READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
ITALY AND HER INVADERS.BOOK IX. THE FRANKISH EMPIRE.
CHAPTER V.POPE AND EMPEROR.
To a student of the life of Charles the Great the question will
sometimes suggest itself whether his connection with the affairs of Italy and
the Church of Rome brought him more of gladness or of vexation. Often when his
head was already weary and his hands over-full with the care of his long wars
against the heathen, there would come some message from over the Alps which
seemed to cause his cup of bitterness to overflow. Even such a message came to
him in the spring of 799; a rumour of terrible deeds done in Rome, which was
followed in July by the actual appearance in his camp at Paderborn of a ghastly
figure, the successor of St. Peter, the most venerated person in Western
Europe, with bloodshot eyes, with pallid face, with mutilated tongue which
could scarce speak the customary words of blessing. What barbarous hands had
inflicted such cruel wounds on the holy Pope of Rome? Not the hands of “unspeakable
Lombards,” nor even of tyrannous Byzantine officials, but the hands of his own
Romans, of ministers of his Church, brought up in the shadow of the Lateran. To
understand what had happened we must go back rather more than three years to
the day after the death of Hadrian.
Leo III, who on the 27th of December, 795—only two days after the
decease of his predecessor—was raised to the vacant throne, was by birth a
Roman His education had been purely ecclesiastical, and through the
incense-smoke of the conventional praises of the biographer we may perhaps
discern that he was an eloquent man, and eminent as an alms- giver, both from
his own funds and from those supplied to him by admiring members of his
congregation. He had passed through the grades of deacon and presbyter, and was
officiating as vestatarius when the unanimous
choice—so it is affirmed—of the nobles, clergy and people of Rome raised him to
the pontificate.
One of the earliest cares of the new Pope was to write to the Frankish
king assuring him of his humble obedience and promising fidelity to his person.
Charles replied in a letter brought by the ‘Homeric' Angilbert, in which he
condoled with the Roman Church on the death of his “sweetest father Hadrian”,
mentioned the fact that he had intended to send some presents (part of the Avar
spoil), which, since too late for Hadrian, were now offered for the acceptance
of Leo, and desired the new Pope to confer with Angilbert ‘on all matters which
might seem necessary for the exaltation of the holy Church of God, the
stability of your honour, and the consolidation of our patriciate.
Both to Angilbert and to Leo himself Charles speaks of the necessity
that the Pope should obey the canons and show purity in morals, firmness in
faith, and honesty in his conversation. Viewed in the light of subsequent
events, this anxious care for the Papal morality suggests the thought that
Charles or one of his advisers, possibly Alcuin, had heard unfavourable reports
as to the stability of character of the eloquent and popular vestatarius.
One paragraph in this letter is so important as describing the
relation—in itself so hard to define—between Pope and Frankish King, that it
will be well to translate it literally : “For as I made a covenant of holy compaternity with your most blessed predecessor, so I
desire to conclude an inviolable treaty of the same faith and love with your
Blessedness, that by your prayers drawing down upon me the grace of God, I may
be everywhere followed by the apostolic benediction, and the most holy seat of
the Roman Church may be always protected by our devotion. It is our duty, with
the help of God, everywhere externally to defend the Church of Christ with our
arms from the inroads of pagans and the devastation of infidels, and internally
to fortify it by our recognition of the Catholic faith. It is yours, most holy
Father, with hands like the hands of Moses raised in prayer to God, to help our
warfare, so that by your intercession, by the gift and guidance of God, the
Christian people may everywhere and always win the victory over the enemies of
His holy name, and the name of our Lord Jesus Christ may be magnified in all
the world”.
This conception (which was also the Roman conception) of the duties of
the Frankish monarch towards the Church was aptly symbolized by the presents
sent him by Leo in announcing his own elevation to the pontificate. They were,
the keys of the confessio or crypt in which
reposed the body of the Apostle Peter, and the banner of the City of Rome. So
thoroughly united were now the two ideas of the Galilean fisherman and of the
City founded by Romulus. Probably, even to themselves, Hadrian and Leo would have
found it hard to explain how much they claimed on behalf of the one and how
much on behalf of the other.
At this day the pilgrim who visits the Eternal City may see the graphic
embodiment of these ideas in a mosaic the original of which was perhaps affixed
to the walls of the Lateran in the very year of Leo III's accession. On an
eighteenth-century building adjoining the Lateran church may be seen portrayed,
on a brilliant gold background, the gigantic figure of St. Peter, who dispenses
gifts to a suppliant on either side of him, men of smaller stature, as is
befitting for contemporaries when brought into the presence of the saints of
old. On his right hand kneels Pope Leo, to whom he is giving the pallium of
hierarchical pre-eminence; on his left, King Charles, wearing a moustache, and
with a curious conical cap on his head, to whom he gives the consecrated banner.
In the barbarous misspelled Latin of the time the Apostle is implored to give
life to the pious pontiff Leo, and victory to King Charles.
For certain reasons which are not very clear to us, the position of the
new Pope was a precarious one. Throughout his long papacy he seems always to
have been hated by a party among the Roman nobles. Possibly there was something
in his moral character which gave an easy handle to slander—it is not denied
that his enemies accused him of adultery and perjury— ; but again it
may be fairly argued that the scoundrels who mutilated his body would not
hesitate, if the occasion offered, to murder his good name. Certain it is that
the most conspicuous of his assailants were two men, nephews of the deceased
Pope Hadrian, one nomenclator and the other sacellarius in the Papal court, Paschalis and Campulus.
Let us look for a moment at the previous career of these two Papal
nephews. In a letter of Hadrian to Charles written in May, 778, we find that
‘our nephew Paschalis' is sent by the Pope to recall the citizens of Terracina
to their obedience. In two letters written a little later, Campulus,
bishop of Gaeta, appears as the informer concerning the machinations of the
Greeks and Beneventans. The name being not a very
common one, it seems probable that this was the same person as Hadrian's
nephew. Thus we have two men whose detestable deeds committed against the
venerated person of the Pope are about to be related, high in office in the
Roman Church and curia, and evidently placed there by the favour of their
uncle. Hadrian's own character must suffer somewhat for the ill deeds of his
kinsmen. Either he was himself unscrupulous in the promotion of his relatives,
or he was grievously deficient in discernment of character.
