THE
POPES OF THE
GREGORIAN RENAISSANCE
St Leo IX to Honorius II
1049-1130
THE
LIVES OF THE POPES IN THE EARLY MIDDLE
AGES
VOLUME IV
HORACE K. MANN
CONTENTS
St. Leo IX. (1049-1054)
Alexander II. (1061-1073)
ST. GREGORY VII. (1073-1085)
B. VICTOR III. (1086-1087)
B. URBAN II. (1088-1099)
PASCHAL I (1099-1118)
GELASIUS II (1118-1119)
CALIXTUS II (1119-11124)
HONORIUS II (1124-1130)
INTRODUCTORY CHAPTER
The century of papal history which it is hoped
will be illustrated by the following pages was the age dominated by the great
name of Hildebrand, and hence is often described as the saeculum Hildebrandicum. It was the age in which that
high-minded and pure-souled monk strove, either by his own exertions or by
those which he inspired, to promote that reform in the Church which had been
inaugurated by St. Leo IX. The efforts at reform took the shape of a determined
struggle against the triple scourge of simony, clerical incontinence, and the
tyrannical interference of the powerful in the domain of the Church, and were
at length focussed in the fight against lay investiture. But the attempt to
stifle this abuse which was begun under the saintly Pontiff from Lorraine, was
not destined to be concluded either in his reign, during which Hildebrand was
trained, or in those of his immediate successors who were under the influence of
Hildebrand, or in that of Hildebrand himself. It was not to be terminated till
the pontificate of Calixtus II; while the general contest between the Papacy
and the Empire which took its rise in this attempt at reform was to last till
the fifteenth century, and was, in the temporal order, to exhaust both.
The reforming zeal of the Popes of the school
of Hildebrand almost everywhere encountered the most stubborn opposition; so
deep-rooted were the evils they strove to eradicate, so dear were they to the
passions of the clergy, or to the interests of the great. And nowhere did they
meet with greater opposition than in Italy. If simony was rife in France, it
was worse in Germany, and worst of all in Italy; and if the spectacle of
married priests and bishops was not uncommon in other countries of Europe, it
was nowhere more obvious than in Italy, and especially in Milan and in Lombardy
generally. The reason of this is not far to seek. Though the Church OF Italy,
especially in its northern portion, had, owing to the power of its bishops, and
to the comparatively rare interfering visits of the German emperors, been free
to a very large extent from the royal oppression under which it groaned in
other countries, it had become thoroughly demoralized by the terrible anarchy
of the tenth century, and its bishops were, for the most part, as loose in
their morals as their secular compeers.
Though, then, the fight for independence and
reform upon which the Popes had entered was to be long and bitter, and was to
bring upon them a very large share of suffering from the Franconian emperors
and their contemptible antipopes, they were not to stand alone in the combat.
The words of such fiery champions of reform as St. Peter Damian must never be
taken too literally. There were always good priests and even good bishops, and
that too even in Italy, who were longing for a reformation in manners, and who
were only waiting for an opportunity to help to promote it. Especially were the
Popes supported by the religious orders, by the Camaldolese,
founded by St. Romuald (1009), by the Premonstratensians (1125), and especially
by the Benedictines, revivified by the reforms of Cluny and by those of the
Carthusians (1084), and of the Cistercians (1098), and producing from such
centres as Bec and Clairvaux men like Lanfranc and SS. Anselm and Bernard. They
were sustained also in their conflict against the powers of evil by men
deservedly conspicuous for their sanctity, by St. Peter Damian, by St. Bruno of
Segni, by St. John Gualbert,
with his order of Vallombrosa, and by St. Bruno with his Carthusians, who by
their silence and penitential life protested loudly against the disorders of
the age.
The era of which we are now about to write in
detail was an era not only of ardent work for reform, but of great and glorious
deeds, the soul of which was faith, both in the social and political as well as
in the ecclesiastical order. It was the age in which the Crescent began steady
decline before the Cross; it saw the birth of the Crusades, “the Lord's doing,
a wonder unknown to preceding ages and reserved for our days”. It was a time
wherein, owing to the spread of the work of the Truce of God, and then
to the departure of much of its warlike element to the East, there was, in
spite of feudalism, greater peace in Europe. Under its blessed shadow learning
at once revived.
Guibert, abbot of Nogent
(d.1124), assures us that “wandering clerklings
of modern times” are more learned than were the professed grammarians in
the time of his boyhood, or immediately before it.
Towards the end of the eleventh century French
and Provençal poetry made their appearance, and the parent of modern literature
is said to have been the Frenchman, William of Poitiers, the chaplain of
William the Conqueror. It was at the same period that the Moors in Spain began
their final retreat before the arms of the Christians. The great legendary hero
of Spain, Roderick Diaz de Bivar, the Cid, died in
1099, and it is far from unlikely that the Castilian Muse was, within fifty
years of his death, busy with the rich verses of the Poema
del Cid, or with the first of the mystery plays, the Misterio
de los Reyes Magos.
Side by side with the lighter forms of
learning, there sprang into activity the more serious figures of law and
medicine, philosophy and theology. As early as 1050 Salerno was known
throughout Europe as a great school of medicine, and by his studies on Roman
Law, Irnerius (c. 1113) was to render Bologna
forever famous as a primary fount of legal learning. And whilst he and his successors
in the teaching of Civil Law were to be partisans of the German emperors, and
by their study of the Digest and the other jurisprudence of Justinian
were to give intellectual support to their absolutism, Deusdedit
(who wrote in 1087) and the other canonists of the latter part of the eleventh
century, and particularly Gratian, with his immortal Decretum
(1142), were to give no little help to the cause of the Popes and to
civilisation generally. And if St. John Damascene and John the Scot are remote
ancestors of scholasticism, Roscelin (d. 1106),
St. Anselm of Canterbury, William of Champeaux (d.
1121), and Abelard (d. 1142) are its immediate parents. The ages wherein
men “had been content to gather up and reproduce the traditionary wisdom of the
Fathers” had passed away, and the powers of reason were to be used to inquire
into and to systematise the masses of theological truths grouped together by
the patient labour of Bedes and Alcuins.
The appearance of scholastic theology shows us
that this age possessed an increased scientific knowledge of God and of the
truths of God; the revival of art (manifesting itself in connection with church
building and decoration) which took place during it is evidence enough of an
increase of devout feeling for the things of God. In every country we find
architectural masterpieces arising which have excited the admiration of every
succeeding age that has itself been blessed with any degree of enlightenment.
What Raoul Glaber tells us of the remarkable increase
in church building during this epoch is abundantly borne out by what is known
of the history of the great European ecclesiastical structures. France saw
arising the great cathedrals of Autun (1060), Cahors (1096), Chartres (1108),
Evreux (1112), and Laon (1114), etc. In the country of her modern ally, the
erection of churches at Novgorod (1056), Kieff
(1075), and Pskof (1138) is recorded. In England most of our cathedrals date
back to this age, as in Scotland do Glasgow Cathedral (1123) and the abbey
churches of Kelso and Waverley (1128), and as in Ireland do St. Patrick’s
Cathedral, Dublin (1090), and King Cormack's Chapel in Cashel (1127). Many a
cathedral too in Germany, Spires (1061), Treves (1077), Worms (1105), Bamberg
(1110), and Hildesheim (1131), etc.;–Italy (Lucca and Parma (1060), Venice
(1063), Pisa (1064), Anagni (1074), Modena (1099), Cremona (1107), etc; and
Spain–(León (1063), Coimbra (1064), Santiago (1078), Avilla (1091)Salamanca
(1120), etc.)– can proudly trace back its origin to this remote period, as can
even Lund (1072) and Westaras (1100) in Sweden, and Roeskilda (1084) in Denmark. So great was the zeal for the
erection of magnificent churches that in many instances existing buildings were
pulled down in order that they might be rebuilt in what was regarded as a more
perfect style. It was to this impulse in this great period of Romanesque
architecture that we owe many of the existing Romanesque cathedrals. And just
as many a basilica had in this age to give place to a Romanesque cathedral, so
in the next many a Romanesque building, e.g., the Romanesque cathedral
of Chartres, was levelled to the ground that the present Gothic structure
might, on the same site, raise its noble front to the glory of God on High. But
beautiful churches were not the only buildings which graced the Gregorian
revival. It was distinguished by the erection of edifices of all kinds for the
benefit of the energetic, or the consolation of the suffering. And we find his
biographer noting with regard to St. John Gualbert (d.
1073) that he was a great bridge builder, and founder of hospitals throughout
the whole of Tuscany. The winter of the early Middle Ages, with its darkness
and its violent storms, had gone, and their springtime had come, instinct with
bursting growth and gladdened with fresh life, even if troubled with violent
winds and sweeping showers.
Turning our eyes from the West in general to
Italy, the more immediate field of papal labour, we are at once struck with the
fact that the three empires which, in the last epoch, were so vigorously
contending for the possession of its fair form, are now fading from its shores.
The power of the Saracen Empire declined everywhere before the close of the
tenth century. At the beginning of the eleventh century it had no permanent
centres of aggression on the mainland of south Italy, and was being taught by
bitter experience the might of the new maritime powers of Venice and Pisa. Even
its predatory incursions became less frequent as the century advanced.
The same age saw the disappearance from the
peninsula of the more disciplined troops of Constantinople. Their occupation of
southern Italy, begun by the capture of Bari in 876, was brought to a close by
their expulsion from it by the Normans in 1071. And if the rights of the German
Empire were not yet to be extinguished in northern Italy, the rise of the
people and of the communes or free burghs, which was to prove fatal to them,
had already begun; so that during this epoch southern Italy became rapidly more
and more Norman; northern Italy made steady advances towards becoming the land
of free cities; and central Italy, especially through the Donation of the
Countess Matilda, fell more than ever under the direct influence of the
temporal sovereignty of the Popes.
It is, however, owing to the great dearth of
documentary evidence, very difficult to say what was the precise extent of the
papal domination at the opening of this epoch. In theory at least the states of
the Church were as extensive as ever, and, by the junction to them of Benevento
(1051), might even seem to be actually, i.e., de facto, more extensive
than ever. But though it is true that Otho I renewed the donations of the
Carolingians, the effective control of the Popes over their states was rather
diminished than increased by that sovereign and his immediate successors. They
protected the Exarchate of Ravenna in the name of the Pope; and in their own
name, despite the protests of the Popes, disposed of its territories to men of
their own choice. Even in the Duchy of Rome, the power of the Popes, like that
of the other sovereigns of the West, was very largely controlled by the feudal
rights and customs which had been usurped by the nobility. And what had
befallen the sovereign claims of the Popes during Rome’s Dark Age had also, to
a very large extent, overtaken their ownership rights. Their privy purse had
become as empty as their State treasury. We have, or shall soon have, seen the
low ebb at which Stephen (V) VI and St. Leo IX found the papal finances. To
restore them we shall find the Popes of this period endeavouring to develop
comparatively fresh sources of revenue. During the century in which they lost
the patrimonies of the Church, the monasteries of Europe had begun to
pay them taxes in return for privileges and the English had set the example to
other countries of paying to the Popes the voluntarily imposed tax of Peter’s
pence. We shall see Alexander II and Gregory VII urging its regular payment on
William the Conqueror, as the former had already done on the King of Denmark.
We need not then begin to think of greed of gold or lust of power when the
efforts of Gregory and other Popes of this period to obtain money, or to extend
their regal authority, are brought to our notice. As little could be done
without money in the Middle Ages as now, and both gold and temporal authority
were required by the Popes if, especially in an age of violence, they were to
be in a position to exercise the charity of the priest, or to preserve in any
way the dignity and independence befitting the Head of the Church.
During the saeculum Hildebrandicum,
the position of the Popes improved not only from a pecuniary point of view, and
with regard to their real authority over their States generally, but also in
the matter of their control over the turbulent Romans. Owing to the collapse of
the Byzantine power before the arms of the Lombards, civil authority in Rome
had fallen into the hands of the Popes by default, and had practically remained
there during the seventh, eighth, and ninth centuries. But during the eighth
century, owing to the establishment of a local militia, a military aristocracy
had begun to be formed, which, of course, increased in importance when the
Popes became temporal rulers, and had more wealth and lucrative positions at
their disposal. This body, which had made its influence bear so heavily on the
papal government that, during the ninth century, the latter had had to appeal
to the Carolingian rulers for assistance against its encroachments, obtained
its own way completely when the Frankish Empire went to pieces. For a century
and a half the Roman nobles, with their fortress-houses in Rome, and their
great estates outside it, lorded it over the city, and reduced it and the
Papacy to the very lowest depths. But, partly broken by the Othos,
who re-established the prefect of the city as their representative, partly kept
in subjection by the firm hand of Hildebrand, who took away from them all
opportunity of interfering in papal elections, and partly checked by the
growing power of the people, who in the last years of this epoch (1143)
asserted their independence of both Pontiff and baron, the nobles had to give
way to the power of the Popes.
The first to benefit by the increased freedom
and wealth of the sovereign Pontiffs was the city of Rome itself. Under Paschal
II and Calixtus II not a few churches were repaired and embellished, and under
Innocent II we see a revival in mosaic work. Art never perished in Rome, even
during the dark days of the tenth century, but, helped by the Popes, it took during
this age a new development in the hands of the Roman marmorarii
or marble-cutters. For it was about the beginning of the twelfth century
that there began to be cultivated in Rome that beautiful geometrical
arrangement of pieces of coloured marbles which, from one of its later distinguished
artists, came to be known as Cosmatesque work. At once architects, decorators,
and sculptors, these Roman marmorarii formed a
guild which rose and fell with the prosperity of the Popes in Rome. It originated
during the twelfth century, did its best work in the thirteenth, and
disappeared in the fourteenth.
In enumerating the cities which led the way in
the revival of Italian art, Sir Martin Conway places Rome first, and adds that
in Rome during the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth centuries no inconsiderable
amount of interesting work was done, and, as just noted, was done under the
direction of the Popes. Building and artistic operations were almost forced
upon them owing to the necessity of repairing the damage wrought on the city by
the terrible fires that devastated it during the eleventh century or thereabouts.
It is the custom of historians to ascribe all the destruction inflicted on Rome
by fire during the eleventh century to that which took place in 1084, when
Robert Guiscard relieved Gregory VII. But we are informed that the city “was
almost wholly destroyed” by a fire which occurred about 993 that under Pope Leo
IX, on the feast of St. Eustachius, “a great part of
the city was burned”, and that in the days of Alexander II that portion of the
city was consumed by fire which stretched from the Parrione
quarter to St. Felix in Pincis. There was
need, then, of works of restoration before 1084, and that date was not awaited
to begin them. “The frescos of S. Clemente are certainly the foundation stone
of the revival of painting, and they date from Hildebrand’s time; so do those
of S. Pudentiana, which he restored, and those in the
Cappella del Martirologio at S. Paul’s. In fact,
Hildebrand undertook a radical restoration of this basilica and its annexes ...
It is even thought that the present monastic buildings and cloister of S. Prassede are the work of Hildebrand”. Of course, after the
year 1084, there was more need than ever of building and decorative activity.
Hildebert of Lavardin, who visited Rome in 1100,
gives us a sad picture of the state of ruin in which he found the city, but
suggests that all the resources of his time could not build anything equal even
to Rome’s ruins. “Rome was”, he says, and yet:
“Bid wealth, bid marble, and bid fate attend,
And watchful artists o'er the labour bend,
Still shall the matchless ruin art defy
The old to rival, or its loss supply.
No art can equal that which still doth stand,
No skill make good what lieth on the sand”.
It was in the days of Pope Paschal that
Hildebert came to Rome, and it was he who, during the few years of peace which
he had after the year 1112, “made the first attempts to rebuild the city ...
Modern researches are continually enlarging the scope of this brief activity”.
The labours of Hildebrand had prepared the way for him, and “there were artists
of a kind at his disposal when he began to attack his problem of renovation, to
tear down the half-ruined buildings, establish new levels and new lines of
streets, and lay the foundations of modern Rome, as it was until its
dismemberment by the Renaissance Popes, and its disruption by the Italians,
after the annexation in 1870. We know the names of a few of these artists:
Paulus, chief among his architects and decorators, Guido and Petrolinus among his painters”.
For many centuries the influence of the Bishops
of Rome over the churches of the East had been but small. And we have seen them
sever their connection with them (1053) by a stroke which was destined to be
final, and to be rapidly followed by the ruin of the Eastern Roman Empire. The
last period of its military glory came to an end before the close of the
Macedonian Dynasty in 1057, and the final bright epoch of its literary life,
inaugurated by Photius, expired with the school of Psellus
(d. 1078). Within twenty years after the legates of St. Leo IX
pronounced the excommunication of Michael Cerularius, the Byzantine Empire
received a blow from which it never recovered. By the battle of Manzikert, when
Alp-Arslan with his Seljukian Turks defeated the emperor Romanus Diogenes, the
Empire was broken. This was in 1071, and it was in the same year that the loss
of Bari deprived Constantinople of its hold on Italy. It was “utterly ruined”
by the Crusaders’ raid in 1204, “and from that time till the capture by the
Turks it was a feeble wreck”. But over both the schism of the Greeks and their
temporal misfortunes the Popes grieved. Their miseries overwhelmed them with
sorrow; and, as we shall see, they made one vain effort after another to heal a
gaping wound which for well-nigh a thousand years has refused to close.
Before this introductory chapter is brought to
a conclusion, a word or two may be said in connection with simony and clerical
marriage, of which mention will so frequently be made in the pages that are to
follow. In the Acts of the Apostles (c. 8) it is related that a certain Simon
Magus attempted to buy from St. Peter the power of bestowing the gifts of the
Holy Ghost. From this action of the magician the sin of giving or receiving any
temporal emolument in direct exchange for any spiritual profit became known as
simony. Gregory VII points out that the sin may be committed when other things
besides money or money value are given in exchange for what is spiritual.
Hence, for the sake of clearness, he divides what may be thus offered into three
classes, which he calls “munera (gifts)
a manu, ab obseguio, et a
lingua”. By the first he understands the giving of money or its worth; by
the second the offering of any kind of service; and by the third the promise of
the use of influence on the donor’s behalf. On the other hand, by the phrase
“things spiritual” is to be understood not merely what are such in themselves,
as the gifts of the Holy Ghost, but those temporal things which are closely
connected with them, as, for instance, the sacred vessels or the right of
patronage. It was, however, the grossest form of simony against which the
mediaeval Pontiffs had to direct all their energies, viz., the simony a manu, the simony of which the powerful were guilty when
they sold ecclesiastical offices to the highest bidder. There was comparatively
little question of the more refined varieties of the crime. Indeed, it would
seem that those rulers were regarded as free from simony who kept their hands
from taking money for the bishoprics and abbacies of which they disposed. Had
there been no question of the grosser simony (simonia
a manu), the Popes would not have convulsed
Europe on the subject.
Another abuse against which the Popes of this
period offered strenuous and successful opposition was that by which bishops
and priests took to themselves wives, and lived as married men. The custom had
crept in during the dread days of feudal anarchy, and in many parts of
Christendom was tolerated by public opinion. It would appear certain that in
the first ages of the Church, down to about the time of the great council of
Nice, there were no laws forbidding the clergy to be married; but even during
that epoch marriage was very early prohibited to those who had once taken Holy
Orders. This canonical discipline on the matter is that still in force in the
Greek Church, and in the East generally. But in the West a severer discipline
began to be introduced soon after the council of Nice, and, by the time of St.
Leo I (440-461), it was well-nigh universally recognised that all those in Holy
Orders were bound to lead a celibate life. However, after the breakup of the
Carolingian Empire, the laws both of the Church and of the State were largely
disregarded. Very many of the clergy married without, it would appear, giving
much or any scandal to the laity, and even transmitted their benefices to their
offspring. But during all this anarchical epoch neither the Church nor the
State ceased altogether to endeavour to enforce its laws, and, as soon as the troublous times began to pass away, the Church at once
commenced to re-establish its canons regarding the celibacy of the clergy. An
indulgence, however, which in many parts of Christendom at least, had been
sanctioned by long custom, was not likely to be surrendered without a struggle.
It required to suppress it not merely the exhortations of the most virtuous
among the clergy themselves, but the authority of the greatest of the Popes,
manifested in drastic legislation. This went so far that, during the course of
the twelfth century, the marriage of bishops, priests, deacons, and even of
sub-deacons was decreed to be not simply unlawful, but invalid. And this
discipline, enforced by the great reforming Pontiffs of the Gregorian
Renaissance, is that in vogue in the Catholic Church today.
Now that we have reviewed the arena in which
the Popes had to fight, have enumerated the foes against whom they had to
contend, and have reckoned those on whose help in the combat they could rely,
we must recount their deeds in detail. In reading them we must never lose sight
of the end for which the Roman Pontiffs were striving. It was for no other than
the moral upraising of both clergy and people. In the course of their struggle
to accomplish this all-important object, they may not have always used the best
means. In a long and fierce fight, supposing every effort is made to conduct it
properly, some deeds are sure to be done, even by the party that is fighting
for the right, which are not altogether creditable to it. Hence, in the history
of the hard contest between the Church and the Empire, we shall encounter some
things which would have been better either not done at all, or, at least, done
in a different way. But with the best and the most impartial writers who have
treated of this war of Titans, it may unhesitatingly be stated that the end the
Popes had in view was the highest, and that in the main their mode of
conducting the campaign for liberty, justice, and virtue was most fair and most
honourable, and was in harmony with the glorious cause for which they were
contending.
ST. LEO IX
(1049-1054)
To the great family which had
already given to the world St. Leger, a grandson of Charlemagne, and St.
Odilia, and was yet to give to it St. Norbert, the founder of the
Premonstratensians, and Rodolf of Hapsburg, belonged
Bruno of Egisheim. It was fitting that one who was
destined for such noble deeds, who was with honour to close the darkest period
of the history of the Papacy, and was to inaugurate the grand yet peaceful
Reformation of the eleventh century, should have such a noble origin. His
parents, Hugh, who was first cousin of the Emperor Conrad, and Heilewide, were distinguished by their piety and learning,
as well as by their illustrious descent. Wibert
assures us that the circumstances of Bruno’s birth gave promise of his future
holiness and greatness. One night, shortly before he was born, his mother had a
vision in which she was told that she would give birth to a male child who
should be great before God, and whom she must call by the name of Bruno. And
behold! when the child was born (June 21, 1002), its little body was marked all
over with tiny crosses. Here we may or may not be face to face with the supernatural;
for many most extraordinary cases have been recorded which show that the child
in the womb can be affected in the most wonderful way by powerful sensations
experienced by the mother? But whether in this instance there is or is not
question of the supernatural, there is no doubt that the faith and piety which
could so affect the body of the future Pope had no small share in producing the
grand character which Bruno afterwards developed
It was at the castle of Egisheim, near Colmar, situated on one of the advance
slopes of the Vosges, “on the borders of sweet Alsace”, that Bruno first saw the
light.
At five years of age the
little Bruno was entrusted to the care of Berthold, bishop of Toul, to be by
him trained and educated. This zealous bishop had not only reformed
monasteries, improved the trade of his episcopal city, and adorned it as well
with numerous public buildings as by gathering learned men within its walls,
but had also founded a school for the sons of the nobility. Here, under the
able guidance of the bishop, and with the aid of a naturally bright mind, Bruno
soon showed himself as superior in intelligence to most of his companions as he
already was in birth and wealth. But, though to these advantages Bruno added
grace of body, he was dear to his schoolfellows; for he did not allow himself
to be puffed up by his good fortune, but was affable and kind, and was at
everyone’s service.
In connection with his early
training two interesting stories have reached us. One is from the chronicle of
Saint Hubert d'Andain, one of the most remarkable
historical productions of medieval Belgium, which was composed about the year
1098. The Emperor Lothaire had presented to the abbey of St. Hubert in the
Ardennes a splendid Psalter written in letters of gold, and ornamented with a
portrait of his father, Louis the Pious, to whom it had belonged. This beautiful
book, said to be still in existence, and removed from the monastery in some
dishonest manner, came to be offered for sale in Toul. It was at once bought by
Heilewide, and given to her little son. But, strange
to say, the lovely golden letters, instead of serving to encourage Bruno,
seemed to baffle him. “For the Holy Ghost”, says the chronicler, “was unwilling
that one who was to be a vessel of election of His should even unconsciously be
defiled by contact with sacrilege”. Whilst Heilewide
was lost in wonder at the child’s embarrassment, it came to her ears that the
book belonged to the monastery of St. Hubert, “for under penalty of anathema
search was being everywhere made for it”. At once, with her little son, did the
good lady betake herself to the abbey, and, humbly begging pardon for what she
had done in ignorance, she restored the volume to its owners. Nay more, in satisfaction, she made the monks a present of
a sacramentary (Liber Sanctorum).
Without pausing to draw the
attention of the reader to the number of medieval ways and manners which this
pretty story brings to our notice, we will pass on to the second. When Bruno
had advanced somewhat in age and in art and in science (in the trivium and the
quadrivium), “and his neck had become a little freer from the scholastic yoke”,
he was allowed, from time to time, to visit his home, to which he was drawn,
boy-like, not only by the goodness and affection of those in it, but by the
attraction of the soldiers within its walls. During one of these visits, whilst
he was lying asleep “in a charming little bedroom” which his loving mother had
prepared for him, some animal found its way into the room, fastened itself upon
his face, and began to lacerate it. Awaking in terror, the youth uttered a loud
shriek, struck the animal from his face, and sprang from his bed. At his cries
the servants rushed into the room; but though the animal escaped, it left
permanent marks of its baneful presence on Bruno’s person. For two months he
lay between life and death. At the end of that period, when he had become so
weak that he had even lost his voice, he saw in a vision St. Benedict, “the
most blessed father of the monks”, who touched his wounds with a bright cross
which he held in his hands. At once the youthful sufferer felt relief, and in a
day or two he was himself again. “To this very day, in familiar conversation with
his friends, he is wont to recount this evident mark of the Divine favour in
his behalf”. Those who continue reading the events of his life, concludes Wibert, and see all that he did for the advantage and for
the reformation of the monks, will readily understand why his cure came from
the hands of St. Benedict rather than from any other saint.
Arrived now at an age
(fifteen) when it became necessary for him to think of choosing his career in
life, he resolved to embrace the clerical state. Perhaps he had essayed the
joys of the world and had found them wanting; for Wibert
will not assert that “in this miserable life, which is one long temptation, he
at all times lived without sin; for that cannot be asserted of the babe of a
day”. At any rate he left the episcopal school, and seems to have attached
himself to the cathedral of St. Stephen, i.e., as it was then expressed,
he became a canon, and lived under the rule of St. Chrodegang
of Metz, or, to use the words of St. Peter Damian, speaking of another cathedral
cloister, he joined “the white band of clerics shining as bright as the angels’
choir. There, as in a school of some heavenly Athens, the young students are
instructed in the words of the Sacred Scriptures; there they zealously devote
themselves to the study of true philosophy, and there daily exercise themselves
under the rule of regular discipline”. On such a sensitive nature as that of
Bruno the mere daily sight of the cathedral of Toul, one of the most imposing
Christian monuments of France, must have produced a strong and elevating
impression. At any rate he made the best use of all the advantages which came
in his way, and gave just reason to Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino,
afterwards Victor III (1087-1088), to speak of him as a man not only “apostolic
in every way, and conspicuous for his religious qualities”, but also “endowed
with wisdom and thoroughly instructed in every branch of ecclesiastical
learning”.
Berthold, the enlightened
bishop of Toul, died in August 1019, and was succeeded by Herimann
of Cologne, whose virtues and vices were those of an upright German martinet.
It says much for the sweet character of Bruno that he was able to moderate the
fiery zeal of his new bishop. He kept his influence with Herimann,
for he obeyed him just as readily as he had obeyed his amiable predecessor; as
though, says Wibert, “he had always before his mental
vision that dictum of the Blessed Pope Gregory—Let no one dare to command who
has not first learnt to obey, lest he should exact from his subordinates
obedience he has never learnt to render to his superiors”. His biographer
furnishes us with two examples of his influence with the choleric Herimann. One of the monasteries which the latter had
favoured was that of Saint-Évre in his cathedral city.
Owing, however, to the calumnies of the jealous, the goodwill of the bishop
towards it was changed to dislike, and he became as anxious to injure it as he
had once been to bestow benefits upon it. But Bruno, “as he had pity upon those
in trouble”, exerted himself in the monks’ behalf. Whenever he could, he
opposed himself to the angry blows of the bishop like “a wall of stone”; and,
when resistance was unavailing, he mingled his tears with those of the
persecuted monks. For some cause or other, Herimann
does not seem to have viewed with favour the college of clerics attached to the
cathedral, for we are told that it required all the efforts of Bruno to preserve
intact the canonical institution and its revenues, which former bishops of the
see had been at great pains to establish and preserve. His close intercourse
with his bishop was brought to an end by the death of the Emperor Henry II
(July 14, 1024), and the election of his cousin (Conrad II of Franconia) as
king of the Germans. Between Henry, the saint and great emperor, who had
deserved so well of the empire, and the illiterate and warlike Conrad, there
was as much difference as between the bishops Berthold and Herimann.
But Conrad was their cousin, and so it was decided by Bruno’s relatives to send
him “to be trained in the king’s court, and to serve in his chapel”. This
decision was quite in keeping with the feudal spirit of the age; for it was
customary at this period for the inferior vassals to put their sons under the
care of their overlord, that they might be educated with his children, not
perhaps so much in literature, as in arms and in the ways of the world. But no
doubt, even if Conrad did not, like Charlemagne, maintain a palace school,
there would be opportunities for Bruno to continue his studies; for, though the
king had a greater love for the sword than for books, he interested himself in
the education of the clergy.
The youthful Bruno quickly
made a name for himself by his grace and learning. Among his companions, to
mark him out from those who bore the same name as he did, he was known as “the
good Bruno”, and was soon the confidant of both the king and the queen. As
such, he soon discovered that it was their intention to bestow a rich bishopric
upon him; and, fearful lest their affection might lead them to favour him in an
exceptional manner, he resolved to accept the first poor one that God might
cause to be presented to him.
But meanwhile he had other
work to do. On the death of the Emperor Henry II, some of the cities of north
Italy, anxious, if they had to have a master, to have one as far away and as
feeble as possible, had shown a disinclination to accept Conrad, and had
offered the Iron Crown to others. But no one was anxious to measure swords with
Conrad, who descended upon the plains of Lombardy for the first time in the
beginning of the year 1026. With his sovereign went the young deacon Bruno, in
charge of the troops which the bishopric of Toul had to furnish for the king’s
army. As a feudatory of the empire, Herimann should have
marched in person with his troops; but he was old and infirm, and entrusted his
contingent to Bruno. During the brief period he was with his soldiers he gave
every indication of possessing the qualities which go to make at least a
careful commander.
But he was not destined to
remain long “fixing camps, posting sentinels, and acting as commissary”. His
bishop died in the Lent of this same year (1026), and the unanimous voice of
the clergy and the people of Toul besought the king to send them as Herimann’s successor their beloved Bruno. They pointed out
to Conrad that, as a border town, their city was fearfully exposed, and that
they needed a bishop “whose vigour and energy would keep the enemy from their
gates”. And they implored Bruno to take them despite of their poverty. Though
the king had destined him for a more elevated appointment, the saint acceded to
the people’s wishes precisely because their see was comparatively
insignificant.
Running no little risk from
the hostile Lombard, he contrived to reach France, and then his episcopal city.
He was received at Toul with the greatest joy, and was solemnly enthroned on
Ascension Day (May 20). The throne of marble used on this occasion is still
shown in the cathedral.
But though enthroned, Bruno
was not yet consecrated. It was Conrad’s wish to have him consecrated by the
Pope at the same time that he himself received the imperial crown. Naturally
enough, when the king’s intention was noised abroad, it excited no little
jealousy, and his metropolitan, Poppo of Trier, as
eager for power as any of the great lay or church lords of his day, declared
that he alone had the right to consecrate the bishops of Toul. Loath to be the
cause of strife, Bruno succeeded in obtaining leave from Conrad to be
consecrated by Poppo. This act of humility caused Poppo to mistake the character of the man with whom he had
to deal, and he declared he would not consecrate Bruno until he had solemnly
engaged not to do anything in his diocese without the express permission of his
metropolitan. To such an unlawful demand Bruno would not give his assent, and
he left Trier unconsecrated. Conrad, however, on his
return from receiving the imperial crown, brought about a compromise. Bruno
agreed not to act in important matters without consulting his metropolitan, and
was then duly consecrated, September 9, 1027.
For twenty-three years, says Wibert in a chapter of his biography only just
printed, he governed his diocese with vigour, and during all that period
enjoyed only four years of comparative peace. The years of quiet were the two
at each extremity of his episcopate. If ever, throughout the years of stress,
he slipped from the path of justice, we are assured that he was never content
“to stand in the way of sinners”, but returned to God at once by humility and
sorrow. He thought nothing of confessing his faults to his inferiors, and of
asking the help of their advice and prayers, with the result that those who saw
“his innocence and continency were moved to despise their own lives”.
To the work of reform—the
keynote of his active life—the bishop now devoted himself with renewed zeal. He
had already begun the work immediately after his election. Convinced that the
monasteries, as centres of peace and learning, were the hope of the future both
for the Church and for the State, he applied himself to improve their
discipline, which, says his biographer, “had for a long time fallen off”. He
deposed such abbots “as, neglecting the souls committed to their charge, seemed
to think that they had been appointed merely to exercise secular power”.
Monastic foundations begun by his predecessor, he brought to successful
completion. But he was careful not to use the resources handed down to him, if
they had not been properly acquired. Finding that a widow had a sound claim to
certain property which had been acquired by the See of Toul, he ordered it to
be restored. “I cannot and ought not to resist the laws”, he said. And with
such exceptional elegance of manners and grace of person was he blest, that, as
we are told, all he did or said gave general satisfaction. He pushed his
charities to the verge of indiscretion, and never allowed stress of business to
prevent him from personally attending every morning to the wants of the poor.
These and the other duties of his state, such as making visitations, attending
synods, and the like, he lightened by devoting a little time to musical
composition. In him, says the devoted Wibert, “were
conspicuous evidences of his possession of the sciences, both human and divine;
especially did he excel in the pleasing art of music, so that he was able not
merely to equal ancient authors, but in the sweetness of his melodies even to surpass
some of them”. To us it is especially interesting to find it recorded that he
composed new tunes for the feast of “the venerable Gregory, doctor and apostle
of the English”, who was honoured in an abbey of the adjoining diocese of
Basel, which was hence known as Munster-in-Gregorienthal.
Among the saints in whose honour Bruno exerted his musical talent, besides
Gregory, a name best beloved throughout the Middle Ages, there was at least one
more connected with the British Isles, viz. the famous Columbanus. According to
the historian of the monastery of Moyenmoutier, in
the year 1044 a monk, afterwards the renowned Cardinal Humbert, composed
certain metrical responsories for the feast of St. Columbanus, and
induced his bishop to set them to music.
But Bruno was not destined to
pass the long years of his episcopate in peaceful retirement among his fellow-bishops,
his priests, the poor, and the Muses. The exigencies of the time and his
position forced him to play a conspicuous part in the great events of the day.
He had to face not only the terrible famine which afflicted especially France,
Italy, and England between the years 1030 and 1033, but the still more awful
scourge of war.
Affairs of
Lorraine and Burgundy.
From the time of the creation
of the impossible Middle Kingdom by Louis the Pious, and of its subdivision by
Lothaire into Lorraine, Burgundy, and Italy, it had proved an apple of discord
between the Gauls and the Germans, and was to be the
prize of the strongest. The struggle for Lorraine we have seen continued till
our own day. Under the Othos it was attached to the
empire. The new Capetian dynasty had used it to buy German support. But Conrad
had now (1027) reason to believe that Robert the Pious was casting longing eyes
on the debatable land. To avoid war he sent Bruno to the French Court. Perhaps
he had an easy task, for Robert was, after all, of a pacific disposition. At
any rate his mission was completely successful. “France is my witness how
satisfactorily he accomplished his embassy; for there
men still speak of his wisdom and humility, of his success in his undertakings,
of his grace of mind and body, and of his tact in executing his mission. He was
loved as a father, and venerated as a saint. So firmly did he establish peace
between the two kingdoms, that it was not shaken either during the remaining
years of Conrad and Robert, or during the reigns of their sons—Henry I of
France and Henry III of Germany.”
But another section of the old
Middle Kingdom was to give him more trouble. Rodolf
III, the Fainéant, king of Burgundy, died September 6, 1032. Being childless,
he had bequeathed his crown to Conrad, the husband of his niece Gisela. The
German emperor, however, found himself in presence of a rival, Eudes, or Odo II, the powerful count
of Blois and Champagne. Though Conrad was crowned king of Burgundy (February 2,
1033), he had not reduced Eudes to submission.
Whenever he was in any difficulty, the count was again in arms. On one occasion
Eudes made a determined effort to seize Lorraine;
and, understanding that Bruno was in difficulties with some rebellious vassals,
laid siege to Toul, the key of the province. To no purpose, however. Bruno’s
eloquence roused the courage of the inhabitants, and his military skill may
have directed their energies. At any rate, Eudes
failed to take the city; and, while he died a rebel (November 15, 1037), the
kingdom of Burgundy was added “to the Roman Empire by the wisdom and exertions
of Bruno”. Granting that Wibert in his love and
admiration for his hero may have attributed to him a larger share in these
important transactions than he actually took, there is no doubt that the part
he did take in them shows that he had in him the soul of a warrior and the tact
of a diplomatist, as well as the faith and piety of a priest.
Another series of important
events in the episcopate of our saint was the annual pilgrimage to Rome. It was
his great devotion to St. Peter that drew him to the Eternal City, there to
pray for his people. On one of these pilgrimages, when over five hundred clergy
and lay people, attracted by his affability and holiness, were in his company,
an epidemic, “arising from the dire corruption of the air of Italy”, attacked
the whole party. So fearful was its strength that the immediate death of all
those seized with the disease was expected. Full of trust in God, Bruno touched
some wine with the relics of the saints he always carried about with him, and
gave it to the sufferers; and we are assured that all who had strength enough
left to swallow (gustare) the liquid
recovered. During the whole journey the bishop said Mass nearly every day, and
during it exhorted those present to do penance, and lead a better life. Every
night, too, whilst the plague lasted, a number of the pilgrims, and of the people
of the country through which they happened to be passing, came with lights to
where the saint was lodging, and, when morning dawned, the sick among them
found themselves perfectly restored to health through the merits of the saints
and the bishop’s prayers. These wonders were soon noised about through all the
patrimony of St. Peter, with the result that love and veneration for Bruno were
firmly fixed in the hearts of all.
It was whilst he was bishop
that he lost his father and his pious mother. No doubt his grief for
their loss was tempered as well by long expectation of it as by the reflection
that, in accordance with the law of the length of human life, their time had
come. But the same cannot be said of his affliction at the premature death of
his elder brother, Gerard, “the brave and courteous knight”, and of another
brother, Hugh, “our heart’s sweet solace whilst he lived”. Beneath domestic
troubles, public calamities, and his unceasing toil for his people, Bruno’s
health completely broke down. His life was despaired of, not only by his
physicians, but by himself and by his sorrowing people. Acting, however, “on a
divine impulse”, he caused himself to be carried before the altar of St. Blaise
at the hour of Matins. There, whilst in an ecstasy, he seemed to see the holy
martyr come to him from the altar, and tenderly wash the suffering parts of his
body. When Bruno returned to himself, he found that he was quite cured, and he
walked back by himself to his room singing, “What god is great like unto our
God?”
In all his trials his great
resource, says his biographer, was prayer. Endowed with “the gift of tears”, he
wept continually whilst at his prayers, or whilst celebrating Mass; for he knew
that the sacrifice which pleases God is a contrite heart.
The time had now arrived when
Bruno, who had sought the lowest place among bishops, was to be exalted to the
highest, and when, with the greatest advantage to it, his talents, his virtues,
and his accomplishments were to be placed at the disposal of the Universal
Church. According to Wibert, the bishop received no
uncertain premonition of the position he was to occupy in the Church. Of two
visions which, on the authority of some of his intimate friends who had heard
Bruno speak of them, are related by his biographer, we will recount the second.
One night, when he had fallen asleep whilst meditating on heavenly things, he
seemed to see an old woman, or rather hag, so dirty, bedraggled, and
dishevelled was she, who wished to engage in conversation with him. Horror-stricken
at her loathsome appearance, Bruno endeavoured to escape from her. She,
however, followed him quickly and closely. At length, quite wearied out, the
saint turned round, and made the sign of the cross on the creature’s face.
Instantly she fell to the earth, only to rise again a thing of beauty
incomparable. Whilst lost in wonder as to what this could portend, the blessed
abbot Odilo appeared to him, and, in response to
Bruno’s request for an explanation of what he had seen, joyfully replied : “Blessed
art thou, for thou hast saved her soul from death”. The meaning of the vision,
concludes Wibert, cannot be doubtful when we reflect
that in various parts of the world the beauty of the Church, or of
Christianity, had been terribly defiled, and that it was Bruno who, with the
help of Christ, restored it to its former state. Whether these visions were
sent by God, or not, they show, at any rate, if our dreams are images, however
blurred, of our waking thoughts, how constantly the mind of the bishop of Toul
was engaged in reflecting on the Church’s needs, and on the best way of
satisfying them.
The short reign of Clement II,
and the sudden death of Damasus II, terrified the Romans. They feared lest the
Black Emperor, Henry III, who had succeeded Conrad, would attribute to them the
premature demise of his countrymen. The same causes produced a similar result among
the German bishops. Whether they assigned the deaths to the climate, to poison,
or to the judgment of God punishing what some of them regarded as the arbitrary
deposition of Gregory VI, the bishops of Germany showed a great disinclination
to accept the supreme pontificate. “The Romans”, said Bonizo, “frightened by
the speedy death (of Damasus), and not being able to remain long without a
Pontiff, set out for the North, crossed the Alps, reached Saxony, and there (at
Pöldhe) finding the king, asked him for a Pope. But
as the bishops were unwilling to go to Rome, the matter was not of easy
accomplishment. The king, therefore, decided to go to Rhenish Frankland, trusting
to find in the kingdom of Lorraine a bishop whom he might present to the Romans
to be made Pope”.
To deliberate on the matter,
Henry convoked an assembly of bishops and nobles at Worms. Thither, of course,
proceeded Bruno; “for nothing of moment was transacted in the imperial court
without his advice”; and thither (i.e., to the city) also went the
ever-famous Hildebrand, already on fire with desire for the elevation of the
Roman Church. The Roman envoys had apparently been commissioned to ask once
more for Halinard, archbishop of Rheims, or for
Bruno, both of whom were known and loved by them from their conduct while on
pilgrimages to Rome. In some way or other Halinard
learnt the wishes of the emperor and the people, and put off his arrival till
another had been elected. No word, however, of what was to happen had reached
Bruno; and no one was more astonished than he when he found that it was the
wish of all, emperor, Germans, and Romans, that he should accept the See of
Rome. He at once raised objection after objection, for greatly did he dread
responsibility for souls. No one, however, paid the slightest attention to
them, but implored him, by his love for SS. Peter and Paul, to come to the
succour of the Roman Church, and not to be afraid to face any dangers for the
sake of the faith. He pleaded for a delay of three days, which he passed in
fasting and prayer; and then, as a last effort to turn aside the wishes of the
assembly, he made, “with torrents of tears”, a public confession of the sins of
his life. His piety and humility moved to tears the bishops and nobles who
heard him. But they loudly declared that God would not allow the child of such
tears to perish, and renewed their importunities. At length he yielded so far
as to say: “I will go to Rome, and if, of their own accord, its clergy and
people choose to elect me for their bishop, I will yield to your desire; but,
if not, I shall not regard myself as elected”
This bold and unexpected
declaration of the rights of the people of Rome has so astonished many writers
that they think it must have been inspired, and could have had no other author
than Hildebrand. This idea, however, does not seem to be borne out by the best
authorities; for, according to Bruno of Segni, when
the newly-elect asked the monk to accompany him to Rome, he refused, “because”,
he said, “you wish to take possession of the See of Rome by the power of kings,
and not by canonical means”. Assured that such was not the case, Hildebrand
agreed to accompany him. Evidently, then, the zealous monk was unacquainted
with what the bishop had said before the assembly. Both of them were full of
the same thoughts; but drew their ideas, not from one another, but from
reflection on the high-handed interference of the German emperors in the
affairs of the Church.
With what inner feelings Henry
III listened to this declaration of his saintly relative we can only infer from
our knowledge of his ideas as to the extent of his rights over the Church. Wazo, the independent bishop of Liège, might impress upon
him: “To the king we owe allegiance, to the Pope obedience”; but the emperor,
so far from contenting himself with giving practical demonstrations of what he
regarded as his just authority in ecclesiastical affairs, declared that his
imperial consecration gave him a preeminent right of exacting submission. “Like
you”, said he to Wazo, “I have been anointed with the
holy oil, and the power of commanding has been bestowed on me beyond all
others”. Ignoring the meaning of the title both under the emperors at
Constantinople, and as understood by Pippin and Charlemagne, he urged his
dignity of Patricius of the Romans as though it gave him the right of
disposing of the Papacy at will. However, despite these exalted ideas of his
prerogatives, Henry agreed to the condition laid down by Bruno, who, after
spending the Christmas of 1048 in his episcopal city, set out for Rome
immediately afterwards. In his train went the Tuscan monk Hildebrand, a very
host in himself. In taking with him to Rome the man by whose prudence and
wisdom the Roman Church was one day to be ruled, Leo, we are told, thereby rendered
a great service to the Blessed Apostle Peter, and, it may be added, attached to
himself one in whose judgment he soon learnt to have the most complete trust,
and who exerted no little influence on his pontificate.
Greatly was Bruno cheered on
his journey by the hearty reception accorded to him by the people as he moved
through France and Italy, and by a heavenly vision. Once, when near the city of
Aosta, “he was in an ecstasy; he heard angels singing to an exquisite melody
(these words of Jeremiah): ‘I know the thoughts that I think towards you, saith
the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of affliction ... You shall pray to me, and
I will hear you ... And I will be found by you, saith the Lord; and I will
bring back your captivity’. Reanimated by this sweet consolation, and now
feeling sure of the help of God, he made haste to accomplish the rest of his
journey”.
He traversed north Italy by
the Via Aemiliana, then known as the King’s High Road
(Via Regia), and reached the neighbourhood of Rome in February. The whole city
poured out to meet him. To their astonishment the people found him not
surrounded with the pomp of martial men, nor clad in the insignia of a Pope, or
even of a bishop, but barefoot, habited as a pilgrim, and escorted by a few
clerics. But if his bare feet proclaimed his humility, the garb of a pilgrim
could not conceal his noble mien; and as the Romans gazed on his fair and
handsome face, on his tall figure, and on his imposing carriage, they felt that
both a saint and a hero had come to them. Loud and joyous, and chanted in
divers tongues, were the hymns with which they welcomed him to their city.
On the following day
both the clergy and the people of Rome betook themselves to St. Peter’s. There
they were addressed by Bruno, who told them simply that he had hearkened to
their embassy, and was, moreover, anxious to conform to the will of the
emperor. He had come to Rome to pray, and to take measures for the election of
a new Pope. Thereupon the bishops and cardinals cried out, as one man, that him
and no other would they have for their bishop; and the archdeacon in the
customary formula (de more) proclaimed : “Blessed Peter has chosen Bruno
bishop”, while the mass of the clergy and the people repeated the same cry.
This was in the early days of February. On its twelfth day he was
consecrated, i.e., as he was already a bishop, he was solemnly presented
with the pallium, and was duly enthroned in the Lateran. And, as Wibert assures us, he lost no time in endeavouring to
imitate the virtues of St. Leo the Great, whose name he assumed.
Anxious as he was to give his
undivided attention to the work of reform, more mundane considerations were
promptly forced upon his attention. Like his immediate predecessors, he
experienced the difficulties which arose from the emptiness of the pontifical
treasury, and from the want of any means of refilling it. Despite the
enthusiastic reception with which all classes of the Romans had received him,
no disposition was shown by them to give him substantial help. Those who had
accompanied him on his journey were in the direst straits. They thought of
selling part of their wardrobes, and of returning home. In vain did Leo try to
dissuade them. They were on the very eve of departing when envoys came from
Benevento with presents for the Pope. Its people, it may be remembered, had
been excommunicated by Clement II, and were being hard pressed by the Normans,
whom the Emperor Henry had urged to harry them. Their necessities were soon to
throw them into the arms of the Popes altogether, and it is thought highly
probable that, even at this time, they begged Leo to take them under his
protection. At any rate, the gifts which they offered Leo on this occasion
enabled him to relieve the wants of his friends; but in doing so, he did not
fail to impress upon them the necessity of never distrusting the providence of
God.
To add to his difficulties
arising from shortness of money, Leo was distressed by the warlike operations
of the ex-Pontiff Benedict IX and his party. Rome and its environs were harried
in all directions by the adherents of Theophylactus.
On the side of Tusculum mischief was wrought by that wicked man himself, with
his two brothers, Gregory and Peter; on the side of Tuscany it was the
brothers, Counts Gerard of Galera and Girard de Saxo, who terrorized the
people; while on the east the same evil work was being carried on by John and Crescentius, the sons of Oddo or
Otho, and the people of Tivoli. In their misery the Romans called upon the Pope
to rid them of their enemies. But, telling them that he had not come to kill
but to vivify, he bade them await the result of the council he was about to
hold.
Theophylactus was accordingly
summoned to appear before the synod which met in April. But as neither he nor
any of his party took the slightest heed of the summons, they were anathematized
by the council, and the “whole Roman army” was called to arms. The result of
the ensuing engagements was favourable to the cause of Leo, and the ex-Pontiff
seems to have been reduced to a state of belligerent helplessness which lasted
during the rest of Leo’s reign.
As day by day the virtues of
the new Pope were ever more and more widely noised abroad, not only were crowds
drawn to Rome to listen to the words of consolation which fell from his lips,
but those who could not come sent him presents in the hope of receiving his
blessing. It became necessary, however, for Leo to see to it that all the gifts
made to him really reached him; for, while he was in the habit of giving to the
poor all those which were, “as in the times of the apostles, actually offered
at his feet”, others were apparently in the habit of taking for themselves what
was placed on the altar of St. Peter. To put a stop to this, if Leo did not
make Hildebrand economus, steward, or rather
treasurer of the Roman Church, he ordained him subdeacon, and named him one of
the guardians of the altar of St. Peter.
When he had completed at least
some preliminary arrangements for the putting of the temporalities of the Roman
Church on a sounder basis, and had satisfied his devotion by a visit to the
Italian “St. Michael’s Mount”, on Mount Gargano, and to Monte Cassino, he began
the work of reform to which his life was to be devoted. For he felt that “we
have been placed in this episcopal pre-eminence to pluck up and to destroy, as
well as to build and plant in the name of the Lord”. At a synod held in the
Lateran during Low Week (April 3-8), to which he had invited the bishops of Gaul
and other countries, besides vainly striving to reconcile Theophylactus, he struck at the two crying evils of the
time, simony and clerical incontinence. Not content with condemning these vices
in the abstract, he proceeded at once to depose certain bishops who were
stained with the former crime; and men believed that God was visibly working
with him, when they saw the bishop of Sutri, who was
endeavouring to defend himself by perjury, fall dead before the assembly. But
he was not able to go as far as he wished. A decree had been passed annulling
all the ordinations held by simoniacal prelates,
which immediately raised a perfect storm in Rome. Leo was assured not only “by
a multitude of Roman priests”, but also by several bishops, that, if such a
resolution was put in force, there would be no priests to serve the churches,
and the faithful would be reduced to despair or indifference. He was,
thereupon, forced, as well by necessity as by his natural inclination to mercy,
simply to renew the decree of Clement it. Other simoniacal
practices were also condemned, and, to prevent poverty from being pleaded as an
excuse, it was decreed that all Christians must be reminded of their duty to
pay tithes, “of which in Apulia and other distant countries the memory alone
survive.
In renewing the decrees
relative to the celibacy of the clergy, he decreed that the concubines of the
Roman clergy should be at once reduced to the condition of slaves to the
Lateran Palace.
Of the need of legislation on
the subject of the morality of the clergy there is more than proof enough in
the letters and other writings of St. Peter Damian. Not only were the canons
which required celibacy in the higher clergy very widely set at naught, but
even unnatural vices were prevalent among them. On this subject the zealous
monk of Fonte Avellana addressed to the Pope a scathing pamphlet, appropriately
named Liber Gomorrhianus. “Since from the
mouth of Truth itself”, he begins, “the Apostolic See is known to be the mother
of all the Churches, it is only right that, if any difficulty regarding the cure
of souls arise anywhere, recourse should be had to it, as to the mistress and
source of heavenly wisdom, so that from that one head the light of ecclesiastical
discipline may shine forth, and the whole body of the Church be illuminated by
the splendour of Truth”. He goes on to say that a criminal and horribly base
vice has manifested itself “in our neighbourhood”, which, if not checked, will
bring down the anger of God on the people. He is ashamed indeed to mention so
foul a sin to such holy ears, but “if the physician shrinks from the plague
poison, who will take in hand to apply the remedy?”. This unnatural vice has
spread like a cancer, and has even attacked the clergy. In concluding his
preface, the saint urges that such of the latter as are stained with these
vices should be promptly deposed. Then, without further introduction, he
plunges straight into his unsavoury subject, and in twenty-four short chapters
explains the kinds, effects, and remedies of crimes against nature. In the
twenty-fifth chapter he defends himself for treating of such matters, and would
rather with Joseph, who “accused his brethren to his father of a most wicked
crime”, by thrown, though innocent, into a pit, than with Heli, who saw the
sins of his sons and kept silent, be punished by an angry God. In the next and
last chapter he recurs “to thee, most blessed Pope”, begs him to give what he
has said the support of his authority, and trusts that during his pontificate
the Church may recover its former vigour.
At first the Pope approved of
the publication of this outspoken denunciation of filthy vice; and his letter
of commendation of his beloved son, the hermit Peter, who “had raised the arm
of the spirit against obscene licence”, figures at the head of the Liber Gomorrhianus. He notes that, in connection with those
delinquents concerning whom Peter, “moved with holy fury”, had written, it is
only fitting that there should be a display of apostolic severity. But—and here
spoke the characteristic virtue of the man—mercy must season justice. Hence, so
far from approving of the drastic measures proposed by St. Peter, he would not even go so far as strict justice and canon law
exacted, but would only decree deposition against those clerks who were guilty
of the most criminal offences. That this decision was the outcome of a tender
heart full of compassion for human weakness, and not of a feeble character, is
clear from the energetic words of the next sentence: “If anyone should dare to
criticise or carp at this decree of ours, let him know that he is in danger of
his order”. In conclusion, he rejoices that the saint “teaches as well by the
holy example of his life as by the words of his mouth”.
Despite the sanction which Leo
had given to the Liber Gomorrhianus, no sooner
were its contents noised abroad than there arose a storm of indignation against
its author. Those whose guilty consciences told them that the work was levelled
against them were furious at the way in which they had been denounced. Men with
delicate consciences feared that more harm than good would result from such a
laying bare of vice. Even moderate men thought that the saint’s onslaught was
too fierce, and that it would result in the formation of exaggerated ideas as
to the spread of the evil. These views were duly impressed upon the Pope.
Fearing, accordingly, that he had an ally whose very zeal made him dangerous,
he showed himself less favourable to him. It is easy to imagine how this change
of front on the part of the Pope, whom he revered so profoundly, must have cut the
sensitive soul of Damian. He wrote to the Pope, telling him that he was not
surprised that he should have listened to the words of those who had spoken
against him, seeing that even David, who was filled with the prophetic spirit,
was led, by placing ill-founded confidence in the words of Siba,
to wrong Miphiboseth. But even God Himself is represented as going down to see
whether things were as they were said to be or not, to show men that they must
have proof before they pass an adverse decision. He prayed Him, if it would be
for the good of his soul, to change in his favour the heart of the Pope, which
He held in His hand.
What effect this respectful
but straightforward letter had upon the Pope is not known, but “it is certain
that Peter Damian only played a very secondary part during the reign of Leo
IX”.
Knowing that the Roman Church
was the only force capable of regenerating the world, and yet realising
that owing to the number of unworthy bishops it was well-nigh impossible for
its reforming action to reach the people, Leo resolved, in imitation of the
Apostles, to carry the truth to them himself. Accordingly, “asking the
permission of the Romans”, he set out for the North with Peter,
cardinal-deacon, librarian and chancellor of the Apostolic See, and other
distinguished Romans. In Pentecost week salutary measures of reform were
impressed on the people of north Italy, where they were sadly needed, by a
council at Pavia.
Before the month of June was
over Leo had joined the emperor in Saxony; and on the feast of the
Apostles Peter and Paul was received with him by the clergy and nobility with
the greatest pomp in Cologne. Granting to its archbishop and his successors the
office of chancellor of the Roman Church, and assigning to them the Church of
St. John '”at the Latin gate”, he betook himself with Henry to Aix-la-Chapelle.
Here important work awaited
him. Already as bishop of Toul he had been employed to bring peace to Lorraine;
he was now again called upon to work for its interests. In 1044 had died Gozelon or Gothelon I, duke of
Lorraine, a powerful prince who had at one time (1026) defied the might of the Emperor
Conrad. Compelled, however, to give way, he became reconciled with his
over-lord; and later on, through his good-will, became master of Upper as well
as of Lower Lorraine. Gothelon left three sons : one,
a younger son, of the same name as himself, a man of no account, who was therefore
allowed by the German emperor to succeed to part (Lower Lorraine) of his
father’s duchy; Frederick, who afterwards became Pope Stephen (IX) X; and
Godfrey the Bearded, who, feared for his abilities, was arbitrarily deprived by
his suzerain of part of his inheritance. War was the consequence. Forming an
alliance with various nobles, such as Thierry of Holland, he first attacked the
bishops, the bulwark of the empire against feudal anarchy. Already under the
ban of the empire, he was excommunicated by the Pope. Leo took this step not
only to help to preserve the integrity of the empire, but also on account of the
barbarous manner in which the war was being waged by the rebels. This union of
Church and State proved too strong for Godfrey. “Fearing the power of the
emperor and the excommunication of the Pope, he came to Aix-la-Chapelle to
surrender himself. By the intercession of the sovereign Pontiff he succeeded
in obtaining the emperor’s favor”. But the fire he
had lighted was not to be easily extinguished; and during the minority which
followed the death of the Emperor Henry III, Flanders and other parts of the
Low Countries became practically independent of the empire.
Granting privileges to
monasteries, and consecrating churches as he went along, the Pope now proceeded
to Rheims to fulfil an engagement he had made with the abbot of St.
Remy. When bishop of Toul, he had promised Herimar,
for that was the abbot’s name, to make a pilgrimage, “without the comfort of a
horse”, to the shrine of St. Remy, the apostle of France. It might have been
thought that his elevation to the See of Rome would prevent his carrying out
his undertaking; but Herimar adroitly suggested to
him that, if ever the needs of the Church should bring him back to his native
place, he could then keep his vow; and, sending him a beautiful drinking-cup,
hinted that he had a church which stood in need of consecration.
Thoroughly appreciating the abbot’s delicate tact, Leo hastened to assure him
that even if he were not summoned by any wants of the Church, he would return
to Gaul (ad Gallias) and consecrate his
basilica for him. But we know from his own writings that the real end of his
journey was the reform of the German and Gallican Churches.
Accordingly, when he arrived
in Germany, Herimar lost no time in going to see him
in order to arrange with him about the ceremony he had at heart. It was decided
that the Pope should come to Rheims in time to say Mass in St. Mary’s on the
feast of St. Michael the Archangel, September 29; that the translation of the
relics of St. Remy should take place on his feast-day (October 1); that the
Pope should consecrate the abbatial basilica on October 2; and that he should
hold a great synod on the three following days. Herimar
had already secured the promise of the French king (Henry I, 1030-1061) that he
would, if possible, come himself to the consecration and would convoke the
bishops and princes of his kingdom. Leo, too, when he reached Toul, ordered
the bishops and abbots of the neighbourhood to attend the synod which was
to be held in the basilica of the apostle of the Franks. And he, wrote the
Pope, who had taught them the rudiments of their faith would cause it to
revivify. Herimar, moreover, on his return had sent
letters throughout “France (Francia) and the neighbouring provinces,
inviting the faithful to come and do honour to their patron saint, and to receive
the Pope’s blessing”.
But nothing flows on without
encountering obstacles. The plans of the good abbot were suddenly
checked and seemed likely to come to naught. “The serpent, who from the
beginning of the world has ever tried to ruin the human race, resolved to
prevent, if possible, the accomplishment of these useful measures”. He
employed, continues the good monk, certain powerful laymen whose incestuous
marriages and other delinquencies would not bear the light, and certain bishops
and abbots who, on account of their simoniacal
practices, were most averse to being summoned to a synod. These men succeeded
in impressing upon King Henry I that to allow the Pope to assume authority in
France would be fatal to his honour; and, ignoring the fact that John VIII had
held a synod at Troyes in 878, assured him that never before had a city of
France opened its gates to a Pope for such a purpose as the holding of a
council. Besides, at the present time, they urged, the country was too
disturbed to allow of the gathering of the great ones in Church and State for
any other purpose than that of war.
History of
the Catholic Church of Scotland
Carried away by these specious
statements, and because he was a notorious simoniac himself, Henry sent to
inform the Pope that the necessities of war prevented his fulfilling his
engagements to the abbot of St. Remy and to beg him to defer his visit to
France till he should be ready to receive him. But Leo quietly replied that he
could not break his engagements, and that, if he found any lovers of religion
in the basilica of St. Remy, he would hold the synod with them. The king,
however, was obstinate, and, despite the opposition of many, summoning around
him his nobles, bishops, and abbots, including the crestfallen abbot of St. Remy
himself, set out on a military expedition.
Nevertheless, the firmness of
the Pope met with at partial reward. Herimar was
allowed to return; and Anselm, from whose narrative all this is taken, mentions
as present at the synod some twenty bishops, not only from Germany and
Burgundy, but also from France and England. There were also present fifty
abbots. From the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle we learn that two of the abbots
were English; and from it too we learn the name of the “bishop from England”
spoken of by Anselm, and the object of the presence at the synod of prelates
from this island. “King Edward sent thither (to the great synod at Rheims) Bishop
Dudoc (of Wells), and Wulfric, abbot of St.
Augustine’s, and Abbot Elfwine (of Ramsey), that they
might make known to him what should be there resolved on for Christendom” and
“to render an account of the condition of the Church in England”. And if petty
political jealousy failed, at least to some extent, to prevent a very large
gathering of bishops at the synod, it failed absolutely to prevent the
assembling at Rheims of a huge concourse of people full of the most ardent
enthusiasm for the Pope. In a marvellously quick manner, considering the
difficulty of communication in the eleventh century, it had become noised
abroad, probably through the monasteries, that the Pope was to spend some time
at Rheims. As a consequence—we have it on the word of Leo’s biographer: “it is
hard to say what a great number of people came from the ends of the earth to
see him, Spaniards, Bretons (Britannorum),
Franks, Irish (Scotorum) and English”.
When Leo arrived at the abbey
of St. Remy, then outside the city of Rheims, he found an enormous crowd of
both clerics and laymen, rich and poor, awaiting him. After a service in the
abbey church, concluded by a “vigorous Te
Deum”, a monster procession was formed, which escorted the Pontiff to the
Church of St. Mary in the city. High Mass was there sung by the Pope, after
which, he was entertained by the archbishop of Rheims in his palace close to
the cathedral. Next day (September 30), as the number of people was still on the
increase, the Pope had to slip away quietly, in order to get near the
monastery, which was now so beset with people, who had come to pray to France’s
patron saint, “and to see the vicar of St. Peter”, that the monks could not
carry on their services in the church. Thrice during the day had Leo to preach
to fresh crowds of people. All night long they kept watch and ward by
torchlight
On the 1st of October, as
arranged, there took place the solemn translation of the relics of St. Remy.
For a time the Pope himself, assisted by the archbishops and abbots carried them
on his shoulders; and then, when the antiphon, Iste
est de sublimibus,
burst forth, “how many cheeks were bedewed with tears, how many souls poured
forth pious supplications to obtain the patronage of the glorious saint!”. When
the Pope yielded the relics to others to be carried to the city, there took
place an incident which would now be called regrettable, and would be ascribed
to very defective police arrangements, but which the piety of our monastic
chronicler presents in quite a different light. No sooner had the sacred relics
left the abbey church, than the pious enthusiasm of the people broke all
bounds. They clapped their hands; they sang aloud the praises of God; they
crowded together to get as near as they could to their patron’s shrine. The
reliquary with its bearers was so pushed first to one side and then another,
that it seemed like a ship tossed on human billows. “All this was an expression
of deep faith which merited a great recompense. In some it manifested itself
even in contempt of death; for, animated by a too lively desire to approach the
shrine with the least possible delay, they made an attempt forcibly to push
their way through the crowd. But in the surging movement they were overthrown
and trampled to death”
When at length, the relics
were safely laid on the altar of St. Mary’s at Rheims, they were there exposed
for public veneration all the rest of that day and during the night. On the
following day (October 2), whilst the Pope was performing part of the long
ceremony of consecrating the abbey church, they were solemnly carried round the
city walls and then back to the monastery. Distressed at the disasters of the
previous day, and fearful lest they should occur again, Leo had ordered the
gates of the basilica to be kept fast shut, so that the relics had to be passed
into it through a window. This gave the people an inspiration, and many of them
found their way into the church in the same way. At the close of the ceremony
the Pope gave absolution “to the people who, according to the prescribed form,
had made public confession of their sins”.
The next day (October 3) there
was opened the synod of Rheims, and a very dramatic event it proved to be. In
the midst of the assembly, which, with the Pope, consisted of twenty-one
bishops, some fifty abbots, and a “very great number” of clergy, were exposed
the relics of St. Remy. For, remarked the Pope, if anyone says anything that
is unbecoming, the man of God, present by his relics, will make him feel the
effect of his power.
The real work of the synod was
very nearly marred by one of those disputes between great churchmen, so common
in the Middle Ages. There sprang up what Anselm calls “the old discussion” as
to precedence between the archbishops of Trier and of Rheims. But Leo was
determined that such a comparatively unimportant question should not then
occupy either his own attention or that of the assembly. He ordered the bishops
to be arranged round him in a circle. Then arose the deacon Peter, who, saying
that the questions which were to occupy their attention were simony, the
encroachments of lay patrons of churches, incestuous and adulterous marriages,
sodomy and oppression of the poor, called upon the bishops to declare publicly
one after another whether they had received or given Holy Orders for money.
Some arose at once and declared their innocence in this matter; some most
humbly and touchingly confessed their guilt; some begged for delay before
giving an answer; and others, as well bishops as abbots (for the same command
was laid upon them), remained silent. The archbishop of Besançon, who made an
attempt to defend the bishop of Langres, who had been
guilty of atrocious crimes, suddenly found himself for the time being utterly
unable to continue speaking. “It was certainly the great St. Remy”, interjects
Anselm, from whom we are still quoting, and to whose full narrative we must
refer readers who desire more ample details, “who wrought this prodigy, in
recompense for the act of faith which had led the Pope to place his relics in
front of the assembly”.
The Church in Spain
Perhaps the most interesting
matter discussed by them was the primacy of the Apostolic See, in relation,
apparently, to an assumption of dignity on the part of the archbishop of
Compostela. The synod decreed, “under pain of the anathema of the apostolic
authority, that if anyone of those present had ever said that any other than
the bishop of the Roman See was primate of the Universal Church, he must there
and then make public atonement. And when no one acknowledged himself guilty
under this head, the decrees of the orthodox Fathers on this subject were read,
and it was decreed that the bishop of the Roman See alone was primate of the
Universal Church and apostolicus”. This may
have been aimed at the patriarch of Constantinople; but when, a little later,
we find it stated that the synod “excommunicated the archbishop of St. James of
Galicia, because he had illegally assumed the title of apostolicus”,
there cannot be much doubt that the decree was directed against the See of
Compostela.
In the beginning of the ninth
century, during the reign of Alfonso or Alonzo II (791-842), known as the
Chaste, king of Asturias, there was discovered in the diocese of Iria Flavia (now Padron) the body which was believed to be
that of St. James the Greater. By the king’s orders a church and a residence
for the bishop were built where it was found, and thither was transferred the
See of Iria.
In the break-up of the
Visigothic Church and State which followed the invasion of the Saracens in 711,
most of the episcopal sees ceased to exist. A precarious succession of bishops
was, however, kept up in Toledo, Seville, and Granada, and there were survivals
both in the northeast and north-west corners where Spanish independence
succeeded in making headway against the Moslems. It is, therefore, not
surprising that the bishop of a see which boasted the possession of the body of
one who was at once an apostle of our Lord and the apostle of Spain disdained
dependence. The better to express his idea of his exalted position, Cresconio of Iria-Compostela
(1048-1066), who is described as a man of illustrious birth, assumed the title
of apostolicus—a title which, in the West, was
given only to the Popes. However, the excommunication launched against him at
Rheims must have stifled his ambition, for we hear nothing more of the title.
But the craving for enlarged authority was implanted in the hearts of the
bishops of Compostela, and it was not satisfied till Calixtus II made Bishop Didacus (Diego Pelaez) a
metropolitan (1120).
Before proceeding to formulate
its decrees, the synod excommunicated those bishops who had been summoned to
the council and who had neither come to it nor sent their excuses in writing.
Certain nobles, too, were excommunicated for various serious breaches of the
marriage laws; and the abbot of Poutières, in the
diocese of Langres, was deposed for living so
luxuriously that he was unable and unwilling to pay the annual tax due to Rome.
Possibly in the interests of peace, but certainly because they were related,
the Pope prohibited Baldwin V, count of Flanders, from giving his daughter
(Matilda) in marriage to William of Normandy (the Conqueror) and the
latter from accepting her. Baldwin had already shown himself a rebel against
the emperor, and would, of course, be a more formidable foe if allied with
William. Leo’s prohibition, however, proved vain. Had it not, the course of
English history would have been very different, for William Rufus and Henry I
would not have sat upon the throne of England.
The formal decrees of the
synod, of which Anselm has preserved a summary, condemned simony in all its branches,
the incontinency of the clergy, as also usury and the carrying of arms by the
clergy. Some of the sins “which cry to heaven for vengeance”, viz.
sodomy and oppression of the poor, were also denounced, as were, moreover, the
“new heretics who had arisen in various parts of Gaul”.
The letters of Gregory Magistros, who was commissioned to expel them, show that
there were Paulicians in Armenia in this century. With their expulsion from
that country some connect the appearance of heretics with Manichaean beliefs in
the south of France. But by the discovery of the Paulician liturgy, entitled the
Key of Truth, it seems to have been made clear that its votaries were
rather Adoptionists than Manichees.
Whereas the “new heretics” were no doubt the upholders of the doctrines,
apparently Manichaean, which had been already condemned at the council of Charroux in Poitou (1027), and which are obviously akin to
those of the Bogomils of Bulgaria. These latter, holding as they did that there
were two equal principles, one good and the other bad (God and Satan), may
certainly be set down as Manichees; and so it is to
them that others trace the sectaries to whom Ademar gives that name.
But if it be the fact that
Basil, the founder of the Bogomils, was put to death under Alexis Comnenus (d.
1118), his doctrines can scarcely have spread to Aquitaine in 1027. If the “new
heretics” were Manichaeans, they must be taken as indicating a revival of an
old smouldering heresy. A year or two later (1052), we find the emperor hanging
“Manichaean heretics” at Goslar.
At the conclusion of the
synod, after carrying on his own shoulders the relics of St. Remy to the place
prepared for them, Leo set out for Mainz to hold another council. The last echo
of the synod of Rheims was a papal bull, in which, after recounting what he had
done there, the Pope exhorts the people of the whole kingdom of the Franks to
pay great devotion to their patron saint.
From his bulls it is easy to
trace the route of the Pope to Mainz. They show him weeping over the ravages of
war at Verdun, and consecrating churches at Metz. A contemporary painting at
the beginning of a Vita Leonis, now preserved at Berne, represents the
abbot Warin of Metz (domnus
abbas Warinus) offering a church (basilica
Sancti Arnulfi) to the Pope (dominus papa Leo nonus), and by means of two verses sets forth the fact
of its consecration by him:—
“Hoc ut
struxit opus Warinus nomine dictus
Contigit ut nonus leo
benediceret almus”.
On the 19th of October, in
presence of the Emperor Henry II, the synod of Mainz was brought to a
close. Some forty bishops assisted at it. Besides local matters, they occupied
themselves with devising remedies for the same great disorders as had been
discussed at Rheims.
Although indeed neither
simony, which was the vice principally at first attacked by Leo, for clerical
incontinence was at once crushed by these synods it is not easy to overestimate
the moral effect they produced. The multitude returned to their homes, and told
how the conduct of the greatest bishops had been examined in public by the
Pope, how the emperor was acting with him, and how even the hand of God Himself
seemed to be visibly supporting the Pontiff in his efforts to root out simony.
The germs of a strong public opinion against that most corroding vice had been
widely sown; the reformation of the eleventh century had received a powerful
impetus.
The synod over, the Pope began
his return journey to Rome, making of it a sort of splendid spiritual progress,
as he had done when he left it only a few months before. As might have been
expected, he passed through his beloved diocese of Toul. Here, as elsewhere, we
find him consecrating churches, and exempting monasteries from episcopal
jurisdiction, usually exacting in return some suitable acknowledgment. Thus the
abbess of Andlau had to send to Rome every year, for
the use of the Popes, three pieces of fine linen; the abbess of Holy Cross at Donauwerd, a chasuble, a gold-embroidered stole, a maniple,
and a girdle; and the abbess of Woffenheim, the
foundation and last resting-place of Leo’s parents, “a golden rose of two Roman
ounces in weight”, “as a memorial of the liberty” he had granted the convent.
It had to be sent to Rome eight days before the fourth Sunday in Lent (Laetare
Sunday), on which day the Popes, says Leo, are wont to carry it.
A short digression on so sweet
a subject as the rose may perhaps be here allowed. The symmetry of its
form, the richness of its colour, and the delicacy of its perfume may well
entitle it to be regarded as the queen of the flowers. To it all that is
loveliest in mankind is wont to be compared. It should not then come as a
surprise to anyone either that the rose was largely used by the pagans in the
worship of what they believed to be gods, or that the use of so charming an
object for the same purpose was retained by the Church in its services devoted
to the honour of the Almighty. Hence we find that in the twelfth century, at
least, on the Sunday before that of Pentecost, roses used to be cast from the
roofs of the churches on to the congregation below. Perhaps later this custom
was transferred to the day of Pentecost itself, which explains the origin of
the Italian name of Pasqua rosa for this
festival. And to this day in Dominican churches roses are blessed and
distributed to the people on Rosary Sunday, i.e., the first Sunday in
October. That the Roman Church might have an abundant supply of roses for pious
purposes, Constantine gave to Pope Mark a “fundus rosaries” (rose farm). At
some date previous to the pontificate of St. Leo IX, there had been instituted
for Mid-Lent Sunday some ceremony in connection with the rose, in which it was
carried in procession by the Pope. In the twelfth century, as we learn from the
Ordo of Canon Benedict, the Pope sang High Mass on Laetare Sunday in
the Church of S. Croce in Gerusalemme, “holding in
his hand a golden rose, (scented) with musk. After the Gospel he preached about
the flower, and showed it to the people, before his regular discourse on the
Gospel itself. After Mass he rode on horseback, with his crown upon his head
and the rose in his hand, back to the Lateran, and there gave the golden flower
to the prefect of the city”. Nowadays an artificial rose is blessed in the
Sistine chapel, and, after being incensed, sprinkled with musk and holy water,
and anointed with balm, is sent to some distinguished person, who is requested
to “accept this mystic rose bedewed with balm and musk, typifying the sweet
odours that should exhale from the good deeds of us all, especially of those in
high places”. The giving of the “golden rose” to those in high places, in token
of the good-will of the Pope, and in recognition of “signal services towards
this Apostolic See”, can be traced to Urban II, who in 1096, at Tours, bestowed
it upon Fulk IV (Rechin) of Anjou. The last king to
receive it in this country was Henry VIII, to whom it was granted by Pope
Clement VII, who noted: “I see too that on account of its charming properties
the rose is the glorious symbol of England”.
The rose sent to Henry is thus
quaintly described by Stow: “This tree was forged of fine gold, and wrought
with branch leaves, and flowers, resembling roses, set in a pot of gold, which
pot had three feet of an antique fashion of measure half a pint. In the
uppermost rose was a fair sapphire, loup pierced, the
bigness of an acorn. The tree was of height half an English yard, and in
breadth a foot”.
Not unnaturally the shape of
the “golden rose” was not always the same. I have seen the one which was given
by Clement V at the beginning of the fourteenth century to the prince-bishop of
Basle. It is in that most interesting museum in Paris known as the Musée de Cluny, and is really a little golden bush, with a
full-blown rose on the highest stem, and with five others on different stems in
divers stages of development
These grants of privilege, of
which mention has just been made, and very many others which Leo issued, but
which want of space compels us to leave unnoticed, show that throughout all his
pontificate he was, though not a monk himself, a great patron of monks and
nuns. Justly did he regard them as the guardians of virtue and of learning, and
as the helpers and protectors of the poor. He looked to the example
of their quiet but ceaseless toil, of their sweet and tender piety, of the
purity of their lives, of their boundless hospitality, and of their essentially
peaceful careers to serve as a powerful auxiliary in his attempts to reform an
idle, selfish, impure, and bellicose world
But though he was ever
endeavouring to increase their numbers, their prosperity, and their influence,
he was careful not to be a partner to any of their shortcomings. And so, when
it was reported to him that some of them went about with the object of inducing
men to bestow all their charities on religious houses to the detriment of their
parish churches, he ordained that such, at least, as contemplated becoming monks
should give half of what they intended to give to the Church to which they
belonged, and that they might then enter any monastery they pleased. He
approved of what the monks did “out of love”, but not what they were trying to
do “out of greed”.
History of
the church and state in Norway from the tenth to the sixteenth century
Before he left the North, the
subject of Christianity in the Scandinavian countries came up for discussion
between him and Adalbert of Bremen. In the course of the tenth century
Christianity was established in Norway. This had been effected by missionaries
from Sweden and Denmark, countries which had profited by the labours of St.
Ansgar, from the archiepiscopal See of Bremen, under the spiritual jurisdiction
of which the Popes had long ago placed all the Scandinavian countries, and
particularly from this country, where some of its rulers had been educated and
baptised. The swords of the two Olafs were the final
factors in the work. During the interval which elapsed between the time when
Harold Fairhair (863-934) made Norway one kingdom
under one ruler, and when Olaf II, the saint (1015-1030), organised the Church
in Norway, there were frequent struggles between the three Scandinavian
kingdoms; and Norway was occasionally for a brief space subject to the crown of
Denmark. But under Magnus the Good, the son of Olaf II, the situation was
reversed, and Denmark was, for a few years (1044-1047), united to the more
northern kingdom. On the death of Magnus (1047), however, the two countries
were again divided; and a fierce struggle for supremacy was commenced between
Harold Hardrada (1047-1066), king of Norway, a name with which our own history
renders us familiar, and Sweyn (or Svend) II, known as
Ulfsson from his father, or as Estrithson from his mother (1048-1075). To render his
independence still more secure, Sweyn desired to have the bishops of his
kingdom subject to a Danish metropolitan, and not to the German archbishop of
Bremen. He, accordingly, made known his wishes to the Pope. It was this very
intelligible attempt on the part of Sweyn that roused Adalbert to try to get
himself made a patriarch. He realised at once that the other Scandinavian kings
would follow the example of Sweyn, and he saw that the Dane’s request was
entertained by the Pope, and that, too, although the king was not very
favourably known to him, as he had had to bring pressure to bear upon him, to
make him put away a near relative he had taken to wife. The only way to save
the honourable position of his see was to have it endowed with patriarchal
rights over the various metropolitan sees which he foresaw would soon come into
existence, and which he knew would otherwise become wholly independent of
Bremen. As he no doubt feared that the good-will which the Pope entertained towards
him might not carry him to the desired lengths, he unwillingly agreed to the
establishment of an archiepiscopal see in Denmark, on condition that “Rome
would grant him patriarchal honours”. The deaths of Pope Leo and the Emperor
Henry in the midst of the protracted negotiations on the subject, and the
struggle between the Church and the empire which followed on them, caused the
matter to drop for a time. But in the end Denmark gained the day; and Paschal
II, in 1104, constituted Lund in Skaane (south
Sweden), then belonging to that kingdom, the metropolitan see of the North.
Wild and weird must have
seemed to the Pope the stories which Adalbert had to tell him of the
countries which his genius proposed to weld into a northern patriarchate, and
of the men who peopled them. He must have told him of Iceland, a land where
there was a midnight sun, a land of snow and fire; of Greenland, a most
inhospitable shore, but blessed with an attractive name. For its wily
discoverer, Eric the Red, argued, when he “went to settle that land which he
had found and which he called Greenland, that many men would desire to visit it
if he gave it a good name”. And, strangest of all, he must have told him of a
land far away to the West, which is called Vinland, because vines grow there
wild, producing excellent wine, and (where) fruit abounds which has not been
planted. He must have told him of all these lands, for there had long been
Christians in all of them, and he himself, at the request of distant Iceland
and Greenland, had sent preachers there. He must also have told him of the men
who inhabited them—men whose home was on the sea, “who never slept beneath the
sooty roof timbers”, whoever lusted for battle, and whose one dread was lest
they “might come to die of old age, within doors, upon a bed of straw”.
One such sea-king at least
stood before Leo IX. Among the Orkneys is an island, now from its superior size
known as the Mainland, but to the Norsemen of old as Hrossey
or Horse Island. Close to it is an islet (Birsay) which
at low tide is joined to it. On this small spot of ground are pointed out the
ruins of the castle of Earl (jarl) Thorfinn, of whom
“it is soothly said, that he has been the most
powerful of all the Orkney earls”. To show the extent of his sway, his biographer
quotes Arnon earlskald :—
“All the way from
Tuskar-skerry,
Down to Dublin, hosts obeyed
him,
Royal Thorfinn,
raven-feeder;
True I tell how liegemen loved
him”.
This formidable chieftain
became sole ruler of the Orkneys in 1046; and, after visiting Harold Hardrada
of Norway, Svveyn of Denmark, and the Kaiser Henry,
“fared to Rome and saw the Pope there, and there he took absolution from him
for all his misdeeds”. Though Leo had been a soldier himself, he must have been
shocked at what the sea-king had to tell him of his burnings and his slaughterings. However, with all the earnestness of his
saintly soul he exhorted the earl to a better life. His words were not lost on
the brave heart of Thorfinn. “The earl turned thence
to his journey home, and he came back safe and sound into his realm; and that
journey was most famous. Then the earl sat down quietly and kept peace over all
his realm. Then he left off warfare; then he turned his mind to ruling the
people and the land, and to lawgiving. He sate almost always in Birsay, and let them build there Christchurch, a splendid
minster. There, first, was set up a bishop’s seat in the Orkneys”. And
although, says Adam of Bremen, “they had before been ruled by English or Irish
bishops, our primate (Adalbert), by command of the Pope, consecrated Thorulf, bishop of Blascona (Bersay?), to take charge of all of them”.
Iceland.
The most interesting country
of which Adalbert, must have spoken to Leo was Iceland, the home of
Scandinavian history, a country of the early origin of which there are extant
authentic records second to none in dramatic interest. The first men to take up
their abode in Iceland were certain Irish monks or hermits. “Before Iceland was
peopled from Norway”, writes Ari (d. 1148), the Bede of Iceland,
“there were in it men whom the Northmen call Papar
(fathers); they were Christian men, and it is held that they must have come
over sea from the West, for there were found left by them Irish books, bells,
etc.” But, discovered accidentally in the second half of the ninth century by
the Norsemen (c. 861), it was colonised soon after by many of their best
families. Only the most uncompromising love of personal independence could have
induced the jarls of Norway to go and live in such a desolate region as
Iceland. But at the time of which we are speaking there was a king (Harold Fairhair, 863-934) in the land who was resolved to be king
in fact as well as in name. The sort of man he was is well set forth in the
contemporary Ravensong about him by Hornclofe:—
“Out at sea he will drink Yule
if he may have his will,
That eager prince, and play
Frey’s game.
From his youth up he loathed
the fire-cauldron, and sitting by the hearth,
The warm corner, and the
cushion full of down”.
A typical example of his doings
will show his method of effecting his purpose and its results. “He sent Thororm, his kinsman, to claim taxes from Asgrim, but he yielded none; so the king sent Thororm a second time for his head, and then he slew Asgrim. At that time Thorstein, the son of Asgrim, was out on Viking journeys ... Some
time afterwards he came back from the wars and laid his ship against Thruma (where Thororm lived) and
burnt Thororm in his house, together with his
household; the stock he cut down and sold the chattels. Whereupon he went to
Iceland”. Some of the earliest settlers and their slaves were Christians, for
the most part probably of the type of Helgi, who “was very shifty in his faith;
he believed in Christ, but made vows to Thor for seafaring and hardy deeds ... Some
of these”, continues Ari, “held faithfully to their belief unto the day of
their death; but in few cases did this pass on from parents to children, for
the sons of some of these reared temples and did sacrifices, and wholly heathen
the land remained for well-nigh a hundred and twenty winters (861-981)”. At the
end of that period a sea-rover, Thorvald, brought a Saxon bishop, Frederick, to
preach Christianity in Iceland. The good that the bishop effected (981-986) was
undone by the violence of Thorvald, and he returned to Saxony in despair.
As well-meaning as Thorvald,
but as violent, was the next notable preacher of Christianity in Iceland. “When
Olaf Trigvesson had been two years king of Norway”,
writes Snorri, “there was a Saxon priest in his house called Thangbrand, a passionate, ungovernable man, and a great
man-slayer; but he was a good scholar and a clever man. The king would not have
him in his house on account of his misdeeds, but gave him the errand to go to
Iceland and bring that land to the Christian faith”. He had as companion the
Icelander Gudlief, who is also set down as “a great
man-slayer”. Whatever else was wanting to these two preachers of the Gospel,
they had energy and the courage of their convictions. By the strength of their
right arms, and of their arguments, and by biting satire and invective,
they soon had the whole island in a blaze of excitement. Blows were
given and taken, lampoons were freely exchanged, and if many were embittered
against Christianity, many embraced it. A civil war was averted only by the
whole question’s being referred to the Althing or Parliament.
Of what took place at the famous
Althing of the year 1000 we have the most graphic details. The Christians
marched in a body to the Law-mount with crosses and incense, and earnestly
explained their faith. Unable to gainsay them, the pagans proposed that two men
from each quarter should be sacrificed to stop the spread of Christianity. Not
to be outdone, two of the Christians, Gisur and Hjalti, made this startling proposal: “Let us select, on
our side, some of our most worthy men, whom we may truly call victims to our
Lord Jesus Christ, that so we may live more blamelessly. Gisur
and I offer ourselves as victims for our province”. Others at once offered
themselves from the other quarters. Then it was suggested that pagans and
Christians should live apart, each party under its own laws, and such an uproar
arose “on the Hill of Laws that no man could hear another’s voice”. In the
midst of this confusion, a messenger came running to tell the assembly that the
subterranean fires had broken out, and were pouring forth their fiery cinders.
“No wonder”, quoth the pagans, “that the gods are
angry at language such as we have had to hear”. “But what”, quickly retorted a
pontiff-chief, “made the gods angry when the ashes on which we stand were all
aglow?” That, all well knew, must have been when the soil of Iceland was as yet
untrodden by the foot of man. The pagans were silenced, but not convinced, and
all hope of peace seemed lost, when the Law-man, Thorgeir,
proposed a compromise. All were to be baptised, but might be allowed to expose
children, and eat horse-flesh. Sacrifice might be offered to the gods in
private, but if witnesses convicted anyone of so doing, he was to be exiled.
The compromise was accepted, and “it is certain that these and other evil pagan
customs were abolished after a few winters”, concludes Ari the Learned.
As then Christianity had been
established by law in Iceland some fifty years before Leo came to the throne of
Peter, there cannot be a doubt that Adalbert, who was destined to consecrate
(c. 1055) the first native Icelander, Isleif by
name, for a definite see (Skalholt) in Iceland, spoke
to him on the ecclesiastical affairs both of that country and of Greenland. For
he had already sent missionaries to both those places. “So affable was he”,
wrote Adam of Bremen “so bountiful, so hospitable, so anxious to stand well in
the eyes both of God and man, that men, especially of the North, eagerly drew
to his side. Among them came envoys from the remotest coasts, Icelanders,
Greenlanders, and men from the Orkneys, to beg that he would send them
preachers of the faith. This he did”.
At any rate, whether Adalbert
did or did not speak to the Pope about Iceland, it is certain that an
Icelander did. When the Icelandic priest Isleif (or Islaf) had reached his fiftieth year, we are told that “he
was bidden to go abroad, and was chosen bishop by the whole commonweal in
Iceland. Then he went abroad and southward to Saxland,
and went to see the Emperor Henry Conradson, and gave him a white bear that had
come from Greenland, and this beast was the greatest treasure, and the emperor
gave Isleif his writ with his seal to go over all his
dominions. Then he went to see Pope Leo. And the Pope sent his writ to
Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen, that he should give Isleif
the consecration of a bishop on Whit Sunday; and the Pope said that he was in
hope that by God’s grace this bishopric should be a long-enduring office, if
the first bishop were consecrated to Iceland on the day in which God blessed
the whole world with the gift of the Holy Ghost. And Isleif
was consecrated bishop on that day according to the Pope’s command (at bothe páva, at the Pope's
bidding) by Adalbert, archbishop in Bremen, fourteen nights before Columba’s
Mass-day (May 26, 1056?). And the archbishop gave him all the insignia that he
needed to have with the office of a bishop, according as the Pope and the
emperor sent him word”.
It may, then, be taken for
granted that the Icelanders were acquainted with the position and authority of
the Pope in the Church. Their annals, it may be noted, had already begun to
enter their names, and they tell how their second native bishop of Skalholt, Gizur, was consecrated (c.
1080) by Hardvig, archbishop of Magdeburg, “at the
command of Gregory VII”.
Though, as we have seen, Leo
did not raise the See of Bremen to the dignity of a patriarchate, as the
large-minded ambition of its prelate desired, he issued a bull confirming its
privileges in the style of his predecessors from the time of the establishment
of the See of Hamburg by Gregory IV, and of its transfer to Bremen under
Nicholas I. Although objections are urged against the Hamburg-Bremen series of
papal bulls, from that of Gregory IV to the one in question, there can be no
doubt that, if some of them have been interpolated in the matter of details as
to the exact countries subject to the united see, they are substantially
authentic. The bulls of Gregory and Nicholas, subordinating to it the Danes,
Swedes, Slavs, and adjoining peoples, were preserved in its archives in the
days of Adam, its canonical historian. Hence, after what we have seen of the
relations between Adalbert and such distant people as the Greenlanders, we may
safely accept the verdict of the majority of historians that Leo’s bull
regarding the See of Bremen is authentic, and that he subjected to him not only
the Swedes, the Danes, the Norwegians, and the Slavs from the river Penis in Sclavania, which formed one of the boundaries of the March
of the Billungs, to the Egdore
(Eider in Schleswig-Holstein), but also Islant
(Iceland), Gronlant (Greenland), and Scridevinum (Scritefingi). On the
same conditions of obedience to the Apostolic See as had been laid down by it
for “the most blessed Boniface”, he was to take the place of the Pope in those
regions, and was to ordain bishops for them according as they were brought
“into the fold of Christ”. And as a matter of fact, as we learn from his
younger contemporary, the canon of Bremen, Adalbert did consecrate bishops both
for Norway and Iceland, and sent letters both to the Icelanders and the
Greenlanders, promising to come to them soon, so that they might rejoice
together.
History of the Northmen up to the conquest of England by William the
Conqueror
The Romans, ever unhappy when
the Pope was not in their midst, and ever turbulent when he was, gave Leo a
royal welcome when he came back. On his first journey to Rome he had brought
with him Hildebrand of Cluny; and this time, in furtherance of his plan to
surround himself with the cream of the monastic order, he brought with him
Humbert from the famous Lorraine abbey of Moyenmoutier
in the diocese of Toul. Both by word and deed he was to prove himself one of
the greatest of the great men whom Leo gathered around him.
Hardly had he returned to Rome
when the cries of the people of south Italy called him away. Their condition
had long been heartrending, for they had long been the prey of Greeks,
Saracens, and their own princes. Now they were feeling the sting of another
serpent, which, however, was fortunately destined to eat up the others. From about
the year 1030 the Normans had been steadily increasing their hold on southern
Italy. Fresh recruits joined them from Normandy, among others the famous Robert
Guiscard, and his numerous brothers, sons of a poor knight, Tancred of Hauteville, near Coutances. After they had seized (1041) Melfi, “the head and gate of all Apulia”, as Leo of Ostia
calls it, they naturally made more rapid headway. With all the ideas of
“gathering property” held by their pagan Viking ancestors, they waged war as
cruelly as the Saracens. What they could not keep they destroyed, and what they
could not seize by force they obtained by treachery. Nor did they care whether
they laid “iron arms” on the lands of priests or people, prince or Pope.
By letter and by envoy Leo begged
the Normans to be more considerate in their treating of the people; but
he soon found that he got nothing from them but smooth words.
Accordingly, as well for the sake of reinvigorating the Church in Apulia, which
in the midst of the horrors of war “seemed to have well-nigh perished”, as to
take the Normans to task for their conduct, he determined to go thither in
person. Outwardly displaying the greatest respect for him, “the whole race of
the Normans” went to meet him. To the Pope’s exhortations and threats they
promised on oath that they would do as he wished, and declared, should he order
it, that they would at once return across the seas. “When the Pope heard this,
thinking that others were as single-minded as he was himself, he gave them his
blessing and leave to depart”. While he was in the South, the crafty Normans
held their hands; but their conduct soon showed that they had but sworn with
the lips, and that they had resolved to do all that their hearts desired.
Passing through Capua,
Salerno, and Melfi, Leo reached Benevento; and when
its rulers, Pandulf III and Landulf VI, refused to tender to him the obedience
which he maintained was due to him from the donations of the city which the
emperors had made to the Popes, the people promptly “expelled them and their
men of law”. Evidently there was then in Benevento a party which had more faith
in the Pope’s protection than in that of their own princes. The city was soon
to pass definitely into the hands of the Popes. The father of its last Lombard
ruler was the latter of those just expelled
From Benevento Leo went on to
Mount Gargano; and when he had refreshed his soul with prayer at the shrine of
St. Michael, he proceeded to hold a synod in the ancient town of Siponto hard by. This council, held on Greek territory, at
which it is supposed the bishops of Calabria and Apulia assisted, deposed two
archbishops who had obtained their positions by bribery and corruption, and
were endeavouring to override one another. “And then”, continues Aimé, “he turned him back to Rome, and once more betook
himself to the road to correct other cities”.
However, before he again
started on another journey he held his usual Paschal synod at Rome. What makes
this one of special account is the fact that it formally condemned the doctrines
of Berengarius of Tours on the Blessed Eucharist. Over fifty bishops from Italy
and from the different kingdoms of Gaul, and over thirty abbots assisted at its
deliberations. Compared with the numbers present at his first Paschal synod,
those at his second may serve to show the rapid advance of Leo’s influence.
After disposing of a question of precedence, and excommunicating the bishops of
Brittany for their simony and their refusal to submit to the archiepiscopal
jurisdiction of Tours, the council proceeded to adopt a new mode of attacking
the marriages of priests. It forbade all, as well clergy as laity, to have any
intercourse with priests and deacons who failed to keep their vows of chastity.
The successors of Leo, especially St. Gregory VII, persisted in this plan,
which was ultimately crowned with success.
But the most important
question dealt with by the synod was the heresy of Berengarius of Tours. Born
towards the beginning of the eleventh century, Berengarius was educated at the
famous school of Chartres by the no less famous bishop of the same city, Fulbert, the heir of the teaching of Gerbert
of Rheims. Of this he was reminded by an old schoolfellow, Adelmann,
in a most touching letter which he wrote to him when the report had reached him
“that he had torn himself from the unity of Holy Mother Church, and that he seemed
to be holding views which differed from Catholic faith regarding the Body and
Blood of the Lord which throughout the whole world is daily immolated on the
altar”. “The words of the report”, the letter continued, “set forth that you
hold that we have not the true Body and Blood of Christ, but a mere figure and
image”. The elder man called to the mind of the younger their “most sweet
companionship” under their “venerable Socrates” (Fulbert)
at Chartres, and the private little colloquies which he used to hold with them
of an evening in the garden, when he was wont, with tearful fervor,
to exhort them to follow in the footsteps of the Fathers, so that they might
never tread a new and deceitful path. Did the good old bishop augur ill from
what he saw of the character of the youthful Berengarius, or was he simply one
of his favourite disciples? Whether Fulbert regarded
him with apprehension or with trustful love, it is certain that, while he made
friends among his companions, who admired him for his attainments, which seem,
however, to have been more external than intellectual, more attractive than
profound, he engendered in a larger number distrust of his mental abilities and
of the sincerity of his actions. Guitmund, “the most
eloquent man of our times”, who later on wrote a treatise against the teaching
of Berengarius, says, on the testimony of those who then knew him, that “whilst
a youth at school, puffed up by an ability that was wanting in ballast, he had
but little respect for the judgment of his master, and none for that of his
fellow-students. He even despised the works on the liberal arts. Unable to rise
to the higher flights of philosophy, for his mind was not keen enough, and the
liberal arts throughout the Gauls were then in a
state oi decay, he strove, by giving new meanings to old words (a habit he has
kept up even to the present day) to win for himself in one way or another a
reputation for special learning. Moreover, by pompous gait, by using a higher
chair than those employed by the others, by striving to assume the dignity of
his master rather than to acquire his learning, by withdrawing his head far
back into his cowl, as though in deep thought, by speaking in a very slow and
plaintive voice, so as to deceive the unwary—by all these means did he
endeavour to insinuate that he was a master in the arts”. Here, of course, we
have the views of those of his fellow-students who had no special love for
Berengarius. But they certainly show that, consciously or unconsciously, he was
an eccentric and affected young man. After the death of Fulbert
(1029) he went to Tours, and became scholasticus
or master of its cathedral school, and even after he had been made archdeacon
of Angers (c. 1040), continued to give lessons there. As a teacher he
attached to himself many devoted disciples, who admired not only what he said
and the way in which he set forth what he had to say, but also his abstemious
life. But, among scholars at least, eloquence will never prevail over learning,
at any rate with the greater number, nor sophistry over real philosophy. The
solidity of the teaching of Lanfranc, who is said to have been the
fellow-student of Berengarius, was drawing the more earnest students from Tours
to Bec. It was about the time when the latter was named archdeacon that the
cultured Italian, who was destined to do so much for France and England, left
his native Pavia and came to Normandy. For the sake of leading a
retired life, and of serving God in obscurity, he withdrew to the little abbey
of Bec, which had just been founded by one who, when in the world, had been a
distinguished soldier (Herluin). But when, after a
year or two, Herluin named him prior (1045), he had
to teach, and before long he caused “the school of Bec to become the most
important intellectual centre of Normandy and of France”, and attracted even some
of the pupils of the scholasticus of Tours.
According to some authors, it
was chagrin at the loss of his students that caused Berengarius to put forth
his heretical views on the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist. “Anxious
to draw to himself the attention of all, he preferred to be a heretic and the
cynosure of all eyes rather than live as a Catholic known only to the eyes of
God”.
For many centuries no attempt
was made to set forth the belief of the Church regarding the sacrament of the
altar fully and in scientific terms. It was, however, inevitable that the
attempt should be made. Monothelism in the seventh
century, and Adoptionism in the eighth, had resulted in a very definite
presentment of Catholic doctrine with regard to the union of the human and
divine natures in the Person of God the Son. The ninth century witnessed the
first effort to unfold the belief of the Church on the Eucharist, and to clothe
it in scientific language. The difficult task was essayed by a monk of Corbie, Paschasius Radbert (d.
865). He had not to deal with the Real Presence; he had not to prove that the
Eucharistic bread was something more than ordinary bread. Unless we are to
regard the Discipline of the Secret as childish, the mysterious words of
the Fathers on the subject of the Eucharist as inept, their sublime language
regarding it as gross exaggeration, all the Eucharistic ceremonies as misleading,
and Christian symbolism as an utterly baseless and groundless figment of puerile
imaginations, we must conclude that it had always been the firm belief of
Christian men that there was very much more beneath the form of the sacramental
bread than the mere product of wheat. Radbert, then,
did not set himself to explain that that was Christ’s body, but to develop the
import of that proposition. This he did in terms, some of which not
unnaturally, as obviously tentative, were not altogether unexceptional. In
insisting, for instance, that the Eucharist was the true Body of Christ, and in
developing its identity with that born of the Virgin Mary, he used expressions
which were easily capable of being understood in too carnal a sense. His
treatise caused some stir. Among the works which it called forth, those which
at one time or another attracted most attention were the productions of Ratram (d. 865), also a monk of Corbie, and of John
Scotus Erigena. The work of the former is most obscure, as it seems at one time
to teach the doctrine of Transubstantiation with Paschasius,
and at another to call in question even the Real Presence. The book of John the
Scot, however, though now lost, appears to have denied the doctrine even of the
Real Presence with no uncertain voice. Such teaching was only to be expected
from that pantheistic and rationalistic writer. But even the voice of theology
cannot make itself heard amid the din of arms. The first controversy on the
Eucharist was stifled in the dire political troubles which distressed the West
as the power of the Carolingians declined; and, when Berengarius started the
second, the simple Catholic faith was that the Eucharistic bread was really and
truly the Body of Christ. But if the first controversy concerned the mode
of Christ’s presence in the Eucharist, the second, for a brief space at least,
concerned the fact of His presence. But as the controversy progressed,
Berengarius began to hold that the Body of Christ was present in or
with the Eucharistic bread (i.e., the doctrine of impanation or companation), and this second controversy on the mode of
Christ’s presence in the Eucharist ended in the definite enunciation of
Transubstantiation as the doctrine of the Catholic Church.
Following in the footsteps of
John the Scot, as he himself allowed, and feeling secure in the friendship of
the bishop of Angers and in that of Geoffrey Martel, count of Anjou,
Berengarius proclaimed (1047) that the Eucharistic bread was not really the
Body of Christ, but merely a figure of it, and that after consecration the
bread was exactly what it had been before. His old friend Adelmann
wrote to implore him “for God’s sake and by the sweet memory of Fulbert to love Catholic peace, and not to disturb the
republic of Christ, so well founded by our ancestors”. Lanfranc lectured
against him, and then set out to assist at the Roman council whence, we have
digressed.
As soon as he was informed
that Lanfranc had condemned his teaching as heretical, Berengarius wrote to him
deprecating what he called his precipitation, but stating his approval of the
opinions of John the Scot. What this letter brought upon its author shall be
stated in the words of Lanfranc: “Your heresy was brought to the notice of the
Apostolic See in the days of Pope Leo. Whilst he was presiding at a synod,
surrounded by a great multitude of bishops, abbots, and pious persons of divers
ranks and countries, the letters you had sent to me on the Body and Blood of
the Lord were ordered to be read in public. The messenger you had commissioned
to deliver them to me, finding I had left Normandy, gave them to some clerks.
They apprised themselves of their contents; and, when they discovered that they
were not in harmony with the general belief of the Church, were moved by zeal
for the cause of God to have them read to others, and to make known their
contents to many ... A clerk of Rheims brought them to Rome. After they had
been read, and it was clear that you adhered to John the Scot, condemned Paschasius, and held doctrines concerning the Eucharist
which were opposed to the common faith, you, who would deprive the Church of
Holy Communion, were yourself cut off from communion with the Church”. However,
to give him an opportunity to clear himself, Berengarius was summoned to appear
before a council to be held by the Pope at Vercelli in September.
The fact that, in the first
instance, he had been condemned, as it were, unheard, enabled him meanwhile to
pose as a victim to malice. He spoke of the Pope in contemptuous language,
calling him sacrilegious; disseminated his doctrines “by means of poor
scholars, whom he allured by daily hire”; and denounced those who did not see
“eye to eye” with him as blind, or as for the most part incapable of
comprehending the matter in hand. Still, he made up his mind to present himself
at the council of Vercelli, and went to the king of France, who was also abbot
of Tours, to obtain his permission to leave the kingdom. But Henry was alarmed
at the growing excitement caused by the spread of the new doctrines; and he
was, moreover, as we have seen, under the influence of men who were anxious to
limit the power of the Pope in France. He accordingly threw the scholasticus of Tours into prison, and made
arrangements to have the affair examined in France.
Meanwhile, as the heresy of
Berengarius was still spreading, the book of John Scotus was read and condemned
at the council of Vercelli, as was also the doctrine of its latest advocate.
Released from confinement—in
all probability not long after the closing of the synod just mentioned—we next
find him making a vain attempt to win over to his doctrines the young duke of
Normandy (the Conqueror). Vanquished soon after (1051) in a public disputation
at Brionne, he was condemned at a council which King Henry caused to assemble
at Paris (October 16, 1051). Deoduinus of Liège had
written to warn Henry that no good could come of his council unless it were
held with the authorization of the Holy See, as it would probably be necessary
to condemn Eusebius Bruno, bishop of Angers, also; and “you know”, he wrote,
“that a bishop can only be condemned by apostolical authority”. Hence he begged
the king not to cite them before him “until the See
of Rome has granted you the power of condemning them”. Besides, he concluded,
their doctrine is already condemned enough. It is their punishment that should
be thought about. Although the council decreed that if Berengarius did not
repent, he and his should be seized, and made to retract, or put to death,
their resolutions remained a dead letter. Berengarius was safe under the
protection of Bishop Bruno and the powerful Geoffrey (II) Martel, count of
Anjou, the son of the dreaded Fulk the Black. It was convenient to that noble
to defend those in opposition to the Holy See, as he was under sentence of
excommunication himself for keeping in prison the bishop of Le Mans.
But the power of Geoffrey was
on the wane. He had brought upon himself the enmity of the “stark”
William. And so, not to have too many foes, he released bishop Gervase at the
end of 1053 or at the beginning of 1054. This he at once made known to the Pope
by a letter in which he strove to show that the whole blame of what had
occurred between them rested with the bishop, since he personally had done all
that lay in his power “not to show himself a rebel to the authority of the Holy
See and not to fail in respect to the ecclesiastical dignity”. The letter concluded
by a request that the Pope would provide for the interests of the See of Le
Mans, inasmuch as Gervase had fled to Normandy as soon as released, and had
refused to return to have his case tried even under a safe-conduct. To take
further cognisance of this matter, and at the same time to take additional
steps with regard to the affair of Berengarius, Leo sent into France his
trusted Hildebrand. At a council which he summoned at Tours, Berengarius,
whether in fear because abandoned by Geoffrey, or because he was won over by
the kind and patient hearing accorded him by the legate, swore, perchance, it
is to be feared, rather with the lips than with the heart, that he professed
the general faith of the Church; or, to use his own words, that “after the consecration
the bread and wine of the altar are the Body and Blood of Christ”. He was, he
also tells us, to have gone to Rome with Hildebrand to justify himself before
Leo, when word was brought that that great Pontiff had died. The after history
of Berengarius will prove at least that he again changed his mind on the
subject of the Holy Eucharist; and this he could the more readily
do, as he held the convenient doctrine that, if he had not been properly treated,
or if threats had been used against him, he could take an oath and then break
it.
During the interval (May to
September) between the two councils, Leo was occupied in visiting and seeing to
the good order and prosperity of monasteries both in north and in south
Italy; in strengthening his temporal authority by bringing to subjection the
neighbouring barons (perhaps the adherents of the house of Tusculum); and in
receiving princes of certain “foreign nations” who came to him, “as to an
apostolic man”, to do him homage. This last item is a very disappointing
piece of information, as it would be very interesting to know for certain
whence came these strange rulers, whether they were Christian or pagan, Slav,
Saracen, or Hungarian. But, unfortunately, no other historical passage can be
found which sheds any further sure light on the matter. While, however, it is
possible that these embassies may have been in connection with the second
expulsion of the Saracens from Sardinia, which took place in this year, and
which was the result of the joint action of the Pisans and the Holy See, it
seems far more probable that they were from the Hungarians.
Among those with whom Leo had
to contend for the temporalities of his see was Hunfrid
of Ravenna. Raised to that see by the emperor, and trusting in the support of
some of his courtiers, he began to act, as others in his position had sometimes
done before him, as though he were the independent temporal as well as the
spiritual ruler of his archdiocese. In vain called to account by the Pope, he
was at length excommunicated by him at the synod of Vercelli. This resulted in
his falling under the displeasure of the emperor, who summoned him to Augsburg
to meet the Pope. There he was compelled to restore what he had usurped, and to
beg for absolution (February 1051). But, as Leo observed that he had asked for
it with scarcely disguised mockery, we are assured by Wibert
that he predicted the speedy death which overtook him after he had but just
returned to his see. Immediately after the synod of Vercelli, Leo for the
second time crossed the Alps, once again to visit Toul for the purpose of
solemnly translating the relics of Gerard, bishop of that city, whom he had
just canonised at the Roman synod, and to interview the emperor. Crossing the
great St. Bernard, and resting on the way at St. Maurice’s at Agaune, at Romainmoutier, at
Besançon, and at Langres, he reached Toul soon after
the middle of October. As he moved along, he did all that he could, by word and
deed and by grant of privileges, to revive the faith of the people, or to
improve the status of the monasteries at which he rested. And, as usual,
wherever he had passed, order and justice revived.
Arrived at his beloved Toul,
he found awaiting him the same enormous crowds of people as at Rheims, and with
them various bishops, “as so many columns of the Church”. Among the latter were
Ulf, bishop of Dorchester, and George, bishop of the Hungarian See of Colocza, who had come on a special deputation to the Pope.
Mindful of what had occurred on a similar occasion at Rheims, Leo decided that
the translation should take place at night, and in presence of the monks and
clergy only. Between October 20 and 21, they assembled in church, and “in
alternate choirs” sang Matins far into the night. Then amid the light of
candles and the smoke of incense the Lord Pope, surrounded by bishops, came to
see the stone removed which covered the sacred tomb. When the venerable body,
more precious than priceless treasure, was exposed to view, it was seen that no
corruption had altered the beauty of the face. The closed eyes seemed those of
a man who was slumbering in peace; the beard had grown, and full locks of hair
hung down on each side of the head. The pontifical vestments were in an equally
good state of preservation. The attitude of the body did not so much suggest
death, as of one risen from the dead. He appeared to be lying in reposeful
expectation of the voice of the angel which was to bid him come forth from his
tomb. The limbs, which exhaled an aroma more fragrant than that of nectar, were
found to be almost intact. The nerves and muscles still held the joints
together; but the flesh seemed to present but little more than lines of dust.
The precious remains were wrapped with all the care imaginable in linen cloths,
and exposed to the veneration of the faithful, who came flocking in from every
side. On the following day (October 22) the solemn feast of the saint was
celebrated; and the Pope consecrated an altar ... where the memory of St.
Gerard was honoured”
Soon after the beginning of
the new year, Leo left Lorraine to go to meet the emperor. The birth of a son
and heir (afterwards to be the famous Henry IV, who was to cause so much
trouble in the world) had brought joy to the heart of Henry the Black, and he
showed himself very gracious to the Pope. He restored, at his request, to its
rightful owners, land alienated by the crown, and, as we have seen, made Hunfrid of Ravenna submit to him. The relations between the
Pope and the emperor at this time seem to have been cordial in the extreme. But
one cannot help wondering whether Leo was satisfied with the imperial policy
with regard to the Hungarians, or if he expressed his disapproval of Henry’s
personal immoralities? No means, however, exist of gratifying this laudable
curiosity. Still, it is far from unlikely that he was displeased that the
efforts which the emperor was making to subdue the Hungarians left him unable
to undertake anything against the Normans, whose cruelties and successes in south
Italy were filling him with sorrow and apprehension.
After celebrating at Augsburg
the feast of the Purification with the emperor and a large number of bishops
and princes, Leo and Henry parted with every demonstration of friendship. The
Pope seems to have returned direct to Rome. When he arrived there, his first
act was to appoint a successor to himself in the See of Toul. Whether the papal
finances had now so improved that he could afford to do without the revenues of
Toul, or whether his stay there had shown him the need of a bishop on the spot,
he at any rate appointed his chancellor, Udo, to succeed him in his first see.
His next important act in Rome
was to hold the annual Paschal synod. At this assembly judgment was passed on
certain episcopal offenders; a dispute between the bishop of Sabina and the
monastery of Farfa was settled in favour of the
latter; it was decreed that monks were to be anathematized who would not return
to their monasteries, and the question of reordinations was discussed. The
matter had already been brought up twice for discussion, and this time the Pope
begged the bishops to pray that God would reveal what should be decreed on the
subject. Leo’s request resulted in the appearance of two pamphlets: one by
Cardinal Humbert against the validity of ordinations conferred by simoniacal bishops, and the other by St. Peter Damian, in
which he showed that bishops are always bishops, and that, as long as they used
the correct form, their ordinations were valid. The doctrine enunciated by the
saint is that of the Catholic Church today.
Scarcely had Leo returned to
Rome, when envoys came to him from Benevento, begging him to come to their
city, probably because they were harassed either by the princes (Pandulf III
and Landulf VI) whom they had expelled (1050), or by the Normans, or by both.
With a view to making himself thoroughly acquainted with the state of affairs,
and to ascertaining how far his presence was really desired by the people, he
sent thither as legates Dominic, patriarch of Aquileia, and Cardinal Humbert.
They found that the people were really anxious to place themselves under papal
rule. They proved their sincerity by taking an oath of fealty to the Pope, by
formally making over their city to him by deed, and by sending to Rome twenty
of the most distinguished of their number as hostages. Satisfied, accordingly,
of their good faith, Leo, passing through Capua and his well-loved Monte
Cassino, entered Benevento in July to receive in person the homage of its
citizens Splendid was the reception accorded him both by the native inhabitants
of the city, and by the strangers, Jews and Greeks, within their gates. All
came forth from the city to greet him, singing the customary “laudes” in their respective languages.
Full of the stories of Norman
violence and cruelty which the Beneventans poured
into his ears, Leo left them and went on to Salerno to interview in their
behalf its prince, Guaimar. All his efforts, however,
for the amelioration of the condition of south Italy were spoilt by the people
themselves. Urged on, not, as some without any grounds have imagined, by Argyrus, the son of the patriot Melus,
who had now taken service with the Greeks, and had been named Catapan by their emperor, but by a fierce longing for
revenge, the Lombards of Apulia planned a general massacre of the Normans on a
given day. Their vile design was accomplished, but only in part. Unfortunately,
however, among the slain was Drogo, one of the best of the Norman chiefs, who
had been recognized as their leader by Henry the Black, and who had promised the
Pope to defend Benevento. If the Normans had been cruel oppressors of the
native population before the murder of Drogo and their other companions who
fell by the daggers of the infuriated Lombards, they were, not unnaturally,
much more cruel after it. Feeling powerless to effect any good, Leo, with a
heavy heart, returned towards Rome.
Never losing an opportunity of
effecting a reform by a personal inspection, he went round by Subiaco, as he
had heard of some scandals of which its abbot had been guilty. But before word
reached the monks that the Pontiff was ascending the wild gorge in which is
situated “the cradle of the Order of St. Benedict, patriarch of the monks of
the West”, the guilty man had taken to flight. Replacing him by the Frank
Humbert, who, until he alienated himself from the curia of the Roman See, did
so much to increase the glory of the monastery, Leo then turned his attention
to the temporalities of the monastery. Finding that the inhabitants of the
little town of Subiaco (the Sublacenses) were
endeavouring to push their claims against the monastery by a number of forged
documents, he caused “the greater part of them to be burnt in his presence”.
Then once again confirming the monastery in its possessions, he proclaimed: “By
the power of God Almighty this spot is almost miraculous, and this
monastery is the head of all the monasteries of Italy”.
Between the months of October
1051 and May 1052, we find Leo now in Rome and now in one of the adjoining
cities. During that period he was engaged not only in the normal work of
elevating everywhere the state of religion, but in receiving appeals for help
against the Normans, and in endeavouring to induce some of the powerful ones of
the earth to grant him assistance against them. The Normans were the great
cross of Leo’s pontificate, just as the Lombards had been the heavy trial of
the life of Gregory the Great. On behalf of the Greeks, Argyrus
sent messenger after messenger to implore his cooperation against them. The
people of Apulia sent secret envoys to him, entreating him to bring an army to
help them. “The Normans”, they said, “had become worse than ever… Fortified
cities can scarcely hold out against them ... A miserable death is impending
over each and all of us”. Their mutilated bodies furnished terrible evidence to
the truth of their words. They were suffering at the hands of the cruel Normans
what the English were soon to have to endure from the same hard conquerors.
“Many were the men who came to the Pope from Apulia, whose sightless eyes and
amputated limbs told the sad story of Norman barbarity”. It is not difficult to
imagine how deeply the tender heart of Leo was affected by the contemplation of
so much misery. He wrote to the emperor, to the king of France, to first one
ruler and then another, to beg them to come and free the land “from the malice
of the Normans. But, as some feared the power of the Normans, and as others
were y well disposed towards them, no one paid heed to the Pope’s prayers”.
Failing to obtain the aid of
another's sword, Leo resolved to try once more the effect of his own words.
This time he took with him, as his “envoy of peace”, his friend the saintly Halinard, archbishop of Lyons; for he expected much help
from his great linguistic attainments. But though he visited one great city
after another (May to July), Capua, Naples, Benevento, Salerno, it was all to
no purpose. The princes would not combine against the enemy who was soon to
destroy them all, and the Normans, who had resolved to be masters of south
Italy, would not stop their aggrandizements. As a last resource, Leo determined
to raise an army and attack the intruders himself. In a letter sent some time
afterwards (January 1054) to the Greek emperor, Constantine Monomachus, he
explained at some length the motives which urged him to come to this strong
decision:
“When, looking round with that
anxious solicitude with which I have to watch over all the churches, I saw a
lawless and alien people raging with incredible and unheard-of fury, and with
more than heathen impiety, against the churches of God, butchering Christians,
and sometimes putting them to death with new and horrible tortures, sparing
neither children, old men, nor even weak women, and, making no distinction
between sacred and profane, plundering, burning, and levelling with the ground
the basilicas of the saints, I very frequently remonstrated with them. I
besought them to amend; I preached to them; I pressed them in season and out of
season; I threatened them with the vengeance of both God and men. But, as the
wise man saith, ‘No man can correct whom God hath despised’; nor is the foolish
man corrected ... Hence, ready not only to spend worldly goods to succour the
sheep of Christ, but to be spent myself, I thought it best, as a protest
against their wickedness, or, if needs be, for the purpose of repressing their
contumacy, to gather together forces from every quarter. For I was mindful of
the saying of the Apostle, ‘that princes bear not the sword in vain, but are
avengers to execute wrath upon him that doth evil, and are not a terror to the
good work but to the evil’; and that kings and dukes are sent by ‘God for the punishment
of evil-doers’.”
Hungary. 1052.
At this juncture the cry of
another distressed people, rose up to the Pope. Envoys reached him from
Andrew, king of Hungary. Reminding him that their country was subject to him,
they implored him to come and procure for them from the emperor the blessings of
peace. Leo looked on the summons as a heaven-sent opportunity. He would go and
persuade Henry not to molest the Hungarians, who only wished to be left to
themselves, but to turn his arms against men bent, at any cost to others, on
forcing forward their own interests. Leaving Halinard
behind him in Rome to await his return, he set out for Germany (July 1052), and
found the emperor encamped before Brezisburg, on the Maraha (Pressburg on the March),
one of the border towns of Hungary.
To regain the throne from
which undue favouring of the foreigner had caused him to be expelled, Peter, the
successor of St. Stephen, had placed Hungary under the suzerainty of the
emperor. This led to his second expulsion by an indignant people, and to the
frequent invasion of their country by Henry in order to wring from their new
ruler, King Andrew (1046-1061), the submission promised by Peter. To induce the
emperor to leave him in undisturbed possession of his throne, Andrew endeavoured
to secure the intercession of the Pope on his behalf, and, as we have seen,
sent George of Colocza to meet him when he crossed
the Alps in 1050. Leo was in a delicate position. True to the noble papal idea
of the empire, he was anxious to increase its influence; and yet, on the
other hand, the relations between Hungary and the Papacy naturally filled him
with a warm sympathy for this, the youngest among the kingdoms of Christendom.
However, he came to the conclusion that the tribute promised to Henry by the
Hungarians ought to be paid, and, to induce them to pay it, he sent them
various legates. Though one of these envoys was no other than the young but
already famous Hugh, abbot of Cluny, and though his biographer assures us that
he succeeded in his mission, it would seem that no more than a mere momentary
improvement in the relations between the two disputants had hitherto resulted
from the strenuous efforts of the Pope. The Hungarians, indeed, had agreed to
pay tribute, if the emperor would accept the situation and leave them with the
king in whom they trusted. But, “disdainfully refusing to accept the conditions
offered by King Andrew”, Henry had made an unsuccessful invasion of the country
in 1051. His failure only made him more than ever determined to be master of
the country. He prepared for another and greater expedition. In despair Andrew
begged (1052) the Pope to come and save him from the impending blow. Leo, as we
have seen, at once accepted the invitation. But again were his efforts in the cause
of peace unavailing. The party at the court which was opposed to him persuaded
the emperor not to listen to his moderate counsels; and another success in the
field gained by the Hungarians rendered Andrew no longer disposed to offer any
terms at all. Nor could even a threat of excommunication on the part of the
Pope induce him to promise again the concessions he had formerly tendered. “And
so”, concludes Wibert’s narrative of these events,
“the Roman republic lost its rule over the kingdom of Hungary, and to this day
sees with sorrow its borders harried with fire and sword”.
In company with the Pope,
Henry withdrew from the Hungarian frontier to Ratisbon (October 1052), having
acquired from his expedition “neither honour nor material advantage”; and, if
we read in Herman that in the following year peace was concluded at the diet of
Tribur between Henry and the Hungarians, we must take
care not to believe that hostilities between them ceased for any appreciable
time.
During the four months that
Leo remained in Germany after the failure of his efforts to bring to a
conclusion the differences between the empire and Hungary, he spent much of his
time in going about from place to place—for his goodly and saintly presence was
everywhere desired—consecrating churches or altars, translating or verifying relics,
granting privileges, and settling disputes, as well secular as ecclesiastical.
But, of course, he did not
forget that the Norman question was one of the chief motives that had brought
him into Germany. He had many discussions with the emperor on the subject; and
at length the matter was brought up for settlement before a great assembly of
the bishops and nobles of the empire at Worms (Christmas 1052). As the outcome
of the deliberations which ensued, two important decisions were arrived at. In
view, no doubt, of the ancient imperial donations, and of the recent acts of
submission on the part of the Beneventans themselves,
Benevento was declared to belong to the Pope, and it was agreed to furnish him
with the troops necessary to render that donation effective. On his side Leo
consented to surrender his feudal rights in connection with Fulda and Bamberg.
Thinking that the poor Apulians were already delivered from their
oppressors, Leo took a grateful farewell of the emperor, and, feeling
strong in the army which accompanied him, advanced towards Rome. But his joy
was short-lived. Deep in the counsels of the emperor was Gebhard,
bishop of Eichstadt, who, as Victor II, was destined
to succeed Leo in the supreme pontificate, and who is described as “a man of
the greatest prudence, and a master of state-craft”. Whether his knowledge of
history had taught him that the fever of Italy, if not its armed forces, had
ever proved fatal to the German expeditions in that country, or whether, wholly
disapproving of the Pope’s policy, he thought it desirable that the Normans
should be allowed to exhaust themselves with their wars against the Greeks and
the other powers, in south Italy before their subjection by the empire was
attempted, at any rate, as the result of his advice, the vassals of the empire
were forbidden to leave Germany.
Consequently, when he entered
Italy, Leo was only accompanied by a small troop, consisting of his relations
and friends, with their dependants and of a mixed company of adventurers, many
of whom were attracted to the expedition not by the goodness of the cause, but,
as always happens in such cases, by the hope of gain or of escaping from the
hands of justice at home. Where Leo had had many thousands he had now but a few
hundreds. No wonder that, when he reflected that he had failed to accomplish
nearly everything which had brought him into Germany, he felt down-hearted. No
wonder, too, that his lowness of spirits caused him to dream uncanny dreams in
which his biographer sees a divine premonition of the misfortunes which were to
cloud the closing years of his pontificate. He seemed to see himself sheltering
within the ample folds of his cope his friends who were flying to him for
protection, and then finding them wounded, and that his garments were all
stained with their blood.
Leo’s dream was destined to be
realised almost to its details first at Mantua, and then at the battle of Civitella. Never for a moment losing sight of the one
supreme object of his life, the reform of the Church, he summoned the bishops
of certain parts of north Italy to meet him in council at Mantua (February 21,
1053). If there was one country where, at this period, ecclesiastical
discipline was more relaxed than any other, that country was Lombardy.
Accordingly, on the present occasion some of its bishops, “fearing Leo’s just
severity”, took steps for rendering any reforming action on his part
impossible. Whilst they were sitting solemnly in synod inside the church, their
armed retainers fell upon the followers of the Pope, who were standing in
fancied security in front of the building. The appearance of the Pope himself
on the steps of the church, whither he had promptly betaken
himself when the noise of the tumult reached him, did but add to the turmoil.
Many of his unarmed attendants were slain, and others were driven away from the
church, so that they might not take refuge therein. Stones and darts flew in
all directions. Some even fell round the person of the saintly Pontiff himself,
actually wounding some of those who crowded round him. Though the riot was with
no little difficulty at length quelled, the object of those who had brought it
about was gained. The council ended in nothing; and on the following day the
authors of the disturbance were pardoned by the over-indulgent Pope, “lest he
might seem to be punishing them from a desire of vengeance”.
Sick at heart, no doubt, but
with spirit yet unbroken, Leo returned to Rome by Ravenna and Rimini. About
Easter-time (April 1053) he held his usual Paschal synod. Except
that he therein confirmed the privileges of the See of Grado, we know not what business
was transacted during its session. Whether the Norman question came up
before it for discussion or not, it is certain that it must have been occupying
the Pope’s attention ever since he returned from Germany. The situation had
been daily growing worse. Guaimar IV of Salerno, who
had had, perhaps, some influence with the Normans, had, like many other Italian
princes of this period, been assassinated (June 1052), and while the tyranny of
the strangers grew daily more oppressive, the resentment of the people, not
only of Apulia, but of the territories of the Roman Church, became hourly
fiercer. A delegate of the Pope was ill-treated and robbed not far from Rome
itself, though he explained his character and “invoked the protection of the
Apostolic See”. Complaining to Leo of the barbarity displayed towards him, he
wrote: “The hatred of the Italians to the Normans has become so intense and
deep-rooted that it is almost impossible for one of them to journey in Italy,
even if he is on a pilgrimage, without exposing himself to the danger of being
assaulted, robbed, stripped naked, cast into a dungeon, and of there dying miserably after a long confinement”. Leo felt
that the only remedy for all these evils was the sword. He had exhausted every
other means, and had got nothing from the wily Normans but words. He
accordingly entered into negotiations with various princes; received promises
of considerable support, and in the May of 1053 left Rome for the South. He was
destined to return to it in a year only to die.
Passing as usual by Monte
Cassino, Leo moved forward to Benevento, gathering recruits as he went along.
He was joined by Adenulfus, duke of Gaeta; Lando, count of Aquino; Landulf, count of Teano, and “many others both of low and high degree”. But
the object of the Pope was, if possible, rather to overawe the Normans into
complete submission by a display of great military force than really to subdue
them by its actual use. For “I desired not the destruction of the Normans nor
of any other men; but I desired that those for whom the thought of the
judgments of God had no terrors might be brought to repentance by the fear of
man”. Hence, instead of advancing south against Melfi,
the centre of the Norman power, he turned north with the object of meeting Argyrus, the Greek Catapan, then
residing at Siponto, and of securing his active
cooperation. By the 10th of June he had reached a place called Sale (perhaps Salcito), on the river Biferno.
Then, turning south, he crossed, a few days later, the river Fortore, which then, as now, through much of its course,
served as the western boundary of Apulia. He crossed it just above its junction
with the little stream known as the Staina, and
identified with the Astagnum of the annals of
Benevento. When the papal army encamped on the rivulet, it was not far from the
little town of Civitas, now a heap of ruins, and was on the direct road to Siponto.
It was, however, no part of
the idea of the Normans to allow the Pope to effect a junction with the Catapan. They succeeded in crushing Argyrus
before he joined the Pope. Then they marched north, and at length stood between
the papal forces and the town of Siponto, separated
only by a small hill from the Pope’s army. Up to this point all is clear
enough; but from the strongly partisan character of the sources upon which we
have to draw, the truth with regard to the subsequent events is not so easily
discovered. There is doubt with regard even to the relative strength of the two
armies, and as to the character of the negotiations between them which preceded
the battle. Numerically the papal forces were perhaps the stronger, but they
were much inferior both in unity, discipline, and equipment. The Pope’s German
contingent, while well armed and brave, despised
their allies and the Normans alike. However numerous were the rest of his
troops, they were short of weapons; and, in their want of discipline, lacked even
that courage which it imparts. The Normans, on the other hand, were
fellow-countrymen, were inured to war, were well equipped, and were, to a large
extent, mounted. If the English military leaders of the year 1053 had studied
the battle of Civitella, they would have seen the
advantages of cavalry, and might have avoided the disaster of Senlac (Hastings,
1066).
Neither side was anxious to
begin hostilities. The Pope was really wishful to avoid bloodshed, and was
sufficiently skilled as a commander to mistrust the fighting quality of most of
his forces. The Normans were Christian enough not to desire to fight with their
spiritual father, and were, moreover, apparently misinformed as to the numbers
of their opponents. They therefore sent to treat for peace on condition that
they might retain, under the suzerainty of Leo, what they had already won by
the sword, and that the Pope would not furnish any help “to their enemies (no
doubt the Greeks) who were still in Apulia”. In this sham offer of peace we may
recognise the wiliness of the Norman chiefs, Humfrey,
and Richard, count of Aversa, but especially of Robert, surnamed Guiscard, another
of the Hauteville family, whose renown was destined
to eclipse that of his brothers, and who received his nickname of Wisehead “because in craft neither Cicero nor the wily
Ulysses was a match for him”.
Delusive as the terms were,
the Pope was disposed to accept them; but his tall and powerful countrymen,
either because they were clever enough to see that no real peace was intended
by the Normans, or, what is more likely, because they despised their slighter
frames, would listen to no conditions. “If they will not leave the shores of
Italy, let them taste of German steel”, they said. It was to no purpose that
Leo endeavoured to moderate their haughty self-reliance. And so, “with more
zeal than knowledge”, as Bruno of Segni thought
likely, he gave his word for war. But realizing only too well that his Italian
troops had not the courage of his countrymen, he endeavoured to fire them with
a little of his own. “Is it not better to live a life full of honour and glory
for one day, and then, if need be, to die, than to lead a lengthy but wretched
existence beneath the feet of a foe? Rouse ye, then! Defend your fields, your
vineyards, and your homes, your wives, your children, nay, your very selves! Am
I asking you to fight that you may win what is another’s? No! It is for your
country that I bid you fight. If any man should fall this day, it will be well
for him. He will be received into Abraham’s bosom”. With these words ringing in
their ears, after they had confessed their sins, and received Holy Communion,
the papal army prepared for battle, while the Pope, unwillingly indeed, retired
to the town of Civitas or Civitella.
The battle of Civitella.
June 18,1053
The conflict opened by the
Normans unexpectedly, seizing the hill which separated the two armies. Down
this they rushed. Checked at first, they succeeded by a ruse in isolating the
Germans. Then, like sheep, the Italians fled incontinently, and the Normans
surrounded the devoted little company of Teutons. Though hemmed in on every
side by horsemen, they refused to yield, and the fight began in earnest.
Sweeping their long sharp swords around them, as did the men of Kent at Hastings
their battle-axes, the heroic Germans long repelled the fierce onslaught of the
Norman knights with their lances. “Sweat and blood flowed in streams”. But for
every Norman that fell there were a dozen to take his place, while the doomed
circle of their foes waned at every moment. At length, when nearly all of them
had fallen where they stood, the Norman horsemen, sweeping the remnant before
them, rode hot for Civitella. “Having slain the
sheep, they longed for the blood of the shepherd”. Improvising engines of war,
they poured into the place showers of stones and darts; and, firing buildings
in the neighbourhood of the town, threatened it with complete destruction.
Fearing lest the town should
be burnt to the ground, Leo resolved to give himself up to the foe, and with
the cross before him approached the gate of the city, already half burnt
through. When lo! “as though caught by the wind”, the furious flames veered
round, and rushed towards the Normans. The people, who a moment before had, in
their terror, thought of surrendering the Pope to his enemies, now implored him
not to trust himself to them; and the Normans, threatening to level the town to
the earth on the morrow, had to draw off for the night.
At dawn Leo sent to offer to
yield himself into the hands of his victorious foes; for, said he, “My own life
is not dearer to me than are those of my friends whom ye have slain”. The
blood-fury of the Normans had passed away, and they replied by making their
usual promises of submission to him. When he actually came among them, they
lavished upon him every demonstration of respect. The common soldiers
prostrated themselves on the ground before him; and the chiefs, with their
silken surcoats stained with the dust of battle, saluted him on bended knee. In
tears they promised him that they would themselves be his soldiers in place of
the slain.
We are next told how the
broken-hearted Pontiff went to the field of battle, and how, while
praying for the dead, he kept calling out by name those who had been specially
dear to him, “as though to lessen the grief in his heart”. For two
days he superintended the burial of the slain in a ruined church that stood
hard by. Later on the Normans afterwards renovated it in splendid style, and
attached to it a community of monks. They were anticipating the founding of Battle
Abbey.
Escorted by the Normans, and
“with a mortal wound in his heart”, Leo returned to Benevento. The news
had preceded him that “the soldiers of Christ and the army of the saints had
been overcome”. In mournful procession the whole people came out to meet him,
and with loud cries of grief escorted him within their walls. He remained with
them for some eight months, and only left them to die.
In his own time there were
many who condemned Leo for his appeal to the sword, and their views have been
endorsed by many since. Herman of Reichenau was of
opinion that his countrymen were vanquished “by a secret judgment of God,
either because so great a Pontiff ought to have contended for spiritual
treasures, and not to have fought for the goods which perish; or because, to
war against the wicked, he led with him men just as wicked—men eager for
plunder or anxious to escape justice”. To the same effect wrote St. Peter
Damian, and, after him, naturally enough, the Norman, Romuald of Salerno. But
if men are agreed that to commit a cause to the decision of the God of Battles
is sometimes justifiable, it would seem that there can be but little doubt,
after what has been said of the causes which drove him to draw the sword, that
Leo was pre-eminently justified in so doing in the present instance.
One conclusion, at any rate,
regarding this battle is certain. The Popes ultimately reaped more profit from
Leo’s defeat than they would have done had the battle resulted in a victory for
him. Among the unexpected results of the fight at Civitella
was that the Papacy secured in the Normans very formidable allies. We have seen
how, after the battle, they professed themselves the Pope’s soldiers, that is,
they acknowledged him as their feudal superior. Under the circumstances, Leo
had no alternative but for the time tacitly to accept the situation. Malaterra, indeed, even states that he not only pardoned
the Normans their offences, and gave them his blessing, but “granted to be held
in fief of St. Peter, of himself, and of his successors, all the territory
which they had already acquired or might hereafter acquire in the direction of
Calabria and Sicily”. Though the unsupported testimony of this Norman monk is
not regarded as evidence enough to make his assertion credible, the action of
the Normans after Civitella certainly laid the
foundation of the relation of “lord and man” which afterwards existed between
them and the Popes. But as to Leo himself, so far was he from ratifying their
conquests, that he did not cease making efforts to oust them from them.
As another result of the
battle, Wibert wishes us to believe what
he gives as a fact, viz. that the Normans henceforth treated the native
population more humanely, and ever after showed themselves faithful servants of
the venerable Pope. In this remark there is truth, for, after Civitella, opposition to them largely ceased, at least
throughout most of Apulia. And in 1060 it is recorded that
“all Calabria, in the presence of Guiscard, the duke, and Roger, his brother
(yet another of the Hautevilles who had come to Italy
in the meanwhile), settled down in peace and quiet”.
