PRINCETON, N. J. ^ BR 162 .R6 1875 v. 4 Robertson, James Craigie, 1813-1882. History of the Christian church, from the Apostoli( HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. LIBRARY OF PRINCETON v.i; 2 9 2003 I THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY HISTORY CHRISTIAN CHURCH FROM THE APOSTOLIC AGE TO THE REFORMATION. A.D. 64-1517. BY JAMES C. ROBERTSON, M.A., CANON OF CANTERBURY, AND PROFESSOR OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY IN KING's COLLEGE, LONDON. IN EIGHT VOLUMES.-VOL. IV. A NEW AND REVISED EDITION. NEW IMPRESSION. LONDON : JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 1903. [The right of Translation is reser^ied,^ PRINTED BY HAZEIL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD., LONDON AND AYLESBURY, CONTENTS OF VOL. IV. List of Popes and Sovereigns ... BOOK V. — continued. Page FROM THE DEATH OF CHARLEMAGNE TO THE DEPOSITION OF POPE GREGORY VI., A.D. 814-IO4.6. CHAPTER V. From the Deposition of Charles the Fat to the Death of Pope Sylvester II., a.d. 887-1003. Page Page Character of the tenth century i Crescentius the elder . 26 Fourth marriage of Leo VI. 2 Gregory V. pope. 28 The Greek Church 4 Crescentius the younger ib. Arnulf ib. Arnulf of Reims . 30 Hungarians and Saracens . 5 Gerbert .... 34 Germany . 7 Question as to marriage of France — Hugh Capet . 9 Robert L 39 Cession of Normandy . 10 Expectation of the second Italy .... 12 Advent .... 42 The Church in France. 13 Gerbert pope (Sylvester II.) 43 Degradation of the Papacy . 15 Last days and death of Otho Otho the Great in Italy 20 III 47 Deposition of John XII. 22 Death of Sylvester . 50 Republican party at Rome 25 ( :hapter vl From the Death of Pc pe Sylvester II. to the Deposition OF Grego RY VI., A.D. 1003- 1046. Henry II. emperor 51 1 Herbert of Milan. 60 State of Rome . 53 Death of Conrad . 62 The Normans in Italy . . 56 Three popes 63 Conrad II. . 58 Council of Sutri . 64 Benedict IX. 59 Deposition of Gregory VI. , 65 VI CONTEN're. CHAPTER VII. The British Churches— Missions of the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. Page PigC I. England . . 66 VIII. North Germany 90 Dunstan • 67 IX. Hungary . . 91 II. Ireland • 73 St. Stephen 93 III. Scotland . - 74 X. Denmark . 95 The Culdees • 75 XL Sweden . 98 IV. Russia •77 XII. Norway . 100 V. Bohemia . . 82 Olave Tryggvesen 103 Adalbert of Prague . 83 St. Olave . 105 VI. Slavonic Liturgy . 85 XIII. Iceland . no VII. Poland . 87 XIV. Greenland and America 114 CHAPTER VIIL Heresies, a.d. 1000-1052. Heresy in the West . .117 Sect at Orleans . . .118 Sect at Arras . . .121 Sect at Monteforte . .123 Sect at Chalons on the Marne 123 Wazo in favour of toleration 123 Question as to origin of the sects . . . .lb. Heresies in the East , .127 CHAPTER IX. Supplementary. I. The Hierarchy . 127 (I.) The Papacy. lb. Metropolitans — The pal 132 Legates 135 Interference with dioce- san rights . 136 (2.) Secular importance F bisliops 137 Appointment to sees . 138 Boy bishops . 141 Theophylact of Constan- tinople ib. Simony 143 Investiture . 144 Relations of bishops anc sovereigns 146 Foundation of sees 148 Chorepiscopi 149 Coadjutors . ih. Warlike bishops . 