On the 25th of April, 799, the Pope prepared to ride along the street
which is now called the Corso, and forth along the Via Flaminia, in order to
celebrate the Greater Litany. This ceremony had taken the place of the old
Pagan Robigalia, and, like that festival, was
intended to implore the Divine Providence to avert rust and mildew from the
springing corn. As the Pope set forth from the Lateran palace, the primicerius Paschalis met him, and with hypocritical
courtesy apologized for not being robed in his chasuble. “I am in weak health”,
said he, “and therefore have come without my planeta”.
Doubtless the fact was that the heavy chasuble would have hindered the bloody
deed upon which his soul was set. The Pope gave him his pardon, and the two
conspirators, as if in lowly attendance upon him, and with words of treacherous
sweetness on their lips, followed in his train.
The procession was meant to go forth by the Porta del Popolo, cross over
the Ponte Molle, and wind round under Monte Mario to St. Peter’s. The chief
rendezvous for the citizens was the church of St. Lawrence in Lucina. At the
neighbouring monastery of St. Stephen and St. Silvester the main body of the
conspirators was assembled. They rushed forth and clustered round their two
leaders. The people who had assembled to view the procession, unarmed and
prepared only for a religious rite, dispersed in panic terror. Leo was thrown
violently to the ground; Paschalis stood at his head and Campulus at his feet; some of the ruffians in the crowd tried to cut out his tongue,
others struck him in the eyes, and then they dispersed, leaving the Supreme
Pontiff of Rome blinded and speechless in the middle of the Corso.
There was evidently a great lack of plan and purpose in the truculent
villains who did this cruel deed, and there is also a disposition on the part
of the Papal biographer to exaggerate the injuries inflicted on the unhappy
pontiff in order to magnify the miracle of his recovery. According to this
authority, the impious men, like veritable Pagans, returned to their victim,
and finding him still alive, dragged him to the confessio of the monastery of Stephen and Silvester, and there “again twice more
thoroughly pulled out his eyes and tongue, and striking him with divers blows
and clubs, mangled him and left him only half alive, rolling in his blood
before the very altar.” It is not easy to recover the exact details of this
atrocity, but on the whole it seems safe to accept the cautious statement of
some of the Frankish annalist that the conspirators mutilated the tongue of
their victim and endeavoured to blind him, but did not entirely succeed in the
latter operation.
The Pope was at first confined in the monastery of the two saints,
Stephen and Silvester, but fearing a rescue his captors conveyed him by night
to the monastery of St. Erasmus on the Coelian, a Greek foundation, whose
abbot, or (as he was styled) hegumenos,
appears to have been in league with the malefactors. While he was imprisoned
here, a miracle, according to the biographer, was wrought by the intercession
of St. Peter, and ‘he both recovered his sight, and his tongue was restored to
him for speaking'. Moreover, there was still some loyalty left in the servants
of the Lateran Court. The chamberlain Albinus, taking counsel with some
faithful friends, planned successfully his master's escape from the Greek
convent. He was let down the wall by a rope in the night-time, and being
received by his friends at the bottom was conveyed by them to St. Peter's. The
people, in whose hearts there was doubtless a reaction of pity towards the
victim of such a barbarous outrage, gathered round him, and in the familiar words
of the Psalter praised “the Lord God of Israel who alone doeth marvellous
things, the Lord who is the light and salvation of His people,” for the
deliverance granted to His servant. The conspirators, who felt themselves
baffled, were well-nigh ready to turn their arms against one another in their
rage and terror, but in fact accomplished nothing but the ignoble revenge of
sacking the house of the faithful Albinus.
Still Leo’s position in the great but unfortified basilica of St. Peter
was by no means free from danger. It happened however that Winichis, the brave
general who defeated the Greeks in 788, and who had since been made duke of
Spoleto in succession to Hildeprand, was now at St. Peter's in the capacity of
missus from King Charles. He had a band of soldiers with him, and marching at
their head he escorted Leo to the safe shelter of the Umbrian stronghold,
Spoleto. From thence in the early summer he set forth upon his journey to the
Frankish court, accompanied, says the biographer, by delegates—bishops, nobles
of Rome and provincial nobles— from all the chief cities of Italy. After
meeting first Charles’s arch-chaplain Hildebald and then his son Pippin, who
were sent to welcome him on to Frankish soil, he arrived, as we have seen, at
Charles’s camp of Paderborn about the month of July. He was received by the
king with all the usual demonstrations of reverent welcome, and he with his
large train of attendants had another camp pitched for them near the royal
tents. Apparently Charles reserved judgment on the charges brought against Leo
(for his opponents also found their way to the camp and persisted in their
accusations) until the matter should have been thoroughly sifted by a
commission sent for that purpose to Rome. But in the meantime king and
courtiers listened to the marvellous story of the miraculous restoration of
sight to the ruined eyes and the power of speech to the mutilated tongue, and
the Pope's ministrations were invoked for the consecration of the new church
which Charles had erected at Paderborn; an evident proof that Leo was still in
the eyes of his powerful protector the lawful pontiff. In the act of
consecration the Pope deposited in the altar of the church some relics of the
protomartyr Stephen which he had brought with him from Rome, assuring the king
that their mysterious efficacy would protect the church from a repetition of
the destruction which it had before frequently undergone at the hands of the
heathen.
Were the summer months of 799 during which Leo abode at the court of
Charles occupied by a negotiation between the two heads of Christendom, the
result of which was that Leo was restored to the pontificate on imperial
condition of raising Charles to the Imperial throne? That is an assertion which
has been sometimes made, but it rests on mere conjecture; there is not a shred
of contemporary evidence in support of it; and, at any rate in the crude form
in which I have here stated it, the assertion lacks probability.