Arguing from Leo’s prolonged
sojourn at Benevento, and from a passage of a German chronicle, it has been
thought that the Normans compelled him to stay there. There does not seem,
however, any reason to come to this conclusion. After the Normans had escorted
him to the city, they seem to have marched away; and there is nothing to show
that he could not have left it at any time. Having experienced the respect the
Normans had for his person, he may have remained to prevent them from attacking
the city, which they did immediately on his death. And, later on, it
may easily have been the unsatisfactory state of his health which detained him.
The disaster of Civitella had inflicted a wound on
his tender heart which was fatally to undermine his health.
However all this may have
been, feeling no doubt that he had not long to live, he redoubled his
austerities. Clad in a hair-shirt, he took his rest on a carpet spread on the
ground, and used a stone for his pillow. Most of the night he passed in prayer,
and during the day he devoted to the Psalter, and to even excessive alms-deeds,
the time he could economise from the cares of his position. And these were
greater than ever. For while he was at Benevento, sick in mind, if not at first
in body, he was engaged in transactions with Constantinople which were to end
in the final religious separation of the East and the West; and, through the
increased political isolation of the Eastern Roman Empire thereby effected, in
the fall of that city, and in the profound modification of the history not only
of Europe, but of the world to the present day.
The
Extinction of the Churches in North Africa
But before we touch on these
momentous events, we have something to say in connection with the
decaying Church in Africa—a church of which we have heard no word since
the days of Sylvester II. Feeble as were at this period, beneath the dead hand
of Mahometanism, the wretched remnants of the once
glorious Church of Africa, they were rendering themselves still more helpless
by internal dissensions. Of the five bishops who were now sufficient for the
needs of the once populous African Church, one of them, the bishop of Gummi, or
Gummasa, in the old province of Byzacena,
usurped the metropolitan rights which belonged to Thomas, the archbishop of
Carthage, then a collection of “fine, wealthy, and populous villages” located
in different parts of the vast ruins of the ancient city. The archimandrite,
Nil Doxopater, who lived at the court of King Roger
of Sicily in the twelfth century, alludes to this usurpation when he tells us
that “the Roman patriarch obtained the province of Byzacena,
in which Carthage now is, and Mauritania”. In letters now lost, Thomas himself
and two of his suffragans, Peter and John, appealed to the Pope. In his reply
to Thomas (December 17,1053), after bewailing the terrible shrinking of the
Church in Africa, Leo expresses his pleasure that in its difficulties it turns,
as it ought to turn, to the Roman Church. He then lays down that, “after the
Roman Pontiff the first archbishop and first metropolitan of all Africa is the
bishop of Carthage” (who alone in Africa is wont to receive the pallium from
the Apostolic See), and that the bishop of Gummi has no right to consecrate
bishops or summon councils without the consent of his metropolitan. But he also
lays down at the same time that a general council cannot be celebrated without
the consent of the bishop of Rome; nor, without it, can final sentence be
pronounced in the case of the deposition of any bishop.
From Leo’s letter to Peter and
John it appears that his zeal for reform had spread even to Africa, and that at
his orders the sad remnant of the African Church had met together in council.
He exhorts them to do the like every year; reminds them that the bishop of
Carthage is the metropolitan of Africa, and that “he cannot lose a privilege
which he has once received from the Holy Roman and Apostolic See, but must keep
it to the end of the world ... whether Carthage remain in ruins or ever again rise
gloriously from them”. In both letters he affirms that it is the teaching of
the canons “that all the greater and more complex cases arising in any of the
churches must be referred for settlement to the holy and chief See of Peter and
his successors”.
The latter letter is
remarkable, as it contains the first direct appeal by a Pope to the False
Decretals. And it may be noted how natural it was that Leo should have been the
first to quote them. They were the decrees with which, as bishop of Toul, he
was familiar, and their binding force was everywhere acknowledged. With the
Roman canonical tradition he was unacquainted, and, even had there been any
need of his making himself familiar with it, he had been too much occupied to
make good his shortcomings in this direction. Hence, when questioned by the
African bishops as to the rights of metropolitans, it was only to be expected
that he would answer in the words of the decrees “of our venerable
predecessors, Clement, Anacletus, Anicetus, and the others”, with which he was
familiar, and which, with the rest of the Western world, he regarded as
genuine.
This faint light from the
feeble African Church was promptly obscured, and some time had to elapse before
another flickering ray from it pierced the surrounding gloom, and showed that
it had not been quite extinguished.
The final rupture of the East
and West
By way of introduction to the
important events concerning the definite suspension of spiritual communion
between the East and the West which we have now to chronicle, a few words on
the causes which led to so disastrous an issue will be to the point. Passing
over such powerfully predisposing circumstances as differences of race and
language, we may fix as the beginning of the Greek schism the transference by
Constantine the Great of the seat of empire from Rome to Constantinople. If
that event enabled the Popes to exercise their spiritual headship of the Church
with greater freedom, and facilitated their acquisition of temporal power which
is necessary to secure them that freedom, it also ensured the ultimate breaking
away of the Eastern Church from the Western.
During the first three
centuries of the Christian era, every shred of ecclesiastical history singles
out Rome as the chief authoritative centre in the Church. It is impossible to
point to any see that then stood out as a rival to its universal authority. But
after the establishment of the “New Rome” by the Bosphorus, a rival is easily
detected. Constantine, as is well known, gave all bishops large civic powers.
Hence self-interest or business naturally brought many of them into immediate
contact with the emperor. He formed a number of them into a sort of permanent
synod ever at his beck; and some of them, of course, obtained considerable
power over him. The influence exerted over Constantine the Great in the matter
of the Arian heresy by Eusebius of Caesarea in particular has caused him to be marked
out as the father of the Greek schism.
Obviously the bishop who came
most into contact with the emperor was the bishop of Constantinople. His
influence at court soon fired his ambition. And the emperor, both for the sake
of being attended by the greatest dignitaries, and because he correctly judged
that the more the power possessed by one whom he could make his creature, the
more he would have himself, favoured his advance. After the time of
Constantine, too, we find mention of the rule in the Church, first of the three
great patriarchs (Rome, Antioch, and Alexandria), and then of the five (the
same, with the addition of Jerusalem and Constantinople); as though the
kingdom, Christ came to found on earth was to be an oligarchy. At any rate,
under one pretext or other, the patriarch of Constantinople never lost an
opportunity of pushing himself in front of his Oriental brethren, whose power
was also woefully reduced by the conquest of the Saracens. Before the ninth
century his spiritual position in the East had become paramount Meanwhile, in
the West, the influence of the Roman Pontiffs had greatly increased by the
conversion of the Teutonic nations in the seventh and eighth centuries. Often,
indeed, before had Pope of Rome and patriarch of Constantinople had serious
differences; often before had the bishop of Old Rome been compelled to
excommunicate the bishop of New Rome for heresy; but it was in the days of
Photius that the East and the West, as such, fairly confronted each other. The
astute patriarch of Constantinople, in his attack on Pope Nicholas, made use of
the lever of racial feeling—a lever of the most contemptible material, but
always the handiest and most effective, if applied judiciously. To win the
sympathy of the learned, Photius strove to show that the Latin Fathers were at
variance with the Greek on the abstruse question of the Descent of the Holy
Ghost; and, to catch the ignorant and unreflecting, he had no difficulty in
establishing that the Latins differed from the Greeks in many points of
liturgical practice, and in some secondary deductions of dogmatic teaching. It
was the Latins who were endeavouring to corrupt the Church; it was for the
Greeks to save it. This evil seed was sown on soil ready to receive it; and,
though Photius and his schism died, it remained in the ground ready to burst
forth into renewed life under conditions in any way favourable.
Despite some trifling
disagreements, however, harmony reigned between Rome and Constantinople after
Photius ceased to be its patriarch; and once more was the supremacy of the
former see acknowledged by the latter. The Popes’ names appeared on the
diptychs of the Eastern Churches; and though it was generally known during this
period that diverse liturgical practices and customs obtained in the East and
West, the greatest teachers in the latter Church correctly declared that they
were of absolutely no moment. Certainly when Michael Cerularius succeeded to
the patriarchal throne of Constantinople (March 25, 1042), there was every sign
of peace and communion between the two Churches. The Latins had churches at
Constantinople, and there were monasteries of Latin monks in the Greek Empire,
and even in Constantinople itself, and they were in full communion with its
ecclesiastical authorities. Writing to the Latin abbot and monks of the
monastery of St. Mary at Constantinople, St. Peter Damian reminds them that,
though in a foreign country, they are in “the bosom of Holy Church ... and that
where there is the one rule of the true faith and a good life, slight
differences (of forms and customs) and a diversity of tongues are of no
account”. Parts of the service, too, in Greek churches were said in Latin.
In the West, on the other
hand, there were monasteries of Greeks under the protection of Latin bishops.
Those in Rome were under the patronage of the Pope. The princes of the West
sent monetary assistance to Greek monasteries in the East. Pilgrims from the
West, who in the beginning of this century crowded in great numbers through
Constantinople to Palestine, were invariably treated by the Greeks as in full
ecclesiastical communion with themselves. Every fact, indeed, that bears on the
subject goes to show that up to 1042 there was no tendency to schism in the
Church among the people. It was brought about by ambition and politics, in
which, as usual, the interests of the people were neglected. Not only, too, was
there religious peace between the two races during the period in question, but
between their spiritual chiefs there was at least official communion. The Popes
continued to approve of the professions of faith duly sent them by the Eastern
patriarchs, whilst they on their side regarded it as needful to send notice of
their enthronization to the See of Peter, and to shelter their own prestige
under this high authority.
But on the advent to power of
Michael Cerularius, “all the fountains of the great deep were broken up”, and
the deluge of passions he let loose has not yet subsided. Although it is
certain that he was one of those ecclesiastics whom the patriarch Veccos afterwards stigmatised as men who disturbed the
peace of the Church by their worldly intrigues, it is not altogether easy to
form a correct judgment on his character. In any effort to do so, we are
largely dependent on Psellus, and upon two of his
writings, both of which, from their very nature, are liable to supply highly
coloured portraits; and which, in the. present instance, equally naturally,
furnish pictures showing quite different features. The documents are first the
public indictment of Cerularius, drawn up by Psellus
after the former’s fall (1059), then a funeral oration pronounced (c. 1062) by
the very same man a few years after the patriarch’s death (December 17, 1059).
Still, in much that he advances regarding the patriarch, Psellus
has the support of other authorities. In what follows that only will be set
down which seems indubitable.
The powerful mainspring which
kept in full action the consuming energies of the aspiring spirit of
Michael Cerularius was his fixed resolve not to be second. “I will not serve”
was his motto. Born of a senatorial family, he was blessed with a good father
and mother; and we read of the assiduity with which his father used to impress
upon him to be circumspect, not to make friends of casual acquaintances, and to
love religion. Perhaps his subsequent haughty, “touch-me-not” attitude and his
overweening pride may be traced to his having pushed too far the former
portion of his father’s advice. The means of the very best education were
placed at his disposal, and he soon manifested a taste for serious studies, for
logic, philosophy, natural science, and theology. His love of natural science,
however, seems to have been rather a love of the marvellous, and led him to
consort with astrologers, seekers after the, philosopher’s stone, and
hypnotisers.
In his early years he does not
seem to have felt any inclination to devote himself to the service of the
Church, but began life by attaching himself to the court. Love of power at once
took hold of him. He would himself be emperor. It was not long before he found
an opportunity of trying to gratify his evil ambition.
The last descendants of the
family of Basil the Macedonian were three sisters. Of these the youngest, Zoe,
after reigning with one husband, Romanus (d. 1034), was now on the
throne with her second, Michael IV, the Paphlagonian
(1034-1041). His tyranny made him many enemies. With his brother and many other
notables, Cerularius entered into a conspiracy against him. The plot was
discovered, and the brothers were exiled. The suicide of his brother, who was
unable to endure the hardships to which he was subjected, had precisely the
same effect upon Michael as the death by lightning of a companion had upon
Martin Luther. Both became monks, but when they put on the lowly garb of the
cloister, neither of them clothed himself with the lowly, retiring spirit which
becomes a monk. On the death of the Paphlagonian, his
nephew, Michael V (1041-1042), possessed himself of the empire, and granted an
amnesty by which Cerularius profited. But the people were true to the
Macedonian dynasty, and rose in revolt. Michael V was deprived of his eyes, and
Zoe, called again to the throne, took to herself a third husband in the person
of Constantine. For this purpose she recalled him from the exile into which
Michael IV had sent him for treason. To emphasise his views on the Paphlagonian, Constantine signalised his advent to power by
receiving into favour men whom his enemy had condemned. Among others who
benefited by this course of action was Michael Cerularius, who soon found
himself once again in a fair way to satisfy his unholy thirst for power; for
Constantine, to attach so strong a man to his person, at once began to push
forward his interests. Over his sovereign, feeble in body, weak in mind,
easy-going, extravagant, and lustful, Cerularius gained complete control; and,
as we shall see further on, he had no scruple in rousing the people against his
benefactor, when he did not find him sufficiently subservient to his will. The
third time he raised his hand against his sovereign (Michael VI, Stratioticus), he succeeded (1056) in driving him from
his throne into a monastery. But at last his vaulting ambition had over-leaped
itself. In Michael's successor (Isaac Comnenus) he found he had fashioned not a
tool, but a master. Before he could strike him down, he found himself in exile
and in prison (1059), and was only saved by a speedy death (December 17, 1059)
from public degradation, or worse.
Such was the man who, on March
25, 1042, became patriarch of Constantinople, and, if we are to believe
the indictment, proceeded to lead a life that befitted neither a monk nor a
bishop of the Holy City. Psellus gives a graphic
picture of a morning at the patriarch’s palace: “Its halls are never for a moment
quiet. First one comes in and then another. At one moment it is a dyer, at
another a skilled artificer; then come a vendor of spices, a water-carrier, a
knife-grinder, and a confectioner; presently appear a goldsmith and a lapidary.
One brings one thing to show him another and another. One offers him a costly
cup of translucent crystal, a second a vase of Thericles,
both enhanced by new epithets and a wealth of phraseology. Afterwards it is the
turn of the fishmongers. Anon he is asked to listen to silver blackbirds and
golden blackcap-warblers pouring forth their peculiar notes by means of some
pneumatic contrivance. Then are presented to his view scent-bottles embossed in
gold, diamonds, lychnites, carbuncles, and pearls,
either natural ones, perfectly round and translucent, or such as had been
fashioned by fire. All these things the patriarch used to admire, some for
their beauty, or for their form, and others for their mechanism. In their turn,
too, come astrologers, and those who in the eyes of the ignorant are accounted
prophets, not indeed because they know anything of prophecy, but because it is their
nationality that is trusted and not their skill, because one is an Illyrian and
another a Persian." In all this there is no necessity to see more than the
magnificent prelate of the type of our own Cardinal Wolsey. But if in the
brighter side of his character he resembled that great English churchman, if
he was like him in his dignified bearing, in the grandeur of his ideas, in his
commanding influence over men and things, and even in some of his ambitions,
another phase of his disposition presents him in quite a different light. His
love of power made him utterly unscrupulous as to the means he used to gain his
ends. He could be revengeful and cruel, and, like Photius, could even stoop to
forgery; and, to win for himself the headship of the state, he did not hesitate
to sunder Christ's seamless garment. For his ultimate object in throwing off
all subjection to Rome, and in making himself the untrammelled ruler of the
Greek Church, was the attainment of absolute power. It was with that object in
view that he deliberately began a quarrel with the Pope.
Soon after his accession to
the patriarchal throne, Cerularius seems to have initiated a misunderstanding
with Rome by striking the name of the Pope off the diptychs. Then
in private conversation he began to attack the Latin custom of using
unfermented bread (azyms) for the sacrifice of
the Mass. But till the very close of Leo’s pontificate there was no public
knowledge either in the East or the West of any want of cordiality in the
relations between Rome and Constantinople. Peter III, who became patriarch of
Antioch about 1052, sent as usual his synodical letter to Rome. To this document,
now lost, Leo sent a reply in the early part of the year 1053. He spoke of the
blessing of unity in the Church, and expressed his pleasure that Peter had, in
accordance with ancient custom, sent notice “to the apostolic and first see” of
his election and of his faith. After setting forth the supremacy of the See of
Peter, he declared that that of Antioch ranked as the third of the greater
sees, and exhorted him not to be deterred “by the pomp or arrogance of anyone
whatsoever” from defending the honour of his see. He confirmed Peter’s election
on the understanding that he had passed through the regular ecclesiastical
grades, and that it had not been obtained by simony. The profession of faith of
the new patriarch is declared “to be thoroughly sound, catholic, and orthodox”;
and then, in conclusion, Leo’s own profession of faith is given.
The time, however, came at
length when Cerularius thought he might attack Rome with advantage. Word
reached him that the Pope was in difficulties with the Normans. Accordingly, a
letter was at once dispatched by him, bearing the name of Leo, “archbishop of
Bulgaria,” i.e., of the See of Achrida, to John, bishop of Trani, in Apulia; but, as the letter itself stated, really
“to all the bishops of the Franks, and to the most revered Pope”. The Latin
Church, through its use of azyms, and its custom of
fasting on Saturday, is denounced as Jewish, and, through its allowance of the
eating of blood, as barbaric. At the same time, the patriarch distributed all
through the Greek Church a violent pamphlet against the Latins, written for him
in Latin by a monk of the Studium named Nicetas Stethatos (Pectoratus), and then proceeded to close the Latin churches
in Constantinople. This was accomplished by the Greeks with a brutality which was
in accord with the violence of their language. They went to the outrageous
length of trampling on the hosts which had been consecrated by the Latins.
When the letter of the
archbishop of Bulgaria was brought to the notice of the Pope, understanding at once
whence it proceeded, he addressed to Michael Cerularius and his associate a
letter both long and strong. Of its length its author was fully aware, but
excused it thus: “As you do not blush at your loquacity, nor fear to indulge
it, it behoves us not so much to blush at taciturnity as to fear to be guilty
of it; for many souls depend upon us, which through the calumnies of false
brethren would perish, if we were silent”. With a complete grasp of the
situation, the Pope devoted neither time nor space to replying to the various
charges, most of them, in comparison with unity at least, absurdly trifling,
but developed the position in the Church of the bishop of Rome, and the
absolute need of submission to him, as to the head, on the part of its various
members.
The letter opened with a
eulogy on the blessings of peace and unity, and a denunciation of those who sow
tares, and hence of Cerularius and Leo, “most dear to us, and still to be
accounted our brethren in Christ”. For “with a presumption altogether new, and
with incredible audacity”, they had openly condemned, as report had it, “the
Apostolic and Latin Church” for its use of azyms. “As
though our Father who is in heaven had hidden from Peter, the Prince of the
Apostles, the rite of the visible sacrifice ... to whom He had deigned to
reveal the ineffable mystery of the invisible divinity of His Son”. The
respective attitudes of the See of Rome and of that of Constantinople towards
heresy are then contrasted. “Have not”, he asked, “all the false doctrines of
heretics been combated and condemned by the See of Rome; and have not the
hearts of the brethren been confirmed in the faith of Peter, which has never
failed and never will fail?” On the contrary, has not the Christian world been
scandalised by the heresies and ambition of many of the patriarchs of
Constantinople? It must have been, for it has seen Eusebius and others supporting
the doctrines of Arius, Macedonius blaspheming the
Holy Ghost, Nestorius denying that Mary was the mother of God, Anthimus teaching Eutychianism,
and more than four hundred years of usurpation by the patriarchs of
Constantinople of the title of Ecumenical. He would not, he said, speak
of the heresy of Sergius, Pyrrhus, and Paul, but
added that, “unmindful of what you are doing”, you are arraigning that see
which the emperors themselves have often declared to be the Head of all the
Churches of God. Then to show how far the Eastern emperors had gone in
honouring the Roman Church, he proceeded to cite at length the document now known
as the “False Donation of Constantine”, but then universally believed to be
genuine. “But”, continued Leo, “we have on this matter a testimony greater than
that of Constantine, ‘who is of the earth, and of the earth he speaketh’ (St. John III. 31). Scarcely do we accept man’s
testimony, we who are filled with the witness of Him who came down from heaven,
and is above all, and who said, ‘Thou art Peter’, etc.”
They must then cease to speak
of the Latins, whose faith is that of the world, as azymites; and the See of
Constantinople must submit to that of Rome as to its mother. For, as “no divine
or human sanction made it (originally) more honourable or more illustrious than
any of the other churches”, it owed its position among them to the recognition
of the Roman Church. Let it not then envy us. “For lo! we regard your glory as
ours. Why then do you strive to destroy what has been given to us both by God
and man? Does not the hand or the foot count as its own the honour or dishonour
which falls on the head? ... If you felt not in you what we have said about the
harmony of the body ... you live not in the body; and if you live not in the
body which is Christ, you are none of His. Whose then are you ? You have been
cut off and will mortify, and, like the branch pruned from the vine, you will
burn in the fire—an end which may God's goodness keep far from you”
Whether this vigorous letter
produced any effect on Cerularius or not, it is certain that the news he
received from Italy caused the greatest alarm to the emperor. John, bishop of Trani, had been sent by Argyrus
to tell him that he had himself been worsted by the Normans, and was lying
wounded at Viesti, and that his defeat had been
followed by that of the Pope at Civitella. Fearing
lest the Pope should cease to oppose the Normans, and that they would soon be
masters of the whole of south Italy, Constantine not only wrote to the Pope
encouraging him to continue to resist the Normans and promising help, but
induced Cerularius to do likewise.
In reply to these two letters,
now lost, Leo sent other two by the hands of Cardinals Humbert and Frederick
(chancellor of the Roman Church), and of Peter, archbishop of Amalfi. The
emperor was thanked for his endeavours to make peace, and at the same time was
assured that the Pope would never cease to oppose the Normans, and that he
expected help against them from both Germany and Constantinople. He was,
moreover, asked to restore the rights and patrimonies of the Roman Church in
the imperial portion of south Italy, and was told of the aggressive conduct of
Cerularius. In his letter to the last-named, while thanking him for his
peaceful overtures, and impressing on him that it was his desire to have peace
with all men, and especially with him, “who he perceived could be a most
valuable servant of God if he would not strive to transgress the limits laid
down by the Fathers”, he blamed him for encroaching on the rights of others,
and said : “You have written to us that if, through us, your name is venerated
in one Roman Church, you will make ours held in honour throughout the whole
world. What is this monstrous idea, dearest brother? Has not the Roman Church,
the head and mother of the churches, (devoted) members? Hence anybody that is
not in agreement with her is no church, but a collection of heretics, a
conventicle of schismatics, and a synagogue of Satan”.
Anguish for the disaster at Civitella had evidently not completely broken the spirit of
Leo IX. He would yield neither to the swords of the Normans nor to the overbearing
insolence of an Eastern patriarch. To be more completely in touch with the
course of events, he found heart enough to devote himself to the study of
Greek.
His legates, whom as usual he
had accredited to the emperor and not to the patriarch, reached Constantinople
before his death (April 19, 1054), and made it plain to the haughty patriarch
that they had come in the name of a superior to receive the submission of a
subordinate. They entered the imperial palace with cross and crosiers, offered
no obeisance to Cerularius, and would not suffer him to treat them as his
inferiors. This was gall and wormwood to the proud patriarch, and he was
utterly unable to conceal his soreness. Of course, he wrote, if they were
insolent towards the emperor, it was no cause for wonder that they would not
bend their heads “to our mediocrity”
Received with the greatest
honour by the emperor, the legates were lodged, not, according to custom, in
the “Placidia” Palace, but in the Fountain or Pigi
Palace, an imperial pleasure-resort outside the walls of the city, near the
health-giving sacred spring now in the little village of Balukli,
some half-mile from the Selivri Kapoussi
Gate, formerly known as the Gate of the Spring. As early as Justinian's time
there was a church there (S. Mary at the Fountain), as Procopius says, “in the
place which is called the Fountain, where there is a rich grove of cypress-trees,
a meadow whose rich earth blooms with flowers, a garden abounding with fruit, a
fountain which noiselessly pours forth a quiet and sweet stream of water—in
short, where all the surroundings befit a sacred place”. The irony of fate,
that that which was destined to be the most bitter and enduring quarrel ever
waged between the East and the West should be so closely connected with such a
peaceful spot!
One of the first acts of the
papal legates was to take cognisance of the pamphlet of the monk Nicetas, in which, while saluting the Romans “as the
glorious eye of the Church of God and of the whole world”, he exhorted
them, in a very superior tone, to abandon their use of azyms—for
it was not bread at all, but a dead substance lacking the life that comes from
fermentation—their Jewish habit of fasting on Saturdays, and the practice of
clerical celibacy. It will be observed that not a single article of Christian
belief held by the Latins, not even the doctrine of the Procession of the Holy
Ghost, is challenged. But the points urged, however, were carefully chosen. They
were calculated to unite the mass of the Creeks against Rome. The Greek clergy
as a body, not unnaturally dreading the stricter discipline of the West, would
be turned against it by the question of celibacy; while the populace, unable to
comprehend the difference between what was of revealed truth, what was part of
the inviolable deposit of faith, and what was of mere temporary practice or
discipline, were taught to look with horror on those who, through their use of
what was not bread, would deprive them of the Body of their Lord.
Both of the cardinals issued
tracts against that of Nicetas. Two from the pen of
Cardinal Humbert have come down to us. The first, in the form of a dialogue between
a Greek and a Latin, is moderate enough in tone, and replies in detail and in
general terms to the propositions of Nicetas. But the
second is a violent invective, and is directed in a very personal manner
against the monk himself. He blamed him for breaking the decrees of
the council of Chalcedon by not attending to his monastic duties, and by mixing
in public affairs. “Led on by your own will and inclinations, you have snarled
snappishly at the Holy Roman and Apostolic Church, and the councils of all the
Holy Fathers, and, more stupid than the ass, have endeavoured to break the
lion’s skull, and a wall of adamant”. He showed himself especially indignant
that the Greeks, whom he accused of shocking carelessness in their treatment of
the sacred species, should have the effrontery to wish to teach the Latins how
to celebrate the Eucharistic sacrifice.
This castigation had a good
effect upon Nicetas. At a public disputation in the
monastery of the Studium, in the presence of the
emperor and his court (June 24, 1054), he at first upheld his doctrines against
the Roman Church. That the whole assembly might follow the discussion, all the documents
had been translated into Greek. However, at the close of the debate the monk
anathematised his own writings, and “all those who denied that the Holy Roman
Church was the first of all the churches, and who presumed to question in
anything its ever-orthodox faith”
Meanwhile, the Pope, who died
on April 19, 1054, had already played his last part in this important drama. In
an effort to attach to himself the patriarch, Peter of Antioch, he seems to
have caused his friend Dominic, patriarch of Grado, to write to him towards the
beginning of the year 1054 a very flattering letter, in which he unfolded the
attack that had been made upon the Latins. Displaying a broad-mindedness which
was conspicuous among the Greeks by its total absence, he pleaded that the East
and the West should be allowed to follow in peace their respective customs in
the matter of the use of leavened or unleavened bread. “For while the mixture
of wheat and leaven which is used by the churches of the East, typifies the
nature of the Incarnate Word, the simple unleavened bread used by the Roman
Church clearly represents the purity of our human flesh assumed by the
Divinity”. The letter closed with an exhortation to Peter to work for unity,
touchingly reminding him that by the words of our Lord we have not life in us
if we do not eat of His body, and that, “if the oblation of unfermented bread
is not the body of Christ, then have we no life in us”.
To this brief, admirable, and
conciliatory letter Peter returned a very lengthy and unsatisfactory answer.
Though acknowledging his own unworthiness, he cannot understand Dominic’s claim
to the title of patriarch. There are only “in the whole world, by the
dispensation of divine grace, five patriarchs, viz. those of Rome,
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem”. Now the body of man has
five senses, and that of the Church five patriarchs. Where, then, is there room
for a sixth? Then follows a long diatribe against the use of unleavened bread,
and an assertion that those who use it are in danger of falling into the heresy
of Apollinaris. In fine, he says, he would be glad if Dominic would forward his
letter to the Pope, in order that he might accept the ideas therein set forth,
and that all might offer the same oblation in the same manner. The intervening
hand of death in all probability prevented Leo from ever seeing this letter of
Peter, patriarch of Antioch.
What has yet to be related of
the doings of Leo’s legates took place, for the most part, after his death, and
during the subsequent vacancy of the Holy See. Their efforts to induce
Cerularius to withdraw his attacks on the Roman Church concerning, not the
deposit of the faith, but mere matters of local observance, were unavailing.
They saw him with the emperor; they interviewed him at his own palace. But at
length, accusing them of overweening pride, he absolutely refused to have any
further communication with them. If in these meetings there was indeed a
display of haughtiness of word and mien, the greater manifestation of these unamiable
qualities will assuredly have been made by the patriarch himself. For he
equalled in pride, we are told, even a particularly proud emperor. And we know
that, later on, maintaining that from any point of view there was very little
difference between the priesthood and royalty, while from the point of view of
higher things the former was of more account than the latter, he suited the
action to the word, and assumed the distinctive mark of the imperial dignity,
the purple buskins.
After the legates had waited
at Constantinople for the greater part of a month (June 25 to July 15), finding
that they were no nearer coming to any understanding with the patriarch, they
resolved publicly to excommunicate him. Betaking themselves to the great Church
of S. Sophia “at the third hour”, just as Mass was about to begin, they
denounced to the assembled people the obstinacy of their patriarch. Then they
placed on the altar a deed of excommunication against him, which Cerularius
would have us believe was immediately snatched from it by some of the attendant
subdeacons, and thrown on the ground. As the legates refused to take it back,
“it fell into the hands of many persons. Whereupon our mediocrity took possession
of it, that the blasphemies in it might not be (further) promulgated”.
The bull of excommunication
proclaimed that the legates found “the columns of the empire and its honourable
citizens” most Christian and orthodox, but Michael, “falsely (abusive) styled
patriarch”, and his supporters, disseminators of heresy. They were accused of
practising simony, of promoting eunuchs even to the episcopacy, of rebaptising
the Latins, of failing to observe clerical celibacy, of denying the Procession
of the Holy Ghost from the Son, and of many other things of less moment.
Consequently, because furthermore they despised the letters of Pope Leo,
refused to meet his legates, and would not allow them a church in which to say
Mass, the legates declared excommunicated, Michael, Leo of Achrida and all
their adherents.
After shaking off the dust
from their feet as a testimony against them, sending copies of the
excommunication in all directions, and reopening the Latin churches in
the city by the aid of the emperor, the legates hurriedly set out for Rome
loaded with presents (July 18). Scarcely had they departed when Cerularius
feigned a great anxiety to have a conference with them, and brought such pressure
to bear on the emperor that he found himself compelled to recall them (July
20). On their return, the patriarch invited them to attend a synod he had
summoned in the Church of S. Sophia. But the emperor had discovered that it was
his intent to incite the people against the legates, and to cause them to be
killed. He accordingly insisted on being present himself, and, as Cerularius
would not agree to this, he bade the legates once more depart.
Baulked of his prey, the
patriarch raised a sedition against the emperor, who succeeded in saving
himself only by sacrificing to his anger the unfortunate men who had served as
interpreters to the legates. Then, in concert with his permanent synod, i.e.,
“with the bishops who daily sit with us”, and a few metropolitans who chanced
to be in the city, Cerularius, in turn, anathematised the authors of the bull
of excommunication against himself. This done, he set deliberately to work to
turn the of the other Eastern patriarchs against Rome. To accomplish his purpose
he did not hesitate to lie in the most barefaced manner, and this he was the
better able to do successfully because some of his correspondents were wholly
ignorant of Latin; and because, utterly unable to find anyone in their
entourage who could supply the deficiency, they were compelled to send
their Latin letters to him to have them translated. Soon after Leo’s death,
Cerularius had written to Peter of Antioch an epistle in which he pretended
that letters he had written to the holy and learned Pope (Leo) “on certain
scandals concerning the orthodox faith which had arisen among them (the
Latins)” had fallen into the hands of Argyrus, “magister
and duke of Italy”, and had been read by him. He had then, continued the
inventive patriarch, forged others in the Pope’s name, which he had sent to
Constantinople by three disreputable persons. These forgeries, translated into
Greek, are being forwarded to Antioch. He concluded by impressing on Peter that
they must turn away from the Latins, not only on account of the question
of the azyms, but because they shave their beards,
eat what has been strangled, have added the Filioque to the Creed, forbid
their priests to marry, do not venerate relics, etc. etc. Men who do such
things are not to be accounted orthodox.
After his excommunication,
Michael wrote Peter a second letter, telling him that heterodox impostors had
dared to excommunicate him, and that he had written to him in order that he
might know how to treat with Rome, should occasion arise. He begged him, in conclusion,
to forward to their proper destination the letters he had enclosed. They were
of precisely the same import as the one addressed to him, and were inscribed to
the patriarchs of Alexandria and Jerusalem.
The reply which Michael
received to these letters was certainly not of the nature he expected. Whatever
else it was, it was the manifest expression of one who was inspired by a horror
of schism, and of breaking away from “the great and first apostolic throne”
(Rome). If it had been thought out before it was committed to writing, it would
have to be regarded as the production of one who, while most anxious to
preserve peace and unity, was, at the same time, a finished diplomatist. But in
all probability it is a faithful record of the evolution of Peter’s feelings.
He is astounded at the presumption of Argyrus. Of the
Latin customs some are bad, some curable, and others negligible. If, for
example, the Latin bishops wear rings “to show, as you write, that they are
wedded to the Holy Church of God, we wear the garara
(tonsure) on our head in honour of the supreme chief of the apostles, Peter, on
whom is built the great Church of God”. The introduction of the Filioque
into the Creed is certainly “an evil and the worst of evils. Still, where there
is no danger to the faith, we must ever incline towards peace and brotherly love,
the more so because the Latins are rude and ignorant. Moreover, while it has
always been a received maxim that old customs have to be followed, no doubt,
just as often happens among ourselves, many things which are improper are done
without the knowledge of the Pope and the bishops. After all, the only matters
of importance are the questions of the Filioque and of the celibacy of
the clergy. Michael must explain matters to the new Pope. Therefore I beg,
pray, and beseech you, and, in spirit embracing your sacred feet, exhort you to
be accommodating. For there is a danger lest, whilst one tries to close a rent,
it may be made worse ... From this long separation and dissension, and from the
rending of this great first apostolic throne (Rome) from our Holy Church, is
there not manifest danger that every evil on the earth will grow worse, that
the whole world will grow sick, every kingdom in it become disorganised, that
everywhere there will be lamentation and unnumbered woes, everywhere famines
and pestilences, and that success will never again attend our armies”.
With his mind now swept clear
by the flood of his own eloquence, Peter finally declared that “if the Latins
would set right the addition to the Creed”, he would seek for no further
concession from them. He begged Michael to take the same view, lest “in seeking
all they might lose all”, and, as a very last word, entreated him “to approach
the subject with greater moderation and condescension”. This was also the
attitude of another Eastern prelate, contemporary with Peter, the learned Theophylactus, archbishop of Achrida. In a
pamphlet addressed to one of his friends regarding the accusations brought
against the Latins, he begins by denying that their errors are numerous, and
asserts that what are urged against them do not, as many aver, tend to divide
the Church, because not one of them concerns “the head of the faith”. He says
that their chief error is the insertion of the Filioque into the Creed,
which ought not to be adulterated, and that for his part he will not allow that
the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son, even if there are
adduced to him the words of " that sublime throne (Rome) whom the sublime
thrones place above the others”.
But the flood-gates of racial
hatred had been opened; and neither the wisdom of the learned nor the wishes of
the moderate could stem the torrent. Cerularius was to triumph. Though his
excommunication was never confirmed at Rome, he flourished it before the people
as a clear proof of its oppressive treatment of the Greek Church, and managed
to fix deep in the minds of the Easterns a suspicion
of the Papacy which subsequent events, such as the sack of Constantinople by
the Crusaders (1204), were to turn to bitter hatred. At the time, indeed,
neither Greeks nor Latins regarded the events of 1054 as inaugurating a final schism
between East and West. They may be said to have been ignored by Greek writers,
and were looked upon by Latin writers merely as another of the temporary
schisms which had so often before divided Rome from Constantinople, but which
the excommunication of the patriarch had successfully closed. But every
subsequent attempt at reunion served to prove to sad demonstration that the die
had been irrevocably cast, and that it was the hand of Michael Cerularius which
had finally thrown it.
Ignorance or jealousy of Rome,
the power of the patriarch of Constantinople, community of civil and religious
customs or of language, were the principal causes which induced most of the
great ecclesiastical rulers of the East one after another so far to range
themselves with Constantinople as to throw off all allegiance to Rome. Antioch,
Alexandria, Jerusalem, and Achrida followed first the lead of the City by the
Golden Horn, and then its example, it was not to be expected that, having
refused to bend the knee to the successor of St. Peter, whom they had ever
acknowledged as the head of the Church, they would long pay court to one who,
like themselves, was but an inferior member of the Church Catholic, and was, indeed,
originally a much less important member than most of them. Severed from their
head, they soon severed themselves from Constantinople, and from one another.
But what was the attitude of
the archbishop of Kiev Russia and of the Russians in this unhappy affair? In
the dearth of documentary evidence regarding the early Russian Church, it is
very difficult to say. Some writers hold that the Russians remained in
communion with the See of Rome till the fifteenth or sixteenth century, with
the exception of a few brief intervals of intervening schism. They point out
that though Russia was converted by Greeks, their conversion took place whilst
the Greeks and the Latins were united; that their liturgy (Slavonic) was the
work of SS. Cyril and Methodius, who were devoted sons of Rome, and that the
numerous marriages which took place in the tenth, eleventh, and twelfth
centuries between Russian and Western princes and princesses is a practical proof
that Kiev (called by Adam of Bremen “the rival of Constantinople and the great
glory of Greece”) and Rome were still in ecclesiastical communion. During the
reign of Demetrius or Isiaslaf, the son of Iaroslaf
the Great(d. 1054), his son (Sviatopolk) made
his appearance in the Eternal City. Isiaslaf had
experienced in his own person the difficulty of succeeding to the throne merely
because he happened to be the eldest son; and so, to facilitate the accession
of his own eldest son, he sent him to Rome to receive his kingdom at the hands
of Gregory VII. It is impossible to suppose he would have followed such a
course as this if his people had not viewed Rome with friendly eyes. “One of
the most convincing proofs of this union between Russia and the Holy See is the
establishment by Ephrem, the metropolitan of Kiev (d. 1102), of the
feast of the translation of the relics of St Nicholas of Bari. This feast was
established in Russia in conformity with a bull of Urban II. As this feast is
not observed in the Greek Church of Constantinople, its papal origin in Russia
is obvious. The real founder of the Russian schism seems to have been the second
successor of Ephrem, viz. Nicephorus I., who addressed to Prince Vladimir II,
Monomachus, a work on the “Separation of the Two Churches”, in which he aimed
at showing the faults of the Latins, and at exalting the Church of
Constantinople
However, despite the evil work
of Nicephorus, the final separation of the Church of the Russians from that of
Rome was not immediately effected. As late as 1227 we find the Grand Dukes of
Russia declaring that they had fallen away from Rome merely “from a want of
preachers”, and in the course of that century it is certain that various
Russian princes embraced the Latin rite. The bishopric of Caffa (formerly
Theodosia, now Feodosia), established by John XXII in the Crimea, proved a
great centre of Latin influence, and during both the fourteenth and fifteenth
centuries many of the metropolitans of Kiev were in union with the See of Rome.
But in the beginning of the following century they definitely separated
themselves from it, and left Russia in the state of schism we find it in today.
However, there are not wanting
writers who maintain that in the eleventh century the Russian Church was simply
a submissive province of the patriarchate of Constantinople ; and who, without
perhaps attaching due weight to the facts above rehearsed and to other similar
ones, hold that, after the defection of Cerularius, a state of schism was the
rule with the Russian Church, union the exception.
Though Cerularius failed to
draw the Armenians, at any rate, into his schism, he accomplished enough to
bring about the ruin of the Greek Empire and the Greek Church. The former,
deprived through the schism of the help of the West, nay, even in one instance
seriously injured in consequence by it, disappeared for ever in the middle of
the fifteenth century; and the latter, enslaved first by the Greek emperors,
arid then by the Turkish Sultans, has survived indeed to the present day. But
its once living waters have ceased to flow, and have become corrupt, and now it
doth “cream and mantle like a standing pond”—a thing of loathing to those who
gaze upon it.
Before telling of the last
moments of Pope Leo, something must be said of his relations with England.
Whilst at this period the whole Church was being ruled and edified by a saint,
our own country had the good fortune to be similarly blessed. Its sceptre was
held by one under whose wholesome laws it was the one ardent wish of many a
generation who came after him to live. When Edward was brought from his exile
in Normandy to the throne of England, it may be said without any exaggeration
that all power in the country was in the hands of a few earls, notably in those
of Earl Godwin of Wessex and of his two sons, Harold and Sweyn. During his long
residence in Normandy, the new king had of course made many friends there; and
it was only natural that he should bring some of them with him, and should
advance their interests. No doubt, too, in placing not a few of them in
important posts, he would have in view the formation of a party round him which
he could oppose to the too powerful influence of the earls. Besides, where
there was question of church preferment, it seems to be generally admitted that
“the ecclesiastics of Normandy were, as a class, superior to those of England
in Edward’s time”. Unfortunately, however, for he was a man of greater
simplicity than discernment, all his nominations of Normans to positions of
trust were not good.
Among these was his
appointment to the great diocese of Dorchester, which stretched from the Thames
to the Humber, of one of his Norman chaplains, named Ulf. The Anglo-Saxon
Chronicle adds that he “ill-bestowed it”, and that the new bishop “was afterwards
driven away because he performed nothing bishoplike
therein, so that it shames us now to tell-more”. This expulsion took place in
1050, and Ulf at once set out for Italy to lay his case before the Pope. Other
English bishops, Hereman of Sherborne and Aldred (or Ealdred) of Worcester,
had preceded him thither, and had presented themselves at the council of Rome
in 1050 “on the king’s errand”.
From later authors, the
substantial accuracy of whose statements in this particular there is no reason
to doubt, it appears that the errand on which they were sent was to obtain from
the Pope for their sovereign a dispensation from a vow he had made when young
to go on a pilgrimage to Rome. When Edward proclaimed his vow to the Witan,
and, reminding them of the words of the Psalmist, “Vow ye, and pay to the Lord
your God”, expressed his intention of fulfilling it, the assembly with one
voice declared that the time was not ripe for such an undertaking, and bade him
send to Rome, and obtain from the Pope a commutation of his vow. This his
envoys were successful in obtaining from Leo. The bull which the Pope forwarded
to the king, and which contained the conditions of the dispensation, had
received the approval of his council:—
“The witness to it was sure
and full:
Then a guarantee was put to
the writing,
Where the bulla hangs by the
silk.
And then, by the advice of the
legists,
There was a counter-writing in
the great register”
The bull set forth that, as it
was clear that there was danger to the country from the departure of the king,
he was absolved from his vow “by the authority of God, of the holy apostles,
and of the holy synod”. The money he had set apart for the journey was to be
given to the poor, and to the erection or reconstruction and endowment of a
monastery in honour of St. Peter, which was to be subject to no other layman
but the king. In consequence of this decision Edward remained in England,
repaired and endowed a monastery in honour of St. Peter, which had been built
long before outside the walls of London on the west, and obtained for it
extensive privileges from Pope Nicholas II.
Bishop Ulf's case did not come
off until September, at the synod which the Pope held at Vercelli. Examination
only revealed how utterly unfit he was for his position, but, because he knew
that the Romans coveted, “as a leech does blood, the red gold and the white
silver”, he saved himself from degradation by gold. “For well-nigh would they
have broken his staff if he had not given very great gifts”. As it was, he returned
to England again to rule Dorchester for a brief time longer
The intercourse between Pope
Leo and King Edward on ecclesiastical matters was very considerable, and was no
doubt facilitated by the esteem which each of them felt for the other.
English bishops were sent to assist at Leo’s councils to keep the Catholics in
England in closer touch with those abroad, and a papal legate was sent to our
country to make the mind of the Pope more clearly known to the king.
As the Anglo-Saxons drove the
Britons further West, they caused the ancient British ecclesiastical
organisation to be replaced by a new one. And so in 909 Archbishop Plegmund founded a see embracing Devonshire and part of
Cornwall, and established its seat at Crediton. This he did with the special
intent of enforcing the usages of Rome among the Britons. Some fifty years
later (viz. in 1046), St. Edward appointed his chaplain, Leofric,
to the See of Crediton. Finding that his diocese was much harried by pirates, Leofric determined to try to effect the removal of his
episcopal see from the unimportant Crediton in the north of Devon to the larger
and hence safer city of Exeter in the south. “And because”, to quote a more or
less contemporary entry in a missal he presented to his cathedral of Exeter,
“he was a man of sound understanding, he knew that this could not be done
without the authority of the Roman Church”. Accordingly, he sent to request
Pope Leo to ask King Edward that he might be allowed to make the proposed
change. As it was in accordance with the general law of the Church that
episcopal sees should be established in the larger towns, the Pope at once agreed
to Leofric’s petition, and addressed (1049-1050) a
letter to the king in which he praised him for the good account he had received
of his piety, and exhorted him to persevere in the course he had entered upon.
Then, after telling him that he had been informed that Leofric’s
see was not in a city, he begged him “for the sake of God and for his love” to
transfer it to Exeter.
“With great devotion Edward
gave his consent in accordance with the terms of this letter”, and the charter
is still extant in which he authorised the translation of the see, and “made
known what he had done in the first instance to the Lord Pope Leo, and
confirmed it by his authority”.
If King Edward’s appointment
of Ulf to Dorchester brought him discredit, two of his other nominations
brought him trouble. Towards the close of this same year (October 29, 1050)
died Eadsige (or Eadsy),
archbishop of Canterbury. Setting aside the candidate of the monks, though they
had secured in his interest the support of Earl Godwin (1051), the king
nominated to the vacant see Robert of Jumièges, then bishop of London. Edward
had known him in Normandy, and had brought him over to England as one of his
chaplains. The new archbishop’s first act was to signify his subjection to the
Pope by going to Rome for his pallium. During his absence the king nominated Spearhafoc (Sparrow-hawk), abbot of Abingdon, to the
vacant bishopric of London. It would appear that there was something irregular
about his promotion. To judge from his subsequent conduct in running away
(perhaps in the beginning of 1053) with the gold and jewels which the king had
given him to make a crown—“for he was a most skilled worker in gold”—and with
moneys belonging to the diocese of London, he was, no doubt, generally unfit to
possess a bishopric. At any rate, when, on his return from Rome, he presented
himself, “with the king’s writ and seal”, to the archbishop for consecration,
the latter “refused and said that the Pope had forbidden it”. Spearhafoc persisted in repeating his request, and
the archbishop his refusal, all during the summer and the autumn. Then at
length the abbot gave way, and William, a Norman, one of the king’s chaplains,
was appointed to the vacant see.
In the party struggle between
Godwin and the archbishop, who is credited by the panegyrist of the former’s
family with endeavouring of set purpose “to annoy the duke”, Godwin was at last
victorious. Ulf, Robert, and others of the king’s Norman friends fled across
the seas. The archbishop at once betook himself to Rome; and, after laying his
case before Leo, obtained from him a decree for his restoration to his see. But
“as he was returning through Jumièges, he died there, and was buried in the
Church of St. Mary, which for the most part he himself had built at vast expense”.
His enemy Godwin had died before him, and our old chronicler evidently had
grave doubts of his salvation, for “he did all too little penance for the
property of God which he held belonging to many holy places”.
It is more than likely that,
even had Robert not died as early as he did (1053?), he would not have been
allowed to return to his see under any circumstances, as long as the party of
Earl Godwin and his sons was in power. For, soon after his flight, at a great
council near London, he had been “without reserve declared an outlaw, and all
the Frenchmen, because they had chiefly made the discord between Earl Godwin
and the king. And Bishop Stigand succeeded to the
archbishopric of Canterbury”. Physical force can cause a man to be called an
archbishop or anything else, and it can put him in possession of property; but
it cannot give him that power which the Church alone has a right to bestow upon
its own officers. Stigand, a man utterly unfit for
such a position, both from his illiteracy and from his ignoble character, was
proclaimed archbishop of Canterbury, and endowed with its revenues by the
political party to which he belonged, and of which he was a very prominent
member. But not a bishop in England would recognise him, or get consecrated by
him, or profess canonical obedience to him, and he was promptly excommunicated
by Pope Leo. His subsequent history and his final downfall must be reserved for
another place. It has been suggested that Stigand’s
schism was probably the determining cause of the help that Rome gave” to
William in his invasion of England; and certain it is that the Conqueror put
forth the expulsion of Archbishop Robert as one of the reasons which led him to
take up arms against this country.
Macbeth in Rome, 1050.
Contemporary with Leo and
Edward was Macbeth, a character more famous on the stage of the theatre than on
the larger one of the world. He succeeded to the crown of Scotland after
having, at least, been a party to the murder of his predecessor Duncan (1040),
and ruled the country well (1040-1058). With a view, no doubt, to make
atonement for his sins, we have it on the authority of a monk (Muiredach mac Robertaigh,
generally known as Marianus Scotus), who was alive at
the time, was a Celt himself, and took special note of the doings of the Scotch
and Irish, that this king made the Roman pilgrimage, or at any rate gave money
to the poor in Rome. In this Macbeth only did what we have already seen done by
many other princes, and what is done to this day by every Catholic pilgrim who
visits the Eternal City; and it is a mere idle flight of an unbridled
imagination to convert, as some have done, his pilgrimage into a diplomatic
mission, and his alms into bribes.
St. Peter Damian tells us a
curious story which may have its foundation in the visit of Macbeth to Rome,
or, possibly, may be the history of some Irish prince otherwise unknown. The
saint says he was told the story by an old man, Bonizo, the rector of the
monastery near St. Severus. This is no doubt the church and monastery of St.
Severinus on the Via Merulana, not far from the
Church of St. Matthew. As the Via Merulana
cuts the line of the old wall of Servius Tullius, St. Peter Damian describes
the monastery on the said via as “near the old city”.
A young Scotch prince (or
Irish?—Scotigenarum rex) on succeeding
to his father’s throne, and reflecting on the vanity of this world, left his
crown and wife. On the pretext of a pilgrimage, he went to Rome, and when there
contrived to evade his followers, hid himself in a monastery, and became a
monk. Soon after he was taken ill and died, constantly begging of God on his
death-bed to “fulfil what He had promised”. He was asking, concludes the saint,
for his reward for his work in the vineyard.
Death of Leo IX
After the battle of Civitella, Leo returned, as we have seen, to Benevento.
Thence he directed the controversy with Michael Cerularius, and there was he
seized with his last illness. Grief for the slaughter of Civitella
never left him; he redoubled the fervour with which he said Mass for the repose
of the slain. This it was that preyed upon his mind far more than the
indifference of Henry to his troubles, or than the quarrel with the Greeks—the
gravity of which no man then realised. As the year 1053 drew to its close, the
powers of his body so far gave way that all desire for food left him, and a
little water was all he could take. On the anniversary of his enthronization
(February 12, 1054) he managed to muster sufficient strength to say Mass. Never
again was he to have that privilege. Feeling that his end was nigh, he had
himself conveyed to Rome in a litter (March 12). As far as Capua, where he
remained twelve days, he was escorted not only by his own followers, but by a
company of Normans who came at his call.
April had just begun when he entered
the Lateran Palace. There, however, he stayed not long, as he had learnt from
God that he should die by St. Peter’s. Accordingly he caused himself to be
carried first to the oratory of the saint, and then to the Vatican Palace hard
by. There, in the presence of a number of bishops, abbots, and faithful people
who had crowded to see him, did he receive Extreme Unction. When the Holy
Viaticum had been given him, he prayed “in his native German” that, if it was not
God’s will that he should recover, he might be released with all speed from the
dwelling-house of his body.
Whilst lying on his bed of
death, he is said by Bonizo to have entrusted the care of the Roman Church
after his death to Hildebrand. But at this time Hildebrand was in Gaul, and it
is, perhaps, scarcely credible that in the then critical condition of affairs
in Rome, the Pope would have entrusted the government of the Church to an
absentee. The statement, however, may be enough to show that Leo did not
overlook the practical side of his duty even till his last hour. But he spent
most of the days of his last agony in prayer. At times he would be carried into
the church, and there, lying beside his marble coffin, he would point out to
those around him how his own case ought to show them the vanity of tlit world, and induce them not to tamper with the goods of
the Church, nor break the laws of God. He prayed for the Church and those who
had shed their blood at Civitella; for heretics and
Jews, and for every province he had visited. Then, rising from his couch, and
throwing himself on his sarcophagus, he signed it with the sign of the cross,
and prayed that on the day of retribution it might present him before the
throne of resurrection, “For I believe that my Redeemer liveth”.
At length, on Wednesday, April
19, lying on his couch before the altar of St. Peter, soon after he had
received “the Body and Blood of Christ” from a bishop who was saying Mass, he
gave back his sweet soul to its Creator at the very hour he had himself
predicted.
“At the very hour that he
commended his soul to Christ”, the bell of St. Peter’s began to toll of itself;
and a citizen of Todi, named Albert, with five
others, declared that they saw, as it were, the road all bedecked with
resplendent coverings and gleaming with gems, by which he was led by angels up
to heaven. Moreover, so great was the calm at the moment of his death, that not
a leaf moved ever so little”.
Many are the miracles cited by
our authorities which he wrought both in life and in death, but for which, “for
the sake of (here) sparing the busy or the incredulous”, reference must be made
to the said authorities.
In the marble sarcophagus
which he had himself prepared for them were laid to rest the mortal remains of
Leo IX. Then, with the concurrence of all the Roman people, it was placed
within the basilica of St. Peter, close to the gate of Ravenna. Later on, an
altar in honour of the saint was erected over the sarcophagus. When, in 1005,
that portion of the old basilica was unfortunately destroyed in the building of
the new one, the relics of the saint were placed in a fresh coffin of cypress
wood. This, with an inscription recording the act of translation, was put in a
sarcophagus of white marble, and the whole placed beneath the altar now
dedicated to the Stigmata of St. Francis of Assisi.
In the case of Leo IX his
memory was not interred with his body. It has been kept green in the Catholic
Church. Honoured as a saint in his life-time, he has been revered as such ever
since. Churches were dedicated in his honour even by his contemporaries, and
his name is enshrined in the Roman Martyrology.
“Leo is dead! Victorious Rome doth
mourn.
Long will it be before his like she
sees”.
Among other losses brought
about during Rome’s Dark Age, we have to deplore that of almost all the papal
money coined during three-quarters of the century preceding the accession of
Leo IX. Of the money struck by him, only a single denarius seems to have
escaped the great destroyer. On the obverse it shows, running round near its
edge, a cross, and the letters Henricus Imp,
and in its centre, in three lines, Romanoru;
and on the reverse a cross and Scs Petrus round
a square in which are enclosed in two lines the letters Leo P. Another
fifty years will have to roll by before we shall meet with the corns of another
Pope (viz. Paschal II.).
“Leo the Great” are the words
with which the author of Rome’s annals begins his account of the successor of
Damasus II. And though among the Leos of Rome the title of Great is officially,
as it were, reserved to St. Leo I, the anonymous writer we have just cited was
guilty of no exaggeration when he called the ninth Pontiff who bore that name,
Leo the Great. For he was great in the amount of work to which he put
his hands, and still more in its importance as well to the Church as to the
world at large. The moral reform which he carried so far forward was, of
course, accompanied by an intellectual advance which could not be confined to
the ecclesiastical body. Great was he also in his self-abnegation. That
he might serve God more utterly, he put to one side the splendid career which
was held out to him by the world, nor would he accept the most glorious
position there is to be found on this earth, till he was imperatively called to
it by those who had the right so to do. And throughout his whole life never do
we see him hesitating between self and his duty, or between self and the
benefit of others. At Monte Cassino we behold him on his knees washing the feet
of the monks, and at Mainz bearing most meekly with a rude and ill-timed
display of independence on the part of its archbishop. He was great, too, in
piety, useful for all things, towards God, and in his tender love of God’s
Blessed Mother. Hence it was that men believed that God was with
him, and that he was one of those who were destined by the Almighty to display
signs and wonders. “In my name they (viz. those that believe) shall cast
out devils: they shall speak with new tongues . . . they shall lay their hands
upon the sick, and they shall recover.” And so we find that all who wrote of
Pope Leo connect him with the working of miracles.
Nor has this been a mere posthumous
greatness; he was great in the eyes of all who knew him, even to those who had
complaints to make to him, ay, or of him. The clergy and the people of Nantes,
in addressing to Leo a letter of remonstrance on account of a bishop he had
sent them, do so as to one “who in their time had so gloriously occupied the
Apostolic See”. The abbot of Fécamp opens a letter to
Leo as follows : “May the whole Roman world rejoice, seeing that it is adorned
with so great a Pope, who, resplendent with a piety as deep as it is new, has
risen glorious like the morning star to drive away the clouds of error from the
face of the Church. Since those golden ages when the Roman Church possessed a
Leo and a Gregory, sources of spiritual doctrine brighter than crystal, what Pope
has arisen so earnest and watchful as you, most holy of prelates, you who feed
the sheep of the Lord on the giving pastures of the hills? To substantiate what
I have advanced, who is not filled with joy and admiration at the vigilance of
a Pontiff who, with a zeal unheard of in our times, would see everything for
himself, and, not content with consulting at Rome in his own see the interests
of one people, ... has moreover visited the churches beyond the Alps, and has
by the holding of synods and by ecclesiastical censure corrected and amended
what was wrong and abnormal? Hail! Pontiff of pontiffs, hail!”
In fine, as “he that instructeth his son shall be praised in him”, so Leo IX
must be called great in his spiritual children whom he trained up, and whose
glory must be reflected back on their spiritual father. One after another of
those whom he had summoned around him from the cloister or the court succeeded
him in the Chair of Peter, and carried on triumphantly the work of the reform
of the Church and the people he had so well initiated. Chief of these was the
immortal Hildebrand, who is not only distinctly stated by those who knew both
of them well to have been “trained” (educatus)
by him, but himself proclaimed “our Lord Leo of blessed memory” to have been
“our father”. By all, then, who have more at heart the spiritual than the
material progress of mankind; by all who can admire the victory of moral over
physical force, the heroic efforts made by Gregory VII to lift up the world’s
standard of virtue will be regarded as the brightest gem in the glorious halo
which surrounds the name of the great Alsatian Pontiff, Bruno of Egisheim.
VICTOR II.
A.D. 1055-1057.
Emperors of the
East.
Theodora, 1055-1056. Michael VI. (Stratioticus),
1056-1057.
Emperors of the
West.
Henry III (The Black), 1039-1056. Henry IV (only King of Germany), 1056-1106.
King of England.
St. Edward the Confessor, 1042-1066.
King of France.
Henry I, 1031-1061.
At the time of the death of
St. Leo IX. (April 1054), the cardinal-subdeacon Hildebrand was in France inquiring
into the doctrines of Berengarius of Tours, and, in the words of that
innovator, “treating in the name of the apostolic authority on various
ecclesiastical affairs”. Nothing could, of course, be done in Rome without the Pope-maker,
to whose care the dying Leo is said to have entrusted the Church. But those in
Rome to whose charge the government of the Church had been committed in the
meanwhile were able to repel a final attempt of the ex-Pope, Benedict IX, to
seize the papal throne by force. This would appear to have been the unhappy
man’s last great crime; for it is probable that he presently retired to the
monastery of Grottaferrata to bewail his sins to the
hour of his death. No sooner was Hildebrand returned than, according to Bonizo
at least, both clergy and people made it plain to him that it was their wish to
make him Pope. Not only, however, had he not wish to sit on the chair of Peter,
but he did not think that the time had yet come when the Church could prudently
attempt to vindicate her right to elect her head freely. The Black
Emperor was at once too good a friend and too powerful a master to be put
lightly aside. Though with very great difficulty he at length succeeded in
convincing the people of this, and in arranging for a deputation to accompany
him to Henry. His idea was at one and the same time to please the emperor and
to safeguard the election rights of the Romans by endeavouring to obtain the
nomination of the candidate on whom they had previously fixed their choice.
Accordingly, accompanied by a
number of the most distinguished Roman clergy and laity, Hildebrand crossed the
Alps and found the emperor at Mainz (November 1054); and, if we are to believe
Bonizo, induced him to abandon what he called his right, as Patricius of
the Romans, of appointing the supreme Pontiffs. Certain it is, at any rate,
that he was specially honoured by the emperor, and that the Romans demanded
Gebhardt, bishop of Eichstadt, and chancellor (economus) of the empire, as the successor of St. Leo
IX.
For information concerning the
chancellor’s career up to this point, we must turn to the anonymous biographer
of the bishops of his see, who has some pretty things to tell us regarding him.
He was the son of Beliza and Hartwig, count of Calvi, situated between Baden and Stuttgart, and on the
borders of what was at this period the Duchy of Swabia. To this day the ruins
of the castle of the counts of Calvi look down upon
the town of the same name, upon the river Nagold on
which it stands, and over many of the fir-clad heights of the Black Forest.
The future Pope was a distant
relative of the emperor; but, when Henry reminded him of the fact, he used to
say that his parents were illustrious enough, but were not quite so
aristocratic as that. In 1042 he became, while still very young, bishop of Eichstadt under the following curious circumstances. The
emperor’s uncle, Gebhardt, bishop of Ratisbon, had asked his nephew to bestow
the See of Eichstadt on a relative of his. Henry was
disposed to consent till he discovered that the candidate was the son of a
priest, whereupon he firmly refused. Very much annoyed, the bishop declared that
the real reason of the emperor’s action was his contempt for him. To show that
this suspicion was false, Henry assured him that if he would present to him any
other of his relations who was a fit and proper person, he would grant him the
bishopric. Gebhardt at once brought forward his namesake. Prejudiced against
him on account of his extreme youth, the emperor asked the advice of one bishop
after another, and at length turned to St. Bardo, archbishop of Mainz, who, as
was his wont, was sitting quiet and recollected with his cowl drawn over his
head. Looking at him earnestly, the archbishop replied : “My lord, you may well
bestow on him this power, for one day you will grant him a greater”. At a loss
to understand the holy man’s meaning, but satisfied with his permission, the emperor
“gave the ring and pastoral staff” to the young Gebhardt. When his father heard
the news he was overjoyed, and at once asked who was the patron saint of his
son’s diocese. When he was told St. Willibald, he exclaimed : “Bah! my dream
has deceived me”, for he had once dreamt that his son was to be a bishop under
St. Peter. “But”, adds his biographer, “his time had not yet come”.
Despite his youth, Gebhardt
showed himself an able Counsellor bishop, so much so indeed that he soon became
“better than many bishops in the empire, and inferior to but few”. Especially
was he remarkable for his skill and dispatch in deciding cases. His
well-deserved fame soon reached the ears of the emperor, who associated him
with himself in the administration of the empire. In office he succeeded in
overcoming envy by virtue—“a most exceptional accomplishment”. And he gave
evidence of his varied ability by showing that he could be as able a general as
an administrator. When Duke Conrad was exiled into Hungary (1053), Gebhardt
took over the government of his Duchy of Bavaria; and during his term of rule
inflicted such chastisement on the freebooting Schirenses
that up to our author’s days they had not forgotten it. When he was now at the
height of his power, and second to the king, “it seemed both to the emperor
himself and to many others that St. Bardo’s prophecy concerning the greater
power had been already fulfilled”."
But what the greater power was
to be, became plain enough to Henry and to Gebhardt when Hildebrand and the
Romans presented their petition. It is hard to say whether it was more
distasteful to the emperor or to the bishop. The one was loth to lose his favourite
minister; the other to take upon himself a burden which had in so short a time
proved fatal to so many of his countrymen. But the Romans would have no other
than Gebhardt, and the more he refused the proffered dignity, the more were
they determined to have him. It was even said that he secretly sent envoys to
Rome with instructions to defame his character; and he certainly employed
learned men at home to try to save him from the position he dreaded.
But, as the historian of his
See reminds us, “there is no wisdom, there is no counsel against the Lord”,
and, in a great diet at Ratisbon, Gebhardt brought the whole affair to a close
“by a few but very noteworthy words”. “Behold”, said he to the emperor, “I give
myself up body and soul to the service of St. Peter, and, although I know
myself to be unworthy of so holy a See, I will obey your commands on condition
that you restore to St. Peter what belongs to him”. To this the emperor agreed,
and Hildebrand carried off the unwilling bishop in triumph to Rome. No wonder
he used to declare half in jest and half in earnest that he did not love monks!
Following the narrative of Leo
of Monte Cassino, we may go on to say that it was Hildebrand who procured the
assent of the Roman people to his choice of Gebhardt as Pope, who suggested to
him to assume the name of Victor, and who did not rest till he was enthroned on
Holy Thursday, April 13, 1055. “For three years Victor ruled the Apostolic See
most gloriously, and, among his other virtues, displayed such liberality that
the Romans glorified him both in life and in death”.
Gebhardt’s arrival in Italy
was followed almost immediately by that of the emperor. He was both annoyed and
alarmed that Godfrey, duke of Lorraine, who had long been a rebel to his
authority, had married his cousin Beatrice, the widow of Boniface, marquis of
Tuscany, and had thus become the most powerful noble in Italy (1054). He feared
lest, through the influence of the new marquis, the Italians, “ever ready for
revolution”, should turn against the empire; and his apprehensions were
deepened by the arrival of an embassy from the Romans, which came to beg him to
enter Italy to check the power of Godfrey. His prompt action disconcerted the
marquis, who hastily quitted Italy, and left his wife to try to pacify him.
Taking her daughter Matilda along with her, she went boldly before the emperor,
and, while assuring him that in marrying Godfrey she had no thought of doing
anything against the interests of the empire, plainly told him that she had
only done what the “law of nations” gave her every right to do. Utterly failing
not merely in magnanimity but in justice, the emperor simply replied that she
ought not to have married without his knowledge, kept both her and her daughter
in honourable captivity as hostages, and brought them back with him to Germany.
He also took action at the same time against Godfrey’s brother, Cardinal
Frederick, who had just returned to Rome from Constantinople with a large sum
of money and valuable presents, of most of which, however,—a fact perhaps
unknown to the emperor—he had been robbed by Trasmund,
count of Teate. Fearful lest this treasure should
come into the hands of Godfrey, Henry wrote to the Pope, and bade him seize the
cardinal, and send him to him at once. But hearing through his friends of the
emperor’s ill-will against him, Frederick left Rome, and became a monk at Monte
Cassino.
Meanwhile the emperor had
advanced as far south as Tuscany, and was in the month of May joined by Victor
at Florence. On Whit Sunday (June 4), in presence of the emperor and the Pope,
a synod was held at which one hundred and twenty bishops assisted. Through the
active agency of Hildebrand, further steps were taken to carry on the work of
reform inaugurated by Leo. Not only were the decrees against simony and the
incontinence of clerics reaffirmed, but several bishops, convicted of breaches
of them, were deposed. It was no doubt, too, on this occasion that, reminding
the emperor of his promise, Victor obtained through him, sometimes even against
his inclinations, the restoration of no small amount of papal property. In 872 Louis
II had granted the Holy See Nursia and other towns,
which involved the grant of a large portion of the Duchy of Spoleto, which
seems to have then included the March of Fermo, Camerino,
or Ancona, as it is variously called. And it would appear that Henry the Black
made over the whole Duchy with its dependent March to the Roman Church. At any
rate, various documents have been preserved which show that Victor II at least
was its duke and marquis. In all these negotiations with Henry there was
naturally much that disappointed the Pope, and, calling to mind how he had
himself been the cause of baulking the policy of Leo IX, he would sigh and exclaim,
“I am well served, inasmuch as I myself opposed my lord”.
It would appear that for some
months after the council of Florence, the Pope and Hildebrand remained with the
emperor in central Italy, probably engaged in establishing on a firmer basis
the imperial and the papal authority in the northern half of Italy. But with
the Normans and southern Italy, Henry was prevented from interfering by having
to return to Germany (November), in order to cope with the difficulties which
Godfrey was causing in Lorraine, and to subdue a conspiracy formed against him
by many of the powerful nobles of his kingdom.
In the beginning of the new
year, the Pope dispatched Hildebrand to France in order to continue the work of
reform from which the death of St. Leo had recalled him. Especially had he to
combat simony, encouraged unfortunately by the French king (Henry I), who paid
no heed to the admonitions on the subject addressed him both by Leo IX and
Victor. The intrepid monk resumed his task with his accustomed energy, and we
find it recorded that the “apocrisiarius Aldebran”
presided at various councils at which the suppression of simony was a med at.
In one of them, held apparently at Embrun, its archbishop, Hugo, accused of
simony, continued against all evidence to deny his guilt. To bring matters to a
head, Hildebrand, acting on the advice of the other bishops, thus addressed him
: “In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, whose gifts
you are accused of buying, I adjure you to confess the truth on this subject.
May heaven prevent you from pronouncing the name of the Holy Spirit as long as
you persist in denying the truth”. A man of ready speech, the archbishop at
once proceeded to pronounce the sacred names. But, to the profound amazement of
all, he was unable, after repeated efforts, to enunciate the name of the Holy
Ghost. Utterly stupefied, the archbishop humbly confessed his fault, and along
with six other bishops was deposed.
When Hildebrand had to return
to Rome, the work of purifying the Church of France was continued by the Pope’s
orders, under the presidency of Rimbaud, archbishop of Arles, and Pontius,
archbishop of Aix, whom he had appointed his legates. Nothing will show so well
the nature of the cleansing to be effected than “a complaint” which was
addressed “to the assembly of the vicars of God (at the council of Toulouse),
and to the legates of the supreme Roman Pontiff who holds the place of Blessed
Peter, Prince of the Apostles”, by Berenger, viscount, or proconsul, as he
called himself, of Narbonne. During the days of his uncle, Archbishop Ermengaud, the church of Narbonne, so the complaint set
forth, was “one of the most flourishing between Rome and Spain”. Its
possessions of all kinds were great, and its church library was full of books.
On the death of Ermengaud, Guifred,
count of Cerdagne, a relation of whom Berenger had married, approached the
viscount himself and his parents, as well as the count of Rodez,
with a view to having his ten-year-old son elected to the archbishopric, and
offered to divide the sum of 1oo.ooo solidi between Berenger’s father and the
count. At first the viscount’s parents were unwilling to have anything to do
with so base a transaction; but when their son, through love of his wife,
threatened to kill them if they did not consent to Guifred’s
wishes, they and the count of Rodez took the money,
and the boy, Guifred (he had the same name as his
father), became archbishop of Narbonne. As might have been expected, he showed
himself altogether more like one of the ordinary nobles of the period than a
priest. He had no sooner come to man’s estate than he quarrelled with Berenger,
who had no doubt counted on making him his creature. He raised troops and made
open war on the viscount, in the course of which thousands of men, we are told,
were slain. For the purposes of his campaigns, and to raise 100,000 solidi to
buy the bishopric of Urgel for his brother, he
absolutely ruined his diocese and his cathedral church. Books, relic-cases,
chalices, everything found their way into the hands of money-grabbing Jews. No
match apparently for the truculent archbishop, Berenger wished to have their
differences settled “by the decision of the apostolic legate”. To this Giufred refused to agree; and when his enemy appealed to the
Pope, he excommunicated both him and his wife, and laid his territory under a
cruel interdict. Were it not for the fear of God, Berenger assured the
assembled Fathers that he would have disregarded Guifred’s
sentence, the more so that the archbishop had himself been already
excommunicated by Pope Victor. And though, in concluding his complaint, the
viscount declared his readiness to go to Rome, he bluntly told the Fathers of
Toulouse that if they did not give him the justice he sought, he would treat
the archbishop’s excommunication with con-tempt, never keep the peace nor
continue his appeal to the Apostolic See.
It is no concern of ours here
to inquire as to exactly how far the complaint of Berenger was well
founded. His own words about himself, combined with Victor’s and other Popes’
condemnation of Guifred, are enough to show that the
picture it presents is accurate enough, at least in its dark outlines, and lets
us see what need there was, in the interests of the weak and of law and order,
that the results of the reforming zeal of the Domnus
Apostolicus should be felt everywhere. Evidently
it was only for the Pope of Rome that the turbulent clerical and lay nobles of
the age had any respect at all.
Passing on to Spain, whither
found its way most of the church plate of the cathedral of Narbonne, we shall
find that two facts at once call for notice. The first is that the demand for a
reformation of manners was being heard, even amid the clash of arms, in that
peninsula, and that the Spanish bishops were endeavouring to meet it. The other
is the steady progress of the Christian kingdoms at the expense of the Moors.
This was chiefly due to the valour of one of the greatest of the sovereigns who
have ruled in Spain, viz., Ferdinand I, king of Castile and Leon. Elated by his
successes, and by the fact that he ruled over more than one kingdom, he was
induced to assume the title of emperor. This assumption was not unnaturally
resented by the Emperor Henry, who sent ambassadors in order to denounce it
first to the assembled Fathers at the council of Tours (1055), which was being
held by Hildebrand, and then to Pope Victor and the council of Florence. Both
Pope and council decided that the German emperor’s contentions were just; and
envoys were dispatched by them to remonstrate with the Spanish monarch in their
name, and to threaten excommunication and interdict if their decrees were
unheeded by him. Ferdinand at once assembled the bishops and nobles of his
kingdoms; and while, through the influence of the famous Roderic Diaz, the Cid,
the assembly declared its complete independence of the empire, it resolved, in
deference to the Roman Pontiff, that it was desirable that their sovereign
should lay aside the imperial title. These recommendations were accepted by
Ferdinand, who dismissed the ambassadors with the assurance that he would obey
the behests of the Pope.
The activities of Victor were
not confined to the continent of Europe. He was equally interested in those
“who inhabited the isles of the sea, to wit, the Irish (Scoti)
and English”. Sending “health and apostolical benediction to his most beloved
son King Edward and to all the nobility of the English”, he confirmed, in
response to a request of the king, the ancient privileges which the Roman
Church had already conferred on the monastery of Ely. To Archbishop Kynsie (Cynesige), who had come
all the way from York for the purpose, he presented his pallium, and he had to
take action in the affair of Archbishop Strand. If the reader will turn to a
preceding page of this work, he will see how, by the influence of the party of
Earl Godwin, the unworthy bishop of Winchester, Stigand,
was put in possession of the See of Canterbury (1052), though its legitimate
occupant, Robert of Jumièges, was still alive, and had not been canonically
deposed. The usurper had been excommunicated by St. Leo IX, whose example was
followed by four of his successors. And if “bishops-elect sought consecration
abroad”, the reason was that Victor II had forbidden the bishops of the
province of Canterbury to seek it at the hands of the intruder Stigand. This illiterate pluralist who had obtained the
archbishopric by force was destined to lose it by the same means at the hands
of William the Conqueror.
The East
Before retracing our steps to
follow the movements of the Pope himself, attention may here be called to one
more of his letters, viz. to the one which by mistake was formerly attributed
to Victor III, and which was addressed to the aged Empress Theodora, who was
placed on the throne of the Byzantine Caesars in the same year as Victor II
took possession of the chair of Peter. The document would seem to be another
illustration of the fact that contemporaries did not realize that an impassable
gulf had been formed between Rome and Constantinople by the acts of the papal
legates and of the patriarch Michael Cerularius in 1053. At first Theodora
allowed herself to be ruled by the ambitious patriarch, who is thought to have favoured
her promotion for the furtherance of his own ends. But her short reign of
eighteen months was not far advanced when she spurned the yoke which he was
placing upon her. It may well be that knowledge of this fact was not without
its influence on the letter which the Pope wrote to her. Reminding her that it
was his duty to admonish both great and small, especially indeed the great, as
they can do so much more good or harm “to the poor of Christ”, he begged her to
abolish the insupportable tax which was placed upon pilgrims to the Holy
Sepulchre by the imperial officials. Not only was a heavy tax of three aim
levied on each of their horses, but the horses themselves were liable to be
seized for the public service, and a sum of like amount was exacted from every
two persons on foot. He reminded her that the delinquencies of subordinates
were visited on their superiors, wished her every blessing for this life and
the next, and exhorted her ever to be mindful of and to venerate the Roman
Church “as her first and proper mother”, just as she had ever honoured her and
her family before her. Death (August 1056) prevented Theodora from carrying
into effect her designs against the all-powerful Cerularius, and the tax remained
to swell the feelings of bitterness against the Greeks which showed themselves
in the conduct of the Latins towards them in the Crusades.
Very little is known of the
doings of the Pope from the time that Hildebrand went to France till the summer
of 1056, when he betook himself to Germany. During this interval, however, he
had a difference with the monks of Monte Cassino. The abbacy of this great
monastery had become vacant in December 1055; and, as the Pope complained in
various letters to the monks, they (a majority of them) had acted very wrongly
in electing the monk Peter as their new abbot without either consulting him or
obtaining the emperor’s permission. The fact perhaps was that Peter, though a
very holy man, was regarded both by a number of his brethren, and especially by
the Pope, as wholly unsuited to rule the abbey and its great domains at a time
when a strong will and a clear intellect were needed to cope with the
aggressive Normans. To explain their conduct, the brethren at once dispatched
some of their number both to the Pope and to the emperor. It seemed to them
that it was Victor’s intention to get the monastery into his power. However,
they boldly declared that even by papal privilege it belonged to the monks to
elect their abbots, and to the Popes only to consecrate them. Settlement of the
affair, delayed by the Pontiff’s journey to Germany, was brought about by the
resignation of Peter, and the subsequent election of Frederick, the cardinal of
Lorraine, a candidate as satisfactory to Victor as to the monks (May 1057).
In July 1056 the Pope was in
his March of Firmana at Aprutium
(Teramo), no doubt on his way to Germany. We there find him restoring property
to its bishop, and decreeing, “in the name of King Henry and his own”, that any
breach of his decision would be punished by a fine of fifty pounds to the royal
exchequer, and of a like amount both to his treasury and to the bishop.
We have no means of saying
whether or not he had previously visited the southern portion of Italy. But in
any case the story of the sufferings which the people were there enduring from
the ravages of the Normans was poured into his ears. It was more than he could
bear. This cry of distress, and perhaps, too, indications of unrest on the part
of the Romans, caused him to lend a favourable ear to the repeated requests of
the emperor that he would come to him in Germany.
Accordingly, about the month
of August he moved northwards from Aprutium and found
the emperor at Goslar, (1056, September 8). He would have been greeted with a splendour
altogether unprecedented, had not God, who wished, we are told, to show how
empty was all such display, sent a furious storm of rain at the very moment of
the Pope’s arrival. On account of the feast, the Nativity of Our Lady, and to
welcome the sovereign Pontiff, the wealth and power of the empire had assembled
at Goslar. But the deluge of rain converted what was to have been a most
glorious and solemn procession of magnates into a disorderly flight.
Despite the weather, however,
attention was given both to business and to pleasure. The Pope succeeded in
reconciling Hanno, the new archbishop of Cologne, with the emperor, and then
the court migrated to Bodfeld in the Hartz Mountains
for hunting purposes. But unfortunately the emperor’s days were numbered. A
fever attacked him, and, feeling that the hand of Death was upon him, he
prepared to meet his end like a man and a Christian. He asked pardon of all
whom he could, restored certain ill-gotten goods, forgave those who had injured
him, confessed his sins to the Pope and to the other bishops and priests who
surrounded his bedside, and received absolution (indulgentiam)
from them, as well as the holy viaticum of the Body and Blood of the Lord. To
provide as far as possible for the maintenance of order in his kingdom after
his demise, he entrusted it and his successor, Henry IV, a child six years old,
to the care of the Pope; and, after an illness of about a week, gave up his
soul into the hands of its Maker (October 5, 1056). His body was transported to
Spires, where, according to the arrangements made by the Pope and the widowed
Empress Agnes it was buried on the anniversary of the day on which he had been
born (October 28), in order that, on the very day on which he had come forth
from the womb of his mother, he might be laid in the bosom of the earth, the
common mother of every mortal.
Through the general
uprightness of his character, and especially through his uncompromising
hostility to simony, Henry had in many ways deserved well of the Church, even
though he occasionally acted as its master. And so Hildebrand, whose life was
devoted to freeing it from the thraldom to which he and his predecessors had
reduced it, always spoke well of him. But his early death, though disastrous
for the empire, was advantageous for the Church. Her path to freedom was
greatly smoothed thereby. Meanwhile, now supreme in both Church and State,
Victor exerted himself with striking success to preserve the empire from the
calamities to be naturally expected on the accession of a child. The occasion
called forth all the skill of the former minister. In the East the Slavs had
just defeated an imperial army with great slaughter, and, in the West, Godfrey
of Lorraine and his allies were still in arms. The first care of the Pope was
to cause the boy-king to be solemnly enthroned at Aix-la-Chapelle and the
nobles to swear fealty to him, and his next to reconcile Godfrey and Baldwin of
Flanders with Henry at a council which he held in December at Cologne. Still in
company with the Pope, Henry met the princes of the empire on Christmas Day at
Ratisbon. His position was secured, and the Tope, with the empire deeply in his
debt, returned to Rome in the beginning of the Lent of 1057.
On his arrival in Rome, Victor
occupied himself not only with holding councils, settling various matters in
connection with bishoprics, and granting privileges, but also with the Norman
question. Unable to bring the pressure of arms to bear upon the Agareni (for so, regarding them as equally vicious
as the Saracens, the people called the Normans), he seems to have tried
diplomacy, and, according to the Annals of Augsburg, succeeded in inducing them
to have a greater regard for peace. His energy indeed at this period was such
that we can have no reason to call in question the soundness of the conclusion
of his anonymous admirer to the effect that if he had lived longer, “he would
have made both the ears of many people tingle”. But his pontificate had not
much longer to run. He left Rome for Tuscany, never to return, towards the end
of May.
One of the objects of this,
his last journey from Rome, was in no doubt to examine for himself on the spot
the causes of the perennial dispute between the bishops of Arezzo and Sienna,
which was brought before him also. Another reason would be to take further
steps towards drawing still closer the bonds of union between the Papacy and
the House of Tuscany. Even if he had not been joined by Hildebrand in Germany,
it is certain that he was accompanied by him on this occasion.
We have already seen how,
emboldened by the death of the emperor, the monks of Monte Cassino had, to the
entire satisfaction of the Pope, elected Frederick of Lorraine as the abbot. In
the month of June the newly elected abbot followed Victor into Tuscany, and was
in the first place ordained by him cardinal-priest of St. Chrysogonus
(June 14), that fourth-century basilica of which the late Pope Leo XIII, of
glorious memory, was titular when he was elected supreme Pontiff. Ten days later
he consecrated him abbot. Assured of the goodwill at least of Beatrice, Duke
Godfrey’s wife, who had been restored to him, and of her stepdaughter Matilda,
Victor was evidently bent on attaching to the Papacy by the strong bonds of
friendship the now most powerful House of Lorraine-Tuscany. In Italy there was
no family comparable in influence to that of Godfrey, who received or assumed
about this time the titles of “standard-bearer of the Romans, patricius of Rome, marquis of Italy, prefect of
Ancona, and marquis of Pisa”. The fruit of Victor’s attention to this
influential family was to be garnered by the Papacy at no distant date. The
great Countess Matilda was to prove the strongest barrier to the tyrannical
designs of Henry IV.
Before the new abbot returned
to Rome, he assisted, along with Hildebrand, the provisor of the monastery
of St. Paul, outside-the-walls, and with several bishops of different Tuscan
cities, at a council which the Pope summoned to settle the dispute between the
bishops of Arezzo and Sienna regarding jurisdiction over various parishes (July
23). The assembly met in the palace of St. Donatus, near the city of Arezzo,
and would appear to have deeded in favour of the claims of Arezzo.
Five days after the closing of
the council, its chief was lying dead in the city near which it had been held.
Anxious to have the body of their illustrious countryman buried in their midst,
a number of Germans set out with it for “the toparch of Eichstadt”.
In the neighbourhood of Ravenna, however, they fell into an ambush prepared for
them by a number of its inhabitants, and were robbed of all they had. They were
forced, therefore, to bury the remains they so jealously guarded outside
Ravenna, “in the basilica of St. Mary, which is of the shape of the Roman
Pantheon, and with sorrowful hearts to make their way back, as best they could,
to their country”. The basilica in question was the well-known round mausoleum
of Theodoric, which had been converted into a monastic church. These
distressing circumstances connected with the Pope’s burial serve well to
illustrate the lawless condition of the age, and may be looked upon as a
complement to the disregard shown by the emperors to the canon law in their
elections of Popes. In the sudden and premature death of Victor we have to
mourn the loss of another of those German Popes whose lives were an honour to
themselves, an advantage to the Church, and a credit to those who nominated
them.
Neither epitaph nor coin of
Victor seems to be extant. There is a story that on one occasion, when he was
saying Mass, the subdeacon put poison into the chalice along with the wine.
Wishful after the consecration to raise the chalice, the Pope found to his
astonishment that he was unable to do so. When, with the people, he prayed to
God to know the cause of this strange circumstance, the poisoner was possessed
by the devil. At once divining the cause, the Pope ordered the chalice with the
blood of the Lord to be enclosed in an altar and preserved for ever as relics.
Then he continued praying until the unfortunate subdeacon was delivered from
his possession.
STEPHEN (IX) X
A.D. 1057-1058.
Emperor of the
East.
Isaac Comnenus, 1057-1059.
One of the distinguished group
of men whom Leo IX gathered round him, and inspired with his own ardent zeal
for the reform of the Church and of the world, was Cardinal Junian
Frederick. Born probably towards the beginning of the eleventh century, he was
the son of Gothelon or Gozelon,
duke of Lotharingia or Lower Lorraine, and of Junca, the daughter of Berengarius II, the last king of
Italy. The rebellious attitude of his brother, Godfrey the Bearded, towards the
empire soon caused him to become an object of suspicion to the Emperor Henry
III, and the marriage of the same brother with Beatrice of Tuscany brought him
into relationship with the most powerful house in Italy.
The learning for which he was
distinguished from his youth upwards, he acquired at the school of St. Lambert
of Liège, which at that time was in a most flourishing condition. In due course
he became a canon and then archdeacon of St. Lambert’s. It was in all likelihood
while he was holding that office that Leo IX, on the occasion of his second
visit to Germany, took him into the service of the Roman Church. He made him
chancellor and librarian of the Apostolic See; and in March 1051 we find his
signature appended to papal bulls as deacon, librarian and chancellor of the
Apostolic See, holding the place of Herimann, arch
chancellor and archbishop of Cologne.
As chancellor he accompanied
Pope Leo in his apostolic journeys, thus gaining a personal knowledge of many
parts of the Church he was destined to rule. We find him on the plains of
Hungary; reading aloud before emperor and people at Bamberg the privileges of
its Church; and witnessing the discomfiture of Leo’s troops by the Normans.
The most important work in which
he took a share before occupying the chair of Peter was the famous embassy
dispatched by Leo to Constantinople, which terminated the disastrous schism of
the East and the West.
We have already seen how
Frederick was robbed of his treasures when he returned from the Greek capital,
and how, robbed, to avoid falling into the power of the emperor, he cast off
the previous robes he was accustomed to wear and became a monk at Monte
Cassino. To put a greater distance between himself and his enemy, it was not long
before he betook himself to the monastery which had been recently founded on
the smallest of the Tremiti Islands. Taking umbrage
at certain abuses he found there, he incurred the dislike of the abbot. This
caused him to return to the mainland, and to seek an asylum in the monastery of
St. John de Venere in the county of Lanciano.
He did not, however, remain long there. Hearing that the abbot of Monte Cassino
(Richer), returning from Ancona, where he had been to see the Pope, was at the
monastery of St. Liberator, he went to him, begged pardon of him for his
restlessness, and obtained his permission to return to Monte Cassino. It must
have been about the end of the year 1055 that he once again climbed the steep
hill which that venerable abbey still crowns.
The death of the emperor Henry
III, not many months after this (October 1056), left Frederick a freer hand,
and when Pope Victor returned to Rome from Germany (April 1057), he went to him
to obtain justice from Trasmund, count of Teate (Chieti), who, as we have seen, had robbed and
imprisoned him on his return from Constantinople. The brigand-noble, after
having been excommunicated by the Pope, confessed his crime, and restored not
only the property of the legates, but also other ill-gotten goods as well.
According to the so-called chronicle of Penna, however, it was only when Frederick,
as Pope, led an armed force against him that the count yielded up his
ill-gotten gains. It is quite possible, if the entry is correct, that Stephen X
undertook this expedition either because Trasmund did
not fulfil all the promises he had made to Victor, or because he had resumed
his old plundering habits.
Soon after the death of the
emperor, Richerius, abbot of Monte Cassino, and
Frederick’s friend, died also (December 11, 1055). Thereupon most of the monks
elected as his successor Peter, the dean of the monastery, an old man indeed,
but one in every way worthy of the position, a man whom the emperor Henry III
had pronounced to be the most perfect monk he had ever seen. For some reason
Pope Victor did not approve of this election. Perhaps he thought that Peter was
too old to occupy so responsible a position in such difficult times, or perhaps
he had set his mind on having another abbot. At any rate, at first with honied
words, and then with sharp ones, he gave the monks to understand that they had
no right to proceed to an election without consulting him, and without
inquiring into what might be the will of the emperor. Then, taking advantage of
the fact that the monks who had not voted for Peter assured him that the
election had been uncanonical, he dispatched Cardinal Humbert to Monte Cassino
to inquire into the election on the spot. But the monks boldly proclaimed that,
by their rule and by papal sanction, the right of election belonged to them
alone, and that in the present case all the forms required by canon law had
been properly complied with.
The investigation would have
terminated favourably for Peter, had not some of his partisans, unknown to him,
and acting with more zeal than discretion, roused the dependants of the abbey,
and attempted to settle the trial by the sword. Peter felt that his cause was
lost; and no sooner had he succeeded in dispersing his armed supporters than he
placed his resignation in the cardinal’s hands. A unanimous vote of the monks
caused Cardinal Frederick to be acknowledged as his successor (May 23, 1057).
Joining the Pope in Tuscany,
the newly elected abbot was first made cardinal-priest of St. Chrysogonus, and then consecrated abbot by him. He also
received from Victor the privilege of wearing the sandals, gloves, and
dalmatic—the usual insignia of a bishop—and of taking rank above all other
abbots.
When he returned to Rome he
was escorted both to his titular church and to his residence in the monastery
of St. Stephen in Pallara, among the ruins of
the Palatine, with the customary honours by a vast crowd (July 27).
He went to his titular church
in great state, clad in a cope and wearing a mitre, riding on horseback,
attended by a body of horsemen, and accompanied by the primicerius,
the schola cantorum, the regionary
sub-deacons, the ostiar; and such of the
magnates (majores) as he had invited. Boys walked in front of him,
bearing palms and flowers, and, as he rode along, an acolyte among them kept
continually intoning his name, to which the choir responded, “St. Peter has
chosen you”. When he arrived at his church, and before he dismounted, the primicerius and the choristers formed around him,
and the paraphonista (the arch-chorister) in a
loud voice intoned his name. Thrice the choir responded, “May God preserve you!
Holy Mary! help you. Holy Michael! help you”. When the laudes
were finished, Frederick dismounted, and gave his hand to the paraphonista, who led him into the church. During
the Mass that followed he was assisted by the primicerius.
After the sacrifice was over,
he adjourned with his company to the Palatine, and there entertained them and
dismissed them with largess (presbiterium).
After spending a few days in
procuring the ornaments required by his new dignities, he was preparing to
leave the city when Boniface, bishop of Albano, brought the news of the death
of Pope Victor. Thrown into consternation at this unexpected catastrophe,
Frederick at once gave up all thoughts of leaving Rome for the time. He was
immediately beset both by clerics and laymen anxious to know his opinion as to
what was best to be done, and as to whom he considered most fit to be Victor’s
successor. He suggested to them the names of five persons, among which were
those of John of Velletri, afterwards the antipope Benedict X, and of
Hildebrand, subdeacon of the Roman Church. But the Roman people would have none
of them. Some indeed were of opinion that they should await Hildebrand’s return
from Tuscany, where he had been staying with the late Pope. The majority,
however, thought that there was no time for delay, and that there was no candidate
so likely to be able to maintain himself in his position when freely elected
than Cardinal Frederick himself, the brother of the powerful Duke Godfrey. To
secure a free election, it was necessary to anticipate the action of the
imperialists or of any powerful family at home. Consequently Frederick was
taken by force from the monastery on the Palatine to the basilica of St. Peter ad
vincula, and there he was duly elected, and called Stephen, as his election
had taken place on the feast of St. Stephen I, Pope and martyr (August 2,
1057). From St. Peter’s he was taken in triumphal procession to be enthroned in
the Lateran palace, and on the following day was consecrated “supreme and
universal Pontiff”, as Leo expresses it, in presence of “all the cardinals, the
clergy, and the Roman people”.
Though the new Pope realized
that the carrying out of the measures of reform to which the Papacy had
committed itself would meet with much fierce opposition, he followed resolutely
in the steps of his immediate predecessors. During the first four months of his
reign he remained in Rome, and held several synods with a view to promoting the
celibacy of the clergy and to checking marriages between near relations. And
when the Greek custom with regard to clerical celibacy was urged against his
action, he answered that the customs of the Greek and Latin churches were
different, and that the custom of the latter church was that all clerics, from
the subdeacon to the bishop, should refrain from marriage. St. Peter Damian
tells us that he expelled from Rome, in order that they might do penance, even
those clerics who had left their wives; for many of them only ceased to
transgress the discipline of the Church in order to break many of the
commandments of God. And, to serve as a warning to evil-doers, he recounts the sudden
death of a priest who would not separate from his wife, and the advice which he
himself gave on that occasion, viz., that no solemn rites should be offered for
the repose of his soul.
To help him in his arduous
task, the Pope had summoned the teller of this story from his quiet Umbrian
retreat at Fonte-Avellana to Rome in order to make him cardinal-bishop of
Ostia. So stoutly, however, did he refuse the preferred dignity that the Pope,
putting him under holy obedience, seized him by the arm and “affianced him to
the Church of Ostia by forcing the ring on his finger, and the crozier into his
hand”. In announcing to his episcopal brethren his accession to their number,
the new cardinal took occasion very bluntly to remind them of their duty. After
bewailing the general decay of morals, he points out that in the midst of the
flood of iniquity, “the holy Roman Church is the only harbour, and that it is
the net of the poor fisherman which alone is able to gather together those who
are boldly struggling against the angry waves, and to br.ng them safely to
shore ... And since from all parts of the world crowds flock to the Lateran
palace, there ought to be conspicuous there, more than in any other part,
irreproachable morals, exemplary lives, and strict discipline ... What makes a
bishop is a good life, and an unceasing effort to acquire the virtues of his
state, and not turret-like headgear made of foreign ski is, nor gaudy marten
furs worn beneath the chin, nor jingling golden bangles, nor companies of soldiers,
nor high-spirited and prancing chargers”.
Another uncompromising monk
whom Stephen advanced was Humbert, cardinal-bishop of Silva-Candida, and his
colleague in the famous embassy to Constantinople regarding Michael Cerularius.
He was made “librarian of the Roman Church and of the Apostolic See”. His
strong, and in parts unmeasured, treatise against simony was published about
this time, and may be taken as another indication of the reforming zeal which
animated the breast of his patron. After going to the length of declaring null
all ordinations effected by simoniacal means, Humbert
asserted that, especially in Italy, ecclesiastical property had been absolutely
ruined by simony; and that, as he had seen with his own eyes, it had led even
to the ploughing up for gain of the sacred enclosures of churches, to the
consequent unearthing of the bones of those who had died in the Lord, and to
the very basilicas themselves being used as cattle stalls. As the principal
cause of this detestable sin of Simon Magus, he denounced the investing by
laymen with the ring and crozier of those whom, against the canons, they had
chosen, or caused to be chosen, bishops or abbots. Here he laid his finger on
the root of the evil, and pointed out to the Popes the main stronghold which
they would have to attack. “Three books against simony” were the opening of the
fierce war of investiture which was the predominant note of the Gregorian
epoch.
Stephen’s choice of Hildebrand
for the delicate mission of announcing his elect on to the German court is a
proof that he, equally with his predecessors, placed the fullest confidence in
his judgment, and shared his views on the needs of reform, and on the means to
be employed to effect it. The cardinal was also commissioned to exhort the empress-mother,
Agnes, to impress upon her son to see to it that ecclesiastical benefits were
bestowed for virtue and merit, and not for money. By “the eloquence and sacred
learning” for which he was distinguished, Hildebrand succeeded in his mission,
and spent the Christmas of 1057 with the young Henry at Goslar. Two days after
the feast itself he was at Pohlde, assisting at the
consecration of the illustrious Gundechar as bishop
of Eichstadt.
Hildebrand had left Rome with
commissions to execute in Italy and France, as well as in Germany; and on his
of Milan, way to the imperial court had done important work at Milan (c. August
1057). Even in Lombardy there was no place where the laws not merely of the
Church but of God regarding purity were more openly set at defiance than in
that great city. From its illiterate archbishop downwards, the whole body of
its clergy were stained with simony. Bonizo doubts if there were five out of a
thousand not guilty of it; and, owing to the fact that most of the clergy were married,
or, what was worse, lived in concubinage, and that their children followed
largely the occupation of their fathers, the number of clerics in Milan was
very considerable. And if we are to believe Landulf the elder, the contemporary
historian of the city, the respectable married clergy were held in at least as
much esteem as those who observed the discipline of the West in the matter of
clerical continency. The unremitting efforts of the former to obtain benefices
for their offspring was one of the principal causes of the simoniacal
practices which were devastating the Church of Milan. As they profited
pecuniary by these breaches of law and discipline, the Lombard nobility were
ardent supporters of the married clergy. But the very magnitude of the disorders
provoked a reaction; and an earnest attempt at reform was initiated. At the
head of this movement was a young priest, Anselm by name, who belonged to a
good family at Baggio near Milan, and who had been trained in learning and
virtue by the famous Lanfranc at Bec. Hoping to crush the new spirit which was
manifesting itself in his archiepiscopal see by removing its originator, Guido
had contrived to induce the emperor and Pope Stephen to consent to Anselm’s
being made bishop of Lucca. But the archbishop was no nearer the accomplishment
of the end he had in view. Anselm’s work was taken up by two clerics of noble
birth, Ariald and Landulf, who, in language at times more strong than
judicious, denounced the clerical vices of the city. The people, especially the
poor, inflamed by their addresses, showed themselves vi0lently hostile to the
married and simoniacal clergy. Milan was soon in an
uproar. From the fact that many of the reformers were dwellers in that quarter of
the city —the Pataria— where old rags (patari) were sold, they were dubbed “Patarines” or “Ragbags” by the clergy and their
aristocratic supporters. But if they called names, the people used force. They
compelled many of the clergy to promise in writing to give up their wives or
concubines, and seized their property. Thus driven to extremities, the harassed
clerics appealed for protection first to the bishops of their province, and
then to the Pope.
Stephen wrote at once
exhorting the people to keep the peace, and ordering Guido to summon a synod
for the settlement of the affair. A numerous assembly of bishops accordingly
met together at Fontaneto in the diocese of Novara;
but, as Landulf and Ariald failed to put in an appearance, they were duly
excommunicated. None of the Patarines, however, took
the slightest notice of the excommunication; Landulf and Ariald became greater
heroes than ever, and the nobility were thoroughly overawed by the
demonstrations made by the people in their behalf. Still, as their adversaries
had turned to Rome, the Patarines determined to do
likewise. In company with a number of “honourable men”, Ariald presented
himself before the Pope, and begged him to send legates back with him to reform
the Church of Milan. Stephen, after a careful examination of all the circumstances,
gave him a favourable hearing, and sent him home in company with such ardent
champions of reform as Bishop Anselm of Lucca and Cardinal Hildebrand.
Guido did not await the coming
of these upright and inflexible judges, but fled to the court of the emperor.
How thoroughly they manifested their approval at least of the principles which
animated the Patarine party may be gauged from the
bitter words of Landulf. The legates, he says, “owed broadcast ruin, discord, and
dissension”. Leaving the Patarines, overjoyed at this
their first victory, to propagate their ideas throughout Lombardy and to
prepare for the severer struggle of 1059, Hildebrand went north to fulfil his
other commissions in Germany and in France.
Meanwhile the health of Pope
Stephen was declining. Unable to bear the climate of Rome, he went among the
hills to the monastery on Monte Cassino (November 1057). There, for he was
still its abbot, he applied himself, not only to the correcting of certain abuses
which had crept in among the monks, but also to negotiating with the eastern
emperor with regard to the schism.
As Christmas drew near his
illness increased. Thinking his end was approaching, he bade the monks elect a
new abbot, and was pleased that their votes were unanimously given to his
friend, the famous Desiderius. However, as he wished to keep for himself the abbatial
power, and as he had determined that Desiderius was to be one of his legates to
Constantinople, he told the newly elected abbot that if, on his return from the
East, he found the Pope still alive, he was merely to be a titular abbot,
but, under the opposite supposition, was to have the power as well as the honour
attached to his title. The mission on which Desiderius was dispatched came to
nothing, as the Pope had died before the delegates left Italy, and the
abbot-elect was recalled to rule his monastery.
At length (February 10),
feeling himself somewhat improved in health, and anxious to be back in Rome, to
prepare for the great council he had determined to hold after Easter, Stephen
returned to the city. One of the first acts which he accomplished on his return
showed why he had determined to remain abbot of Monte Cassino, and what large
designs he had been maturing. Whilst at the great monastery, his ears had been
filled with stories of the dreadful deeds of the Normans, and, as Leo IX had
done, he came to the conclusion that they must be expelled from Italy. But the
history of his predecessor’s failure had taught him that little help was to be
hoped for from Germany, and from even a strong emperor. Still less could be
expected from a child. He would then bestow the imperial crown on his powerful
brother, Duke Godfrey of Lorraine and Tuscany, and raise money for the war by
borrowing the treasures of Monte Cassino. So at least ran a wild story. At any
rate, he had not been long back in Rome before he sent word to the provost of
the monastery to bring to him with all possible speed and secrecy its gold and
silver, promising in a short time to return a far larger sum. Obedient, but
sorrowful, the monks laid their treasure at the feet of the Pope. Touched at
the sight of their grief, pleased at the sight of their prompt obedience, and,
it may be, doubtful of the justice of what he had thought of doing, he bade
them return home with their property, only keeping for himself a single statue (icona) out of the presents he had himself brought
from Constantinople.
Unfortunately, his residence
at Monte Cassino had not effected any material improvement in his health. He
felt the hand of death was upon him, and, with statesmanlike instinct, that
trouble was in store for the Papacy. But he was wise enough to devise a remedy
for the evil he had wit enough to foresee. He called the Roman clergy and
people together, and adjured them not to proceed to the election of a new Pope
before the return of the subdeacon Hildebrand, should his own death supervene
in the meantime. The succession was to be regulated by his advice. “For I know
that after my death there will arise among you men, self-seekers, who will endeavour
to obtain possession of the Apostolic See, not in accordance with canon law,
but by force”.
After he had obtained a
promise from all present that in any papal election which might take place, the
canons should be faithfully observed, Stephen once again left Rome and set out
for Tuscany (March 1058). Whether he went thither for his health’s sake, or to
meet his brother, or for some other purpose, is uncertain. Anxious to have his
last hours comforted by the presence of a saint, he sent word to John Gualbert to come from his monastery at Vallombrosa and meet
him. But John was himself too ill to be able to obey the Pope’s summons.
However, if he could not
secure the services of one saint, he was fortunate enough to obtain those of
another. His deathbed at Florence was attended by St. Hugh, the great abbot of
Cluny, a man whom Stephen had ever esteemed and loved, and of whom he used to
say that the devil went out when Hugh came in, and returned when the worthy
abbot departed. Solaced by the saint, and surrounded, as he had always been in
life, by several of his brethren from Monte Cassino, the Pope had himself laid
out in sackcloth and ashes, and, after receiving the last rites of the Church,
expired in the abbot’s arms. He breathed his last on March 29, 1058. He was
buried in the Church of S. Reparata, which was erected
in the seventh century on the site of the Church of S. Salvatore, and was
afterwards demolished (in the beginning of the fourteenth century) to make way
for the present glorious Duomo, or Cathedral of S. Maria del Fiore. Whilst
excavations were being made (August 1357) in the course of the erection of the
existing church, we are assured by the Florentine historian Matteo Villani that
there was found by the side of the altar of St. Zenobio,
the patron saint of Florence, the tomb of Pope Stephen. The inscription on it
made identification easy. On the breast of the corpse was found the papal
brooch adorned with gems and with a golden clasp; on its head was a mitre, and
there was a ring on its finger. “The relics were all entrusted to the Calonaci to await honourable burial”. Whether they ever
obtained it, however, does not seem to be known.
The epitaph, which, according
to Paccinelli in his history of the Abbey of
Florence, used to be in the possession of Christina of Lorraine, grand-duchess
of Tuscany, is a comparatively modern and insipid production in the renaissance
style. It simply says, in many words, that Duke Godfrey in tears joins his
tribute of affection to his brother with that of others, and that the monks of
the Abbey of Florence do likewise
In conclusion, we may regret
with Lambert of Hersfeld that Stephen’s early death
disappointed those who had hoped great things from his pontificate, inasmuch as
“for many years back no one had assumed the government of the Roman Church with
greater satisfaction to all men, and amid more universal expectation of a
glorious reign”. Esteemed by all the people in life, he was regarded by them as
a miracle-worker in death.
NICHOLAS II.
A.D. 1059-1061.
Emperors of the East.
Isaac Comnenus, 1057-1059
Constantine X, Ducas, 1059-10O7.
Kings of France.
Henry I, 1033-1060.
Philip I, 1060-1108.
No sooner did the news of the death of Stephen
X (March, 29) reach Rome, than that lawless party of the Roman barons, whose
interference in papal elections had in the past epoch brought such disgrace
upon the Papacy, made a last effort to keep their usurped power. Headed by
Gregory de Alberico, count of Tusculum, Gerard or
Girard, count of Galeria, and the sons of Crescentius of Monticelli, an
armed band took possession of the city; and, at night, amidst scenes of the
wildest disorder, despite the canons, the promises made to the late Pope, and
the protests and anathemas of the cardinals, they elected John, bishop of
Velletri, as the successor of St. Peter (April 5). By scattering broadcast the
money which they had seized in the treasury of St. Peter’s, the nobles
succeeded in getting , their puppet acknowledged by a number of the Romans.
They could not, however, get a bishop to enthrone him in the prescribed manner.
St. Peter Damian, whose office it was, as bishop of Ostia, to perform that
ceremony, had fled with the other bishops; so that they were compelled to have
the function carried out by an illiterate priest of the Church of Ostia.
The bishop who had after such a fashion been
proclaimed Pope was a Roman of the region of St. Mary Major’s, and the son of
one Guido. As he had been named by Cardinal Frederick as a possible candidate
for the Papacy, he can scarcely have been the fool depicted by St. Peter Damian
in the indignant letter which narrates the circumstances of his elevation. If
he had no hand in bringing about his selection by the Tusculan
faction, nay, if was against his will that he was promoted by it, he sinned, as
St. Peter Damian pointed out, by striving to maintain himself in a position in
which he had been illegally placed.
Fortunately the day of the counts of Tusculum
was over. They had to reckon not only with Hildebrand outside the city, but
with a strong opposition in Rome itself, especially in the Trastevere.
There it was headed by a noble of the name of Leo, the son of Benedict known as
“the Christian”, who seems to have been a convert from Judaism, and to have
been the founder of the house of Pierleoni, which was
to become so famous in the beginning of the following century.
But the more formidable opponent of baronial
anarchy and insolence was Hildebrand. When he returned to Italy from his triple
embassy, he was greeted with the sad news that the armed violence of the counts
of Tusculum had gone far to undo the work of reform he had so well inaugurated.
But the sword had no terrors for Hildebrand. He halted at Florence, and at once
began to take steps to foil the blustering doings of the party of misrule. He
put himself in communication with those in Rome who were anxious for the reform
of Church and State; and, if we are to believe the Roman Annals, sent money to
Leo the son of Benedict. Encouraged by his letters, strong opposition was
offered by them to the dongs of the Tusculan counts
and their creature, and Hildebrand was assured that what he did would meet with
their consent.
Then, securing a promise of armed support from
Duke Godfrey, he designated as Pope, Gerard, bishop of Florence. He was
selected not only on account of his worth, but also, no doubt, because it was
thought he would not be unacceptable to the German Court, as he had been
nominated to his bishopric by the emperor Henry III. For Hildebrand had
resolved to endeavour to secure the adhesion of the empress-regent to his
plans. He could not look to her for troops, seeing that it was as much as she
could do to maintain her own authority against disaffected Saxons and ambitious
nobles. But he realized that her consent to his wishes would not merely avoid
complications in the future, but help to the general acceptance of his candidate.
It is far from unlikely that he went on this mission himself. At any rate a
number of Romans approached the empress on the matter, and obtained from her a
commission to Wibert, the imperial chancellor of
Italy, and to Duke Godfrey to co-operate with Hildebrand in securing the
appointment of the bishop of Florence. On the return of the embassy, the cardinals
who had escaped from Rome met together at Siena, probably in December, and duly
elected the Burgundian Gerard.
In the first month of the following year Wibert and Godfrey assembled their forces at Sutri. After holding a council there, in which the usurper
Benedict was condemned, Gerard and his supporters advanced on Rome. Their
friends in the Trastevere forthwith admitted them
into that part of the city. After some fighting Gerard became master of Rome,
and Benedict, henceforth contemptuously dubbed Mincius,
fled to Passarano, and placed himself under the
protection of Regem or Regetellus,
the son of Crescentius.
After the prefect Peter had been replaced by
John Tiniosus, one of Hildebrand’s Trasteverine followers, a solemn assembly of the people was
held at the Lateran, and the circumstances of Benedict’s election thoroughly
inquired into. Some of those who were interrogated at once acknowledged that
the election of Benedict was a crime, but declared that it had been effected
despite them; others, however, maintained that, as Benedict was a wise and good
man, they had done well in electing him. However, the greater part both of the
clergy and the laity were of the same mind as the archdeacon, and accordingly
deposed Benedict, and elected Gerard.
Thus duly “chosen by the Roman clergy and
people”, the Burgundian bishop, learned, bright, pure, and charitable, was
solemnly enthroned in St. Peter’s as Nicholas II, and received from his
subjects the usual oath of fidelity. But some, we are told, took it holding up
their left hands; for, they said, they had already sworn to Benedict with their
right. The same authority insinuates that all this was not accomplished without
bribery and the personal solicitations of the Pope.
The position of Nicholas, however, was anything
but safe. Benedict had left Passarano, and had
betaken himself to the strong castle of Count Gerard of Galeria.
It was necessary to have him dislodged, and Hildebrand could not think of any
who were at once able and willing to effect that task but the Normans. They had
ever shown themselves wishful to approach the Papacy. The time had come, then,
to reverse the policy of Leo IX, and to make the best of the Norman occupation
of south Italy, which was now an accomplished fact. After the battle of Civitella, the Norman hold of the southern portion of the
Italian peninsula had rapidly tightened. Encouraged by his successes against
the town, Richard of Aversa assumed the title of Prince of Capua in 1058,
though he did not obtain full and final control over it till the middle of
1062. It was to him that Hildebrand, “by command of Pope Nicholas”, betook
himself in the first instance. His mission was crowned with complete success.
Richard promised fealty to the Pope and to the Roman Church, and dispatched
three hundred men with Hildebrand to seize the castle of Galeria.
The place, however, was strong, so that after ravaging the district the Normans
returned without effecting its reduction. This was in the spring of 1059. The
Norman alliance had made a beginning, and was quickly to be extended.
One of the agents who helped to strengthen the
good understanding between the Papacy and the Normans was Desiderius, whom we
have seen made honorary abbot of Monte Cassino by Stephen X. Prevented by bad
weather from sailing to Constantinople for the purpose of carrying out the
commission entrusted to him by that Pope, he had had to throw himself upon the
generosity of the Norman Guiscard in order to secure a safe return to his abbey
when Stephen died. He was fortunate enough to find favour in the eyes of the
fierce Norman, who assisted him to reach Monte Cassino in safety, and ever
remained deeply attached to him. Duly installed as its abbot on April 18, 1058,
it was not, however, till about a year later that Desiderius was consecrated by
Pope Nicholas at Osimo (March 7), after he had been
ordained cardinal-priest on the preceding day. And, in a bull in favour of
Monte Cassino which he praises as the model of monasteries and as allied to the
Holy See, Nicholas bestowed on Desiderius, but for his own lifetime only,
jurisdiction over all the monks in Campania, and in the Principality of
Benevento, and in Apulia and Calabria. With the aid of the local bishops he was
commissioned to restore discipline, which, in some monasteries, was relaxed.
Such in south Italy was the position of the man whose high intelligence and
gentleness of character was to make him the acceptable intermediary between the
Papacy and the redoubtable Robert Guiscard.
Whilst Nicholas was utilizing the good understanding
which existed between Desiderius and the Normans to effect reforms in the
South, he was, about the same time, employing the zeal of St. Peter Damian in
the North to continue the good work commenced by Hildebrand in Milan. It was a
deputation of its citizens that had moved him to send his legates there. To the
fiery saint he joined the milder Anselm da Baggio, or Badagio,
bishop of Lucca, and destined to be Alexander II. But this second papal mission
was not to be accomplished as quietly as the first. The simoniacal
clergy had not been idle in the meantime. They had organized a party in
opposition to that of the Patarines. The legates were
received, indeed, with the honour which was due to representatives of the Holy
See; but no sooner had they proceed to deal in synod with the matter which had
brought them to the city, than there arose among the people a regular tumult,
organized by the clergy in opposition. This rapidly increased in intensity when
Archbishop Guido was seen to be seated on the left of St. Peter Damian, while
Anselm was on his right. Many went about shouting that the Church of St.
Ambrose ought not to be subject to the jurisdiction of Rome, and that the Roman
See had no right to act as judge within that of Milan. The people crowded towards
the episcopal palace, where the synod was assembled; they made the whole city
reverberate with the harsh clanging of its bells, and threatened Damian with
death. Quite unmoved, however, he arose and calmly addressed the angry mob.
What province, he asked them, was outside of
the rule of him who had the keys of the gates of heaven itself. Patriarchs and
bishops, emperors and kings, have been made by man, but the Roman Church was
founded through Peter by Christ Himself. Milan, he reminded them, had received
its first apostles from Rome, and their great patron St. Ambrose had ever
acknowledged its pre-eminence. “Search”, said he in conclusion, “your own
records, and if you do not find there recorded what I have stated, you may
account me a liar. But if you discover that I have spoken what is true, then
resist not the truth, assail not your mother, but be ever ready gladly to
receive the solid food of heavenly doctrine from the one from whom, you first
drew the milk of apostolic faith”.
Overcome by the character and eloquence of
Damian, the people were not only quietened, but were moved to promise the saint
to do whatever he should require of them. “Then”, moralizes the legate, “I saw
plainly how all-important it was in ecclesiastical cases to understand the
prerogatives (privilegium) of the Roman
Church”.
He insisted in the first instance that the
archbishop and the principal clergy should sign a declaration to the effect
that in future holy orders, ecclesiastical benefices, etc., should be bestowed
freely, and that the Western discipline with regard to clerical continency
should be strictly upheld. He obtained a similar oath from the majority of the
people. Then he imposed suitable penances in the old canonical style on the
various delinquents, which they were allowed to redeem by the payment of a
fixed sum of money, or, in other cases, by the recitation of prescribed
prayers, or the performance of certain works of charity. With all this,
however, it will not surprise any who know the world that evils which had
struck deep and wide roots were not eradicated by one effort even of a saint.
Lateran Council,
April 13, 1059
Soon after the mission of St. Peter Damian to
Milan, there met in Rome a synod of one hundred and thirteen bishops, which was
destined to exercise a lasting influence on the history of the Papacy. The
chief business which occupied the attention of the assembly was the formulating
of legislation calculated to prevent the repetition of such elections as that
of Benedict X, and to affirm the lawfulness of that of Nicholas. Unfortunately,
the struggle between the Popes and the emperors, which occupied no little
portion of this period, caused the wording of the principal decree propagated
by the council to be afterwards tampered with. Such a version of it will be
given here as seems best supported by other documents of acknowledged
authenticity which bear upon it.
Besides issuing decrees against simony and
clerical and lay incontinency, the council ordained “that, on the death of the
Pontiff of this universal Roman Church, (1) the cardinal-bishops shall together
and with the greatest care consider who is to be his successor; (2) that they
shall then attach to themselves the cardinals of the other orders (clericos cardinales);
(3) and that the rest of the clergy and the laity shall next express their
adhesion to the new election. To put down all attempt at venality, let the
religious men (religiosi viri), the clergy, i.e., the cardinals, take the lead
in the election of the new Pope, and let the others follow them. If the ranks
of the (Roman) Church can show a suitable candidate, let him be elected; but,
if not, let one be taken from another church—saving the honour and respect due
to our most beloved son Henry, now king, and one day, by the blessing of God,
it is to be hoped, emperor, according as, by the mediation of his envoy, Wibert or Guibert, chancellor of Lombardy, we have granted
to him, and to such of his successors as shall have individually obtained this
privilege from the Apostolic See”.
“And if the power of the wicked is such that a
proper and gratuitous election cannot be made in Rome, let the
cardinal-bishops, along with the pious clergy (cum religiosis
cleris), and with the Catholic laity, even if few
in number, have the right of electing the Pontiff of the Apostolic See where
they shall think best. And when the election has once been made, should war or
the malice of the wicked prevent the enthronization of the newly elect, let
him, as true Pope, have authority to rule the Roman Church. If, despite these
decrees, anyone shall have been elected or enthroned by sedition, or by any
other means, let him be regarded not as Pope, but as Satan, and let him be
degraded from the position he held before such election; and let his aiders and
abettors be punished in the same way. In fine, such as should dare to set at
naught these decrees were laid under the most dreadful anathemas”.
Although this new legislation on papal
elections did not aim at securing absolute freedom of choice, as it allowed the
emperor some undefined right of interference, it was a great stride in that
direction. It took initiative in the matter out of the hands of emperor, noble,
or populace, and rested it finally in the hands of a special section of the
Roman clergy, viz. the cardinals, especially the cardinal- bishops, and
required that their choice should be simply ratified by the rest of the Romans,
cleric and lay.
But it must be borne in mind that this new
decree, aimed primarily against the unruly Roman nobility, only made applicable
to the Roman See the procedure in episcopal elections then in force in every
other see. The early method of election “by clergy and people” had led to such
disorders that, outside Rome, it had long been abolished, and the right of
election had been vested in the clergy. In order, then, to do away with the
tumultuous elections caused by the Roman nobles, this decree committed all future
papal elections mainly to the clergy. It was not, however, till our own day,
after the election of our present glorious Pontiff, Pius X, that any
interference whatsoever of the secular power in the election of a Pope was
finally forbidden.
Notice of the work of this synod, which the
bishops of the conciliabulum of Worms (January 1076)
assign, no doubt correctly, to the promptings of Hildebrand, was sent by
Nicholas to the bishops of Gaul, and of Amalfi, as well as to the clergy of the
Catholic world in general.
Berengarius of
Tours, 1059
Besides endeavouring to promote the canonical
or community life among the secular clergy, the council dealt with the heresy
of Berengarius. Since his condemnation at Tours in 1054 he had not ceased to
propagate his peculiar views. At length (1059), pressed by Hildebrand, he set
out for Rome to lay his teaching before the Pope. Because Hildebrand had been
considerate towards him, he affected to believe that the great cardinal was in
sympathy with his doctrines. He accordingly induced his patron, Geoffrey Martel,
count of Anjou (1040-60), and son of the dreaded Fulk Nerra,
to write to Hildebrand and induce him to defend the assertion that the bread
remains on the altar after the consecration. When he arrived in Rome, and he
was called upon himself to unfold what he had to say on this proposition, he
would not speak, either because, according to his own version, he was
frightened by the threat of death, or because, as Lanfranc asserted, he had no
arguments to adduce.
His teaching was therefore condemned; and he had
both to burn his own books and to accept a profession of faith touching the
Holy Eucharist drawn up by Cardinal Humbert. The main contention of Berengarius
was that substance and its appearances or accidents are absolutely inseparable,
and that, consequently, where there are the external resemblances of bread,
there bread must be. Hence his teaching (if it be supposed that at this period
at any rate he believed in the Real Presence) was now equivalent to the impanation
or companation theory of Martin Luther. With a
view to compelling Berengarius to show his true colours, and to preventing him
from continuing his tergiversations, Humbert undoubtedly used terms which
modern Catholic theologians would not employ; but which, due regard being had
to the doctrines of Berengarius, were well calculated to bring out clearly the
teaching of the Church. “The unworthy deacon of the Church of St. Maurice at
Angers”, as he called himself, accordingly anathematized the assertion that
“the bread and wine after consecration are only a symbol (or sign, sacramentum),
and not the true body and blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and that this body
cannot, in fact (or really, sensibly, sensualiter),
and apart from the symbol (in solo Sacramento), be handled by the priest
or eaten by the faithful”. On the contrary, his profession proclaimed that “the
bread and wine of the altar after consecration are not merely a sign (sacramentum),
but are the true body and blood of Our Lord Jesus Christ, and are actually (sensualiter), and not in figure but in truth (non
solum sacramento sed in veritate) handled by the priest, etc”.
No sooner, however, was he back home in safety,
than, heartily abusing Cardinal Humbert, “the Burgundian”, as he chose falsely
to call him, he began anew to propagate his heretical opinions regarding the
Blessed Eucharist. Summoned to Rome a second time by Hildebrand, now Pope
Gregory VII, he again confessed before a council (February 11, 1079) that he
had taught error, and signed a yet more exactly worded profession of Catholic
faith than he had done before.
With such patent evidence of want of character
in the “unworthy deacon”, it is curious that Archbishop Trench should have to
condemn a disposition to overrate Berenger, and this both intellectually and
morally, and should have to emphasize the fact that “he was from the beginning
restless and vain ... Then, too, there is a passionate feebleness about him. He
scolds like an angry woman. A much smaller man than Abelard ... he shares with
him in a very unpleasant trait, namely, that he cannot conceive of any opposing
or even disagreeing with him, except as impelled to this by ignorance or
dishonesty or personal malice”.
If anything said with regard to Hildebrand by
Bishop Benzo of Alba, who was present at this synod, can be accepted as true,
it was not broken up before “Prandellus” (such is his
designation of his enemy), “after corrupting the Romans with money and lies,
placed a regal crown upon the head of his puppet (hydolum).
On its lower circlet it bore the words : ‘The crown of the kingdom from the
hand of God’, and on its upper one, ‘The diadem of empire from the hand of
Peter’. ” Whatever may be thought of the details of this narrative, there is no
reason to doubt the main fact; for it is certain that the Popes were crowned in
this century.
The difficulties against which the Popes had to
contend in their efforts for reform may be judged from this. Most of the
Lombard bishops, “obstinate bulls”, as they are called by Bonizo, as soon as
they returned home, took care not to publish the decrees of the council. They
had received too much money from the incriminated clerks. The only one who
ventured to make them public, viz., the bishop of Brescia, was almost beaten to
death by them. This sacrilegious violence, however, had one good result. It led
to a considerable increase of the party of the Patarines,
and to the number of those who cut themselves off from such of the clergy as
were living in concubinage.
After this important synod had finished its
sittings, and whilst, to the great grief of Nicholas, the pontifical authority
was being set at naught by the Roman barons (Romanorum capitanei),
an embassy arrived from the Normans. Among those who had most distinguished
themselves on the field of Civitella was Robert, one
of the many sons of Tancred of Hauteville. Because he
was the wiliest of the wily Normans, “second in craft neither to Cicero nor
Ulysses”, he was known among them as the wiseacre (Guiscard) par
excellence. According to the Eastern royal poetess, Anna Comnena, who both feared and hated Robert, he was a man “of
ruddy complexion, light hair and broad shoulders, and possessed of a voice like
to that of Achilles, of a shout which could put to flight myriads of enemies”.
This redoubtable warrior, the real founder of Norman rule in Italy, became the
chief of his countrymen in Apulia after the death of his elder brother Humphrey
(1056 or 1057), and soon made his younger brother Roger the associate of his
power. What that power became may be gauged from the fact that in the same year
his arms, or the terror of his name, put to flight
the emperor of the East and the emperor of the West.
Realizing how much more easily he would be able
to accomplish his ends if he had the goodwill instead of the enmity of the
Pope, he sent to Nicholas the embassy just mentioned. The ambassadors, in
Robert’s name, begged him to come to Apulia, and to effect a complete
understanding with their countrymen, reconciling them to God’s church. Nicholas
and his advisers resolved to accept the invitation; they too came to the
conclusion that it would be better to have the goodwill of the Normans instead
of their enmity. The time had come to reverse the policy of Leo IX and Stephen
(IX) X. The position of the Normans in south Italy was now assured, and they
were anxious to be at peace with the Church.
Accordingly, as well to hold a council for the
promotion of discipline as to meet the Normans, the Pope, along with Abbot
Desiderius, betook himself to Melfi, the headquarters
of their power in Apulia. Robert, who was then engaged in the siege of Cariati on the coast, at once abandoned it. Besides the
Normans, some hundred bishops gathered round the Pope in synod. Of the latter,
several were deposed for simony and other crimes, and decrees were issued, with
not altogether satisfactory results, against the prevailing laxity in the
matter of the celibacy of the clergy, which in those parts was encouraged by
the example of the Greeks.
When the ecclesiastical business of the synod
was finished, the Norman question was discussed. To prove his wish for a
thorough reconciliation with the Roman Church, Robert restored all its
patrimonies which he had seized. In return, he was not only absolved from
whatever ecclesiastical censures he had incurred, but, “at the request of
many”, was recognized by the Pope as duke of Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily, on
condition of his taking an oath of fealty to him, and paying a yearly tribute
of twelve denar for every yoke of oxen. At the same time, William de Montreuil,
known as the Good Norman, said to have been constituted the armed advocate or
standard-bearer of the Roman See.
To seal his compact with the Holy See, Robert
took an of oath to Nicholas in the following terms: “I, Robert, by the grace of
God and of St. Peter, duke of Apulia and Calabria, and, by like grace,
hereafter of Sicily, will from this hour be a true vassal (fidelis) to
the Holy Church of Rome, and to thee, Pope Nicholas, my lord. In the counsel or
in the act whereby thy life or liberty shall be endangered will I not share;
the secret (consilium) which thou shalt have
confided to my keeping I will never knowingly reveal to thy hurt; I will
steadfastly assist the Roman Church in the protection and extension of the royalties
(regalia) and possessions of St. Peter to the best of my power against all men;
and I will support thee in the safe and honourable possession of the Roman
Papacy, of its territory, and of its privileges (principatum);
and I will not aim at harrying or plundering (thy domains), nor will I take
possession of any of them without thy express consent or that of thy lawful
successors. I will honourably see to it that the Roman Church each year
receives the revenues of such of its patrimonies as I now hold or may hereafter
come into my hands. All churches in my dominions I put, with their possessions,
into thy power, and I will consider the defence of them an obligation resulting
from my fealty to the Church of Rome. And shouldst
thou or any of thy successors depart this life before me, I, under the directions
of the better-disposed cardinals, the clergy, and the people of Rome, will do
my best to secure the election and ordination of a Pontiff to the honour of St.
Peter. All these things do I swear that I will loyally observe in thy sight, in
that of the Roman Church, and in that of thy lawful successors who shall continue
to me the investiture granted by you”.
In thus acting as the suzerain of south Italy,
Nicholas was partly recognizing the status quo, and partly bestowing on another
rights which had been given to his predecessors by the Carolingian and Saxon
donations, but which they had never themselves exercised. Nevertheless, we may
be prepared to find that the Germans will bitterly resent the action of the
Pope. They could justly point out not only that his predecessors had often
acknowledged the imperial claims over south Italy, but also that even the
Normans themselves had in presence of a Pope sworn fealty to the emperor
(1047). However, neither Greek nor German had been able to uphold their power
in face of the Normans, so that it is hard to blame the Pope for accepting the
suzerainty over a country which its actual owners practically put into his
hands. It may be true that the connection with south Italy brought more curses
than blessings to the Papacy right down to the nineteenth century, but still
the legalizing of the de facto owner’s possession of the two Sicilies by
one who had claims to a large portion of them was a blessing at least to the
people in that kingdom. With the Normans came comparative peace and order where
all had been chaos and war.
This papal recognition of their claims was
promptly followed by important results. The following year (1060) saw a
beginning made by Count Roger of the expulsion of the Saracens from Sicily, and
the time immediately following the holding of the council saw the end of the
evil sway which the barons had long held over Rome.
When the Pope began to retrace his steps, there
accompanied him a strong force of Normans (c. September 1059). The counts of Tusculum,
Praeneste, and Sabina were soon subdued, and the
Norman army advanced on Galeria, the retreat of the
antipope and the chief stronghold of Count Gerard. One of the old domuscultae of Pope Zachary, this fortress, some
fifteen miles from Rome, was situated on the Arrone,
and was a little south of the Via Clodia. After
considerable loss on the part of the Normans, and after they had ravaged the
count’s territories as far as Sutri, Galeria was reduced to the last extremity. It was then that
the antipope offered to give up his claims, if his personal safety was
guaranteed. After this had been done by thirty Roman nobles, Benedict gave
himself up, went to Rome with the Pope, and retired to his home near S. Maria
Maggiore to lead a quiet life. The power of the Campanian barons was completely
broken.
It would not have been natural if Nicholas had
forgotten the man who called him to the Papacy, and who had been mainly
instrumental in bringing his rival to his knees. Ingratitude, however, cannot
be laid at his door. He no sooner returned to Rome than he made Hildebrand oeconomous and archdeacon of the Roman Church. It
seems to have been about this year that, perhaps for the second time, he took
over the management of the monastery attached to St. Paul’s outside-the-walls,
in which he had long dwelt as a monk.
Among the signatures to the decrees of the
Roman synod of April is that of “Airard, bishop and
abbot of St. Paul’s”. Whilst in the latter capacity, he had been nominated by
Leo IX (1049) to the See of Nantes, but had been rejected by its people, had
returned to Rome, and had again resumed his government of the abbey of St.
Paul. However, about this time (1059 or 1060) he returned to France and made
further vain efforts to obtain possession of his see. He was certainly still
alive in 1064. Following Paul Bernried, it would seem
that Hildebrand had been “set over” the monastery of St. Paul when Airard left it in 1049. Owing to the latter’s incompetency,
it was in a wretched condition both temporarily and spiritually. It would not
appear that Hildebrand had then the title of abbot; but he at once reformed it,
and handed it back to Airard on his return from his
fruitless journey in a very different state to that in which he had found it.
Even on Airard’s second departure, he seems for a
second period to have governed the abbey at least for some time, probably till
the death of Airard, merely as its procurator.
A memorial of his zeal for the external as well
as the internal beauty of his monastery has come down to our times in the
famous panelled bronze doors of St. Paul’s, which were saved from the
disastrous fire of 1823. Standing at present in the sacristy of the great
basilica, they are a solid memorial of the renaissance in art which was
actually in progress at Constantinople about this time, and of the yearning in
western Europe for better artistic work, which accompanied its intellectual
awakening in this century. Inscriptions on the doors themselves let us know that
they were made in the year 1070, “during the times of His Holiness Pope
Alexander II, and of the Lord Hildebrand, venerable monk”, and that they were
fashioned at Constantinople by one Stauracius. The expense of their production
was borne by Pantaleon, “patricius and consul”, one
of the sons of Count Mauro of Amalfi, and an ardent partisan of the Greek cause
against the Normans. They were covered with fifty-four embossed bronze plates,
ornamented with enamel work and inlaid with gold and silver thread. Needless to
say that from one cause and another they are no longer in perfect condition.
From several of Nicholas’s letters it is clear
that he had very early in his pontificate formed the design of imitating Pope
Leo IX and of going to France. Unable, however, to carry out his intention as
soon as he had hoped, he manifested his interest in the affairs of that country
by the dispatch of letters and legates. The council of 1059 was no sooner over
than he sent notice of its decrees “to the bishops of Gaul, Aquitaine, and
Gascony”, along with a copy of the retractation of Berengarius.
Perhaps about this also, Nicholas sent to the
same country another letter which is worth mentioning, as it puts us in touch
with that Franco-Russian alliance of which we have of late years heard so much.
In 1051 Henry I of France married, for her great beauty, the Princess Anne,
daughter of Jaroslav the Great, grand-duke of Kief (1015-54). Writing to this
interesting lady, the Pope tells her that he rejoices to hear that manly virtues
have taken up their abode in her womanly breast. He exhorts her to persevere in
their exercise to the last hour of her life, and to use her influence that her
husband may govern his kingdom well and may protect the Church. In fine, he
would have her bring up her children well in the love of their Creator, and
remind them that, if they are noble because they belong to the royal family,
they are still more noble because they have the Church for the mother.
Whether or not on account of any representations
made to him by his wife, Henry appears at this time to have viewed Rome with
less suspicion. At any rate the first mentioned among those present at the
coronation of his son, the little Philip (May 23, 1059), are Hugh, archbishop
of Besançon, and Ermenfrid, bishop of Sion (in the
Valais). And they were, the first after the consecrator, Gervais, archbishop of
Rheims, to give their assent to the choice of Philip as king, though this
privilege was accorded them “out of deference to the person they represented,
for it is well known that the election can take place without the consent of
the Pope”.
We have several letters of Nicholas to the
consecrator of the boy-king of France. In one of these the Pope notes that
Gervais has been accused to him of favouring the party of the antipope, and of
not paying sufficient attention to the mandates of the Apostolic See. He has,
however, taken no notice of these charges, because a person of good standing
has assured him of the archbishop’s “loyalty to St. Peter”. He looks to Gervais
to help to raise the Church of the Franks, “which has almost sunk to the
ground”, and begs him to use all his influence that the king may not allow
himself to be led by designing men who hope, by promoting dissensions between
their spiritual and temporal rulers, to escape the censure of the Pope. Gervais
must strive especially that Henry do not insist on giving the bishopric of
Macon to a man who is utterly unfit for the position.
Though in another letter Gervais commanded to
make good damage done to the Church of Verdun, we find by yet another that the
archbishop succeeded in convincing the Pope that the suspicion he entertained
against his devotion to the Holy See was unfounded. Consequently Nicholas was
not slow to express his intention of supporting Gervais. “For we have no wish
to be lacking in justice, in support of which, were it necessary, we should
think it again to die”
Reforms
Passing over the fact that it was Nicholas who
removed the interdict from Normandy, and gave William the Conqueror permission
to retain Matilda as his wife, we must notice his pressing on of reform in France.
Feeling now more sure both of the king and of the archbishop of Rheims, and
strong in the support of the great order of Cluny, he sent at the close of the year
(1059) Cardinal Stephen, a Frenchman, a monk of Cluny and the bosom friend of
Hildebrand, to continue the struggle against simony and clerical incontinency.
Early in the following year the new legate presided over councils at Vienne and
at Tours, while the famous Hugo, abbot of Cluny, also acting in the Pope’s
name, did the same in the provinces of Avignon and Toulouse.
The progress of the good work was, however,
troubled by the death of the king (August 4, 1060). Formally announcing this
event to the Pope, Gervais begged for his counsel. “You know how impatient of
control our people are, and how hard to rule. I am afraid their dissensions
will mean misery for the country. Help me by your advice to avoid it. As you
are the father of all, it is for you to give it to every kingdom, but
especially to ours, as it is the duty of good men to aid their native land
first and foremost”. He longs for the Pope to come to France, for he has
brought honour to it, seeing that Rome has chosen him “to make him her own ruler
and that of the world”. He would honour the Pope as Our Lord honoured Peter
when he made him head of the Church.
When Stephen passed from France into Germany,
he was very far from finding sentiments such as these animating the breasts of
many of the bishops of the latter country, especially the aulic
prelates. Though they were no doubt angry at the Norman alliance effected by
Hildebrand, and at the tone of the new papal election decree, it seems to have
been personal feeling that caused them to act against the Pope. This seems to
be established by what we are told of the general taint of avariciousness which
seems to have infected them all, and of the action of Anno of Cologne. It is
Benzo who tells us that it was Anno who starred up others to avenge injuries
which Hildebrand had inflicted both upon him and them. The injuries of
which they complained were the well merited censures which Nicholas had meted
out to them.
