countess of Tuscany. His quarrel with
        the papacy was renewed in 1185 when Urban III became Pope. Soon afterwards the
        great Muslim Saladin took Jerusalem, and Barbarossa was more anxious to conquer
        the foe of all Christendom than to get the better of a pope. He set out from
        Regensburg in June 1189 at the head of a fine army, and reached Asia Minor. He
        was drowned in a river near Seleucia in Cilicia, and the place of his burial
        remains unknown. His eldest son became emperor as Henry VI.
   Henry VI (1190-1197), cruel, capable, and ambitious,
        hoped to make the imperial dignity hereditary in his family and aspired to an
        almost universal dominion. In order to gain his own ends he was prepared to
        make important concessions to the Pope, possibly even the feudal lordship over
        the whole Empire. He pushed his rule in Italy nearly to the gates of Rome and
        induced Pope Celestine III to crown him emperor in Rome in 1191. He died in
        Sicily in 1197 from a cold caught when hunting, leaving as his heir Frederic
        II, a child of three years. Celestine died the next year, and the path was left
        clear for the accession of a Pope who raised the papacy to a height unknown
        before.
         Pope Innocent III (d. 1216) was an ecclesiastical
        Barbarossa, and brought the medieval papacy to the zenith of its power. In the
        world he was Lotario, Count of Segni, a wealthy
        aristocrat of mixed German and Roman lineage. Skilled in the study of law and
        politics, his life was strict and pious. Before he was raised to the papal
        throne he had written a work on the Scorn of the World, and he showed his
        self-control by not shortening the canonical time that elapsed before his
        ordination to the priesthood and the episcopate. He had to face a situation
        which was complicated with grave difficulties, political, moral, and religious,
        and he faced it with a resolution that had important and permanent results. The
        ends which he endeavored to attain were to secure the political freedom and
        supremacy of the papacy in Italy, to uphold the spiritual supremacy of the
        papacy in opposition to all secular potentates, to rescue Eastern Christianity
        from the Muslims and bind it to Rome, and to exterminate heresy, especially in
        southern France, which was its peculiar hotbed.
   Innocent first secured his authority in Rome, and
        after a struggle made the municipality obedient to his will. This was, even by
        itself, no insignificant victory; but it was followed by a masterly success in
        breaking the German ring which surrounded the so-called Patrimony of St. Peter
        in central Italy. He added Spoleto and Ravenna to his dominions, and became
        president of a league of Tuscan cities which had formed part of the inheritance
        of Matilda.
         The relations of Innocent III with France vividly
        illustrate the difficulties which beset the papacy at this period. Philip
        Augustus, King of France, was a widower, and he resolved to marry Ingeborg,
        sister of Knut VI, King of Denmark. The Danes had a good navy and were sailors
        of an old fighting breed. So the French king thought that they would be useful
        for his intended invasion of England. Knut refused to take part in this
        adventure, and Philip Augustus demanded with his bride a dowry of 10,000 marks.
        The Dane considered this sum a high price to pay even for an alliance with
        France. But he paid it because he was persuaded that France would protect him
        against German encroachments. The bride was both beautiful and virtuous, and
        the marriage was celebrated at Amiens in August 1193. The next day, during the
        ceremony of the coronation, Ingeborg observed that her husband turned pale and
        showed feelings of aversion towards herself. Contemporaries attributed his
        behavior to the influence of sorcery, but the problem of its cause is still
        unsolved. It remains certain that the king was bent upon immediately divorcing
        his wife, and actually obtained a sentence of divorce from his complaisant
        clergy. The hapless Ingeborg, on learning her sentence, cried Mala Francia,
        mala Francia ... Roma, Roma. And to Rome her brother appealed.
         Pope Celestine III sent to France letter after letter
        and legate after legate. Philip Augustus was obdurate, and to render the
        divorce irrevocable he sought in marriage the hands of at least three
        princesses. They prudently refused his advances, and he had to content himself
        with Agnes de Meran, daughter of a Bavarian noble. Ingeborg was removed to
        castles and monasteries according to the whim of her lord and master, and
        complained of rudeness, poor food, and the want of the consolation of religion.