At the same time we may well believe that Leo during these months of his
abode at Paderborn perceived, what may have been hidden from him before, that
the learned men and the churchmen at Charles's court, with their heads full of
the literature and the memories of ancient Rome, true men of the Renaissance as
they were, had conceived the idea of reviving the old and genuine dignity of
Roman Imperator—something distinct from the spurious imitation of it which
passed current at Constantinople—on behalf of their mighty Frankish lord. Four
of the capital cities of the old Empire, Milan, Trier, Ravenna, Rome, already
recognized Charles as their master, while two only, Constantinople and
Nicomedia, remained to the ‘Greek' Emperors. The extent of old Imperial territory
which owned the sway of the Frank was enormously larger than the dwindled
heritage of the East over which Irene ruled, and there were great and fair
territories in central Europe which Varus and Drusus had failed to conquer, but
which Charles, the enlarger of the Empire had won for civilization. All these
arguments were doubtless often urged in the halls of Aachen and by the
camp-fires of Paderborn ; and Charles probably listened to them, pleased but
not convinced by his courtiers' zeal for his exaltation.
We have seen that Angilbert had already used the epithet ‘Augustus' of
his royal master; but it is in Alcuin's correspondence that the word Empire
first clearly emerges. He had received a somewhat languid invitation from
Charles to repair to the court and meet the apostolic exile. But, happily for
us, the invitation did not appear to him to be a sufficiently direct command to
make it necessary for him in his feeble state of health to undertake the
journey from Tours into the troublous regions of
Saxon-land. To this feeling of slightly offended dignity we probably owe the
fact that at this critical period of Charles's career we are able to trace in
Alcuin's correspondence the advice given to the king by his chief counsellors.
In one very important letter written by ‘Flaccus Albinus’ to ‘the
peaceful king David’ immediately after the receipt of the tidings of the
outrage in the streets of Rome, Alcuin says:
“Hitherto there have been three persons in the world higher than all
others. One is the Apostolic Sublimity which is accustomed to rule by delegated
power the seat of St. Peter, Prince of Apostles. But what deeds have been done
to him who was ruler of that see your worshipful Goodness has deigned to inform
me.
“The next is the Imperial Dignity and secular power Emperor, of the
Second Rome. How impiously the Governor of that Empire has been deposed, not by
strangers, but by his own people and fellow-citizens, universal fame hath
abundantly reported.
“The third is the Royal Dignity, in which the providence of our Lord
Jesus Christ hath ordained you for the ruler of the Christian people, more
excellent in power than the other aforesaid dignities, more illustrious in
wisdom, more sublime in the dignity of your kingdom. Lo, now upon you alone
reposes the whole salvation of the Churches of Christ. You are the avenger of
crime, the guide of the wanderers, the comforter of the mourners, the
exaltation of the righteous.
“Have not the most flagrant instances of impiety manifested themselves
in that Roman see where formerly religion and piety shone most brightly? These
men, blinded in their own hearts, have blinded their own Head. These are the
perilous times formerly predicted by the Truth itself, because the love of many
is waxing cold.
“On no account must you forego the care of the head. It is a smaller
matter that the feet than that the head should be in pain”.
Alcuin proceeds to explain and expand this oracular utterance. Charles
during this year (799) was intent on one of his great campaigns against the
Saxons, sending his son Charles to harry Bardengau,
the old home of the Lombards, calling in the aid of Slavonic tribes beyond the
Elbe, planning extensive transportations of Saxons into Rhine-land and repeoplings of their country by Franks. All this work, even
when it is necessary—and here he repeats a previous warning against the
exaction of tithes from the Saxons—Alcuin considers to be comparatively
unimportant. It is at best healing the pain of the feet, while the whole head
is sick and the whole heart faint. The City of Home and the Church of Home are
the points to which he thinks that his patron's attention should be mainly
directed.
It may be said that in all this we have no direct mention of the
assumption of the Imperial title. This is true, but it is easy to see how
arguments like those employed by Alcuin would lead up to that result. If
Charles was already above the Emperor in power and wisdom, let him not be
afraid to assume at least an equality of rank with him. If Home was to be
firmly governed and the repetition of such outrages as that of the 25th of
April was to be prevented, let him take some title of more awful import than that
anomalous ‘Patriciate of the Romans’ with which for the last quarter of a
century he had been presiding over, but hardly guiding, the fortunes of Italy.
Above all, if he was to realize his great ideal of a foster-father, guide, and
protector of the Church, if he was to be the Constantine of this later age, let
him be called, as Constantine was called, Imperator Romanorum.
All these speculations and suggestions, however, might have remained
mere academical exercises but for the two events which had horrified the world,
and which had darkened the atmosphere of the New and the Old Rome. These two
events, the deposition and cruel punishment of Constantine VI, and the
mutilation of Leo III, concurring as they did in the last years of the eighth
century, facilitated, nay necessitated that other great event which fixed the
fate of Europe for centuries. That a woman—and such a woman—should pretend to
occupy the throne of the Caesars, that the Head of Western Christendom should
be attacked and halfmurdered in the streets of his
own capital, these were two portents which shocked the conscience of the world,
and which seemed to show that nothing less than a revolution, which should be
also a return to the elementary principles of the great World-Empire of Rome,
could cure the deep-seated malady of the age.
After a few months’ residence at Paderborn, Pope Leo set out on his
southward journey. He was escorted by a brilliant company, at once a guard of
honour for his person on the journey, and a strong commission to try his case
on their arrival in Rome. On this commission rode two archbishops, Hildibald of Cologne and Arno of Salzburg, five bishops,
and three counts.
On the 29th of November Leo re-entered Rome, amid vivid manifestations
of popular joy. The great ecclesiastics, the nobles, the body (whatever it may
have been) which now called itself the Senate of Rome, the little army of the Ducatus Romae, the nuns, the
deaconesses, all streamed forth to the Ponte Molle, with banners and with
psalmody, to meet the returning Shepherd and assure him of the joy of his flock
at his reappearance. There too were seen the members of the four great Scholae
or guilds of foreigners, Franks, Frisians, Saxons (from England), and Lombards,
who were now settled in Rome, and had quarters assigned to them between St.
Peter's and the castle of S. Angelo. All flocked with the pontiff to the great
basilica on the Vatican, where he celebrated mass, and all partook of the holy
feast.
Next day, after keeping the festival of St. Andrew, the Pope proceeded
in state through the City to the Lateran palace. Here, after an interval the
length of which we know not, Charles's ten commissioners took their seats in
the great triclinium, and for a week or more examined into the charges which
Paschalis and Campulus had brought against Leo,
declared them to be unfounded, and sent the accusers as criminals into
Frank-land, probably in order that the king himself might decide upon their
punishment.