Accordingly, during the course, it would seem,
of the summer of the year 1060, the chief officials (rectores)
of the royal court, along with, forsooth, some holy bishops of the Teutonic
kingdom, conspiring against the Roman Church, collected a council. Therein,
with an audacity wholly incredible, they passed sentence upon the Pope and declared
all that he had decreed null and void. It is not then to be wondered at that
when Cardinal Stephen, of whose great virtue and patience St. Peter Damian has
much to say, arrived in Germany, the court officials, as well clerical as lay,
would neither admit him to their deliberations nor allow him to present to the
king the documents he had brought with him. After being kept waiting some five
days, he had to return to Rome without accomplishing his mission.
Whilst, by means of his legates, Nicholas was endeavouring
to forward the work of reform in distant lands, both among clergy and people,
he was moving about Italy himself with the like intent. His beloved Florence
saw him several times, and we have traces of him at Fano, Farfa,
and other places.
In April 1060 he assisted at a tragic ceremony,
viz., at the public degradation of the papal pretender, Benedict X. Unfortunately,
knowledge of this event has come down to us only through the antipapal author
of the Annales Romani. From an incidental remark made by him, however,
it would appear that it was suspicion, at least, of some new movement in his favour
which was the cause of this fresh proceeding against him.
At any rate he was brought by the archdeacon
Hildebrand into the Lateran basilica before the Pope and a number of bishops
assembled in council. He was stripped of his sacerdotal vestments by Hildebrand,
and was compelled despite his tearful protestations, to read aloud a list of
crimes laid to his charge. By his side stood his aged mother, with bare bosom
and dishevelled hair, weeping and wailing, and along with her were his
relatives, striking their breasts and tearing their cheeks with their nails.
Unmoved by such a spectacle, the archdeacon
cried aloud, “Hear, ye citizens of Rome, the evil deeds of the man you chose as
Pope”. Then was the unfortunate forced to clothe himself in the robes of a Pope,
only to have them torn from him.
After this humiliating ceremony was concluded,
the unhappy man was sent to a hospice attached to the Church of St. Agnes,
“that there he might live miserably”, deprived of the right to exercise any of
his sacred functions. However, some little time later, at the intercession of Suppus, the archpriest of St. Anastasius, and “spiritual
father” of the Pope, he was at length allowed to act as deacon. He died about
the time that Hildebrand became Pope Gregory VII, and, if we are to believe the
author we are quoting, was buried with papal honours. Gregory, it is suggested,
granted this distinction to atone for the uncharitable way in which he had ever
regarded him.
The last year of Nicholas’s life found him
still full of activity. A brief entry in the Beneventan
Annals records that in February he was besieging the castle of Alipergum, probably bringing some refractory baron of the
duchy to a sense of reason and duty.
Lateran synod, 1061.
The next month saw him back in Rome holding
another synod in the Lateran. Strong decrees were passed against simony; but,
owing to the wide spread of the disorder, it was decided that those who before
the holding of this synod had been gratuitously ordained by simoniacal
bishops were not to be molested, but that in future those who were ordained by
a bishop known to them to be simoniacal were to be
deposed, along with those who ordained them. And, as though anticipating
trouble at the next papal election, owing to the unsatisfactory attitude of the
German Court, the election decree of 1059 was renewed.
The presence of Englishmen at this council
naturally turns our thoughts to the relations of England with Rome. We have
seen that Stigand, who was intruded into the See of
Canterbury, had been excommunicated by Victor. The sentence had been renewed by
Stephen; but the antipope Benedict, possibly at the request of Earl Harold, who
was in Rome on a pilgrimage about that time, sent the pallium to the usurper.
Nicholas could not but renew the sentence of his predecessors against Stigand. He had also to act with severity towards the
would-be occupant of the other archiepiscopal see of England. Along with
Harold’s brother, Tostig, earl of Northumberland, and his wife, there came to
Rome for episcopal consecration Gisa and Walter, bishops-elect of Wells and
Hereford, as, owing to the prohibition of Pope Victor, they could not apply to Stigand for it. In their company also was Ealdred, bishop of Worcester, who on the death of Cynesige (December 1060) had been nominated to the See of
York, and wished to hold it along with the See of Worcester. He had secured his
appointment by “playing upon the simplicity of King Edward” and by gold. The
“bishops received their consecration, but Nicholas refused to recognize Ealdred as archbishop of York, because he had been
transferred to a greater see without the permission of the Pope, and because he
wanted to hold two sees.
On their return home the pilgrims fell among
thieves. One of the last acts of Gerard of Galena, the main support, as we have
seen, of Benedict X, was to plunder Earl Tostig and his company of all their
possessions “to the value of a thousand pounds of the money of Pavia”. For this
last outrage he was excommunicated by Pope Nicholas and the synod of which we
have been speaking. Lighted candles were extinguished when the sentence was
pronounced to show that he was under a perpetual anathema
Utterly forlorn, the pilgrims returned to Rome.
Tostig was more than indignant, and gave free vent to his feelings in words.
“How could the Pope expect men in far-off lands to fear the excommunication
which banditti at his very doors despised? He would induce the king of England
to withhold Peter’s Pence (tributum S. Petri)
till the losses of the pilgrims had been made good”. Tostig was anxious to
secure the pallium for Ealdred, and seized his
opportunity. Terrified at the thunder of his angry threats, the Pope’s attendants
begged him to grant the earl’s request. To show that he was really grieved for
what had happened, Nicholas both gave great presents to the pilgrims and
granted the pallium to Ealdred, on condition that
Worcester received a bishop of its own.
The Pope also entrusted them with two bulls.
One was for Wilwin, bishop of Dorchester, confirming
him in the privileges and possessions of his see, and the other was for the
king. It praises Edward’s love for St. Peter, and prays that the Apostle may be
his guardian in every difficulty. “For it is obvious that it is through the
reverence and devotion which the kings of the English have ever shown to
Blessed Peter that they have lived in honour at home, and have been victorious
abroad”. The commutation of his vow granted by St. Leo IX is confirmed, and the
abbey, of Westminster, which Edward was engaged in restoring, is declared to be
the place where, for ever, the kings of England shall be consecrated, and the
royal insignia shall be kept. Edward and his successors are, in fine, declared
the “advocates and guardians” of the abbey, its cemetery, and other
surroundings.
But the days of Nicholas, all too short for the
good of the world, were numbered. Not long after the departure of the English,
he went to Florence about the end of May, and there, taken suddenly ill, died
on July 27. He was buried, like Pope Stephen (IX) X, in the Church of St Reparata. His epitaph proclaims that for his learning and
chastity he was illustrious before the whole world, and that he practiced
himself the virtues he taught to others; and it prays that heaven may receive
him, in order that amid the blessed he may adore the God of Ages.
The illustrious deeds of Nicholas are
celebrated not merely by an epitaph; their fame merited the praise of that
severe judge, St. Peter Damian. The same saint also gives us, on the authority
of Mainard, bishop of Silva Candida, a striking proof
of the Pope’s humility. He assures us that a day never passed without his
washing the feet of twelve poor men. If he had not time to perform this lowly
act while it was light, he did it by night. Though the influence of Hildebrand
was deservedly paramount during his pontificate, what he accomplished in its
course is enough to show how baseless are the impertinent judgments of Benzo.
If choice of him to be Pope was a credit to the discernment of Hildebrand, his
splendid activity and his shining virtues were his own.
ALEXANDER II.
A.D. 1061-1073.
King of France.
Philip I., 10601108.
Kings of England.
St. Edward the Confessor, 1042-1066.
William I., the Conqueror, 1066-1087.
Emperors of the East.
Constantine X (Ducas), 1059-1067.
Michael VII (Ducas), 1067-1078.
Romanus IV. (Diogenes), 1068-1071.
Emperors of the West.
Henry IV (only King of Germany and of the Romans, 1056-1106).
However obscure are some of the facts connected
with the election of Alexander II, there is no doubt that it was a matter of
the greatest moment to the Roman Church, and through it to the world. For, as
St. Peter Damian realized at the time, and as is now acknowledged by all
classes of historians, its good estate at this epoch was essential to the
well-being of Christendom. It was a question whether, softened and enervated by
the loss of a celibate clergy, and held in base subjection to the great ones of
this world by the bonds of simony, the Catholic Church was to be kept stamped
in the mire by the iron heel of feudalism, or whether it was to arise and renew
its youth by again forming a ministry at once strong through its celibacy, and
free through being gratuitously chosen for its merits. Was the Roman Church to
remain the one safe harbour for the poor and for the oppressed, or were its
breakwaters too to be broken down by the violent passions of men? Was it to be
free to work for the moral and intellectual elevation of Europe, or was it to
be bought over to connive at the violation of its own rights, and those of the
weak and the down-trodden in every country of the West?
In the year 1061 the forces behind these
alternatives met in conflict over the election of a successor to Nicholas II.
On the one side were many of the German statesmen, who were little disposed to
give up the power they had acquired of nominating the Popes; many of the
bishops and priests of Lombardy, who were equally disinclined to abandon their simoniacal and unchaste habits; and lastly, many of the
Roman barons, who were determined, if possible, to retain the Papacy as an
appanage to their families. Prominent among the leaders of this party were the imperial
chancellor Guibert (or Wibert), afterwards an
antipope, Gerard of Galeria, the bandit who despoiled
Tostig, and Cardinal Hugo Candidus, of whom Bonizo thinks
that the less said the better, but whose conduct was as crooked as his eyes.
The apologist of the party was Benzo, bishop of Alba, one of the “headstrong
bulls” of Lombardy whom Nicholas II tried in vain to tame, and to reclaim from
his simoniacal habits. Though a lower type of
pamphleteer than even Liutprand of Cremona, he will be
sometimes here cited, because he has incidentally preserved some facts which
are worth knowing, and because his production serves to show the lengths to
which party faction was prepared to go. While “Brother Benzo”, as he is fond of
styling himself, “is another Aristeus, binding his
enemies with his arguments”, whilst he is “universally beloved” and “dear to
everybody”, Pope Alexander “is the heretic of Lucca”, is “Lucencis
(of Lucca), or rather Lutulensis (muddy), has “a face
like the damned”, and is an ass of every kind —Asinandrellus,
Asinelus, Asinander.
Hildebrand is even more reviled. Not only is he Prandellus,
or Folleprand, but he is a false monk who not merely
“consults devils”, but a “cowled devil” and a “limb of the devil”.
On the other side, the material force of the
empire was somewhat balanced by that of Godfrey, duke of Tuscany, and of the
Normans, who were both prepared to aid the Papacy, at least so far as by so
doing they could advance the cause of their own independence. But the former was
liable to be swayed by his wife and his daughter, Beatrice and Matilda, who
supported a reforming Papacy from purer motives; while over the latter,
Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, was able to exert an influence sometimes
sufficient to induce them to give help which was not wholly selfish. But the
heart and soul of the party of reform was the monk Hildebrand, archdeacon of
the Roman Church, a man hated by some with the same intensity with which he was
loved by others. For men felt themselves either strongly attracted towards him
or disposed to be bitterly hostile to him. They were either for or against
Hildebrand. Among the former in Rome mention has already been made of Leo the
son of Benedict the Christian, Cencius Frangipane, and John (or Gerard) Brazutus. Nor were Gregory and his friends in want of a pen
at this period. The literary ability of St. Peter Damian was at their disposal.
And if his style and character were very far removed above those of Benzo in
dignity and truthfulness, he could at times dip his pen in gall, and say severe
things, while his zeal was occasionally only too ardent.
Between the death of Nicholas II and the
election of his successor more than two months intervened. What was the cause
of this delay? What were the cardinals doing in the meantime? The fact that
Nicholas had died outside Rome would account for some delay in the appointment
of his successor, but not to the extent noted. There can be little doubt that
the hesitation to proceed to the election was due to the schismatical
attitude which had been taken up by the German Court when it caused Nicholas to
be declared excommunicated. But while the party of reform were waiting to see
what the empress and her advisers would do, or were anxiously deliberating what
they should do themselves, their hands were forced by the Crescentii
and the counts of Tusculum. As they dare not now directly impose one of their
creatures on the chair of Peter, they resolved that the men who were striving
to put an end to their lawlessness should not elect another reformer. They
accordingly surreptitiously possessed themselves of the pontifical insignia and
of the ornaments of the patricius, and sent off to
Germany a deputation, headed by Gerard of Galena, to request “the boy-king to
bestow a pious ruler on the Roman Church”. This decided Hildebrand. The Roman
Church must not lose its undoubted right of choosing the supreme Pontiff, and
action must be taken at once, as the people were being stirred up to sedition.
But as it was felt to be necessary to do all that was possible to avoid trouble
with the German Court, a candidate was selected who was both suitable, and
known to be on good terms with it. Anselm, bishop of Lucca, the friend of Duke
Godfrey, was the object of the choice of the reforming party, and Hildebrand
was sent to bring him to Rome for election. At the same time Abbot Desiderius
was commissioned to bring up Richard of Capua and his Normans to keep order in
the city.
Quite against his will, Anselm allowed himself
to be persuaded by Hildebrand, and to be offered to the Romans as a candidate
for the Papacy. By a large assembly, gathered together in the Church of St.
Peter ad vincula, he was declared duly elected, and was escorted to the
Lateran and solemnly crowned. On the following day Richard of Capua again
renewed his oath of fidelity to the new Pope, who had taken the name of
Alexander, and then withdrew his forces.
The new Pope belonged to the family of Baggio
da Baggio, of which mention is found in documents of the ninth century, and
which took its name from Badaglum (Badagio, now Baggio), a village some three miles west of
Milan. His father’s name is variously given in the catalogues as Anselinus or Ardericus. Part of
his studies were made under Lanfranc at Bec; and the favour which throughout in
his pontificate he showed to monks may be traced to his early connection with
that famous monastery. A glance at the Regesta
of Jaffé will show him continuing the policy of his
predecessors, and confirming monasteries in the possession of their property,
protecting them from the encroachments of bishops and nobles, taking them under
his protection, and sometimes exempting them from episcopal control. And this he
did in every country in Europe.
Becoming in due course attached to the clergy of
Milan, he was, at least, one of the first supporters of the Pataria,
and was, even according to Landulf, a diligent preacher of the Word of God. His
zeal, especially against the married clergy, was too disturbing for Arch shop
Guido, and so he procured his nomination to the See of Lucca (1057). By this
device, however, he did not altogether get rid of the influence he dreaded.
Anselm continued to encourage the Patarines, and, as
we have seen, even appeared in Milan as apostolic legate along with Hildebrand.
The first letter he wrote as Pope was to the Milanese, exhorting them to lead
purer lives; and he devoted no little of his pontificate to working for their
betterment.
Whilst, on the one hand, the new Pope was
rejoicing at the congratulations he was receiving from loyal souls, who prayed
that he might show himself a worthy representative of God in his government of
the Church, he was, on the other, saddened by the news that reached him from
Germany. Gerard and his associates had been joined by Cadalous, bishop of Parma.
Pretending that he was unaware that a successor to Nicholas had been elected,
and taking with him, so the story went, an immense sum of money, he betook himself
to the king’s court at Augsburg. Nor did he cease pushing his case with the
empress-mother, with the (young) king, and with the bishop of Augsburg (Henry),
till he had secured his appointment to the Apostolic See.
Cadalous was the nominee of a number of Lombard
bishops who, on the death of Nicholas, had assembled in council under the
presidency of the chancellor Guibert. They had decided that the only Pope they
would accept would be one “from the paradise of Italy who could compassionate
the infirmities”. The principal supporters of Cadalous. were the bishops
Dionysius of Piacenza and Gregory of Vercelli, men whom St. Peter Damian
denounces as of a very unepiscopal character, and of
whom he says that their habits made them better judges of female beauty than of
the proper men to choose as Popes.
The man on whom men of that description fixed
their choice was, of course, either like unto themselves, or of such a pitiable
character as easily to be made their tool. He was of the family of the counts
of Sabulonus, a castle not far from Verona, and, on
the death of his father, took up his abode in the city, along with his
brothers, at the court of its duke. In 1042 he joined the ranks of the clergy;
and three years later, becoming bishop of Parma, he founded the monastery of
St. George ex (or in) Braida, on
the banks of the Adige, just outside the city, whence Dom Cajetan drew these
particulars of his early life. In allowing himself to be made an antipope, and
thus “the ruin of the people”, as St. Peter Damian is fond of calling him, he
displayed anything but a virtuous character; and that act seems to have been
but the climax of an ill-spent life. The last-named author says he was worse
than Saul, for he from being good became bad, whereas the bishop from being bad
became worse. And he further declares that those who had been present affirmed
that it was only the clemency of the Roman Church that saved him from
condemnation by the synods of Pavia (1049), Mantua (1052), and Florence (1055).
If these words are, however, too vague to allow us to do more than suspect him
of simony or concubinage, specific charges of the former crime, at least, are
definitely brought against him by the same writer
To give some show of canonical action to their
proceedings, the supporters of Cadalous convened a synod at Basle. The first
act in its proceedings was the crowning of the young king as Patricius of the
Romans, by Gerard and his associates, with the golden circlet they had brought
from Rome. Then, despite the opposition of at least a considerable number of
the archbishops and bishops, Cadalous was declared Pope by the young king, was
invested with the mitre and the customary red cloak or cope, and took the name
of Honorius II. “These doings”, regretfully note the Annals of Altaich, “were the beginnings of troubles”, and were
possible “because the king was a boy, and his mother, inasmuch as she was a
woman, was easily swayed first by one adviser and then by another; whilst the
other chief men of the palace were all slaves to avarice, and would do no
justice without money, so that right and wrong were confounded together”.
It is true that by the election decree of 1059
some ill-defined right in connection with papal elections had been left to the
emperor. But whatever that right was, it is certain that it was the survival of
the right which had been given to him originally with a view to preventing
disorderly elections, and that there was no idea in the minds of the framers of
the decree that a regular election would be nullified if the right was not
exercised. They did not regard the emperor or anything that he might do or not
do as essential to a valid election.
But the action of the German Court in its
opposition to Nicholas II made it plain that it was not content with the right
of exercising a kind of police supervision over papal elections. It had been so
long in the habit of exercising a predominating influence over them that it was
not disposed to give up its usurped rights. Hence in the matter of the election
of Alexander II there was no formal protest on its part against the violation
of such rights as had been left to it by the decree of 1059, but a violent
attempt to keep a position to which it had no intrinsic claim. It was not even
dignified in its violence. It allowed itself to be induced, by whatever means,
to sanction the patently uncanonical election of an unworthy candidate, the
representative of a base cause, and to allege groundless charges to discredit
the obviously canonical election of a desirable candidate, who stood for reform
in the best sense of that much-abused word.
Whilst this unwarrantable election brought the
greatest joy to that section of the clergy that was devoted to simony and
concubinage, “the eye of the Papacy and the immovable support of the Apostolic
See”, St. Peter Damian, was filled with anguish of soul. He at once dispatched
a long and earnest letter to the intruder. Reminding him of the mercy the Roman
See had shown him in not punishing him for the faults of which he had been
guilty when he pretended to be nothing more than bishop of Parma, he
indignantly asked him how he could dare to allow himself to be elected bishop
of Rome, and that too without the cooperation of the cardinal-bishops and the
Roman Church? In the strongest language of the Sacred Scriptures he tried to
impress upon the usurper the evil he had done and the trouble he was about to
bring upon the world. He endeavoured to shame him by reminding him that up to
this time his transgressions had been known to but few, but that, now he laid
claim to be Pope, they were being discussed everywhere. “They are being talked
about in markets where the merchants most do congregate, and by the workers in
the fields. Boys at school are engaged in pulling your character to pieces, and
the citizens who meet together in the streets are condemning you”. He even
ventured, in a few verses at the end of his letter, to assert that the intruder
would die in the course of the year.
It was all to no purpose. Cadalous at once
began to make preparations to establish himself in Rome by force; and
instructions were given by the court to its Italian officials to afford him all
the necessary help. Meanwhile the notorious Benzo was dispatched to Rome with
large sums of money to weld together by its means a strong opposition. In
passing through Tuscany, he tells us himself how he bought the support of
various counts; and when he had been received in Rome by the malcontents within
the city, and lodged in the palace of Octavian, near S. Maria in Aracoeli, he gave them also gold in plenty and promised
them mountains of it. If we are to believe his own account of his doings, he
displayed the greatest activity for the antipope, not only in a more or less
secret manner, but openly. And he has left us quaint pictures of his private
conferences with his aristocratic supporters in their tall white mitres, and of
his public addresses to the people in the Coliseum or the Circus Maximus. He
avers that Pope Alexander himself was present at one of these latter, that he
objurgated him for leaving the see given him by King Henry, and for usurping
that of Rome by the aid of money and the Normans; that the Pontiff meekly
replied that he would send an embassy to Germany to explain his action, and
that he then took his departure amid the hootings of
the multitude.
As soon as he had formed a more or less strong
party, Benzo sent word to the antipope to make is descent on Rome. With a
strong force, drawn for the most part from his bishopric, and paid for by its
goods, Cadalous began his southward march by way of Bologna, gathering recruits
as he went along. Despite the opposition of the Countess Beatrice, he reached Sutri on March 25. Here he was joined by Benzo with “his
Roman senators and Galerian princes”.
Meanwhile Hildebrand had not been inactive. He
had gathered together some troops, but had failed to induce either the Normans
or Godfrey of Tuscany, both intent on their own schemes, to come to his aid.
However, when the forces of Cadalous encamped on the Neronian fields, they were
assailed by the Romans (April 14). Victory was at first with the antipope, and
he all but gained possession of St. Peter’s; but, unable to hold his ground in
the Leonine city, he withdrew by the ford at Fiano (Flajanum, the ancient Flavian), some twenty-six miles from
Rome, to the other side of the Tiber. The castle of St. Angelo, nevertheless, remained
in the power of one of his partisans, Cencius or Crescentius,
the son of the prefect Stephen.
At Fiano, Cadalous
received some fresh recruits, and then moved to Tusculum, where he was joined
by its counts, and where—a most unexpected remark from the artificial Benzo—all
“were delighted by the most fragrant scents of herbs and flowers”. Whilst still
encamped beneath the towers of Tusculum, the party of the antipope were greatly
elated by the arrival in their midst of three gorgeously attired envoys from
the Eastern Emperor. It would appear that Benzo had already been trying to
effect an alliance with the Greeks against the Normans, through the agency of
Pantaleon, patricius of Amalfi. At any rate, besides
carefully discussing the situation, the ambassadors are credited by Benzo with
having handed to Cadalous the following letter : “To the patriarch of Rome, by
royal charter raised over the universal Church, Constantine Doclitius
(Ducas), basileus of Constantinople, health”. The
emperor expressed his desire of forming an eternal friendship with the young
Henry with the double object of their together striving for the recovery of the
Lord’s sepulchre, and for the expulsion of the Normans. As a guarantee of his
good faith he offered to put his son as a hostage into the hands of the king,
and to place his treasury at his disposal.
But the joy of Cadalous on hearing the contents
of this Arrival of this epistle was quickly damped, not only by his receiving
another stinging letter from St. Peter Damian, but by the arrival on the scene
of Godfrey of Tuscany with a large army (c. May). Pitching his camp by the
Ponte Molle, he commanded both Alexander and Cadalous
to cease their contentions for the Papacy, and to retire to their respective
bishoprics, till such times as the king and the Empress Agnes should pass an
authoritative decision on their claims. Though convinced that Godfrey was
acting in the interests of his opponent, Cadalous could not resist. His money
was exhausted, and his mercenary followers were falling away from him. He had
to return to Parma as well as he could, while Godfrey escorted Alexander to
Lucca.
Kaiserswerth, April 1062
Godfrey’s action on this occasion was but one
act of a conspiracy to bring to an end the existing regency in Germany. He was
in touch with Anno of Cologne, and other ecclesiastics who were jealous of the
power possessed in the councils of the empress-regent by Henry, bishop of
Augsburg, and with Otho, duke of Bavaria, and other lay nobles who were equally
envious of the favoured bishop, and who bore uneasily the yoke of a female
ruler. By a clever ruse the malcontents contrived to possess themselves of the
person of their youthful sovereign at a place on the Rhine where now stands the
town of Kaiserswerth. He was at once conveyed up
stream to Cologne by the boat into which he had been entrapped.
There was considerable excuse for Anno’s share
in this affair, if it be the fact that he had been named by the emperor “the
guardian of the kingdom and of his son”. At any rate, he was now master of the
situation. Nicholas II, against whom he had had a personal dislike, was dead,
and Cadalous was the nominee of the party of the empress. And, as the
archbishop at once replaced her chancellor of Italy, Guibert, by Gregory,
bishop of Vercelli, policy, at least, if not conscience, dictated to him the
advisability of supporting Alexander. It was decided to hold a great diet at
Augsburg in October. St. Peter Damian prepared the way for this assembly’s
passing a judgment in favour of Alexander by the arguments which he set down in
his Disceptatio synodalis,
and with which the reader has already been made familiar.
It is very unfortunate that but few facts with
regard to the diet of Augsburg have been transmitted to us. Besides a number of
German and Italian bishops and nobles, there were present at it Anno and his protégé,
King Henry, as well as, probably, Godfrey of Tuscany. The more conscientious among
the bishops seem to have felt themselves in the same awkward position as did
many of the successors in the Great Schism of the West. They realized that the
case seemed to be one of disciples sitting in judgment on their master, and
would appear to have come to a decision that was rather practical than
theoretical in its nature. This would seem the most satisfactory inference from
a comparison of what actually took place immediately after the diet, viz., the
restoration of Alexander, with the fact of the legality of his elect on being
rediscussed at the council of Mantua. It is true St. Peter Damian says that
Cadalous was “condemned and deposed” at Augsburg, but the statement cannot be
said to be more than practically correct. The better informed Annals of Altaich give it as the decree of the assembly “that he who
had been consecrated (Pope) should again return to the Apostolic See, until
such times as a canonical and synodal decision should definitely rule whether
he was to retain it or to be deposed from it”. And they add, “Alexander
returned to Rome not long after this”.
Anno’s nephew, Burchard of Halberstadt,
was meanwhile commissioned by the diet to proceed to Rome and “to satisfy
himself regarding the truth of what had been alleged for and against Alexander’s
election. Burchard’s declaration that he had been properly elected was followed
early in the year 1063 by his restoration to Rome under the escort of Duke
Godfrey.
In accordance with ancient custom, Alexander
ordered a synod to meet soon after Easter (April, 20). Over a hundred bishops
answered to his summons. The first matter which occupied the attention of the
assembly was the aggress on of Cadalous. Examination soon showed that he had endeavoured
to obtain possession of Rome, “the mother of the churches”, both by gold and
steel. And as he had neither come himself nor sent a representative to plead
his cause, it was unanimously decided to declare him
excommunicated. The synod next turned itself to the work of reform, and
published twelve canons against simony, whether on the part of priests or
people, against clerical and lay concubinage, against marriage within the
forbidden degrees of kindred, and against laics taking orders without due
preparation in the clerical body. To help the observance of these decrees, the
faithful were forbidden to hear the Mass of a priest who did not obey the
decrees of the Church with regard to clerical chastity.
This action of the Lateran synod with regard to
Cadalous would seem to have galvanized his party into new life. Gathering
together “what bishops and clerics he could at Parma”, the antipope declared
that he was the true Pope, inasmuch as “he had been elected and installed by
the king as patricius of the Romans”, and he
anathematized Alexander, who, he maintained, had not been canonically elected
by the Roman clergy and people, but fraudulently by the Normans, “the enemies
of the Roman Empire”.
Then, after he had gathered together a large
sum of money, which he scattered freely in all directions, he again marched on
Rome. Contriving to elude the troops stationed by Duke Godfrey to watch him, he
succeeded in surprising the Leonine City by night, “with the aid of the capitanei and certain pestiferous Romans”.
Compelled, however, to abandon it on the following day, he took refuge with
Cencius in the castle of St. Angelo, for both and Johannipolis
were in the hands of Alexander’s enemies.
Once again the streets of Rome resounded with
the notes of battle, and its great buildings re-echoed the fierce battle-cry, War!
War! of the Normans, whom Hildebrand had again summoned to Alexander’s
assistance. Though they failed to carry the castle of St. Angelo by assault,
they succeeded, with the help of Godfrey, in reducing Cadalous to extremities.
It was in vain that Benzo appealed to the Greeks, and visited Germany on his
behalf. He obtained nothing but words. Even Cencius wearied of fighting for the
antipope, who was at length compelled to give his host three hundred pounds of
silver, and to take his departure in secret from the castle. He reached Berceto in the early part of the year 1064.
It appeared to many in Rome that the only way
to put an end to these unseemly conflicts was to obtain from the German Court a
formal declaration as to the legitimacy of the election of Alexander or of his
rival. An embassy was accordingly dispatched to Germany to make these views
known. About the same time, St. Peter Damian, who was on a mission in France,
and who was always strongly, if unreasonably, opposed to clerics supporting
their rights by arms, wrote to Archbishop Anno in order to induce him to
complete the work begun at Augsburg. To put an end to the evil which was being
wrought by Cadalous, “the devil’s herald and the apostle of Antichrist”, he
adjured him to cause the assembling of a general council as soon as possible,
so that the thorns which were troubling the wretched world might be eradicated.
The king and his advisers accordingly decided
to hold a synod at Mantua, where both Popes, if it be right to use such a
phrase, along with the German, Roman, and Lombard bishops, might meet together.
The synod was fixed for the feast of Pentecost; “and although”, as Bonizo
notes, “the proceeding was derogatory to the dignity of the Roman Pontiffs,
nevertheless, seeing that it was a case of hard necessity”, Alexander not only
agreed to be present at the assembly, but actually summoned it himself.
On the appointed day a great many important
personages met at Mantua, and were received with the greatest honour by the
Countess Beatrice. In the first place came Pope Alexander, “who
ever strove to comply with the canons”; then Archbishop Anno, with a
number of German bishops and nobles; and, finally, “innumerable” bishops,
abbots, and princes “from all parts of Italy”.
Cadalous, who had promised to present himself
at the synod, failed to do so, but took up a position close at hand, with a
number of armed men, at Aqua nigra. Hence he sent to Anno to say that he would
not come to the assembly unless he were allowed to be its supreme president. Of
this impertinent announcement the king’s representatives took no notice, as
they regarded Alexander as at least Pope de facto. Thus rebuffed,
Cadalous contented himself with sending a number of spies into the city, in
order that he might be kept well informed as to what went on.
The first session of the synod was held in the
church on Whit-Monday, and it was obvious that there was considerable
difference of opinion amongst its members. However, after the invocation of the
Holy Ghost, when all had taken their seats, Alexander addressed them on the
need of peace and harmony, and then ordered him to speak who had anything to
say. Thus adjured, Anno rose and said that it had come to the ears of the king
that Alexander had been elected by simony, and had been maintained in his
position by the Normans, enemies of the Roman Empire. To this Alexander is said
by the annalist of Altaich, who professes to give his
very words, to have made the following reply : “What truth there is in my
accusers you may judge from this, that, unlike me, they have not dared to
present themselves before this assembly. But to what has been alleged against
me I am willing to make answer, not upon compulsion, but of my own accord; for
all know that it is not the proper thing for disciples to accuse or to judge
their masters. Hence, that God’s Holy Church may not be scandalized through me,
I call to witness the Holy Spirit, whose coming we are now celebrating, that my
soul has never been stained with simony, and that I was duly installed in the
chair of Peter quite against my will. And this was done by those who are
acknowledged to have the right, according to the ancient custom of the Roman
Church, of electing and consecrating the Pope. With regard to friendship with
the Normans, there is no need that I should say anything. However, when the
king, my son, comes to Rome to receive the imperial crown, he will be able to
discover for himself what measure of truth there may be in what is said
concerning it”.
These simple words of Alexander were enough for
the assembled prelates. They acclaimed him Pope, and intoned the Te Deum. Then, on the motion of the sovereign
Pontiff, they unanimously condemned Cadalous.
Another session was held on the following day.
Emboldened by the fact that for some reason Anno was not present at it, a
number of armed supporters of the antipope burst into the church, denouncing
Alexander as a heretic, and threatening to kill him. Most of the bishops fled
in terror. But Alexander boldly kept his place, guided by the advice of the
abbot of Altaich, Wenceslaus, who, says our annalist
with ill-disguised contempt, knew well the ways of the Lombards, which were to
threaten much more than they had the courage to accomplish. And so it happened
on this occasion; for the opportune arrival of the Countess Beatrice with her
soldiers caused an instantaneous resumption of order.
After two more sessions, and after he had
conferred certain privileges on the bishop of Mantua, Alexander returned to
Rome by way of Lucca, and was acknowledged by all.
Though now almost universally discredited,
Cadalous in retirement continued to style himself Pope, and ceased not till the
hour of his death issuing decrees as though he were the supreme Pontiff, and
constituting himself a center of disaffection. He
died either at the close of the year 1071 or at the beginning of 1072. And
while on the walls of the Lateran there was to be read an inscription to the
effect that Alexander reigns, whilst Cadalous falls, in Parma ascriptions were
erected in which the positions of the two were reversed. An ancient sepulchral
epitaph found by Affó, and composed as an address to
Rome, set forth that Parma in tears had interred in a narrow tomb her duly
elected Pope. With him as her ruler she would with great power have won back
the honours of the world for the Apostolic See. The Normans would have been
expelled, and Apulia and Calabria would have been freed from the servitude in
which they are now lying; while Rome, the head of the world, would have set her
foot upon the haughty. But, as it was, unhappy in the ruler she retained, she
acted against the one who conquered her, strong as she was, but who, with her,
would have subdued the world for her, had long enough life been granted him.
According to Rangerius,
it was in prison that Cadalous expiated the crimes of his life by his death.
If the coming of Anno to Italy had been
advantageous to Alexander, it was not so to the archbishop himself. His absence
from the court had been utilized by his rivals. It was only natural that Henry
should remember that Anno had taken the principal part in the outrage which had
been put upon him at Kaiserswerth, and he had found
him a more severe mentor than he wished to have. He, therefore, favoured the advances
of another who left him more to himself and his passions; and when Anno
returned to Germany, he found that his place had been taken by the able and
aspiring Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen, of whose splendid ambition mention has
already been made. The empress-mother Agnes returned to court; but such
influence for good as she exercised over her wayward son was more than neutralized
by that which the young dissolute Count Werner exerted over him in an opposite
direction.
To increase his influence over the youthful
Henry, the patriarch of Hamburg-Bremen, for so Adalbert loved to be
called, caused him to be proclaimed of age when he was only fifteen years old
(March 29, 1065).
One result of the advent of Adalbert to power
would seem to have been that encouragement was again given to Cadalous by the
German Court. This action called forth a strong letter from St. Peter Damian to
“Henry, son of the emperor Henry (II) III, king of the Romans”. In prophetic
language he warned him that the man who should divide the Church would be
himself divided; he suggested that the empire’s treatment of the Roman Church
was perhaps the reason of the losses it was sustaining at the hands of the
Normans and others; and he exhorted him to let the force of his wrath fall upon
Cadalous, that enemy of man’s salvation, that sink of vices, that fuel of hell.
This letter was not without its effect on the
king’s council, and an expedition into Italy was decided upon. Owing, however,
it would appear, to the diplomatic manoeuvrers of Adalbert, ii was first
postponed, then abandoned altogether. And, despise is own wishes, Alexander
was, as we shall see, forced to endeavour to strengthen the papal alliance with
the Normans.
Though fortune-tellers, in whom he trusted, had
assured that he would be the head of the government for a long time, a
coalition of his enemies brought about his fall as early as the beginning of
the year 1066. The party of Anno once again became all-powerful in the realm;
and while archbishops and dukes contended for the chief place in his kingdom,
the young king was made to remain a mere cipher in its government, but was
allowed to become an adept in every ignoble vice.
With a view to putting a term to the growing
licentiousness of their youthful monarch, his councillors insisted on his
marrying Bertha, the daughter of Adelaide, countess of Turin, to whom his
father had long before caused him to be betrothed. The ceremony was accordingly
gone through at Tribur, July 13, 1066; but for many
months Henry refused to consummate the marriage. Although Bertha was amiable
and beautiful, and, as the sequel abundantly proved, loved her husband, he
conceived the greatest dislike to her—partly, no doubt, because pressure had
been put upon him in the matter by Anno.
The history of the early years of the reign of
King Henry IV furnishes an admirable illustration of the truth that it is an
evil thing for a nation to have a child-ruler. During that period the whole of Germany
was kept in a turmoil by the unchecked self-seeking of its chief men. Whilst
Anno’s nepotism was causing, as one of its results, the violent death of one of
his nephews, a bishop-elect, the quarrels of Adalbert with Magnus, duke of
Saxony, were ending in the ruin of his diocese, in an outburst of paganism, and
in his own great humiliation.
In their struggles for influence the heads of
the various parties strove to secure the support of the Pope. There is still
extant a letter to Alexander from Siegfried, archbishop of Mainz or Mayence, in which he begs his paternity, inasmuch as he is
the crown of their kingdom, and the diadem of the whole Roman Empire, ever to
have his son, their sovereign lord Henry, in his good memory, and with
apostolic constancy to continue, as he has done in the past, to support him
with his advice and help till he secure the imperial crown. The part soon to be
taken by Siegfried in the affair of the king’s divorce throws light on this rapprochement
between Henry and the archbishop of Maine.
Whilst the German king was passing his time in
gratifying his passions, Italy was slipping away from the empire. Godfrey of
Tuscany was much more powerful there than was the Franconian Henry. To reassert
imperial influence in the peninsula, it was again decided that the king should
lead an expedition into it, and with that object he came to Augsburg (February
2, 1067). But most of the great princes of the empire had their own ends to
work out in Germany. Knowing that he would not be loath to return to his
pleasures, they easily persuaded Henry that his ideas on the subject were those
of a boy, and that he had better go back himself to Saxony, and send an embassy
into Italy instead. It seems to have been the intention of the princes that
Duke Godfrey should accomplish the mission. But, as we shall see later, he chose
to work (1067) rather for his own interests and those of the Papacy than for
those of the empire.
Accordingly, in the following year (1068), Anno
of Cologne, Bishop Henry of Trent, and Otho, duke of Bavaria, entered Italy in
then sovereign’s name, and at once incurred the displeasure of the Pope by
freely holding intercourse with Cadalous and with his equally excommunicated
partisan, Henry, archbishop of Ravenna. Another reason that made Alexander
disposed to treat Anno coldly was that he had been informed that he was aiming
at the Papacy; and he was, moreover, annoyed at the way in which, despite his
prohibition, he was harrying the monks of Stavelo or Stablo. Hence, when the ambassadors reached Rome, Alexander
for some time refused to see them. However, after they had humbly offered
satisfaction, the Pope granted them indeed a hearing, but apparently refused to
conform at least to all their wishes, and, taking up a firm stand, bade them
lay his views before the king.
How far the embassy was successful in
impressing upon the people of Italy the power of Germany, or the advantage or
necessity of union with it, may be gathered from what the Annals of Altaich tell us of the return of the ambassadors.
Instead of going back to Germany with the
bishops, Otho of Nordheim, duke of Bavaria, remained
behind, as though to treat with the princes of Italy on its affairs. With a
great multitude of Italians, Duke Godfrey went to meet him on the plains round
Piacenza. When, however, Otho attempted to enter upon business, the Italians,
moved by their pride, and, as it were, inborn hatred of the Germans, refused to
give him a hearing, shouted him down, and compelled him to depart without
accomplishing anything.
Another matter to which Henry and his advisers
failed to induce the Pope to agree was his wish to divorce Bertha. Whether
because she had in a sense been forced upon him, or because he objected to the
restraints of married life, or because he had taken a personal dislike to her,
he desired to procure a divorce from her. It was in 1069 (June), and to
Siegfried of Mainz (Mayence), that Henry first opened
his mind on the subject, and, according to a conjecture of Lambert, offered to
force the Thuringians to pay him the tithes, if he would help him to attain his
end. When, by whatever means, he had secured the adhesion of the archbishop to
his base designs, he began to speak publicly of his relations to Bertha with
much the same loathsome hypocrisy as our own Henry VIII spoke of his towards
Catherine of Aragon. He had no fault to find with her, but could no longer keep
from men that “by what judgment of God he knew not”, he could not live with his
wife, and that he had never treated her as such. It was accordingly decided to
hold a synod on the matter at Mainz in the week following the feast of St. Michael.
Meanwhile the queen was relegated to the abbey of Lorsch.
Whether because he hoped to beguile Alexander
into sanctioning his action, or because he feared the consequences if he did
not communicate so important a matter to him, Siegfried forwarded to him a
garbled account as to what had taken place up to that moment regarding the
projected divorce. He pretended that he had opposed the king’s wishes in the
matter until both king and queen had assured him that she was incapable of
becoming a mother; and he declared that nothing should be done without the
Pope’s authority.
The practical reply of the Pope was to send the
fearless and inflexible ascetic, St. Peter Damian, as his legate to the
appointed synod.
Full of hope of a speedy release from the matrimonial
bond, Henry had set out for Mainz (Mayence), when
word was brought to him of the arrival in that city of the Pope’s legate, and
of the fact that he had already threatened to excommunicate Siegfried for the
part he had taken “in this wicked attempt at separation”. Made a coward by his
conscience, and filled with bitter disappointment, the king was at first
disposed to return to Saxony without presenting himself before the synod. It
required all the persuasive powers of his friends to induce him to face the
legate. It was pointed out to him that the attention of all was directed to the
synod; that by his own command the great ones of the empire would assemble at
Mainz, and that he must meet them. However, when he reached Frankfort, he gave
orders that the gathering should be held in that city instead.
The synod was accordingly held there in the
beginning of October (1069), and it was soon evident that Henry had no case.
Supported by justice, by the commission of the Pope, and by his own character,
the authority of the legate was irresistible. The divorce was not to be. When
the king had heard the princes of the empire express their adhesion to the
words of the legate, and declare that the decision of the Roman Pontiff was just,
“broken rather than convinced”, he said, “he would bear as best he could a
burden he could not lay down”. Then, without waiting for the queen, he hurried
back to Saxony with an escort of barely forty men. Bertha, however, regained
her rights both as a queen and as a wife.
It would appear that St. Peter Damian utilized
his stay in Germany to examine into the state of its Church. At any rate, in
obedience to the Pope’s summons, the archbishops of Cologne and Mainz and the
bishop of Bamberg betook themselves to Rome in the beginning of the year 1070
to answer a charge of simony. The bishop of Bamberg extricated himself out of
his difficulties, not by giving presents to the Pope, as Lambert suggests in
one place, but by perjury, as the same author shows in another place. The great
archbishops, now humble enough before the Pope, were only permitted to return
home after they had taken an oath never again to be guilty of the vice of
simony.
The opposition which Siegfried and others
offered after this to the simoniacal practices of
King Henry shows that the spirit of the Gregorian reform was beginning to sink
deep.
For a second time was a journey to Italy fatal
to the ascendancy of Anno. No sooner did Henry see that he had fallen under the
displeasure of the Pope than he recalled Adalbert of Bremen to manage the
affairs of state. But the brightness and brilliancy of the archbishop had
departed, and left behind them only a senile cunning. He thought merely of
acquiring wealth for his church, of leaving the king to work his will, and of avoiding
coming into adverse contact with the magnates of the realm. He had no concern
how badly the weak and helpless were treated either by himself or others. Of
all his great powers, his ready speech alone did not desert him; so that at
this declining period of his life it might have been said of him, as it was of
an English king, viz., that he never said a foolish thing, and never did
a wise one. But his end was near. He died on March 18, 1072.
After what has been said of the last doings of
Adalbert, the condition of things at his death may be easily imagined. Murmurs
were loud and deep. The king was alarmed, and succeeded in inducing Anno to
take up once more for the general good the reins of government. To help the
archbishop in his efforts to bring Henry to some sense of his duty, his mother
left Italy, and came to add her exhortations to those of the new minister. It
was all to no purpose. Roused for a time by the vigour of Anno’s
administration, Henry soon fell back, and continued his career of vice and
folly, wantonly offending great and small alike. Unable to check him, Anno
begged to be allowed to retire and to apply himself exclusively to the affairs
of his diocese. Henry was nothing loath, “and, as it were delivered from a most
severe master, at once burst all the bonds of moderation and plunged headlong
into every kind of wickedness” (Christmas 1072).
There was, however, one firm barrier at least
in his way, and against it he soon struck. It was the Holy See. His counter
struggle with Hildebrand was about to begin. But the first blows in the deadly
combat between the monarch and the Popes were struck by the dying hand of
Alexander. In a Roman synod held in Lent a month or so before he died, he
publicly excommunicated, at the request of the empress-mother Agnes, some of
the king’s advisers whose counsels were eminently calculated to lead to his
being cut off from the communion of the Church. Ekkehard of Aura (Urach),
indeed, goes much further. He pretends that Anno, who had gone to Rome to
receive some moneys due to the king, returned with papal letters summoning
Henry to Rome to answer the charges of simony and other crimes which had been
lodged against him. These accusations, as we learn from the same author, had
been preferred against him by the Saxons, whom he had been fiercely oppressing.
Their statements of their wrongs had won over Siegfried of Mainz, and many
others, and through them had enlisted the sympathy of the Pope. But it would
seem more likely that in this instance Bonizo was more correct, and that it was
Henry’s counsellors and not himself who received the summons to present themselves
before the Pope to answer for their inquiries. Still, whatever be the truth in
the matter, it is evident that the power of the Papacy is beginning to make
itself felt in the immediate vicinity of the king’s person. It will not be long
before it will fall upon him.
Affairs of Italy.
Milan
Now that we have sketched the relations between
the empire and Pope Alexander to the day of his death, we may turn to other
events in different parts of the Church with which he was connected. It is only
natural that we should begin with the affairs of Italy, and with those of one
of its most important cities, Milan. The reform inaugurated in that city by St.
Peter Damian was not final; but as long as the authority of Alexander hung in
the balance, and papal interference was scarcely possible, Guido, its refractory
archbishop, was content to acknowledge that Pontiff as head of the Church. No
sooner, however, was his position rendered secure than he went over to the
party of Cadalous. The Patarines, however, headed now
by the deacon Ariald and the knight Herlembald, who took the place of his
deceased brother Landulf, resumed their old activity against the married clergy
(1066). Herlembald had, when in doubt, been encouraged to attach himself to
Ariald by Pope Alexander and the cardinals, “who gave him, in the name of St.
Peter, a wondrous standard, that, when the storm of heresy raged furiously
around him, he might, by holding his banner in his hand, be able to allay it”.
As Guido showed himself false to the promises
he had made to St. Peter Damian, and resumed his simoniacal
practices, Ariald sent Herlembald to Rome for instructions as to what should be
done. Whilst he was away, party feeling was intensely aroused. On the one hand,
the archbishop had persecuted two clerics who had given up their former mode of
irregular living and had joined the Patarines, and,
on the other, the latter had, in the name of the liturgical rites of the Church
of Rome, attacked certain Ambrosian customs. This caused quite a popular commotion,
and of this the archbishop made good use when Herlembald returned to Milan with
a papal bull declaring him excommunicated. He declared that Milan had never obeyed
the Roman Church, and called upon the people to do away with those who would
destroy their liberties. No more was needed to inflame the passions of men. By
the friends of the archbishop Ariald was attacked, and left for dead; and by
the supporters of the deacon, Guido’s palace was sacked, and himself nearly
done to death. But a lavish distribution of money provoked a general feeling against
Ariald. He was compelled to fly from the city, was captured by the partisans of
the archbishop, and put to death in a manner too horrible to be here described.
Such a crime could not long remain
hidden, and Ariald conquered in death. His mutilated body was brought back in
triumph to Milan (1067), and soon after two cardinals arrived there from Rome
to restore peace and order to the distracted city (August). Their one object
was to put a term to the factions whose terrible reprisals were causing such
misery in the city. Hence, they said nothing about the death of Ariald, and,
though they renewed the decrees which St. Peter Damian had issued (1059)
regarding simony and clerical celibacy, they absolutely forbade those who had
banded themselves together to eradicate those vices to proceed in the future by
any measures of violence. They must act canonically, and denounce delinquents
to the archbishop or the bishops. The legates would also seem to have allowed
the excommunication of Guido to lapse, perhaps on condition that he should
resign his office. For, on the one hand, we know that Hildebrand had declared
that the only remedy for the sad state of affairs in Milan was the resignation
of Guido, and the canonical election of another archbishop, with the consent of
the Holy See; and, on the other, that he did actually resign about this time.
But if the legates of the Holy See showed by
their moderation that their one aim was the establishment of peace, the conduct
of Guido evinced plainly either that the general good was of little concern to
him, or that he had no idea of how to work for it. When he resigned his see,
instead of committing the choice of his successor to the clergy and people of
Milan, and giving the Holy See an opportunity of expressing its approval of
their choice, he sent his crozier and ring to the king of Germany, and asked
him to appoint as his successor a subdeacon of the name of Godfrey. He
preferred to surrender the liberties of his church into the hands of the
empire, rather than into those of the Papacy. Godfrey, who had schemed to
secure his nomination by Guido, was equally successful with Henry, to whom he
gave money, and a promise to destroy the Patarines.
But though he was consecrated at Novara, Rome would have none of him, nor would
the people of Milan. And even Guido, before he died (August 23, 1071),
abandoned him, and made his peace with the reform party.
All during the interval between the nomination
of Election of Godfrey and the death of Guido, active opposition was kept up
towards the former by Herlembald. On the demise of the old archbishop,
Herlembald put himself in communication with Rome, and it was decided to
proceed to choose a new archbishop. Cardinal Bernard was sent from Rome to
watch the election; and the party of the Patarines
selected a young cleric of noble blood named Atto
(January 6, 1072). But he was scarcely elected before he was seized by the
opposite faction, wounded, and compelled to swear that he would renounce the
bishopric. He was, however, rescued by Herlembald, and his oath was declared
null by the Pope. But, unable to maintain himself in Milan, he went to Rome, and
though Gregory VII took up his cause, he was never able to obtain his see, as
King Henry supported a second intruder, Theobald, on the death of Godfrey.
In many other cities of northern Italy besides
Milan did struggle for reform in their bishops resist the efforts of the Holy
See to reform them, and many other cities witnessed tragic scenes, when a large
section of the people seconded the zeal of Rome. But the event which made the
greatest sensation was the trial by fire which took place at Florence to
prove that its bishop, Peter of Pavia, was guilty of simony (February 1068). A
monk passed unscathed between two blazing pyres, each ten feet long by four and
a half wide, and separated only a foot or two from each other. This monk, since
known from this fiery ordeal as Peter Igneus,
afterwards became cardinal-bishop of Albano.
It will be readily understood that this
uprising of the people against even worthless men in authority was not without
its dangers. While many acted from the purest motives, and were well able to
understand how to obey a properly constituted authority, and when an unlawfully
imposed one might be resisted, many evil-minded men opposed the simoniacal bishops merely for the satisfaction of thwarting
authority, and many, in ignorance, began to think that, if an official was
personally wicked, he lost his powers and might be disobeyed with impunity. And
so the cry was raised in Florence: “There is no Pope, no King, no Archbishop,
and no Priest!” Hence, says the saint, who lets us know of this black side of
the work of reform, “it is said that some thousand people, deceived by these childish
sophisms, died without receiving the sacrament of the Lord’s Body and Blood”.
The epoch of which we are writing will not have
passed away before some at least of these “sophisms” put forward by the
dangerous, because impractical, eloquence of Arnold of Brescia will have
wrought a world of mischief.
In the north of Italy, then, many of the
bishops on whom the Pope, in his efforts to effect a general reformation of
morals, ought to have been able to rely, proved themselves his most bitter
opponents. And, at the same time, in the south of Italy the Normans showed that
their help could not be securely counted on by the Papacy, but that they were
as ready to use their swords against it as for it, according as best suited
their interests. Whilst Robert Guiscard and his brother Roger were securing
their conquests in Apulia and Calabria, and were beginning to rend Sicily from
the Saracens (1061), Richard of Aversa turned his arms northward. Capua fell
completely under his sway in May 1062, and he made the fact that the Pope had
accepted services of William of Montreuil, who had shown himself a disobedient
vassal, his excuse for invading his territory.
Taking no account of the fact that William had
returned to his allegiance, and not considering the efforts Alexander had made
to prevent William from repudiating his wife, who was Richard’s daughter, the
Norman count seized Ceprano and advanced on Rome
(1066). He had conceived the idea of making himself Patricius of the city, and
ruling the Pope like the Alberics of the tenth
century. It was to no purpose that Alexander, who had sent letters and
messengers to ask Henry for help, threatened the advancing Normans with the
vengeance of the German king. They had grown quite accustomed to treating him
with contempt. This time, however, Henry was in earnest; for he wished to
receive the imperial crown as well as to chastise the Normans. His host
assembled at Augsburg in the early part of 1067. But whether because the German
princes did not desire an Italian expedition, or because Henry’s presence was
required “in other parts of the empire”, or whether, more likely, because Duke
Godfrey, who ought to have come to furnish the vanguard and to lead it into
Italy, did not put in an appearance, the king disbanded his army.
But if the imperial viceroy in Italy was not
anxious to see Henry and his Germans in Rome, he was far from desirous that
Norman influence in Rome should outweigh his own. Accordingly, collecting a
large army, he marched to Rome with his wife and his step-daughter, the famous
Matilda; for they were touched by the troubles of their Tuscan Pope (May 1067).
After a little fighting and some negotiation, the Normans surrendered their
conquests, and secured the withdrawal of the duke by the payment of a large sum
of money. “This”, notes Bonizo, “was the first service which Matilda, the most
excellent daughter of Boniface, was able to offer the Blessed Prince of the
Apostles; but it was not long before the many gracious services which she
rendered in the same direction merited for her the title of Daughter of Blessed
Peter”.
Peace being thus effected between the Normans
and the Pope, he was enabled, in company with Hildebrand and others, to go
about among them, and remedy some of the wrongs they were everywhere perpetrating.
One of those he was anxious to help was Alfanus,
archbishop of Salerno, a man whom Giesebrecht has
pronounced to be worthy of the highest praise on many counts; for he was, he
tells us, “a most fervent monk, a most zealous defender of ecclesiastical
liberty, a most ardent lover of antiquity, and, for his age, a perfect
grammarian”. He was, moreover, a great friend and admirer of Hildebrand; and
among his verses, second to none of his time, there is a long poem in his honour.
To Alfanus it seemed that Rome owed no more to the Scipios and to its other heroes than to Hildebrand, and
that through him its ancient sway had returned.
Like so many others, Alfanus
had been robbed by the Normans. William, one of the sons of Tancred, had taken
violent possession of property belonging to the See of Salerno; and as before a
synod held at Melfi (August 1, 1067) he refused to
restore his ill-gotten goods, he was excommunicated. A short time afterwards,
however, he and his followers restored them at Salerno and at Capua.
With the exception of another brief
misunderstanding with Richard of Capua, brought about again apparently by
William of Montreuil, Alexander maintained satisfactory relations with the
Normans during the rest of his pontificate. Their successes were in many ways a
gain to the Holy See, and occasionally brought it curious presents. In his
Sicilian campaign, Roger had gained a decisive victory over the Saracens at the
river Cerami near Traina
(1063). The count realized that it was to God and St. Peter that he owed this
great victory. Not to be ungrateful for so great a favour, he sent by Meledius four camels to Pope Alexander, who was then
holding in Rome the place of St. Peter and governing with prudence the Catholic
Church. Delighted much more at the victory over the infidels which God had granted
than at the presents he had received, the Apostolicus,
in virtue of his power and with his apostolic benediction, granted to the
count, and to all who might assist in wresting Sicily from the infidel, and in
the work of its lasting conversion, the remission of their sins, on the
condition of their being sorry for them and avoiding them in the future. He
also sent them a standard, blessed by apostolic authority, that, full of
confidence in St. Peter, they might fight against the Saracens with greater impunity.
If the reign of Alexander was to see the
beginning of the end of Saracen rule in Sicily, it was to behold the complete
dominion termination of Byzantine authority in south Italy. The last period of
Greek power in Italy began by their seizure of Bari (876); it was closed by its
capture by the Normans in 1071. Less than a year after, the taking of Palermo
by the same redoubtable warriors (January 1072) gave the deathblow to the
Saracen sway in Sicily. The most important result of these exploits, as far as
the Pope was concerned, was the return of south Italy and Sicily to his
spiritual jurisdiction. Through the action of the Greek emperors Leo III and
his son Constantine Copronymous (741-775), their
churches had been reunited to the synod of Constantinople, seeing that the Pope
and Old Rome is under the domination of the barbarians. Through the action of
the Norman rulers they again fell under the authority of Rome. In Sicily the
speedy establishment of that authority was simple. The Saracens had destroyed
all its episcopal sees by the end of the ninth century; it was therefore merely
a question of reconstituting them. But in south Italy the sees
were in the hands of Greeks, and the Greek rite was in general use. Change,
therefore, in these matters could in those districts only be effected by
degrees. Where there was a large Latin population of Normans and Lombards, the
Greek bishops and the Greek rite were replaced by Latin ones as the sees fell vacant; and thus in less than thirty years the
four metropolitan and seven suffragan sees were completely Latinized. But where
the Greek population was numerous no immediate change was made. Hence we find
that in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries there were still many Greek
bishops. Even as late as the sixteenth century the succession had not quite
died out, and the Greek lite, protected by the Holy See, was still surviving in
the seventeenth century. But the fourteenth century may be taken as the date of
the fusion of the Greek and Latin races. Though, therefore, the power of the
emperor of Constantinople and of its patriarch in south Italy and Sicily came
to end in the eleventh century, and was replaced by the authority of the Pope
and of the Norman kings, Greek influence did not cease to make itself felt there.
Indeed, through the monastic foundations of the twelfth century it experienced
quite a renaissance.
The change of rulers in south Italy is
noticeable in the of consecration of the new church at Monte Cassino. The
eleventh century is justly regarded as the golden age of this glorious abbey,
and Desiderius (1058-87), the most distinguished of its long line of abbots, as
the Leo X of the Gregorian renaissance. From the total renovation of the
buildings of the monastery which he effected, he is called its fourth founder.
He naturally paid special attention to the church. To decorate it he brought
from Rome columns, precious marbles, and other splendid architectural relics of
imperial times; and from Lombardy, Amalfi, and especially from Constantinople,
sculptors, mosaists, and painters. When the church
was finished, and its walls were all aglow with mosaics, and its pavement gay
with slabs of coloured marbles arranged in geometrical patterns, Desiderius
begged the Pope to come and consecrate his new building. Alexander at once
summoned all the bishops of Campania, the Principate (of Capua), Apulia and
Calabria. In consequence of the summons of the Pope, there assembled in and
around the abbey not only an enormous number of the nameless crowd, but all
those who in that part have left their mark on the world. With the Pope were
Hildebrand, St. Peter Damian, and other cardinals, ten archbishops, and over
forty bishops, several of whom were from Greek sees. With Richard, prince (or
duke) of Capua, were the principal Norman and other princes of southern Italy,
except f Robert Guiscard, who was then besieging Palermo. The high altar —that
of St. Benedict— was consecrated by the Pope himself, who granted to all who
throughout the octave came to Monte Cassino and confessed their sins a full
absolution. The number of people who flocked to the abbey was such that its
great resources were taxed to the utmost. But Benedictine hospitality rose to
the occasion, “so that scarce one of that countless multitude could be found who
did not declare that he had been supplied with all that he needed to eat”.
Speaking of Pope Alexander, a Frenchman, who
was contemporary with him, says of him that he was “one who France, well
deserved to be consulted and obeyed by the universal Church; for his decisions
were fair and sound. The sun held not more exactly to its assigned course than
did he to the path of truth, everywhere correcting whatever evil he could, and
never showing himself a respecter of persons”. Anyone who examines his relations
with the country to which William of Poitiers belonged must form the same
conclusion. After carefully surveying the history of the fourteen
ecclesiastical provinces into which France was then divided, Delarc’s inferences quite bear out the statements of the
Conqueror’s chaplain. He writes: “By his letters and by his legates Alexander
II was perpetually intervening in the difficulties and in the multifarious
incidents of the inner life of the Church in France. And it cannot be called in
question that this intervention of his was most beneficial, nay, in some cases,
even providential”.
By the ancient canon law of the Church, a
bishop was to Episcopal be freely elected by the clergy and people of the
diocese; but at this period throughout almost the whole of France, freedom of
election was a thing of the past. Bishops were imposed on clergy and people by
the power of the king or of some feudal overlord; and, as money was the sole
aim of most of these men, it will be readily understood that most of the bishops
of France held their sees because they had paid the price. And when once the
civil magnates had secured their price for a bishopric or an abbey, they cared
nothing about the character of the man who through them became a bishop or an
abbot, nor about the subsequent fate of the diocese or monastery. Simony and
its attendant evils stalked with sardonic smile from one end of France to the
other. And those who had to suffer under the oppressive tyranny of the simoniacal invaders of bishoprics and abbeys had no other
resource, but in person, or by letter, to implore “the justice of St. Peter,
and consolation from his successor in the midst of the wrongs they had to
endure”. The archbishops who ought to have been the most strenuous opponents of
simony were its open or secret allies; for, as Alexander pointed out, no one
would buy a bishopric if he knew he could not obtain consecration from his
metropolitan. It was then but natural, it was but proper, that the head of the
Church should try to provide a remedy for this sad state of things, and should
strive to wrest the right of election from the hands of worldly -minded men, and
take it as far as possible into his own. With a view to effecting this
transfer, we find Alexander declaring that to the Popes alone belonged the
right of settling the boundaries of bishoprics, and not unfrequently assuming
the right of approving the selection of episcopal candidates.
If at this period, owing especially to the
countless evils caused by simony, the Church in France did not fall into
complete chaos, it was due to the reforming intervention of the Holy See. It
exerted its influence to a very large extent by the legates it dispatched
thither one after another. They summoned and presided over councils, encouraged
local efforts at reform, deposed unworthy bishops, and authoritatively settled
the disagreements which they found in the French clerical world—differences
among the clergy themselves, or between divers churches, or again between the
seculars and regulars. Even the most powerful prelates of France were fain to
beg the Pope to send a legate a latere to aid
them in the midst of their troubles. And appeals to the Pope for his help came
to Rome from every rank of men throughout France : from simple priests
oppressed by their bishops; from women robbed of their property and of their
good name by lustful husbands; from monasteries which had been plundered of
their relics, of their rights, and of their possessions by bishops of the baronial
type; from abbots and monks forcibly expelled from their monasteries by simoniacal intruders; from broken-hearted sinners who came
to beg from the successor of the apostles pity and penance for their great
transgressions; and from bishops struggling against the savage tyranny of
brutal barons.
It is not a little curious to find that one of
the appeals to Rome for help came from Berengarius of Tours. When he returned
home after his retractation at Rome (1059) with regard to the Blessed
Eucharist, he is said to have continued to propagate his views, as though he
had in no way compromised his position. But he was soon to find that others had
changed, if he had not. His former friend, Eusebius Bruno, bishop of Angers,
would no longer support him, but reminded him that his opinions had been
condemned once and for all “by the synod of the Apostolic See”. What was felt
much more keenly by Berengarius was the death (1060) of his powerful lay
patron, Geoffrey Martel. The new count, Geoffrey the Bearded, the nephew of
Martel, disliked Berengarius just as heartily as his uncle had loved him; and
he would have been no Angevin if he had not made his dislike felt by its object.
He soon rendered the position of Berengarius as archdeacon of Angers untenable.
In sorrowfully making the fact known to
Cardinal Stephen, Berengarius says that he is aware that it is open to him to
appeal “to the dignity and sublimity of the Roman Church”, but he would be glad
if the cardinal himself would present his respects to the Pope, and approach
him on his behalf. Alexander had already, he assured his correspondent, sent
him his blessing. “The divine clemency would, through you, grant me a very
great favour if you could induce the Pope to write to the archbishop (of Tours)
and to the bishops of Le Mans and Angers, bidding them defend me against the
presumption of the envious and the stupid”.
Presumably ignorant that Berengarius had,
despite his retractation of 1059, continued to teach as before regarding the
Blessed Eucharist, Alexander, besides sending a kind letter of sympathy to the
archdeacon himself, wrote to the bishops of Tours and of Angers. He bade them
not to allow Geoffrey to persecute Berengarius on pretence of defending the
Christian faith, as that was their affair, and not his. He also addressed two
letters “to his very dear son Geoffrey, count of the Angevins”, one before and
one after he had dispatched Cardinal Stephen to France on this and other
business. In both he very paternally exhorted
Geoffrey to cease to molest Berengarius, of whose unbounded charity especially
he had received a very good account. But, like the rest of his house, Geoffrey
“neither feared God nor regarded man”. He took no heed either of the Pope’s
letter or of his legate, Stephen, and if he had had his own way he would have
continued to play the tyrant not only towards Berengarius, but towards the
monks of Marmoutier and the whole diocese of Tours.
Of this we have proof in the letter which Bartholomew, archbishop of Tours,
wrote to Alexander denouncing the oppressions of Geoffrey, “this contemporary
Nero who surpasses in impiety all the counts his predecessors”.
But Geoffrey was destined to get less of his own
way in life than most men. His brother Fulk, Rechin,
or “the Quarreller”, wished to possess himself of his inheritance, and in the
Lent of 1067 succeeded in securing Geoffrey’s person. The bearded count was now
himself in the position of needing the Pope’s aid, and was fortunate enough to
secure it. Stephen, Alexander’s legate, induced Fulk to set his brother at
liberty.
No sooner, however, was he a free man than he
recommenced oppressing the Church. Naturally irritated at such ingratitude, the
cardinal summoned a council, excommunicated him, and “in virtue of the
authority of St. Peter”, gave the county of Anjou to his younger brother Fulk.
Not long after the publication of this sentence, Geoffrey again fell into his
brother’s hands (1068), who, undeterred by papal excommunication, kept him
prisoner in the castle of Chinon for twenty-eight
years. At the close of that period the unhappy man was released through the
efforts of Urban II. Shattered in mind and body, he only regained his freedom
to die.
It is characteristic of the vain weakness of
Berengarius that about the very time he was appealing to the See of
Peter for help, he appears to have been perpetually abusing its doings and its
occupants. From fragments of his writings which have come down to us in one way
or another, and which are believed to have been published at this period, we
see how little his vanity could brook opposition. “It was either in 1068 or
1069” that he wrote his Liber prior de sacra coena,
and it was seemingly some four years later that he brought out a second book on
the same subject in answer to Lanfranc’s Liber de corpore Domini, which
his first publication had provoked. In both works the archdeacon descends to
abuse, and in both decries the council of 1059, Cardinal Humbert, and Nicholas
II. Humbert is a vagabond and an imbecile who does not understand his
adversary; Lanfranc, if learned, is a knave who, like Paschasius
Radbert, falsifies texts; and Pope Nicholas is an
ignoramus, unworthy of his position, a prophet of lies.
Cardinal Stephen was not the only legate sent
into France by Alexander. One of the first of those whom he dispatched thither
seems to have been St. Peter Damian, who volunteered to go in order to settle
one of the many disputes which were then being carried on between the seculars
and regulars.
When we reflect that, on the one hand, the
spirit of reform at this period had its home among the monks, that the
monastery was its centre, and that not only its chief exponents, but its
authoritative supporters in the Church, were monks, and that, on the other
hand, the bishops were not unfrequently the representatives of feudal domination
and license, we may be prepared to find the abbot’s crook and the episcopal
crozier in frequent opposition. And if the bishops generally had might on their
side, the abbots usually had right. To adjust these differences without
destroying the energetic life which gave them birth was one of the most vital
duties of the Popes and their agents.
There had appeared before the Roman synod of
1063, Hugh, surnamed the Great, abbot of Cluny, and the real founder of its
congregation. He had come for protection against Drogo, bishop of Macon, in
whose diocese Cluny was situated, and who by force of arms wished to deprive
that famous monastery of its privilege of exemption from episcopal control.
Alexander listened readily to Hugh’s appeal, accepted the offer of St. Peter
Damian, “the eye and immovable foundation of the Apostolic See”, to mediate
between the two parties, and warmly recommended him to the archbishops of
France.
Undaunted either by his great age, his weak
health, the terrors of the Alps, or by the wiles of Cadalous, who, like a
tiger, was thirsting for his blood, the saint set out for France. On foot and
without guides he crossed the great St. Bernard, and at length reached the
famous abbey, where he was received with the greatest honour and joy. Without
loss of time letters were dispatched to the neighbouring bishops, ordering them
in the name of the Pope to meet in synod at Châlons-sur-Saone. Most of the
bishops came prepared to support their colleague of Macon; but the eloquence
and authority of the saint prevailed. And when the deeds of privilege granted
to Cluny by its founder William, duke of Aquitaine, and by many of the Popes
were read, the opposition of the bishop of Macon broke down. He declared that
he had sinned in ignorance, and had no wish to oppose Pope Alexander or any of
the Popes. Various other affairs were settled at this council, and certain simoniacal intruders condemned, so that “the synod which
was convoked for one case, turned out to the profit of many”. Refusing the
presents which the grateful monks would have pressed upon him, “lest temporal
reward might destroy the eternal”, the saintly legate of the Apostolic See
returned to the solitude of Fonte Avellana (October 1063).
Mention has already been made of the embassies
of the cardinal subdeacon Peter, and of that of Cardinal Stephen.
Spain
It remains to speak of yet another, viz. of
that of Cardinal Hugo Candidus, who proved as
faithless to his duty on this occasion as he had been previously untrue to Pope
Alexander. Finding that in the service of the antipope (Cadalous) he was
suffering much and receiving but little, Hugo sought and obtained not only
Alexander’s forgiveness, but some measure of his confidence. And out of respect
for the memory of St. Leo IX, who had advanced him, Alexander sent his former
adversary on an important embassy to the country on both sides of the Pyrenees.
As we shall see, however, the falseness of his character reasserted itself; and
“when acting as legate in Spain, he pulled down whatever he had built up; for he first prosecuted the simoniacs,
and then on receipt of money condoned their offences”.
Hugo began his mission on this side of the
Pyrenees, and in the archdiocese of Auch—a province remarkable for the number
of its pluralist bishops. He held his first synod at Auch itself. Merely noting
that it condemned “symbolic feasts in churches”, and that “by order of Pope
Alexander”, he held another council at Toulouse, we shall pass on with him into
Spain. There, after furthering the movement of reform and of the Truce of God
in public assemblies at Gerona and Vich, he entered
upon a campaign against the liturgy that is known as the Mozarabic. Seeing,
however, that it is the rite which had been in use in Spain since the time of
the conversion to Christianity of its Visigothic invaders in the fifth century,
i.e., for some seven hundred years, it would be better called the Visigothic liturgy.
Still, as it survived longer among the Mozarabs, or Mostarabes,
as they should properly be called, it received their name. They themselves were
Christians who, from the fact of their continuing to live amongst the Moors,
came to receive a name which denoted that they had, in some respects at least,
become Arabs.
Until the second half of the eleventh century,
the Mozarabic liturgy was in general use throughout Spain, as well among the
Catholics of the independent northern Christian states as among the
Mozarabs. But before then it had begun to be viewed With suspicion by the
former. Naturally influenced by their Frankish neighbours, who, from the time
of Charlemagne, had adopted the Roman liturgy, they too had commenced to turn
towards it, and insensibly to be alienated from the Mozarabic. It was
remembered that the Adoptionists had essayed to
support their heresy by quotations from it; and, moreover, it was the Liturgy
employed by the Mozarabs, of whose orthodoxy the Spanish kings would naturally
be as suspicious as they were of their patriotism.
The great Christian conquests over the Moors began
after the eleventh century had passed its zenith, and it was doubtless felt by
the Christian kings that to take away their liturgy from the Mozarabs would be
to break one more of their links with a mode of life which they wished them to
forget. Whatever force there may or may not be in this reflection, it must not
be pushed too far; for not a few, at least, of the bishops and many of the
people were in favour of the national liturgy. And so when about the year 1065
legates of Pope Alexander were anxious for its suppression, the Spanish bishops
in anger sent three of their number, viz., the bishops of Calahorra,
Alava, and Auca (or Oca, then transferred to Burgos) to the Pope himself with
their liturgical books, the Liber Ordinum, the
Liber Missarum, the Liber Orationum, and the Liber Antifonarum.
The volumes were carefully examined by the Pope and a council, and pronounced
free from heterodoxy. Moreover, so at any rate it is said by a contemporary
Spanish document, “apostolic authority forbade anyone in future to attack the
office of the Spanish Church”.
But, despite this pronouncement, the attack
continued, and it is certain that Frankish influence and the desire of the
Popes and of the great churchmen for orthodoxy and unity were potent factors in
the abolition of the Mozarabic liturgy. Of the combined action of the Holy See
and distinguished ecclesiastics in this matter we have an example in the letter
which Alexander II wrote about this time (October 18, 1071) to Aquilinus, abbot of the famous monastery of S. Juan de la Peña
in Aragon. Understanding, he said, that in Spain the unity of the Catholic
faith had lost its integrity, and that almost all had erred in the matter of
ecclesiastical discipline and the divine worship, he had sent thither the cardinal-priest
Hugo Candidus, who had restored the integrity of the
faith, had expelled simony, and had unified the divine worship. King Sancius (Sancho Ramirez, king of Aragon, 10631094),
embracing the perfect faith, had submitted himself to the apostolic dignity,
had placed all the monasteries of his kingdom under the jurisdiction of the
Roman Church, and had dispatched you (Aquilinus) to
Rome to obtain for your monastery the special protection of the Roman Church,
agreeing to pay to it an annual tax of an ounce of gold. This patronage
Alexander professed himself pleased to bestow, and informed the abbot in
conclusion that he granted him “the glory and protection of the apostolic
privilege”.
One result, then, of the mission of Hugo was
the abolition of the Mozarabic rite in Aragon and Navarre in 1071; another was
that the manner in which he conducted his embassy brought upon him the
opposition of St. Hugh and the monks of Cluny. Recalled to Rome, the cardinal
succeeded for the time in defending himself against their accusations, so that
Gregory VII, in sending him once again into Spain (1073), declared it to be his
belief that he was practically innocent. The second legation of Hugo, and a
letter of the Pope to the kings of Leon and Castile, had not the same rapid
success against the old liturgy in their kingdoms as corresponding acts had had
in those of Aragon and Navarre. But it was doomed, and was soon in the position
of being barely tolerated in a few churches. Revived at the close of the
fifteenth century by the great Cardinal Ximenes, it is still followed, as a
liturgical curiosity, in some churches in Toledo.
A second defection of Hugo from the line of the
true Popes caused his whole conduct to be thoroughly examined. He was degraded
in 1075 and anathematized at the Roman Council of February 1078, not only on
account of his adhesion to first one antipope and then another, but also on
account of the unfaithful manner in which he had discharged his office of
apostolic legate.
In the successful expeditions against the Moors
which the Spanish kings were carrying out at this period, many of the nobles of
France took part. Among others who were desirous, moreover, of striking a blow
against the infidels on their own account was Ebles
or Eboli (Evulus) count of Rouci,
near Rheims.
Certainly for over three hundred years the idea
of the paramount position of the Pope in the West had been steadily growing;
and here there is question not of his spiritual position merely, but of his
position among men from every point of view. This sentiment, which no doubt had
its origin in the contemplation of his spiritual supremacy, and of the
Christian faith and civilization which the Western nations had received through
him, was deepened by many political considerations. The decision of Pope
Zachary had legalized the extinction of one dynasty, and the establishment of
another. Charlemagne, the greatest ruler whom the new nations had seen, had
received an imperial crown at the hands of Pope Leo III. And when, through the
failure of the line of his descendants, the empire which a Pope had inaugurated
had faded away, the West saw rise up, at the touch of his hand; a new creation,
“The Holy Roman Empire of the German nation”. Ever since the sixth century, men
in every Western land had become accustomed to seeing emperors and kings,
bishops and abbots, dukes and counts, asking the Pope to take their religious
and philanthropic foundations under his protection, to give his sanction to
important political transactions of all kinds, and to grant them his assistance
in extricating themselves from difficulties which more powerful neighbours or
other circumstances had brought upon them. Through the action of the princes of
the Hungarians, of the Slavs, and of the Normans, it had become no uncommon
spectacle to see kingdoms placed under the patronage and protection of the Holy
See. Even in the reign of Alexander himself, Ramiro I (king of Aragon, 1035-1063),
beset with political difficulties, made his kingdom “tributary to the Holy
See”, and in sign thereof paid it an annual tax. Then, was it not definitely
asserted in the supposed Donation of Constantine, to which public appeal had at
length begun to be regularly made, that the first Christian emperor had made
over the whole West to the Popes? It is only natural then to find the opinion
gaining ground that the West was subject to the suzerainty of the Popes, and
that lands newly acquired by Christians should be held of him in feudal tenure.
At any rate we shall find Gregory VII boldly
asserting that “the kingdom of Spain” was subject to St. Peter; while, to gain
the support of Alexander, Ebles of Rouci, before undertaking his expedition against the Spanish
Moors, agreed to hold his conquests “of St. Peter”.
Among those who suffered from the swords of the
Franks Alexander in Spain were the ever-unfortunate Jews. In Alexander,
however, they found a friend. Both bishops and counts were given to understand
that he highly disapproved of the ill-treatment which had been meted out to
them. It seems, too, that the Spanish bishops had also done their best for the
Jews, for their conduct is praised by the Pope. “We have just heard with
pleasure”, he wrote to them, “that you have protected the Jews who dwell in
your midst, preventing them from being killed by those who have entered Spain
against the Saracens. Through brutish ignorance or blind cupidity, these men
wished to kill those whom, it may be, the divine clemency had predestined to
eternal salvation. So the blessed Gregory forbade the killing of Jews,
pronouncing it impious to wish to slay those whom God had preserved in order
that, after the loss of their country and their liberty, they might, in lasting
penance for the wrong done by their fathers in shedding the Saviour's blood,
live dispersed throughout the world. The case of the Jews and the Saracens is
very different. War is justly waged against the latter, who attack the
Christians, and drive them from their homes and from their country. But the
former are everywhere ready to live in subjection”
St. Wulstan
Now that the royal houses of Spain and England
are united by marriage, transition in thought from the one country to the other
is easy. Alexander will probably ever be thought of by Englishmen as the Pope
who countenanced the invasion of this country by William the Conqueror. He had
had, however, other relations with the English before that event. We have
already seen that Nicholas II consented to grant the pallium to Ealred of York only on the condition that he resigned the
See of Worcester. To watch the due performance of this agreement and to
transact other business, two legates (Ermenfried,
bishop of Sion, and another) were dispatched to England by Nicholas’s
successor, Alexander (1062). King Edward received them with the profound
reverence with which he was wont to bestow on all that was Roman. Then, in
obedience to the command of the Pope, Ealred
accompanied them in a visitation which they made of nearly the whole of
England, and finally left them at Worcester in charge of Prior Wulstan, who
spared no pains “that they might experience the unbounded hospitality of the
English”. Through the representations of the legates, supported by those of the
archbishops of Canterbury and York and of Earl Harold, Wulstan himself was
elected to fill the see which Ealred had vacated. But
it was only when put under obedience to the Pope that the saint would accept
the bishopric. He was in due course consecrated at York by Ealred;
because, as we have already noticed, “the Roman Pope had interdicted Stigand of Canterbury from exercising the functions of his
office”.
The king, who, in his inimitable manner, was so
devoted to the customs of Rome, died on January 5, 1066, and for “forty weeks
and one day” was succeeded by Earl Harold. But if he became king de
facto, William, duke of Normandy, claimed to be king de jure, and at
once prepared to make good his claim by appealing both to the Pope and to arms.
The ambassadors he sent to Rome assured Alexander that the Confessor had
promised that he should succeed him, and that Earl Harold, who had now usurped
the throne, had already sworn fealty to the duke as his liege lord. When Gislebert, archdeacon of Lisieux, William’s chief envoy,
arrived in Rome, he did not find any one from England to oppose him. For Harold
had neglected to send ambassadors thither to justify his pretensions, “either
because he was proud by nature, or distrusted his cause; or because he feared
that his messengers would be obstructed by William and his partisans, who beset
every port”. He did not, however, stand in want of friends, and a fair hearing
was given to the question. But, unfortunately for Harold, his case was opposed
by Hildebrand. It was to no purpose that some pointed out that the expedition
would cause great bloodshed. Hildebrand’s motto was fiat justitia, ruat coelum; and with the prevailing notions of feudal
equity, he had no difficulty in showing that Harold was William’s liegeman and
must submit to him. The debate finished by the Pope’s encouraging the Norman
duke boldly to take up arms against the perjured Saxon, and sending him a
banner of St. Peter.
Strong in the papal approval of his enterprise,
William had no difficulty in raising an army for the invasion of England. When
his arms had been crowned with success, and the last Anglo-Saxon king had
fallen on the field of Senlac, he displayed his appreciation of what the Pope’s
decision had done for him. He sent to Alexander untold gold and silver,
ornaments “which would have been reckoned splendid even at Constantinople”, and
Harold’s great standard with the figure of an armed man woven upon it in gold.
Naturally gratified by this display of the
Conqueror’s goodwill, the Pope took occasion to ask for the renewed payment of
Peter’s Pence, as the troubles consequent on the death of Edward the Confessor
had resulted in a suspension of its collection. In the fragment of the letter
in which this request is made, Alexander makes a statement which we shall find
more strongly urged by Gregory VII, and firmly contradicted by William. “Your Prudence”,
wrote the Pope, “is aware that, from the time when the name of Christ was first
made known in England, that kingdom remained under the protection and patronage
of the Prince of the Apostles, till certain men, imitating the pride of their
father the devil, broke the bond of God, and turned the English away from the
path of truth ... As you well know, whilst the English were faithful, in order
to show their religious devotedness, they were accustomed to pay an annual
charge to the Apostolic See. Of this money, part went to the service of those
attached to the Church of St. Mary which is called the School of the English,
and part to the Roman Pontiff”.
William, it would seem, made no difficulty in
agreeing to pay the Peter’s Pence which had been paid by Edward the Confessor,
and at the same time asked the Pope to send legates solemnly to crown him
again, and to help him to settle the affairs of the Church in England; for his
original coronation by Ealred of York had been
anything but auspicious. By the year 1069 he had become really master of
England. He wished, therefore, to have the sanction of the Pope for the
completion of his undertaking, as for its commencement. Alexander, accordingly,
dispatched to England Ermenfried, bishop of Sion (Sitten), a man already acquainted with the affairs of this
country, and two cardinals.
Received by William as angels of God, their
first act was to confirm the Conqueror’s position as king of England by
solemnly crowning him at Winchester (Easter 1070). They then proceeded to help
him in dealing with the Church. As no little of the opposition which he had
encountered in his efforts to render the country completely submissive to him
had been brought about by churchmen, he made it his policy “to deprive of their
ecclesiastical positions as many of the English as possible, and to fill up
their places with men of his own nation, in order to confirm his power in a
kingdom which he had but recently acquired”. Besides, the Conqueror was a man
who wished to be obeyed in matters spiritual as well as temporal. However, as
he was really anxious to have the Church holy, and endeavoured to appoint pious
and learned men to bishoprics and abbacies, speaking generally, more good than
harm was the immediate result at least of his arbitrary conduct, for “he was
mild to those good men who loved God, and beyond all bounds stark to those men
who withstood his will”. And there is no doubt that the action of the Normans
on the Church in England was greatly to its benefit. It put new life into its
dry and decaying bones. This much is allowed even by William of Malmesbury. The Normans, he says, “revived by their Coming
the observances of religion which in England were everywhere grown lifeless.
You might see churches rise in every village, and monasteries in the towns and
cities, built after a style unknown before, and you might behold the country
flourishing with renovated rites”.
After William’s coronation by the papal
legates, “at his command and by consent of Pope Alexander, a great council was
holden at Winchester ... In this council Stigand,
archbishop of Canterbury, was degraded on three grounds: because he was
unlawfully holding the bishopric of Winchester, together with his own
archbishopric, and because during the life of Archbishop Robert he had not only
taken possession of the archbishopric, but for some time during the celebration
of Mass had worn his pallium, which had been left at Canterbury after his
violent and unjust banishment from England, and because he had afterwards
received the pallium from Benedict, who had been excommunicated by the Holy
Roman Church for having simoniacally obtained
possession of the Apostolic See”. For Stigand, whom
the Conqueror had hitherto treated with diplomatic respect, and for the other
bishops and abbots who were deposed at this and at a subsequent synod held in
the following month (May), nothing can be said. They deserved their fate. And
in the case of Stigand in particular, it must be
borne in mind that he had been already condemned by the Holy See. For “nineteen
years had he remained in his obstinacy of heart”, and during that period no
fewer than five Popes, from St. Leo IX, had sent their legates into England to
deal with that recalcitrant prelate. But in some of the depositions decreed by
these synods, justice was not always done. Among others who were thus
unwarrantably driven from their sees even into dungeons was Egelric
or Alric, bishop of Chichester.
The unjust deposition of bishops, however,
could not be tolerated by the Pope, and in 1071 a letter reached William on
behalf from Alexander in which he pleaded for the oppressed in bishop of
general, and for Alric in particular. After praising
the king for his zeal against simony and for his love for the liberties of the
Church, and reminding him that the crown was only given to those who persevered
to the end, he exhorted him to adorn the churches of Christ with sound
regulations, to govern his kingdom with justice, and mercifully to protect from
injuries ecclesiastical persons, widows, orphans, and the oppressed generally.
To this end he is to follow the counsels of Archbishop Lanfranc, “one of the
first sons of the Roman Church”. “Moreover, we wish to inform your eminence
that the case of Alric, formerly bishop of
Chichester, and deposed by our legates, does not seem to us to have been
properly discussed. Accordingly, in accordance with the canons, we have decided
that he must first be restored, and then have his case carefully re-examined by
our brother, Archbishop Lanfranc ... In deciding causes he will represent us,
so that whatever just decisions he shall form shall be held to be final, as
though defined by us.” This letter was brought by Lanfranc from Rome, whither,
in company with Thomas, archbishop of York, he had gone for his pallium. Certain,
it is that for some time it produced no effect; for, somewhat later, we find
Alexander asking Lanfranc if the continuance of the captivity of the bishop was
due to his negligence or to the disobedience of the king. Whether or not the
Pope’s remonstrances were finally hearkened to or not, does not appear to be
recorded. What evidence there is seems to show that they were not.
Lanfranc had written to Rome to request that
the pallium might be sent to him; but he was politely informed by Hildebrand
that the old rule must be observed, and that he must come in person to receive
it; that if an exception could be made for any one, it should be made for him,
but that it could not; and that besides the Holy See wished to consult him on
various matters.
Arrived in Rome with Thomas of
York and Remigius of Lincoln, he was received most cordially by the Pope, not
merely as an archbishop of an important see, as the learned instructor of many
of his relations, and as his own master, but as a great and holy man, and as
the champion of the Church against the heretic Berengarius. When he came before
Alexander, the Pontiff rose from his seat to greet him, not because, as he said,
he was an archbishop, but because he had been his master. “And now”, continued
the Pope, “that I have given its due to honour, do you pay what is owing to
justice, and, like all archbishops, prostrate yourself at the feet of the vicar
of St. Peter”. Then with his own hand did he put round the archbishop’s neck
his own pallium, afterwards presenting him with another from the confession of
St. Peter in the usual manner.
But the reception accorded by the Pope to
Thomas and Remigius was very different. They were deprived of the emblems of
their episcopal office, of their croziers and rings, because the one was the
son of a priest, and the latter was judged to have purchased his bishopric from
William by the assistance he had supplied him in his invasion of England.
However, as Lanfranc interceded for them, the Pope bade him act towards them as
he thought fit. They were at once reinvested.
This act of kindness on the part of Lanfranc
did not prevent Thomas of York from appealing to the Pope against the claim for
precedence set up by the archbishop of Canterbury. According to Malmesbury, he resisted Lanfranc’s demand for an oath of
obedience because, being a stranger, he did not understand the customs of
England. Although Lanfranc supported his pretensions “with strong sayings”,
Alexander would not settle the matter himself, but decided that it must be
referred for final judgment to the united bench of the bishops and abbots of
England.
Consequently, on Lanfranc’s return a council
was called at Windsor “by the command of Pope Alexander, and the permission of
King William”, and it was decided that the Church of York was subject to that
of Canterbury, and that the archbishop of York was to take an oath of canonical
obedience to him of Canterbury. The council was overcome by the logical
eloquence of Lanfranc. “When our Lord and Saviour”, he contended, “said to St.
Peter, ‘Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church’ etc., He
might, had it so pleased Him, have added, ‘the like power I grant to thy successors’.
But the omission of such words in no wise diminishes the dignity of the
successors of that apostle ... Do you advance anything in opposition to this?
It is impressed on the consciences of all Christians that, no less than if the
acts were those of St. Peter himself, they should tremble when his successors
threaten, and reverently rejoice when they show themselves serene. And then
only is the arrangement of any ecclesiastical matters ratified and binding,
when the successors of St. Peter have given it their sanction. And what causes
this but the power of divine grace diffused through the Lord Jesus from St.
Peter among his vicars”. “As Christ”, continued the southern metropolitan,
“said to all the bishops of Rome what he said to Peter, so what Gregory (the
Great) said to all the successors of Augustine he said in the person of
Augustine, hence it is that as Canterbury is subject to Rome because it
received its faith from it, so let York be subject to Canterbury, which sent
its preachers to it”
As soon as the council was closed, Lanfranc,
“bishop Lanfranc of the holy Church of Canterbury”, at once dispatched a letter
“to the Lord Pope Alexander, supreme guardian of the whole Christian religion,
with all subjection and obedience, in which he gave him an account of what had
been done in the council summoned by his authority”.
The history of Bede, “a priest of the Church of
York and the doctor of the English”, had been brought before the assembly, and
from it extracts had been read which proved that, from the time of the
conversion of the English to the days of Bede himself, Lanfranc’s predecessors”
had had the primacy over the Church of York, over the whole island which is
called Britain, and over Ireland”. Some of the bishops of the sees over which Thomas of York claimed jurisdiction had
even, “with the authority of the Roman See”, been deposed by archbishops of
Canterbury. Councils too had proclaimed the primacy of that see. “Finally, as
the very core and foundation of the whole argument were adduced the letters and
privileges of your predecessors, Gregory, Boniface, Honorius, Vitalian, Sergius, Gregory, Leo, and John, which, at different times
on diverse topics, were sent to the archbishops of Canterbury and to the kings
of the English. The authentic letters and their copies which had been sent by
other Pontiffs were burnt in the fire which destroyed our Church four years
ago”.
Along with this letter, the archbishop
forwarded another to Hildebrand, whom he spoke of as the honour and support of
the Church. He informed him that he had sent to the Pope an account of the
synod, and begged him, with his accustomed kindness, to read it over most
carefully.
That Alexander confirmed the decision of the
council at Windsor is clear from the fact of his afterwards calling the Church
of Canterbury “the metropolitan see of all Britain”. The letter which contained
this phrase was written to Lanfranc, because the Pope had been informed “by
certain people from England” that some of the clergy, seeking the aid of the
secular power, were endeavouring, on the pretext of a relaxation of discipline,
to expel the monks not merely from St. Saviour’s Church in Canterbury, but from
every episcopal see.
To this new party Lanfranc had offered
effective opposition; but, lest it might prevail after his death, he appealed
for the support “of the authority of the Roman and Apostolic See”, particularly
with regard to the monks of Canterbury. The result of his appeal was the letter
just quoted, in which Alexander renewed the decrees of St. Gregory the Great
and Boniface IV in favour of the monks, and “in the name of the Apostles” repeated
the anathemas they had pronounced against such as contravened their decrees.
If to what has now been told of William’s
dealings with the Holy See be added his requests for its confirmation of his
religious foundations, it will be an obvious conclusion that he acknowledged,
in theory at least, its spiritual supremacy over the whole Church, and so over
himself and his people. But at the same time many of his acts show not merely
that he understood that the spiritual supremacy of the Pope was one thing and
his temporal supremacy quite another, but also that his practice was often not
logically consistent with a proper acknowledgment of the Pope’s spiritual power.
Without ever going to the length of regarding himself as the spiritual head of
the Church either in Normandy or in England, he would not brook interference
with his will, whether in matters spiritual or temporal. St. Anselm’s
biographer, Eadmer, well sums up this phase of the
stark conqueror’s character: “All things, human and divine, were dependent on
his will. Briefly to explain this, I will set down some of the novelties which
he introduced into England. ... He would not suffer any one throughout all his
dominions to acknowledge the duly constituted bishop of Rome as Pope, unless he
sanctioned the submission, nor to receive his letters unless they had
previously been submitted to him. Nor would he permit the archbishop of
Canterbury, when presiding in council over the bishops of the province, to
issue any synodal decrees which did not meet with his approval, and had not
been first laid down by him. And as little would he allow, without his express
sanction, any of his barons or ministers to be accused by a bishop of adultery
… or of any capital offence, or to be bound by any ecclesiastical penalty”.
Norway, Denmark.
The fact that, after having continued for some
three hundred years, the terrible Viking expeditions came to an end during the
reign of Alexander, is one proof that Christianity had at length begun to take
a firm hold of the Scandinavian countries. And, despite immense difficulties,
it was at this period bringing forth exceptionally good fruit in Norway; for
the men of that country “had learnt to love peace and truth, and were now
content with their poverty, nay, were ready to give what they had got, and no
longer, as formerly, to gather in what they had not sown”. This change in the
character and habits of the Norwegians had been brought about especially by
missionaries from England. It is only natural then to find them disposed to turn
towards this country in their religious needs.
As we have already seen, ecclesiastical
jurisdiction over all the countries of the extreme north of Europe had been
conceded to the See of Bremen. And the famous Adalbert, its occupant at this
time, “relying on the authority of the Roman Pope”, was throwing himself with
great ardour into the work of organizing the Church in his vast archbishopric.
For Denmark, Norway, Sweden, the Orkneys and Ireland, he consecrated no fewer
than twenty bishops, in some cases “even against the will of princes”."
One of the kings who gave Adalbert trouble was the fierce Harold Hardrada, who
from 1047 to kept a heavy hand on Norway, and “extended his bloody rule even to
Ireland”. The archbishop was especially annoyed that he sent the bishops of his
country to be consecrated in Gaul or in England, whereas the Pope had bestowed
the right of their consecration upon himself. He accordingly sent an embassy to
protest against the king’s action. But the haughty monarch drove the legates
from his presence in a fury, declaring, “The only archbishop or ruler of any
kind that I know in Norway is Harold”.
Adalbert turned to the Pope for support, and
Alexander at once dispatched a letter to Harold, “king of the Northmen”.
“Because you are still untrained in the faith, and walk somewhat haltingly in
the way of ecclesiastical discipline, it behoves us, to whom has been committed
the rule of the whole Church, frequently to admonish you. But inasmuch as
distance prevents us from doing this in person, know that we have entrusted the
doing of it to Adalbert, the archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, our vicar. Now the
aforesaid venerable archbishop, our legate, has complained to us that, in
contravention of the Roman privileges which have been granted to his church and
to himself, the bishops of your province have either not been consecrated at
all, or have been simoniacally, and so wrongfully
consecrated in England or in Gaul. Hence by virtue of the authority of the
apostles Peter and Paul, as is your duty to show respectful reverence to the
Apostolic See, so we exhort you and your bishops to display proper submission
to the venerable archbishop who is acting in our stead”
This letter probably produced very little
effect on the savage ruler of Norway. However, Adalbert managed to consecrate
two bishops for his country, and, in one way or another, to secure some promise
of obedience from those who were consecrated for it elsewhere. And when in 1066
Hardrada obtained the seven feet of land for a grave promised him by Harold of
England, Christianity was able to make more regular progress under his son Olaf
Kyrre, or the Peaceable.
Whilst Hardrada was ruling, or oppressing,
Norway, the southern Scandinavian kingdom (Denmark) was under the dominion of
Sweyn (or Svend) II, Estrithson
(1047-1076), of whom mention has been made already. He was a man of very
different character from the bellicose and sanguinary Harold. If he was a slave
to incontinence, he was “the most illustrious among the barbarian kings ... and
was adorned with many virtues”. Among Sweyn’s good qualities, Adam of Bremen
specifies his learning, his liberality, and his zeal for the propagation of
Christianity. It was from his “truthful and charming narrative that the
industrious canon gathered a large portion of the matter for his little book”.
The zeal of Sweyn for the spread of the gospel was surpassed by “our
archbishop”, as Adam loves to call the “magnificent” Adalbert. “In a more
lordly style than his predecessors, he extended his archiepiscopal powers among
the outlying nations and at one time formed the design of making a visitation
of all the North, i.e., of Denmark, Sweden, Norway, the Orkneys, and even of
Iceland, the extremity of the earth”. But as he was advised that in the then
state of Christianity in those parts such a plan was not feasible, “relying on
the authority of the Roman Pope, and trusting to the ready help of the king of
the Danes, he wished, with his wonted splendid ideas, to hold a council of all
the bishops of the North”. Finding, however, that some of the northern bishops
were not disposed to recognize his authority, he appealed for the support of
the Pope. By way of response, “Alexander, servant of the servants of God”, sent
a letter wishing health and the apostolic benediction “to the bishops in
Denmark in communion with the Apostolic See and our vicar”. They are commanded
to do their best to induce “Edbert, bishop of the Faroe
Islands”, against whom various charges are made, to come up for trial to the
synod to which Adalbert had in vain often summoned him. By another letter Sweyn
and his people are exhorted not to communicate with Edbert
until he makes satisfaction to the Pope’s vicar. At the same time, with a view
doubtless to keeping Adalbert in his place, Alexander notified the bishops of
Denmark “that no archbishop nor patriarch could canonically depose a bishop
without a previous sentence of the Apostolic See”.
From a fragment of another letter of Alexander
addressed to Sweyn which has come down to us, we gather that, even before this
time, the Danes had been in the habit of paying Peter’s Pence. The Pope begged
Sweyn, for reasons with which we are already familiar, to cause his offering to
be placed not on the altar of St. Peter, but “in our hands or in those of our
successors, that more certain cognizance may be taken of it”.
Croatia
On the east of the Adriatic is a province of
the Hungarian Empire which bears the name of Dalmatia. This district, with its
broken coast-line, its many islands lying parallel to its shores, its deep
gulfs, narrow channels, rapid currents, and sunken rocks, is almost identical
in area with that which was known to the Romans under the same name in the days
of our Lord. From the time when, during the Roman Empire (fourth century), the
province of Dalmatia included, besides the modern province, Herzegovina and
parts of Bosnia and Montenegro, and its destinies were directed by a perfectissimus president acting under the Praetorian
prefect of Italy, it has been the battle-ground of many nations, and has known
many masters. Soon after Gregory I was Pope (590-604), it appears to have been
governed by a duke who was dependent upon the Exarch of Ravenna; and it was in
the century in which that great Pope first saw the light that Slavs began to
make inroads into it. On the authority of the Emperor Constantine Porphyrogenitus,
it used to be said that the Greek emperors employed the Avars to drive out these
marauding Slavs, but had to use other Slavs, viz. the Chrobati,
the present inhabitants of the country, to subdue the Avars. Now, however, it
seems to be held that the first Slav invaders were subdued by other branches of
the Slavonic family, the Croatians and Serbs, acting on their own behalf. The
country occupied by the Croatians lay for the most part between two tributaries
of the Save, the Kulpa and the Verbas,
and included, besides the present Croatia, part of Bosnia, and northern
Dalmatia down to the river Cetina.
For a while the Chrobati
or Croatians, and the conquered Slavs of Dalmatia were content to acknowledge
the supremacy of the emperors of Constantinople, and during that time they
appear to have begun to embrace the faith of Christ. The ninth century,
however, saw independent Slavonic dukes of the Croatians, whose power, as we
have seen, extended over northern Dalmatia.
But during the first few centuries of the
history of the Croatians, the political situation was complicated by the fact
that several of the coast towns and islands of Dalmatia contrived to resist the
power of the Slavs, and remained more than nominally subject to the Basileus at
Constantinople. For a season too, about the beginning of the ninth century, the
Franks exercised some authority in Croatia. In the course of the eleventh
century, Venice began seriously to interfere with the designs of the Croatians,
taking possession of such places as her ships could approach. However, in the
midst of the darkness of early Croatian history, we find that the dukes who had
won independence in the ninth century began, in the course of the tenth
century, to call themselves kings. The most famous of these Croatian kings, Cresimir II, or Cresimir Peter,
as he generally styles himself (1058-1073), took the title of king of the
Croatians and Dalmatians. During his reign and that of his father, Stephen I
(1035-1058), communications with Rome were frequent, and records of them have
been preserved by authentic letters of the Popes, and by the narratives, more
or less confused, of the presbyter of Dioclea (in the
second half of the twelfth century), and of Thomas, the archdeacon of Spalato
(or Spalatro).
The invasions of the Slavs into the Balkan
peninsula had the effect of almost completely breaking up its ecclesiastical
organization throughout the greater part of the ancient civil dioceses of Illyricum,
Dacia, and Macedonia; and the province of Dalmatia was no exception to the
rule. When in 639 the Avars burnt Salona, the chief city of the Roman Empire in
Dalmatia, where it had its arsenals for weapons, its weaving-houses, its
dye-houses, and its storehouses, and where the Roman Church had its chief see in
Dalmatia, the remnant of the inhabitants ultimately took refuge in the enormous
and splendid palace of the Emperor Diocletian at Spalato, only a few miles
away. Here for many years they held out against the barbarians, and here
founded the modern city of Spalato. Through this harbour of refuge the Popes
contrived to keep in touch with Dalmatia. About the year 650 the reigning
Pontiff sent a legate, John of Ravenna, to the shores of the Adriatic with
instructions to reorganize the Christians throughout Croatia and Dalmatia.
Promptly elected their archbishop by the people of Spalato, John was consecrated
by the Pope, and obtained for Spalato all the privileges that had belonged to
the Church of Salona. John appears to have been a model bishop (d. 680).
“He traversed Dalmatia and Sclavonia, restoring
churches, consecrating bishops, forming their dioceses, and gradually
attracting the barbarians to the Catholic faith”.
After giving us this account of the revival of
Catholicity in Dalmatia, the worthy archdeacon of Salona proceeds to inform us
that “all the bishops" of Dalmatia, both north and south of the Cetina, obeyed the archbishop of Salona-Spalato”. With the
conversion of the Slavs to Christianity other bishoprics besides those of
Dalmatia were established among them. But in the course of the century
following that in which the Popes revived the hierarchy of Dalmatia, the
iconoclastic emperor, Leo the Isaurian, forcibly withdrew the countries east of
the Adriatic from the jurisdiction of Rome. In the ninth and tenth centuries,
however, as the Slavonic chiefs began more and more to assert their civil independence
of the Basileus at Constantinople, they turned more and more to Rome for
ecclesiastical guidance. Various Popes, such as John VIII and John X, were in
frequent communication with them during that period.
Whilst the bonds, never very strong, which
united the Slavs with the eastern Roman Empire gradually became slacker, the
cleavage between their different branches grew more pronounced. This caused the
Popes to have to modify the ecclesiastical hierarchy which had relations with
them, and we shall see Dioclea-Antivari cut off from
Salona-Spalato to please the Servians, and later (c.
1145) Zara, in the north of Dalmatia, made into a metropolitical see to satisfy
the Venetians. The sovereign Pontiffs were also called upon to intervene in the
disputes which arose concerning the language in which the Church’s liturgy was
to be said. Besides the natural wish on the part of the Popes to favour the use
of the Latin language in order to deepen the sense of Christian unity, there
were in its favour the desires of those places whither the Roman fugitives from
all parts of Illyria had concentrated, such as Zara, Veglia,
Arbe, Spalato, etc. “In these cities, despite all the
Slavonic incursions, Latin, and later Italian, always remained the official
language; it was also the language of the people all down the coast”. On the
other hand, the Slavs were not unnaturally anxious to have the liturgy in
Slavonic. The questions, then, of language, reform, and metropolitical
jurisdiction in the Slavonic countries that touched the Adriatic occupied the
attention of the Popes for many centuries.
About the year 1045 there ascended the
arch-episcopal throne of Salona-Spalato a man of the same character as sat on
many another episcopal throne in the first half of the eleventh century—a man
of a powerful noble family who thought that right which he wanted to do. “He
had a wife and children like a layman, and kept them in the archiepiscopal
palace, so that his residence for ever resounded with the wailings of children
and the shrill voices of servant-maids”, says the indignant archdeacon of
Salona. Occupied, too, with worldly affairs, he had very little time left for
spiritual duties. Pope Leo IX was not the man to tolerate such “enormities”. He
dispatched a legate to Salona, “a very prudent man”, John by name, perhaps
John, bishop of Porto. Summoned before a synod, Dabralis,
for such was the archbishop’s name, urged that in taking a wife he was simply
following the custom of the Oriental Church. “Regarding these excuses as of no
account, the legate by apostolic authority definitely deposed him from his
see”.
Other legates of Leo’s successors followed John
in the work of introducing law and order into the Church of the Croatians.
Among the smaller kingdoms with which Alexander
also was in regular communication was Dalmatia. The call for reform raised by
the Pope was responded to in that country, but the effort to meet it was
complicated by the question of the use of the Slavonic language in the liturgy.
Apparently in the year 1060, Mainard, bishop of Silva
Candida, had been sent to Dalmatia by Nicholas II to deal with various
questions of reform. In conjunction with John IV, archbishop of Spalato, he
caused various decrees to be passed relative to clerical continency,
discipline, and immunity. It was also decided that “Slavs ignorant of Latin
were not to be ordained”, and, as we learn from the archdeacon of Spalato, that
the divine mysteries were not to be celebrated in the Slavonic tongue, but only
in Latin or Greek. These decrees were confirmed both by Nicholas II and by
Alexander (1062), in a letter addressed to the king (Peter Cresimir)
and bishops of Dalmatia.
As usual, there was no trouble about the more
serious questions; but when, continues Thomas, the decrees about the liturgy
had been confirmed by the Apostolic See, all the Slav priests were much
troubled, for their churches were closed, and they themselves suspended. They,
therefore, appealed to the Pope, who, according to the archdeacon, replied to
them as follows: “Know, my children, that I have often heard much said in
favour of what the Goths request; but because this liturgy was framed by
Arians, I cannot depart from the tradition of my predecessors, nor give the
Slavs leave to celebrate the divine mysteries in their own language”. If the Spalatan, who was not born till one hundred and forty years
after this, has correctly preserved the words of Alexander, there must have
reigned a strange ignorance at Rome which could identify SS. Cyril and
Methodius with Arian heretics, unless, indeed, the Pope is simply referring to
the Glagolitic characters in which the liturgy was written and of which the
origin is still obscure. This decision of Alexander did not settle the
question, nor did the action of the legate whom he sent “to extirpate the
unspeakable schism”.
In the beginning of the eleventh century Venice
had obtained some authority over Dalmatia; and although Peter Cresimir, who became king of Croatia in 1052, took the
additional title of “king of Dalmatia”, and replaced Venetian influence over
most of it by his own, the republic was still master of a portion of the country
even during Peter’s reign. Where Venice held sway, the use of the Slavonic
tongue in the liturgy was suppressed, but it was preserved in the other parts
of the country; and, as we have already noticed, was finally approved by
Innocent IV (1248).
In the reorganization of the provinces of the
Roman Empire effected by Diocletian towards the close of the third century,
Dalmatia was divided into two provinces, into Dalmatia proper and Praevalitana. Of this latter province, which only just
touched the sea (Adriatic), the central portion was Zenta,
or the modern Montenegro, and its chief city from about the sixth century was Dioclea (or Doclea, now Duklia, a mass of ruins), situated between the rivers Zenta (or Zetta) and Moraka, just above their junction a
mile or two north of Podgoritza. In harmony with this
political partition, there were originally two ecclesiastical provinces, one
under the jurisdiction of the metropolitan of Salona-Spalato, and the other
under that of the archbishop of Dioclea. When, however,
Leo the Isaurian forcibly withdrew Illyricum from the western patriarchate, he
subjected Dioclea itself and other cities to the
jurisdiction of the metropolitan of Dyrrachium in Epirus Nova. But, as time
went on, Byzantine influence on the eastern shores of the Adriatic declined
before the advancing power of the Slavs, and Dioclea
was brought under the jurisdiction of the archbishop of Spalato. In the century
of which we are now writing, viz., the eleventh, Dalmatia was again divided for
ecclesiastical purposes into two provinces, and the metropolitan see of the
southern portion was fixed first at Antivari, and, as will be noticed later on,
afterwards at Ragusa. The cause of this re-establishment of the southern
province of Dalmatia is thus given by Archdeacon Thomas in his history of
Salona. In obeying the summons of its archbishop Dabralis
(10301045) to a council, four of the bishops of upper or southern Dalmatia
were drowned at sea. Thus deprived of their pastors, the people of the bereaved
dioceses petitioned the Pope to constitute a separate province for them, “as it
was dangerous for them to visit so remote a church”. Wherefore the Roman bishop
granted their request, freed all the bishops from Ragusa upwards from
subjection to the old metropolitical see (Salona-Spalato), and made them depend
on the new one of Antivari.
But it is believed that what the archdeacon
sets down as a cause was really only a pretext. The destruction of the
Bulgarian Empire, then the first non-Greek power in the Balkan peninsula, by
Basil II (Bulgaroctonus) in 1018, and his subsequent
occupation of Bosnia and upper Dalmatia, had not, however, led to the more
complete submission of their Slavonic inhabitants to Constantinople. Under the
leadership of a Servian Zhupan, Stephen Boitslav (or Dobroslav), the
Serbs defeated the Byzantines in a great battle close to Antivari in the
defiles of Jeni-bazaar. This took place during the reign of the unwarlike
emperor Constantine IX Monomachus, about the year 1043, and laid the foundation
of the Servian monarchy.
It was only to be expected that Boitslav would wish to have the bishops of Servia dependent
on one of themselves, and that, after throwing off the imperial yoke, he would
turn to Rome rather than to Constantinople for the establishment of a local
hierarchy. And as Dioclea had been destroyed during
the wars (1027), it was proposed to erect the new metropolitan see at Antivari
on the coast. Whether, then, the petition for a south Dalmatian or Servian
archbishopric proceeded from prince or people, it is certain that it was
granted by Rome.
In 1067 Alexander issued a bull to Peter, “the
venerable archbishop of Dioclea and Antivari”, in
which he decreed that his jurisdiction should extend over the sees of what then constituted the kingdom of Servia, and
over the monasteries therein, whether of Latins, Greeks, or Slavs: “in order
that you may know that all these form one church over which you are to have
episcopal control”. He, moreover, in accordance with custom, sent him the pallium,
and permitted him to have the cross carried before him “through Dalmatia and
Slavonia”, i.e., through Dalmatia south of Ragusa, and through the rest
of his archdiocese in Servia, etc.
But though, like their bitter enemies, the
Bulgarians, with whom to this day they have ever been at war, the Servians were very glad to turn to the Popes whenever their
patronage was of use to them, they finally, again like the Bulgarians, after
long playing off Constantinople against Rome, joined the Greek Church, but secured
an independent patriarch of their own. The Servian Church may be said to have
become thus definitely autocephalous under Stephen Dushan
(1336-1356), the most powerful ruler that Servia has ever known.
From the ninth century the Bohemians had been
to a greater or less extent dependent on their Teutonic neighbours; but the
princes of Bohemia very seldom lost an opportunity of striking a blow for
complete freedom from the yoke which ever galled them. Spytihniev
II (1055-1061) inherited from his father a fierce hatred of the Germans, and
drove them out of Bohemia, as though he were clearing his garden of nettles. To
strengthen his hand against them he turned, like so many other Slav princes, to
Rome, and begged Pope Nicholas II to grant him the insignia of a king, in order
that they might serve as a sign of his absolute independence. It is possible,
however, that his request may have been merely to hold his country of the Pope
instead of the emperor. At any rate, Cardinal Deusdedit
assures us that he found it recorded in a Lateran codex that Spytihniev was authorized by Pope Nicholas to wear a mitre,
“which is not wont to be bestowed on lay persons”, and that the prince promised
to pay him annually a sum of a hundred pounds of silver “as a tax”.
The curse of Bohemia was the ever-recurring
dissensions in the reigning family. Spytihniev was
succeeded by his brother Vratislav (1061-1092), who, among other reasons,
because he was rather well-disposed towards the Germans, was soon involved in a
long and bitter struggle with his brother Jaromir, and was through it drawn to
side with the empire in its war against the Papacy.
In accordance with a common custom, Jaromir,
the youngest of the five sons of Bracislav, had been
destined by his father for the Church, and to succeed Severus (d.
December 9, 1067) as archbishop of Prague. He had, therefore, been devoted to a
life of study; but when his brother Vratislav discovered that he had no taste
for either study or the Church, but wished to inherit some of the power of Spytihniev, he caused him to be ordained deacon by force.
But Jaromir, “despising the grace which had been given him by the imposition of
hands, put on the dress of a soldier, and fled with his followers to the duke
of Poland (Boleslaus II), and remained with him till
the death of Bishop Severus”.
No sooner had that taken place than Jaromir’s
two brothers, Conrad and Otho, summoned him from Poland, and bade him resume
the tonsure and his clerical attire, with a view to his succeeding the deceased
bishop. Despite the opposition of the crafty Vratislav, who wished to nominate
a German partisan of his own, Jaromir was elected by the clergy and people
(June 1068), was confirmed in his appointment by Henry IV of Germany, and,
changing his name to Gebehard, was consecrated.
Thus installed against his brother’s will, it
was not to be expected that he would live in harmony with him. Quarrels soon
broke out between them. Both parties turned to the Pope, who wrote to them over
and over again, begging them to live in peace with one another. He then, at the
request of the duke, sent legates to try to settle the matters in dispute
between them, and ended by excommunicating Jaromir.
The principal cause of trouble between the
brothers was connected with the bishopric of Moravia.
At the request of Vratislav, Severus of Prague
had agreed to a partition of his diocese. A new bishopric of Moravia was
established at Olomouci (Olmutz) in 1062, and a
certain John became its first incumbent. As a recompense for the concession, the
bishop of Prague was to receive a sum of money from the duke, and certain
properties in different parts of Bohemia. Unable, after four years and more had
passed in vain effort, to obtain from his brother either the money or the
suppression of the new diocese, the warlike Jaromir swore: “By God! I will
either unite the dioceses or lose both of them”. He accordingly paid John an
unexpected visit, and is credited with having maltreated him in the most
barbarous manner (1073).
Vratislav at once appealed to Rome on behalf of
the outraged bishop, and Pope Gregory replied by promptly dispatching legates
to Bohemia. But finding that Jaromir paid no heed to them, he ordered him to
present himself in Rome by April 13, 1074. Vratislav was also to come to Rome,
or to send John and some representatives. Jaromir duly presented himself before
the Pope, and, denying some of the charges urged against him, and offering
satisfaction for such as he admitted, gained Gregory’s goodwill. He was reinstated
in his see, and his brother was asked to restore what belonged to him. It was
further decided that the quarrel between the two bishops was to be settled in a
synod at which they were both to be present, and to which the duke was asked to
send delegates.
But no sooner had Jaromir returned to Bohemia,
than, making a false use of Gregory’s letters, he endeavoured to rob both his
brother and John. This conduct brought down upon him a severe letter from the
Pope, and a peremptory order to present himself along with John at the synod
already appointed. In due course the two bishops duly presented themselves
before the Pope, and a council assembled in the Lateran basilica (March 1075).
Fortunately for Jaromir, there was also present at this council “the most
powerful lady Matilda ... whose nod, as though she were their own sovereign,
the whole senatorial order obeyed, and with whose advice Pope Gregory himself
transacted all his business, both spiritual and temporal; for she was a most
wise counsellor, and in all its troubles and difficulties the greatest support
of the Roman Church”. According to Cosmas, she was in some way related to the
family of Jaromir, and saved him from being condemned by Gregory as absolutely
as he had been by Alexander. Though the Pope says nothing of this intercession
of the illustrious countess, he does tell us that Jaromir was pardoned by him,
and that, as he could not at the time arrive at the truth in the matter of the
disputed points between the two bishops, he ordered them to live at peace with
one another, each keeping half the property in litigation between them. He
fixed, however, a period of ten years during which either party might make
good what he believed to be his just claims.
The last mention of the two bishops made by
Gregory is in a letter in which he exhorts Vratislav to keep his dominions in
peace, and himself to live at peace with John and Jaromir.
Simony in the
church of Germany
If greed of power and gold on the part of the
bishop of Prague kept the Church of Bohemia in a state of unrest, similar
causes were producing a like result in the Church in Germany. The great bishops
of the empire had, for the most part, more in common with lay princes than with
churchmen. They were desirous of independence, whether of Pope or king. They
acknowledged, indeed, as we have seen in the case of Siegfried of Mainz, that
the Pope was their superior, and that with him lay the final decision of
important matters, but they strove to prevent them from being referred to him;
and in the struggle between the Papacy and the empire many of them were more
ready to side with the emperor than with the Pope. So far from co-operating
with the Popes in their efforts at reform, they resisted them. Guilty of simony
themselves, they were not likely to co-operate in an earnest effort to stamp it
out of the German Church. They imitated their temporal rather than their
spiritual ruler, for Henry IV was deeply stained with simony. It is true that
in a passing mood he acknowledged and deplored his guilt in this direction, but
his repentance was but transitory, his sin a habit. He was as reckless in the
manner in which he dealt with ecclesiastical appointments as in the way in
which he made or unmade the feudatories of the empire. With the utmost contempt
for proper legal procedure, and with a total disregard of consequences, he
wantonly deprived of his dukedom the powerful Saxon, Otho of Nordheim, duke of Bavaria, and gave it to Welf (or Guelf), the son of an Italian marquis, Azzo, and son-in-law of Otho himself. He was to live to rue
his heedless folly.
He lived to find out, also, that he could not
treat the Church with impunity. The efforts of the Popes to effect a
reformation of manners were telling upon the people, and they were not long
before they convinced both king and bishop that the laws of the Church must be
respected. Here we purpose, in proof of this, merely to give details of the
singularly dramatic case of the double abbey of Stablo-Malmedy,
both of which were some twenty miles south of Liege and Aix-la-Chapelle. Both Stablo, in the diocese of Liege, and Malmedy,
in that of Cologne, owed their foundations to Sigebert
II, acting under the advice of St. Remaclus (c. 651).
For a while the saint governed both monasteries, which came to be regarded as
one, and sometime after his death (c. 664) was recognized the patron-saint of Stabio.
Brusquely brushing aside all rights,
privileges, and precedents, King Henry gave the monastery of Malmedy to Archbishop Anno in 1063. The abbot of the twin
houses at once betook himself to Rome, and was well received by Alexander “and
by the consuls of the republic”. At his request, and by reason of his duty to
the universal Church, the Pope wrote a strong letter to Anno. Telling him that
he was surprised that a man of whom he had had such a good account should be
guilty of injustice, he bade him respect the rights of others. But Anno paid no
heed to the Pope’s words, nor to a promise of amendment which he made to the
Pope in person when he was humbled before him in the year 1068. Nor would he listen
to the king when he wished to undo the wrong of which he had been guilty. He
would not, he said, give up his possession if St. Remaclus
himself were to appear before him, and ask him to do so.
Not indeed in the manner conceived by Anno, but
the saint did appear before him, and, despite the obstinate archbishop,
obtained justice for his monks. Unable to obtain his rights from Pope or king,
the abbot had turned to God and his patron-saint and bethought him of a
striking scheme.
On the evening of Easter Day (May 8, 1071) the
king and queen and the great spiritual and temporal lords of the empire were
holding a grand state banquet at Liege. The hall in which they were sitting
feasting was brilliant with lights and the splendid dresses of the company.
Wine and wit, the fragrance of flowers and savoury viands were doing their
work, and the guests were in the highest spirits. Suddenly a low and melancholy
chant makes itself heard amid the noise and revelry; it rings louder and louder,
and bright cheeks grow pale, and laughter dies away on the lip, when a body of
dark-robed monks slowly enter the banqueting-hall, and solemnly set before the
king the massive shrine which contained the relics of St. Remaclus.
“Look on him, O king!” they exclaimed, “whom you have wronged. Return to him
what the world acknowledges to be his. Give him justice now, lest he seek it
against you from God”. Panic seized the whole assembly; the queen was in tears,
and the king was profoundly moved. “It is through you”, he cried to the archbishop,
“that this has fallen upon me”.
A scene of great disorder followed. Unmoved by
the entreaties of the king and the bishops, or by the objurgations of Anno, the
monks refused to remove the body of the saint till justice was done them.
Thereupon Henry and his guests hurriedly deserted the banqueting-hall, which
was immediately filled by a crowd of excited people crying out: “Why, O just
God, do you allow this injustice to be perpetrated upon the earth?”. Their
excitement became intense when the table on which the shrine of the saint had
been placed, giving way beneath its weight, broke a man's leg, which was seen
to be healed instantly by the intercession of the saint. The crowd grew in
numbers; miracles were worked all through the night. The king’s officers made a
vain attempt themselves to remove the shrine. It could not be stirred.
Thoroughly perturbed by all these events, Henry
at length restored to the monks the monastery which he had forced the reluctant
archbishop to return to him (May 9, 1071).
During the first few years of his reign,
Alexander witnessed two striking renunciations of high station, one in the
Church and one in the world. He was not long Pope before he received a request
from St. Peter Damian to be allowed to resign his See of Ostia. What Nicholas
had refused, Alexander might have granted at once but for the strenuous
opposition of Hildebrand. The archdeacon, who knew that the days were evil,
believed that it was the duty of all such as were able and willing to oppose
wrong not to abandon positions of importance, but to remain in the world, and
meet the powers of darkness face to face. Such, however, were not the views of
Damian, and he wrote a remarkable letter “to his most beloved the elect of the
Apostolic See, and to Hildebrand, the rod of Assur, ... who are the Apostolic
See, the Roman Church”. He declared himself ready to be put in prison if only
he were released from his office. “But perchance that smooth tyrant, who has
ever for me a sort of Neronian pity, who soothes me with blows, and, so to
speak, strokes me with an eagle’s talon, will break out into this querulous
complaint: ‘See, he seeks a place of refuge, and, under the pretext of doing
penance, would shun coming to Rome; by disobedience he would win leisure, and,
while others are in the thick of the fight, he would secure for himself an
inglorious repose. But to my holy Satan (adversary), I would answer in the
words of the sons of Reuben and Gad to their leader Moses: 'We ourselves will
go armed and ready for battle before the children of Israel, until we bring
them in unto their places ... But we will not seek anything beyond the Jordan,
because we have already our possession on the east side thereof' (Num. xxxii.
17 ff)”. Pleading his old age, the difficulties of ruling, and other reasons,
he concluded: “May He deliver the wretched Peter from the hands of Hildebrand,
at whose order Herod’s prison was thrown open for the great Peter”.
Hildebrand, however, was not in the least
disposed to entertain Damian’s wishes, and would seem to have expressed in no
uncertain voice his disapproval of the saint’s intentions, and to have induced
the Pope to accept his view of the situation. Accordingly, Damian wrote to
Hildebrand directly, and, after affectionately upbraiding him for the cooling
of his love for him, concluded by saying: “By these letters I return you the
bishopric which you gave me, and I cut off from myself all rights and power
which I have over it”. Whether Damian’s resignation was accepted is uncertain;
but, whether he henceforth ceased to act as bishop of Ostia or not, it is
certain that no other person was named its bishop till after the saint’s death
(1072).
In the year 1067 Rome, says the same saint, was
edified by seeing the Empress Agnes riding into the city on a wretched steed,
scarcely larger than a little ass, and clad in a miserable dark-coloured linen
garment. She had changed a crown for a veil, and fine purple for sackcloth, and
the hand which had grasped a sceptre clasped a prayer-book.
Bereft not only of power, but of the
guardianship of her son, whose dissolute courses she bitterly deplored, full of
grief for her share in the schism of Cadalous, the empress-mother conceived a
disgust for the world. She retired first to the abbey of Fructuaria
in Piedmont (1066), and then came to Rome to learn “the folly of the
fisherman.” Henceforth an ally of the Papacy, she spent her time till the day
of her death (1077) serving the poor of Christ. She was buried in the chapel of
St. Petronilla.
Some four years before the death of the lady,
whose repentance for the wrong she had done him he lived to see, Alexander II
closed in death his arduous struggle against the vices of the clergy, and the
naturally still greater ones of the laity. This ardent defender of the rights
of the Papacy—the source of consolation in the midst of the ills of life—this
uncompromising opponent of simony and clerical incontinence was buried in the
Lateran basilica near Sergius IV. Like several of his
predecessors, he had helped to prepare the way for Hildebrand, and has derived
no little of his renown from the cooperation of that master-spirit. Under his
guidance, to quote the words of Otto of Frising, “he
restored to her pristine liberty the Church, which had long been in a state of
servitude”.
ST. GREGORY VII.
A.D. 1073-1085.
I.
Hildebrand before
he becomes Pope
EMPERORS OF THE EAST.
Michael VII. (Ducas), 1067-1078.
Nicephorus III. (Botaniates), 1078-1081.
Alexius I. (Comnenus), 1081-1118.
The man whose genius, zeal, and piety were to
be so powerfully instrumental in effecting the greatest and most enduring
reformation of manners ever effected in Europe from within the Church itself
was, like most of the great men of the world, a man of the people.
In passing through what are now the Tuscan
malaria plains, through what may be called the Tuscan Maremma,
the train from Grosseto to Rome stops at the little port of Orbitello.
Not many miles inland from this once famous town is another, Soana (Sovana), which also in
days gone by held up its head among the cities of medieval Tuscany. Now it is
but a ruinous village in the fever-stricken valley of the Fiora.
Near it was the hamlet of Rovaco, and there,
apparently during the pontificate of Benedict VIII, and possibly in the year
1020, the wife of Bonizo gave birth to a son.
A writer who was himself inconvenienced by the
heat caused by the Gregorian reformation has told us that, when Hildebrand was archsubdeacon of the Roman Church he was seen by St. Leo
IX, with his cloak (cappa) all on fire, and flames issuing from it in
all directions. The saint thereon with prophetic soul exclaimed : “If ever you
are Pope, which God forbid, you will set the whole world in a blaze. The
parents too of the future archsubdeacon, as though
also forecasting his destiny, gave him a name, Hildebrand, of which one part at
least is indicative of fire, and which his friends decided to mean “a burning of
concupiscence”, and his enemies a “brand of hell” (Hoellebrand).
From the many legends connected with fire which
Paul found interwoven with the story of Hildebrand’s early years, he compared
him to the prophet Elias. Sparks of fire were, he says, often seen to spring
from his clothes, and on one occasion flame was observed to issue from his
head. Hildebrand himself is said to have seen fire coming from his mouth which
consumed the whole earth; and when, as Pope, he had on Maunday
Thursday consecrated the holy oils at the famous abbey of Nonantula,
they were suddenly ignited by a bright flame which fell from heaven. Finally,
appealing to the chronicles of venerable men, Bernied
assures us that Gregory extinguished by the sign of the cross a conflagration which
Henry IV had caused when he was besieging Rome, and which was driving their
defenders from the city walls.
Another pretty legend tells how, while still
ignorant of letters, the little Hildebrand, playing in his father’s workshop,
is said to have formed with the shavings he found there the words of the
Psalmist: · I will rule from sea to sea. (Ps. LXXI. 8).
Even if we include all the data of legend, very
little is known of Hildebrand till his coming to Rome with St. Leo IX. It would
appear that he was sent there, in the first instance, whilst still a child,
during the pontificate of John XIX, for we are told that he had been trained in
Rome under ten of his predecessors. And when in 1075 he wrote himself that he
had been living in Rome for twenty years under compulsion, we may suppose that,
bearing in mind his leaving Rome with Gregory VI, and his comparatively long
period of absence from the eternal city during the reign of St. Leo IX, he must
have been speaking of the second period of his practically continuous residence
therein, and of the compulsion put upon him by one Pope after another to attach
himself to the Roman Church. That he had indeed been brought up in Rome is
clear from his own words, as well as from those of others.
On the west of the now unfrequented Aventine
Hill, not far from the Tiber, the consul Alberic possessed
a house; for in the tenth century the Aventine was the aristocratic quarter.
Charmed by the virtues of St. Odo (879-942), the
great reforming abbot of Cluny, and its real founder, Alberic
gave him his house, and the monastery of St. Mary, now represented by the
Church of S. Maria Aventinense, became one of the
twenty abbeys of Rome. To the abbot of this monastery, who was his uncle, the
little Hildebrand was entrusted by his parents to be trained in learning and
virtue, and we are assured that he soon showed that he profited by the
instruction he received. Here, it would seem, he embraced the monastic
profession; here, in converse with the famous abbots who ruled the mother-house
of Cluny, and who in their visits to Rome took up their abode on the Aventine,
he imbibed the reforming spirit of that illustrious monastery, and here he laid
deep the foundations of those virtues and of that strength of character which
were to be so necessary for him in accomplishing the work that was in store for
him.
Fortunately, Hildebrand’s training was not
confined to the necessarily somewhat narrow groove of his monastery. His
promising parts caused him to be sent to the pontifical schola cantorum in the Lateran palace, where he came in
contact with many of the most distinguished youths in Rome, and with some of
its best masters; with men of the school of Pope Sylvester II, such as
Lawrence, archbishop of Amalfi, and John Gratian, afterwards Pope Gregory VI.
Of these men, the first was highly prated by those who knew him both for his
virtue and for his learning, especially for his mastery both of Greek and
Latin; and the second was distinguished for his chaste life, and generally
upright character.
So pleased was Gratian with the talents of his
pupil that when he became Pope he made him his capellanus. i.e., not his
chaplain in the modern sense of the term, but one of the palace
officials who were guardians of the fabrics of churches. In his capacity of capellanus
he became one of the guardians of the altar of St Peter.
When Gregory VI ascended the Throne of the
Fisher-man, Rome, reeling from the disorders of the pontificate of Benedict IX,
was in a state of anarchy. The sword of the robber and the dagger of the
assassin held the city in terror. The public revenues of the Papacy had been
seized by the nobility; its private resources had been filched or dissipated.
Pilgrims from other lands, who, even at the peril of destruction, longed to
offer their prayers at the tomb of the apostle, were waylaid; and if they
succeeded in escaping the barons of the Campagna, and the bandit nobles who
beset the forum, they became a prey to further horrors. Even over the very
bodies of the holy apostles and martyrs, even on the sacred altars, swords were
unsheathed, and the offerings of pilgrims, ere well laid out of their hands,
were snatched away and consumed in drunkenness and fornication.
Realizing the uselessness of trying to suppress
such flagrant abuses with words, Gregory authorised his capellanus to
put them down by the sword. He could not have addressed himself to a better
man. Ever on fire with a love of justice, and ever full of feeling for the poor
and the oppressed, the young monk studied the art of war, raised men and money,
and soon made the profligate nobility feel that there was a master among them.
By a display of wisdom and prudence above his years, he was not long in
acquiring the greatest influence with all classes of the community. And though
the reign of Gregory VI was but short, a good beginning of suppressing the barbarous
licence of the Roman feudal nobility was made during his pontificate by his
able and energetic capellanus. The worst violences
of the tenth century were not to return again; while the finances and civil
authority of the Popes began to give evidence of greater stability.
When, through the action of the council of Sutri, Gregory VI had to resign the Papacy, and to return
with the Emperor Henry into Germany, his faithful capellanus would not
leave his side. During the long, weary journey from the Tiber to the Rhine, the
condition of the Papacy, to which the congregation of Cluny was especially
loyal, must have largely occupied his thoughts. The pontificate of Benedict IX
had shown him to what it could be reduced by the petty tyranny of local nobles;
the council of Sutri had proved that it could fare
even worse at the hands of an imperial master. He had already begun the work of
freeing it from the former; but though with all his soul he longed to see it
once again no longer in slavery but in honour, he had little thought or
intention of himself striking the blows that were to break its fetters. Like
his great predecessor (St. Gregory I), who had enjoyed the peace of the cloister
before he became Pope, Hildebrand had no wish for anything but his monastery.
It was against his wish that he left it to be the adviser of Gregory VI, and to
accompany him across the Alps; and it was still more against his dearest wishes
that he left it to return again to Rome with St. Leo IX.
The unfortunate Gregory VI did not long survive
his exile at Cologne. And although by his deeds and by his sermons his capellanus,
Hildebrand, had made a profound impression upon the Emperor Henry III, who
treated him with the greatest consideration, he did not remain with him after
the death of his master, but betook himself to Cluny, the mother-house of his
monastery on the Aventine. There for a few months, during the course of the year
1048, he tasted again of that monastic peace he loved so well. This was whilst
St. Odilo, who had known him at Rome, was still
abbot, and whilst the high-born St. Hugh, who was to succeed to the abbacy in
1049, was grand-prior. A quasi-contemporary, Rainald,
abbot of Vezelay, and afterwards archbishop of Lyons (d.
1129), has left us a picture of the young Hildebrand assisting at a chapter
held at Cluny by the grand-prior, who was a few years younger than himself, and
to whom he was to be attached in the closest bonds of friendship all the days
of his life. It was an all-engrossing love of justice, which they saw
everywhere so outraged, that drew these two souls together.
Business on behalf of his monastery took Prior
Hugh to the imperial court, and, knowing that Hildebrand stood well with the
emperor, he caused the young Italian monk to go with him. It was at Worms that
Hildebrand met Bruno of Toul; there that his destiny was decided, for there he
agreed to return to Rome.
It is hoped that the foregoing narrative has
told at sufficient length the rise of Hildebrand under St. Leo IX and his
successors, and how far he succeeded, as their adviser and agent, in
reaffirming the authority and prestige of the Papacy both at home and abroad.
We have noted his being made subdeacon of the Roman Church by St. Leo IX, and
archdeacon by Nicholas II; we have beheld him, as director of St. Paul’s
outside-the-walls, making it as bright with monastic virtue as with marble and
the precious metals; we have seen from his signature attached to various bulls
that he belonged to the papal chancellary since the
days of Pope Victor; we have accompanied him on his missions of reform to
France, and on his diplomatic journeys to the German Court, so to arrange the
papal elections that they should be freed from imperial control; and we have
watched the growth of law and order in Rome through his vigorous
administration. There was much of the character of Oliver Cromwell in the young
Hildebrand. No man ever trusted more in God; and at the same time no man ever
less despised the power of the sword; for he believed it was the duty of the
rulers not to bear the sword in vain. His soldiers, whom he sometimes
accompanied in person, curbed to some extent at least the tyranny of the Roman
nobles, and the nations once again crowded to the tomb of the Apostles. For
much of what was accomplished under Leo IX and his successors, Hildebrand
received due credit; for if some allotted all the praise to those who were at
the head of the Church and State in Rome, the enlightened and the thoughtful
knew from whom proceeded the wisdom that devised the reforms, and the vigour
which carried them out. To them he was the eye of the Papacy, the shield of the
Roman Church, the pillar of the Apostolic See. They declared that the
archdeacon’s voice had more power than the soldiers of Julius Caesar, and that
Rome owed more to him than to the Scipios. “If I obey
the Lord Pope”, said St. Peter Damian, “still more do I obey the Lord of the
Pope”. Nor was the saint alone in this, for the Popes themselves obeyed the
dark little monk on whom they leaned. He was the confidant of St. Leo IX, who
discussed all important matters with him; and he was equally trusted by Popes
Nicholas and Alexander.
Hence, if St. Peter Damian, in writing to those
Pontiffs, did not hesitate sometimes to couple with their names that of
“Hildebrand the venerable archdeacon”, so they in their turn had no hesitation
in joining his name to their own when they sent their greetings to
distinguished personages. Hildebrand himself too, when Pope, occasionally lets
fall in his correspondence a few words which throw out in the clearest light
the fact of his great influence in the councils of the Holy See. Surely no man
had ever served a better apprenticeship to the Papacy.