         In the meantime Innocent III had become Pope. He told
        Philip Augustus that the dignity of a king was not to be set above the duties
        of a Christian, and he put France under an interdict. The king resisted for
        several years, then professed to yield, and on September the 8th, 1200, the
        interdict was removed. The next year a Council was held at Soissons at which
        both sides of the question were elaborately argued, until a simple priest,
        coming forward from a crowd of spectators, defended the cause of Ingeborg with
        an eloquence that threatened to carry all before it. The king said that he
        would be reconciled with his wife. He went off to the abbey of Notre-Dame,
        where she was living, placed her on his own horse, and rode off at a gallop.
        This does not mean that he abandoned Agnes de Meran, but her death that year
        seems to have frightened him into a desire to make peace with Rome, and
        Innocent met him half-way by pronouncing legitimate the two children of Agnes.
         This, however, did not end the quarrel. Philip
        Augustus continued to demand a divorce, and Innocent III showed miracles of
        diplomacy in dealing with the two contending parties.
         In 1213, when the conflict had lasted twenty years,
        the king yielded. He took back Ingeborg, if not as his wife, yet as his queen,
        and she kept her royal rank until her death in 1223. His motive was probably a
        fresh desire to conquer England. Otherwise he would have continued to flout the
        papacy as he had flouted it for twenty years, even in a grave matter where he
        was wholly in the wrong.
         Innocent’s relations with England must now claim our
        attention.
         In 1206 a vacancy occurred in the see of Canterbury,
        and the right to choose a new archbishop was disputed between the bishops of
        the province and the monks of the monastery of Christchurch. King John thrust
        in a man chosen by himself. Innocent then took the matter into his own hands
        and with rare discernment appointed Stephen Langton, a prebendary of York,
        educated in Paris. John resisted, with the result that the country was laid
        under an interdict. The king himself was excommunicated in 1209, and in 1212
        declared to be deposed. John was now afraid of Philip Augustus, who had patched
        up his quarrel with the Danes. He therefore accepted Stephen Langton and
        surrendered his kingdom to the Pope. He received g back as a papal fief and
        agreed to pay the Pope an annual tribute. So far Innocent's triumph was
        complete. Still chafing under the conviction that the English barons intended
        to demand reforms which he was not ready to grant, John sent an embassy to the
        Emir of Morocco, though it is doubtful whether he did, or did not, offer to
        embrace the religion of Muhammad. Reduced to temporary impotence by the defeat
        of his army at Bouvines in France, he signed in 1215
        Magna Carta, which was in fact a treaty between himself and his own subjects,
        in which the liberties of all classes were secured. John was frantic with
        vexation, fortified his castles, garrisoned them with mercenaries, and procured
        from the Pope letters excommunicating his enemies. The excommunication was
        published, Langton left England, and John seized the estates of his see. The
        Pope sharpened his sentence of excommunication by excommunicating the rebel
        lords by name, and his legate, Gualo, forbade Louis,
        son of the King of France, to invade England. Louis defied the Pope, landed in
        Kent, and gained many strong adherents. The whole country was torn with strife
        until John, who is said to have surfeited himself with peaches and ale, died of
        dysentery and fever after sending a letter commending his children to the new
        Pope, Honorius.
   John was succeeded by his son Henry III. Pope Honorius
        III was bound in honor and self-interest to protect him. The new King of
        England was crowned without delay at Gloucester, where he did homage to his
        suzerain the Pope in the person of Gualo, and in
        1220, by the Pope's directions, he was crowned at Westminster by Stephen
        Langton. Henry lived to rebuild the abbey church of Westminster almost as it
        stands today, and erected within it a gorgeous shrine for Edward the Confessor.
   Langton is one of the great figures of this crucial
        period. He was learned and sincere, essentially English in his combined love of
        law and love of liberty. It is to Langton more than any other man that England
        owes the great charter of her freedom. And his resolute attitude towards the
        king had a parallel in his opposition to the Pope, who in vain commanded him to
        excommunicate the barons who curbed the king's injustice.