About a year was to elapse before the return of Leo was followed by its
natural and all-important consequence, Charles's fourth visit to Rome.
In the first place, shortly after Leo's departure there appeared at the
Frankish court an ambassador named Daniel, who was sent by Michael, the
Patrician of Sicily, and who, having discharged his commission, was dismissed
with marks of high honour and favour by the Frankish king. This was in fact the
last of three embassies which had come in three successive years from the
Byzantine court, or from its representative in Sicily. In 797, a certain Theoctistus had come from Nicetas, governor of Sicily,
bringing a letter from Constantine VI, which was perhaps a cry for help from
the doomed Emperor. In 798, Michael, Patrician of Phrygia, and Theophilus, a
presbyter, brought a letter from Irene, apparently announcing her son's
dethronement, on account of the insolence of his manners, and her own
possession of the solitary throne. The object of this embassy was evidently to
strengthen Irene's position by forming an alliance with the Frank. It appears
to have been successful, and a sign of the restored friendship between the two
states was the return to Constantinople of Sisinnius, brother of the Patriarch
Tarasius, who had apparently been in captivity ever since the war of 788.
Lastly came the above-mentioned embassy, probably from this same Michael, now
promoted, to the governorship of Sicily. All these indications show that at
this time Charles was not unwilling to accept the olive-branch so persistently
tendered by the Augusta of Constantinople.
The autumn of this year (799) was saddened for Charles by the tidings of
the death of two of his bravest warriors, slain in battle with the barbarians
of the Danube. Gerold, duke of Bavaria, brother of the beloved Hildegard, was
slain with two of his officers by a troop of insurgent Avars, while he was
riding in front of his followers and cheering them on to the encounter; Eric,
duke of Friuli, fell at Tersatto, the victim of an
ambush laid by the barbarous Croatians. The scene of this disaster, together with
other indications, shows that Istria now formed part of the Frankish dominions
: an important conquest, to which we are unable to assign a date, save that it
must have been before the year 791. The death of Eric was an especially heavy
blow for his royal master. It was he who had penetrated (795) into the far-
famed and mysterious Avar Hring, and carried off its
stored- up treasures. He had been a generous benefactor to the Church, a
liberal almoner to the poor, and in all things, as far as we can trace his
actions, a type of the Christian hero. His friendship for Paulinus, bishop of
Aquileia, who composed for him a manual of the Christian life called Liber Exhortationis, and who lamented him after his death in
a dirge which recalls David's lament over Jonathan, is a beautiful incident in
an age of violence and bloodshed.
King Charles spent the winter of 799 at Aachen, and the other tidings
which were brought to him there were all of a joyful kind. The subjugation—as
men fondly hoped the final subjugation—of the turbulent Celts of Brittany, the
expulsion of the Moors from Majorca, the surrender of Huesca in Arragon, all these successes were reported to him in the
course of that winter. Not less welcome probably was the arrival of a monk from
Jerusalem, bringing relics and other offerings ‘from the place of the Lord's
resurrection', a present from the Patriarch of the Holy City to ‘the great King
of the West'. It was apparently on Christmas Day itself that the Syrian monk
was dismissed in all honour from the palace, escorted by another monk named
Zacharias, who was to bear the royal gifts to the Holy Place.
With the approach of spring, Charles left his palace at Aachen, sailed
down the Rhine or the Meuse into the German Ocean, coasted along till he came
to the mouth of the Somme, and there landed at the monastery of S. Riquier, of
which his irregular son-in-law Angilbert was head. The king's business in those
regions was to strengthen the defences of the coast, and equip some kind of a
fleet to repel the incursions of the Northmen, those terrible incursions which
were to stain with blood the pages of the next century and to destroy so much
of the infant civilization of the Anglo-Saxon and Frankish lands.
Again putting to sea, he sailed up the Seine to Rouen, and from thence
journeyed by land to the shrine of St. Martin at Tours. His avowed object was
to perform his devotions at the tomb of Gaul's greatest saint, but it cannot be
doubted that he also desired to converse about the affairs of his kingdom with
that trusted adviser, Alcuin, who was abbot of St. Martin's monastery. Some
months before, Charles had invited him to be his companion in the meditated
journey to Rome, but Alcuin had declined, alleging that his feeble body, racked
with daily pains, was unfitted for the fatigues of so long and toilsome a
journey. “You chide me”, he said, “that I prefer the smoke-grimed roofs of
Tours to the gilded citadels of the Romans : but I know that your Prudence remembers
the saying of Solomon, “It is better to dwell in a corner of the house-top than
with a brawling woman in a wide house.” And let me say it in all courtesy, iron
(the iron of warlike weapons) hurts my eyes more than smoke. Tours, thanks to
your bounty, rests in peace, content with her smoky homes. But Rome, which has
been once touched by the discord of brethren, still keeps the poison which has
been instilled into her veins, and thus compels your venerable Dignity to
hasten from your sweet abodes in Germany in order to repress the fury of this
pestilence”.
Since, then, Alcuin persistently refused to visit Charles, Charles
repaired to the monastery of Alcuin. It was indeed time that he should visit
the Neustrian portion of his dominions, for he had not seen them for twenty-two
years; so persistently Austrasian in his sympathies was this great king, whom
Napoleon and his courtiers loved to speak of as a Frenchman.
The king’s sojourn at Tours was prolonged by the illness and saddened by
the death of his wife, his last wedded wife, the bright and genial Liutgarda. She died on the 4th of June, and was buried near
the shrine of the soldier-saint. The widowed husband returned by way of Orleans
to Paris and Aachen, held a great placitum at Mainz in August, and in the
autumn started on his memorable fourth journey to Rome. He went at the head of
an army, for the affairs of Benevento wore a threatening aspect, the young
prince Grimwald again stirring mutinously against the Frankish yoke. We hear of
him first at Ravenna, where he tarried seven days, and then at Ancona, from
whence he dispatched his son Pippin on the usual ravaging expedition against
the lands of the Beneventans. On the 24th of November
he arrived at Rome. On the previous day the Pope had gone to meet him at Mentana, fourteen miles from Rome, and after partaking of
supper in his quarters, returned to the City for the night. On the morning of
the 24th Charles entered Rome, being received by the citizens, the
ecclesiastics, the guilds of foreigners, with the same display of banners, the
same chanting of devout hymns which had welcomed the returning Leo. At the foot
of the Vatican hill he dismounted and walked slowly up the steps of St. Peter's
(we do not hear, as on a former visit, of his kissing the sacred stairs), while
Pope and clergy sang loud their praises.