Whilst Alexander lay dying,
his archdeacon made unobtrusive but effective preparations to secure a
peaceable and free election after his death. He caused not only the regular
fortifications of Rome, its walls, its gates, and its bridges, but also such
monuments of antiquity as the old triumphal arches which the Roman nobles had
long been using as castles, to be occupied by soldiers. So well arranged were
his precautionary measures that, when the Pope died (April 21), the Roman
people, “contrary to the custom”, remained perfectly quiet, and entrusted to
Hildebrand the task of carrying out the details for the election of his
successor. The archdeacon at once proclaimed the usual three days’ prayer and
fast which had to precede a papal election. On the following day he assisted at
the funeral obsequies of Alexander in the Church of St. John Lateran, to which
in life the deceased Pontiff had been a great benefactor.
Suddenly, in the midst of the
hush of the solemn funeral service, a cry arose : “Hildebrand bishop”. It was
at once taken up by the vast assembly of clergy and people that filled the
great basilica, and, anticipating the archdeacon in his efforts to reach the
ambo and calm the excited multitude, Cardinal Hugo Candidus,
who was afterwards to betray him, fanned the flame of the people’s desires. “My
brethren, you know that from the days of Pope Leo it is Hildebrand who has
exalted the Holy Roman Church, and freed the city. Since, then, we cannot have
a better Pope, or even so good a one, we bishops and cardinals elect him to
reign over us, who has received sacred orders in our midst, and who is known
and approved by all of us”. A unanimous shout: “St. Peter has chosen Gregory”,
followed the cardinal’s words, and, despite his sorrowful protestations,
Hildebrand was clad in the customary red cloak or cope, and, with the papal
mitre on his head, was hurried off in triumph to the Church of St. Peter ad
vincula, and enthroned.
Before this eventful day had
reached its close, a notary of the Roman Church had drawn up and deposited in
the archives of the Lateran the following official document: “In the year 1073
of the reign of our Lord Jesus Christ, in the eleventh year of the indiction, and in the eleventh moon, on Monday the 10th of
the Calends of May (April 22), and on the day of the burial of the Lord Pope
Alexander II of good memory, in order that the Apostolic See [deprived of a
pastor] might not long remain in grief, congregated in the basilica of Blessed
Peter ad vincula, we, cardinals, clergy, acolytes, subdeacons, and
deacons of the Catholic and Apostolic Church, in the presence of venerable
bishops and abbots, with the consent of the clergy and the monks, and amid the
applause of a multitude of both sexes and of every rank, chose for our pastor
and supreme Pontiff a religious man, distinguished for his learning, both
sacred and profane, most remarkable for his love of equity and justice, strong
in adversity, but temperate in prosperity— a man, according to the dictum of
the Apostle, of good behaviour, blameless, modest, sober, chaste, learned,
given to hospitality, one that ruleth well his own
house, and who had been from his youth well brought up in the bosom of this
mother church, and had for the merit of his conduct been raised to the
archdeaconate, to wit, the Archdeacon Hildebrand, whom now and henceforth we
wish to be and to be called Gregory Pope and Apostolicus.
. . . Done at Rome on the 10th of the Calends of May, in the eleventh indiction”.
When the inevitable, which
hitherto he had contrived to shun, had come upon him, when it was borne in upon
him that he would now have to bear the responsibility of the acts he had long
been advising, and when he thought of the magnitude of the evils he believed he
was called by God to redress, and of the small means at his disposal wherewith
to combat them, he was completely overwhelmed. He was filled with fear, his
strength gave way, and the fire of fever exhausted him. From his bed of
sickness he wrote to tell his friends how very much against his will he had
been made Pope, and to implore their prayers. Indeed, not only then, but
throughout the whole of his pontificate he continued to beg for prayers,
declaring that they were the one thing of which he stood in need : prayers not
for himself only, but for his enemies also. “I am come”, he cried in the words
of the Psalmist, “into the depth of the sea, and a tempest has overwhelmed me,
I have laboured with crying : my jaws are become hoarse”.
No sooner did he begin to
recover than he commenced to prepare for a more vigorous war against the vices
which were eating away the life of Christendom than he had hitherto waged upon
them. He endeavoured at once to rally his friends around him. Some, such as
Desiderius of Monte Cassino, and Gisulf, prince of
Salerno,7were asked to come to him without delay; and others, the empress-mother
Agnes and Guibert, archbishop of Ravenna, were entreated to give him their
patronage and support. He lost no time in endeavouring to reconcile those able
men whose little misunderstandings so often retard the advance of good. He
implored Hugh, abbot of Cluny, to come to an understanding with Cardinal Hugo Candidus, whose feeble character seems to have been better
understood by the abbot than by the Pope.
Nor did he delay to inform in
the usual way the great ones in both Church and State of his election to the
supreme pontificate. But among his extant letters on this subject there is no
note of his having sent any information to Henry of Germany regarding it. Are
we then to conclude that none was sent? Certainly not. The only explanation of
his putting off his consecration till the end of June, and till then styling
himself “Gregorius in Romanum pontificem
electus”, is that the king might thus have an
opportunity, not of confirming his election, but of satisfying himself that it
had been canonical, and of sending representatives to his consecration. But
those who feared the just judgments of Gregory, or who wished to see the Church
in subjection to the State, urged Henry not to recognize Hildebrand’s election.
Chief of these was “that devil Gregory (bishop) of Vercelli”, the imperial
chancellor for Italy. However much he may have been moved by the
representations of Gregory’s enemies, Henry did not feel justified in making
any attempt to prevent his retaining the chair of Peter. He seems to have
simply acquiesced in the situation.
Accordingly, on the Saturday
of the Ember week which follows Whitsunday, Gregory was ordained priest
(May 22), and received episcopal consecration on Sunday, June 30, in St.
Peter’s, in presence of the Empress Agnes, the Countess Beatrice, and the
Chancellor Gregory of Vercelli.
On the new Pope were now fixed
the eyes of the world, of the bad and of the good alike. The dissolute glared
upon him with looks of sullen hate, because they knew he would try to check
their lawless careers; while all those who longed for a reformation of manners
realised that it must come from Rome, and regarded Gregory as its glorious
champion. “If the Roman Church leads not the way back to the path of
rectitude”, declared St. Peter Damian, “the whole world will assuredly remain
sunk in its miserable errors. That must be the beginning of the renewal of our
salvation which was its first foundation”. “God”, wrote William of Metz to
Gregory himself, “then especially shows mercy to His people when He sets at
their head one whose life may serve them as an example. This He has now done
when He has set you on that chair from which the light of virtue is shed on the
whole earth, and to which, as do its rays to the centre of a circle, all things
converge. But the more you please the good, the more you will displease the
wicked, though to be hated by them is no small mark of uprightness. Now, most
powerful of men, gird thy sword on thy thigh, that sword which the prophet
declares (Jeremiahs XLVIII. 10) must not be
withholden from blood, and which the Lord promises shall devour flesh. You see
how against the camp of Israel, the Amalecites, the Madianites, and so many other pests conspire. What care,
what prudence, what ceaseless zeal must you employ to be able to stay or tame
such monstrous brutes! But let no fear nor threats hold you back from this holy
conflict. . . . On you, set on the highest pinnacle, are fixed the eyes of all
men. They know the glorious combats you have sustained in an inferior station,
and one and all long now to hear great things of you”.
III.
BEFORE we enter into the details
of Gregory’s pontificate, it will be well to take a glance at Christendom, to
see what conditions therein called for amelioration, especially from an
ecclesiastical point of view. We will examine Gregory’s position, and how far
that position justified him in undertaking to reform the world, and inquire
into his aims, and into the motives for his endeavours, into his views with
regard to the powers for or against him, and into the means he adopted for
putting into effect the ideas of reform which he conceived in his mind.
If the moral condition of
Christendom in the year 1073 were to be gauged from that of its principal
rulers, it would have to be rated low indeed. Henry IV, the heir-at-law to the
Western Empire, was a dissolute young man, twenty-three years of age. In his
private life he was a slave to sexual immorality, and as a consequence was
deceitful, cruel, flippant, and greedy of gold, to gain which he sold in the
most unblushing manner the ecclesiastical offices of the empire. Making
advisers of the companions of his base pleasures, he chose as his counsellors
men who were foolish and young and of no standing. Encouraged by them, he
behaved in the most irresponsible manner to the great nobles of the empire, and
derided those who came to complain to him of the wrongs his favoured
subordinates had inflicted upon them. Especially, but to his own great
disadvantage, as he was to live to find, did he flout the Saxons, against whom
he had conceived a violent prejudice. He was, in short, a capricious tyrant,
who could not endure that anyone should have the will or the power capable of
opposing his own. “That he might be the lord of all, he would not have another
lord live in his kingdom”. Nor can it be said that Henry’s deep-seated vices
were adjusted by personal activity and bravery, by perseverance and fertility
of resource, and by transient fits of penitential piety or generosity.
The nominal ruler of France
was the feeble Philip I, strong only against the weak, and like a typical
French monarch in his lewdness. Surrounded by mistresses, he finished by
discarding his lawful wife and marrying one of them. He trafficked in
ecclesiastical preferments in the most cynical manner, and did not blush to
adorn his concubines with what he had filched from the merchants who came to
his territories. His reign was the longest and most disreputable which the
annals of France have known. It need not be added that both in the empire and
especially in France the nobles waged war on one another as they listed, and
that the one who finally bore the heavy weight of misery caused by all this
misconduct was the man who wielded the hammer or followed the plough.
Though William the Conqueror
was “very rigid and cruel, so that no one durst do anything against his will
... though poor men were greatly oppressed by him, and though he took many a
mark of gold from his subjects for little need”, he was the best of the great
rulers of Christendom, and for that reason had ever a friend in Hildebrand,
both before and after the latter became Pope.
But if misery was largely the
lot of the people in the countries the rulers of which we have just glanced at,
how awful must have been their lot in that part of Spain at least where
Christian and Moslem were ever at war, and where that extraordinary national
hero, the Cid, was ravaging with mercenary impartiality the lands of friends
and foes alike!
With the east of Europe, or
with the Eastern Empire, the biographer of Gregory will have little concern.
The Empire Byzantine power had indeed just (1071) received, if not its coup
de grâce, at least a mortal wound at the battle
of Manzikert, where the Seljukian Turks defeated the emperor Romanus Diogenes.
It would seem that Gregory, when bewailing the falling away of the East “from
the Catholic faith”, alludes to this terrible battle, when he writes that “the
old enemy, the devil, by his members (the Turks?) is killing the Christians of
the East, and is thus destroying them spiritually and temporally”. This blow,
which sent the eastern Roman Empire reeling, was felt in all its provinces; and
Bulgaria and eastern Europe generally suffered in the shock. The East had just
broken with the centre of Catholic unity, and experienced the first pressure of
the Turkish heel which was to crush it.
Gregory, then, was justified
in declaring that in his time there were no princes who preferred the glory of
God to their own, or justice to filthy lucre; and that, with regard to those at
least in the midst of whom he had to live, Roman, Lombard, and Norman, they were
in some ways, as he used to tell them to their faces, “worse than the Jews or
the pagans”.
From this alone we might at
once safely conclude what was his opinion about the bishops of the world. Like
priest and ruler, like people. But he has not left us to make deductions about
them for ourselves. Through being brought into the councils of kings; through
accepting the lands, privileges, and the duties of barons; through being chosen
by princes, instead of by the clergy and the people; and through the relaxation
of discipline caused by the anarchy of the tenth century, they had become,
speaking generally, the counterpart of their secular peers. “Whether,
throughout all the regions of the West, I look north or south, I scarcely find
any bishops worthy of their positions by their lives or by the manner in which
they have acquired their offices, or who rule Christ’s flock from love and not
from worldly ambition”. As their own lives would not bear inspection, stained
as so many of them were with the vices especially of simony and of impurity,
they not only made no effort to check the vices of their subordinates, but
rather encouraged than fought against them. Pre-eminent among the delinquents
were the bishops of Lombardy, who were singled out for reprobation by Manasses, archbishop of Rheims, who was far from being a
model of virtue himself. Hence in the great struggle between Henry and Gregory,
who in the eyes of most of the men of their time stood for vice and virtue
respectively, if many of the German bishops adhered to the former, nearly all
the Lombard bishops did. No doubt Gregory’s bitterness of soul did not lead him
to understate the case against the bishops; but the colours he selected with
which to paint their doings were the suitable ones, though perchance they were
laid on too heavily at times.
The contemplation of this sad
state of things made Gregory think that the barque of the Church was well-nigh
shipwrecked. He believed that the times had never been worse since the days of
the blessed Pope Sylvester I, when the Church was freed; and the barbarity
which he beheld in all countries caused him to see Antichrist everywhere. His
sorrows at the sight of the world’s misery were so great that, adopting the
words of the prophet, he declared that “every hour he suffered the pains of a
woman in labour”.
But Gregory was not the man to
stand idly by uttering vain lamentations when the ship in his charge was in
danger. He had an intelligence quick to see the perils with which the Church
was surrounded and to devise remedies against them; he had a heart to feel for
the oppressed, and courage and energy to work for their liberation.
He was consumed with a violent
hunger and thirst for justice. “Right, not might”, was his motto. The “justice
of God” he would not give up for gold, nor leave for kings. No bribe can make
him swerve from the right line of justice. “Truth and justice” he must
announce, and from this course he cannot be turned away. “To abandon justice
would be for him to make shipwreck of his soul”. If his views were not just, he
would not wish to be followed. If his legates would be like him, they must
pursue justice. The advice he gave to kings was that they should be slaves of
justice. He would not tolerate a breach of justice even in his dearest friends,
the Countess Beatrice of Tuscany and her daughter, the great Matilda. Even if
his predecessors have granted any privileges which trench on the domain of
justice, he would have them quashed. Constancy in working for justice is what
he impresses on his friends; punishment for injustice is what he threatens to
those who are knowingly unjust, even if they are the great ones of the world.
“Justice! justice!” was his incessant cry during life it was on his lips
in his death.
Now to Gregory’s mind the
first step in the way of reform which justice demanded was to free the Church.
She was the natural mistress of souls. He was determined she should cease to be
the “worthless bondwoman” which the kings of the earth had made her. For this
he would fight with both his hands, and as if they were both right hands; for
this no fear should ever prevent him from crying out; for this he would resist
to the shedding of his bloods or even unto death itself, for which indeed he
not unfrequently sighed.
If the Church was to be free,
its members must be freed : its bishops freed from dependence on princes, and
from solicitude for the things of the world. Simony and clerical marriage must
be wholly eradicated. These evils had been growing worse from the latter part
of the ninth century, and so far the reforming action which had set in strongly
with St. Leo IX had not effected much.
In his determination to
enforce continency on the part of the clergy, from the subdeacons upwards,
Gregory believed he was acting in accordance with what had been enacted by the
canons in the West, at least, from very early times. Besides, in what other way
was it possible to check the growing worldliness of the clergy, and to preserve
for the poor and for divine worship the resources of the Church which were
being squandered on their families? Men who openly flouted the laws of the
Church on this important matter of celibacy were not likely to be particular
about the commandments in general.
The other great evil which was
choking the Church was simony. The princes sold bishoprics and abbacies to any
who would pay their price for them, and imposed their nominees on the Church
often without allowing the semblance of an election; and in their turn the
bishops, “heretical brigands”, as St. Peter Damian called them, sold every
ecclesiastical office in their power. It requires no imagination to guess what
sort of men bought themselves into authority in the Church. The crushing of
simony, as practised by the offering of money, of obsequious servility, or of flattery,
was naturally the second great item on Gregory’s programme of reform. This he
would effect not merely by direct prohibition of the degrading vice, and by
making every effort to render ecclesiastical elections really free, but by
striking at their root, by anathematizing lay investiture.
Through the lands that had
been bestowed upon bishops and abbots, and through the large share in the
affairs of government that had been given them, inasmuch as they were at once
the most capable and the most willing to work for law and order, kings had
begun to look upon them in much the same light as they regarded the secular
nobility. This tendency became more marked with the complete collapse of the
Roman Empire in the West under the blows of the barbarian, and with the replacement
of Roman organization and of Roman codified law by barbaric disunity and
traditional customs. Owing, therefore, to the importance in their kingdoms of
the ecclesiastical aristocracy, sovereigns endeavoured to secure to themselves
the appointment to bishoprics and abbacies. And when they had found a candidate
whose knowledge of statecraft, whose gold or whose strong right arm would be
useful to them, there was no question with very many of them as to whether by
moral character and piety and learning he was fitted for the cure of souls. But
by force or by the exercise of undue influence in one form or another, they
placed him in the vacant post, presenting him in sign thereof with what were
the recognized symbols of spiritual jurisdiction, the crosier and the ring, i.e.,
they invested him with the words, “Receive the Church”. The bishop or abbot
before being thus invested took an oath of fealty to his prince, and did homage
to him after the manner of the holders of secular fiefs. And if his loyalty was
not thought satisfactory, the hand that gave the ring and the crosier took them
away, and the prelate was deposed. Action of this sort caused both prince and
cleric to lose sight of the source of spiritual jurisdiction, with what
resulting degradation of the Church we have seen.
This practice of lay
investiture sprang up in the ninth century. But, as the real quest, on
underlying the quarrel about lay investiture was freedom of election, the
practice of such investiture may be said to have been already prescribed; for
the general council of Nice (787, can. 3) condemned all ecclesiastical
elections made by the secular authority. Some, indeed, at this period were
quite alive to the fact that the real issue between the Church and the State
was the question of freedom of election. Our northern author, Hugh the Chantor, in his history of certain archbishops of York,
relates that the distinguished canonist Ivo of Chartres used to point out that
it mattered not by what symbol investiture was given, if only freedom of election
and consecration were safeguarded. Many, however, wholly failed to appreciate
the true bearings of the investiture dispute, and well merited Hugh’s reproach
that in laying all the stress on the symbols of investiture, and in not putting
prominently forward the question of freedom of election, they were swallowing
the camel, and straining at the gnat. Gregory, at any rate, had the real end of
the controversy well in view when, to give a definite point to the prohibition
of Nice, and other similar prohibitions, in 1075, and more explicitly in 1078,
he forbade lay investiture, “investitura episcopatus”, as he called it. The quarrel over investiture
was only settled by the compromise effected at the council of Worms in 1122.
Round it the struggles in the first great contest between the empire and the
Papacy may be said to have crystallised. The “age of Hildebrand” was “the age
of the investiture dispute”. The Popes of this epoch attached such importance
to this question because “to have left to princes the investiture of
bishoprics, with the significance that then attached to that act, would have
been to laicize the Church, to crush the episcopacy, and to make of the priest
only the chaplain of the great”. To the men of the eleventh century it appeared
that “the bishop had become the man of the laic, and that the power of
the lord extended over both the bishop himself and over the goods and effects
of his bishopric”.
An outline of the career of
Godfrey, archbishop of Trier, may serve to illustrate the evils inflicted on
the Church when monarchs, like Henry IV and his son, could trample despotically
on her laws. Arnold, provost of Trier, we are told, had a young clerical
nephew, Godfrey, who fell into vicious ways. Accordingly, because, “on account
of his evil life, his uncle saw that there was no hope of his obtaining
promotion in the regular way, he sent him to the court of King Henry IV, in
order that he might be intruded by the royal power into a position which he
could not hope to obtain canonically”.
When once the king’s authority
had put Godfrey in an important position, he soon obtained a large sum of money
by the practice of the grossest simony, and then, by the gift, “it is said”, of
more than 1100 marks of silver, he procured the archbishopric of Trier, though
his ignorance was on a par with his other vices (1124). The money he had had to
pay for his promotion, and his attempts at fulfilling the promises of bestowing
favours he had had to make, caused the whole diocese to fall into confusion.
The distracted people at length appealed to Rome. Honorius II took up the
matter, and his legate, Cardinal Peter, held a synod at Toul (March 13, 1127).
Calling upon witnesses to speak “by the obedience they owed to the Roman
Church”, the truth about Godfrey’s evil courses was brought to light and he was
at last compelled to abdicate (May, 1127).
To fulfil his burning desire
that, “for God’s honour, and the renovation of Christendom”, there might be a
true pastor in every church to rule God’s people, and that the clergy, free
from lay control, might be conspicuous for their virtues, Gregory felt compelled
“to rise up against many and to rouse them up against his soul”. Of the
difficulties in his way he was not ignorant, and what toil and trouble he was
preparing for himself he knew full well. But he believed it was his duty to
fight the good fight for the souls of men, because he believed he was the head
of Christ’s Church on earth and was responsible for the souls of the highest
and the lowest, of cleric and lay alike.
In his famous letter “to all
the faithful in Christ who truly love the Apostolic See”, he reminds them that
“all those who throughout the whole world are accounted Christians, and have a
true knowledge of the Christian faith, know and believe that Blessed Peter, the
Prince of the Apostles, is the father and the first shepherd after Christ of
all Christians, and that the holy Roman Church is the mother and mistress of
all the churches”. She is ever firm and without spot. As the mother of all, she
must be obeyed by all; for the Apostolic See has the power to bind and loose
whomsoever and wheresoever it pleases. As men, the king and the beggar are
equal; hence when he speaks in accordance with the statutes of the holy
fathers, kings must obey him like anyone else. Bishops, inasmuch as they have
the same faith as the Pope, and, moreover, know their duty from the Writings of
the fathers, must devotedly, lovingly, and faithfully attach themselves to the
Apostolic See, and submit to its commands, which “neither patriarch nor primate
may contravene”. Such of them as prefer to follow the king rather than the Pope
are confounding the Christian religion with kingdom and country. If they are
not in agreement with the Apostolic See, he must remind them that St. Ambrose
has laid it down “that he is a heretic who is not in concord with the Roman
Church”; and he must therefore impress upon them that they are in imminent
danger of damnation, if they are outside the circle of its unity. And what was
Gregory’s belief as to his position in the Church, was, as he asserts himself,
the belief of Christendom. And one of its most distinguished representatives in
the days of Hildebrand declares that “beyond all doubt Rome is the bead of the
entire holy Church, and its principal see”.
It was then Gregory’s
conviction that, in the spiritual order, he was the father of all Christians
without exception, and that, while he owed them all the thoughtful care and
affection he could bestow upon them, it was their duty to love and obey him,
and to submit as dutiful children to such correction as he believed he was in
duty bound to inflict upon them. “God is my witness”, he wrote, “that it is not
any hope of the applause of men that impels me to oppose myself to wicked princes
and unholy bishops, but the thought of my duty and of the power of the
Apostolic See which is ever urging me”.
Believing that to him had been
committed by Christ the supreme direction of the Christian people that he was a
debtor to the believer and to the unbeliever; and that it was his, in the
last resort, to decide what Christians had to believe and practise if they
would attain to eternal life, he admonished kings and princes of their duties
as a father would his sons. And when, relying on their position, they thought
they could break the laws of God and man with impunity, and attempted to put
their beliefs into practice, he did not hesitate to let them know, first by
words and then by deeds, that they were not above the law. They were Christians
equally with their subjects; and when they outraged Christianity, he avenged it
as its lawful and recognised head. In the manner in which he vindicated it, he
generally followed precedent, though occasionally no doubt he created it. But
even in those exceptional cases it would seem that he did not act in violation
of the ideas of his age, and that consequently he had with him the sympathy of
the great bulk of the intelligent and of the virtuous of his time. And it may
well be asked whether his methods of dealing with unsatisfactory rulers which
won their approval have not at least as much to be said in their favour as many
of those which have been practised in modern times. As Viscount Llandaff has
well observed : “Almost all moral writers are agreed that there is some point
of oppression and misconduct at which subjects are justified in throwing off
their allegiance to a sovereign whose rule has ceased to be legitimate by his
misdeeds”. But it is another thing to decide when that point has been reached.
During the last hundred years every country in Europe has seen that question
settled by secret meetings of conspirators, by violence, and by bloodshed. It
appeared to Gregory and to the more weighty thinkers of his time that such a
moral difficulty should be solved by the judicial decision of the one who was
universally recognized as the great censor morum.
Again, it must be repeated
that it would be a mistake to suppose with some writers that Gregory claimed a
right to rebuke and even to punish kings, because he regarded all the kingdoms
of the earth as his, because he looked upon himself as the king of kings. He believed
with the great men who had gone before him, both in Church and State, that
there were two powers in the body politic, one spiritual for dealing with the
affairs of the soul, the other temporal for the care of the body. He wished the
sacerdotium and the imperium to work
together in harmony, to be as the two eyes which guide the body. And as, on the
one hand, “the Roman Church was the universal mother of all Christians”, and,
on the other, Henry “had been placed by God in the very highest position”, Gregory
was ready to greet him as “the head of all the laity”, and “his lord, brother,
and son”; and that, not on any condition of temporal subjection to himself, but
simply on the understanding that he honoured God. Henry, on his side, had at
one time no difficulty in calling the Pope “his lord and father”, and there is
no reason to doubt that, if he had acted in any way becomingly as a man and a
sovereign, Gregory would never have interfered in the least degree with the
temporal affairs of the empire.
At the same time, considering
from a Christian standpoint the superiority of the soul over the whole world,
he contended that spiritual authority was of higher importance in itself than
temporal. Following in the wake of Gregory the Great and other earlier writers,
he maintained that “gold is not so much more precious than lead as the
sacerdotal dignity is higher than that of kings”. It becomes them, therefore,
to look up to the more honorable, to the head (magister)
of the Church, i.e., to Blessed Peter, and, so far from regarding the
Church as their handmaid, they must consider it as their mistress.
Even from their respective
origins, the dignity of the spiritual power is, according to Gregory, obvious.
Princes, he said, have sprung from those who, unmindful of God, by the
perpetration of every crime, and with intolerable presumption, succeeded in
lording it over their equals, i.e., men. Shall such a power, be asks,
not be subject to that dignity which God Himself gave to the world through His
Son, the great High Priest, who despised the power of this world, and of his
own accord embraced “the priesthood of the Cross”?
But Henry IV, whom in all this
Gregory had chiefly in view, was not an Alfred the Great, who, if we are to
credit Ailred, abbot of Rievaux
(d. 1166), understood his position as a Christian king, and knew how to
expound it in beautiful words. “He realized”, records Ailred,
“what few nowadays seem to be willing to profess, viz., that the greatest
kingly power has no manner of authority in the Church of Christ. True kingly
dignity”, he used to say, “requires that I should acknowledge that in the
kingdom of Christ, which is the Church, I am no king, but a citizen, and that
it is not for me to rule the priests by my laws, but humbly to submit to the laws
of Christ which they have promulgated”. If Henry was ever animated by similar
sentiments, it was but in one of those brief and rare moments during which he
allowed virtue to make some impression upon him. His normal attitude towards
the Church was that of one who would rule it as a master, and crush it as he
would a viper if it turned upon him. And it may be safely affirmed that the
tyranny of Henry IV was one of the factors which brought about, towards the
close of this century, a change in the theories of ecclesiastical writers as to
the origin of temporal authority. Up to the epoch named, they had assigned God
as its source, but from the eleventh to the fourteenth century they held that
the people were the source of the power of governments.
But with such a man as Gregory
VII as its head, it was not easy for Henry to make a bondwoman of the Church;
and it was not long before a struggle which was to outlast the life of Gregory
began between the empire and the priesthood. And when once a contest had broken
out between powers which ought to have been equal, because each ought to have
been supreme in its own domain, it was inevitable that the struggle should
issue in a fight for supremacy. But though in the heat of battle Gregory may
have given utterance to propositions that were capable of very great extension,
there is no evidence that he wished to establish a theocracy, and “obtain
supreme dominion over all nations”. It is true he claimed an altum dominium over some countries, as he did
over many monasteries, and that too on much the same grounds, viz., because
those who had power over them had either really commended them to the Holy See
to secure its protection, or were believed to have done so. Sometimes, indeed,
he would appear to have based his pretensions on documents which were not
authentic, but which were accepted as genuine by the whole world. But if he
made claim to Spain and Hungary, to Bohemia, Russia and Croatia, it was because
those countries had previously placed their rising liberties under the aegis of
the authority of the bishop of Rome, and in feudal style acknowledged their
dependence on him by a payment of an annual tax. By degrees this payment came
to be regarded in Rome as a sign that the place whence it came was placed under
the suzerainty of the Pope. This idea was in the main true, and may have been
the reason which moved Gregory to claim the altum
dominium over England also—a claim indignantly rejected by the Conqueror.
Possibly, too, he may have regarded William’s action in appealing to Rome, and
accepting the banner from Alexander II, as betokening some manner of dependence
on the Holy See. In any case he did no more than repeat a claim which had been
made by his predecessor.
Gregory was naturally led to
try and revive old rights to temporal suzerainty when he saw new ones bestowed
upon himself. He received the donation of Provence from its count, Bertram II;
and his supreme jurisdiction over Sardinia, if not over islands in general, was
acknowledged by the numerous requests made to him for permission to invade that
island. Perhaps Gregory was as anxious for princes to place themselves under
his suzerainty as some of them were to submit themselves to it. But if that
were so, his object was not merely that the pecuniary advantages arising
therefrom might help to replenish the depleted papal treasury, but that the
good of Christendom might be thereby promoted. “Religious bishops”, he said
himself in his famous apologetic letter5to Bishop Herimann
of Metz, “who, led by divine love, wish to rule, do so that God’s honour and
the salvation of souls may be thus advanced”. And if Gregory’s overlordship had
been everywhere respected as it was with regard to Sardinia, there can be no
question but that the peace and happiness of Europe would have been very
greatly extended.
In his untiring efforts to
better the temporal and spiritual condition of his children, on what had the
Father of Christendom to rely? Certainly not on those who ought to have been
his natural allies; not on kings and princes; for they, as usual, were, for the
most part, the principal agents of the degradation against which he was
struggling; and not on the bishops, who, as a body, were little better than the
secular princes. And of those in the episcopal order who were not wholly bad,
the greater number would not act. He could not even count on the members of his
own household. Beno has left us a list of cardinals and other functionaries of
the pontifical court who abandoned their master in the time of stress in 1084.
Among the deserters were over ten cardinal priests and deacons, the primicerius of the schola cantorum,
with all his subordinates, the oblationarius,
the prior of the regionary subdeacons, the archacolyte,
the subpulmentarius (an almoner), the primicerius of the judges, and all the banner-bearers of
the different regions, the prior of the scriveners, and many others.
He had to rely, then, in the
first place, on God and on himself. We have seen how he begged for prayers; for
he trusted in God more than in man, and believed that He was with him and
worked with him. Writing within a year or two of his death to the clergy of
Gaul, he took occasion to thank God for having protected him from the violence
of his persecutors; for having defended in his person that justice for which
his conscience had made him contend; for having strengthened his weakness, and
for never allowing either bribes or threats to turn him to iniquity.
In his efforts to defend the
oppressed and to uphold justice, obligations which he believed his position as
successor of St. Peter forced upon him, he was ever upheld by confidence in the
prestige of Rome—he was fond of repeating that Rome, through its faith or
through its arms, was ever invincible—by the glorious idea of duty, and by the
hope of eternal rest with Christ our Lord.
But with all the self-reliance
which the thought of duty and of working in the cause of God and man inspired,
he knew he must have fellow-workers. The vineyard of the Lord was so vast, and
was so woefully overgrown with weeds! His first care was to multiply himself by
his legates, by men whom he strove to animate with the same spirit as himself.
“Ever act with becoming dignity”, he used to tell them, “as though I were with
you, or rather because I am with you, my representatives”. He would have them
at once heroes and sages, all on fire with charity, so that the oppressed might
find in them defenders, and that oppressors might learn that they were lovers
of justice. He sent them north and south, east and west, they were seen in
England and in Denmark, as well as among the Normans in south Italy; they found
their way not only into the more civilized lands of the Eastern Empire, into Germany,
France and Spain, but also into Hungary, Poland, and Russia. And wherever they
went they were followed by Gregory with eager interest; and he strove to secure
for them a favourable reception everywhere. “He who receives you, receives us,
i.e., receives Blessed Peter himself”, he used to declare. As he pointed out to
the bishops of southern France and Spain: “From its very foundation it has been
the custom of the Roman Church to send legates to every land that boasted the
name of Christian; so that through them the ruler of that church might effect
what he could not in his own person, viz., instruct the churches throughout the
world in apostolic faith and practice”.
But if he strove to make the
path of his legates smooth, and to punish any interference in the commissions
with which he entrusted them, he never ceased to impress upon them that they
must use the power entrusted to them with the greatest moderation and prudence;
and he occasionally made them feel the necessity of so doing by revising or by
annulling their decisions.
Other allies on whom he
confidently reckoned were the Gregory monks. Amid the general defection which
he was constantly deploring, he thanked God that among those who still feared
Him were the monks. Hardly a monastery can be cited which adhered to the cause
of Henry, simony, and clerical concubinage. There was Farfa
in Italy, which was imperialistic by tradition; and among those which had been
forced to accept creatures of Henry as their abbots, and were thus pressed into
his service, may be named those of St. Gall in Switzerland, and Hersfeld in the diocese of Halberstadt.
A monk himself, Gregory protected and favoured the monastic orders—the more so
since no care was taken of them by the great ones of the world. “Do you think”,
he wrote to Bishop Cunibert of Turin, “that bishops
have received with their pastoral staff such an amount of power and licence
that they may oppress as they please the monasteries which are in their
dioceses, and diminish religious fervour there by capricious and unlimited
requirements? Are you then ignorant that popes have frequently freed the
monasteries from the rule of bishops, and from that of metropolitans, on
account of the vexations inflicted by superiors? Do you not know that it has
been their object, by the gift of lasting liberty, to attach the churches to
the Apostolic See, as the members are attached to the head? Consider the
privileges granted by our predecessors, and you will see that it has been
forbidden even to archbishops to fulfil their office in abbeys unless invited
by the abbots, lest the peace of the cloister should be disturbed by the influx
and the conversation of secular visitors”.
The monks were not ungrateful
for his care. They everywhere showed themselves staunch and able friends of the
Papacy, and gave up their most promising subjects to its use. From them Gregory
drew his best bishops, his counsellors, and his legates. First among his
confidants was Hugh, the great abbot of Cluny, whom we may call the patriarch
of the monks of his day, who had been the trusted friend of the emperor Henry
III, and who was the godfather of Henry IV. He was a man whose moderate and am
able character well enabled him, without sacrifice of principle, to act as
mediator between Henry IV and Gregory, whom, like St. Peter Damian, he regarded
as a gentle tyrant, a lion in striking and a lamb in pardoning. Also from Cluny
there came to the service of Gregory, Gerald, its grand-prior, to be made
cardinal-bishop of Ostia, and its prior Odo, who was
to succeed Gerald in the Sec of Ostia, and to become Pope Urban II. The legate
Hugh de Die, who in Gregory’s name practically ruled the Church of France for
ten years, had been prior of St. Marcel-lez-Châlons,
and Jarenton, who brought Guiscard and his Normans to
save Gregory from Henry, had been educated at Cluny, shared Gregory’s exile at
Salerno, and for his sufferings in the cause of justice merited to be called by
the Pope his fellow-captive. The dearest of Gregory’s friends, one who as his
legate in Germany suffered exile and imprisonment in his cause, was Bernard,
abbot of St. Victor at Marseilles. Monks also were such steady allies of
Gregory, as Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino; Alfano, the famous archbishop
of Salerno; Cardinal Stephen, who, with Gregory himself, deserved to be called
by St. Peter Damian “an impregnable buckler” of the Holy See; Bruno of Asti,
bishop of Segni; St. Anselm of Lucca, the adviser of
the great countess; and William, abbot of Hirschau,
who in his last agony exhorted his monks to persevere till death in subjection
to the Apostolic See.
Also on the side of Gregory were
not merely such comparatively few bishops as were by virtue and learning fitted
for their office, and such rare secular princes as Matilda of Tuscany (at once almost
a nun and a knight), who had a thought above their own sordid interests, but
generally the great mass of the people. Even the fickle populace of Rome, as
was proved by their conduct during the siege of their city by Henry, were
exceptionally loyal to Gregory. The devotion of the people at large to the Pope
is set down as a fact by contemporary historians; and in full faith of its
truth we see Gregory himself finding his consolation.
With these allies, such as
they were, “monks, simple priests (sacerdotes),
the lower order of the nobility, and the poor”, Gregory assayed iniquity in
high places; and, as he declared only a few months before his death, strove
with all his might (to bring it about that the Church should hold the honoured
position that was its due, and “should remain free, chaste, and catholic”.
That, in truth, Gregory’s aim
was as pure as he professed it to be, that it “was a righteous one, few”,
writes a non-Catholic author, “will now venture to dispute”. The most eminent
modern writers on the age of Hildebrand are generally agreed that Gregory’s
struggle was that of spirit against matter, of moral against physical force, of
the laws of love and justice against those of selfishness and might.
Now that we have seen
something of the motives which animated the great Pontiff, and of the forces
which were at work for or against him in his gigantic efforts to secure the
independence of the Church, we may now let the course of the narrative of the
events of his pontificate run freely on, unchecked by reflections on the
intentions which inspired his several actions.
As Pope, Gregory continued the
administrative work on in and which he had been engaged as a capellanus
and as the oeconomus of the Holy See. In the first place he persevered
in his efforts to make the Roman barons and those of the Campagna respect the
law, and to force the Normans to confine themselves to their own territories.
To effect these ends he paid as before no little attention to the armed forces
of the Roman Church. With their aid and with that of Landulf, prince of Benevento,
and Richard, prince of Capua, who had taken the oath of fealty to him, he not
only garrisoned the cities and towns, and held what was still left of the papal
inheritance, but recovered much of what had been lost of it by violence, fraud,
or negligence. So actively was this police work carried on that in a few months
there was no one bold enough to touch the property of Peter. Even before his
consecration he had to defend the temporal rights of the Holy See against the
usurpations of Guibert, archbishop of Ravenna, who to the prejudice of the
Roman Church endeavoured to subject certain towns of the exarchate to his own
authority.
But it was even more necessary
that order should be restored in Peter’s own home. The great Roman basilica
that bore his name was under the care of over sixty mansionarii
or sacristans. These men were laics, of whom some were married, and who at this
period were one and all scoundrels. Shaved and wearing mitres, they gave out to
the simple that they were priests and cardinals; and during the day received
money from the peasants in return for their prayers, and during the night
committed robbery, murder, and adultery. The behaviour in St. Peter’s of some
of the cardinals themselves was not above reproach. They only had the right to
say Mass at the high altar, or altar over the body of the Prince of the
Apostles. For the sake of gain, they came to the basilica and began to offer
the great Christian sacrifice before the dawn. To put an end co these most
disreputable customs, Gregory, after expelling with no little difficulty the
lay mansionarii, replaced them by good
priests, and forbade the church to be open before daylight, and the cardinals
to say Mass till nine o'clock.
By encouraging the payment of
Peter’s Pence and other means, he endeavoured to raise the funds necessary for
the purposes of government. Through his good management of the monies at his
disposal, it resulted, not that the poor were robbed, but that, as always
happens when revenues are well expended, there was enough for necessities and
for charity. Hence even Guido of Ferrara praises him as “the protector of the
widow and the young, the helper of the orphan, and the advocate of the poor”,
and also for his profuse liberality to the needy and the helpless.
Full of enthusiasm and of the
hope begotten of it, the energetic pontiff resolved to approach Robert Giscard
and the Normans, trusting to be able to induce these enterprising and warlike neighbours
to leave his dominions in peace. Leaving Rome in July, he spent a day by the
sea at Laurentum, a town now no more, which lay
between Ostia and Ardea, and seemingly in the
neighbourhood of the existing hamlet of Capocotta.
Thence he betook himself, by Albano, first to Monte Cassino to secure the
company of its abbot Desiderius, ever a persona grata to the Normans,
and then to Benevento. There, on August 12, he received from the Lombard prince
Landulf an undertaking that, on pain of being instantly deprived of his
position, he would be faithful to the Roman Church, and would not in any way
lessen the integrity of his duchy by granting investiture of any portion of it
without the consent of the Pope. But though Gregory had given proof of his
goodwill towards Guiscard when a false report of his death had reached him, the
wily Norman contented himself with promising in general terms that “he would
serve the Pope faithfully”. It is true that in 1059 Robert had taken an oath of
fidelity to Nicholas II, but his lust of conquest had gone on increasing, and
he would not have his designs on Salerno, on Capua, and perhaps, too, on
Benevento, hampered by further oaths. Gregory, like Leo IX, soon saw that arms
alone would keep the ambition of Guiscard within bounds. To meet force with
force, he endeavoured to ally to his own forces those of Gisulf
of Salerno, of the Norman, Richard of Capua, and of Beatrice and Matilda of
Tuscany. On September 14 he received from Richard an oath of fidelity, such as
he had previously taken to Nicholas II (1059). He swore to do all that in him
lay to help to recover the possessions of St. Peter; to pay annually the money
due for the lands which he held of the Roman Church; and to restrict any oath
of fidelity he might be called upon to take to King Henry by the clause saving
the fealty he owed to the holy Roman Church.
Satisfied with what he had
already accomplished, Gregory seems to have imagined that he had practically
checkmated Robert. Writing a week or two later to the knight Herlembald, the
leader of the reform party in Milan, he told him that he was at Capua in good
health, and happy because he believed that his residence in that city had
resulted in great advantage to the Church. “For the Normans, who, with manifest
danger to the empire and holy Church, had been contemplating peace with one
another, are obstinately continuing in the state of unrest in which we found
them. It will only be through us that they will obtain peace. For if we had
judged it for the advantage of holy Church, they would already have humbly
submitted to us, and have displayed towards us their wonted reverence”. But he
had strangely underrated the energy, ability, and power of Guiscard. Summoning
his brother Roger, count of Sicily, to his aid, the Norman duke began at once
to ravage the territory of Richard, and before the Pope had returned to Rome (c.
December 17, 1073) had inflicted material damage on his Capuan ally.
About this time advices which
he had received from Constantinople inspired Gregory with a new idea, and made
him more anxious than ever to assemble troops. After the disastrous defeat of
the Byzantine forces at Manzikert, and the subsequent irritating but impotent
conduct of the imperial government towards the victorious Alp Arslan, the
sufferings which the Turks inflicted on the helpless Christian population of
Asia Minor surpass belief. And in the midst of their unspeakable afflictions
the oppressed turned for help to the common Father of Christendom, whom their
chief priests had rejected. When messenger after messenger reached him telling
him that the heathen had laid waste the whole land almost to the very walls of
Constantinople, and had slain many thousands of Christians as though they had
been beasts of the field, Gregory’s heart was wrung with grief, and he longed
himself to die to save his brethren. “He would rather” he declared, “lay down
his life for them, than neglect them and have the whole world submissive to his
will”.
Though convinced he could himself
raise troops enough to bring the refractory Normans “to a sense of justice”, he
tried to realize a plan which he thought would result in saving Christian
blood, both in Italy and in the East. He would gather together a great
Christian army, the very sight of which would bring about the submission of the
Normans, and which would be powerful enough, under his own personal leadership,
to stop the ravages of the Turks. These great plans we see unfolded in the
following letter which he dispatched to William I, count of Burgundy, on
February 2, 1074: “Gregory, bishop, servant of the servants of God, to William,
count of Burgundy, health and apostolic benediction. Your prudence may remember
with what a large-hearted welcome the Roman Church formerly greeted you, and
what special love she has ever displayed towards you. It does not then befit
you to be unmindful of the promise you made to God before the body of Peter,
the Prince of the Apostles, in the presence of our venerable predecessor, Pope
Alexander, of a considerable number of bishops and abbots, and of a very great
concourse of people of different nationalities, to the effect that when
necessary your right arm would be ready to strike a blow for the defence of the
possessions of St. Peter, whenever it was called upon to do so. Hence, mindful
of the nobility of your faith, we admonish you to make ready your armies to
lend aid to the liberty of the Roman Church, and, if need be, to march hither
with your troops as servants of St. Peter. We beg you also to instruct to act
in like manner, the count of St. Giles, the father-in-law of Richard, prince of
Capua; Amadeus, the son of Adelaide; and the others you know to be loyal to St.
Peter, and who, with hands raised to heaven, have given the same undertakings
as yourself. If you have any definite response to make to us, let your
messenger be so instructed as to be able to remove all doubt from our mind; and
let him on his way to us call upon Beatrice, who, with her daughter and
son-in-law, is an earnest worker in this matter.
“We are not labouring to
collect this great number of soldiers because we wish to shed Christian blood,
but that they (i.e., the Normans), seeing the strength of our forces, may fear
to fight, and may the more ready submit to what is just. We have, moreover, a
hope that perchance a further good result may follow from this expedition:
viz., that, when the Normans are quieted, we may pass over to Constantinople to
assist the Christians, who, suffering terribly under the repeated blows of the
Saracens, unceasingly implore us to stretch out to them a helping hand. For were it a question merely of the rebellious Normans, we
have ourselves sufficient forces to deal with them.
“Doubt not that, as we
believe, Peter and Paul, the Princes of the Apostles, will bestow a manifold
recompense on you and on all who with you will share in the toil of this
expedition.
“Given at Rome on the fourth
of the nones of February (February 2), in the twelfth
indiction”.
A month later a circular
letter, addressed “to all those who wished to defend the Christian faith”, and
entrusted to the charge of one newly come from the East, informed the Western
world of the terrible sufferings which the heathen Turks were inflicting on the
Christians of the East. “Wherefore, if we love God and regard ourselves as
Christians, we ought to be overwhelmed with grief at the misfortune which has
befallen so renowned an empire, and at the terrible slaughter of Christian men.
But we must do more than grieve; the example of our Redeemer must move us to sacrifice
our lives for them. We ourself intend to do all in our power to help the
empire. In the name, then, of that faith in which through Christ we are united
by the adoption of the sons of God, we exhort you, and by the authority of
Blessed Peter, Prince of the Apostles, we urge you to let the wounds and blood
of your brethren, and the dire peril of the empire, stir up your sympathy, so
that you may be ready to undergo the toil of bearing help to your brethren. Let
us know without delay, and by reliable messengers, what the mercy of God shall
move you to do”.
But Europe was not yet ready
for a Crusade. The story of the Turkish atrocities had not yet been told often
enough, and great masses are not moved at the first essay. The echo to Gregory’s
resounding trumpet-call to arms was but feeble; and meanwhile Guiscard
continued contumacious and threatening. In the Lenten council of this year
(March 1074), Robert Guiscard, duke of Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily, with all
his supporters, was excommunicated and anathematized, in the presence of
Matilda of Tuscany, the Marquis Azzo, and Gisulf of Salerno.
Gregory, however, knew enough
of the audacious nature of the duke to realize that no censure of the Church
would put a curb on his ambition. The sword of Guiscard must be crossed with
another of like temper and material. But whence was he to procure it? He had
already discovered that the transalpine princes would not take up arms either
against the Turks or the Normans. “You”, he wrote to Duke Godfrey, “have done
like so many others. You have been false to your word. Where is the aid you
promised? Where are the soldiers you promised to lead in person to bring honourable
succour to St. Peter?”
His Italian allies were,
however, truer to Gregory. Beatrice and Matilda undertook to force the enemy to
restore what he had taken from the Prince of the Apostles. Accordingly, in the
summer of 1074 an army from different parts of Italy assembled by the woods of
Mt. Cimino, between Sutri and Viterbo. But the
expedition came to naught. The Pisans would not fight with Gisulf,
who had basely ill-treated some of their traders; an insurrection among some of
their dependants necessitated the departure of Beatrice and her daughter; and
Gregory himself fell grievously ill.
When, after about two months
and a half of sickness, contrary to the prognostications of those around him, and
to his “grief rather than joy”, Gregory recovered his health, there were
reopened with Guiscard negotiations into which the military preparations of the
Pope had caused him to enter, but which had been closed by the former’s
illness. The Norman duke offered to renew under every guarantee of fidelity his
allegiance to the Pope. But, seemingly on account of the difficulty of inducing
Guiscard to respect his allies, Gregory delayed acceding to his offers; and in
the beginning of the year 1075 relations between the two were so far strained
that there is some ground for believing that the Pope thought of calling upon a
son of the Danish king, Svend Estrithson,
to measure swords with Robert for his duchy. He was the more anxious that the
Norman duke should be reduced to peaceful subjection, seeing that fresh
messengers had come from the East to implore his aid against the Turks. Not
only had he made another effort to induce “all the faithful of St. Peter,
especially those beyond the mountains”, to cease fighting for perishable goods,
and to come to him in order that together they might defend the Christian
faith, but he had asked the assistance of Henry IV. He had told him of the
heartrending appeals for succour which he had received from the East, and of
the efforts he had made to move men to give their lives for their brethren.
“Already”, he had written, “more than 50,000 men are arming themselves, and, if
they can have me as their priest and leader in the expedition, are ready to
attack the enemies of God, and, under His guidance, to march even to the Lord’s
tomb. I am especially moved to undertake this expedition, because the Church of
Constantinople, differing from us on the doctrine of the Holy Ghost, longs for
reunion with the Apostolic See. Almost all the Armenians have fallen away from
the Catholic faith. And most of the Orientals, in the midst of their diverse
opinions, await the decision of the faith of the Apostle Peter. Especially in
our time is fulfilled the injunction which our Holy Redeemer deigned to impose
on the Prince of the Apostles : I have prayed for thee, that thy faith fail not;
and thou being once converted confirm thy brethren ... But as great designs
need great forethought and the help of the great, I shall turn to you for
advice and support, if God gives me to make a beginning of this undertaking;
for if, under God’s favour, I shall go to the East, I shall entrust the care of
the Roman Church to you, after God, to guard and defend it as your holy
mother”.
But the time for the Crusades
had not yet come; it was for others to reap what Gregory had sown. The princes
were wrapped up in the pursuit of their own selfish ends; and knowledge of the
sufferings of the Christians in the East had not yet spread deep enough to move
the masses of the people. Gregory himself, too, had soon to cope with troubles
nearer home than in Palestine. In little more than a year from the date of the
dispatch of the letter just cited, he had written his last letter to Henry, had
well-nigh lost his life at the hands of an assassin, and at the bidding of
Henry IV had been declared deposed from the Papacy by a council of German
bishops.
In the midst of all his exertions
to effect local reforms, to put a curb on the grasping ambition of the Normans,
and to carry through such a gigantic undertaking as a Crusade, Gregory did not
lose sight of the necessity of furthering the general reform of the Church, so
well inaugurated by his immediate predecessors. To this end, he began at an
early date in his pontificate to make preparations for the holding of the first
of the customary Lenten synods which occupy such an important place in his
reign. They were assembled not merely to make laws, but to advise the Pope in
questions of religion, law, and policy; for, as Gregory himself wrote when
summoning the Patriarch of Aquileia to the synod of 1074, “the more securely
and firmly shall we be able to work for the good of ecclesiastical liberty and
religion, the more abundantly and closely we are supported by the society and
provident forethought of many of our fellow-bishops”.
March 1074, First
Lenten Synod
With the exception of a few
from France and Spain, most of the bishops who were present at Gregory’s first
synod, were Italians. Among the distinguished laity who assisted at it were Gisulf, prince of Salerno, and the Countess Matilda. The
principal work of the council was to renew the prohibitions already issued
against simony and clerical incontinence. All who had received holy orders or
benefices by simoniacal practices were to lose them;
and such as were guilty of incontinence were forbidden to exercise any sacred
function. Should they presume to do so, the faithful were forbidden to assist
at any celebration held by them. Various particular cases were also decided at
this synod, and, as we have seen, Guiscard was excommunicated by it.
To secure the observance of
these decrees, and, at the same time, to bring about a satisfactory
understanding between Henry and the Holy See, and between the king and the
rebellious Saxons, Gregory dispatched to Germany Cardinals Humbert and Gerald,
bishops of Palestrina and Ostia respectively. With them went the Empress Agnes,
full of anxiety for the spiritual condition of her son. Henry, as we shall see
presently, seemed prepared to satisfy the legates in everything, and, outwardly
at any rate, made no objection to their calling a council in order to deal with
the bishops and abbots guilty of simony and incontinency. Headed, however, by Liemar, archbishop of Hamburg, the bishops at once raised a
cry of “Privilege!”. They maintained that, in accordance with ancient custom,
the archbishop of Mainz was the Pope’s representative in Germany, and that, therefore,
mere legates could not hold a synod in the country under his jurisdiction. It
would have to be held by the Pope himself. According to Bonizo, it was at
Henry’s suggestion that the bishops put forward this specious argument, as he
did not wish the synod to be held. But Lambert will have it that Henry was
really anxious for the holding of the synod, because, as most of the bishops
were tainted with simony, he hoped to bring about the deposition of his
enemies, especially the Saxon bishops. And as Henry was not averse to
abandoning a friend if he could serve himself, Lambert is probably right. The
result, however, was that the synod could not be held, and that, after a time, Liemar was suspended by the Pope from the performance of
his episcopal functions till he should present himself in Rome to explain his
conduct. Liemar was furious, and gave vent to his
feelings in a letter which he wrote to the bishop of Hildesheim : “A dangerous
man wishes to order bishops about as if they were his stewards; and if they do
not fulfil all his behests, they are summoned to Rome, and suspended before
being tried”.
Before returning to Rome,
loaded with presents from Henry, the legates instructed the metropolitans to
put the decrees of the Roman synod into force. An attempt to do so on the
part of the archbishop of Mainz caused a furious outburst of indignation among
his clergy. The Pope must be a heretic, they exclaimed, to want to force men to
live like angels. They would give up their orders rather than their wives, they
said, and the Pope might get angels to take their place. So strong, indeed, in
certain parts of Germany was the feeling aroused by the attempt to enforce the
law of celibacy, that some of the metropolitans, in endeavouring to do so,
barely escaped with their lives. The opposition was the stronger since, no
doubt, not a few of the clergy had taken to themselves wives, because they
really believed that custom at least allowed them to do so.
Though similar disturbances
took place in France also, Gregory was not the man to be daunted by displays of
violence when there was question of his duty. If the bishops would not be
reformed by the Pope, nor the clergy by the bishops, he would bring both to a
sense of their duty by the people. Writing to the dukes, Rudolf of Swabia, and Bertulf of Carinthia, he reminds them that most of the
bishops have done nothing to give effect to the decrees of council after
council since the days of Pope Leo IX. As these decrees concern such weighty
matters as simony and clerical incontinence, he will have to employ fresh means
to see that they are observed. “It seems to us much better to reconstruct the
justice of God even by new methods, than to suffer the souls of men to perish
along with the neglected laws. We, therefore, exhort you and all men, whatever
henceforth the bishops may say or not say, to refuse, nay, if possible to hinder
by force, the ministrations of all those whom you know to be tainted with
simony or incontinency. If any should protest that to take such action is
outside your province, tell them that they must not interfere with your
salvation or that of the people, and that they must come to us to complain of
the obedience we have laid on you”. Another letter addressed to all the clergy
and laity “in the kingdom of the Teutons”, bids them not obey those bishops who
countenance want of chastity on the part of their clergy, since they themselves
do not obey the orders of the Apostolic See, nor the authority of the Fathers.
There is no doubt that this
“lay remedy” was a drastic one, and productive of some harm by its giving the
laity the idea that they were the judges of their pastors; but then all severe
remedial measures cause at least some temporary harm, and yet are justified by
the permanent gain obtained by them. And so the firmness of Gregory ultimately
triumphed over the frantic opposition which it aroused, for men and not angels
have since been found in every land ready to serve God and His Church in the
observance of that chastity on which he insisted.
As his relations with Henry IV
constitute the most salient feature in Gregory’s career, it is of
importance that they should be clearly traced from their commencement. The
first point in connection with them which makes itself at once manifest is the
effort made by Gregory to develop in Henry a sense of responsibility, and to
promote the harmonious working of the spiritual and temporal powers for the
benefit of mankind. Understanding, however, that it was with them as with
individual men, and that, therefore, each of them could work best when most
free, he ceased not withal to strive for the full freedom of the Church.
He began his pontifical life,
as we have seen, by notifying his election to Henry, and perhaps by a request, pro
forma, that he would acknowledge it. At the same time, writing as Roman
Pontiff elect to Duke Godfrey of Lorraine, he laid bare to him his mind and
wishes with regard to the king. “No one”, he wrote, “is more anxious and solicitous
for his present and future honour than we are. It is our intention on the first
opportunity to approach him through our legates with paternal love, and to treat
with him on what we believe of importance for the advantage of the Church, and
the honour of his royal dignity. If he will listen to us, we shall rejoice in
his salvation as much as our own, for he will certainly attain it, if, in
maintaining justice, he will give heed to our admonitions and advice. But if,
which we trust will not be the case, he returns us hatred for love, and,
setting aside what is justly due to God, he repays Him with contempt for the honours
He has bestowed upon him, the threat: ‘Cursed be he that withholdeth
his sword from blood’, shall, by the mercy of God, not fall upon me. After the
words of the apostle : ‘If I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of
Christ’, we may not put aside the law of God for the sake of anyone, nor for
man’s favour leave the path of rectitude”.
What was, at this time
especially, distressing Gregory in Henry’s conduct was his continuing to consort
with those worthless favourites of his who had been excommunicated by Alexander
II; not to speak of his attitude towards the Saxons, and towards the Church of
Milan. It was not, as he assured Rudolf of Swabia, that he was animated by any
malevolent feelings towards Henry; for “we have chosen him king, and, among all
the Italians at the court of his father, the Emperor Henry, of praiseworthy
memory, we were specially honoured; and, when the said emperor came to die, he
entrusted this son of his to the Roman Church in the person of Pope Victor, of
venerable memory”. That there might be true harmony between the Church and the
State, he thought it advisable to hold a conference with Rudolf of Swabia, the
Empress Agnes, the Duchess Beatrice, and other God-fearing persons, in order
that the relations with the king might be regulated by their advice.
Before this projected
conference could be realized, the Pope received from Henry a letter “full of
sweetness and deference, such as”, wrote Gregory, “neither he nor any of his
predecessors ever, as far as we can remember, wrote to a Roman Pontiff”. The
fact was that Henry had received a serious blow from the Saxons, with whom he
had been at enmity for some time, and was anxious to secure the friendship of
the Pope. His letter was addressed : “To the most watchful and most beloved
Lord Pope Gregory, gifted from heaven with the apostolic dignity, Henry, by the
grace of God, king of the Romans, loyally offers the homage which is his due.
“That the Church and the
State, fitly directed in Christ, may endure, they have ever need of one
another’s help. Hence is it proper, my lord and well-beloved father, that they
should never quarrel, but should rather, by the bond of Christ, ever most
closely adhere to one another”. Henry then proceeds to acknowledge that he has
not always treated the Church as he ought to have done, and that he has not
always used the sword of justice aright. Led astray by youth, by the possession
of unlimited power, and by interested advisers, he has seized ecclesiastical
property, and handed churches over to unworthy men. But now, touched by the
mercy of God, he begs the Pope’s forgiveness and help to amend matters, and he
would have him assist him in the first place to bring order into the Church of
Milan.
Supposing Henry to be in
earnest, Gregory was much touched, and began to look forward with confidence to
the great reforms which could be effected by a Pope and an emperor working
together. It was not, however, till after his Lenten synod (1074) that he was
able to send legates to Germany to take advantage of the king’s good
disposition, so that peace might be made between him and the Saxons, and that
joint action for the reform of the Church might be concerted. He had been much
distressed at the news of the slaughter of men, of the plundering of churches
and the poor, and of the general devastation which reached him from the seat of
war. And he had written both to the king and the Saxons, imploring them to
refrain from hostilities till his legates could arrive, and bring about a
lasting peace.
When Cardinal Humbert and the
other legates of the Pope reached Germany, Henry was at Bamberg; but as its
bishop was guilty of simony, and the legates would not, therefore, go thither,
the king came to Nuremberg, where they had halted. He was the more anxious to
meet them, seeing that he had been completely worsted by the Saxons. In
demolishing the fortress of Harzburg, which he had
built to overawe them, they had gone even to the length of digging up the
bodies of his relatives which he had buried in the chapel within its walls
(March 1074). Unable to avenge this sacrilegious violence, he had turned for
help to the Pope and to the laws of the Church; for, as he said, both the civil
laws and arms had failed him.
It may perhaps be remembered
that it has already been pointed out that this embassy was not wholly
successful. The legates were prevented from holding a council, and do not seem
to have been able to effect anything towards settling the Saxon difficulties.
But both they and the Pope thought that not a little had been done when Henry
professed sorrow for the simony of which he had been guilty, and sought and
obtained absolution from the general censures pronounced against all such as
were guilty of that sin. Besides, he promised to remedy certain abuses at once,
and professed the utmost devotion to the Pope. Some of these undertakings he
carried out to the letter; but others, notably one with regard to the Church of
Milan, he made little or no attempt to fulfil. The fact was that, so far as
personal, or, indeed, any other kind of real reforms were concerned, Henry was
not in earnest. His worthless counsellors, or rather companions of his base
pleasures, were not dismissed; nor were any serious efforts made by him to be
just, either towards the Church or towards the Saxons. It was impossible for
him, however, to deceive the most watchful Gregory forever, although the Pope
showed himself determined to believe the best of him and to close his eyes to
his shortcomings as long as he could. But the second year of Gregory’s
pontificate will not have closed ere we shall see him striking directly at
Henry’s evil advisers and evil ways.
In February 1075 Gregory held
his second Lenten synod, at which assisted a multitude of archbishops, bishops,
and abbots, and a very great number of clerics and laymen. Knowing that
constantly falling water wears away the hardest rock, the assembled Fathers
renewed the decrees against the heresies of Simon Magus and Nicholas,
and again forbade the faithful to attend the clerical functions performed by
those known to be tainted by them. For various offences several bishops were
suspended, among others, Liemar of Hamburg and Heriman, or Herman, of Bamberg. Philip, king of France, was
threatened with excommunication for brigandage and simony, and Guiscard, with
his nephew, Robert of Loritello, was again laid under
the ban of the Church, as an invader of the goods of St. Peter.
But this synod derives its
special importance from the steps taken by it against King Henry, and against
the practice of investiture. Pope Alexander had declared some of Henry’s evil counsellors
excommunicated, and Gregory had, in letter after letter, implored Henry to
avoid those advisers who placed gain before justice. The action of Alexander,
and the words of Gregory were both alike in vain. Accordingly, picking out five
“of the household of the king of the Teutons, by whose advice churches are
sold”, the Pope declared them excommunicated, unless they came to Rome, and
made suitable satisfaction before the 1st of June.
But this synod of February
1075 took other work in hand which touched Henry more nearly than even the
proceedings against certain of his youthful and dissolute counsellors. In
estimating the causes of the evils which were stifling the life of the Church,
the assembly concluded that the most deadly was investiture. Through it
the Church was really ruled by the lay nobility, who used their power over it
to replenish the coffers, exhausted by extravagance, the cost of war, and other
causes. The powerful but too frequently sold the ecclesiastical positions under
their control to the highest bidders, who, when in office, did likewise. Clergy
thus appointed were naturally not men imbued with the spirit of their calling.
They were laymen at heart, and acted as such. They took to themselves wives,
and thought more of them and of their families than they did of the work of
God. Were investiture killed, argued the synod, the most poisonous root which
was infecting the garden of the Church would be destroyed. To effect its destruction,
the following important decree was drawn up : “If anyone shall from henceforth
receive from the hand of any layman a bishopric or abbey, let him not be
accounted a bishop or abbot, and let no one treat him as a bishop or abbot. We
deprive him, moreover, of the grace of St. Peter, and of the right of entry
into the Church, until he shall have given up the position he has secured by
the sin of ambition and of disobedience, which is as the sin of idolatry. And
similarly do we decree concerning the lesser dignities of the Church. Further,
if any emperor, duke, marquis, count, or any temporal lord, or indeed any
secular person whosoever, shall presume to give investiture of any bishopric or
of any ecclesiastical dignity, let him understand that he is bound by the same
sentence”.
The Fathers of the synod,
however, not unmindful that large numbers of ecclesiastics held lands of feudal
chiefs, and would hence owe some kind of acknowledgment for them, realized that
there was room for compromise in this matter of investiture. And so, after
affirming, in accordance “with the decrees of the Fathers”, the rights of the
Church with regard to the appointment of its officials, they would appear to
have put forth their decree as it were tentatively, and not definitely, as they
did in March 1080. It would seem, at any rate, that it was in connection with
this decree that Gregory made an offer of negotiation in the last letter which
he wrote to Henry. While affirming that in drawing up the decision in question
there had been no innovation, the Pontiff wrote : “However, lest this decree
should appear to you unduly severe, we have instructed those of your subjects
who are here to beg you not to allow the change of a bad custom to disturb you,
but to send to us some of the good and wise men of your country. If they can
show how, without sacrificing God’s honour, or endangering our soul’s
salvation, we can modify the decree of the Fathers which has been promulgated,
we will willingly follow their opinions. And even if we had not made you this
friendly offer, it would have been proper, before you violated the apostolic
decrees, to have shown us in what we had aggrieved you or detracted from the honour
which is your due. But your after conduct proclaimed how much you care for our admonitions,
or for the observance of justice”.
In the interval, however,
between his hearing of the investiture decree and his receiving this letter
from the Pope, Henry’s position at home had materially improved. He had
defeated the Saxons on the Unstrut (June), and bad
received their submission (October). He was in a better position to set at
naught the laws of God and man with at least temporary impunity.
Before the final surrender of
the Saxons he had continued to temporize to some extent with the Papacy.
Gregory had never ceased his efforts to reform the Church in Germany, exhorting
its archbishops to enforce his decrees, summoning to Rome bishops accused of
simony, and reminding all of them that “it has ever been the right of the
Church of Rome, and ever will be, to devise against fresh disorders new laws
and remedies which, put forth as they are with the sanction of reason and
authority, may not be regarded as null by any man”. With the zeal of the Pope,
Henry made some pretence of co-operating, and even succeeded in winning
Gregory’s approval for his efforts. Moreover, “perceiving”, as he said, “that
nearly all the great ones of his kingdom rejoiced more over any discord between
the Pope and himself than over their good understanding”, he sent envoys to
confirm that understanding, and to ask for the imperial crown. To this Gregory
had replied that he desired to have Christ’s peace “not only with you, whom God
has placed in the highest human position”, but with all men. He had begun, he
continued, to conceive great hopes when he perceived that Henry had commenced
to entrust the affairs of the Church to men who really loved the rulers of the
Church and State, and not what they could get from them. “The counsel of these
men I am prepared to follow, to open to you the bosom of the Roman Church, to
accept you as my lord, my brother, and my son, and to help you as opportunity
offers, asking nothing of you but that you should attend to the advice which is
offered you regarding your salvation, and that you should not refuse to offer
to your Creator the honour and glory which is His due”.
But although, as early as
September 11, Gregory unfolded to Beatrice and Matilda certain reasons for
distrust which Henry had already given him, no overt act of hostility had then
taken place between them. Events that took place in Milan caused Henry
definitely to throw off the mask, and to make it evident that he would not be
thwarted by the laws of the Church if he could help it.
When Gregory became Pope, the
See of Milan was in the hands of Godfrey, who had been simoniacally
elected, while Atto, who was its legitimate bishop,
was in exile in Rome. Headed by the knight Herlembald, who was vigorously
supported by Gregory, the Patarines were able to
deprive Godfrey of any influence. Unfortunately, however, Herlembald committed
the great mistake of interfering in matters of comparatively trifling account
when great issues were at stake. In attempting to enforce in Milan the use of
the Roman liturgy, he was slain (May 1075) by the Milanese capitanei
in accordance with a promise they had previously made to Henry.
The death of Herlembald was
one of the greatest misfortunes which could have befallen the party of reform
in north Italy. It was now without a head. The power of Gregory’s enemies there
was further strengthened by the adhesion to their ranks of Archbishop Guibert
of Ravenna. He had been deposed by Gregory for refusing to attend the synod of
February. Despising excommunication, the shifty Cardinal Hugo Candidus also transferred his allegiance to the foes of the
Church, and vainly endeavoured to induce Robert Guiscard to do likewise.
With the Saxons under his
feet, and north Italy by his side, Henry felt that he was in a position to
dictate. To extend, however, his influence in Italy, he sent thither, as his
agent, Count Ebehard of Nellenburg
(c. the end of November). Ebehard was one of
the king’s counsellors who had been excommunicated by the Pope, and the choice
of such an envoy shows the spirit in which Henry was acting. Ebehard’s first mission was to the Milanese. He
congratulated them on having slain Herlembald, declared the Patarines
public enemies, made war on some of them, and, as though wantoning in power,
proposed to the capitanei of Milan to elect
yet another archbishop. Nothing loath, they chose a cleric named Tedald (or Theobald), a man of noble family, but “of more
stoutness than virtue”. It is to be presumed that Godfrey was for some cause or
other not sufficiently active in the interests of the schismatical
party. At any rate, though he had previously invested Godfrey, Henry now
invested Tedald —“an extraordinary proceeding”, adds
even the imperialist Arnulf, “and one altogether hitherto unheard of, that a
city, which has one bishop elect, and a second consecrated, should have a third
bestowed upon it”.
Ebehard, in his endeavours
to increase his master’s hold on Italy, did not confine himself to north Italy.
Like Hugo Candidus, he tampered with Guiscard’s
loyalty, such as it was, to the Pope. In company with Gregory, bishop of
Vercelli, he visited Guiscard, and endeavoured to persuade him that his
possessions and prospects would be surer if he held his conquests of the king,
and not of the Pope. But the wily Norman replied that to ensure his continuing
to receive the aid of God and the holy apostles, Peter and Paul, he preferred
to remain a vassal of the Pope; but that if the king, out of his abundance,
were to grant him some additional lands, he would, without sacrifice of his
fidelity to the Church, acknowledge the suzerainty of the king in their regard.
Though baffled by Robert, Ebehard was able to report to his master that he might
count on north Italy, and need not be afraid of opposition from the Normans.
Their duke was too much engrossed with his own plans to concern himself with
the doings of the king or the Pope, so long as neither of them interfered with
southern Italy.
Despite the fact that
Gregory’s rights, both spiritual and temporal, had been so flouted by Henry, he
still endeavoured to avoid a conflict. He wrote in a firm but conciliatory
spirit to Tedald, reminding him of the previous
election of Atto, exhorting him to come to Rome under
a safe conduct, in order that his claims might be carefully examined, and
forbidding him in the meantime to receive any sacred orders. “If you do not see
fit to obey us now, you will regret it when, by your hastiness, you find yourself
immersed in an abyss whence you will not be able to extricate yourself, even
when you wish”. In fine, he warned him not to heed those who would persuade him
to trust in the might of the king, of the nobility, and of his fellow-
citizens. “The power of kings and emperors, and all the efforts of all men
against the rights of the Apostolic See, and the omnipotence of the great God,
are as a little ash and straw”. This letter was immediately followed by another
to Gregory of Vercelli and the other suffragans of Milan, forbidding them, in the
meanwhile, to bestow any sacred orders on Tedald,
“whom the king has placed in the Church of Milan against his written and verbal
promise”.
Tedald paid no regard to
Gregory’s earnest exhortations, but took forcible possession of the
archbishopric of Milan; and Henry, without the slightest reference to the Pope,
and in defiance of all right, bestowed the Sees of
Fermo and Spoleto on two of his clerics.
This outrageous conduct drew
from Gregory a strong protest, which took the form of a letter to Henry. It is
the last, to Henry, as far at least as we know, that the Pope addressed to him.
“Gregory, servant of the
servants of God, to King Henry health and apostolic benediction, if he yields
to the Apostolic See that obedience which is due from a Christian king”.
In the first instance, Henry
is reminded that, if the report be true that he consorts with those who have
been excommunicated, he is not in a condition to receive the blessing either of
Heaven or of the Holy See. If he feels himself guilty in this respect, he
should, by a prompt confession, secure the good advice of some holy bishop. The
Pope assured Henry that he empowered the prelate of his choice to absolve him,
and to impose a suitable penance upon him. With the king’s consent the said
bishop could make known to the Pope the measure of his repentance. Henry is
next upbraided because his honied words, and those of his envoys, do not in the
least correspond with his action, for instance, with regard to the Churches of
Milan, Fermo, and Spoleto. As he calls himself a son of the Church, it behoves
him to show respect to its head, St. Peter, and his successors. Consequently,
when the Pope speaks in conformity with the dictates of the Fathers, he who
would obey the ordinance of God must conform to his admonitions.
Referring, then, to the synod
of February 1075, and, seemingly, to a decree against investitures passed
thereat, the Pope expresses his willingness to compromise in that matter as far
as is at all possible.
This, one of Gregory’s very
few long letters, concludes with the hope that the natural development of
Henry’s intellect will lead him to obey the behests of Christ, and not to
interfere with the liberty of the Church, His spouse. God has given him a great
victory: let him not, then, imitate Saul, who, under similar circumstances,
drunk with glory, despised the words of the priests, but rather let him copy
the humility of David.
How little this paternal
exhortation affected Henry, the sequel will show. But while his criminal
administration was deservedly raising up life-long enemies against him,
Gregory’s conscientious endeavours to promote the cause of God and man were
having the same effect in his regard. One of the most bitter of his foes was
Cencius, the son of Stephen, once prefect of the city. Cencius was a worthy
survivor of the worst type of the Roman robber-baron of the tenth century. In
the castle of St. Angelo he had given an asylum to Cadalous (1063); and in
forts which he possessed in the Campagna and by the bridge of St. Peter he
found both a coign of vantage whence to prey upon the weak, and a place of
refuge from the hands of justice. Convicted at length of trying by forgery to
obtain property that belonged to the Holy See, he would have been put to death,
but for the intercession of the Countess Matilda. Hating the hand that had set
him free, he spent the year 1075 in gathering round him other evil-doers who
had suffered from, or who feared, the justice of Gregory. By the close of the
year his plans were matured. He would slay the man who had granted him his
life, and he would do the deed on the first convenient opportunity.
His chance came at Christmas
time. On Christmas Eve a terrific storm burst over the city of Rome. The wind
howled through its narrow streets, and brought down such a tempest of rain that
the terrified people were not only unable to go to so distant a church as that
of St. Mary Major, where the Pope was wont to inaugurate the devotions of
Christmas time, but, while kept within doors, were led to think of the great
Deluge, and of what a suitable day it was for the commission of a great crime.
The storm, however, did not
prevent Gregory from leaving his palace and going to the exposed Church of St.
Mary on the Esquiline Hill. There he sang Mass, and it is to be supposed
partook, in company with all his court, of the special banquet which it was the
duty of the cardinal-bishop of Albano to furnish on that day.
The accomplices of Cencius
were on the watch. If there were few at the Pope’s Mass on Christmas Eve, there
would be still fewer at his midnight Mass. When the darkness of night added to
the horrors of the storm, Cencius gathered together his gang armed them, and
provided them with horses, so that they might ride away in safety after they
had slain the Pope or seized him alive. Gregory said his first Mass at the
altar where, according to tradition, was preserved the manger
in which our Saviour had been laid. He and the assistant clergy had just
communicated, and were distributing the Body of the Lord to the faithful, when,
on a sudden, there rang through the great, almost empty basilica the sound of
the clash of arms and the fierce cries of bloodthirsty men. The ruffians who
had thus violated the House of God made a dash for the chapel in which the Pope
was celebrating. Those who opposed them or were in their way were struck down
with the sword. One of the band even made a wild attempt to strike off the head
of the Pope, but did no more than inflict a severe wound on his forehead. His
comrades, however, seized Gregory, tore off with the utmost violence his
pallium, his chasuble, his dalmatic, and his tunic, hurried him from the
church, and forced him, still clad in his alb and
stole, on to the back of a horse behind one of the gang, as if he had been a
common thief. Then, as though the fiend were behind them as well as in their
hearts, the whole troop charged through the blinding storm to one of the towers
of Cencius by the Piazza Navona.
In the midst of all this
brutal fury, we are told that Gregory, “like an innocent and gentle lamb”, did
naught but raise his eyes to heaven. He gave his assailants no answer, upbraided
them not, resisted them not, nor begged for mercy. But we are equally told that
the wretch who had struck the Pontiff with his sword was possessed by the
devil, and for a long time lay rolling on the ground foaming at the mouth in
front of the atrium of the church, while his horse galloped away and was seen
no more.
The news of the dread deed
which had been done soon spread through the city, for the storm ceased as
though “not to hinder the people who were zealous with the zeal of the Lord”.
The altars of the churches were at once stripped, and all divine services were
brought to an abrupt end. All the rest of the night the alarm bells rang out,
and trumpets sounded, while soldiers patrolled the city to find whither the
Pope had been carried, and men were set to watch the gates, lest an attempt
should be made to carry him out of the city.
Meanwhile in his prison
Gregory was being treated with sympathy and with insolence and violence. “A
certain man, with a certain noble matron”, were carried off, we are told, along
with the Pope. And while the man tried to warm him by covering him with his own
furs, and placing his cold feet against his breast, the matron dressed the
wound on his forehead, and fearlessly denounced his captors.
But while one woman tried to
console him, another, the sister of Cencius, did not hesitate to revile him in
the bitterest terms; and her brother’s bravos added their threats to her
vituperations. Cencius himself stood over him with his drawn sword, and with
all the fury of a madman threatened him with the direst extremities if he did
not hand over to him his treasure and the castle of St. Angelo, and his other
strongest castles.
At length, as a result of
inquiries and searches eagerly prosecuted in every direction, word was brought
to the people assembled in the Capitol that their beloved bishop was alive, but
was a captive in a tower of Cencius. With loud shouts all encouraged one
another to vengeance, and as soon as morning broke they precipitated themselves
on the fortress with the utmost fury. “Not a man thought of his own danger,
but, utterly forgetful of himself, fought with all his might”. Fire,
battering-rams, and siege-engines of every kind soon reduced Cencius and his
gang to straits. A javelin hurled from without by one of the assailants pierced
a ruffian in the throat who was at the moment threatening to cut off the head
of the Pope. “It threw his body”, adds Paul Bernried,
“quivering in death to the ground, and sent his soul to hell”.
Overcome now with the fear of
immediate death, Cencius fell upon his knees before the Pontiff he had so
grievously outraged, and implored his forgiveness. For the injuries he had
inflicted on himself Gregory freely granted him pardon, but to atone for his
offences against God he commanded him to present himself to him again after
having made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem. But there was not even a spark of virtue
in Cencius. No sooner was he free than he threw himself into one of his castles
in the Campagna, ravaged the property of the Roman Church, and continued till
the hour of his death his machinations against the man who had with great
difficulty succeeded in saving his life.
Masters of the tower, the
people escorted the Pope at his own request back to the Church of St. Mary
Major with feelings not only of joy, but of grief, for they realized when they
saw him covered with blood something of what he had been made to suffer. When
he reached the church, Gregory, supported by two assistants, calmly concluded
before them all the Mass he had been prevented from finishing, and then
returned to the Lateran in the prescribed manner.
As though nothing unusual had
happened, Gregory allowed the crown to be placed upon his head by the
archdeacon, mounted his horse, and proceeded to the Lateran Palace by the
accustomed route. This was by the eastern side of the Church of S. Prassede, under the arch near the Church of St. Vitus in
the modern street of S. Vito, and in the old market of Livia, and by the
reservoir and fountain (Nymphaeum) known in the Middle Ages as Cimbrum, from its supposed connection with Marius.
Thereabouts it turned south into the Via Merulana,
which in part of its course was identical with the present street of that name,
and ran direct to the Lateran Palace “in the neighbourhood of the fullery”.
At the head of this papal
procession there proudly marched twelve soldiers (milites
draconarii), who bore the twelve standards (pandora)
of the city’s regions. With the draconarii was
led for the Pope a second horse fully caparisoned. Next, carried aloft, was the
cross. After the cross came the bishops, and behind them the notaries singing.
Then followed the cardinals, and then the archdeacon, the primicerius,
and the deacons and subdeacons, two and two. Behind them, on horseback, rode
the Pope. Following him came the prefect of the city, wearing a precious mantle
and shod with buskins, one of which was ornamented in gold and the other in red.
The procession was closed by the judges in great cloaks or copes. Its
arrangement, and the preservation of its order, seem to have been in the hands
of two captains of the fleet (praefecti navales), called Drungarii,
who also wore great cloaks (pluviales) and
carried batons. They were assisted by mounted majorentes
or the schola stimulati, in silken mantles,
and also carrying batons.
The cavalcade halted at the
first of the great group of buildings which then formed the Lateran, viz., at
the library called, from Pope Zachary’s additions to it, the Basilica Zachariae. The cardinals dismounted before the Pope,
received his blessing, and, in the ordinary form of the laudes,
wished Gregory “long life”, and called upon God and His saints to grant it to
him, and to help him. In return for their good wishes they each received three
solidi. After the judges also had wished the Pope “many years”, and that both
he and all might have “a happy life”(tempora
bona), the Pope dismounted, and was led into the palace by the primicerius and secundicerius
of the defensors.
Gregory then distributed the
accustomed largess (presbyterium) “to all the orders”, and, as also on
Easter Sunday, a manus—that is, a double presbyterium—to the
heads (priores) of the different orders or scholae.
Thus the primicerius of the judges, the first
(prior) of the bishops, and the first of the cardinals each received four solio and a manus. The prefect received the
largest sum, twenty solidi and a manus, while the regionary prior only
received two solidi with his manus.
When the presentation of the
largess was over, the whole company adjourned to the great triclinium of Leo
III to dine together. On the right of the Pope sat the bishops and cardinals,
and on his left the archdeacon, the deacon, the primicerius,
the prior basilicarius, and the prior regionarius. When the feast was nearly half over, at
a sign from the archdeacon, a deacon read a lesson from a book of homilies
which an ostiarius had placed in the midst on a stand. The cantors then sang, “in modulated tones”,
the Sequence “Laetabundus”, and, after kissing the
Pope’s feet, received from the sacellarius
(paymaster) for their services not only a byzant apiece, but a cup of wine
which the Pope had touched with his lips. “When the banquet was over”,
concludes the Ordo of Benedict, “all returned, or, if cardinals, were escorted,
to their homes”.
Meanwhile the people, after the
Pope had completed his Mass, devoted themselves to wreaking vengeance on
Cencius and his followers. As many of the latter as they encountered they put
to death, “against the wishes of the Pope”. They plundered or destroyed their
goods, levelled the towers of Cencius to the ground, and declared his property
confiscated to the State.
GREGORY’S important letter of
December 1075 to Henry had concluded thus: “With regard to the points in
your letters on which we have not touched, we shall not give definite replies
to them until your ambassadors, Rabbod, etc., and
those whom we have attached to them, have returned to us, and more fully made
known to us your intentions with regard to those matters on which we have commissioned
them to treat with you”.
In the beginning of January
the envoys met the king at Goslar. But they were unable to extract from him any
satisfactory assurances of an alteration in his policy towards the Holy See, or
towards the Saxon bishops he had imprisoned. Still less would he promise to
reform his private life, or to abandon the society of those who had already
been excommunicated. The envoys, thereupon, gave him to understand that he
would be excommunicated, and hence deprived of his kingdom, in the approaching
Roman synod (February 22), unless he made atonement for his misdeeds. Lambert
of Hersfeld, indeed, declares that the envoys cited
Henry himself, under pain of excommunication, to appear before the synod to
defend his conduct in person. But in this respect, to judge from Gregory’s
letters and from the chroniclers Bruno, Berthold, and Bernald,
he is certainly mistaken. It is to be observed that Henry was threatened with
excommunication not on any political count, but by reason of his personal crimes.
The king, like the poorest of his subjects, was a member of the Church; and
hence, if he sinned, was amenable to its jurisdiction just as every other one
of its members. It was because he was a sinful man, because he was grossly and
notoriously immoral, and consorted with the excommunicated, and not because he
was a political offender, that Gregory claimed authority over him. This he
makes very clear in his subsequent apology for his action addressed to the
German people.
At any rate, Henry was infuriated
at meeting with opposition from Rome, when he had humbled his enemies at home,
and had just induced the nobility to promise to elect his son Conrad as his
successor. In hot haste he summoned a diet, “especially of those bishops and
princes on whom he could rely”, to meet forthwith at Worms. On January 24 there
gathered round him in that ancient city the two metropolitans of Mainz
(Siegfried) and Trier, twenty-four bishops, of whom one was from Italy, a great
number of abbots, and not a few of the princes of the empire The most important
ecclesiastic present was the degraded or excommunicated Cardinal Hugo Candidus.
Denouncing Gregory in a series
of “tragic lies”, he declared that he had been improperly elected, had stirred
up discord all over Europe, and had degraded the episcopal office. He even had
the effrontery to denounce his relations with the Countess Matilda. Many of the
bishops present, conscious of their own shortcomings in the eyes of the Pope,
made no difficulty in accepting these assertions, and all were compelled to
sign a declaration to the effect that they would not in future render him any
obedience, and that, as he had often said that they were not bishops, they
would not regard him as their apostolicus. One
or two, indeed, resisted for a time. They pointed out that it was contrary to
the canons to condemn any bishop in his absence, not to say the bishop of Rome,
against whom no accusation, whether of bishop or archbishop, was valid. Under
pressure, however, they gave way, and signed the document. But a deeper
humiliation was in store for them, and for as many as had signed the general
decree through fear. In most instances against his will each bishop was
compelled to sign a private deed setting forth that he henceforth forbade any
obedience to be paid to Hildebrand, and that he would nevermore acknowledge him
as apostolicus. “Behold!” exclaimed Gebehard of Salzburg, “the source of all the troubles we
are enduring ... the source of all our sorrows. ... Bishops decree that a
servant of a king has a right to bid the supreme Pontiff come down from his
episcopal seat”."
Henry had now fairly crossed
the Rubicon. His intemperate action had kindled a fire which was destined to
consume many. His first act was to send the decree of the diet of Worms to the
bishops of north Italy, who heartily endorsed it at Piacenza and Pavia, but
dared not take it to Rome. At length, however, a certain Roland, a canon of
Parma, was found bold enough to carry Henry’s missives to the Pope.
Making the greatest haste,
Roland arrived in Rome the day before the opening of the synod which Gregory
had long previously fixed for February 14. He at once put in circulation a
letter which Henry had addressed to all the clergy and people of the Roman Church,
calling on them to be loyal to him, and to depose the monk Hildebrand, the
oppressor of the Church, the enemy of the Roman Republic and of the German
kingdom, the intruder who had attempted to humiliate the bishops of the empire,
and had declared that at the cost of his life he would deprive the king of his
existence and of his kingdom. It was, so the document reminded the Romans, in
virtue of his power as patricius of Rome that he
summoned Hildebrand to descend from the chair of Peter.
When the Pope had opened the
synod at the Lateran in the presence of a hundred and ten bishops, and a large
number of clerics and laics, among whom was the empress- mother Agnes, Roland
stepped audaciously forward. “My lord the king”, he began, “and all the bishops
beyond the Alps, as well as these of Lombardy, bid you quit forthwith the See
of Peter, into which you have intruded yourself. No one has a right to this
great honour except him who has received a mandate from the bishops and the
approval of the king”. Then, addressing the clergy, he continued: “You, my
brethren, are summoned to appear before the king on the feast of Pentecost, to
receive from his hands a Pope and Father; for this man is no Pope, but a
ravenous wolf”. “Seize him”, thundered out John, the cardinal-bishop of Porto.
Instantly the great basilica rang with cries of “Death to the insolent knave!”,
swords flashed from their sheaths, and but for Gregory’s throwing himself in
front of him, the king’s messenger would have been cut to pieces by the prefect,
the nobles, and the soldiers.
When order had been restored,
the Pope commanded that the letter from the king which Roland had brought
should be read aloud forthwith. It was with profound astonishment that the
assembly listened to the following extraordinary epistle : “Henry, king, not by
usurpation, but by the holy will of God, to Hildebrand, now no longer the apostolicus, but a false monk”. After asserting that
Gregory had trampled upon the episcopal order, and, mistaking the king’s
anxiety for the honour of the Apostolic See for fear, had dared to threaten to
deprive him of his kingdom, he declared to him that he had lawfully received
his power from Jesus Christ, whereas Gregory had gained the Apostolic See by
fraud, by force, and by gold. “You have assailed me, though according to the
tradition of the Fathers, I am to be judged by God alone, and not to be deposed
except, which God forbid, I should fall away from the faith ... Condemned by
all our bishops and by us, come down, and leave the apostolic chair you have
usurped. Let another mount the throne of Blessed Peter, who, under cover of
religion, will not teach war. . . I, Henry, by the grace of God, king, with all
our bishops, say unto thee, damned for ever, come down, come down!”
When the Fathers of the
council met on the following day, they called on the Pope to pass sentence on
the rebellious bishops, and on Henry, the author of their revolt. Accordingly,
invoking St. Peter, who had nourished him from his infancy, to bear witness
that he had against his will been set over the Roman Church, Gregory declared
it to be his belief that it was the will of the saint “that the Christian
people, specially committed to thee, should obey me in thy stead. Through thy
favour I have received from God the power of binding and of loosing
in heaven and in earth. Relying on this, for the honour and defence of thy
Church, in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and by thy
power and authority, I forbid to King Henry, who through unexampled pride has
rebelled against thy Holy Church, the government of the whole realm of Germany
and of Italy; I absolve all Christians from the oaths which they have taken or
may take to him; and I decree that no one shall obey him as king, for it is
fitting that he, who has endeavoured to diminish the honour of thy Church,
should himself lose that honour which he seems to have. And because he has
scorned the obedience of a Christian, refusing to return to the Lord, whom he
had driven from him by his communion with the excommunicate; by spurning, as
thou knowest, the admonitions given by me for his own
safety’s sake; and by severing himself from thy Church in the attempt to divide
it, I, in thy stead, bind him with the bond of anathema; thus acting in
confidence on thee, that the nations may know and acknowledge that thou art
Peter, that upon thy rock the Son of the living God hath built his Church, and
that the gates of hell shall not prevail against it”.
The bishops of Germany and
Lombardy who had cooperated with the king were suspended from the performance
of their episcopal functions, and cut off from the communion of Christ’s body
and blood. Those, however, who had yielded an unwilling consent to Henry’s acts
were given till the feast of St. Peter to make satisfaction to the Pope, and so
avoid the general sentence. And, even before the council had finished its
sittings, letters were received from some of the German bishops, in which they
acknowledged their fault, begged pardon for their offence, and promised
henceforth the obedience of children to their father.
The council was no sooner over
than, addressing a letter to all those who wished to be of the number of those
sheep whom Christ had entrusted to St. Peter, Gregory called their attention to
the outrage which the action of Henry had put upon the authority which had been
given to the first of the of apostles; begged them to pray that the impious
might be converted or confounded; and set forth the reasons why Henry had been
excommunicated. He also took an early opportunity of protesting that, in what
he had done, he had acted from zeal for justice, and not from any personal
ill-feeling.
When this momentous piece of intelligence
was made known to the world, there were some who did not hesitate to tell the
Pope that kings could not be excommunicated. To these, however, he simply
replied, “When with the words 'Feed my sheep', God thrice entrusted his Church
to Blessed Peter, did He except kings? When chiefly to him He gave the power of
binding and loosing in heaven and in earth, He made
no exceptions; He did not withdraw anyone from under his authority. He who
asserts that he cannot be bound by the Church’s bonds, confesses that he cannot
be loosed by her authority. And he who makes such an assertion, separates
himself wholly from Christ”.
As soon as the news of
Henry’s excommunication got abroad, “the whole Roman world trembled”. The king
heard of it at Utrecht. His fury may be easily imagined, and he at once ordered
a bishop to tell the people that the censure was impotent. But, to his chagrin,
the bishop immediately fled from his court, and though William of Utrecht
readily fulfilled his wishes, he quickly realized that the ground was crumbling
beneath his feet. To the horror of everyone, William died soon after in despair
of his salvation for his contempt of the Pope (April 27, 1076). Word, too, was
brought to Henry that some of the bishops who had supported him at Worms were
seeking to be reconciled with the Pope. And if by the assassination of Godfrey
the Hunchback, of Lorraine (February 26, 1076), he gained a duchy, he lost his
ablest general and most talented supporter. Furthermore, it was already hinted
to him that the princes of the empire had begun to abandon him.
Nevertheless, he did not
hesitate to summon them to meet him at Worms on the feast of Pentecost: “Our
interests, and the interests of the bishops, ay, even of the whole oppressed
Church, require it”, he wrote, “for Hildebrand has, against the will of God,
made himself lord of the empire and of the episcopate, and has thereby ignored
His will that those two powers should not be held in one hand, as He typically
foreshadowed when He said that the two swords were enough” (St. Luke XXII. 38).
But, through insufficient
attendance, the assembly of Worms was a failure, so that a new diet was
appointed to be held at Mainz on June 29. The greatest lay princes of the
empire, however, were conspicuous by their absence from this assembly also.
Nevertheless, the king’s bishops again declared Gregory excommunicated, and his
sentence against the king of no avail. But Henry was to learn that for him or
his to declare the Pope deposed was one thing, but that it was another and a
very different thing for the Pope to pronounce him excommunicated and deprived
of his kingdom. The question of the justice of these sentences was soon being
debated throughout the whole empire. And though there were some who would not
admit that the Pope had a right to decide that the king had forfeited his
crown, those who correctly comprehended the relations which then held between
the Church and the State concluded that the Pope was within his rights. They
remembered that when Henry was elected, it had been “on the understanding that
he shall prove a just king”, and that it was a law of the empire that “if a man
were not absolved from a sentence of excommunication within a year and a day,
he was to be deprived of every dignity”.
The further the news of the
king’s excommunication spread, the more rapidly did he lose supporters. Udo,
the metropolitan of Trier, returned from Rome, where he had made his peace with
Gregory, and induced other bishops to follow his example. Many more, both
clergy and laity, abandoned Henry on becoming acquainted with the contents of
one or other of the circular letters which Gregory kept dispatching “to all the
bishops, abbots, and priests, to all the dukes, princes, and knights, and to
all Christians who dwell in the Roman Empire and really love the Christian
faith and the honour of Blessed Peter”. Some of the letters were addressed to
the bishops, exhorting them to repent as they held the same faith as the Pope,
and knew their duty.[ Others urged those to whom they were sent to do their
best to induce Henry to return to the right path, and to avoid the society of
such as held intercourse with the excommunicated monarch. Others again, of an
apologetic character, established Gregory’s right to excommunicate the king. In
them he quoted the examples of Pope Zachary’s deposition of Childeric III; of
St. Gregory I imposing excommunication, with loss of dignity, on kings or
anyone else who should violate the privilege he granted to a hospital at Autun;
and of St. Ambrose excommunicating the great emperor Theodosius. He explained
that from the time when he was a deacon he had endeavoured to turn Henry away
from his evil courses, that he had made greater efforts after he became Pope,
that Henry had only grown more wicked with advancing age, and that his
exhortations had been merely met with promises of amendment. When at length he
had been compelled to excommunicate those who were basely trafficking in
churches, Henry openly received them into his society; and, when he had been
still further rebuked for his dreadful crimes, he had caused almost all the
bishops of Italy (Lombardy), and such German bishops as he could, to be false
to the obedience they owed the Apostolic See. For these reasons he had
excommunicated him : and he now forbade him to be absolved without his
knowledge. Finally, he made it known that, “with due regard for justice”, he
would support those who were talking of electing a new king.
THE SAXON WAR
Perhaps the most serious blow
which these letters inflicted on Henry’s cause was the encouragement they gave
to the Saxons. To appreciate the force of this remark, a few words must be said
regarding Henry’s dealings with these, the most warlike people of his
dominions.
Whether the recollection that
their country had given the first rulers to the Holy Roman Empire of the German
nation made them naturally hostile to the Franconian line, it is certain that
they were much attached to their local chiefs, liberties, and customs, and were
ever ready to resent interference with any of them. But Henry, so far from
attempting to respect their prejudices, acted as though he cared neither for
their feelings nor their liberties. In the early part of his reign, he spent
most of his time n Saxony, slighting its chiefs and outraging its maidens. This
led the Saxons to appeal to the Pope and to rebellion. Acting on the advice of
Adalbert of Bremen, who had his own reasons for not loving the Saxons, Henry
began to erect fortresses all over Saxony and Thuringia, with a view to
overawing the people (1069). His favourite one was at Hartzburg.
He next irritated the Saxon chiefs by unjustly depriving Otho of Nordheim, a Saxon by birth, of the Duchy of Bavaria (1070),
and by keeping young Magnus, the heir of their Duke Ordulf
(d. 1073), a prisoner during two years for supporting Otho when he vainly endeavoured
to resist the confiscation of his duchy.
At length, infuriated by the
licentious behaviour of the garrisons which the king had placed in his castles,
by his threat to cut off the heads of any who appealed to Rome, by his
contemptuous disregard of the protestations and demands of their chiefs, and by
the discovery which they had made that he was trying to rouse the Danes and
others against them, the Saxons rose “as one man”, and marched straight on Hartzburg. Henry fled for his life to the monastery of Hersfeld, where Lambert was engaged in writing the annals
we are constantly quoting. No sooner had he left their country, than the Saxons
at once began to destroy his castles; and a conference between the Saxon chiefs
and representatives of the king, held at Gerstungen
in October, simply ended in a further loss of popularity by Henry, even among
those of the princes who were supposed to be attached to him. It is also said
that it was already proposed, if not decided, to depose Henry, and place the
crown upon the head of Rudolf of Swabia. Odium was still further excited
against Henry by the assertion of one of his followers that he had wished him
to assassinate the Dukes Rudolf of Swabia and Berthold of Carinthia. His case
would have been hopeless had he not found a powerful support in the loyalty of
the citizens of Worms, to which city he had betaken himself in December.
At this junctures Gregory
dispatched a letter to the Saxon leaders in the interests of peace. Henry had
asked the Pope’s help in his difficulties,6 and there can be no doubt that,
despite his threats, the Saxons had made the latter acquainted with their
position.
Expressing his regret at the
quarrel which had broken out between them and the king, at the consequent loss
of life, conflagrations, pillage of churches and of the poor, and at the ruin
of the country, Gregory conjured them to abstain from hostilities until he
should be able to send legates to re-establish peace. He assured them that he
had written to the same effect to Henry. “And since, as you know, for us to lie
would be a sacrilege, and to abandon justice would be to make shipwreck of our
souls, we would not have one of you doubt that, with the help of God, we will endeavour
to decide and solidly to carry into effect whatever, after careful discussion
of the question, shall appear to be just. Whichever party we shall find to be
the injured one, and to be suffering from outraged justice, on that, without
fear or respect of persons, will we bestow our favour and the protection of our
apostolic authority”. But, unfortunately for themselves, the Saxons were too
much elated by their success to listen to the Pope. Events were to take their
course unrestrained by the guiding hand of Gregory.
Failing in an attempt to
surprise the Saxons by a winter campaign, Henry was compelled to make peace
with them, and to agree to their conditions (February 1074). One of these was
that his Saxon castles should be surrendered and destroyed. Flushed with their
success, and fired with the spirit of revenge, the Saxon people went beyond the
legal fulfilment of the treaty. Having obtained possession of Hartzburg, they were not content till they had dug up the
remains of Henry’s son and brother, and burnt them along, with the monastery
and church he had erected in the interior of his fortress.
Unable at the moment to avenge
these outrages by force of arms, he sent legates to Rome to make a strong
appeal against their authors, and he resolved at the same time to take a bitter
revenge on them as soon as circumstances would permit. Sparing no pains to
secure allies, and scorning all attempts made by the Saxon chiefs to atone for
the wanton destruction of Hartzburg, he was at length
able to enter Saxony with one of the largest and best appointed armies that had
ever obeyed a German king (June 1075). With him, besides the Dukes Rudolf, Welf of Bavaria, and Godfrey of Lorraine, marched Wratislaus with his Bohemians, and the Rhineland burghers. The
Saxons were taken by surprise, and suffered a terrible defeat on the banks of
the Unstrut (June 9). But the losses they endured on
the field of battle were small compared with the miseries inflicted on them and
their unhappy country after the battle was over. Henry’s troops acted as if
every license was permitted them, and continued so to act until want of
provisions forced the king to disband them with an order to reassemble in the
autumn. In the interval the Saxons made the most piteous appeals to Henry for
mercy. But if they made not the slightest impression on their cruel king, they
did on many of his great feudatories, and when the autumn came, his army
mustered without the contingents of Rudolf, Welf, and
Berthold of Carinthia. They repented them, they said, of the terrible bloodshed
at the Unstrut, and they were disgusted at the
hard-heartedness of the king.
When in October the Saxons and
the forces of the king once more stood face to face, the chiefs of both sides
showed themselves averse to further fighting. After much negotiation, the Saxon
leaders, both clerical and lay, relying on the pledges of the king’s principal
nobles, gave themselves into his hands on the understanding that their
surrender was simply to satisfy his honour, and that they were to be speedily
released without suffering any other disabilities. No sooner, however, were
they in his power than, entrusting them to the safe keeping of his adherents in
different parts of the empire, he made it plain that their confinement was not
to be of short duration, seized their goods, and again lorded it tyrannically
over Saxony.
Whilst the Saxons were still unsubdued,
Henry professed to listen with respect to the admonitions of the Pope, and, as
we have seen, promised amendment; but now “he wholly set them at naught, and
made it a point ostentatiously to hold intercourse with those of his counsellors
and intimates who had been excommunicated in the synod at Rome and ceased not
to harass the churches of God, as had been his previous custom”. His reply to a
strong remonstrance on the part of Gregory had been to declare him deposed.
But after his unwarrantable conduct
had brought excommunication upon him, he soon began, despite his victories, to
find himself in great straits.
The oppressed Saxons were
delighted when they heard of his excommunication, and their joy was
intensified when they found first one and then another of their leaders
returning to them. Some of them had escaped from the hands of their captors,
but many more had been released when Henry’s excommunication was proclaimed
(April-May). Under their old chiefs, the people once again flew to arms, and
Henry’s castles were soon in their hands. An attempt which he made to subdue
the rebels ended in complete failure, and in the autumn, at Worms, he heard
that the Saxons had appealed to the Pope to come to the aid “of a nation
well-nigh ruined”, and that the great ones of the empire, clerical and lay, had
called upon the whole nobility to assemble at Tribur
on October 16, “in order that, by common consent, they might decide what was to
be done in this important crisis”.
While Henry in impotent
anxiety moved forward to Oppenheim on the left bank of the Rhine, there
assembled to the east of that river, at Tribur, near
Darmstadt—a place already famous, for the deposition of Charles the Fat— the
great bishops and lords of the empire, accompanied by powerful retinues of
Saxons and Swabians. There were also present two legates of the Pope, viz. Sieghard, patriarch of Aquileia, and Altman, bishop of
Passau. At first the assembly showed itself very bitter against Henry. His
repeated promises of amendment of life were unheeded, and many wished to
proclaim a new king[ and to attack Henry forthwith. Apparently, however,
through the efforts of the Pope’s legates, more moderate counsels prevailed.
The monarch was duly informed that it had been decided to leave the decision
regarding his case to the Roman Pontiff, who was to be asked to meet the great
ones of the empire at a diet at Augsburg on the Feast of the Purification
(February 2, 1077). If, on the anniversary day of his excommunication, he was
still under the Church’s ban, he was to lose his dignity for ever, for the law
forbade further administration to anyone who had been under sentence of
excommunication for a year. Should he accept these conditions, he was to
dismiss his army and his excommunicated counsellors, and retire to Spires and
await, living as a private person, the coming of the Pope. They, however, on
the other hand, engaged, if he proved true to his promises, to accompany him to
Italy that he might receive the imperial crown, and drive the Normans from Apulia
and Calabria. With these hard conditions Henry was compelled to comply. Nor did
his humiliation end even with them. He was required, moreover, by circular
letter addressed to all the clerical and lay dignitaries of the empire, to
repudiate his schismatical action at Worms, and to
profess his readiness “unreservedly to obey the Holy See and the Lord Pope
Gregory who presides over it, and to make due satisfaction for any serious
wrong done to him”. In conclusion, he had to call on all those who had been
excommunicated along with him to seek absolution.
It was also demanded of him
that, by the hand of Udo of Trier, he should send to the Pope himself a
corresponding declaration of submission. It seems, however, that “the promise
of King Henry to Pope Gregory” which has come down to us is not the document
which was authorized for transmission to Rome by the princes at Tribur, but a forged one which Henry contrived to forward
in its place, and which, besides offering submission to the Pope, bade him take
note of the scandal which he himself was giving to the Church.
The significance of the
decisions of this remarkable diet has been admirably set forth by Voigt. “What
had been 0f the diet there accomplished”, he says, “was the natural result 0f
the policy of King Henry III. He had humbled the power of the great ones of the
empire too deeply, and had made them feel the superiority of his house so
keenly, that it was only to be expected that they would lift up their heads,
and do all in their power to recover their ancient liberties when once his iron
hand was removed. The foundation of German liberty rested on the authority of
the Pope and the princes, who by their union put a curb on the imperial power.
The power of the princes was as necessary as that of the Pope to prevent the
emperors of Germany from becoming absolute monarchs and tyrants. It was well
for humanity that the voice of the Papacy and religion found its support in
that of the princes who supported freedom, and joined the authority of the
sword to that of the sovereign Pontiff.
Naturally refusing Henry’s
request to allow him to come to exculpate himself at Rome, Gregory intimated to
his of advisers his intention to accept the invitation of the princes at Tribur, and to move north without delay. It was to no
purpose that they tried to dissuade him by reminding him of the advance towards
his dominions of the warlike Normans, of the unusual severity of the weather,
and of the avowed hostility to him of the Lombards. Writing to all the Germans,
and asking them to arrange for his reception, he assured them he was prepared
to brave all dangers, and would be at Mantua on January 8, 1077.
Under the escort of that “most
beloved and most faithful daughter of St. Peter”, Matilda, who had been one of
the few who had encouraged Gregory to undertake the journey, the Pope reached
Mantua in safety by the date he had appointed. But to his astonishment there
were no troops there from the princes to conduct him thence to Augsburg. He had
not, however, long to wait conjecturing the reason of this. An alarming piece
of news soon reached him. It was said that Henry had crossed the Alps with a
great army, and, as far as the king was concerned, the report was true. Already
before this the princes had received authentic information of Henry’s flight;
and the confusion into which this intelligence had thrown their counsels
prevented them from dispatching the escort for the Pope.
Whilst Henry was living in
enforced privacy at Spires, two conclusions forced themselves upon him: he must
prevent the Pope from appearing in Germany, and he must succeed in having the
excommunication removed from himself before the expiration of the year of
grace. Many wild schemes passed through his brain for accomplishing these ends
by the use of gold or force. But reflection on his utter abandonment quickly
reminded him that of the latter he had none; and an abortive attempt which he made
to raise money taught him that, as matters stood, he was as little likely to be
able to procure the former. Realizing, accordingly, that his only hope lay in
full submission to the Pope, he hurriedly left Spires with his wife and child
and a small company, and made for those passes of the Alps which were in the
hands of his mother-in-law, Adelaide, countess of Turin. Paying heavily for her
support, he crossed the Rhone at Geneva, and began the ascent of Mt. Cenis.
Owing to an exceptionally severe winter, the difficulties and dangers he had to
encounter in the ascent were very great, but they were surpassed by those he
met with in the descent. Often had the men of his party to crawl down some
steep declivity on their hands and knees, or to be carried on the backs of
their guides, while the peasants lowered the queen with her child and her
female attendants wrapped up in the skins of oxen.
At length, after many
hardships, and with the loss of most of his horses, Henry trod the Lombard
plain in safety. No sooner was it noised abroad that the German king had
crossed the Alps than all the numerous foes of the Papacy and reform were
rejoiced. Believing that he had come to humiliate their foe, evil-living
bishops and nobles flocked to him with their retainers. His cortège was,
moreover, swelled by many who were in hopes that he had come to draw the peace
of order out of the warlike chaos of north Italy. He seemed to be a king indeed
once again. But he knew that, with Germany against him, the support of the
greater portion of Lombardy was of little worth. Disguising from his adherents
at Pavia the dire necessity he was under of getting free from the
excommunication which weighed upon him, and leaving them under the impression
that as soon as he had had an interview with Gregory he would co-operate with
them “in quite ridding himself and the whole kingdom from so sacrilegious a man”,
he advanced towards Reggio.
CANOSSA
When the news that Henry,
faithless to his engagements at Tribur, had left
Spires and had crossed the Alps in safety reached Gregory, he was for a moment
at a loss what to do. Unwilling to return to Rome, he accepted the invitation
of Matilda, and retired with her to her famous castle of Canossa—a fortress so
strong that “a few soldiers could defend it against a host; that a ten years’
siege would not alarm it, for it was full of food, and was a mountain
surrounded by walls; and that it feared no engine of war, nor the king
himself”. Like a giant sentinel of the Apennines, it looked across the Lombard plain,
over many a city, towards the misty Alps.
Leaving Reggio by a road which
led to the south-west, and passing by Bibbiano, Henry
and his small company soon caught sight of Canossa among the clouds on one of
the high hills which here form the advance guard of the Apennines towards the
great plain. Striking the broad roaring torrent of the Enza,
they rode along its right bank to Ciano, and then began the steep ascent to the
castle. As they mounted up, the tight of a few stalks, black and straggling, of
some miserable vines protruding through the snow only served to throw out into
greater prominence the utter barrenness of the hills all around them, on which
not even the heats of summer could bring forth a blade of grass. Disregarding
the cold blasts which swept down the mountain side, and forcing their way
through the snow up a path like the dry bed of a torrent, they saw tower after
tower on the brow of first one peak and then another, and realized how
completely they were in the hands of the Great Countess, and how all their
movements were being watched and reported. At length, far in front of them, on
a solid mass of rock which itself sprang from the breast of a mighty cliff,
towered the strong, gloomy walls of the fortress of Canossa. Arrived there at last,
Henry gazed around him before attempting to enter it. To the north, through the
opening in the hills whence poured into the level country the torrent of the Enza, and away round to the east over the lower hills at
his feet, he gazed on the fertile plain of Lombardy which stretched away like
the rolling sea to the mighty barrier of the Alps, through which at the peril
of his life he had just made his way. He looked on the walls and towers of
Parma, of Reggio, and of Modena. But to the south, and especially to the west,
there was nothing on which his eye could rest but ridge after ridge of the
rugged, snow-covered Apennines.
Today only a few fragments of
the great castle are left standing. A column of marble is said to indicate the
site of the chapel of the fortress, and the gateway, now known as the “Porta di
penitenza”, before which Henry stood for days in
penitential garb, still exists. Traces of the castle’s triple defensive wall
may still be observed; but of the chapel of St. Nicholas, and of the dwellings
which once clustered round the base of the castle-rock, there are now no
remains.
In these buildings, which formed
quite a little town, and even in 1449 were known as “i
borghi di Canossa”, Henry found several of his
bishops and laymen who had been excommunicated doing severe penance. They had
crossed the Alps by different passes, had presented themselves to Gregory, and
had received absolution from him after promising submission to his injunctions.
Making use of the good offices
of Matilda and his godfather, the abbot Hugh, Henry begged the Pope through
them to free him from excommunication, and not to trust the charges of the
German princes. But Gregory replied that it was against the canons to judge an
accused in the absence of his accusers. Let the king come to Augsburg, and the
Pope would judge just judgment.
The fact was that the action
of Henry had placed Gregory in a most awkward position. To absolve him without
the knowledge of the German princes would not be fair to them, and yet not to
absolve him would seem harsh.
As he had failed to gain his
ends by negotiation, Henry resolved to follow in the wake of his subjects, and
to appear in penitential guise before the Pope, in order to win from him as a
priest what he could not as a diplomatist. Like them, with bare feet and clad
in a coarse woollen shirt over his other garments, he stood in the courtyard of
the castle, and craved to be admitted into the Pontiff’s presence. But Gregory
wished to deal with him only in Germany, and, besides, with good reason,
profoundly distrusted him. He would submit his sincerity to a severe test, and
would for a time take no heed of the king’s petition. For three successive days
did the unfortunate monarch wait in the cold for the Pope to relent. If Gregory
was not moved by the sight of his touching humility, it affected all the others
who saw it or heard of it. Many implored the Pope with tears to relent; all
were astonished at his unwonted hardness of heart, and some did not hesitate to
tell him that he was displaying not apostolic severity, but tyrannical
ferocity.
At the close of the third day
of his penance, Henry could endure his humiliation no longer. He would not, he
said, break his shield any further. In response to his earnest appeals to her
(for Abbot Hugh assured him that she alone could succeed), Matilda made another
pathetic appeal to the Pope, and at length induced him to allow Henry to appear
before him. Unable to resist the king’s ardent appeal for mercy, touched by his
penance, and by the intercession of his friends, Gregory agreed to absolve him
on certain conditions to which he was to swear on the following day; because,
as Berthold notes, the Pope “was as unwilling to be deceived as he was to
deceive”.
Profoundly convinced that
Henry’s tears and professions did not spring from his heart, Gregory did what
in him lay to ensure his fidelity to his engagements. He had to swear that he
would abide by the Pope’s final decision in his regard, and that he would
accord a safe conduct through his dominions to the Pope himself, or to any who
were on his business. To add solemnity to the oath, which Henry had no doubt taken,
after the manner of sovereigns, through his counsellors, it was witnessed on
behalf of the Pope by seven cardinals, and on behalf of the king by three
bishops, Hugh of Cluny, the Countess Matilda, and many of the nobility. Over
and above this, he would seem to have promised to stand by the agreement he had
made with the princes at Tribur, and to have been
given to understand that the validity of his absolution depended upon his
abiding by his oaths. After the taking of the oath, Gregory said Mass, and gave
the king Holy Communion. In offering him the Sacred Host, the Pope amplified
the usual formula, saying: “If you are approaching with a good heart, and
intend to observe what you have promised, may this Sacred Body be to you the
salvation it was to most of the apostles, otherwise you will receive it
unworthily, and without doubt will eat judgment to yourself”. The king received
the Body of the Lord, and after Mass was over was entertained to a banquet in
the most friendly way by the Pope.
In taking a parting glance at
this ever memorable scene, which has furnished even to our own age a common
phrase to denote any surrender on the part of the temporal power to the
spiritual, we shall confine ourselves to noting that historians see in the
humiliation of the tall, powerful king before the small, frail Pontiff, a type
of the “great victory of the moral power, represented by the Church, over rude
despotism”. “No doubt”, remarks Floto, “Henry had to
undergo a severe penance; but still, if there be taken into account the series
of events after 1075, the faults he committed, and the natural consequences of
those faults, we need not be astonished at their dramatic termination. Nor
ought we to be surprised at the exterior forms of the penance done by Henry.
The custom of those barbarous times required them, and all submitted to them.
In 1074, at Nuremburg, Henry had already presented himself before the legates
in a similar manner. Moreover, it is a great mistake to look upon Gregory as a
tyrant, full of rancour, and enjoying the sight of the sufferings and
humiliations of his victim. As a matter of fact, the penitence of the king
threw Gregory into a state of embarrassment, and was regarded by him as an
untoward event, seeing that what he desired was the assembly of the princes of
the empire”.
When Henry returned to Reggio
after his reconciliation with the Pope, he found that, if his action had
disconcerted the councils of his enemies in Germany, had sown a feeling of
distrust between them and the Pope, and had disappointed the Saxons, it had, on
the other hand, infuriated against him the powerful bishops of Lombardy, who
had hoped that he would have effectually curbed the power of Gregory. They
affected to despise him for having paid any heed to the excommunication of one
whom the bishops of Italy (Lombardy) had declared to be deposed for his
manifold crimes, and they contemptuously bade him, if he could, get his kingdom
back again by the aid of the Pope.
But if the hopes of the enemies
of the Pope had been dashed to the ground by the lightning stroke of Canossa,
those of his friends rose. The Patarines of Milan
definitely took the upper hand. A deputation of its citizens, among whom was
the now repentant historian Arnulf, came to the Pope to beg for absolution for
having held intercourse with the excommunicated Tedald.
Their request was granted through the agency of Anselm of Lucca and Cardinal
Gerald of Ostia, who were dispatched by the Pope to Milan and other cities of
Lombardy to take advantage of the reaction in his favour. But their mission was
brought to an abrupt termination by the seizure and imprisonment of Gerald by
the bishop of Piacenza.
This and other similar facts
soon convinced “the Lombard bulls” that they had no cause to be dissatisfied
with their champion. By his every act Henry made it plain to them that, if his
lips had sworn, his heart was yet unchanged. It was rumoured that he had
attempted to seize the person of the Pope by treachery, and that by night be
held secret conferences with Guibert of Ravenna, with the Roman Cencius, and
with other enemies of the Church. And it is certain that, when he came to
Piacenza, he made no effort to procure the release of the apostolic legate
Gerald, and that, too, despite the intercession in his behalf of his mother
Agnes. He did not hesitate, however, to ask Gregory to name a bishop to crown
him at Monza, with a view to appearing to have received from the Pope not only
communion, but also his kingly rights (regnum). But Gregory gave him clearly to
understand that as long as Peter, in the person of his ambassador, was in
bonds, he would never authorize his coronation.
Meanwhile the Pope had written
to tell the princes of the kingdom of the Teutons who were defending the
Christian faith how it had happened that the king’s humble penance had
compelled him to absolve him, but he assured them at the same time that the
question of Henry’s civil position was untouched, “was still in suspense”, and
could only be settled as arranged, viz., . by their decision in his presence.
This letter and the explanations of its bearer, Rapoto,
did something to restore to the princes the confidence of which the king’s
escape and absolution had deprived them. Henry’s power in Lombardy, the
severity of the season, and their own want of bold, prompt action caused the
abandonment of the Augsburg meeting. A number of them, however, met at Ulm in
Swabia about the middle of February, and arranged for the holding of a larger
assembly at Forcheim on the 13th of March. They also
sent to beg the Pope to be present at it, and to obtain, if possible, a safe
conduct from the king.
But if it was Gregory’s
earnest wish to preside at Forcheim, it was not
really that either of Rudolf or Henry. The former, anxious apparently to be
elected king himself, did not desire the presence either of an impartial judge
or a rival; nor did the latter desire that the good understanding between the
Pope and the princes should be strengthened. Hence he would neither go to the
diet himself nor give the Pope a safe conduct.
Accordingly, the diet of Forcheim was opened without the assistance either of Pope
or king, though the former was represented by two legates, the cardinal-deacon
Bernard, and another Bernard, the abbot of St. Victor in Marseilles. But their
commission did not extend beyond presenting the Pope’s letter to the assembly,
and exhorting the princes to defer the election of a new king till he could be
with them, “if they thought that that could be done with safety”. On the appointed
day there assembled at Forcheim thirteen bishops and
a great number of the princes of the empire. The papal legates, who were
received by the assembly with the greatest respect, explained to them the
little reason the Pope had had to be satisfied with the manner in which Henry
had so far fulfilled the promises he had made at Canossa, but begged them, in
the Pope’s name, to postpone, if it could be done with safety, the question of
the election of a new king till he could join them.
When, however, the papal
envoys had listened to the recital of Henry’s misdeeds, they could only express
their astonishment that the people had endured his rule so long. Nor could they
find it in their hearts to oppose the unanimous election of Rudolf of Swabia as
king, especially after he had engaged not to interfere with the freedom of
episcopal elections, and not to endeavour to make the kingdom hereditary (March
15).
Eleven days after the closing
of the diet, Rudolf was crowned with great pomp in the grand old romanesque cathedral at Mainz by its archbishop, Siegfried
(March 26, 1077). But the day of his coronation was not an auspicious one for
the new king. In the course of it, as the result of some petty quarrel, a
conflict took place between the citizens and the retainers of the nobles. The
people were subdued and punished, but showed themselves so hostile that Rudolf
and the archbishop made haste to leave the city. The first drops had fallen of
that torrent of blood with which the election of Rudolf was to deluge the soil
of Germany. And the new king had done more on the day of his coronation than
alienate a great city. By causing a deacon, charged with simony, who had been
appointed to sing the Gospel, to give place to another, he made it plain to the
lax members of the clerical body that he was pledged to the Gregorian reforms.
That was enough. His most bitter and powerful enemies were throughout the rest
of his life the refractory spirits among the clergy, and, beginning their
hostility to him at once, it was they who, according to Bernried
and Bernald, brought about the disturbance on his
coronation day.
Rudolf lost no time in
informing the Pope of his election, begging of him to come to Germany, and
promising to send troops to escort him—a promise which the difficulties of his
of situation rendered him unable to fulfil. The precipitation of the princes in
electing a new king was as disconcerting to Gregory as it was satisfactory to
Henry. The Pope persistently declared that the election had been made without
his knowledge or consent. Henry, however, at once put him into a dilemma, by
calling on him to excommunicate his rival. But if Henry was “a shrewd and
crafty man”, Gregory was himself not without the wisdom of the serpent; and he
replied that he would do as the king wished, if, when called upon to do so,
Rudolf proved unable to justify his conduct. Foiled and furious, Henry declared
that the Pope was responsible for the election, and, realizing that he must now
play the man, raised money and troops. Then definitely throwing off the mask
which he had worn but clumsily since his penance at Canossa, he entrusted his
son to the simoniacal bishops of Lombardy, and set
out for Germany (April), to fight to the death for his kingdom.
THE DONATION OF
MATILDA
For two or three months after
the departure of Henry from Italy, Gregory remained in the neighbourhood of
Canossa, hoping that an opportunity would be afforded him of going to Germany
to arbitrate between its rival kings. Finding at length that there was no
immediate prospect of his desire being fulfilled, he returned to Rome about the
middle of September, and was received with every demonstration of joy by the
citizens.
It would seem that the Great
Countess followed the Pope to Rome, and in the chapel of the Holy Cross attached
to the Lateran Palace proclaimed that the Pope was to be the heir of her great
possessions. “For the good of her own soul and that of her parents”, she gave
to St. Peter, in the person of Gregory, all that she then had, or might
hereafter acquire, on both sides of the mountains, and in feudal style invested
the Roman Church with her estates, which seem to have been chiefly situated in
the dioceses of Parma, Reggio, Modena, and Mantua, and which, in part at least,
were held by the Popes, down to our own times, “by knife and knotty twig, by
glove, and by sod of earth and branch of tree”. In 1102 she renewed her
donation at Canossa, as the charter of her previous one was not forthcoming. It
is this confirmatory charter which has come down to us. Soon after engraved on
marble, it may still be seen in part in the crypt of St. Peter’s.
But if, from the submission of
Henry, and the donation of Matilda, the year 1077 was the most glorious of
Gregory’s reign, it was not without its troubles, which foreshadowed or
prepared the way for the evil days which were to come upon him. Just before he
returned to Rome, his staunch supporter Cinthius, the
virtuous prefect of Rome, had been murdered by the brother of Cencius; and not
long after his return the empress-mother Agnes died (December 14, 1077).
From the time that Henry
appeared in Germany till the death of Rudolf (October 15, 1080), i.e.,
for nearly three years and a half, there ensued between them an uninterrupted
series of battles and negotiations. During most of that period, for well-nigh
three years, Gregory persistently refused to favour either claimant, and used
all his efforts to promote peace. For Rudolf stood the party of reform and the
Saxons, while Henry could count on the larger clerical party which was opposed
to reform, on the towns, which hoped to obtain from him an increase of their
privileges, on much of southern Germany and Lombardy, on those who were
instinctively loyal to the reigning house, and on Wratislaus
and his wild Bohemians.
In the hope of preventing
civil war, Gregory addressed a letter to his legates in Germany, the two Bernards, to call upon the two kings to guarantee him a
safe journey to their country, so that, with the concurrence of the clergy and
the laity of the kingdom, he might decide as to the rightful ruler of the
country. Incalculable harm, he said, would accrue to the whole Church if he
were in any way to be careless about the conduct of this most important matter.
In another letter of the same date (May 31, 1077), addressed to all the
faithful “in the kingdom of the Teutons”, he informs them of the instructions
he had given to his legates, and begs them, as he had ordered his legates, to favor the king who should help forward the negotiations,
and oppose the one who endeavoured to hinder them. “For if the See of Blessed
Peter passes judgment on things spiritual, how much more on mere earthly
concerns”.
The fact that Henry first
agreed to attend a meeting in presence of the legates, and then violated his
engagements, allowing even the abbot-legate to be held as a prisoner, caused
Cardinal Bernard at Goslar to declare him excommunicated, and to pronounce in favor of Rudolf (November 12).
However much Henry may have
been disposed to set at naught this sentence of the legate, he was anxious that
it should not be confirmed by the Pope in his forthcoming Lenten synod, and so
sent to Rome Bishops Benno of Osnabruck and Dietrich of Verdun to defend his
cause.
Before nearly a hundred
bishops assembled in the Lateran basilica, Henry’s envoys pleaded his case with
great skill; but, while not endorsing the action of Cardinal Bernard, the Pope
wisely insisted that the only satisfactory method of bringing the struggle
between the rival kings to an end was by the decision of a great diet of the
empire. To preside over it he would send distinguished legates; and, bewailing
the damage which the confusion in the empire was daily inflicting on the
Church, he declared that whoever should attempt to thwart the work of such an
assembly was ipso facto excommunicated. “Moreover, by our apostolic power we
will that the effects of the anathema should fall even on the body of such a
one, and that victory should be taken away from his arms”.
Letter after letter notified
this sentence to the German people, exhorting all to see that it was carried
into effect. Insincere negotiations took place between the rivals, though their
envoys swore before two Roman synods that their masters had not hindered, but
were striving to arrange for the meeting of the assembly ordered by the Pope.
As Henry meanwhile did not
refrain from inflicting severe injuries on his enemies whenever he had an
opportunity, the reserve of the Pope greatly irritated the Saxons and other
supporters of Rudolf. Strong remonstrances reached him from various quarters,
especially from the Saxons, who, says Bruno, had lost faith in the apostolic
rock. They had believed, he adds, that the heavens would stand still before the
Chair of Peter would lose the constancy of Peter. However, he continues, as he
is afraid of the handmaiden of this world, they are sending him a letter which
they trust will act on him, as the crowing of the cock acted on Peter, and will
make him, after looking to Christ, return to his former constancy. The burden
of their communication is that the Pope’s remissness in declaring in Rudolf’s favour
is the cause of the terrible misery which war is bringing on the whole of Germany.
They implore him not to turn back on the path he has had the courage to enter.
These and similar remonstrances full of half-truths stung Gregory as only
half-truths can, and we find him defending himself both before the Bavarians
and the Germans generally. Writing “to all those in the Teutonic kingdom who
are faithful to St. Peter”, he says: “It has come to my knowledge that some of
you think that, under the pressure of circumstances, I have shown myself
fickle. But in all this affair, except so far as the stress of actual battle is
concerned, no one of you has suffered greater trials and injuries than I have.
With but few exceptions all the Lombards are in favour of Henry, and accuse me
of excessive harshness and uncharitableness in his
regard. Up to this, however, disregarding their remonstrances, we have favoured
neither party, except in so far as our conscience dictated to be just and
proper. If our legates have acted contrary to our instructions, we are sorry
for it; and we understand that they acted as they did partly because they were
deceived, and partly because they were forced. We, however, had instructed them
to arrange a suitable time and place, so that we might send fit and proper
legates to examine your cause, to restore the exiled bishops, and to give the
necessary instructions to avoid intercourse with excommunicated persons”. The
letter concludes with an exhortation to perseverance under trial.
After the great but indecisive
battle between the two kings near Melrichstadt on the
Streu, August 7, 1078, the Saxons redoubled their
appeals to the Pope, because they remembered, says Bruno, that it took a second
crow of the cock to rouse Peter. They told him how difficult it was for them to
send envoys to him, because the road to Rome, which “at all times ought to be
open to all peoples, tribes, and tongues, was closed, and closed especially to
those who had laboured not a little for the honour of him to whose body that
road led”. And they begged him to confirm the excommunication launched against
Henry by his legate Bernard, adding : “Your coming to us is as much longed for
by us as it is necessary, but we know well that our enemies will never suffer
you to come to us unless they are certain that you will act not according to
justice, but in harmony with their will, and that you will favour them”. In
another letter they ask with bitterness if Henry has improved during the three
years since he was found incorrigible, and again assure the Pope that his idea
of a general assembly can never be realized, and that he can and ought to stop
the evils they are enduring.
So angry did the Saxons become
that they declared that the new papal legates whom Gregory, in response to the
Saxon appeals, had dispatched to Germany after the synod of February 1079 did nothing
but go from one party to another getting money from each, “after the fashion of
the Romans”, by promising the papal support first to one side and then to the
other. This accusation, indeed, does not seem altogether void of foundation;
for, in writing to these envoys, Gregory tells them that men are saying that
one of them is acting with too great simplicity, and the other without
simplicity enough.
Gregory’s wishes and work for
the holding, in presence of his legates, of a great diet of the empire to
settle the claims of the rival kings were not to be realized. He had striven to
bring it about, because he felt that “the party which was found not to have
justice on its side would, when overcome by argument and constrained by the
authority of Blessed Peter, yield more easily, and, by the mercy of God, cease
from causing the death of the souls and bodies of men. Whereas the party favoured
by justice would have a fuller confidence in God, and, helped by the power of
Blessed Peter and by the concurrence of all who loved justice, would have
confident hope of victory, and would fear the death neither of soul nor body”.
But neither party really
wished for a fair discussion of their claims on equal terms, least of all,
perhaps, Henry. Accordingly, gathering together an army in the winter
(1079-1080), he made an attempt to surprise the Saxons. He was, however, defeated
at Flarcheim on the Unstrut,
in Thuringia (January 27, 1080).
Confounded by his failure,
conscious of having been false to the engagements he had entered into at
Canossa, and convinced that Gregory would no longer tolerate his arbitrary and
evil appointments to bishoprics, he was at pains to send envoys well supplied
with money to the synod which Gregory had summoned for the beginning of March 3
(1080). Thither also were sent the ambassadors of Rudolf.
Some fifty bishops and a great
number of abbots and inferior clergy met together in the Lateran basilica, and,
after condemning investitures, gave audience to the envoys of Rudolf. They
urged that Henry, deprived of his kingdom by the apostolic authority, had again
taken possession of it, carrying fire and sword everywhere; that his cruelty
had driven bishops from their sees, which he had at once given to his favourites;
that bishops and thousands of men had lost their lives through him; that those
princes who, not to put themselves in opposition to the Holy See, had refused
to obey him, had had to endure every indignity; and that it was he who had
hindered the assembling of the diet that was to decide on the merits of the
rival kings.
Theodoric of Verdun pretends
that the ambassadors of Henry, so far from being allowed to speak, were exposed
to insults. No doubt the Fathers of the council had had enough of the deceitful
words of Henry, who was as faithless as our own Charles I. However this may be,
Gregory solemnly renewed the excommunication he had previously inflicted upon
him. Telling the assembled Fathers of all his relations with Henry, he reminded
them that, when he had seen the king’s humility at Canossa, and had listened to
his promises of amending his life, he had restored him to communion, but not to
his throne, and that he had acted in this way in order that he might make peace
between him and his bishops and nobles. The promises which Henry had made to him
to further this settlement of the question had been broken, and the princes of
the empire, “giving up, so to speak, all faith in him, without any
communication with me, as you know, elected Duke Rudolf as the king. The new
sovereign at once sent word to me that he had been compelled to accept the
reins of government, and that he was ready to obey me in all things—a promise
he has repeated ever since”. Proceeding, he assured the synod that, when
appealed to by Henry for help against Rudolf, he had always declared he was
prepared to give it when he had been enabled to judge of the claims of the two
rivals, and that up to this very time he had only stood for justice. Despite
the sentence of excommunication which he had decreed against any who should
hinder the meeting of the assembly which was to decide on the position of
Henry, that monarch had incurred the excommunication by preventing the holding
of the diet, and had been the cause of the death of a great multitude of
Christian men, of the destruction of churches, and of the ruin of almost the
whole kingdom of the Teutons. “Wherefore, trusting in the judgment and mercy of
God, and of his most loving Mother, Mary, ever virgin, and relying on the
authority of the apostles Peter and Paul, I subject to excommunication and bind
with the bonds of anathema the above mentioned Henry called king, and all his
supporters. And once again, in the name of Almighty God and of the apostles
Peter and Paul, do I forbid him all authority in the kingdom of the Teutons and
of Italy; I deprive him of all kingly power and dignity; I command all
Christians to refrain from obeying him as king; and I absolve from their oaths
all who may have sworn obedience to him as their ruler”. Then, after praying
for defeat for Henry and victory for the new king whom he now recognized, he
granted remission of all their sins to those who were faithful to Rudolf.
He brought this tremendous
allocution to a close in words which might have come from the lips of the
inspired Isaias: “Most revered Fathers and princes, act now, I beg you, in such
a way that the whole world may know that, if you can bind and loose in heaven,
you can on earth give and take away, in accordance with deserts, empires,
kingdoms, principalities, duchies, marquisates, counties, and the possessions
of all men ... Let kings and the princes of the world now learn who you are and
what is your power; and let them fear to make light of the commands of the
Church. And in the case of Henry, put your decision into effect so promptly,
that all may see that he falls not by chance, but by your power. Let him be
confounded, but to penance, that in the day of the Lord his soul may be saved”.
It was at the close of this
eventful synod, if ever, that Gregory sent to Rudolf a crown with the inscription
to the effect that “The Rock (which is Christ) gave a crown to Peter, and Peter
gives it to Rudolf”.
Both parties now felt that the
die had been finally cast, and that it was war to the death. The king’s
excommunication and his money, which his envoys distributed among the people,
caused party feeling to run high in Rome. In Tuscany also, as they passed
through it on their way back to Germany, Henry’s ambassadors succeeded in
raising a formidable opposition to the Great Countess. Once in Lombardy, they
invited its princes to assemble at Brixen.
On his side Gregory, through
the agency of the abbot Desiderius, secured the support of the Normans.
Journeying southwards, he had an interview with the formidable duke of the
Normans at Aquino (June 29). Condoning some of Guiscard’s aggressions, he
received his homage, and with a banner invested him with the duchy of Apulia
and Calabria. But in declaring him possessed of the lands which his
predecessors Nicholas and Alexander had granted him, he left Guiscard’s rights
to Salerno, to Amalfi, and to part of the Mark of Fermo, an open question.
No sooner did the news reach
Germany of the renewed papal excommunication of Henry than his bishops began to
inveigh against Gregory even during Mass, and went about everywhere declaring
that he was not to be recognized as Pope. Nineteen of them met at Mainz (May
31, 1080), and decreed (some of them only under pressure) that, as the only way
to cure the evils of Church and State was “to cut off the head of the
pestiferous serpent, by whose poisonous breath they had been caused”,
Hildebrand, “the execrable disturber of the laws of God and man”, had to be
deposed and a more worthy elected in his stead.
When the king and his bishops
had taken this preliminary step, they hesitated for a long time before
taking the next. They feared the wisdom of the man (i.e., of Gregory);
his resources confounded them; the quickness of his intelligence astounded
them; and, what is wont, especially to strike men, his command of money made a
deep impression upon them. So speaks even Guido of Ferrara. But they realized
they had gone too far to retreat. Summoning the bishops of Germany to meet him
at Brixen, a small town in Austrian Tyrol,
conveniently situated on the great road which led by the Brenner pass from
Italy into Germany, Henry found himself, on June 25, 1080, surrounded by thirty
bishops, mostly from Lombardy.
After setting forth a wholly
false sketch of Gregory’s career, the assembled prelates decreed that “the same
most insolent Hildebrand, the preacher of sacrilege and conflagration, the
defender of perjury and homicide, who, as an old disciple of the heretic
Berengarius, has put in doubt the catholic and apostolic doctrine of the Body
and Blood of the Lord, this observer of omens and dreams, and this undoubted
necromancer who is under the influence of a pythonic spirit, and therefore out
of the true faith, must be canonically deposed and expelled from his see”. The
first to affix his signature to this childish decree was Cardinal Hugo Candidus, who impudently signed “for all the Roman
cardinals”; the last was Henry, “by the grace of God king”.
It was, however, not so easy
for the assembly to find a successor to Gregory as to declare him
deposed. Tedald of Milan refused the preferred honour.
It was at length accepted by Guibert of Ravenna, whose ambition and
opposition to Gregory have been already noted, but who, we are assured by
Guido, “was not less noble by his character than by his birth”.
After engaging to crown one
another at Rome in the near future, Guibert, assuming the insignia of the
sovereign Pontiff, and calling himself Clement III, entered Italy with the pomp
of which he was so enamoured, while Henry devoted himself to the war against
Rudolf.
Knowing, therefore, that Henry
would be fully occupied, Gregory thought of bringing the rebellious archbishop
to his knees by force. But those on whom he relied failed him. Matilda could do
no more than hold her own against the schismatic, and Guiscard was too much
occupied with his designs against the Eastern Empire to be led into a war in
north Italy.
