| CRISTO RAUL.ORG ' | 
|  | MEDIEVAL HISTORY.THE CONTEST EMPIRE AND PAPACY |  | 
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 CHAPTER I
              THE REFORM OF THE CHURCH.
              
           The early part of the eleventh, as well as the tenth,
          century is often and rightly called a dark age for the Western Church.
          Everywhere we find deep corruptions and varied abuses, which can easily be
          summed up in broad generalisations and illustrated by
          striking examples. And they seem, on a first survey, almost unrelieved by any
          gleams of spiritual light. The comparative security of the Carolingian Age,
          which gave free scope to individual enthusiasm and personal activity, had been
          followed by wide and deep disunion, under which religion suffered no less than
          learning and government. Beginning with the central imperial and monarchical
          power, the social nerves and limbs fell slack; outside dangers, Northmen and
          Saracens, furthered the inner decay. Communities and men alike lost their sense
          of wider brotherhood, along with their former feeling of security and strength.
          Hence came the decay in Church life. If it was to be arrested, it could only
          be, not by isolated attacks upon varied abuses, but by a general campaign waged
          upon principles and directed by experience.
   Yet condemnations of a particular age, like most
          historical generalisations, are often overdone. This
          is the case here, too. There were to be found, in regions far apart, many men
          of piety and self-devotion. Among such reformers was Nilus (ob. 1005), who founded some monasteries in Italy. Greek by descent, born at Rossano in Calabria, he was inspired even in his early
          years by the Life of St Anthony (which so deeply touched St Augustine) and so
          turned to a life of piety, penitence, and self-sacrifice. His visions gained
          him followers, but his humble service to others carried him into the world of
          human sympathy. Even when he was a feeble man of eighty-eight he took the long
          journey to Rome to offer himself as humble companion to Philagathus of Piacenza, whom Otto III had imprisoned after cutting out his tongue and
          blinding him (998); his brave and courageous reproof moved the youthful ruler,
          and this accidental association has given Nilus a
          reputation which his whole less dramatic life deserved. Through him and Romuald of Ravenna, who did much in a small sphere for
          ascetic life, a fresh stream of Greek influence was brought to strengthen
          Western monachism, which was growing into an almost
          independent strength of its own. More widely influential was William of Dijon
          (ob. 1031), a German born in Italy, commended by his father to the favour of Otto I, and by his mother to the care of the
          Blessed Virgin. He was brought up in a cloister near Vercelli, but soon came to
          look towards Cluny as his spiritual home, and in its abbot, Odilo,
          he found a religious guide who sent him to the task of reform at Dijon, whence
          his monastic reform spread in Burgundy, France, and Lorraine. Everywhere his
          name, William supra regulam was revered, and at St Arnulf at Gorze,
          and St Aper at Toul the
          spirit of Cluny was diffused through him.
   Richard of St Vannes near Verdun (ob. 1046) specially
          affected Lorraine, and his name, Richard of the Grace of God, shows the
          impression he made in his day. Poppo, Abbot of Stablo in the diocese of Liege (10201048), was a pupil of
          his, and through him the movement, favoured by kings
          and utilised by bishops, reached Germany. In some
          cases, such men had not to work in fields untilled. Gerard of Brogne, near Namur, (ob. 959) and the earlier history of
          monastic reform must not be forgotten. But while the earlier monastic revival
          was independent of the episcopate, in the later part of the eleventh century
          monasticism and the episcopate worked, on the whole, together. Better men among
          the bishops, and through royal influence there were many such, rightly saw in
          the monastic revival a force which made for righteousness. It was so at Liege, Cambrai, Toul, and at Cologne,
          where a friend of Poppo, Pilgrim (1021-1036), favoured Cluniacs and their
          followers. Thus in Germany, more perhaps than elsewhere, reform gained
          strength.
   The life and wandering of Ratherius (c. 887-974), no less than his writings, illustrate the turmoil and degradation
          of the day; born near Liege, with a sound monastic training and in close touch
          with Bruno, the excellent Archbishop of Cologne (953-965), his spiritual home
          was Lorraine while his troubles arose mainly in Italy. From Lorraine he
          followed Hilduin, afterwards Archbishop of Milan
          (931), to Italy (for the revival in Lorraine threw its tendrils afar), and
          became Bishop of Verona (931-939). Italian learning he found solely pagan in
          its scholarship; ignorance abounded (his clergy reproached him for being ready
          to study books all day); clerks did not even know their creed; at Vicenza many
          of them were barely believers in the Christian God; morals were even worse,
          clerks differed little from laity except in dress, the smiles or the tears of
          courtesans ruled everything. The strife of politics prevented reform and
          intensified disorder. The Italian wars of Otto I, Hugh, and Berengar affected the fate of Ratherius; his episcopal rule
          was only intermittent (931-939; 946-948; 961-968), and when for a time Bruno of
          Cologne made him Bishop of Liege (953-955), he was faced through the Count of
          Hainault by a rival, as at Verona, and found refuge at Lobbes.
          He was specially anxious to force celibacy upon his Veronese clergy, some
          married and many licentious; not all would come to a synod, and even those who
          came defied him; some he cast into prison, a fate which once at least befell
          himself. With the ambition of a reformer, he lacked the needed patience and
          wisdom; he toiled overmuch in the spirit of his death-bed saying: “Trample underfoot
          the salt which has lost its savour”. “He had not,”
          says Fleury, “the gift of making himself loved,” and it is doubtful if he
          desired it. The vivid and tangled experiences of his life, political and
          ecclesiastical, are depicted for us in his works and give us the best, if the darkest,
          picture of his times.
   Nor should it be forgotten that some ecclesiastics did
          much for the arts which their Church had so often fostered. Bernward of Hildesheim (Bishop 992-1022), for instance, was not only a patron of Art,
          but, like our English Dunstan, himself a skilled workman; in his personal piety
          and generosity he was followed by his successor Godehard.
          Later monks condemned this secular activity, and Peter Damian held Richard of
          St Vannes, who like Poppo of Stablo was a great builder and adorner of churches, condemned to a lengthy Purgatory
          for this offence. In France, however, activity was shown rather in the realm of
          thought, where Gerbert’s pupil, Fulbert Bishop of Chartres (ob. 1028), and Odo of Tournai (ob. 1113) were pre-eminent; out of this activity,
          reviving older discussions, arose the Berengarian controversy, in which not only Berengar himself, but
          Lanfranc, of Bec and Canterbury, and Durand of Troarn (ob. 1088) took part. The age was not wholly dead.
   One foremost line of German growth was that of Canon
          Law, which gave, as it were, a constitutional background to the attempts at
          reform, drawn from the past and destined to mould the
          future. Here Burchard, Bishop of Worms (1000-1025),
          was renowned, combining as he did respect for authority systematised by the past with regard to the circumstances of his day. Wazo,
          Bishop of Liège (1041-1048), the faithful servant of Henry III, had much the
          same reputation, and his obiter dicta were held as oracles.
   Some reformers were bishops, but more of them were
          monastics—for reform took mainly the monastic turn. Here and there, now and
          then, could be found really religious houses, and their influence often spread
          near and far. Yet it was difficult for such individuals or communities to
          impress a world which was disorderly and insecure. But soon, as so often,
          reforms, which were first to check and then to overcome the varied evils, began
          to shape themselves. Sometimes the impulse came from single personalities,
          sometimes from a school with kindred thoughts; sometimes general resemblances
          are common, sometimes local peculiarities overpower them. The tangled history
          only becomes a little easier to trace when it is grouped around the simony
          which Sylvester II held to be the central sin of the day. It must not be
          forgotten that Christian missions although at work had only partly conquered
          many lands; abuses in the older churches paralysed their growth, and the semi-paganism which was left even percolated into the
          mother-lands.
   
           JAROMIR OF PRAGUE
           
           Bohemian history illustrates something of this
          process. A bishopric had been founded at Prague (c. 975) in which the Popes
          took special interest, and indeed the Latin rite was used there from the
          outset. So Bohemia looked towards the Papacy. But Willigis of Mayence had consecrated St Adalbert to Prague
          (983), and so to claims of overlordship by the German
          kings was now added a German claim to ecclesiastical control over Christians
          who, as we are told, lived much as barbarians. Then Bratislav of Bohemia, largely for political reasons, founded or restored a lapsed
          Moravian see at Olmutz, over which he placed John, a
          monk from near Prague, Severus of Prague being promised compensation in
          Moravia. In 1068 Bratislav, for family and political
          reasons, made his troublesome brother Jaromir Bishop
          of Prague, in the hope of rendering him more amenable. But the only change in
          the disorderly prince was that of taking the name of Gebhard.
          He, like Severus, strove for the delayed compensation but took to more drastic
          means: he visited (1071) his brother-bishop at Olmutz,
          and after a drunken revel mishandled his slumbering host. John complained to Bratislav, who shed tears over his brother’s doings, and
          sent to Rome to place the burden of the unsavoury quarrel upon Alexander II. His messenger spent a night at Ratisbon on his road with a burgher friendly to Gebhard. Then,
          strangely enough, he was stopped and robbed on his farther way and came back to
          tell his tale. A second and larger embassy, headed by the Provost of St George
          at Prague, an ecclesiastic so gifted as to speak both Latin and German, was
          then sent, and reached Rome early in 1073. A letter from Bratislav,
          weighted with two hundred marks, was presented to the Pope, and probably read
          at the Lenten Synod. Legates were sent who, at Ratisbon,
          were to investigate the case, but its settlement remained for Gregory VII. It
          is a sordid story of evil ecclesiastics on a background of equally sordid
          social and dynastic interests. And there were many like it.
   The common corruption is better told us and easier to
          depict for regulars than for seculars. In the districts most open to
          incursions, many monasteries were harried or sorely afflicted. If the monks
          walled their houses as protection against pirates or raiders, they only caused neighbouring lords to desire them for fortresses. The
          spirit of the ascetic life, already weakened by the civil employment of monks,
          seemed lost. The synod of Trosly, near Soissons,
          called by Hervé of Rheims in 909, ascribed the decay
          of regular life mainly to abbots, laymen, for the most part unlearned, and also
          married, and so eager to alienate property for their families. Lay lords and
          laymen generally were said to lack respect for Church laws and even for
          morality itself; debauchery and sensuality were common; patrons made heavy
          charges on appointments to their parish churches. This legislation was a
          vigorous protest against the sins of the day, and it is well to note that the
          very next year saw the foundation of Cluny. The Rule was kept hardly anywhere;
          enclosure was forgotten, and any attempt to enforce episcopal control over
          monasteries was useless when bishops were so often themselves of careless or
          evil life. Attempts at improvement sometimes caused bloodshed: when the Abbot Erluin of Lobbes, trying to
          enforce the Rule, expelled some malcontents, three of them fell upon him, cut
          out his tongue, and blinded him.
   
           FARFA
               
           The story of the great Italian monastery of Farfa is typical. It had been favoured by Emperors and was scarcely excelled for splendour.
          Then it was seized by the Saracens (before 915) and afterwards burnt by
          Christian robbers. Its members were scattered to Rome, Rieti, and Fermo; its lands were lost or wasted: there was no recognised abbot, and after Abbot Peter died his successor Rimo lived with the Farfa colony
          at Rome and there was poisoned. Then as the great nobles strove eagerly for so
          useful a fortress, King Hugh supported a new abbot, Rafred,
          who began to restore it: he settled in the neighbourhood 100 families from Fermo and rebuilt the cloister. As
          far as was possible, the monks were recalled and the monastic treasures
          restored. But there was little pretence of theology
          or even piety; only the study of medicine was kept up, and that included the
          useful knowledge of poisons, as abbot after abbot was to learn. When Rafred was disposed of, one of his poisoners maintained
          himself in the monastery by military force; the so-called monks lived openly
          with concubines; worship on Sundays was the sole relic of older habits, and at
          length even that was given up. One Campo, to whom King Hugh had given the
          monastery in fief, enriched his seven daughters and three sons out of its
          property. When some monks were sent from Rome to restore religion, he sent them
          back. Then Alberic drove Campo out by force, and
          installed as abbot one Dagobert, who maintained
          himself for five tumultuous years until he, too, fell before the local skill in
          poison. Adam of Lucca, who followed with the support of Alberic and John XII, led much the life of Campo. Then Theobald of Spoleto made his own
          brother Hubert abbot, but he was removed by John XII, and succeeded by Leo,
          Abbot of Sant’ Andrea at Soracte.
          But the task of ruling was too hard for any man, and only force heavily applied
          could procure even decency of life. If this was the sad state and tumultuous
          history of monasteries, once homes of piety and peace, it can be guessed how,
          with less to support them, parishes suffered and missions languished. Priests
          succumbed and forgot their holy task. Their bishops, often worse than
          themselves, neither cared nor attempted to rule or restrain them. For the
          episcopate was ineffective and corrupt.
   The primitive rule for election of bishops had been
          that it should be made by clergy and people. To choose a fit person was
          essential, but the mode of choice was not defined. Soon the clergy of the
          cathedral, first to learn of the vacancy and specially concerned about it,
          began to take a leading part. They, the clergy of the neighbouring country, and the laity, were separate bodies with different interests, and
          tended to draw together and to act as groups. But the forces, which made for centralisation of all kinds in civil politics, worked in
          the ecclesiastical sphere as well, and the cathedral clergy gained the leading
          part in elections, other clerks dropping off, and later on leading abbots
          appearing. Among laymen a like process took place, and the populace, more
          particularly, almost ceased to appear in the election. Thus, in place of
          election by clergy and laity, we have a process in which the cathedral clergy,
          the lay vassals of the see, and the leading nobles of the diocese, alone
          appear. We can trace a varied growth, in which the elements most concerned and
          most insistent eventually gained fixed and customary rights.
   But the more or less customary rights gained in this
          process were soon encroached upon by the crown. The king had a special interest
          in the bishops: they were his spiritual advisers, a function more or less
          important. But they were largely used by him for other purposes. In Germany
          they were given civil duties, which did not seem so alien to their office when
          the general conception was that of one general Christian society inside which
          churchman and layman worked for common Christian ends. To gain their help and
          to raise them in comparison with the lay nobility, it was worth
            while, quite apart from piety and religious reasons, to enrich their
          sees, and even to heap secular offices upon them. Ecclesiastical nobles were
          always a useful counterpoise to secular nobles; as a rule they were better
          trained for official duties, the Church had reason to remember gratefully past
          services rendered to it by kings, and it had always stood for social unity and
          larger fields of administration. In France, where the authority of the king did
          not cover a large territory, the greater vassals gained the same power for
          their own lands. Popular election, even its weakened form, tended to disappear.
          Ancient and repeated canons might assert election by clergy and laity, but
          those of them who kept their voice did so rather as surviving representatives
          of smaller classes than as individuals. More and more the chapters alone
          appeared for the clergy and the Church; more and more the king or a great
          feudal lord came to appoint. By the middle of the eleventh century the old
          style of election had disappeared in France, and the bishopric was treated as a
          fief.
   In Germany the bishops, although for the most part men
          of high character, were often supporters of the crown and the mainstay of its
          administration; when a bishop or a great abbot died, the chapter and the great
          laymen of the diocese sent deputies to the court, and after a consultation with
          them, in which they might or might not suggest a choice, the king filled up the
          office. For England such evidence as we have points to selection by the king,
          although his choice was declared in the Witan, where both laymen and churchmen
          were present. In all these lands, the decisive voice, indeed the real
          appointment itself, lay with the king; the part played by others was small and
          varying. To the Church remained, however, the safeguard of consecration by the
          metropolitan and bishops; to the diocese itself the local ceremony of
          enthronement.
           For parochial clergy and parishes the history is much
          the same. In the central countries of Europe the missionary stage of the Church
          had long passed away, although in newer lands varying traces, or more than
          traces, of it remained. In most cases the cathedral church had been the mission centre, and from it the Church had spread. Of the
          early stages we know but little, but there were many churches, serving a
          parish, which the landowner had built, and in such cases he usually appointed
          the parish priest. The right of approval lay with the bishop, who gave the
          spiritual charge. But more and more the office came to be treated as private
          property, and in some cases was even bought and sold. The patron—for here we
          come to the origin of patronage, a field tangled and not yet fully worked—was
          the landowner, who looked on the parish priest as a vassal, and on the church
          as a possession. For the parish as for the diocese distinct and even hostile
          conceptions were thus at work. A fit person for the spiritual work was needed;
          to see to this was the duty and indeed the purpose of the Church. It could be
          best safeguarded by a choice from above, and in early days a missionary bishop
          had seen to it. But when a parish church was held to be private property, a
          totally new conception came into conflict with the ecclesiastical conception.
          We have a history which can be traced, although with some unsettled
          controversy.
   The legislation of the Eastern Empire, following that
          of Constantine the Great, allowed churches to be private property, and forbade
          their alienation, but it also safeguarded the claims of the Church to secure
          the proper use of the building, and adequate provision for the priest attached
          to it. Justinian (543) gave the founder of a church and his successors the
          right to present a candidate for due examination by the bishop.
           