Seven days after Charles's triumphal entry into Rome a synod of all the
great Roman ecclesiastics and Frankish nobles was convened in St. Peter's
basilica. The Papal biographer, intent on all that redounds to the glory of his
order, bids us note that the King and the Pope, who were seated, called on the
archbishops, bishops and abbots to resume their seats, but that all the other
priests and nobles remained standing. The King then, with that fluent and
majestic eloquence of which he was master, set forth to the assembly the
Discussion reasons for this, his fourth visit to Rome, and the charges
necessity for a close investigation of the crimes urged against Leo by his
enemies. At this point there is a slight divergence between our two sets of
witnesses. The Frankish annalists say that the great initial difficulty of the
investigation was that no one was found willing to formulate the charges
against Pope Leo. Of course that might mean either (which is the more probable
supposition) that the charges were wicked fabrications, or that in face of the
royal favour manifested towards the Pope no one dared to come forward as his
accuser. The Papal biographer, on the other hand, tells us that all the
archbishops, bishops and abbots with one accord said, “We do not dare to judge
the Apostolic See, which is the head of all the Churches of God. For to it and
its Vicar all we are answerable, but the See itself is judged of no man. So has
the custom been from of old; but as he, the supreme pontiff, shall ordain, we
will canonically obey.” Then the venerable chief [Leo] said, “I will follow the
footsteps of the Popes my predecessors, and am prepared to purge myself from
these false charges which wicked men have blazed abroad against me.”
All our authorities agree that this self-vindicating oath was in fact
the sole event of the trial, if trial, it may be called. ‘On the next day at
St. Peter's all the archbishops, bishops and abbots, and all the Franks in the
King's service and all the Romans being present together in that church, the
Pope in their presence took the four gospels in his hand, ascended the ambo,
and with a clear voice said, “It hath been heard, dearest brethren, and spread
abroad in many places, how evil men have risen up against me and laid grievous
crimes to my charge. In order to try this cause, the most clement and most
serene lord, King Charles, together with his bishops and nobles, hath come unto
this City. Wherefore I, Leo, pontiff of the Holy Roman Church, being judged by
no man and constrained by none, of mine own free will do purify and purge
myself in your sight and before God and His angels, who knoweth my conscience, and before the blessed Peter, Prince of Apostles, in whose
basilica we stand; as thus : These criminal and wicked deeds which they lay
unto my charge, I have neither perpetrated nor ordered to be perpetrated; as
God is my witness, before whose judgment-seat we shall appear and in whose
sight we stand. And this I do of mine own free will, for the removal of all
suspicions; not as if any such procedure were found in the canons, nor as if I
would impose this custom or decree [as a precedent] on my successors in Holy
Church, or on my brothers and colleagues in the episcopate.” This solemn oath
of innocence having been sworn, the churchmen sang the litany and gave thanks
to God, the Virgin, and St. Peter.
In order to dismiss this mysterious business of the attack on the Pope's
character we may slightly anticipate the order of events. It was probably after
the lapse of several weeks that Pasehalis and Campulus and their associates, brought back from their
exile in Frank-land, were led into Charles's presence, with the chief nobles of
the two nations, Frankish and Roman, standing round them, and bitterly
upbraiding them for their evil deeds. The ruffians in their disgrace fell out
with one another. Campulus said to Pasehalis, ‘In an evil hour did I behold thy face. It is
thou who hast brought me into this peril'. And so with all the others : their
mutual chidings and upbraidings were a clear
confession of guilt. They were condemned to death as guilty of treason—an
important evidence of the sovereign character which the Pope of Rome had now
assumed—but on the intercession of the Pope the sentence was commuted into one
of banishment.
On the same day on which Pope Leo performed his solemn act of
self-exculpation, the presbyter Zacharias returned from Jerusalem with two
monks who were commissioned by the Patriarch to bring to Charles the keys of
Calvary and of the Holy Sepulchre, together with the banner of Jerusalem. The
precise import of this act was perhaps doubtful. Certainly the Caliph
Haroun-al-Raschid would not have allowed that it
conferred on the Frankish king any territorial sovereignty over Jerusalem.
Still it was in a certain sense a recognition that the holiest place in
Christendom was under the protection of the great monarch of the West, and in
so far it helped to prepare men's minds for the impending revolution.
An interval of three weeks followed, undescribed by any of our
authorities; but which we may fairly conjecture to have been occupied by those
deliberations between Frankish nobles and Roman ecclesiastics which are
described by the author of the Chronicon Moissiacense,
and which prepared the way for the next act in the drama.
At length the fullness of time was come, and Charles, attended probably
by all his Frankish courtiers and by a multitude of the citizens of Rome, went
to pay his devotions on the morning of Christmas Day in the great basilica of
St. Peter. That building has been often named in these pages, but I have not
hitherto attempted to describe it. If we would imagine its appearance at the
close of the eighth century, or indeed at any period before the beginning of
the sixteenth century, the chief requisite is absolutely to exclude from our
mental vision the vast Renaissance temple which Julius II and Leo X, which
Bramante and Raffaele and Michael Angelo have reared upon the Vatican hill. If
we must think of some still existing building, let it be S. Ambrogio at Milan
or S. Paolo Fuori at Rome rather than the existing
St. Peter's. Let us follow Charles and his nobles in imagination to the great
basilica on the morning of Friday, the 25th of December, 800. They mount up
from the banks of the Tiber by a long colonnade which stretches all the way
from the castle of S. Angelo to the threshold of St. Peter's. They
reverentially ascend the thirty-five steps to the platform, on which the Pope
and all the great officers of his household stand waiting to receive them.
