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MEDIEVAL HISTORY.THE CONTEST EMPIRE AND PAPACY |
CHAPTER II.
GREGORY VII AND THE FIRST CONTEST
BETWEEN EMPIRE AND PAPACY.
I.
ON 21 April 1073 Pope Alexander II died. The strained relations between
the Papacy and the ruler of the Empire made the occasion more than usually
critical; moreover, the Election Decree of Nicholas II, for which so narrow a
victory had been won at the previous vacancy, was to be put to a second test.
Fortunately for the Papacy, there was no division of opinion within the Curia;
the outstanding personality of the Archdeacon Hildebrand made it certain on
whom the choice of the cardinals would fall. But their deliberations were
anticipated by the impatience of the populace. While the body of Alexander was
being laid to rest in the church of St John Lateran on the day following his
death, a violent tumult arose. The crowd seized upon the person of Hildebrand,
hurried him to the church of St Peter ad Vincula, and enthusiastically
acclaimed him as Pope. The formalities of the Election Decree were hastily complied
with; the cardinals elected, the clergy and people gave their assent, and
Hildebrand was solemnly enthroned as Pope Gregory VII. Popular violence had
compromised the election, and provided a handle for the accusations of his
enemies. But the main purpose of the Election Decree had been fulfilled. The
Pope was the nominee neither of the Emperor nor of the Roman nobles; the choice
of the cardinals had been anticipated indeed, but not controlled, by the
enthusiasm of the multitude. Hildebrand only held deacon’s orders; a month
later he was ordained priest, and on 30 June consecrated bishop, hi the
interval, he seems, in accordance with the Election Decree, to have announced
his election to the king and to have obtained the royal assent.
We have little certain information’ of the origin and
early life of this great Pope. He is said to have been the son of one Bonizo and
to have been born at Sovana in Tuscany; the
date of his birth is uncertain, but he was probably about fifty years old at
the time of his accession. The important fact, to which he himself bears
emphatic testimony, is that his early days were passed in Rome and that it was
there that he received his education. So he
saw the Papacy in its degradation and was to participate in every stage of its
recovery. He received minor orders (reluctantly, he tells us) and was attached
in some capacity to the service of Gregory VI, the Pope who bought the Papacy
in order to reform it. With him he went into exile in 1047, and spent two
impressionable years in the Rhine district, then the centre of the
advanced reform movement of the day, and probably it was at this time that he
received the monastic habit. In 1049 Leo IX, nominated Pope by Henry III, was
filling the chief places in the Papal Curia with leading reformers especially
from this district; on his way to Rome he took with him the young Hildebrand,
whose life was for the future to be devoted entirely to Rome and the Papacy.
With every detail of papal activity he was associated, in every leading
incident he played his part; his share in the papal councils became
increasingly important, until at the last he was the outstanding figure whose
qualifications for the papal throne none could contest.
By Leo IX he was made sub-deacon and entrusted with
the task of restoring both the buildings and the discipline of the monastery of
St Paul without the walls. Later he was sent to France to deal with heresy in
the person of Berengar of Tours, whose views he condemned but whose
person he protected. By Victor II he was given the important task of enforcing
the decrees against simony and clerical marriage in France, where in company
with Abbot Hugh of Cluny he held synods at Lyons and elsewhere. With Bishop
Anselm of Lucca he was sent by Pope Stephen IX to Milan, where the alliance of
Pope and Pataria was for the first time
cemented; and from Milan to Germany to obtain the royal assent to Stephen’s
election. He had a share in vindicating the independence of papal elections
against the turbulence of the Roman nobles at the election of Nicholas II, and
again in the papal Election Decree which was designed to establish this independence
for the future. By Nicholas he was employed in initiating the negotiations
which led to the first alliance of the Papacy with the Normans in South Italy.
In the same year (1059) his appointment as Archdeacon of the Roman Church gave
him an important administrative position; shortly afterwards occurred the death
of Cardinal Humbert of Silva Candida, and Hildebrand took his place as the
leading figure in the Papal Curia. To his energy and resolution was due the
victory of Alexander II over the rival imperial nominee, and he held the first
place in the Pope’s councils during the twelve years of Alexander’s papacy. The
extent of his influence has been exaggerated by the flattery of his admirers
and by the abuse of his enemies. He was the right-hand man, not the master, of
the Pope; he influenced, but did not dominate Alexander. That other counsels
often prevailed we know. When he became Pope he revoked more than one privilege
granted by his predecessor, suggesting that Alexander was too prone to be led away
by evil counsellors. Even when, as in the case of the papal support given to
the Norman conquest of England, his policy prevailed, it is clear from his own
statement that he had to contend against considerable opposition within the
Curia. On all the major issues, however, Pope and archdeacon must have been in
complete agreement, especially with regard to Milan, the greatest question of
all. They had been associated together in the embassy that inaugurated the new
papal policy with regard to the Pataria, and, as
Bishop of Lucca, Alexander had been more than once employed as papal legate to
Milan. This was the critical issue that led to the breach between Pope and
king, and it was the extension of the same policy to Germany that produced the
ill-will of the German episcopate which is so noticeable at the beginning of
Gregory’s papacy. That there is a change of masters when Gregory VII becomes
Pope is clear. The policy is the same, but the method of its execution is quite
different. Hildebrand must have chafed at the slowness and caution of his predecessor.
When he becomes Pope, he is urgent to see the policy carried into immediate
effect. The hand on the reins is now a firm one, the controlling mind is
ardent and impatient. Soon the issue is joined, and events move rapidly to the
catastrophe.
Superficially the new Pope was not attractive. He was
small of stature, his voice was weak, his appearance unprepossessing. In
learning he fell short of many of his contemporaries; the knowledge of which he
gives evidence is limited, though very practical for his purpose. Thus he had a
close acquaintance with the collections of Decretals current in his time.
Besides them he depended mainly on Gregory the Great, with several of whose
works he was obviously familiar. Otherwise there is practically no indication
of any first-hand acquaintance with the works of the Fathers or other Church
writers. He adduces the authority of a few passages from Ambrose and John
Chrysostom in urging on Countess Matilda of Tuscany the importance of frequent
communion. Once only does he quote from Augustine, and then the reference is to
the De doctrina Christiana, the Civitas Dei, quoted
so frequently by his supporters and opponents alike, is not mentioned by him
at all.
The chief authority with him was naturally the Bible.
The words of Scripture, both Old and New Testament, were constantly on his
lips. But, though quotations from the New Testament are the more numerous, it
is the spirit of the Old Testament that prevails. His doctrine is of
righteousness as shewn in duty and obedience, rather than as expressed in the
gospel of love. The language of the Old Testament came most naturally to him;
he was fond of military metaphors, and his language is that of a general engaged
in a constant campaign against a vigilant enemy. A favourite quotation
was from Jeremiah, “Cursed be the man that keepeth back
his sword from blood,” though he usually added with Gregory the Great “that is
to say, the word of preaching from the rebuking of carnal men.” He was, in
fact, in temperament not unlike a prophet of the Old Testament—fierce in
denunciation of wrong, confident in prophecy, vigorous in action, unshaken in
adversity. It is not surprising to find that contemporaries compared him with the
prophet Elijah. His enthusiasm and his ardent imagination drew men to him; that
he attracted men is well attested. One feature his contemporaries remarked—the
brightness and keenness of his glance. This was the outward sign of the fiery
spirit within that insignificant frame, which by the flame of its enthusiasm
could provoke the unwilling to acquiescence and stimulate even the fickle Roman
population to devotion. It was kindled by his conviction of the righteousness
of his aims and his determination, in which self-interest did not participate,
to carry them into effect.
This had its weak side. He was always too ready to
judge of men by their outward acquiescence in his aims, without regarding their
motives. It is remarkable that with his experience he could have been deceived
by the professions of Cardinal Hugo Candidus, or have failed to realise the
insincerity of Henry IV’s repentance in 1073. Here he was deceived to his own
prejudice. It is not easy, however, to condone his readiness in 1080 to accept
the alliance of Robert Guiscard, who had been under excommunication until that
date, or of the Saxons, whom he had spoken of as rebels in 1075, and who were
actuated by no worthier motives in 1076 and 1080. In the heat of action he
grievously compromised his ideal. Another and a more inevitable result of his
temperament was the frequent reaction into depression. Like Elijah, again, on
Mount Carmel we find him crying out that there is not a righteous man left.
Probably these moods were not infrequent, though they could only find
expression in his letters to intimate friends such as Countess Matilda of
Tuscany and Abbot Hugh of Cluny. And the gentler tone of these letters shews
him in a softer light—oppressed by his burden, dependent solely on the helping
hand of the “pauper Jesus.” It was a genuine reluctance of which he spoke when
he emphasised his unwillingness at every stage of his life to have
fresh burdens, even of honour, imposed upon him. There is no reason to
doubt that he was unwilling to become Pope; the event itself prostrated him,
and his first letters, announcing his election and appealing for support, had
to be dictated from his bed.
This was a temporary weakness, soon overcome. And it
would be a mistake to regard him merely, or even mainly, as an enthusiast and a
visionary. He had a strong will and could curb his imagination with an iron
self-control. As a result he has been pictured most strangely as cold and
inflexible, untouched by human weakness, unmoved by human sympathies. It is
not in that light that we should view him at the Lenten Synod of 1076, where he
alone remained calm and his will availed to quell the uproar; it was
self-control that checked his impatience in the period following Canossa, and
that was responsible for his firmness and serenity amid defeat and
disappointment, so that he remained unconquered in spirit almost to the end.
But there was another influence too, the experience of the years that preceded
his papacy. As cardinal-deacon for over twenty years, and Archdeacon of the
Roman Church for thirteen, his work had lain particularly among the secular
affairs of the Papacy; from this he had acquired great practical knowledge and
a keen sense of the actual. It coloured his whole outlook, and
produced the contrast between the theories he expressed and the limitation of
them that he was willing to accept. He had a clear vision both of what was
essential and of what was possible; it was later clouded by the dust of
conflict, after he had joined issue with the Emperor.
His early life had been spent in the service of the
Church and the Papacy. This service remained his single aim, and he was
actuated, as he justly claimed, by no feeling of worldly pride or
self-glorification. He naturally had a full sense of the importance of his
office, and realised both its potentialities and its
responsibilities. To St Peter, who had watched over the training of his youth,
he owed his earliest allegiance; as Bishop of Rome he had become the successor
and representative of St Peter. It was not the least of his achievements that
he realised the logical inferences that could be drawn from the
Petrine authority; he was careful to sink his own individuality, and to picture
himself as the channel through which the will of the Apostle was expressed to
mankind. Every communication addressed to the Pope by letter or by word of
mouth is received by St Peter himself; and, while the Pope only reads the words
or listens to the message, St Peter can read the heart of the sender. Any
injury done, even in thought, to the Pope is thus an injury to the Prince of
the Apostles himself. He acts as the mouthpiece of St Peter, his sentences are
the sentences of St Peter, and from St Peter has descended to him the supreme
power of binding and of loosing in heaven and on earths So his power
of excommunication is unlimited: he can excommunicate, as in the case of six
bishops with all their supporters at the Lenten Synod of 1079, sine spe recuperationis. Similarly
his power of absolution is unlimited, whether it be absolution to the penitent,
absolution from all their sins to those who fight the battles of the Church against
her enemies, or absolution of the subjects of an excommunicated ruler from the
oath of allegiance they had taken to him. These are not the assertions of a
claim; they are the simple expression of his absolute belief. How supreme was
his confidence is shewn in his prophecies. The authority descended from St
Peter extends over material prosperity in this life; yes, and over life itself.
Glory and honour in this life, as well as in the life to come, depend
on obedience to him, he assured the magistrates of Sardinia in 1073. In 1078 he
proclaimed that all who hindered the holding of a synod in Germany would suffer
not only in soul but also in body and property, would win no success in war and
no triumph in their lifetime. And at Easter 1080 he pronounced his famous
prophecy that Henry, if he did not repent, would be dead or deposed before
August. This is the confidence of complete conviction.
But it was a delegated authority that he was
exercising, and therefore it must not be exercised arbitrarily. The obedience
to God which he enforced on all Christians must be rendered by himself first
of all. Obedience to God implies obedience to the Church and to the law of the
Church, to the decrees of the Fathers, the canonical tradition. He shews no disposition
to over-ride this; in fact he is careful to explain that he is subject to its
authority. Frequently he protested that there was nothing new in his decrees.
His decree against lay investiture was not new, not of his own invention; in
promulgating it he had merely returned to the teaching and decrees of the Early
Fathers and followed the prime unique rule of ecclesiastical discipline. He did
not make new laws; he issued edicts which interpreted the law or prohibited the
illegal practices that had grown up in course of time. The Holy Roman Church,
he says, has always had and will always have the right of issuing new decrees
to deal with particular abuses as they arise. Its custom has always been to be
merciful, to temper the rigour of the law with discretion, to
tolerate some things after careful consideration, but never to do anything
which conflicts with the harmony of canonical tradition.
Now the prime importance of this consideration of
Gregory VII’s views is in its bearing on his relations with the temporal
authority. He started with the orthodox Gelasian view of the two
powers each supreme in its own department, and it is clear that at first he
sees no conflict of his ideas with this. In the ecclesiastical department of
course he must be absolute master. Archbishops, bishops, and abbots must
acknowledge his complete authority, obey his summons to Rome, submit to his
over-riding of their actions, and not interfere with direct appeals to Rome.
The legates he sends act in his name. Anywhere they can call synods, preside
over them, and issue decrees on his behalf. But, as his own office is divinely
ordained, so he recognises is the royal office. In 1073 he speaks of
the two powers and compares them with the two eyes of the human body; as these
give light to the body, so the sacerdotium and imperium should
illumine with spiritual light the body of the Church. They should work together
in the harmony of pure religion for the spiritual good of Christianity; the
spiritual end is the final object of both, in accordance with the accepted
medieval view. Obedience, therefore, is due to kings; he shows no
indulgence with the Saxon revolt in 1073, and congratulates Henry on his
victory over the rebels in 1075. Over churches he continually repeats that the
lay power has a protective not a possessive function, but he is anxious not to
appear to be encroaching on imperial prerogative. Though he is convinced that
the practice of lay investiture is an abuse that has arisen in the course of
time, he recognises that it has come to be regarded almost as a
prescriptive right; he is careful not to promulgate his decree against it in
1075 until he has consulted the king, upon whose rights, he declares, he is
anxious not to encroach. The language of these early days is markedly different
from that of his later years. The normal contrast between medieval theory and
practice is noticeable at the beginning, when he is content to subordinate his
theory to practical considerations; in later years he is striving to bring his
practice up to the level of his theory. The difference lies not so much in a
change in his point of view, as in a recognition of its real implications and
of its actual incompatibility with the orthodox Gelasian theory. This
recognition was forced upon him by the circumstances of the struggle with the
king, without which he might never have adopted the extreme attitude of his
later years. His methods help to mark the difference. At first he attempts to
promote his aims by mutual agreement and negotiation; afterwards he acts by
decree, issuing his orders and demanding implicit obedience.
The key to his development is to be found in his
insistence on righteousness as the criterion by which he tests his own actions
and those of all with whom he has to deal. Righteousness, with him as with
Augustine, consists in obedience to the commandments of God. Truth, obedience,
humility, are the marks of the righteous man, the servant of God, as falsehood,
disobedience, pride, are the marks of the wicked man, whose master is the
devil. If this is merely medieval commonplace, it becomes something more in its
application. It is when he has to deal with an unrighteous king that he
discovers the logical results of his opinions. The Pope, as St Peter’s
successor, has authority over the souls of men; he has in consequence an awful
responsibility as he will have to answer for them before the tribunal of God.
It is incumbent upon him to rebuke those that err; it is he, in fact, that must
be the judge of right and wrong, and to this judgment all men, even kings, must
be subject. Every act of a king must have the test of right and wrong applied
to it, for it is a king’s duty to govern for the spiritual welfare of his
subjects. Obedience to God is the sign of the iustus homo, how
much more of the iustus rex! And
so, if a king does not act as a iustus homo he
at once becomes amenable to papal jurisdiction. The head of the spiritual
department is entitled accordingly to obedience from secular rulers. “As I have
to answer for you at the awful Judgment,” he writes to William I of England,
“in the interests of your own salvation, ought you, can you avoid immediate
obedience to me?” The implication is that the obedience which is expected from
all Christians is obedience to himself.
When the great question came as to the sentence of a
king who was, in his view, manifestly unrighteous, there could be no doubt with
him as to the authority he could exercise. The theory of passive obedience to a
wicked king could not influence him or his supporters for a moment; a king who
aimed at his own glory had ceased to be the servant of God and become the
servant of the devil; he was no longer a king but a tyrant. With the Pope, the
judge of right and wrong, lay the sentence. Saul, ordained by God for his
humility, was deposed by Samuel, the representative of God, for his pride and
disobedience. The Pope is through St Peter the representative of God; as he has
power to bind and loose in spiritual things, how much more in secular! Henry
had not merely been disobedient; his pride had led him to attempt the
overthrow of the Pope, a direct outrage on St Peter himself. St Peter,
therefore, through the Pope’s mouth, pronounces sentence of excommunication and
deposition. Gregory has faced the logical outcome of his point of view. The two
powers are not equal and independent; the head of the ecclesiastical department
is dominant over the head of the temporal. And so, when the enemies of Henry in
Germany were contemplating the election of an anti-king to succeed Rudolf, he
sends them the wording of the oath that their new choice must take to him—the
oath of fealty of a vassal to his overlord.