Not to be thwarted, the Pope
sent envoys into Lombardy to induce the clergy and the laity of Ravenna to
elect a new archbishop. This attempt was no more successful than the preceding
one, so he himself nominated one Richard to replace the excommunicated Guibert.
Meanwhile the cause which
Gregory advocated in Germany had been won and lost. On October 15 the forces of
Henry and Rudolf met on the Elster by the marsh of Grona. Among the great prelates and nobles in the ranks of
the former was Frederick of Hohenstaufen, to whom Henry had given the duchy of
Swabia, and the hand of his daughter Agnes. The first and last heirs of the
famous house of Hohenstaufen who have made their mark in history made it as
enemies of the Papacy, and, it may be added, scored it against themselves.
The battle between the two
armies was bloody and decisive. The troops of Henry were thoroughly worsted.
But in the moment of victory, the brave Rudolf received a mortal wound. His
sorrowing followers buried him in the neighboring
cathedral of Merseburg, where his effigy, consisting of a “bronze plate in low
relief, representing him in imperial attire”, may still be seen. The
inscription which they cut on his tomb proclaimed that “for him death was life,
for he fell for the Church”. “King Rudolf died and virtue was overwhelmed” is
the sad wail of the poet.
THE very day on which the death
of Rudolf freed Henry from fear in Germany, a defeat of the troops of Matilda,
near La Volta, in the territory of Mantua, freed him from anxiety as to his
power in north Italy. Accordingly, full of hope of crushing Gregory forthwith,
he crossed the Brenner Pass at the end of March (1081), and pushed on to Verona
(April 4). In leaving the Saxons behind him, he trusted that their difficulties
in selecting a successor to Rudolf would prevent any aggressive action on their
part, even if, when left alone, they might feel disposed to take any. They had
indeed declared to his envoys that they knew that his design was “to dishonour
the apostolic dignity, and that he had promised them peace in order to be able
to ill-use at his pleasure him who was their head”; and on their part they had
let him know that if he should ill-treat the Pope, he would, on his return from
Italy, find his affairs in a very different state from what he expected.
The threats of the Saxons,
however, failed to alarm Henry, for he felt assured that, with the hold he had
on northern Italy, the capture of Rome and of the Pope would take neither time
nor trouble, and that he would soon be back in Germany.
Gregory meanwhile remained
utterly undaunted, whether by the death of Rudolf, by the defeat of Matilda, by
the news that Henry was preparing to advance on Rome, or, hardest trial of all,
by the faint-heartedness of those around him. On the arrival of the terrifying
news of the death of Rudolf, almost all his advisers implored him to make peace
with Henry. They pointed out to him that the king had always professed himself
disposed to yield to him in many points, and that, if once Henry appeared in
Italy, he need not hope that his allies in Germany would be of any use to him.
But Gregory would hearken neither to their reasons nor their fears. He had had
proof enough of Henry’s faithlessness, and if, he said, he was left without
German help, he cared not, for he reckoned nothing of his pride. “It was more
glorious to fight through long years for the liberty of holy Church, than to
submit to a miserable and diabolical servitude”. For his own part, “he despised
alike the threats of his enemies and their offers of service. He was prepared,
if need be, to suffer death rather than approve of the impieties of the king
and of the archbishop (i.e., the antipope Guibert), or abandon the cause of
justice”.
Animated, accordingly, by what
he believed a zeal for justice, Gregory at length, in synod, solemnly renewed
against Henry the sentence of excommunication from which he had absolved him at
Canossa. Sentence was passed upon him as “a despiser of the law of Christ, a
destroyer of churches and of the empire, and as an aider and abettor of
heretics”. Soon afterwards, to justify his action, he replied, by means of a
very long letter addressed to Heriman, bishop of
Metz, “to those who foolishly maintain that an emperor cannot be excommunicated
by the Roman Pontiff”. He endeavoured to show, by Scripture, by the words of
the Fathers, and by historical precedent, that the power of the successors of
St. Peter extended to all Christians, without any exceptions whatsoever, and
that that power had, as a matter of fact, been already frequently exercised
even over kings. Adapting the words of St. Paul, he argued : “Know you not that
we shall judge angels? how much more things of this world”. After he had thus
taken against Henry those steps which his ideas of duty seemed to require,
Gregory calmly awaited the march of events, which, however, were destined to
advance further than he anticipated.
Though, even after Henry had
descended into the Lombard plain, Gregory did not believe he would be able to
march on Rome, and though he cared not for himself, he was anxious about the
position of the Countess Matilda. Hence he wrote to his friends in Germany to
urge them to action should Henry make any serious attempt on her. They were to
rouse Welf, duke of Bavaria, and to proceed to the
election of a new king in place of Rudolf. They were not, however, to be in any
haste about the latter matter, and were to be sure of electing one who would
have the necessary qualities to make a good king. They were also to see to it
that the object of their choice would undertake on oath to respect the
spiritual and temporal rights of the Church. Finally, owing to the difficulties
of the times, they were to temper for the present the rigor of the canons in
regard to the clergy.
Working as usual through the
Abbot Desiderius, he made great efforts to secure the active support of Robert
Guiscard, should Henry make any hostile attempt on Rome. He was quite alive to
the fact that the wily Norman cared but little for the interests of any other
person than Robert Guiscard; and he knew that he was at the moment making
preparations for the carrying out of no less ambitious an undertaking than the
conquest of the Byzantine Empire.
Robert’s little daughter,
Helena, had been sent to Constantinople and been betrothed (1075-1076) to the
child Constantine, the heir of the Emperor Michael VII, Ducas.
The reign of Michael, however, had been brought to an abrupt close by the aged
Nicephorus Botoniates (April 1, 1078), and he had
himself been incarcerated in the famous monastery of Studion. Guiscard seized
the opportunity of the injury done to the interests of his daughter to prepare
for the conquest of the Eastern Empire. To improve his chances of success, he
caused to appear in his court at Salerno a monk who gave himself out to be the
deposed emperor, and he appealed for the support of the Pope. This Gregory was
ready to give, as he had already excommunicated Nicephorus for having unjustly
deprived his friend Michael of his throne (November 1078). Accordingly, he bade
the bishops of Apulia and Calabria exhort those who had taken up arms in
Michael’s favour to be loyal and steadfast, and absolve from their sins such
among them as did true penance.
Strong in the approval of the
Pope, it mattered not to Guiscard that his monk was subsequently proved to be
an impostor, and that his enemy Nicephorus was himself overthrown by Alexius
Comnenus (April 1081). His plans were now matured; and if he would not allow
himself to be gained over by Henry, he would not hearken to Gregory’s appeals
to stop and help him against the German king. However, before he set sail to Aulon (Vallona), towards the end
of May, he instructed his young son Roger, whom he had left regent in his absence,
to render what aid he could to the Pope, should necessity arise.
Reckoning nothing of any
assistance which a youth and the handful of Normans whom Guiscard had left
behind him might bring to Gregory, Henry raised troops in Ravenna and the March
of Ancona, and moved southwards, ravaging the territory of Matilda as he went
along. His forces arrived in sight of Rome about the same time as those of
Guiscard were setting sail for the East (viz., May 21, 1081).
To Henry’s profound
disappointment, the Romans set at naught both his manifestoes and his soldiers.
For once, a Pope could write with confidence: “The Romans and all those who
surround me are full of faith and the spirit of God, and ready to serve me in
everything”. Unable to carry the city by assault, Henry had to yield to the
heats of summer, and to return “with his beast”, as Bonizo calls the antipope,
to the north of Italy.
Meanwhile, with a view to weakening
the power of Matilda, Henry took a step which, though of the first importance
for the development of Italy, was destined to recoil on the empire. By granting
charters of liberties to some of her more important cities, like Lucca, he
succeeded in further crippling the resources of Matilda, but he helped onward
the formation of those communes of Italy which were ultimately to put an end to
Germanic influence in the peninsula. He had already somewhat hampered her by
seizing such of her property as he could lay his hands upon, on the plea that
she had been guilty of high treason.
Soon after Henry had been compelled
to raise the siege of Rome, he received another blow through the election of a
successor to Rudolf. As the result of an appeal by the Saxons to the whole
German people to elect a new king, other than Henry or his son, who should unite
them all together again, there was elected at Ochensfurt
on the Main, Hermann, a scion, rich but indifferent, of the house of
Luxembourg.
But these disadvantages were
more than compensated by the success of his negotiations with the new Greek
emperor Alexius. Anxious to secure allies against Guiscard, Alexius had written
to different Western princes, to the Pope among others, promising them money if
they would attack Robert. But his main reliance was not unnaturally on Henry,
who, as we have said, had already been in negotiation with him, for an alliance
against the Norman. To him he sent nearly 150,000 golden solidi, besides other
presents, with a promise of a still larger sum when he should be in south
Italy. With his credit restored in this way, Henry spent the winter in raising
an army which was to be strong enough to lay formal siege to Rome.
Towards the close of March
Henry was again before the walls of Rome, and again did the Romans despise
alike his words and his arms; so that, despite his success in gaining over to
his cause Jordan, prince of Capua, a nephew of Guiscard and liegeman of the
Pope, he was once more compelled to abandon the siege. But though Desiderius of
Monte Cassino pointed out to him that quarrels of the kind in which he was now engaged
with the Pope “would be fatal to the empire and to the Papacy alike”, and
though he reminded his bishops that “the Apostolic See was mistress, subject to
none and above all”, neither Henry nor his prelates had any thought of giving
up the struggle.
When, after his second failure
to capture the city, the king returned to Lombardy (May), he left his antipope
behind him at Tivoli. From this centre Clement ceased not to ravage the whole
district, destroying both crops and people alike.
But his depredations were at length
partially checked by the return to Italy of Robert Guiscard. In the midst of a
victorious career in Greece, he received a letter from the Pope congratulating
him on his successes, but calling on him for help against Henry. That which probably
still more affected Robert was the news he received of Jordan’s alliance with
the Germans, and the spirit of rebellion against his authority which was manifesting
itself all over the south of Italy. Accordingly, leaving his son Bohemond in
charge of his army in Greece, he returned to Italy (April 1082). Without
troops, and with many against him, Robert was unable for some time to give any
effectual help to anyone but himself. He made, however, some demonstration in
force before Rome and Tivoli, which was not without good result for Gregory’s
cause. But he was unable to render him any substantial assistance.
By the beginning of the new
year (1083) the critical nature of his position was being steadily impressed
upon Gregory. In December (1082) Henry had brought up fresh troops for the
siege of Rome, though he himself did not then remain before it. Moreover,
Gregory had heard that Hermann of Luxembourg, who had spent the previous twelve
months in preparing to come to his relief and had left Saxony to do so, had
been compelled to return thither by the death of his chief supporter, Otho of Nordheim. He had himself failed to raise money, without
which he knew the unwonted loyalty already displayed by the venal Romans could
not be maintained. A Roman council (May 1082), evidently only half-hearted in
the cause of their master, had declared that the goods of the Church ought not
to be alienated for military purposes. Certainly, in pleasing contrast to this
traitorous conduct of many of the local clergy was the action of his supporters
in Tuscany. Abbot Gerard of Canossa melted down the gold and silver of his
church to send money to Gregory, and the faithful and warlike Matilda sent him
what pecuniary assistance she could. But it was not much that he received from
these sources. Still his courage did not desert him. Addressing all the
bishops, abbots, clergy, and laymen “who were faithful to the Apostolic See”,
he exhorted them to patience, fortitude, and hope. “We all wish”, he wrote,
“that the ungodly should repent; ... we all seek that the holy Church, now
trampled down throughout the world ... may be restored to her pristine
comeliness and strength; we all labour that God may be glorified in us ...
Marvel not, dearest brethren, if the world hate you, for we ourselves irritate
it against us, while we set ourselves against its lusts ... Rouse yourselves,
then, and be strong. Conceive a lively hope”.
One source of consolation he
had at this time. It was the presence in Rome of the saintly Bruno of Segni, who, under circumstances very similar to those in
which Gregory the Great executed a like task, wrote a commentary on Isaias, and
again, like that Pontiff, tinged it with the historical colouring of his time.
In April 1083 Henry joined his
troops in front of Rome, and in June managed to surprise the Leonine city,
failing, however, to seize the city proper. To a fresh excommunication launched
against him by the intrepid Pope, he replied by causing his antipope to be
crowned in St. Peter’s. His success made many of the Romans, already weary of
being so often in a state of siege, or always well disposed towards him,
anxious for peace. Through the action of this party there was devised yet
another scheme to bring about a definite settlement of the respective claims of
the Pope and the king. Gregory was to summon a council which should go
thoroughly into all the matters in dispute, while Henry was to engage not to
place any obstacle in the way of the proper transaction of its business. A
section of the Romans, moreover, who had been gained over by money or promises,
added a secret clause to the treaty. Giving hostages to Henry, they engaged, on
his return to the city in the winter, to have him crowned by Gregory, if he
were alive or had not fled from the city. But if he were to die, or to leave
Rome, they would with the king elect a new Pope, whom they would induce to
crown him.
Leaving a small garrison to
hold the Leonine city, Henry again went north to avoid the summer heats (July),
and the Pope issued summonses to the synod which was to put an end to the
strife between the empire and the Apostolic See. But the faithless monarch
could not keep his word. He seized the envoys of Herimann
as they were coming to the synod, and detained many important bishops and
abbots who had set out from France and other countries to obey the Pope’s
orders. He is even said to have put some of the captured monks to the torture.
It was, however, a real annoyance to him that one of his militant bishops
seized his godfather, Hugh of Cluny, who had been called to Rome by the Pope to
make peace between him and Henry.
Owing to the action of the
king, the council over which Gregory presided on November 20 and the two
following days was not a numerous one, and was unable to bring about peace.
Moved by the wishes of the assembled Fathers, Gregory did not again
excommunicate Henry by name, but contented himself with excommunicating all
such as had interfered with those who were coming to the council. And on the
third day of the synod, addressing it, “with the face rather of an angel than
of a man”, on the Christian life and on the constancy of mind so needful at the
moment, “he moved almost the whole assembly to tears”.
There was, therefore, no other
way of settling the quarrel but by the sword. But when Henry returned to Rome
(December), and called on the Roman nobles to abide by their word, and by
entreaties or force to make Gregory crown him, he found their minds had
changed. His garrison had nearly all perished by fever, and Robert Guiscard had
put the Pope in possession of money. They accordingly informed the king that Gregory
had declared that he would only crown him if he made satisfaction for his
faults; and they added sarcastically, on their own account, that if he was not
prepared to do this, they would still keep their word by causing the Pope, with
a curse, to drop the crown on his head by means of a stick from the walls of
the castle of St. Angelo.
With greater zest than ever
Henry devoted himself to the siege. Fortunately for himself, he received, in the
beginning of 1084, the further sums of money which Alexius had promised him.
With these, after he had made a show in February of a campaign against the
Normans to satisfy the Greek emperor, he bribed the Romans. And just when, as
he wrote himself, he had given up all hopes of capturing the city, the Romans
made overtures to him, and admitted him within their walls on March 21, 1084.
Had they been able to forecast the result to Rome of their action, they would
have cut off their hands rather than have allowed them to open the gates of St.
John to the German. They had signed the death warrant of old Rome!
When Henry entered Rome,
Gregory retreated to the castle of St. Angelo, carrying with him forty hostages
given him by the nobles. On this occasion most of them remained faithful to the
Pope, and, holding many points of vantage throughout the city, carried on a
terrible street war for over two months. Rusticus, a nephew of Gregory, held
the Septizonium of Severus at the south corner of the
Palatine Hill; the Frangipani were safe in the Turris
Cartularia by the Arch of Titus; the Corsi dominated the Capitol, and papal troops held the
bridges.
Evidently not feeling too
secure of his position, Henry hurried on the formal election of his antipope
and his own coronation. Whilst the beautiful columns of the Septizonium
were falling beneath his battering-rams, and his troops were storming the
Capitol, he held some kind of a synod in the Lateran Palace (March 22). Gregory
was declared deposed, and Guibert elected in his place as Clement III; but not,
as Henry falsely wrote, by all the cardinals and the Roman people. On the
following Sunday (Palm Sunday, March 24), Clement was consecrated by three
excommunicated bishops, and on Easter Sunday crowned Henry and Bertha as
emperor and empress of the Romans.
Benzo has furnished us with a
description of the rites of the coronation of an emperor in vogue at the time,
which of he would fain have us believe were carried out at this coronation of
his hero, who, “in intelligence, might, and arms” surpassed all the ancients
and the moderns. He depicts the royal procession making its way to St. Peter’s,
preceded by the holy cross and the lance of St. Maurice. After them came the
clergy, and then the king clad in a long scarlet tunic or alb,
wonderfully set out with gold and gems, and “terrible with his golden spurs”,
girt with his sword, covered with the distinctly imperial garment, the Frisian
cloak (Frisia clamide),
and wearing linen gloves and an episcopal ring, and with the imperial diadem on
his head. In his left hand he carried the orb (pomum),
and in his right the sceptre “de more Julii, Octaviani”, etc.
Supported by the Pope (Clement
III), by the archbishop of Milan, and by dukes and nobles, he was followed by
five magistrates wearing variegated cloaks and patrician crowns.
When the procession started
the clergy intoned, “Jam bone pastor”, the Germans adding, “Kyrrie
eleyson, helfo (help), S. Petre heleyson”. Meanwhile the
different nations who were looking on cheered according to the mode of their
respective counties.
Mass was begun after the
procession, and, in accordance with the canons, Henry was consecrated and blessed
before the Gospel. After Mass was over, the new emperor adjourned to the palace
for refreshment.
After the banquet, the emperor
was vested in a green cloak, and a white mitre with the patrician circlet
around it was set upon his head. In this style he proceeded to Vespers, and
“again their voices knock at the gate of heaven to the glory of Him who reigns
for ever and ever”.
On the following day the Pope
put “the Roman crown” solemnly upon the head of Henry, who then, “crowned by
the will of God and the prayer of St. Peter”, was received “by the senate” at
the steps of the basilica in which he had been crowned. Mounting on horseback,
the emperor, surrounded by German, Roman, and Lombard knights, went “by the
triumphal way” to the Lateran. All along the route he was greeted with joyful
song. In front of the Lateran the emperor was met by the scholae of the sixteen
regions. Mass was then celebrated, and cries of Alleluia resounded everywhere.
This description of an
imperial coronation, though quaint, is, like everything else that Benzo wrote,
inaccurate; and, in any case, considering the disturbed condition of the city,
it is wholly improbable that anything like such an elaborate ceremonial was
employed for the coronation of Henry IV by his antipope Clement III.
Henry now devoted himself to
the task of securing the person of his enemy the Pope. With this end in view he
began to enclose St. Angelo within lines of circumvallation. “An emperor”, says
Gregorovius, “now besieged a Pope who defended the freedom of the Church
against the temporal power”. Realizing there was no time to be lost, Gregory
contrived to dispatch an embassy to Guiscard, imploring his assistance. When Robert
received the Pope’s message, he had already not only subdued the rebellious
spirits of his duchy, but had gathered together a powerful army, including even
Saracens from Sicily, and was about to embark for the East. Comprehending at
once how dangerous for himself it would be if Henry should succeed in seizing
both Rome and the Pope, he straightway set his troops on the march for the
Eternal City.
Word of his movements was at
once sent both to Gregory and to the king by Desiderius of Monte Cassino. His
messenger was promptly followed by one from Guiscard himself to Henry, who was
bluntly informed that “if he did not leave Rome of his own accord, he would be
driven from it, and that there was no one who could pluck him from his hands”.
Never distinguished by being willing to face fearful odds, Henry informed the
Romans that he found it necessary to withdraw to Lombardy, and that he
entrusted his crown and his honour to their hands. Then, levelling the Leonine
City to the ground, he hastened north (May 21), leaving his antipope at Tivoli.
Six days after his departure
the army of Guiscard was descried from the walls of Rome. It approached the
city with due care. First came a thousand picked men, then three thousand, and
lastly Guiscard himself with the main body. Meeting with no opposition, he
encamped opposite the Porta Asinaria (now replaced by
the Porta S. Giovanni), near the Claudian aqueduct. On the following day
(Tuesday, May 28) he ordered a general assault, and, while some of his troops
stormed the gate of St. Laurence, others entered by the Flaminian and Pincian gates, which had been thrown open to them. With the
formidable cry of “Guiscard” on their lips, the Normans made a dash for the bridge
and castle of St. Angelo, some of the less disciplined among them pausing to
sack the churches of S. Lorenzo in Lucina and S. Silvestro in the Campus
Martius. Gregory was released from his confinement, and on the following day
was escorted with all the pomp and circumstance of war to the Lateran Palace.
Had the coming of the Normans
been attended with no worse results than these, all would have been well for
Gregory. But their subsequent action was to destroy his influence with the
Romans forever. Three days after Guiscard’s entry into the city, in consequence
of a quarrel into which the Romans entered either of set purpose or
accidentally, a terrible fight took place between them and the Normans. Unable
to drive the Romans out of the narrow streets, Guiscard acted on the advice of
the consul Cencius, and fired the houses. Driven forth by the flames, the
wretched inhabitants fell on the swords and spears of their enemies.
Intoxicated by carnage, and furious at the death of their comrades, the
soldiers of Guiscard gave themselves up to the most unbridled license. They
slaughtered all the men they met, and violated the women, even virgins
consecrated to God. When wearied of killing, they devoted themselves to
plundering and to making captives. These they sold as slaves, “like Jews”.
Guiscard was unwilling to check the excesses of his troops. He is reported to
have said : “the citizens of Rome are worthless traitors; they are and always
will be ungrateful to God and His saints for the innumerable benefits conferred
upon them ... I will give the blood-stained city to the flames, and, by God’s
help, I will restore it to a better condition, and fill it with inhabitants
from the Transalpine nations”. Three days elapsed before Gregory could prevail
upon the savage duke to bring his men to order, and stop the conflagration which
was destroying the city.
Terrible was the damage done
to old Rome by this sack of 1084. The flames consumed everything between St.
John Lateran’s and the Colisseum. Other parts of the
city also suffered. Guiscard completed the destruction which Henry had begun,
and which, according to his biographer, money only had prevented from completing
himself. The whole appearance of the city was changed. “Even after the lapse of
so many centuries”, writes Lanciani, “we can still
find traces of this Norman-Saracenic invasion. The Caelian quarter as a whole
has never recovered from the state of desolation to which it was reduced in
1084. The few roads which traverse this silent region are practically the same
as those through which Gregory VII had been hurried from the castle of St.
Angelo to the Lateran; only their present level is higher, the layer of debris
from the burnt edifices having considerably raised the level of the whole
district ... The final decay of the city—the abandonment of the old level of
streets and squares, the disappearance of the remains of private houses, and
even of some public edifices—dates from this fearful conflagration”. With the
altered physical aspect of Rome we may connect the changed position of the
Papacy. At the time when the Eternal City lost its old world look, the Popes
were becoming the pivot on which medieval Europe was to turn not only in the
spiritual order, but also in the temporal.
Thoroughly cowed by the fearful
blows which Guiscard had dealt them, the Romans submitted to their conqueror
unconditionally. After he had secured in the castle of St. Angelo the hostages
whom they gave him, Guiscard left Rome with the Pope to bring back to his
allegiance the surrounding localities. Sutri and Nepi and other places were soon subdued; but, anxious to
resume his eastern campaign, Guiscard would not stay long enough to drive the
antipope from Tivoli. When, therefore, the Norman escorted Gregory back to Rome
at the end of June, it did not seem possible for him to remain there. Clement
was close at hand; and, unmindful that the real author of their cruel woes was
Henry, the Romans, assigning them all to Gregory, because he had summoned the
Normans, hated him accordingly.
Bowing before the storm,
Gregory, in the deepest poverty, left Rome with Guiscard in the beginning of
July; and in his company, halting at Monte Cassino and Benevento, reached
Salerno, where he was soon to die. Meanwhile, however, with spirit still
unsubdued, he gathered together what bishops he could. Once more he excommunicated
Henry, Guibert and their adherents, and dispatched his legates to promulgate
his sentence through France and Germany. At the same time he issued, “to all
the faithful who truly love the Apostolic See”, what is justly regarded as the
finest of his encyclicals. The princes, he said, have united against the Lord
and against His Christ because we have been unwilling to keep silent when the
Church was in danger, and give way to those who would reduce it to servitude
vile. “Come”, he cried, “to the succour of your father and mother, if by them
you would have forgiveness of your sins, and all blessings in this life and in
the next”.
Not only, however, was no help
for the afflicted Pontiff forthcoming, but one untoward event after another was
to the cause of bring his grey hairs with sorrow to the grave. If he was
gladdened by the victory which in July Matilda gained at Sorbaria
over Henry’s troops, he was saddened by the departure of Guiscard for the East
in September, and by the fact that the antipope was by Christmas in possession
of Rome. He was, moreover, much distressed by a fresh outbreak of war in
Germany, to which Henry had returned before the close of the year 1084. The
struggle was carried on with spiritual as well as with earthly weapons. Under
the presidency of the uncompromising Otho, cardinal-bishop of Ostia, who had
been sent to Germany by Gregory to promulgate the fact of Henry’s renewed
excommunication, a synod was held at Quedlinburg
(April 1085). King Hermann, along with a large number of Saxon bishops and
nobles, was present at it. Putting forth the principle that no one has a right
to judge the sentence of the Sovereign Pontiff, Otho led the assembly to
declare Henry’s nominations to bishoprics null and void, and to anathematize
the antipope and his adherents. Further, with an independence which cannot be
too much admired, he did not hesitate to denounce both Hermann himself, because
it was said that he had married within the forbidden degrees of kindred, and
some of the Saxon nobles who during the war had appropriated the goods of the
Church. About the same time the episcopal and other partisans of Henry
assembled at Mainz, and in turn did not hesitate to act towards Gregory as the
council of Quedlinburg had acted towards Clement
(May).
But the noise of the fierce
strife over his principles which was ringing throughout the whole empire was
now making but a feeble impression upon Gregory. Already, in January, he had
declared that he would die about the beginning of June. Nevertheless, he ceased
not “to work for justice”, and spent much time in preaching to the people. At length,
however, he could toil no longer; he could no more “think of many things, and
give his attention to affairs of moment”. But great as had been his labours for
God and man, he took no complacency in them when congratulated on them. “I
have”, he said to the cardinals who surrounded his death-bed, “only one source
of consolation. I have ever loved justice and hated iniquity”. When they next
expressed to him their fears as to what would happen to them after he had been
taken from them, he raised his hands and eyes to heaven, saying: “I am going
thither, and there, with earnest entreaty, will I commend you to the God of
mercy”.
Asked to name his successor in
view of the special difficulties of the times, he mentioned three or four
names, but recommended that Desiderius of Monte Cassino should be selected on
account of his being at hand. And when questioned with regard to those he had
excommunicated, he replied that, with the exception of Henry, Guibert, and
their principal supporters, he absolved and blessed all those who firmly
believed that, in the place of the apostles Peter and Paul, he had power so to
do. His last will and testament did not require much making. He had only his
vestments to leave, and of these he gave his mitre to Anslem of Lucca.
Finally, exhorting the
cardinals only to regard as Pope the one who should be canonically elected, he
received the Holy Viaticum, and with his dying lips cried out: “I have loved
justice and hated iniquity, therefore I die in exile”. “In exile, Holy Father”,
exclaimed a bishop, “thou canst not die; for in the stead of Christ and His
apostles you have received from God the Gentiles for your inheritance, and the
ends of the earth for your possession”.
It was on May 25 that “the
Church on earth was thrown into great grief by the news of the decease” of him
who was “the terror of the wicked and the shield of the good, who never ceased
to lead the people from the paths of vice to those which lead to heaven, and
whose own life was in accordance with his teaching”.
His death moved to tears even
the stark Guiscard, who was destined in a few weeks to follow Gregory to that bourne whence no traveller has returned; and “it moved to
tears all religious men and women, but especially the poor”. Of all the good
who had grief for the death of Gregory, not one was so deeply affected as the
faithful Countess Matilda. “Oft”, says Rangerius,
“was she shaken in her sadness by her sobs; and when
she saw his mitre, her love was wounded afresh; she dissolved in tears, and
sought the cover of darkness. She faded away with the desire of being with
Christ, and of enjoying her eternal reward with her friend. After his death she
loved nothing but death”.
The body of the great Pontiff
was laid to rest in the Church of St. Matthew, which had just been built to
receive the relics of the evangelist, and which Gregory had himself consecrated
this very year. Some two hundred years after the interment, John of Procida, a name ever to be connected with the “Sicilian
Vespers”, erected a beautiful chapel over the tomb, which was at the right of
the high altar, and “at which God had deigned to work many miracles”. Towards
the close of the sixteenth century (1578), the marble tomb given by Guiscard
had fallen into decay. Before erecting a new monument over the remains of “the
guardian of pontifical authority”, Mark Anthony Colonna, archbishop of Salerno,
ordered them to be laid bare. They were found still clad in the sacred
vestments in which they had been buried, and entire. So says the archbishop
himself, who assures us that “he saw the remains with his own eyes, and touched
them with his own hands”. The official document drawn up by his order informs
us that “on the head was a simple pontifical mitre, with crosses worked on its
fillets. The stole was of silk, shot with gold, and had upon it both gold
ornaments and the words Pax Nostra. The silk gloves were beautifully woven with
golden threads and pearls, and with a cross on the back of each of them. On the
ring-finger was a gold ring without a stone. The chasuble was red, shot with
gold, and there was a silk tunic. The buskins, which were partially eaten away,
were also shot with gold, had crosses on each of the feet, and reached almost
to the knees. There was a girdle of gold, and a veil covered the face. There
were also remains of the pallium. ... In a word, all the vestments of a Pontiff
were there”.
In 1605 the tomb was opened
again, and the cranium and right arm were taken out, the latter being sent to
Gregory’s birthplace, Soana. In 1614 the remains were
transferred to their present resting place beneath the altar of Procida’s chapel.
The tomb of Gregory on which
the visitor to Salerno now gazes is that of Colonna, but his statue which he
sees there was erected only by Archbishop G. Beltrano
(16061611). The modern decorations of the chapel were the work of Pius IX. The
poor fresco on the right of the wretched, anachronistic statue represents
Gregory’s entrance into Salerno with Guiscard, and the equally indifferent one
on the left depicts his reception of the canons of Salerno. The whole memorial
is utterly unworthy of one of the world’s really great heroes.
The honour which had been
previously paid to him as a saint by the people of Salerno was accorded to him
throughout the universal Church by the order of Benedict XIII (1729).
ONE of those who were
sincerely glad of the elevation of Hildebrand to the See of Peter was William
the Conqueror, for he was mindful of the efforts he had made to secure the
approval of Rome for his invasion of England. Besides, he realized that
Hildebrand was a Conqueror too, and there was the sympathy of great minds
between them. Though Gregory was very far from approving of all William’s acts,
and from obtaining all he wanted from him, he always regarded him as the best
of the civil rulers of the time. When he wrote to thank him for his expressions
of sympathy concerning the decease of Alexander, and of joy at his succession,
he assured him that “he was the king whom he took it to be his duty to love
above all others”. At the same time, he did not lose the opportunity to exhort
William to be just in all his dealings, to defend the churches committed to his
care, to place the honour of God above all his worldly interests, and to look
after the revenue of St. Peter in England, as he would look after his own. On
the other hand, he lets him know that he has care for the interests of the
Conqueror’s monastery of St. Stephen at Caen. In writing on the same occasion
to William’s wife, Matilda, he entreated her never to cease endeavouring to
inspire her husband with good intentions, reminding her that if “the
unbelieving husband is sanctified by the believing wife”, a believing husband
is made still better by a believing wife.
Gregory held that William was
better than other kings, because he neither sold nor destroyed the churches of
God, but endeavoured to promote the reign of peace and justice among his
subjects, and because he refused to join himself to the enemies of the
Apostolic See, and caused the clergy to dismiss their wives, and the laity to
give up the Church tithes which they had seized.
If, with all this, Gregory did
not find the Conqueror as “religious as he could have wished”; so, too, with
all his virtues, he did not find Lanfranc as obedient as he could have wished.
Learned and pious, Lanfranc was diplomatic, and from the day when he made peace
between William and Rome on the subject of his marriage, he remained in the
closest intimacy with his sovereign. Under his hands the Conqueror became
something of a churchman, and under the masterful mind of William, Lanfranc
learnt to take up, to some extent, the attitude of an independent statesman.
No sooner had Gregory been
elected Pope than he informed “his most beloved brother” Lanfranc of the fact,
and implored him to pray for him, because he felt that, if he wished to escape
the judgment to come, he would have to oppose himself to kings and bishops who
were not merely doing no good, but were actually leading the people to evil. Finally,
recognizing in him, as Gregory I did in St. Augustine, a sort of patriarchal
authority over the British Isles, he exhorted him to put down certain scandals
existing among the Irish.
About the same time Lanfranc
received another letter from the Pope, in which, assuring him that he had as
little doubt about him as he had about himself, Gregory expressed his
astonishment that he suffered the Holy See to be trifled with, by not
preventing Herfast, bishop of Elmham,
from harassing the abbey of St. Edmundsbury, which was under papal protection. Herfast was one of the most indifferent of William’s
episcopal creations, and gave Lanfranc trouble by ordaining a married man
deacon. How strongly he took up the defence of the abbey may be gathered from
his letter to Herfast on the subject.
By degrees Gregory’s regard
for Lanfranc began to cool. The bishops and abbots of England had been ordered
to attend the Synod of 1075, “by virtue of the obedience which they owed to
Blessed Peter”; because, said the Pope, the state of religion in England was
not what it ought to be. But Lanfranc failed to comply with this and other
corresponding summonses which Gregory addressed to him. At length, by the hands
of his legate Hubert, “subdeacon of the sacred palace”, whom he was sending on
an embassy to the king, Gregory forwarded a letter to Lanfranc which was very
different in tone from its predecessors. He expressed his surprise that the
archbishop, who had ever manifested affection for him, should have hitherto
failed, despite frequent mandates, to visit him. Only the apostolic clemency
and the remembrance of former friendship had prevented him from making his
displeasure very apparent. He had learnt, indeed, that it was fear of the king
which had prevented his journey, but he was not to allow himself to be swayed
by fear of the powers of this world. He finished his letter by exhorting him to
remind the king of his duty, and to warn him that he was not to attempt to
hinder anyone from going to Rome.
To this letter of the Pope,
Lanfranc returned a respectful but very evasive reply. It was the reply not of
a thoroughly loyal son of the Church, but of a politician in sympathy with a
master who was anxious to have the Church as subservient to himself as the
State. “To Gregory, the reverend and supreme pastor of the Universal Church,
Lanfranc, the sinner and unworthy bishop, offers his due submissive service”.
He begins by saying that he has received the Pope’s letter, which is full of
paternal admonitions, and which accuses him of not showing the same respect for
the Roman Church as he had shown before he was raised to his present elevated
position which he and everybody else understands that he owes to the authority
of the Apostolic See”. He continues: “I must not, venerable Father, say you are
labouring under a mistake; but, as my conscience is my witness, I can never suppose
myself thinking that absence, or distance, or any exalted position could avail
to prevent me from being completely submissive to your orders, in accordance
with the dictates of the canons”. He promises when, by God’s help, he does meet
the Pope, to show that the loss of love is rather on his side, and assures him
that he has endeavoured, though without success, to forward the legate’s
business with the king.
The business of the legate
Hubert was to obtain from William for the Pope not only the Peter’s Pence which
was due, but also that which Gregory supposed to go along with the payment of
money, viz., an oath of fealty. How far the legate was successful in his quest
will be best understood from the king’s letter on the subject to the Pope. “Thy
legate Hubert, Holy Father, hath called upon me in thy name to take the oath of
fealty to thee and to thy successors, and to exert myself in enforcing the more
regular payment of the money which my predecessors were accustomed to remit to
the Church of Rome. One request I have granted; the other I refuse. Homage to
thee I have not chosen, nor do I choose to do. I never made, a promise to that
effect, neither do I find that it was ever performed by my predecessors to
thine. The money in question during the three years past, owing to my being
frequently in France, has been negligently collected. Now, as I am, by divine
mercy, returned to my kingdom, the money which has been collected is remitted
by the aforesaid legate. As for the rest, it shall be sent, as opportunity
shall occur, by the legates of our trusty Archbishop Lanfranc. Pray for us, and
for our kingdom, for we always respected thy predecessors, and we would fain
regard thee with sincere affection, and be always thy obedient servant”.
Gregory felt much annoyed at
this reply, and at once recalled Hubert by letter, saying that he cared not for
money unaccompanied by homage. At the same time, however, he expressed his dissatisfaction
that another of his legates had ventured on his own authority to upbraid William,
although, indeed, he wrote, the Roman Church had many causes of complaint
against him. “He has not been ashamed”, wrote the indignant Pontiff, “to do
what no pagan king ever has presumed to attempt against the Apostolic See,
viz., irreverently and impudently to prevent bishops from coming to the
threshold of the apostles (ad limina)”. So far, he continued, memory of
former affection had caused him to stay his hand, but Hubert must let the king
know that if he continued his present course he would be made to feel the wrath
of St. Peter. Because William opposed simony and clerical incontinence, Gregory
bore with his shortcomings towards himself, as did Pius VI those of Napoleon I
because he restored religion in France.
The letter just quoted
contained another order for English and Norman bishops to present themselves at
the Lenten synod of 1080. Their failure to attend and the continued
disobedience of their archbishop at length (c. 1081) brought upon the latter a
threat of suspension if he did not present himself before the Pope in the
course of the four months following the receipt of the notice.
Fortunately for Lanfranc,
however, a weapon fell into his hands which enabled him to parry the blows of
the Pontiff. An antipope (Clement) had been elected at Brixen
(1080). By his agent, Cardinal Hugo Candidus, he at
once endeavoured to secure the allegiance of England. Lanfranc was not disloyal
enough to throw off the obedience he owed to Gregory, but he was—shall we
say—diplomatic enough to give out that it was quite possible that it might
become necessary to do so. This cunning ruse and the difficulties into which
Henry’s march on Rome plunged the Pope, enabled Lanfranc to pursue his career
of independence unchecked. The letter, generally supposed to have been written
to Hugo, in which Lanfranc unfolds this policy, does him credit as a
diplomatist, if not as a Catholic bishop. It is true he objects to the
disrespectful language towards Gregory used by his correspondent, as also to
his excessive flattery of Clement. “Nevertheless, I fully believe that the
illustrious Emperor would not have embarked in an affair of such importance
(the deposition of the Pope) without good reason, nor can I suppose that he
could have effected his purpose except by the Divine
assistance ... Our island has not, as yet, rejected Gregory; it has not decided
upon tendering obedience to Clement. When both sides have been heard, we shall
be better qualified to come to a resolution of the case”. The result of this
quasi neutrality, though it enabled William and Lanfranc to act very
independently of Rome, still caused them to be “counted among the Gregorian
party by its continental supporters”.
There is no doubt that this
was the correct view for them to take, as is shown by the following fact.
William, bishop of Durham, finding that his cathedral church and the body of
St. Cuthbert were no longer served as of old by monks, consulted King William
and Lanfranc as to what he should do, “in order that no one should hereafter
set aside his arrangements on the plea that they were his own private acts”.
“Anxious that a design of such utility should obtain general approbation, the
king sent the bishop to the Pope in order to consult with him not only upon
this particular piece of business, but upon some other matters, with the
management of which he entrusted him”. After the bishop had “truthfully
explained to the Lord Pope Gregory the former and present condition of the
Church of Durham”, a bull was issued by which he was authorized to eject the secular
canons from his cathedral, and to replace them by the monks of Wearmouth and Jarrow. By separate letters King William and
Lanfranc were encouraged to assist in the carrying out of the bishop’s wish.
“When the king heard that the Pope had assented in this wise, he was no little
rejoiced, and he gave his license for its accomplishment”. Accordingly, after
the exhibition of the papal bull “to the assembled multitudes”, the monks were
restored to Durham (May 1083).
But Gregory was not the man to
confine himself to granting favours to retain doubtful allegiance. In the very
last letter in his Register we find him remonstrating with William on his
imprisoning his brother Odo, bishop of Bayeux. This
warlike and ambitious prelate, like another Wolsey, ambitioned the Papacy. He
had accumulated large sums of gold, and, “by stuffing the scrips of pilgrims
with letters and money, he had nearly purchased the Roman Papacy from the
citizens”. But when rumour of his schemes brought soldiers to him from all
parts of England, his brother the king took alarm, not knowing to what purpose
he might turn his troops. He accordingly threw Odo
into prison, saying that he did not seize the bishop of Bayeux, but the earl of
Kent (1082).
The Conqueror’s sarcastic
distinction between Odo as a bishop and as the second
man in his kingdom did not recommend itself to Gregory. He accordingly wrote to
the king, saying that the satisfaction he experienced in the contemplation of
the king’s many virtues was dulled by the thought that in imprisoning his brother
he had preferred reasons of State to the laws of God. Quoting the Holy
Scriptures, the saying of the great emperor Constantine at the council of Nice,
and the words of the Fathers, he enlarged on the sacerdotal dignity.
Unfortunately, only a fragment of this letter is extant; but it is certain it
had no immediate effect upon William. Only on his deathbed did he reluctantly
grant the release of Odo, assuring the bystanders
that he had kept his brother in prison because he was destitute of the virtues either
of a bishop or of a prince.
In the very beginning of his
pontificate, Gregory directed his attention towards Ireland. The ravages of the
Danes, and the terrible losses sustained by the Irish at the great battle of
Clontarf, in which they crushed the power of the Norsemen (1014), were fatal to
Christian discipline in their country. After Clontarf native unity and
strength were over, and the reign of discord and chaos was about to begin. In
his first letter to Lanfranc, Gregory exhorted him to endeavour to put down
adultery and the selling of wives which were so common in parts of Ireland. As
a consequence, Lanfranc wrote to Guthrie, one of the kings of the Danes in
Ireland, whom he calls “a precious son of the Holy Roman Church”, encouraging
him to hold fast to the faith, and bidding him put down throughout his kingdom
offences against the laws of marriage. He wrote also to Turlogh
O'Brian, a grandson of the hero of Clontarf, the great Brian Boru, “the most vigorous sovereign of the eleventh century”
(d. 1086), and the overlord of the Danish king just mentioned. After
congratulating Ireland on the possession of such a prince, he begs him to set
his face against the practice of divorce and of other customs prohibited by the
Gospel, the Popes, and the Canons.
It was to this same
distinguished ruler that Gregory wrote in 1083. The tone of his letter may be
better understood if it be borne in mind that Donogh
O'Brian, one of the sons of Brian Boru, who survived
the fateful day of Clontarf, went to Rome on a pilgrimage, “perhaps anxious to
atone for his crimes”, and “is sad to have presented the crown and scepter of Munster to the reigning Pope”.
Impressing on Turlogh and all the people of Ireland the necessity of
their practicing the virtue of justice, and of loving and preserving Christian
peace, he lays it down that “the authority of Christ has founded His Holy
Church on a solid rock, and has committed its rights to Blessed Peter, and He
has also constituted it over all the kingdoms of the world. To this Church He
has subjected principalities, powers, and everything else which is sublime upon
earth, according to the prophet Isaiah : “They that slander thee shall come and
shall worship the steps of thy feet”. Therefore to Blessed Peter and his vicars,
among whom, by divine dispensation, we happen to be numbered, the whole world
owes obedience and reverence, which, with a devout mind, you shall remember to
show to the Holy Roman Church. If, therefore, any affairs shall take place
among you which may seem to require our assistance, be careful to apply to us
at once, and your just demand, with God’s help, you shall obtain”. In this
letter, however, there is nothing to compel one to believe that Gregory does
not refer simply to spiritual subjection.
Apart from vague appeals to Svend Estrithson, the king of
Denmark, for help against the Normans, Gregory’s relations with Scandinavia
were confined to efforts to develop its civilization, and to spread the faith
within its limits. Hence he earnestly exhorted its kings to do their duty to
their people, “with the royal name to manifest royal virtues, and to show that
there ever reigned in their hearts that justice in virtue of which they ruled
their subjects”. “You know”, he wrote to Svend (or
Sweyn II.), “that the glory and delights of this world are fleeting and
deceptive. You know that all flesh hastens day by day to its last end, and that
death spares no one. You know that kings, just like the poorest, are only dust
and ashes, and that all men will one day be severely judged. Both bishops,
then, and kings have all the more reason to fear that they have to answer for
their subjects as well as for themselves. So live, then, so reign that you may
then look with confidence on the face of the Eternal King and Judge, and receive
from Him an eternal crown in return for an earthly sceptre wielded with
virtue”.
Quite similar was the advice
he gave to Svend’s son Harald III. He would have him
season his life with justice and mercy, and be the protector of the poor, the
widow, and the orphan. Harald showed himself willing to profit by Gregory’s
wisdom, and begged for more explicit direction as to the proper government of
his kingdom. To be enabled to comply properly with the king’s request, Gregory
asked him to send him a cleric who could inform him regarding the manners and
customs of the Danes, and then carry back to Denmark the instructions of the
Apostolic See. One result of Harald’s friendly communications with Gregory
seems to have been that he became one of Denmark’s favourite legislators, and
his successors, on their accession, were made to swear to observe his
enactments. Another was that he obtained an ally who helped to preserve his
kingdom for him intact.
Gregory also corresponded with
the good King Olaf III of Norway, known as Kyrre, or
the Peaceful, whom he regarded as living “almost at the extremity of the
world”. He requested the king “to send to the court of the apostles some of the
young nobles of his country, in order that, carefully trained under the eyes of
the apostles Peter and Paul in the laws of God and the Church, they may be able
worthily to teach and practice the word of God”. Besides exhorting Olaf to be
just towards all, he warned him not to help any of those who were trying to
disturb the country of Harald Hein.
Gregory’s keen vision extended
even beyond the “furthest limits” of the world; for the annals of Iceland tell
us that it was by his orders that the second native Icelander, Gissur, was consecrated bishop. It is not easy to overestimate
the advantages which accrued to these young and distant countries from their
intercourse with Rome and Gregory. Civilization was in each case steadily
promoted in both head and members.
Of the kings of northern
Europe, Gregory, as we have seen, uniformly spoke well. He could, at times,
even find a good word to say of Henry IV; but he had never anything but evil to
write of Philip of France. And his judgment of that king has been endorsed by
all subsequent writers. Weak and wicked, Philip was denounced by the Pope as
the prince of his time who was the most stained with simony, and the most
anxious to enslave the Church. Constantly false to his promises of amendment,
Gregory found it necessary to threaten him. He declared he would lay all France
under an interdict, the consequences of which would be that his subjects,
“unless they were willing to give up the Christian faith, would refuse to yield
him any further obedience”. Under the rule of such a sovereign, or rather
tyrant, Gregory declared the once powerful kingdom of France had sunk lower and
lower, till it seemed to have lost all sense of honour and decorum. Justice was
trampled underfoot, and crime stalked with impunity through a country desolated
by private wars. Its impotent king did nothing but set an example to his
subjects of every crime. That he had been allowed to go so far along the path
of vice was the fault, so Gregory declared, of the supineness of the bishops.
They must warn their king, and if he would not hear them, they must lay France
under an interdict. If that failed to bring him to a sense of his duty, he
would strive in every way to take his kingdom from him.
In his efforts to purify the
Church of France, Gregory was actively and directly seconded by the zeal and
ability of Hugh, bishop of Die, who acted as his legate, and indirectly, as it
were, by the prayers of St. Bruno, who founded the Carthusian Order during his
pontificate (1084). The chief obstacle to the work of reform was Manasses, archbishop of Rheims, whose priestly character
may be gauged by his remark that the archbishopric of Rheims would be worth
having if it did not involve the saying of Mass.
Under Hugh synods were held, simoniacal bishops deposed, and monies due to the Holy See
were collected. So zealous was Hugh in the work of reform, that his zeal
sometimes outran his discretion, and Gregory occasionally found it necessary to
annul or modify his sentences, and to urge moderation upon him.
Referring the reader elsewhere
for an account of the manner in which Gregory was drawn into the interminable
dispute about the respective jurisdictions of Tours and Dol; of his further
dealings with the worldly and headstrong archbishop of Rheims; and of his
recognition of the primacy of the archbishop of Lyons over the ecclesiastical
provinces of Lyons, Rouen, Tours, and Sens, we shall close our narration of
Gregory’s relations with France by the story of his dealings with Berengarius
of Tours.
As the heresy of Berengarius
still continued to cause unrest in France, it was again condemned at the synod
of Poitiers (1075); for, despite recantations, and despite promises to maintain
silence on the doctrine of the Eucharist, the archdeacon continued to propound
his theories. When, in consequence, he was summoned by the Pope’s
representatives in France to appear before them, not wishing to be tried by
judges on the spot who could easily learn the truth, he threw himself on the
protection of Gregory. Writing, accordingly, to the Pope, “who in the Lord Jesus
has to be treated with the most profound reverence”, and to whom he offers “his
sincerest affection”, he professes to be astonished that his legates should
wish to proceed against him. He is surprised, because he has obeyed the Pope’s
order to preserve silence on his doctrine, though he does add, ambiguously
enough, “as far as he ought”. He declares that he has resolved to treat of his
case only in presence of the Pope, in which he trusts soon to be. Finally,
objecting to the local judges as prejudiced, or as men of no character, he begs
the Pope not to subject him to them, but to grant him a protection worthy of
the Apostolic See.
This and other letters which
he received from France convinced Gregory that he must again examine
Berengarius. He therefore summoned him to appear before him. If we are to
believe Berengarius himself, there was some talk, when he arrived in Rome, of
submitting him to the ordeal of red-hot iron, but the Pope decided that it was
not to take place. However that may be, his teachings were thoroughly examined
in the important synod of February 1079. The Father of this council, at
which were present 150 bishops and abbots and a very large number of clergy,
was Alberic, a monk of Monte Cassino. When hard
pressed, Berengarius was in the habit of declaring that after the words of
consecration had been pronounced the eyes saw upon the altar bread and wine,
but faith told us that the bread and wine are the body and blood of Jesus
Christ. His assertion, properly interpreted, is sound Catholic doctrine; but,
when free to say what he believed, Berengarius held that it was man’s faith
alone which supposed the body and blood of our Lord to be upon the altar, and
that, de facto, really, or strictly speaking, they were not there at
all. To put an end to this quibbling, Alberic
proposed to add the word substantially to the declaration of Berengarius
that, after the consecration, the body and blood of our Lord were present on
the altar. Hence in the official version of the proceedings of the synod we read
that “the great majority (maxima pars) of those present held that in
virtue of the words of consecration pronounced by the priest, the bread and wine
were, by the invisible cooperation of the Holy Ghost, converted substantially
into the body and blood of our Lord”. After three days’ discussion, those who
had maintained a mere figurative change gave way, and Berengarius asked and
obtained pardon for his heretical teaching. He took an oath that he believed as
the council had defined, and was commanded by Gregory never again to discuss
the doctrine of the Lord’s body and blood with anyone, except for the sake of
bringing back to the faith one whom his teaching might have led astray.
Satisfied with his submission,
Gregory not only allowed him to return to France, but furnished him with a safe
conduct as well, forbidding anyone to injure him, “a son of the Roman Church”,
or to call him a heretic. It was this consideration for Berengarius that caused
Gregory’s enemies to publish broadcast the accusation that “he called in
question the catholic and apostolic faith concerning the body and blood of the
Lord, and that he was a long-standing follower of Berengarius”.
No sooner was the archdeacon
back in France, than, once more false to all his undertakings, he began again,
it is said, to spread abroad his peculiar tenets. Condemned for the last time
by a council at Bordeaux (October 1080), he ceased from that time till his
death (1088) to make history. We may therefore hope that the unanimous
assertion of his contemporaries is correct, and that he abandoned his private
opinions on the subject of the Holy Eucharist, and died in the bosom of the
Church.
Spain.
To judge from Gregory’s
letters, it would appear that the need of reform in Spain was not so urgent as
in some of the other countries of the West, or was perhaps not so possible. At
any rate, in his known dealings with Spain, Gregory simply followed the policy
of Alexander. He encouraged the expeditions which Ebles
of Rouci and other French nobles were making against
the Moors in Spain. This encouragement he accorded, as we have already seen, on
condition that they should hold the lands they might conquer of St. Peter; for
Gregory maintained, both to them and to the princes of Spain themselves, that
the supreme dominion over the kingdom of Spain belonged to the Roman Church.
But he had more at heart
strengthening the bonds of unity which formerly attached the kings of Spain to
the Roman pontiffs. Hence, by his letters to both kings and bishops, and by his
legates, he endeavoured to push forward the replacement of the Mozarabic
liturgy by that of Rome. He congratulated Sancho Ramirez, king of Aragon, on
his efforts to effect the cleared change, and he begged the kings of Leon and
Castile to follow his example. He reminded them of the concord which connected
“Spain with the city of Rome in both faith and liturgical practice” before
heresy and the invasion of the Goths and Moors dimmed at once the faith of the
Spaniards and their worldly prosperity; and he exhorted the two kings to
receive that Liturgy which had been brought to the notice of the Spaniards long
ago by Popes Innocent I and Hormisdas, and by their own early councils.
Up to the autumn of the year
1079 at least, Gregory's intercourse with Alfonso VI of Leon was most
harmonious; for, in recognition of his cooperation with him, he sent him in the
October of that year a golden key containing some filings from St. Peter’s
chains. But before midsummer of the following year, Alfonso had given the Pope
grave cause to be dissatisfied with him. In defiance of the laws of the Church
he had contracted a second marriage with a relative, Agnes of Aquitaine, and,
falling under the influence of an insubordinate monk of Cluny, had gravely
slighted the Pope's legate. The monk seems to have been guilty of causing a
great number of the Castilians, who were on the point of giving up their
objections to the reception of the Roman liturgy, to hold fast to their
accustomed one. Hugh of Cluny, who was the recalcitrant monk’s abbot, was
commanded by the Pope to bring his rebellious subject to order. He was also instructed
to make known to Alfonso how grievously he had offended the Pope, who was
resolved, unless he repented, to take the extreme step of going himself to
Spain, and stirring up opposition against him, if all else failed. At the same
time he wrote to Alfonso, exhorting him to renounce both Agnes and his evil
counsellor. These representations were not lost on Alfonso. In place of the
monk he took as his adviser Bernard, abbot of Sahagun, afterwards archbishop of
Toledo, and in place of Agnes he took to wife Constance of Burgundy, the niece
of Hugh of Cluny. It was especially by the exertions of Bernard and Constance
that the Mozarabic liturgy disappeared from Castile and Leon.
But in the meantime, when any
Spanish bishops came to Rome, Gregory prevailed upon them to promise to take up
the work of spreading the use of the Roman liturgy; and he strove by letter to
move them to “labour that the Roman ordo might be more accurately
observed throughout Spain, Galicia, and wherever their influence extended”.
From these earnest efforts of Gregory it resulted that, speaking generally, by
the end of the “Hildebrandine age” the Mozarabic
liturgy ceased to be used outside of Toledo and Salamanca.
Africa
If, at this time, the lot of
the Christians under the Moors in Spain was not all that could be desired, that
of those under the Moslems in Africa was hard indeed. Since the Mohammedan
invasion of that country in the seventh century their numbers had steadily
declined; and the tenth and eleventh centuries especially witnessed a sad
diminution in the number of their bishoprics and centres of work generally.
With the decline of their material prosperity ensued a decline in their
religious spirit. They became divided amongst themselves. We have seen how St.
Leo IX endeavoured to check the ambition of the bishop of Gummi, or Gummasa, who wished to lord it over the bishop of Carthage,
always accounted the first of the African bishops. Now we find a miserable
section of the Christians of Carthage dragging their bishop, Cyriacus, before the tribunal of the emir because he would
not work their will. Insulted by the Moslem, the unfortunate bishop turned to
the sovereign Pontiff. Gregory, who had just been made Pope, at once dispatched
two letters to Africa. One upbraided the people for their conduct, and exhorted
them to repentance; the other consoled the outraged bishop, and prayed God to succour
“the Church of Africa, so long troubled and buffeted by the waves”.
Another letter, which Gregory
wrote three years later to the same prelate, gives us a picture, striking but
melancholy, of the woeful decay of the Church in Africa ever since the days of
the Vandals. Shortly after the overthrow of these barbarians by the troops of
Justinian, over two hundred African bishops could meet together in council. A
list of bishops, written some centuries later, probably in the tenth century,
shows that there were still some forty bishops in Africa. By Gregory’s time (1076)
the number of African bishops had sunk almost to the vanishing point, when El-Nacer, the grandson of the founder of the usurping dynasty
of the Hammadites, sent to him an embassy with rich
presents. Anxious, no doubt, to strengthen his dynasty, and to attract people
to his new city of Boujoyah, he wrote to Gregory,
requesting him to consecrate the African priest Servandus
for the See of Buzea. In his reply to the Moslem
prince, whom he calls Anazir, and describes as king
of Mauritania Sitifensis, though his kingdom really
extended beyond the limits of that ancient province, the Pope, after granting
his request, thanks him for his presents, and especially for having set free a
number of Christian captives. “This act of goodness has been suggested to your heart
by God, the Creator of all things, without whom we cannot do nor even think any
good ... For almighty God, who wishes all men to be saved and none to perish,
approves of nothing in us so much as that after Him we should love our
fellow-men, and not do to others what we would not have them do to us. This
love ought to exist more between us than between other nations, seeing that we,
though in a different way, acknowledge the one God, and every day praise and
adore Him as the Creator and Ruler of the Universe. For, as the apostle says :
He is our peace, who bath made both one”. In the concluding portion of this
noble letter, the Pope devoted himself to promoting arrangements which might
advance friendly relations between his people and those of El-Nacer.
This letter, and one to the
people of Buzea, exhorting them to receive Servandus and to edify by their conduct the Saracens in the
midst of whom they lived, inform us of the fact of the consecration of an
archbishop for Africa by the Pope. But it is one to Cyriacus,
archbishop of Carthage, which lets us know the sad truth that Christian Africa
had fallen into such a state of distress that it could not furnish the three
bishops canonically required to consecrate a new one. In the letter alluded to,
Gregory bade Cyriacus, in conjunction with Servandus, send him a proper person to be consecrated as
their assistant, so that the three of them may be able to duly consecrate fresh
bishops and provide for the necessities of the African Church.
The good understanding between
Gregory and El-Nacer seems to have been productive of
lasting fruit, for in 1114 a Christian bishop was still to be found in the
territory of the Hammadites. But the condition of the
African Church only became blacker and blacker, and such valuable documents bearing
on it as the letters of Leo IX and Gregory VII, rarer and rarer.
From the tenth-century list of
African bishops just quoted, it would appear that, during the century in which
the Moslems occupied Sardinia, viz., during the tenth, its Christian population
was for church purposes included in the ecclesiastical province of Mauritania secunda. After the final expulsion of the Moors (1050),
however, it reverted to the immediate jurisdiction of the Popes, and we find
the indefatigable Gregory working to draw it closer to Rome temporally as well
as spiritually.
At first, however, it would
seem that the native Sardinian authorities were not deposed to acknowledge the
civil suzerainty of the Pope. But when they found that various peoples, regarding
the island after the expulsion of the Moors as a sort of no man’s-land, were
writing to Gregory for permission to invade and seize it in his name, they were
glad enough to acknowledge his claims.
GREGORY’S hopes with regard to
the Eastern Empire were not destined to be realized. He aspired to reunite the
Greek Church to the See of Rome, to deliver the Christians of the East from the
thraldom of the Turk, and to bring the forces of Constantinople in opposition
to those of the Normans. On the accession of Michael VII to the imperial throne
(1071), Pope Alexander had sent St. Peter, bishop of Anagni, to congratulate
him on his accession, and to labour for the reunion of the two churches. But
his efforts were brought to nothing by that “able but intriguing pedant”,
Michael Psellus; for Michael himself, though a
literary, was a useless sovereign. The consequences of the terrible defeat of
Manzikert (1071), however, were gradually impressing upon the Byzantine
statesmen that they would have to look to the West for help against the
advancing power of the Turks. Overtures in this direction would seem to have
reached Gregory soon after he became Pope. In reply to the emperors expressions
of devotion to the Roman Church, Gregory made known to him that it was his
ardent wish to renew the ancient union between the Roman Church “and her
daughter, the Church of Constantinople”, and that to promote this and other
ends, he was sending him Dominic, the patriarch of Venice.
While these negotiations were
pending, the bitter cries of distress which reached him from the Christians of
the East, who were suffering cruelly at the hands of the Turks, caused Gregory
to turn his attention, as we have seen, to procuring armed help for them. But
his projects came to nothing; and he had to look on in anguish of heart while
the Eastern Church drifted further from Rome, and the Eastern Empire hastened
on to its destruction. Although Michael had not been able to bring the union of
the Eastern and Western Churches any nearer, he certainly succeeded in securing
the affection of the Pope. Hence we see Gregory not only excommunicating the
voluptuary Nicephorus Botoniates who dethroned
Michael (1078), but supporting Robert Guiscard in his efforts to avenge him.
When Gregory became Pope,
Hungary, like Germany, was ruled by a young man (Solomon, 1063-1074), who was,
moreover, a friend of the German monarch, and had married his sister Judith.
When he was a mere boy he had been espoused to her by his father (Andrew I),
who had hoped by a German alliance to strengthen him against his uncle Bela.
But his German friends and his German sympathies proved far more dangerous to
him than either Béla or his sons, Geyza and Ladislaus
the Saint. They alienated his people, who naturally turned for guidance to the
sons of Béla. In his distress, Solomon appealed for help both to Henry and to the
Pope, but he did not succeed in obtaining either material aid from his
brother-in-law or moral support from the Pope. The troops of Henry were
discomfited, and the letters of Gregory brought him blame instead of
consolation. In accepting his kingdom from Henry as a benefice, he had, the
Pope declared, slighted the rights of St. Peter; for the elders of his people
could tell him that King Stephen offered the kingdom of Hungary to the Holy
Roman Church. If he hoped for the love of the Holy See, he must acknowledge
that he held his sceptre “of the apostolical and not of the royal majesty”, and
regulate his conduct as a king should.
Thus abandoned, Solomon had to
fly for his life; and Geyza, the son of Béla,
remained in possession of his kingdom. But though Gregory did not feel very
keenly the misfortunes of the exiled king, it was otherwise with regard to his
wife Judith. To her he wrote a letter full of sympathy and encouragement. “Let
not”, he said, “the misfortune which has now come upon you terrify you, nor
depress your noble mind, but with royal mind overlook your troubles, and,
firmly trusting in God, bear your difficulties with the natural strength of
your character ... At all times remember that you must ever strive to render
your noble birth and name more illustrious”.
Solomon’s successor lost no
time in commending himself and his cause to the Pope. In reply to his
protestations, Gregory wished him such honour and glory as were consistent with
justice, for he had heard much good of him. “We believe you know”, he
continued, “that, like other most glorious kingdoms, that of Hungary ought to
remain free, and not be subject to the king of any other kingdom, but only to
the holy and universal mother, the Roman Church, whose subjects are treated as
sons and not as slaves ... Since the power is in your hands, we exhort you to
have a care for religion and the churches, and to obey our legates in such a
way that you may reap benefit in this life and the next”.
Though in this letter to Geyza, whom here, as always, he only calls duke, Gregory
salutes him as king de facto, still he did not forget the interests of
Solomon. He laboured to make peace between the two on the basis of Solomon’s
being allowed to hold the small portion of Hungary then in his possession. With
regard to the whole kingdom, he maintained that Providence had taken it away
from him for presuming to hold it of Henry and not of the Holy See.
Geyza (d. April
15, 1077) held the sceptre of Hungary only a few years, and was succeeded by
his brother St. Ladislaus. It would appear that at first the newly elected king
only communicated with the Pope by letters, and those, too, not very explicit.
At any rate, having occasion to write to Neemia,
archbishop of Gran, or Strigonia, Gregory bade him
along with his fellow bishops and the notables of the country, approach Ladisiaus, and recommend him “to make his position and his
attitude towards the Apostolic See more plainly known to us by means of
suitable envoys”. At the same time, he undertook to support the king, to his
own greater good and to that of his country, with the weight of the apostolic
authority.
Ladislaus hastened to assure
the Pope of his devotion towards him, and proved it in a practical way by
giving his protection to such as were fighting the battle of the Church, and
had fled into his country as exiles from Germany.
In his letters to Ladislaus,
as to his predecessors, Gregory did not lose an opportunity of impressing upon
him to be ever just, to protect the widow, the orphan, and the pilgrim, and to
guard the Church. The king would appear to have taken the advice of the Pope to
heart. Already great in body, “with hands and feet as large as those of a
lion”, he became great in soul, and was called “by all his people the holy
king”. The reputation of his valor and holiness
spread all over Europe, and it is asserted that he was asked both by Pope Urban
II and the people of the West to lead the first Crusade. If nothing else, death
at least (1905) prevented his complying with this request.
If Gregory’s “apostolic
authority” did not avail for anything more, it humanized the kings of Hungary,
and did much for the independence of their country.
Bohemia
In the documents which
chronicle the reigns of Henry IV, and of Gregory VII, there may frequently be
read the name of Vratislav II, duke of Bohemia. He and his wild followers
fought on many a battlefield in Germany and Hungary in behalf of their liege
lord Henry. Nor was it any concern of theirs whether he was under the ban of
the Church or not. For many years, however, Gregory remained on good terms with
Vratislav, as is shown by his letters relating to the duke’s brother, Jaromir,
which we have already quoted. In April 1075 we find him begging “the serenity
of Vratislav’s nobility” to have compassion on his
nephew Frederick (who afterwards became patriarch of Aquileia), and to let him
have the inheritance left him by his father, or some other satisfactory one. He
asks the duke to listen to him, both because Frederick is of his own flesh and
blood, and because appeal is made to him in the name of St. Peter. Frederick
afterwards showed his gratitude towards Gregory for his efforts in his behalf
by his devotion to him and to his cause—devotion which he was to prove with his
life.
As time went on, and word
reached Gregory of the outrages inflicted on the Saxons and the papal party in
Germany by the troops of Vratislav, that prince incurred at length the enmity of
Gregory. He was blamed for communicating with excommunicated persons, and
exhorted not to prefer his own honour to that of God, or money to justice. He
was, moreover, told that his request that the liturgy might be celebrated in
the Slavonic tongue could not be granted. D'Avril is
of opinion that a confusion in the mind of the Pope between the Arian Goths and
the Slavs is the reason why he refused to concede what John VIII and other
Popes had already allowed. But bearing in mind Gregory’s action with regard to
the Mozarabic rite, it is perhaps better to assign, as the motive of his
action, his wish to strengthen the unity of the Church. At any rate, he says
nothing from which the former reason may be gathered. He writes: “When one
reflects on the matter, it seems clear that it is not without reason that
Almighty God has willed that the sacred scriptures should be obscure in parts,
for fear lest, if they were completely clear to all, they might not be appreciated,
or might even be despised; or again, wrongly interpreted by mediocre minds,
they might lead men into error”. Then, briefly unfolding the idea of the
development of doctrine, he continued : “It is no argument to the contrary that
some pious men have tolerated or permitted to pass what in all simplicity the
people have asked them. The primitive Church allowed many things which, with
the development of Christianity, have in process of time been amended by the
holy Fathers after careful examination”.
Although Vratislav remained
faithful to Henry, and even received a kingly crown from him (1086), he obeyed
the commands of the Pope with regard to the use of the Slavonic tongue in the
liturgy.
Dalmatia
Zvonimir (Demetrius or Sunimir), the last real king of Dalmatia and Croatia, was
the son-in-law of Béla I of Hungary; and after his death, owing to a disputed
succession, his country passed into the hands of Béla’s son, St. Ladislaus. He
himself, however, to strengthen his position, had taken the precaution to
acknowledge the Pope as his suzerain (1076). He experienced the benefit of
being Gregory’s vassal during the rebellion of Wezelin,
which seemingly came to naught. How far the rebel’s failure was due to the Pope
cannot be stated, but no doubt the moral support he gave to the king was not
without its effect. “We are exceedingly astonished”, wrote Gregory to Wezelin, “that, after having long since promised to be a
vassal to St. Peter and to us, you attempt now to rise up against him whom the
apostolical authority has appointed king of Dalmatia. We, therefore, in the
name of St. Peter, prohibit you to take arms against that king, because,
whatever you do against him, you do against the Holy See itself. If you have
any grounds of complaint, you should ask justice of us, and wait for our
decision; otherwise, know that we will draw against thee the sword of St. Peter
to punish thy audacity, and the temerity of all those who shall favour thee in
this enterprise”.
Poland And Russia
Some fifteen years before Gregory
became Pope, Boleslaus II, surnamed the Bold,
succeeded his father Casimir as duke of Poland (1058-1081). Of this prince
Dunham says with much truth : “Before his expedition to Russia (1076), he was
the model of sovereigns, ... afterwards he was the disgrace of human
nature”. Whilst he was still a creditable prince, he entered into
communication with Gregory, and sent him presents. When thanking him for his
kindness, the Pope urged him to cooperate with the legates he was sending him
in putting the Church in Poland on a more satisfactory basis. He pointed out
that the number of bishops in his country was too small, and that, through the
want of a metropolitan, the few who were there were not under proper
discipline. In the light of the fact that death might overtake him at any time,
Boleslaus was urged to lead a good life, and to
restore the money which he had taken from the king of the Russians (Dmitri Isiaslaf, the son of Jaroslaf,
king of Kief).
On the death of Jaroslaf the Great, or the Wise (d. 1054), under
whom Kief reached the height of its renown, and became the rival of
Constantinople, his sons began to quarrel among themselves. “Through cupidity”,
Swatoslaf induced another of his brothers, Wsewolod, to join him in attacking their eldest brother Isiaslaf, who was their overlord, and ruled at Kief. Their
undertaking was successful, and Isiaslaf had to fly
from his capital (1073). In his exile, Isiaslaf
devoted himself to obtaining allies against his rebellious brothers. He
appealed both to Henry IV and to the Pope, to whom he sent his son Japorolla (1075), and to whom he offered his kingdom as a
fief. In replying to the exiled king, Gregory signified his acceptance of his
offer, in the hope that Blessed Peter, “by his intercession with God”, would
guard him and his kingdom; would bring it about that he should hold his kingdom
till his death, and would obtain for him life everlasting. He promised,
moreover, that he would cooperate with him in whatever he wished as far as ever
he could consistently with the claims of justice.
With his letters Gregory sent
legates. The result of their representations, and of the Pope’s words, was that
Boleslaus, who had previously plundered the exiled
monarch, now came to his assistance, and Isiaslaf was
re-established at Kief in July 1077. He died fighting on behalf of one of the
very brothers who had driven him from his kingdom (October 1078). Except for
what he says of his tall figure and handsome face, Nestor, in his panegyric of
him, might be speaking of Gregory: “His moral character was irreproachable; he
loathed injustice and loved justice; he was free from all double-dealing, was
kind, and rendered not evil for evil”.
Elated by his success in
restoring Isiaslaf, and seeing Poland and the
difficulties in which Henry IV was involved, Boleslaus
severed the slender cord which held him in subjection to the empire, and
proclaimed himself king (December 1077).
He would appear also, about
the same time, to have cut the bonds which bound him to his Creator. Speaking of
him after this Russian expedition, Dunham notes that “his character—outwardly
at least—had changed; his industry, his love of justice, his regal qualities
had fled, and he was become the veriest debauchee of
his dominions”. His excesses, however, were opposed by St. Stanislaus, bishop
of Cracow, who at length had recourse to excommunication and interdict against
him. Unable to overawe the courageous bishop, Boleslaus
with his own hand6 (1079) slew him whilst he was saying Mass.
News of this atrocious crime
soon reached Gregory. At first he refused to give it credence. Assured at
length of its truth, he at once, we are told, excommunicated Boleslaus, put his kingdom under an interdict, and declared
him deposed. For some considerable time Boleslaus
braved the papal ban, but at last was forced to leave Poland, and to fly into
Hungary. Here he is said to have gone mad, and after his death to have been
devoured by dogs. His brother Ladislaus, who succeeded him, lost no time in
sending an embassy to acquaint Gregory with what had happened. Understanding
that Boleslaus was dead, the interdict was removed;
and to further that reform of the Church of Poland on which he was intent, the
Pope consecrated one Lambert for the See of Cracow (1082).
To those who, through the
medium of the preceding pages, have seen something of the great deeds of
Gregory VII, there may come a desire to know more of the inner character of
their doer, more of this just man and devout servant of God. They will have
gathered from his words and his works that he was of the number of those who
would sooner see the heavens fall than that justice should miscarry. They will
not require to be reminded that he was fearless; nor, when they think of him as
concerned about arctic Iceland and burning Africa, about Ireland in the Western
Ocean, and the lands of the rising sun, will they need to be told that he was
energetic, or that day and night his busy brain and pen were ever at work.
But they may be tempted to
think that, in his hunger and thirst after justice, he was simply concerned
that he himself might get his fill of it. It may not, therefore, be out of
place to note that, if “he was anxious that the rights and dignities of the
Roman Church should be preserved”, he professed to be desirous that “by its
foresight and authority the privileges of its members, i.e., of the other
churches, should be equally preserved”. If, in working to safeguard the
liberties of Hungary, he might be said to be toiling to defend his own
suzerainty, the same cannot be said of “the enmities of princes and nobles
which he had to endure” for his efforts on behalf of Venetian independence. Men
felt that he was possessed of justice, and came to him for it; and they came to
him with equal confidence whether they were of the lower ranks of the clergy or
of the higher orders of the nobility. If he was ready to pour out his life’s
blood for the Church, he was also prepared to shed it for the good of the
empire; and if he did not hesitate to send others where danger lay, he
proclaimed that he was willing to go east or west at duty’s call.
We have said that he was
prepared to see the heavens fall rather than that justice should not be done.
But when, in his great struggle with the empire, this frail little man began to
see, as it were, the very foundations of human society commencing to quake
beneath the violence of attack and defence, we need not wonder that we
occasionally detect a slight hesitation on his part in pushing matters to
extremities—a hesitation for which he was vigorously challenged by the Saxons.
His chief adversary (Henry IV) was bold and unscrupulous; some even regarded
him as “a modern Nero”, and described him as “the most criminal man on the
earth”. He was the centre to which were attracted the reckless, the daring, and
the irreligious. With their aid, it was his aim “to subject to himself the
Roman Church as he had subjected the other churches” of the empire. In dealing,
then, with such a man, Gregory stood sometimes appalled at the consequences of
his acts, and hesitated to strike the next blow. Still, when his conscience
told him that the time to strike could be deferred no longer, he struck with
all his might, and braved the consequences. When he beheld in vision Simon
Magus lording it over the barque of Peter, he rushed in, and ceased not to
wrestle with him till he had bound him hand and foot. Here we have typified the
one aim of Gregory’s life, which was to purify the Church. We have seen him,
indeed, aiming to extend the temporal suzerainty of the Roman Church. This he
did, not from any tangible advantage brought to him by this overlordship, which
was little more than nominal, but from a wish to increase the prestige of the
Church and his influence for good in those countries of which he was the suzerain.
The great ones of the world had made the Church their bondwoman. But Gregory,
knowing that it could not do any good among the people if it were not
independent, strove for that reason to make it their mistress. Further, in
condemning investiture, he had not in view the withdrawing from their
sovereigns the temporal power wielded by ecclesiastics and the subjecting of it
to himself, but simply the rendering of the episcopate completely spiritually
independent. It is true that this action of his was almost as destructive of
the feudal system as the growth of the communes; but since he restored the
election of the bishops to the people, his decree was far more calculated to
increase the local influence of the people than his own.
With all Gregory’s yearning
for justice, he was not a hard man. He was not a man to stand rigidly by his
bond, to exact his full pound of flesh. His letters show that the troubles of
his friends touched him to the quick, that as a good shepherd he was distressed
when any of his flock were in difficulties, and that a cry for help always
attracted his sympathetic attention. Full of paternal feeling, it was his wish
to care for all, even for the very least Christian. He would not even have
anyone treated with discourtesy, still less with cruelty. When on one occasion
he saw the bleeding corpse of a monk who had been a pronounced opponent of the
pontifical cause, and who had been assassinated, he tenderly covered it with
his own cope, and himself sang the Mass for the repose of the soul of the
murdered man. He was ever pleading for the poor, and in his solicitude for the
helpless we hear him anathematizing wreckers.
Although, as we have seen,
Gregory could at times brandish the terrible weapon of excommunication, and at
times even strike with it, he did not himself use it anything like as often as
would seem to be popularly supposed; nor did he approve of its frequent use. On
the contrary, he was ever anxious for peace and honourable compromise, and ever
wishful to be merciful. So much so, that, if some said he was cruel, others
declared he was too pitiful.
Amid the bustle and din of
arms in which Gregory was compelled to pass most of his pontificate, he found
time to promote learning. Not only did he encourage literary effort, and refuse
to accept as bishops men who lacked learning,0 but he passed a decree in synod
that “all bishops must see to it that literature is taught in their
churches”." Such a man was naturally an opponent of superstition.
Though Gregory was compelled
to lead a most strenuous life, he was nevertheless a man of prayer. He had a
tender devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, whose image is said to have shed
tears before him when he was in difficulties, and to have smiled upon him in
his successes. Acting as spiritual director to the Great Countess, he exhorted
her to have a great love of the Blessed Sacrament of the altar, and to have
great confidence in Mary. To her intercession he attributed his recovery from
fever; and it was from her that he learnt that an attack of spiritual dryness
which he experienced on one occasion was due to what ordinary men would call an
innocent enough familiarity with his niece. To divert her sorrowing thoughts
from his sufferings, he had on one occasion played with her necklace, and asked
her if she would like to get married. A conscience, the lustre of which could
be dimmed by such a trifle, could only belong to a saint; and in consonance
with this estimate of his character, we read of the power of working miracles
being attributed to him. At any rate Gregory’s piety was solid and practical.
He recognized no repentance as genuine which did not bring forth worthy fruits
of a change of life. His piety was practical also. He knew that human means must
not be neglected if human ends were to be accomplished. He had no hesitation
himself in drawing the sword to put down violence. He would have tyrants
attacked “by arms both carnal and spiritual”. He considered that for the love
of God to help the wretched and the oppressed was of more value than prayers
and fasts; for “with the apostle he did not hesitate to put true charity before
every other virtue”.
To the plunderer of the priest,
the poor, or the trader, Gregory proved himself a formidable opponent. Whether
the offender was a king or a noble, he did not spare him, but endeavoured to
make him submit to restitution or punishment. By his vigorous defence of the
Church’s laws with regard to matrimony, he did much to preserve and extend that
high standard of sexual morality to which the Western nations long aspired; and
he has a title to the gratitude of all who realize what the strict observance
of the marriage laws means to the good of the individual and of the community.
He forbade kings and nobles to marry relations; for, as he truly said : “The
nobility of the race is destroyed when children are begotten of illicit
unions”. The breaches of the matrimonial law which he opposed in the individual
he opposed also in communities. English, Irish, and Genoese were in turn
upbraided by him for laxity in this direction. Evidently there was not any
beneficial influence on European morals in his age to be compared with that
wielded by this democratic Pontiff. For it must be remembered that his
influence was exerted not merely by letter and by legate, but personally, as it
is by the Popes of today, on the crowds who, he tells us, flocked every year to
Rome.
There are, however, authors
who, while recognizing the necessity of emancipating the Church from the
political power, find their interest in his “salutary reform” lessened, and
their judgment terrified by “the exaggerated programme of papal infallibility
and supremacy which Gregory put forward”. It is no part of our object to decide
whether the programme of papal infallibility and supremacy put forth, whether
by S. Gregory I, S. Gregory VII, or Pius X, is or is not exaggerated, but we
have to note that many who consider the claims of Gregory VII extravagant are
influenced by the twenty-seven curt propositions of the so-called Dictatus Papae.
Though Gregorovius, for instance, allows that their author “is doubtful”, he
regards them as “enunciating clearly and plainly the aims of Gregory”. But,
certainly in the bald and crude form in which they are set forth, they would
never, in their entirety, be acknowledged by any theologian as Catholic
doctrine, and it is the opinion of the greater number of the best historians,
whether Catholic or not, that they are not the production of Pope Gregory VII.
Though, as we have already pointed out, some of the assertions of that Pontiff
made in the heat of the contest with Henry IV might be interpreted to cover
many extravagant propositions, Gregory nowhere categorically sets forth “that
he alone had the right to wear the imperial regalia (n. 8); that his name was
the only one which should be mentioned in the prayers of the Church (n. 10); or
that a canonically consecrated Pope becomes holy by the merits of St. Peter (n.
23)”. With the memory of Benedict IX before him, Gregory was not so foolish as
even to think the last proposition; and, with his ideas of justice and
ecclesiastical custom, he was not the person to have enunciated the other two.
Though he did maintain that circumstances might arise to justify his declaring
that king or emperor had lost his right of ruling his subjects, it is incorrect
to say that he regarded it as a broad general truth that “it was lawful for the
Pope to depose emperors” (n. 12). Many of the other propositions, indeed, had
in substance, if not quite in the unconditional style of the Dictatus, been proclaimed long before his time, and
are accepted today as simple Catholic belief. It is and always has been the
belief of Catholics that the Roman Church, i.e., the See of St. Peter and his
successors, owes its origin to God (n. I); that consequently it cannot err (n.
22); that those only are to be accounted Catholics who are in spiritual
agreement with it (n. 26); that the Pope cannot be judged by anyone (n. 19);
and that the more important causes must be referred to it (n. 21).
However, as Gregory was no
innovator, but in all he said and did ever supported himself by the words and
examples of those who had gone before him, we may, with the majority of the
best authorities, non-Catholic and Catholic, safely deny to Gregory the
authorship of the Dictatus Papae. They may be dismissed with the words of Bowden :
“The propositions are not mentioned by any writer of Gregory's own age, or of
that which immediately followed it: not even by Benno, or any other of those foul-mouthed
and infuriated opponents of Gregory and his cause, who could scarcely have
failed, had they been acquainted with it, to inveigh in the strongest terms
against a document so extraordinary, and so manifestly open to censure ...
Gregory does not, in any of his numerous epistles, urge on any of his numerous
correspondents the reception of these Dictatus,
or even allude, in the slightest manner, to their existence. We may, therefore,
it seems, in accordance with the most learned critics of ecclesiastical history
... unhesitatingly decide against their authenticity”.
In seeking a reply to the
question as to how far Gregory was successful in the work he set himself to
accomplish, we must, we believe, reject the view that “he did not succeed in
his end, at least in the investiture quarrel, because he knew not how to
measure his blows, and because he wished to impose upon the world ideas that
were too absolute”. In the successful treatment of a loathsome disease, greater
credit is due to the bold and skilful surgeon who vigorously plies the lancet,
even to the great temporary distress of his patient, than to those who
afterwards dress the wounds he has made, and assist at their final healing.
Urban II, Calixtus II, and others merely reaped what Gregory had sown, or
quietly promoted the eking of the health-giving cuts given by that immortal
Pontiff, whom, in parting, we may hail with Gibbon “as a great man, a second
Athanasius, in a more fortunate age of the Church”.
B. VICTOR III.
A.D. 1086-1087.
For nearly a year after the death of Gregory
VII the Church remained without a head, it was not that his ideas had been
interred with him at Salerno. It was, in fact, owing to the vigorous manner in
which they lived after him that the Church was so long a widow. In Rome, in
north Italy, and in Germany, they were indeed opposed even to the shedding of
blood by the antipope Guibert, by the simoniacal
bishops of Lombardy, and by King Henry IV. But they were upheld in the Eternal
City by the consul Cencius, and by the people of the Trastevere,
who have ever been the most devoted to the Papacy of all the inhabitants of
Rome. The “Lombard bulls” were kept in check by the Tuscan sword of the
Countess Matilda, and by the eloquence and prayers of the papal vicar, St.
Anselm of Lucca; and the tyranny of Henry was prevented from running riot by
the Saxon party of Herman of Luxembourg. In the midst of the general strife and
slaughter it was almost impossible for the cardinals to meet for the election
of a Pope.
On his death-bed Gregory had named three or
four men whom he regarded as fit and proper to succeed him, and of these he had
singled out Cardinal Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, as the most suitable.
He had come to this conclusion because he was near at hand, and because he had
always had great influence with the Normans, who at least gave to the Holy See
what little concern they could spare from the close prosecution of their own
interests. The eyes of all the leading men in the Church consequently turned to
the abbot, who had immediately, on Gregory’s death, showed himself very
energetic in taking steps to provide him with a successor. But when the
cardinals and bishops straightway began to remind him of Gregory’s views in his
regard, and implored him to take upon himself the burden of the Papacy, he
declared that, while ready to help the Roman Church in every way he could, he
would not become Pope himself.
Whilst these negotiations were going on, that
is, seemingly in the early summer (1085), the way was being paved for an
election in Rome. The death of Gregory had greatly elated the partisans of the
antipope. But their joy was destined to be brief; for the Romans forced Guibert
to quit the city and return to Ravenna. Thereupon Desiderius hastened to Rome
with two of the Norman princes, met some of the cardinals there, and endeavoured
to secure the cooperation of the Countess Matilda in forwarding the election of
a new Pope. Discovering, however, that all were anxious to force the Papacy
upon himself, he returned to Monte Cassino. His flight and the summer heats put
off the possibility of the election’s taking place till the autumn, and even
then nothing could be done, as the electors were resolved that Desiderius
should be Pope, and he was equally determined not to be.
At length, after nearly a year had elapsed from
the death of Gregory, a number of cardinals and bishops assembled in Rome
(about April 5, 1086), and commanded Desiderius to come to the city with the
bishops and cardinals who were staying with him, in order that they might all
deliberate on the needs of the Roman Church. The abbot obeyed the summons, and
once more found himself besieged with requests that he would accept the burden
of the Papacy. With his more than ordinary Benedictine love of peace,
Desiderius firmly rejected their petition. Overcome by his humble perseverance,
the electors gathered together in the deaconry of St. Lucy, near the Septizonium, and promised they would choose the man of his
selection. He accordingly named Otho, bishop of Ostia. But when to this choice
it was objected that translations of bishops were against the canons, the
assembly could contain itself no longer. Clergy and people threw themselves on
Desiderius, hurried him off to the adjoining Church of St. Lucy, and elected
him Pope under the name of Victor (May 24). Struggling in vain, the red cope,
which distinguished the Popes, was put upon him; but he would not assume the
other papal insignia.
But immediate trouble was in store for the
unhappy, peace-loving abbot who had thus been forced upon the papal throne. He
had no sooner made his election known to the world, declaring that he would act
in accordance with the decrees of the Fathers, and confirming Gregory’s action
against Henry, than he found himself exposed to the bitter hostility of the
imperial prefect of Rome. This official had been taken prisoner by Robert
Guiscard when he seized Rome, but had been liberated by his son and successor,
Duke Roger, because he was annoyed that his candidate for the archiepiscopal
See of Salerno had not been confirmed by Rome. Taking possession of the
Capitol, the prefect hired ruffians to persecute the Pope. Unable to bear the
annoyance, and unwilling to meet force with force, the Pope left Rome four days
after his election, laid aside the cross and cope (clamidis)
and the other pontifical insignia, refused, despite every argument, to resume
them, and retired to Monte Cassino. He had not, however, long enjoyed the quiet
of his abbey before Jordan of Capua appeared before it with a large army.
Knowing his enmity to Duke Roger, the cardinals had requested him to establish
the authority of the new Pope in Rome by force. But he was induced to abandon
his enterprise, partly by the entreaties of Victor, and partly by fear of the
summer heats.
This unsatisfactory state of affairs
lasted for nearly another year. But about the first week in the March of 1087,
those concerned for the welfare of the Church, and especially Desiderius, as
papal vicar in those parts, brought about the meeting of a council at Capua. To
that assembly came not only Desiderius and the other cardinals who were true to
the legitimate line of Popes, as well as a number of bishops, including Hugh,
archbishop of Lyons, but also Cencius, “the consul of the Romans”, with other
Roman nobles, Jordan of Capua, and even Duke Roger with most of his nobles. The
adhesion of the last-named prince had possibly been secured by an undertaking
that his candidate for the archbishopric of Salerno should be officially
recognized by Rome. However that may be, after the situation of the Church had
been formally discussed, the great majority of the assembly, not taking any
heed of the ambitious opposition of Hugh of Lyons, turned to Desiderius, and
implored him to resume the burden of the Papacy. For two days he held out
against their earnest entreaties; but at length, on Palm Sunday (March 21), he
yielded, and “confirmed the previous election by resuming the cross and the
purple”.
He who had thus most reluctantly but definitely
decided to rank among the successors of St. Peter was a member of the
illustrious family of the dukes of Benevento, and was related to the princes of
Salerno. Born in 1027, his early piety soon showed that “the nobility of his
soul was greater than that of his birth”. The death of his father enabled Dauferius, for that was the proper name of Desiderius, to
carry out without great let or hindrance the design he had formed of abandoning
the world. As the only hope of his race, his father had destined a splendid
marriage for him. But the mind of the young man, now about twenty years of age,
was set on other things, and he privately unfolded his wishes to a monk of his
acquaintance. He was forced to act with secrecy, as his relatives were anxious
to prevent him from entering the cloister.
After he had tried the youth for some time, the
monk promised him his assistance. Leaving the city one evening, as though on a
hunting expedition, Dauferius stopped before the
church of St. Peter Major, and, committing his horse and sword to the charge of
his attendants, entered the sacred building, as they supposed, for a few
moments’ prayer. Under cover of the darkness he contrived, unknown to them, to
leave the church by another door, and to betake himself to the cell of a solitary.
Furious at being tricked, his relations scoured the whole country. Discovering
at length the object of their search, they tore his religious habit into
shreds, clothed him once more in secular attire, and escorted him back to
Benevento in triumph. After nearly a year’s confinement, he contrived to escape
to Salerno, and to secure the protection of his relative, Guaimar
IV. Strong under that protection, he only agreed to leave the monastery of La
Cava, to which he had withdrawn, and to return to Benevento, on condition that
he should be allowed to become a monk in the famous monastery of St. Sophia. It
was the abbot of this celebrated house who changed his name to Desiderius,
because, as he said, he was universally beloved.
Whilst at Benevento, he was introduced to the notice
of St. Leo IX by Cardinals Humbert and Frederick, to whom he had been
previously known (1053). The Pontiff soon became much attached to the amiable
young monk, and often made him assist him at Mass. When Leo returned to Rome
after his defeat by the Normans, Desiderius betook himself to Salerno, already
famous as the home of medicine, to recover the health of which his fastings and long vigils had deprived him. At Salerno he
met the cleric Alfanus, who was to be its archbishop
and the great ally of Gregory VII, and who was already distinguished for his
skill in music and medicine. Desiderius soon acquired the greatest influence
over Alfanus, and persuaded him to become a monk. So
strongly did he feel the attraction of the charming character of Desiderius,
that he declared he wished never to be separated from him.
The peace of the retirement at St. Sophia,
rendered doubly sweet by this mutual friendship, was rudely broken by the news
that Pope Victor II was coming into those parts (1055) to examine into the
assassination of Guaimar IV of Salerno (1052).
Fearing lest some of his relations might be charged
with complicity in the deed, Alfanus induced his
friend to go with him to the Pope. Trusting that his medical knowledge would
help him at the court of the Pope, he took with him his medical books and a
number of medicines. Alfanus was not mistaken in his
hopes, and the two friends soon acquired the greatest influence in the papal
curia. Finding, however, that the Pope did not intend to move in the matter of Guaimar’s death, they obtained leave from him to retire to
Monte Cassino. Here they were warmly welcomed by the brethren, and once more
gave themselves up to the enjoyment of monastic peace in that abode where it
has so fully dwelt even to our own day.
Peter the Deacon has put on record a dream
which Desiderius had at Monte Cassino whilst still a simple monk there. Behold!
he seemed to be standing in the tower which was beside the chapter-house, and
to be in the presence of St. Benedict, who was seated on a glorious throne. As
he stood afraid to move, the saint made a gracious sign to him to come and sit
by his side. Subsequent events, says Peter, showed the import of the vision;
for Desiderius became abbot of the monastery, and practically renewed the whole
of it during his period of office.
By Pope Stephen (IX) X he was summoned to Rome
(August 1057), and destined to go as his legate to Constantinople. That
Pontiff’s death, however, prevented him from sailing to the East, and was followed
by his election as abbot of Monte Cassino in the stead of the deceased Pontiff;
for Stephen had retained the abbacy whilst he lived, though he had sanctioned
the succession of Desiderius (1058).
Desiderius had reached Bari, and was on the
point of leaving it for Constantinople, when he received word of the death of
Pope Stephen and notice of his election to succeed him as abbot of Monte
Cassino. It was whilst returning to his abbey that he encountered the dreaded
Robert Guiscard, and by his winning personality obtained that favour with him
and his followers which he never lost. He was installed as abbot on Easter
Sunday (April 19,1058).
In the schism which followed the death of Pope
Stephen, Desiderius attached himself to Pope Nicholas, who not only himself
bestowed the abbatial benediction upon him but made him a cardinal (March 6),
and his vicar over the whole of Campania, the principate of Capua, Apulia, and
Calabria from the river Pescara. After taking possession of his titular church
(St. Cecily in Trastevere) amid the greatest
rejoicings of the Roman people, he returned to Monte Cassino.
Leo of Ostia opens the third book of the chronicle
of his abbey with the following words: “Desiderius, the thirty- seventh abbot
of this monastery, and its fourth restorer, ruled for twenty years and five
months. Its first founder was our father the saintly Benedict, the second Petronax, and the third Aligernus”.
Under Desiderius began the golden age of Monte Cassino, and by him also was
advanced that renaissance of Italian art which, begun in this century, was to
culminate so gloriously in the sixteenth. If to the Benedictines in general the
praise is given of having considerably contributed to the preservation of
Italian art, no small portion of that well-deserved praise must be assigned to
Abbot Desiderius.
When the abbey came under his control, it was
from age and neglect in a ruinous condition. Without loss of time the new abbot
began in a modest manner to put some of its smaller portions into a state of
repair. He began by completing a building (palatium) which one of his
predecessors had left unfinished; then he erected a small library, and next
turned his attention to the abbot’s house, which had been built up against the
church, and was propped up from beneath with some wretched beams, and seemed
all overgrown with brushwood. When he had altogether renewed this last
building, he embarked on larger works. He built a new spacious dormitory for
his monks, and decorated its walls with pigments of various colours. He then levelled
the old chapter-house to the ground, and erected another one on a much finer
scale, adorning it with plaster urns, glass windows, and with a pavement of
variegated marbles, and colouring its walls.
Unfortunately, the good abbot was not to be
allowed to pursue his peaceful occupations undisturbed. He had to turn his
attention to checking the aggressions of some of his neighbours, who broke in
pieces and threw into an adjoining ditch the stone lions that marked the
boundaries of the property of the monastery, and then pretended that certain
other “lions” that adjoined a church were the real boundary stones between
their property and that of the abbey. But fear of one of the Norman noble
friends of Desiderius, and a strong castle which he built, taught them at length
to respect the domains of their neighbours. Not content with simply preserving
the abbatial property as he found it, he increased it by recovering part of
what had been taken from it, and by the presents he received from the Empress
Agnes and others; for he was one of those persons, attractive on the one hand,
and hard-working and devoted on the other, to whom men willingly give.
“When, therefore, the venerable abbot looked
around. and saw that, through the merits of our ever-blessed Father church,
Benedict, our prosperity was great and the peace in which we lived unbroken—for
in such honour was he held that not only the lesser folk, but also their
princes and dukes were eager to obey him and, as though he were their father
and lord, to follow his dictates—the notion came upon him, not without
suggestion from above, to throw down the old church, and to erect a more
beautiful and glorious one in its stead. Sore discontent at this proposal were
very many of our priors; they feared he would never live long enough to be able
to complete his designs. But their arguments and entreaties were lost upon him;
for, with full confidence in God, he looked for His help in what he was about
to do for His glory”.
Accordingly, in the ninth year of his rule as
abbot (1066), after putting up a temporary chapel, he began to pull down the
old church, and to level a large portion of the mountain top on which the abbey
stood. Then he betook himself to Rome for materials, and, by influence and
money, procured a large number of columns, plinths, and capitals, and a
considerable quantity of marble of all colours. All this valuable material he
conveyed by the Tiber to Portus; by the sea to the Torre Garigliano,
which Richard of Capua had previously given him; by the Liris
(Garigliano) to Suio, and
thence, with immense toil, on wagons to his mountain top. “But that you
may admire the zeal of the faithful who assisted at the work, they dragged the
first pillar to its place up the steep and wretched mountain path by the
unaided strength of their arms; for Desiderius had not then constructed the
commodious road which he made afterwards”.
To work the marble he had thus laboriously
collected on the summit of Monte Cassino, Desiderius hired from Constantinople
artists skilled in mosaic-work and in the constructing of that variety of
marble pavement known as opus Alexandrinum;
and he took advantage of the presence of these master-craftsmen to train many
of his young monks under them and under the other workers in stone and metal
whom he brought together. So well did the Byzantine workmen execute their task,
that, according to Leo, their marble animals seemed to live, and their stone
flowers to bloom.
In the course of the excavations in connection
with this new church, the workmen unexpectedly came upon the tomb of St.
Benedict. However, out of respect for the saint’s remains, and for fear lest
“anyone might venture to steal any portion of so great a treasure”, the abbot
would not have it touched, but straightway covered it with precious stones, and
erected over it a splendid monument of Parian marble.
When at length, during the course of five
years’ work, he had added to his great basilica altars and chapels to Our Lady,
to Blessed John the Baptist, to the archangel Michael, and to SS. Gregory, Nicholas,
and Bartholomew; had built on to it sacristies, a campanile, an atrium or
paradise, with a great cistern below it; had laid down variegated marble
pavements, the like of which had never been seen in those parts before; had
gilded the beams of the roof; had decorated its walls with mosaics and frescoes
depicting scenes from the Old and the New Testament, and had set up
inscriptions in great letters of gold which set forth that he had dedicated to
God this great basilica which on its mountain was to be a Mount Sinai of the
new law—when he had accomplished all this, he betook himself to Pope Alexander
(1071), and begged him to come and solemnly dedicate the new church. This, as
we have already seen, he did with great readiness and pomp.
The number of those who flocked to the
dedication of the new basilica, and the impression made upon them by its
manifold beauties, brought it about not only that the abbey of Monte Cassino
became more famous than ever, and that the reputation of Desiderius spread
everywhere, but that strangers came from all parts to see the great abbot, and
to gaze upon the glories which he had produced, or to take the monastic habit
under him. Presents, too, poured into the abbot’s hands from the great ones of
the earth, and, adds Leo, they sent to implore his prayers and those of his
brethren.
All this praise and encouragement only served
to stimulate Desiderius to still greater exertions. He spent the money he had
received in buying ornaments for the church or in causing them to be made. For
one hundred and eighty pounds of silver he secured nearly all the
ecclesiastical treasures of the late Pope Victor II, which were held in pledge
by different people in Rome, and with thirty-six pounds of gold he purchased at
Constantinople an antependium of glass mosaic, adorned with precious stones,
which represented scenes from the Gospel and from the life of St. Benedict.
Many of the beautiful images and specimens of different kinds of church work
which came from Constantinople he caused to be copied by his own monks. Among
the many other rich and beautiful objects which Desiderius caused to be made
for the church were its service books. He had them beautifully illuminated, and
bound in gold, silver, and ivory.
The success which had attended his efforts to
raise a magnificent basilica moved Desiderius to treat the whole monastery,
even that part of it which he had rebuilt himself, as he had treated its old
church. He swept away entirely the whole monastic buildings. More of the
mountain top was levelled, and there arose, after several more years of labour,
new cloisters and dormitories, a new chapter-house, guest-house, and infirmary
furnished with baths and all necessaries for the sick, and a new refectory,
with kitchen, bake-house, cellars, and cisterns. Finally, that as many as
possible might benefit by his work, he improved the approach to the monastery,
and, that it might endure as long as possible, he fortified it with strong
walls and towers.
With all his zeal for the external beauty of
his monastery, and for the material comfort of his monks, Desiderius did not
lose sight of the fact that the first aim of a monastery ought to be the
spiritual improvement of its inmates. To train the minds of his monks he not
only built a library, but caused books to be copied for it. Among the volumes
he caused to be copied were registers of the Popes, e.g., those of Leo and
Felix, various works of St. Augustine and other Fathers, the histories of
Gregory of Tours and others, Sacramentaries, the
poems of Virgil, Ovid, and others, both sacred and profane, Cicero, De
natura deorum, and the Institutes and Novella
of Justinian. At the same time he ceased not to endeavour to engage the monks
in a more and more strict observance of their rule.
Men so trained were naturally thought highly of
by the Popes, who scarcely required the instigation of Hildebrand to look to
Monte Cassino when they required a good bishop or abbot. They even allowed
Desiderius to appoint bishops and abbots himself. Seeing that he had found such
favour in their eyes, it need scarcely be added that he obtained from them
confirmation of the privileges of his abbey, that he was himself employed by
them on important commissions, or that he should have been marked out by Gregory
as the man most suitable to succeed him.
Desiderius did not confine his attentions to
Monte Cassino. He did for other churches what he had done for that of his own
monastery. He renewed and decorated in his grand style not only the church
which, from a temple of Apollo, St. Benedict himself had turned into the Church
of St. Martin, and which stood close to his monastery gate, but rebuilt and
adorned with mosaics the monastery of St. Benedict at Capua, and the country
Church of S. Angelo ad Formas (or in Formis), near Capua. The walls of this edifice were covered
with frescoes inside and out. “A fair number of them have been preserved,
albeit”, add Crowe and Cavalcaselle, “in a poor state
of preservation. In the apsis”, they continue, “is the Saviour enthroned in
benediction. The book is in His grasp; the symbols of the Evangelists are at
His sides; and the hand of the Eternal appears out of an opening surrounded by
a fan-like ornament. Beneath the semidome, and on the wall of the apsis, three
archangels separate the Abbot Desiderius, erect and receiving the model of the
church, from a figure of St. Benedict, now almost obliterated”.' While all the
figures are crude, “the painters of Sant' Angelo-in-Formis
succeeded much better in representing the realm of Satan than the joys of Paradise.
Their idea of the Saviour is inexpressibly painful”.
However imperfect were the pictorial results actually
obtained by Desiderius, his work in the domain of art was none the less
important. He gave it a much-needed impetus; so that it may be said with truth
that among the benefactors of European cultivation few are more deserving of
eternal benediction than Abbot Desiderius of Monte Cassino.
But it must not be supposed that it has been
reserved for moderns only to appreciate the character and worth of Desiderius.
They were highly esteemed by those who knew him, whether they were Italians or
Normans. They moved “the illustrious” Gregory, consul of the Romans, and his
son Ptolemy to free, throughout the whole extent of their jurisdiction, the
ship of the monastery of Monte Cassino from all dock and harbour dues; they
deposed the Countess Matilda to free all Cassinese
monks from taxes; and they moved the Popes to entrust weighty commissions to
him, and the Normans to bestow great possessions on his monastery, and to
incline their ears towards him when he endeavoured to mediate between them and
the Holy See. He is justly credited with being the first ecclesiastic who
realized that the Normans had become too powerful to be expelled by force, and
who to an unequal and useless struggle with them preferred an understanding,
which soon resulted in bringing great advantages to Monte Cassino at least.
Understanding his great influence both with the
Pope and with the Normans, Henry IV wished to use him for his own purposes, and
threatened him with all manner of evils if he did not come to him. While
realizing that if he did not obey the king’s behest, he would endanger the
safety of his beloved monastery, and that, if he did accomplish the king’s
will, he would jeopardize his life, he nevertheless decided to go to him, and
expose himself to danger and death. During his journey to Henry, he would not
communicate with any of the king’s followers who were under the papal ban; nor
would he, despise the royal threats, consent to accept his monastery from his
hands. However, through the good offices of Jordan of Capua, an understanding
was arrived at between them. Henry declared himself content that Desiderius
should promise him his friendship, and such help as he could conscientiously
offer him towards his attaining the imperial crown. The abbot also engaged to
accept his monastery from the king when he had received that crown.
Whilst he was at Henry’s court, Desiderius
never lost an opportunity of impressing on such bishops as he met there claims of the rights of the Apostolic See. And when
in self-defence they brought forward the decree of Nicholas II, and urged that,
in virtue of it, a Pope could not be made without the emperor’s consent, the
abbot simply replied that if such a conclusion followed from the decree, then
it itself was valueless; for, said he, “the Apostolic See is our mistress, not
our handmaid; nor is she subject to anyone, but, on the contrary, is set over
all of us ... By the mercy of Heaven”, he boldly concluded, “never again shall
a Roman Pope be made by a German king”. He even drove the anti-pope to admit
that the position he had taken up was the result of his fear lest Henry should
deprive him of his rank.
Reviewing now the work and character of
Desiderius up to the date of Gregory’s death, and mindful of that discerning
Pontiff’s choice of him as his most fitting successor, we cannot avoid the
conclusion that the vacillating course he pursued about accepting the papal
crown was due, not merely to a becoming unwillingness to accept the great
responsibility of the Papacy, but also to ill-health. Though naturally amiable
and gentle, and more disposed to try and induce men to take up the yoke of
Christ because it is sweet and light, than with cords to drive evil-doers out
of the house of God, he had not, up to the death of Gregory, shown any sign of
weakness. But before that event, and frequently after it, we find notices of
failure of his bodily health. Indeed, after his consecration his health seems
to have given way altogether. Ordericus assures us
that he was taken ill whilst he was singing his first Mass after his
consecration, and that from that time he was hardly ever able to offer the holy
sacrifice. We shall probably then not be wrong if we ascribe the hesitation he
displayed in accepting the Papacy more to weakness of body than to timidity of
conscience.
A few weeks after Desiderius had definitely
taken on his shoulders the heavy burden of the Papacy, he appeared before Rome
with a Norman escort, to find that the anti-pope had returned from Ravenna, and
was in possession of St. Peter’s. From this he was promptly driven by Jordan;
and on May 9, Pope Victor III was formally consecrated there by the bishops of
Ostia, Tusculum, Porto, and Albano, in presence of nearly all the
inhabitants of the Trastevere, and of many of the
other Romans (May 9). However, as Guibert was still in arms on the other side
of the Tiber, the Pope, not feeling himself safe, or not wishing to witness
further bloodshed, returned to Monte Cassino.
The month of May, however, had not run its
course before he had again to leave his peaceful home, and go to Rome. This
time it was in answer to a summons from the Countess Matilda, who had determined
to drive Guibert out of the city altogether. At first her arms were successful,
and the Pope took up his abode on the island of St. Bartholomew; but the
appearance of an envoy from the king put fresh vigour into the party of the
antipope, and for a brief space St. Peter’s was again in their hands. Unable to
bear this miserable state of things, Victor once more left Rome, never to
return to it, and retired to Monte Cassino (July or August).
Besides feeling distressed at the sight of
sacred edifices and ancient monuments being transformed into fortresses, and of
the streets of Rome being turned into battle-fields, Victor was sore disturbed
at the rebellious attitude of Hugh, the great archbishop of Lyons, one of those
whom Gregory had designated as suitable men to sit in the chair of Peter.
Summoned to Rome, Hugh arrived there after the election of Desiderius; but, as
he acknowledges himself, he gave in his adhesion to it. Then, whether it was
that the thought of his nearness to the papal throne fired his ambition, or
that he was irritated at the vacillation of Desiderius, he pretended to
discover from the Pope’s public pronouncements how utterly unworthy he was of
the Papacy. He had heard him, he said, unblushingly proclaim himself the
partisan of Henry, and he had witnessed his denunciations of Gregory, and his
opposition to his policy. Pretending, too, that he had observed that, at the
gathering at Capua, Victor was craftily trying to bring about his re-election,
he induced the bishop of Ostia and others to support him in opposing it,
although, according to Desiderius, he had himself been one of those who had
urged him to resume the pontificate. That his opposition proved unavailing,
Hugh does not hesitate to ascribe to the power of Duke Roger, who, he says, was
won over by Victor’s consenting to consecrate his nominee, Alfanus,
to the archbishopric of Salerno. Despite his being abandoned by the cardinal of
Ostia, and most of those whose support he had secured, Hugh withdrew from
communion with Victor, and seems to have done all he could to thwart him. As we
shall see, his conduct earned for him condemnation of some kind at the council
of Benevento. But he must have quickly made his peace with the Holy See, for
whilst Urban II was Pope, we find him writing to the Countess Matilda and
saying that, however he may have opposed the re-election of Victor, he had
never “separated himself from that one body in which God’s mercy has joined us
to serve Blessed Peter, and by God’s will never would, but that, on the
contrary, his mind was made up to advance in every way the interests of the
Apostolic See”.
Despite the difficulties under which he laboured
at home, Victor could be affected by the troubles of others. With the double
object, no doubt, of helping on the expulsion of the Saracens from Sicily by
the Normans, and of checking the predatory habits of these infidel pirates,
Victor succeeded in rousing most of the Italian peoples against them,
especially the Pisans and Genoese, whose sea-power was now increasing enormously.
Furnished with the banner of St. Peter, and with a promise of a plenary
indulgence, the Christian fleet sailed for the African coast. The expedition
met with no small measure of success. The loss of a large number of men and the
taking of El Mehadia seem to have made Temin, the
king of Tunis, anxious for peace. By payment of a sum of money he became
tributary to the Apostolic See, agreed to set free his Christian captives, and
to refrain in future from harrying Christian countries. Unfortunately, the refusal
of Roger of Sicily to cooperate in the expedition prevented it from producing
lasting results as far as the peace of Europe was concerned, though the
churches of Pisa benefited largely by the enormous booty which the fleet
brought back to Italy.
About the very time that El Mehadia
fell into the hands of the Christians (August 6, 1087), Victor, though sick
unto death, was holding a council at Benevento, and showing therein that he had
inherited the ideas of Gregory not only with regard to armed opposition to the
Moslems, but also with regard to the means to be adopted to free the Church
from the thraldom of the State. The synod, which was attended by the bishops of
southern Italy, anathematized Guibert as even at the moment engaged in devastating
the city of Rome, and also Hugh of Lyons for his contumaciousness, and then
strongly condemned investiture. Copies of the conciliar decrees were
disseminated over both the East and the West.
Even before he became Pope, Victor had
interested himself in Sardinia. We have seen how, as abbot of Monte Cassino, he
had received presents from two out of the four kings or judges who ruled, or
were supposed to rule, that island. The long struggle which, in this century,
had ended in the final expulsion of the Moors from Sardinia, had left the
country in a very unsettled state. Conscious of this, one of the judges had
implored Desiderius to send some monks to Sardinia. His first effort to comply
with the judge’s request was not successful. The monks whom he sent, well supplied
with books and all necessaries, had been seized by the Pisans, who long
entertained designs against the independence of Sardinia. It was not till
pressure had been brought to bear on the practical Pisans by Pope Alexander
that they made satisfaction for their barbarous conduct. Desiderius, meanwhile,
undaunted, sent other monks to the island, and when he became Pope did a great
deal for the moral improvement of Sardinia. Indeed, we are assured that he
spread the benefits of law and order not only in that island, but in all the
West.
But Victor’s opportunities for working for the
spiritual good of the world were but few. After the council of Benevento, he
hurried back to Monte Cassino, for he was very ill. His first act was to lay
down a number of regulations for the future good of his beloved monastery.
Then, after gathering around him the bishops and cardinals who had accompanied
him, he grasped Otho of Ostia by the hand, and, presenting him to the others,
said : “Take him and set him at the head of the Roman Church, and do you
yourselves take my place in everything until you can do this”. Otho’s
opposition to his re-election was evidently not remembered by the Pope. Two
days after making this last solemn will and testament, Pope Victor died (September
16, 1087), “when the sun was in the sign of the Virgin”. He was buried,
according to his desire, in the apse of the monastic chapter-house; but in the
sixteenth century his remains were transferred to the chapel of St. Berthairius, in the great church of the monastery. There
they still remain, though his epitaph, which was to be seen in the days of Mabillon, has disappeared. With its text, which, in elegant
diction, gives a brief account of his life, we bring his biography to a close:
Quis fuerim, vel quid, qualis, quantusque doceri
Si quis forte velit, aurea scripta docent.
Stirps mihi magnatum, Beneventus
patria, nomen
Est Desiderius, tuque Casine,
decus.
Intactam sponsam, matrem patriamque, propinquos
Spernens huc propero, monachus
efficior.
Interea fueram Romana clarus in urbe
Presbiter ecclesias, Petre Beate, tuae.
Hoc senis lustris minus anno functus honore,
Victor apostolicum scando dehinc solium.
Quattuor et senis vix mensibus
inde peractis
Bis sex lustra gerens,
mortuus hic tumulor.
Solis virgineo stabat lux ultima signo,
Cum me sol verus hinc tulit ipse Deus.
B. URBAN II.
A.D. 1088-1099.
CONTEMPORARY SOVEREIGNS.
Emperor of Germany: Henry IV, 1056-1106.
King of France: Philip I, 1060-1108.
King of England: William II, Rufus, 1087-1100.
Emperor of the East: Alexius I, Comnenus, 1081-1118.
I.
THE EARLY LIFE AND ELECTION OF
URBAN II
Otho bishop of Ostia, who, on the
recommendation of his two immediate predecessors, was to succeed Victor III,
was born about the year 1042 at Châtillon-sur-Marne, not far from Rheims, in
the province of Champagne. He belonged to the knightly family of Lagery, and had for his father and mother Eucher of Lagery and Isabella.
Lovers of monks themselves, like so many others of the nobility of their times,
they would seem to have inspired their son with love of the religious life. At
any rate, after studying under the saintly Bruno at the famous school of
Rheims, to which the learning of Gerbert had restored
the title of the “Gallic Athens”, and after being a canon and archbishop of the
diocese, he betook himself to Cluny.
In that “cloister of the angels”, as it used to
be called, “which shone on the earth like another sun”, he not only acquired
that love of monks and monastic orders of which he gave practical proofs all
his life, but was brought in touch, especially through his famous abbot Hugh,
with all the important events that were in progress throughout Christendom. For
it was largely owing to the personal characters of its first abbots that it
became true that Cluny was “by far the most potent international influence of
the eleventh century”. The friends he made whilst a monk at Cluny, Urban never
forgot. Especially dear to him was his novice master Peter Pappacarbone;
and he was never tired of expressing his love and gratitude to Cluny and to
Abbot Hugh, “once his father”. “You and yours do I love particularly”, he wrote
to him, “for through you did I learn the elements of the monastic life, and in
your monastery was I born again by the vivifying grace of the Holy Spirit”.
Hence, when he became Pope, he chose monks for
his helpers—monks not only from Cluny, but also from Bec and Monte Cassino,
which last he proclaimed to be “the head of all the monasteries of the West”,
and to which he professed his gratitude for the help it was ever ready to
afford to the Roman Church. Of the monks he drew to his side from Monte
Cassino, special mention must be made of John of Gaeta, whom he made a cardinal
and his chancellor, because he was destined to become Pope Gelasius II. Another
justly celebrated monk whom he summoned to the help of the Church was his old
master Bruno, the Carthusian.
But the most striking proof which he gave of
his love for monks and monasteries, and of his appreciation of the great work
they were doing for the uplifting of the world, was the number of exemptions
from episcopal control to which he affixed his signature. Privilege after
privilege did he grant, not only to Hugh and to Cluny, but to monasteries all
over Christendom. In testimony of their having received “this liberty from the
Roman Church”, they were generally called upon to pay an annual sum of money
“to the Lateran Palace”. Sometimes, in place of money, they had to give to the
papal exchequer cloth, vestments, etc.; and sometimes again the granting of a
privilege was used as an opportunity of reminding the monks of their duties
towards the poor.
These deeds of exemption, and of other favours
which Urban issued so lavishly in behalf of different monasteries, not only
generally secured for the houses which received them that freedom from
molestation and interference, whether by bishop or baron, which was necessary
for them to accomplish their end, and to procure which they were primarily
granted, but also served to bring some financial aid to the dire needs of the
Pope, so often driven from Rome. They served also to reward faithful service,
and to attach closely to the Pope a devoted band of adherents in every land.
It cannot fail to strike even a casual reader
of Urban’s bulls that very many of them are in favor
of monasteries in Germany. With Henry’s habit of appointing to bishoprics any
unworthy person who would pay him well enough, and of imposing his own
creatures on monasteries as their abbots, it was only proper that Urban should
do all he could to preserve the monasteries from the contaminating influences
of Henry’s favourites. Hence the frequent concessions to them of freedom from
episcopal control, and his reiterated declaration of their rights in the matter
of the election of their own superiors. Whatever after evils arose from this
freedom, its grant was at the time absolutely necessary, if the monasteries
were to be agents of good.
After a few years of life as a simple monk,
Otho was named grand-prior by his abbot, Hugh. In virtue of this office, he was
the second in command of the great abbey, and evidently proved himself as fitted
to rule as he had been to obey. So well had he acquitted himself of his
duties both as a subordinate and as a superior, that, when Gregory VII asked
Abbot Hugh to send him some of his subjects whom he might raise to the
episcopacy, Otho was one of those at once selected. The Pope at once made him
his chief adviser and bishop of Ostia (1078). To use the impudent words of
Beno, “Turbanus was his footman”.
During the years 1082 to 1085, Otho was moving
backwards and forwards between Rome and France and Germany, acting as Gregory’s
legate. It has already been told how Henry, in violation of his word, seized
Otho when making his way to Rome to attend the November synod of 1083. Released
because his captor had discovered that his seizure had proved what was to him
worse than a crime, viz., a mistake, he was again sent into Germany (1084) to
spread abroad the news that Gregory had reiterated his excommunication of the
king and his antipope. In sending him on this important mission, Gregory
dispatched a letter “to all the faithful”, assuring them they might have full
confidence in Otho and his companions. “They are”, he wrote, “most faithful to
Blessed Peter, and each in his own rank is among the most distinguished in his
household. They cannot be moved from their loyalty to him nor torn from the
bosom of Holy Mother Church by threats or promises”.
Besides occupying himself with filling up
vacant sees in Saxony, or in replacing such bishops as Gregory had condemned
with men who were loyal to the Church, he presided, by order of the Pope, over
an important synod which was held at Quedlinburg
(Saxony) in April 1085. At this council matters were discussed that had
previously been treated of at a conference at Gerstungen
between representatives both of the papal and the imperial parties, at which
Otho had also presided. The conference had ended in nothing, and at the synod
in question, composed of the adherents of the Pope, and of those Saxon bishops,
“torches which, in the midst of an evil and perverse people, no whirlwind had
been able to extinguish”, it was first established that the decisions of the
Popes are irreformable. Then, after the passing of disciplinary decrees anent
the continence of the clergy, etc., the antipope Guibert and many of his
followers were anathematized by name.
When Otho returned from Germany, Desiderius had
already been elected to the See of Peter. Annoyed, perhaps, at the continued
unwillingness of the abbot to accept the honour which had been thrust upon him,
Otho seems for a time to have joined Hugh of Lyons in endeavouring to take from
him what he had no wish to keep. Such brief opposition, however, as he had
displayed towards him, did not prevent Victor from recommending him as his
successor.
On the death of that amiable Pontiff, the star
of the Gregorian party seemed far from being in the ascendant. In Germany,
Hermann was no match for Henry, who was preparing to send his son Conrad into
Italy to make head against the Countess Matilda, and Rome was for the most part
in the power of the antipope. But the friends of the Papacy, especially the
Countess Matilda, were not idle. Messengers were dispatched in all directions
to exhort the bishops not to be wanting to their head. At length a definite
summons was issued for as many as possible to meet at Terracina in the first
week of Lent, and for those who could not be present in person to send word
that they would acknowledge as Pope the one who was there elected.
Accordingly, on the 9th of March 1088, there
assembled in the Church of SS. Peter and Caesarius,
attached to the palace of the bishop of Terracina, some forty bishops and
abbots, Benedict, the papal prefect of Rome, and a certain number of
representatives of ultramontane bishops and of the
Countess Matilda. After the wishes of Popes Gregory and Victor as to their
successors had been made known to the assembly, the usual three days of fasting
and prayer were proclaimed, and the meeting adjourned till Sunday. On that day,
when the prelates were again gathered together in the same church, the bishops
of Tusculum, Porto, and Albano mounted the ambo together, and together proposed
that Otho, bishop of Ostia, should be elected. Mindful of the wishes of the two
late Popes, and attracted by his amiable character, his ability, and his fine
tall figure, the whole assembly, “with wonderful and complete accord, and with
loud voice”, signified its assent. Then, no sooner had the bishop of Albano
announced that the new Pope wished to be called Urban, than all rose to their
feet, crowded round the object of their choice, stripped him of his mantle of
wool, clothed him in purple, and with acclamations of joy and invocations of
the Holy Ghost hurried him to the altar of Blessed Peter the apostle, and
placed him on the pontifical throne. Nor did the assembly break up till after
Urban had said Mass, and had been duly installed (March 12, 1088).
The bishop who had thus been raised to the
supreme see of Christendom was, we are informed, a man of commanding presence,
of polished manners, of distinguished piety and ability, and possessed of
remarkable powers of eloquence. Though both by word and deed he proclaimed
himself to be imbued with the reforming views of Gregory VII, and though he was
said so to be by others, he was perhaps more disposed than his illustrious
model to have regard to the weakness of human nature, or at least to bow his
head a little to circumstances. But he kept the memory of Gregory’s great deeds
in front of him as his guide and his spur. He proclaimed in his bulls that he
acted through devotion to this, his “most reverend Father and predecessor”,
whose “heroic life, whose distinguished learning, and whose admirable constancy
is the theme of the Roman Church and of the whole West, and is acknowledged by
the obstinacy of tyrants at once endured and overcome”. The piety with which,
on the testimony of his contemporaries, we have credited Urban, showed itself
in his actions in two ways at least. He had thought for the poor, and devotion
to Our Lady. He endeavoured not only to raise money for his own poor of Rome,
but generally to safeguard the interests of the poor everywhere. Of his
devotion to the Mother of God he gave evidence both by his repeated
declarations in his letters that he was moved to act “out of devotion and love
to Blessed Mary ever Virgin”, and by writing a Preface in her honour.
One of the first of Urban’s pontifical acts was
to notify to the Catholic world his election, and his determination to walk in
the footsteps of Gregory. Some of the letters in which he made these announcements
have been preserved. In one of them, addressed to Gebhard,
archbishop of Salzburg; to the bishops of Passau and of Worms, and to a few
other German bishops who were still loyal to the Roman Church; to Duke Welf, and to the faithful generally, he tells how he had
been elected against his will, and how a sense of obedience only had compelled
him to take up the burden of the Papacy in the present perilsome
circumstances. He exhorts them to continue to stand by the Roman Church, and to
be assured, as far as he was concerned, that he was desirous of following in
the path marked out by Gregory. “All”, he said, “that he rejected I reject,
what he condemned I condemn, what he loved I embrace, what he regarded as
Catholic I approve of, and to whatever side he was attracted I incline”.
Writing to his old abbot, Hugh of Cluny, on the
same day, he implores him, if he has any pity, if he has any remembrance of his
son and his pupil, to come to him, or, if that cannot be, to send someone in
his name from whom he may learn the abbot’s mind, and from whom he may learn
how all the brethren are. He concludes by begging Hugh to cause all the
brethren to pray for the needs of the Church.
Writing a little later to Lanfranc, “the noblest
and truest of the distinguished sons of his mother, the Holy Roman Church”, he
begged him to give “due obedience” and help to her in this her time of great
stress. Reminding him of the special debt that the church over which he
presided owed to the Roman Church, because it had received from her “the
elements of the Catholic faith”, he urged him to link the two distant churches
together in the bonds of Catholic unity, and to the best of his power to
correct “anything he might find to be contrary to the Apostolic See or opposed
to its authority”. He was also to ask the king to stand by the Roman Church,
and to send to Cluny as soon as possible, through Roger, “cardinal subdeacon of
our Church”, the money “which Blessed Peter’s wont to receive from his kingdom”.
We may pause to note here that William the
Conqueror, over whom Lanfranc had no little influence, had died September 9,
1087, and that the king referred to in this letter is that unworthy tyrant, the
Red William II. That Lanfranc, had he lived, would have been able to curb the
excesses of Rufus may be doubted. At any rate, when this letter reached
Lanfranc, he was nearer ninety years of age than eighty, and had not long to
live (d. May 24, 1089). In any case, there is no reason to suppose he would
have succeeded in altering the neutral position towards the rival Popes which
William the Conqueror had caused England to assume, even if he could have been
persuaded to make the attempt.
Among the many congratulatory messages which
must have reached Urban after the dispatch of these letters, the
bantering epigram of St. Peter Damian will at least have caused him some
amusement. He Urbanely congratulates him on being made a poor bishop at
Rome. “I find”, he wrote, “that what Peter was at Bethsaida, he is now in Rome,
the same when holding the sceptre as when mending his nets. He is ever
cleansing his fishing tackle, and ploughing the waters of the deep. He who of
old on the waters was destitute of everything, contrives here on earth to place
a heavy burden on me, and would refresh with husks one who had at least a
little fish to nourish him”.
II.
HENRY AND HIS ANTIPOPE DOWN TO
THE DEATH OF POPE URBAN.
REALIZING that the Normans were the only
earthly power on which he could count, Urban’s first care was to bring them to
peace among themselves. Roger and Bohemund, the two sons of Guiscard, were
fighting for their father’s inheritance. To mediate effectively between them
Urban betook himself to Sicily in order to secure the co-operation of their
uncle, Count Roger, in the work he had at heart Though engaged in the siege of
a town held by the Moors, Roger, “like a true Catholic”, at once left it, and
hurried to Troina to meet the Pope, who was too much
fatigued by his journey to proceed further. Unfortunately, we have not a full
record of what took place between them. There can, however, be little doubt
that among the subjects which engaged their attention were, besides the
treatment of Latin Christians in the East by the Emperor Alexius, the relations
between the Papacy and the Normans, and the internecine strife of the latter;
for in the following year peace appears to have been brought about between the
brothers through the mediating of the Pope and Count Roger.
In November, for the first time since his
consecration, we find Urban in Rome, whither, according to the conjecture of
certain writers, he had been escorted by Norman troopers. If, indeed, his
introduction into his episcopal city was due to them, they must either have
abandoned him at once, or else have attempted to establish him with a very
inadequate force. Not only was the antipope’s party not driven from the
principal places of Rome, but Urban had to take up his abode on the island of
St Bartholomew, where he was protected by “the most famous and illustrious
Peter Leo (Pierleone)”, who had converted the theatre
of Marcellus into a fortress which guarded the approach to the island from the
Rome of the left bank of the Tiber. Confined to this insignificant portion of
the Eternal City, Urban was reduced to such straits that he was dependent for
his support on the charity of Roman matrons, and sometimes even on the poor
ones among them. Still, in the midst of his poverty, Urban consulted for the
dignity of the Apostolic See. “A man of literary tastes”, he was anxious that
the documents which issued from the apostolic chancellary
should not be wanting in style. He accordingly made brother John of Gaeta his
chancellor, that he might restore “the old polished diction which his see had
well-nigh lost, and might promptly reintroduce the Leonine cursus”.
Meanwhile, in war-ridden Germany, Henry,
despite some reverses, was gradually getting the upper hand. His cause was
greatly helped by the death, during the year 1088, of the warlike Saxon bishop,
Burchard of Halberstadt, and of the learned Gebhard of Salzburg. Weary of war, dispirited by the
constant devastation of their land, and by the loss of many of their leaders,
many even of the Saxons now abandoned Hermann, the king of their own choice,
and submitted to Henry. Thus deserted, Hermann withdrew to Lorraine, where he
also died this same year.
Bad as all this news was for Urban cooped up on
the island of the Tiber between the faithful people of the Trastevere
and Pierleone in his theatre fortress, it did not
paralyze him. He was the heir of Gregory’s spirit as well as of his throne, and
he made known to his legate in Germany, viz., Gebhard
of Constance, and to the German bishops, that after holding a synod, he had
confirmed the sentence of excommunication issued by Gregory against “the
Heresiarch of Ravenna”, against Henry, “the author of his obstinacy, and
against all such as gave them active support in any way”. But with regard to
those who entered into relations of one sort and another with such as had been
excommunicated, Urban was more merciful. He would not, he said, excommunicate
them, but he would only allow them to be received into the society of the
faithful after they had done penance and received absolution. A smaller penance
was to be imposed on those who had offended by ignorance or necessity, but a
severe one on such as had done so of their own free will. With regard to those
who had been ordained by excommunicated, but properly consecrated, bishops — if
simony had not entered into their ordination, if their character was good, and
if the necessity of the Church required it,—he allowed such to remain in the
grade to which they had been ordained, but only in very rare cases, and under
the greatest, necessity, to be raised to a higher rank.
The example of Urban in holding a synod was
followed by the antipope. He held a council in St. Peter’s, before which he
summoned Urban to appear; for to the Pope’s party he attributed the blood which
was being shed all over Italy and Germany. It is a sign of the times that even
Guibert and his bishops, unable to withstand the voice of the people, dissatisfied
with a married clergy, were compelled to enforce the laws of the Church
regarding clerical continency.
But for the time, at least, the days of Guibert
in Rome were numbered. Urban’s own troops, supported by a number of his vassals
from the Campagna, attacked the forces of the antipope under his nephew, Count Odo of Sutri, and the imperial
prefect. After three days’ fighting (June 28-30), the antipope was compelled to
abandon the city, leaving his treasure chest in the hands of the papal party.
On the 3rd of July, accompanied by the clergy and people of Rome, and by a
force of horse and foot, to the sound of the cymbal and the lyre, through
streets bedecked with flowers and palms, and covered with carpets, Urban made
his triumphant way to St Peter’s, where he said Mass. Thence with the crown on
his head he returned to the city proper.
With this severe blow given to the fortunes of
Henry in Italy, we may associate another which also took place this year.
Opposition to his power was far from being dead even in Germany. Duke Guelf IV
(or Welf) of Bavaria was still in arms against his
king. To consolidate the opposition against him, Urban persuaded Matilda to
accept the hand of Guelf, the younger son of the Duke of Bavaria. Many suitors,
enamoured of the character or possessions of the great countess, had sought her
hand after the death of her first husband, Godfrey of Lorraine. Among these was
Robert, the son of William the Conqueror, who vainly sought to win her that he
might the better oppose his father. The youthful Guelf would probably have
fared no better in his suit than Robert, had it not been for the intervention
of Urban in his behalf. Realizing how much it would strengthen his hands if the
house of one of the strongest supporters of the papal cause in Germany were
united with its most powerful stay in Italy, Urban did not hesitate to urge
Matilda to accept the proffered hand of Guelf, youth though he was.
Eminently satisfied with the success of his
negotiations in this delicate matter, Urban left Rome to promote an enduring
peace among the Norman nobles, and a higher standard of ecclesiastical
discipline among the clergy of south Italy. At his command seventy bishops met
him in synod at Melfi (September 10). Besides passing
the usual decrees regarding clerical celibacy, and against investitures and lay
interference in ecclesiastical affairs generally, the assembly issued various
regulations relating to the clergy. For instance, they were forbidden to dress
extravagantly, and it was prohibited to ordain men priests before they were
thirty years of age. Abbots were also warned not to encroach on the rights of
parish churches.
The synod, however, did not confine its work to
matters clerical. Political affairs also occupied its attention. The brothers Roger
and Bohemund were drawn into satisfactory amicable relations, and the former,
as his father had done before him, took the oath of fealty to the Pope, became
the liegeman of Urban, and by the gift of a standard received from him his
lands with the title of duke.
After the close of the synod, the Pope, often
in the company of the two Norman chiefs, spent the greater part of three months
in going about from one town to another in Apulia, consecrating churches or
bishops, and arranging ecclesiastical affairs of all kinds. He returned to Rome
in December.
Greatly annoyed at these successes scored by
the Pope, but especially at the marriage of Matilda, Henry at once seized her
property north of the Alps, and in the spring of 1090 entered Italy.
Devastating the territory of the great countess as he went along, he reached
Mantua in April, and at once laid siege to it. His arrival in Italy inspired
the party of the antipope with fresh courage, and they began again to make
themselves troublesome in Rome. Unwilling, if we are to believe Bernald, to reduce them to obedience by force, Urban left
Rome (1090) for the Campagna. It was three years before he could return.
Meanwhile the arms of Henry were not making any
great progress in the north. But in the year following his entry into Italy,
fortune smiled more favourably upon him. Treachery enabled him to make himself
master of Mantua after a siege of nearly a year (April 1091); and his antipope
Clement was about the same time readmitted into Rome. The adherents of the
latter got possession of St. Angelo, which they held for seven years, and “he
so entrenched himself near St. Peter’s that he could not be easily dislodged”.
The position of Urban after he left Rome in
1090 was anything but enviable. Behind him, in the north of Italy, Henry was
subduing the forces of Matilda and her youthful spouse, and in Rome the
turbulence of the antipope’s faction made residence therein practically impossible
for him. In front of him one of his Norman friends, Jordan of Capua, who, however,
had not long to live (d. November 20, 1090), was quietly annexing all that part
of Campania in his neighbourhood which belonged to the Apostolic See. He had to
be a wanderer in the midst of strife. But while most men would seem to have
acquiesced in the conclusion that there was nothing for it but continued appeal
to the sword, some ceased not endeavouring to bring about peace. There were
some who addressed themselves to the general public. Railing against Clement,
who could not exercise clemency because the power of the keys had not been
given to him, they called upon Urban either to change his name or to
return to his urban see. They proposed that a council should be summoned
to adjudicate on the respective claims of the two Popes. Others in Germany addressed
themselves to Henry, and promised him their allegiance and assistance in
subduing all rebels if he would only abandon Guibert, and return to communion
with the true Pope. But this he was hindered from doing by the opposition of
the schismatical bishops, who had by this time
possession of all but four or five of the sees of
Germany, and who foresaw their own deposition in the event of peace between
Henry and the Pope. They, accordingly, prevented him from coming to terms, and
thus putting an end to the dreadful struggle which was rending in twain every
province and every episcopal see in the empire. An appeal to him on the same
lines in Italy was equally fruitless. He deserved the description given him by
Urban as “the overthrower of Christian peace, and the sacrilegious seller of
churches, the destroyer of the Roman Empire, and the cause and protector of
heretics”.
With prospects, therefore, anything but bright,
Urban went about south Italy striving to raise the standard of ecclesiastical
discipline. For this end he celebrated a council at Benevento, though he did
not neglect to use the opportunity to renew the condemnation of Guibert and his
accomplices. Whilst thus an exile from his episcopal see, with nowhere to lay
his head, he was nevertheless consoled by the proofs which he was daily
receiving that he was the Pope generally acknowledged by the Catholic world,
and he was encouraged by many signs to believe that his position was slowly
improving. By the capture of Noto in 1091, Count Roger brought to an end the
Saracen domination of Sicily, and replaced it by the Norman. And any advance of
Norman influence was on the whole to the advantage of Urban.
In the north of Italy Henry’s success had
at first been overwhelming. The vassals of Matilda, thoroughly cowed, compelled
her to enter into negotiations with the German monarch. But “the ears of the
countess would not listen” to the condition that she must acknowledge Guibert,
who had now joined his king, as Pope of Rome. Reanimated by the eloquence of a
hermit who promised that the prayers of St. Peter would bring them victory, the
followers of the countess decided to continue the struggle, and soon after
inflicted a severe defeat on Henry at Canossa. The memory of what he had
suffered at that famous castle made him anxious to raze it to the ground. But
once more Canossa was fatal to him. He was completely worsted, lost his royal
standard, had to retreat across the Po, and watch his fortunes in Italy
steadily decline (October 1092).
He was not at the end of h s troubles in Italy.
On the death of his outraged but faithful wife Bertha (1087), he had married Praxedis, the daughter of the Russian prince Vsevlad of Kiev (1089). He soon conceived a greater hatred
of her than he had at first done against Bertha, and undoubtedly treated her in
a much more abominable manner than he had his first wife. Donizo
refuses to speak of the foul manner in which he exposed her chastity to
violation, lest the mere mention of it should defile his poem. Imitating the
poet in this respect, we will merely observe that if we are to be guided by
contemporary evidence, it was Henry’s attempt to make his son the partner of
his deep depravity that was the cause of Conrad’s rebellion against him at this
time; but that, if we are to follow the assertion of some modern authors, it
was the persuasion of Matilda, or of “the priests”.