         To exterminate heresy in the south of France was among
        the great desires of Innocent III. He has been denounced for inaugurating a
        crusade of Christians against Christians. But the Cathari cannot fairly be
        described as Christians, and Innocent at least showed that he preferred
        persuasion to persecution. In 1194 the powerful Raymond VI became Count of
        Toulouse. His morals were entirely Oriental and he was probably indifferent to
        all creeds, but he openly favored the Cathari, and was said to have allowed his
        son to be brought up in their tenets. Among the clergy there were a few like
        Azevedo, Bishop of Osma, and Dominic, the subsequent founder of the Dominicans,
        who tried to combat heresy by fervent preaching, and by lives of apostolic
        hardship. Others like Folquet, Bishop of Marseilles,
        and a papal legate, Pierre de Castelnau, were in
        favor of harsher measures, and these measures the Pope was ultimately persuaded
        to adopt. Folquet became Bishop of Toulouse in 1206.
        Pierre excommunicated Raymond VI, and in revenge a squire of the count mortally
        wounded the legate in January 1208. Pierre, after praying to God to forgive his
        murderer, received the Holy Communion and died the next day at dawn. Innocent
        was deeply moved when he heard the news, and took the solemn step of renewing
        the excommunication of Raymond, absolving his subjects from their oath of
        allegiance and giving to all Catholics the right to pursue his person and
        occupy his lands.
   Raymond bent beneath the storm. He was ready to accept
        the hardest conditions imposed by the Pope. He surrendered seven castles, took
        an oath to expel the heretics, and submitted to being led, naked to the waist,
        by a papal legate into the church of Saint-Gilles, where he was first thrashed
        and then absolved. This dramatic scene was enacted on June the 18th, 1209. But
        it was too late to save Languedoc. An army of Catholics from northern and
        central France with a throng of bishops and Simon de Montfort, Earl of
        Leicester, had assembled at Lyons and in July the war began.
         The first triumph of the invaders was the capture of
        Beziers, a town belonging to Raymond Roger, a patron of the heretics, like the
        Count of Toulouse. Men, women, and children were massacred without mercy.
        Castle after castle and town after town fell before the fanatical crusaders,
        who manifested peculiar joy whenever there fell into their hands one of the
        so-called Perfect, the highest caste of the Cathari. Many of the victors
        returned home after they had fulfilled their vow of fighting for forty days.
        Others remained, some of them hoping to settle in a promised land nearer than
        the Jerusalem sought by the soldiers of previous crusades. By 1215 the
        independence of Languedoc was a thing of the past, the country was under a new
        government, both military and sacerdotal, and the common people accepted a
        regime which at least was some protection against the feudal anarchy from which
        they had previously suffered. Innocent did not behave with the same bitterness
        as his legates. He received the unfortunate Raymond at Rome and showed the same
        consideration towards his son and his ambassadors.
         The almost world-wide power of Innocent III was
        demonstrated in 1215, when he convened the fourth Lateran Council, reckoned by
        the Roman Catholic Church as the twelfth Ecumenical Council. It was attended by
        plenipotentiaries of the emperor and of many kings and princes. There were 412
        bishops and some 800 priors and abbots. The extraordinary personal ascendancy
        of the Pope was shown by the fact that though the states represented were
        vitally concerned with some of the business transacted, the vast assembly did
        not discuss, but simply endorsed, what the Pope decreed. The seventy decrees
        began with a confession of faith directed against the Cathari and the
        Waldensians. The first chapter contains the following important statement in
        regard to transubstantiation:
         “There is one universal Church of the faithful,
        outside which no one at all is in a state of salvation. In this Church Jesus
        Christ himself is both priest and sacrifice; and His body and blood are really
        contained in the sacrament of the altar under the species of bread and wine,
        the bread being transubstantiated into the body and the wine into the blood by
        the power of God, so that, to effect the mystery of unity, we ourselves receive
        of that which is His, what He himself received of that which is ours. And
        moreover, no one can consecrate this sacrament except a priest who has been
        duly ordained according to the keys of the Church, which Jesus Christ himself
        gave to the apostles and their successors”.
         Students of medieval theology will observe that this
        statement is much more restrained than some other statements found in medieval
        writers, for it contains nothing that suggests a material presence of Christ
        and does not definitely assert that only the “accidents” of bread and wine
        remain when transubstantiation has taken place.