1073 A.D.
Gregory found himself faced at his accession with a
situation that gave him every cause for anxiety, but much real ground for
optimism. In the twenty-four years following his recall to Rome by Pope Leo IX
a great advance had been made. The reformed Papacy had assumed its natural
position as leader and director of the reform movement. It had vindicated the
independence of its own elections against the usurpation of the Roman nobles
and the practice of imperial nomination, it was asserting its absolute
authority in ecclesiastical matters over all archbishops and bishops, and it
was beginning to recover its temporal power in Italy. But its progress was
hampered by difficulties and opposition from every quarter. Papal decrees had
been promulgated against simony and clerical marriage, but there was more
opposition to these decrees than obedience. The absolute authority of the Pope
over all metropolitans was not denied in theory, but it had not been maintained
in practice, and much resentment was aroused by its exercise. The temporal
possessions of the Pope were continually exposed to the encroachments of the
Normans, who would acknowledge themselves vassals of the Papacy but paid no
heed to its instructions. And all these difficulties were complicated and
controlled by the relations of the Pope with the King of Germany, and by the
clash of their conflicting interests. The situation would have been easier had
Henry III been on the throne. He at any rate was an earnest promoter of
ecclesiastical reform. Henry IV was not even in sympathy with the reform
movement, and simony in episcopal elections had become frequent once more;
while he was as firmly resolved as his father that royal control over all his
subjects, lay and ecclesiastical, should be maintained, and this implied royal
control of nominations to bishoprics and abbeys both in Germany and North
Italy. Hence the crisis that had arisen with regard to Milan just before
Alexander II’s death. In the establishment of his authority in the
ecclesiastical department, Gregory was thus faced by the opposition of the
higher clergy (except in Saxony where the bishops as a whole allied themselves
with the local opposition to Henry), supported by the king, and also of the
lower ranks of the secular clergy, who considered that clerical celibacy was
an ideal of perfection to which they ought not to be expected to aspire. He was
supported on the whole by the regulars and often by the mass of the common
people, who were readily aroused to action, as at Milan, against the laxity of
the secular clergy.
It was evident to the Pope that his best chance of
success lay in obtaining the king’s support. Without it he could not coerce the
higher clergy; with it the decrees for Church reform could be made efficacious.
He regarded the royal power as the natural supporter of the Papacy, and the
protector of its temporal authority in South Italy against Norman aggression. His
imagination led him to visualise the magnificent conception of a
united Empire and Papacy working together in harmony for the same spiritual
objects, and he was sanguine enough to believe that Henry could be induced to
take the same view. And so the first task he undertook was to bring about a
reconciliation with the king. To effect this he sought assistance from every
quarter—the Empress-mother Agnes, Beatrice and Matilda of Tuscany, Dukes Rudolf
of Swabia and Godfrey of Lower Lorraine, Bishop Rainald of
Como—from anyone in short who might exercise influence over the king, and who
might be expected to influence him in the right direction. Henry yielded, but
he yielded to necessity, not to persuasion. In August he had with difficulty
evaded the Saxons by flight and had made his way south, where he was remaining
isolated and almost without support. The situation was in many respects similar
to that at Canossa, and the king’s policy was the same on both occasions—as his
enemies in Germany had the upper hand, he must propitiate the anger of the
Pope, and this could only be done by a complete outward submission. The letter
Gregory VII received from the king in September 1073 was as abject as the
humiliation of 1077, without the personal degradation of Canossa. The king
confesses that he is guilty of all the charges brought against him and asks for
papal absolution; he promises obedience to Gregory’s bidding in the matter of
reform, especially in regard to Milan, and expresses his keen desire for the
harmonious cooperation of the spiritual and temporal powers. The delight of
Gregory was unbounded when he received this letter, so full, he says, of
sweetness and obedience, such as no Pope had ever received from Emperor before.
He failed to realise, though he saw it clearly enough later, that the Saxon
situation was entirely responsible, and that Henry’s humility depended on his
position in Germany; he even did his best to bring Henry and the Saxons to
terms. To Henry’s appeal for absolution he responded with enthusiasm, and early
in the following year it was effected by an embassy headed by two
cardinal-bishops and accompanied by Henry’s mother Agnes.
Assured of royal support, or at any rate relieved from
the embarrassment of royal opposition, he now took in hand the important
questions of Church reform and the assertion of his ecclesiastical authority.
He knew the hostility he had to face. In North Italy, Archbishop Guibert of
Ravenna had submitted himself to Alexander II and promised obedience, but
little reliance could be placed on his promises; in general, the morals of the
clergy were lax, the episcopate was mutinous. In Germany, there was an
atmosphere of sullen resentment against the measures already taken by
Alexander, and of ill-will towards his successor. It was not until 1074 that
the two leading metropolitans—Siegfried of Mayence,
the German Arch-Chancellor, and Anno of Cologne (ex-regent of Germany, now
living in retirement and devoted to good works)—wrote to congratulate Gregory
on his election; and there is no evidence to show that any of the others were
more forward in this respect. Siegfried took the opportunity of expressing his
pleasure and congratulations in a letter which he wrote on the subject of the
dispute between the Bishops of Prague and Olmutz,
Bohemian sees within his province. In this letter he complained of the
intervention of the late Pope in a matter which came within his own
jurisdiction; particularly that Alexander had allowed the Bishop of Olmutz to appeal direct to Rome, and had sent legates
to Bohemia who without reference to Siegfried had suspended the Bishop of
Prague from his office. This was a test case, and Gregory replied with
great vigour. He rebutted the arguments from Canon Law which Siegfried had
urged, and accused him of neglect of his office and of arrogance towards the
Apostolic See. Siegfried’s timid attempt to assert himself was overwhelmed by
the Pope’s vehemence, and he made no further effort to interfere with the papal
settlement of the question. The Bishop of Prague obeyed the Pope’s summons to Rome,
and Gregory, by his lenient treatment of him, gave the episcopate a lesson in
the value of ready obedience.
This was a signal victory. He passed on to deal with
the questions of simony and clerical marriage. In the first synod he held in
Rome, in Lent 1074, he repeated the decrees of his predecessors against these
abuses, and proceeded to take measures for their enforcement in Germany. The
two cardinal-bishops, who had given absolution to the king and to his
excommunicated councillors at Easter 1074, had the further task
imposed upon them of summoning a synod of German clergy, promulgating the
decrees at this synod, and enforcing acquiescence in their execution. This was
a difficult task, rendered impossible by the overbearing manner of the papal
legates. They addressed themselves first to two of the leading archbishops,
Siegfried of Mayence and Liemar of
Bremen, with a haughty injunction to them to hold a synod. They met their match
in Liemar. A supporter of the reform movement, the methods of the Pope and
his legates roused his pride and independence. He refused to do anything
without previous consultation with the episcopate as a whole, and sneered at
the impracticable suggestion that he should hold a synod to which his suffragans far
distant in North Germany or in Denmark would not be able to come. Siegfried
deprecated the whole business, but from timidity rather than pride. He temporised for
six months and at last called a synod at Erfurt in October. As he expected, he
was faced by a violent outburst from the secular clergy, who fortified
themselves against the decree enforcing celibacy by the words of St Paul, and
the synod broke up in confusion. Another incident that happened at the same
time well illustrates the temper of the episcopate. Archbishop Udo of Treves
was ordered by the Pope to investigate the charges brought against the Bishop
of Toul by one of his clergy. He held a synod at which more than
twenty bishops were present. They commenced by a unanimous protest against the
Pope’s action in submitting a bishop to the indignity of having to answer
before a synod to charges that any of his clergy might please to bring against
him. Needless to say, the bishop was unanimously acquitted. In only one
quarter, in fact, could the Pope find support—in Saxony. Here the episcopate
was allied with the lay nobility in opposition to Henry, and it was part of its
policy to keep on good terms with the Pope. It is not surprising, then, to
learn that Bishop Burchard of Halberstadt,
one of the chief leaders of the Saxons, wrote to Gregory to deplore the
unworthy treatment of the papal legates in Germany, and received his reward in
a warm letter of commendation from the Pope.
Gregory now began to take vigorous action to enforce
his will. Archbishop Liemar, defiant to the legates who had summoned him
to appear in Rome in November, was ordered by the Pope himself to come to the
Lenten Synod of 1075. The same summons was sent to Archbishop Siegfried, and to
six of his suffragan bishops as well. The Pope further issued circulars
appealing especially to prominent laymen to assist him in executing his
decrees. Siegfried’s answer to Gregory’s summons was typical of the timid man
striving to extricate himself from the contest between two violently hostile
parties. Afraid to oppose the Pope’s will, and equally afraid to enforce it, he
excused himself from coming to Rome on the ground of ill-health, pleaded lack
of time for his inability to examine the conduct of the six suffragans mentioned
in Gregory’s letter, but declared that he had sent on the Pope’s
order with instructions to them to obey it. He expressed his compliance with
the decrees against simony and clerical marriage, but urged moderation and
discretion in their execution.
The synod sat at Rome from 24 to 28 February 1075. At
this synod the Pope suspended the absent and disobedient Liemar, and
passed the same sentence on the Bishops of Bamberg, Strasbourg, and Spires,
three of the six suffragans of Mayence (Mainz)
whose attendance he had ordered; the other three seem to have satisfied him,
temporarily at any rate, by their appearance or through representatives.
Decrees were also passed against simony and clerical marriage, with the special
addition, in conformity with Gregory’s policy, of a clause calling on the laity
to assist by refraining from attending the mass celebrated by an offending
priest. In sending the text of these decrees to Archbishop Siegfried, he showed
that the moderation urged by Siegfried was not in his mind at all. The decrees
are to be issued and enforced in their full rigour. Instructions to
the same effect were sent to other metropolitans and bishops, for instance to
the Archbishops of Cologne and Magdeburg, with injunctions to hold synods to
enforce the decrees. This was again pressed on Siegfried and distressed
him still further. He eventually replied to the Pope in July or
August, in a letter intended to be tactful and to shift
responsibility from his own shoulders. It was no use; Gregory was quite firm.
He replied on 3 September, acknowledging the weight of Siegfried’s
arguments but declaring them of no effect when set in the balance
against his pastoral duty. Siegfried was forced to comply, especially
as the submission of the Saxons took away from him his chief excuse for
delay. He held a synod at Mayence in October,
and, as before, it was broken up by the turbulence of the
secular clergy. But the whole question was now to be transferred to a
larger stage, and the next act in the drama is the Council of Worms.
In this struggle with the German episcopate, in
which matters were rapidly coming to a crisis, Gregory had been able
to act unhampered by royal interference, and so far
his policy of effecting a reconciliation with Henry had
justified itself. But in North Italy, where he required the active co-operation
rather than the non-interference of the king, the policy had not been so
successful. Little, however, could be expected from Henry when his position in
Germany itself was so difficult, and for two years Gregory seems to have
persisted in his confidence in the king’s sincerity. He did complain, indeed,
in December 1074 that Henry had not yet taken any action with regard to Milan,
and he administered a gentle warning as to the councillors he had
around him. But the more personal letter he wrote at the same time gives
expression to his confidence in the king. In this letter he detailed his plan
of leading a vast expedition to the East both to protect the Eastern Christians
and to bring them back to the orthodox faith; he is careful to seek Henry’s advice
and assistance in this, because in the event of his going he intends to leave
the Roman Church under Henry’s care and protection. If he could trust the king
to this extent, he was profoundly suspicious of his councillors and
of their confederates the Lombard bishops. At the Lenten Synod of 1075, three
Italian bishops were suspended for disobedience to his summons, and five of
Henry’s councillors, promoters of simony, are to be excommunicated if they
have not appeared in Rome and given satisfaction by 1 June. At the same synod
was passed the first decree against lay investiture.
Against the practice of lay ownership of churches,
great and small, the reformed Papacy had already raised its protest, and the
necessity of obtaining suitable agents for the work of reform had turned its
attention to the method of appointment. While denying the right of the king to
control appointments, the Popes allowed him a considerable though undefined
role, both as head of the laity and as the natural protector of the Church. In
this Gregory VII acquiesced, and where the appointments were good from the
spiritual point of view, as was the case in England under William I, he was
little disposed to question the method. It was the insubordination of the
episcopate in Germany and North Italy, and especially the clash of papal and
imperial claims at Milan, that led him to take definite action against a royal
control that led to bad appointments. The king, for his part, regarded
bishoprics as being in his gift, and allowed no bishop to exercise his
functions until he had invested him with ring and staff. To the Church party
the use of these symbols betokened the conferring by the king of spiritual
functions; this was an abuse the removal of which might lead to the restoration
of true canonical election. In Gregory VII’s eyes it was clearly not an end in
itself, but only a step towards the end, which was through free election by
clergy and people to obtain a personnel adequate for its spiritual functions
and amenable to papal authority.
The importance of lay investiture had been early recognised by
Cardinal Humbert in his Liber adversus Symoniacos, but Gregory VII was the first Pope to
legislate directly on the subject. The first decree prohibiting lay investiture
(though not imposing any penalty on laymen who invested) was passed at this
synod in 1075. But it was never properly published. Bishops elected and
invested in 1075 and 1076 could plead ignorance of its existence and the Pope
accepted their plea. No German writer seems to know of it, and we are indebted
for its wording solely to a Milanese writer, Arnulf, which gives weight to
the suggestion that the Milanese situation was principally responsible for the
framing of the decree. The fact was that Gregory knew that he was dealing with
a long-established custom, regarded by the king as a prescriptive right, and he
knew that he must walk warily. He first of all sent the text of the decree to
the king accompanied by a message to explain that it was no new step that he
was taking but a restoration of canonical practice, and urging the king, if he
felt his rights to be in any way infringed, to communicate with him, so that
the matter could be arranged on a just and amicable footing. Gregory attempted
to establish his point by negotiation, and he seems to have imagined that the
king would recognise the fairness of his claim. Henry made no reply to
these overtures, and the Pope does not seem to have been immediately perturbed
by this ominous silence. In July he warmly praised the king for his zeal in
resisting simony and clerical marriage, which gives him reason, he says, to
hope for still higher and better things—acquiescence, doubtless, in the new
decree. Just after this, two ambassadors from Henry arrived in Rome with a
strictly confidential message to the Pope to be communicated to no one except
the king’s mother Agnes, or Beatrice and Matilda of Tuscany. This has been
conjectured, with great probability, to have had reference to the king’s desire
to be crowned Emperor by the Pope; if this be so we have a ready explanation of
his willingness to keep on good terms with the Pope, even after his great victory
over the Saxons in June. Gregory took some time to reply, owing to illness;
but, when he did, he warmly congratulated the king on his victory over the
rebels, and wrote in a tone of confidence that they were going to work together
in harmony.
This was the last time that he expressed any such
confidence, and in the meantime the situation in Italy, especially at Milan,
had been getting steadily worse. Revolt against the Pope was spreading in North
Italy, and Archbishop Guibert of Ravenna once more took the
opportunity of proclaiming the independence of his see. In Milan, Erlembald,
the leader of the Pataria and practical
ruler of the city, had, in accordance with the Pope’s appeal to the laity,
forbidden the offending clergy to exercise their functions, which were usurped
by a priest of his own party, Liutprand. A riot ensued in which Erlembald was
killed and Liutprand mutilated. Their enemies in triumph reported the
facts to Henry, and asked him to appoint a new archbishop in place of his
previous nominee Godfrey, from whom he had practically withdrawn support. That
Henry for some time ignored this request may have encouraged the Pope in the
confidence that he expressed in August. But, with the situation in Germany becoming
increasingly favourable, Henry seems to have felt himself strong enough to
follow his own inclinations, and to listen again to those councillors from
whom Gregory had been most anxious to separate him. His two ambassadors, who
were still waiting instructions from him in Rome, suddenly received a message
at the beginning of September to make public what he had previously wished to
be a close secret, a discourtesy to the Pope which the latter rightly felt to
be ominous. And at the same time he sent an embassy into Italy which revealed a
complete change in his policy. It was headed by Count Eberhard of Nellenburg, who was almost certainly one of the councillors placed
under a ban by the Pope. Its first object was to make an alliance with the
Lombard bishops and to attempt to ally the king with the excommunicated Norman
duke, Robert Guiscard. Further, by royal authority, bishops were appointed to
the vacant sees of Fermo and Spoleto, sees which lay within the provincia Romano. But the main
purpose of the embassy was to make a settlement of affairs at Milan, so as
completely to re-establish the old imperial authority. Acceding to the request
of the anti-Patarian party, Henry ignored both
his own nominee Godfrey and also Atto, whom the Pope recognised as
archbishop, and proceeded to invest one Tedald,
who was consecrated archbishop by the suffragans of Milan. As in
1072, Henry so long compliant deliberately provoked a rupture on the question
of Milan. It was an issue in which imperial and papal interests vitally
conflicted, and now that he was master once more in Germany it was an issue
that he felt himself strong enough to raise. Henry had revealed himself in his
true colours. The Pope’s eyes were opened. He realised at last
the meaning of Henry’s submission in 1073, and that it was due not to sincerity
but to defeat. It was clear that compliance could be expected from Henry only
when his fortunes were at a low ebb, and that at such times no reliance could
be placed on his promises. The Pope’s dream is at an end; he is now awake to
the realities of the situation, the bitter frustration of all his hopes.
His tone to the usurper Tedald and
his orders to the suffragan bishops of Milan were sharp and
uncompromising. With the king he tried the effect of threats to see if they
would succeed where persuasion had failed. By the king’s own ambassadors he
sent him a letter in which he summed up the leading offences of Henry—he is
reported to be associating with his excommunicated councillors, and if
this be true must do penance and seek absolution; he is certainly guilty with
regard to Fermo and Spoleto and most culpable of all in his action at
Milan, which was a direct breach of all his promises and a proof of the
falseness of his pretended humility and obedience to Rome. A more mild rebuke
follows for Henry’s silence to his overtures regarding the investiture decree;
if the king felt himself aggrieved he ought to have stated his grievances.
Until he has given satisfaction on all these points, the king must expect no
answer to his previous. Hence Gregory’s complaint that they were men unknown to
him. enquiry (again, doubtless, on the question of his coronation at
Rome). He concludes with a warning to the king to remember the fate of Saul,
who, like Henry, had displayed pride and disobedience after his victory; it is
the humility of David that a righteous king must imitate. The letter was stem,
but not uncompromising; the message given to the ambassadors to deliver by word
of mouth was more direct. It amounted to a distinct threat that, failing
compliance, Henry must expect the sentence of excommunication, and possibly of
deposition also, to be pronounced against him from the papal chair. This verbal
message was in effect an ultimatum.
The embassy reached Henry early in January 1076. He
could not brook threats of this nature when policy no longer required him to
yield to them. He had been humble to the Pope only until he had defeated his
other foe; now that he was victorious, the need for humility was past, and he
could deal directly with the other enemy that was menacing the imperial rights.