At any rate, in 1093, Conrad did throw off
allegiance to his father, and attached himself to Matilda and Guelf. Their
party was still further strengthened this year by the adhesion of the first
Lombard League. Milan, Cremona, Lodi, and Piacenza banded themselves together
for a term of twenty years against Henry. The passes of the Alps were promptly
seized by them, and the king, abandoning all hope of receiving succor from Germany, shut himself up in a fortress. Here,
while his son was being crowned at Monza and at Milan, he would have put an end
to his wretched existence, had he not been prevented by his attendants.
All this success of Urban’s friends in the
north of Italy had its effect in the south. Urban, who had spent the greater
part of the year 1093 in going about southern Italy from one town to
another, holding a council at Troya, and promoting the observance of the Truce
of God, was able to make a peaceful entry into Rome in November. Unhappily for
him, however, though Guibert was with Henry in the north talking about
resigning in order to bring peace to the Church, his party held the castle of
St. Angelo. Again helped by Pierleone, Urban took up
his abode in a fortress near S. Maria Nuova, viz. in the massive Turris Cartularia of the
Frangipani. Again, too, because he was unwilling, says Bernald,
“to take up arms against Roman citizens”, he patiently endured the trouble
which the antipope’s followers caused him, and lived in great distress and
poverty under the protection of John Frangipane. This time his wants were
supplied by the famous abbot Geoffrey of Vendôme, who in a very touching letter
has modestly left on record what he did for the Pope. Although his own abbey
was but poor, he at once set out for Rome when he heard of the straits to which
Urban was reduced, “that he might share his toils and troubles and relieve his
needs as far as he could”. During the Lent of 1094 the generous abbot remained
with the Pope. Before its close, Ferruchio, Guibert’s
governor of the Lateran Palace, offered to surrender it to Urban for a sum of
money. As Urban and all his bishops and cardinals were unable to raise the
required amount, Geoffrey gave him what money he had, and, selling his horses
and mules to raise more, had the pleasure of handing over the Lateran to the
Pope, “where I was the first to kiss the foot of the Lord Pope, seated on the
apostolic throne, on which for a long time previously no Catholic Pope had
sat”. The charity of the worthy abbot brought him the affection of the Pope,
who treated him, as Geoffrey tells us himself, “like an only son”.
It was in this year that the unfortunate Praxedis made her escape to Matilda from the durance vile
in which she had been retained by her husband. The countess at once took her to
the Pope, who had come north in the summer. Throwing herself at his feet, she
poured forth to Urban her sad story amidst the tears and sobs which her shame
wrung from her. The whole empire was soon ringing with the story of her wrongs.
Men had no difficulty in forgiving her flight from such a husband as Henry;
they forgave the rebellion of tis son, and abandoned his cause in crowds.
Feeling that the time had come not merely to
strike a well-deserved blow at Henry, but to push forward the ideas of his
great predecessor both in the direction of reform and in the matter of
sending help to the oppressed Christians in the East, Urban summoned a council
to meet at Piacenza in the spring of 1095. The story of the wrongs of Praxedis had spread widely; and, while many came to
Piacenza hoping to see her cause taken up, many more came trusting that the
interests of peace and reform would be advanced. Very great were the numbers
that appeared to assist at the council. No church could hold them. It was said
that nearly four thousand clerics and thirty thousand laymen attended the
synod. It had to be held in the open air. The case of Henry’s unhappy queen was
first investigated. As Henry made no attempt at defence, and the proofs of his
guilt were convincing, Praxedis was publicly declared
innocent, and not liable to the penance assigned to adultery. Passing over in this
place the council's treatment of Philip of France, and Urban’s first
suggestions of the Crusades, we may here note that as usual simony and the
marriage of priests were condemned, as well as the antipope and his
accomplices, and the heresy of Berengarius. Various disciplinary decrees were
also passed by the synod. That Urban was able to hold such a council in the
very middle of Lombardy is proof enough that the Gregorian reformation was
taking deep root even there, and that the power of Henry and his antipope in
north Italy was of no account.
After the council was over, Urban proceeded to
Cremona to meet Conrad. The young king came out to greet him, and, in
accordance with the usual custom of the time, for a brief space led the Pope’s
palfrey. After he had taken the customary oath, under which he guaranteed the
Pontiff’s personal security, and undertook to defend his claims to the Papacy,
and his temporal rights both within and without Rome, Urban adopted him as a
son of the Roman Church. He, moreover, agreed to help him to have and to hold
the kingdom of Italy which had been given him by his coronation, and to bestow
upon him the imperial crown when he came to Rome, always supposing that he
observed the papal decrees, especially regarding investiture.
To strengthen Conrad’s position, and to enable
him to obtain the money he stood in need of, the Pope and the Countess Matilda
advised him to seek the hand of the very youthful daughter of Count Roger of
Sicily. Urban pointed out to the count how honourable such a marriage would be
for him, and how Conrad, aided by the money he would receive with his wife,
would then be able to overcome the enemies of the Church. Yielding to the
Pope’s persuasion, and to the advice of his barons, Roger consented to the
proposals made to him, and Conrad was duly married to the richly dowered
daughter of the count of Sicily.
With Henry and his antipope now hopelessly
discredited, with the one attempting to kill himself, and the other and returns
talking of resigning his usurped dignity, Urban thought he might safely go to
France to crown the work he had begun at Piacenza. Of his doings among the French
(August 1095-September 1096), which placed him more than ever in the forefront
of European estimation, and which resulted in hurling the West on the East, we
shall speak in the next chapter. Meanwhile we shall follow the course of the
relations between Henry and the Pope till the latter’s death (1099). When Urban
returned to Italy (September 1096) after having set on foot the first Crusade,
he found that the wheel of fortune had taken a turn in his great enemy’s favour.
The ill-assorted union between a spiritually-minded experienced woman of
forty-three with a young man of less than half her age had broken, and Matilda
was to all intents a widow again. It would seem that it was the hope of
securing her estates that had induced the youthful Guelf to take the hand of
the Great Countess. But when he found that his wife was determined to abide by
the donation of her lands which she had already made to the Church, Guelf no
longer found her attractive. It was in vain that the youth’s father came into Italy,
and tried to bring about a reconciliation. Unable to accomplish his purpose, he
threw himself into Henry’s party in the hope that he might be able to compel
Matilda to leave her property to his son. For some time, however, his change of
front did not bring much advantage to Henry’s cause. His regular adherents did
not at first trust their new-found ally, and the loyalty of the great mass of
Rome’s supporters was not shaken by the selfish desertion of their cause by
Guelf and his son.
Meanwhile, on his return to Italy (September
1096), Urban passed through Milan, and there preached against simony before an
immense multitude and, to impress upon them the great dignity of the
priesthood, he assured them that the least cleric was a greater person than a
king. And though our sources say nothing about : we may be sure that, as was
his wont now on all occasions when he addressed great bodies of men, he urged
upon them “the Jerusalem journey”.
Making his way to join the Countess Matilda,
Urban reached Lucca in November. Near this city, which may still be called
ancient, he was met by a number of French Crusaders, headed by Robert, duke of
Normandy, Hugh of Vermandois, the brother of Philip I of France, and Stephen,
count of Blois. After an interview with the chiefs, and with as many others as
wished to see him, he gave them his blessing and sent them on their way to Rome
rejoicing.
Escorted by the Great Countess at the head of
her troops, Urban moved on towards Rome, where, during his absence, the state
of parties had remained much the same. It was not that there had been peace;
there had been fierce fighting in Rome and in the adjoining country, and we
read of a certain John Paganus, perhaps a noble of
the Campagna, “who had inflicted a great deal of suffering on the Romans” of
Urban’s party, being beheaded and ignominiously buried in a dunghill. But Urban
entered the city surrounded by a very great number of people, without any
fighting, though the troops of the antipope were still in possession of the
castle of St. Angelo. This we learn from Urban himself. It is often stated on
the authority of later writers that it was the arms of the Crusaders which
introduced the Pope into his city. This is a mistake. Though some of the
Crusaders who passed through Rome were grossly outraged by the followers of the
antipope, they do not appear to have retaliated. What happened to them we learn
from an eye-witness. “When we entered the basilica of St. Peter”, says Fulcher,
“we found the followers of the imbecile Pope Guibert with swords in their
hands, plundering the altars of the gifts placed upon them. Others, mounting on
to the beams of the church, pelted us with stones as we knelt in prayer; for
they wished to kill every faithful adherent of Urban”. Though the Crusaders
were shocked at these outrages, Fulcher expressly assures us that they did
nothing but pray God to punish them.
With all Europe hanging on Urban’s lips and
obeying his behests, the extinction of the influence of Henry and his creature
followed as a matter of course. So that Ivo of Chartres, contemplating northern
and central Italy in the power of Conrad and Matilda, could congratulate the
Pope that the kingdom of Italy was almost wholly at peace.
The material prospects of the Pope continued to
improve. He was able to hold a council in Rome in January (1097), and in May
was gladdened by the news that Henry, alter an almost continuous residence in
Italy of seven years, had quitted it. Whether he was driven out by Matilda, or
took advantage of the opening of the passes of the Alps by his new ally Guelf,
he was, at any rate, never to set foot in it again. His return to Germany
brought him but little improvement in his position. In Italy, shut up in
Verona, he had had hardly more power or state than a second-rate baron; and
when, with a few followers, he moved from one place to another in Germany, he
was wholly unable to assume the status of a sovereign. Instead of being the
revered leader of Christendom arising in its might
against the Moslem, he was a despised wanderer, in whose affairs nobody was
concerned, and himself taking no interest in the great movement which was
agitating Europe from end to end.
The state of turmoil in which the action of
Henry had kept Germany for so many years resulted in astounding manifestations
not only of cruelty and impiety, but also of a piety and charity. Horrified at
the deeds of violence they saw all round them, men began to loathe the ways of
the world around them, and to tire of its barbarities. While many in high
position left the world altogether, and sought the peace of the cloister, many
more, both men and women, whilst remaining in the world, led the life of religious,
often attaching themselves to some monastery to be directed by its monks or nuns.
This kind of community life in the world was taken up even by whole villages,
and there was seen the edifying spectacle of an innumerable multitude of both
high and low, men and women, devoting themselves to religious exercises, and to
the daily service of their neighbours. As Urban had himself when in Germany
been a witness of the good which this widespread movement was effecting, he had
no hesitation in approving of it, and setting it down as holy and Catholic. It
was an anticipation of the “third order” of St. Dominic and of St. Francis.
While Henry was in the forlorn condition we
have described above, some of his adherents were working more for themselves
than for their king. The selfish Duke Guelf of Bavaria was vindicating for
himself against his brothers in Italy the inheritance of his father Azzo (d. 1097). But if that was to some extent an advantage
for the cause of Henry, the loss of Argenta by
Guibert more than counteracted it (1098). This strong castle, “on which the
antipope greatly relied”, was situated to the north of Imola, on the Po de Primaro, and gave to its owner the control of the river Po
in its neighbourhood.
After celebrating Christmas (1097) and Easter
in Rome with great pomp, Urban left the city to seek help among the Normans to
enable him to render his position safe by securing the castle of St. Angelo. He
had pacified the outlying districts of Rome, and if that galling thorn of Crescentius were removed, the whole city itself also would
be at peace. But to get aid in men from the Normans was out of the question.
Like the rest of Europe, south Italy was preparing for the Crusade, but those
of the Normans who were not occupied with it were, with their Duke and Count
Roger, besieging revolted Capua.
But if he could not induce the Capuans to come to terms with the Normans, and if,
consequently, the latter could not go to fight for him, they could give him
money. Of this his agents in Rome made such prompt use that the castle was
surrendered to Pierleone on the vigil of St.
Bartholomew (August 23, 1098). Gold, compromise, and steel soon completed the
little pacification required after the surrender of “the house of Crescentius”.
Urban, however, did not return to Rome
immediately after he had learned that he was master of St. Angelo. He had still
work to do in south Italy. In return for the assistance he had received from
the Normans, and as a practical proof of the gratitude he was always professing
to them for having expelled the Saracens from Italy and Sicily, and, moreover,
no doubt, as a concession to importunate demands on the part of the powerful
court of Sicily, he felt called upon to show them some special mark of his favour.
The Normans had always shown themselves friends
of the Holy See, but they were calculating friends. They measured their
friendship almost exactly by what advantages they were likely to win out of it
for themselves. Their kings liberally professed respectful obedience to the
Popes, but were careful, as far as ever they could, to keep all power, both of
Church and State, in their own absolute hands.
The Church in Sicily had, it may be said, been
entirely swept away by the Saracens. Hence, on the conquest of the island by Roger,
it fell to the lot of Popes Gregory and Urban to reorganize its hierarchy. But
the count began immediately, both overtly and with true Norman wiliness, to try
to arrange everything in his own way. He brought about the election of Robert
as bishop of Troina without waiting for the presence
at it “of the legate of the Apostolic See, or for the consent” of the Pope.
Gregory, it is true, confirmed the election, but he gave the count distinctly
to understand that such elections were not to occur again. After this
pronouncement of Gregory, the next bishopric, that of Syracuse, seems to have
been canonically re-erected (1093). But Roger soon returned to his arbitrary
ways, and even went the length of arresting Robert, bishop of Troina-Messina, whom Urban, “without consulting him”, had
named his legate in Sicily. At what period Roger thus imprisoned the bishop who
had been the object of his own selection is as uncertain as nearly everything
else connected with the refoundation of the episcopal sees of Sicily. At any
rate, Urban cancelled his nomination, and some satisfactory solution of the
affair was arrived at between the count and himself; for we find the latter not
long after conferring extraordinary privileges upon Roger. These are contained
in a document addressed “to his most dear son, Roger, Count of Calabria and
Sicily”. It begins by declaring Roger adopted as a special and most dear son of
the universal Church, because of the manner in which God had deigned to exalt
him by his victories; because of his having by them extended the Church of God;
and because of his having ever shown himself devoted to the Apostolic See. It then
went on to say that, “having full confidence in the count’s uprightness”, no
legate of the Roman Church should, against his will, be established in “any
portion of his dominions during his lifetime or that of his son Simon, or other
legitimate heir of his body”. The count was further authorized to control with
legatine power such legates as the Pope might send “ex latere
nostro”, seeing that he had hitherto been obedient to the Apostolic See and
had “strenuously and faithfully helped it in its necessities”. Finally, should
the Pope notify him to send the bishops and abbots of his country to a council,
it was to be within his power to send such as he thought fit. From the words of
Malaterra which immediately precede his quotation of
this identical bull, it would appear that the document in question was rather a
summary of the deed which left the papal chancellary
than the actual deed itself. The words of the monk to which we refer show that
there were various modifying clauses in the original papal bull which do not
appear in the abridgment which has come down to us. Thus, though the Pope
undertook not to send a legate to Sicily, it was arranged that to deal with
what concerned the jurisdiction of the Roman Church, he should send chartulari (no doubt legal officials), who, “with
the assistance of the bishops of the province”, should settle the matter in dispute.
And though the Pope authorized Roger to decide what bishops he would dispatch
to a council, this privilege of his was limited by the clause which stated that
he would have to send a particular bishop if any question was to be treated of
concerning him which could not be settled in his province.
Some authors, in fact, dwelling on these
differences between the bull as we have it, and the arrangements made between
Urban and Roger, as detailed by Malaterra, and
arguing from the unwarrantable deductions which later Sicilian monarchs drew
from this bull, have altogether denied its authenticity. But, if the
explanation just given of the language of Malaterra
be allowed, the objections to the bull drawn from his words fall. Moreover, the
document seems to harmonize in parts with another bull of Urban on Sicilian
affairs, and explains the fact that, in a mosaic of the Church of La Martorana (built 1143) in Palermo, our Lord is seen
crowning King Roger, “who is represented in Byzantine costume, and wears the Dalmatian
tunic, a strictly ecclesiastical garment, to show that the kings of Sicily were
what Urban II made them, hereditary apostolical legates, and therefore at the
head of the Church in the island”. Though Urban did not make the kings of
Sicily in general “hereditary apostolical legates”, the mosaic, no doubt, does
show that they claimed to be.
After thus settling the affairs of the Church
in Sicily by a compromise largely in favour of Count Roger, Urban made his way
to Bari, and held a council where St. Anselm so much distinguished himself
(October 1098). Before the close of November, Urban was in Rome, where he was
to pass the few remaining months of his life in honour and glory. The city was
wholly under his control, and the one dear object of his life’s work, the
recovery of Jerusalem from the Turks, was in sight. It was to take place (July
15, 1099) before his death (July 29), though so soon before it that he was not
to have the pleasure of knowing that it was in Christian hands.
The last important act of his pontificate was
to be marked by a final effort on his part to promote and advance the cause of
the Crusades. He summoned a council to meet in Rome the third week after Easter
(1099). One hundred and fifty bishops and abbots and “an innumerable number of
clerics” responded to his call. After the confirmation of the acts of his
predecessors condemning Guibert “and all his accomplices”, and after the passing
of various disciplinary decrees, Urban once more raised his eloquent voice in
behalf “of the Jerusalem journey”. He threw his soul into the long and earnest
pleadings by which he besought his hearers to go and help their brethren in
their arduous toils. His words did not fall on deaf ears; and from Lombardy
itself, hitherto the centre of the opposition to the Hildebrandine
reform, there set out a body of Crusaders (1100-1102), among whom was the very
brother of Guibert himself. It was indeed the last triumph of Urban II.
Within three months of the close of this
council “the venerable Pope Urban” had breathed his last (July 29), while his
praises were beginning to ring throughout the world”. He died in the house
which had often given him shelter in life, viz., in the house of Pierleone, a little to the south-east of the theatre of
Marcellus, and quite close to the Church of S. Niccola
in Carcere. Owing to the presence in the city of a
number of the followers of Guibert, it was not thought advisable to take the
Pope’s body for interment to the Lateran, where his immediate predecessors had
been buried. It was transported through the faithful Trastevere
to St. Peter’s, and there, beneath a handsome monument, laid to rest by the
side of the tomb of Pope Hadrian I.
Three several sets of verses are cited as
epitaphs of Urban; but it is not known if any one of them was ever actually to
be read on his tomb. Ordericus Vitalis quotes two of
them in the beginning of his tenth book, and Dom Ruinart
the third. The longer one of the two, which we shall extract from Ordericus, is said by him to have been the work of an
“eminent versifier” other than Pierleone, to whom he
assigns the shorter epitaph. But some assert that he is mistaken, and that the
longer one is the work of that “special son of the Holy Roman Church” just
mentioned. In any case, the poem runs thus: “Odo, a
canon of Rheims, who was made a monk of Cluny by (abbot) Hugh, became an
excellent Pope. While he lived he was the light of Rome; when he died it was
eclipsed. The city flourished while he lived, and languished at his death. O
Rome! the laws which he gave you, and the peace he cherished, filled you with
happiness, preserving you from vices within and from foes without. He was never
swayed by the wealth of the rich, nor elated by praises and fame, nor terrified
by the threats of the powerful. His tongue was remarkable for eloquence, his
heart for wisdom, his conduct for worth, and his
carriage for dignity. Through him the way is open to the holy city; our
religion triumphs; the pagans are conquered, and the faith is spread through
the world. As the rose, the most brilliant of flowers, is soon plucked, so fate
swept off this distinguished prelate. Death possesses his mortal part, rest his
soul, the tomb his corpse; nothing is left to us but his glory”.
“Urban”, sings Donizo,
“was not like a reed shaken by the wind, but by his word did he cut down evil
as with a knife. Heretics feared him as the snake does the stag ... The liberty
of the Roman See suffered no decrease in his days ... He was a golden bishop of
the finest lustre. It was an evil hour for Rome when it lost such a shepherd”.
III.
THE EAST AND THE FIRST
CRUSADE.
ALTHOUGH Alexius Comnenus manifested the usual
tendency of the Caesars on the Bosphorus to interfere in matters religious, the
difficult is in which he was placed by the attacks of the Turks and other more
or less barbaric foes soon caused him to put himself on good terms with the
Pope and the West. At an early period in his reign, he had forbidden the Latins
who dwelt in the empire to use unleavened bread in the sacrifice of the Mass.
With considerable tact Urban dispatched to remonstrate with the emperor the
Greek abbot of Grottaferrata. So well did the abbot
conduct the negotiations, that Alexius not only withdrew his obnoxious edicts,
but in letters written in gold proposed to the Pope that a council should be held
at Constantinople to settle the question as to what kind of bread should be
used in the Mass. He begged the Pope to come himself with a number of learned
Latins, in order that “the one Church of God might follow the same custom”, and
suggested that the council should be held in the course of the next eighteen
months. According to Malaterra, to whom we owe this
interesting item regarding the ecclesiastical relations of the East and West,
Count Roger of Sicily advised the Pope to accept the emperor’s invitation.
Unfortunately, the state of Rome prevented the advice from being carried out,
at least to the letter.
But the idea of reunion between the two
churches, or of a more close union between the eastern and western portions of
the one church had been started, and was to go forward. Even yet it would seem
that many were blind to the fact that the East was finally cut off from the
Church. To facilitate the progress of negotiations, Urban formally absolved the
emperor from excommunication.
At length, in October 1098, a council was held
at Bari in presence of the Pope and of our own St. Anselm, who had come to Rome
to tell his story of the stark tyranny of the Red William. At the feet of the
saint sat his faithful biographer Eadmer, from whom
alone we know any of the particulars of this council, for its acts are lost.
One hundred and eighty-five bishops met together. Among them were a number of
Greeks; but whether they were Greeks of Magna Graecia, or Greeks from the East,
is not certain. From the silence of Byzantine historians, some have inferred
that they were only “Italian Greeks”. But though it may be conceded that such
was the nationality of most of the Greeks, it would seem more probable, judging
from the zeal of Alexius for reunion both before and after this council, that
there were also Greeks from Constantinople present at it.
The council was held in the immense, fortress-like
cathedral of St. Nicholas, with is three aisles divided by screens of granite
or marble columns, and with its great central aisle spanned by three vast
arches. This great basilica, Romanesque in plan, but showing “Saracenic colour
and ornament, combined in the most bizarre manner with the wild energy of
Norman feeling”, was a suitable place for the assembling of a number of bishops
differing widely in nationality, speech, costume, and personal appearance
After many points of Catholic doctrine had been
illuminated by the Pope with his brilliant and well-reasoned eloquence, the
question of the Filioque was mooted. In his reply to the Greeks, who
attempted to show that the “Holy Ghost proceeded from the Father only”, Urban
quoted from De incarnatione Verbi,
a work which Anselm had once sent him. Pressed hard on the matter by some
subtle objections from the Greeks, he called out in a loud voice, “Father and
master, Anselm, archbishop of the English, where art thou?”. The archbishop,
who was seated in the same row with the principal members of the assembly, on
hearing that the Pope called for him, rose and answered, “Lord and Father, what
are your commands? Here I am”. “What are you doing?” resumed the Pontiff. “Why
do you keep silence like the rest? Come hither, I pray you, and take your place
at my side. These Greeks would fain rob the Church of her integrity, and drag
me down into their own pit of impiety. Help, therefore, help; it is for this
that God has sent you hither”. The prelates round about the throne of the Pope
were now all in a bustle, changing seats and preparing a place for the stranger,
who was with all ceremonious courtesy conducted to a seat on the steps of the
throne. “Who is this?” “Where does he come from?" so ran the whisper
round the church. When silence had been restored, the Pope addressed the
council on the learning and piety of their visitor, and in subdued tones told
of the many persecutions he had suffered for justice’ sake, and of his unjust
exile.
“Rising up before the assembly, Anselm, under
the guidance of the Holy Ghost, so carefully argued the subject, that one and all
expressed themselves satisfied with his reasoning ... When he had finished
speaking, the Pope, earnestly gazing on him, said: “Blessed be thy heart and
thy mind, and blessed be thy mouth and the eloquence thereof”.
The opponents of the Catholic doctrine were
condemned by the council, and, as we shall see later, it was only the
intercession of Anselm that averted the indignation of the assembly from
falling on the Red King. Whether the work of this council produced any effect
in the East is not known, but of the Filioque controversy no more was
heard in Greater Greece.
But Urban did not look upon the East with the
eyes of a theologian only; he regarded it as a politician also. The outcome of
his mingled gaze was that he hurled the Catholic West against the Moslem East;
he launched the Crusades.
Like every other great event, the Crusades had
their roots in a distant past. Their remotest origin may be sought both in the
natural feeling which has ever prompted Christians of every time to visit the
scenes of our Saviour’s toils, and in “the brotherhood of Christ”. The Holy
Places were surely visited during the three centuries of persecution. After
Constantine’s edict of toleration gave freedom to Christianity, they were
thronged by devout worshippers from the most distant shores. Conspicuous among
them were men from this island. “The Briton”, writes St. Jerome, “separated
from our world ... leaves the western sun and seeks Jerusalem”. There has come
down to us an itinerary of a pilgrim from Bordeaux who visited the Holy Land
before the death of the emancipator of the Christian faith. Some were not
content to see Jerusalem, they would live there. St. Jerome’s distinguished
penitent, St. Paula, who followed him to Palestine, wrote thence to a friend in
Rome: “No doubt there are other good people elsewhere than here, but I stoutly
affirm that here the foremost men in the world are gathered together”. Examples
of different virtues are set us by Gauls, Britons,
Armenians, Persians, Indians, Ethiopians, and men from every part of the East.
“They speak with divers tongues, but in their hearts there is but one faith”.
But in 637 Jerusalem was taken by the Arabs,
and became a Moslem city. Christians could live therein only by payment of a
heavy tax, and by submitting to humiliating conditions as to dress, customs,
and the like. The stream of pilgrims to the Holy Land almost dried up during
the next century and a half. But before the end of the eighth century better
times began to dawn on the oppressed Christians of the Holy City. The warlike
fame of Charlemagne lent weight to the petitions which he addressed to the
great caliph Haroun-al-Raschid. He obtained from him
the protectorate of the Christians of the Holy Land, and full rights over the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre. After this the alms of the faithful began to pour
into Jerusalem; monasteries, churches, and hospices were built or restored, and
once again the flow of pilgrims to the holy places began to swell. With the
general revival of faith which began in the eleventh century, and with the
conversion at the same time of Hungary to the Christian faith which reopened
the overland route to Palestine, the pilgrimages grew in number and size.
Checked by the persecution of the mad Hakem, the Nero
of Egypt, (1005-1021), and his destruction of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher (1010), “the Jerusalem journey” was again resumed
when his tyrannical treatment of his Christian subjects ceased. It was now
indeed often undertaken by such numbers of pilgrims travelling together as to
constitute veritable armies. Even the renewed persecution of Al Mostancer (1036-1094), Hakem’s
second successor, did not daunt those who longed to see where their Lord had
lived.
But if during the eleventh century the Moslem
frequently oppressed the Christians who dwelt in the East, and took his money
and not infrequently his life from the Western pilgrim who came to visit the
land which he kept in his fanatical grip, many a Western warrior was learning
the way to Palestine, and many a Western palmer, on his return to Europe, told
the tale of Moslem exactions and cruel oppressions. The West was being
gradually aroused. Already, about the time of the destruction of the temple of
the Holy Sepulchre, there were wild rumours of armies of Westerns throwing themselves
upon the East.
The sullen discontent with the Mohammedan sway
in the Holy Land, which had permeated Europe before the third quarter of this
century was over, was fanned into activity by the rise of the Seljukian Turks.
Fear and indignation filled the breasts of the thoughtful men of the West when
they heard that wild hordes of Turks from Siberia had put an end to the
temporal power of the Caliphs of Bagdad (1053), had broken the power of the
Byzantine Empire in the fatal battle of Manzikert (1071), and, after a terrible
destruction of Christian churches and people, had made themselves masters of
the Holy Land, and of Asia Minor to within sight of Constantinople.
But long before the banners of the Sultanate of
Rum had been stirred by the breezes of the Black and Mediterranean Seas, the bitter
cry of the suffering Christians of the East had been heard in Rome. The Popes
hearkened to their sighs, and endeavoured to stir up the nations of the West to
their help. Gregory VII longed in person to lead an army against the Turks, and
Pope Victor III actually succeeded in bringing about a united expedition of
various Italian states against the Moslems of Africa.
The Seljuks had reduced the empire of
Constantinople to such pitiable straits that the emperors themselves began
mediate at length to look for help where their stricken subjects had already
besought it. After sustaining a severe defeat in Thrace at the hands of the
Patzinaks (1088), Alexius I secured from Count Robert of Flanders, who was
returning from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, the promise of a support of 1500
knights. A year or two later (1091), his ambassadors found the Pope in
Campagna, and begged him to use his influence that armed assistance might be
sent to their master. For a similar purpose his ambassadors appeared before the
council of Piacenza (1095). Moved by the sad tale they had to tell of the cruel
ravages of the Turk and Patzinak, Urban induced many
to promise on oath to go to the defence of the Eastern Empire.
It was now that reflection on the needs of empires
and of pilgrims began to lead Urban to entertain wider views with regard to the
East. He saw that the battle of Manzikert, leading to the loss by the Eastern
Empire of practically all its Asiatic possessions, and to the establishment of
a Moslem kingdom within sight of Constantinople, had dealt a fatal blow to
Byzantine power. He had to listen every day to the distressing story of continued
Moslem oppression of the Christian pilgrim to the Holy Land, and of the
Christian resident therein. Nor could he be unmindful that, since the
consummation of the Greek schism, even the Greeks had begun to treat the
Western pilgrims with an injustice which had called forth a strong protest from
Pope Victor III. By no powers of eloquence could he hope to arouse the West to
fight for the Byzantine Empire. But the faith with which it was then burning
would move it to fight for unrestricted access to the scenes of its Saviour’s
sufferings. For that he would urge the entire West to take the sword against
the Moslem. The road of the pilgrim would then be made secure, and the Eastern
Empire would be saved.
As he moved along from Piacenza to France, his
ideas and aims became more definite to himself, and he no doubt unfolded them
to others both by word and writing as he journeyed on. The news of the great
things which Urban was maturing went before him. The minds of men became full
of what was to come, and when it was noised abroad that he was to hold a
council in Auvergne, bishops and priests, nobles and commoners began to move
towards its mountains from all parts and parts of France.
Leaving Italy in the month of July, Urban was
at Valence on the Rhone on August 5. The reception he met with in France
was altogether unprecedented, and he began at once to issue orders for the assembling
of a council at Clermont on November 18. While awaiting that date, he went to
different towns and monasteries, confirming the privileges of the latter, and
consecrating churches and altars.
The fateful time arrived at last, and the old
lava-built town of Clermont welcomed within its walls Pope Urban and his
cardinals, thirteen archbishops, two hundred and twenty-five bishops, over
ninety abbots, and a great number of secular princes. To proclaim a war which
was to stir up the West from its very depths, and for generations to hurl its
living, fighting masses on the shores of Asia, no better site could have been
chosen than the volcanic city of Clermont. Perched on a hill well-nigh fifteen
hundred feet above the level of the sea, it rests at the foot of a range of
extinct volcanoes which rear their conical crests all round it.
The synod would appear to have been held in the
ancient Romanesque Church of Notre Dame du Port. The official acts of the
council are lost, but much can be gathered regarding its doings and its canons
from contemporary historians. The decisions of Urban’s previous councils
against simony, clerical marriage, and investiture were reaffirmed, and Philip
of France was excommunicated because he had put away his lawful wife, and was
living in adultery with the wife of another.
Then the great question of the state of the
Holy Land was discussed; and it was decided that an army of horse and foot
should march to Jerusalem “to rescue it and the churches of Asia from the power
of the Saracens”. To encourage men to join the expedition a plenary indulgence
was offered to such as took part in it, purely from the motive of the love of
God, and not for glory or wealth. For the same object the Truce of God
was extended, and it was decreed that the goods of those who took the cross
were to be inviolable. At the same time, or soon after, Urban decided who were
not to undertake “the Jerusalem journey”. We find, for instance, that monks and
clerics were forbidden to join the expedition, at least without the leave of
their superiors, and that young married men were to be discouraged from leaving
their homes without the consent of their wives. In general, the bishops were
enjoined to see to it that their subjects took the advice of their priests
before taking up arms. What misery would have been averted had the sober
counsels of the Pope been followed!
When the work of the council was over, Urban
went forth from the church to a large open space behind it. There, from a lofty
platform, exerting his powers of eloquence to the full, he told the assembled
multitude how word had been brought to him again and again, both from Jerusalem
and Constantinople, that the Turks had invaded the lands of the Christians of
the East, and had enslaved them, tortured them, and destroyed or appropriated
their churches. The Holy Places were polluted. It was for the Franks, renowned
for their warlike prowess, to cease turning their arms against one another, and
in their teeming thousands to march to free the city of God from the yoke of the
infidel.
No sooner had Urban finished speaking than
there thundered forth from the multitude, in Latin and in the common tongue of
the people, the cry of “God wills it! God wills it!”. Those present pressed
forward to promise the Pope that they would themselves fight for the
deliverance of the Holy Places, and that they would engage others to do the
same. They made haste, at the Pope’s behest, to attach a cross to their cloaks
or tunics, in silk, in cloth of gold, or in any material which came to hand, as
a sign that they had taken up the cross of Christ in earnest. Then, whilst the
immense multitude prostrated themselves on the ground, striking their breasts,
Cardinal Gregory said the Confiteor, and all together begged the Pope’s
absolution for the sins they had committed. This, with his blessing, all
received before they returned to their homes.
One of the first to take the cross was Adhemar of Monteil, bishop of Le
Puy, who, named his legate by the Pope, was to take a foremost part in the
expedition. August the 15th, 1096, was fixed as the day when the march to
Palestine was to begin, and Constantinople was named the trysting place.
To stir up those who could not be present at
the council, Urban sent synodal letters relating to the Crusade in all directions
and at his command special preachers, among them Peter the Hermit, aroused the
people all over Europe. Urban himself, travelling from one city in France to
another till the close of August 1096, preached the Crusade wherever he went.
Indeed, it was never off his lips till he died. Council after council heard his
call to the Holy War. The maritime states were urged to furnish their ships,
inland cities to supply soldiers. The note of war resounded throughout the
West. Everywhere the great nobles began to enlist and drill men and to
manufacture arms. At the word of the Pope, Europe became a barracks, an
armoury, and a camp; while in town and country, over hill and dale, rang out
the song of the Crusade.
So great was the excitement which the thought
of fighting for the deliverance of the Holy Land engendered throughout Europe,
that many would not wait till the more regular armies were ready, but set out
under any one who would lead them. “The Welshman”, says William of Malmesbury, “left his hunting; the Scot his fellowship with
lice; the Dane his drinking party; the Norwegian his raw fish. Lands were
deserted by their husbandmen, houses by their inhabitants; even whole cities
migrated”. The peasants shod their oxen like horses, and, placing their
children on carts, set off to drive to Jerusalem; and you might hear the
children asking whether any large town which they approached was not Jerusalem.
Within three months of the close of the council of Clermont, hordes of these
undisciplined people began to move through Hungary towards Jerusalem. Some five
such hosts, under Peter the Hermit, Walter the Penniless, and others, followed
one another to Constantinople, proving a source of misery and dread both to
themselves and others as they straggled onwards. They plundered and pillaged,
massacred the Jews, slew, and were slain, so that but few of them saw even the
continent of Asia. Those few were soon cut to pieces by the Turks.
At length, about the time designated by the
Pope, the more disciplined bands began to march by deferent routes towards
Constantinople. There were Lorrainers, Germans, and Frenchmen from the north
under Godfrey de Bouillon and his brother Baldwin. Normans, other Frenchmen,
and English were under the command of Hugh of Vermandois, brother of Philip of
France, Robert, duke of Normandy, and Stephen of Blois. Raymond of St. Giles,
count of Toulouse, led the French of the south, with whom went Adhemar, the papal legate, whom all were supposed to obey.
The Normans of south Italy were led by the astute, self-seeking Bohemund, and
his nephew, the generous and heroic Tancred. “The light of the sun from the
world’s creation”, says our own historian, Henry of Huntingdon, “never shone on
so splendid an array, so dread, so numerous an assemblage, so many and such
valiant chiefs—the most illustrious men that the Western world had given birth
to in any age, all bearing the sign of the cross, all the bravest of their
several countries ... It was the Lord’s doing, a wonder unknown to preceding
ages, and reserved for our days, that such different nations, so many noble
warriors, should leave their splendid possessions, their wives and children,
and that all with one accord should, in contempt of death, direct their steps
to regions almost unknown”.
When the Crusaders had entered on “the way of
God”, Urban lost no time in communicating the fact to the Emperor Alexius. He
told him that, in virtue of the general decision at Clermont to wage war on the
Saracens, some “300,000 men had assumed the cross”, among them 7000 “of the
picked youth of Italy”. He impressed upon the Byzantine monarch that the one
important thing was that he should assist the Crusaders with men and
provisions, and should help on in every way he could “this most just and
glorious war”.
This is not the place to tell the history of
the first Crusade. Suffice it to note here that though he did not live to know
it, the desire of Urban’s heart was in part, at least, fulfilled. Despise the
distrust and suspicion with which Alexius viewed the Crusades, and the utter
want of any hearty and effective co-operation with them on his part; despite
the difficulties of distance and climate; despite the strenuous opposition of
the Turks; despite the ambitious designs of several of the Christian leaders,
which led them to abandon their comrades-in-arms in order to carve out
principalities for themselves; and despite the lack of that discipline among
the Crusaders themselves which can only be secured by one man in a position to
enforce obedience to his orders—despite these almost superhuman obstacles, the
Crusaders carried Jerusalem by assault a few days before the death of Urban
(July 15, 1099).
Godfrey de Bouillon was chosen to rule the
country they had conquered, but he would not take the title of king, for he would
not, he said, wear a crown of gold where the King of kings had worn a crown of
thorns. He became “the defender (advocatus) of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre”.
The chiefs did not, however, proceed to elect a patriarch, as Adhemar, the papal legate, had died in 1098, and they
considered that the new patriarch should “be appointed by the determination of
the Roman Pontiff”. It is true that on the death of the bishop of Le Puy, Urban
had at once sent out a new legate in the person of Daimbert,
or Dagobert, bishop of Pisa; but owing especially to difficulties of every sort
put in his way by Alexius, he did not reach Jerusalem till the beginning of the
year 1100.
Meanwhile, however, a small clique of the
clergy, who since the death of Adhemar had got a
little out of control, elected a certain Arnulf de Rohes,
a capellanus of Robert, duke of Normandy, as patriarch in succession to the
Greek patriarch Simeon, who had died at Cyprus6 (1099). It would seem, however,
that the chief clerical and lay lords of the Crusaders would not recognize this
election of Arnulf. Though learned, he was the son of a married priest, had not
received all the major orders, and was, according to some authorities, a man of
loose character. Besides, as we have seen, they did not think it right to act
in such an important ecclesiastical affair without the consent of the Pope.
They would appear, however, to have recognized him in the meanwhile as
chancellor of the Church of Jerusalem.
On the arrival of the papal legate Daimbert at Jerusalem, the election of Arnulf was examined
and declared void, and the legate was himself chosen as the first Latin
patriarch of Jerusalem. His first act was to grant, in the name of the Pope,
the investiture of the kingdom of Jerusalem and the principality of Antioch to
Godfrey and Bohemund respectively.
It had been the wish of Urban, as it had been
that of Gregory, to go himself with the Crusaders to Jerusalem. But the one was
prevented from accomplishing his desires by his troubles with Henry IV, the
other by the opposition of all his advisers. Through the presence of his
legate, however, the Crusaders fought “under his leadership and that of St.
Peter”. Besides, he never ceased working for their success, both by his words
and his letters. In every way he could, he encouraged men to assume the cross;
and though the taking of it was everywhere left an absolutely voluntary act, he
did not easily dispense from their obligations those who had once affixed it to
their right shoulders. “Pope Urban”, says Ordericus,
“had sanctioned by his universal authority, and by his apostolic commands had
insisted that it should be the rule throughout all Christendom that all who had
taken the cross of Christ, and had changed their minds and had not gone to
Jerusalem, should in the name of the Lord undertake a corresponding journey, or
pay the penalty by incurring excommunication”.
As the Crusaders pursued their long and arduous
way, Urban ever kept in touch with them. One of their letters to him has come
down to us. It is addressed by Bohemund, Raymond of Toulouse, Godfrey, Robert
of Normandy, and others, “to the venerable Pope Urban”, and offers him their
greetings and true homage in Jesus Christ. They tell him of the siege of
Antioch and of the discovery of the Holy Lance, and how at length “our Lord
Jesus Christ had subjected all Antioch to the Roman religion and faith”. After
informing him of the death of his legate, they beg him to come to them himself
with as many as possible. “What is more fitting than that you, who are the
father and head of the Christian religion, should come to the original city of
the Christian name (Antioch), and should bring to a successful termination the
war which is yours. ... If you come to us, and with us finish the way we have
begun through you, the whole world will be obedient to you”.
Although, as we have seen, Urban was not
permitted to carry out his own wishes and those of the Crusaders, and betake
himself to the Holy Land, he never ceased till his dying day labouring for
their interests both by word and work. The success of the first Crusade was the
work of Urban II; its shortcomings were the result of the human weakness of the
many. We may take our leave of it, thanking God with Urban “for deigning,
especially in his time, after so many ages, to relieve the stress under which
the Christians were suffering, and to exalt the faith. For in our days, by the
might of the Christians, has He struck down the Turks in Asia and the Moors in
Europe, and graciously brought many once famous cities under the worship of the
true faith”.
IV.
FRANCE
At a time when almost the whole of his native
land “lay buried beneath the mists of confusion” and anarchy caused by the evil
deeds and example of a weak and vicious monarch, the influence of Urban wrought
the same beneficial effect upon it as do the rays of the summer sun on the
morning haze. The Pope’s most pronounced move towards clearing the moral
atmosphere of France was perhaps his opposition to the loose conduct of its
king. For twelve years (1092-1104) did Popes Urban II and Paschal II employ
every device of kindness and severity in trying to bring the adulterous Philip
to a sense of his duty.
Between the years 1071 and 1074 Philip married
Bertha, the daughter of Floris (or Florence) I, count of Holland, by whom he
had a son and a daughter. Some twenty years after, he became enamoured of the
wife of his near relative Fulk Rechin, count of
Anjou. His base passion was reciprocated by the lady, Bertrada
de Montford, whose sole title to praise, according to the author of the Gesta of the counts of Anjou, was her beauty, but
who at least possessed in an eminent degree the art by which men as wise as
Solomon are rendered fools, and by which foolish men like Philip I of France
are made veritable slaves. She eloped with the king (May 1092), who in the
course of a few months found a bishop worthless enough to pronounce the
marriage service over them (October).
But the French episcopate as a body were not as
subservient as William of Rouen. The proud and honourable position of the most
uncompromising opponent of the king’s baseness was held by the learned
canonist, Bishop Ivo of Chartres. His courageous opposition soon brought him
into trouble. Though he assured the king that, in opposing him, he was really
giving him a proof of his fidelity, inasmuch as what he was attempting would
endanger his soul and imperil his crown, Philip nevertheless cast him into
prison.
Affairs of such scandalous moment could not
escape the notice of the Pope. On October 29 he dispatched a letter to the
bishops of the province of Rheims, in which he severely blamed them for
allowing Philip to contract an adulterous marriage. “What has been done”, he
wrote, “redounds to the confusion of the whole kingdom, to the discredit of
your churches, and to your personal infamy”. He commanded the archbishop to
approach the king at once, and to urge him, in his own name, in name of God,
and in that of the Pope, to cease from his sin forthwith. If he will not, then
must he and they prepare to do their duty; and if Ivo is not released from
prison immediately, they must excommunicate his captor, and lay an interdict on
any place in which he may be detained.
This strong letter was followed by the release
of Ivo, who made use of his liberty to betake himself to Rome towards the close
of 1093. One result of the conferences between the Pope and the bishop of
Chartres was that the former ordered that a council of French bishops should be
assembled thoroughly to investigate the whole question of the king’s marriage. Despite
the efforts of Philip, Hugh, archbishop of Lyons, the Pope’s legate in France,
duly convened a council at Autun (October 15, 1094); and though Bertha had died
in the meantime (1094), her false husband was by it declared excommunicated.
As soon as this sentence was published, Philip
dispatched envoys to Rome to get it annulled. To accomplish the end of their
mission they were to spare neither promises nor threats. They were to declare
that, unless their master were reinstated in his rights, he would withdraw
himself and his kingdom from the obedience of Urban. But “the seat of justice”,
after granting Philip a respite at the council of Piacenza, reaffirmed the
excommunication at the council of Clermont. Moreover, to show publicly to Fulk
how much he felt the shameful way in which he had been outraged, he took
occasion of the presence of Fulk at his Mass in the Church of St. Martin at
Tours to present him with the Golden Rose (Lent 1096). This we learn from the
count himself, who adds that he at once made a law that it should in future be
carried by himself and his descendants in the procession on Palm Sunday. The
sequel will show how little Fulk deserved honour from anyone. The Pope will not
suffer any interference with his excommunication.
Kings have ever been able to buy the
consciences of some men, and Philip was not more incapable than the rest of his
class in this respect. He had secured some partisans among the episcopate, who
would appear at the council of Tours (March 16-22, 1096) to have put forth that
it was in their power to absolve the king from his excommunication. But the
Fathers of the council, over which Urban presided in person, at once proclaimed
that no one could loose where the supreme Pontiff had
bound. And the Pope himself issued a circular letter to the French bishops,
reminding them that if the just excommunications of even simple suffragans
could not be removed by their metropolitans, still less could any bishops undo
the act of the Pope, who has no superior, but to whom even the patriarchs are
subject.
Finding at length that submission was all that
was left for him, Philip sent Bertrada away, promised
amendment, and was absolved by the Pope at the council of Nimes (July
1096). But of his oaths or solemn promises the miserable monarch thought but
little. Bertrada was soon with him again; and again,
through the action of the papal legate. Hugh of Lyons, was he placed under the
censure of the Church (1097). A fresh act of perjury on his part procured from
the Pope a suspension of Hugh’s censure (1098), just as proof of the perjury
brought a renewal of the archbishop’s interdict by the Pope not long before his
death. But for ecclesiastical censures neither did the infatuated king nor some
of the members of the hierarchy seem to care very much. When the church bells,
which on Philip’s arrival in a town all became mute, rang out joyfully on his
departure from it, he is said to have laughingly observed to Bertrada : “Do you hear, my pretty, how they are driving us
away?”. And when Urban died the bishops of the province of Rheims ventured to
behave towards the king as though he were no longer under the ban of the
Church; “as if”, said Ivo of Chartres, “they fancied that justice had died with
its herald”.
But Urban’s successor, Paschal II, was the
successor of his policy as well as of his throne, and at once sent two
cardinal-priests, John and Benedict, into France, that they might vindicate the
claims of that justice which never dies. They held councils, and they tried by
personal interviews to move the abandoned king. Seeing, however, that their
pacific efforts were useless, they resolved to excommunicate Philip once more
in a council at Poitiers (1100). This they boldly did at the risk of their
lives, for Poitiers was one of the king’s cities, and his agents stirred up the
people against the assembled Fathers. Some of them were seriously injured, but
the heroic fearlessness displayed by the papal legates brought their assailants
to reason and repentance.
After this council the canonical rules
regarding interdict and excommunication were put into operation more
universally and strictly than before, and, what affected the wretched king
still more, disunion and strife now began to show itself in the midst of his
family. His son (afterwards known as Louis VI, the Fat) by Bertha now arrived
at man’s estate, and seeing how royalty was falling into contempt, began, only
naturally, to conceive a strong dislike to Bertrada.
His hostile feelings were more than reciprocated by the would-be queen. She
tried to do away with him.
This domestic trouble especially seems to have
made Philip once again wishful to make his peace with God and the Pope, at any
rate in appearance. Ivo of Chartres, however, doubted his sincerity, and wrote
urging the Pope, if he absolved him, “so to bind him with the keys and chains
of Peter, that if, when absolved, he returned to the vomit, as he had done
before, he might be immediately refettered”.
In 1102 Paschal sent into France Richard,
cardinal- bishop of Albano, as his legate to arrange for the king’s absolution.
Different councils were held touching the matter, but nothing was decided. At
length, however, came a letter from the Pope enjoining the bishops to accept
Philip’s protestations of repentance, if he “and the woman for whom he had been
excommunicated” would swear that “they would for the future avoid all carnal
intercourse, or indeed intercourse of any kind, except in the presence of
persons above suspicion” (October 5, 1104).
Philip lost no time in assembling the bishops
at Paris, and, on December 2, took, with bare feet and most solemnly, the
oath required of him by the Pope. But after he had been formally reconciled to
the Church, it seems certain that if he had sworn, his heart was yet unsworn.
He allowed himself apparently to be irrevocably ensnared by the charmer. So
successful were the wiles of this medieval Delilah, who to gain her ends is
said not to have hesitated at any prostitution of her charms, that she even
succeeded in inducing her husband, Fulk Rechin, to
acquiesce in the disgraceful position in which she had placed him. Whether
because Philip’s case was regarded as hopeless, or because be covered it over
with lies, no further steps seem to have been instituted against him by the
Church. And as typical of the situation we will reproduce a scene left us by
the Abbot Suger, and with it take our leave of Bertrada and her two conjugal slaves. It is the autumn
(October) of the year 1106. Bertrada is seated as
queen by the side of Philip, and on a footstool at her feet sits Fulk Rechin, obedient, as though fascinated, to her every
behest, and looking to her as a handmaid to her mistress.
As we have already seen, one of the scenes of
the tragedy of Philip's divorce was played whilst Urban himself was in France.
After the council of Piacenza the Pope spent more than a full year in his
native land, viz., from August 1095 to the end of the same month in the
following year. Whilst there, the question of the king’s marital relations
occupied but a small portion of his time. His principal concern was the Crusade
and all that was closely connected with it, such as the Truce of God. It is
known that he preached the Crusade himself at Limoges, at Angers, and at Nimes,
as well as at Clermont. And during his triumphal progresses from one end of the
country to the other, we find him visiting and reforming monasteries, settling
disputes, and purifying the episcopate. He had also to bring to obedience some
of the archbishops of the country. The archbishop of Vienne had to be taught to
obey the Pope’s judicial decision regarding the extent of the jurisdiction of
the bishop of Grenoble, and regarding the bishop to whom the monastery of Romainmoutier on the Isère had to be subject. And the archbishop
of Sens had to be made to yield due submission to the Pope’s legate, the archbishop
of Lyons.
The most important link that connected Urban
with France after he left it was his relation with the monastery of Citeaux,
for ever famous, if only because it was the home of St. Bernard. Robert, abbot
of Molesmes, finding that the monks of his monastery
were not disposed to submit to the very strict regulations which he wished to
impose upon them, left them with some twenty of their number who were desirous
of a stricter observance of the rule of St. Benedict. With these he retired to a
desert spot, and on March 2, St. Benedict’s Day, 1098, founded the new monastery,
afterwards called Citeaux, and “that order whence were to issue unnumbered
Popes, cardinals, and prelates, to say nothing of more than three thousand
affiliated monasteries”. But the monks of Molesmes
could not live without their late abbot, so they sent some of their number to
Rome, and very strongly urged the Pope to compel Robert to return to them.
Moved by their importunity, Urban wrote to his legate, Hugh of Lyons, to try to
arrange the matter. This the archbishop succeeded in accomplishing, while the
Pope, with a view to giving stability to the new state of things, issued the
following decree : “The utmost care must be taken lest a horrible schism be
nourished in the house of God, ... and, on the other hand, that the grace which
is given from on high for the salvation of souls be not impiously extinguished.
We, therefore, ... ordain, by our apostolical authority, that the monks of Molesmes who prefer the general rules of the monastic order
shall inviolably observe them, and not presume to desert their own monastery or
adopt other customs. As for the Cistercians who make profession of keeping the
rule of St. Benedict in all particulars, let them not by another change return
to a system which they now hold in contempt”.
When Urban issued this decree to give stability
to the new order, he who was to be known for ever as St. Bernard of Citeaux was
about seven years old, and by his devotion to the Holy See was destined more than
to repay it for what it had done for his community.
ENGLAND
Accepted as king of England by the goodwill of
Archbishop Lanfranc, William II, the Red, was crowned by him (September 25,
1087) on the understanding that he would govern the land with justice, and
protect the Church. During the life of his benefactor, William observed his
promises to some extent, but after the archbishop’s death he proved in his
public capacity an oppressor both of Church and State, and in his private life
a model of the basest vices. He “was never married”, says Ordericus,
“having abandoned himself without restraint to lewdness and debauchery, setting
his subjects an example of gross lasciviousness”.
The early days of his reign were disturbed by a
rebellion in which most of the Norman notables in England were engaged. Odo of Bayeux was its chief instigator, and one of its
important adherents was a favourite of the king, William of St. Calais, bishop
of Durham. The rising was suppressed mainly through the loyalty of Rufus’s
English subjects; and much of the property of the diocese of Durham was alienated.
Summoned before the king to answer for his treason (c. May 1088), the bishop of
Durham, who had already written to remind him that “it was not within the
competence of everybody to judge bishops, and that he would make answer to him
according to his order”, refused to be tried like a layman, and insisted on the
privileges of his order. Again summoned a few months later before a mixed
tribunal in presence of the king (November), William once more declined to
allow the laity any jurisdiction over him. Bishop Geoffrey of Coutances was
disposed to argue that the accused ought to be restored to his full rights
before he was called upon to defend himself. But Archbishop Lanfranc and the
others, clerics as well as laymen, held that he must acknowledge the jurisdiction
of the mixed court before any restorations were made him. This, as “against the
canons and against our law”, the bishop refused to do.
Finding, however, that Lanfranc continued to
press the validity of the jurisdiction of the court, William, in imitation of
St. Wilfrid, turned to Rome, “because”, he said, “I perceive that the hatred of
the king towards me causes all of you to hate me. I appeal to the Apostolic
Roman Church, to Blessed Peter, and to his vicar, to whom the ancient authority
of the apostles, of their successors, and of the canons has reserved all
important ecclesiastical causes and all decisions regarding bishops”. While
granting the bishop's request to be allowed to proceed to Rome, the court
declared that his fief was forfeited. Again rejecting its jurisdiction for that
of Rome, “where justice rather than violence was meted out”, William forwarded
his appeal to the Pope, and left England after some enforced delay, in the
eighth year of his episcopate.
Not having a good case, he did not on this
occasion go to Rome in person; but from the court of Robert, duke of Normandy,
where he took up his abode, he sent to Urban his own version of his dispute
with the king. Writing to Rufus on receipt of the bishop’s appeal, Urban
confined himself to stating the case as it had been put to him, and to
insisting on the fulfilment of the ordinary requirements of canon law. “We have
heard that, without just cause, you have driven the bishop of Durham from his
bishopric; that, contrary to the canons, you have stripped him of his goods,
and then forced him to appear before your court; and that, when he appealed to
Rome, you in many ways prevented him from coming to us. Conduct such as this,
as you doubtless are aware, is an outrage on us, as we perceive that it is
wholly opposed to God and to the decrees of the holy Fathers. We therefore
implore your charity, and by apostolic authority order, that he be restored to
the full rights of his bishopric, and that you suffer him to come to us with
such properly qualified accusers of his conduct as may exist”.
As this letter is the last echo of this affair
which has reached our ears, we may conclude either that William ceased to press
his appeal, or that Urban, better informed, declined to offer any further support
to the rebellious bishop. At any rate, after a year or two (1091) William
contrived to reinstate himself in the king’s favour, and lived long enough to
prefer it, in the case of St. Anselm, to that of the Pope. But in thus thinking
“to save his life” he lost it; for he died under the king’s displeasure when
about to be tried for treason.
Before treating of the relations of that great
saint with bishop of Rufus and with Urban, we may glance at an episode in the
career of Herbert of Losinga, first bishop of
Norwich. It will serve still further to define the attitude of the English
hierarchy towards the Holy See both in theory and in practice. It helps to show
that, despite the efforts of tyrannical monarchs to usurp ecclesiastical
authority, the only spiritual head of the Church which our bishops acknowledged
at this time was the Pope of Rome. It, moreover, throws light on the working of
the Gregorian reform.
When the See of Thetford became vacant in 1091,
the promise of a thousand pounds to Ralph Flambard,
the vile, usurious minister of Rufus, enabled the Englishman, Herbert of Losinga, to become its occupant. But as he was possessed of
that which “makes cowards of us all”, he was at length filled with remorse for
his simony, and resolved to resign his bishopric into the hands of the Pope.
Ever keeping before his mind the saying of St. Jerome, “we have sinned in our
youth, let us repent in our age”, he repaired to Hastings, intending to cross
from there to the continent (February 1094). Though his intention was for a
time frustrated by the king, he contrived to elude his watchfulness and to make
his way to Urban. Into his hands he resigned his pastoral staff and his
episcopal ring, humbly confessing his guilt at the same time. His humility
touched the Pope, and he at once restored him to his see. On his return to
England he devoted himself with renewed zeal to learning and good works. With
the approbation of Pope Paschal II, he removed his see to Norwich, a town
“celebrated for its trade and populousness”, and left
an enduring monument of himself in the cathedral we behold today.
The learned but somewhat Erastian bishop of
whose sin and repentance we have just spoken was one of those archbishop
bishops who assisted at the consecration of Anselm of Aosta as archbishop of
Canterbury. In telling the story of the struggle between this profound
philosopher, this gentle teacher and loving friend, this saintly prelate, and
that greedy, lustful tyrant, the Red William II, we are really narrating the
beginnings of that great struggle for English liberty which was to be secured
by the Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights, and those other great charters which,
during the course of the centuries, were to be wrung from our kings. In
appearance Anselm was simply contending for the freedom of the Church from the
temporal power; in reality, he was working for the liberty of all, for he was
engaged in putting a bridle on the arbitrary exercise of the monarch’s will.
By the death of Lanfranc (May 1089) the last
restraining influence seemed to have been removed from the Red King, and he
resolved not to be fettered again. By keeping the archbishopric vacant, he could
fill his coffers by appropriating its revenues, and he would at the same time
lessen the chances of opposition to his illegal conduct.
For nearly four whole years, despite all
remonstrance, was the See of Canterbury kept widowed. Before the end of that
period, fortunately both for himself and the nation, Rufus fell ill (1093).
With sickness came reflection, and he determined, on the advice of the one whom
he was to name archbishop, to amend his conduct both as a man and as a king.
The good angel of the king on this occasion was Anselm, abbot of Bec. Born
about 1033 at Aosta he became a monk at the famous abbey of Bec, in Normandy,
in 1060. Soon made its prior, he succeeded Herluin,
its founder, as abbot in 1078. In this position, business often brought him to
England, where he promptly secured the affection and esteem of all who came in
contact with him. Even Rufus lost his ferocity in presence of Anselm. As he
chanced to be in England when the king lay sick, he was brought to him as the
one most likely to prepare him well for death, and he was the one selected by
him in his illness to fill the vacant See of Canterbury. The king’s nomination
was eagerly ratified by the clergy and laity; but some months elapsed before
Anselm could be induced to accept what was thrust upon him. Refusing to accept
his crosier from the hands of the king, he, however, did homage to him for the
lands of the see and was consecrated on December 4, 1093.
Rufus no sooner recovered from his illness than
he went from bad to worse. It would appear that the devil which Anselm had
helped to drive out of him returned to him and with seven others worse than himself.
Differences soon arose between “the untamed bull and the weak old sheep”, as
Anselm described the king and himself. They came to a head when the archbishop
wished to go to Rome to receive the pallium from Pope Urban. Now one “of the
novelties” which the Conqueror had introduced into England was that no one
should be acknowledged as the Roman Pontiff without his order. William accordingly
declared that he had not as yet himself accepted Urban as Pope, and would not
allow any of his subjects to do so without his permission. He would consider
the man who made the attempt a traitor to the crown. After further angry
remarks from the king, it was agreed that a council should be summoned to
decide whether, “saving the reverence and obedience due to the Apostolic See,
one could preserve the fidelity he owed his temporal sovereign”. “And if it is
proved”, added the saint, “that the two things are incompatible, then do I
confess that I prefer to leave your territory till you acknowledge the Pope,
than for the space of a single hour to deny obedience to Blessed Peter and his
vicar”.
A great assembly of the lords spiritual and
temporal of the country was accordingly held at Rockingham “on the northern
edge of Northamptonshire” (March 11, 1095). Soon finding that he could get no
support from the bishops, who either hoped or feared all things from the king,
Anselm proclaimed his intentions and position to the prelates and peers in no
uncertain tones: “I will resort to the Chief Shepherd and the Prince of all. To
the Angel of great counsel will I turn, and crave the counsel I must follow in
this affair: an affair which is not mine, but His and His Church’s. Hear, then,
what he says to the most Blessed Peter, 'Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I
will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it: and I
will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatsoever thou shalt
bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven': and to the general college
of the twelve, 'He that heareth you, heareth me, and he that despiseth you, despiseth me', and
'He that toucheth you, toucheth
the apple of my eye'. As these words were first and primarily addressed to
Peter, and through him to the other apostles, so do we hold them to be said now
first and primarily to St. Peter’s vicar, and through him to the episcopate,
who take the place of the apostles, to him and to them, and not to the emperor,
whoever he may be, not to king or duke or count. Whereas in what concerns our
service and subjection to earthly princes, the same, the Angel of great
counsel, instructs and teaches us, 'Render to Caesar the things that are
Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s' ... Know, therefore, that in
the things which appertain to God I will yield obedience to the vicar of St.
Peter, and in those which by law concern the territorial rank of my lord the
king I will give faithful counsel and help to the utmost of my power”.
The position taken up by the archbishop was one
in which his bitterest enemies, least of all William of St. Calais, the most
crafty of them could find no flaw, so that to gain time the king gladly agreed
to postpone the question till the octave of Whitsuntide. No sooner was the
assembly broken up than Rufus dispatched two clerks of his royal chapel to Rome,
first to ascertain for certain who was the true Pope, and then to induce him,
when found, to send the pallium to him for the archbishop of Canterbury. His
crude idea was that, as no mention had to be made of any person’s name, he
might be able to give the archbishopric and the pallium to whomsoever he wished
after he had got rid of Anselm.
The envoys had no difficulty in finding out
that Urban was the true Pope, and they so far succeeded in the matter of the
pallium that it was entrusted to Walter, cardinal bishop of Albano, for the
king. They were even able to bring the legate secretly straight to the king.
Not a word did he say to or for Anselm. The king was delighted. His clumsy plan
was going to be successful. He caused Urban to be proclaimed throughout his
dominions as the true Pope.
But his evil cunning was at fault. He was no
match for the papal legate, who was at once good and astute. His refraining
from intercourse with Anselm, and his holding out hopes to the king, had caused
men to say hard things about his master. “If Rome”, said they, “prefers gold to
justice, what hopes have those of justice who have nothing to give?”. But when
Urban had been proclaimed Pope, Rufus could not prevail upon the legate to help
him to depose Anselm, though he offered him and the Roman Church an enormous
bribe. Nor did his disappointment end there. He could not prevail upon Anselm
to purchase peace with him for money, nor even to accept the pallium from his
hands. “That gift”, the archbishop pointed out, “was not the king’s to give; it
could come only from the special authority of Blessed Peter”.
Completely checkmated, and harassed moreover by
rebellion, there was nothing for it but restore Anselm to favour. It was
decided then that the legate should place the pallium on the altar at
Canterbury “as from the hand of Blessed Peter”. Accordingly the cardinal went
to Canterbury (May 27, 1095), “carrying the pallium in a silver casket”. When
he drew nigh the city there went forth to meet him not only the monks of Christ-church
and of St. Augustine’s and a great number of clergy and lay-people, but the
primate himself, barefooted, though clad in his sacred vestments, and supported
by a number of bishops. Anselm then took the pallium from the altar on which it
had been solemnly laid, and gave it to the people to kiss “to show their
reverence for St. Peter”.
Although, after he had thus presented the pallium
to Anselm, “Bishop Walter remained in this land during a legate, considerable
portion of this year”, he does not appear to have been able to cultivate much
friendship with our archbishop, who no doubt believed, and not without reason,
that the cardinal had given a great deal more attention to the interests of his
master than to his deserts. He did not, however, bear him the smallest
ill-will; but, when the cardinal was leaving the country, begged him to assure
the Pope of his loyal affection for him, to ask his prayers for him, and to beg
him to be ready to show him mercy, “should he ever have to fly to him in his
anxieties”. “May Almighty God”, he wrote in conclusion, “send you his good
angel to bear you company and speed you happily on your way”
At the same time he wrote to “the venerable
Urban, respectfully to be acknowledged supreme Pontiff of the Catholic Church”.
He thanked him for the estimable legates and for the pallium he had sent him,
and expressed his great desire to visit him, not only because he was in duty
bound, but because he wished is advice in the difficult position in which he
was placed. Unfortunately, however, war held the country in a state of
apprehension, and the king had hitherto refused to allow him to leave the
country; but when there was peace he would strive to obtain permission to go to
him. “And if ever, set as I am in danger of shipwreck; if ever, buffeted as I
am by the blasts, I should be compelled in my distress to run for the haven of
Mother Church, then for His sake who shed His blood for us may I find in you a
kind and ready help and sympathy”.
In the early part of the following year there
appeared in England another apostolic legate, Jarenton,
abbot of St. Benignus at Dijon, the one who succeeded
in escaping from the castle of St. Angelo, and in bringing Robert Guiscard to
the rescue of Gregory VII.
Hostilities were on the point of breaking out
between Robert of Normandy and his brother Rufus. To avert this catastrophe,
the Pope sent Jarenton to England. Taking advantage,
as it would seem, of his opportunity rather than commissioned for that purpose
by the Pope, as Hugh asserts, he upbraided Rufus for keeping bishoprics and
abbacies vacant, and meanwhile confiscating their revenues, and for his
encouragement of simony and clerical incontinence. He next proceeded to
denounce certain concessions which, according to Hugh, had been granted Rufus
by Cardinal Walter, against whose integrity our chronicler makes insinuations
rather than specific charges. The episcopal legate is asserted to have agreed
that no legate from Rome to whom Rufus objected should enter England, and to
have insisted that in the oath of fidelity which Anselm had to take to the Pope
there should be inserted the words, “saving the fidelity he owed to his lord
the king”. With the archbishop’s principles before him, we may be sure that
Walter would never have ventured to suggest the insertion of any such clause.
Anselm would certainly never have repeated it.
Before the monk’s bold, incisive denunciations
of his shortcomings Rufus quailed, and promised amendment; the Church in the
country took heart, and “the liberty of the authority of Rome” once again
received fresh life. Whether the king suspected or not that Jarenton
was exceeding his powers in treating of other matters besides the impending war
between his brother and himself, he sent, Hugh says, to the Pope, and for “ten
marks of pure gold” procured the services of a nephew of his. This man, only a
laic, gave out that the Pope had granted a postponement till Christmas of the
discussion of the questions in dispute between Jarenton
and the king on condition that part at least of the Peter’s Pence due was paid
him. To cover his ruse, as one may well suppose, Rufus pretended to be very
indignant that Urban had suspended Jarenton’s mission
in such a summary way, and by such an unworthy agent. “In both public and
private”, says Hugh, “he railed against the Pope for treating a man so
distinguished, and commissioned, too, by himself, in such a dishonourable manner
as to suspend his legatine functions through the agency of a layman, neither
furnished with proper credentials, nor commendable by his dignity or learning”.
It is satisfactory to learn that, however
unsuccessful were his efforts to reclaim the Red King, the abbot was at any
rate fortunate enough to prevent war between the two brothers. For a large sum
Robert pledged Normandy to Rufus, and set out for Palestine as one of the most
distinguished leaders of the first Crusade.
Between men with such different ideals as Rufus
and Anselm, and occupying such correlated and responsible positions, there
could be no lasting peace. Again the archbishop fell under the king’s
displeasure, and again, when he asked permission to go to Rome, the bishops
sided with the king. Nor did they make any secret of the interested motives
that caused them to cleave to him. “Go then you to your lord”, broke out the
saint, “and I will hold to my God”. After he had repeated his request several
times over, he was simply told by the king that he must swear not to appeal to
the Pope any more. “That”, replied the archbishop, “is a demand which, as a
Christian, you ought not to make. To take such an oath is to forswear Blessed
Peter; and to forswear Blessed Peter is to forswear Christ, who made him the
Prince of his Church”.
Wearied out at length with the archbishop’s
importunities, Rufus, like the unjust judge in the Gospel, bade him begone and
be out of the country in ten days. Only too glad to obey, Anselm blessed the
king, and left the country in November. Spending Christmas with the great abbot
Hugh at Cluny, he reached Rome in the spring (1098), as the Pope had expressed
a wish that he should make no delay.
Arrived in Rome, he was most honourably
received by the Pope, who lodged him beside himself in the Lateran Palace, and
declared him, as it were, his “compeer, and the patriarch of another world”.
When he had heard Anselm’s story, he promised to help him, and at once wrote to
Rufus, bidding him leave intact the property of the archbishop, and reinvest
him with what had been taken away.
Although the English king tried both by letters
and by gold to injure Anselm in the eyes of the Pope, his efforts were all in
vain. Wherever went Urban, to Capua, to Aversa, to Bari, went Anselm. The opportunities
of intercourse with the Pope which this intimacy gave to our archbishop, he
used to endeavour to induce him to relieve him of his episcopal burden. To this
request, however, Urban would pay no heed, but, again promising him his
assistance, bade him present himself at the council of Bari.
We have already seen how Anselm distinguished
himself at that council against the Greeks. After the question of the
Procession of the Holy Ghost had been argued, the affairs of England came up
for discussion. Not only were the public crimes of Rufus discussed, his simony,
his treatment of Anselm, but the infamies of his private life were noted. “Of
these”, said the Pope, “complaint has been frequently made to the Apostolic
See, and on these subjects have I frequently admonished him”. It was only the
earnest supplication of Anselm that prevented sentence of excommunication from
at once being passed on the wretched king.
After the council was over the archbishop
returned with the Pope to Rome. At the close of the year an envoy arrived there
from Rufus. Though he had received the letter of the Pope in Anselm’s behalf
“with what grace he could”, he would not receive Anselm’s at all. When Urban
learnt from the envoy’s own lips that the king did not put forth any other reason
for appropriating the whole property of the archbishopric than that Anselm had
left England without his leave, he bade him return, and let his master know
that, unless he made restitution before the meeting of the council that was to
be held in the third week of Easter, he would be therein excommunicated. Before
the envoy left Rome, however, he contrived, by presents and promises of the
same to various members of the papal court, to get the period of grace
prolonged till Michaelmas (1099).
Though the known recklessness of the character
of Rufus, and the straits in which Henry and his antipope kept him, may excuse
the temporizing policy of Urban, it could not fail to sadden and disappoint
Anselm. He asked leave to return to Lyons. This the Pope would not grant, but
he made more and more efforts to soothe the archbishop’s wounded feelings. He
made him use the Lateran as though it were his own dwelling, and ever treated
him as the next to himself. Not only was he thus specially honoured by the
Pope, but the English who visited Rome strove to kiss his feet as they did
those of the Pope, and even “the vast number” of Henry’s supporters in Rome
were afraid to do him outrage.
When the Vatican council which the Pope had
summoned for April was held, and investiture and the doing of homage for
ecclesiastical preferments had been forbidden, suddenly the assembly was
electrified by the poet Ragnerius, bishop of Lucca.
“From the world’s most distant boundary”, he thundered forth, “there is one
amongst us here ... whose very silence is a thousand tongues, and his humility
and patience as grand and as eloquent in God’s esteem as they are meek and
gentle in our own. There is one here, I say, whose afflictions have reached the
utmost verge of cruelty, whose wrongs the utmost bounds of injustice. Robbed of
all he has, there is one here come to invoke the justice and equity of the
Apostle’s See in his behalf. It is more than a year since he first came to
Rome, and what help has he got? If you do not all know whom I mean, it is
Anselm, archbishop of the English land”. Despite the splendid indignation of
the bishop, the synod had to rest content with the Pope’s assurance that good
counsel should be taken on the matter.
On the conclusion of the council Anselm
obtained permission to return to Lyons. Whilst there news reached both Anselm
and Rufus that Urban was no more (d. July 29, 1099). “May he who cares for that
be hated of God”, was the unfeeling remark of Rufus. “But what sort of man”, he
added, “is the new Pope?”. Told that in some respects he resembled Anselm, he
coarsely exclaimed : “By God's Face, then he is not of much account. But let him
keep himself to himself; for, by this and that, he shall not come his papacy
over me. I have won my liberty, and I will do as I like”. Within a year he was
lying dead in the New Forest with an arrow through his heart.
SPAIN
Whilst England, under the profligate and
tyrannical hand of the Red King, was moving rapidly on the down grade, the
Christian countries of Spain were expanding their frontiers, consolidating
their kingdoms, and, especially by the aid of the monks of Cluny, elevating
their peoples. Alfonso VI, the energetic ruler of the united kingdoms of
Castile and Leon (1074-1109), had in 1085 reconquered from the Moors the important
city of Toledo, the old ecclesiastical centre of the country, after it had been
lost to Christendom for about 370 years. Thanking God and the king’s exertions
for this happy result, Urban proceeded to cooperate with Alfonso in settling
the ecclesiastical affairs of his kingdom. To occupy the recovered See of
Toledo, there was chosen by the clergy, people, and king, one Bernard, a monk
of Cluny (1086). In due course the new bishop went to Rome for his pallium. Not
only did Urban willingly bestow that upon him, but he also made him primate of
Spain, and exhorted the king to hearken to his words, and the bishops, saving
the authority of the Roman Church and the rights of individual metropolitans,
to refer all disputed questions to him as to their primate. All the rights
which the Church of Toledo had ever possessed were to be restored to it as the country
should in the course of time be won back from the Moors.
But, as we have seen already, Alfonso was not
always prepared to conform to papal ideas of what was right and wrong in
ecclesiastical matters. Diego Pelaez, who had been
made bishop of Compostela under Sancho II of Castile in 1070, was imprisoned by
Alfonso in 1088, “on account of his deserts”. What those deserts were we are
not told; we can only conjecture that they were political, as we are informed
that he was so wrapped up in the affairs of the world that his spiritual duties
suffered in consequence. That the Church of Compostela might not suffer by
being without a bishop, Alfonso caused Diego to appear before a council which
Cardinal Richard, abbot of St. Victor at Marseilles, was holding at Fuselli. In fear of the king, and hoping to be released
from prison, the poor bishop declared himself unworthy of the episcopacy, and
placed his crosier and ring in the hands of the cardinal. Following the king’s
nomination, the cardinal consecrated Peter, abbot of Cardena,
to succeed the unfortunate Diego, who was sent back to prison (1088).
It was not long before word of this unfeeling
treatment of a bishop reached Rome. Urban was very indignant, and in the very
letter in which he congratulated Alfonso on his capture of Toledo, he reminded
him that the two great powers in the world were the sacerdotal and the royal;
but that the former was the more important, seeing that it had to give an
account of kings themselves to the King of kings. Alfonso was therefore pressed
to restore Diego to his dignity through the archbishop of Toledo, and then with
his own envoys to send him to Rome to be canonically tried.
This letter does not seem to have effected
much, so that an interdict was laid on the diocese, and another legate, in the
person of Cardinal Rainerius (afterwards Pascal II),
was dispatched to supersede Richard, and to examine into the affair afresh. At
a council held at Leon, Peter, after two years’ rule, was “justly and
canonically deposed because he had been promoted to so great a dignity without
the consent of our holy mother, the Roman Church” (1091).
A whole year elapsed before an agreement could
be come to about the filling of the see, as the king would not yield with
regard to Diego. Rome at length suggested that a new bishop altogether should
be chosen. To this Alfonso agreed, and with the consent of the clergy and
people, there was consecrated for the vacant see one Dalmatius,
a monk of Cluny, whom its abbot had sent to visit the monasteries of north
Spain, which depended upon it. Unfortunately, the new bishop only lived long
enough to attend the council of Clermont, and there to obtain the privilege of
his see from Pope Urban. He died eight days after his return from the council
(1095).
Thinking this was his opportunity, Diego Pelaez, who had been liberated from prison, betook himself
to Rome, and contended that he had been unjustly deposed. The case dragged on
for years. When at length the envoys of Alfonso arrived in Rome, they found
that Urban was no more, and that the legate Rainerius
whom they had known was Pope Paschal II. Thoroughly understanding the case, he
at once decided that Diego was unworthy of the bishopric. This he duly notified
to Alfonso and to the bishops of the province of Compostela, bidding them elect
a bishop, and send him to him for consecration. Diego Gelmirez,
who had in the meantime administered the see, and was destined to be one of its
most famous or notorious occupants, was elected its bishop. He was ordained
subdeacon by Paschal. Owing, however, to the troubles that the Moors were
causing the Church in Spain, the Pope did not insist on his return to Rome to
be made bishop, but authorized his consecration in Spain.
The influence in Spain exercised by Pope Urban
II was really most remarkable; and it was exercised not only in the spiritual,
but in the temporal order as well. Moved “by the love of God”, as he sets forth
himself, and urged, as he also specifically states, by the desire of keeping
himself independent of such ambitious princes as Alfonso VI, Raymond Berenger
II, count of Barcelona (1076-1093), placed the whole of his dominions, and
especially the city and district of Tarragona, which he had just reconquered
from the Moors, under the suzerainty of the Pope (1091). “I, Berenger, count of
Barcelona”, he inscribed, “moved by the love of God, have given to Him, to the
Prince of the Apostles, the most blessed Peter, and to his vicar, the apostolicus of the Roman See, all my hereditary possessions
... and I especially give him in God’s name the city of Tarragona, with all
that pertains or ought to pertain to it, in such wise that I and all my
successors hold everything from the hands and voice of St. Peter and his vicar,
the apostolicus of the Roman See, paying (in token
thereof) a tax of twenty-five pounds of the purest silver every five years. ...
I also wish to have this deed ratified that the aforesaid dominions may never
pass to the power of another, but that only I myself and my successors may ever
hold them from the hands of the Princes of the Apostles, Peter and Paul, and of
his vicar, the Lord Urban II, and his successors canonically ruling the See of
Peter. This offering I make to God ... for the remission of my sins and those
of my father Raymond ... by the advice of my bishops and nobles, and by the
hand of Rainerius, cardinal of the Roman Church, who
is now filling the office of legate in our territories”.
The letter of Pope Urban is extant in which he
accepts this donation, transfers Berengarius of Ausona
(Vich) to the See of Tarragona, grants him the
pallium, and exhorts him by his words and example to win the Moors to the
faith.
But Barcelona was not the only kingdom of Spain
that was subject to the temporal jurisdiction of Urban. Following the footsteps
of his father and grandfather, who, for the same reasons as the counts of
Barcelona, had subjected themselves to the suzerainty of the Popes, Peter I
(10941104) reaffirmed their donation of Aragon to Urban, and their annual
tribute of “500 golden aurei”. But at the same time he begged Urban to prevent
the bishops of his kingdom from interfering with the monasteries and churches
which had been placed under the special jurisdiction of the Popes, “that they
might enjoy greater freedom”. He also complained that the bishops were attempting
to take from his nobles, when they were fighting against the Moors, the
non-parochial churches, with their tithes, which were on their estates and
belonged to them. In his reply to this complaint of the king, Urban granted to
the king and his nobles the rights of patronage over such churches as they
might capture from the Saracens, or over such as they might build themselves,
provided that they were properly administered.
Leaving out of our consideration the large
extent of the Christian Spain over which Urban was temporal suzerain, we may
well assert that he refounded the church in that
country. We have seen him name the archbishop of Toledo its primate; he also
appointed him his legate in Spain. He subjected certain sees and monasteries to
the exclusive jurisdiction of the See of Rome; he altered the sites of episcopal
cities, and regulated the boundaries of different dioceses, and founded new
bishoprics. He rearranged the boundaries of the dioceses because they had
become utterly confused, as he pointed out, “partly by the oppression of the
Saracens, and partly by civil war”. By his labours in thus organizing and
unifying the Church in Spain, Urban should ever rank as one of the great
benefactors of that country. Everything which made for Christian unity was a
factor in the great work of the expulsion of the Moors from Spain.
DENMARK
About the close of the year 1096, Urban was visited
by one who must have been regarded by him with no little curiosity, his visitor
was Eric III of Denmark, surnamed Eiegod, or the
Ever-good (1095-1103), the son of Sweyn II Estrithson,
one of the correspondents of Gregory VII. When the Pope, a man of no mean
stature himself, looked on the Danish king, he saw a man taller by head and
shoulders than the great men of the North, a man of such strength that even
when seated he could throw a spear further than the most skilled soldier when
standing up, and, when in the same position, could overthrow and bind any two
men who attacked him. A voice, both powerful and sweet, rendered his eloquence
irresistible, and so well educated was he that he needed no interpreter when
passing through the different countries on his way to Rome. Had it not been for
a very regrettable ancestral weakness for women, he would have been an almost
flawless monarch.
On some charge unknown to us, Liemar, the archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, the
ecclesiastical chief of the whole North, thought fit to excommunicate the king
of Denmark. Regarding the sentence as unjust, Eric made his way to the Pope,
and appealed against it. After a careful examination of the case, Urban
annulled the excommunication, and Eric returned to Denmark to reflect on the
hierarchical arrangement that brought him under the jurisdiction of a bishop
subject to a power often hostile to himself. He decided to push a request which
his predecessors had already made, viz. that Denmark should have a metropolitan
of its own.
He accordingly retraced his steps to Rome. In
the quaint language of the Icelandic poet: “It shall be told how the king went
the long path to Rome to win a share in its glory”. Passing by “the fenced land
of refuge” (Venice), he made his way to Bari, where he found Urban in October
1098. The Pope listened favourably to his request, and promised to grant it,
but died before he could give effect to his promise.
But Eric had no thought of letting the matter
drop. His envoys reminded the successor of Urban of that Pontiff’s
promise. Paschal immediately dispatched to the North a legate, who, after a careful
inspection of the cities of Denmark and their bishops, finally decided that
Lund should be the new metropolitan see. Though Lund was in Skaane
(Sweden), it was subject to Denmark. The legate made choice of Lund, both
because it was a fine city and easy of access, “both
by land and sea”, and also on account of the excellent character of its bishop,
Asterus. He, moreover, subjected Norway and Sweden,
with Iceland and Greenland, to the new metropolitan, who received his pallium
in the year 1104. “Denmark”, concludes Saxo, “owes no little to the kindness of
Rome, which both gave it liberty and gave it dominion over other nations”.
After the close of the council of Bari, Eric
accompanied the Pope and “visited the halidoms (relics, etc.) in Rome; he adorned
the rich shrines with rings and red gold; he went with weary feet round the
realm of the monks (Rome) for his soul’s good ... Our spiritual state is the
better by his adventure ... The Pope, Christ’s friend, granted all that he
asked of him”.
PASCHAL II.
A.D. 1099-1118.
CONTEMPORARY SOVEREIGNS.
Kings of England. William II (Rufus),
1087-1100. Henry I (Beauclerc), 1100-1135.
Emperors of Germany. Henry IV, 1056-1106. Henry
V, 1106-1125.
Kings of France. Philip I, 1060-1108. Louis VI,
1108-1137.
Emperors of the East. Alexius I (Comnenus),
1081-1118.
I.
The new pope. His early career
and consecration as pope.
The successor of Urban II was also a “golden
Pope” but of a more malleable variety than his predecessor. Of noble birth and
pious, learned and a promoter of learning, and, though poor, free from avarice,
he was “an honour to the Church”, and, in many ways, “a beautiful model for
posterity”. How much this “father of the widow and the orphan” did for the
needy among both the clergy and laity is told us by Pandulf towards the
beginning of his biography of Pope Gelasius. In subordinate positions he had
proved himself equal to the charges that had been put upon him; and, no doubt,
had his lot as Pope fallen on quieter times, he would, as far as mortal can,
have fulfilled with credit to himself, and advantage to the Church, the onerous
duties that devolve upon its head. But he was no match for such a cunning,
strong, and unscrupulous monarch as Henry V. Violence and the clash of steel,
which did but put fire into the brave heart of Hildebrand, unnerved the
“gentle-natured monk”. Paschal was, however, no coward. He proved it, as we
shall see, by both word and deed. But dread of possible disastrous consequences
to those around him unmanned him. Fear for the lives of others led him to
concede what no thought of danger to himself would ever have wrung from hum. He
was a man in whom the kindlier and more winning qualities of our human nature
were more conspicuous than those firmer and stronger ones with which, to some
extent at least, a ruler must at all times be endowed. He was too prone, it
would seem, to lean to the side of mercy and forgiveness. At any rate, that was
the opinion of some of his contemporaries. Begging him not to be angry at his
speaking to him as a son to his father, Ivo of Chartres wrote to tell him :
“There are many good men who, seeing you have pardoned or condoned the faults
of many, have either taken refuge in silence or have lost all hope of
correcting vice”.
To carry out a programme of universal reform in
the midst of tyrannical German emperors, of antipopes, of a largely
recalcitrant clergy, and of unruly subjects in Rome, there was need of a
succession of Hildebrands. But if Paschal was not a
Hildebrand, he could and did follow in his footsteps, and his reign saw the
beginning of that emancipation of the Church from the State which Gregory had
striven so hard to effect. That clear-sighted Pontiff had condemned
investitures because he perceived that they were the strongest fetters that
held the Church in bondage. Paschal saw them given up by Robert II, count of
Flanders, and by the king of Hungary; and, what was more important, the
compromise on the subject worked out between St. Anselm and Henry I of England,
to which he agreed, pointed out the way by which the terrible controversy was
to be ended by the concordat of Worms (1122).
Rainerius, the future Paschal
II, the son of Crescentius and Alfatia,
was born in the village of Blera, situated in the
mountainous district of Galeata, in the upper valley
of the Ronco, south of Faenza. He was offered to a
monastery whilst still a boy. It is generally said that the monastery was
Cluny; but according to Ordericus it was the
well-known woody Vallombrosa, near Florence. At any rate, so highly was he
esteemed by his superiors that he was sent to Rome at the age of twenty on the
affairs of his monastery. “His conduct of the business, the gravity of his
deportment, the uprightness of his character, and the quickness of his
understanding attracted the notice of Gregory VII. He kept the young monk by
his side, and in due course made him cardinal-priest of St. Clement”. He had
also been made abbot of St. Lawrence outside-the-walls
The same qualities which moved Gregory to make
the young monk a cardinal, moved Urban to employ him as a papal legate, and the
clergy and people to elect him Pope.
On the death “of the magnanimous Lord Pope
Urban of solemn memory”, the electors assembled in the Church of St. Clement,
apparently in the old basilica, which had been irrevocably injured by Guiscard,
but which seemingly had not yet been replaced by the present church, which was
erected by Cardinal Anastasius (d. 1126-1127). The electors are stated by
Pandulf to have been “the cardinals and bishops, the deacons and the chief men
of the city, the secretaries, and the regionary scribes”. After some discussion
of different names, the cardinal of St. Clement, perceiving that the thoughts
of the assembly were being turned towards himself, endeavoured to escape and hide
himself. Soon discovered, he was brought back and upbraided for his action.
“Nay”, said he, “it is better to fly than presumptuously to take up a burden
for which one’s shoulders are unequal”. “It is for you”, they replied, “to
follow whither the will of God would lead you, and as the people desire you to
be Pope, and the clergy have elected you, it is God’s providence which calls
you”. In vain did he hold out. He heard the notaries thrice proclaim: “St.
Peter has elected Pope Paschal”. Whilst the customary lands were being sung, he
was clad with the red cope and a tiara was placed upon his head. Then on
horseback he was solemnly escorted with canticles of joy to the Lateran Palace.
There he dismounted, and took his seat on the stone chair which was in the
portico of the basilica, i.e., on the so-called sedes
stercoraria, whilst the choir sang from the
Psalms (No. 112): “Raising up the needy from the earth, and luting up the poor
out of the dunghill, that he may place him with princes”. Then he was led to
the episcopal chair in the apse, where he received the homage of the cardinals.
Leaving the basilica by the door which opened into the palace, and which still
exists, he ascended to the chapel of St. Sylvester on the first floor of the
palace. At the entrance of the chapel were two porphyry seats, called by
Pandulf sedes curules,
or symae. Brought from some ancient Roman
bath, they were of the nature of easy-chairs on which the Pope reclined rather
than sat. When Paschal had taken up his position on one of them, a girdle was
put upon him, from which depended seven keys and seven seals; when seated in
the other chair, a rod was put into his hands.
In these ceremonies, originally simply designed
to typify the new Pope’s taking possession of the temporalities of the Roman
See, both Pandulf and Cencius see a spiritual symbolism. Thus the former tells
us that the keys were given to the Pope that he might be reminded that, in his
binding and loosing for the interests of the Church, he should be guided by the
sevenfold gifts of the Holy Ghost. And the latter notes that, in taking his
seat on the two chairs, he should reflect that he should ever remain between
the primacy of Peter, the Prince of the Apostles, and the preaching of Paul,
the doctor of the Gentiles.
Paschal was consecrated in St. Peter’s on the
day following that of his election (August 14). The consecrating bishops were
Otho (Oddo) of Ostia, who, as the principal
consecrator, wore the pallium, Maurice of Porto, and Walter of Albano, assisted
by some other bishops. When the ceremony was over, the Pope was solemnly
crowned on the steps of St. Peter's before mounting his horse, and returned in
state to the Lateran amidst a delighted populace.
One of the first things which the new Pope did
was to write to inform Hugh of Cluny of the death “of our Father Urban”,
bewailed by the whole Church, and of his own accession. He knew that he could
adopt no better method for having himself promptly recognized as the true Pope
by the Christian world. Nor was he mistaken. Letters of adhesion soon reached
him, and hopes were freely expressed that he would better the good promise he
had already given.
II.
TWO ANTIPOPES. LOCAL
DIFFICULTIES.
In Rome all went well for the Pope. Won over by
his affability, the people seem for once to have united in loyalty to their
priestly ruler. They became anxious to drive away the antipope from their
neighbourhood; and a timely gift to the Pope of a thousand ounces of gold from
Roger I, count of Sicily, enabled the enterprise to be set on foot. Driven from
Albano, Guibert betook himself to Civita Castellana, where a sudden death put an end to his
ambitious career (c. September 1100). As his followers soon gave out that a
miraculous light was seen at his tomb, and that miracles were worked thereat,
Paschal put an end to both by causing his body to be dug up and thrown into the
Tiber. Ordericus has preserved a few verses on Guibert
which may serve as his epitaph. They were the work of Pierleone,
destined himself, strange to say, to become the father of an antipope. The poet
reminds Guibert that, expelled from both Rome and Ravenna, he has earned an
abode for himself in hell by his use of a name without its substance.
The death of Guibert did not, however,
unfortunately, bring peace to Paschal and to Rome. The party of the German king
was not dead either in Germany or in Italy. By a free use of bribes and
threats, Henry had, on his return to Germany, succeeded in once more
rehabilitating his party, and in depressing that of the Church. “We have few
friends in this country”, wrote Udalric of the
monastery of St. Michel-sur-Meuse to Urban II; “for fear of the tyrant has
drawn to his communion those who formerly obeyed you. But we know that you have
the word of life, and with you we will not shrink either from a laborious life
here below, or from a glorious death”. To strengthen himself still more, as he
thought, Henry had also caused his younger son of the same name as himself to
be crowned king (January 5, 1099).
His party, therefore, did not hesitate, on the
death of Guibert (Clement III), to elect another antipope. Some night towards
the close of September, a number of them met secretly in St. Peter’s and
elected a certain Theodoric, known to the schismatics as bishop of St. Rufina.
He is said to have held a council on September 30. It is certain, however, that
he did not retain his usurped position very long. Not daring to remain in the
city, he left it to make his way to Henry, but was seized “one hundred and five
days” after his election. Brought before the Pope, he was condemned and
consigned to the monastery of La Cava, and there died in the course of a year
or so (1 102).
No sooner was he dead than Henry encouraged his
partisans to elect yet another antipope. Again was there another mock election
in St. Peter’s. But no sooner did word of what was there being done spread
abroad than the whole city was in an uproar, and the crowd rushed to the
basilica. In great alarm the assembly hastily broke up; but while Albert, the
newly elected antipope, who is called bishop of Sabina, contrived to make his
escape to the basilica of St. Marcellus, many of his party were seized and very
roughly handled. A sum of money quickly bought Albert from his patron. He was
stripped of the pallium he had just assumed, put on a horse behind its rider,
and taken before the Pope at the Lateran. After a short incarceration in a
tower, he too was sent to a monastery, and ended his days as a monk in St.
Lawrence’s at Aversa. As we shall see presently, yet another antipope was to
disturb the peace of Paschal.
Throughout the whole of his pontificate Paschal
was driven to engage in petty warfare either with the antipopes, or the Roman
lay partisans of the German kings, or with nobles who, pretending a zeal for
the interests of a distant suzerain, wished to do as they listed. Pandulf,
indeed, speaks in glowing terms of a peace of nine years which, “though
posterity will scarcely believe in it”, he himself saw and felt—a peace for
which the trembling peasant longed, and which the audacious robber dreaded. He
supposes this period of blessedness to have begun after the departure of Henry
V from Rome (1111), and after his restoration to the Pope of all the
territories of Blessed Peter. But, as this narrative will show, Pandulf must
have been contented with a very comparative kind of peace. It is true that for
about the last seven years of Paschal’s life, viz.,
from the deposition of Maginulf (1111), he was freed
from the rivalry of an antipope. We must therefore suppose that this is the
vaunted golden age of Pandulf. But it is certainly true that any one period of Paschal’s troubled pontificate was as little peaceful as any
other.
Despite the great natural strength which the
deep gorge of the Treja gives to Civita
Castellana, where the antipope Guibert had died, it
was soon in the hands of the Pope (1100). The important town of Benevento,
which thought to find its independence midst the troubles of the Papacy, was
laid under an interdict at a synod held by the Pope at Melfi
(October 1100), and captured by him in the following year with the aid of Duke
Roger and his Normans. Paschal made his triumphal entry therein on September
23, 1101.
An imperial partisan who caused the Pope much
trouble in the early years of his pontificate was Peter de Colonna. With this
turbulent noble the family of the Colonna makes its appearance for the first
time in the pages of history. Peter’s family was a branch of that of the counts
of Tusculum, and, like other branches of that remarkable family, furnished the
chair of Peter with some of its distinguished occupants, and with some of its
bitterest opponents. Peter himself was the son of Gregory, count of Tusculum,
and brother of Benedict IX. Ptolemy, count of Tusculum, and a grandson of the
same Count Gregory, will also be found among the foes of Paschal. Peter took
his name from the fortress of Colonna, five miles from Tusculum, which, with
the little village around it, still exists under the same name, still towers
above the Via Labicana, and, strange to say, is still
antipapal. This brigand noble began his operations by attacking Cavae (Cave, some four miles east of Palestrina), which is
described as a town “belonging to Blessed Peter (de jure B. Petri)”. But
he miscalculated either his own strength or the weakness of the Pope. Paschal
sallied forth from Rome, and attacked the rebel, with the result that Peter not
only failed to take Cavae, but of his own possessions
lost Colonna and Zagarolo.
III.
Paschal, Henry IV (August 7,
1106), and Henry V to the year 1111.
In the midst of the troubles and annoyances
just enumerated it was impossible for Paschal to forget their principal author,
the German Henry, “the heretics’ chief”, as he called him. With an energy
worthy of a better cause, the king, called emperor by his partisans, had once
more made himself strong in Germany, and his cause in north Italy had been
greatly strengthened by the death of his son Conrad (July 27, 1101). The
greatest praise is given to this young prince by Ekkehard, not only because he
was “a true Catholic, and most devoted to the Apostolic See”, and more given to
piety and study than to arms and pleasures, but because, withal, he was tall,
handsome, and brave, merciful and just to all, following in all things the
counsels of Matilda and the Pope.
But although weariness of the strife on the one
hand, and Henry’s bribes and threats on the other, caused many to go over to
his side, the faithful remainder severed themselves yet more strictly than ever
from the excommunicated. They were mindful, says the historian, that when Judas
fell away from our Lord, the other apostles cleaved yet more strongly to Him.
Besides, the princes of the empire on both sides were tired of the long
conflict between Church and State, and gave Henry to understand that he must
take steps to put an end to it. Never unwilling to prostitute his kingly word,
he promised the princes that he would go to Rome, and summon a great council to
assemble there about the beginning of February 1102, in order that after the
differences between the Pope and himself had been duly discussed, “catholic
unity between Church and State might be restored”. But, continues the same
well-informed historian, not only did he not fulfil his undertakings, nor offer
his submission “to the apostolic dignity”, but he made efforts to have Paschal
replaced by another antipope.
Under these circumstances, the Pope determined
to take action. He gathered round him, about the middle of March, not only the
bishops of Italy, but a number of ultramontane prelates
as well. Henry was once more declared excommunicated, and that heresy, too, was
condemned “which is now troubling the Church, and which asserts that its
anathema is to be treated as of no account”. A few weeks later, when the
multitudes had as usual come together in Rome for Holy Week, Paschal proclaimed
the excommunication of Henry before them all. Among the thousands who listened
to the Pope’s denunciation on that Holy Thursday was Ekkehard, the chronicler
we are quoting. “Because Henry has not ceased to rend the robe of Christ, i.e.,
the Church, by his robberies, his luxuries, his perjuries, and his homicides,
he has been excommunicated by Popes Gregory and Urban. We, too, in our late
synod, have, by the judgment of the whole Church, condemned him to perpetual
anathema. This we would make known to all, especially to those beyond the
mountains, that he may refrain from his wickedness”. The synod also renewed the
previous prohibitions against investitures. “Clerics had not to do homage to
laymen, nor receive ecclesiastical property from their hands”. “For this”, as
Paschal explained to St. Anselm, “is the root of simony, when, to gain ecclesiastical
honours, foolish men stoop to please seculars”.
Of this action of the Pope, Henry took not the
slightest heed. But, to lessen the growing ill-feeling against him, he
proclaimed his intention, some months later (Christmas 1102), of taking the
cross. By this announcement he instantly acquired immense popularity among all
classes, and great preparations were made on all sides to accompany him to the
Holy Land. But, as time went on, it became apparent that he had not the least
intention of putting his declaration into effect. The nobles who came to his
court with a view to preparing for the Crusade did nothing there but waste
their time and substance. Everything went from bad to worse. Conspiracy against
the deceitful tyrant soon became rife, and the conspirators began to tamper with
the loyalty of his crowned son. In December 1104 their plans were complete. The
youthful Henry abandoned his father, raised the standard of rebellion, and
wrote to the Pope for advice regarding the oath he had taken not to aspire to
supreme power without his father’s permission. He gave out that he could not
consort with one who had been excommunicated by the Church, and rejected by the
nobles of the empire.
Paschal, “hoping”, says the monastic annalist
of Hildesheim, “that these events had been brought about by God”, sent the
young king the apostolic benediction, and, through his legate, Gebhard of Constance, promised him absolution at the
judgment seat of God if he would undertake to be a just king, and would make
good the injuries his father had done to the Church. On the required pledges
being given, Gebhard imparted to the young king the
Pope’s absolution.
It would have been much better for Pope Paschal
if he had not had anything to do with Henry V. It is true that by the laws or
customs of the empire Henry IV, as having been under excommunication for more
than a year, was not legally emperor; it is true that under his misrule
both the Church and State were going to ruin; and it is further true that his
personal crimes were such that, had it not been, says the annalist, that God
spared him in order that he might do penance, the earth would have swallowed
him up alive. All these things are true, and in time of war men are not very
particular with what kind of arms they slay their adversaries. But some weapons
are, if possible, best left alone. They cut the hands that use them. Rebellious
sons are weapons of this kind, as Paschal was to learn to his cost. If Henry IV
had scourged the Papacy with whips, Henry V, a greater dissembler, and in many
ways, if possible, a man of inferior moral fibre to his father, scourged it
with scorpions.
Meanwhile, however, he was respectful to the
Pope and dutiful to the lawfully elected bishops of the empire. He persisted in
declining to have anything to do with his father till he was absolved from his
excommunication, “reconciled all Saxony to the communion of the Roman Church”,
and at the council of Nordhausen (May 1105), he
supported its reforming decrees, and declared with tears that he had no wish to
reign, and that, if his father would only offer due subjection to St. Peter and
his successors, he was ready either to cease to be king altogether or to reign
under him.
Henry, though at first overcome with grief by
the rebellion of his younger son, as he had been for a time by that of his
elder, soon recovered himself, and began with fire and sword to ravage the
lands of his son’s adherents. Meanwhile, giving out that he would obey the
Pope, he wrote to him whose rights he had outraged by his encouragement of the
antipopes, telling him that his son, following the advice of wicked men, had
rebelled against him, and that, because he had heard that the Pope was a lover
of peace, and desirous above all things of the unity of the Church, he was sending
him an envoy to arrange an understanding between them. He wished for a peace
which would preserve his own dignity and the honour of the Pope.
Unfortunately, there does not seem to be any
record as to how these overtures were received by Rome. Not too favourably we
may no doubt conclude from the fact that an imperial agent in Italy had, before
the close of the year, joined in a plot for the election of another antipope.
This imperial supporter of the conspiracy was Werner, duke of Spoleto and
margrave of Camerino. He was the son or grandson of
the Werner who had commanded the German contingent of St. Leo IX at the battle
of Civita, and who had succeeded in making himself
master of a large section of what used to be called the Pentapolis. This
territory, which then became known as the March of Werner, he had handed on to
his children. To the margravate of Ancona which Werner II had received from his
father, Henry IV had added the duchy of Spoleto and the margravate of Camerino.
A number of malcontents, nobles outside Rome
who, by Henry’s power, had obtained possession of papal property, and naturally
feared to be driven out of it, and nobles and clerics within the city who had
been disappointed in their expectations of obtaining the Pope’s favour, applied
for the armed support of Werner. After this had been promised them, they
secured the services of a certain Maginulf. According
to the Pope, this man was a stranger in Rome, and reported to be a necromancer,
who gave himself out to be a priest, but whose ordination at the time of Paschal’s writing had not been traced. Taking advantage of
the Truce of God, when the Pope’s men were not under arms, and of the fact that
Paschal himself was at the moment residing “in the portico” of St. Peter’s, the
conspirators elected their puppet Pope in S. Maria Rotunda (the Pantheon) on
November 18, forcibly introduced him into the Lateran Palace, and hailed him as
Sylvester IV. On the following day, when Paschal left the Leonine City and
entered Rome proper, the antipope abandoned the city. But from the Annales
Romani it would appear that there was previously a good deal of fighting
between the Pope’s troops under the prefect Peter, and those of the antipope
under Berto, “the chief of the Roman militia”. The
struggle began in the neighbourhood of the Lateran, and extended to the
Coliseum and the Septizonium. According to the same
authority, it would appear that victory attended the arms of the antipope. But
the fact that he had to quit the city the day after his pretended election
would seem to show that his success was Pyrrhic at best. He first withdrew with
Werner to Tivoli, and then to Hosmum (Auximum?). There he remained till Henry V came to Rome,
whither he at once went to join him. However, after peace had been made between
Paschal and Henry, Maginulf was deposed (c. April 11,
1111), but allowed to end his days
In Germany events were to work out as
unsatisfactorily for Henry IV himself as they had done in Italy for his
lieutenant Werner. As his troops would not face those of his son on the Regen
(August 1105), he had to take refuge in flight to Mainz. Though, as a rule, the
great cities on the Rhine had remained faithful to him, he had, on the approach
of his son, to abandon that ancient city, and retreat towards Cologne. He then
devoted himself to endeavouring to hinder the assembling of the great diet
which the new king had summoned to meet at Christmas. However, at an affecting
interview which he had with his son at Coblentz (December), when the latter
again declared his readiness to obey him if he would repent, he put off the
discussion of the points at issue till the meeting of the diet. Meanwhile, as
the two kings were moving towards Mainz, the elder continued secretly making
efforts to undermine the loyalty of his son’s adherents. This breach of the
safe conduct being discovered, he was seized at Bingen
(December 22), and confined in the strong castle of Bockelheim
to await the assembling of the diet at Christmas. “This”, continues Ekkehard,
“caused the foolish report to be spread about that the father had been
treacherously seized and imprisoned by his son”.
Whilst, then, on Christmas Day (1105) the
father lay imprisoned, unwashed and unshaven, exposed to insults, privations,
and threats, and, what he said he felt most, deprived of spiritual consolations
and of the Body of Christ, the son was presiding at the greatest gathering of
the notables of Germany which had assembled for many years. Besides the legates
of the Pope, Richard, cardinal-bishop of Albano, and Gebhard
of Constance, there were present more than fifty-two of the princes “of the
Teutonic kingdom”, all of them, in fact, except Magnus, the aged duke of
Saxony. The sentence of excommunication, so frequently pronounced against the
elder Henry, was solemnly confirmed by the papal legates. But later, when,
prompted by fear, he proposed to meet the princes, and to resign in his son’s favour,
they agreed to grant his petition. They decided, however, that, “as the people
were wont to favour his cause rather than that of his son”, the meeting should
take place at Ingelheim on the last day of the year.
Accordingly, the older monarch was there brought
before the assembled princes. On his knees before them all, he resigned his
power into the hands of his son, confessed his guilt, and begged the cardinal
to release him from the sentence of excommunication under which he lay. Though
he was told that this could only be done by the Pope himself, the unhappy
monarch proceeded “with many tears to commend his son to the princes, and to
promise that henceforth he would take thought for the good of his soul in
accordance with the decrees of the Pope and the Church. In this way did Henry,
the fifth of that name, begin to reign, chosen first by his father, and then
elected by all the princes of Germany, and confirmed in proper Catholic style
by the legates of the Apostolic See”. Before the assembly broke up, it was
decided to send a most dignified embassy to the Pope to beg him to come in
person, to bring order to the disturbed German Church.
Seemingly in the interval between the closing
of this important diet and the young king’s coronation, Paschal wrote to him,
congratulating him on his abhorrence of his father’s wickedness, and assuring
him that if he would show him that obedience which other sovereigns had shown
his predecessors, he would recognize him as “the catholic emperor”, and would not
merely go to Germany, but would expose himself to any risk of body in his
behalf.
When the imperial insignia, the crown and the sceptre,
the lance and the sword, the cross and the globe, had been delivered up by the
deposed monarch, his son was solemnly crowned at Mainz. And it is recorded that
as its archbishop, Ruothard, placed the crown on the
young king’s head, he prayed that “what had befallen his father might happen to
him if he did not prove a just ruler of his kingdom, and a defender of the churches
of God” (February 1, 1106).
After his coronation Henry V seems to have left
his father at Mainz under little or no restraint. At any rate the
dethroned king had no difficulty in escaping first to Cologne and then to
Liege. There the people had ever been loyal to him, and he had no difficulty in
rousing them, and in once more forming a party. Again was the empire disturbed
by the din of war. There was fighting on the Meuse; and Cologne, which as usual
declared for Henry IV, was besieged by the young king’s troops. The aid of the
king of France was invoked by the elder Henry, as was also that of the kings of
England, Denmark, and other countries.
At the same time his cunning kept pace with his
energy. While, by his orders, the deputies of the great diet of Mainz, on their
way to the Pope, were seized, plundered, and imprisoned by a Count Adalbert, he
was professing to Hugh of Cluny that he was prepared to follow his decision
with regard to his relations with the Apostolic See. “Would”, he wrote, “that I
could see your apostolic face, and, bewailing my sins, lay my head on your
bosom. Hasten to come to me, for I promise that, saving my honour, I will do
whatever you decide ought to be done to effect our
reconciliation with the Pope, and to further the peace and unity of the Roman
Church”. In another letter to the same holy abbot, he promises that, if he will
only come, he will do his best to repair the harm he has caused, and that “if
we can bring about the unity of the empire and the Papacy we will go to
Jerusalem, and there more earnestly adore Him who for us endured the scourge
and the cross, who for our sakes died and was buried”.
Further, when, as the summer came on, the young
king had collected an army of twenty thousand men (June), Henry IV, to put off
the evil day, tried the effect of an appeal to Rome. He accordingly wrote to
the princes of the empire, complaining of the manner in which he had been
seized and despoiled, but declaring his readiness to make amends, by their
advice and that of Abbot Hugh of Cluny, to his son or to any one whom he had
injured. He professed his willingness to give due obedience to the Pope, and to
put the Church and State in order. If they will not hear him, he asks them, “by
the authority of the Roman Church, to which we commend ourselves and the honour
of the empire”, to leave him and his undisturbed. Then, speaking no doubt with
true natural insight, for Henry V was a worthy son of Henry IV, he went on to
urge that his son was not acting from any zeal for the divine law or for love
of the Roman Church, and that, consequently, as no intervention will move him,
“we appeal to the Roman Pontiff and to the holy universal Roman See”.
But the princes wrote back to tell him that
they had renounced the obedience of “the incorrigible head of the schism”, by
which the empire had been torn for forty years, and by which it had been made a
desert, forced to apostatize from the Catholic faith, and almost reduced to
paganism. They reminded him that he had himself commended to them the king they
had elected, and that he was once more agitating the Church, which had begun
freely to breathe again. However, under any terms of security he chose to name,
he might come to plead his cause before princes and
people, so that peace might be at once restored to Church and State.
The only tangible result of this and other
proposals which were made to the dethroned monarch was that the bearers of them
were maltreated by him. But while both sides were making preparations for a
decisive battle, Henry suddenly fell ill and died (August 7, 1106). According
to Ekkehard, those who were present at his death-bed said he made a good end,
confessing his sins, receiving the Holy Viaticum, and sending messages of peace
and goodwill to the Pope and to his son.
Whatever was the death he died, “the news of it
brought joy to the hearts of all true Christians everywhere”, and furnished
food for reflection to the thoughtful. St. Anselm bade the count of Flanders
“look round and consider the fate of princes who attack the Church and trample
her underfoot”. And even the dead monarch’s godfather and faithful friend, Hugh
of Cluny, writing to move Philip of France to leave the paths of sin, bids him
“think and tremble at the fate of the princes, his neighbours, William of
England and Henry of Germany. See what evils they have suffered, what dreadful
deaths they have died. The first falls stricken by an arrow... The other, you
must know, has just died, after having endured cruel agonies, and after having
borne the weight of miseries untold”.
After recording the death of him who, out of
the fifty-six years of his life, bore the title of king for fifty, and who was
known to his partisans “by the appellation of the Emperor Henry IV, but to
Catholics, i.e., to all who, in virtue of the law of Christ, offer fidelity and
obedience to Blessed Peter and his successors, by the appellations of archrobber (archi-pyrata),
heresiarch, apostate, and persecutor rather of souls than bodies”, Ekkehard
says a few striking words about his character. No one, he insists, by birth and
ability, endurance and courage, and every bodily advantage, would, in our
times, have been more fitted to wear the imperial crown, if he had known how
not to yield to vice. To these pregnant words of the abbot of Aura we will only
add that Henry was the selfish and cruel tyrant that he was because he was
utterly given up to gross sensuality, and this vice never begets aught but the
cruel and the selfish. Henry IV was like our own Henry VIII, for the vice that
fashioned both of them was the same—lust.
Henry IV had requested on his death-bed that
his son might be asked to allow him to be buried at Spires by the side of his
parents. Meanwhile the loyal people of Liége buried
him in their Church of St. Lambert. When, however, the young Henry consulted
the princes regarding his father’s burial, they advised that, as he died under
sentence of excommunication, his body should be dug up and placed in an unconsecrated building, whilst envoys were dispatched to
ask the Pope to remove the excommunication. This advice was followed, and the
body, according to the commonly received account, was placed on an island in
the Meuse. Were we to believe the author of the Life or panegyric of Henry IV,
there was deep and general mourning after his death, and ceaseless prayers were
offered at his tomb. Whatever truth there may be in this statement, when his
body was placed on the island, no one was found to watch by it but a monk who
had returned from the Crusades, and who by day and night sang psalms by its side.
If it is not quite clear where the body of the
unhappy king was first taken after its removal from St. Lambert’s, all authors
agree that it was transported from one unconsecrated
place to another before it was finally allowed to rest by the tombs of the
kings of Germany in the cathedral of Spires (August 7, 1111). For it seems
certain that for some lane, at any rate, Paschal would not suffer the body to
be bur1 id in the cathedral. “If we will not communicate with the saints in
life, we cannot in death”.
It may have been observed by any one reading
the foregoing narrative of the rebellion of Henry V, that not a single document
from the papal chancellary has been quoted in
connection with it. The simple reason is that but one or two such documents,
and those only indirectly treating of it, have come down to us. This
unfortunate circumstance, which to some extent leaves us in the dark with
regard to the attitude of the Pope during that eventful but difficult time, is
due principally to the loss of Paschal’s register,
but partly also to the fact that trouble at home with the antipope Maginulf and rebellious nobles prevented him from paying
full attention to the course of events in Germany. This is especially true of
the year 1106.
Once or twice, however, we do find Paschal
alluding to the rebellion. Exhorting Ruothard of
Mainz to renewed efforts against simony (November 11, 1105), he reminds him
that “divine providence has provided the opportunity of a new rule”. He asserts
that it is his wish to let kings have their rights, provided they will leave
full liberty to the spouse of Christ. But what, he asks, have they to do with
the episcopal crosier? Let kings have what belongs to them, and bishops what is
their due.
But the Corsi drove
the affairs of the empire from the Pope’s thoughts. The Etna of the wicked, i.e.,
of Maginulf and his supporters, was still smoking,
although, says the papal biographer, its fire had been put out by the virtues
of Paschal. Among other nobles who had supported the third antipope were the Corsi. In consequence of their treason the Pope had
levelled their strongholds on the Capitol to the ground. Stephen Corsi, however, the head of the family, contrived to seize
St. Paul’s outside-the-walls, and its adjoining fortress, Johannipolis.
Thither all the malcontents, ever a large class in Rome, betook themselves.
Once more in the unfortunate reign of Paschal did law and order leave the city.
“There was no security inside or outside of it”. No wonder that the bishop of
Florence, seeing the miseries in Germany and Rome, began to teach that
antichrist was born. The robber stronghold was, however, soon stormed by the
Pope. Stephen fled, assumed the habit of a monk, and was on that account
allowed by the Pope to remain free.
But no sooner did Paschal leave Rome for the
north of Italy and France with a view to arranging for the peace of the empire,
than Stephen threw off his monk’s cowl. Resuming his sword and soon making
himself master of the Upper Maremma, he fortified
Montalto (north-west of Corneto, and near the mouth
of the sparkling river Fiora), and Pontecele, not far from it, both cities belonging to the
Pope. As soon as he returned from France (September 1107), Paschal attacked the
rebel and captured Pontecele. But the castle of
Montalto, which still towers above its melancholy little town, defied his
efforts, and he found it necessary, before he had completely subdued his
rebellious vassal, to return to Rome. Thence in the following autumn he set out
for Apulia (September 1108). On his departure, he entrusted Bovo, bishop of Labicum, with the care of the churches; Pierleone
and Leo Frangipane with the government of the city and its suburbs; and Ptolemy
with the control of the patrimony outside the city and of his nephew Galfred, the commander of the forces.
Unfortunately for himself, Paschal was
possessed of very little ability to judge of the characters of men, and still
less of that firmness which is necessary to keep the lawless in check. Ptolemy
proved false to his trust. Instantly there was rioting in the city. Anagni, Praeneste, Tusculum, and the Sabine territories were in
revolt; and Peter of Colonna, the abbot of Farfa, the
Corsi, and a crowd of others had attached themselves
to the count of Tusculum. Want of energy at any rate was not a fault of the
Pope. With the aid of the Norman Richard, duke of Gaeta, he made his way to
Rome (1109); trusting to kill the rebellion by stabbing it in the heart,
he laid siege to the fortified mansions and towers which the rebels possessed
on the Capitol and in other parts of the city. Nor was he disappointed in his
expectations. When their fortresses fell into the Pope’s hands, the
rebels succumbed, gave hostages, and promised amendment. With this,
unfortunately for himself and the cause of order, Paschal was content. At any
rate there was present peace, and “it lasted until God’s anger brought into
Italy that devastator of the earth, Henry, the son of Henry”.
In the midst of all the civic troubles caused
by the Corsi and their adherents, Paschal left Rome
several times. On one occasion (September 1106) he did so with the
intention of going to Germany, whither, as we have seen, the great diet of
Mainz (January 1106) had called him. “All”, says Donizo,
were anxious for him to traverse the world, binding, loosing, and healing”. His
first care was to visit the great Countess Matilda, who received him with all honor. Under her protection he held councils first at
Florence, and then (October 22) at Guastalla, a town
under the control of the countess at the confluence of the Crostolo
and the Po. At this latter synod, at which were present many clerics and laymen
from different countries, along with the envoys of Henry V, decrees of both
mercy and justice were passed. Owing to the very great number of ecclesiastics
in Germany who, by their adherence to the cause of their late sovereign, were
in a state of schism, it was necessary to deal leniently with them. It was
accordingly decreed that such clergy, of whatever rank, as had been ordained
during the schism, and were not intruders or guilty of simony or any other
crime, but were men of virtue and learning, were to be allowed to remain in the
office to which they had thus been raised.
Then, to punish the long-standing rebellious
attitude of Ravenna, which had culminated in the schism of the anti- pope
Guibert, it was decided that that metropolitan city should, for the future, cease
to exercise ecclesiastical jurisdiction over Emilia, with its cities of
Piacenza, Parma, Reggio, Modena, and Bologna.
Finally, in order to destroy what the Fathers
of the council call the causes “of the schisms and heresies which have sprung
up in our times, investitures of churches by laymen were absolutely forbidden”.
As to the rest of the work of this important
synod, we may say with Ekkehard, “it would take too long to tell how Paschal,
that prudent and faithful steward of God’s household, daily most liberally
nourished his servants with the bread of God’s word; how he deposed
pseudo-bishops, and instituted such as were truly Catholic; how to archbishops
he granted palliums and to monasteries privileges; how he addressed with
honeyed words those shepherds of Christ’s flock who were present, and sent
letters of paternal warning to those of them who were absent; and how he again
engrafted into the living tree of the Church branches which had been cut off
from it, and finally rejected such as seemed to be wholly rotten”.
Among those present at this council were the
ambassadors of the new king, Henry V. They had come to ask the Pope “to grant
their master the rights of empire” and to promise him true filial obedience.
The favourable answer which Paschal returned to their request won the approval
of the whole council, and of the Countess Matilda.
Elated by the good which the Pope had accomplished
at Guastalla, the faithful in Germany were looking
forward with great joy to his coming into their country. They expected that he
would keep Christmas at Mainz with the king and all the princes of the empire.
But both they and the king waited in vain; and while Henry, who had come as far
as Ratisbon to meet the Pope, celebrated Christmas there in presence of the papal
envoys, Paschal kept the feast with the monks of Cluny. Ekkehard of Aura lets
us know some of the reasons which caused the Pope to alter his plans. He had
learnt, after he came to the north of Italy, that the young king had not the
slightest intention of giving up the right of investiture, that his character
was anything but disciplined, and, likely enough, that his dealings with his
late father had not been quite such as he had represented them at Rome.
Finally, a tumult, which the anti-papal party had been permitted to raise on
the occasion of a visit that he had paid to Verona, filled him full of mistrust
of the young king. It would be safer to meet him anywhere than in north Italy.
Saying “with a groan that the road to Germany was not yet open to him”, he
turned aside into France. What was soon to happen at Chalons-sur-Marne showed
that he was wise in thus deciding not “to trust the insolence of the Germans”.
With the general history of the doings of the
Pope in France, or with his action on the Church there, it is not our intention
to deal at present. We will continue our account of his relations with Henry of
Germany. He had betaken himself into France, “in order to take counsel with the
kings of France (Philip and Louis), and with the Church of France, on the
difficulties and on the new ecclesiastical investiture troubles with which he
had been met by the Emperor Henry (V), and on the greater ones with which he
was already threatened by him”. The abbot Suger, who
gives us this information as to the object of Paschal’s
journey to France, sets it down as his opinion that the said Henry was “a man
wholly destitute of filial piety, or of the common feelings of humanity”.
When Philip and his son came into the presence
of the Pope, “out of love of God they bent the knee before him, as kings are
wont to do at the tomb of Peter the Fisherman”, continues the abbot. Reminding
them of what Charlemagne and others of their ancestors had done for the Church,
Paschal begged them to help him against its enemies, “and especially against
the Emperor Henry (V)”. This they promised the Pope, and went with him,
along with several of the higher clergy, including the abbot Suger, to meet the German envoys at Chalons-sur-Marne.
Paschal had already caught a sufficient glimpse
of the character of Henry V to enable him to realize that he stood in need of
all the assistance he could obtain. Before Henry’s position was secured, no one
could have been more dutiful to the Pope, more respectful to the bishops, or
more suave and just towards everybody. The Church in Germany felt that the days
of its freedom had returned. Schismatical bishops
fled from their sees or were expelled from them, and Catholic bishops were elected
to replace them. “The torn tunic of Christ was resewn”. Even Paschal himself at
Guastalla had expressed his belief that the Church
had again arisen in its native freedom.
But with the security of power had come its
insolence. And now Henry’s real character—in which avarice, selfishness, and
overbearing tyranny were conspicuous qualities—began to betray itself. Peace
meant, with him, nothing less than the absolute submission of the German
nobility, the commonalty, and the Papacy. He reasserted the claims which he had
condemned his father for making, and began to invest new bishops with the ring
and crosier, as his father had done. The manners of such a king were, of
course, repeated in his servants, and with true Gallic wit
the abbot Suger has painted us a graphic picture of
the insolent envoys of a domineering lord.
When the ambassadors of Henry, both bishops and
counts, arrived, they came with a numerous escort and with great pomp and
circumstance. There was no display of mock modesty about them, but they showed
themselves stiff and assertive. One of them, the corpulent Welf
II, duke of Bavaria, “quite wonderful in his length and breadth”, was typical
of the embassy. He had a sword always carried before him, and, with a voice
like thunder, seemed to have been sent more to inspire terror than to propound
an argument. The only gentleman among them, and he was largely French in his
manner, was the archbishop of Trier. After offering the Pope the emperor’s
service, “saving the rights of the empire”, he claimed for his master as an
ancient due, not only the right of approving or rejecting all candidates for
the episcopacy, but of investing them with ring and crosier for the regalia,
and of receiving their homage. For the regalia, concluded the archbishop, i.e.,
such things as towns, castles, and tolls are dependent upon the imperial
authority. Should the Pope acknowledge these rights, the Church and State will
work together in peace and harmony for the honour of God. To this came the
answer: “The Church, bought by the precious blood of Christ, and made free, may
not again become a slave; if she cannot elect a bishop without the emperor’s
consent, she is no better than his servant, and the death of Christ is of no
avail. If the prelate-elect is invested by the lay power with the crosier and
ring which belong to the altar, it is a usurpation of the rights of God; and if
the prelate subjects his hands, consecrated by the body and blood of our Lord,
to the hands of a layman, blood-stained from his sword, he derogates from his
orders and his holy unction”. At this the Germans burst out into a fury; and,
had they dared, would have used violence. As it was, they went their way
muttering: “Not here, but at Rome, and with the sword, shall this quarrel be
ended”.
While they returned to Germany to sharpen that
ineffectual weapon, Paschal betook himself to Troyes in order to reaffirm in
council the condemnation of investitures. Fresh envoys from Henry followed the
Pope thither, but could obtain nothing more than the grant of a delay of a year
during which their master could come to Rome to have the question definitely
settled in a general council. Meanwhile Paschal seems to have excommunicated
some at least of the bishops who had accepted investiture at the king’s hands.
Of one such, Richard of Verdun, the chronicler of that see tells us that the
story was current that Paschal had said: “Richard of Verdun has given himself
up to the king, and we give him up to Satan”. Even Gebhard
of Constance, so long the energetic and faithful legate of the Holy See in
Germany, was blamed for a certain slackness in the cause of God, and for
lending some indirect countenance to the pretensions of Henry.
After he had completed the work of the
important council of Troyes, Paschal moved slowly towards Rome, Italy,
followed by the love of the French and the fear and hatred of the Germans, and
was received in his own city with as much joy as though he had returned from the
dead.
The difficulties which Paschal encountered from
rebellious vassals when he came back to Italy, and the manner in which he
overcame them, have already been set forth. They had scarcely been disposed of,
ere negotiations began which were to terminate in the crisis of his career. The
year assigned by the Pope as the period during which Henry was to make good his
contentions, or give them up, had much more than passed, when the young king
sent another pompous embassy to Rome, to effect an understanding with the Pope
and to arrange for his reception of the imperial crown (1109). When
Paschal had been duly informed of Henry’s intention to come for the imperial
crown, he promised he would receive him with all paternal solicitude if only
“he would show himself to the Holy Roman See a Catholic king, a son and
defender of the Church, and a lover of justice”.
Content with this reply, Henry, at a diet at
Ratisbon (January 6, 1110), announced his determination to cross the Alps in
order to receive the imperial consecration at the hands of the Pope; to weld by
peace, justice, and law the broad provinces of Italy into closer union with the
German empire; and, in accordance with the wishes of the Pope, to do all he
could to promote the interests of the Church. Fired by love of the Church of
God and of their country, the assembled princes received the announcement with
enthusiasm. He was not thought to be a man, says the abbot-historian we have so
often quoted, who was not desirous of taking part in so glorious an expedition.
In the month of August a powerful and
well-equipped German army crossed the Alps into Italy. One division marched
with the king over the Great St. Bernard; the other made its way through the
valley of Trent. And knowing that the Roman Empire of old was governed not only
by force of arms but by wisdom, Henry surrounded himself with a number of men
learned in the law, among whom was the Scotchman David, the historian of this
expedition.
Novara and other places which were not anxious
to be welded closely to the empire were forced to submit to Henry’s will. Most
of the cities of Lombardy, however, with the notable exception of populous Milan,
offered him of their own accord their homage, their men, and their money. Even
the great Countess Matilda, although she would appear to have suspected him,
did not attempt to oppose his march, though she would not undertake to
accompany him against Peter. She was now too old for war, and was ready to
believe that Henry meant peace. Besides, her power was not what it had been.
Whilst emperors and Popes were at war, the cities of north Italy were quietly
creeping on towards independence of all feudal superiors. The communes of Italy
were coming into being, and even the great countess found before the close of
her life that her authority was waning.
By Christmas Henry had crossed the Apennines
and reached Florence. Two days later he was at Arezzo, but had to destroy its
citadel before its citizens would receive him (December 27).
Paschal, meanwhile, had been endeavouring to
his policy plain, and his position secure. Not content with his previous solemn
condemnations of investiture at the councils of Benevento (1108) and of Troyes
(1109), he again proscribed it at a council held in the Lateran (March 7).
Then, in the summertime, he went into Apulia and Calabria to meet Duke Roger I
and the other Norman princes, and to exact from them an undertaking to assist
him in case of need: and on his return to Rome he required the Roman nobility
to make the same promise on oath. These precautions taken, he awaited with what
tranquillity he could the arrival of a monarch who was bearing down all
opposition with fire and battering-ram.
From Arezzo Henry sent envoys to the Pope, and
a letter to the consuls, senate, and people of Rome, both great and small,
assuring them that his mission was peace, and that his end in coming to them
was to arrive at a just understanding between the Church and them on the one
hand, and himself on the other. Henry’s real object in coming to Rome was twofold.
It was to obtain the imperial crown and to force the Pope definitely to concede
to him the right of investiture. How these two ends were to be obtained was matterless to Henry; for the faithless son of Henry IV was
prepared to employ fraud or force; in a word, any means, either fair or foul.
IV.
The year 1111
The negotiations begun between Henry and the
Pope, when the king was at Arezzo, were continued as he advanced by Acquapendente to Sutri. The chief
intermediary on his part was, as in France, the chancellor Albert, the
archbishop-elect of Mainz; while Pierleone, the
grandfather of the antipope Anacletus II, was Paschal’s
principal envoy. The final arrangements were made in the portico of St.
Peter’s. Finding that Henry was not disposed to yield the right of investiture,
which he maintained had been exercised by his ancestors for more than three
hundred years, and had been recognized by sixty-three Popes, Paschal proposed,
or accepted the proposal, that the Church should be content with its tithes,
and with the offerings which persons in their private capacity had made or
should make to it, of what was absolutely theirs to give, and that the king
should take back from it the regalia, i.e., the property, rights,
and privileges, such as cities, duchies, manors, castles, tolls, markets, the
right of coining money, etc., which churchmen held from the king as their
suzerain. Paschal also agreed to bestow the imperial crown on Henry, who, on
his side, was to give up the right of investiture.
Henry, indeed, accused the Pope and his
plenipotentiaries of bad faith in these negotiations. He asserted that they
knew that the proposal of the Pope that the bishops of the empire should give
up the regalia could not be put into effect. But while the subsequent conduct
of Paschal makes it plain that he was honourably, even if quixotically, in
earnest, Henry, on the other hand, knew that the German prelates, strong in
their rights, would never yield them. He knew that so much secular power had
been granted them, partly because it was felt that they would make a better use
of it than the lay nobility, and partly, in later times, to act as a
counterpoise to the authority of the great feudatories of the empire. He knew
further that, even if the Pope were able in the end to enforce his will, the
secular princes of the empire would never allow their ecclesiastical compeers
to give up their temporal authority into his hands. Such an accession of power
as he would thereby have received would have made him absolute, and that the
lay princes would never tolerate. Hence we find it generally asserted by both
native and foreign contemporary annalists that it was
Henry who was guilty of double dealing in his relations with Paschal in this
eventful year 1111.
Whatever attempts at over-reaching were being
made, the concordat was duly signed both by the Pope and the king between
February the 5th and 12th. Hostages were given on both sides, and Henry
advanced towards Rome, after having sworn that he would not make any attempts
on the Pope’s life or liberty, and that he would leave intact the patrimonies
and possessions of Blessed Peter. On Saturday, February 11, the king’s army,
still very formidable despite its great losses in crossing the Apennines,
encamped on Monte Mario, the hill of joy or woe.
Here Henry received two embassies. One came
from the people of Rome, requiring him on oath to guarantee the honour and
freedom of the city; but the Caesar, craftily desiring to outwit them, took an
oath in German to do his own will. This was, however, understood by some of the
envoys, who returned to the city declaring that foul play was intended.
The other embassy came from the Pope. After
hostages had been given and received by them, Henry again swore to respect the
life and liberty and the rights and patrimonies of the Pope, and to give up the
right of investiture, leaving undisturbed the private property of the churches.
On the following day the people of Rome,
divided according to their regions, and, grouped under their crosses and distinctive
gonfalons, displaying eagles, lions, wolves, and dragons, went forth to meet
the German king. Many of them, clad in white, bore wands or tapers in their
hands, while the great mass bore flowers and branches of trees.
As the king of the Romans approached the city,
he had, according to custom, twice to swear to preserve the rights of the Roman
people. The first time the oath had to be taken was at the little bridge where
the stream was crossed which comes down from the Valle dell' Inferno, dividing the
Vatican from Monte Mario; the second time was at the Porta S. Peregrini, the gate in the wall of Pope Leo IV. at the
point where it cut the via di Porta Angelica.
Before and at the gate of St. Angelo, by which
Henry entered the Leonine City, he was welcomed with song by the Jews and by
the Greeks. Inside the gate he was met by the inferior clergy in their
chasubles, or dalmatics, and birrettas, and, dismounting from his horse, was
escorted to the steps of St. Peter’s by them and the nobles to the acclamation:
“St. Peter has chosen Henry as king”. At the top of the steps he was received
by the Pope, who was surrounded by a number of bishops, by the cardinals, and
by the schola cantorum. After Henry had first
kissed the Pope’s feet, the two rulers thrice kissed each other on the face,
and embraced each other. Then hand in hand they approached the Silver Gate. In
front of it the king swore to be loyal to the Pope, and to defend the Holy
Roman Church. Then, after he had been designated as emperor by the Pope, and
again kissed by him, the first prayer was said over him by the bishop of Labicum or Tusculum.
They were now to enter the basilica. Henry,
however, would not do so before it and all the fortifications by Peter’s, which
it was protected were handed over to his soldiers. He then gave hostages,
entered the sacred edifice, and, along with the Pope, took his seat on one of
the thrones, which had been placed on a large circular disc of red porphyry “
in the centre of the nave, between the altars of St. Simon and St. Jude, and
that of St. Philip and St. James”. There were other smaller such discs about
this large one, and their site, spoken of as “ad quatuor
Rotas” (the four discs), was the traditional spot on which the emperors were
crowned.
When the Pope and the king had taken their
seats, the former demanded the formal ratification of the concordat by which he
was to require the bishops to surrender the regalia, and Henry was to
renounce the right of investiture. Instead of at once complying, as he had engaged
to do, the king withdrew with his bishops and nobles to the corner of the
basilica near the sacristy. It is not at all improbable that the majority of
the German notables now heard the details of the convention for the first time.
They were both amazed and incensed at the idea of the bishops’ surrendering
their temporal power into the hands of the king, and would not listen to the
suggestion. The day wore on, and though the Pope sent to urge the adoption of
the agreement, they held to their determination not to allow the surrender of
the regalia. Then it would appear as if Henry, convinced as he no doubt had
been all along that the regalia would not be given up, resolved to force the
Pope both to give him the imperial crown and to allow him to retain the right
of investiture. At any rate, it was his counselors (familiares regis)
that approached the Pope, and contended that the convention could not be
carried out with justice. It was to no purpose that Paschal urged biblical and
canonical objections to bishops concerning themselves with secular affairs.
Henry’s party would not accept the convention.
Hour after hour passed; evening was drawing on,
and yet nothing was decided. By way of wearying the Pope into doing his will,
extraneous topics were introduced by Henry. Men grew impatient. The German
soldiery began to close in round the Roman clergy; and a German noble sprang up
and shouted : “What need of more words? Crown the emperor at once”. With this
demand some advised the Pope to comply, on the understanding that discussion on
the concordat should be resumed in the following week. The Germans would have
none of the concordat. Their king must be crowned at once. To this, however,
Paschal would not give his consent, and ordered that Mass should bring the day's
tedious proceedings to a close.
Henry now resolved on one of the most violent
and audacious strokes of the kind recorded in history. Orders were passed to
the soldiers to seize the Pope and the cardinals as soon as Mass was over. From
all parts of the great basilica the German troops began to press towards the
altar. It was almost impossible to proceed with the holy sacrifice. The
assistants could scarcely make their way about the altar, or procure the
necessary bread and wine.
No sooner was the Mass finished than, roughly
and rapidly forcing their way through the crowd which thronged the basilica,
the German soldiers proceeded to execute their commission. Paschal was seized
at once, compelled to leave his episcopal throne, and placed under a guard by
the confession of St. Peter. At the same moment as the Pope, a number of
cardinals and lay pontifical officials were also taken prisoners. As soon as
the movements of the troops were comprehended, the sacred edifice instantly
became a scene of the wildest confusion and uproar. The great rafters rang with
the cries of terrified women and children, or with the shouts of indignant and
angry men. Some attempted resistance, some flight. Above the din rose the sound
of clashing swords and the clanging of steel mail. The religious light of the
basilica was rendered still dimmer by the shades of evening and the overturning
of lamps. And in the semi-darkness the barbarous soldiers treated the defenseless people as they listed. Many were wounded, if
not killed, and still more were robbed. The sacred vessels were stolen, and
many of the clergy were stripped of their priestly vestments, of their clothes,
and even of their ornamental buskins and shoes.
To the credit of our human nature be it said
that there were some few Germans who had the courage to show their king that
they disapproved of his treacherous and sacrilegious act. Of these heroic souls
one was Norbert, the future saintly founder of the Premonstratensian order. He
was in the basilica in the capacity of a royal chaplain. But seeing the great
wickedness of his lord the king, he was filled with grief, threw himself at the
Pope’s feet, and implored his forgiveness, and abandoned a world where such
deeds were possible. Conrad, archbishop of Salzburg, loudly protested against
the impious transaction, and offered his neck to the sword of one of Henry’s
suite, ready to die for justice. Though the glory of martyrdom was denied him,
he proved his willingness “rather to part with his life than participate in
such a deed of sacrilege”.
After the shrieking and terrified multitude had
escaped from the basilica, and had fled from the Leonine City, Paschal and his
fellow-captives were hurried from the church under cover of darkness to one of
the hospitals in the neighbourhood of St. Peter’s.