Charles himself,
‘In shape and
gesture proudly eminent,'
with
his yellow locks tinged with grey and with some furrows ploughed in his cheeks
by the toils of twenty Saxon campaigns, towers above the swarthy, shaven
ecclesiastics who surround the Pope. All Roman hearts are gladdened by seeing
that he wears the Roman dress, the long tunic with the scarf thrown over it,
and the low shoes of a Roman noble instead of the high laced-up boots of a
Teutonic chieftain.
After the usual courteous salutations, the blended train of nobles and
churchmen follow Hadrian and Charles into the basilica. They traverse first the
great atrium, measuring 320 feet by 225. In the centre of the atrium rises the
great fountain called Pinea, the water spouting forth from the top and from
every bossy protuberance of an enormous fircone. This
fountain was placed there by Pope Symmachus, the contemporary of Theodoric,
who, like Leo III himself, was well-nigh
‘Done to
death by evil tongues.'
Round the fountain have begun to cluster the marble tombs of the Popes
of the last four centuries.
They pass on : they enter the basilica proper, consisting of five naves;
(the central nave much wider than the rest), divided from one another by four
rows of monolith columns. These columns are ninety-six in number2,
of different materials, granite, Parian marble, African marble; and they have
very different histories ; some, it is said, being brought from the Septizonium of Septimius Severus, and others from the
various temples of heathen Rome.
They are of unequal height; and not only this inequality, but many signs
of rough work, notwithstanding all the splendour of gold and silver plates and
the vivid colouring of the mosaics on the walls, give evidence of the haste
with which the venerable fabric was originally reared—men say by the order and
with the co-operation of Constantine himself—in the days when Christianity
could yet scarcely believe in the permanence of its hardly-won victory over
heathenism. Between the pillars of the central nave are hung (as it is a feast
day) costly veils of purple embroidered with gold, and at the further end of
the church the gigantic cross-shaped candelabra, hanging from the silver-plated
frame-work of the triumphal arch, with its 1,370 candles, lights up the gloom
of the December morning. This triumphal arch, which, with the long colonnade
leading up to it, was an essential feature of the early Roman basilica, is
doubtless adorned with mosaics of saints and martyrs, and spans the entrance to
the apsidal tribune, which is the very Holy of Holies of Rome. For here, before
and below the high altar, is the confessio or
subterranean cave in which the body of St. Peter, rescued from its pagan
surroundings, the circus of Nero and the temples of Apollo and Cybele, is
believed to repose in the coffin of gilded bronze provided for it by the
reverent munificence of the first Christian Emperor. Over the high altar rises
a baldacchino supported by four porphyry columns, and
by others of white marble twisted into the resemblance of vine- stems. Keeping
guard as it were in front of the confessio are
many statues of saints and angels. Here, as if in bold defiance of all the
edicts of iconoclastic Emperors, Gregory III has reared an iconostasis covered
with silver plates, on which are depicted on one side the likenesses of Christ
and His Apostles, on the other those of the Virgin Mary and a train of holy
maidens; and following in his footsteps Hadrian has placed near the iconostasis
six images, made of silver plates covered with gold. At the entrance of the
choir stands the image of the Saviour, with the archangels Gabriel and Michael
on either side of Him, and behind, in the middle of the choir, is the Virgin
Mother, flanked by the Apostles St. Andrew and St. John. All the floor of this
part of the basilica is covered with plates of silver. Behind, at the very end
of the church, is seen the chair of St. Peter's successor, with seats for the
suburbicarian bishops—the cardinal-bishops as they are already beginning to be
called—in the curve of the apse on either side of him.
The basilica proper, that is the part within the atrium, measured 320
feet by 226. The best idea of its dimensions will be obtained by comparing it
with the existing church of S. Paolo fuori le Mura at
Home, which is 306 feet long by 222 broad. That church also has its four rows
of columns, its triumphal arch adorned with mosaics, its confessio with a reputed apostolic tomb surmounted by a baldacchino borne by porphyry columns and guarded by apostolic statues, and behind the
triumphal arch it has its round apsidal end. Thus, notwithstanding its own
extremely modern date, it may both in size and arrangement be considered as the
best representative now available of the basilica of St. Peter at the end of
the eighth century.
One thing more we note in passing, that the St. Peter’s of Leo III was
about a century older than its modern representative, reared by Julius II and
Leo X and Paul III, is at the present day.
Such then was the great and venerable building, encrusted with memories
of half a thousand Christian years, in which Charles the Frank knelt on the
Christmas morning of the year 800 to pay his devotions at the confessio of St. Peter. Assuredly if he himself was
ignorant of what was about to happen, neither the Roman citizens nor the
Frankish courtiers shared his ignorance. Assuredly there was a hush of
expectation throughout the dim basilica, and all eyes were directed towards the
kneeling figure in Roman garb at the tomb of the Apostle.
Charles rose from his knees. The Pope approached him, and lifting high
his hands placed on the head of the giant king a golden crown. Then all the
Roman citizens burst into a loud and joyful cry : ‘To Carolus Augustus, crowned
by God, mighty and pacific Emperor, be life and victory'. Thrice was the
fateful acclamation uttered. Then all joined in the Laudes,
a long series of choral invocations to Christ, to angels, to apostles, to
martyrs, and to virgins, praying each separately to grant the newly-crowned
Emperor heavenly aid to conquer all his foes.
Thus the great revolution towards which for three generations the stream
of events had been steadily setting was accomplished. Once more an Emperor of
the Romans had been acclaimed in Rome, the first of that long line of Teutonic
Augusti, the last of whom laid down the true Imperial diadem in the lifetime of
our fathers at the bidding of the son of a Corsican attorney.
Thus far all our authorities are agreed. It is important now to notice
the points in which, without contradicting, they nevertheless diverge somewhat
from one another.
(1) The Frankish annalists
both assure us that after Lauds had been sung, Charles ‘was adored by the
pontiff after the manner of the ancient princes. The Papal biographer
conveniently omits this fact, which the Roman Curia did not desire to remember,
but there is no reason to doubt that it actually occurred, nor that such
reverence as the Patriarch of Constantinople would have paid to Justinian or
Heraclius, the Bishop of Rome paid to his now acknowledged lord, Carolus
Augustus.