His previous humiliation only made his desire for revenge more keen, and his
indignation demanded a speedy revenge. The bishops he knew to be as bitter
against the Pope as himself; and he summoned them to a Council at Worms on 24
January. The short notice given in the summons must have prevented the
attendance of several, such as Archbishop Liemar, who would gladly have
been present; even so, two archbishops, Siegfried of Mayence and
Udo of Treves, and twenty-four bishops, subscribed their names to the
proceedings. There was no need for persuasion or deliberation. They readily renounced
allegiance to the Pope, and concocted a letter addressed to him in which they
brought forward various charges (of adultery, perjury, and the like) to blacken
his character, but laid their principal stress on the only serious charge they
could bring—his treatment of the episcopate. The king composed a
letter on his own account, making the bishops’ cause his own, and
indignantly repudiating Gregory’s claim to exercise authority over
himself, who as the Lord’s anointed was above all earthly judgment, ordered him
to descend from the papal throne and yield it to a more worthy
occupant. The next step was to obtain the adhesion of the North
Italian bishops, which was very readily given at a council at
Piacenza, and to Roland of Parma was entrusted the mission of
delivering to the Pope the sentence of deposition pronounced by the
king and the bishops of the Empire.
At Christmas 1075 had occurred the outrage
of Cencius, who laid violent hands on the Pope and hurried him,
a prisoner, into a fortress of his own. Gregory was rescued by the
Roman populace, and had to intervene to prevent them from
tearing his captor in pieces. The horror aroused at this
incident gave an added reverence to the person of the Pope, and it
was in these circumstances, and while the Lenten Synod was
about to commence its deliberations, that Roland of Parma arrived.
The message which he delivered to the assembled synod was an outrage beside
which that of Cencius paled into insignificance. It shocked the
general feeling of the day, which was accordingly prejudiced on the Pope’s side
at the commencement of the struggle. At the synod itself there was a scene of
wild disorder and uproar. The Pope, depressed at the final ruin of his hopes
and at the prospect of the struggle before him, alone remained calm; he
intervened to protect Roland from their fury, and succeeded at last in quieting
the assembly and recalling it to its deliberations. The verdict was assured and
he proceeded to pass sentence on his aggressors. Archbishop Siegfried and the
other German bishops that subscribed are sentenced to deposition and separated
from communion with the Church; a proviso is added giving the opportunity to
those who had been coerced into signing to make their peace before 1 August.
The same sentence is passed on the Lombard bishops. Finally he deals with the
king in an impressive utterance addressed to St Peter, in whose name he
declares him deposed and absolves his subjects from their oath of allegiance;
and then he bans him from the communion of the Church, recounting his various
offences—communicating with the excommunicated councillors; his many
iniquities; his contempt of papal warnings; his breach of the unity of the
Church by his attack on the Pope.
The hasty violence and the fantastic charges of the
king and the bishops contrasted very strikingly with the solemn and deliberate
sentence of the Pope. Confident himself in the justice of his action, there
were some who doubted, and for these he wrote a circular letter detailing the
events that led to Henry’s excommunication. The facts spoke for themselves, but
there were still some who continued to doubt whether in any circumstances the
Pope had the right to excommunicate the king; to convince these he wrote a
letter to Bishop Herman of Metz (who had hastened to make his peace with the
Pope for his enforced signature at Worms), in which he justifies himself by
precedents, by the power given to St Peter, and by the authority of Scripture
and the Fathers. It is rather a hurried letter, in which he answers briefly and
somewhat impatiently several questions put to him by Herman. He makes it quite
clear, however, that he regards the spiritual power as superior to the
temporal, and that his authority extends over all temporal rulers. Henceforward
there is no sign of his earlier attitude which seemed to imply adherence to
the Gelasian standpoint; he is now the judge who decides whether the
king is doing that which is right (i.e. is worthy to be king),
and the test of right-doing is obedience to the papal commands. One point calls
for remark. It is only the excommunication that he justifies. The sentence of
deposition plays little part in 1076; it is not a final sentence as in 1080,
and even by Henry’s enemies in Germany, who considered this to be a question
rather for them to decide, little attention is paid to this part of the
sentence. Probably in the Pope’s eyes it was subsidiary; deposition and the
absolving of the king’s subjects from their oath of allegiance was a necessary
consequence of excommunication in order to save from the same penalty the
subjects of the excommunicated king. As is clear from his letter to Bishop
Herman, he contemplated the absolution of the king as a possibility in the near
future, and he did not at present contemplate the appointment of a successor to
Henry.
The king received intelligence of the papal sentence at Easter, and immediately summoned a council to meet at Worms on Whitsunday. The crisis had been reached. The king had ordered the Pope to descend from St Peter’s chair; the Pope treated the king as contumacious, excommunicated him, and declared him to be no longer king. Which was to prevail? The answer to this was quickly given. The papal ban was seen to be speedily efficacious. It frightened the more timid of Henry’s adherents, it impressed moderate men who had been horrified by the king’s attack on the Pope. Moreover it gave the excuse for revolt to raise its head in Saxony once more, and to win adherents from among the higher nobility in the rest of Germany, alienated by the high-handed measures of the king in his moment of triumph and resenting their own lack of influence in the affairs of the kingdom. The situation in Germany is dealt with in another chapter. Here it is enough to say that Henry found himself isolated, and faced by a coalition far more dangerous to his power than the revolt of 1073. His summons to councils at Worms and Mayence were ignored, and the bishops of Germany were hastening to make their peace with the Pope, either directly or indirectly through the papal legate, Bishop Altmann of Passau. Only in North Italy were his adherents still faithful, and with them it was not possible for him to join forces. The imperial authority was humiliated between the
encroachments of the spiritual power on the one hand, and the decentralising policy
of the leading nobles on the other. At the Diet of princes held at Tribur in October these two powers came to terms for
mutual action. Two papal legates were present, and the Pope’s letter of the
previous month, in which for the first time he contemplates the possibility of
a successor to I Henry, was probably before the diet. He insists in
that event on being consulted as to their choice, requiring careful information
as to personal character; he claims that the Apostolic See has the right of
confirming the election made by the nobles. Such a right was not likely to be
conceded by them, but to obtain papal support they were willing to satisfy him
essentially. Henry was forced to send a solemn promise of obedience to the Pope
and of satisfaction for his offences, and to promulgate his change of mind to
all the nobles, lay and ecclesiastical, of the kingdom. The diet then arrived
at two important decisions. Accepting the justice of Henry’s excommunication,
they agreed that if he had not obtained absolution by 22 February they would no
longer recognise him as king. Secondly, they summoned a council to be
held at Augsburg on 2 February, at which they invited the Pope to be present
and to preside; at this council the question of Henry’s worthiness to reign was
to be decided and, if necessary, the choice of a successor was to be made.
These decisions were communicated to the Pope, and also to Henry, who was
remaining on the other side of the river at Oppenheim, carefully watched, with
only a few attendants, almost a prisoner.
The Pope received the news with delight and accepted
the invitation with alacrity. It meant for him the realisation of his
aims and the exhibition to the world of the relative importance of the
spiritual and temporal powers; Pope Gregory VII sitting in judgment on King
Henry IV would efface the unhappy memory of King Henry III sitting in judgment
on Pope Gregory VI thirty years before. He left Rome in December and travelled
north into Lombardy. But the escort promised him from Germany did not arrive,
and the news reached him that Henry had crossed the Alps and was in Italy.
Uncertain as to the king’s intentions and fully aware of the hostility of
the Lombards, he took refuge in Countess Matilda’s castle of Canossa.
The king was in a desperate position. He could expect
little mercy from the council of his enemies at Augsburg in February. The
conjunction of the Pope and the German nobles was above all things to be
avoided. The only resource left to him was to obtain absolution, and to obtain
it from the Pope in Italy, before he arrived in Germany. To effect this a
humiliation even more abject than that of 1073 was necessary: he must appear in
person before the Pope not as a king but as a penitent sinner; it would be hard
for the Pope to refuse absolution to a humble penitent. His decision arrived
at, he acted with singular courage and resolution. He had to elude the close
vigilance of the nobles and escape from his present confinement; as they were
guarding the other passes into Italy, only the Mont Cenis pass was left to him,
which was in the control of his wife’s family, the counts of Savoy; but the
winter was one of the most severe on record, and the passage of the Mont Cenis
pass was an undertaking that might have daunted the hardiest mountaineer. All
these difficulties Henry overcame, and with his wife, his infant son, and a few
personal attendants he reached the plains of Lombardy. Here he found numerous
supporters, militant anti-Papalists, eager to flock to his banner. It was a
serious temptation, but his good sense shewed him that it would ultimately have
been fatal, and he resisted it. With his meagre retinue he continued his
journey until he arrived at the gates of Canossa, where the final difficulty
was to be overcome, the obtaining of the papal absolution. To this end he
strove to obtain the intercession of his godfather Abbot Hugh of Cluny, of the
Countess Matilda, of any of those present whose influence might prevail with
the Pope. And he carried out to the full his design of throwing off the king
and appearing as the sinner seeking absolution; bare-footed, in the woollen garb
of the penitent, for three days he stood humbly in the outer courtyard of
Canossa.
There are few moments in history that have impressed
later generations so much as this spectacle of the heir to
the Empire standing in the courtyard of Canossa, a humble suppliant for papal
absolution. But it is within the castle that we must look for the real drama of
Canossa. Paradoxical as it sounds, it was the king who had planned and achieved
this situation; the plans of the Pope were upset by this sudden appearance,
his mind was unprepared for the emergency. The three days of waiting are not so
much the measure of Henry’s humiliation as of Gregory’s irresolution. Could he
refuse absolution to one so humble and apparently so penitent? The influence of
those on whom he was wont to lean for spiritual help, especially the Abbot of
Cluny, urged him to mercy; the appeal of the beloved Countess Matilda moved him
in the same direction. But they only saw a king in penitential garb; he had the
bitter experience of the last two years to guide him, and what confidence
could he feel that the penitence of Henry was more sincere now, when his need
was greater, than it had been in 1073? He saw before him too the
prospect of the wrecking of all his hopes, the breach of his engagement with
the German nobles, which would probably result from an absolution given in
circumstances that neither he nor they had contemplated. His long hesitation
was due, then, to the conflict in his mind; it was not a deliberate delay
designed to increase to the utmost the degradation of the king.
But at last the appeal to the divine mercy prevailed
over all other considerations. The doors were opened and Henry admitted to the
Pope’s presence; the ban was removed, and the king was received once more into
communion with the Church. From him the Pope extracted such assurances of his
penitence and guarantees for his future conduct as would justify the absolution
and at the same time leave the situation as far as possible unaltered from the
papal point of view. With his hand on the Gospels the king took an oath to
follow the Pope’s directions with regard to the charges of the German nobles
against him, whichever way they might tend, and further by no act or
instigation of his to impede Gregory from coming into Germany or to interfere
with his safe-conduct while there. The Pope sent a copy of this oath to the
German nobles with a letter describing the events at Canossa. He realised that
the absolution of Henry in Italy would appear to them in the light of a betrayal
of the compact he had entered into with them. His letter is an explanation,
almost an apology of his action; while he points out that the non-appearance of
the promised escort had prevented him from reaching Germany, he is careful to
insist firstly that it was impossible for him to refuse absolution, secondly
that he has entered into no engagement with the king and that his purpose is as
before to be present at a council in Germany. He lingered, in fact, for some
months in North Italy, waiting for the escort that never came; at last he
resigned himself to the inevitable and slowly retraced his steps to Rome, which
he reached at the beginning of September.
Henry’s plan had been precisely fulfilled. He had
counted the cost— a public humiliation—and was prepared to pay the additional
price in the form of promises; he had obtained his end—absolution—and the
results he had anticipated from this were to prove the success of his policy.
In Lombardy he resumed his royal rights, but resisted the clamour of
his Italian adherents, whose ardour he most thoroughly disappointed;
he must still walk with great discretion, and Germany, not Italy, was his immediate
objective. Thither he soon returned, and the effects of his absolution were at
once revealed. By the majority of his subjects he was regarded as the lawful
sovereign once more. He had endured a grave injury to imperial prestige, but he
had administered an important check to the two dangerous rivals of imperial
power—the spiritual authority and the feudal nobility.
The news of Henry’s absolution came as a shock to his
enemies in Germany, upsetting their plans and disappointing their expectations.
Nor were they comforted by the Pope’s effort to reassure them. They decided,
however, to proceed with their original purpose and to hold a diet at Forchheim in March. Their invitation to the Pope to be
present at this diet must have contained a reference to their disappointment at
his action, for in his reply he finds it necessary to justify himself again,
laying stress also on their failure to provide an escort. This was still the
difficulty that prevented him from coming to Germany, but he sent two papal legates
who were present at Forchheim, and who seem on
their own responsibility to have confirmed the decision of the nobles and to
have given papal sanction to the election of Duke Rudolf of Swabia as king.
The election of Rudolf created a difficult situation,
but one full of possibilities for the Pope which he was not slow to recognise.
He refused, indeed, to confirm the action of his legates at Forchheim, but he recognised the existence of
two kings and claimed for himself the decision between them. If he could
establish this claim and obtain acquiescence in his decision, the predominance
of the spiritual power would be revealed as a fact. His decision must not be
hurried; it must be given only after clear evidence and on the spiritual and
moral grounds which were the justification of the supremacy he claimed.
Righteousness must be the supreme test; he will give his decision to the
king cut iustitia favet.
Again and again he emphasised this, and that
the marks of iustitia were humility
and obedience, obedience to the commandments of God and so to St Peter, and
through St Peter to himself. Obedience to the Pope was to be the final test of
worthiness to rule, and he gave one practical application of this principle. He
still continued for a time to cherish the hope that he would preside in person
over a council in Germany; when this was proved impossible, his plan was to
send legates to preside in his place. From both kings he expected assistance.
The king who was convicted of hindering the holding of the council would be
deposed, and judgment given in favour of the other; for as Gregory
the Great had said, “even kings lose their thrones if they presume to oppose
apostolic decrees.” Naturally his attitude gave intense dissatisfaction to both
Henry and Rudolf; neither felt strong enough to stand alone, and both expected
papal support. Henry urged the Pope to excommunicate the traitor Rudolf, who
had presumed to set himself up against God’s anointed. The supporters of Rudolf
were equally persistent. The Pope had absolved them from their allegiance to
Henry. In conformity with this they had made a compact with him for joint
action, a compact which they felt he had broken by his absolution of Henry.
They had persisted, however, with the scheme and had elected Rudolf, and papal
legates had been present and confirmed the election. Moreover, a garbled
version of Canossa soon prevailed among them, which made it appear that the
king had been granted absolution on conditions (distinct from those in his
oath) which he had immediately broken, and was thereby again excommunicate. In
this view they were again supported by the papal legates, who continued to
embarrass the Pope by exceeding their instructions. Rudolf and his supporters
can hardly be blamed for interpreting the action of the legates as performed on
behalf of the Pope and by his orders. His continued neutrality and his constant
reference to two kings only bewildered and irritated them. He
persisted, however, in neutrality, undeterred by the complaints of either side,
determined to take no action until the righteousness of one party or the
absence of it in the other could be made apparent. But there could never have
been much doubt as to the final decision. He always shewed complete confidence
in Rudolf’s rectitude; his previous experience could have given him little
confidence in Henry. The three days’ hesitation at Canossa had ended when he
allowed himself to be assured of Henry’s penitence; the hesitation of the three
years following Canossa was to be resolved when he could feel complete
assurance of Henry’s guilt.
PAPAL LEGISLATION
From 1077 to 1080 the decision in Germany is naturally
the chief object of the Pope’s attention. This did not divert
his mind from the important questions of Church government and papal authority,
but to some extent it hampered and restricted his actions; it would appear that
he was careful to avoid any cause of friction with Henry which might compromise
the settlement of the great decision. His authority was set at naught by the
bishops of North Italy, who refused to execute his decrees and defied his
repeated excommunications. In Germany there is hardly a trace of the struggle
that had been so bitter in 1074 and 1075; this was mainly due to the confusion
arising from the state of civil war. Probably too the German episcopate was not
anxious to engage in another trial of strength with the Pope. Their revolt at
Worms had resulted in bringing them in submission to the Pope’s feet, and their
leader, Archbishop Siegfried of Mainz, had given up all further thoughts of
revolt against him. He had even abandoned his royal master and had consecrated
Rudolf as king; his instinct in every crisis for the losing side remained with
him to the end. In Gregory’s correspondence during this period there is an
almost complete absence of reference to ecclesiastical affairs in Germany. At
the same time it is the period of his chief legislative activity. At the
Lenten and November Synods of 1078, especially at the latter, he issued a
number of decrees dealing with the leading questions of Church discipline,
most of which were subsequently incorporated by Gratian into his Decretum. The increased stringency of
the measures taken to deal with ecclesiastical offenders is the principal
feature of these decrees. Bishops are ordered to enforce clerical chastity in
their dioceses, under penalty of suspension. The sacraments of married clergy
had previously been declared invalid, and the laity ordered not to hear the
mass of a married priest; now entry into churches is forbidden to married
clergy. All ordinations, simoniacal or otherwise uncanonical, are
declared null and void, as are the orders of those ordained by excommunicated
bishops. Naturally, then, the ordinations of simoniacal bishops are
invalid; an exception is made in the case of those ordained nescienter et sine pretio by simoniacal bishops
before the papacy of Nicholas II, who, after the laying-on of hands, might be
confirmed in their orders. As to the enforcement of these decrees by the Pope
we hear nothing; but they raised issues which were to be seriously contested
after his death, and his immediate successors were eventually to take less
extreme views. Further, the Pope dealt with the unlawful intervention of the
laity in ecclesiastical affairs. Not only are the laity sternly prohibited from
holding Church property or tithes; a decree is also passed in November 1078
condemning the practice of lay investiture. It is noticeable that it only
prohibits investiture with the spiritual office, and that it enforces
penalties only on the recipients, not on the laity who invest. Finally, there
were a number of decrees connected with points of doctrine, the most important
of which was issued after considerable debate at the Lenten Synod of 1079,
affirming the substantial change of the elements after consecration. It was an
answer to the heresy of Berengar of Tours, who is compelled once more
to recant; Gregory as before shewed great leniency in dealing with him, and
actually threatened with excommunication anyone who should molest him.