In the confusion two of the cardinals, John,
bishop of Tusculum, and Leo, bishop of Ostia, had contrived to escape. They and
the others who had witnessed the outrageous scene in St. Peter’s, and had been
allowed to go free, soon roused the city. The Romans were filled with grief and
fury. Every German who was found in the city proper was instantly massacred.
All night long the people prepared for fight,
and with the morning light, unfurling their standards, they forced their way
into the Leonine City to effect the release of the Pope. So sudden and fierce
was their attack that Henry himself nearly lost his life in the fray (February
13). The fight was carried on all day with varying fortune, but with great loss
of life. Both parties being exhausted by the terrible encounter, there was a
cessation of hostilities for two days. At the close of the second day’s rest,
the Romans, animated by the cardinal of Tusculum, who bade them fight for their
lives and for their liberties, for glory and for the defence of the Apostolic
See, prepared for a grand attack on the following day. But during the night
(February 15-16) Henry evacuated the town, taking with him the Pope and his
prisoners, but leaving behind him no little treasure, and not a few of his
wounded.
Stripped of his pontifical insignia, perhaps
even bound, Paschal was escorted from Rome. Cardinals and nobles followed after
him, dragged with ropes through the mud by German horse soldiers. Hurried along
the Flaminian Way, he was taken past the foot of Mount Soracte
and through the Sabine country, and finally lodged, with six cardinals, in a
castle at Trebicum, while the other captives were
imprisoned at Corcodilum (Corcolo,
Querquetula), to the south-west of Tivoli, and six
miles from Zagorolo.
When the cardinal of Tusculum discovered that
Paschal had been carried off into the Campagna, “acting in the name of Jesus
Christ, bound in the person of the Pope”, he made every effort to raise a force
strong enough to compel Henry to set his sovereign free. But, as we have said,
Matilda was now too old for fighting, and the Normans were themselves in a
critical state. Duke Roger I. of Apulia died a few days after the capture of
the Pope (February 22), and his brother, the famous Crusader, Bohemund, prince
of Tarentum, followed him to the grave a little later. So that there were three
female rulers in south Italy during Paschal’s
captivity: Adelaide in Sicily, Alaine in Salerno, and Constance in Tarentum.
Already, when Henry began to move towards Rome in the beginning of February,
had Paschal himself to no purpose endeavoured to rouse the Normans to show
themselves ready to help him.6Undeterred by the Pope’s failure, John made noble
efforts to stir up the old allies of the Papacy. But though they realized that
the Pope’s interests and their own were identical, they were paralyzed by the
deaths of their leaders, and were, moreover, in dread of a rising of the
natives. Robert, prince of Capua, however, dispatched a troop of horse towards
Rome, But faced at Ferentino by Ptolemy of Tusculum and other nobles of the
Campagna, who were standing for the king, they rode back home.
Of rescue, then, there was no hope for Paschal.
Week after week passed by, and his hard captivity continued. No Italians were
allowed to speak to him, while the Germans by whom he was surrounded told him
of nothing but the ravages that their king was inflicting on the people, and
were for ever urging him to make peace by surrendering to their master the
right of investiture. Their king, too, swore that he would kill or maim all his
prisoners if he did not do his will. Overcome by the sufferings of his faithful
adherents, and in dread of a revival of the schism of Maginulf,
with which he was threatened, Paschal, who had proclaimed his readiness to die
rather than give way to the king, at length, “with tears and sighs”, weakly
agreed to do for others what at the cost of his life he would not do for
himself.
The preliminaries of an arrangement between the
Pope and Henry were settled (April 11) at Ponte Mammolo,
where the Via Tiburtina (or Valeria) crossed the Anio, which at this time separated the German army from the
Romans. Paschal agreed not to trouble Henry on account of the injuries he had
received at his hands; to concede him the right of investiture; not to
excommunicate him; to crown him as emperor, and, as far as in him lay, to
maintain him in his imperial dignity. Henry, on his side, swore to release the
Pope and all he had taken prisoners, and to leave Rome in peace; to help
Paschal to hold the Papacy; to restore what patrimonies of the Church he had
seized; and to give him such obedience “as Catholic emperors are wont to render
to Catholic Roman Pontiffs”.
There was still question of the formal signing
by the Pope of the investiture concession, “that extorted portion of the
agreement”. His seal was in Rome, and, as Henry did not wish this concession to
be known there, a messenger was dispatched for it. Meanwhile the German troops
moved further along the Tiburtine Road to the ninth milestone, where stood the
Church of St. Symphorosa and her seven sons. Here, no
doubt, it was that Paschal said the Mass “Quasi modo geniti”
(April 12), and gave “the Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ to Henry with
the solemn words: This Body of the Lord, which Holy Church holds, which was
born of the Virgin Mary, which was raised on the cross for the redemption of
the human race, this do I give thee, my dearest son, for the remission of thy
sins, and for the preservation of the peace between me and thee, between the
empire and the Papacy; so that our Lord Jesus Christ, whose Body and Blood this
is, may be the guardian and confirmer of true peace and concord between me and
thee, and between the empire and the Papacy”.
It was evening before the papal seal was
brought out from Rome. Meanwhile the terms of the investiture concession had
been agreed upon in the German camp, pitched in a place which, from the
adjoining Church of St. Symphorosa, was then known as
Septem Fratrum,
and since as Sette Fratte.
The German army then retraced its steps westward, made its way over to the Via Salaria, and crossed the Tiber near the Ponte Salario, i.e., somewhere near the mouth of the Anio, with the object of working round Rome so as to enter
the Leonine City. When at evening it had taken up its quarters at Octavum, (which does not appear to be identified, but which
must be sought in the Campus Neronis), a notary from
Rome drew up the investiture agreement, which, “though unwillingly”, Paschal
signed. This document set forth that Henry might have the privilege of
investing with ring and crosier the bishops and abbots of the empire who had
been elected without compulsion or simony.
On the following day, Henry, “full of joy”,
again entered the Leonine City; and again was he received by the Pope and all
the clergy at the Silver Gate of the basilica of St. Peter’s. Then, after
recitation of the prescribed prayer, he was conducted to the porphyry disc, and
there, to quote the imperial account of this affair, “after the second prayer
had been said, he was conducted, with the singing of the litanies, to the
confession of the apostles Peter and Paul, and there anointed. Then with
immense joy was he led by the Lord Pope to the altar of the same apostles, and
by the imposition of the crown by the Pope was he consecrated emperor”. After
he had been thus crowned, acting against “not only the will of the Pope, but
against all custom”, he put the investiture agreement into Paschal’s
hands, and there and then received it back from him. He was anxious to make it
appear that the Pope had granted it to him of his own free will.
During the coronation all access from Rome to
the Leonine City had been prevented. After the ceremony was over, the new
emperor returned to his camp in the Neronian fields (ad castra in Campum), while the Pope, once more free, crossed the
Tiber into Rome with his cardinals and bishops. He was received by so great a
concourse of delighted people that it was not till evening that he reached the
island of the Tiber, safe under the protection of the Frangipani.
Henry did not remain much longer in Italy. On
May 6 he was at Bianello, where he had an interview
with the Countess Matilda, whom he seems to have deceived with regard to his
treatment of Paschal. Leaving her his regent in Liguria (i.e., Lombardy), he
crossed the Alps before the end of May, and in August solemnly interred the
body of his father in the cathedral of Spires.
But neither the weakness of the Pope, nor the
violence of the emperor, was to remain unpunished. Paschal felt the first darts
of retribution. Wherever his concession to Henry became known, it forthwith
evoked a storm of indignation among all who, since the days of Gregory VII, had
toiled and suffered for the reformation of the Church. So strongly did the
party of reform feel on the subject, that Paschal was denounced by many as if
he were a heretic. Many spoke as though the concession he had granted to the
emperor in a matter that concerned ecclesiastical discipline were a declaration
of formal heresy.
One of the first to speak out was Bruno of
Asti, bishop of Segni, and for some time abbot of
Monte Cassino, the friend of Hildebrand, and the biographer of St. Leo IX. In
conjunction with a number of cardinals and of bishops of different countries,
he called upon the Pope to annul the privilege he had granted to Henry, and to
excommunicate him. After assuring the Pope of his love for him, he continued :
“But I cannot approve of that treaty made with such violence and treachery, and
opposed to all piety and religion; nor, as I learn from many, do you yourself.
Who, indeed, can approve of a treaty which violates the faith, destroys the
Church’s freedom, and deprives her of her priesthood by shutting the only door,
viz., that of the Church, by which it can be entered?”
John, the cardinal-bishop of Tusculum, who had
made such heroic efforts to rescue the Pope when he was first seized, convoked
a number of cardinals and bishops, and called on him in their name to undo at
once what he had done so unfortunately. In France, where the full facts of the
case would not at first be very well known, the unhappy Pope sank very low in
the general estimation. Bishops, abbots, and councils not only declared his
concessions null, but loudly proclaimed that he ought to have been ready to
suffer death “rather than yield anything to the secular power contrary to
justice and to the decrees of the Fathers”. So heated did the French clergy
become over this affair that it became necessary for the famous canonist, Ivo
of Chartres, to remind them that “it was no business of theirs to pass judgment
on the supreme Pontiff”.
Even in Germany itself some of the bishops
showed themselves openly hostile to the concordat which Henry had extorted from
the Pope. The monks of Hirschau are said to have
declared that both Henry and Paschal ought to be deposed and excommunicated.
Other monks again, like those of St. Vanne of Verdun,
broken-spirited by the thought that “the citadel of the Roman faith had
surrendered”, and by the gibes of their enemies that their sufferings for
thirty years had come to naught, protested by their silence.
Even the Emperor Alexius wrote to say that he
was distressed at the violent captivity of the Pope, and endeavoured to improve
the occasion by offering to the Pope either himself or his son as a candidate for
the imperial crown in the West (1111). Besides the first suggestion of definite
opposition to Henry, the first strong action in this affair also took its
origin in the East. Conon, formerly count of Urach, now cardinal-bishop of
Palestrina and papal legate in Jerusalem, acting on the advice of his clergy,
and inflamed with zeal for the glory of God, declared Henry excommunicated
(mi). Subsequently, with the assent of their respective churches, he confirmed
his sentence in five councils, in Greece, Hungary, Saxony, Lorraine, and
France.
The year 1111, then, which had witnessed
Henry’s triumph, did not close without giving abundant evidence of the rise of
a flood which would sweep it away completely.
At first Paschal endeavoured to check the
rising flood of indignant repudiation of his concordat. He rebuked with
severity some of his critics, and even punished others. But when to the
well-deserved reproaches of those who were loyal both to him and the Church was
added the faithlessness of Henry in fulfilling his side of the concordat, he
could not stand his ground. In despair he put off the insignia of his office,
and fled to the desert island of Ponza (autumn 1111),
famous in the history of the early martyrs of Christianity. But he was not to
be allowed to withdraw from the combat. Men knew his goodness, and they feared
a schism. The voice of the Church recalled him to his post (October 1111).
V.
The continuation of the
investiture struggle with Henry V, till Paschal’s
death.
That there was nothing for it but that he
should revoke his concession was impressed upon Paschal not only by the
indignant protests of Richard, cardinal-bishop of Albano; of Guy, archbishop of
Vienne, afterwards Calixtus II; and of all those who were regarded as “the
columns of the Transalpine” and Cisalpine Churches, but specially by the action
of the imperial party in Germany. Henry was not content with simply sending
copies of the concordat all over his kingdom, but he suffered his nobles to anticipate
the Erastian Protestants of the sixteenth century. They went about proclaiming
that Henry was at once king and pontiff, and that it was within his right to
make and unmake bishops. Paschal accordingly summoned a council to deal with
the affair.
On March 18, 1112, there met together
about one hundred and twenty-six bishops and cardinals, a number of abbots, and
a very large number of the inferior clergy and laymen. The Pope explained to
the assembled Fathers how he and a number of his clergy had been seized by
Henry; how, against his better judgment, but under compulsion, and to free his
brethren, he had conceded to Henry the right of investiture, and had promised
not to excommunicate him on that count; and how, although Henry had not
fulfilled his side of the compact, he could not excommunicate him, but he could
and did condemn the privilege he had granted him. Following the lead of the
Pope, the assembly, leaving Henry alone, declared the privilege null and void.
Throughout all the deliberations of this synod, Paschal’s
“demeanour, free from hatred towards the perjured Henry, ... gives him claim to
the rare title of a true priest, and we venture to think that his attitude was
due to Christian conviction, and not alone to fear”.
Though this action of the council was enough to
alarm Henry’s supporters in Italy, and to cause them to beg him to come there
at once with an army before opposition to him had become overwhelming, it did
not satisfy the party of reform. Not content with the dispatch of Bishop Gerard
of Angouleme formally to notify the sentence of the council to Henry, Guy,
archbishop of Vienne, Paschal’s legate in France,
with the Pope’s permission, and the encouragement of the French king, summoned
the bishops of the various provinces of France to meet him at Vienne. The
outcome of the deliberations of the council was that Henry was solemnly
excommunicated by name for his base seizure of the Pope, and for his extorting
the investiture concession from him. Paschal was then earnestly implored to
confirm their action; and as “most of the princes and nearly all the people”,
say the Fathers of the council, “think with us on this matter, do you enjoin
them all to help us if need should arise”. In conclusion, “with due reverence”,
but certainly with no little firmness, they assure the Pope of their obedience
if he confirms their action and abstains from all further intercourse with “the
most cruel tyrant”, but if he does not, then, they conclude: “May God have pity
on us, because you will force us to abandon our subjection to you”.
It may be easily imagined that this vigorous
action was not without its effect. From Paschal, who ceased not to proclaim
that his views of the evil of the practice of investiture had never changed,
and that dire necessity alone had wrung from him an approval of it, it
compelled a prompt approval of what the council had done (October 1112); and in
Germany it caused a gradual alienation from Henry, both of the people and of
the nobles. When later we have to chronicle the emperor’s second entry into
Italy (1116), we shall then relate how the repetition of the sentence of
excommunication against him, and how his constant illegal treatment of the
nobility of the empire, gradually undermined his power.
After he had thus expressed his adhesion to the
decrees of Vienne, Paschal enjoyed three or four years of comparative peace.
But even during that period he was worried with anxiety about Benevento, which,
owing to internal dissensions and to the machinations of a party of the Normans
who were anxious to obtain possession of it, was kept in a state of unrest both
within and without. Paschal, at the request of its people, visited it in the
winter of 1112-1113, and, after punishing the malcontents, set over it as
constable a skilled soldier, Landulf de Graeca. But
even this did not suffice to restore order, and the Pope found it necessary to
depose the archbishop of Benevento, in order to support his governor. This he
did at a council held at Ceprano (October 1114),
where he invested Duke William, the son of Duke Roger I, and grandson of Robert
Guiscard, with Apulia, Calabria, and Sicily.
The following year (1115) was distinguished by
the death of the great Countess Matilda (July 24). She died as she had lived,
full of the liveliest faith and of the most burning love of our Lord. “Kissing
the crucifix, she cried : “Thee, my Lord, have I ever worshipped; now, I beg
Thee, wash away my sins”. And after she had received Christ’s revered Body, she
uttered these her last words: “Thou knowest, my God,
that ever during my life my hope has been in Thee; now, when it is o'er, take
me, I beseech Thee, and save me”.
Paschal realized at once that Matilda’s death
meant a second coming of Henry into Italy; he felt that he would never allow
her inheritance to pass quietly to the Roman Church, as she had willed that it
should. He must, therefore, make further efforts to put an end to the dissensions
which were rendering the Norman power in south Italy ineffective, and quite
unable to afford him any solid support against Henry. Proceeding, therefore,
immediately into Apulia, he partially succeeded in effecting his object; for in
a council at Troia (August 1115), he induced the
barons of those parts to promise to observe the Truce of God for three years.
But the promises were not kept; and when Henry made his second descent into
Italy, the Normans were in no position to help the Pope.
Paschal was not mistaken in his conjecture that
the death of Matilda would bring Henry once again over the Alps. Other causes,
however, had also been at work to make the emperor desirous of entering Italy.
His affairs in Germany had come into such an evil case that he was glad to
leave it.
When he had returned to Germany after his
imperial coronation (1111), he soon gave evidence that he possessed the same
tyrannical instincts as his father. His arbitrary interference with the
privileges of the nobility, both ecclesiastical and lay, alienated many of them
from him, and his excommunication by the French episcopate began gradually to
make itself felt. One of those who, influenced by the latter cause, began to
bestir himself against him was his once chief adviser and prime favourite, the
chancellor Adalbert, chancellor of the empire and now archbishop-designate of
Mainz. Grievances, real or imaginary, drove the Count Palatine Sigfried and the Saxons to arms. The whole empire was soon
in a state of unrest. But by the year 1114 the emperor’s arms were everywhere
in the ascendant. This, and his marriage with Matilda of England (January 6,
1114), seemed to render his position secure. He could not, however, refrain
from dishonourable and arbitrary acts. As a consequence, the peace of the
empire was promptly and seriously broken. Even at his marriage “many of the
princes attended in sullen fear, and for the most part took themselves off
without waiting for his permission. But they did not separate before they had
arranged for a rising. This time Henry’s arms were not so successful. The
imperial troops suffered several defeats even in the year 1114. To add to his
difficulties, the bishops who were still faithful to the idea of reform became
more active, and the excommunication which had been pronounced against him in
distant Jerusalem and in France, began at length to be published in Germany itself.
The energetic Conon is said to have declared Henry excommunicated at a council
held in Cologne (April 19, 1115), and a little later in the same year another
papal legate, Dietrich (Theodoric), repeated the declaration at Goslar.
Twice failing to induce the princes to treat
with him, compelled by the citizens of Mainz to release their archbishop, and
hearing that his excommunication had again been solemnly proclaimed at Cologne
(Christmas 1115), Henry decided to leave Germany, and raise money for a fresh
campaign against the rebellious princes by seizing the property of the late
Countess Matilda. He entered Italy in March (1116), but this time with only a
small army. The majority of the princes had no thought of accompanying him.
On his arrival in Italy, Henry found that it
was still more or less true that, owing to the fear his first visit had
inspired, Lombardy was even yet devoted to him. He seems to have had no
difficulty in possessing himself of the inheritance of Matilda. But what that
inheritance was, and on what grounds he claimed it, are questions more easily
asked than answered. It seems to be generally supposed that he claimed Matilda’s
allodial possessions on the plea of his relationship to her, and her fiefs as
her emperor. His relationship to her was, however, very distant, and could not
for a moment have been rightfully urged in opposition to her deeds of gift, by
which she had made over her estates to the Roman Church. By seizing Matilda’s
allodial possessions, then, Henry showed himself a royal robber. And in those
days, when fiefs had practically become hereditary, had he any right to take
Matilda’s fiefs into his own hands? Ought he not to have allowed the Pope to
inherit them, as the other bishops of the empire received the fiefs which had
been held of the emperor by their predecessors? Whatever answer be given to
these questions, it remains to be stated that it cannot be shown that Henry
ever claimed the fiefs of Matilda because he was her suzerain. His relationship
to her seems to be the only claim that he put forward to anything and
everything that had belonged to her. Unfortunately, it is not clear which parts
of north Italy, over so much of which she had ruled, were her allodial
possessions, and which were imperial fiefs. There is equal uncertainty as to
what she wished to make over to the Church of Rome, and indeed as to what
exactly she had control over on any count whatsoever. A contemporary document
says she was “Duchess of Tuscany and of Lombardy, of the Marks or Marches of
Spoleto and Camerino, and of all the country between
the Adriatic, on which are the cities of Ravenna and Venice, to the other sea,
on which is the city of Pisa, and to the city of Sutri
near Rome”.
Had Paschal succeeded to the dominion of
Matilda, as here outlined, then, having personal control over the patrimony of
St. Peter from Radicofani to Ceprano,
and being at the same time suzerain of south Italy and Sicily, he would have
been the ruler of nearly the whole of the Italian peninsula. His sway would
have extended from beyond Mantua in the north to the extreme point of Calabria;
and the twelfth century would have seen a united Italy under the suzerainty of
the Pope—a state of things to which even today many look forward as the best
solution of the “Roman question”. But with his mailed hand Henry had grasped
the lands of Matilda, so that Paschal did not inherit an acre of them. And it
was a long time before any of the Popes received the least practical benefit
from the Countess Matilda’s generous donation in their behalf.
About the same time that Henry entered Italy,
the Pope held a council at the Lateran, in order to show the emperor by its
decrees that he was resolved to stand by the policy of his predecessors. The
privilege which had been granted to Henry was condemned at Paschal’s
own request, after he had explained that he had in a weak moment given his
consent to it in order to bring to an end the cruel treatment which was being
inflicted on the Church. When, however, some wished to have the privilege declared
heretical, Paschal sprang up and, demanding silence, exclaimed : “This Church
has never been guilty of heresy, nay, has ever condemned it. . . . It was for
this Church that the Son of God prayed in His Passion when he said : I have
prayed for thee, Peter, that thy faith fail not” (St. Luke XXII. 32). But
before the Pope himself could take any action, the strenuous opposition of
Henry’s ambassadors had to be overcome; for no sooner had the emperor
established himself in the north of Italy than he sent ambassadors to Rome “to
make an earnest effort to settle the differences which had again begun to
disturb the relations between the Papacy and the empire”. The chief of the
embassy was Pontius, abbot of Cluny, said to have been a relation of Paschal.
Receiving support from John of Gaeta, Pierleone, and
the prefect of the city, the abbot strove to prevent matters from going any
further; but to no purpose.
Paschal formally condemned both those who gave
and those who received investiture, and definitely approved of the strong
measures which had been taken by Conon. This being the case, it is impossible
to regard Henry’s assertion that, in response to his embassy, Paschal
repudiated the action of Conon and Theodoric, as other than false.
The Lateran council had not been broken up many
days when an event occurred at Rome which played into Henry’s hands most
opportunely. Peter, the city prefect, died at the end of March, and it was the
wish of Paschal that he should be succeeded by a son of Pierleone
II, the powerful supporter .of the Popes. But before even the dead prefect had
been buried, a number of irresponsible persons, without consulting the more
important citizens, elected to succeed him his son, a mere boy, also named
Peter. To compel Paschal to confirm their election, they burst into the Lateran
basilica, where he was consecrating the Holy Oils (Holy Thursday, March 30),
and, placing their youthful candidate with rent garments between the altar and
the Pope’s episcopal chair, they clamoured for his immediate confirmation. A
request so preferred, received the refusal it deserved. But Peter’s supporters
were not to be put off. They pushed their candidate’s claims among the people
even on Good Friday, when, says the papal biographer, it was the general custom,
especially at Rome, for people to go barefoot round “the cemeteries of the
martyrs” and other holy places. On Easter Monday, when, in accordance with
custom, the Pope rode from the Lateran to hold a station at St. Peter’s, the
would-be prefect presented himself before him at the bridge of St. Angelo, and
again to no purpose asked for confirmation. Enraged at the refusal, the
infuriated youth and his party insulted the Pope’s escort, and even seized some
of them. And when, on the completion of the station, Paschal was returning to
the Lateran in solemn state, with his crown on his head, as was usual on that
day, and, after having passed the Church of St. Mark, was moving along the
Clivus Argentarius (Via di Marforio)
at the foot of the Capitol, he was again assailed with insolent clamour and
even with stones.
Both parties flew to arms, and called for their
friends to come from their castles in the Campagna to help them. Fighting took
place in every part of the city, and many were the fortified houses with their
towers which were levelled with the ground. Delighted to hear of the turmoil,
the emperor took care to help it on by sending large sums of money to the party
which was opposed to the Pope. Finding that his position in the Lateran was
unsafe, Paschal took refuge in the Septizonium, which
in the days of Gregory VII had already been converted into a fortress. Thence
he fled to Albano (April 8), and, after a brief return to St. Angelo and the Trastevere, he continued his flight, first to Sezza, the ancient Setia, on the east of the Pontine
Marches, and then back again to the Trastevere. On
his first return to the Trastevere he had endeavoured
to secure the loyalty of some of the nobles by presents. He even invested
Ptolemy of Tusculum with the town of Aricia. But many of these men were devoid
of either honour or conscience; and a victory of the papal troops outside Rome
was enough to cause Ptolemy to forget all that had been done for him, and to
turn with successful treachery on his benefactor.
The perjury and victory of Ptolemy was the
signal for a wholesale defection from the Pope, both in the city and in the
Campagna. Sermoneta, Ninfa, and Tiberia
and the whole Maritima fell away from him; and in Rome a furious but fruitless
attack was made on the Theatre of Marcellus and the towers about it, which
formed the powerful fortress of his ally, Pierleone
II. The return of Paschal to Rome with a body of troops put an end to the
assault, and restored peace to the city (August 1116).
Utterly discomfited, “the prefect and the
consuls” sent to beg Henry to march on Rome. Readily accepting the
invitation, the emperor moved southwards as soon as the winter (1116-1117) was
over. Fighting began the moment he entered Latium. The lands of the Pope’s
friends were ravaged and their castles stormed. Paving the way with gold
beforehand, Henry entered the city along with the queen in triumph (c. March
1117).
Naturally wishful to wear his crown in Rome,
Henry was faced by the difficulty that there was no one left in the city solemnly
to place it on his head. Paschal had fled on his approach. He therefore tried
to induce some of the cardinals who had remained behind, under the shelter of
the strong castle of Pierleone II, to perform the
desired function. As, however, he refused to give up his claim to invest with
the crosier and the ring, they would not treat with him. He prevailed, however,
on Maurice Bourdin, archbishop of Braga, and afterwards an antipope, who had
come to Rome in order to defend the rights of his see, to perform the
coronation ceremony for him. Crossing the Tiber by boat, because, through the
castles of St. Angelo and that of the Theatre of Marcellus, Pierleone
II had control of the bridges of St. Angelo and of the island, Henry made his
way with what state he could to St. Peter’s. There Bourdin, as though not
daring to impose the crown upon him in the proper place, before the confession
of St. Peter, crowned him in the chapel of St. Gregory (March 25). Then the
newly crowned monarch, after investing by the sceptre (per aquilam) the youthful disturber Peter with the
prefectship, commenced his return march.
A demonstration against him in some force on the
part of the Normans can scarcely be said to have been successful. Still, as
Henry could not remain to enforce his authority either in Rome or south of it,
the extent of that authority may be easily estimated. His accomplice Bourdin
was excommunicated by Paschal at a council in Benevento (April 1117). The towns
that had revolted were brought back to a sense of their duty, and in some cases
punished severely. Ninfa saw its walls demolished and had to agree not to
rebuild them without the Pope’s permission.
But Paschal’s days
were numbered. In the autumn (1117) he retired to Anagni, and there nearly
died. Recovering, however, a little strength, he not merely dedicated the
present cathedral of Praeneste, but accepted the
invitation of Peter Colonna and Raynald Senebaldi and others of his party to return to Rome. His
first care, on re-entering the city (January 14), was to prepare engines of war
to drive the prefect’s party out of the basilica of St. Peter. Death, however,
overtook him in a house close to the castle of St. Angelo before he could
accomplish his design (January 21, 1118).
When he felt that his hour was come, he called
the cardinals around him, and bade them follow him in love of the faith and
truth, and detest schism and “the Teutonic enormity”. Then “having confessed
his sins, received extreme unction, and done all that becomes a good man to do,
singing with those who were singing around him, at midnight, like one who was
passing from darkness to the light, the holy old man paid the debt of all
flesh”. After the body had been embalmed, “as the Ordo prescribes”, and clad in
the sacred vestments, it was carried by the cardinals themselves to the Lateran
basilica, as St. Peter’s was in the hands of the prefect, and placed in a
mausoleum of the purest marble. His funeral took place on the day after his
death.
Despite his unsettled reign, he not only
consecrated twenty churches in Rome, and in different parts of Italy and
France, but he completely restored the ancient church of the Quattro Coronati on the Celian, which had
been destroyed in the fire of Robert Guiscard.
There are still to be seen a number of very
small coins stamped only on one side. Round the coin runs the name
“Paschalis”, preceded by a cross, and in its centre is the Roman numeral II. It
has been doubted whether they are really coins; but Promis
believes the doubt has been set at rest by the discovery of a number of similar
pieces showing two keys, the sign of the rule of the Roman Church, and the word
“Beneventus”, preceded by a cross, running round
them. Both these sets of coins, then, will have been struck at Benevento in the
year 1101.
Though the coins which are ascribed to Paschal
II are no doubt his, the same cannot be said of the arms set down as his by Ciacconius. They are almost certainly not his; for he would
seem to have mistaken the monogram of Paschal I for the arms of Paschal II.
VI.
England, France, and Spain.
In treating of the different countries with
which Paschal had important relations, we will begin with England, not only
because the investiture quarrel which agitated the whole of Paschal’s
reign was there first settled by a satisfactory compromise, but also because,
as Paschal himself stated, “the kingdom of the English was especially linked to
the Apostolic See by love and obedience”.
The confusion caused in England by the sudden
death of Rufus (August 2, 1100), and the seizure of the kingdom by Henry, to
the exclusion of his elder brother Robert, duke of Normandy, evoked a general
wish for the return of Anselm. In response to a joint appeal from king and
people, the archbishop left France and landed in England on September 23, 1100.
His return was Henry’s salvation. Through his influence the designs of Robert
from without, and of discontented nobles within, were brought to naught, and
Henry felt safe on his throne.
To win his crown Henry had promised to make
free the Holy Church of God, “which in his brother’s time had been sold and put
out to farm”; to remove the evil customs and unjust exactions by which the
country had been oppressed, and to restore the laws of good King Edward. But
Henry was at heart a Norman tyrant, and soon showed his intentions with regard
to the Church, both in its Head and members, by requiring Anselm “to do him
homage and receive the archbishopric from him”, and by refusing to receive as a
papal legate, Guy, archbishop of Vienne, who came to England in the beginning
of the year 1101. In the midst of his early difficulties he did not push the
matter of Anselm’s receiving investiture from him; on the contrary, he promised
to leave ecclesiastical affairs in his hands, and to obey the Pope. He tried at
once, however, to obtain Paschal’s consent to his
wishes; and continued to do so for some six years, sending him no fewer than
five embassies, and striving by every conceivable device either to obtain his
end or to ward off the consequences of his disobedience. Though his own
troubles and his natural weakness of character prevented the Pope from taking
up a strong position at first, he persistently refused to listen to Henry’s
request. He reminded him of the saying of our Lord, “I am the Door” (S. John X.
9), and added, “The moment, therefore, that kings establish the claim to be the
entrance (to the Church), all such as enter by them must be regarded as thieves
and robbers ... (Hence) the Roman and Apostolic Church has in the person of my
predecessors made the most lively efforts to put a stop to royal usurpation
under the abominable guise of investiture, and, in spite of most grievous
persecutions and princely tyranny, has held her ground till this day”. He also
exhorted Anselm to strive to reform the Church in England, to bring the king to
a sense of his duty to the Pope, and to effect the restoration of Peter’s
Pence, as he knew how hampered he was for want of means. Finally, he begged the
archbishop to work hard to make peace between Henry and Robert, for the latter,
as a Crusader, had appealed to him regarding Henry’s seizure of England. To
help Anselm to effect the desired peace he sent him two legates. Other letters
soon followed, in which he unfolded to him his mind on the investiture
question.
There was certainly ample need of his plainly
informing Anselm of his attitude on the investiture question, for the
archbishop had reason to fear that he had been frightened out of his position.
Henry had written him a very domineering letter. In it he had indeed
congratulated Paschal on his accession to the See of the Holy Roman Church, had
informed him that he had dispatched the customary Peter’s Pence, and had
promised him that obedience which his predecessors had had in England in his
father’s time; but he had also stated that, if he was not allowed to retain the
usages and customs which had obtained during that period, he would be
compelled, however unwillingly, to withdraw himself from obedience to him.
Moreover, some of the king’s bishops, Gerard,
archbishop of York, Herbert Losinga of Norwich, and
Robert, bishop of Chester, who formed the second embassy which Henry sent to
Rome, had not hesitated on their return to declare that the Pope had by word of
mouth granted to the king that right of investiture which he denied him in
writing (autumn 1102).
Though fresh letters soon arrived from the Pope
(c. January 1103), indignantly repudiating the assertions of the bishops, Henry
would take no notice of them, but begged Anselm himself to go to Rome, and try to
persuade the Pope to let him keep “the usages of his predecessors”. Though well
knowing what the result would be, when he found that the wishes of the king
were the wishes also of the barons, he set out for Rome (April 1103).
When the aged prelate arrived at his
destination, he found there an envoy of the king, William of Warelwast or Veraval. A skilful diplomat was William of
Veraval, but he overshot the mark when he closed a clever speech with the
words: “I would have you all know that my lord the king of England will rather
suffer the loss of his kingdom than lose the investiture of the churches”. “If
your king”, promptly rejoined the Pope, “will not
give up the investiture of the churches even at the cost of the loss of his
kingdom, know that not even for the loss of his life will Paschal ever allow
him to retain it with impunity”.
But in the hope that a mild answer would turn
away wrath, the Pope sent Henry a very temperate letter. After congratulating
him on the birth of his son, he expressed his regret that the king should ask
him for what he cannot grant: “Were we to sanction or tolerate the grant of
investitures by your Majesty, we should incur a terrible risk, and so would
you. It is not that in thus forbidding them we either gain a wider obedience and
ampler freedom, or diminish aught of your due power and right; ... for the
right is not yours. It is neither imperial nor royal, but Divine”. The only
result of Anselm’s mission, as far as he was concerned, was that he was
forbidden to return to England. He accordingly took up his abode as before with
Archbishop Hugh at Lyons.
Meanwhile Henry seized the revenues of the
archbishopric Anselm and entered into procrastinating negotiations with the
Pope and Anselm to stave off the consequences of his arbitrary conduct. But
there is an end to all things; and Anselm, leaving the question of investiture
to be dealt with by the Pope, gave the king to understand that unless he left
the property of his see undisturbed, he would excommunicate him (May 1104). Though
by restoring the archbishop’s property he saved himself from that danger (July
1105), he found that difficulties were thickening around him. Paschal had
excommunicated his chief adviser, Count Robert of Meluan,
and those whom he had ventured to invest (March 1105); the clergy and people of
England were becoming restive owing to his illegal pecuniary exactions; and his
campaigns against his brother, Robert of Normandy, were not successful. There
was a general wish for Anselm’s return to his diocese. For this Paschal paved
the way by a concession which he made to Henry’s fifth embassy. He authorized
the archbishop to absolve those who had incurred censures in the meantime by
giving or receiving investitures, and as a temporary indulgence, and on the
understanding that investiture was to be withheld, he permitted ecclesiastics
to offer homage to the king.
Accordingly, at the urgent request of the king,
Anselm set out for England, where he was received by “Good Queen Mold” (Matilda) and the whole country with the greatest
joy, about the close of August 1106.
On August 1 of the following year, at a great
assembly in London, the controversy on investitures, in which Anselm had taken
so noble a part, was brought to a satisfactory close. It was there decreed that
in future no ecclesiastic was to be invested by crosier or ring with a
bishopric or abbacy, but, on the other hand, it was to be permitted to do
homage to the king. The homage was tendered before consecration, and, at least
in the time of Henry II, the oath to the king was taken with the saving clause,
“as far as my sacred character will permit”.
This concession on the part of Henry did not indeed
make the Church in England free; but it was a good step forward in that
direction. It was an acknowledgment that the source of spiritual jurisdiction
was elsewhere than in the crown. The king could not make bishops as he could
make earls. Henry realized that he had had to give up what he would fain have
kept. He was not above even making a feint to recover what he had yielded, on
the pretence that Paschal had granted the right of investiture to Henry V of
Germany. But a prompt denial of this pretext on the Pope’s part saved the
English king from perjuring himself.
Despite his age, Anselm devoted himself with the
utmost zeal to repair the injuries sustained by the Church during his struggle
with the king, and he was well supported by the Pope. Seeing that the larger
and better part of the English clergy were the sons of priests, Paschal allowed
Anselm, notwithstanding the canons to the contrary, to promote such as were
good and learned. And at the saint’s request he authorized the formation of the
diocese of Ely out of the large diocese of Lincoln.
Though Anselm died in the midst of his work of
reform (April 21,1109), the Pope fortunately did not cease to take an interest
in our country. Unmindful of the promises he had made at the beginning of his
reign, Henry kept the See of Canterbury vacant, and appropriated its revenues.
At length, however, “moved by the admonitions of the Lord Pope” and by the
prayers of the monks of Canterbury and others, he permitted an election to take
place in his presence at Windsor. The choice of the electors fell on Ralph d'Escures, bishop of Rochester, sometime abbot of Seez (April 22, 1114), and he was solemnly enthroned about
three weeks later. Towards the end of the year a number of monks and clerics
were sent to Rome with letters from the king and the monks of Christchurch,
praying the Pope to confirm their choice, and to grant their envoys the pallium
for Ralph, as ill-health prevented him from going for it himself.
Seeing that the new archbishop had been
translated from one see to another without his knowledge or consent, Paschal
was little disposed to accede to the request made to him. But the envoys
managed to secure the patronage of Anselm, abbot of St. Sabas,
and nephew of their late archbishop, whom he resembled in his sweetness of face
and character. He had lived in England for some considerable time, and “for his
gentleness had been loved by the English as one of themselves”. He prevailed
upon the Pope to allow him to take the pallium to the archbishop; but at the same
time he had to convey papal letters to the king and the monks of Christchurch,
in which Paschal complained that, in the realms of Henry, Blessed Peter, and in
his person, our Lord had been deprived of the honour which was His due. Papal
letters and legates were not received without the consent of the king, and
appeals were not carried to Rome. This state of things, urged the Pope, is very
different from that which obtained under the old regime, when England was so
closely attached to the Apostolic See. To promote a better understanding he is
sending to the king one dear to both of them, the abbot Anselm. He also told
the king that Peter’s Pence was so carelessly or fraudulently collected that
not half of it reached Rome. For this, as for all the other evils, the king is
to blame, “because nothing may be done in the kingdom without his consent”. In
his letter to the monks, Paschal strongly condemned the translation of the
bishop of Rochester without his knowledge, but stated that he condoned the act
owing to the good character of the prelate who had been translated.
After he had first made a profession of
fidelity and canonical obedience to the Roman Pontiff, Ralph, with bare feet,
assumed the pallium, which Anselm had placed in a silver casket on the altar of
the cathedral at Canterbury (June 27, 1115).
Some weeks after this the bishops and barons of
the nation were summoned to Westminster to discuss the Pope’s views on the
relations between the king and himself. A long letter was read from him, in
which he denounced Henry’s methods with regard to bishops. When our Lord Jesus
Christ, said the Pope, entrusted the Church to its first pastor, St. Peter,
with the words, “Feed my sheep, feed my lambs”, He gave into his hands the care
of the bishops, signified by the sheep. How then can we feed sheep we have
never seen nor heard? Our Lord divided the whole world among his disciples; but
he gave over Europe especially to Peter and Paul, and through them and their
successors has all Europe been converted. It has been their wont, continued the
Pope, to settle the more important ecclesiastical cases by their vicars. But
you, without consulting us, decide even episcopal cases; you hinder appeals to
the Apostolic See, and hold ecclesiastical councils without our knowledge. If,
concluded Paschal, you continue to do these things, we shall devote you to the
judgment of God. This outspoken letter, of course, offended the
susceptibilities of our Norman king; and the council accordingly decided that
he should send an embassy to make his views known to the Pope.
Of the work done by the embassy nothing is
known; but in the following year (1116), when Anselm was again on his way to
England as papal legate, he was honourably but effectively retained by Henry in
Normandy.
This question of the reception of papal legates
in England, other than the archbishop of Canterbury, opened between William the
Conqueror and Gregory VII, continued during most of the reign of Henry I,
between that monarch, on the one hand, and Popes Paschal II, Calixtus II,
Honorius II, and Innocent II on the other. By threats, soft words, or gold,
Henry often succeeded in preventing the papal legates from landing in England
or from executing their commissions. But the Popes continued to oppose their
natural rights to the new-fangled tyrannical customs of the Norman sovereigns,
and in their turn were occasionally successful in the assertion of their
claims.
In connection with the legatine mission of
Abbot Anselm of which we have just spoken, it was decided by a council in
England and by Henry that Archbishop Ralph, “who was longing to visit the
threshold of the apostles”, should go to the Pope to press his claims to be the
sole legate of the Holy See in England. Ralph was also anxious to induce
Paschal to force Thurstan, the archbishop-elect of York, to acknowledge his
primacy. He went on his journey with great pomp, and was everywhere received
with the state which he himself assumed. When, however, he reached Rome (1117),
he found that, owing to the quarrel between Pope and emperor, the former had
betaken himself to Benevento, and that it would be highly dangerous to attempt
to go to him. He had, therefore, but to send him letters, and to return content
with the Pope’s simple reply that he would not diminish the authentic
privileges of the See of Canterbury.
Another long dispute in which also Paschal was
engaged owed its continuance in no small degree, it would seem, to the Popes
themselves not adopting a definite and final attitude towards it. The dispute
in point was that between the archbishops of York and of Canterbury on the
question of the dependence of the former see on the latter. Before Lanfranc
would consecrate Thomas I of York, he exacted a promise of submission from him;
but, saying that there were two metropolitans in England, the northern
archbishop would not renew the act of submission to Lanfranc’s successor, Anselm.
His successor, Gerard, however, gave the required promise “of subjection and
obedience”. On his death, Thomas II (1108-1114) endeavoured to avoid making the
objectionable promise, but Paschal stood firmly by Anselm; and his legate,
Cardinal Ulric, gave the pallium to Thomas only after he had professed his
subjection to Canterbury. On the accession of the famous Thurstan (1114-1140)
to the great northern see, the dispute broke out again with violence. King
Henry at first sided with the elect of York in his determination not to proffer
that profession of obedience which, according to him, was only a recent claim,
and not in harmony with the regulations of St. Gregory I and of his successors.
But whilst Thurstan was making his contention known in Rome, and getting
Paschal to acknowledge its justice, Henry veered round. Doubtless realizing it
would be easier for him to control one primate than two, he ordered Thurstan to
make the profession of obedience; and on his continued refusal to comply,
deprived him of his see. Ralph, however, as we have seen, was unable to induce
Paschal to give up his support of his rival. On the contrary, both Canterbury
and the king received letters from the Pope requiring that Thurstan should be
restored to his see, and that Ralph should consecrate him without exacting the
promise of subjection. In virtue of the Pope’s letter Henry restored the elect
to his see; but Ralph would not consecrate him, nor would Henry allow the
Pope’s mandate which commissioned the suffragans of York to consecrate him to
be put into effect. The dispute dragged on; and during it both Pope Paschal II
and Gelasius II, who shared in it, died. Calixtus II, however, at last took up
the matter vigorously, and, despite both Henry and Ralph, consecrated Thurstan
himself (October 20, 1119). “And because”, says our old chronicle, “that
Thurstan, against right and against the arch-see of Canterbury, and against the
king’s will, had received consecration from the Pope, the king prohibited him
from all return to England”. Calixtus accordingly took him about with him, and
behaved towards him with the utmost consideration. He treated him as a
cardinal, giving him, on the occasions of his solemn coronations, the same
number of golden byzants, i.e., the same presbyterium, as he was wont to give
to the cardinals.
In the following year, when at Gap, he took
stronger steps. He definitely freed York from subjection to Canterbury, and
threatened to excommunicate Henry if he should continue to oppose its
archbishop (March 11, 1120). But it was not till the beginning of the next
year, after Thurstan had been of great service to the king in promoting peace
between England and France, and after Calixtus had threatened to lay the
country under an interdict, that he was allowed to return to his diocese. If,
however, he had helped to make peace between two countries, he did not succeed
in making it between two archbishoprics. His struggle for independence with
Canterbury went on for the greater part of his life, and almost as fiercely
after the death of Ralph (October 20, 1122) as before it.
FRANCE
One of the links between England and France at
this time was Thurstan. His cause was warmly supported by Louis the Fat, who
bluntly told the Pope that “the case of the archbishop of York would bring to
Rome no little honour or dishonour, as the case might be”. The Pope to whom he
spoke these words was Calixtus II, but they might well have been addressed to
Paschal II, with reference to many cases in France with which that Pontiff was
concerned. Paschal’s action in the realm of Philip I
(d. 1108), and Louis VI, the Fat, was manifold, but exerted in so pacific a
spirit that, if compromise was carried to its furthest limits, the work of
reform among the undisciplined clergy of the Church in France was nevertheless
substantially advanced. We have already seen that to be more free to further
it, he overlooked the fact that in the matter of Philip’s intercourse with Bertrada, his words and his deeds were not at one. The
adulterous king was sure of the support of many of his creatures among the
bishops. Even when he was under excommunication, the archbishop of Rheims would
seem not to have hesitated to crown him. In view, then, of the strong position
of the French king, and because he wanted a support in his struggle against the
empire, Paschal followed the lead of the great bishop Ivo of Chartres, who
induced both him and the king to make mutual concessions. They would appear,
for instance, to have come to a tacit understanding on the investiture question
on the lines of its settlement in England. But neither by his legates nor by
his personal efforts when in France, did he succeed in putting an end to such
abuses of the royal power as the keeping of bishoprics vacant that their
revenues might enrich the royal coffers, and the arbitrary interference with
the freedom of ecclesiastical elections.
Much of what has been said in the preceding paragraph
may be illustrated by the case of Stephen Garland. Despite the regulations of
the Pope and of his legates, John and Benedict, regarding the validity of
episcopal elections, the larger section of the chapter of Beauvais, on the
recommendation of Philip and Bertrada, elected as
their bishop Stephen Garland, a son of the seneschal of France. Not only was
their candidate not in major orders, but he was an illiterate gambler of bad
life, who had been publicly expelled from the Church for adultery. Notwithstanding
Stephen’s attempts at bribery, his election was annulled at Rome, and the more
reputable portion of the chapter, with the advice of the nobles of the diocese
and the consent of the people, elected in his stead a learned and virtuous
monk, named Galon. But, inflamed by the suggestions
of Stephen’s electors, Philip swore that never should Galon
be bishop of Beauvais. Thus rejected by the king, the bishop-elect betook
himself to Rome. Though Paschal at once acknowledged the legitimacy of his
election, he did not institute proceedings against the king of France, but sent
Galon on an embassy to Poland (1102). For two years
longer the See of Beauvais remained vacant. At this juncture the bishop of
Paris died (1104), and the friends of peace brought about the election and
translation of Galon to the See of Paris. Consecrated
by the Pope himself (April 1105), he entered on his new charge in peace, while
a new bishop was chosen for Beauvais.
In all this affair, in the resistance offered
to the scandalous election, and in the compromise that closed the strife
resulting therefrom, the leading spirit was Ivo of Chartres. For though, as far
as in him lay, he would not suffer the great laws of the Church to be trampled
upon, he was so conscious of the harm done by disagreement between Church and
State, that he spared no pains to put an end to it as soon as possible. “God first
of all”, he insisted, “must have in His Church what are His rights”. At the
same time he impressed upon Pope Paschal that “when Church and State work
together, the world is well governed, and the Church flourishes; but that when
they are in disagreement, not only do the weak not grow strong, but the strong
become wretchedly infirm”.
These words were addressed to Pope Paschal à
propos of the diocese of Noyon. When they were
written, Louis VI was king of France. Though, according to Ivo, he was a man of
simple nature, devoted to the Church of God, and well disposed towards the
Apostolic See, he was above all things bent on extending the prestige and
substantial power of the king of France. For it must not be forgotten that at
this period he who bore that title was de facto the actual ruler of but
a portion of the centre of the country which now bears that name. But, inasmuch
as Louis VI firmly established the royal power in the country round Paris, and
thus secured to the French monarchs a strong centre, he indirectly laid the
foundations of that absolute power over the whole of France possessed by Louis
XIV. With all his goodwill to the Church either at large or at home, over which
the early kings of the Capetian race had more control than they had over the
State, Louis steadfastly opposed anything which would tend to lessen his real
power over it.
Part of the diocese of Noyon, in which was
situated the city of Tournai, was close to the boundary where met the spheres
of influence of the French king and of the emperor, and was more disposed to
attach itself to the latter than to the former. On the death of Balderic, bishop of Noyon and Tournai (1113), both Noyon
and Tournai put forward candidates of their own, and Paschal, favourable to a
division of this large diocese, took steps to provide Tournai with a bishop of
its own. But fearful lest the result of this would be that he would thus lose
control over part of the diocese of Noyon, Louis stoutly set his face against
its subdivision. Ivo in consequence wrote a strong letter to the Pope, begging
that an arrangement of four hundred years duration might be allowed to stand,
lest, though the kingdom of the Franks had ever been distinguished for its
loyalty to the Apostolic See, Louis might cause a schism “in the kingdom of the
Gauls” such as exists in the German Empire. He did not,
he said, question the right of the Pope to arrange the territorial divisions of
the Church, but he must consider the danger of schism, and of impoverishing the
diocese of Noyon. The project of the division of the diocese accordingly fell
through for the time.
It is quite impossible here to enter into any
further detail to elucidate the intercourse between Paschal and the rulers,
spiritual and temporal, of France. It must suffice to state the position he
occupied in that great country, for it will not then require any great flight
of imagination to understand in what directions his relations towards it must
have run. To do so we select some words of Luchaire,
who has sketched it in a few bold strokes. “The successor of St. Peter had in
France his estates, his revenues, his sovereign rights, his government. The
influence which he exercised either in person or by his representatives was
even much more widespread than that of the king of France, for it effectively
reached all parts of the kingdom, even those distant fiefs where the sovereign
who ruled at Paris was scarcely known even by name”. And the action of Paschal
in France was all the greater because at this period there was considerable
religious activity there. The great growth of monasticism all over Europe in
the eleventh century was very conspicuous in France. Not to speak again of the
monastery of Cluny and its dependencies, to which attention has been so
frequently called in these pages, nor yet of that of Citeaux, mention may here
be made of the monastic foundations, Fontevrault,
etc., of the Breton, Robert of Arbissel, of those of
Bernard, abbot of Tiron in Perche, and of those of
the Norman monk St. Vital. And, speaking generally, wherever a new monastery
was instituted, there also was established a centre of papal action and
influence. However, as Monod is at pains to note, Paschal did not unduly favour
either monks or monasteries, but, in the disputes which necessarily arose between
them and the bishops, he decided, as an impartial judge, now in favour of a
bishop, now in favour of a monastery, as justice appeared to require.
SPAIN
It was in the year 1002 that first tolled the
death-knell of the Moors in Spain. In that year, during the reign of Moorish
Hisham II (976-1012), practically the last of the splendid line of the Caliphs
of Cordova, died Almanzor (1002), nominally his commander-in-chief, but really
his ruler, and the virtual sovereign of all the Moors in the peninsula. Soon
after his death the caliphate came to an end. A number of petty kingdoms sprang
up, and throughout the eleventh century there was anarchy in Moorish Spain,
while the Christ, an kingdoms of the North, taking advantage of it, were
steadily expanding southwards. Alfonso VI, king of Castile and Leon
(1074-1109), recovered Toledo (1085), and Urban II helped to consolidate his
kingdom by re-establishing the ancient ecclesiastical primacy of Toledo, and by
his general policy of church reform in Christian Spain.
In the formation of the great modern kingdoms
of Europe, the Church has played a very great part; initially, indeed, the
greatest part; for, in the break-up of the empire of Old Rome, or of the
dynasties which succeeded to portions of its power, the Church suffered less
than any other institution. This was due to its organization, at once simple
and complete, the same in every section of the empire, connected with that of
every other section, and bound to a common immutable centre, the See of Peter.
Hence it furnished in every country a nucleus round which its political unity
could crystallize.
Of no country is this more true than of Spain;
and what Paschal II did for it helped it at a very critical period of its
history. Alarmed at the anarchy which had followed the close of the Ommeyad dynasty of Cordova, and at the advance of the
Christian arms, the Moors of Spain turned for help to Africa. There the Berber
chief Yusuf, coming from the slopes of the Atlas Mountains, had founded a new
empire, that of the Almoravides (religious soldiers). Invited by the Moors of
Spain to come to their help, he not only drove back the victorious Spaniards,
but subjected the Moors themselves to his iron puritanical rule. And during
most of the twelfth century Berber rulers, whether of the Almoravide dynasty or
of that of their successors, the Almohades, kept the Christian kingdoms more or
less in check.
When, then, Paschal II realized that the
Spanish Christians had a new foe to face, he at once forbade either the laity or
the clergy of Spain to join the Crusaders who were making for Jerusalem. Nor
was he content with this prohibition, nor yet with offering his commiseration
to Alfonso VI on his defeats. He encouraged the Christians of other lands to go
and fight in Spain, and had the satisfaction of seeing that his exhortations
were not thrown away. It was, for instance, due to his encouragement that the
people of Pisa fitted out a fleet of three hundred ships and wrested the island
of Majorca from the Moors (1114). He sent letters to the bishops and princes of
Spain, urging them to combine to put down intestine strife, and to keep peace
with one another; and he pronounced all those excommunicated who were engaged
in civil war. He confirmed the decree of Urban II, which restored to Toledo its
ancient primacy in Spain, and supported Bernard, the occupant of the see, “and
our vicar”, in his punishment of Maurice Bourdin, archbishop of Braga, for his
oppression of the See of Leon.
There was certainly every need for Paschal to do
his best to promote the cause of peace and unity in Spain, for at this very
time, when those blessings were most required by the Spanish kingdoms, they, were
conspicuous by their absence. On the death of the great king Alfonso VI, his
eldest daughter, Urraca, the widow of Raymond, count of Burgundy, succeeded to
his throne (1109-1126). Unfortunately, the very step which she took, on the
advice of her nobles, in the interests of peace brought about ceaseless war.
She married Alfonso I, king of Aragon, surnamed el Batallador, or The Warrior (1109). But the marriage was a
most unfortunate one. It was opposed by the Pope, because the married couple were
cousins; and it was unhappy in itself. If the husband was cruel and
overbearing, the wife was inconstant and unfaithful. Aragon and Castile,
Portugal and Leon were all at war; Diego Gomez and Pedro de Lara, the queen’s
lovers; Alfonso, the queen’s husband, and Alfonso, the queen's son, were one
and all involved in perpetual strife; nor did the dissolution of Urraca’s marriage by the Pope in any way tend to abate the
stress of warfare, which was maintained till her unregretted death in 1126.
This internecine struggle not only paralyzed
the efforts of the Spaniards against the Moors, but led to a permanent division
among themselves. It resulted in the independence of Portugal. At the mouth of
the Douro once stood the town of Cale, or Porto Cale (Oporto). Belonging to the
Callaeci, it became one of the important towns of the
Roman province of Hispania Tarraconensis. About the
middle of the eleventh century, among the districts or counties into which
Galicia, then part of the kingdom of Leon, was divided, appears that of Portucalense. This district extended from the Douro
as far south as the Vouga, and towards the north
embraced part of the modern province of Minho. In 1095 its ruler was Count
Henry, who had married an illegitimate daughter of Alfonso VI. Through his
exertions and those of his son, Alfonso Henry, the Moors were steadily driven
back along the west coast; and, during the troubles of the ill-starred reign of
Urraca, he began to dream of independence. The fulfilment of this dream, was
helped forward by the Pope. For the greater freedom of the newly reestablished Church of Portucale,
Paschal exempted its bishop from all metropolitan jurisdiction save that “of
the Roman Pontiff or of a legate whom he might send ab ejus
latere”. Carefully mapping out the limits of the ecclesia
Portugalensis, he ordered restitution to be made
to its bishop, Hugh, of any portion of it that had been annexed by another.
With a church independent of any Spanish
metropolitan, and with his suzerain of Castile and Leon in perpetual strife,
Alfonso Henry, the son of Count Henry, became himself independent (1139). In
1143 he assumed the title of king, and to ensure the permanence of his rule
placed his kingdom under the suzerainty of the Holy See. His homage was
accepted by Pope Lucius II, who, however, only gave him the title of duke. It
was not till the pontificate of Alexander III that the papacy acknowledged the
dukes of Portugal as kings, and that Portugal became independent in name as
well as in fact.
In the midst of all the fighting, quarrelling,
and intriguing princes of northern Spain at this epoch, the person of Diego Gelmirez, another Wolsey in his greatness and in his
ambition, stands forth very conspicuously. Principally concerned with
glorifying his See of Compostela and making it completely independent, we
nevertheless find him in close contact with the great political movements of
his time and country. Now he is supporting Urraca, and now fighting against
her. At one time we see him making headway against Alfonso I of Aragon, and at
another struggling against his people in revolt.
The possession by the Church of Compostela of
the body of St. James the Apostle had given a great distinction to its bishop;
but Diego was not satisfied with that, but longed to be completely independent
of the revived primatial dignity of Toledo (1086), and of the archbishop of
Braga, the traditional metropolitan of Galicia. His wishes were to a
considerable extent gratified by the Popes. Urban II freed the See of
Compostela from all subjection to any metropolitan, and Paschal II gave Diego
the pallium. He, moreover, agreed that, in imitation of a Roman custom, only
Diego, or one of “the seven cardinal-priests” he had ordained for the purpose,
should say Mass at the altar of St. James. Although he granted other privileges
to the Church of St. James, he found there was no satisfying Diego, and at length
had to decline to grant him any further favors for
the time. However, to soothe his feelings, he bade him labor
for peace, and told him that when it was established he would consider his
requests. In subsequent pages we shall have to relate how the ambitious Diego
succeeded in winning from later Popes the rank of archbishop and the dignity of
legate of the Apostolic See in the ecclesiastical provinces of Braga and
Merida.
VII.
THE CRUSADES AND THE EAST.
IN his zeal for the success of the Crusades, Paschal
imitated his illustrious predecessor. A few months after his accession he wrote
to the Crusaders in Palestine to congratulate them on their victories over “the
oppressors of the Christian people”, and to rejoice that “the Eastern Church,
after its long captivity, had to a large extent returned to its ancient
liberty”. He encouraged them, in view of the sacrifices they had already made
of ease and home and friends, to aim at higher things, that they might win
eternal life. He sent them, he said, “from the bosom of the Apostolic See”,
Maurice, bishop of Porto, “that they who, through the vicar of Blessed Peter,
his predecessor of blessed memory, Pope Urban, had undertaken so formidable a
pilgrimage, might ever abound in the consolations of Peter”. He would have them
obey his legate whom he had sent to regulate the Church of Jerusalem as they
would obey himself.
Then he wrote in all directions, especially to
the bishops of France, urging all soldiers, especially those who had already
taken the cross, to hasten to assist their brethren in Palestine. Those who did
not fulfil their promises to go to the East were to be accounted as infamous,
and those who had cowardly abandoned the siege of Antioch were to be regarded
as excommunicated.
Although a great number hearkened immediately
to the voice of the Pope, the demand for men was so great, on account of the
heavy losses the Crusaders had sustained, especially during their journey to
Palestine, by hunger, sickness, the incessant attacks of enemies, and the wiles
of the “accursed Alexius”, that he found it necessary, a few years later, to
make a special effort. Bohemond of Antioch appeared before him and demanded
help. Giving him the standard of St. Peter, and attaching to him the famous
Bruno of Asti, bishop of Segni, Paschal sent him to
France, the home of the Crusades, to stir up fresh zeal in their behalf.
The two envoys addressed the people at a great
council at Poitiers (June 1106); and numbers assumed the cross with ardour,
and, leaving all they possessed, embraced the pilgrimage to Jerusalem as if
they were going to a feast. So many indeed took the cross at their
exhortations, that Ordericus speaks of a third
Crusade of the people of the West to Jerusalem being then set on foot, and
depicts a vast concourse of many thousands advancing through Thrace,
threatening to tread underfoot the Byzantine dynasty. Bohemond had
specially inflamed his hearers against Alexius by alleging his cruelty towards
the Crusaders, for which, adds William of Malmesbury,
he was very noted. The minds of the Westerns were now turned against the rulers
of Constantinople, and the fatal seizure of Constantinople (1204), as the
result of the fourth Crusade, was facilitated by the selfish and suspicious
attitude of Alexius towards the Western soldiers of the first Crusade.
Throughout all his life Paschal had this
satisfaction at least, that in response to his letters and to the personal
appeals of himself and his legates, men set out year by year from every country
to fight the infidel either in Spain or Palestine.
But the act of Paschal which had the most
far-reaching influence on the Crusades was his confirmation of the Hospital of
St. John at Jerusalem. According to the generally received account, some
merchants from Amalfi had been allowed by the Fatimite Caliph of Egypt, el-Mustansir billah (1036-1094),
to found a hospital in Jerusalem for poor and sick Latin pilgrims (1048). It
would seem, however, that the ancient hospice of Charlemagne had been revived
as early as the first quarter of the eleventh century, and that the hospital
founded in 1048 was but a supplementary one. Whether this is so or not, a
certain Gerard had founded a hospice at Jerusalem, “near the Church of St. John
the Baptist”, and was at the head of it in 1113; for in that year Paschal
addressed a bull to him in the twofold capacity of its head and founder. In
response to Gerard’s request, the Pope took his hospital “under the
guardianship (tutela) of the Apostolic See, and the protection of Blessed
Peter”, and decreed that everything either in Europe or Asia which became their
property was to be preserved to them inviolate; that they should be freed from the
payment of tithes; and that after Gerard’s death only the professed brethren (fratres professi)
should have the right of putting a successor in his place.
During the life of Gerard (d. 1118), the
brethren of the hospital only took the three ordinary monastic vows of poverty,
chastity, and obedience, and confined their attentions to tending the sick. But
after his death, his successor, Raymond du Puy (1118-1160), seeing the
sufferings to which the pilgrims were even yet exposed on their way to
Jerusalem from Saracenic marauders, followed the example just set by Hugh de Payen and his Templars, and added a fourth vow of fighting
against the infidel. These two orders, religious and military, were to be the
chief stay of the new kingdom of Jerusalem. Its other supporters were a very
fleeting quantity, always coming and going; but they were ever on the spot to
give it their permanent aid. And, to speak of the Order of the Knights
Hospitallers, or of the Knights of Malta, as they were afterwards called, we
willingly subscribe to the dictum of one of their English historians: “When we
look back on the glorious achievements which through so many centuries have
adorned its annals, and mark the long list of names, ennobled by so many heroic
deeds, which have been successively enrolled beneath its banners, we must
render all praise to the mind that first contemplated the establishment of a
brotherhood combining within its obligations such apparently contradictory
duties, and yet fulfilling its purposes with so much lasting benefit to
Christianity, and imperishable renown to itself”.
One of the many obstacles which prevented the
formation of a strong Latin kingdom of Jerusalem was the diverse nationality of
its rulers, both spiritual and temporal. This naturally begot such jealousies
and factions as rendered unity of action difficult in the highest degree.
Another of the effects of this difference of race which concerns us at the
moment was the obscuring of truth. Writers of different nationalities have left
on record very different notices of the same men and the same events. The
unfortunate quarrel we are about to relate between the patriarch Daimbert and King Baldwin I was, we believe, largely based
on racial prejudices; and we find quite opposite estimates of the characters of
the principal personages in the quarrel in historians of different countries.
Albert of Aix would make of Daimbert a slave of
avarice and a thief, and would have us believe that he became patriarch of
Jerusalem by the weight of his gold rather than of his character. At the same
time, he does not hesitate to depict his rival Arnulf, undoubtedly an intriguer,
and probably a man of indifferent character, as distinguished for his prudence
and eloquence. But then Albert was a German, and his sympathies go with the
German Baldwin. On the other hand, of the more impartial authors, Fulcher
praises Daimbert, and Raymond of Agiles
condemns Arnulf; and with these authorities Albert cannot compare for a moment.
The quarrel between Daimbert
and Baldwin began on the death of Godfrey (1100). The Italian patriarch wanted
the Italian Bohemond to be the second king of the Holy City. Failing in his
efforts to secure the fulfilment of his wishes, he was very naturally regarded
with disfavour by the new king, Baldwin I, Godfrey’s brother. The ill-feeling
thus felt towards him by his sovereign was stimulated by the intriguer Arnulf,
and soon grew to such a pitch that Baldwin appealed to his suzerain, the Pope,
against him. He was accused of treason, and of not giving the king moneys that
were his due. To investigate the affair, Paschal, whom Albert calls “the
inquisitor (examinator) of the Christian faith and religion throughout
the world”, dispatched “brother Maurice, one of the twelve cardinals”. If we
are to believe the aforesaid author, for William of Tyre says nothing about
this embassy of Maurice, the cardinal at first suspended Daimbert
from his office. Three hundred byzants, however, induced the king to persuade
the legate to remove the suspension.
But when, after his hatred or mistrust of Daimbert had been once more aroused, Baldwin wished the
cardinal again to proceed against him, he found, according to the same
gossiping historian, that Maurice had been gained over to the patriarch’s cause
by good cheer and gold. So hardly, however, did the king press his patriarch
for money, that he at length fled to join Bohemond at Antioch (1103).
According to Albert of Aix, on the intercession
of Tancred and other princes he returned soon after under a safe-conduct to
Jerusalem, and was restored to his position preparatory to standing his trial.
Under the presidency of a new legate, the cardinal-priest Robert, a council was
held, and the patriarch was duly tried. But, overwhelmed by the evidence
brought against him, he held his peace, and was declared deposed and
excommunicated. However, from the more reliable evidence of a letter of Paschal,
it would seem that he was condemned in his absence.
Whether Daimbert was
condemned in his presence or absence, a successor was given to him, with the
consent of the cardinal, in the person of Ebremar,
who, according to Albert, was a good and distinguished cleric; but who,
according to William of Tyre, was a priest, if pious, at any rate very simple.
Next year Bohemond and Daimbert set sail for Italy to
see the Pope (1104), the one going to seek help, the other justice. Both
obtained what they sought, but both died before they could profit much by the
success of their quest. Paschal examined Daimbert’s
case at the Lateran synod of March 1105, and decided that he was to be restored
to his see. But, as Ebremar had seemingly acted in
good faith, he was not punished, but declared eligible for a vacant see. For
more than a year Paschal kept Daimbert in Rome to see
if his accusers would come to make good their charges. None appeared, and in
the spring of 1107 the patriarch set sail for Jerusalem, but he died on the
voyage (May or June 1107). Meanwhile, when Ebremar
had heard of the Pope’s action, he at once set out for Rome to justify his
conduct. Thither also went the intriguer Arnulf with what one cannot help but
suspect must have been forged documents. Utterly unable to find out the truth
between them, Paschal referred the matter to the Church of Jerusalem, and sent
out as his legate the aged, learned, and virtuous Gibelinus,
archbishop of Arles.
A council which Gibelinus
summoned on his arrival at Jerusalem found, on the evidence “of good and
sufficient witnesses”, that Daimbert had been
expelled from his see “through the factions of Arnulf and the violence of the
king”, and decreed that, though Ebremar had to be
deposed, he might be given the vacant See of Caesarea. The debate which then
ensued as to a successor for Daimbert was at length
closed by the unanimous election of the legate Gibelinus.
Whereupon Arnulf, so it is said, consoled himself by the reflection that his
age would not allow the archbishop to enjoy his new see very long. It may be at
once added that Gibelinus did not live very long (d.
1111), and that many will think that virtue was not rewarded when Arnulf,
surnamed Malacorona, “the first-born of Satan”, as
William of Tyre calls him, became patriarch in his stead (d. 1111).
Paschal’s new fief, the
Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, brought him, as we have already given evidence
enough, no little trouble. Its chief temporal ruler, Baldwin I, though in many
ways fitted to be the successor of the immortal Godfrey de Bouillon, was a
slave to the soft passion, that most expensive luxury of kings, and abundant
source of their perennial insolvency. The patriarch Arnulf, whom the Pope
commissioned to rebuke the king for the looseness of his private life, was, it
is to be feared, not much better than his royal master. And the very legates
whom Paschal sent to adjudicate in his stead on the difficult cases that arose
in the new kingdom were, it would seem, not always above suspicion. Still, in
connection both with them and the Popes themselves, we would note that the
charge of taking bribes which the disappointed candidate or the prejudiced
historian so frequently brings against them, is one that is most easily
brought, and most readily believed, and yet one that is most difficult to
prove. As those who are base enough to offer or to take the bribes are not too
likely to blazon their acts abroad, bribery must in very many cases at least
always remain a wholly unfounded charge.
Another trouble which Paschal had to face was
caused by the policy of Baldwin, and the ambition of the new patriarchs of
Jerusalem.
The king was naturally anxious that all the
conquests made from the Saracens should as far as possible be under his
personal control, both in the spiritual and in the temporal order. He was most
desirous that the influence of such subordinate rulers as the princes of
Antioch should not increase. Calling to mind (and William of Tyre is honest
enough to say that the suggestions of the clergy perhaps helped to bring the
fact to his mind) that, before the coming of the Saracens, the jurisdiction of
the patriarch of Antioch was much more extensive than that of the patriarch of
Jerusalem, he sent to ask the Pope to agree that all the future conquests of
the Crusaders should be subject to the See of Jerusalem. To this request
Paschal gave his assent on the ground that the old landmarks had been swept
away by the infidels, and consequently that it was necessary to establish new
ones.
This action of the Pope not unnaturally roused
the patriarch of Antioch, and he at once sent envoys to Rome to express his
indignation at an attempt to curtail the ancient rights of his see. To pacify
Bernard’s wounded feelings, Paschal wrote him various letters, explaining that
he had not had any intention of interfering with the just claims of Antioch,
but that his distance from the localities in dispute, and the alteration of
names which time and the infidels had brought to cities and provinces, had
placed him very much in the dark about them. Hence, as far as ever the changes
wrought by time and the infidel rendered possible, it was his wish “not to
lessen the rights of the churches because of the power of princes, nor on
account of ecclesiastical dignities to hamper regal resources”. At the same
time, he made known to Baldwin that, in the concession he had granted him, he
had had no intention of interfering with the clear and undoubted rights of the
Church of Antioch, and he begged him not to suffer such rights to be violated.
“We cannot”, he concluded, “oppose the sacred constitutions of our fathers”.
But time was soon to show both the secular and ecclesiastical princes that they
had better have spent their time in making fast what they had, than in
quarrelling over futurities which were never to be theirs.
Passing over the other works of this
"wholly admirable Pope, we shall reserve the few facts we have found
concerning his intercourse with Norsemen, Slavs, and Hungarians till we recount
the relations of Calixtus II with those peoples. This will prevent the
scattering of the very insignificant number of such details which has reached
us. Enough, we believe, has here been said to make manifest what manner of man
was the gentle but energetic Paschal II, and to justify the assertion that,
despite an occasional display of tender weakness, he was, both as a man and as
a Pope, a worthy representative of the great reforming Pontiffs of his age.
GELASIUS II.
A.D. 1118-1119.
When Paschal II died, Rome, as we have seen, was
anything but tranquil. A portion of it was in the hands of a party hostile to
the Popes. The greater portion of the city was, however, in the hands of loyal
subjects; and Peter, bishop of Porto, took steps immediately for the election
of a new Pontiff. The archdeacon and chancellor, John of Gaeta, who was staying
at Monte Cassino at the time, was at once summoned to Rome. On the prescribed
third day after the death of Paschal, four out of seven cardinal-bishops,
twenty-seven out of twenty-eight cardinal-priests, the eighteen
cardinal-deacons, a number of the inferior clergy, and some “of the senators
and consuls”, met together in the monastery known as the Palladium, the site of
which is now marked by the small Church of St. Sebastian alia Polveriera, or, as it is otherwise called, S. Maria in
Pallara (January 24, 1118). This building, which
was on the Palatine, not very far from the Arch of Titus, belonged to the Roman
Curia, and was regarded as a desirable meeting-place, because it was in the
midst of those monuments of antiquity, the Arch of Titus, with its adjoining Turris Chartularia, the Septizonium, and the rest which the Frangipani had
converted into fortresses. After some debate, the chancellor John, archdeacon
of S. Maria in Cosmedin, was unanimously elected Pope
4 (January 24, 1118).
The place in which the election had been held
was near the papal palace of John VII, at the foot of the Palatine, and among
the fortresses of a family which had long been faithful to the Holy See. It had
therefore been regarded as most safe, but it proved to be one of the worst
places in which it could have been held. No sooner was it made public that,
despite his unwillingness, John of Gaeta was Pope Gelasius II, than Cencius
Frangipane, whether acting in the interests of the Emperor Henry V, or, what is
more likely, actuated by some personal vindictive motives, collected a band of
his dependants and attacked the monastery. The papal guard was easily
overpowered, and the church doors were burst open. Sword in hand, the noble
ruffian dashed into the sacred building, seized the aged Pope by the throat,
threw him to the ground, assailed him with blows, gashed him with his spurs,
dragged him along by the hair, and threw him bound into one of his dungeons.
The other prelates who were present were treated in a similar manner. After
being robbed and maltreated in various ways, they were thrown on to horses
with their faces towards the animals’ tails.
But the triumphal hour of the Frangipani was
short. Under Peter, the prefect of the city, Pierleone,
Stephen the Norman, and other nobles, the militia of the twelve regions, of the
Trastevere and the Island, rushed to arms, swarmed
over the Capitol, and demanded the surrender of the Pope. The Frangipani, brave
where there was no danger, were terrified. Throwing themselves at the Pope’s
feet, they begged for forgiveness, obtained it, and lived to harry the Church
again.
No sooner was the Pope released than he was
mounted upon a white horse, and a crown was put upon his head. At the same time
the whole city crowned itself with garlands, while the Pope with the customary
solemn procession made his way by the Meta Sudans and
the Coliseum to the Lateran.
He whose election day was so fearfully
memorable belonged to the noble family of the Coniulo
of Gaeta, and was born certainly before the year 1058. When a child, he was
offered by his parents to Monte Cassino, and was there brought up under the
famous abbot Desiderius. Trained under able masters, he imbibed that culture
which manifested itself not only in the various Lives of saints which he
wrote whilst in the monastery, but in his work in the papal chancellary.
In that important department he was placed by Urban II, who brought him from his
ever-beloved home in the monastery which overlooks the Garigliano.
We have evidence of his work there certainly in 1089, and, according to some,
as early as August 23, 1088.
Urban’s object in selecting the learned and
eloquent young monk for a position in his chancellary
was that he might assist in bringing back to the documents which issued from it
some of the dignity of diction that used to distinguish them. From the fifth century,
from the days of St. Leo I the Great (440-461), whose letters served as a model
for them, the papal bulls were, till about the middle of the seventh century,
distinguished by a certain rhythm, known from St. Leo as the cursus leoninus. This rhythmic cursus was produced by
an ordered sequence of accented spondees and dactyls, giving respectively the cursus
tardus or velox.
Four and even more distinct varieties of style of diction were at one time
recognizable in the documents which proceeded from the Roman Curia (styli curiales). After the seventh century the literary
excellence of the papal epistles steadily deteriorated. But in connection with
the century of which Paschal II saw the opening years, it has been said that
then “the literature of the papal bulls had its rules, its vocabulary, its
grammar, and its masters, who, from the beginning of the twelfth century, drew up
their formularies, and took rank with the canonists”. The principal author of
this literary development was the chancellor of Urban II and Paschal II, John Comalo. With the last-named Pontiff he had very great
influence, for he stood by him in all his troubles, and, as Pandulf says, was
the prop of his old age. Among other ways, he used this influence in securing
the deserved promotion of different members of the school of young secretaries
whom he had trained. John was no doubt also instrumental in finally fixing the
minuscule as the alphabetic character in which the papal bulls were for the
future to be written. The penmanship of the documents which issued from the
papal chancellary varied at different times but the
definite employment of the minuscule was settled by the dictum of Urban II,
perhaps inspired by John of Gaeta, that there was need not only of drawing up
documents, but of drawing them up in such a style that the faithful could read
and comprehend them.
Put in charge, as archdeacon, of S. Maria in Cosmedin, he not only enriched and endowed that ancient
deaconry with the goods of this world, with gold and estates, but furnished it
with relics of the saints, and made it conspicuous for the works of piety there
practised
The news of the election as Pope of the
industrious and learned arch-chancellor, the fifth monk since Gregory VII, was
received with some misgivings by the bolder adherents of the principles of the
Gregorian reformation. The fact that he had with some the reputation of being a
friend of the emperor, and that he had throughout supported Paschal in all his
timid courses, caused it to be feared that he would at least be as irresolute
as his late master. When the fearless legate, Conon of Praeneste,
was informed that John of Gaeta had been elected, but against his will, he
exclaimed: “Did so great a man at such a moment of persecution and danger
hesitate to take the burden of the Papacy on his shoulders? ... Although, as
God knows, I have never aimed at the Papacy, had I been in Rome I would have
readily placed my shoulders beneath the burden, that I might the easier fight
the enemy of the Christian faith, who ceases not to attack the Church of
Christ. In time of peace, indeed, when often love of power fires ambition, no
man, even endowed with ability, should take that office to himself except under
compulsion, and no man lacking it should take it even under compulsion”.
The heroic exile, Conrad of Salzburg, on
hearing of the election of John of Gaeta, is reported to have said : “Among the
cardinals a worse choice could not have been made than that of John, but there
may be some virtue in Gelasius”. The arch-chancellor of the Roman Church,
Frederick, archbishop of Cologne, wrote about the beginning of March to a
number of bishops assembled in synod at Milan, that if a legitimate successor
had been given to Paschal, who would in all things follow in his footsteps and
in those of the Fathers, he would have the support of the whole Gregorian party
in Germany; “but if he show by his actions that he is a bishop not of God but
of a man, and of the excommunicated, no persuasion nor condemnation will make
us serve him”.
But even if there was no soundness in John Coniulo, there was much virtue in Gelasius. Many hailed his
accession because “he was personally acquainted with nearly all the churches of
the world, with their pastors and with their needs”. Besides, “with his name”,
says a contemporary, “he changed his character ... glorified the Church, and,
with Peter, was prepared to lay down his life for the liberty of the Church”.
As Gelasius was only a deacon, he awaited the
coming of the Lenten Ember days to be ordained priest at the customary time,
though meanwhile he ruled the Church as if he were already consecrated. Word of
all that had happened since the death of Paschal had been forwarded to Henry at
Verona “by the consuls”. Without loss of time he hurried to Rome with a small
force, and entered the city secretly on the night of Friday, March 1-2. The
emperor’s object in this hurried rush to the Eternal City was to wring
concessions from Gelasius in return for his recognizing him as Pope. But no
sooner was his arrival made known than Gelasius, though old and feeble, was
placed by his attendants on a horse, and hastily conveyed for the night from
the Lateran to the house of Bulgamini. It was
situated near the Church of S. Maria in Secundicherio,
i.e., S. Maria Egiziaca, the little pagan temple of
Fortuna Virilis near the Ponte Rotto,
which John VIII dedicated to our Lady in 872. Its proximity to the Tiber and to
the docks made it a suitable house of refuge.
On the Saturday Henry sent envoys to the Pope,
calling on him “to put an end to the struggle” between them, i.e., to grant him
the right of investiture. Unable to do this, and unwilling to be treated by the
emperor as Paschal had been, Gelasius went on board a galley that very night.
Accompanied by a number of cardinals and others in another galley, he made for
Porto, but “the heavens and the earth and well-nigh everything in them”, says
Pandulf, “conspired against them”. A terrible storm of hail and rain, with
thunder and lightning, lashed the river and the sea to such fury that the two
ships could hardly remain in safety in the harbour of Porto, much less put to
sea. To make matters worse, the Germans, who had got word of the flight of the
Pope and his followers, endeavoured to capture them, dead or alive. As they
were not in possession of boats fit to face the storm, they fired upon the
galleys with arrows, which Pandulf declares were poisoned, and threatened to
burn them with a sort of Greek fire, if the Pope were not surrendered. From
these horrors Gelasius and his party were only saved by night and the violence
of the storm.
As it was not safe to put to sea, the galleys
were run ashore at Ostia, and the papal company made for the castle of Ardea, some thirty miles away, which belonged to the
monastery of St. Paul. The infirm Pontiff was carried on the back of the
devoted cardinal, Hugh of Alatri, through the
blinding darkness and storm for many a weary mile.
When the daylight of Sunday (March 3) dawned,
the Germans, finding that the galleys had been abandoned, and that the Pope had
fled somewhere by land, retraced their steps. On Sunday night the poor Pope was
hurried back to the Tiber, again put on board, and, though the storm had not
quite subsided, was conveyed to Gaeta. There, after braving no little danger
from the angry sea, he arrived on Tuesday, and received a most enthusiastic
welcome from his fellow-citizens.
As soon as the news of his arrival at Gaeta
spread over south Italy, bishops, abbots, and barons flocked to him from all
parts. With the lesser barons came William, duke of Apulia, Robert, prince of
Capua, and others of the greater nobility, who renewed their oaths of fidelity
to him. Then, in the presence of an immense crowd of people, he was ordained
priest on the Saturday of Ember Week (March 9), and consecrated bishop by the
three cardinal-bishops, whose privilege it was to perform that act, on the
following day.
Meanwhile in Rome Henry’s advisers, finding
that Gelasius was as little likely to be bent to their views as his
predecessors, advised their master to provide himself with a Pope after his own
heart. The ambitious and excommunicated Maurice of Braga was promptly selected
for this mark of the emperor’s confidence. Accordingly, with the applause of
only a number of the old faction of the antipope Guibert, the Spanish bishop
was installed as Gregory VIII, perhaps on the very day on which Gelasius
himself was consecrated, but probably two days earlier.
Henry was induced to take this extreme step, as
unjustifiable as it was futile, owing to the failure of fresh negotiations into
which he had entered with Gelasius after his flight from Rome. Baffled by the
Pope’s escape from his hands, he dispatched envoys to Gaeta, who, by a
judicious use of threats and flattery, were to endeavour to induce him to return
to Rome. They were to assure the Pope that the emperor was anxious to confirm
his election, and to be present at his consecration; but they were at the same
time to make it plain that the election of an antipope would be the consequence
of his refusal to come back to the Eternal City. After expressing his
astonishment that the emperor, who had sent him word that he would come to Rome
at Easter, had entered it by night before the appointed time, Gelasius said
that he would, with his fellow-bishops, discuss the question in dispute between
the Church and the empire either at Milan or Cremona on the forthcoming feast
of St. Luke (October 18).
On this occasion the astute emperor had brought
with him to Rome allies of a fresh type, viz., professors of law, men who had
revived at Bologna the study of the Code Justinian, and of the legislation of
old Rome. Imbued with the ideas of the absolutism of the state therein
embodied, these men and their disciples were to continue to prove themselves
the most subtle agents of despotism, and the greatest enemies of personal
freedom. Of these new supporters of the emperor, the most famous was Master Irnerius or Guarnerius, the
father of the revival of the study of Roman law in the West, some of whose
successors or disciples were to maintain “that the simple letter or rescript of
the emperor has the force of law”, and that “the emperor was really the lord of
all property”. Obertus, archbishop of Milan, even
assured the emperor, Frederic I, Barbarossa, that “his will was law” (1158).
Master Irnerius accordingly explained to the people
the papal decrees about the election of Popes, and in consequence procured a
number of them to acclaim Maurice Bourdin as Pope Gregory VIII. But the prefect
of the city and a number of the Roman nobles sent to assure Gelasius that they
had had no hand in the promotion of the excommunicated archbishop, and that
they had no doubt that God would soon bring the designs of the wicked emperor
to naught.
Unmoved by the action of Henry and his quibbling
lawyers, Gelasius, the representative of what Gregorovius calls “the rock of
Peter, the immobile saxum”, lost no time in notifying
to the Catholic world what Henry had done, and in commending the firmness of
those Romans who had resisted the emperor’s bribes, threats, and cajoleries. He
also ordered the election of a new bishop for the See of Braga, and on Palm
Sunday (April 7) excommunicated Henry “and his idol” at Capua.
Henry, meanwhile, to render the neighbourhood
of Rome safer for his “idol”, laid siege to the papal fortress of Torrice (Turricula), some six
miles east of Frosinone, above the road to Capua. As the garrison offered a
stout and prolonged resistance, Gelasius was able to induce the Normans to come
to his help. Under Robert of Capua they began their march on Rome. This
movement so alarmed Henry that, hastily breaking up the siege of Torrice, he returned to the city, caused himself to be
crowned by Maurice (June 2), and then, leaving his puppet-pope in Rome, began
his return journey to Germany.
The attack of the Normans on Rome was only
partially successful; they drove the nobles who favoured the emperor across the
Tiber, but they did not succeed in expelling the antipope’s party altogether.
Although they marched home before they had completed their task, Gelasius
returned to Rome about the beginning of July. He had, however, to take up his
abode in the little Church of S. Maria in Secundocereo,
the old temple of Fortuna Virilis, in the midst of
the fortresses of his friends.
So little assured was his power in Rome that,
when he went to sing vespers in the Church of S. Prassede
(July 21), assailed by a fierce attack upon it was made by the Frangipani, in
the midst of whose strongholds it was. The attack was as fiercely resisted by
Stephen the Norman and the other friends of the Pope. In the midst of the
fight, Gelasius managed to escape from the church, and, still partially clad in
his sacred vestments, mounted a horse and fled out of the city towards St.
Paul’s outside-the-walls. When the Frangipani, among whom was the ungrateful
Cencius, finding that their prey had fled, drew off, search was then made for
the Pope by his friends. He was at length found in a field near St. Paul’s,
weary and sick at heart, broken in mind and body.
Rome, thus parcelled out between warring
factions, was more than either Pope or antipope could endure. Bourdin retired
to Sutri, leaving St. Peter’s in the hands of his
followers, and Gelasius determined to follow his example. “Let us fly from this
city of blood”, he said to those around him : “I would sooner have one emperor
than many. One wicked one would at least kill the more wicked, till the Emperor
of emperors come to bring him to justice”.
After nominating Peter, bishop of Porto, as his
vicar, and the gallant Stephen the Norman as standard-bearer of the Church,
Gelasius set out by sea for Pisa. In conferring on the new archbishop, Walter,
who had abjured the schismatical alliance of the
Emperor Henry, the forfeited spiritual and temporal privileges of the See of
Ravenna, he had already bestowed upon him the civil authority in those parts.
His intention in leaving Rome was to seek “the traditional friendship of the
king of the French, and the sympathy of their church”. John of Crema, Pierleone, and other cardinals, and a number of Roman
nobles accompanied the Pope.
The aged Pontiff was received with the greatest
honour not only by the Pisans themselves, but by crowds of people wh0 flocked
to the great maritime city from all parts of Tuscany. Profoundly moved by their
affectionate enthusiasm, Gelasius addressed them with an eloquence “which
Origen himself could scarcely have equalled”. Before he left the city in the
beginning of October, he had consecrated the new cathedral Church of St. Mary,
that glorious conception of Buschetto which had been
begun in 1064, and which was the fruit of booty taken from the Saracens. All in
bright marble, this noble building, with its arcades and its many columns,
still stands as it was meant to stand, an enduring thank-offering to God, and
as a lasting memorial of the patriotic people who caused it to be built. So
delighted was the Pope with what the Pisans had done for the honour of God and
for the cause of Christ against the Moslems, that he made their bishop a
metropolitan, and subjected to him the bishops of Corsica.
From Pisa he went by boat to Genoa, to
Marseilles, and then by the Petit Rhone to St. Giles, where he gave the famous
St. Norbert, the founder of the Premonstratensians, “permission to preach
wherever he wished”, and then to Maguelonne
(November). In France, where saints were offering up for him their last dying
prayers, and where appeals were waiting for his decision, the aged Pope, though
poverty-stricken and quite worn out by the hardships of his journey, was received
with every demonstration of respect and joy.
But if the good people of France could make a
rich man of a pauper, they could not renew the youth of the Pope, nor change
sickness into health. Still, the old and feeble Pontiff made a brave use of the
few weeks of life that were left him. He interviewed the envoys of Archbishop
Ralph; granted privileges to bishops and monasteries; took certain abbeys under
his protection; dedicated churches; settled disputes; showed a great interest
in the prosecution of the war against the Moors in Spain; held a synod at
Vienne (January 1119), and ordered the assembling of an important one for March
1119. Indeed, we are assured that he was forming plans for the carrying out of
many new and hitherto unheard-of schemes, when he was seized with his last
illness.
Feeling that his end was nigh, he gave orders
that he should be conveyed to Cluny. There he was received with greatest honour,
and treated with the tenderest care; and there, “as though he were St. Peter
himself”, he was visited by bishops and nobles. All who came to see him were
comforted and edified. At length, after he had provided as well as he could for
those loyal hearts who had followed him into exile, or whom he had left behind
him in Rome, feeling that the pleurisy which had seized him was about to end
his life, he called his cardinals and the monks about him. Causing himself to
be laid on the ground, he confessed his sins, and received the Body and Blood
of our Redeemer.
Among the bishops who had flocked to greet the
suffering Pontiff, was one of the great heroes of the giant struggle between
the Church and the empire, Cardinal Conon of Palestrina (Praeneste).
Singling him out from among the bishops around him, Gelasius expressed his wish
that he should be recognized as his successor. “God forbid, Holy Father, that
so great an honour and so heavy a burden should be laid upon me, unworthy and
miserable as I am. The Roman Church in our days needs to be defended against
persecution by temporal riches and influence. If you would take my advice, it
would be to elect the archbishop of Vienne, a man both religious and prudent,
and, moreover, possessed of worldly rank and power. By God’s help and the
merits of St. Peter he may be able to deliver the Roman Church, so long
oppressed and threatened, and to lead her to peace and victory”.
This disinterested counsel recommended itself
to all, and messengers were straightway dispatched to urge the archbishop to
hasten to the Pope’s death-bed. But Gelasius had made his last effort for the
Church, and, as a faithful monk expresses it, “in his own house its own master
rested in peace at Cluny” (January 29, 1119).
Amid general grief this “father of justice”,
who in his sufferings as Pope was an image of his Divine Master, if ever any
man was, was most honourably interred in the great church at Cluny. His tomb,
which was still to be seen in the eighteenth century, was situated “between the
cross and the altar, behind the choir”. What is often quoted as his epitaph is
really a poem by Peter of Poitiers, chancellor of the Church of Paris, who died
as late as 1205. It begins: “Vir gravis et sapiens actu verboque Joannes”,
and notes that John of Gaeta was a worthy second to Gelasius I, but does not
add to our knowledge of him who “slept his last sleep in the special harbour of
refuge of the Roman Church—Dormiit in proprio Romani
juris asylo”.
The number of terribly tragic episodes which
were crowded so thickly in the brief pontificate of Gelasius have justly earned
him the compassion of writers of every school of thought. “His pontificate”,
writes Gregorovius, “had only lasted a year and four days, and within this span
of time the sorrows of a life had been compressed. No sensitive man can look
unmoved by feelings of sympathy on the unfortunate figure of this last
sacrifice to the struggle for investiture”.
CALIXTUS II.
A.D. 1119-1124.
CONTEMPORARY SOVEREIGNS.
Emperor of Germany. Henry V, 1106-1125.
King of France. Louis VI, the Fat, 1108-1137.
King of England. Henry I, 1100-1135.
Emperor of the East. John Comnenus, 1118-1143.
I.
THE ELECTION OF GUY OF VIENNE,
AND HIS EARLY LIFE.
ACTING on the advice of Cardinal Conon, the
dying Gelasius had commended to those around his bedside Guy of Vienne as his
successor. Accordingly, when, after the Pope’s death, the archbishop reached
Cluny, he was at once, despite his reluctance, elected to fill the vacant see
by the cardinals and Romans who had accompanied Gelasius into France. His
disinclination to accept the burden of the Papacy was the more real because he
did not know whether the cardinals in Rome would confirm the action of their
brethren in France. Moreover, he was happy in his native Burgundy, and, on the
other hand, clearly understood the insolent turbulence of the Romans. Vienne,
he said, was not a rich church, but it was rich enough for him, and in the
whole of Burgundy there was scarcely anyone of name who was not his relation or
dependant. But the Roman Papacy, while more than honourable, was a most
grievous burden. “In Rome”, he continued, “I shall find as many princes as
cardinals, and as many masters as citizens”.
According to the authors of the history of
Compostela, no sooner did Guy’s numerous escort hear of his election as Pope
than, in a paroxysm of grief at the thought of losing their beloved pastor,
they burst open the monastery gates, rushed in, and, violently tearing from
their archbishop the cope, stole, and the other papal insignia, they cried out:
“Why are you plotting to deprive us and all France of so great a pastor? Let
the Romans choose another bishop; they shall not have ours”. After a time,
however, wiser counsels prevailed, and, realizing the honour which had come to
their city, they conducted their late archbishop through Lyons, where he had a
most splendid reception, back to Vienne. There he was solemnly installed and
crowned as Pope on Quinquagesima Sunday (February 9).
Though thus duly proclaimed Pope, and though,
as the well-informed history of the monastery of Maurigny
assures us, the cardinals who had accompanied Gelasius had arranged with those
in Rome that, if anything happened to the Pope in France, it should be lawful
for them to elect his successor, still, he was unwilling, like St. Leo IX, to
make much use of his new powers until his election had been confirmed at Rome.
The cardinals who had elected him had at once dispatched one of their number, Rocemanus, the cardinal-deacon of St. George in Velabro, to
the Eternal City in order that he might notify to the cardinals there what they
had done. Peter, cardinal-bishop of Porto, whom Gelasius had left as his vicar
in Rome, at once assembled the electors. They came together on the 1st of March
into the Church of St. John de insula, and, if we are to believe Pandulf, the
influential nobleman Pierleone worked as hard in Rome
for the confirmation of the election of Calixtus as his son, the cardinal, had
in France to secure him that election. At any rate, the election was confirmed
without any difficulty, and the cardinals in Rome lost no time in signifying
this not only to their brethren at Cluny, but to the Christian world at large.
The new Pope, they said, was prayed for in the liturgy of the Church, and his
name was inscribed in the documents which were issued from the papal chancellary. Even some of the followers of the antipope
sent in their adhesion to an election which they praised as “free from the
taint of simony and ambition”.
Guy of Vienne, who was thus acknowledged Pope
by the Catholic world, was born probably about the year 1060, and was a scion
of one of the best-connected houses in Christendom. His father was William,
surnamed the Great, or Tête-Hardie, sovereign count of Burgundy, who had been a
great ally of Gregory VII. His mother, Stephania (Étienette),
who brought to her husband the county of Vienne, had at least nine children.
Through this large number of brothers and sisters, or through his parents, Guy
was related to most of the great reigning families of Europe. He was cousin of
our own King Henry I and of the Emperor Henry V. His niece Adelaide was the
wife of King Louis VI of France; and in his letters he makes frequent mention
of his nephew Alfonso VII, king of Castile, and of his sister Clementia, wife of the count of Flanders. Of his three
brothers who died fighting for the cause of Christianity in the East, he often
speaks of Hugh, who was archbishop of Besançon; and though Clementia
seems to be the only one of his sisters whose name appears in his letters, the
others seem to have been equally illustrious, and through their distinguished
marriages brought him into close touch with many great families.
Guy’s character was apparently on a par with
his great family. His piety and energy, his love of justice, and his
open-handed generosity are the common theme of writers, both ancient and
modern.
Little or nothing is known of his early years.
Fable has, however, endeavoured to fill up this gap in our knowledge. In a
letter which is supposed to have been written by him, and which is prefixed to
a work, Liber de miraculis S. Jacobi, which is
also said to have been from his hand, he is made to say that, when he was a student,
he spent fourteen years in travelling through various lands, civilized and
uncivilized, collecting all that had been written about St. James the Apostle,
whom he had loved from his infancy. In the course of his wanderings, he
encountered perils from fire, from robbers, and from shipwreck, and though he
frequently lost all else that he had, the volume in which he had recorded what
he had learnt about the apostle was never taken from him. In a vision he was
ordered by the Son of God Himself to complete his account of the miracles of
St. James, and to punish all wicked pilgrims who were on their way to his
shrine at Compostela. Unfortunately, the letter which tells this pretty story
is as little authentic as the book of which it speaks.
It is more probable that the place of Guy’s
birth was the chateau of Quingey on the Loue, one of
the residences of the counts of Burgundy; that he was educated in the school of
the chapter of St. John at Besançon; that his abilities were the reason of his
being ordained priest before the age fixed by the canons, and that he soon rose
to honour among the clergy of Besançon.
At any rate it is certain that in due course he
was elected archbishop of Vienne, seemingly in 1088, and that he soon after
came to Rome and endeared himself to Urban II, who highly extolled his merits.
When he returned to his diocese, he devoted his influence and energy to the
ordering especially of its temporal well-being. Unfortunately, it is so often
true that the sight of the means to do ill deeds makes ill deeds done, and that
the powerful easily confound might and right. And as David first coveted and
then seized Naboth’s vineyard, so Guy of Vienne first coveted, then seized and
tried to keep by violence and fraud the churches of the pagus
Salmoracensis (Sermorens),
a county on the borders of the dioceses of Vienne and Grenoble, the capital of
which has now fallen to the low level of a suburb of Voiron
in the Isère.
When Guy became archbishop, it is acknowledged
that spiritual jurisdiction over the said district had for a hundred years and
more been in the hands of the bishops of Grenoble, suffragans of the
archbishops of Vienne, and that it was then exercised by St. Hugh, bishop of
Grenoble. Pretending, however, that one of his predecessors had indeed, in the
days of the Saracen trouble, entrusted the ecclesiastical government of the
locality to the bishop of Grenoble, but for a time only, Guy boldly claimed it.
But finding that his arguments were not likely to stand the searching
examination of other bishops before whom the case was brought, without more ado
he took violent possession of the county. Urban was now appealed to by Bishop Hugh,
but Guy circumvented an adverse decision of the Pope’s delegate, by secretly
sending to Rome, judiciously expending five hundred solidi among the members of
the Roman Curia, and obtaining from the Pope, who was ignorant of the judgment
of his legate, a confirmation of the privileges of his see, among which
jurisdiction over Sermorens had been inserted. Such a
confirmation was, of course, not worth the parchment on which it was engrossed,
and was promptly repudiated by Urban as soon as he learnt the truth. But Guy
would not give up what he had seized. Carried on by obstinate adherence to a
bad case, he stopped at nothing to gain his point. He connived, at least, at
the forging of false documents; he made promises and deliberately broke them;
set at naught the sentences of Pope and council; and went the length of putting
armed pressure on Urban when he came to France. Even when the punishments
inflicted upon him by the Pope caused him to yield, he seized the opportunity
furnished him by an illness of St. Hugh in Italy of again possessing himself of
the district in dispute. Urban died before he could vindicate his outraged
authority, and in the final settlement of the quarrel effected by Paschal II,
we do not see the triumph of the right. When that Pontiff was in Lyons in
January 1107, he caused the contending parties to agree to a division of the
county. Each bishop was to have eleven churches, and though some slight
compensation was given to St. Hugh for the loss of eleven churches, the
archbishop was to keep the right of ordaining the clergy and consecrating the
altars for the entire county. For the sake of peace and deference to the Pope
Hugh agreed to this compromise, the whole gain of which was on the side of his
opponent.
Even when Guy of Vienne became Pope Calixtus
II, he does not appear to have righted the wrong which his highhanded conduct
caused ultimately to be inflicted on the See of Grenoble. When, as Pope, he was
occupied not unnaturally with bestowing favours on his former see— granting its
occupant the right of having his cross carried before him throughout the whole
of his province, and of not being subject to any other legate but one direct
from the Pope (a pontificis latere)—he
seems to have denied to the See of Grenoble even the rights granted it by
Paschal. Fortunately, as Robert pertinently notes, there are more beautiful
pages in the life of Guy of Vienne.
If his embassy to England in 1101 as papal
legate was not a success, it was not his fault, and did not prevent his friend
Pope Paschal from making him his legate in France in succession to Hugh,
archbishop of Lyons (d. October 1106).
A year or two later, seemingly in 1109, he went
into Spain to be nominated along with Diego, bishop of Compostela, tutor to his
young nephew, Alfonso VII, whom his dying grandfather, Alfonso VI, named ruler
of Galicia. It was no doubt on this occasion that he first began to take that
interest in Compostela and its bishop which he showed so strongly when he
became Pope.
We have already spoken of the uncompromising
attitude which he took up towards the Emperor Henry V on the question of
investiture, and of the great influence which he thereby exercised on the stand
which Paschal at length made against the brute force of the German monarch. If
he did not shrink from excommunicating Henry himself, he did not, we may be
sure, hesitate to treat his creatures in the same way. A few years later, we
find him anathematizing our countryman, Henry, archdeacon of Winchester. He had
escorted into Germany Henry’s betrothed, Matilda, the daughter of Henry I of
England. For this, through her influence, he had been nominated bishop of Verdun
by the emperor. Guy insisted on his submission to the Pope, and had the
pleasure of seeing him offer it to Cardinal John of Crema, who acted in Paschal’s behalf.
It was from the midst of hard work for his
diocese, and useful labours for the Universal Church, that Guy of Vienne was
called to fill the Chair of Peter.
II.
CALIXTUS II IN FRANCE
Before leaving Vienne, where he had been crowned,
Calixtus adopted the advice which had been given him by Roman cardinals and
summoned a council to meet at Rheims in the following autumn, to deliberate as
to the best means of providing for the peace and freedom of the Church. He then
began a tour through France, which was to occupy him nearly a year, and which
was in every way productive of the greatest good. Apart from presiding at local
councils, conferring privileges, consecrating churches, and the performance of
other similar functions, his intention was by personal interviews to endeavour
to influence for good the emperor and the kings of France and England.
Meanwhile, he lost no time in exhorting the leaders of the church party in
Germany not to allow themselves to be contaminated by the tyrant’s abominable
investiture.
In the beginning of July Calixtus entered the
ancient city of Toulouse, and there, on the 8th or 9th, opened a council at
which were present a number of bishops not only from the south of France, but
from the north of Spain. This council is memorable not so much because it
condemned simony and the plundering of church property by the laity, as because
it anathematized doctrines which were to be propagated in the same locality by
the Albigensians with such terrible consequences, and
because we see it here authoritatively proclaimed that heretics, at least
heretics of a certain class, were to be coerced by the secular arm. The decree
on this subject ran as follows: “Those who, under the pretence of special
piety, repudiate the sacrament of the Lord’s Body and Blood, the baptism of
infants, the priesthood, and the other sacred orders in the Church, and the bonds
of legitimate matrimony, are expelled as heretics from the Church of God,
and must, along with their supporters, be coerced by the secular arm”.
In this appeal to the civil authorities to
punish heretics, it must be noted that they were teachers of doctrines not
merely opposed to the tenets of the Catholic Church, but to public morality. A
hundred years before the holding of this council of Toulouse, we find the
punishment recorded of certain heretics in this very district, who went by the name
of Manicheans, and who, we are assured, endeavoured to propagate their views in
secret. The heretics who were condemned by the third canon of the council of
Toulouse in 1119 were no doubt descendants of the so-called Manicheans of the
eleventh century, and as some of their dogmas were gravely dangerous to public
decency, the public authorities were very naturally called upon to check the propagation
of them. What steps, if any, were taken by the civil power do not appear. But
if any were taken, they were not very efficacious; and before Calixtus had been
dead a hundred years, the great Innocent III found it necessary to proclaim a
crusade against heretics who, under a different name, lived in the same
locality of Toulouse, and also promulgated teachings similar to those held by
the heretics there of the eleventh and twelfth centuries—teachings opposed not
only to the Catholic faith, but to the most fundamental principles of Christian
morality.
The Pope and the council of the year 1119 called
on the civil authority to do what the indignant voice of outraged Christendom
called upon the United States Government to do against the Mormons of Salt Lake
City, and what our own Government has had to do more than once in this
generation against propagators of theories of “free love”. Beliefs that pander
to man’s basest passions soon spread, but are rooted out with the greatest
difficulty.
After some well-filled months of work, Calixtus
reached Rheims on October 18.
The principal object for which the council of
Rheims had been summoned was the establishment of peace between the Church and
the empire. The emperor was the more ready to treat with the Pope because he
had found that his power in Germany, which he had thought so firm, was
tottering. While he had been in Italy, the indefatigable legate Conon had been
acting with his usual energy. His repeated excommunications of Henry had their
effect, and the princes of the empire had resolved to hold a diet, and there
force their emperor to come to terms with the Church, or else depose him. On
hearing of this determination, Henry was seized with fury, and, leaving his
wife and army in Italy, hurried back to Germany, where he endeavoured to carry
all before him with a high hand. The Truce of God was disregarded, and the whole
country again resounded with the din of battle. But Henry had miscalculated his
strength, and he was forced to consent to the holding of a diet at Tribur, near Mainz, for the redress of grievances. It met
on June 24, 1119, and was very numerously attended. Among others present at it
were legates of Pope Calixtus. Utterly disregarding the emperor’s creature,
Bourdin, the whole German hierarchy submitted to Calixtus,4and approved of the
holding of the synod at Rheims. Then, to promote peace within the empire, it
was decided that the emperor and the princes should mutually restore what each
party had annexed, and that the investiture question should be referred to the
consideration of the forthcoming council of Rheims.
Before the council assembled, two envoys of the
Pope, Pontius, abbot of Cluny, and the celebrated William of Champeaux, now bishop of Châlons, and once the master of
Abelard, met the emperor at Strasburg about the beginning of October. Asked by
Henry how he could come to terms with the Church without a loss of his power,
the bishop assured him that if he gave up investiture he would lose nothing.
“I”, he said, “have never received investiture from the king, and yet in the
matter of taxes, military service, and the like, I serve him as your bishops do
you. Give up investiture, restore the property of the Church and of those who
have laboured for her, and we will strive to put an end to this quarrel”. To
this the emperor replied that he would do what was required of him if the Pope
would do him justice, and see that what he and his had lost during the struggle
was restored to him. At a subsequent inter-view these mutual concessions were
agreed to in writing, and it was arranged that the Pope and the emperor should
meet at Mouzon on October 25 to ratify them formally.
The council, for which many had waited
anxiously in the hope that it meant peace, was opened at length on October 20.
The bishops who were to take part in it had gathered together from Italy and
Germany, France and Spain, Brittany and England, the islands of the Ocean, and
all the provinces of the West. Some of them had come in great state, as
Adalbert, archbishop of Mainz, who had an escort of five hundred knights. There
assembled, then, in the metropolitan Church of Our Lady, “for the love of our
Saviour”, and in obedience to the command of the Pope, fifteen archbishops,
over two hundred bishops, and as many abbots, making in all four hundred and
twenty-seven prelates.
The Pope’s throne was placed on a raised
platform facing the doors of the church, while the chairs of the bishops were
set opposite to it, and in front of the rood-loft. By the side of the Pope
stood the deacon Chrysogonus in his dalmatic, with a
volume of the canons in his hand, so that, as occasion required, he might cite
therefrom the decrees of the Fathers. The different metropolitans were seated in
the order of precedence, says Ordericus, “to which
they were entitled in virtue of ancient decrees of the Popes”.
After a sermon from the Pope, in which he
compared the Church in the world to the barque of the apostles on the Sea of
Galilee, the assembled Fathers were reminded both in Latin and in their mother
tongue of the ravages simony was effecting in the Church through the custom of
investiture.
After the investiture question had been clearly
laid before the assembly, the French king Louis, pale, tall, and stout, in
eloquent language denounced the conduct of our king, Henry I, for his treatment
of Robert of Normandy and his son, and that of Theobald of Blois for disturbing
his kingdom. Hildegarde, countess of Poitiers, came to plead for justice
against an adulterous husband, and others appeared to appeal against deeds of
violence.
At this point the Pope intervened. He delivered
a most touching exhortation to peace, which he called “the nurse of the good”,
and declared that he would do all he could to propagate it throughout the
Church, and that he enjoined “the observance of the Truce of God, as Pope Urban
of blessed memory decreed it at the council of Clermont”. He then suspended the
work of the synod for the time being, explaining that the emperor had invited
him to meet him at Mouzon to make peace, and forbidding
any of the Fathers to leave Rheims till he returned to finish with them the
work of the council. After that, he said, he would visit Henry of England, his
spiritual son and relative, and endeavour to induce him to refrain from hostile
enterprises.
On the second day after the opening of the
council (October 22), Calixtus left the city to traverse the rough seventy-five
miles of road which led through the Ardennes to Mouzon
on the Meuse, near Sedan. When they arrived at that small town they were not a
little alarmed to find the emperor in the neighbourhood with a large army,
which some of the cardinals, perhaps because terrified, estimated at thirty
thousand. Anything but reassured by this display of force, the Pope’s suite
insisted on his remaining in a castle, whilst his envoys went to interview the
emperor.
At first Henry pretended that he had never
promised to give up investiture; then he pressed for one delay after another,
while his followers by an aggressive exhibition of naked swords and spears endeavoured
to frighten the papal legates. Especially did they insist that it was
preposterous that the emperor should make his submission to the Pope barefoot
in the usual way. Though the envoys at once promised that they would try to
bring it about that his absolution should take place privately and with shod
feet, they saw that there was no real intention on Henry’s part of coming to
terms. Accordingly, when it transpired that he had requested that the Pope
should be detained in the castle in which he had taken refuge, no time was lost
in putting a safe distance between the emperor and his intended prey. The Pope
and his suite returned to Rheims far quicker than they had left it (October
26). For a day or two after his return Calixtus was so much upset by the
fatigues and fears from which he had suffered during the brief period of his
absence from Rheims, that he could not recommence the business of the synod.
However, its work was resumed on October 29, and various decrees were passed
against simony, the marriage of the clergy, and investiture.
At the same time, with great grief Calixtus
pronounced sentence of excommunication against the emperor, the enemy of God,
and against the antipope Bourdin and their supporters. And “by his apostolic
authority he absolved from their allegiance all those who had sworn fidelity to
the emperor till such times as he should repent, and make satisfaction to the
Church of God”.
Among the many people who came to Rheims to see
the Pope was St. Norbert, the founder of the Premonstratensian Order. But the
number of those who were anxious to interview Calixtus was so great, that,
after staying in the city for three days, Norbert wandered away from it in
despair. Fortunately, he was met and accosted by Bishop Bartholomew of Laon.
Finding that he wished to embrace a special form of religious life, for which
he was desirous of securing the papal approval, the bishop bade him return with
him, and promised to secure him an audience with the Pope. The bishop fulfilled
his promise, modestly suggesting to the Pope that it was not the proper thing
that he, the Father of the Church universal, should speak only with the rich,
and that the poor should be kept from him. After much speech with the Pope,
first at Rheims and then at Laon, Norbert secured from him the approval of the
order he proposed to found.
Knowing that the weighty and solemn condemnation
of the council of Rheims could not be ignored, and that, when the returning
bishops had spread word of it throughout every civilized country of Europe, it
could not fail to produce its desired effect, Calixtus meanwhile turned his
attention to other matters. Of his interview at Gisors
with Henry of England (November 1119), which resulted at least in peace between
England and France, we shall speak in another place. After spending a few more
months in the latter country, among other things confirming St. Norbert’s
right to preach everywhere, and, at the request of Abbot Stephen Harding, the
Cistercian rule, he at length set out for Italy (March 1120).
III.
CALIXTUS IN ITALY. DOWNFALL OF
THE ANTIPOPE
It was about March 25 when Calixtus, in company
with those members of the Roman Church who had been with him in France, and
escorted by the guard who had left Rome with Gelasius, appeared in Piedmont.
His safety was carefully watched over by the archbishop of Milan, and
everywhere, especially at Lucca and Pisa, was he received with the liveliest
demonstrations of joy. Everywhere was he greeted as the vicar of Christ. The
news of his triumphal progress soon reached Rome, and put fresh life into the
adherents of the Papacy. The basilica of St. Peter and its approaches were
still in the hands of the partisans of the antipope Bourdin, who was now
residing at Sutri. Pierleone
made another effort to get possession of it, and before Calixtus appeared in
sight of Rome, money had induced the followers of the antipope to give up their
chief stronghold in the Eternal City.
When Calixtus reached Rosella he was joined by Egino, abbot of S. Udalricus of
Augsburg, and his inseparable companion, the monk Udalscalcus.
He received them with the utmost cheerfulness, and bade them come with him and
witness the triumph of the Church. At a distance of three days’ journey from
Rome he was met by the militia of the city, with their banners and crosses; and
as he drew nearer to it, the whole population, men, women, and children, seemed
to come out to greet him. The children, who were carrying branches of trees,
were especially blessed by the Pontiff. As he passed along, “even the confused
plaudits of the Jews” were heard amidst the chants of the Latins and the
Greeks. Solemnly received by Peter, cardinal-bishop of Porto, the vicar of
Rome, and the other dignitaries of the Church and State, he was formally
crowned in St. Peter’s, and through the Sacred Way, as the route was called,
all gay with triumphal arches, gilding, and precious draperies, he slowly made
his way to the Lateran Palace. No such glorious sight had been seen in Rome
within the memory of any living man. At the Lateran the Pope received the
homage of Pierleone, of the prefect of Rome, of Leo
Frangipane, of Stephen the Norman, and Peter Colonna.
Calixtus did not remain long in Rome. Anxious
to strengthen his authority among the Normans in south Italy, he made his way
through the Campagna to Monte Cassino. After resting there for a few weeks, he
went to Benevento. His coming there had been long looked for, says Falco, and
the whole people, clergy and laity, went two miles out of the city to meet him.
The wealthy merchants of Amalfi had ornamented the city with hangings of silk
and expensive decorations of all sorts, and perfumed the whole air by burning
cinnamon and various aromatic herbs in censers of gold and silver. Sweet with
the odour of precious spices, the air was also pleasant with the sound of
tympana, tinkling cymbals and lyres. Four distinguished citizens held the
stirrups and reins of the Pope’s horse from the Leper’s Bridge to the Gate of
St. Lawrence; then four others held them from there to the residence of the
bishop, when their places in turn were taken by four of the judges, who led the
Pope to the palace (August 8). “Reader!” exclaims the local historian, full of
legitimate pride, “had you been present in the Pope's company and heard and
seen those lovely sounds and sights, you would have said chat never before had
a Pontiff been so joyously and triumphantly greeted by any other city”.
Before Calixtus left Benevento, he received the
feudal submission of a very great number of the inferior nobility, and of
Jordan II of Capua and of the poor-spirited Duke William I of Apulia. By a
banner which he placed in the hands of the latter, he confirmed him in all the
possessions which his predecessors from the days of Pope Nicholas II had
granted either to his grandfather, Robert Guiscard, or to his father, Duke
Roger. In his anxiety to promote the sacred cause of peace, Calixtus went from
one city to another. At Troia he was met by the
nobility, headed by Duke William, who, performing the office of esquire, led
the Pope’s horse to the cathedral. In this city and at Bari he devoted himself
to the establishment of the Truce of God.
Returning to Rome for the December ordinations,
he began forthwith to make preparations for securing the submission of the antipope,
who by his constant raids was rendering the roads to Rome quite unsafe.
With a large force of horse and foot he
appeared before Sutri about the middle of April.
Though Bourdin had written piteous letters for help to his patron, the Emperor
Henry, he had received nothing from him but florid letters. The papal troops
pushed the siege, and after enduring a blockade of eight days, the inhabitants
surrendered Maurice Bourdin, called Gregory VIII, into their hands.
No sooner was he in their power than, clothing
him in bleeding sheep-skins instead of the red mantle worn by the Popes, and
putting him on the camel which had carried the cooking utensils of the papal
camp-kitchen, with his face towards its tail, which was given him as reins,
they drove him with insults and mockeries towards Rome. “Accursed one”, they
cried, “what scandal have you caused! Woe to you for attempting to rend the
seamless robe of Christ, and to divide the unity of Catholic faith”. When this
disorderly cavalcade reached Rome, the tormentors of the unfortunate antipope,
treating him with a view of preventing others from imitating him, set him on a worthless
nag, and hurried him with fresh insults through the Trastevere.
How this cruel horse-play, to which the Romans were much addicted, might have
ended if the wretched man had remained in the hands of the mob, it is perhaps
not very difficult to conjecture. But at last he was with difficulty rescued
from their hands by Calixtus, and placed in safety, though in chains, in the Septizonium. It is much to be regretted that the Pope did
not take the antipope into his own custody the moment he surrendered. After
all, he was a most distinguished man : one, says our own historian, William of Malmesbury, “whom anyone might have highly reverenced, nay,
even almost have venerated, for his active and unwearied industry, had he not
been led to make himself conspicuous by so disgraceful an act” as setting
himself up against the true Pope. But it is quite possible that Calixtus
rescued him from the hands of the crowd as soon as he could.
He was not left long in the Septizonium.
Taken thence, he was confined first in one place and then another, and appears
to have died in the monastery of La Cava, near Salerno, after the month of
August 1137. In memory of the capture of Bourdin a picture of the Pope was
placed in one of the halls of the Lateran Palace, and beneath it this
inscription:—
Ecce Calixtus, honor patria, decus imperiale,
Nequam Burdinum damnat pacemque reformat.
Not long after the fall of the antipope,
Calixtus left Rome for some seven months to restore order in its neighbourhood,
and to work for peace in south Italy, both in the civil and in the
ecclesiastical order. The chief cause of trouble at this time in south Italy
was, on the one hand, the weakness of William, duke of Apulia, and on the other
the ambition or greed of his first cousin, Roger II, count of Sicily,
afterwards (1130) king of Italy (i.e. Sicily). He invaded Calabria,
taking advantage, according to Pandulf, of a journey of William to
Constantinople. When the duke left Italy, he entrusted his territory to the
care of the Pope, but no doubt lost no time in returning home as soon as he
heard of his cousin’s aggressive action. Calixtus did all he could, both by
legates and by personal interviews, to bring about peace between the two
cousins. Everything, however, went against the Pope. He lost at this moment by
death many of his most eminent and trusted cardinals, and he himself fell
dangerously ill. With Calixtus in this stricken condition, Count Roger was able
to work his will. He was in Calabria, and in Calabria he contrived to remain.
To illustrate the work for peace in the
ecclesiastical order performed by Calixtus in south Italy, we will select the
one instance of his relations with the Church of Tres Tabernae.
We do so because it serves also as a reminder of how largely under Greek
influence was still the southern portion of the peninsula, and as an indication
of the manner in which that influence was gradually being undermined.
Among the very many towns in the extreme south
of Italy destroyed by the Saracens in the course of the ninth and tenth
centuries was the populous but unwalled city of Trischines,
or Tres Tabernae, situated on the sea by the river
Alii in the toe of Italy. Such, however, of the inhabitants as escaped
built for themselves another town in a strong place on the higher part of the
same river, the present Taverna, some ten miles north of Catanzaro. The
episcopal succession, which had been transferred to the new city during the
Byzantine domination in those parts, was again broken owing to quarrels among
the local Norman nobles after the city had in due course come into the hands of
Robert Guiscard. At length, however, the virtuous Geoffrey, count of Catanzaro,
calling his feudatories around him, pointed out to them that it was not
becoming that they should have a bishopric in their midst but no bishop. “Let
us then send to Pope Gelasius and beg him to let us have a Latin bishop for our
See of Tres Tabernae. Since we are all Latins, we do
not want a Greek”. The envoys who were accordingly sent to the Pope found that
he had betaken himself to France. When they reached that country they had to
present their petition to Pope Calixtus, as Gelasius was no more.
Learning from the report of Cardinal Desiderius
that the resources of the bishopric were quite equal to the proper support of a
bishop, Calixtus accepted as the new incumbent the choice of the clergy and
people, viz. John, the capellanus of Catanzaro, himself consecrated him, and by
a bull of January 14, 1121, reconstituted the bishopric in his favour. But the
lords spiritual and temporal of the neighbourhood who had profited by the
recent lapse of the episcopal succession of Taverna to annex the property or
rights of its diocese were not all of them disposed to give up what they had
taken. Calixtus, therefore, had to issue a number of letters to Peter, bishop
of Squillace, and to Hugh the Red, the lord of Rocca Falluca, commanding them to give to John, bishop of Catanzaro,
the obedience or the property which was his due. In order to establish clearly
the limits of the diocese of Taverna or Catanzaro, inasmuch as they were
everywhere disputed, Calixtus ordered the bishops and abbots of Calabria to
meet him at Cotrone (January 1122). On the testimony
especially of a Greek priest who knew Latin, and whose father had been the
chief official of one of the bishops of Tres Tabernae,
it was definitely decreed that the diocese of Catanzaro should extend from the
river Lorda or Bordo(?) to
the Crocchio. With the citation of a second
admonitory letter of the Pope to Hugh the Red, the interesting chronicle of
Tres Tabernae comes to an abrupt close. Short though
it is, it serves to show by what steps Greek influence in south Italy was
gradually replaced by that of the Popes and of the Normans.
IV.
THE CONCORDAT OF WORMS AND THE
FIRST GENERAL COUNCIL OF THE LATERAN (1122-1123).
Meanwhile in Germany the march of events was
gradually wearing down the obstinacy of Henry. His solemn excommunication at
Rheims caused him to be abandoned by first one bishop and then another. An
attempt which he made to crush by force one of his principal opponents,
Adalbert, archbishop of Mainz, resulted in his being faced by half the empire
in arms (June 1121), and he had to agree to refer the matters in dispute to a
diet to be held at Wurzburg (September 1121). The downfall of his antipope
Bourdin still further weakened his position.
When the diet assembled in the presence of
legates of the Pope, it was agreed in the first instance to enforce the
observation of peace throughout the whole empire, and a general restitution of
the property which had been seized by both sides during the wars caused by the
quarrel between the Papacy and the Empire. Justice was to be administered to
all classes of the community, and thieves and robbers were to be put down. The
all-important question, however, of the relations between the Pope and the
emperor was put off for the consideration of a general council which was to be
summoned by the Pope in order that “what could not be decided by human wisdom
might be settled by the decision of the Holy Ghost”. Meanwhile it was laid down
as a general principle that the emperor was to obey the Apostolic See. But at
the same time all felt that it was far from easy to adjust the claims of the
Pope with the just rights of the emperor.
The hope, however, of the situation was a deep
and general feeling that it was not beyond the power of earnest and wise men to
settle the investiture question in such a manner as not to compromise the real
rights either of the Pope or of the emperor.
To this feeling expression was given in a
poetical dialogue between the Pope and the emperor, published by Hugo Metellus
of Toul (d.c. 1150) shortly before the
assembling of the diet of Worms. After indulging in mutual recriminations, and
arguing as to the signification of investiture by crosier and ring, and as to
the intent of the donation of Constantine, the two disputants concluded to put
an end to vain contentions, and to follow the decisions of the wise.
With a view to keeping Henry true to the
provisions of Wurzburg, Calixtus addressed him a letter which he sent by Azzo, bishop of Acqui, a mutual
relative. He selected Azzo in order to remind the
emperor that they were debtors one to another in a more strict sense than their
predecessors had been. “Besides the bond of apostolical paternity which links
us together, and besides the bond between us of the imperial dignity, which the
German kings receive solely through the Roman Pontiffs, we are bound to hear
and to love one another by our close blood relationship”. He exhorted him to
restore peace to the Church, “which desires not any of your rights for herself,
but, like a mother, gives freely of her own to all. ... You have soldiers on
your side, but the Church has to defend her the King of kings ... and her lords
and patrons are the Apostles Peter and Paul. Give up, then, what does not
belong to your province, that you may the better administer what does”.
The bishop of Spires and the abbot of Fulda had
been dispatched to Rome to inform the Pope of the decisions of the diet of
Wurzburg. With them, on their return to Germany, Calixtus sent on his behalf
Lambert, bishop of Ostia, and Cardinals Gregory and Saxo. As Henry had already
begun to violate the agreement of Wurzburg, it required all the exhortations of
the Pope, and all the exertions of his legates, and of the indefatigable
Adalbert of Mainz, to keep the peace, and to bring about an assembly of the great
ones of the empire at Worms. Lambert reminded the emperor of his declaration by
the envoys he had recently sent to Rome that he wanted peace if it could be
brought about consistently with the maintenance of his position and rights, and
he assured him it was the wish of the Pope that, maintaining due regard for
justice, the honour of the empire should in every way be augmented. He
therefore begged him to come “to the council of bishops” which was to be held
at Mainz.
In deference to the wishes of the emperor, who
not unnaturally preferred that the diet should be held in a city loyal to
himself, the place of its meeting was changed from Mainz to Worms. Accordingly,
in the month of September, there assembled in the latter city the great leaders
both of the Church and the imperial parties, along with the emperor himself,
and the papal legates; while on the banks of the Rhine outside the city an
enormous crowd of people took up their station. For more than a week the
important question of investiture, which had so long agitated the whole empire,
was debated with the greatest vehemence and prudence. At first the lay adherents
of the emperor were not disposed to yield anything. They alleged the length of
time the emperors had practised investiture by ring and crosier, and did not
hesitate to call their opponents destroyers of the empire. However, as time and
the debate went on, the more moderate views of those who were really anxious
for peace prevailed. God, “in whose hands are the hearts of kings, bent the
obstinacy of the emperor beneath the obedience of the Apostolic See”, and Henry
“gave up for the love of Christ what he had sworn never to part with as long as
his life should endure”.
After the emperor and his party had been
solemnly absolved from the censures of the Church, the terms of the agreement
which had been arrived at were read out before the assembled multitude. “I,
Calixtus”, began the famous document, “servant of the servants of God, do grant
to thee, beloved son Henry, by the grace of God august emperor of the Romans,
that the elections of the bishops and abbots of the German kingdom, who belong
to the kingdom, shall take place in thy presence, without simony and without
any violence; so that if any discord shall arise between the parties concerned,
thou, by the counsel or judgment of the metropolitan and the co-provincials,
mayest give consent and aid to the party which has the more right. The one
elected, moreover, without any exaction, may receive the regalia from thee
through the scepter (sceptrum),
and shall do unto thee for these what he rightfully should. But he who is
consecrated in the other parts of thy empire shall within six months, and
without any exaction, receive the regalia from thee through the sceptre, and
shall do unto thee for these what he rightfully should, excepting all things
which are known to belong to the Roman Church. Concerning matters, however, in
which thou dost make complaint to me, and dost demand aid—I, according to the
duty of my office, will furnish aid to thee. I give unto thee true peace, and
to all who are or have been on thy side in the time of this discord”.
Then followed the second part of the concordat:
“In the name of the holy and indivisible Trinity, I, Henry, by the grace of God
august emperor of the Romans, for the love of God, and of the Holy Roman
Church, and of our Lord Pope Calixtus, and for the healing of my soul, do remit
to God, and to the holy apostles of God, Peter and Paul, and to the Holy
Catholic Church, all investiture through ring and staff, and do grant that in
all the churches that are in my kingdom or empire there may be canonical
election and free consecration. All the possessions and regalia of St. Peter,
which, from the beginning of this discord unto this day, whether in the time of
my father or else in mine, have been abstracted and which I hold, I restore to
that same Holy Roman Church. As to those things, moreover, which I do not hold,
I will faithfully aid in their restoration. As to the possessions also of all
other churches and princes, and of all other lay and clerical persons which
have been lost in that war, according to the counsel of the princes, or
according to justice, I will restore the things that I hold, and of those
things which I do not hold I will faithfully aid in their restoration. And I
grant true peace to our Lord (dominus) Pope Calixtus, and to the Holy Roman
Church, and to all those who are or have been on its side. And in matters where
the Holy Roman Church shall demand aid I will grant it, and in matters
concerning which it shall make complaint to me I will duly grant it justice.
All these things have been done with the consent and counsel of the princes”.
Then follow the names of the principal clerical and lay chiefs of the empire,
and the official signature of Frederick, archbishop of Cologne, and
archchancellor.
After the reading of this momentous document,
Mass was said by Lambert of Ostia, at which the reconciliation of the emperor
to the Church was sealed “by his receiving the kiss of peace and the Holy Communion;
and all departed with infinite joy”. Thus, says our own chronicler, William of Malmesbury, “that inveterate controversy between the empire
and the priesthood concerning investiture, which for more than fifty years had
created commotions to such a degree that, when any favourer of this heresy was
cut off by disease or death, immediately, like the hydra’s heads, many sprouted
up afresh, this man by his diligence cut off, brought low, rooted out, or
plucked up, beating down the crest of German fierceness by the vigorous stroke
of the papal hatchet”.
The fifty years’ war between the Church and the
State regarding investitures was at length at an end. A fair compromise had
been found which gave to each party its due. On the one hand, the emperor, by
yielding the right to invest with the ring and crosier, gave up all pretence of
having any ecclesiastical jurisdiction, and the clergy, by doing homage for the
temporalities of their sees, professed that there was a temporal side to their
office which required acknowledgment. But it must be noted that what had been
gained by the Church was not of such far-reaching importance as might at first
appear. The emperor, it is true, conceded freedom of election and of
consecration, but he retained the right to be present at elections, and he was
granted a voice in disputed elections. Further, the German bishops, at least, had
to receive investiture of their temporalities by the scepter
before their consecration. With these rights guaranteed to him, it is clear
that the emperor could easily cause the elections to be free in nothing except
the name. Still, as he had had to give way in what appeared to be the principal
matter in dispute, viz., the ring and crosier, it was generally believed that a
striking victory had been gained by the Church, and its influence was thereby
greatly increased. Time, however, was to show that the position of the State
had not been completely carried by the Concordat of Worms.
As soon as Calixtus received official
information of the concordat which the genius of his legate, Lambert of Ostia,
had been chiefly instrumental in bringing out, he caused the agreement to be
everywhere published throughout the nations and peoples, and wrote to
congratulate Henry on his having at length submitted to the Church. He assured
him that his conduct and his relationship to him would make him cherish both
the empire and himself with an ever increasing affection. By their union they
must confer as much benefit on the faithful of Europe as their previous,
discord had brought injury.
In the letter just quoted Calixtus speaks of
the near approach of a council which he had summoned before the holding of the
diet of Worms, no doubt with the intention either of confirming what should be
done there, or of even more solemnly reaffirming the sentence passed
against Henry by the council of Rheims.
In the middle of Lent (March 18, 1123) was
opened the council which is reckoned the ninth ecumenical council, or the first
general council of the Lateran. We are told that most
of the prelates of Europe were present; nor need we doubt the assertion, since
it appears that some three hundred bishops and over six hundred abbots, nine
hundred and ninety-seven prelates in all, assisted at it. The most important
work of the council consisted in the confirming of the concordat of Worms, and
in the absolving of the emperor from the excommunication decreed against him by
the council of Rheims.
The council also issued a number of
disciplinary decrees. We have the usual ones against simony and the marriage of
the higher clergy. But now, for the first time, such marriages were declared
null and void. The ordinations held by the antipope Bourdin, after he had been
condemned by the Roman Church, were declared null and void. Those who had taken
the cross to fight the infidel in Palestine or in Spain, and had not yet
fulfilled their vows, were ordered to do so at once. With the consent of the
prefect, certain mal-practices of the Porticani, the
inhabitants of the quarter of the colonnade of St. Peter, were ordered to be
put an end to. And no doubt also with special reference to Rome it was
forbidden to fortify churches, and to snatch votive offerings from altars.
Utterers of false coin were declared excommunicated, as oppressors of the poor,
and disturbers of the public peace; and so also were those who put fresh
imposts and tolls on merchants. The observance of the Truce of God was still
further insisted on. Several canons restricted the parochial action of monks,
and defined more exactly their relations with their episcopal ordinaries.
Among the many causes that were brought to a
satisfactory termination by the council, some of which will be mentioned later,
was the canonization of Conrad, bishop of Constance. The
Not content that notice of the work of reform
begun by St. Leo IX, promoted most especially by Gregory VII, and fixed by
himself, should be committed only to parchment, Calixtus employed the art of
the time, such as it was, to commemorate the history of the fifty years’
struggle. Not only did he cause the text of the concordat to be painted on the
walls of a hall adjacent to his chapel of St. Nicholas of Bari, but built the
said chapel, perhaps on the site of the oratory of St. Cesarius,
in the vestiarium of the Lateran Palace, as a kind of
memorial of the great investiture quarrel. The decoration of the new chapel was
begun by Calixtus II, but seems to have been finished by the antipope Anacletus
II. That portion of it which occupied the apse showed two rows of figures. The
upper row filled the conch of the apse. Its centre was occupied by a crowned
figure of our Lady seated on a throne, grasping a cross with one hand, and with
the other holding her divine child on her lap. Close to her throne on each side
are angels with torches. Further away on her right is an erect figure of Pope
St. Sylvester, wearing a tiara, and on her left another erect figure of a Pope
without a tiara, which the existing copies of the original designate as St.
Anastasius I, but which seems to have been meant for St. Anacletus I. Grasping
the feet of our Lady are two kneeling Popes, both represented with square
nimbuses. The one on her right is Pope Calixtus II himself, and the one on her
left is, in our copies, like the erect Pope near him, set down as a Pope
Anastasius (viz. Anastasius IV., 1153-1154), but it is probably the antipope
Anacletus II. Immediately below our Lady is the inscription : “Presidet aethereis pia virgo Maria choreis—Above the
heavenly choirs sits Mary, pious maid”. And below the figures on her right and
left run the following lines, according to the copy made of them by Pietro
Sabino at the close of the fifteenth century:—
Calixtus first this temple wholly raised
Of Gallic noble blood, renowned far.
With joy Callistus, trusting papal power,
This work adorned, and many ways bedecked.
Now it is certain that there is something wrong
with the third verse as it now stands. Not only is the spelling Callistus
not the spelling of the twelfth century, but the laws of leonine verse require
that we should read “Calixtus letus” to rhyme with “fretus”. Other antiquaries who copied this inscription in
the beginning of the seventeenth century began the third line with “Verum
Anastasius”; and it is possible that the remains of letters exhibited by a MS.
preserved at Windsor may designate “Praesul
Anastasius”. But those readings are worse than that of Sabino. If, however, we suppose
the said verse begins: “Praesul Anacletus” (Pope
Anacletus), we shall not only have a proper rhyme for “fretus”,
but the four verses will harmonize among themselves, and the meaning they then
present will be found to square with what we know of the history of the time.
We should thus be told that the building was erected by Calixtus, but decorated
by Anacletus; and considering that Calixtus died about two years after the
signing of the concordat of Worms, it would seem only likely that there would not
be time for him both to build and to decorate his chapel in that interval. No
doubt then that, after his overthrow, the name of Anacletus was deleted, and
that the archaeologists of later ages made out what they could from such traces
of the letters of his name as were left. Below this inscription is a series of
nine upright figures. In the centre, immediately beneath our Lady, stands the
patron of the chapel, St. Nicholas of Bari. On his right are St. Leo I, Urban
II, Paschal II, and Gelasius II, and on his left are St. Gregory I, Alexander
II, St. Gregory VII, and Victor III.
Adjoining this chapel, Calixtus also built an
audience chamber, and adorned it also with frescoes relating to the investiture
quarrel, which were no doubt admired by his contemporaries, but which were
thought “most abominable” by the sixteenth and seventeenth century men who have
left us notices of them, and who had gazed upon the wondrous pictorial
creations of the Renaissance in all their glorious freshness. One of the
pictures showed Alexander II and his cardinals treading underfoot the antipope
Cadalous, with the inscription : “Regnat Alexander, Cadolus cadit et superatur”. Another depicted Guibert of Ravenna being
treated in the same way by Gregory VII, Victor III, and Urban II: “Gregorius,
Victor, Urbanus cathedram tenuerunt; Gibertus cum suis tandem destructi fuerunt”. A third represented Albert, Maginulf,
and Theodoric beneath the feet of Paschal; and a fourth Calixtus II triumphing
over Bourdin, as we have already noted.
Though it be granted that the provisions of the
concordat of Worms, especially in the matter of freedom of elections, were far
from being always observed by the emperors, they were nevertheless fraught with
the most important results in the Church and in the State. Whatever, hereafter,
might be the practice in individual cases, a canon of right and wrong had been
set up by general agreement which caused any interference with freedom of
election to be branded as an illegal act, and principles had been proclaimed
which at once put in the wrong anyone attempting to practice investiture.
The investiture quarrel and its
just termination spelt death to absolutism in the State as well as in the
Church. The successful manner in which the princes, those of Saxony especially,
had resisted the arbitrary will of the powerful Franconian emperors, rendered
it for ever impossible for the Teutonic Cesar to lord it over free Germans. The
independence of the various German races and the different local dynasties was secured,
and has in the main remained intact to this day. If the imperial authority
maintained German unity, the local governments were the safeguard of personal
freedom.