           EARLY STAGES OF LAY PATRONAGE
               
           In the West this was also recognised by a law of a.d. 398, and the priest serving the
          church was, at least sometimes, chosen by the parishioners. It was well to
          encourage private generosity, but it soon became necessary to safeguard the
          control of the bishop, and Gelasius I (492-496), an
          active legislator, restricted the rights of the founders of churches and
          attempted to make papal consent necessary for consecration; in this way the
          Pope might make sure of ample provision for the maintenance of the Church. This
          clearly recognised the two opposed rights, those of
          the Church and of the lay founder, but became a dead letter. Legislation under
          Charles the Great also recognised the private
          ownership: the Council of Frankfort (794) allowed churches built by freemen to
          be given away or sold, but only on condition that they were not destroyed and
          that worship was performed. The Council at Rome in a.d. 826 had to deal as no uncommon case with churches which the patrons had let
          fall into ruin; priests were to be placed there and maintained. The Synod of Trosly (909) condemned the charges levied by laymen upon
          priests they appointed; tithes were to be exempted from such rapacity. The
          elaboration with which (canon 5) relations of patrons and parish priests are
          prescribed shows that great difficulties and abuses had arisen. But the steady
          growth of feudalism, and the growing inefficiency of bishops, intensified all
          these evils. From the ninth century onward the leading principles become
          blurred. Prudentius of Troyes (ob. 861) and Hincmar of Laon led a movement
          against these private churches, insisting that at consecration they should be
          handed over to the Church. Charles the Bald and the great canonist Hincmar of Rheims took a different view; the latter wished
          to remove the abuses but to allow the principle of private churches. Patronage
          in its later sense (the term itself dates from the eighth century) was in an
          early stage of growth; abuses were so rife that principles seemed likely to be
          lost. Simony grew to an astonishing height, and it was only after a long
          struggle was over that Alexander III (1159-1181) established a clear and
          coherent system, which is the basis of Church law today.
   When we come to the eleventh century, we find that in
          parish churches, built by a landowner, the priest was usually appointed by him;
          thus the right of property and local interests were recognised.
          But the actual power of laymen combined with the carelessness of many bishops
          to make encroachment easy; there was a tendency to treat all churches as on the
          same footing, and the right of approving the appointment which belonged to the
          bishop, and which was meant to secure spiritual efficiency, tended to
          disappear. More and more parish churches were treated as merely private
          property, and in many cases were bought and sold. The patron treated the priest
          as his vassal and often levied charges upon him.
   Moreover, open violence, not cloaked by any claim to
          right, was common. There were parishes in which a bishop had built a church,
          either as part of the original mission machinery of the Church or on lands
          belonging to the see. But sees were extensively robbed and some of these
          churches too fell into lay hands. There were probably also cases in which the
          parishioners themselves had elected their priest, but, with the growth of
          feudal uniformity, here too the lay landowner came to nominate. The tenth and
          eleventh centuries give us the final stage—of usurpation or corruption—in which
          the principle of private ownership was supreme, and the spiritual
          considerations, typified by episcopal control, were lost, almost or even
          utterly; and with lay ownership in a feudal age, simony, the sale of property
          which was no longer regarded as belonging to a religious administration, became
          almost the rule. 
   Where the king had the power to fill vacant
          bishoprics, simony was easy and in a feudal age natural. Kings were in constant
          need of money, and poverty was a hard task-master. Some of the German kings had
          really cared for the Church, and saw to the appointment of fit men, but others
          like Conrad II made gain of the transaction; it was only too easy to pass from
          the ordinary gift, although some conscientious bishops refused even that, to
          unblushing purchase. In France simony was especially rife. Philip I (1060-1108)
          dismissed one candidate for a see because his power was smaller than a rival’s,
          but he gave the disappointed clerk some words of cheer: “Let me make my profit
          out of him; then you can try to get him degraded for simony, and afterwards we
          can see about. satisfying you.” Purchase of sees became a recognised thing: a tainted bishop infected his flock and often sold ordinations; so the
          disease spread until, as saddened reformers said, Simon Magus possessed the
          Church.
   It must not be supposed that this result was reached
          without protest. Old Church laws though forgotten could be appealed to, and
          councils were the fitting place for protest, as bishops were the proper people
          to make it. Unhappily, councils were becoming rarer and many bishops were
          careless of their office. Nevertheless, at Ingelheim (948) laymen were forbidden to instal a parish priest
          or to expel him without the bishop’s leave; at Augsburg (952) laymen were
          forbidden to expel a priest from a church canonically committed to him or to
          replace him by another. At the important Synod of Seligenstadt (1023) it was decreed that no layman should give his church to any priest
          without the consent of the bishop, to whom the candidate was to be sent for
          proof of age, knowledge, and piety sufficient to qualify him for the charge of
          God’s people. The equally important Synod of Bourges (1031) decreed that no
          layman should hold the land (feudum) of a priest in
          place of a priest, and no layman ought to place a priest in a church, since the
          bishop alone could bestow the cure of souls in every parish. The same synod, it
          may be noted, forbade a bishop to receive fees for ordination, and also forbade
          priests to charge fees for baptism, penance, or burial, although free gifts
          were allowed. In England laws betray the same evils: a fine was to be levied
          for making merchandise of a church, and again no man was to bring a church into
          servitude nor unrighteously make merchandise of it,
          nor turn out a church-thegn without the bishop’s
          leave.
   It was significant that against abuses appeal was thus
          being made to older decrees reiterated or enlarged by sporadic councils. And the
          growth of religious revival in time resulted in a feeling of deeper obligation
          to Canon Law, and a stronger sense of corporate life. But it was the duty of
          the bishops to enforce upon their subjects the duty of obedience. In doing
          this, they had often in the past been helped by righteous kings and courageous
          Popes. But now for the needed reforms to be effectively enforced it needed a
          sound episcopate, backed up by conscientious kings and Popes. Only so could the
          inspiration of religion, which was breathing in many quarters, become coherent
          in constitutional action. When king and Pope in fellowship turned to reform, an
          episcopate, aroused to a sense of duty, might become effective.
           
           SIMONY
               
           But the episcopate itself was corrupt, bad in itself,
          moving in a bad social atmosphere, and largely used for regal politics. Two of
          the great Lorraine reformers, William of Dijon (962-1031) and Richard of St
          Vannes (ob. 1046), sharply criticised the prelates of
          their day: “They were preachers who did not preach; they were shepherds who
          lived as hirelings.” Everywhere one could see glaring infamies. Guifred of Cerdagne became
          Archbishop of Narbonne (1016-1079) when only ten years old, 100,000 solidi
          being paid on his behalf. His episcopate was disastrous: he sold nearly
          everything belonging to his cathedral and his see; he oppressed his clergy but
          he provided for his family; for a brother he bought the see of Urgel through the sale of the holy vessels and plate
          throughout his diocese. In the Midi such abuses were specially prevalent. In 1038 two viscounts sold the see of Albi, while it was occupied,
          and confirmed the sale by a written contract. But even over the Midi the
          reforming zeal of Halinard of Lyons had much effect;
          Lyons belonged to Burgundy, and Burgundy under Conrad II became German. Halinard had been Abbot of St Remy at Dijon, and was a
          reformer of the Cluniac type; at Rome, whither he made many pilgrimages, he was
          well known and so popular that the Romans sought him as Pope on the death of Damasus II. One bishop, of the ducal house of Gascony, is
          said to have held eight sees which he disposed of by will. The tables of the
          money-changers were not only brought into the temple, but grouped round the
          altar itself. Gerbert (Sylvester II), who had seen
          many lands and knew something of the past, spoke strongly against the
          many-headed and elusive simony. A bishop might say, “I gave gold and I received
          the episcopate; but yet I do not fear to receive it back if I behave as I
          should. I ordain a priest and I receive gold; I make a deacon and I receive a
          heap of silver....Behold the gold which I gave I have once more unlessened in my purse.”
   
           CELIBACY
               
           Sylvester II held simony to be the greatest evil in
          the Church. Most reformers, however, attacked the evil morals of the clergy,
          and their attack was justified. But strict morality and asceticism went hand in
          hand, and the complicated evils of the day gave fresh strength to the zeal for
          monasticism and the demand for clerical celibacy. The spirit of asceticism had
          in the past done much to deepen piety and the sense of personal responsibility,
          even if teaching by strong example has its dangers as well as successes. In the
          West more than in the East the conversion of new races had been due to monks,
          and now the strength of reformation lay in monasticism. The enforcement of
          clerical celibacy seemed an easy, if not the only, remedy for the diseases of
          the day. In primitive times married priests were common, even if we do not find
          cases of marriage after ordination, but the reverence for virginity, enhanced
          by monasticism, turned the stream of opinion against them. At Nicaea the
          assembled Fathers, while forbidding a priest to have a woman, other than wife
          or sister, living in his house, had refrained, largely because of the protest
          of Paphnutius, from enforcing celibacy. But the
          Councils of Ancyra and Neocaesarea (both in 314) had
          legislated on the point, although with some reserve. The former allowed
          deacons, who at ordination affirmed their intention to marry, to do so, but
          otherwise they were degraded. The latter decreed that a priest marrying after
          ordination should be degraded, while a fornicator or adulterer should be more
          severely punished. The Council of Elvira (c. 305), which dealt so generally and
          largely with sexual sins, shut out from communion an adulterous bishop, priest,
          or deacon; it ordered all bishops, priests, deacons, and other clerks, to
          abstain from conjugal intercourse. This was the first general enactment of the
          kind and it was Western. As time went on, the divergence between the more
          conservative East and the newer West, with its changing conditions and rules,
          became more marked. In the East things moved towards its present rule, which
          allows priests, deacons, and sub-deacons, married before ordination, to live
          freely with their wives (Quintisext in Trullo, held 680, promulgated 691); bishops, however, were
          to live in separation from their wives. Second marriages, which were always
          treated as a different matter, were forbidden. The present rule is for parish
          priests to be married, while bishops, chosen from regulars, are unmarried. The
          West, on the other hand, moved, to begin with, first by legislation and then,
          more slowly, by practice, towards uniform celibacy.
   Councils at Carthage (390, 398, and 419), at Agde (506), Toledo (531), and Orleans (538), enjoined
          strict continency upon married clerks from
          sub-deacons upwards. Siricius (384-398), by what is
          commonly reckoned the first Decretal (385), and Innocent I (402-419) pronounced
          strongly against clerical marriage. Henceforth succeeding Popes plainly
          enunciated the Roman law. There was so much clerical immorality in Africa, in
          spite of the great name and Strict teaching of St Augustine, and elsewhere,
          that the populace generally preferred a celibate clergy. Ecclesiastical
          authorities took the same line, and Leo I extended the strict law to
          sub-deacons. The Theodosian Code pronounced the children of clergy
          illegitimate, and so the reformers of the tenth and eleventh centuries could
          appeal to much support. Nevertheless, there were both districts and periods in
          which custom accorded badly with the declared law, and the confusion made by
          reformers between marriages they did not accept and concubinage which opinion, no less than law, condemned makes the evidence sometimes hard to
          interpret. St Boniface dealt firmly with incontinent priests, and on the whole,
          although here popular feeling was not with him, he was successful both in
          Austrasia and Neustria. The eighth and ninth centuries saw the struggle between
          law and custom continuing with varying fortune. Custom became laxer under the
          later Carolingians than under Charlemagne, who had set for others a standard he
          never dreamt of for himself; Hincmar, who was an
          advocate of strictness, gives elaborate directions for proper procedure against
          offending clerks, and it is clear that the clergy proved hard either to
          convince or to rule. By the end of the ninth century, amid prevalent disorder,
          clerical celibacy became less general, and the laws in its favour were frequently and openly ignored. It was easy, as Pelagius II (578590), in
          giving dispensation for a special case, had confessed, to find excuse in the
          laxity of the age. So too St Boniface had found it necessary to restore
          offenders after penance, for otherwise there would be none to say mass. Italy
          was the most difficult country to deal with, and Ratherius of Verona says (966) that the enforcement of the laws, which he not only
          accepted but strongly approved, would have left only boys in the Church. It
          was, he held, a war of canons against custom. By about the beginning of the
          eleventh century celibacy was uncommon, and the laws enforcing it almost obsolete.
          But they began to gain greater force as churchmen turned more to legal studies
          and as the pressure of abuses grew stronger.
   The tenth and eleventh centuries had special reason
          for enforcing celibacy and disliking clerical families. Married priests, like
          laymen, wished to enrich their children and strove to hand on their benefices
          to them. Hereditary bishops, hereditary priests, were a danger: there was much
          alienation of clerical property; thus the arguments urged so repeatedly in favour of celibacy were reinforced. Bishops, and not only
          those who held secular jurisdiction, thought and acted as laymen, and like
          laymen strove to found dynasties, firmly seated and richly endowed. Parish
          priests copied them on a humbler scale. Hence the denial of ordination to sons
          of clerks is frequent in conciliar legislation.
   One attempt at reform of the secular clergy, which had
          special importance in England, needs notice. This was the institution of
          canons, which has a long and varied history. The germ of the later chapter
          appears at a very early date in cathedrals, certainly in the sixth century; a
          staff of clergy was needed both for ordinary mission work and for distribution
          of alms. But poverty often, as with monasteries later on, led to careless and
          disordered life. Chrodegang of Metz (ob. 766), the
          pious founder of Gorze, near his city, and of Lorsch, set up, after a Benedictine model, a rule for his
          cathedral clergy: there was to be a common life, although private property was
          permitted; a synod under Louis the Pious at Aix-la-Chapelle (817) elaborated it
          and it was widely applied. The ideal was high, and although inspired by the
          asceticism which produced monasticism, it paid regard to the special tasks of
          seculars; it infused a new moral and intellectual life into the clergy at the centre of the diocese, and education was specially cared
          for. So excellent an example was soon copied by other large churches, and the
          system spread widely. In its original form it was not destined to live long:
          decay began at Cologne with the surrender of the common administration of
          funds; Gunther, the archbishop, yielded to the wish for more individual
          freedom, and his successor Willibert in a synod (873)
          confirmed his changes. After this the institution of prebends (benefices assigned to a canon) grew, and each canon held a prebend and lived apart. This private control of their income, and their surrender of a
          common life, began a long process of decay. But variations of the original
          form, which itself had utilised much older growths,
          appeared largely and widely in history. Brotherhood and the sympathy of a
          common life furthered diligence and devotion.
   In councils of the tenth and eleventh centuries,
          clerical celibacy and simony are repeatedly spoken of. With few exceptions, all
          well-wishers of reform, whether lay or clerical, desired to enforce celibacy,
          although some thought circumstances compelled laxity in applying the law. Thus
          in France the Council of Poitiers (1000) forbade priests and deacons to live
          with women, under pain of degradation and excommunication. The Council of
          Bourges (1031), while making the same decrees (repeated at Limoges the same
          year), went further by ordering all sub-deacons to promise at ordination to
          keep neither wife nor mistress. This promise resembles the attempt of Guarino of Modena a little earlier to refuse benefices to
          any clerk who would not swear to observe celibacy. In Germany the
          largely-attended Council of Augsburg (952) forbade marriage to ecclesiastics,
          including sub-deacons; the reason assigned was their handling the divine
          mysteries, and with German respect for Canon Law appeal was made to the decrees
          of many councils in the past. Under Henry III the prohibitions were better
          observed, not only through the support of the Emperor, but because collections
          of Canons, especially that by Burchard of Worms (Decretum, between 1008 and 1012), were becoming known and
          gaining authority. The statement of principles, especially from the past, as
          against the practice of the day was becoming coherent. But the Papacy, which
          had so repeatedly declared for celibacy, was not in a state to interfere
          authoritatively. Thus we come to the question of reform at Rome. The movement
          for reform needed authority and coherence, which were to be supplied from Rome.
          But first of all Reform had to capture Rome itself.
   At Rome a bad ecclesiastical atmosphere was darkened
          by political troubles and not lightened by religious enthusiasm. There as
          elsewhere local families were striving for local power; the nobility, with
          seats outside, was very disorderly and made the city itself tumultuous and
          unsafe. The Crescentii, so long and so darkly
          connected with papal history, had lands in the Sabina and around Farfa, and although with lessening influence in the city
          itself they stood for the traditions of civic independence, overshadowed, it is
          true, by the mostly distant power of the Saxon Emperors. Nearer home they were
          confronted by the growing power of the Counts of Tusculum, to whose family
          Gregory, the naval prefect under Otto III, had belonged; they naturally,
          although for their own purposes, followed a German policy. Either of these
          houses might have founded at Rome a feudal dynasty such as rose elsewhere, and
          each seemed at times likely to do so. But in a city where Pope and Emperor were
          just strong enough to check feudal growth, although not strong enough to impose
          continuous order, the disorderly stage, the almost anarchy, of early feudalism
          lingered long.
   