All this legislation, important as it was and fruitful
in future controversies, was subsidiary to the question of the German kingdom,
which at every synod took the leading place. Gregory was continually striving
to bring about the council in Germany over which his legates were to preside.
Both kings promised to co-operate and to abide by the decision of the legates;
both promised an escort to ensure the safe-conduct of the legates. But nothing
was done by either; Rudolf was doubtless unable, Henry was certainly unwilling.
There was in consequence a strong feeling at the Lenten Synod of 1079 that the
Pope should immediately decide for Rudolf. Gregory, however, persevered and
contented himself with renewed promises, guaranteed by oath, from the
ambassadors of both kings. Henry was becoming impatient. As his position in
Germany grew more secure, his need to conciliate the Pope became less urgent.
At the Lenten Synod of 1080 his ambassadors appeared not with promises but with
the demand, accompanied probably by threats, that the Pope should immediately
excommunicate Rudolf; Rudolf’s ambassadors replied with a string of charges
against Henry, to prove his unrighteousness and insincerity. The Pope could
remain neutral no longer. Henry’s embassy had provided the evidence he required
to prove the king’s breach of faith. Against Henry the decision was given.
The proceedings of the synod commenced with a renewal
of the decree against lay investiture, accompanied, now that negotiation with
Henry was at an end, by a further decree threatening with excommunication the
lay power that presumed to confer investiture of bishopric or abbey. A third
decree enforced the pure canonical election of bishops, and provided that,
where this was in any way vitiated, the power of election should devolve on the
Pope or the metropolitan. The synod terminated with the pronouncement of the
papal decision on the German kingdom. Again in the form of a solemn address,
this time with added effect to both St Peter and St Paul, Gregory dwells on his
reluctance at every stage in his advancement to the papal chair, and recounts
the history of his relations with Henry during the three preceding years,
marking the insincerity of the king and his final disobedience in the matter of
the council, which, with the ruin and desolation he had caused in Germany,
proved his unrighteousness and unfitness to reign. Then follows the sentence—
Henry, for his pride, disobedience, and falsehood, is excommunicated, deposed
from his kingdom, and his subjects absolved from their oath of allegiance.
Rudolf by his humility, obedience, truthfulness, is revealed as the righteous
man; to him the kingdom, to which he had been elected by the German people, is
entrusted by the Pope acting in the name of the two Apostles, to whom he
appeals for a vindication of his just sentence.
The sentence has a ring of finality in it that was not
present in 1076. Henry is now deposed for ever and a successor
appointed in his place. So it is on the deposition that the main emphasis is
laid, as it was on the excommunication in 1076. Gregory’s justification of his
action is again addressed to Bishop Herman of Metz, though
not written till the following year. Unlike the similar letter of 1076 it shews
no sign of haste or impatience; it is a reasoned statement, full of quotations
from precedent and authority, and is concerned mainly with emphasising the
complete subjection of the secular to the spiritual power, for even the lowest
in the ecclesiastical hierarchy have powers which are not given to the greatest
Emperors. It is a mighty assertion of the unlimited autocracy of the Pope over
all men, even the greatest, on earth. And it was an assertion of authority in
the justice of which Gregory had the supremest confidence.
In the sentence he had prayed that Henry might acquire no strength in war, no
victory in his lifetime. He followed this up on Easter Monday by his famous
prophecy that Henry, if he did not repent, would be dead or deposed before St
Peter’s day. He felt assured that the easy victory of 1076 would be repeated.
But the situation was entirely different from that in 1076, as also the issue
was to be. Then opinion in Germany had been shocked by the violence and
illegality of the king in attempting to expel the Pope. The papal
excommunication had been obeyed as a just retribution; to the sentence of
deposition little attention had been paid. As soon as the king was absolved he
received again the allegiance of all those who were in favour of
legitimacy and a strong central authority, and were opposed to the local
ambitions of the dukes who set up Rudolf. The Pope’s claim to have the deciding
voice was not regarded very seriously by them, and still less attention was
paid to his assertion of the complete autocracy of the spiritual power. When
Henry would do nothing to make possible the council that the Pope so earnestly
desired, his action was doubtless approved by them; and when the Pope in consequence
excommunicated and deposed the king and appointed Rudolf in his place, he
aroused very widespread indignation. It is Gregory who is the aggressor now,
as Henry was in 1076; it is he that is regarded now’ as exceeding his powers in
attempting to dethrone the temporal head of Western Christendom. The situation
is completely reversed, and it is not too much to say that as a result of the
papal sentence Henry’s power in Germany became stronger than it had been for
some years.
Henry was probably more alive than Gregory to the real
facts of the situation. Rapidly, but with less precipitancy than he had shown
in 1076, he planned his counter-stroke. A council of German bishops held at
Mainz on Whitsunday decreed the deposition of the Pope and arranged another
council to be held at Brixen on 25 June,
where a successor to Gregory was to be appointed. To this council the bishops
of North Italy came in large numbers; the king was present and many nobles both
of Germany and Italy. The bishops confirmed the Mainz decree and unanimously
declared Gregory deposed; to the royal power was entrusted the task of
executing the sentence. They also proceeded to the election of a successor, and
their choice fell on Archbishop Guibert of Ravenna, the leader of the
Lombard bishops in their revolt against papal authority.
A man of strong determination, resolute in upholding
the independence he claimed for his see, he had been repeatedly summoned to
Rome by the Pope, and for his absence and contumacy repeatedly excommunicated.
Though violently attacked by papalist writers and likened to the
beast in the Apocalypse, no charges were made against his personal character;
he seems also to have been in sympathy with Church reform, as his decrees shew.
A stubborn opponent of Gregory, unmoved by papal excommunications, he was
eminently the man for Henry’s purpose in the final struggle that had now begun.
For it was a struggle that admitted of no compromise—king and anti-Pope versus Pope
and anti-king. St Peter’s day came and Gregory’s prophecy was not fulfilled; in
October Rudolf was killed in battle. It was now possible for Henry to take in
hand the execution of the Brixen decree,
and to use the temporal weapon to expel the deposed Pope.
Even before the Council of Brixen met,
Gregory had realised the danger that threatened him. Spiritual
weapons were of avail no longer; he must have recourse to the aid of temporal
power. The Romans, he knew, were loyal to him and would resist the invader. In
Tuscany he could rely absolutely on the devotion of Countess Matilda, but
against this must be set the hostility of Lombardy. To restore the balance in
his favour he was driven to seek assistance from the Normans in South
Italy. He knew that they would welcome the alliance if he was willing to pay
their price. The issues at stake were so vital to the Papacy and the Church
that he felt justified in consenting to the price they demanded, though it
involved what in other circumstances he would have regarded as an important
breach of principle. To understand this it is necessary to review briefly his
relations with the Normans during the past seven years.
The relations of the Pope with the Normans were
affected by two considerations—the protection of papal territory, and the
possible need for their assistance. Robert Guiscard, Duke of Apulia, Calabria,
and Sicily, who was trying to form a centralised Norman state in
South Italy, had readily done homage to previous Popes in return for the
cession of territory, and had rendered valuable assistance to the Papacy at
Alexander II's accession. Gregory was determined to yield no more territory.
This and the reconciliation with Henry were the two chief objects of his
attention during the first few months of his papacy. He increased the area of
papal suzerainty by the addition of the lands belonging to the surviving
Lombard rulers in the south, especially Benevento and Salerno; in return for
his protection they surrendered them to the Pope and received them back again
as fiefs from the Papacy. Richard, Prince of Capua, the only Norman who could
rival Robert Guiscard, took the same step, and Gregory was delighted at the
success of his policy, which was, as he himself declared, to keep the Normans
from uniting to the damage of the Church. Robert Guiscard, desiring to expand
his power, could only do so at the expense of papal territory. This, in spite
of his oath, he did not scruple to do, and was in consequence excommunicated at
the Lenten Synods of 1074 and 1075. But the breach with Henry in 1076 caused
the Pope to contemplate the desirability of Norman aid; Robert made the cession
of papal territory a necessary condition, and negotiations fell through.
Moreover Richard of Capua had in the meantime broken his allegiance and allied
himself with Robert Guiscard, and together they made a successful attack on
various portions of the papal territory. In Lent 1078 the Pope issued a bull of
excommunication against them once more. Richard died soon afterwards and on his
death-bed was reconciled with the Church; his son Jordan came to Rome and made
his peace with the Pope on the old terms. So once more Gregory had brought
about disunion; and a serious revolt of his vassals against Robert Guiscard,
which it took the latter two years to quell, saved the Pope from further Norman
aggression. The revolt was extinguished by the middle of 1080, at the very
moment that the Pope decided to appeal to Robert for aid. They met at Ceprano in June. The ban was removed, Robert did
fealty to the Pope, and in return received investiture both of the lands
granted him by Popes Nicholas II and Alexander II and of the territory he had
himself seized, for which he agreed to pay an annual tribute to the Pope. The
Pope thus confirmed what he is careful to call “an unjust tenure,” and to gain
Robert’s aid sacrificed the principle for which he had stood firm in 1076.
Whether justifiable or not the sacrifice was ineffectual. Robert Guiscard
welcomed the alliance because his ambitions were turned to the East. Instead of
obtaining the immediate help he required, the Pope had to give his blessing to
Robert’s expedition against the Eastern Empire. The duke’s absence in Greece
gave the opportunity for a renewed outbreak of revolt among his vassals. This
forced him to return and he was not successful in crushing the revolt until
July 1083; it was not till the following year, when it was as much to his own
interest as to the Pope’s to check the successful advance of Henry, that he at
last moved to Gregory’s support. Up to this time the alliance, without bringing
any advantage to the Pope, had actually assisted the king. It gained for him
two useful allies, both of whom were anxious to hamper the power of Robert Guiscard—Jordan
of Capua and the Eastern Emperor Alexius. The latter supplied Henry with large
sums of money, intended for use against Robert, but which the king was
eventually to employ with success in his negotiations with the Romans.
Robert Guiscard did at any rate, as previously in
1075, reject Henry’s proposals for an alliance. But he also disregarded the
Pope’s appeals, and set sail for the East at the very time that Henry was
marching on Rome. The Pope therefore had to rely on his own resources and the
assistance of Countess Matilda. This did not weaken his determination;
convinced of the righteousness of his cause he was confident of the result. At
the Lenten Synod of 1081 he excommunicated Henry and his followers afresh, and
from this synod he sent his legates directions with regard to the election of a
successor to Rudolf. He must not be hastily chosen; the chief qualifications
must be integrity of character and devotion to the Church. The Pope also sent
them the wording of the oath he expected from the new king—an oath of fealty,
promising obedience to the papal will in all things. This was the practical
expression of the theories he enunciated at the same time in his letter to
Bishop Herman of Metz justifying the excommunication and deposition of Henry.
It is important as marking the culmination of his views, but it was without
effect; at the new election it seems to have been completely disregarded.
The weakness of the opposition in Germany made it
possible for Henry to undertake his Italian expedition. He came to assert his
position, and to obtain imperial coronation at Rome: by negotiation and from
Gregory, if possible, but if necessary by force and from his anti-Pope. His
first attempt was in May 1081; whether from over-confidence or necessity he
brought few troops with him. He announced his arrival in a letter to the
Romans, recalling them to the allegiance they had promised to his father. The
Romans, however, justified Gregory’s confidence in their loyalty, and Henry was
forced to retire after a little aimless plundering of the suburbs. The
situation was not affected by the election of Count Herman of Salm at
the end of 1081 as successor to Rudolf. Henry could not reduce Saxony to
submission, but he could safely ignore Herman and resume his Italian design. He
reappeared before Rome in February 1082, preceded by a second letter to the
Romans; this attempt was as unsuccessful as the former one, and for the rest of
the year he was occupied with the resistance of the Countess Matilda in
northern Italy. He returned to Rome at the beginning of 1083 and settled down to
besiege the Leonine City, which he finally captured in June, thus gaining
possession of St Peter’s and all the region on the right bank of the Tiber
except the castle of Sant’ Angelo. This success shewed that the loyalty of
the Romans to Gregory was weakening; they were not equal to the strain of a
long siege, and the money supplied by the Emperor Alexius was beginning to have
its effect. At the same time a moderate party was being formed within the Curia
itself, which managed to obtain the papal consent to the holding of a synod in
November, at which the questions at issue between Pope and king were to be
discussed; Henry’s party was approached and promised a safe-conduct to those
who attended the synod. Thus in both camps there were influences at work to procure
a peaceful settlement. The king himself was not averse to such a settlement. He
had moreover come to a private understanding with the leading Romans on the
matter of greatest importance to himself. Unknown to the Pope they had taken an
oath to Henry to obtain for him imperial coronation at Gregory’s hands, or,
failing this, to disown Gregory and recognise the anti-Pope.
The Norman sack of Rome
The attempt at reconciliation came to nothing. The
Pope issued his summons to the synod, but the tone of his letters, addressed
only to those who were not under excommunication, showed that he would not
compromise his views or negotiate with the impenitent. The king, who had been
further irritated by what he regarded as the treachery of certain of the Romans
in demolishing some fortifications he had constructed, adopted an attitude
equally intransigent. He deliberately prevented Gregory’s chief supporters from
coming to the synod, and actually took prisoner a papal legate, the
Cardinal-bishop Otto of Ostia. The synod, therefore, was poorly attended and
entirely without result. But the secret negotiations of Henry were more
successful. He was about to leave Rome, in despair of attaining his object,
when a deputation arrived promising him instant possession of the main city.
With some hesitation he retraced his steps to find the promise genuine and his
highest hopes unexpectedly fulfilled. On 21 March 1084 he entered Rome in
triumph with his anti-Pope. A council of his supporters decreed anew the
deposition of Pope Gregory VII, and on Palm Sunday Guibert was
enthroned as Pope Clement III. On Easter Day the new Pope crowned Henry and
Bertha as Emperor and Empress, and Henry’s chief object was attained. He had
followed in the footsteps of his father—the deposition of Pope Gregory, the
appointment of Pope Clement, the imperial coronation—and felt that he had
restored the relations of Empire and Papacy as they existed in 1046.
The Emperor proclaimed his triumph far and wide, and
his partisans celebrated it in exultant pamphlets. But their rejoicing was
premature and short-lived. Gregory VII was still holding the castle of Sant’
Angelo and other of the fortified positions in Rome, his determination unmoved
by defeat. And at last his appeals to Robert Guiscard were heeded. The Norman
duke at the head of a large army advanced on Rome. As he approached, Henry, who
was not strong enough to oppose him, retreated, and by slow stages made his way
back to Germany, leaving the anti-Pope at Tivoli. His immediate purpose had
been achieved, and he had to abandon Rome to its fate. He could not, like his
father, take the deposed Pope with him to Germany; the degradation of Gregory
VII was to be the work of the man who came to his rescue. The brutal sack of
Rome by the Normans lasted for three days, and put in the shade the damage done
to the city in former days by Goths and Vandals. When Robert Guiscard returned
south he took with him the Pope, whom he could not have left to the mercy of
the infuriated populace. Gregory would fain have found a refuge at Monte Cassino;
but his rescuer, now his master, hurried him on (as if to display to him the
papal territory that had been the price of this deliverance), first to
Benevento and then to Salerno. In June they arrived at the latter place, where Gregory
was to spend the last year of his life, while the anti-Pope was able quietly to
return to Rome and celebrate Christmas there. At Salerno the Pope held his last
synod, repeated once more his excommunication of Henry and his supporters, and
dispatched his final letter of justification and appeal to the Christian world.
The bitterness of failure hung heavily upon him. He, who had prayed often that
God would release him from this life if he could not be of service to the
Church, had now no longer any desire to live. He passed away on 25 May 1085,
and the anguish of his heart found expression in his dying words: “I have
loved righteousness and hated iniquity; therefore I die in exile.”
The emphasis was on righteousness to the last. And it
was justified. Had he consented to compromise his principles and to come to
terms with Henry he could have maintained himself unchallenged on the papal
throne. The rough hand of the Norman had made his residence at Rome impossible;
but without Norman aid it would have been equally impossible. The
Romans had deserted him; the king was master of the city. His end might even
have been more terrible, though it could not have been more tragic. What
impresses one most of all is not his temporary defeat, but the quenching of his
spirit. The old passionate confidence has gone; though still convinced of the
righteousness of his cause, he has lost all hope of its victory on earth. “The
devil,” he wrote, “has won no such victory since the days of the great
Constantine; the nearer the day of Anti-Christ approaches, the more vigorous
are the efforts he is making.” His vision was dimmed by the gloom of the
moment, and this gave him a pessimistic outlook that was unnatural to him and
was not justified by facts. The Papacy had vindicated its independence, had
taken the lead in Church reform, and had established the principles for which
the reformers had been fighting. It had also asserted its authority as supreme
within the ecclesiastical department, and exercised a control unknown before and
not to be relaxed in the future. This was largely the work of Gregory VII. The
great struggle too in which he was engaged with Henry IV was to end eventually
in a complete victory for the Papacy; his antagonist was to come to an end even
more miserable than his own. The great theories which he had evolved in the
course of this struggle were not indeed to be followed up in practice by his
immediate successors. But he left a great cause behind him, and his claims were
repeated and defended in the pamphlet-warfare that followed his death. Later
they were to be revived again and to raise the Papacy to its greatest height;
but they were to lead to eventual disaster, as the ideal which had inspired
them was forgotten. They were with Gregory VII the logical expression of his
great ideal—the rule of righteousness upon earth. He had tried to effect this
with the aid of the temporal ruler; when that was proved impossible, he tried
to enforce it against him. The medieval theory of the two equal and independent
powers had proved impracticable; Gregory inaugurated the new papal theory that
was to take its place.
The main interest of Gregory VII’s papacy is
concentrated on the great struggle with the Empire and the theories and claims
that arose out of it. If his relations with the other countries of Europe are
of minor interest, they are of almost equal importance in completing our understanding
of the Pope. He was dealing with similar problems, and he applied the same
methods to their solution; the enforcement of his decrees, the recognition of
his supreme authority in the ecclesiastical department, co-operation with the
secular authority, are his principal objects. Conditions differed widely in
each country; he was keenly alive to these differences, shrewd and practical in
varying his policy to suit them. He had frequently to face opposition, but in
no case was he driven into open conflict with the secular authority. This must
be borne in mind in considering the claims which he advanced against the
Empire, which were the result of his conflict with the temporal ruler; where no
such conflict occurred, these claims did not emerge. Evidently then they must
not be taken to represent his normal attitude; they denote rather the extreme
position into which he was forced by determined opposition.