To the Church and the Papacy the concordat
brought many advantages. Freedom of election was guaranteed not only to the
members of the Church, but also to its Head. The emperor could never for the
future claim a right of interference with the election of a Pope, when it had
been declared illegal for him to interfere with the election of the most insignificant
abbot in the empire. By giving up investiture with the ring and crosier, the
emperors acknowledged that they had no share whatever in the imparting of that
spiritual power by which alone a bishop is constituted. Finally, the concordat brought
to the Church at large, and to the distracted Church in Germany in particular,
a measure of peace. For a brief space there was a much needed truce between the
empire and the Papacy, between the temporal and the spiritual powers. It is
indeed with these powers living side by side as it is with the higher and lower
natures of a man. There can never be enduring peace between them; and the
history of the Popes and the Hohenstaufens will show
the empire and the Papacy soon again in dire conflict.
Meanwhile, with the details and results of the
investiture quarrel now before his mind, there is no one, we venture to think,
who can call in question the conclusion of Montalembert:
“No man, therefore, who has the smallest knowledge of history can fail to see in
Rome the sanctuary of spiritual freedom, the bulwark of human dignity, and the
hearth where burned the inextinguishable flame of truth”. And if we allow that
“the time was approaching when abuses as well as benefits were to spring from
Rome”, we may boldly assert with a non-Catholic writer that “the papal
plenitude of dominion over the Western world . . . often degenerated into a
tyranny; but that tyranny, even when carried to its greatest excess, was free
from the most formidable of those dangers to religion which would have attended
the unqualified subjection of the Church and her discipline to secular
authority, against which Rome contended in the great battle of half a century,
which has been now described”.
Now assured of peace with the empire,
Calixtus employed the freedom thus acquired in making his authority
respected at Rome. “For the preservation of peace”, he ordered the complete
destruction of a number of towers in the city. One of them belonged to a certain
Domna Bona, seemingly “the wife of John Frangipane
(the son of Cencius), the sister of Stephen the Norman, and the mother of
Cencius II, Leo, and Robert, who figure in the histories of Gelasius II and
Honorius II”. The lawless barons of the Campagna also felt the weight of the
just hand of Calixtus. Over and over again he led troops against them. Among
other places, he took the fortresses of Maenza near Piperno, and Aquapuzza near Sermoneta, and decapitated their lordly owners for killing
his governors. So successful were the energetic operations of this “son of
peace”, as his biographer justly calls him, that in the city itself signs of
order were visible which had not been seen for centuries. No one, whether
citizen or stranger, dared to carry arms within its walls.
The last two years of the life of Calixtus were
taken up with these strenuous campaigns, with another visit to the south of
Italy, and with the execution of works for the beautifying or for the utility
of the city. The basilica of St. Peter was the object of his special care. To
protect it against the plundering habits of the lay nobility, or to save it
from assault, he bought a fortress in its neighbourhood, and besides bestowing
a number of endowments upon it, renewing its high altar and enriching it with
silver candelabra and other gifts, he never entered it, or said Mass within its
walls, without making it a present.
In his care for St. Peter’s he did not forget
those who lived round about its portico, i.e., those inhabitants of the Leonine
City who were known as the Porticani. By what the
Pope properly described as a bad custom, it had come to pass that, if any of
the Porticani died without a will, their
property was seized for the benefit of the prefect of the city. One result of
this was that people left the Leonine City, “so that it seemed almost a ruin”.
One of the prefects, Peter, had, in the presence of Calixtus, formally
renounced all claim to take advantage of this custom. The Pope had, therefore,
less difficulty in complying with the petitions of the Porticani,
and by a decree of July 1123 abolished the abuse for ever. The benefits
conferred by Calixtus on Rome and its neighbourhood in general, and on St.
Peter’s in particular, may be summed up in the words of William of Malmesbury: “In his time there were no snares laid for the traveller
in the neighbourhood of Rome; no assaults on him when he arrived within the
city. The offerings to St. Peter, which, through insolence, and for their
lusts, the powerful used to pillage, basely injuring such preceding Popes as
dared to complain, Calixtus brought back to their proper use: that is to say,
for the public service of the ruler of the Holy See”.
On the Alban Hills, between Marino and Grotta Ferrata, rises the stream of the Aqua Crabra. Turning round by Morrena,
it runs into the Anio, five miles from Rome. “But at
the Casale di Morrena, near
the railway junction, the greater part of its water is diverted and flows by a
subterranean canal, under the name of the Marrana or Morrena, to Rome, . . . and falls into the Tiber near the
Cloaca Maxima”. It enters the city at the ancient Porta Metrovia.
It was seemingly from this source that Calixtus carried water to the Porta Lateranensis or Asinaria, a gate
that was in use up to the year 1408. There he constructed a great basin for
watering horses and a number of water-mills; and there, too, all round about
where they could be benefited by the water, he planted both vines and fruit trees.
Unfortunately, however, just “when the days of
Augustus were returning”, Calixtus was seized with the Roman fever. After
receiving the last sacraments, “the father of peace, in company with peace
herself, left us all desolate” (December 13, 1124).
He was laid to rest in the south transept of
the Lateran basilica, near Paschal II, apparently on the day of his death,
viz., on the feast of St. Lucy (December 13).
A few months after the body of Calixtus was
carried to the basilica of the Lateran, that of his imperial opponent, Henry V,
was conveyed to the massive cathedral of Spires. The great drama of the
investiture quarrel closed, as a great tragedy always does, with the nearly
simultaneous deaths of those who took leading parts in it. With the childless
Henry V the great house of Franconia came to an end. But the duel between the
Papacy and the empire was not over. After a brief breathing space it was to be
violently resumed, and was to be continued for a hundred years (1150-1268) by
men greater even than those under whom it had been begun. The Hohenstaufens, Frederic I, Barbarossa, and Frederick II,
the wonder of the world, were to be faced and vanquished by Alexander III and
Innocent III, by Honorius III, by Gregory IX, and by Innocent IV.
V.
FRANCE, ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND
WALES, THE NORTH OF EUROPE
The best service rendered by Calixtus either to
France or England was the peace he brought about between the kings of the two
countries. Though Henry had his brother Robert, duke of Normandy, in safe keeping
in England, and had that unfortunate man’s duchy more or less firmly in his
grip, the cause of Robert was not lost. His son William had friends not only
among some of the barons of Normandy, but also in Louis of France. The young
man’s claims were taken up, and soon all Normandy was ringing with the clash of
arms, the burning of villages, and the groans of the poor.
After the council of Rheims, the Pope went to
meet Henry at Gisors (November 1119). The magnificent
king received him with the highest honours, threw himself at his feet, and paid
the greatest reverence to one who was not only the chief pastor of the universal
Church, but united to him by the ties of consanguinity. Calixtus, after
informing Henry that at the council of Rheims he had been occupied with trying
to promote a general peace, begged him to grant that peace to his enemies which
they sought through the Pope’s mediation, and to restore Normandy to Robert.
Pretending that Robert’s carelessness had already lost him the duchy before he
took it, Henry, while refusing to restore the duchy to him, showed himself
ready to come to terms with Louis of France, “because”, as he said, “I both
wish to give you satisfaction in all things, and desire a general peace”. Terms
were soon arranged between the two kings, and a peace was made, satisfactory not
only “to the people, who had suffered so much from frequent hostilities”, but
also, on various grounds, to the Pope. Peace between France and England was to
a lover of peace and the poor desirable in itself. It was also a step towards
peace between the Papacy and the empire, and in any case meant that one who was
friendly towards him would be more at liberty to help him.
But however amenable to the wishes of the Pope
Louis might be under ordinary circumstances, he soon grew impatient if anything
were done which tended in any way to limit his authority. The one aim of Louis
VI was to extend the power of the monarchy at its centre in the Île de France,
the Orléannais, the Vexin,
and Picardy. He began that systematic policy of crushing the local feudal nobility
which, steadily persevered in by his successors, was to render them the most
powerful absolute monarchs in Europe.
With the view of strengthening the
ecclesiastical unity of France, Calixtus had confirmed the jurisdiction of the
archbishop of Lyons over the metropolitans of Rouen, Tours, and Sens, which had
belonged to it of old (January 5, 1121). At this period the kingdom of
Burgundy, of which Lyons was the chief city, was dependent upon the empire. It
had been ceded to it in 1038 by Rudolf III. king of Burgundy. Louis, therefore,
was not at all satisfied that the metropolitan of Sens, whose jurisdiction
extended over a large portion of the royal domains, should be subject to the
influence of a primate who was sure to act in accordance with the interests of
the emperor. These views he made plain to the Pope, who in consequence
suspended his confirmation of the powers of the primate of Lyons, at least as
far as Sens was concerned, as there does not appear to have been any difficulty
with regard to the other metropolitans. This only partially satisfied Louis. He
desired the definite withdrawal of Sens from the jurisdiction of Lyons, and
wrote to the Pope to that effect. He told him he would sooner die, and have his
whole kingdom in a blaze, than tolerate the subjection of Sens to Lyons; and he
reminded him how true he had been to him, listening to neither the emperor’s
entreaties nor his promises. If, he continued, the ancient primatial rights of
Lyons be urged, the ancient exemption of the See of Sens can be equally put
forward.
What the immediate effect of this strong letter
was is not known; but the difficulty was not finally adjusted till the kingdom
of Burgundy became attached to the crown of France.
After Calixtus left that country, he continued
to exercise influence over it, as over other countries, by his legates. One of
the most distinguished of these was the famous Jew-looking, deformed Pierleone, cardinal of S. Maria in Trastevere,
a relative of the Pierleone who was afterwards the
antipope Anacletus II. He was the Pope’s envoy in France, Ireland, and England,
and his legatine power extended even to the Orkneys. Another was the
oft-mentioned Conon, bishop of Praeneste, who made
frequent journeys through France, often in company with the famous William of Champeaux, bishop of Châlons, the “column of the doctors”.
Both these men came into contact with the
greatly gifted but inordinately vain and selfish Abelard. William of Champeaux, when lecturing at the cathedral school of Paris,
had had his realistic doctrines upset by his pupil Abelard, and the cardinal had
to decide concerning his orthodoxy at the council of Soissons (spring 1121?).
He was accused of refining away altogether the distinctions between the Three
Persons of the Blessed Trinity, and was finally made to burn with his own hands
his Introductio in theologiam,
as teaching Sabellianism. It is unfortunate that the details of this synod are
only known to us from a letter of Abelard himself. However, Otto of Frising allows that he was condemned without a hearing, as
all knew his masterly skill in debate.
As Abelard does not appear to have had any
personal relations with Calixtus, we shall pass on to that Pontiff’s dealings
with England.
England.
Not only did our country at once acknowledge
Calixtus as the legitimate successor of St. Peter, but, as we have just
seen, the Anglo-Norman historian, Ordericus Vitalis,
put into the mouth of Henry I the declaration that he wished to give the Pope
satisfaction in all things. Yet, in fact, he would neither restore Normandy nor
liberty to his brother Robert at the Pope’s request, nor would he at first
allow the archbishop of York to return to England. Even when the joint
exertions of the Pope and of Thurstan himself secured the accomplishment of the
last-named point (1121), the question of the independence of the archdiocese of
York was far from being settled. The Pope indeed gave Thurstan the pallium,
confirmed his metropolitan rights, and ordered his suffragans, including the
bishops of Scotland, to obey him as their archbishop. But the archbishop of
Canterbury had no mind to give up the primacy, which he believed had been
conferred upon his see by Pope Gregory the Great, and which the monks of Canterbury
assured him had been confirmed by Pope after Pope, as papal privileges in their
archives showed. He induced1 the king to summon Thurstan (August 1121) to a
council to be held at Michaelmas.
He had previously written a very long
expostulatory letter to the Pope. He had pointed out that from the days of Pope
Gregory the Great the Apostolic See had been ever bestowing dignities on the
Church of Canterbury, as it in turn (except in the case of a “certain Stigand”) had ever offered obedience to the Apostolic See.
As a result, what Rome was to Canterbury, Canterbury became “to the whole of
Britain”. It was the ambition of the archbishops of York to overthrow the
primacy which Rome had given to Canterbury. Ralph then gives a summary of the
history of the Church in England drawn from the History of Bede, in which he
strove to prove that the primacy given by Gregory I to Canterbury had in fact
been exercised by that see up to the Norman Conquest. Reminding Calixtus that
the Popes engaged not to act against the decrees of their predecessors, he
declared that in exacting submission from the archbishop of York he was not
disobedient. Canterbury had received this homage “for many thousands of days,
not against the will of Peter, but with it and under it”. He did not, be said,
desire what was not his, but the Church of York had ever yielded canonical
subjection to the See of Canterbury. In conclusion, he besought the Pope, if he
thought it well, to send to England some of his cardinals and of the bishops of
France to examine his claims and those of York on the spot. “Again and again we
call on your majesty not in these last days to despise the good faith of the
Church of Canterbury and its devoted obedience towards the supreme and first
see of Blessed Peter”. No doubt the mission of Cardinal Pierleone
to England, which, as we have already noted, Henry contrived to render futile,
was in connection with this dispute about the primatial rights of Canterbury.
But if Henry could by force or guile prevent
the Pope from settling the difference in the way he wanted, he was unable to
work his own will in the matter. When in due course Thurstan presented himself
before him and his council at Michaelmas (1121), he simply assured the king
that if he had refused his profession to Canterbury “before he was formally
exempted from it by the Pope, he was less likely to submit afterwards”. He then
presented to the king the privilege of Pope Calixtus. That put an abrupt term
to the discussion, and Thurstan returned to his diocese.
The death of Ralph, which took place soon after
(October 20, 1122), did not improve the position of Thurstan. The king, too,
was annoyed that without his consent the archbishop had received the papal
summons to the Lateran council, and had signified his intention to obey it.
However, on this matter, Henry’s vexation was short-lived, and when, after a
stormy debate between the bishops on the one hand, and the nobles and the monks
of Canterbury on the other, the monks were practically forced to elect a secular
clerk, William of Corbeil, and not a monk, Henry turned to Thurstan for his
opinion on the man thus selected (February 1123). The archbishop praised both
his learning and his virtue, and signified his readiness to consecrate him. His
proffered services, however, were declined, unless he would consecrate him “as
primate of all England”.
This, needless to say, Thurstan would not do,
but pressed the king for leave to betake himself to the Lateran council. But
Henry requested him as a favour to wait till William was ready to go for the
pallium, promising to explain his absence to Rome. When the two archbishops
arrived in Rome, the election of William was regarded as uncanonical, and had
it not been for the generous intercession of Thurstan, it would have been
rejected by the Pope.
Though it was through the good-will of Thurstan
that William received his pallium from Calixtus, that fact did not prevent his
party from striving by argument, and, according to Hugh, even by bribery, to
obtain the withdrawal of the privilege in favour of Thurstan. But as there was
question of the examination of the ancient papal privileges which both parties
professed to have at home, the dispute between the rival archbishops could not
be then and there settled. Both William and Thurstan returned to England with
papal letters. William was recommended to his suffragans, and kindly treatment
was asked for Thurstan from the king and from William of Canterbury.
To settle this primacy quarrel and other
matters, Calixtus next year (1124) sent the cardinal-priest, John of Crema, as
his legate to England. But before John landed in England, Calixtus died. His successor,
Honorius II, in due course confirmed John’s mission, concerning which it must
suffice to note here that it left the primacy question precisely where it was
before.
Scotland.
The steady growth of the feeling of nationality
in Europe during this period was, as we have already seen, everywhere causing
difficulties in the matter of ecclesiastical jurisdiction. Rulers of one nation
were loth to have their subjects under the
ecclesiastical control of bishops who owned allegiance to a neighbouring and often
hostile potentate.
On the grounds of the letter of St. Gregory I
to St. Augustine, committing to him all the bishops of Britain, and the
jurisdiction over the south of Scotland formerly exercised by Northumbrian
bishops, the archbishop of York, somewhere about the year 1072, put forward a
claim to supremacy over the bishops of Scotland. His pretensions were favoured
by the Popes. Paschal II wrote to the bishops of Scotland, bidding them show
due obedience to the archbishop of York. But the Scottish bishops very
frequently called in question the claims of the Anglo-Norman prelate; and when,
to avoid vexatious delays, Turgot was consecrated by Thomas II of York bishop
of St. Andrews, “in which is the see of the primate of the whole nation of the
Scots”, it was on the understanding that the consecration was not to prejudge
the rights of either see.
With the favor he had
found in the eyes of Calixtus, Archbishop Thurstan had no difficulty in
obtaining his support against the efforts of the Scotch bishops to obtain
freedom. The bishops of Durham, the Orkneys, Glasgow, and Scotland, suffragans
of York, were ordered to obey its archbishop (1119). Sure, however, of the
support of King Alexander I, John, bishop of Glasgow, who had been consecrated
by Pope Paschal II, refused to acknowledge the jurisdiction of York. Letters of
Calixtus (1122) to the king, to John, and the other bishops of Scotland, were
ignored, as also were those of Honorius II, Innocent II, and Hadrian IV.
The question was complicated by claims of the
archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, and of the archbishop of Canterbury. The former
asserted his supremacy over the Orkneys in virtue of his succession from St.
Ansgar, the apostle of Scandinavia, and hence of Norway, to which those islands
belonged. The archbishop of Canterbury claimed to be the spiritual superior of
the Orkneys and of York alike. During the hundred years that the dispute lasted,
the different parties did not lose any opportunity of pushing their claims at
Rome. Hugh the Chantor tells us how Thurstan used one
against the recalcitrant John of Glasgow. Meeting him in Rome in 1125 in the
train of William of Corbeil, Thurstan complained to Honorius II of his failure
to comply with the commands of Paschal and Calixtus about rendering canonical
obedience to the See of York. John, however, pointed out to the Pope that he
had not been summoned to Rome on this matter, but had come as an envoy of the
king of Scotland, and contrived to arrange for the hearing of the case on
another occasion. At the same time, Honorius reminded him that "he had not
absolved him from the obligations which Pope Calixtus had imposed upon him.
The struggle of the Scottish kings and bishops
for immunity from the jurisdiction of an English bishop continued till the
reign of King William. This monarch contrived to free Scotland from all
dependence on England, whether spiritual or temporal. By gold he induced Richard
Coeur-de-Lion to renounce all pretensions to political supremacy over Scotland,
and by the bull, Cum universi, of March 13,
1188, which he procured from Clement III, the ecclesiastical controversy of a
century was settled. The Pope decreed that the Church in Scotland was
henceforth to be subject directly to the Holy See. Only the Pope or his legate
a latere was to pronounce any sentence of
interdict or excommunication in Scotland, and only a subject of the Scottish
kingdom or a special delegate from the Apostolic See was to exercise the
functions of legate in Scotland. Questions regarding the property of the Church
were to be settled within the kingdom, saving in the case of an appeal to Rome.
Clement’s bull, which was confirmed by Innocent III
(1208) and Honorius III (1218), definitely freed the Church in Scotland from
all further interference by the bishops of this country.
Wales.
The canonical supremacy which the archbishops
of York failed at this period to make good over the bishops of Scotland was
successfully established over the bishops of Wales by the archbishops of
Canterbury, supported, for political reasons, by the English kings. Urban,
though probably a Welshman, was not elected, like his predecessors, by the
Welsh princes, but by Norman nomination, and 'was consecrated to Llandaff at
Canterbury, A.D. 1107, and professed canonical obedience to that see. In the
first year of his reign (October 1119), Calixtus received a pitiful letter from
Bishop Urban. It was addressed “to the patron of all Christendom”, and was
dispatched in the name “of the Church of God and ours, which is under God and
you”. It reminded the Pope that the Church of Llandaff, founded in honour of
St. Peter, had been the head of all the other churches of Wales, but was now, by
the invasion of the Normans and other causes, fallen from its former high
state. Assuring Calixtus that during the days both of the British Church and of
the Anglo-Saxon Church, the bishops of Llandaff had been faithful both to the
archbishop of Canterbury and to the king of the English, he begged his
protection against the oppressors of his see, amongst whom he had to include
the bishops of Hereford and St. David’s.
Hearkening to Urban’s petition, Calixtus took
his see under the protection of the Apostolic See, and addressed letters in his
favour to the archbishop of Canterbury and others. But Urban’s troubles were not
to be settled so easily. His episcopal opponents were not to be put down. In
1128 he went to Rome in person to seek the aid of Honorius II. This he
obtained, and King Henry caused the apostolic mandates in his favour to be put
into execution. Still the numerous letters of Honorius on his behalf, and the
exertions of the king of England in his interests, did not secure Urban’s position.
Counter-claims were set up against him by the See of St. David. Nevertheless,
Innocent II took up the cause of the struggling bishop, which was only ended by
his death in 1134, on the occasion of a fresh journey to Rome to prosecute his
appeal.
Northern Europe.
The Popes of the early part of the twelfth
century were in frequent communication even with the most northerly countries
of Europe. We have records to show that not only did distinguished Icelanders
go on pilgrimage to Rome at this period, but that they received from Paschal
the first bishop of their northern See of Holar in Sheltiedale. We are indebted to the entertaining saga of
this prelate (Joans Saga) for very
interesting information regarding his career. The first important statement it
contains is to the effect that “the holy John was married and had two wives,
and the first one lived but a short time”. This good man was selected by Bishop
Gizor of the southern Icelandic See of Skalholt to be the first incumbent of the northern see. He
chose him “with the consent of all the clerks and laymen in the Northlander’s
Quarter”. He was then sent for consecration to Archbishop Auzor,
archbishop of Lund, to whom Paschal had sent the pallium. “But”, exclaimed Auzor, “because thou hast had two wives, I dare not
consecrate thee without the leave of the Pope”. He accordingly sent him to the
Pope, who received him very well; and as he found everything about him in the
letters of Gizor and the archbishop quite
satisfactory,—at least so says the saga—he gave Auzor
permission to consecrate him. This was duly done on April 29, 1106. John proved
a truly great bishop, establishing schools and bringing to Iceland masters from
Denmark and France.
As it is certain that his second wife, Waldis, was alive when he was a bishop, it would be
interesting to know on what understanding Paschal agreed to his consecration.
Passing over the letter of Calixtus to the
brothers Eystein and Sigurd Jorsalfarer,
kings of Norway, admonishing them to accept, as bishop of the Orkneys, Ralph,
who had been consecrated by the archbishop of York, we may turn our attention
to the Church in Denmark.
Already, before the year 1042, Peter’s Pence
had been paid by the Danes. But in Denmark, as in other countries, it was often
collected carelessly or fraudulently. Pope Paschal, therefore, in 1104, found
it necessary to write to Auzor, the new archbishop of
Lund, of whom mention has just been made, and to the other bishops throughout
the country, and to exhort them to exert themselves in order that the Roman
Church might not be further defrauded of its rights.
The act of Pope Paschal which erected the See
of Lund into an independent archbishopric, of which Auzor
was the first incumbent, was not likely to pass unchallenged. His bull, which
had made the Danish bishop a metropolitan (1104), had at once curtailed the
powers of the archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen and abridged the influence of the
emperor. Henry took the first opportunity of making representations on the
subject to Pope Calixtus; and in 1123 Adalbert, the new canonically elected
archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, went to Rome in person to ask for the pallium,
and to plead for the rights of his see. He contended that he ought not to
suffer for the negligence of his two predecessors, through whose fault it was
that the pallium had been lost to his see, and transferred to that of the
Danes. His eloquence and the wishes of the emperor prevailed. The pallium, with
spiritual jurisdiction over the whole far North, was restored to him. But
though a cardinal was sent back with him to instruct the Danish bishops to obey
him as their metropolitan, and though to please his protector, the Emperor
Lothaire II, Innocent II confirmed the decision of Calixtus II in behalf of
Hamburg-Bremen (1133), Paschal’s settlement remained
undisturbed.
VI.
POLAND, POMERANIA, HUNGARY AND
DALMATIA.
In the midst of all their difficulties with the
empire, Paschal II and Calixtus II found time to attend to the spiritual needs
of the still semi-barbarous and but half-Christian states of the east of Europe.
At the beginning of the twelfth century the
destinies of the duchy of Poland were guided in a masterful way by the brave
and successful but rather cruel Duke Boleslas III, Wrymouth (1102-1139). To
establish more firmly the ducal succession in the legitimate branch of the
family against the pretensions of his half-brother Sbigniew,
he wished to espouse Zbslava, the daughter of Sviatopolk, prince of Kief (1093-1113). As, however, she
was a near relative of his, it was necessary to apply to Rome for a
dispensation. The case was managed for the duke by Baldwin, bishop of Cracow,
who had been consecrated by Pope Paschal II himself. Putting forward the pleas
of political necessity, and the crude ideas of the Christian faith yet in vogue
among all classes, he obtained the Pope’s permission for the wedding. “And so”,
adds the contemporary Polish chronicle assigned to Martinus
Gallus, “the authority of the Roman See, as is said, sanctioned this marriage
exceptionally and out of merciful consideration, but not in accordance with
either canon law or custom” (1103).
Soon after the marriage of Boleslas with the
Russian princess, if not indeed in connection with it, there appeared in Poland
as legate of the Pope, Walo (or Galo), bishop of Beauvais.
His mission was to push on in Poland the work of ecclesiastical reform which
the Popes were endeavouring to effect in every country in Europe. He was
received with great honour by the warlike duke. A council was held, and with
the support of Boleslas, two unworthy bishops were deposed. And then, to use
the significant words of the chronicler, “the apostolic envoy gave his blessing
and returned to Rome, while the bellicose Boleslas went to fight his enemies”.
Among these were the Slavonic Pomeranians, who,
to the north of Poland, dwelt on the shores of the Baltic, between the Oder and
the Vistula. Fierce and brave, skilful fighters both on sea and land,
accustomed to live by plunder, they were naturally a thorn in the side of a
people at once Christian and somewhat more civilized than themselves. The
continual wars between them and the more or less Christian Poles were a great
hindrance to the spread of Christianity among them, as was also the fact that
the Poles, when victorious, endeavoured to impose it upon them by force. But
the Pomeranians were hard to conquer; and no sooner were they subdued than they
rose again, and threw off at once not only the dominion of the Poles, but their
religion, which they had never regarded as anything else but a badge of their
subjection to the Poles.
In the wry-mouthed Boleslas III, however, they
found one who was determined to be their master. After he had, with some degree
of firmness, fixed his yoke on their necks, he essayed to plant his religion in
their hearts. But for some time he could not get preachers, for the savage
manners of his new subjects, and the tragic way in which they had terminated
previous attempts to convert them, daunted the bravest. At length, about the
year 1122, there arrived at his court a Spaniard, Bernard by name, who had been
consecrated bishop at Rome. There he heard that the Pomeranians were still
pagans, and there he was seized with the desire of “either incorporating them
in the Catholic Church by faith, or of there laying
down his life for Christ by martyrdom”.
When Boleslas found that, despite what he had
to tell him of the difficulties and dangers of the work he had set before
himself to do, Bernard was still resolved to go forward, he was overjoyed, and
supplied him both with an interpreter and a guide. Arrived at Julin (now Wollin) in humble
guise, poorly clad and barefoot, he began to preach with great earnestness the
Word of God. But the rude Pomeranians had peculiar ideas of their own.
Unable to judge except by outward appearances,
they were not impressed by the exterior of the holy missionary. Consequently,
when he told them that he was a servant of the true God, the Maker of heaven
and earth, they turned on him indignantly. “How”, they asked, “can it be that
you are the messenger of the supreme Deity. He is glorious and all-rich, but
you are miserable-looking and so poor that you have not shoes to your feet. ...
The great God would never have sent us so abject an envoy. If He had wished our
conversion He would have sent us a becoming minister, one worthy of His power”.
They would neither hear him nor be provoked to put him to death; they simply sent
him out of their country, after nearly killing him for his attempt to provoke
them.
Having heard of his noble but futile effort to
convert the Pomeranians, Otho, the famous bishop of Bamberg, made it a point of
conversing with him on his missionary journey. As he listened to Bernard’s
account, he was fired with the idea of renewing the Spaniard’s attempt. “If you
go amongst these heathens, then”, said the missioner,
“you must go in great state, with abundance of everything; and if they give you
any presents, you must give them greater, that they may see you have come to
preach the Gospel to them not for gain, but for the love of God. Have courage,
then; you will bring many into the true land of promise”.
Otho determined to follow the advice which
experience dictated; but first, realizing that all that is done in a house
without the knowledge and consent of the master of the house is to no purpose,
he understood that so arduous a work was not to be undertaken without the
authority of the Roman Pontiff. He accordingly dispatched competent envoys to
the apostolic Pope Calixtus, and obtained from him permission to preach the
Gospel in Pomerania.
Of the work of this apostle of the Pomeranians
it is not our task to speak. Suffice it to note that a previous residence in
Poland had fitted him for the work of converting them, by giving him an
opportunity of becoming conversant with their customs and language, and that in
his two journeys (1124 and 1127), making much of his authority as envoy of Pope
Calixtus, he met with great success. He returned to his diocese after
overcoming and destroying the idols. Among the other idols which he destroyed was
one that had been held in the very greatest esteem by the people, viz. the golden
three-headed god Triglav. But its triple head he kept
for himself, and then sent it to Pope Honorius II, with whose blessing he had
undertaken his second journey, as an earnest of the conversion of the Slavs :
“that is, to show to the apostolic Pope and the Universal Church what, in
obedience to them, he had been able to accomplish among those peoples by
rooting up and planting, by building and destroying.
The good bishop continued to watch over the new
church till his death. He provided for its ecclesiastical organization by
establishing a bishopric at Julin (Wollin) in 1139, which was placed by Innocent II under the
immediate jurisdiction of the Holy See (1140). After the destruction of Julin by the Danes, the see was transferred to Camin (1188).
Whilst Boleslas III of Poland was in constant,
if generally in hostile, touch with Hungary, the records of the age that have
reached us do not appear to connect in any way closely with it the name of his
correspondent, Pope Calixtus II. In all the letters of that Pontiff which have
reached us the name of Hungary would seem only to figure once. When renewing
the privileges of the famous monastery of St. Giles in Provence, he confirmed
to it the abbey of St. Giles in Sümeg, to the
north-west of Lake Balaton in Hungary, an abbey which paid the Holy See a tax
of two ounces of gold.
The immediate predecessors, however, of
Calixtus were often in communication with the rulers of Hungary. In 1095 one of
Hungary’s greater sovereigns came to the throne in the person of Coloman the Bookish, or the Learned. Fortunately for
Hungary, he was not merely a student; he was a soldier also. And he needed his
military capacity to control the first undisciplined hordes of Crusaders, the
leadership of whom had been offered to his predecessor St. Ladislaus, and who
roamed through his territories to the Holy Land, plundering and fighting as
they went along.
The character of Coloman,
and the civilizing influence exercised over the rising kingdom of Hungary by
the supreme Pontiffs, may, to some extent, be gauged from the following letter
addressed by Urban II (1096) to its sovereign, “the magnificent king of the
Hungarians”. After assuring him that he had heard of his accession with joy, he
added : “Our venerable son Odilo, abbot of St. Giles,
has told me that, besides the secular knowledge in which you excel, you are
well trained in sacred learning, and, what is of the first importance in a
ruler, that you are skilled in canon law. Hence it becomes you, dearest son in
Christ, to have a greater care of your own salvation and that of the people
entrusted to you than your predecessors have had. To whom much is given, from
him will much be required”. He bade him raise the glorious standard of the
Catholic faith which will bring victory and glory to his banners, and, mindful
of the example of King Stephen, “the first of his race to receive the faith
from the Holy Roman and Apostolic Church”, to obey SS. Peter and Paul, and to
show their Church that submissive honour which was tendered to it by him. He
went on to warn his correspondent against the antipope Guibert, and to show him
to what misery Henry, the author of the existing schismatical
troubles, had been reduced. “His most intimate friends, men whom he loved as
his own soul, nay, even his own son, have turned against him on account of his
abominations, and separated themselves from him”. In the midst of the stormy
times caused by Henry and his antipope, the kingdom of Hungary has for a while,
continued the Pope, ceased to obey the Apostolic See, but, as he believed,
divine providence had raised Coloman to the throne to
take away the veil from the eyes of his people. In conclusion, the Pope begged
him to let him know whether he would agree to papal legates being sent to him.
Negotiations between Coloman
and the Holy See must have proceeded satisfactorily; for at the council
of Guastalla (1106) he gave up the right of
investiture, “as he wished to submit to the divine law, and, according to it,
to obey the Pope”. Moreover, at a council which was held at Gran (Strigonium) in 1114, many decrees were passed in the spirit
of the Gregorian reform. The king was to be asked to ordain that judgments
concerning clerics and all church matters should be based upon canon law, and
while, “from regard to human weakness”, such priests as had been married before
receiving orders might keep their wives, those who had not married before being
ordained were forbidden to marry. Simony was also forbidden, and a great many
decrees were passed which were eminently calculated to advance the interests of
public morality, order, and decency.
King Coloman, as we
have said, was a soldier as well as a scholar, and used his military talents in
consolidating the conquests which his predecessors had made towards the West.
Not only did he so subdue Croatia that it henceforth remained incorporated in
the Hungarian empire, but, despite the opposition of the Venetians, rendered
himself master of much the greater part of Dalmatia. In 1102 he had been
crowned king of Croatia and Dalmatia at Belgrade (Zaravecchia),
and by 1105 he was really, as he styled himself, king of Hungary, Dalmatia, and
Croatia.
After he had established his power in Dalmatia
(1105), Coloman would appear to have been suspicious
of any influence, even of a spiritual order, exercised therein other than his
own. From a strikingly vigorous letter of Pope Paschal to an archbishop of
Spalato, it seems that the Hungarian monarch had objected to that prelate’s
taking the usual oath of obedience tendered to the Pope by bishops when they
received the pallium from Rome.
“You have informed me, dearest brother”, wrote
the Pope, probably to Archbishop Manasses, about
1113, “that the king and his nobles are astonished that the pallium was offered
you by my envoys on condition that you took the oath which I had prescribed. By
the pallium, my brother, is conceded the fullness of pontifical authority,
seeing that, in accordance with the custom of the Apostolic See and the
universal Church, metropolitans may not consecrate bishops nor hold synods
until they have received it. The same persons would, I suppose, be astonished
at the action of our Lord Jesus Christ. For in entrusting the care of all His
sheep to Simon Peter, He did so on a condition, when He said, 'Simon, son of
John, lovest thou me? ... Feed my sheep' (St. John
xxi. 17). If the Lord of our consciences imposed such a condition ... how dare
we entrust so great a number of Christ’s sheep to brothers whose consciences we
cannot see, to such as we do not even know by
intercourse, and of whose love we are entirely ignorant?
“It is further urged that all oath-taking has
been forbidden by our Lord in the Gospel, and that such an oath is not found to
have been prescribed by the apostles or by the councils. But what is that which
our Lord went on to say— that which is over and above these (viz., yea and no)
is of evil (S. Matthew v. 37)? That we should exact this over and above is
required of us by that very evil. Is it not an evil to withdraw from the unity
of the Church, and from the obedience of the Apostolic See? Did not your
predecessors condemn a bishop without the knowledge of the Roman Pontiff? By
what canons or councils is this permitted? Why must I speak of episcopal
translations, which among you are made without reference to the apostolic
authority, but by the command of the king. To put an end to these and other
such evils is this oath required”.
After explaining in what sense the Gospel forbids
oath-taking, he continued:—
“They contend that this oath is not found to
have been ordered by councils, as though any councils could impose laws on the
Roman Church, since all councils have been held by the authority of the Roman
Church, and from it have received all their authority. And, what is more, that
authority has been plainly acknowledged in their decrees ... Does, then, the
fact, that the king and his magnates have decreed that you should decline the
aforesaid oath, seem to you to be a decision of the Gospel? Does not the honour
of our primacy seem of the first importance? Have you forgotten the word of our
Lord that the disciple is not above his master (S. Matthew x. 24)? Was it to
the king of Hungary that our Lord said : And thou, being once converted,
confirm thy brethren (S. Luke XXII. 32)? ... They may raise up their heel
against the Apostolic See, but the privilege given to it by God when it was
said to Peter, 'Thou art Peter' etc., cannot be diminished. ... Since, then,
you ask of the Apostolic See the insignia of your dignity which are taken from
the body of Blessed Peter, it is fitting that you should show due signs of
subjection to it”. He concludes this remarkable assertion of papal rights by
assuring the Dalmatian archbishop that he is requiring nothing from him which
he does not exact from the metropolitans of the Saxons, Danes, and all the
others.
According to Gams, Manasses
was expelled from his see, but whether it was because he obeyed the mandates of
the Apostolic See, I am wholly unable to state.
One of the maritime cities of Dalmatia which Coloman failed to subdue was the famous republic of Ragusa.
In Antivari. 1120 (September 28) we find Calixtus confirming the metropolitan
rights of its archbishop over “upper Dalmatia or Dioclea”.
A little sooner or a little later (1119-1124),
he confirmed the metropolitical rights of its rival Albanian city, Antivari,
over northern Albania, and sent the pallium to its incumbent Elias, and
acknowledged his right to have his cross carried before him in Sclavonia and Dalmatia.
VII.
THE EAST AND SPAIN.
CALIXTUS would not have been a true heir of the
ideas of Gregory VII if he had failed to make an effort to reunite the Greek
and Latin Churches. In 1122 his envoys made their way to Constantinople with
letters for the Greek emperor, John II, Comnenus, on the subject of reunion.
The Pope’s letters are lost, but the emperor’s reply to them is extant. John
II, known as Kalojoannes, John the Good, was a pious,
brave, and virtuous monarch, and indeed by some historians is even accounted
“the most amiable character that ever occupied the Byzantine throne”. Both his
own disposition and reflection on the weak and corrupt condition of the empire
must have made John welcome the idea of a closer union with the vigorous West.
He accordingly wrote to Calixtus, warmly approving of his efforts, and sent an
envoy with instructions as to the mode of proceeding in effecting the reunion.
He acknowledged that what the Pope had written about the unity of the churches
was in accord with the truth, and eminently worthy of his great prudence. “For
what”, he asked, “ought to be of greater moment to us Christians than the true
unity of the Church? This rich fruit of peace must be earnestly sought by all
who obey the laws of God”. The wicked are ever striving to rend the divine
seamless vesture, but our Saviour will bring their designs to naught.
Expressing his approval of what the Pope had done, the emperor went on to say
that he had instructed his envoy to inform him as to the manner in which the
reunion should be brought about. Finally, after pleading his Eastern campaigns
as the cause of his delay in replying to the Pope’s overtures, he concluded
with an enumeration of the presents, vestments, etc., which he had forwarded to
him (June 1124).
The negotiations so auspiciously opened under
Calixtus were continued under Honorius II. Unfortunately, most of the
correspondence which passed between Rome and Constantinople has been lost.
However, there has been preserved another letter “to the most holy Pope” from
“John, faithful to God in Christ, Emperor, born in the purple, King, High,
Mighty. Augustus, Autocrator of the Romans,
Comnenus”. This document would seem to show that things were moving favourably
for Rome, as the emperor’s letter opens with an acknowledgment of the division
of the two powers, the spiritual and the temporal. The former he declared was
given by Christ to His disciples, and by it His ministers bind and loose in
accordance with the divine will; the latter, the power of this world, is
Caesar’s. United, these two powers work for man’s good; divided, they cause the
greatest mischief to him. What he has learnt from the Pope’s envoys has shown
him that he is striving to make the two powers work in harmony. He himself
thinks with the Pope, who must complete what he has so well begun. If God would
only bring about the corporate reunion of the churches, it would be the
greatest benefit of the divine goodness.
From whatever reason, whether because the
emperor was insincere, or the difficulties in his way were insurmountable,
negotiations did not lead to much else except further negotiations. The Emperor
Lothaire took up the task of furthering the projected reunion (1135-1136), and
his envoy Anselm, bishop of Havelberg, held a theological
discussion with the archbishop of Nicomedia (April 10, 1136). In the following
year, when Honorius was in Calabria, there reached him an embassy from the
Greek emperor, to which was attached “a certain philosopher”, one of those
fanatics who have ever ruined all attempts to reunite the Greeks and the
Latins. We are told that in the very presence of Lothaire he began “to snap and
to bark at the Holy Roman and Apostolic See and the whole Western Church,
declaring that the Roman Pontiff was an emperor and not a bishop, that the
Roman clergy were all excommunicated and were Azymites”. The Westerns, he
continued, take after their bishops, who, like Pope Innocent II, distribute
money, collect soldiers, and clothe themselves in purple. To attempt to discuss
reunion with men of the stamp of this philosopher was out of the question; and
it may be assumed that the opposition which Innocent II had to offer to John’s
designs on Antioch and other towns in the hands of the Crusaders brought to a
close another abortive and little known attempt to reunite the Greek and Latin
Churches (1138).
A thirteenth-century chronicle, while giving an
account, more or less mythical, of one “John, patriarch of the Indies”,
furnishes a curious addition to our knowledge of this attempt at reunion.
Professing to quote “from the records of Calixtus”, its author relates that in
the fourth year of that Pope there arrived at Constantinople, after a journey
of a whole year, the patriarch of that part of India which forms the end of the
world (1122). He had come, we are told, for the pallium, and he found at the
imperial city envoys whom “Calixtus had sent to promote concord between the
Romans and the Greek emperor”. Learning from these envoys “that Rome was the
head of the whole world”, he returned with them to Rome. There, in reply to
questions put to him by the Pope and his cardinals, he said that the name of
the city whence he had come was Ulna (or Ultima, according to another reading),
“the capital and ruling city of the whole kingdom of India”. It had a
circumference of four days’ journey, and two Roman chariots could run abreast
along its walls, which were so high that even the towers of Rome looked small
beside them. Phison, one of the rivers of paradise,
flowed through it, most limpid, and yielding gold and gems. It was inhabited by
most faithful Christian people. Not far from the city, on a mountain surrounded
by a deep lake, was the mother church of St. Thomas the Apostle. Round the lake
were monasteries of the twelve apostles. In the ciborium of the church, in a
silver case (concha), suspended by silver chains, was the body of the apostle
whole and entire, which, according to John, did the most extraordinary things
during Mass.
Though there is much in this narrative that is
mythical and that foreshadows the wondrous stories of Prester John which were
to excite the interest of Europe from this century to the close of the Middle
Ages, it has incidentally preserved a grain of truth.
Following in the footsteps of Paschal II,
Calixtus not only confirmed the order of the Hospitallers, but endeavoured, by
recommending their agent to the faithful Eur0pe, t0 obtain financial assistance
for them.
But he took a greater interest in the new
kingdom of Jerusalem than that of confirming an Order which was indeed to be of
the greatest advantage to it, or of sending the pallium to its patriarch, Guarmond.
In the beginning of his reign Baldwin II, king
of Jerusalem (1118-1131), gained some successes in different parts of his
dominions; but in 1123 he was taken prisoner by Balak,
the sultan of Aleppo. The provisional government then set up, despite the display
of a great deal of energy on the part of its chief, Count Eustace of Sidon,
feeling that its hold on Syria was becoming very feeble, turned to the West
(1123). They sent envoys both to Pope Calixtus and to the doge of Venice, Domenigo Michieli, begging their
immediate help. Unable himself to offer any effectual assistance, the Pope at
once sent ambassadors to Venice to implore the Venetians by their common faith
to go to the help of the distressed Christians of the East. Moved by the joint
appeal of the Latin princes and of the Pope, the doge, “ a thorough Catholic,
bold, and full of days”, and the chief nobility of Venice “with great devotion”
took the cross. Under the banner of Blessed Peter, which Calixtus had sent
them, the Venetians sailed to the East with a great fleet. Their arrival
changed the situation. Moslem fleets were destroyed, and the famous city of
Tyre captured (July 1124), of which the Venetians, who were always on the
look-out for commercial advantages, received one-third. From this time till the
death of Baldwin II, the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem enjoyed a large measure
both of peace and prosperity.
Spain.
With his mind full of the needs of the
Christians in the East, Calixtus could not forget those others nearer home who
were fighting against the same terrible foes of Christianity. Like Paschal, he
gave the same encouragement to those who fought against the infidels in Spain
as to those who made the Holy Land their battle-ground against them. Addressing
an encyclical to all bishops, kings, counts, and princes, and to all the
faithful, he reminded them of the sufferings of the Spanish Church at the hands
of the unbeliever, and exhorted them to hasten to the aid of their afflicted
brethren. In virtue of his apostolic authority and of the power given him by
God, he granted the same remission of sins to the Spanish Crusaders as to the
defenders of the Church in the East. Because he could not be with the crusading
army in person, as he wished, he sent it, he said, as his legate, the archbishop
of Tarragona, to whom all questions were to be referred.
The sympathetic appeals of the Popes in its
behalf greatly helped the Spanish cause. Pope Gelasius had shown such interest
in it that, when he went to France, it was rumoured that he intended to proceed
to Spain.
Calixtus was not behind his immediate
predecessors in his interest in both the spiritual and temporal concerns of the
Peninsula. He showed himself a great friend to the famous bishop, Diego Gelmirez, who utilized the good-will of the Pope to get for
his See of Compostela the metropolitical privileges which had formerly belonged
to the See of Braga or of Merida. His great plea was that the bishops of all
the other apostolic sees were metropolitans. And, if we are to believe the
authors of the Historia Compostellana, the
chief means he used to obtain the recognition of his plea was gold, at times
sacrilegiously taken from the shrine of St. James, and shamelessly distributed
among the members of the Roman Curia.
But before Gelmirez
could obtain the archbishopric which he panted, he had many obstacles to
overcome, The primate of Spain, Bernard, archbishop of Toledo and of papal
legate, not unnaturally opposed his ambitious aspirations. Alfonso I, king of
Aragon, was his bitter enemy on account of the support which he gave to his
wife Urraca, from whom he was separated, and endeavoured to prevent any of his
agents from finding their way to the Popes when they were in France. Hence we
are told of Diego’s envoys, even bishops, journeying through Aragon as beggars,
and feigning to be afflicted with blindness, lameness, or paralysis. In fine,
many of the Roman Curia were not too favourably disposed towards him. Their
opposition is ascribed by Diego’s purblind admirers to unsatisfied avarice, or
to an absurd fear which the bishop’s panegyrists imagined them to have lest
Compostela should become the rival of Rome itself.
Calixtus II was not a man to be frightened by a
bogey, and he made no difficulty in bestowing on Diego the archiepiscopal
dignity which had belonged to Merida before it fell under the yoke of the
Moors. He extended his jurisdiction at the same time over the ancient archdiocese
of Braga, and named him his legate in those two provinces (1120). This he did,
he said, in honour of St. James the Apostle, and at the request of his nephew,
King Alfonso, of Pontius, abbot of Cluny, and of Diego’s envoy.
In the following year Calixtus had again to
interfere in behalf of Gelmirez. The fact of his
having once been the guardian of her outraged son, Alfonso VII, and of his
being the favoured friend of Calixtus II, her son’s uncle, would seem to have
enraged the unnatural Queen Urraca against him. She contrived to seize him, and
cast him into prison, and to possess herself of the goods of his church (1121).
Calixtus at once wrote to his legate in Spain, Boso, the cardinal-priest of St. Anastasia, to bid the
queen, under pain of excommunication, to set Gelmirez
free, and to restore the goods of his church within forty days. The primate and
the bishops of Spain were also instructed to take action in the matter. The
Pope’s letter to his nephew, Alfonso VII, is interesting from many points of
view. It is addressed “to his most dear nephew, the powerful and glorious king
of the Spains”. “We give thanks to Almighty God, and
to our Lord Jesus Christ, who, according to His great mercy, has freed us from
a grievous sickness, and restored us to health. We also thank Him because all
the faithful in the city and without it over all Italy are humbly submissive to
our will. But there is one thing which makes us most sad, and that is, that
your mother, Queen Urraca, has laid sacrilegious hands on our venerable brother
Diego, the archbishop of Compostela”. The king is urged, by the memory of all
that his former guardian did for him when a boy, to work for his release.
Before this letter could have reached him, the
young king had already taken the part of the archbishop. The people rose, and
the queen was soon compelled to restore Gelmirez to
freedom. But she had an insatiable thirst for money, and longed to keep the
property (castella) of the Blessed James. This was the principal cause
of the discord between her and the archbishop, and why most of Galicia was
devastated by the scourge of war. It does not, however, come as a surprise when
the panegyrists of the pertinacious archbishop inform us that it was not long
before he recovered the property of his see.
Though, as we have seen, Calixtus bestowed
great favours on Gelmirez, and stood by him to the
last, he found that it was necessary to keep his ambition within confirmed. And
so, whilst reserving to him primatial rights over the provinces of Merida and
Braga, he confirmed Bernard as primate of the rest of Spain, and reasserted the
privileges of Segovia and Braga.
He never ceased to take a close interest in the
affairs of the Spanish Church. Not long before he died he sent to Spain a
special legate a latere in the person of
Cardinal Deusdedit, of whom let it suffice here to
state that he was well received by Gelmirez, and
became his devoted friend. Distracted as Spain was at this period by civil and
foreign war, the organization of ecclesiastical jurisdiction which the Popes
were able to effect during it must have had a most beneficial effect on the
consolidation of Spanish power. But however this may be, their action certainly
increased their own influence in the Peninsula. The admirers of Gelmirez who wrote the Historia Compostellana
assure us in one place that, up to his time, his predecessors had all been as
much fighting men as bishops, so much so that they had been described as at
once crosiers and catapults. And when he became bishop “almost all Spain was
rude and illiterate. None of the Spanish bishops at that time paid any due
regard or obedience to our Mother, the Holy Roman Church. Spain received the
law of Toledo, not that of Rome. But after King Alfonso (VI) of happy memory
imposed the Roman law and Roman customs on Spain, then, as though the cloud of
ignorance had been rolled away, the glory of Holy Church began to shine in
Spain”.
When due allowance has been made for the
intention of his panegyrists to glorify Gelmirez, and
to proclaim his loyalty to the See of Rome, enough remains of their evidence to
show that about his time papal influence grew considerably in Spain.
The ambition of Gelmirez
and his relations with the Apostolic See did not expire in 1124; but in that
year died Pope Calixtus, “distinguished for his prudence, humility, chastity,
and other moral virtues”. Further notices of the intercourse with Rome of the
bishop of Compostela will be found in the biographies of Honorius II and
Innocent II.
From what we have now written of the Life of
Calixtus, the friend of the rich and the father of the poor, and from the
unanimous verdict of his contemporaries, we cannot be far wide of the truth if
we conclude with Ordericus that he “was the brightest
light and the best model of virtues the Church had in our times”.
HONORIUS II
A.D. 1124-1130.
CONTEMPORARY SOVEREIGNS.
Emperors of the West: Henry V, 1106-1125.
Lothaire II, 1125-1138.
Emperor of the East: John II (Comnenus),
1118-1143.
King of France : Louis VI, 1108-1137.
King of England : Henry I, 1100-1135.
I.
LAMBERT OF FIAGNANO BECOMES
POPE HONORIUS II
On the death of Calixtus the illegal
interference of the nobility in papal elections again caused trouble. At the
moment the two great factions in Rome were the Frangipani and the Pierleoni, the one dominating the region of the Colisseum, with their Turris Chartularia, and the other the district in the
neighbourhood of the Island of the Tiber, with their fortress-theatre of
Marcellus. By general agreement it was arranged between all the cardinals of
the curia and the nobility, that, in accordance with the canons, the election
of a successor to Calixtus should not take place till the third day after his
death. On the side of the nobles the chief agents were the rich and powerful Pierleone I (fii28), the father of Cardinal Pierleone II, who was to be the antipope Anacletus, and Leo
Frangipane, the brother of Robert Frangipane and of that Cencius who had
outraged Gelasius II. Leo Frangipane had promoted this understanding in order
that he might have the longer time to work for the election of the
distinguished diplomatist of the concordat of Worms, Cardinal Lambert, bishop
of Ostia. Feeling that a difficult task was in front of him, as it was widely
known that the people desired Saxo, cardinal of St. Stephen’s, Leo feigned to
have the same desire himself. At the same time, to secure the presence of all
the cardinals, and so ensure a valid election, he is credited with having
privately approached the chaplains of every one of the cardinals on the evening
before the election day, and with having arranged with each of them, unknown to
the others, to vest his master on the morrow with the red robe distinctive of
the Popes beneath his black cloak. This he did in the expectation that,
trusting to his influence to be elected Pope, each of the cardinals, unmindful
of what had happened at the election of Gelasius, would boldly come to the
place of election and would look to him.
Whatever truth there may be in this story, told
by an ardent partisan of the antipope Anacletus, then Cardinal Pierleone (II) of St. Calixtus’, two of whose subsequent
adherents were prominent at this election, all the cardinals did assemble in
the chapel of the monastery of St. Pancratius. This
was attached to the south of the Lateran basilica, where now stands the
charming cloister of the canons.
After some discussion, on the motion of
Jonathan, cardinal-deacon of SS. Cosmas and Damian, neither Cardinal Saxo nor
Lambert was chosen, but the cardinal-priest of St. Anastasia’s, Theobald Buccapecu. He was duly clothed with the red cope, and took
the name of Celestine. But suddenly, whilst the Te
Deum was being chanted, and Cardinal Lambert was singing as loud as the
rest, Robert Frangipane and his party raised the cry of “Lambert Pope!”. He was
at once hurried off, seated in the so-called symae (sigmae) in front of the Church of St. Sylvester, and
proclaimed Pope under the name of Honorius II (December 15).
It is fairly obvious that the party of Pierleone, by their unexpected nomination of Theobald,
disconcerted the mass of the cardinals, and they were hurried into proclaiming
a candidate they did not want. For, as soon as the name of Lambert was put
forward, “the more respectable portion” of them, the sanior
pars of the election decree of Nicholas II, immediately adhered to him.
For some days Rome was the scene of the
greatest disorder and tumult; but at length Celestine’s supporters abandoned
him, and Lambert was left in undisputed possession of the See of Peter.
However, as he was “a lover of justice”, he was not satisfied with the manner
of his election, and, before all the cardinals, resigned his position, and laid
aside his mitre and mantle.
His resignation was accepted, but he was
immediately re-elected. All kissed his feet, and acknowledged him “as their
bishop and universal Pope” (Sunday, December 21, 1124).
According to Pandulf, Lambert was born of
humble parentage in the county of Bologna, more exactly, in the insignificant
hamlet of Fiagnano, near Imola. When we next hear of
him, he is archdeacon of Bologna. His reputation for learning at length attracted
the notice of the Pope, and he entered the service of Urban II, possibly as a
member of the papal chancellary. He was made
cardinal-bishop of Ostia by Paschal II (1117), and throughout all the trying
pontificate of his successor, Gelasius II, remained by his side. He shared his
exile in France and stood near him at his death.
But it was under Calixtus II that his
remarkable abilities especially showed themselves. After he had crowned him, he
accompanied him in his journeys through France, assisted him in his first
dealings with the Emperor Henry V, and was sent with full powers into Germany
to conduct those negotiations which terminated in the concordat of Worms
(1122). In that most important undertaking he displayed a happy combination of
firmness and tact. His letters are still extant in which he makes known to the
emperor his presence in Germany, informs the bishops of France and Germany that
he has come by the authority of our lord the Pope and the whole Roman Church to
make peace between that Church and the empire, and summons them all to appear
at the council he had ordered to assemble at Mainz on September 8, 1122. So
little was he prepared to brook any want of obedience to his orders on the part
of the bishops, that it required the mediation of Adalbert, archbishop of
Mainz, to save St. Otho of Bamberg from being suspended by him for his
non-attendance at one of his synods.
It seems to have been generally acknowledged at
the time that, whatever measure of peace accrued to the Church and the empire
by the concordat of Worms was, to a very large extent, due to the exertions of
Lambert of Ostia. Hence Ekkehard assures us that the news of his election as
Pope was everywhere received with approval.
In the midst of all his distracting public occupations
for the good of the Church and the State, Lambert would seem even in his old
age to have found some few quiet hours during which he could devote himself to
his studies. For when he was elected Pope, men knew at least of his learning,
if of nothing else about him. Oderisius, abbot of
Monte Cassino, on being asked who the new Pope was, replied that he had no
knowledge whatever of his parentage, but that he was certain of one thing
regarding him. “He is”, said he, “full of literature from his head to his
feet”.
He had, of course, not become thus learned
without effort. He was a hard worker, and wished all those around him to work
as he did. He began his labours in the very early morning, and did not approve
of even exercises of piety keeping his cardinals from an early application to
the calls of business. Hence, as his devotions did not allow the saintly
Cardinal Matthew of Albano (formerly a Cluniac monk) to begin his work till the
third hour (nine o'clock), the Pope used frequently to say to him in a half-bantering
tone that he was still a great deal too much of a monk.
Honorius, then, began his pontificate as a
bishop already distinguished for his love of justice and of the poor, and with
a well-deserved reputation for learning, virtue, and prudence. Unfortunately,
however, he did not begin it with a well-filled treasury, nor with a
substantial military force at his disposal. His predecessor, Calixtus II,
through his powerful family connections, had no doubt been able to wield such
supplies of money, and to exercise such influence, that the turbulent Roman
barons had thought it advisable to keep within bounds. But when his restraining
hand was removed, and the barons found that the new Pope was embarrassed for
want of money, they broke out into their old habits of license. To repress them
Honorius had to engage in a number of petty wars which wasted his time without
bringing him glory, or even always success. And his efforts to raise the funds
necessary for the expenses of government sometimes, as we shall see, brought
him into trouble.
II
HONORIUS THE EMPIRE
On May 23, 1125, died the emperor with whom
Honorius, when Cardinal Lambert, had concluded the concordat of Worms. Had
Henry not died thus early in the pontificate of Honorius, there is every reason
to fear that he would soon again have been at war with him. It is thought that
his abortive invasion of France in the last year of his reign was undertaken
not merely in the interests of his father-in-law, Henry I of England, but also
because its king, Louis VI, was the ally of the Pope. However this may have
been, there were two obvious causes of quarrel between them, viz. the
succession to the inheritance of Matilda, and the loyal carrying out of the
provisions of the concordat itself.
The Great Countess, Matilda of Tuscany, had, as
we have seen, left her possessions, Tuscany, Liguria, part of Lombardy, and
Ferrara, to the Popes. Much of what she bequeathed to them had already been
given to them by King Pippin, Charlemagne, and other emperors; and it has been
noticed that the claims to territory which they made from time to time never
went beyond the boundary line from Luna through Bercetum
to Mons Silicis, which Pippin had fixed as the limit
of his donation. Hence of the inheritance of Matilda they never claimed Reggio,
Parma, Mantua, etc., which may have been imperial fiefs. But Henry V, on the
death of Matilda (d. 1115), without making the slightest pretence of endeavouring
to establish what legal rights he had to any or all of the lands of Matilda,
descended the Alps in 1116, and took forcible possession of all that had been
hers. He and his successors thereafter took upon themselves to appoint marquises
of German birth to administer Tuscany. But their authority was disputed either
by the cities of Tuscany, or by the Pope, or by both. During the whole of the
twelfth century (1115-1199), the lordship of Matilda’s county was warmly
disputed by the Popes and by the emperors. Not unnaturally, Tuscany as an
administrative area fell to pieces. Its cities gradually made themselves
independent, and at length, in 1199, formed themselves into a league under the
protection of the Popes.
Meanwhile Honorius II made an effort to
establish the just claims of the Papacy to Tuscany, and appointed a certain Albert
as marquis and duke there. Though Albert may never have possessed much
authority in his duchy, the action of the Pope would have sufficed to have
caused a quarrel with the despoiler Henry, had he lived to see it.
And if the nomination of a papal ruler of Tuscany
had not been enough to cause dissension between Honorius and Henry, the
concordat of Worms itself would have been quite sufficient. The emperor certainly
never made much attempt to enforce the carrying into effect of some of its
provisions. He had undertaken faithfully to help in the restoration of property
which had been taken from either cleric or layman during the course of the
investiture dispute. But the contents of the subjoined letter, written in the
year 1125, may be taken as an indication that the secular power of the empire
was not to be relied upon for the faithful carrying out of the provisions of
the concordat. It shows that those who had suffered during the investiture
quarrel did not think of appealing to the ruler of the empire for the redress
of their grievances.
“To his friend Adalbert, by the grace of God
venerable archbishop of Mainz, Lawrence, and the congregation of the Church of St.
Vanne-de-Verdun, address their respectful greetings
and supplications.
“The whole empire knows the most faithful
devotion and love which you display towards the Roman Church ... and all the
sufferings you have endured for its sake. That peace (concordia)
between the empire and the Papacy, which the afflicted Church had so long
sighed for, was, after many miseries, brought about to a very large extent by
you. Nor were the terms of that peace drawn up without the greatest care. Among
them there was a clause to the effect that churches which had been robbed of
their possessions, or any persons who had lost their rights or goods by reason
of the investiture quarrel, should have them restored to them intact.
“Hence we appealed to Henry, bishop of Verdun,
to restore to us the rights which had been granted us by his predecessors, and
confirmed by decrees of Popes and emperors, but which had been lost during the
days of strife. This, though calling himself an obedient son of the Roman
Church, he has refused to do. Compelled to appeal to Rome, Pope Honorius took
our part, and ordered the bishop to restore what he had taken. So far from
doing this, he has even deprived us of more ... In this extremity ... for now
we have scarcely bread ... we turn to you for justice”.
Knowing, then, what we do of the character of
Henry, and considering that there were the inheritance of Matilda and the
provisions of the concordat of Worms to quarrel about, it is not difficult to
forecast what a harassed reign Honorius would have had if Henry had lived. But,
as we have said, he died on May 23, 1125, and, as he was childless, the great
Franconian line came to a close with him. It was the wish of Henry that his
nephew, Frederick of Hohenstaufen, duke of Swabia, should succeed him. But the
house of Franconia had in the last two reigns worn out the affection and
patience of the Germans. Hence in the summons to the diet which was to elect a
successor to the late emperor, Adalbert, archbishop of Mainz, and
archchancellor of the empire, and the other nobles who issued it, bade the
electors consider the oppression under which the Church and the whole empire
had been suffering, and to see to it that, in electing a successor, they should
choose one who would free the Church and State from the heavy yoke of servitude
under which they had been labouring, so that all might live in peace under the laws.
There were present at the diet, besides the
legates of the Pope, and the great clerical and lay nobles of the empire, some
sixty thousand fighting men. The arrogance of Frederick, who came to be elected
but not to elect, combined with the opposition to him of Adalbert, and the
persuasion of the papal legate Gerard, was the chief reason why the votes of
the assembly ultimately fell upon Lothaire of Supplinburg,
duke of Saxony. With the cry of “Let Lothaire be our king”, the nobles raised
him aloft on their shoulders, and, despite his reluctance, saluted him as
emperor. After the newly elect had formally agreed to respect the rights of the
Church and of the people, he received from the clergy, not homage, but a
promise of fidelity, and from the laity, including Frederick himself, the
customary homage.
Cardinal Gerard (afterwards Lucius II) and two
bishops were then sent to Rome to obtain the Pope’s confirmation of the
election. This was duly granted by Honorius, and Lothaire was at the same time
invited by the same cardinal-priest to come to Rome to receive the plenitude of
the imperial dignity (c. July 1126).
But foreign and domestic wars prevented Lothaire
from immediately availing himself of the invitation of the Pope, or of that of
the Roman people, which came later. At first wars in Bohemia kept him occupied
in the north, and then the rebellion of the Hohenstaufen brothers, Frederick
and Conrad, duke of Franconia. The latter was proclaimed king by some
malcontents at Spires (December 1127), crossed the Alps, and was crowned at
Monza by Anselm, archbishop of Milan (1128). His attempt, however, was not
destined to be successful. The Church both in Italy and Germany opposed him. In
Italy, Cardinal John of Crema called together at Pavia the suffragans of Milan,
and urged them to excommunicate their archbishop for his conduct. They obeyed
and wrote to inform Lothaire that Conrad, “the Milanese idol”, was universally
discredited, and that various cities of Italy were eagerly longing for his
appearance among them (1129). Strange to say, the Romans also remained loyal to
Lothaire, and their consuls and other princes wrote to tell him that they were
constant in their fidelity to Pope Honorius, and loved what was pleasing to
him. Accordingly, in view of the great affection which they knew the Pope had
for him, and in view of the rebellion of Conrad, they entreated him to come to
Rome forthwith, and to receive from the Pope the plenitude of dignity and the honour
of empire.
If, then, the greater part of Italy remained
loyal to Lothaire, so did most of Germany. Its great archbishops had promptly
excommunicated the Hohenstaufen brothers, and their action was confirmed by the
Pope in a synod which he held in Rome at Easter (April 22, 1128). Though it was
not till 1135 that the rebellious brothers finally submitted to Lothaire, their
revolt did not seriously disturb the empire, and its chroniclers could with
some justice write large at the beginning of their entries for the year 1126 :
“Here begin the years of peace”. There was, however, war enough to prevent
Lothaire from coming to Rome, so that Honorius had not the gratification of
crowning the prince whom his influence had so substantially helped to place
upon the throne, and to keep there. But if it was not till 1133 that Lothaire
received the imperial crown at Rome, he showed himself throughout all his reign
“a faithful son of the Church, and a faithful patron of the Saxons, the two
influences that placed him on the throne”.
The fact that St. Norbert was a subject of the
empire, and became one of the most trusted counsellors of Lothaire, must be our
excuse for finding a place here to say something more about him. Though he had
received from Gelasius II and Calixtus II permission to preach wherever he
wished, and a general approval had been given of the order he had founded at
Premontré in the midst of the forest of Coucy, near
Rheims, he was anxious for its formal sanction by Rome. As the rule he gave his
monks was in substance that of St. Augustine, his order was rather a revival of
an old institution than the establishment of a new one. Its object was to
combine the active and the contemplative life, the duties of canons with those
of monks, and the care of souls with the pursuit of learning. To obtain the end
he had in view Norbert set out for Rome in the very beginning of the year 1126.
Honourably received by Pope Honorius, he obtained from him the confirmation he desired.
A bull was issued which expressed approval of his rule, granted its followers
many immunities from episcopal jurisdiction, and forbade any interference with
their goods, which were to be left undisturbed “for the benefit of the brethren
of the order and of the poor”.
It is not the province of a biographer of the
Popes to tell of the extraordinary impulse which, at the close of the eleventh
century, and at the beginning of the twelfth, urged so many men of position to
abandon the joys and activity of the world for the austerities and repose of a
monastery, and caused such a wonderful development of religious orders, like
the Cistercian and Premonstratensian. But it may be noted with a great modern
historian of the Ages of Faith that the moral courage required to
embrace the restrictions of the religious life was such that it can scarcely be
comprehended by an age like ours, so effeminate and so devoted to material
comforts. “We are convinced”, he says, “that this zeal for the severe
discipline of the monastery could only have been brought about by a burning
desire for the joys of heaven, painted in such glowing colours by the lively
faith of this believing generation”. Whatever be our attitude towards
monasticism, its profound moral effect on this age cannot be doubted; and those
who had not the opportunity or the courage to join its ranks considered themselves
bound, for their soul’s sake, to help it onwards. Kings and nobles founded
monasteries and nunneries everywhere, and Popes blessed and protected the monks
and nuns who filled them.
III.
ITALY AND THE NORMANS.
ALTHOUGH Honorius had no difficulty, perhaps
with aid of the Frangipani, in maintaining order among the nobles in Rome, the
same cannot be said about the nobles of the Campagna. From their well-nigh
inaccessible castles which crowned the crests of the hills, they were for ever
engaged in despoiling the farmers of the plain, in molesting the peaceful
traveller, the merchant or the pilgrim, and, generally, in setting the papal
authority at defiance. At intervals during the first three years of his reign
Honorius took the field against them with varying success.
In the spring of 1125 he brought to submission
the lords of Ceccano by taking forcible possession of
Trevi, Maenza, and S. Lorenzo,
and by devoting to the flames Roccasecca, Giuliano,
and others of their fastnesses. Immediately afterwards he laid siege to the
castle on the lofty, round, stony, isolated summit of Fumone,
which dominates the whole country in the neighbourhood of Ferentino, Frosinone,
and Alatri, commanding a view of some forty towns and
villages. It was the hill whence the watch-fire gave the alarm of war to the
whole country. “When the fire blazes on Fumone, the
whole of Campania trembles”, the people used to say.
The stronghold of Fumone
belonged to the Popes, but the nobles, to whom it had been leased, kept possession
of it. Ascending the hill, the papal troops slowly rose above the slopes where
the vines’ dark, lank, and sinuous arms gripped each twisted branch of the
smooth-barked elm, and where, still higher, the somber
olives cast their thin shade on the rocky soil, and at length they encamped in
front of the small town which formed one large fortress, with its castello as a kind of citadel in its midst. After a
blockade often weeks the place submitted (July).
“Moved by the wonted clemency of the Apostolic
See”, Honorius again granted its custody to the same family, after taking every
precaution that they would never again claim to be its real owners. Once master
of this stronghold, Honorius transferred to it the antipope Gregory VIII
(Maurice Bourdin) from Janula, the fortress of Monte
Cassino. Towering aloft may still be seen the rocky castle where one Pope
imprisoned an antipope, and where Boniface VIII imprisoned St. Celestine V
after his abdication, lest he might be induced to become one. Honorius removed Maurice
to Fumone because he was not on good terms with Oderisius, the abbot of Monte Cassino, and not unnaturally
feared to leave under his control one whom the abbot might use as a powerful
weapon against him.
Though somewhat petty, it may be well to tell
the story of the quarrel between Honorius and Oderisius,
as it shows what an amount of independence was affected by some of the great
abbots of Christendom. The ill-feeling between the two began when Honorius was still
Cardinal Lambert. He had asked the abbot to allow him and his suite the right
to lodge at S. Maria in Pallaria on the Palatine, as
his predecessor in the See of Ostia had been allowed to do. Oderisius,
however, fearing that a precedent might be thus created, and that the abbey
might eventually thus lose the Church altogether, refused to grant the desired
permission. No doubt the cardinal was not pleased with this rebuff, and the
abbot, whom his modern biographer, himself a distinguished abbot of Monte
Cassino, allows to have been wanting in prudence, was impolitic enough to
irritate him again when he was elected Pope. In want of money, Honorius on his
election wrote to Oderisius to ask him for some
pecuniary assistance, saying he would regard those as step-sons and not as true
children who should refuse to help him in his great need. But this Oderisius denied him. He had had no share in his election,
he said, and therefore ought not to be burdened with his difficulties. And in
reference to the Pope’s humble origin, he told his monks that he had not any
knowledge whatever of his parentage, and indeed knew nothing else about him
except that he was crammed full of literature.
When, then, stories were brought to Honorius
that Oderisius was more bent on aggrandizing than
sanctifying his monastery, it is likely that the Pope did not find them hard to
believe. Accordingly, when he had safely removed the antipope Gregory from the
control of Oderisius to his own castle of Fumone, he publicly denounced the abbot as being a soldier
and not a monk, and as a squanderer of the goods of his abbey. When, further, Adenulfus, count of Aquino, accused Oderisius
to the Pope of aiming at the Papacy, Honorius had no difficulty in believing
that there was some foundation in the charge, and summoned Oderisius
to Rome to clear himself of it. As the abbot, knowing the Pope’s feelings
towards him, thrice refused to answer the summons, Honorius declared him
deposed from his office (Lent 1126). Listening to flattery, the misguided man
set the sentence at naught, and continued to act as before. This act of
contumacy brought down upon him a sentence of excommunication. At once many of
the abbot’s supporters fell away from him, especially the people of San Germano (Cassino). This was a dependency of the great
abbey. It was situated on a small hill far below the monastery, and was grouped
beneath its rocca, its old citadel of Janula (now in ruins), perched on a rugged limestone crag.
In the course of the armed struggle which
immediately ensued between Oderisius and the people
of San Germano, the latter forced their way into the
monastery, compelled the monks to declare Oderisius
deposed, and to elect another abbot in his place. Accordingly, Nicholas, the
dean of the monastery, was chosen to fill his place. Some of the priors, however,
not satisfied with his choice, secretly sent word to the Pope that the new
election had not been held in accordance with the regulations of canon law.
“Not understanding”, says the deacon Peter, “that Nicholas was actually
elected”, Honorius sent Cardinal Gregory to the abbey with instructions to
secure the election of Seniorectus, the provost of
the monastery at Capua, as he was a man in every way likely to restore the
prosperity of the abbey, both spiritually and temporally.
This action of the Pope was bitterly resented
by the monks. Their monastery was “free”, they said, and was not to be
subjected to cardinals. Undisturbed by the tumult his mission had raised,
Gregory asked the monks “what church or abbey was free from the yoke of the
Roman See, seeing that at its will heaven itself was bound and loosed?”.
Whereupon, after the cardinal had succinctly unfolded the relations of the
great abbey to Rome, the monks satisfied themselves with promising to embrace
the first favourable opportunity of complying with the will of the Pope.
Meanwhile, open war was waged between the two
abbots. To make headway against his rival, Nicholas disposed of the treasures
of the abbey, and thereby of course incurred the hatred of the monks. The whole
domain of the abbey was rent with strife, and its neighbours took advantage of
the confusion to seize part of it. Hope of peace, however, dawned at last. Oderisius resigned his pretensions; and when Honorius
excommunicated Nicholas, and assured the monks that he only had their interests
in view, they expelled their late abbot, and begged the Pope to send a legate
to put a term to their troubles. Honorius therefore sent them Matthew,
cardinal-bishop of Albano, who at length secured the peaceable election of Seniorectus (1127). A little later (c. September), as
Honorius was on his way to Benevento to deal with the usurpation of Roger of
Sicily, he himself installed Seniorectus as abbot.
But when he wished him to take the oath of fidelity which vassals were wont to
take to their overlord, in order that the abbey might not take the part of
Roger, the monks objected to his taking it. They pretended to think that there
was question of faith and not of loyalty, and asserted that it was right for others
to take that oath, but not for them, as they had never been heretical, and
never held opinions opposed to those of the Apostolic See. How far Honorius was
justified in demanding an oath of fidelity from the monks was shown by the
sequel. Oderisius and the monks of Monte Cassino
stood by the antipope Anacletus and Roger of Sicily against Innocent II.
The story of Honorius and Abbot Oderisius has been narrated as it appears in the pages of Peter,
a monk of Monte Cassino. There does not seem to be any other contemporary
source by which it can be controlled. Knowing this, the reader will perhaps
himself be able to see what praise or blame should be meted out to the Pope and
to the abbot.
In passing backwards and forwards between Rome
and Monte Cassino, Honorius must every time have gazed on the high hill on
which stood the strong city of Segni, and have
reflected that, like many another place which ought to have been subject to his
authority, it was under the power of a petty baron. At length he found time to
lay siege to it. Its tyrant was slain, and it returned “under the sway of
Blessed Peter”, thus verifying the prophecy which St. Bruno of Segni is said to have uttered on his death-bed (d. 1123).
It was to the effect that his episcopal city would soon be set free from the
tyrants, never again to fall under their yoke. Though generally successful in
these small wars which he had to undertake, Honorius was not uniformly
fortunate, and we read of his returning to Rome after the loss of many of his
men, and covered with the discredit of a failure before Arpino—or
Supino, according to one manuscript reading.
But military operations in south Italy on a
much larger scale were soon to demand the attention of the Pope. Roger, the
brother of Robert Guiscard, and the youngest of the sons of Tancred de Hauteville, had, with the aid of his famous brother,
invaded Sicily (1061), rent it from the Saracens, and become its Great Count.
Roger I died in 1101, and left Sicily to his child, Roger II, who was to become
king of Sicily and Apulia. On the death of his childless cousin, William I,
grandson of Robert Guiscard and duke of Apulia and Calabria (1127), Roger
sailed to Italy to establish his claim to his territories.
From the words of Alexander of Telese, it appears that Roger claimed Apulia on the ground
that his cousin, if he did not live to draw up a formal document to that
effect, had, as a matter of fact, constituted him his heir. Walter, archdeacon
of Thérouanne, on the other hand, professing to speak
from information received from the Pope himself, assures us that William had
left all his possessions to the Holy See. However, as far as the rights of
Honorius II over Apulia are concerned, it is matterless
which of these historians is correct. William was his vassal, and had been duly
invested with his duchy by him (September 1125). Hence by ordinary feudal law,
as William died intestate, his fief reverted to the Pope.
Misfortunes, it is said, never come singly; and
it was after his reverse at Arpino that Honorius heard
that Roger had landed in Italy with the intention of taking forcible possession
of the duchy of Apulia. The Pope made haste to reach Benevento, the more so
because he had heard that at least the Norman party there had begun to enter
into negotiations with Roger. The count overran the duchy with great rapidity,
and sent Honorius many, valuable presents, begging him to invest him with the
duchy, and promising him Troia and Monte Fusco in
return. So far, however, from listening to the repeatedly urged request of
Roger, Honorius, no doubt dreading to have an all-powerful Norman neighbour,
solemnly declared him excommunicated if he persisted in his attempt. Many of
the barons of Apulia, who, under the easy rule of Duke William, had been able
to live as they listed, and now feared to be brought to order by Roger, rallied
round the Pope. The excommunication of the count of Sicily was renewed at Troia (November), and both sides prepared for war. Roger,
ordering his allies to harass Benevento unceasingly, betook himself to Sicily,
while the Pope endeavoured to strengthen his hands by an alliance with the new
prince of Capua.
Jordan II of Capua died on December 19, and was
succeeded by his son Robert. He was solemnly anointed in presence of the Pope
(December 30), who, taking advantage of the great gathering of bishops and
barons which the occasion brought together, exhorted them to united action
against the ambitious Roger. The harangue of Honorius evoked the greatest
enthusiasm. The new prince of Capua immediately offered to devote himself and
the principality which the Pope had just granted him to the service of the
Roman Church. Still further to encourage his allies, Honorius granted a plenary
indulgence to all who, truly contrite, should lose their lives in the struggle
against Roger, and a partial indulgence to all who, after confessing their
sins, should take part in it.
Though excommunicated for refusing to allow the
bishops of Sicily to go to Rome, and, as we have seen, for assuming the title
of duke of Apulia without the approval of its suzerain the Pope, Roger’s arms
and Fabian policy were attended with complete success after he
re-entered Italy in May 1128. At length the armies of the Pope and of Roger
came in touch with each other on the banks of the Bradano.
The count, however, would not give battle, but kept to the mountains. He
trusted that, given a little time, the July sun and internal dissensions would
cause the heterogeneous army of the Pope to fall to pieces. Helped, too, by the
fortune of war, his anticipations were realized. The commissariat of the papal
army was not equal to the demands made upon it, and at once some of the allies
began to desert to Roger.
Fearing lest he should be abandoned by all,
Honorius followed the bad example which had been set by some of the most
important of his allies, and began to consult for of his own advantage.
He sent secretly to Roger, and agreed to invest him with the duchy of Apulia,
if he would follow him to Benevento, whither he promptly retired. The count
followed him, and, after a few days’ negotiation, during which Honorius
safeguarded the interests of the prince of Capua, who had been the first to
abandon him, met the Pope at the bridge (Pons Major) which crosses the river Sabbato near Benevento. There, after sunset, in the
presence of some twenty thousand men, Honorius presented Roger with a standard,
thereby formally investing him with the duchy of Apulia, and received from the
new duke the usual feudal oath of fidelity (August 22, 1128). By this act of
the Pope in sanctioning that union of Sicily with part of the peninsula whence
was soon to spring the kingdom of the Two Sicilies, an enormous boon was
conferred on south Italy. It was henceforth to be subject to one ruler, and not
to continue to be rent in pieces by a dozen.
After peace had been thus concluded, Honorius
set-out for Rome. He had not arrived there before news reached him that a
faction of the people of Benevento had risen, massacred his governor (rector),
destroyed the houses of other officials, and formed a commune. Full of indignation,
the Pope declared he would exact full vengeance for the misdeeds of the city
wherein he had spent so much of his time. Alarmed at the Pontiff’s just anger,
the townsfolk sent to assure him that the outrages had been the work of
foolish and wicked men, and to beg him to grant them peace and send them a
suitable governor. Cardinal Gerard was accordingly dispatched to rule the city.
Next year (1129) Honorius once more visited
Benevento. But, as he could not induce its citizens to receive back those who
had been banished in the late disturbance, he went to Roger, engaged him to
punish the city in the following May (1130), and meanwhile gave orders for it
to be harassed. Honorius, however, did not live till the following May, and the
schism which took place after his death saved the Beneventans
from the condign punishment they deserved.
The Pope must have been glad, one would think,
to leave Benevento. From first to last it had brought him trouble. When he
visited it at the beginning of his pontificate (1125), it had been shaken by a
terrible earthquake. Its first shock was felt at night, and Falco tells us how
the Pope left his palace, and in tears, prostrate on the ground before the
altar of our Saviour in the basilica of St. John, implored the divine mercy.
Shocks were felt for no less than fifteen days in succession, and the terrified
people, followed by the Pope and cardinals in bare feet, went in procession to
the churches, singing litanies and calling on God for protection. Swaying with
earthquakes and with the passions of its people, Benevento was not a pleasant
place for a peaceful person to dwell in during the twelfth century.
Before turning to the intercourse of Honorius
with some of the great men of France, we may say a word or two about his
dealings with another part of Italy, viz., with the great maritime cities of
Genoa and Pisa. Unfortunately, these two naval powers, ever jealous of one another,
were perpetually at war with each other. One bone of contention between them
was the ecclesiastical primacy of the isle of Corsica. This had been granted to
the Pisans by Urban II, and confirmed to them by his two immediate successors.
But on account of the bad blood which this privilege caused between the Pisans
and the Genoese, Calixtus II took away the primacy from the Pisans and placed
the island under the immediate jurisdiction of the Apostolic See. Though this
action of Calixtus took away one cause of quarrel between the two cities, it
did not make them live in peace. It was to no purpose that Honorius sent
letters and legates to try and make them act in harmony with each other.
Seeing, then, that his exertions were thrown away, and that the Pisans were clamouring
for the privilege that had been duly conferred upon them, Honorius, after
careful examination of the facts of the case, decided to restore the primacy of
Corsica to the Pisans, on the ground that a privilege which had been so
solemnly conferred upon them ought not to be taken away, unless it had been
manifestly abused.
IV.
HONORIUS AND SOME OF THE GREAT
ONES OF FRANCE.
A NAME not unfrequently to be met with in the
preceding pages of this work is that of Pontius, abbot of Cluny. Of noble birth
and of great promise, he was elected while still young to succeed the famous
abbot Hugh in the government of the abbey of Cluny. He took part in many of the
important affairs of his age, and soon became one of its best-known men. But
mixing with secular princes led him to imitate their ways. His pomp was equal
to theirs, and his imperiousness no less. The temporal interests of the
monastery were sacrificed to his ambitions, and its spiritual concerns were
neglected. An anecdote told of him by Geoffrey, prior of Vossium
(Vigeois), in his excellent chronicle, may be at
least so far relied on as to show how high the abbot of Cluny aspired.
Whilst Gelasius II lay dying at Cluny, he fixed
his eyes steadily on its abbot, who stood by his side. Asked by Pontius why he
did so, he replied, “Because I see you dying on papal territory”. He was indeed
to die in Rome as a prisoner, but he at once conceived the thought of being
Pope. This vain hope led him to offer a useless opposition to the election of
Calixtus II.
Meanwhile the discontent of the monks at the
lordly and extravagant ways of their abbot was steadily growing. They sent
their complaints to Rome. Grievously hurt in his self-esteem, Pontius went
himself to Calixtus, and would hear of nothing but that his resignation should
be accepted. The Pope at length consented to meet his wishes, and permitted him
to go to Palestine, where he proposed to end his days (1122).
But in three years he was back again in France,
distinctly a worse man than when he left it. Want of power seems only to have
strengthened the desire of it in his heart, and the flattery of some of his
companions, who, regarding him, or pretending to regard him, as a saint, told
the most wonderful stories of his miraculous deeds, completely upset the
balance of a mind already unduly weighted with ambition. Collecting together
any disorderly monks he could find, and a number of armed men, mingled with
whom are said to have been a number of dissolute women, he burst into the abbey
of Cluny during the absence of its abbot, Peter the Venerable (1125). Melting
down the treasures of the monastery, he thus found money to give to his gang of
ruffians, and to carry on the work of compelling the dependencies of the abbey
to recognize his authority.
It was not long before news of such outrageous
proceedings reached Rome from many sources. Honorius at once dispatched the
cardinal-deacon Peter of S. Maria in Via Lata as his legate to investigate the
affair on the spot. He then excommunicated Pontius, denounced him to the whole
of France, and summoned him to Rome. Peter the Venerable was summoned thither
at the same time, and duly presented himself before the Pope (September 1126).
But it was only after he had been solemnly
condemned, in France that Pontius obeyed the papal summons to Rome. He came,
however, thoroughly hardened in his iniquity, and, after his case had been
carefully investigated, he was imprisoned in the tower of the Septizonium. There, not long after, he died, as he had
lived, impenitent. Though he died under sentence of excommunication, Honorius,
out of respect for the great monastery of Cluny, caused him to be buried honourably
in the monastery of St. Andrew’s on the Coelian
(December 1126).
Meanwhile Peter the Venerable, reinvested with
the emblems of his dignity by the Pope, had returned to Cluny with apostolical
letters which enjoined the monks to pay full obedience to him according to the
order of St. Benedict. The commands of the Pope were obeyed, and Abbot Peter,
triumphant in the issue of his appeal, was well received by the monks, who,
says Ordericus Vitalis, have submitted to his
government to the present time, laudably combating for the divine law.
A very different man to the unhappy abbot
Pontius was Bernard, abbot of Clairvaux. Both were of noble blood, both were
famous in their generation, and both were much in the eye of the world; but
while pride and the wish to be seen figuring in lofty stations caused the fall
of the one, humility and a disinclination to appear in public were the
safeguard of the other. It may be that it was in connection with this very
affair of Pontius that the cardinal-deacon Peter had requested Bernard to join
him, and that the abbot had replied to him in these terms: “That I have not
come to you as you commanded has been caused not by my sloth, but by a graver
reason. It is that, if you will permit me to say so with all the respect which
is due to you and all good men, I have taken a resolution not again to go out
of my monastery, unless for precise causes; and I see at present nothing of
that kind which would permit me to carry out your wish and gratify my own by
coming to you”.
Passing over the first communications of St.
Bernard with Honorius, to the effect that the election of Alberic
to the See of Châlons might be confirmed, and that the monks of Dijon might be
supported by him, we may discuss the saint’s relations with the bishop of Paris
and the king of France. His example and his exhortations to a more earnest life
were having their effect in the very highest quarters. Among those who were
thus influenced by St. Bernard was Stephen, bishop of Paris (1124-1144). He
left the king’s court, and devoted himself to the cure of souls and to working
for the liberty of the Church. His change of conduct brought on him the
displeasure of the king. The goods of his church were arbitrary confiscated,
and he was exposed to much annoyance. But he had firm friends in the monks of
Citeaux. Headed by the English abbot, Stephen Harding, they wrote to the king,
declaring that they would be compelled to have recourse to the authority of the
Pope, if he did not desist from his persecution of the bishop. Next, the
bishops of Stephen’s province, with Henry, archbishop of Sens, at their head,
contemplated extending the interdict which he had already laid on his diocese
of Paris. The last measure would by itself have proved effective in bringing
Louis to a sense of justice, had he not contrived by negotiations at Rome to
induce Honorius to suspend the operation of the interdict. Indignation at this
act of the Pope was general. St. Bernard wrote to him and to his chancellor Haimeric, both in his own name and in that of others. “In
the time of Honorius”, he wrote to the Pope himself, “the honour of the Church has
been deeply wounded. Already the humility, or rather the constancy, of the
bishops had bent down the anger of the king, when the supreme authority of the supreme
Pontiff intervening, alas! threw down constancy and set up pride! We know,
indeed, that that mandate must have been obtained from you by falsehood, as is
quite evident from your letter, or you would not have ordered an interdict so
just and so necessary to be put an end to ... That which astonishes us is that
judgment should have been given without hearing the two parties”. And in a
letter to the papal chancellor he boldly added: “Even although I shut myself up
and keep silence, I do not suppose that the murmurs of the churches will cease,
if the Roman Curia continues to do injury to the absent in order to be complaisant
to those who are near at hand”. The issue of the affair is anything but clear.
It seems, however, that the Pope entrusted the examination of it to his legate
Matthew, cardinal-bishop of Albano; that, acting on the advice of the bishop of
Chartres, Stephen presented himself to the king, and that at length, after
Honorius had passed away, “justice and peace kissed” (1130).
Henry Sanglier (1129)
Connected with the struggle of Stephen, bishop
of Paris, against the king was that of his metropolitan, Henry Sanglier, archbishop of Sens. A charge of simony was
trumped up against him by the king, but as a matter of fact the Capetian
government persecuted him because he had joined the party of reform. “The very
men”, wrote St. Bernard to the Pope in behalf of the archbishop, “who
previously in secular life were honoured by the king, judged faithful, and regarded
as familiar friends, are now treated as enemies, because they behave worthily
in the priesthood and honour their ministry in all things. This is the cause of
the insults and injuries with which the bishop of Paris, though innocent, has
been attacked; yet he has not been crushed, because the Lord arrested the
king’s hands when he opposed yours. Hence also now he endeavours to weary and
break down the constancy of the archbishop of Sens, so that when the
metropolitan is vanquished (which may God forbid!) he may easily, as he
supposes, prevail over all the suffragans”.
Fearing that Honorius would order the cause of
the archbishop to be discussed in the presence of the king, and acknowledging
that whatever he directed must be inviolably adhered to, St. Bernard implored
the Pope that, if he were to decide on such a course, and if, in consequence,
this prelate should be crushed by the sovereign power (as it has happened only
too often), “he may be permitted to seek refuge in your fatherly bosom, because
hitherto we have never heard that you have refused this refuge to a person
oppressed”.
In some of these letters about the conduct of
the king of France, the saint occasionally allowed his zeal for justice to
obscure his judgment regarding the general character of Louis, and at times to
outrun discretion. The king of France was not exactly a Herod, though St.
Bernard calls him such, and in the present instance he was not apparently
guilty of any of the drastic modes of action of that “thorough” sovereign. At any
rate, in 1136 the archbishop was still in possession of all his rights, and,
such is the strange nature of many men, engaged in oppressing others, as he had
himself been oppressed.
These struggles of Bishops Stephen and Henry
against Louis of France are typical of the movement begun by Gregory VII, and destined
to continue till the Church had won comparative liberty for herself and for the
people. A prelate won to a life in accordance with his sacred character meant a
champion gained for the cause of freedom. The charters wrung from absolute
kings which declared the Church in a particular country to be free, at the same
time secured the rights of every inhabitant of that country. And the churchmen
who fought and bled to wrest the freedom of the Church from the hands of
arbitrary tyrants were really striving for the personal liberty of every
citizen. At the time of which we are writing there was playing about the
streets of London a little boy of twelve whose later heroic struggle for the
rights of the Church in England not merely threw into the shade most of the
similar contests waged by others, but rendered possible the putting into
position of the keystone of English freedom in the beginning of the following
century. It was from the hot life’s blood of Thomas Becket, freely poured forth
on the pavement of his cathedral in defence of the liberties of the Church,
that there sprang forth the Magna Carta of England.
Nor should it ever be forgotten that what
encouraged churchmen to brave the swords which in these ages
of violence were ever ready to spring from the scabbards of princes was the
thought that they could have recourse to the authority of the Pope. Rome it was
which was at once their support and their restraint. The powerful voice of the
Pope rang throughout Europe big with fate to the evil-doer, but in the sweet
accents of hope to the oppressed; and his arm, which reached powerfully even to
the lands in the frozen sea, was for ever employed not merely in repression and
in punishment, but in helping forward and upward.
Unfortunately, in continuing to treat of the
relations between Honorius and the great ones of France, we have now in an
increasing degree to face the difficulty we had to encounter in the cases of
Stephen of Paris and Henry of Sens. Many documents of this period are like
flash-lights. They show us persons and things in contact, but do not enable us
to study the relations between them.
Towards the beginning of the year 1125
Hildebert of Lavardin, bishop of Le Mans, one of the
distinguished churchmen who at this period gave luster
to the Church in France, was by permission of Pope Honorius translated to the
metropolitan See of Tours (1125).
Because he was a man of virtue and principle,
he was soon in conflict with the king of France. Louis, though, according to a
modern biographer of Hildebert, he was more intelligent than William Rufus, and
not false like his successor, Henry I, was nevertheless quite willing to follow
their evil example when it suited him. Like them he was prone by violence to
keep ecclesiastical positions vacant to enjoy their revenues, or, by the
exertion of his kingly power, to fill them with his own creatures. He took the
latter course with regard to certain vacancies in the diocese of Tours (1126).
It was in vain that Hildebert tried by a personal interview to bring him to a
sense of what was in accordance with law; it was also seemingly in vain that he
implored the assistance of the Pope’s legate, John of Crema, then on his way to
England. While he continued to refuse to accept the king’s nominees, he had to
suffer loss of control over the revenues of his see, and to submit to his
clergy’s carrying appeals to the civil authority and not to himself. At length,
but not till 1131, Hildebert contrived to make his peace with the king, by a
considerable pecuniary sacrifice. And yet this same Louis when king-elect (rex
designatus), at the close of a quarrel he had had
with certain canons, had laid down the principle that, without hindrance from
him, the canons were to render obedience to the Pope of Rome as the successor
of the apostles, and service to him as their king. In dealing with Hildebert he
had forgotten that not all things are Caesar’s. These disputes in different
countries between bishops and kings as to their respective rights over the
revenues of the Church, and over ecclesiastical positions, serve at least to
show how literally is it true that history repeats itself.
If Hildebert was in disfavour with his own
sovereign, he was in honour with another. Anxious to effect various reforms in
his duchy, Conan III, duke of Brittany, called together at Nantes a large
assembly of his bishops and nobles. Despite the pretensions of the bishop of
Dol to the primacy in Brittany, the presidency of the diet was entrusted to the
true primate of the duchy, viz. to the archbishop of Tours. At this important
gathering several disciplinary decrees were carried. Various barbarous or
illegal customs were condemned, such as those which placed the goods and
persons of the shipwrecked, or the goods of a deceased wife or husband, at the
mercy of the lord of the manor. Incestuous marriages, and the marriages too of
priests, were strictly prohibited. These much-needed acts of reform were sent
to Rome by Hildebert, and duly received the Pope’s confirmation.
The work of the diet was not finished at
Nantes. One of Conan’s vassals, Oliver of Pontchâteau,
had succeeded in setting his suzerain at complete defiance. He had at last
seized the famous monastery of Redon, and turned it into a fortress, whence he
plundered the whole neighbourhood. Writing to the Pope, Conan, confessing his
inability to restrain his vassals, begged him to retake the monastery under his
direct protection, and, in order to strike terror into the brigands, to do this
with great pomp by means of his legate Gerard, bishop of Angouleme, and
Hildebert.
Acting on the Pope’s instructions, the diet
proceeded to the plain of Redon. The robber-baron submitted, and Hildebert
removed the desecration of the monastic church by the solemn reconsecration of
its high altar.
If Hildebert’s work
for the reformation of his diocese was hindered by appeals to the king, it was
also hampered by what he regarded as vexatious appeals to Rome. He accordingly
wrote two letters to the Pope, which, though full of expressions of respect for
the authority of Rome, were strong protests against its ready reception of all
kinds of appeals against episcopal authority. He knew, he said, it was his duty
to show respect to those in power by deeds of obedience, and not to aggravate
them by words of insolence; but at the same time he urged that it was not in
accordance with either right reason or canon law that appeals of all kinds
should be listened to at Rome. How was it possible, he asked, to force the
blind and the lame to enter the kingdom of heaven (St. Luke XIV. 24), if the
blind and the lame could always appeal? He acknowledged that, where there was
question of violence, or of unfair trial or of other similar reasons, appeals
to Rome were right and proper, but he begged the Pope to give no heed to
appeals which were simply made to gain time, and implored him to leave him free
to exercise his episcopal power in his own diocese. Whether Hildebert obtained
any satisfaction from Honorius, or whether the Pope was able to show that the
appeals in question were not simply vexatious, is not known.
Besides being a great bishop and poet,
Hildebert was, for his age, a traveller. In the very beginning of the twelfth
century (1101) he went to Rome, where he was well received by Pope Paschal II,
and then made a journey through south Italy.
From Cannes one can see in the roadstead of
Toulon the low, dull isles of Lérins, “rocky and arid,
surmounted here and there by a slender cluster of pines”. One of them, the Ile
St. Honorat, “has been for the soul, for the mind,
for the moral progress of humanity, a centre purer and more fertile than any
famous isle of the Hellenic Archipelago”. Thither in the fifth century came
Honoratus, a patrician and monk, and there founded a monastery which will
render the name of Lérins for ever illustrious in the
annals of Christendom; for it became “a celebrated school of theology and
Christian philosophy, a citadel inaccessible to the waves of the barbarian
invasion, an asylum for literature and science, which had fled from Italy,
invaded by the Goths: in short, a nursery of bishops and saints, who were
destined to spread over the whole of Gaul the knowledge of the gospel and the
glory of Lérins”. Hildebert, when sailing back from
Italy, did not look at the isles of Lérins with
indifference and strive to avoid them, as Montalembert,
whom we have been quoting, notes is the habit of most travellers. He put into
the isle of St. Honorat to visit its great monastery.
But his pious curiosity nearly cost him his life. On the very day that a favourable
breeze had carried him safely away from the island to the then flourishing, but
now deserted Provençal harbour of Maguelonne, a fleet
of barbarous Moorish pirates swooped down upon the luckless isle of Blessed
Honoratus (1101). Not for the first time in its long and chequered career was
the monastery destroyed and most of the monks put to the edge of the sword.
Some few of them, however, escaped by hiding themselves, or by taking refuge in
a tower. Alongside the ruins of the church, baptistery, and other buildings of
the old monastery still to be seen on the island is a donjon-tower, surrounded
by a loop-holed wall. This is doubtless the castle spoken of by Hildebert, and
hence is the place in which most of the monks who escaped from the Saracens
found refuge.
Situated as they were in front of the very jaws
of the Saracens, the monks, unable to help themselves, turned to the common
Father of Christendom. Honorius at once interested himself in their behalf, and
in an encyclical addressed to all the faithful told of the sufferings which the
Saracens had long been inflicting on the monks of Lérins
and called on all to help them. To encourage men to go to their assistance, he
offered them the same remission of their sins as his predecessor had offered to
those who went in arms to Jerusalem, on condition that “for the love of God and
the good of their souls” they remained at their own expense to defend the monks
for three months. Those who could not go themselves, but supported a soldier
there for three months, were to receive an indulgence of three years with
regard to those sins of which they had repented.
Fulk V the younger
of Anjou, 1109-1143
History also shows the names of Hildebert of Lavardin and Honorius II connected with the doings of Fulk
V the younger, count of Anjou. Situated as were the domains of Fulk on the
borders of territories over which Henry I of England and Louis VI of France
respectively held sway, it behoved the Angevin to walk with great circumspection,
and to ally himself with one or other of the great potentates who were as ready
to attack him as each other. At first Fulk attached himself to Henry I, who, as
duke of Normandy, was his northern neighbour, by giving his daughter, with the
province of Maine as the principal part of her dowry, to William the Atheling,
heir to the throne of England (1119). But by the wreck of the White Ship
(November 25, 1120), Fulk’s daughter lost her
husband, and Fulk himself his daughter’s dowry, which Henry refused to restore.
Naturally indignant, Fulk now invested William, surnamed the Clito, son of Robert of Normandy, with Maine, and gave him
in marriage his second daughter, Sibyl (1123). At the same time he promised the
young man his help to recover the inheritance of his father. As Henry had
possessed himself of the dominions of his brother Robert, whom at this very
time he was holding in confinement, he was not a little alarmed at this
alliance, and immediately endeavoured to break it. He first attempted to get
the marriage between William and Sibyl dissolved on the ground of the
relationship between them. At this period marriages between those related even
to the seventh degree were prohibited by the Church, and William and Sibyl were
related in the sixth degree. It is true that the marriage between his own son,
William the Atheling, and a sister of Sibyl had roused no scruple in Henry’s
conscience; but the Clito’s marriage was opposed to
his interests and must be dissolved. According to Ordericus,
the English king began at once to employ skilful agents, and to scatter his
money broadcast.
The affair was important, and Pope Calixtus
sent to France to examine the case two most distinguished cardinals, Pierleone (Peter Leo), afterwards the antipope Anacletus,
and Gregory, afterwards Innocent II (1124). Received with the greatest honour
by such bishops as Serlo of Séez, who would have all
attention paid to them because they were the ambassadors of the Pope, “who,
under God, is the father of all the faithful”, they summoned a council to meet
at Chartres (1124). Hildebert of Le Mans, who, as the most important bishop in
the disputed province of Maine, felt himself in a most awkward position, was
called upon to open the council, and did so with a sermon on the sacrament of
matrimony. But the violence displayed by the two parties at the council
prevented the bishop from concluding his discourse, and caused the assembly to
break up without accomplishing anything.
The abrupt termination of the council, however,
meant the collapse of the case for the validity of the marriage; “for in the
absence of reasons to the contrary the decrees of the canon law were final”.
Another papal legate, John of Crema, declared the marriage null, and Pope
Calixtus supported his decision (1124). But the Clito
would not give up his bride; and his father-in-law, Fulk, seized the legate’s
messengers, who announced to him John’s decision, singed their beards, and
publicly burnt the cardinal’s letter. This truly Angevin violence brought from
John a sentence of excommunication on its truculent perpetrator himself, and an
interdict on his territories. Confirmation of this action by Honorius
vindicated the authority of the Church, and William was compelled to leave his
bride and Anjou as well, and with fear and toil to seek the aid of strangers.
But the chequered relations between Henry of
England and Fulk of Anjou were not yet over. The cause of William the Clito being taken up by Louis of France, drove Henry to
turn once more to Fulk. He offered to unite his daughter, the Empress Matilda,
the childless widow of the Emperor Henry, to Geoffrey Plantagenet, Fulk’s eldest son. “Regardless of his promise not to give his
daughter in marriage to anyone out of the realm, regardless of the scorn of
both Normans and English, of the empress’s own reluctance, and also of the
kindred between the houses of Normandy and Anjou”, Henry carried out his
purpose (1128), and succeeded in ultimately providing from his body an heir to
the throne, and in adding Anjou and Maine to his Norman duchy. To Fulk,
however, thus become the father of a new race of English kings, the marriage of
his eldest son and heir to the heiress of England and Normandy meant loss of
interest in his ancestral domains, and the same year (1128) that his son
married, he accepted the hand of Melisenda, the
heiress of Baldwin II, took the cross from Hildebert, now archbishop of Tours,
and at length became king of Jerusalem.
Before the name of Honorius II had been heard
in Gaul, those of Abelard and Heloise had already become famous, if not
notorious, throughout the land. However much what she herself called her
“immoderate love” of her master, and her unbounded devotion to her lover are
calculated to win for the misguided Heloise the indulgent compassion of
loyal-hearted men, it would appear that too much sympathy is not uncommonly
shown towards the cleric who could abuse the advantages given him by his age and
position to attract the affections of his pupil, and then to seduce her; who
could, while master of the whole heart of one of the truest of women, be all
the while false to her and who was at one period perhaps the proudest and
vainest man of his time, regarding himself as the only philosopher of his age
worthy of the name. It is true he was subtle, bright, and quick-witted; but he
had no respect for authority, was not too profound, and was unable to make any
progress in the exact sciences. His great dialectic skill, and his natural
intellectual pugnacity, however, which made him able and willing to unseat everyone of his professors, earned for him as great a name
in the world of letters as was ever gained in the realm of war by the most
skilled knight in the tilt-yard.
But we are not here directly concerned with
either Abelard’s intellect or his moral character. When the savage vengeance
which the uncle of Heloise had inflicted on him for his behaviour towards his
niece had reduced Abelard to the same state to which the great Origen
voluntarily brought himself, he persuaded Heloise to become a nun in the
convent of Argenteuil, while he became a monk in the great abbey of St. Denis
(1119).
It was not long before the amiability and
intellectual capacity of Heloise caused her to attain the highest position in
her convent. But all did not go well at Argenteuil. Whether too much of the
relations of the new prioress with Abelard both in the convent and out of it,
before she became a professed religious, was known to the nuns to prevent their
having due respect for her authority, or whether they were lacking in
discipline before she joined them, certain it is that the irregularities of her
convent became notorious.
In perusing the documents which showed the rights
of the abbey of St. Denis, the great abbot Suger had
discovered that Argenteuil really belonged to his monastery. Promptly taking
advantage of the ill-repute of its nuns, he put forward his claim to it. One of
the ubiquitous papal legates whom Rome’s zeal for reform had spread over Europe
was soon upon the spot. An inquiry was held, and Matthew, “by divine grace
bishop of Albano and legate of the Apostolic See”, proclaimed (1129) that an
investigation held before the king and a large number of bishops had revealed
the fact that gross irregularities were practiced at the convent, and that in
consequence the nuns must be dispersed to different religious houses, and their
convent restored to the monastery of St. Denis, “which we have found to be
flooded with the light of monastic virtue”. This decision of the cardinal of
Albano was shortly afterwards (April 23, 1129) duly confirmed by Pope Honorius,
because, as he said, the bonds of unity were best preserved when that which had
been carefully done by the members of the Church was confirmed by its head. But
in his confirmatory bull which he addressed to Suger,
he was careful twice to insist that his sanction of the cardinal's decision was
only granted on condition that the abbot took the greatest care to place the
nuns in suitable convents, “so that not one of them should perish through his
fault”.
Abelard now came to the help of the expelled
Heloise, and gave her and the few nuns who remained attached to her a small
oratory which he had built (1121) on the banks of the Ardusson,
in the diocese of Troyes near Nogent-sur-Seine, and
which he had called the Paraclete (1129). Further, as nothing had been proved
against Heloise, who seems to have been as true to her vows as she had been
formerly true to Abelard, she herself induced Innocent II, whom the schism of
Anacletus had driven into France, to take her house under his protection, and
to confirm its property. “At last”, says Remusat with
justice, “Abelard for once did no evil to the object of his love”.
As the name of Innocent II has just been
brought into touch with the work of Abelard, it may be well to narrate here
what remains to be told of the latter’s relations with the See of Rome.
When, by taking the habit of a monk, Abelard
proclaimed to the world his conversion to God, the thought of his sins and the
calamities they had brought upon him did not, unfortunately, work in him the
change that similar reflection wrought in St. Augustine. That sound interpreter
of our duties to our Creator laid it down that when God has been forsaken by
sin, “it must be by a humble piety that we must return to Thee, and then Thou
cleanse us of our evil customs, and show mercy to them that confess their sins,
and hear the groans of them that are fettered, and loosest those bands which we
have made to ourselves, provided that we now no longer advance against Thee the
horns of a false liberty by the covetousness of having more, and so incur the
loss of all, by loving more a private good of our own than Thee, the universal
good of all”. Abelard for a long time, at least, thought
not of returning to God by the way of humility, nor did he learn to keep in
check his desire to fathom the supernatural mysteries of faith with the plummet
of human reason. He ceased not, moreover, to be intolerant of the opinions of
others when they opposed his own; he remained as impatient of authority as ever;
and he encouraged a false liberty both in himself and others.
Though, when at Cluny, he repudiated his errors
in general terms, never did he become humble enough and wise enough to write a
book of “retractations”. After many of his teachings had been condemned by the
Church, he simply declared “that they were in essential harmony with the
Catholic faith; and while he is careful in his Apologia to emphasize his
convictions of that faith, he does not retract1 his previous words, but
attributes many things said against him to malice or ignorance, and asks only
that whatever in his writings may appear of doubtful meaning shall be
interpreted in the spirit of charity”.
It is not to be wondered at, after the
scandalous life which Abelard had led, that many should think that to seek
retirement would become him better than to court publicity. Nor is it anything
but natural that many whose characters, if not perfect, had never been as bad
as his, should take it amiss that he should set himself up to criticize their
conduct; nor again is it strange that, when his disciples gave utterance to new
and strange theories regarding the faith, the orthodoxy of their master should
be closely scrutinized. Another circumstance which rendered the novel
utterances of Abelard all the more suspicious was his connection with Arnold of
Brescia. Relying on the words of St. Bernard, who calls that revolutionary
Abelard’s “shield-beare, some suppose that Arnold’s
encouragement rendered the restless professor still less heedful of authority.
At any rate, whether rendered more audacious by Arnold or not, Abelard’s
disposition was constantly putting him in opposition to the men and things he
found around him, and his high opinion of his own powers was always driving him
to say rather what seemed acute and original than what was in accepted
accordance with revealed and acknowledged truth.
At length a number of his errors, or, at least,
a number of his propositions which by a natural and fair interpretation were
erroneous, were brought directly to the notice of St. Bernard by William, abbot
of St. Thierry. “Peter Abelar, he wrote, “is again
teaching and publishing novelties; his books cross the seas, pass the Alps; new
speculations concerning the doctrine of the faith, and new dogmas are spread
throughout provinces and realms, are openly preached and freely defended; it is
even said that they have partisans in the Curia of Rome”. He set forth some thirteen
erroneous propositions, chiefly with regard to the Blessed Trinity, which he
had culled from the writings of Abelard.
St. Bernard was thoroughly aroused, and with
his accustomed vigour denounced the innovator, in the first instance, to Pope
Innocent (1140). “Master Peter and Arnold, of whose evil influence you have
cleared Italy”, he wrote to the Pope, “have stood up against the Lord ... To
describe this theologian in few words, he distinguishes with Arius degrees and
inequalities in the Trinity; with Pelagius he prefers free-will to grace; and
with Nestorius he divides Christ in excluding His humanity from union with the
Trinity”. He next wrote, sometimes in language that was unjustifiably violent,
to various cardinals and abbots, to inform them that “the life, the character,
and the books already published of Peter Abelard show him to be a persecutor of
the Catholic faith”.
Everywhere men began to talk of the “errors” of
Abelard. Realizing that he must take some decisive step if he would avoid a second
condemnation, Abelard challenged St. Bernard to a discussion on his teaching
before a great assembly of bishops and others which was to meet at Sens. The
adverse decision already passed against him at the council of Soissons (1121)
had not affected him very much, as he had contrived to make it appear that envy
had been the cause of his condemnation.
At first St. Bernard was unwilling to face such
a master of fence as Abelard, but when it was pointed out to the saint that, if
he failed to meet his adversary, “unthinking persons, as well as his partisans
of error, would regard all the opinions, or rather all the fancies of their
master as being more important than they really were”, he boldly presented
himself before the assembly.
This meeting of Abelard and St. Bernard ranks
among the most memorable that history has recorded. The quickest-witted, if not
the most intelligent man of his age, was faced by one who was perhaps the
holiest man of his age. The excitement of the great multitude which gazed upon
these two great masters in Israel must have been intense. The disciples of
Abelard and those who wished for innovation believed that their tall and
eloquent champion was invincible. Had he not silenced everyone who had stood up
against him, even his professors? The followers of St. Bernard and the lovers
of the Catholic faith believed that, as God was with the great abbot, no one
could prevail against him.
At once taking the offensive, the saint pointed
out to the king, and to the archbishops, bishops, abbots, and nobles who were
present, what he contended were the heretical propositions contained in Abelard’s
Theologia. But to the intense surprise of the
whole audience, when, with all his wonted eloquence, St. Bernard closed his
indictment of Abelard’s teachings, “Master Peter”, wrote the bishops to the
Pope Innocent, “appeared to be at a loss what to do, and in order to make a way
of escape, refused to reply, although he had a free hearing given to him, a
safe place, and impartial judges; but appealing to your hearing in person, most
Holy Father, he left the assembly with all his supporters. Although”, continued
the bishops, “that appeal seemed to us not canonical, yet out of respect to the
Apostolic See, we abstained from pronouncing any judgment against him
personally”. However, they call on the Pope to do so, and to confirm their
condemnation of his doctrines.
Whether Abelard had or had not followers among
the cardinals, a storm of strong letters from St. Bernard to different members
of the curia swept away all the support in which he trusted, and the Pope
issued two letters to the archbishop of Sens, St. Bernard, and others,
condemning the innovator. Acting on the letters of the council, and guided by
examination “of the heads of the errors” of Abelard which had been sent him,
and by “the common advice of our brethren, the bishops and cardinals”, Innocent
“condemned, with their author, all the perverse doctrines” of Peter Abelard. He
“imposed perpetual silence upon him as a heretic”, and decreed that
excommunication should be inflicted on his followers (July 16). He also, rather
hastily, it would seem, as far as the professor was concerned, ordered them to
imprison Abelard and Arnold in separate religious houses and to burn their
books.
Abelard, however, on his way to Rome to appeal
to the Pope, found an asylum at Cluny. By the advice of its abbot, Peter the
Venerable, he remained there, and became reconciled with St. Bernard and the
Pope; for, as he said in his Apology addressed to Heloise, “I have no wish to
be even a second Aristotle, if I am to be separated from Jesus Christ”. After
about two years spent in that famous abbey in hard work and humble submission,
“showing”, says the chronicle of Cluny, “something divine in his spirit, his
words, and his actions”, he died in 1142. Before the close of the year the
sympathetic abbot conveyed the remains of his former religious to the
Paraclete, and heard from Heloise the simple words, “You have given us the body
of our master”.
V.
ENGLAND, SPAIN AND OTHER
COUNTRIES
In the early months of his pontificate (April
5, 1125), Honorius wrote to Thurstan, archbishop of York, to tell him that, as
he loved him, he wished the question of the primacy to be settled before him
personally. However, seeing that questions of jurisdiction between Canterbury
and Wales, and between York and Scotland and Norway had also to be settled, he
ratified the orders previously given by Calixtus II, and instructed his legate,
Cardinal John of Crema, then in Normandy, to proceed to England. At the same
time, he wrote to the clergy and laity of England, charging them to receive John
as the vicar of St. Peter. He reminded them that, as our Lord had committed the
sheep and the lambs of his flock to St. Peter, “not one of the lambs belonging
to the fellowship of Christ is excluded as not belonging to the pastorate of
Peter. Besides this, the authority of our most holy father, Pope Gregory, and
the mission of St. Augustine show that the kingdom of England belongs in a
special manner to Blessed Peter and the Roman Church”.
After having been kept a long time in Normandy
by King Henry, the legate at length “received permission to cross into England,
and was reverentially welcomed by the churches”. However much tyrannical kings
and ambitious prelates might dread the arrival of a papal legate, the rank and
file of the clergy and the people at large were glad to see in their midst the
representative of the great spiritual power which exercised so wholesome a
restraining influence on the arbitrary tyranny of the powerful. Hence our
national chronicle is at pains to tell us that John of Crema was “everywhere
received with worship”. Visiting the different bishoprics and abbeys on his
way, and receiving everywhere the greatest honour and splendid presents, John
proceeded in the first instance to Scotland. The object of his mission was set
forth in a letter of Honorius, which he presented to King David. The monarch is
asked to cause the bishops of Scotland to assemble in council when summoned by
the legate, and is informed that, while the council is to discuss the question
of the jurisdiction of the archbishop of York over them, “the final sentence is
reserved to the Apostolic See”. The bishops, accordingly, duly met at Roxburgh
in response to the legate’s summons, but what took place at their synod is not
known. Certain it is that many of the Scottish bishops continued to reject the
claims of York; and at length, in 1188, Clement III declared the Scottish
Church to be immediately dependent on the Apostolic See.
Meanwhile, however, the archbishops of York did
not cease to strive to maintain their jurisdiction over the bishops of
Scotland. With this end in view, Thurstan made great efforts to secure the
support of Honorius. When, about the close of the year 1125, he had gone to
Rome along with William, archbishop of Canterbury, in order to treat before the
Pope of the respective rights of York and Canterbury, he asserted his claims to
ecclesiastical authority over Scotland before John, bishop of Glasgow. But the
whole affair was one of politics. Both parties seem to have allowed that
spiritual jurisdiction was to be determined by temporal conditions. The Scotch
bishops held that Scotland was not feudally dependent upon England, and endeavoured
to get the bishop of St. Andrews made their metropolitan; whereas Thurstan
urged that their kingdom was subject to England, and that the king of the Scots
was the liegeman of the king of England. Both Honorius II and Innocent II
strove with only partial success to make the Scotch bishops obey Thurstan. Some
of them, as for instance the bishops of Galloway (Whitherne),
fulfilled the papal mandates, but John of Glasgow never submitted, and his
successors were the first of the Scottish bishops who obtained from Rome a
grant of independence from the jurisdiction of York. In this matter of
spiritual authority of a bishop of one nationality over the bishops of another,
racial and political prejudices were too strong for the Popes. They found
themselves in most cases ultimately compelled to modify the ecclesiastical
situation in accordance with the political.
For some time, however, the archbishops of York
kept their spiritual control over certain places which were in the power of the
kings of Norway, or of their sub-kings. Thus letters are extant in which Olaf,
king of Man (1103-1153), calls on Thurstan of York to consecrate one Nicholas
bishop of the Isles, and in 1151 and 1154 Thurstan’s successors are found
consecrating bishops of Man and the Isles. But after the visit to Norway of the
English cardinal Nicholas Breakspear (afterwards Hadrian IV) in 1148, Eugenius
III and Anastasius IV definitely made the sees of the
Orkneys and of Man and the Isles subject to the See of Nidaros (Drontheim or Trondhjem).
Similar efforts to those which the archbishops
of York were making to maintain their jurisdiction over bishoprics not included
in the realm of England were also being made by the archbishops of Canterbury.
William of Malmesbury categorically asserts that the
archbishop of York had subject to him all the bishops on the farther side of
the Humber, and all the bishops of Scotland and the Orkneys, and the archbishop
of Canterbury those of Ireland and Wales. But as the Scotch contested the
claims of York, the Welsh contested those of Canterbury. However, the Welsh
were gradually subdued by the arms of the Norman kings, and at length lost both
their political and ecclesiastical autonomy. The first quarter of the twelfth
century saw Norman nominees and Normans appointed to Welsh bishoprics, and the
last quarter of the same century witnessed the complete subjection of the Welsh
Church to that of Canterbury. It did not, however, submit without a struggle.
The See of St. David's endeavoured, but in vain, to induce first Honorius II
and then Innocent II to grant it metropolitan authority; and the people
sometimes succeeded in preventing those Normans who had been appointed to sees
in Wales from actually holding them. It would also seem that they occasionally
contrived to worry such bishops as had been imposed upon them whom they could
not dispossess. But the strong arm of the Norman kings at length beat down all
resistance.
The first bishop in Wales who was appointed by
the Normans (1107) was Urban, who became the ruler of the diocese of Llandaff.
It was not long before he became well known at the court of Rome during the
reigns of both Honorius II and Innocent II. Perhaps because he was not a
Norman, the neighbouring Norman bishops of St. David’s and Hereford would
appear to have usurped part of his diocese. At any rate he appealed to Rome
against them in connection with the boundaries of his see (1119). “The Church
of God and ours which is subject to God and to you”, he wrote to Pope Calixtus,
“sends this letter to your mercy”. But though he appealed to Calixtus, to
Honorius, and to Innocent in turn; though he made two journeys to Rome (1128-1129),
and received many privileges for his see, and many letters of encouragement and
support from each of these Popes, the affair was not settled when he died,
during his third journey to Rome in order to get it decided (1133). The
contention, says William of Malmesbury, “after being
agitated by so many appeals to the court of Rome, by so many expensive
journeys, by so many debates of lawyers for a number of years, was at last
terminated, or rather cut short, by the death of Urban”.
Before the papal legate, John of Crema, left
England he presided over a council held at Westminster. Both Thurstan of York
and William of Corbeil, archbishop of Canterbury, were present at the synod,
along with twenty bishops, some forty abbots, and a countless multitude of clergy
and people. The assembled Fathers passed seventeen canons of discipline
forbidding simony in any form, usury, pluralities in the Church, and the
marriage of the clergy or of those related even to the seventh degree.
The council did not touch upon the dispute
between Thurstan and William of Corbeil; but after it was over, John summoned
the two archbishops to accompany him to Rome, in order that the question of the
primacy might be discussed in the Pope's presence. Along with the legate and
the archbishops there went also Alexander, the munificent bishop of Lincoln;
John, bishop of Lothian; and Gaufridus, abbot of St.
Albans. They were received by Pope Honorius with great honour, and they
remained in Rome all that winter (1125-1126). The issue of the dispute between
the archbishops was that William returned in the character of the Pope’s legate
for England, but Thurstan exactly as he had set out. Despite Honorius’s
predilection for Thurstan, he evidently could not see his way to allow his
complete independence of Canterbury; but to lessen the pain his refusal must
cost his friend, he put the superiority of Canterbury on another level. William
of Corbeil was henceforth Thurstan’s superior, not as archbishop of Canterbury,
but as papal legate for England and Scotland. In order to show this, he forbade
the archbishop of Canterbury to exact any profession of obedience from the
archbishop of York, and ordained that, for purposes of honorary distinction,
that prelate should be regarded as the first who had been first consecrated.
Finally, he enjoined both King Henry and the archbishop of Canterbury to permit
Thurstan, in accordance with ancient custom, to have his cross earned before
him, and, as usual, to take his share in crowning the king.
SPAIN
The most striking figure in Spain at this
period, if not in the political, at least in the ecclesiastical world, was
Diego Gelmirez, the archbishop of Compostela. The one
object of this able and ambitious but unscrupulous prelate was to enhance the
importance of his see. He had succeeded in obtaining the pallium from Pascal II
(1104), and although that Pontiff decided that the Spanish primacy was to be
attached as of old to the See of Toledo, he left Merida and Braga under the
jurisdiction of Diego as legate of the Apostolic See for those provinces (March
27, 1120). But the ambition of Diego was not sated; he would be legate of all
Spain. Honorius, however, did not look upon Diego with the same friendly eyes
as Calixtus. Gossip had long been proclaiming in Rome that Diego wished to make
his apostolic see the equal of that of Rome. Though the Popes could afford to
smile at such wild ambition, even if it existed in fact, the persistence of
such stories about the Spanish prelate was enough to make them slow to help the
See of Compostela still further up the ecclesiastical ladder. The successors of
Calixtus did not renew his commission as legate.
Honorius, whom Diego, through his panegyrists,
cannot refrain from describing as a man of remarkable industry and great probity,
took care to inform the archbishop that he had heard many stories of his
ambitious designs; but he assured him that he trusted him, and exhorted him to
a humble performance of his duty. With a view to obliterating the unfavourable
impression of him evidently entertained by Honorius, and in the hope of being
made by him legate of all Spain, Diego sent envoys to Rome with a large
benediction. According to Diego, for the words of the Historia Compostellana are his words, this benediction
consisted of three hundred Almorabitini; and
of these two hundred and twenty were given to the Pope. The remaining eighty
were used in pacifying the curia. Honorius, however, was not to be won over by
any of the arts of Diego, but diplomatically replied that, while he might be glad
at some future time to make him legate of Spain, he could not do so at present,
as he had already dispatched Cardinal Hubert in that capacity to Spain.
However, Honorius hearkened to one of the
requests of Diego. On the death of Gonzalo II, bishop of Coimbra, in the
province of Merida, the archbishop of Braga, in contempt of the canons and of
the privilege of the Roman Church, presumed to consecrate his successor, though
the See of Coimbra was subject to that of Compostela. Of this usurpation Diego
had loudly complained, and Honorius wrote a curt letter to the offending
archbishop. He told him that it had been the good pleasure of the Roman Pontiff
to honour Diego and to make him the metropolitan of the province of Merida.
Despite this, the archbishop (Payo Mendes) had
presumed, so it appeared, to consecrate one of the suffragans of that province.
He must present himself before the Pope on the second Sunday after Easter
(1129) to answer for his conduct.
When Cardinal Hubert arrived in Spain, he arranged
with Alfonso VII of Leon and Castile, el Emperador, to hold a council at Carrion. To this
council Diego was duly summoned both by the king and the legate, because, says
Diego, “they knew that if he were absent their council would not be able to effect
anything”. Though not well, the archbishop decided to present himself at the
council, “not so much on account of the invitation of the king and the cardinal”,
as for the good of the Church. Again, according to Diego’s panegyrists, the
reception given to their hero by the king was most splendid, and “by the
concession of the king and the Roman cardinal” the entire conduct of the
council was put in his hands. The principal work of the assembly seems to have
been “the just and reasonable deposition of the bishops”. If Diego had no
further relations with Honorius, neither his stormy career nor his intercourse
with Rome was yet over. After what seems to have been a careful inquiry into
the facts of the case, he acknowledged Innocent II, and not Anacletus, as the
lawful successor of Honorius. Some years later, after making his see outshine,
“as the moon outshines the stars”, all the other sees, with the exception of
Rome, “which is the mistress of the whole Church on earth”, the machinations of
his enemies, or the natural consequences of his vaulting ambition, nearly
brought about Diego’s deposition by a cardinal-legate, and his death at the
hands of an angry mob (1136). But “the head of Spain”, as Diego calls himself,
never lived to see himself recognized as such. He closed his vigorous life in
1139.
Like all the Pontiffs of this age, Honorius was
ever ready to promote any enterprise against the infidels. This anxiety brought
him in touch with the north-east of Spain. Raymond-Berenger III, count of
Barcelona (1096-1131) recovered the ancient city of Tarragona from the Moors,
and, with the consent of Pope Gelasius II, made Oldegaire,
bishop of Barcelona, the new archbishop of Tarragona. At the same time, he made
him the temporal ruler of the newly recovered city. It was, however, in a sorry
condition, its cathedral church being “overgrown with oaks, beeches, and other
tall trees which had sprung up in it”. The archbishop manfully set to work to
restore the city, but he was hampered by the Moors and his own age. He accordingly
“looked about him for a man of deep experience, in whom he might provide a
protector for the church, and a lord for the city, who would defend the one and
the other ... as if they were his own”. He found such a man in the land where
at that time so many bold adventurers were to be found, viz., in the land of
Normandy. Robert de Culie, surnamed Burdet, was the man of Oldegaire’s
choice, and he duly named him “prince of the city”, that he might “there always
serve God and His Church and bear arms in defence of Christianity” (1128).
After Robert had duly sworn to be the liegeman of Oldegaire,
he betook himself to Pope Honorius, and “received from the Pope’s gift the
county of Tarragona, to hold free from all secular exactions. On his return”
continues Ordericus Vitalis, whom we are here
quoting, “he gathered a band of his own countrymen, and has held it, and
resisted the pagans to the present day”.
In the days of which we are writing, it would
seem that no important transaction was valid, or at least likely to be deemed
finally concluded, unless it received the sanction of the Roman Pontiff, the universal
referee of Christendom. If this was true of other Christian countries, it was
particularly true of Spain, which, as we have seen, was claimed by the Popes as
subject to themselves in an especial manner.
VI.
THE EAST. DEATH AND BURIAL OF
POPE HONORIUS II.
FROM the close of the eleventh century the
chief cities of Palestine had been in the hands of the Crusaders, but their
control over the intervening country was but feeble. Predatory bands of Arabs
rendered the roads from the coast to Jerusalem most unsafe, and many an
unfortunate pilgrim from the West lost his money or his life, or both, almost
within sight of the Holy City itself. Filled with concern at this state of
things, Hugh de Payns and eight other knights bound
themselves by vow to devote their lives to protecting the pilgrim and the traveller
in the Holy Land (1119). To quote the words of a quasi-contemporary, writing
about the year 1162: “There arose in Jerusalem a new kind of soldiery, founded
by a nobleman Hugh de Payns. They lived like monks,
took a vow of chastity, observed discipline both at home and in the field, ate
their meals in silence, and had all things in common. They bear arms only
against the heathen, and have spread widely. Many say that but for these men
the Franks would long since have lost Jerusalem and Palestine. They are called
‘soldiers of the Temple’ because they have fixed their centre in the portico of
Solomon”. What the Templars called the Temple of Solomon was the long basilica
of St. Mary built by the Emperor Justinian on the south wall of Mount Moriah,
but not connected with Abd-el-Melek’s
Chapel of the Rock, which was erected on the site of Solomon’s Temple.
To obtain recruits and papal sanction for their
new Order, some of the knights came to Europe. In 1128 they appeared before the
council of Troyes (January 13), at which, among many others, the papal legate
Matthew, bishop of Albano, and St. Bernard were present. The council expressed
its approval of the new Order, and commissioned St. Bernard to draw up a rule
for it. In accordance with their new constitution, the Templars added to their
vow of fighting for the Christian cause in Palestine the vows of poverty,
chastity, and obedience. As a distinctive mark of their Order, they were to
wear a white cloak, to which a red cross was afterwards added by Eugenius III.
To ensure that the rule should be authoritative and at the same time practical,
it was to be submitted to the Pope, to Stephen, the patriarch of Jerusalem, and
to the chapter of the Order. What exactly it was that the Pope approved we have
no means of knowing, as no bull of his bearing on the matter is extant.
However, when once his approval was given, the future of the Order was assured,
and by the favour of priest and people its knights soon became numerous,
wealthy, and powerful. “The memory of these holy warriors is embalmed in all
our recollections of the wars of the cross; they were the bulwarks of the Latin
kingdom of Jerusalem during the short period of its existence, and were the
last band of Europe’s host that contended for the possession of Palestine”. Mr.
Addison only spoke the truth when he called them holy; for such they were on
their first institution, and such for the most part they remained. They formed
a company whose object was not to fight for honour or glory, but for Christ. The
eulogy pronounced upon them by St. Bernard was well merited, and if, with the
fate of all things human, the lapse of time found them after two hundred years
of existence not so good as they were when they were first enrolled, their
Order, as a whole, was incorrupt when it was suppressed. But, as has so often
happened, to the shame of mankind, the knights who had done so much for a great
cause encountered the basest ingratitude in return for the services they had
rendered to the Christian faith, and were plundered, persecuted, and condemned
to a cruel death by those who ought in justice to have been their defenders and
supporters.
The Order of the Templars became the model of
many similar bodies; and it is one of the glories of Honorius II that his name
will be for ever linked with as heroic, if withal as strange, a body of men as
have ever existed.
The other relations of Honorius with the East
may be summed up shortly. As suzerain of the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem, he
confirmed the bull of Pope Paschal and ratified the election of Baldwin II, the
first royal patron of the Templars, as its sovereign.
Like all the Popes, he strove to preserve
harmony among the various Western rulers in the East. One of the chief causes
of the weakness of the kingdom of Jerusalem was the natural but unfortunate
rivalry of the different nations which had contributed to its formation,
combined with the grasping for power on the part of its new ecclesiastical and
civil rulers. In the sphere of spiritual jurisdiction, trouble soon arose
between the new Latin patriarchs of Antioch and Jerusalem. Paschal II, without
taking into consideration the ancient boundaries between the patriarchates, had
decided that all the territory temporally subject to the king of Jerusalem
should be ecclesiastically subject to the patriarch of Jerusalem (1111). Two
years later, he is said to have fixed the river Eleutherus
(Nahr-el-Kebir, great river), nearly midway between Antaradus (Tortosa) and Tripoli, as the boundary between
the newly revived patriarchates. Though he weakly endeavoured to render his
decisions more acceptable to Bernard of Antioch by asking the king of Jerusalem
not to tamper with the boundaries of the ancient Church of Antioch in his wish
to favour his own patriarch, still Bernard never succeeded in obtaining
jurisdiction over much of the territory ruled over by his predecessors before
the coming of the Saracen.
Ill-feeling, however, remained between the two
patriarchs, and manifested itself over the new archbishopric of Tyre. That important
place fell into the hands of the Crusaders in 1124, and Guarimund,
patriarch of Jerusalem, consecrated as its new archbishop William I, an
Englishman (1128). He was accepted by Honorius, to whom he betook himself, and
received the pallium from him against the will of Guarimund.
Now possessed of metropolitical powers, William wished to obtain jurisdiction
over the suffragans, thirteen to fifteen in number, who used to be subject to
the See of Tyre. Bernard, however, having lost his rights over Tyre itself, had
no mind to lose his control over all the bishops who used to be subject to that
see. He accordingly refused to give up his claims to several of them. When
William went to Rome, he laid the question before Honorius, who sent back to
Palestine with him, as his legate, Giles, cardinal-bishop of Tusculum, “a man”,
says the historian-archbishop of Tyre, “both eloquent and literary, whose
famous letters to the people of Antioch are still extant”. But neither the
Pope’s legate nor his letter were destined to be altogether successful.
Cardinal Giles reminded Bernard that, in defiance of the oath he had taken to
the contrary, he had set at naught both “the letters of the Father of all
Christians and his legates”. He had “contemned the Roman dominion with disdain”,
though at his consecration before the sepulchre of the Lord he had promised
obedience to the Pope, and had received the pallium from Maurice, (cardinal)
bishop of Porto. He would seem to have forgotten the fact that Peter received
his name from Christ from a rock, and that on his body at Rome the whole Church
rested. Reminding the patriarch that Antioch had been snatched from the very
jaws of the infidel by the Roman Church, who was daily sending out her sons to
guard it, he exhorted the patriarch to humble submission. He must be careful
lest the Church of the East be ruined by internal dissension, and lose the
assistance of the western Church. The Pope’s letter to Bernard threatened to
suspend the suffragans of Tyre if they did not submit to their archbishop
within forty days after they had received the letters he had sent them.
Bernard, however, and his successors contrived
to evade the papal mandates, and though the Popes succeeded in maintaining the
jurisdiction of the patriarch of Jerusalem over the archbishop of Tyre, the
patriarchs of Antioch retained their hold of those bishoprics north of Beyrout which used to be subject to the archbishop of Tyre.
Even the patriarch of Jerusalem possessed himself of some of his suffragans, so
that, wrote Tyre’s archiepiscopal historian humorously, if somewhat petulantly,
the two patriarchs “have sated themselves with my belongings, and it only
remains to hope that they will make them vomit them up again”. He concludes by
assigning the cause of the troubles of his see to the Roman Church, which
ordered the archbishops of Tyre to be subject to the Church of Jerusalem, and
then suffered them to be robbed by the Church of Antioch. Such petty and
self-seeking prelates deserved to lose all in their unceasing efforts to grasp
for more. If they had only been content loyally to abide by the reasonable
decisions of the Popes, or to have put off contending for their respective
rights till the conquest of the country had been definitely effected, they
would have done something to assure the success of the Crusades. But the
rivalries of the great churchmen and nobles which no Pope nor king could quell
were almost as fatal to the continued existence of the Latin kingdom of
Jerusalem as the arms of Saladin himself.
Honorius passed the last year of his life in
suffering, and when he felt that the end was drawing nigh, he took the advice
of his most trusted counsellors, and caused himself to be conveyed to the
monastery of SS. Andrew and Gregory on the Coelian.
This he did to be near the Cartularia and the centre
of the power of the Frangipani, because the openly ambitious aims of Cardinal Pierleone had already given symptoms of causing trouble at
the ensuing papal election. As a matter of fact, the conduct of the cardinal’s
party even before Honorius died showed how he was going to act. Hearing some
report that the Pope was dead, Pierleone’s adherents
rushed tumultuously to the monastery with the evident intention of forcing the
election of their chief. They were only induced to disperse when the dying Pope
showed himself at a window in full pontifical state, surrounded by his relations,
friends, and attendants.
When, about sunset on Friday, February 14,
1130, Honorius really did die, the cardinals who had been with him, in view of
the disturbed state of the city, closed the monastery gates and refused admission
to anyone. On the following day, if we are to accept the statements made by the
party of Pierleone, the body of Honorius was
temporarily interred in the cloister of the monastery. Then the cardinals in
the enclosure elected Gregory as Innocent II, and the body of Honorius was
transferred to the Lateran for more formal burial. About the same time Innocent
went to take possession of the basilica, so that “the dead and the living entered
the basilica at the same time”. The corpse of the late Pope was laid to rest in
the south transept next to the body of Calixtus II, to whom in life Honorius,
according to Peter the Venerable, had been in no way inferior.
He was in truth a worthy successor of St.
Gregory VII and of his distinguished successors, to whom the greatest men of
their time offered not simply the scant homage of bare duty, but the full
homage of reverence and love. Adalbert, archbishop of Mainz, is credited with
loving the Holy See beyond gold and the topaz; Geoffrey 0f Vendôme rejoices in
the Lord that he has suffered for the good of the Roman Church; and Otho,
bishop of Bamberg, lays it down that no one must cross the limits which have
been set by the authority of Rome, whose decisions must be accepted under pain
of heresy. And although, among others, so great a bishop as Hildebert of Le
Mans found it necessary to complain of the abuse of appeals to Rome, he
proclaimed, as we have already seen, that a light offence becomes serious if it
is the Church of Rome that is offended, and that he would not undertake to
defend anyone at the expense of St. Peter.
“THE LIVES OF THE POPES
IN THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES”
END OF THE FOURTH
VOLUME