           BENEDICT VIII
               
           When Sergius IV (1009-1012)
          “Boccaporco,” son of a Roman shoemaker and Bishop of
          Albano, died soon after John Crescentius, the rival
          houses produced rival Popes: Gregory, supported by the Crescentii,
          and the Cardinal Theophylact, son of Gregory of
          Tusculum. Henry II of Germany, hampered by opposition from Lombard nobles and
          faced by King Arduin, had watched Italian politics
          from afar, and the disputed election gave him an opening. Rome was divided. Theophylact had seized the Lateran, but could not maintain
          himself there; Gregory fled, even from Italy, and (Christmas 1012) appeared in
          Henry’s court at Pohlde as a suppliant in papal
          robes. Henry cautiously promised enquiry, but significantly took the papal
          crozier into his own keeping, just as he might have done for a German
          bishopric. He had, however, partly recognised Theophylact, and had indeed sent to gain from him a
          confirmation of privileges for his beloved Bamberg: a decision in Theophylact’s favour was
          therefore natural. Henry soon appeared in Italy (February 1013); his arrival
          put Arduin in the shade. Theophylact,
          with the help of his family, had established himself, and it was he who, as
          Benedict VIII, crowned Henry and Cunegunda (14
          February 1014). The royal pair were received by a solemn procession, and six
          bearded and six beardless Senators bearing wands walked “mystically” before
          them. The pious Emperor dedicated his former kingly crown to St Peter, but the
          imperial orb bearing a cross was sent to Cluny. Benedict VIII was supported now
          by the imperial arm, and in Germany his ecclesiastical power was freely used;
          he and the Emperor worked together on lines of Church reform, even if their
          motives differed.
   Benedict VIII (1012-1024) proved an efficient
          administrator, faced by the constant Saracen peril, and wisely kept on good
          terms with Henry II. Although he was first of all a warrior and an
          administrator, he also appears, probably under the influence of the Emperor, as
          a Church reformer. A Council was held at Pavia (1018), where the Pope made an
          impressive speech, which, it is suggested, may have been the work of Leo of
          Vercelli, on the evils of the day, denouncing specially clerical concubinage and simony. His starting point was a wish to
          protect Church property from alienation to priestly families, a consideration
          likely to weigh with a statesmanlike administrator, although Henry II might
          have had a more spiritual concern. By the decrees of the Council, marriage and concubinage were forbidden to priests, deacons, and subdeacons, indeed to any clerk. Bishops not enforcing
          this were to be deposed. The children of clerks were to be the property of the
          Church. In the Council the initiative of the Pope seems to have been strong.
          The Emperor gave the decrees the force of law, and a Council at Goslar (1019)
          repeated them. Italy and Germany were working as one.
   There was little difference between the ecclesiastical
          powers of Henry in Italy and in Germany. He knew his strength and did not
          shrink from using it. Before his imperial coronation he held a synod at Ravenna
          (January 1014) where he practically decreed by the advice of the bishops; for
          Ravenna he had named as archbishop his half-brother Arnold, who was opposed by
          a popularly-supported rival Adalbert. This probably canonical prelate was
          deposed, and after Henry’s coronation a Roman synod approved the judgment,
          although it did obtain for the victim the compensation of a smaller see.
          Decrees against simonist ordinations and the
          alienation through pledges of Church lands were also passed, and published by
          the Emperor. A liturgical difference between Roman and German use in the mass
          was even decided in favour of the latter. So far did
          German influence prevail.
   The reforming tendencies of the German Church found
          full expression at the Synod of Seligenstadt (12
          August 1023). In 1021 a young imperial chaplain Aribo had been made Archbishop of Mayence; and he aimed at
          giving the German Church not only a better spirit but a more coherent
          discipline. In the preamble to the canons, Aribo states the aim of himself and his suffragans, among
          whom was Burchard of Worms (Bishop 1000-1025): it was
          to establish uniformity in worship, discipline, and ecclesiastical morals. The
          twenty canons regulated fasting, some points of clerical observance, observance
          of marriage, in which the canonical and not the civil reckoning of degrees of
          kinship was to hold; lay patrons were forbidden to fill vacancies without the
          approval and assent of the bishop; no one was to go to Rome (i.e. for judgment)
          without leave of his bishop, and no one subjected to penance was to go to Rome
          in the hope of a lighter punishment. This legislation was inspired by the
          reforming spirit of the German Church, due not only to the saintly Emperor but
          to many ecclesiastics of all ranks, with whom religion was a real thing; and
          for the furtherance of this the regulations of the Church were to be obeyed.
          The Canon Law, now always including the Forged Decretals, involved respect to
          papal authority, but Aribo and his suffragans laid stress also upon the rights of
          metropolitans and bishops in the national Church, which gave them not only much
          power for good but the machinery for welding the nation together.
   
           JOHN XIX
               
           In June 1024 Benedict VIII died and was followed by
          his brother Romanus the Senator, who became John XIX; his election, which was
          tainted by bribery and force, was soon followed by the death of the Emperor (13
          July 1024). The new monarch, Conrad II, was supported by the German adherents
          in Italy and especially by the Archbishop Aribert of Milan, a city always
          important in imperial politics. Both he and John XIX were ready to give Conrad
          the crowns which it was theirs to bestow. So in 1026 he came to Italy; and he
          and his wife Gisela were crowned in St Peter’s (26 March 1027). Then, after
          passing to South Italy, he slowly returned home, leaving John XIX to continue a
          papacy, inglorious and void of reform, until his death in January 1032. Under
          him old abuses revived, and so the state of things at Rome grew worse, while in
          Germany, although Conrad II (1024-1039) was very different from Henry II in
          Church affairs, the party of reform was gaining strength.
           With the election of Benedict IX, formerly Theophylact, son of Alberic of
          Tusculum, brother of a younger Roman us the Consul, and nephew of Benedict VIII
          and John XIX, papal history reached a crisis, difficult enough in itself, and
          distorted, even at the time, by varying accounts. According to the ordinary
          story, Benedict IX was only twelve years old at his election, but as he grew
          older he grew also in debauchery, until even the Romans, usually patient of
          papal scandal, became restive; then at length the Emperor Henry III had to come
          to restore decency and order at the centre of Western
          Christendom. But there is reason to doubt something of the story. That Benedict
          was only twelve years old at his accession rests on the confused statement of Rodulf Glaber; there is reason to
          suppose he was older. The description of his depravity becomes more highly coloured as years go by and the controversies of Pope and
          Emperor distort the past. But there is enough to show that as a man he was
          profligate and bad, as a Pope unworthy and ineffective. It was, however, rather
          the events of his papacy, singular and significant, than his character, that
          made the crisis. He was the last of a series of what we may call dynastic
          Popes, rarely pious and often bad; after him there comes a school of reformed
          and reformers.
   Conrad II differed much in Church matters from Henry
          II. It is true that he kept the feasts of the Church with fitting regularity
          and splendour and that he also was a “brother” of
          some monasteries. But his aims were purely secular, and the former imperial
          regard for learning and piety was not kept up. Some of his bishops, like Thietmar of Hildesheim, were ignorant; others, like Reginhard of Liege and Ulrich of Basle, had openly bought
          their sees, and not all of them, like Reginhard,
          sought absolution at Rome. Upon monasteries the king’s hand was heavy: he dealt
          very freely with their possessions, sometimes forcing them to give lands as
          fiefs to his friends, sometimes even granting the royal abbeys themselves as
          such. Thus the royal power worked harmfully or, at any rate, not favourably for the Church, and
          bishops or abbots eager for reform could no longer reckon upon kingly help. It
          is true that Poppo of Stablo enjoyed royal favour, but other ecclesiastics who,
          like Aribo of Mainz, had
          supported Conrad at his accession, received small encouragement. Conrad’s
          marriage with Gisela trespassed on the Church’s rule of affinity, and the
          queen’s interest in ecclesiastical appointments, by which her friends and
          relatives gained, did not take away the reproach; but she favoured reformers, especially the Cluniacs, whose influence
          in Burgundy was useful.
           A change in imperial policy then coincided with a
          change in Popes. Benedict VIII may have been inspired by Henry II, but John XIX
          was a tool of Conrad. For instance, he had to reverse a former decision, by
          which the Patriarch of Grado had been made
          independent of his brother of Aquileia. Poppo of
          Aquileia was a German and naturally an adherent of Conrad; everyone knew why
          the decision was changed. It was even more significant that the Emperor spoke
          formally of the decree of the faithful of the realm, “of the Pope John, of the
          venerable patriarch Poppo, and others.” It was thus
          made clear that, whether for reform or otherwise, the Pope was regarded by the
          Emperor exactly as were the higher German prelates. They were all in his realm
          and therefore in his hands. Here he anticipated a ruler otherwise very differently-minded,
          Henry III.
   Benedict IX could be treated with even less respect
          than John XIX. It is true that he held synods (1036 and 1038), that he made the
          Roman Bishop of Silva Candida bibliothecarius (or
          head of the Chancery) in succession to Pilgrim of Cologne. But in 1038 he
          excommunicated Aribert of Milan, who was giving trouble to Conrad. To the
          Emperor he was so far acceptable, but in Rome where faction lingered on he had
          trouble. Once (at a date uncertain) the citizens tried to assassinate him at
          the altar itself. Later (1044) a rebellion was more successful: he and his
          brother were driven from the city, although they were able to hold the Trastevere. Then John, Bishop of Sabina, was elected Pope,
          taking the name of Sylvester III. Again we hear of bribery, but as John’s see
          was in the territory of the Crescentii, we may
          suppose that this rival house was concerned in this attack upon the Tusculans; in fifty days the latter, helped by Count Gerard
          of Galeria, drove out Sylvester’s party, and he
          returned to his former see. Then afterwards Benedict withdrew from the Papacy
          in favour of his godfather, John Gratian, Archpriest
          of St John at the Latin Gate, who took the name of Gregory VI. The new Pope
          belonged to the party of reform; he was a man of high character, but his
          election had been stained by simony, for Benedict, even if he were weary of his
          office and of the Romans, and longed, according to Bonizo’s curious tale, for marriage, had been bought out by the promise of the income
          sent from England as Peter’s Pence. The change of Popes, however, was welcomed
          by the reformers, and Peter Damian in particular hailed Gregory as the dove
          bearing the olivebranch to the ark. Even more
          significant for the future was Gregory’s association with the young Hildebrand;
          both were probably connected with the wealthy family of Benedict the Christian.
          There was a simplicity in Gregory’s character which, in a bad society calling
          loudly for reform, led him to do evil that good might come. For nearly two
          years he remained Pope, but reform still tarried.
   Attention has been too often concentrated on the
          profligacy of Benedict IX, which in its more lurid colours shines so prominently in later accounts. What is remarkable, however, is the
          corruption, not of a single man, even of a single Pope, but of the whole Roman
          society. Powerful family interests maintained it; the imperial power might
          counterbalance them, and, as we have seen, the Papacy had been lately treated
          much as a German bishopric. In the Empire itself there had been a change;
          Conrad II had died (4 June 1039), and his son Henry III, a very different man,
          now held the sceptre.
   