         The Council further declared it to be the duty of
        every Christian, of either sex, who had arrived at years of discretion, to
        confess sins at least once a year and to receive the Eucharist at least at
        Easter. Laymen were to confess to their own priest, but with his permission
        they might have recourse to a 'discreet and cautious' priest outside. Severe
        penalties were threatened in the case of a priest who betrayed any secret
        confided to him in confession. Such a one was to do perpetual penance in a
        strict monastery. The Lateran Council of 1215 thus makes a milestone in the
        history of the Church's penitential system. For it shows the whole Western
        Church definitely accepting what had for some time been the common custom both
        south and north of the Alps, the custom of private confession and private
        absolution with the priest as the minister of reconciliation. The public
        features of the older Western, and specially Roman, system disappear, and the
        confession is made before a priest, and not necessarily before a bishop or a
        priest who is the bishop's special delegate. The newer method first took its
        origin among the Celtic Christians of Great Britain and Ireland, so it was from
        northern Europe that Rome learned the value of private and recurring
        sacramental confession.
         The far-reaching nature of papal rule at this period
        can be illustrated from every quarter of ecclesiastical life. The power of the
        metropolitans was weakened and their dependence upon Rome continued to be
        proclaimed by their wearing round their necks the pallium without which they
        could exercise no jurisdiction. The papal recommendations to vacant sees
        (Preces, whence those so recommended were called Precistae)
        were, from the time of Innocent III, changed into Mandata.
        The right of confirming all episcopal elections was claimed by Alexander III.
        The authority of the bishops was reduced by papal absolutions, dispensations to
        break Church rules, and the right of canonization which Alexander III, in 1181,
        claimed as an exclusively papal prerogative. The popes were represented abroad
        by legates who were charged with diplomatic negotiations, visitations of
        churches, and the function of presiding at provincial councils. The Roman
        Curia, which embraced the various tribunals and departments for dealing with
        the general business of the Church, deriving its authority from the Pope,
        increased in bulk and importance. The cost of maintaining it was enormous, and
        had to be defrayed by the fees levied for the granting of the pallium,
        confirmation of elections, dispensations, and the more ordinary offerings such
        as Peter's pence.
   In the meantime the decisions already given by the
        popes were gathered into a body of doctrine and promulgated as laws for the
        Christian world. Innocent III, Honorius III, and Gregory IX employed their
        jurists to collect the more important of these rulings, and Gregory's decrees
        became 'the definite repository of the canon law'.
         The Pope was therefore the supreme legislator, as he
        was the universal judge, of what was in Western Christendom acknowledged to be
        the entire Church of Christ. He was an absolute monarch, the indispensable head
        of the episcopate and of the Church itself. The doctrine of papal
        infallibility, if not already contained in germ in the action of the popes, is
        plainly akin to the whole idea of an absolute papal monarchy. St. Thomas
        Aquinas, the greatest theologian of the Middle Ages, taught that the Pope, when
        giving his decisions as head of the Church, is infallible. Thus infallibility
        in practice came to be followed by infallibility in dogma, though the dogma had
        to wait several centuries before it was finally accepted.
         The age of Innocent III, a period of political,
        social, and religious ferment, became focused in the lives of St. Francis and
        St. Dominic, the founders of the mendicant orders.
         Francis was born in or near 1182, the son of Pietro Bernadone, a rich cloth merchant of Assisi, and of Pica,
        his wife. Pica is said to have been a native of Provence, and from her it is
        most probable that Francis derived his love for France, and some knowledge of
        the sects which criticized the wealth and luxury of the Church. With great
        refinement of manners he united a love of music and song, and he delighted in
        all the works of God, sun and moon, flowers and birds. After a year as a
        prisoner of war in Perugia, he had a long illness, and when convalescent found
        to his wonder that he could no longer feel his former joy in the scenery of
        Umbria, the Eden of Italy. He began to be silent and absent-minded; and we hear
        of his meeting with a leper, hearing a voice from a crucifix in a ruined
        church, leaving his father's house, and appearing as a beggar amid a jeering
        crowd in the streets. His father was furious with vexation, and father and son
        appeared together in the bishop's court to decide the right to certain moneys
        which belonged to Bernadone, but had been
        appropriated to pious uses by his son. The bishop naturally decided against
        Francis, who not only paid back the moneys but at once stripped off his clothes
        because his father had paid for them. In this scene Dante discerned the
        espousals of the saint with Poverty, his bride. But he had as yet no clear
        views as to what his work should be.