Gregory had himself been employed as papal legate to
enforce the reform decrees in France, and had thus been able to familiarise himself
with the ecclesiastical situation. The king, Philip I, had little real
authority in temporal matters, but exercised considerable influence in
ecclesiastical, as also did the leading nobles. The alliance of monarchy and
episcopate, a legacy to the Capetians from the Carolingians, was of importance
to the king, both politically and financially. The rights of regalia and spolia, and
the simoniacal appointments to bishoprics, provided an important
source of revenue, which the king would not willingly surrender; he was
therefore definitely antagonistic to the reform movement. The simoniacal practices
of the king and his plundering of Church property naturally provoked papal
intervention. Remonstrance and warning were of no effect, until at the Lenten
Synod of 1075 a decree was passed threatening Philip with excommunication if he
failed to give satisfaction to the papal legates. The threat was apparently
sufficient. Philip was not strong enough openly to defy the Pope and risk
excommunication. Co-operation of the kind that Gregory desired was impossible,
but Philip was content with a defensive attitude, which hindered the progress
of the papal movement but did not finally prevent it. At any rate there is no
further reference to papal action against the king, who seems to have made a
show of compliance with the Pope’s wishes in 1080, when Gregory wrote to him,
imputing his former moral and ecclesiastical offences to youthful folly and
sending him precepts for his future conduct. The episcopate adopted an attitude
similar to that of the king. The lay influence at elections, the prevalence of
simony and of clerical marriage, had created an atmosphere which made the work
of reform peculiarly difficult. The bishops, supporting and supported by the
king, were extremely averse to papal control, but owing to the strength of the
feudal nobility they lacked the territorial power and independence of the
German bishops. They had to be content therefore, like the king, with a shifty
and defensive attitude; they resisted continually, but only half-heartedly.
FRANCE
In Gregory VII’s correspondence with the French Church
there are two striking features. In the first place his letters to France are,
at every stage of his papacy, more than twice as numerous as his letters to Germany.
These letters reveal the laxity prevailing in the Church, and the general
disorder of the country owing to the weakness of the central government; they
also shew the timidity of the opposition which made it possible for the Pope to
interfere directly, not only in matters affecting the ecclesiastical organisation as
a whole but also in questions of detail concerning individual churches and
monasteries. Secondly, while the Pope’s correspondence with Germany was mainly
concerned with the great questions of his reform policy, his far more numerous
letters to France have hardly any references to these questions. His methods
were the same in both countries: in 1074 he sent papal legates to France, as to
Germany, to inaugurate a great campaign against simony and clerical marriage.
The legates in Germany had met with determined resistance, but those in France
had pursued their work with such ardour and success that the Pope
established them eventually as permanent legates in France—Bishop Hugh of Die
being mainly concerned with the north and centre, Bishop Amatus of Oloron with
Aquitaine and Languedoc. To them he left the task of enforcing compliance with
the papal decrees; hence the silence on these matters in his own
correspondence. The legates, especially Bishop Hugh, were indefatigable. They
held numerous synods, publishing the papal decrees and asserting
their own authority. Inevitably they provoked opposition, especially from the
lower clergy to the enforcement of clerical celibacy, and their lives were
sometimes in danger; at the Council of Poitiers in 1078 there was even a
popular riot against them. The archbishops were naturally reluctant to submit
to their authority, but had to be content with a passive resistance. They
refused to appear at the synods, or questioned the legatine authority. The sentence
of interdict, which Hugh never failed to employ, usually brought them to a
reluctant submission. Only Manasse, Archbishop
of Rheims, for whose character no writer has a good word, took a decided stand.
He refused to appear at the synods when summoned, and appealed against the
Pope’s action in giving full legatine authority to non-Romans. As he continued
obstinate in his refusal to appear before the legates, he was deposed in 1080
and a successor appointed in his place; not even the king’s support availed to
save him. The action of the papal legates was often violent and ill-considered.
Hugh in particular was a man of rigid and narrow outlook whose sentences
never erred on the side of leniency. The Pope repeatedly reminded him
of the virtues of mercy and discretion, and frequently reversed his sentences.
The legate was aggrieved at the Pope’s leniency. He complained bitterly that
his authority was not being upheld by the Pope; offenders had only to run to
Rome to obtain immediate pardon. In the Pope’s mind, however, submission to
Rome outweighed all else; when that was obtained, he readily dispensed with
the penalties of his subordinates. An important step towards the strengthening
of the papal authority was taken in 1079, when he made the Archbishop of Lyons
primate of the four provinces of Lyons, Rouen, Tours, and Sens, subject of
course to the immediate control of the Papacy; and in 1082 the legate Hugh was,
practically by the Pope’s orders, promoted Archbishop of Lyons. The Pope, in
his decree, spoke of the restoration of the ancient constitution, but the
Archbishop of Sens had by custom held the primacy, and Lyons was now rather
imperial than French in its allegiance. A consideration of this nature was not
likely to weigh with the Pope; it was against the idea of national and
independent churches, which monarchical control was tending to produce, that he
was directing his efforts. If he was not able definitely to prevent lay control
of elections in France, he had firmly established papal authority over the
French Church. If his decrees were not carefully obeyed, the principles of the
reform movement were accepted; in the critical years that followed his death,
France was to provide many of the chief supporters of the papal policy.
ENGLAND
The situation with regard to England was altogether
different Gregory’s friendship with King William I was of long standing. His
had been the influence that had induced Alexander II to give the papal blessing
to the Norman Duke’s conquest of England. William had recognised the
obligation and made use of his friendship. On Gregory’s accession he wrote
expressing his keen satisfaction at the event. William was a ruler of the type
of the Emperor Henry III. Determined to be master in Church and State alike, he
was resolved to establish good order and justice in ecclesiastical as well as
in secular affairs. He was therefore in sympathy with Church reform and the
purity of Church discipline and government. He was fortunate in his Archbishop
of Canterbury, Lanfranc, whose legal mind shared the same vision of royal
autocracy; content to be subject to the king he would admit no ecclesiastical
equal, and successfully upheld the primacy of his see against the independent
claims of York. The personnel of the episcopate, secularised and
ignorant, needed drastic alteration; William was careful to refrain from simony
and to make good appointments, but he was equally careful to keep the appointments in his own hands. He took a strong line
against the immorality and ignorance of the lower clergy, and promoted reform
by the encouragement he gave to regulars. Frequent Church councils were held,
notably at Winchester in 1076, where decrees were passed against clerical
marriage, simony, and the holding of tithes by laymen; but the decrees were
framed by the king, and none could be published without his sanction. The work
of Church reform was furthered, as Gregory wished, by the active co-operation
of the king; the separation of the ecclesiastical from the civil courts,
creating independent Church government, was also a measure after
Gregory’s heart. The Pope frequently expressed his gratification; the work
of purifying the Church, so much impeded elsewhere, was proceeding apace in
England without the need of his intervention. Disagreement arose from
William’s determination to be master in his kingdom, in ecclesiastical affairs
as well as in secular; he made this clear by forbidding papal bulls to be
published without his permission, and especially by refusing to allow English
bishops to go to Rome. The Pope bitterly resented the king’s attitude; a novel
and formidable obstacle confronted him in the one quarter where he had
anticipated none. Matters were not improved by the papal decree of 1079,
subjecting the Norman archbishopric of Rouen to the primacy of the Archbishop
of Lyons. So for a time relations were much strained, but an embassy from William
in 1080 seems to have restored a better understanding, and even to have
encouraged Gregory to advance the striking claim that William should do fealty
to the Papacy for his kingdom. There is good reason to believe that the claim
was made in 1080, and that it took the form of a message entrusted to the
legate Hubert with the letter he brought to William in May 1080. The king abruptly dismissed the claim on
the ground that there was no precedent to justify it. The Pope
yielded to this rebuff and made no further attempt, nor did William’s
refusal interfere with the restored harmony. Gregory was sensible, as he
wrote in 1081, of the many exceptional merits in William, who moreover
had refused to listen to the overtures of the Pope’s enemies. And in
one respect William made a concession. He allowed Lanfranc to visit
Rome at the end of 1082, the first visit that is recorded
of any English bishop during Gregory’s papacy. It was only a small
concession. For, while the reform movement was directly furthered by
royal authority in England, the Church remained quasi-national under
royal control; the introduction of papal authority was definitely
resisted.
OTHER STATES
In the remaining parts of Europe the Pope’s
efforts were mainly directed towards three objects—missionary work,
uniformity of ritual, and the extension of the temporal power of the
Papacy. With backward countries such as Norway and Sweden, where the difficulty
of the language was an obstacle to the sending of Roman missionaries, he urged
that young men should be sent to Rome for instruction, so that they might
return to impart it to their fellow-countrymen. In Poland it was the
undeveloped ecclesiastical organisation that called for his
attention; it possessed no metropolitan and hardly any bishops, and he sent
legates to introduce the necessary reforms. The question of uniformity of
ritual arose with regard to the territory recently recovered to Christianity
from the Saracens, especially in Spain. The acceptance by the Spanish Church of
the Ordo Romanus was an event of great importance for
Catholicism in the future. Over Spain, and on the same grounds over Corsica and
Sardinia as well, the Pope claimed authority temporal as well as spiritual.
They were all, he declared, in former times under the jurisdiction of St Peter,
but the rights of the Papacy had long been in abeyance owing to the negligence
of his predecessors or the usurpation of the Saracens. Though he does not state
the ground for his assertion, it is doubtless the (forged) Donation of
Constantine to Pope Sylvester I that he had in his mind. He was more precise in
his claims over Hungary. St Stephen had handed over his kingdom to St Peter, as
the Emperor Henry III recognised after his victory over
Hungary, when he sent a lance and crown to St Peter. King Salomo,
despising St Peter, had received his kingdom as a fief from King Henry IV;
later he had been expelled by his cousin Geza. This was God’s judgment for
his impiety. In these cases Gregory was trying to establish claims based on
former grants. He was equally anxious to extend papal dominion by new grants.
He readily acceded to the request of Dmitri that the kingdom of Russia might be
taken under papal protection and held as a fief from the Papacy; the King of
Denmark had made a similar suggestion to his predecessor, which Gregory tried
to persuade the next king to confirm.
His positive success in this policy was slight. The
interest lies rather in the fact that he rested all these claims on grants from
secular rulers; in no case does he assert that the ruler should do fealty to
him in virtue of the overlordship of the spiritual power over all
earthly rulers. This was a claim he applied to the Empire alone, his final
remedy to cure the sickness of the world, and to prevent a recurrence of the
great conflict in which he was engaged. He seems to have been loth to
resort to this remedy until open defiance drove him to its use. It is not
unlikely, however, that he did contemplate the gradual extension over Western
Christendom of papal overlordship; but he conceived of this overlordship as
coming into being in the normal feudal manner, established by consent and on a
constitutional basis. In this way, when he could compel obedience even from
temporal rulers to the dictates of the moral law, his dream of the rule of
righteousness would at last be fulfilled.
II.
Gregory VII was dead, but his personality continued to
dominate the Church, his spirit lived on in the enthusiasm of his followers.
The great pamphlet-warfare, already in existence, became fuller and more bitter
over his final claims against the Empire. But his immediate successors were
concerned with the practical danger that threatened the Papacy. They had to fight
not for its supremacy so much as for the continued existence of its
independence, once more threatened with imperial control. With Henry, endeavouring to
establish a Pope amenable to his wishes, there could be no accommodation. Until
his death in 1106 everything had to be subordinated to the immediate
necessities of a struggle for existence. But in the rest of Europe the
situation is entirely different. Nowhere was Henry’s candidate recognised as
Pope, and outside imperial territory the extreme claims of Gregory VII had not
been put forward. In these countries, therefore, the policy of Gregory VII was
continued and developed, and, considering the extent to which the Papacy was
hampered by its continual struggle with the Emperor, the advance it was able to
make was remarkable, and not without effect on its attitude to the Empire when
communion was restored on the succession of Henry V to the throne.
When Gregory VII died, in exile and almost in
captivity, the position of his supporters was embarrassing in the extreme, and
it was not until a year had passed that a successor to him was elected. Nor was
the election of Abbot Desiderius of Monte Cassino as Pope Victor III
of hopeful augury for the future. Desiderius was above all things a peacemaker,
inclined thereto alike by temperament and by the position of his abbey, which
lay in such dangerous proximity to the encroaching Normans. He had acted as peace-maker
between Robert Guiscard and Richard of Capua in 1075, and thereby assisted in
thwarting the policy of Gregory VII; in 1080 he had made amends by effecting
the alliance of Gregory with Robert Guiscard at Ceprano.
But in 1082 he had even entered into peace negotiations with Henry IV and
assisted the alliance of the latter with Jordan of Capua; hence for a year he
was under the papal ban. Possibly his election was a sign that the moderate
party, anxious for peace, had won the ascendency. More probably it indicates
the continued dominance of Norman influence. Robert Guiscard, indeed, had died
shortly after Gregory VII, but his sons Roger and Bohemond in South
Italy and his brother Roger in Sicily continued his policy, affording the papal
party their protection and in return enforcing their will. And for this purpose
Desiderius was an easy tool. The unfortunate Pope knew himself to be unequal to
the crisis, and made repeated attempts to resign the office he had so little
coveted. It was, therefore, a cruel addition to his misfortunes that he was
violently attacked by the more extreme followers of Gregory VII, especially by
the papal legates in France and Spain, Archbishop Hugh of Lyons and Abbot
Richard of Marseilles, who accused him of inordinate ambition and an unworthy
use of Norman assistance to obtain his election. Perhaps it was this opposition
that stiffened his resolution and decided him at last in March 1087 at Capua,
fortified by Norman support, to undertake the duties of his office. He went to Rome,
and on 9 May was consecrated in St Peter’s by the cardinal-bishops, whose
action was in itself an answer to his traducers. But his reign was to be of
short duration. Unable to maintain himself in Rome, he soon retired to
Monte Cassino, his real home, where he died on 16 September. The only
noteworthy act of his papacy was the holding of a synod at Benevento in August,
at which he issued a decree against lay investiture, passed sentence of
anathema on the anti-Pope, and excommunicated Archbishop Hugh and Abbot
Richard for the charges they had presumed to bring against him.
For six months the papal throne was again vacant. At
last, on 12 March 1088, the cardinals met at Terracina, and unanimously
elected Otto, Cardinal-bishop of Ostia, as Pope Urban II. The three years of
weakness and confusion were at an end, and a worthy leader had been found. On
the day following his election he wrote a letter to his supporters in Germany,
stating his determination to follow in the steps of Gregory VII, and affirming
solemnly his complete adhesion to all the acts and aspirations of his dead
master. To this declaration he consistently adhered; it was in fact the guiding
principle of his policy. Yet in other respects he presents a complete
antithesis to Gregory VII. He was a Frenchman of noble parentage, born (about
1042) near Rheims, educated at the cathedral school, and rising rapidly in
ecclesiastical rank. Suddenly he abandoned these prospects and adopted the
monastic profession at Cluny, where about 1076 he was appointed prior. Some two
years later, the Abbot Hugh was requested by Pope Gregory VII to send some of
his monks to work under him at Rome. Otto was one of those selected, and he was
made Cardinal-bishop of Ostia in 1078. From this time he seems to have been attached
to the person of the Pope as a confidential adviser, and he was occasionally
employed on important missions. He was taken prisoner by Henry IV when on his
way to the November synod of 1083. Released the next year, he went as legate to
Germany, where he worked untiringly to strengthen the papal party. In 1085 he
was present at a conference for peace between the Saxons and Henry’s supporters
and, after the failure of this conference, at the Synod of Quedlinburg, where the excommunication of Henry, Guibert,
and their supporters was again promulgated. On the death of Gregory VII he
returned to Italy, and was the candidate of a section of the Curia to succeed
Gregory, who had indeed mentioned his name on his death-bed. He loyally
supported Victor III, and in 1088 was unanimously elected to succeed him. Tall
and handsome, eloquent and learned, his personality was as different from that
of Gregory VII as his early career had been. In his case it was the gentleness
and moderation of his nature that won admiration; we are told
that he refused at the price of men’s lives even to recover Rome. His
learning, especially his training in Canon Law, was exactly what was required
in the successor of Gregory VII. He was well qualified to work out in practice
the principles of Church government inherited from his predecessor, and to
place the reconstructed Church on a sound constitutional basis. The continual
struggle with the Empire, which outlasted his life, robbed him of the
opportunity, though much that he did was to be of permanent effect. It was in
his native country, France, that his talents were to be employed with
the greatest success.
It is mainly in connexion with France,
therefore, that we can trace his general ideas of Church
government, his view of papal authority and its relations with the lay power.
There is no divergence from the standpoint of Gregory VII; he was content to
carry on the work of his predecessor, following the same methods and with
the same objects in view. Papal control was maintained by the system of
permanent legates, and Urban continued to employ Archbishop Hugh of
Lyons, and Amatus who now became
Archbishop of Bordeaux. The former he had pardoned for his transgression
against Victor III and he had confirmed him as legate. Hugh’s fellow-offender,
Abbot Richard of Marseilles, was also pardoned and was soon promoted to the
archbishopric of Narbonne. But he was not employed again as legate in Spain;
this function was attached to the archbishopric of Toledo. Germany too was now
given a permanent legate in the person of Bishop Gebhard of
Constance. These legates were empowered to act with full authority on the
Pope’s behalf, were kept informed of his wishes, and were made
responsible for promoting the papal policy.
Urban’s ultimate object was undoubtedly the
emancipation of the Church from the lay control that was responsible
for its secularisation and loss of spiritual ideals. He had to
combat the idea inherent in feudal society that churches, bishoprics,
and abbeys were in the private gift of the lord in whose territory
they were situated. To this he opposed the papal view that
the laity had the duty of protecting the Church but no right of
possession or authority over it. Free election by clergy and
people had been the programme of the reform party for half a
century, and even more than Gregory VII did Urban II pay
attention to the circumstances attending appointments to bishoprics and
abbeys. At several synods he repeated decrees against lay
investiture, and forbade the receiving of any ecclesiastical dignity
or benefice from a layman. At the Council of Clermont in 1095 he went
further, prohibiting a bishop or priest from doing homage to a
layman. According to Bishop Ivo of Chartres, Urban recognised the
right of the king to take part in elections “as head of the people,”
that is to say the right of giving, but not of refusing, assent.