(2) Theophanes
says that the Pope anointed Charles with oil from his head to his feet, and
arrayed him in a royal robe and crown. This thorough anointing, which would
have required that Charles should have been stripped naked in the sight of the
whole assembly, does not agree with any of the other accounts, and is in itself
improbable. It probably arose from some confusion with the next item of
information.
(3) The Papal
biographer informs us that ‘on the same day' (probably at a later hour) ‘the
Pope anointed with the holy oil his most excellent son Charles (the younger) as
king.' This, though not mentioned by the annalists, is quite intelligible. As
his predecessor had anointed Pippin king of Italy and Louis king of Aquitaine,
so he now anointed their brother Charles as king, probably king of the Franks,
that being a title which was perhaps left open for him by his father's
promotion to a higher dignity.
(4) His (The same
biographer mentions the costly gifts which were presented to the shrine of St.
Peter by Charles and his family, after the celebration of Mass which followed
the coronation. They were ‘a silver table with its feet' (whose weight is not
stated), ‘a golden crown with jewels to hang over the altar, a golden paten,
and three large chalices, one of them set with gems.' The mere gold in these
vessels weighed 216 pounds, equivalent in value to more than £10,000 sterling.
(5) A most
important statement, and one that has given rise to almost endless discussion,
is that made by Einhard in his Life of Charles:— “At this time he received the
name of Imperator and Augustus. Which he at first so much disliked, that he
declared that he would never have entered the church on that day, though it was
a high festival, if he could have foreknown the pontiff's design. He bore,
however, with great patience the odium that attached to him on account of his
new title through the indignation of the Roman Emperors.” And he vanquished
their stubbornness by his own far-surpassing magnanimity, sending to them
frequent embassies, and in his letters addressing them as brothers.
I reserve my comments on this important statement for a later paragraph.
The remainder of Charles’s visit to Italy may be described in a few
words.
The winter was occupied in settling the affairs of Charles's the State
and the Church in the new relations to one in Italy, another which resulted
from the re-establishment of the Empire. One of the most important of these was
that henceforward the consent of the Frankish Emperor was necessary for the
consecration of a newly elected Pope.
As Grimwald was still unsubdued, a second expedition was sent under
Pippin to reduce him to obedience, but it does not appear to have achieved any
decided success. Probably malaria, as well as the Lombard sword, defended the
independence of the Samnite duchy.
On Easter Day (April 4, 801) Charles was again in Rome. Three weeks
afterwards he visited Spoleto, where, in the second hour of the night, he
witnessed a tremendous earthquake which shook the whole of Italy and brought
down in ruin the roof of S. Paolo fuori at Rome.
From Spoleto he went to Ravenna, where he spent some of the early days
of May; from Ravenna to Pavia, arriving there about the beginning of June. In
the old palace of the Lombard kings he received the tidings of the arrival of
an embassy from the Caliph Haroun-al-Raschid. From
Pavia he went to Ivrea, and so over the Great St. Bernard to Switzerland, and
down the Rhine to his beloved Aquae Grani, where he spent the remainder of the
year.
Now that Charles has recrossed the Alps and sits once more in his palace
at Aachen, no longer now as mere Rex Francorum et Langobardorum and Patricius Romanorum, but as Augustus and Imperator, we may suitably
consider what were the causes and what was the significance of the peaceful
revolution—for such in fact it was—effected in the basilica of St. Peter on
Christmas Day, 800.
It is hardly necessary formally to discuss the theory which prevailed a
hundred years ago, that there was in this act an intentional revival of the
Western Empire which had lain dormant since the deposition of Romulus
Augustulus in 476. Doubtless this was something like the practical result of
Charles’s coronation. After an interval of suspense, uncertainty and mutual
suspicion, the two powers of East and West at last settled down into an
attitude, not of partnership, hardly of friendship, but of mutual toleration,
and accepted the Adriatic as the dividing line between the two Empires. And
yet, near two centuries later, a monk of Salerno writing the history of his
city, an Italian city, under the influence of strong anti-Frankish feeling,
could say, ‘The men about the court of Charles the Great called him Emperor,
because he wore a precious crown on his head. But in truth no one should be
called Emperor save the man who presides over the Roman, that is the
Constantinopolitan kingdom. The kings of the Gauls have now usurped to themselves that name, but in ancient times they were never
so called.
In truth the epithet ‘one and indivisible’ which the French Republic
used of itself when threatened by the armies of partitioning invaders, might
have been applied to the Roman Empire at any time previous to the ninth
century. There were jealousies and heart-burnings (as the readers of this history
know right well) between the East and the West, between Arcadius and Honorius,
between Leo and Ricimer; and sometimes these quarrels were on the point of
bursting into the flame of war. Still the wars thus threatened, like the wars
which were actually waged between Constantine and Julian or between Theodosius
and Eugenius, would have been regarded as civil wars. The great
earth-encompassing Imperium Romanum remained, at
least in theory, one, and no more convincing proof of its unity, of its
indestructible feeling of organic and all-pervading life, could be given than
was afforded by the marvellous reconquest of Italy by the generals of
Justinian.
We must then recognize the fact that the Pope when he placed the crown
on the head of Charles, and the Roman people when they shouted ‘Long life to
the most pious Augustus, great and pacific Emperor of the Romans,' were, in
theory at least, assailing the throne of Irene, and claiming for the great
Austrasian monarch dominion over all the lands, from the Pillars of Hercules to
the river Euphrates, over which the Roman eagle had flapped its wings.
This fact, that the assumption of the Imperial title was of necessity a
challenge to the court of Constantinople, the only Christian state which could
for a moment pretend to rival the Frankish kingdom in wealth and power, was
doubtless one reason (as Einhard implicitly assures us) for Charles's
unwillingness to be hailed as Augustus. For that this unwillingness was a mere
pretence, that Charles when he expressed his dissatisfaction with the ceremony
was merely copying the Nolo Episcopari of eminent ecclesiastics, seems to me both unproved and improbable. He was not
a spiritual ruler, nor expected to utter any phrases of conventional humility.