   He fixed his home near the lonely chapel of Santa
        Maria della Porziuncula,
        'the little portion', which was to become the birthplace of his order. And at
        Mass on a day in February 1209 he heard the words of the Gospel, 'Provide
        neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses, nor scrip for your journey,
        neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves.'
   He went back to Assisi and preached in the streets. He
        won disciples immediately, men who, like himself, sold all that they had and
        gave to the poor. When they numbered twelve they went to Rome and Pope Innocent
        III gave his verbal sanction to their rule. The Pope was cautious, but the
        evident earnestness of Francis and his companions overcame his scruples. They
        returned to Umbria and wandered about the country, preaching and singing,
        working in the fields for food, or begging when no wages were paid to them.
        They possessed nothing but the rough clothes that they wore. Not even a book
        was allowed them, for books were costly things.
         In 1212 a young and noble lady of Assisi, Clara Scifi, left her father's house and fled to the Porziuncula. She put herself under the direction of Francis
        and became the founder of the order of Poor Clares.
        No one understood him better, and she was his firm friend until he died, and
        his body was brought to her convent to receive the last farewell of herself and
        her sisters. Happy in the friendship of St. Clara, he was no less fortunate in
        the support which he received from Cardinal Ugolino.
        This eminent canonist became the 'Protector' of the order, and it was probably
        he who suggested a better organization of it, including the institution of
        separate 'provinces' with 'ministers' over them. Leaving two vicars to exercise
        his authority during his absence, Francis went to the East, and in 1219 had his
        famous interview with the Sultan of Egypt near Damietta. The sultan was not
        unfriendly, and wished to give him presents, which were declined by the
        intrepid missionary. Before returning to Europe Francis planted the first
        Franciscan colony in the Holy Land. Shortly afterwards he resigned the
        generalship of the order in favor of Elias of Cortona, a resolute and prudent
        guide.
   Ugolino gave a fresh proof of his wisdom by supporting the Third Order of lay people
        who lived in the world but did not desire to be of the world. It was an
        admirable means of reviving Christianity among the classes which were most in
        danger of being alienated from the faith. Men and women were able to go about
        their ordinary work, undertaking certain duties which bound them to one another
        and to the Church, and filled them with a new enthusiasm. The success of this
        institution was so great that it can hardly be measured: in a few years' time
        half of Christendom was penetrated by the lives of people who had a sense of
        the Gospel message, and while they were servants of the Pope they were also
        witnesses to Christ. Francis revised his rule in 1221 and again two years
        later, inflexibly maintaining his opposition to the possession of books by any
        member of the order. He took the draft to Rome and submitted it to Pope
        Honorius III, who solemnly approved it, though the nature of holy poverty was
        left undefined, and a cause of serious trouble was thereby bequeathed to future
        times.
         The Christmas after his rule was finally settled he
        was in the hermitage of Greccio, when he instituted the simple and touching
        Christmas custom of having a representation of the manger, the 'crib', of the
        Babe of Bethlehem. The next August, in the still wilder retreat of Alvernia,
        after a prolonged season of loneliness and meditation, he saw the vision of the
        seraph crucified, and began to bear in his body the 'stigmata' of the five
        wounds of the Redeemer. The fact that he was thus marked appears to be beyond
        dispute, and is corroborated by modern cases of a similar character. Suffering
        alike from great weakness and failing eyesight, he set out to visit a physician
        at Rieti. On his way he stopped at San Damiano to see Sister Clara, and after a
        night of acute suffering he uttered his most famous song, the 'Canticle of
        Brother Sun'. He was carried to Rieti, to Siena, and to Assisi. There he bade
        two brothers sing that last Canticle, but he interrupted their words with the
        142nd Psalm, and died after blessing the brothers, bidding them to love God and
        poverty and 'to put the Holy Gospel before all other ordinances'. The day was
        October the 3rd, 1226.