He also allowed the king’s right to “concede” the regalia—the
temporal possessions of the see that had come to it by
royal grant; here again the right of refusing concession is not implied. Ivo
of Chartres was prepared to allow the king a much larger part in elections than
the Pope conceded, and his interpretation of Urban’s decrees is, from the point
of view of the king, the most favourable that could be put upon them.
The Pope was undoubtedly advancing in theory towards a condition .of complete
independence, but his decrees are rather an expression of his ideal than of his
practice.
In practice he was, like Gregory VII, much more
moderate, and when good appointments were made was not disposed to quarrel with
lay influence. His temperament, as well as the political situation,
deterred him from drastic action, for instance, in dealing with the Kings of
England and France. He tried every means of persuasion before issuing a decree
of excommunication against Philip I in the matter of his divorce; and though he
took Anselm under his protection, he never actually pronounced sentence against
William II. It was a difficult position to maintain. His legates, especially the
violent Hugh, followed the exact letter of the decrees, and by their ready use
of the penal clauses often caused embarrassment to the Pope. On the other
hand, the bishops and secular clergy, as was shewn in France over the royal
divorce question, were too complaisant to the king and could not be trusted.
On the regular clergy he could place more reliance, and it is to them that he
particularly looked for support. It is remarkable how large a proportion of the
documents that issued from Urban’s Chancery were bulls to monasteries,
confirming their privileges and possessions, exempting them sometimes from
episcopal control, and taking them under papal protection (always with the
proviso that they shall pay an annual census to the papal treasury); the extension
of Cluniac influence with Urban’s approval naturally had the same effect. Nor
was his interest confined to Benedictine monasteries; he gave a ready
encouragement to the new orders in process of formation, especially to the
regular canons who traced their rule to St Augustine. And so, at the same time
that he was trying to secure for the bishops freedom of election and a
loosening of the yoke that bound them to the lay power, he was narrowing the
range of their spiritual authority. Indirectly too the authority of the
metropolitans was diminishing; it was becoming common for bishops to obtain
confirmation of their election from the Pope, and in some cases consecration as
well, while the practice of direct appeal to Rome was now firmly established.
Moreover, the appointment of primates, exalting some archbishops at the expense
of others, introduced a further grading into the hierarchy, and at the same
time established responsibility for the enforcement of papal decrees. The
primacy of Lyons, created by Gregory VII, was confirmed by Urban in spite of
the protests of Archbishop Richer of Sens, who refused to recognise the
authority of Lyons; his successor Daimbert was
for a time equally obstinate, but had to submit in order to obtain consecration.
Urban extended the system by creating the Archbishop of Rheims primate of Belgica Secunda,
the Archbishop of Narbonne primate over Aix, and the Archbishop of Toledo
primate of all Spain. The Pope, therefore, was modelling the ecclesiastical
constitution so as to make his authority effective throughout. A natural
consequence of this was his zeal for uniformity. He was anxious, as he had been
as legate, to get rid of local customs and to produce a universal
conformity to the practice of the Roman Church. This is evident in many of his
decretals, those, for instance, that regulated ordinations and ecclesiastical
promotions or that prescribed the dates of the fasts quattuor temporum.
While Urban II undoubtedly increased the spiritual
authority of the Papacy, he was far less concerned than Gregory VII
with its temporal authority. He certainly made use of the Donation of
Constantine to assert his authority in Corsica and Lipara, but he did not
revive Gregory VII’s claims to Hungary, nor did he demand from England anything
more than the payment of Peter’s Pence. It was not until 1095 that he
received the recognition of William II, and his mild treatment of that king, in
spite of William’s brutality to Archbishop Anselm, has already been mentioned.
In Spain and Sicily he was mainly concerned with the congenial task of
re-creating bishoprics and rebuilding monasteries in the districts recently won
from the infidel; he was careful to make papal authority effective, and to
introduce uniformity to Roman practice by the elimination of local uses. One
great extension of temporal authority he did not disdain.
In 1095 King Peter of Aragon, in return for the payment of an annual tribute, obtained the protection of the Holy See, and acknowledged his subordination to its authority. Papal overlordship was recognised also
by the Normans in South Italy, and Roger, Robert Guiscard’s son, was invested
by Urban with the duchy of Apulia. The Normans, however, were vassals only in
name, and never allowed their piety to interfere with their interests. In 1098
Urban was a helpless witness of the siege and capture of Capua, and the same
year Count Roger of Sicily obtained for himself and his heirs a remarkable
privilege. No papal legate, unless sent a latere, was
to enter his territory. The count himself was to hold the position of
papal legate, and, in the case of a papal summons to a Roman
Council, was allowed to decide which of his bishops and abbots should
go and which should remain. Urban owed much to Norman protection, but
he had to pay the price..
At any rate, at the time of his accession,
Urban was safe only in Norman territory. Guibert held Rome, and
Urban’s adherents in the city were few and powerless. Countess Matilda
was loyal as ever, but all her resources were needed for her own
security. Lombardy was still strongly anti-papal, while in
Germany (apart from Saxony) there were hardly half-a-dozen bishops
who upheld the papal cause, and the rebel nobles were absorbed in
their own defence. But in North Italy the tide soon began to
turn. Already in 1088 the Archbishop of Milan had renounced allegiance to Henry
and had become reconciled with the Pope, who pardoned his offence of having
received royal investiture. There followed in 1089 the marriage of the
younger Welf with the ageing Countess Matilda of Tuscany, truly (as
the chroniclers relate) not prompted by any weakness of the flesh, but a
political move which reflected little credit on either party; the Duke of
Bavaria, at any rate, was completely outwitted, but the Papacy gained the
immediate help it required. It brought Henry into Italy to wage a campaign that
was for two years successful, culminating in the capture of Mantua, and a
signal victory over Matilda’s troops at Tricontai,
in 1091, but he was now fighting to maintain his authority in Lombardy, where
it had previously been unchallenged. The final blow came with the revolt of his
son Conrad in 1093. Conrad, bringing with him stories of fresh crimes to blacken
his father’s name, was welcomed by the papal party with open arms, and crowned
(he had already been crowned King of Germany) with the iron crown of Lombardy.
A regular Lombard League sprang into being with Milan at its head. The unfortunate
father was in very evil plight, almost isolated at Verona, unable, as his
enemies held the passes, even to escape into Germany until 1097.
Success in North Italy reacted on Urban’s authority
elsewhere. The winter of 1088-1089 he had indeed spent in Rome, but in wretched
circumstances, living on the island in the Tiber under the direction of
the Pierleoni, and obtaining the necessities of
life from the charity of a few poor women. Later in 1089 the expulsion of Guibert from
Rome improved the Pope’s position, but it was only a temporary improvement. The
hostile element (probably the recollection of 1084 was still smarting) was too
strong for him, and he had to retire south in the summer of 1090. Though he
managed to celebrate Christmas both in 1091 and 1092 in the suburbs, he was not
able to enter the city again until Christmas 1093. Refusing to allow bloodshed
to secure his position, he adopted the safer method of winning the Romans by
gold, instituting collections for this purpose, especially in France. In 1094 Abbot
Geoffrey of Vendome, on a visit to the Pope, found him living in mean state in
the house of John Frangipani, and supplied him with money with which he
purchased the Lateran from a certain Ferruchius left
in charge of it by Guibert From this time Urban’s fortunes began to
mend, and only the castle of Sant’ Angelo remained in the hands of
the Guibertines. But his tenure of Rome was
insecure; papal authority within the city was not popular, while outside his
enemies made the approaches dangerous for those who came to visit the Pope. It
was not surprising, then, that he took the opportunity of the success of his
cause in North Italy to commence the northern tour which was to have such
important results.
In Germany progress was made with difficulty. The
bishops as a whole were too deeply implicated in the schism to withdraw, and
the papal legate, Bishop Gebhard of
Constance, in spite of his undoubted zeal, could make little headway. The
deaths of Bishops Herman of Metz and Adalbero of
Wurzburg in 1090, and of Abbot William of Hirschau and
Bishop Altmann of Passau in 1091, robbed the papal party of its
staunchest supporters. But Henry’s absence in Italy and the revolt of Conrad
gave an opportunity to the two sections of opposition to Henry in South Germany
to unite for concerted action. At an assembly held at Ulm in 1093 all present
pledged themselves by oath to accept Bishop Gebhard as
the spiritual head, and his brother Duke Berthold as the temporal leader, of
the party; further, Dukes Berthold and Welf did homage as vassals to
the papal legate and thus recognised the overlordship of
the Pope. At the same time, the leading bishops in Lorraine renounced obedience
to the excommunicated Archbishop of Treves and brought a welcome reinforcement
to the papal party. The improvement in the situation is shown by the
largely-attended synod presided over by Gebhard at
Constance in the following Lent. Shortly afterwards Europe was devastated by a
pestilence, which was particularly severe in Germany. The fear of death had a considerable
effect in withdrawing adherents from an excommunicated king, and the increasing
sentiment in favour of the lawful Pope was heightened by the
commencement of the crusading movement. The political situation, however, was
less satisfactory than the ecclesiastical. Duke Welf, foiled in his
expectations of the results of his son’s marriage with Matilda, reverted to
Henry’s allegiance in 1095, and Henry’s return to Germany in 1097 prevented the
revolt against him from assuming greater proportions.
The reconciliation with the Church of so many that had been in schism before made it urgently necessary to find an answer to the question—in what light were to be regarded the orders of those who received ordination from schismatics or simonists? Ever since the war on simony began, the question of ordinations by simonists had agitated the Church. Peter Damian had argued for their validity. Cardinal Humbert had been emphatic against, and Popes Nicholas II and Gregory VII had practically adopted his opinion. On one thing all alike were agreed—there could be no such thing as reordination. In Humbert’s view, simonists were outside the pale of the Church, and could confer nothing sacramental; those who received ordination from them in effect received nothing, and so, unless they afterwards received Catholic ordination, they had no orders at all. Urban was obviously at a loss for some time, and his rulings were of a contradictory nature. He uses the language of Humbert when he says in 1089 that he himself ordained Daimbert, Bishop-elect of Pisa, as deacon, because Daimbert had previously been ordained by Archbishop Werner of Mainz, heretic and excommunicate, and “qui nihil habuit, nil dare potuit”; and again in 1091 when he ruled that Poppo, Bishop-elect of Metz, must be ordained deacon by a Catholic bishop if his previous ordination had been simoniacal, because in that case it would be null. But circumstances were too strong for him, and even in 1089 he gave permission to his legate in Germany to allow the retention of their orders to those who without simony had received ordination from schismatic bishops, provided the latter had themselves received Catholic ordination. It was at the great Council of Piacenza in 1095 that he at last issued authoritative decrees on this subject. Those ordained by schismatic bishops, who had themselves received Catholic ordination, might retain their orders, if and when they returned to the unity of the Church. Also those who had been ordained by schismatics or simonists might retain their orders if they could prove their ignorance of the excommunication or simony of their ordainers. But in all cases where such ignorance was not alleged the orders were declared to be altogether of no effect (omnino irritae). The meaning of this is not clear, but evidently the validity of such orders is in fact recognised, as the validity of the sacrament could not depend on the knowledge or ignorance of the ordinand. Some light is thrown by a letter of uncertain date to one Lucius, provost of St Juventius. After having
declared the validity of the orders and sacraments of criminous clergy, provided they
are not schismatics, he goes on to say that the schismatics have
the forma but not the virtutis effectus of the sacraments, unless and until they
are received into the Catholic communion by the laying-on of hands. This then
was the bridge by which the penitent schismatic might pass into the Catholic
fold, and the ceremony of reconciliation, which included the performance of all
the rites of ordination save that of unction, was laid down by him in letters
written both in 1088 and 1097. Urban’s position was neither easy to comprehend
nor to maintain, and the antiPope Guibert was on firmer ground
when he condemned those who refused to recognise the ordinations of
his partisans. Urban’s successor was able, when the death of Henry IV brought
the schism to an end, to assist the restoration of unity by a more generous
policy of recognition.
As we have seen, in 1094, when the Pope was at last in
possession of the Lateran palace, his cause was victorious throughout Italy and
gaining adherents rapidly in Germany. In the autumn he left Rome and commenced
his journey, which lasted two years and was not far short of a triumphal
progress, through France and Italy. He came first to Tuscany where he spent the
winter, and then proceeded into North Italy which had been persistent, under
the lead of the bishops, in its hostility to the Pope, and which, now that the
episcopal domination was beginning to wane, was looking to the Pope
as an ally against imperial authority. Even the bishops, following the example
of the Archbishop of Milan, were rapidly becoming reconciled with the Pope. In
March 1095 Urban held a Council at Piacenza, which was attended by an immense
concourse of ecclesiastics and laymen. The business, some of which has already
been mentioned, was as important as the attendance. Praxedis,
Henry IV’s second wife, was present to shock the assembly with stories of the
horrors her husband had forced her to commit. These found a ready credence, and
she herself a full pardon and the Pope’s protection. The case of King Philip of
France, excommunicated for adultery by Archbishop Hugh at Autun the
previous year, was debated and postponed for the Pope’s decision in France.
Finally there appeared the envoys of the Emperor Alexius imploring the help of
Western Christendom against the infidel, and the inspiration came to Urban that
was to give a great purpose to his journey to France. From Piacenza Urban
passed to Cremona, where he met Conrad, who did fealty to him and received in
return the promise of imperial coronation. Conrad further linked himself with
the papal cause by marrying the daughter of Count Roger of Sicily shortly
afterwards at Pisa. It is easy to blame the Pope who welcomed the rebel son;
but it is juster to attribute his welcome
as given to the penitent seeking absolution and a refuge from an evil and
excommunicated father. The fault of Urban was rather that he took up the
unfortunate legacy from Gregory VII of attempting to establish an Emperor who
would be his vassal, falling thus into the temptation that was to be fatal to
the Papacy. Urban in this respect was as unsuccessful as his rival, who
attempted to establish a compliant Pope; Conrad lived on for six more years,
but without a following, and he and Guibert alike came to their end
discredited and alone.
In July the Pope entered France, where judgment was to
be passed on the king and the Crusade to be proclaimed. But the Pope’s energies
were not confined to these two dominant questions. He travelled ceaselessly
from place to place, looking into every detail of the ecclesiastical organisation, settling disputes,
and consecrating churches. Philip I made no attempt to interfere with the papal
progress, and the people everywhere hailed with enthusiasm and
devotion the unaccustomed sight of a Pope. The climax was reached at
the Council of Clermont in the latter half of November, where both of the
important questions were decided. The king was excommunicated and the First
Crusade proclaimed. Urban recognised that he was
again following in the footsteps of Gregory VII, but his was the higher
conception and his the practical ability that realised the ideal.
A less disinterested Pope might have roused the enthusiasm of the
faithful against his enemy in Germany; personal considerations might
at least have checked him from sending the great host to fight against the
infidel when the Emperor still threatened danger, the King of France was alienated
by excommunication, and the King of England was anything but friendly. His
disinterestedness had its reward in the position the Papacy secured in
consequence of the success of his appeal, but this reward was not in Urban’s
mind in issuing the appeal. Clermont was followed by no anti-climax. The papal
progress was continued in 1096, the Crusade was preached again at Angers and
oil the banks of the Loire, synods were held at Tours and Nimes, and the
popular enthusiasm increased in intensity. He had the satisfaction too of
obtaining the submission of Philip.
When he returned to Italy in September, and,
accompanied by Countess Matilda, made his way to Rome, he was to experience
even there a great reception and to feel himself at last master of the papal
city. “Honeste tute et alacriter sumus” are the
concluding words of his account of his return in a letter to Archbishop Hugh of
Lyons. And in 1098 the last stronghold of the Guibertines,
the castle of Sant Angelo, fell into his hands. But his joy
was premature. It would seem that the turbulent Roman nobles, who had tasted
independence, were not willing to submit for long to papal authority. It was
not in the Lateran palace but in the house of the Pierleoni that
Urban died on 29 July 1099, and his body was taken by way of Trastevere to
its last resting place in the Vatican.
But, on the whole, his last three years were passed in
comparative tranquillity and honour. The presence of Archbishop
Anselm of Canterbury, in exile from England, added distinction to the papal
Court. Received with the veneration that his character merited, Anselm acted as
champion of Western orthodoxy against the Greeks at the Council of Bari in
1098. And three months before his death Urban held in St Peter’s his last
council, at which the decrees of Piacenza and Clermont were solemnly
reaffirmed. Anselm returned to England with the decrees against lay
investiture and homage as the last memory of his Roman visit. They were to
bring him into immediate conflict with his new sovereign.
PASCHAL II
It was perhaps due to the unsettled state of Rome that
the cardinals chose San Clemente for the place of conclave; there on 13 August
they unanimously elected Rainer, cardinal-priest of that basilica, as Urban’s
successor, in spite of his manifest reluctance. The anti-Pope was hovering in
the neighbourhood and a surprise from him was feared, but nothing
occurred to disturb the election. Rainer, who took the name of Paschal II, was
a Tuscan by birth, who had been from early days a monk and, like his predecessor,
at Cluny. Sent to Rome by the Abbot Hugh while still quite young, he had been
retained by Gregory VII and appointed Abbot of San Lorenzo fuori le mura and
afterwards cardinal-priest of San Clemente. By Urban II, in whose election he
took a leading part, he had been employed as papal legate in Spain. Here our
knowledge of his antecedents ceases. So general was the agreement at his
election that he was conducted at once to take possession of the Lateran
palace, and on the following day was solemnly consecrated and enthroned at St
Peter’s. Guibert was dangerously close, but the arrival of Norman
gold enabled the Pope to chase him from Albano to Sutri; soon afterwards
he retired to Civita Castellana, and died
there in September 1100. Two anti-Popes were set up in succession by his Roman
partisans, both cardinal-bishops of his creation—Theodoric of Santa Rufina and
Albert of the Sabina—but both were easily disposed of. Paschal, so far
fortunate, was soon to experience the same trouble as Urban II from the Roman
nobles. The defeat of Peter Colonna (with whom the name Colonna first enters
into history) was an easy matter. More dangerous were the Corsi, who, after being expelled from their stronghold on
the Capitol, settled in the Marittima and took their revenge by
plundering papal territory. Closely connected with this disturbance was the
rising of other noble families under the lead of a German, Marquess Werner
of Ancona, which resulted in 1105 in the setting-up of a third anti-Pope, the
arch-priest Maginulf, who styled himself Pope
Sylvester IV. Paschal was for a time forced to take refuge
in the island on the Tiber, but the anti-Pope was soon expelled. He
remained, however, as a useful pawn for Henry V in his negotiations with the
Pope, until the events of 1111 did away with the need for him, and
he was then discarded. The nobles had not ceased to harass Paschal, and
a serious rising in 1108-1109 hampered him considerably at a time
when his relations with Henry were becoming critical. Again in 1116, on the occasion
of Henry’s second appearance in Italy, Paschal was forced
to leave Rome for a time owing to the riots that resulted from his
attempt to establish a Pierleone as prefect of the city.