150 (3.) Property of the Church Advocates . (4.) Canons (5.) Morals of the clergy Chaplains and acepha^ lous clerks Celibacy and marriage Ratherius II. Monasticism (i.) Decline of Monasticism. (2.) Order of Cluny . (3.) Order of Camaldoli (4.) Order of Vallombrosa (5.) Reforms in Germany (6.) Abolition of impropria tions. (7.) Relations of bishops and monks (8.) Confraters and monastic communion , 151 152 154 156 ib. 157 160 164 ib. 166 171 173 175 176 177 180 CONTENTS. trU III. Rites and Usages . (i.) Ritualists (2.) Martyrologies and le- gends St. Martial an apostle . Canonization (3.) Reverence for the blessed Virgin (4.) All Souls' Day . (5.) Relics .... Page 182 ib. (6.) Pilgrimages . (7.) Architecture. , Glass-staining (8.) Penance Excommunication anathema . I Interdict 187 1(9.) The Truce of God 188 ! IV. Chivalry . 183, 184 186 and Page 192 194 195 .196 197 198 199 204 BOOK VI. FROM THE DEPOSITION OF POPE GREGORY VI. TO THE DEATH OF POPE CELESTINE III., A.D. IO46-II98. CHAPTER I. The Pontificates of Clement II., Damasus IL, Leo IX., Victor IL, Steihen IX., Nicolas IL, and Alexander IL, A.D. 1046-1073. Troubles at Milan . . 248 Legation of Peter Damiani . 253 Council at Rome . . . 254 Decree as to election of popes 255 Treaty with Robert Guiscard 258 Norman conquests in Italy and Sicily . . . 260 Death of Nicolas. . . 261 Alexander II. and Cadalous. 262 Abduction of Henry IV. . 264 Synod of Osbor . . . 266 Peter Damiani in retirement. 267 Youth of Henry IV. . . 268 Adalbert of Bremen . . 269 Council of Mantua . . 274 Renewed troubles at Milan . ib. Troubles at Florence . . 280 Henry IV. and Bertha . 281 Last days and death of Adal- bert . . . .282 Disorders of Germany . . 284 Deaths of Alexander and P. Damiani .... 287 Clement II. ... 207 Conflicting views as to reform 208 Damasus IL . . . 211 Hildebrand. 213 Leo IX 215 Peter Damiani . 216 Flagellation — Dominic of the Cuirass .... 219 Damiani on marriage of the clergy .... 221 Simony .... 222 Leo's attempts at reform 223 Council of Reims 224 Effects of Leo's measures . 228 Leo at Worms . 230 Leo and the Normans . 231 His death .... 234 Breach with Constantinople . ib. Victor II 240 Deaths of Henry III. and tie pope .... 242 Stephen IX. ib. John of Velletri . 246 Nicolas IL 247 viii CONTENTS. CHAPTER II. Gregory VII., A.D. 1073-1085. Election of Hildebrand as Page Page Henry goes into Italy . 319 pope .... Claims of the papacy . 287 The countess Matilda . 321 291 Gregory and Plenry at Ca- Gregory and Philip I. of nossa .... 322 1* ranee .... 295 Henry and the Italians 326 Transactions with Germany . 296 Election of Rudolf as king of Measures a^>iinst simony and Germany. 330 marriage of the clergy 300 War in Germany. 331 Investiture .... 305 Remonstrances of the Saxons 332 Seizure of Gregory by Cen- Henry again excommunicated 334 cius. . . • . 307 Guibert elected antipope 335 Communications between Death of Rudolf . 336 Gregory and Heniy IV. . 310 Gregory's preparations against Council at Worms 311 Henry .... 337 Excommunication of Henry. 313 Henry in Italy . 340 Excommunication of Gregory 315 The Normans in Rome 343 Distress of Henry 316 Death of Gregory 344 Meeting at Tribur 318 His character . , 345 CHAPTER III. Berengar of Tours, a.d. 1045- 1088. Doctrine of the eucharistic Council at Tours . 