         It is doubtful whether any other man did as much as
        Francis to rescue Christianity from being submerged by utter worldliness and by
        fantastic heresies, and his secret lay in his complete devotion to Jesus Christ
        and in his love of every person and everything that God created.
         The unique place which St. Francis has always occupied
        in the affection and piety of the Christian world has tended to obscure the
        fame of his great contemporary, St. Dominic.
         St. Dominic was born in 1170 at Calaroga in Old Castile. After spending several years in study at Palencia, he was
        ordained and became a canon in the cathedral church of Osma. The bishop
        persuaded his canons to follow the rule of St. Augustine, and Dominic soon
        became the prior of the cathedral community of Augustinian canons. He repaired
        to Rome with his bishop and was charged by Innocent III with the duty of
        preaching to the Albigenses in Languedoc. He devoted himself to this work for
        about ten years (1205-1215). The fundamentally destructive character of the
        Albigensian heresy, and the devastating war by which it was exterminated, have
        been already described. It remains to be added that, although he was on good
        terms with the ruthless Simon de Montfort, there is no proof that Dominic acted
        as Inquisitor during the Albigensian war, or that he abandoned his spiritual
        campaign against the heretics to take part in the crusade. His method was to
        travel about the country on foot and barefooted in utter poverty, preaching,
        teaching, and disputing. He made a considerable number of converts, but by no
        means as many as he desired. And his last sermon in Languedoc threatened that
        blows might avail where blessings had accomplished nothing.
         The order of Dominicans, the 'Preaching Friars', grew
        out of a band of volunteers who had joined him in his work among the
        Albigenses. He became filled with the idea that this band might grow into a
        body of men specially devoted to preaching. The idea was fostered by the Bishop
        of Toulouse, and in 1216 Pope Honorius III gave his full sanction to the plan.
        Two general chapters held at Bologna in 1220 and 1221 gave the order a definite
        form. A special dress was adopted, a white woolen habit with a black cloak, the
        rule of the Augustinian canons was blended with that of the Premonstratensians,
        the order was divided into provinces, each under its own provincial, and all
        under a supreme master-general residing in Rome. At the desire of St. Dominic,
        and in direct imitation of the Franciscans, it was determined that the poverty
        of the friars should not be merely individual poverty, as among the monastic
        orders, but corporate. The order was to have no possessions except its
        buildings, it was to be a mendicant order, living on charity and by begging.
         Dominic died in 1221, having never been able to
        fulfill his desire of preaching to the Kuman Tatars on the Dnieper and the
        Volga. But his friars spread rapidly, first through the Latin countries, then
        to the Slavonic countries, and soon into Greece, Palestine, and central Asia.
        St. Hyacinth, a Pole received by St. Dominic, travelled in Tibet and northern
        China, and in the fourteenth century the Dominicans had missions in China,
        Persia, and India. They were in Oxford in 1221, and by the end of that century
        had fifty friaries in England. The name of Blackfriars in London, like the name
        of the Franciscan Grey-friars in Edinburgh, testifies to the former activity of
        the mendicant orders in our cities. The scholastic organization of the
        Dominicans is inseparably connected with their work in and beyond Europe. They
        quickly established in their different provinces veritable schools of
        arts—logic, natural science, ethics, and politics. To their initiative in this
        direction the Dominicans owed their predominance in culture. From the first
        their theology bore a philosophic stamp, and they produced the most famous
        philosophers of the thirteenth century. The general chapter of 1236 gave an
        impulse to the study of Oriental languages by ordering that in all provinces of
        the order the languages of the country must be learned. In this way Greek,
        Arabic, and Hebrew were studied. The Dominicans also took a preponderating part
        in the life of the great European universities. In some cases the Dominican
        schools of theology were simply juxtaposed to the universities which did not
        possess a theological faculty, and later these universities included the
        Dominican schools, as had been previously done by Paris and Oxford, which had
        faculties of theology before the Dominican order was founded.
         In St. Francis and St. Dominic the religion of
        authority met and espoused the religion of the spirit.
             
         CHAPTER XII.
        THE THREE RELIGIONS IN SPAIN
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