           EMPEROR HENRY III
               
           Whether it be true or not that, as Bonizo tells us, Peter the Archdeacon became discontented and went to ask Henry’s
          interference, it is certain that in 1046 Henry came to Italy; German interests
          and the state of the Church alike incited him. At Pavia (25 October) he held a
          Council, and the denunciation of simony made there by him gave the keynote of
          his policy, now, after Germany, to be applied to Italy and Rome itself.
           Henry was now a man of twenty-two, versed in business,
          trained to responsibilities and weighty decisions since his coronation at
          eleven. He had been carefully taught, but, while profiting from his teachers,
          had also learnt to think and decide for himself. He had a high ideal of his
          kingly office; to a firm belief in righteousness he added a conception of his
          task and power such as Charlemagne had shown. He was hailed, indeed, as a
          second Charlemagne, and like him as a second David, destined to slay the
          Goliath of simony. But in his private life he far surpassed the one and the
          other in purity. He saw, as he had declared at Constance and Treves (1043), the
          need of his realm for peace, but the peace was to come from his royal sway. He
          was every inch a king, but heart and soul a Christian king. Simony he loathed,
          and at one breath the atmosphere of Court and Church was to be swept clear of
          it. Inside the Church its laws were to bind not only others but himself as
          well: no son of a clerk, for instance, could hope for a bishopric under him,
          because this was a breach of law, and he told Richard of St Vannes that he
          sought only spiritually-minded men for prelates. His father had been guilty of
          simony, but, at much loss to himself, he abstained from it; his father had been
          harsh, but he did not hesitate to reverse his decisions: thus he reinstated
          Aribert at Milan. But on the other hand, election by chapters, for bishoprics
          and monasteries, was unknown: he himself made the appointments and made them
          well; in the ceremony of investiture he gave not only the staff but the ring.
          Synods he called at his will, and in them played much the part of Constantine
          at Nicaea. This was for Germany, and in Italy he played, or meant to play, the
          same part. The case of Widger of Ravenna is
          significant. This canon of Cologne had been named as Archbishop of Ravenna
          (1044), but when two years had passed he was still unconsecrated, although he
          wore episcopal robes at mass. He was summoned to the imperial court, and the
          German bishops were asked to decide his case. Wazo of
          Liège asserted that an Italian bishop could not be tried in Germany, but
          clearly to Henry the distinction meant nothing. Wazo also laid down the principle, of novel sound then although common later, that
          to the Pope they owed obedience, to the Emperor fealty; secular matters the one
          was to judge, ecclesiastical matters the other. Widger’s case, then, was for the Pope and Italy, not for Henry and Germany.
          Nevertheless, Henry gained his point and Widger had
          to return his ring and staff. It was doubly significant that the distinction
          between ecclesiastical and secular authority should be drawn by Wazo, for the king had no more devoted servant; he said
          once that if the Emperor put out his right eye he should still serve him with
          the left, and his acts, notably in defending the imperial rights around Liege
          even by force, answered to his words. He was the bishop, too, to whom, when he
          asserted the superiority of his episcopal anointing, Henry answered that he
          himself was also anointed. Here then, in the principles of Wazo,
          canonist, bishop, loyalist, and royal servant, but a clear thinker withal, were
          the signs of future conflict. In Henry’s own principles might be seen something
          of the same unformed conflict, but with him they were reconciled in his own
          authority and power.
   Such was the king whom the scandals of the Papacy
          called from Germany, where for six years the Church had rapidly improved, to
          Rome, over which reformers grieved. Of Rome, Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino and afterwards Pope as Victor III (1086-7), could
          write, although with the exaggeration of a critic: “the Italian priesthood, and
          among them most conspicuously the Roman pontiffs, were in the habit of defying
          all law and all authority; thus utterly confounding together things sacred and
          profane. Few prelates kept themselves untainted with the vile pollution of
          simony; few, very few, kept the commandments of God or served him with upright
          hearts.”
   
           THE SYNOD OF SUTRI
               
           After his synod at Pavia, Henry III went on to
          Piacenza, where Gregory VI, the only Pope actually in power, came to meet him
          and was received with fitting honour. Then in Roman
          Tuscany another synod was held at Sutri; at this
          point later and conflicting accounts, papal and imperial, begin gravely to
          distort the evidence and the sequence of events. At the synod the story of the
          payment made by Gregory VI for the Papacy was told; he was most probably
          deposed, although a later pro-papal account made him resign of himself, as the
          bishops refused to judge him. Up to their interview at Piacenza Henry had
          treated him as the legitimate Pope, but afterwards there was certainly a
          change. The details of his accession were probably now more clearly unfolded;
          stress may have been laid upon them, and so Henry may have been influenced. It
          was not an unknown thing for an Emperor to remove a Pope. Another motive may
          also have influenced him. His second marriage to Agnes of Poitou, sound as a
          piece of policy, was within the prohibited degrees. It had caused some
          discussion in Germany, but there no bishop, whatever he thought, cared to
          withstand a king so good. Probably at Rome it would be looked at more
          suspiciously, and to the eyes of a strict Pope might go against the coronation
          of the royal pair. We are reminded of the marriage of William the Conqueror;
          both cases would at a later date have been rightly covered by a dispensation,
          but the law and its system of dispensations was only beginning to grow into
          shape. And Henry might naturally wish for a Pope who would support him without
          reserve, for such was his view of bishops generally. The exile, which Gregory
          was to pass in Germany up to his death (probably in October 1047), is a strange
          ending to an almost blameless life; it can only be accounted for by the fear of
          danger arising from him if he were left in Italy. The doubt about Henry’s
          marriage, and the recognition of Gregory VI as the true Pope, widespread in
          Italy and testified to by Wazo of Liège in Germany,
          might be used for trouble.
   But if Gregory was removed from the papal throne on
          the ground of an invalid title, either Benedict IX or Sylvester III must be the
          rightful Pope; the throne could hardly now be treated as vacant. Henry had
          doubtless made up his mind for a German Pope, who could be better relied on
          than an Italian; Rome could well be treated as Milan or Ravenna had been, and a
          German Pope was a good precedent since the days of Gregory V. The claims of
          Benedict IX and even of Sylvester III were stirred into life, although they may
          not have been urged; the story that they were considered at Sutri comes from later writers and is unlikely. It was probably in a synod at Rome
          (23-24 October) that Benedict was deposed; at one time he had certainly been a
          rightful, if an unrighteous, Pope, and so he must be legally deposed. Sylvester
          III, whose claims were weaker, disappeared into monastic retirement at Fruttuaria, and was, if dealt with at all, probably deposed
          in the same synod.
   
           CLEMENT II
               
           The way was now clear, and Suidger of Bamberg, a worthy bishop, was chosen as Pope (Christmas 1046). Then, as
          Clement II, he crowned Henry and Agnes. We can judge of the degradation of the
          papal office, in spite of the enhanced appeal to it through the spread of Canon
          Law, by the refusal of Adalbert of Bremen to accept it on Henry’s offer; his
          own see, even apart from his special Baltic plans, seemed to be more important.
          There was a show of election in the appointment, but the real power lay with
          Henry, who named Suidger with the approval of a large
          assembly; once again he treated an Italian bishopric, even that of Rome, as he
          would have done a German. Significant is the renunciation by the Romans of
          their election rights, which must be taken along with the title of Patrician
          given to Henry.
   But the new state of things was not to pass without
          criticism. From Lower Lorraine came a curious and rather bitter tractate (De ordinando pontifice auctor Gallicus) written late in 1047. It betrays some
          unrevealed discussion, and the writer urges the French bishops, who had not
          been consulted in the election of Clement, to stand aloof; it was not for the
          Church to palter with the laws of marriage at the wish of a king. Evidently,
          therefore, Henry’s marriage was held to be of moment in the election. Even in
          Germany there were some who, like Siegfried of Gorze and like Wazo a little later, were uneasy. Siegfried
          had disliked the marriage, and Wazo protested to
          Henry, when he sought a successor to Clement, that no Pope could be made while
          Gregory VI was still alive.
   Clement II was worthy of his office, but his papacy
          was short, and so uneventful; he was overshadowed by the presence of the
          Emperor, whom he followed to southern Italy, but he held in January 1047 a
          Council at Rome, where deposition was decreed against all simonists,
          while those ordained by a simonist bishop were to do
          forty days’ penance. Like preceding Popes he was ready to excommunicate the
          Emperor’s foes, and the Beneventans, who refused
          admittance to the German army, were sufferers. But, setting a strange example
          to later Popes, he kept his old bishopric, to which, as “his sweetest bride,”
          he sent an affectionate letter, and where on his unexpected death (9 October
          1047) his body was laid to rest (he was the only Pope buried in Germany); a
          widely-accepted rumour had it that his unexplained
          illness was due to poison administered in the interests of Benedict IX, and the
          same was said about his successor. It is certain, at any rate, that on 9
          November Benedict returned to Rome, and, supported by the Marquess Boniface of Tuscany, kept his old office until July (1048). Neither Roman
          families nor Italian nobles would accept imperial control if they could help
          it. The power of Boniface now threatened to become dangerous: his grandfather Azzo owned Canossa, and his father Tedald, favoured by Henry II, had held Mantua, Ferrara, and
          other towns, and kept them faithful to the Emperors. Boniface at first followed
          his father’s policy and Conrad had given him the March of Tuscany. But his
          choice of a second wife, Beatrice, daughter of Frederick, Duke of Upper
          Lorraine, brought him into a wider sphere of politics. Distrust grew between
          him and the Emperor. At Rome he could injure the Emperor most, and hence his
          support of Benedict. The Romans, however, did not follow him; a deputation was
          sent to Henry at Pohlde seeking a new nomination, and Poppo, Bishop of Brixen,
          was chosen (Christmas 1047). But Boniface, although Henry’s representative in
          Italy, at first refused to lead the new Pope to Rome, and only renewed orders
          brought him to obedience; then at length he expelled Benedict IX, and the new
          Pope was enthroned as Damasus II (17 July 1048). On 9
          August he too died at Palestrina, after a pontificate of only twenty- three
          days; poison was again suspected, although malaria may have been the cause. It
          was no wonder that the deputation which again visited Germany found the papal
          throne little desired. They suggested Halinard of
          Lyon, much beloved in Rome, where he had sojourned long. But he did not accept,
          even if Henry offered it. At Worms the Emperor chose a relative of his own,
          Bruno of Toul, and so there began a papacy which was
          to change even the unchanged Rome itself.
   