The new Pope was of a peaceful and retiring
disposition, and in his attempts to resist election he shewed a just estimate
of his own capacity. Lacking the practical gifts of Urban II and
Gregory VII, and still more the enlightened imagination of the
latter, he was drawn into a struggle which he abhorred and for which he was
quite unequal. Timid and unfamiliar with the world, he dreaded
the ferocia gentis of
the Germans, and commiserated ;with Anselm on being inter barbaros positus/i> as
archbishop. He was an admirable subordinate in his habit of
unquestioning obedience, but he had not the capacity to lead or to
initiate. Obedient to his predecessors, he was obstinate in adhering
to the text of their decrees, but he was very easily overborne by
determined opponents. This weakness of character is strikingly
demonstrated throughout the investiture struggle, in which he took the
line of rigid obedience to the text of papal decrees.
Probably he was not cognisant of all the
complicated constitutional issues involved,and the situation
required the common sense and understanding of a man like
Bishop Ivo of Chartres to handle it with success; Ivo had the
true Gregorian standpoint. Paschal devised a solution of the difficulty
with Henry V in 1111 which was admirable on paper but impossible to carry into
effect; and he showed no strength of mind when he had to face the storm which
his scheme provoked. A short captivity was sufficient to wring from him the
concession of lay investiture which his decrees had so emphatically condemned.
When this again raised a storm, he yielded at once and revoked his concession;
at the same time he refused to face the logic of his revocation and to stand up
definitely against the Emperor who had forced the concession from him. The
misery of his later years was the fruit of his indecision and lack of courage. The
electors are to blame, who overbore his resistance, and it is impossible not
to sympathise with this devout, well-meaning, but weak Pope, faced on
all sides by strong-minded men insistent that their extreme demands must be
carried out and contemptuous of the timid nature that yielded so readily. Eadmer tells
us of a characteristic outburst from William Rufus, on being informed that the
new Pope was not unlike Anselm in character; “God’s Face! Then he isn’t much
good.” The comparison has some truth in it, though it is a little unfair to
Anselm. Both were unworldly men, drawn against their will from their
monasteries to a prolonged contest with powerful sovereigns; unquestioning
obedience to spiritual authority was characteristic of them both, but
immeasurably the greater was Anselm, who spoke no ill of his enemies and
shielded them from punishment, while he never yielded his principles even to
extreme violence. Paschal would have left a great name behind him, had he been
possessed of the serene courage of St Anselm.
For seven years the tide flowed strongly in his favour.
The death of the anti-Pope Guibert in 1100 was a great event. It
seems very probable that if Henry IV had discarded Guibert, as Henry V
discarded Maginulf, he might have come to terms
with Urban II. But Henry IV was more loyal to his allies than was his son, and
he refused to take this treacherous step. It seemed to him that with Guibert’s death
the chief difficulty was removed, and he certainly gave no countenance to the
anti-Popes of a day that were set up in Rome to oppose Paschal. He was indeed
quite ready to recognise Paschal, and, in consonance with the
universal desire in Germany for the healing of the schism, announced his
intention of going to Rome in person to be present at a synod where issues
between Empire and Papacy might be amicably settled. It was Paschal, however,
who proved irreconcilable. In his letters and decrees he showed his firm
resolve to give no mercy to the king who had been excommunicated and deposed by
his predecessors and by himself. Henry was a broken man, very different from
the antagonist of Gregory VII, and it was easy for Paschal to be defiant. The
final blow for the Emperor came at Christmas 1104, when the young Henry
deserted him and joined the rebels. Relying on the nobles and the papal
partisans, Henry V was naturally anxious to be reconciled with the Pope.
Paschal welcomed the rebel with open arms, as Urban had welcomed Conrad.
The formal reconciliation took place at the beginning
of 1106. Born in 1081, when his father was already excommunicated, Henry could
only have received baptism from a schismatic bishop. With the ceremony of the
laying-on of hands he was received by Catholic bishops into the Church, and by
this bridge the mass of the schismatics passed back into the orthodox
fold. The Pope made easy the path of reconciliation, and the schism was thus
practically brought to an end. The young king, as his position was still
insecure, shewed himself extremely compliant to the Church party. He had
already expelled the more prominent bishops of his father’s party from their
sees, and filled their places by men whom the papal legate, Bishop Gebhard of Constance, had no hesitation in consecrating.
But he shewed no disposition to give up any of the rights exercised by his
father, and Paschal did not take advantage of the opportunity to make
conditions or to obtain concessions from him. Towards the old king, who made a
special appeal to the apostolic mercy, promising complete submission to the
papal will, Paschal shewed himself implacable. There could be no repetition of
Canossa, but the Pope renewed the ambition of Gregory VII in announcing his
intention to be present at a council in Germany. The temporary recovery of
power by Henry IV in 1106 prevented the holding of this council in Germany, and
it was summoned to meet in Italy instead. In the interval Henry died, and
still the Pope was implacable, refusing to allow the body of the excommunicated
king to be laid to rest in consecrated ground. It was a hollow triumph; the
Papacy was soon to find that it had exchanged an ageing and beaten foe for a
young and resolute one. The death of his father had relieved Henry V from the
immediate necessity of submission to the papal will. He soon made clear that he
was as resolute a champion of royal rights as his father, and he faced the Pope
with Germany united in his support.
III.
With the death of Henry IV and the reconciliation of
Henry V with the Church, the schism that had lasted virtually for thirty years
was at an end. The desire for peace, rather than any deep conviction of
imperial guilt, had been responsible perhaps for Henry V’s revolt, certainly
for his victory over his father. By the tacit consent of both sides the claims
and counter-claims of the years of conflict were ignored; the attempt of each
power to be master of the other was abandoned, and in the relations between
the regnum and sacerdotium the status
quo ante was restored. On the question of lay investiture negotiations
had already been started before the schism began; they were resumed as soon as
the schism was healed, but papal decrees in the intervening years had increased
the difficulty of solution. Universal as was the desire for peace, this issue
prevented its consummation for another sixteen years. The contest of Henry V
and the Papacy is solely, and can very rightly be named, an Investiture
Struggle.
Gregory VII’s decrees had been directed against the
old idea by which churches and bishoprics were regarded as possessions of
laymen, and against the practice of investiture by ring and staff which symbolised the
donation by the king of spiritual functions. He shewed no disposition to
interfere with the feudal obligations which the king demanded from the bishops
as from all holders of land and offices within his realm. But his successors
were not content merely to repeat his decrees. At the Council of Clermont in
1095 Urban II had prohibited the clergy from doing homage to laymen, and at the
Lenten Synod at Rome in 1102 Paschal II also prohibited the clergy from
receiving ecclesiastical property at the hands of a layman, that is to say,
even investiture with temporalities alone. To Gregory investiture was not
important in itself, but only in the lay control of spiritual functions which
it typified, and in the results to which this led—bad appointments and simony;
the prohibition of investiture was only a means to an end. To Paschal it had
become an end in itself. Rigid in his obedience to the letter of the decrees,
he was blind to the fact that, in order to get rid of the hated word and
ceremony, he was leaving unimpaired the royal control, which was the real evil.
He had already obtained his point in France, and was
about to establish it in England also. In France, owing to the weakness of the
central government, papal authority had for some time been more effective than
elsewhere; Philip I also exposed himself to attack on the moral side, and had
only recently received absolution (in 1104) after a second period of
excommunication. Relations were not broken off again, as the Pope did not
take cognisance of Philip’s later lapses. The king, at any rate, was
not strong enough to resist the investiture decrees. There was no actual
concordat; the king simply ceased to invest, and the nobles followed his
example. He, and they, retained control of appointments, and in place of
investiture “conceded” the temporalities of the see, usually after consecration
and without symbol; the bishops took the oath of fealty, but usually did not do
homage.
Paschal was less successful in England, where again
political conditions were largely responsible for bringing Henry I into the
mood for compromise. Henry and Paschal were equally stubborn, and on Anselm
fell the brunt of the struggle and the pain of a second exile. At last Henry
was brought to see the wisdom of a reconciliation with Anselm, and the Pope
relented so far as to permit Anselm to consecrate bishops even though they had
received lay investiture or done homage to the king. This paved the way for the
Concordat of August 1107, by which the king gave up the practice of investing
with ring and staff and Anselm consented to consecrate bishops who had done
homage to the king. Thus what the Pope designed as a temporary concession was
turned into a permanent settlement. The subsequent practice is seen from
succeeding elections and was embodied in the twelfth chapter of the
Constitutions of Clarendon. The king had the controlling voice in the election,
the bishop-elect did homage and took the oath of fealty, and only
after that did the consecration take place. In effect, the king retained the
same control as before. The Pope was satisfied by the abolition of investiture
with the ring and staff, but the king, though hating to surrender an old
custom, had his way on all the essential points.
Paschal II’s obsession with the question of
investiture is shewn in the letter he wrote to Archbishop Ruthard of Mayence in
November 1105, a letter which is a fitting prelude to the new struggle.
Investiture, he says, is the cause of the discord between
the regnum and the sacerdotium, but
he hopes that the new reign will bring a solution of the difficulty. Actually
it was the new reign that created the difficulty. During the schism papal
decrees were naturally disregarded in Germany; royal investiture continued
uninterruptedly, and Henry V from the beginning of his
reign regularly invested with the ring and staff. But when Germany
returned to the Catholic fold, papal decrees became operative once more, and
the discrepancy between Henry’s profession of obedience to Rome and his
practice of investiture was immediately apparent. He was as determined as
his father that the royal prerogative should remain unimpaired, but he
showed his sense of the direction the controversy was taking and the weakness
of the royal position by insisting that he was only investing with the regalia?. This
made no difference to Paschal, who refused all compromise on the exercise of
investiture; his assertion of his desire not to interfere with the
royal rights, which had some meaning in Gregory VII’s mouth, earned
no conviction. He must have been sanguine indeed if he
expected in Germany a cessation of investiture as in
Prance; there was nothing to induce Henry V even to follow
the precedent set by his English namesake. In Germany there
was no parallel to the peculiar position in England of St
Anselm, the primate who put first his profession of obedience to the
Pope. Archbishops and bishops, as well as lay nobles, were at
one with the king on this question; even the papal legate,
Bishop Gebhard of Constance, who had
endured so much in the papal cause, did not object to consecrate
bishops appointed and invested by Henry. And the German king had
legal documents to set against the papal claims—the privileges of Pope
Hadrian I to Charles the Great and of Pope Leo VIII to Otto the Great—forged
documents, it is true, but none the less useful. It needed a change in the
political atmosphere to induce Henry V to concessions.
The council summoned by Paschal met at Guastalla on 22 October 1106. The Pope was affronted
by the scant attention paid by German bishops to his summons. Instead there
appeared an embassy from Henry claiming that the Pope should respect the royal
rights, and at the same time inviting him again to Germany. To the first
message Paschal replied by a decree against lay investiture, to the second by
an acceptance of the invitation, promising to be at Mayence at
Christmas. He soon repented of his promise, whether persuaded of the futility
of the journey or wishing to avoid the personal encounter, and hastily made his
way into France, where he could be sure of protection and respect. Here he met
with a reception which fell little short of that accorded to Urban; in
particular he was welcomed by the two kings, Philip I and his son Louis, who
accompanied the Pope to Châlons in May 1107, where he received the
German ambassadors with Archbishop Bruno of Treves at their head. To the
reasoned statement they presented of the king’s demands Paschal returned a
direct refusal, which was pointed by the decree he promulgated against
investiture at a council held at Troyes on 23 May. At this council he took
action against the German episcopate, especially for their disobedience to his
summons to Guastalla: the Archbishops of Mayence and Cologne and their suffragans, with
two exceptions, were put under the ban, and his legate Gebhard received
a sharp censure. It was of little avail that he invited Henry to be present at
a synod in Rome in the following year. Henry did not appear, and Paschal was
too much occupied with difficulties in Rome to take any action. But at a synod
at Benevento in 1108 he renewed the investiture decrees, adding the penalty of
excommunication against the giver as well as the receiver of investiture.
Clearly he was meditating a definite step against Henry. The king, however, had
a reason for not wishing at this moment to alienate the Pope—his desire for
imperial coronation. Accordingly during 1109 and 1110 negotiations were
resumed. An embassy from Henry proposing his visit to Rome was well received by
Paschal, who welcomed the proposal though remaining firm against the king’s
demands. At the Lenten Synod of 1110 he repeated the investiture decree, but,
perhaps to prevent a breach in the negotiations, abstained from pronouncing
excommunication on the giver of investiture. He had reiterated to Henry’s
embassy his intention not to infringe the royal rights. Had he already
conceived his solution of 1111? At any rate he took the precaution of obtaining
the promise of Norman support in case of need, a promise which was not
fulfilled.
Duke Roger of Apulia died on 21 February 1111, and the
Normans were too weak to come to the Pope’s assistance. In fact they feared an
imperial attack upon themselves.
In August 1110 Henry began his march to Rome. From Arezzo,
at the end of December, he sent an embassy to the Pope, making it clear that he
insisted on investing with the temporalities held from the Empire. Paschal’s answer was not satisfactory, but a second
embassy (from Acquapendente) was more
successful. It was now that Paschal produced his famous solution of the
dilemma—the separation of ecclesiastics from all secular interests. If Henry
would renounce investiture, the Church would surrender all the regalia held
by bishops and abbots, who would be content for the future with tithes and
offerings. Ideally this was an admirable solution, and it may have appeared to
the unworldly monk to be a practical one as well. Henry must have known better.
He must have realised that it would be impossible to obtain acquiescence
from those who were to be deprived of their privileges and possessions. But he
saw that it could be turned to his own advantage. He adroitly managed to lay on
the Pope the onus of obtaining acquiescence; this the Pope readily undertook,
serenely relying on the competency of ecclesiastical censures to bring the
reluctant to obedience. The compact was made by the plenipotentiaries of both
sides at the church of Santa Maria in Turri on
4 February 1111, and was confirmed by the king himself at Sutri on 9
February.
On 12 February the king entered St Peter’s
with the usual preliminary formalities that attended imperial coronations. The
ratification of the compact was to precede the ceremony proper. Henry rose and
read aloud his renunciation of investiture. The Pope then on behalf of the
Church renounced the regalia, and forbade the holding of them
by any bishops or abbots, present or to come. Immediately burst forth the storm
that might have been expected. Not only the ecclesiastics, who saw the loss of
their power and possessions, but also the lay nobles, who anticipated the
decline in their authority consequent on the liberation of churches from their
control, joined in the uproar. All was confusion; the ceremony of coronation
could not proceed. Eventually, after futile negotiations, the imperialists laid
violent hands on the Pope and cardinals; they were hurried outside the walls to
the king’s camp, after a bloody conflict with the Romans. A captivity of two
months followed, and then the Pope yielded to the pressure and conceded all
that Henry wished. Not only was royal investiture permitted; it was to be a
necessary preliminary to consecration. They returned together to St Peter’s,
where on 13 April the Pope handed Henry his privilege and placed the imperial
crown upon his head. Immediately after the ceremony the Pope was released; the
Emperor, who had had to barricade the Leonine city against the populace,
hastily quitted Rome and returned in triumph to Germany.
The Pope had had his moment of greatness. He had tried
to bring the ideal into practice and to recall the Church to its true path; but
the time was not ripe, the violence of the change was too great, and the plan
failed. The failure was turned into disaster by the weakness of character which
caused him to submit to force and make the vital concession of investiture;
for the rest of his life he had to pay the penalty. The extreme Church party
immediately gave expression to their feelings. Led by the Cardinal-bishops of
Tusculum and Ostia in Rome, and in France and Burgundy by the Archbishops of
Lyons and Vienne, they clamoured for the repudiation of the
“concession”, reminding Paschal of his own previous decrees and hinting at
withdrawal of obedience if the Pope did not retract his oath. In this oath
Paschal had sworn, and sixteen cardinals had sworn with him, to take no further
action in the matter of investiture, and never to pronounce anathema against
the king. Both parts of the oath he was compelled to forswear, helpless as ever
in the presence of strong-minded men. At the Lenten Synod of 1112 he retracted
his concession of investiture, as having been extracted from him by force and
therefore null and void. The same year Archbishop Guy of Vienne held a synod
which condemned lay investiture as heresy, anathematised the king,
and threatened to withdraw obedience from the Pope if he did not confirm the
decrees. Paschal wrote on 20 October, meekly ratifying Guy’s actions. But his
conscience made his life a burden to him, and led him into various inconsistencies.
He felt pledged in faith to Henry, and wrote to Germany that he would not
renounce his pact or take action against the Emperor. The unhappy Pope,
however, was not man enough to maintain this attitude. Harassed by the
vehemence of the extremists, whose scorn for his action was blended with a sort
of contemptuous pity, he was forced at the Lenten Synod of 1116 to retract
again publicly the concession of 1111 and to condemn it by anathema.
Moreover, Cuno, Cardinal-bishop of Palestrina,
complained that as papal legate at Jerusalem and elsewhere, he had in the
Pope’s name excommunicated Henry, and demanded confirmation of his action. The
Pope decreed this confirmation, and in a letter to Archbishop Frederick of
Cologne the next year, he wrote that hearing of the archbishop’s
excommunication of Henry he had abstained from intercourse with the king.