It may be true, it probably is true, that the subject of the change of his
title from Patricius to Imperator had often been discussed in his presence by
such men as Alcuin, Angilbert, and Leo himself ; and the proposal had probably
found a certain degree of acceptance in a mind such as his, which was always
inspired by large and lofty ambitions. But he saw, as perhaps Alcuin did not
see, the practical inconveniences of a permanent estrangement from the
Byzantine court. He may possibly have already entertained the strange project
of acquiring the Imperial crown by a matrimonial alliance with Irene. At all
events, he wished to choose his own time and way for the great revolution, and
saw with dissatisfaction his hand forced by the officiousness of Leo III and
the enthusiasm of the Roman people.
We may perhaps be enabled to understand a little better the state of
mind of the Frankish hero if we compare his position with that of Julius Caesar
when Marcus Antonius at the festival of the Lupercalia offered him a kingly
crown, or with that of Cromwell, when after much deliberation and many swayings of his mind backwards and forwards he finally
rejected the title of King offered to him by his Parliament. In both of those
cases there was much to be said in favour of the proposed change, and there
were strong reasons, quite apart from any motive of mere vanity or ambition,
why the foremost man in the state should accept the offered title. In both of
those cases the great man's adherents—not in mere flattery and courtiership— were more anxious than he himself for the
augmentation of his dignity. There also the statesman felt the obstacles,
invisible to the less highly trained perceptions of his followers, which made
the change a perilous one. The all-important difference between those cases and
this which we are now considering is that in them the negative arguments
prevailed, while with Charles the intervention of the sacrosanct chief of
Western Christendom, dispelled all doubts, ended all hesitation, and by
proclaiming the Teutonic Caesar fixed the form of European polity for centuries
to come.
This very intervention of the Pope was, however, in all probability one
of those circumstances of the revolution which made it unacceptable to the new
Augustus. If the thing had to be done—and probably he had made up his mind to
accept its necessity—he would have wished it done in some other way: by the
invitation of his Frankish nobles ; by a vote of the shadowy body which called
itself the Roman Senate (if such a shadow still haunted the northwestern
corner of the Forum); by the acclamations of the Roman people; or by all these
instrumentalities combined, but not by the touch of the Pontiff's fingers. He
foresaw, probably with statesman-like instinct, the mischief which would accrue
to future generations from the precedent thus furnished of a Pope appearing by
virtue of his ecclesiastical office to bestow the Imperial crown. And certainly
he did what in him lay to destroy the force of the precedent. No bishop of Rome
or of any other see presided over the ceremony when in 813 he promoted his son
Louis to the Imperial dignity. The mischief, however, was incurable. It became
the deep- rooted conviction of the Middle Ages that the Emperor, if he would be
an Emperor of unchallenged legitimacy, must receive his crown in Rome from the
hands of the successor of St. Peter. And not only so, but the absolutely
erroneous idea that the Pope had by virtue of his plenary power over states and
kingdoms transferred the Imperial dignity from Constantinople to Rome, was
adopted by one canonist and monkish historian after another, till it at length
found full and loud expression in the Decretal published by Innocent III in
1201, in which he upheld the cause of Otho of Brunswick as candidate for the
Imperial crown against Philip of Swabia. The story of the Translation thus passed
into the collection of the Decretals, and as part of the canon law of Europe
reigned supreme for three centuries, till at the time of the Revival of
Learning this fiction, along with the Donation of Constantine, the Decretals of
the false Isidore, and others like itself, came tumbling to the ground.
Truly is it said by Professor Dahn, ‘All the claims which were ever
asserted by the great Popes against the Emperors, their theory of the Two
Swords, the whole conception according to which the Pope as successor of St.
Peter, as representative of God upon earth, was entitled to grant or to refuse
to grant the Imperial crown as his beneficium to the German king (“Petra dedit Petro, Petrus diadema Rudolfo”); all this theory which makes the king the Pope's vassal in respect of
the Imperial crown, rests on that one ceremony in which the first Emperor
received the crown from the hand of the Roman Pope.
It is reasonable to infer that so far-seeing a statesman as Charles
perceived this cloud on the horizon of the future, and that his perception of
it had something to do with that enigmatic saying of his to Einhard, “Had I
known what Leo was about to do, I would never have entered St. Peter’s on that
Christmas morning.” There is also another consideration, scarcely noticed
hitherto, which, as it seems to me, may have rendered Charles averse to the
proposed revolution. He had three sons, Charles, Pippin, Louis. He intended
Louis to reign after him in Southern Gaul, Pippin in Italy and Bavaria, while
Neustria and Austrasia, the proper home of the Franks, with their old and
time-honoured capitals, Metz, Soissons, Paris, and the great Rhine-stream
itself, dearest of rivers to Charles’s heart, were all to be the portion of his
eldest son Charles, likest of all his children to
himself, who was undoubtedly to hold the predominant place in the royal
partnership. Presumably therefore Charles was to be the future Emperor, but the
city from which he was to take his title, the city which as Emperor he was to be preeminently bound to cherish and protect, would be
included in the dominions of a brother, perhaps of a rival. Here was a danger,
patent and obviously to be apprehended, though in the actual course of events
the lamentable death of both the two young princes, Charles and Pippin,
prevented its actual occurrence. We have, I think, no hint of the way in which
Charles himself proposed to deal with it, but it may well have been one of the elements
in the case which rendered him less eager than Alcuin and Angilbert to hear the
joyful acclamations of the Roman people, “Long life to Carolus Augustus.”
Of the other chief actors in the scene the motives are not so hard to
discover. The Frankish nobles and great churchmen doubtless felt their own
dignity exalted by becoming the servants of a Roman Emperor. The Roman people
seemed to regain the right, lost for nearly four centuries, of conferring by
their acclamations the title which gave to its wearer ‘the lordship of the
habitable world.' And as for the Pope himself, may we not consider that if he
renounced for the present his dream of establishing himself as the absolutely
independent sovereign of central and southern Italy, he saw his advantage in
the restoration of a strong Imperial rule which would make such outrages as
those perpetrated upon him by Paschalis and Campulus thereafter impossible? And still the consolidation of the Papal States would go
forward, though in theory he would have to hold them as a beneficium from the
new Augustus. In practice, who could tell, with that magnificent precedent of a
Pope-conferred crown, whether the relation might not one day be inverted, and
the Pope become, as Boniface VIII claimed to be, lord paramount of the Emperor.
CHAPTER VI.CHARLES AND IRENE.
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