           LEO IX
               
           Bruno, Bishop of Toul, was
          son of Hugo, Count of Egisheim, and related to Conrad
          II, who destined him for rich preferment. Herman of Toul died on 1 April 1026, and the clergy and citizens at once chose for successor
          Bruno, who was well known to them but was then with the army of Conrad II in
          Italy. The Emperor hinted at a refusal in hope of better things, but the
          unanimous election seemed to the young ecclesiastic a call from God; there had
          been no secular influence at work on his behalf, and so to Toul,
          a poor bishopric, often disturbed by border wars, he determined to go.
   The future Pope had been born 21 June 1002, and, as
          destined for the Church, was sent to a school at Toul,
          noted equally for its religious spirit and its aristocratic pupils. His parents
          were religious and devoted patrons of monasteries in Alsace, and at Toul reforming tendencies, due to William of Dijon, were
          strong, while an earlier bishop, Gerard (963994), was revered as a saint; the
          young man, learned and literary, became a canon of Toul,
          and although not a monk had a deep regard for St Benedict, to whose power he
          attributed his recovery from an illness. From Toul he
          passed to the chapel of the king, and as deputy for Herman led the vassals of
          the bishopric with Conrad; in military affairs he shewed ability, and was, from
          his impressive figure, his manners and activity, liked by many besides Conrad
          and Gisela. His acceptance of Toul seemed to others a
          self-denial, but even its very poverty and difficulties drew him. He was not
          consecrated until 9 September 1027, as Poppo of
          Treves wished to impose a stricter form of oath upon his suffragan,
          and not until Conrad’s return did the dispute end by the imposition of the
          older form. This difficulty cleared, Bruno devoted himself to his diocese:
          monastic reform in a city where monasteries were unusually important was a
          necessity, and to this he saw; the city lay open to attacks from the Count of
          Champagne, and Bruno had often occasion to use his military experience,
          inherited and acquired. Thus, like the best bishops of his day, notably Wazo of Liège, he was a good vassal to the Emperor and a
          defender of the Empire. On the ecclesiastical side, too, he had that love of
          the past which gave a compelling power to historic traditions: it was he who
          urged Widerich, Abbot of St Evre,
          to write a life of his predecessor, St Gerard; as a pilgrim to the apostolic
          threshold, he often went to Rome. In diplomacy he was versed and useful : in
          Burgundian politics he had taken a share; he had helped to negotiate the peace
          with France in 1032. As a worthy bishop with many-sided interests and
          activities he was known far beyond his diocese, and even in countries besides
          his own.
   Christmas 1048 Bruno spent at Toul,
          and then, accompanied by other bishops and by Hildebrand, the follower of
          Gregory VI, he went to Rome. It was a journey with the details of which
          clerical and partisan romance afterwards made itself busy. But an election at
          Rome was usual and, to Leo more than to other men, necessary. As before at Toul, his path must be plain before him. Only when accepted
          by his future flock could he begin his work, although the real choice had been
          the Emperor’s. Leo moved along a path he had already trodden, and he needed no
          Hildebrand, with the warning of an older prophet, to guide his steps. Already
          he knew a bishop’s duty and the needs of the Church. He now passed into a
          larger world, even if he kept his former see up to August 1051: his aims and
          his spirit were already set, only he was now to work on an international field;
          reading, travel, diplomacy, and episcopal work had trained him into a strong,
          enlightened statesman, of fixed principles and piety, clear as to the means he
          ought to use. Church reform had begun in many places and under many leaders;
          its various forms had been tending to coherence in principles and supports,
          removal of abuses, and recognition of Canon Law. Taught by these, many eyes had
          turned to Rome. But guidance had been lacking thence, and abuses had flourished
          to excess. Leo IX was to bring to the movement guidance; he was to give it a
          coherence based on papal leadership and power. We find under him all the former
          elements of the movement welded together, and re-interpreted by a Pope who knew
          what the Papacy could do. Hence came its new strength. His papacy is marked by
          its many Councils, held not only at Rome but also far afield: Rome (after
          Easter 1049), Pavia (Whitsuntide), Rheims (October), Mayence (October), Rome (Easter 1050), Salerno, Siponto,
          Vercelli (September 1050), Rome (Easter 1051), Mantua (February 1053), Rome
          (Easter). But this itinerary gives little idea of his travels; on his route
          from place to place he made visits of political importance, such as to
          Lorraine, and southern Italy, and even to Hungary; everywhere he strove to
          rouse the Church, and incidentally composed political or ecclesiastical strifes. Details are wanting for some of these councils,
          but we must assume that in all of them decrees against simony and clerical
          marriage, often spoken of as concubinage (which was
          sometimes the truth), were issued. At the Roman Council of 1049 simony was much
          discussed; guilty bishops were deposed, and one of them, Kilian of Sutri, while trying to clear himself by false witness, fell
          like another Ananias and died soon afterwards. There was a like incident later
          at Rheims, when the innocent Archbishop of Besançon,
          pleading for the guilty and much accused Hugh of Langres,
          suddenly lost his voice. It was ascribed to a miracle by St Remy (Remigius), but such details shOw how personal responsibility was now being pressed home on the bishops. There
          was a suggestion that ordinations bv simonist bishops should be declared null, and it is
          sometimes said that Leo decreed they were so. This, as it was urged, would have
          made almost a clean sweep of the Roman clergy, for many Popes of late had been simoniacal. Finally it was settled on the lines laid down
          by Clement II that a penance of forty days met the case. But Leo brought up the
          matter again in 1050 and 1051, and on the last date he bade the bishops seek
          light from God. In the Curia there were different views. Peter Damian insisted
          that the acts of simoniacal bishops were valid, and
          he supported this by the assertion that some of them had worked miracles;
          Cardinal Humbert, on the other hand, went strongly on the other side. The two
          men were foremost in rival schools of thought, divided by opinions on other
          matters also. Peter Damian, for instance, welcomed the help of pious kings like
          Henry III, while Humbert held any lay interference in Church affairs an
          outrage. Strife on this matter was to grow keener, and the fortune of battle is
          recorded as by an index in the treatment of simonist ordinations. There was a side issue in the question whether simony was not a
          heresy, as the musician-monk Guido of Arezzo suggested; if it were, simonist ordinations, according to received doctrine, would
          be automatically void.
   The Council of Rheims (3 October 1049) was of special
          importance. In France local conditions varied: here the king and there a great
          vassal controlled episcopal appointments, but everywhere simony was rife. It
          arose, however, not as in Germany from the policy of one central power, based
          upon a general principle of law or administration; it was a widespread abuse of
          varied local origin to be attacked in many individual cases. The needed reform
          was now to be preached on French soil by the Pope himself; it was to be
          enforced with all the authority given to the Pope by the Canon Law, genuine or
          forged; it appealed to ancient decisions, such as that of Chalcedon (canon II,
          repeated at Paris in 829), against simony, whether in ordinations or in ecclesiastical
          appointments, and such as those enforcing attendance at councils, which were
          henceforth commoner. The appearance of a Pope with definite claims to obedience
          was thus emphasised by an appeal to the deficient but
          reviving sense of corporate life. And, when the synod had done its work, the
          appeal was driven home by the summons of guilty bishops to Rome, and by the
          Pope’s bold guardianship of free elections against royal interference, as in
          the case of Sens (1049) and Le Puy (1053), and Henry
          I shewed himself fairly complaisant.
   But a German Pope was by no means welcome in France;
          national diplomacy rather than a fear of papal authority made Henry I look
          askance on the assembly at Rheims. The consecration of the new abbey church of
          St Remy was the occasion of Leo’s visit, but the king, by summoning his
          episcopal vassals to service in a well-timed campaign, made their attendance at
          the synod difficult, and so many held aloof. An attack upon simony was the
          first and main business, and after an allocution the bishops one by one were
          called upon to declare their innocence of it. To do this was notoriously
          difficult for Guy, the local Archbishop, and the Bishops of Langres,
          Nevers, Coutances, and Nantes were in the same
          plight. The archbishop promised to clear himself at Rome the next Easter, which
          he may have done; the much-accused Hugh of Langres fled and was excommunicated; Pudicus of Nantes was
          deposed; the two others cleared themselves of suspicion. The Archbishop of
          Sens, and the Bishops of Beauvais and Amiens, were excommunicated for
          non-attendance with insufficient reason. The canons enjoined election by clergy
          and people for bishops and abbots, forbade the sale of orders, safeguarded
          clerical dues but prohibited fees for burials, eucharists,
          and service to the sick; some canons recalled the objects of the Truce of God,
          and others dealt with infringements of the marriage law. If the synod had been
          in itself and in many ways, and above all in its vigorous reforms, an
          expression of the Church’s corporate life, it also drove home with unexpected
          energy the lesson of individual responsibility. The new Papacy as a means of
          reform had justified itself in a hitherto disorderly field. Summonses to Rome,
          attendance at Roman synods, and the visits of Roman legates to France, were to
          secure for the future the gains that Leo had made possible.
   From Rheims the Pope passed by way of Verdun, Metz,
          and Treves, to Mainz, where (in October) a large
          Council was held. Here simony and clerical marriage were sternly condemned.
          Adalbert of Bremen and other bishops after their return home enforced these
          decrees with varying strictness, but without much success; Adalbert drove wives
          of clerics from his city to the country outside. But the unhappy fact that a
          few of the bishops, and notably Sigebod of Spires,
          were not above moral reproach gave Bardo of Mainz, who was named legate, a difficult task. On leaving
          Germany, Leo visited Alsace and Lorraine, having with him Humbert, a monk of Moyenmoutier in the Vosges; he was designed for a new
          arch-see in Sicily, but that not being created he was named Cardinalbishop of Silva Candida. It was doubtless meant that he was to help Leo in the plans
          already forming against the Normans in southern Italy. Then, whether before or
          after the Easter Council at Rome (1050) it is hard to say, Leo went to southern
          Italy where matters religious and secular needed attention. At the outset of
          his reign an embassy, it is said, from Benevento had begged for his help; there
          was another embassy in 1052, and probably an intermediate one. And one of the
          legates whom Leo sent to report upon the situation was Cardinal Humbert. In his
          own visit of 1050 Leo held Councils at Salerno and at Siponto,
          in the Norman territory; here the customary decrees were made and some simoniacal bishops deposed. The Easter Council at Rome
          (1050) was largely attended, as was becoming usual, fifty-five bishops and
          thirty-two abbots being present. Guido of Milan successfully cleared himself
          from a charge of simony, but his very appearance to do so marked, much as
          similar trials at Rheims and Mayence, a triumph for
          papal power. But, unhappily for Guido, the struggle for precedence between him
          and Humfred of Ravenna ended in his being wounded so
          severely as to be healed only on his return by the miraculous help of St
          Ambrose. But Humfred himself offended by words
          against the Pope, for which he was excommunicated at the Council of Vercelli,
          and his forgiveness at Augsburg (February 1051) was followed by a somewhat
          dramatic death. The very stars seemed to fight against Leo’s foes, and
          submissions to his commands became more general.
           It is needless to follow the later councils of Leo;
          they were all part of the policy so strikingly begun. A few fresh matters
          appear in them, mingled with the old: at Vercelli (1 September 1050) the heresy
          of Berengar, previously discussed in the Roman
          Council of the same year, was brought up afresh and was to come up again and
          again. It was an outcome, almost inevitable, of the varied and growing movements
          of the day. 
   
           THE NORMANS
           
           From Vercelli Leo went by way of Burgundy and Lorraine
          to Germany, only coming back to Rome for the Easter Council of 1051. He wished
          to get the Emperor’s support for a Norman campaign, but the advice of Gebhard of Eichstadt (afterwards
          Victor II) swayed Henry against it. Then later in the year he visited southern
          Italy, whither he had already sent Cardinal Humbert and the Patriarch of
          Aquileia as legates. His plans almost reached a Crusade; he wished for help
          both from Henry and the Emperor Constantine IX (1042-1055); he had visions of a
          papal supremacy which should extend to the long-severed East. Hence a campaign
          against the Normans and negotiations with Constantinople were combined.
          Benevento, whence the citizens had driven the Lombard Princes, and which Leo
          now visited, was at Worms (autumn 1052) in a later visit to Germany given to
          the Papacy in exchange for Bamberg. Leo IX therefore, like many a Pope, has
          been called, though for services further afield, the founder of the Temporal
          Power. On his return from the south, Councils at Mantua (February 1053), where
          opposition to the decrees for celibacy raised a Lombard riot, and at Rome
          (Easter) followed; at the latter, the rights of the Patriarch of Grado over Venice and Istria were confirmed, and to the see
          of Foroiulium (Udine), where the Patriarch of
          Aquileia had taken refuge after the destruction of his city by the Lombards, was now left only Lombard territory. These
          measures are to be taken along with the Pope’s Eastern plans, in the general
          policy and military preparations for which Hildebrand had a share. But the
          host, like other crusading forces, was strangely composed, and the battle of Civitate, which was to have crowned everything, brought
          only disaster and disappointment. An honourable captivity with the Normans at Benevento made warfare, against which Peter
          Damian raised a voice, impossible, but Leo could still carry on correspondence
          and negotiations. The story of the papal embassy to Constantinople, whence help
          was expected more hopefully than from Germany, has been told elsewhere. The
          three legates, Cardinal Humbert, Frederick of Lorraine, Cardinal and
          Chancellor, and Peter, Bishop of Amalfi, had small success, and the breach
          between the Churches of the East and of the West only became wider and more
          lasting. Constantine IX had hoped by conquering the Normans to revive his
          failing dominion over southern Italy, where the Catapan Argyrus was as anti-Norman as Leo himself. But
          Michael Cerularius, Patriarch since March 1043, had
          his own large views, carried into politics with much ability, and a natural
          dislike of the now more strongly-urged Roman claims. Constantinople for many
          centuries had jealously maintained its independence of Rome; it knew nothing of
          the Forged Decretals, while Canon Law, Church customs, and ritual were now
          taking separate paths in East and West. Eastern Emperor and Eastern Patriarch
          thus had very different interests and views about Leo’s designs. The fortune of
          war favoured the Patriarch, for Argyrus,
          like Leo, was routed in Italy (February 1053), and the negotiations at
          Constantinople came to worse than naught.
   But the end of a great papal reign was near. Sick in
          heart and health, Leo left Benevento (12 March 1054), slowly travelling to the
          Rome where he had dwelt so little but which he tried to make so great. Before
          his death he besought the Romans to keep from perjury, forbidden marriages, and
          robbery of the Church; he absolved all whom he had excommunicated; he prayed
          for the Church and for the conversion of Benedict IX and his brothers, who had
          set up simony over nearly all the world. Then (19 April 1054) he died.
           There seems to us a contrast between the more
          political schemes of his later and the reforming work of his earlier years. But
          to him they were both part of the task to which he had been called. To breathe
          a new spirit into the Church and to extend its power were both to make it more
          effective in its duty. Even his warfare for the Church was merely doing as Pope
          what had been part of his recognised duty as Bishop
          of Toul. And his papal reign made a new departure.
          His conciliar and legislative activity had been great, even if, amid the
          pressure of large events and policies, it slackened, like that of Gregory VII,
          before the end. He brought bishops more generally into varied touch with Rome.
          He renewed the papal intercourse and growing control for many lands, such as
          Hungary and England. He made Adalbert of Bremen (1053) Papal Vicar for his
          Baltic lands, with power to form new sees, even “regibus invitis.” Much that he had begun was carried further
          by later Popes, and great as it was in itself his pontificate was perhaps even
          greater as an example and an inspiration. Under the influence of reform in
          Germany, of his own training, his own piety, and his devotion to the Church, he
          had shown, as Bishop of Toul, a high conception of a
          bishop’s office. He brought the same to Rome, and with wider and more historic
          responsibilities he formed a like conception for the Papacy. His friend and
          almost pupil Hildebrand was wont, we are told, to dwell upon the life of Leo,
          and the things which tended to the glory of the Roman Church. One great thing
          above all he did in raising the College of Cardinals, which succeeding Popes,
          and notably Stephen IX, carried further. His very travels, and the councils
          away from Rome at which he presided, brought home to men the place and
          jurisdiction of the Papacy which was being taught then by the Canon Law. These
          councils were now attended not only by bishops but also by abbots, in quickly
          increasing numbers; first by such as those of Cluny and Monte Cassino, and then by others, until at Rheims (1049) about
          fifty appeared and at Rome (1050) thirty-two. Many abbots were now privileged
          to wear mitres and to ordain; attendance at councils
          was thus natural. They formed a solid phalanx of reformers, and the nucleus of
          a papal majority. Thus his pontificate abounded in beginnings upon which future
          days were to build. He brought the Papacy, after its time of degradation, and
          with the best impulses of a new day, into a larger field of work and power.
   Leo IX left his mark in many ways upon following
          reigns. The central direction of the Western Church continues, although with
          some fluctuations of policy and persons, while the improved organisation enables us to see it in the documents now more carefully preserved. The
          Chancery, upon which fell much work due to the new and wide-spread activity of
          the Popes, was re-organised by him after the model of
          the imperial Chancery. After his time the signatures of witnesses often appear,
          and so we can see who were the chief advisers of the Pope; this we can connect
          with the growing importance of the cardinals. Papal activities are seen in the
          number of privileges to monasteries, and many documents show a diligent papal
          guardianship of clerical and monastic property. Rome is kept closely in touch
          with many lands, leading prelates are informed of papal wishes and decrees. A
          continuity of policy and of care for special districts can also be traced in
          series of letters, such as those to Rheims.
   Leo’s reforming policy was carried on. Conciliar
          decrees upon clerical celibacy were repeated, and simony, sometimes forbidden
          afresh, like marriage, met with new punishment. The policy is much the same,
          and it is still more directed by Rome. But one difference between him and his
          successors soon appears, and slowly grows. He had worked well with the Emperor,
          but the new spirit breathed into the Papacy brought, with a new
          self-consciousness, a wish for independence. This was natural, and harmonised with the new feeling, intensified by Canon Law,
          that the hierarchy of the Church should not be entangled with that of the
          State. About the difficult application of this principle, views began to
          differ. The papal reigns to which we pass shew us the gradual disentanglement
          of these rival principles amid the clash of politics.
   