Paschal had ceased to be Head of the Church in anything but name.
If the events of 1111 brought humiliation to Paschal
from all sides, the Emperor was to get little advantage from his successful
violence. The revolt that broke out in Germany in 1112 and lasted with
variations of fortune for nine years was certainly not unconnected with the
incidents of those fateful two months. The Saxons naturally seized the
opportunity to rebel, but it is more surprising to find the leading archbishops
and many bishops of Germany in revolt against the king. Dissatisfaction with
the February compact, indignation at the violence done to the Pope, as well as
the ill-feeling caused by the high-handed policy of Henry in Germany, were
responsible for the outbreak; if Archbishop Adalbert of Mainz was controlled
mainly by motives of personal ambition, Archbishop Conrad of Salzburg was
influenced by ecclesiastical considerations only. Henry’s enemies hastened to
ally themselves with the extreme Church party, and Germany was divided into two
camps once more. Even neutrality was dangerous, and Bishop Otto of Bamberg, who
had never lost the favour of Pope or Emperor, found himself placed
under anathema by Adalbert.
An important event in 1115, the death of Countess
Matilda of Tuscany, brought the Emperor again into Italy. He came, early in
1116, to enter into possession not only of the territory and dignities held
from the Empire but, as heir, of her allodial possessions as well.
Matilda, at some time in the years 1077-1080, had made over these allodial possessions,
on both sides of the Alps, to the Roman Church, receiving them back as a fief
from the Papacy, but retaining full right of disposition. This donation
she had confirmed in a charter of 17 November 1102. Her free right of disposal
had been fully exercised, notably on the occasion of Henry’s first expedition
to Italy. Both on his arrival, and again at his departure, she had shown a friendliness
to him which is most remarkable in view of his dealings with the Pope. Moreover
it seems to be proved that at this time she actually made him her heir, without
prejudice of course to the previous donation to the Papacy. The Pope must have
been aware of the bequest, as he made no attempt to interfere with Henry when
he came into Italy to take possession. The bequest to Henry at any rate
prevented any friction from arising on the question during the Emperor’s
lifetime, especially as Henry, like Matilda, retained full disposal and entered
into no definite vassal-relationship to the Pope. For Henry it was a personal
acquisition of the highest value. By a number of charters to Italian towns,
which were to be of great importance for the future, he sought to consolidate
his authority and to regain the support his father had lost. His general
relations with the Pope do not seem to have caused him any uneasiness. It was
not until the beginning of 1117 that he proceeded to Rome, where he planned a
solemn coronation at Easter and a display of imperial authority in the city
proper, in which he had been unable to set foot in 1111.
During the previous year Paschal’s position
in Rome had been endangered by the struggles for the prefecture, in which a
boy, son of the late prefect, was set up in defiance of the Pope’s efforts on
behalf of his constant supporters the Pierleoni.
The arrival of Henry brought a new terror. Paschal could not face the prospect
of having to retract his retractation; he fled to South Italy. Henry,
supported by the prefect, spent Easter in Rome, and was able to find a
complaisant archbishop to perform the ceremony of coronation in Maurice Bourdin of
Braga, who was immediately excommunicated by the Pope. For the rest of the year
Paschal remained under Norman protection in South Italy, where he renewed with
certain limitations Urban IPs remarkable privilege to Count Roger of Sicily.
Finally in January 1118, as Henry had gone, he could venture back to Rome, to
find peace at last. On 21 January 1118 he died in the castle
of Sant’ Angelo.
GELASIUS II & CALIXTUS II
His successor, John of Gaeta, who took the name
of Gelasius II, had been Chancellor under both Urban II and Paschal
II, and had distinguished his period of office by the introduction of the cursus, which
became a special feature of papal letters and was later imitated by other
chanceries. His papacy only lasted a year, and throughout he had to endure a
continual conflict with his enemies. The Frangipani made residence in Rome impossible
for him. The Emperor himself appeared in March, and set up the excommunicated
Archbishop of Braga as Pope Gregory VIII. In April at Capua Gelasius excommunicated
the Emperor and his anti-Pope, and so took the direct step from which Paschal
had shrunk, and a new schism definitely came into being. At last in
September Gelasius set sail for Pisa, and from there journeyed to
France where he knew he could obtain peace and protection. On 29 January 1119
he died at the monastery of Cluny.
The cardinals who had accompanied Gelasius to
France did not hesitate long as to their choice of a successor, and on 2 February
Archbishop Guy of Vienne was elected as Pope Calixtus II; the
election was ratified without delay by the cardinals who had remained in Rome.
There was much to justify their unanimity. Calixtus was of high
birth, and was related to the leading rulers in Europe—among others to the
sovereigns of Germany, France, and England; he had the advantage, on which he
frequently insisted, of being able to address them as their equal in birth. He
had also shown himself to be a man of strong character and inflexible
determination. As Archbishop of Vienne he had upheld the claims of his see
against the Popes themselves, and apparently had not scrupled to employ forged
documents to gain his ends. He had taken the lead in Burgundy in opposing the
“concession” of Paschal in 1111, and, as we have seen, had dictated the Pope’s
recantation. But the characteristics that made him acceptable to the cardinals
at this crisis might seem to have militated against the prospects of peace. The
result proved the contrary, however, and it was probably an advantage that the
Pope was a strong man and would not be intimidated by violence like his
predecessor, whose weakness had encouraged Henry to press his claims to the
full. Moreover the revival of the schism caused such consternation in Germany
that it was perhaps a blessing in disguise. It allowed the opinions of moderate
men, such as Ivo of Chartres and Otto of Bamberg, to make themselves heard and
to force a compromise against the wishes of the extremists on both sides.
Calixtus soon showed that he was anxious for
peace, by assisting the promotion of negotiations. These came to a head
at Mouzon on 23 October, when the Emperor
abandoned investiture to churches, and a settlement seemed to have been
arranged. But distrust of Henry was very strong among the Pope’s entourage;
they were continually on the alert, anticipating an attempt to take the Pope
prisoner. So suspicious were they that they decided there must be a flaw in his
pledge to abandon investiture; they found it in his not mentioning Church
property, investiture with which was equally repudiated by them. On this point
no accommodation could be reached, and the conference broke up. Calixtus returned
to Rheims to preside over a synod which had been interrupted by his departure
to Mouzon. The synod pronounced sentence of
excommunication on Henry V and passed a decree against lay investiture; the
decree as originally drafted included a condemnation of investiture with Church
property, but the opposition of the laity to this clause led to its withdrawal,
and the decree simply condemned investiture with bishoprics and abbeys. A
little less suspicion and the rupture with Henry might have been avoided.
Investiture was not the only important issue at the
Synod of Rheims. During its session the King of France, Louis VI, made a
dramatic appeal to the Pope against Henry I of England. On 20
November Calixtus met Henry himself at Gisors,
and found him ready enough to make peace with Louis but unyielding on the
ecclesiastical questions which he raised himself. They were especially in
conflict on the relations between the Archbishops of Canterbury and York. Calixtus had
reversed the decision of his predecessors and denied the right of Canterbury to
the obedience of York, which Lanfranc had successfully established. Perhaps his
own experience led him to suspect the forgeries by which Lanfranc had built up
his case, or he may have been anxious to curb the power of Canterbury which had
rendered unsuccessful a mission on which he had himself been employed as papal
legate to England. He insisted on the non-subordination of York to Canterbury;
in return, he later granted to the Archbishop of Canterbury the dignity of
permanent papal legate in England. This may have given satisfaction to the
king; it also gave a foothold for papal authority in a country which papal
legates had not been allowed to enter without royal permission.
For more than a year Calixtus remained in
France. When he made his way into Italy and arrived at Rome in June 1120, he
met with an enthusiastic reception; though he spent many months in South Italy,
his residence in Rome was comparatively untroubled. The failure of the
negotiations at Mouzon delayed peace for
three more years, but the universal desire for it was too strong to be
gainsaid. Two events in 1121 prepared the way. Firstly, the capture of the
anti-Pope in April by Calixtus removed a serious obstacle; the
wretched Gregory VIII had received, as he complained, no support from the
Emperor who had exalted him. Secondly, at Michaelmas in the Diet of
Wurzburg the German nobles restored peace between Henry and his opponents in
Germany, and promised by their mediation to effect peace with the Church also.
This removed the chief difficulties. Suspicion of the king had ruined
negotiations at Mouzon; his pledges were now to
be guaranteed by the princes of the Empire. Moreover with Germany united for
peace, the Papacy could have little to gain by holding out against it; Calixtus shewed
his sense of the changed situation by the conciliatory, though firm, letter
which he wrote to Henry on 19 February 1122 and sent by the hand of their
common kinsman, Bishop Azzo of Acqui. Henry had as little to gain by obstinacy, and shewed
himself prepared to carry out the decisions of the Diet of Wurzburg and to
promote the re-opening of negotiations. The preliminaries took time. The papal
plenipotentiaries fixed on Mainz as the meeting-place for the council, but the
Emperor won an important success in obtaining the change of venue from this
city, where he had in the archbishop an implacable enemy, to the more loyal
Worms; here on 23 September was at last signed the Concordat which brought
Empire and Papacy into communion once more.
The Concordat of Worms was a treaty of peace between
the two powers, each of whom signed a diploma granting concessions to the
other. The Emperor, besides a general guarantee of the security of Church
property and the freedom of elections, surrendered for ever investiture with
the ring and staff. The Pope in his concessions made an important distinction
between bishoprics and abbeys in Germany and those in Italy and Burgundy. In
the former he granted that elections should take place in the king’s presence
and allowed a certain authority to the king in disputed elections; the bishop
or abbot elect was to receive the regalia from the king by
the sceptre, and in return was to do homage and take the oath of fealty,
before consecration. In Italy and Burgundy consecration was to follow a free
election, and within six months the king might bestow the regalia by
the sceptre and receive homage in return. This distinction marked a
recognition of existing facts. The Emperor had exercised little control over
elections in Burgundy, and had been gradually losing authority in Italy. Two
factors had reduced the importance of the Italian bishoprics: the growing power
of the communes, often acquiesced in by the bishops, had brought about a
corresponding decline in episcopal authority, and the bishops had in general
acceded to the papal reform decrees, so that they were far less amenable to
imperial control. As far as Germany was concerned, it remained of the highest
importance to the king to retain control over the elections, as the temporal authority
of the bishops continued unimpaired. And here, though the abolition of the
obnoxious use of spiritual symbols satisfied the papal scruples, the royal
control of elections remained effective. But it cannot be denied that the
Concordat was a real gain to the Papacy. The Emperor’s privilege was a
surrender of an existing practice; the Pope’s was only a statement of how much
of the existing procedure he was willing to countenance.
On 11 November a diet at Bamberg confirmed the
Concordat, which forthwith became part of the constitutional law of the Empire.
In December the Pope wrote a letter of congratulation to Henry and sent him his
blessing, and at the Lenten Synod of 1123 proceeded to ratify the Concordat on
the side of the Church as well. The imperial diploma was welcomed with
enthusiasm by the synod; against the papal concessions there was some
murmuring, but for the sake of peace they were tolerated for the time. It
was recognised that they were not irrevocable, and their wording
rendered possible the claim that, while Henry’s privilege was binding on his
successors, the Pope’s had been granted to Henry alone for his lifetime. There
were also wide discrepancies of opinion as to the exact implication of
the praesentia regis at elections and the influence he could
exercise at disputed elections. By Henry V, and later by Frederick Barbarossa,
these were interpreted in the sense most favourable to the king.
Between Henry and Calixtus, however, no friction arose, despite the
efforts of Archbishop Adalbert to provoke the Pope to action against the
Emperor. Calixtus died in December 1124, Henry in the following
summer, without any violation of the peace. The subordination of Lothar to
ecclesiastical interests allowed the Papacy to improve its position, which was
still further enhanced during the weak reign of Conrad. Frederick I restored
royal authority in this direction as in others, and the version of the
Concordat given by Otto of Freising represents his point of view; the
difference between Italian and German bishoprics is ignored, and the wording of
the Concordat is slightly altered to admit of interpretation in the imperial
sense. It is clear that the Concordat contained within itself difficulties
that prevented it from becoming a permanent settlement; its great work was to
put on a legal footing the relations of the Emperor with the bishops and abbots
of Germany. What might have resulted in connexion with the Papacy we
cannot tell. The conflict between Frederick I and the Papacy was again a
conflict for mastery, in which lesser subjects of difference were obliterated.
Finally Frederick II made a grand renunciation of imperial rights at elections
on 12 July 1213, before the last great conflict began.
The first great contest between Empire and Papacy had
virtually come to an end with the death of Henry IV. Its results were
indecisive. The Concordat of Worms had provided a settlement of a minor issue,
but the great question, that of supremacy, remained unsettled. It was tacitly
ignored by both sides until it was raised again by the challenging words of
Hadrian IV. But the change that had taken place in the relations between the
two powers was in itself a great victory for the papal idea. The Papacy, which
Henry III had controlled as master from 1046 to 1056, had claimed authority
over his son, and had at any rate treated as an equal with his grandson. In the
ecclesiastical sphere the Pope had obtained a position which he was never to
lose. That he was the spiritual head of the Church would hardly have been
questioned before, but his authority had been rather that of a suzerain, who
was expected to leave the local archbishops and bishops in independent control
of their own districts. In imitation of the policy of the temporal rulers, the
Popes had striven, with a large measure of success, to convert this suzerainty
into a true sovereignty. This was most fully recognised in France,
though it was very widely accepted also in Germany and North Italy. In England,
papal authority had made least headway, but even here we find in Anselm an
archbishop of Canterbury placing his profession of obedience to the Pope above
his duty to his temporal sovereign. The spiritual sovereignty of the Papacy was
bound to mean a limitation of the authority of the temporal rulers.
Papal sovereignty found expression in the legislative, executive, and judicial supremacy of the Pope. At general synods, held usually at Rome and during Lent, he promulgated decrees binding on the whole Church; these decrees were repeated and made effective by local synods also, on the holding of which the Popes insisted. The government was centralised in the hands of the Pope, firstly, by means of legates, permanent or temporary, who acted in his name with full powers: secondly, by the frequent summons to Rome of bishops and especially of archbishops, who, moreover, were rarely allowed to receive the pallium except from the hand of the Pope himself. A more
elaborate organisation was contemplated in the creation of primacies,
begun in France by Gregory VII and extended by his successors; while certain
archbishops were thus given authority over others, they were themselves made
more directly responsible to Rome.
And as papal authority became more real, the authority
of archbishops and bishops tended to decrease. The encouragement of direct
appeals to Rome was a cause of this, as was the papal protection given to
monasteries, especially by Urban II, with exemption in several cases from
episcopal control. Calixtus II, as a former archbishop, was less in
sympathy with this policy and guarded episcopal rights over monasteries with
some care. But the close connexion of the Papacy with so many houses
in all parts tended to exalt its position and to lower the authority of the
local bishop; it had a further importance in the financial advantage it brought
to the Papacy.
Papal elections were now quite free. The rights that
had been preserved to Henry IV in the Election Decree of Nicholas II had
lapsed during the schism. Imperial attempts to counteract this by the appointment
of subservient anti-Popes had proved a complete failure. In episcopal
elections, too, progress had been made towards greater freedom. There was a
tendency towards the later system of election by the chapter, but at present
clergy outside the chapter and influential laymen had a considerable and a
lawful share. In Germany and England the royal will was still the decisive
factor. It may be noticed here that the Popes did not attempt to introduce
their own control over elections in place of the lay control which they
deprecated. They did, however, frequently decide in cases of dispute, or order
a new election when they considered the previous one to be uncanonical in form
or invalid owing to the character of the person elected; occasionally too, as
Gregory VII in the case of Hugh and the archbishopric of Lyons, they suggested
to the electors the suitable candidate. But the papal efforts were directed
primarily to preserving the purity of canonical election.
The Reform Movement had led to a devastating struggle,
but in many respects its results were for good. There was undoubtedly a greater
spirituality noticeable among the higher clergy, in Germany as well as in
France, at the end of the period. The leading figure among the moderates,
Bishop Otto of Bamberg, was to become famous as the apostle of Pomerania, and
Archbishop Conrad of Salzburg was to be prominent not only in politics but also
for his zeal in removing the clergy from secular pursuits. In the age that
followed, St Bernard and St Norbert were able by their personality and
spiritual example to exercise a dominance over the rulers of France and Germany
denied to the Popes themselves.
There was indeed another side of papal activity which
tended to lessen their purely spiritual influence. The temporal power was to
some extent a necessity, for spiritual weapons were of only limited avail.
Gregory VII had apparently conceived the idea of a Europe owning papal
suzerainty, but his immediate successors limited themselves to the Papal
States, extended by the whole of South Italy, where the Normans recognised papal overlordship.
The alliance with the Normans, so often useful, almost necessary, was dangerous
and demoralising. It had led to the fatal results of Gregory’s last
years and was for some time to give the Normans a considerable influence over
papal policy, while the claim of overlordship of the South was to
lead to the terrible struggle with the later Hohenstaufen and its aftermath in
the contest of Angevins and Aragonese.
In Rome itself papal authority, which had been unquestioned during Gregory’s
archidiaconate and papacy up to 1083, received a severe check from Norman
brutality; it was long before it could be recovered in full again.
The great advance of papal authority spiritual and
temporal, its rise as a power co-equal with the Empire, was not initiated
indeed by Gregory VII, but it was made possible by him and he was the creator
of the new Papacy. He had in imagination travelled much farther than his
immediate successors were willing to follow. But he made claims and set in
motion theories which were debated and championed by writers of greater
learning than his own, and though they lay dormant for a time they were not
forgotten. St Bernard shewed what spiritual authority could achieve. Gregory
VII had contemplated the Papacy exercising this authority, and his claims were
to be brought into the light again, foolishly and impetuously at first by
Hadrian IV, but with more insight and determination by Innocent III, with whom
they were to enter into the region of the practical and in some measure
actually to be carried into effect. Gregory VII owed much to Nicholas I and the
author of the Forged Decretals; Innocent III owed still more to Gregory VII.
CHAPTER III
GERMANY
UNDER HENRY IV AND HENRY V.
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