           VICTOR II
               
           But Leo’s successor was long in coming, and the exact
          course of events is somewhat doubtful. Gebhard of Eichstadt had been a trusted counsellor of Henry, he had
          thwarted the hopes of Leo for large help against the Normans, and now at length
          he became Pope. The Emperor might well hesitate to part with such a friend, and
          the prospect of the impoverished Papacy in difficult Italy was not enticing.
          Here as in the case of Leo IX the real decision lay with Henry. Gebhard’s elevation was settled in the last months of 1054,
          and he was received and, as Victor II, enthroned “ hilariter”
          at Rome (13 April 1055).
   The Norman victory, and another event, had altered
          affairs in Italy. Boniface of Tuscany, whose power and policy were threatening
          to Pope and Emperor alike, was assassinated on 6 May 1052, and his widow
          Beatrice married (1054) the dangerous and ambitious Godfrey the Bearded, the
          exiled Duke of Lorraine, who had been administering her estates. Hence arose
          difficulties with Henry. He was needed in Italy; in April he was in Verona, at
          Easter in Mantua. In spite of her defence he put
          Beatrice and her only remaining child Matilda in prison. Godfrey fled across
          the Alps, and his brother Frederick, lately returned from Constantinople, took
          refuge at the fortress-monastery of Monte Cassino;
          here (May-June 1057) he became abbot, after a short but fervid monastic career
          entered upon under the influence of Desiderius. At Whitsuntide (4 June 1055) Pope
          and Emperor were present at a council in Florence. Before leaving Italy Henry
          gave to the Pope Spoleto and Camerino, as well as
          making him Imperial Vicar in Italy. This may throw light on Henry’s choice of Gebhard and also his alleged promise to restore papal
          rights. But on 5 October 1056 the great Emperor died. The removal of a strong
          hand brought new responsibilities to the Pope, his old adviser and friend.
   Victor II, like Leo, dwelt little in Rome; he left it
          at the end of 1055 and travelled slowly to Germany; he was by Henry’s death-bed
          at Botfeld, and he buried him at Spires. Then at
          Aix-la-Chapelle he enthroned the young king Henry IV; his presence and
          experience were valuable to the Empress Agnes, now Regent, and he was able to
          clear her path and his own by a reconciliation with Godfrey, who was allowed to
          take the place of Boniface. By Lent 1057 Victor was in Rome to hold the usual
          council. Then he left the city for Monte Cassino to
          bring the stubborn monastery, which had elected an Abbot Peter without
          consulting Pope or Emperor, into accord with the Papacy. The elevation of the
          Cardinal-deacon Frederick to be its abbot and also Cardinal-priest of St Chrysogonus (14 June) marked a reconciliation, significant
          ecclesiastically and politically. In July Monte Cassino was left for a journey towards Rheims, where a great Council was to be held.
          But Victor’s death at Arezzo (28 July 1057) removed from the Empire a pillar of
          peace, and left the Church without a head. In those days of stress, workers who
          really faced their task rarely lived long. He was buried, not at Eichstadt as he and his old subjects would have wished, but
          at Ravenna.
           It is not so easy to sketch the character of Victor II
          as to record his doings. As a young man he had been chosen bishop almost
          incidentally by Henry III, who may have judged rightly his powers of steady
          service. The Eichstadt chronicles tell us that as a
          young man he did nothing puerile; it is also true that as an old man he did
          nothing great. But neither as German bishop nor as Pope did he ever fail in
          diligence or duty: his earlier reputation was gained rather as servant of the
          State than as prelate of the Church; as Imperial Vicar he might have brought
          peace to Italy as he had to Germany and its infant king. But death prevented
          his settling the Norman difficulty; there is no reason to think that he had
          forsaken his former view which had crossed that of Leo IX. His dealings with
          Monte Cassino, always strongly anti-Norman, had given
          him a new base upon which he could rely for peace as easily as for war. His
          work was sound but was not completed. He seems to us an official of many
          merits, but confidence was the only thing he inspired. He was no leader with
          policies and phrases ready; he was only a workman who needed not to be ashamed.
   
           STEPHEN I
               
           On 2 August 1057, the festival of Pope Stephen I,
          Frederick of Lorraine was elected Pope, and took the name of Stephen IX. He was
          in Rome when the news of Victor’s death came, and was asked to suggest a
          successor; he named Humbert, three Italian bishops, and Hildebrand. Then, when
          asked to be Pope himself, he unwillingly accepted. He was no imperialist like
          Victor, and he was, like the monks of his abbey, strongly anti-Norman. Above
          all he was an ecclesiastic, heart and soul. Moreover, he was freely elected at
          Rome; not until December was a deputation sent to inform the German Court;
          there was no whisper of kingly recognition and indeed there was no Emperor; he
          was elected, as a German chronicler complains, rege ignorante, although the circumstances
          may account for this.
   The new Pope had been a canon at Liege. His riches,
          increased by gifts at Constantinople, made him popular, but he was a monk of
          deep conviction. His short papacy leaves room for conjecture as to what with
          longer days he might have done. There were rumours that he meant to make Duke Godfrey Emperor, but he differed very widely from
          his more secular-minded brother. Like his predecessors he did not stay long in
          Rome; he soon left it for Monte Cassino, which he
          reached at the end of November; he arranged for Desiderius to be abbot after
          his death, but meanwhile to be sent on an embassy to Constantinople. The shadow
          of death was already on the Pope, when in February 1058 he went to Rome. Before
          this he had sent representatives, of whom Hildebrand was one, to Germany,
          probably to announce his election. Now he resolved to meet his brother, but
          before he set out he gathered together the cardinal-bishops and other clergy of
          Rome with the burghers. He told them he knew that after his death men would
          arise among them who lived for themselves, who did not follow the canons but,
          though laymen, wished to reach the papal throne. Then they took an oath not to
          depart from the canons and not to assent to a breach of them by others. He also
          bound them in case of his death to take no steps before Hildebrand’s arrival.
          Then he set out for Tuscany, but on 29 March 1058 died at Florence where he was
          buried. Weakness and sickness had long been his lot; it was needless to
          attribute his death to poison given by an emissary from Rome.
   It is clear that Pope Stephen’s thoughts were intent
          upon the Normans; what support Hildebrand had gained from the Empress-regent we
          do not know, and the Pope himself was eagerly awaiting his legate’s return.
          What further help and of what kind he was to gain from Duke Godfrey was even
          more uncertain. A policy of peace, such as Victor II had adopted, had more to
          recommend it than had one of war; Monte Cassino was
          under papal control, and all the cards were in the papal hand. The hurried
          fever of a dying man made for haste, but death was even quicker. Stephen’s
          papacy ended amid great possibilities.
   But one thing was certain: any line taken would be
          towards the continued reform of the Church. Stephen had drawn more closely
          around him able and determined reformers. Peter Damian he called to be
          Cardinal-bishop of Ostia, a post from which that thorough monk recoiled. He had
          been unwilling to pass from his beloved Fonte-Avellana to Ocri where Leo IX had made him prior; the sins of
          the monks filled him with horror, and now he shrank even more from the open
          world which did not even profess the monastic rule. The Pope had to appeal to
          his obedience and even to threaten excommunication. So Damian was consecrated
          at Rome in November 1057, under pressure which he held to be almost
          uncanonical. He was called from his diocese in 1059 to enforce the programme of discipline at Ambrosian Milan; with him was to
          go the active reformer Anselm, Bishop of Lucca. To their embassy we must return
          later. It is enough to notice here that Milan was thus brought into the papal
          sphere; Guido, its Archbishop, was ordered on 9 December 1057 to appear at the
          papal Court to discuss the situation.
   At length in 1070 Peter Damian gained his release from
          Alexander II so that he could return to his beloved penitential desert. But his
          cardinalate he kept and his influence he never lost. As legate, however, he
          brought his personal power into fresh fields: he was sent to difficult Milan in
          1057; to France in 1063 to settle the dispute between Drogo of Macon and the
          exempted Cluny; and as an old man of 62 to Germany in 1069 to handle the
          suggested divorce of Henry IV and Bertha. Each mission was a triumph for his
          firmness or, as he would have preferred to say, for the laws of the Church. The
          employment of legates to preside at councils superseded the heroic attempts of
          Leo IX to do so in person; the reverence owed to the Apostolic See was paid to
          its legates. So we have Humbert’s legateship to Benevento in 1051 and to
          Ravenna in 1053; that of Hildebrand to France in 1055, when he not only, as
          Damian tells us, deposed six bishops for simony but, as he himself told
          Desiderius, saw the simonist Archbishop of Lyons
          smitten dumb as he strove to finish the Gloria with the words “and to the Holy
          Ghost.” With the same great aim, Victor II named the Archbishops of Arles and
          Aix his permanent Vicars for southern France. Leo IX solemnly placed a mitre on the head of Bardo of
          Treves to mark him as Primate of Gallia Belgica (12
          March 1049), on 29 June 1049 gave Herman of Cologne the pallium and cross, on 6
          January 1053 gave the pallium and mitre to Adalbert
          of Bremen as Papal Vicar for the north, and on 18 October 1052 gave the pallium
          and the use of a special mitre to the Archbishop of Mayence; on 25 April 1057 Victor confirmed the privileges
          of Treves, and gave the mitre and pallium to Ravenna.
          The papal power was thus made more and more the mainspring of the Church.
          Metropolitans became the channels of papal power. To the Papacy men looked for
          authority, and from it they received honours which symbolised authority. Grants of the pallium to other sees
          extended the process, and other marks of honour, such
          as the white saddle-cloths of Roman clerics, were given and prized. The eleventh
          century, like the tenth, was one in which this varied taste for splendour, borrowed from the past, was liberally indulged.
          The mitre, papal and episcopal, was being more
          generally used and was altering in shape, and its growth illustrates a curious side
          of our period. Laymen shared the tastes of churchmen; Benzo’s vivid picture of
          “the Roman senate” wearing headdresses akin to the mitre charmed the pencil of a medieval chronicler.
   The death of Stephen IX gave the Roman nobles,
          restless if submissive under imperial control and papal power, a wished-for
          chance. Empire and Papacy were now somewhat out of touch, and other powers,
          Tuscan and Norman, had arisen in Italy. Gerard, Count of Galeria,
          formed a party with Tusculan and Crescentian help, burst into the city by night, 5 April 1058, and elected John Mincius, Cardinal-bishop of Velletri,
          as Benedict X; and money played its part in the election. The name was
          significant, but the Pope himself, more feeble than perverse, had previously
          been open to no reproach; he had been made cardinal by Leo IX, and on the death
          of Victor II had been suggested by Stephen himself as a possible Pope. Reform
          had thus made great strides between Benedict IX and Benedict X. Some of the
          cardinals were afar, Humbert in Florence, and Hildebrand on his way from
          Germany, whither he had gone, a little late, to announce the election of
          Stephen. But as a body they were now more coherent, less purely Roman, and more
          ecclesiastical; they declared against Benedict, threatening him with
          excommunication, and fled the city. Then they gathered together in Tuscany and
          consulted at leisure on another choice. In the end they settled on a
          Burgundian, Gerard Bishop of Florence, a sound and not too self-willed prelate
          of excellent repute, favoured by Duke Godfrey and not
          likely to take a line of his own. Besides the help of Godfrey the approval of
          the Empress Agnes was sought. Even in Rome itself there was a party against
          Benedict, headed by Leo de Benedicto Christiano, a rich citizen, son of a Jewish convert,
          influential in the Trastevere and in close touch with
          Hildebrand; they sent a deputation to the Empress Agnes at Augsburg, pleading
          that the election of Benedict had been due to force. As a result Duke Godfrey
          was ordered to lead the cardinals’ nominee to Rome. Gerard was elected at
          Siena, probably in December 1058, by the cardinals, together with high
          ecclesiastics and nobles, and chose the name of Nicholas II. His old see he
          kept until his death. Then an approach was made towards Rome; a synod was held
          at Sutri. Leo de Benedicto opened the Trastevere to them, and Benedict X fled
          for a few days to Passarano and thence to Galeria, where for three months he was besieged by the
          Normans under Richard of Aversa. Nicholas was enthroned on 24 January 1059; and
          the captured Benedict was deposed, stripped of his vestments, and imprisoned in
          the Hospitium of the church of Sant’
          Agnese. His name was long left in the papal lists, and he was not an anti-Pope
          in the ordinary sense until Nicholas II was elected. The choice of Gerard had
          removed the election of a Pope from the purely Roman sphere to one of wider
          importance, and the alliance with the Normans, brought about by the help of
          Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, gave the Pope a
          support independent of the Empire or Rome. In all these negotiations
          Hildebrand played a great part. In the interval between his enthronement and
          the Easter Council, Nicholas visited Spoleto, Farfa,
          and Osimo, and at the last place on 6 March 1059
          appointed Desiderius as cardinal. In Italy, after the Easter Council at Rome,
          he held a Council at Melfi, where decrees on clerical
          celibacy were repeated stringently, and the famous peace was made with the
          Normans. Then he returned to Rome, accompanied by a Norman army, and the papal sovereignty
          was enforced. The Norman alliance, and the celebrated decree on papal
          elections, worked together, and a new era began.
           A great Council of 113 bishops was held on 14 April
          1059 at the Lateran. Earlier decrees had broadly regulated the election of a
          Pope; Stephen III (769) and Stephen IV (862-3) had anathematised anyone contesting an election made by priests, prelates, and the whole clergy
          of the Roman Church. Otto I had renewed the settlement of Lothar I (824), by which the election was to be made by the whole clergy and nobility
          of the whole Roman people, canonically and justly, but the elect was not to be
          consecrated until he had taken the oath to the Emperor. The normal canonical
          form was prescribed, but disorderly nobles, imperial pressure, civic riots, and
          simony, had tampered with Rome even more than other churches. The German Popes
          had brought reform but at the price of ecclesiastical freedom.
   The Election Decree of 1059 has come down to us in two
          forms, known as imperial and papal respectively. The latter is now generally
          accepted, and the former is held to have been falsified by Guibert,
          then Imperial Chancellor for Italy and afterwards Archbishop of Ravenna and
          anti-Pope as Clement III. The business of election was, in the first place, to
          be treated of by the cardinal-bishops. Then they were
          to call in firstly the cardinal-clerics, and secondly the rest of the Roman
          clergy and the people. To prevent simony, the cardinal-bishops, taking the
          place of a metropolitan, were to superintend the election, the others falling
          in after them. The elect should be taken from the Roman Church, if a suitable
          candidate were found; if not, from another Church. The honour due to Henry, at present king and as it is hoped future Emperor, was reserved
          as conceded to him, and to such of his successors as should have obtained in
          person the same right from the apostolic throne. If a pure, sincere, and
          voluntary election could not be held in Rome, the cardinal-bishops with the
          clergy and catholic laity, even if few, might hold the election where they were
          gathered together. If the enthronement had to be postponed by reason of war or
          other evil, the Pope-elect might exercise his powers as if fully Pope. Anyone
          elected, consecrated, or enthroned contrary to this decree was to be anathematised.
   The imperial form differed from the papal form summarised above in giving the Emperor a place with the
          cardinals as a body in leading the election; it does not distinguish the
          cardinal-bishops from the others, and it does not mention the rest of the
          clergy or the people. If an election were not possible in Rome, it might be
          held where the electors chose, in agreement with the king. The differences lie
          rather in the way in which the king is brought into the election than in the
          reservation of the imperial rights, which is much the same in both forms, and
          the cardinalbishops are not given the rights of a
          metropolitan; and the imperial form mentions the mediation of Guibert, Chancellor of Italy and imperial representative.
          The changes seem to be made less on general principles than to suit a special
          case, and if due to Guibert this is what we might
          expect.
   The decree was not strictly kept, but the place given
          to the cardinals, who were now growing into a College, was significant for the
          future. Its details had reference to the past election; judged by its standard,
          the election of Nicholas was correct and that of Benedict was not. But it laid
          stress on the special place of the Papacy, and in the papal form at any rate it
          threw aside all imperial influence before assent to the accomplished act. It
          remained to be seen whether this freedom could be maintained.
           Other matters were also dealt with in the Council. Berengar appeared and made a profession of faith dictated
          by Cardinal Humbert. The regulation of the papal election was announced as a
          matter of European importance, as indeed it now was, and here the
          cardinal-bishops are mentioned expressly; the decree on celibacy was strict,
          and for those clerks who obediently observed chastity the common canonical life
          was enforced. In this detail we have a trace of the discussion already
          mentioned No clerk or priest was to obtain a church either gratis or for money
          through laymen. No one was to hear a mass said by an unchaste priest: the
          precedent of this canon was to be followed later under Alexander II and Gregory
          VII. Laymen were not to judge or expel from their churches clerks of any rank.
          The boldness of this canon may be compared with a more hesitating grant in 1057
          to the clergy of Lucca that none of them should be taken to secular judgment.
          The fuller treatment of simonist ordinations and
          simony of all kinds belongs to the synods of 1060 and 1061. The upshot of
          conciliar activity under Nicholas II was to crystallise the former campaign for celibacy into definite decisions, backed by the whole
          power of the Papacy and the Curia. What had before been tentative was now
          fixed. Opinion was consolidated, and policy was centralised,
          not only about celibacy but also about simonists. If
          those who had been ordained by simonists in the past
          were allowed to keep their orders and their offices, thus conforming to the
          policy of Peter Damian at Milan, it was lest the Church should be left without
          pastors. But for the future there was to be no hesitation, and the
          correspondence of the Popes with Gervais of Rheims(a see carefully watched as
          in previous reigns) illustrates the carrying out of the policy.
   The Council at Rome (1060) decreed that for the future
          anyone ordained without payment by a simonist bishop
          should remain in his order if he was open to no other charge; this decision was
          made not on principle but from pity, as the number affected was so great. It
          was not to be taken as precedent by following Popes; for the future, however,
          anyone ordained by a bishop whom he knew to be a simonist should be deposed, as should the bishop also. Thus a long-standing difficulty
          was for the time disposed of. Reforming councils in France at Vienne and Tours,
          held under the legate Cardinal Stephen, made stringent decrees against simony,
          marriage of priests, and alienation of church property or tithes under legal
          form. Abbot Hugh of Cluny did the same at Avignon and Toulouse. But it was now
          more a matter of enforcing decrees already made than issuing new. In Italy some
          bishops found it difficult to publish reforming decrees, and in some cases did
          so with risk of violence.
   It has been noted as strange that in such a remarkable
          reign we hear little about the character of the Pope himself. The predominance
          of the cardinals partly explains it: Humbert, Peter Damian, and Hildebrand (now
          archdeacon) were not always in accord, and it was for Nicholas to balance
          conflicting views and policies. He was the president of the College rather than
          its director. Like other Popes Nicholas kept his old bishopric, and like them
          too he was often absent from Rome, which was not without its drawbacks, as the
          English bishops, robbed by the Count of Galeria,
          found out. But we breathe an air of greater largeness in his Papacy, and things
          seem on a larger scale.
   Nicholas died suddenly near Florence on 27 July 1061,
          returning from an expedition in southern Italy. The Election Decree was to be
          tested.
           The Norman alliance, and still more the Election
          Decree, had affected the delicate relations of Pope and Empire. During the
          minority of Henry IV, matters had been allowed to slide, and when attention was
          at length given to them the barometer registered a change of atmosphere. So
          great was the irritation in Germany that the name of Nicholas was left out in
          intercessions at mass; legates from Rome met with bad receptions.
           Meanwhile events in Milan had taken a decisive turn
          for papal and ecclesiastical history. In position, in wealth, in traditions,
          both political and ecclesiastical, the city of St Ambrose was a rival of Rome,
          and hitherto it had proudly kept its independence. Aribert’s opposition to the
          Emperor Conrad had shown the power of the archbishop; and if an enemy to the
          Empire were to rule there, imperial influence would be weakened. This Henry III
          understood. On Aribert’s death in 1045 Guido was appointed. Class distinctions
          were strongly marked, and the new archbishop belonged not to the barons but to
          the vavassors; in strength and in reputation he was
          undistinguished, and Bonizo with his usual
          exaggeration calls him “vir illiteratus et concubinatus et symoniacus,”
          but concubinage he was not guilty of. He was not the
          man for a difficult post, still less the man to lead reform. He valued more the
          traditions of St Ambrose as a rival of Rome than as a teacher of righteousness.
          In Italy as a whole the poor were more devoted to the Church than the rich (who
          tended to have their own chapels), and they were keen to criticise the lives of their spiritual teachers; outbursts of violence against unworthy
          priests had not been rare in Milan. But these had been isolated acts; what
          mattered more was that the Milanese Church had settled down into a worldly,
          possibly respectable, but certainly unspiritual life of its own. It was content
          to breathe the air around it but did nothing to revive or purify it, although
          the clergy were numerous “ as the sands of the sea” and the churches were rich.
          For the most part the clerks were married, and so the Church was deeply
          intertwined in the social state. Sale of Church offices was common, and there
          was a recognised scale of charges for orders and for preferments. It was certain that reformers would find much
          to complain of; so long had the growth of secularisation gone on that, even with a more placid populace, reform when it came was likely
          to become revolution.
   About 1056 the new streams of thought and new ideals
          began to flow around the hitherto firm footing of the clergy. The movement was
          headed by a deacon Ariald, a vavassor by birth and a canonist by training, an idealist, inspired by visions of the
          primitive Church and the simple teaching of Christ: contrasting these with the
          example of priests whose life could teach but error. He began his campaign in
          the villages where he was at home; then, when his hearers pleaded their
          simplicity and urged him to go to Milan, where he would find men of learning to
          answer him, he took their advice. In the city he found allies ready to help
          although starting from a different point—Landulf, who
          was in minor orders, and (later on) his brother Erlembald,
          of the Cotta family, both gifted with eloquence, ambitious, and thorough
          demagogues. The movement soon became political and social as well as religious,
          owing to the social standing of those they attacked. With these two worked
          Anselm of Baggio, one of the collegiate priests, whom Guido persuaded the
          Emperor to appoint to the see of Lucca (1056 or 1057). Guido, appointed by
          Henry III who had misjudged his character, was himself a simonist,
          and his arguments that clerical marriage was an ancient custom in Milan, that
          abuse and violence were evil ways of reproving offenders, that the clergy were
          not immoral but for the most part respectable married men, and that abstinence
          was a grace not given to all and was not imposed by divine law, had small
          effect. In other cities, Pavia and Asti for instance, the populace rose against
          their bishop, and Milan was moved in the same way. Landulf worked in the city; Ariald carried on the campaign in
          the surrounding villages whose feudal lords were citizens of the town. And Anselm
          brought the movement into touch with the wider circle of reformers at Rome and
          elsewhere. Landulf’s eloquence soon filled the poorer
          citizens with hatred of the clergy, with contempt for their sacraments, and a
          readiness to enforce reform by violence. The undoubted devotion of the leaders,
          enforced by their eloquence in sermons and speeches, soon made them leaders of
          the populace. The use of nicknames—Simonians and Nicolaitans—branded
          the clerical party; that of Patarines brought in
          class distinctions, and those to whom it was given could claim like Lollards in
          England the special grace of simple men. On the local festival of the
          translation of St Nazarius a riot broke out, and the
          clergy were forced to sign a written promise to keep celibacy. They had to
          choose between their altars and their wives. Their appeal to the archbishop,
          who took the movement lightly, brought them no help. The nobles for some reason
          or other took as yet no steps to help them. The bishops of the province when
          appealed to prove helpless, and in despair the clerks appealed to Rome,
          probably to Victor II. His care for the Empire made the Pope anxious to keep
          order. He referred the matter to Guido, and bade him call a provincial synod,
          which he did at Fontaneto in the neighbourhood of Novara (1057). Ariald and Landulf were summoned, but, in their scornful absence, after three days they were
          excommunicated. Although this synod had been called, its consequences fall in
          the pontificate of Stephen IX, who is said to have removed the ban from the
          democratic leaders. The movement had become, as democratic movements so easily
          do, a persecution with violence and injury. Guido’s position was difficult and
          in the autumn (1057) he went to the German Court.
   But the movement now took a new and wider turn; not
          only clerical marriage but simony, the prevalent and deeply-rooted evil of the
          city, was attacked. A large association, sworn to reach its ends, was formed.
          The new programme affected Guido, equally guilty with
          nearly all his clergy. It was of small avail that now the higher classes, more
          sensitive to attacks on wealth than on ecclesiastical offences, began to
          support the clergy; the strife was only intensified. In the absence of Guido,
          and with new hopes from the new Pope, Ariald went to
          Rome and there complained of the evils prevalent at Milan. It was decided to
          send a legate, and Hildebrand on his way to the German Court made a short stay
          at Milan (November 1057). He was well received; frequent sermons did something
          to control the people already roused. But his visit wrought little change, and
          it was not until Damian and Anselm came as legates that anything was done.
          Damian persuaded Guido to call a synod, and here, at first to the anger of the
          patriotic Milanese, the legate presided. It seemed a slur upon the patrimony
          and the traditions of St Ambrose; even the democratic reformers were aghast. It
          was then that Damian, faced by certain violence and likely death, shewed the
          courage in which he never failed. With no attempt at compromise, with no
          flattery to soothe their pride, he spoke of the claims of St Peter and his
          Roman Church to obedience. Milan was the daughter, the great daughter of Rome,
          and so he called them to submission. It was a triumph of bold oratory backed by
          a great personality; Guido and the whole assembly promised obedience to Rome.
          Then Damian went on with his inquest; one by one the clerics present confessed
          what they had paid, for Holy Orders, for benefices, and for preferment. All
          were tainted, from the archbishop to the humblest clerk. Punishment of the
          guilty, from which Damian was not the man to shrink, would have left the Church
          in Milan without priests and ministers of any kind. So the legate took the
          course taken by Nicholas II in his decree against simonists (1059). Those present, beginning with the archbishop, owned their guilt, and
          promised for the future to give up simony and to enforce clerical celibacy. To
          this all present took an oath. Milan had fallen into line with the reformers,
          and in doing so had subjected itself to Rome. Bonizo,
          agreeing with Arnulf on the other side, is right in
          taking this embassy as the end of the old and proud independence of Milan. When
          Guido and his suffragans were summoned to the Easter
          Council of 1059 at Rome some Milanese resented it. But the archbishop received
          absolution and for some six years was not out of favour at Rome.
   
           ALEXANDER II AND HONORIUS II
           
           The unexpected death of Nicholas II was followed by a
          contested election and a long struggle. Both the Roman nobles and the Lombard
          bishops wished for a change but knew their need of outside help. At Rome Gerard
          of Galeria, whose talents and diplomacy were typical
          of his class, was the leader; he and the Abbot of St Gregory on the Caelian
          were sent to the German Court, and they carried with them the crown and
          insignia of the Patrician. The Lombard bishops, with whom the Chancellor Guibert worked, met together and demanded a Pope from
          Lombardy—the paradise of Italy—who would know how to indulge human weakness.
          Thus civic politics at Rome and a reaction against Pataria and Pope worked together; the young king Henry acted at the impulse of Italians
          rather than of Germans; the latter had reason for discontent, but the imperial
          nominee was not their choice and their support was somewhat lukewarm. Henry met
          the Lombard bishops (some of whom Peter Damian thought better skilled to
          discuss the beauty of a woman than the election of a Pope) and the Romans at
          Basle on 28 October 1061, and, wearing the Patrician’s crown which they had
          brought, invested their elect, Cadalus, Bishop of
          Parma, who chose the name of Honorius II, “a man rich in silver, poor in
          virtue” says Bonizo. Meanwhile the cardinal-bishops
          and others had met outside Rome, and, hastening when they knew of the
          opposition, elected, 30 September 1061, Anselm of Baggio, the Patarine Bishop of Lucca. It was a wise choice and likely
          to commend itself; there could be no doubt as to the orthodoxy or policy of
          this old pupil of Lanfranc at Bee, tested at Milan and versed in Italian matters;
          at the same time he was in good repute at the German Court and a friend of Duke
          Godfrey. Desiderius of Monte Cassino carried a
          request for military help to Richard of Capua, who came and led Alexander II to
          Rome. Some nobles, especially Leo de Benedicto Christiano (“of the Jewish synagogue,” says Benzo),
          influenced the Trastevere, but there was much
          fighting and Anselm was only taken into the Lateran at night and by force. He
          was consecrated on 1 October 1061, and like his predecessors kept his old bishopric.
   Cadalus found his way to Rome blocked by Godfrey’s forces,
          but in Parma he gathered his vassals, and could thus march on. But another help
          was of greater use. Benzo, Bishop of Alba in Piedmont, was sent by the Emperor
          as his ambassador to Rome; he was a popular speaker with many gifts and few
          scruples; his happy if vulgar wit was to please the mob and sting his
          opponents; he was welcomed by the imperialists and lodged in the palace of
          Octavian. Then he invited the citizens, great and small, and even Alexander
          with his cardinals, to a popular assembly. The papal solemnity had little
          chance with the episcopal wit. “Asinandrellus, the
          heretic of Lucca,” and “his stall-keeper Prandellus,”
          as Benzo calls the Pope and Hildebrand, were worsted in the debate; Cadalus was able to enter Rome on 25 March 1062, and a
          battle on 14 April in the Neronian Field after much
          slaughter left him victor. But he could not gain the whole city, and it was
          divided into hostile camps. Honorius hoped for help from Germany, and he was
          negotiating with Greek envoys for a joint campaign against the Normans. But
          after the arrival of Duke Godfrey there came an end to the strife; both
          claimants were to withdraw to their former sees until they could get their
          claims settled at the German Court. Honorius was said to have paid heavily for
          the respite, but Alexander could rest easy as to his final success.
   Alexander was not without some literary support. Peter
          Damian from his hermitage wrote to Cadalus two
          letters, fierce and prophetic—the second addressed “To Cadalus,
          false bishop, Peter, monk and sinner, wishes the fate he deserves ”: he had
          been condemned by three synods; he had broken the Election Decree; his very
          name derived from cado laós was
          sinister, he would die within the year; the old prophet believed the prophecy
          fulfilled by the excommunication, the spiritual death, of Honorius within the
          year. At the same time he was writing treatises on the episcopal and clerical
          life. At this time, too, he wrote his well-known Disceptatio Synodalis, a dialogue between champions
          of the Papacy and the Empire; it is not, as was once supposed, the record of an
          actual discussion, but a treatise intended to influence opinion at the assembly
          called at Augsburg, 27 October 1062, to settle the papal rivalry. But he was an
          embarrassing ally: his letters to Henry and Anno of Germany, if full of candid
          advice, laid overmuch stress on the royal rights, and
          Alexander and Hildebrand were displeased. Damian, perhaps ironically, begged
          the mercy of his “ Holy Satan.”
   It was the practical politics of the day, and not
          theories or arguments, which turned the balance at Augsburg and elsewhere in favour of Alexander. The abduction of the twelve-year-old
          boy at Kaiserswertli (April 1062) and his
          guardianship by Anno of Cologne, first alone and then with Adalbert, changed
          affairs. The Empress Agnes, who had taken the veil about the end of 1061,
          withdrew from politics. The German episcopate, weak, divided, and never
          whole-hearted for the Lombard Honorius, turned towards Alexander. The Synod of
          Augsburg, led by Anno, declared for Alexander and so gained commendation from
          Damian; “he had smitten off the neck of the scaly monster of Parma.” Before the
          end of 1062 Alexander moved towards Rome, and before Easter 1063 Godfrey supported
          the decision of Augsburg; the inclination of Anno and his position of Imperial
          Vicar led him to Rome. At the Easter Synod Alexander acted as already and fully
          Pope. As a matter of course he excommunicated Cadalus,
          and repeated canons against clerical marriage and simony ; the faithful were
          again forbidden to hear mass said by guilty priests.
   But the opposition was not at an end, so the
          irrepressible Benzo again led Cadalus to Rome in May
          1063; they took the Leonine City, Sant’ Angelo, and
          St Peter’s, but his seat was insecure. His supporters and his silver dwindled
          together; the castle was really his prison until he bought freedom from his
          jailor Cencius with three hundred pounds of silver;
          with one poor attendant he escaped to the safer Parma.
   Then at Whitsuntide, probably in 1064, he met the
          Council at Mantua attended by German and Italian prelates. Anno (“the
          high-priest” Benzo calls him) stated candidly the charges against Alexander.
          Alexander on oath denied simony, and on the question of his election without
          Henry’s leave or approval satisfied the assembly. Everyone present may not have
          looked at the Council in the same way, but all were glad to settle the disputed
          succession. On the second day a mob of Cadalists attacked the gathering. Only the appearance of Beatrice of Tuscany with a small
          force saved the Pope’s life; some bishops fled. Cadalus was excommunicated, and Alexander could safely go to Rome. But his city was
          still not a pleasant seat. Benzo did not give up hope and in 1065 visited the
          German Court; even up to 20 April 1069 Honorius signed bulls as Pope. The
          remaining years of Alexander’s pontificate can be summarised.
   The Norman vassals or allies of the Pope soon deserted
          him; Richard of Capua ravaged Campania and approached Rome, probably anxious to
          be made Patrician. Duke Godfrey, acting in his own interests and not those of
          Henry, marched towards Rome with an army of Germans and Tuscans, and a treaty
          followed. Once more Pope and Normans were at peace, irrespective of imperial
          plans and hopes. The balance between Duke Godfrey and the Normans was finally
          kept. Elsewhere too it was a question of balance. As Anno’s influence at the
          German Court lessened he depended more upon Rome, and from the German
          episcopate, lacking any great national leader like Aribo and now gradually losing its former moral strength, he gained small support. At
          Rome he was humiliated; in 1068 and again in 1070 he had to clear himself of
          accusations. The system by which metropolitans were to be channels of papal authority
          was beginning to work its way. But provincial synods both in France and Germany
          became commoner, and some, such as that of Mainz (August 1071) where Charles, the intended Bishop of Constance, resigned in
          order to avoid a trial, acted independently. But there as in other cases
          legates, the Archbishops of Salzburg and Treves, were present. Such councils,
          often repeating decrees from Rome, raised papal power, and at this very synod
          the Archbishop of Mainz is called for the first
          time Primas et Apostolicae sedis legatus. It was no
          wonder that not only Anno but Siegfried dreamt of a calm monastic life.
           The growth of reform seemed to slacken in Alexander’s
          later years: it may be that Damian was right in contrasting the indulgence
          shewn to bishops with the severity towards the lower clergy; it may be that the
          movement was now throwing itself more into constitutional solidification than
          into spiritual awakening; it may be that the machinery at Rome was not equal to
          the burden thrown upon it by the vast conception of its work. In England alone,
          where Alexander had blessed the enterprise of William of Normandy, was success
          undiluted. The king was just and conscientious; Lanfranc was a theologian and a
          reformer, even if of the school of Damian rather than of Humbert. The
          episcopate was raised, and the standard of clerical life; councils, such as
          marked the movement, became the rule, as was seen at Winchester and London in
          1072. But if England moved parallel to Rome it was yet, as an island, apart. It
          was also peculiar in its happy co-operation of a just king and a great archbishop.
           The growth of canonical legislation (1049-1073) is
          easily traced. It begins with an attempt to regain for the Church a control
          over the appointment of its officers through reviving canonical election for
          bishops and episcopal institution for parish priests. But the repetition of
          such canons, even with increasing frequency and stringency, had failed to gain
          freedom for the Church in face of royal interests and private patronage. The
          Synod of Rheims under Leo IX (1049) had led the way: no one was to enter on a
          bishopric without election by clergy and laity. The spread of Church reform and
          literary discussion moved towards a clearer definition of the rival principles:
          the Church’s right to choose its own officers, and the customary rights of king
          or patron in appointments. So the Roman synod of 1059 went further: its sixth
          canon forbade the acquisition either gratis or by payment by any cleric or
          priest of a Church office through a layman. The French synods at Vienne and
          Tours (1060), held under the legate Stephen, affirmed the necessity of
          episcopal assent for any appointment. Alexander II, with greater chance of
          success, renewed in his Roman synod of 1063 Pope Nicholas’ canon of 1059. Under
          him the two elements, the cure of souls, which was obviously the Church’s care,
          and the gift of the property annexed to it, about which king and laymen had
          something to say, were more distinctly separated. It was significant when on 21
          March 1070 Alexander gave to Gebhard of Salzburg the
          power of creating new bishops in his province, and provided that no bishop
          should be made by investiture as it was accustomed to be called or by any other
          arrangement, except those whom he or his successors should, of their free will,
          have elected, ordained, and constituted. So far, and so far only, had things
          moved when Alexander II died.
   The constant use of legates was continued if not
          increased, and France was as before a field of special care. Thither Damian had
          gone, returning in October 1063, and Gerard of Ostia (1072) dealt specially and
          severely with simony. In France, and also elsewhere, the frequency of councils
          locally called is now noticeable. Not only the ordinary matters but laxity of
          marriage laws among the laity arising from licence among great and small were legislated upon.
   The course of affairs at Milan, however, needs longer
          and special notice. Alexander II had been for many years concerned in the
          struggle at Milan; his accession gave encouragement to the Patarines;
          to the citizens and clergy he wrote announcing his election. When Ariald visited Rome under Stephen IX, Landulf,
          who was on his way thither, was wounded at Piacenza; his wound was complicated
          by consumption, and he lost the voice and the energy which he had used so
          effectively. After his death, the date of which is uncertain, his place was
          more than filled by his brother Erlembald, a knight
          fresh from a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and with, as it was said, private, as
          well as family, wrongs to avenge upon the clergy. He had a personality and
          appearance very different from his brother’s; striking and handsome as became a
          patrician, splendidly dressed, gifted with that power of military control and organisation which was destined to reappear so often in
          medieval Italian States. He fortified his house, he moved about with a
          bodyguard; he became the Captain of the city; personal power and democratic
          rule were combined and so he was the real founder of the Italian commune. Ariald was content, as he put it, to use the word while Erlembald wielded the more powerful sword. The new leader
          visited Rome (1065) when Alexander was settled there; he received from the Pope
          a white banner with a red cross, and so became the knight of the Roman and the
          universal Church. The archbishop, with no traditions of family or friendship to
          uphold him, saw power slipping from his hands, and the Emperor counted for
          naught. From a second visit to Rome (1066) Erlembald returned with threats of a papal excommunication of Guido, and fresh
          disturbances began. Married priests and simonists were sharply condemned from Rome, and believers were forbidden to hear their
          masses. But the Papacy sought after order, and the cathedral clergy, faced by
          persecution, gathered around the archbishop. More tumult arose when Ariald preached against local customs of long standing.
          Milan had not only its own Ambrosian Liturgy, but various peculiar customs: the
          ten days between Ascension Day and Pentecost had been kept since the fourth
          century as fasts; elsewhere only Whitsun Eve was so observed. Ariald, preferring the Roman custom, preached against the
          local use, and so aroused indignation. Then Guido at Whitsuntide seized his
          chance, and rebuked the Patarines for their action
          against him at Rome in seeking his excommunication; a worse tumult than before
          arose, and the city was again in uproar. But the day after the riot the mass of
          citizens took better thought and repented. The archbishop placed the city under
          an interdict so long as Ariald abode in it. For the
          sake of peace the threatened preacher left, and (27 June) was mysteriously
          murdered, at Guido’s instigation as his followers said. Ten months later his
          body was, strangely and it was said miraculously, recovered. He had perished by
          the sword of violence which he had taken, but the splendid popular ceremonies
          of his funeral restored his fame, and so in death he served his cause.
   Once again two legates came to still the storm (August
          1067): Mainard, Cardinal-bishop of Silva Candida, and
          the Cardinal-priest John. The settlement they made went back to that of Damian,
          and so recognised the position of Guido, but years of
          violence had by now changed the city. The legatine settlement attempted to
          re-establish Church order and Damian’s reforms, and the revenue of the Church
          was to be left untouched. Violence was forbidden, but things had gone too far;
          revolution had crystallised, and neither side liked
          the settlement; Guido thought of resigning.
   Erlembald, supported from Rome, thought he could increase his
          power by enforcing canonical election on the resignation of Guido, setting
          aside the imperial investiture and gaining the approval of the Pope. But Guido
          now chose the sub-deacon Godfrey, a man of good family, in his confidence,
          eloquent, as even his later enemies confessed, and therefore likely to be
          influential. Guido formally although privately resigned, and Godfrey went to
          the imperial Court where he was already known through services rendered; he
          returned with his ring and staff, but was driven away. Alexander II condemned
          not only Godfrey but also Guido, who had resigned without papal leave; Guido
          took up his duties again, and remained in power; disorder passed into war. Erlembald, with an army made up of his followers and some
          nobles, attacked Godfrey. Revolution had become war against a claimant chosen
          by the Emperor but in defiance of ecclesiastical law and the Papacy. During
          Lent 1071 part of the city was set on fire, causing great destruction and
          misery; Guido withdrew to the country and there on 23 August 1071 his life and
          trouble ended. Not until 6 January 1072 did Erlembald find it possible to elect a successor; by a large assembly from the city, its neighbourhood, and even farther afield, in the presence of
          a legate Cardinal Bernard, Atto, a young cathedral
          clerk of good family but little known, was elected. Erlembald,
          the real ruler of the city, was behind and over all; and many, laymen and
          ecclesiastics, disliked the choice. The discontented took to arms, the legate
          escaped with rent robes, and Atto, torn from the
          intended feast at the palace, was borne to the cathedral, where in mortal fear
          he was made to swear never to ascend the throne of St Ambrose. But next day Erlembald regained control; he “ruled the city as a Pope to
          judge the priests, as a king to grind down the people, now with steel and now
          with gold, with sworn leagues and covenants many and varied. It mattered little
          that at Rome a synod declared Atto rightly elected,
          and condemned Godfrey and his adherents as enemies of God. Meanwhile the Patarines held the field, and their success at Milan
          encouraged their fellows in Lombardy as a whole. But the new turn of affairs
          had involved the Pope; he wrote (c. February 1072) to Henry IV, as a father to
          a son, to cast away hatred of the servants of God and allow the Church of Milan
          to have a bishop according to God. A local difficulty, amid vested interests,
          principles of Church reform, and civic revolution, had merged into a struggle
          between Emperor and Pope. Henry IV sent an embassy to the suffragans of Milan announcing his will that Godfrey, already invested, should be
          consecrated; they met at Novara where the consecration took place.
           At the Easter Synod (1073) the Pope, now failing in
          strength, excommunicated the counsellors of Henry IV who were, it was said,
          striving to alienate him from the Church. This was one of Alexander’s last
          acts. Death had already removed many prominent leaders, Duke Godfrey at Christinas 1069, the anti-Pope Cadalus at the end of 1072 (the exact day is not recorded). Peter Damian died on 22
          February 1072, and Adalbert of Bremen on 16 March of the same year, both men of
          the past although of very different pasts. Cardinal Humbert had died long
          before, on 5 May 1061. Hildebrand was thus left almost alone out of the old
          circle of Leo IX.
   On 21 April 1073 Alexander died, worn out by his work
          and responsibilities; even as Pope he had never ceased the care of his see of
          Lucca; by frequent visits, repeated letters, and minute regulations he
          fulfilled his duty as its bishopo. It was so with him
          also as Pope. The mass of great matters dealt with was equalled by that of smaller things. Even the devolution of duties, notably to cardinals
          and especially to the archdeacon, did not ease the Pope himself. He seems to us
          a man intent mainly upon religious issues, always striving (as we should expect
          from a former leader at Milan) for the ends of clerical reform, able now to
          work towards them through the Papacy itself. Reform, directed from Rome and
          based upon papal authority, was the note of his reign. A man of duty more than
          of disposition or temperament, he gained respect, if not the reverent love
          which had gathered around Leo IX. His measure of greatness he reached more
          because he was filled with the leading, probably the best, ideas of his day
          than because of any individual greatness of conception or power. But he had
          faced dark days and death itself with devotion and unswerving hope. It was
          something to have passed from his earlier trials to his later prosperity and firm
          position, and yet to have shown himself the same man throughout, with the same
          beliefs, the same aims, and the same care for his task. If he left his
          successors many difficulties, and some things even for Gregory VII to criticise, he also left them a working model of a
          conscientious, world-embracing Papacy, filled, as it seems to us, with the
          spirit of the day rather than inspiring the day from above. The Papacy had
          risen to a height and a power which would have seemed impossible in the time of
          Benedict IX. But the power, strong in its theory and conception, had a fragile
          foundation in the politics of the Empire, of Italy, and of Rome itself.
           
 
 CHAPTER II.
           GREGORY VII AND THE FIRST CONTEST
          BETWEEN EMPIRE AND PAPACY.
           
 
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