359 presence . . . .351 Berengar before Nicolas II. . 360 Berengar . . . -353 Treatises of Lanfranc and Lanfranc .... 354 Berengar . . 362 Letter of Berengar to Lanfranc 355 Guitmund . . 365 Councils at Rome, Vercelli, Roman council of 1078 . 366 Brionne, and Paris . -357 Last years of Berengar . 367 CHAPT ER IV. From the Death of Gregory VII. to that of the Emteror Henry IV.; the First Crusade, a.d. 1085-1106. Victor III Urban II. . . Second marriage of countess Matilda .... Henry in Italy Henry and Adelaide . Rebellion of Conrad . Sufferings of Christians in Palestine. 369 Peter the Hermit. 372 Councils of Piacenza and Clermont. 375 Preparations for the crusade. ib. The first expeditions . 376 Leaders of the regular forces 377 The crusaders at Constanti- ' nople .... 378 1 Passage through Asia Minor 380 382 388 391 395 397 398 CONTENTS. tx Siege of Antioch . Siege of Jerusalem Kingdom of Jerusalem Results of the crusades The Sicilian monarchy Death of Urban II.— Pas- challl. . . . Page 399 405 409 413 418 419 Deaths of Guibert and Philip Henry IV. in Germany Rebellion of the younger Henry .... Abdication of Henry IV. His death and character Page 420 422 425 427 429 CHAPTER V. England from the Norman Conquest to the Death of St. Anselm, a.d. 1066-1108. Effects of the Conquest . 432 Lanfranc archbishop of Can- terbury . . . .435 Ecclesiastical policy of the Conqueror . . . 438 Communications with Gre- gory VII. . . . 440 William Rufus . . , 443 Anselm .... 445 His promotion to Canterbury 448 Disagreements between Wil liam and Anselm Council of Rockingham Acknowledgment of Urban Anselm goes to Rome . Exile and recall of Anselm Question of homage Second exile of Anselm Reconciliation with Henry I Death of Anselm . 450 453 455 457 lb. 460 464 465 468 IJST OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. Popes OF Rome. {From ]a.ff6*s I^eg-es/a.) (The names In brackets are those of anti-popes.) 897 900 A.D, A.D. 885. Stephen V. . .891 891. Formosus . . . 896 896. Boniface VI. (May-June) Stephen VI. 897. Romanus (July- Nov.) Theodore II. (Nov. -Dec.) 898. John IX. . goo. Benedict IV. 903. Leo. V. (Aug. -Sept.) Christopher. . . 904 904. Sergius III. . .911 911. Anastasius III. . . 913 913. Lando. . . . 914 914. John X. . . . 928 928. Leo VI. . . . 929 929. Stephen VII. . . 931 931. John XL . . . 936 936. Leo VII. . . . 939 939. Stephen VII I. . . 942 942. Marinus II. . . 946 946. Agapetus 11. . .955 955. John XII. . . .963 903. Leo VIII. . , .965 965- 972. [Benedict V. May-June 964.] John XII] Benedict VI. [Boniface VII. July- Aug. 974.] 974. Benedict VII. 983. John XIV. [Boniface VII. again 984 972 974 983 984 5.J A.D. A.Dl 985. John XV. . . .996 996. Gregory V. . . 999 [John XVI. 997-8.] 999. Sylvester II. . . 1003 1003. JohnXVL(Jan. 13-Dec. 7). John XVII. . . 1009 1009. Sergius IV. . . 1012 1012. Benedict VIII. . . I024 [Gregory, Jan. -Dec. 1012.] 1024. John XVIII. . . 1033 1033. Benedict IX. . . 1046 [Sylvester III. 1044-6.] 1045. Gregory VI. . . 1046 1046. Clement II. . . 1047 1047. Damasus II. . . 1048 1048. Leo IX. . . . 1054 1054. Victor II. . . . 1057 1057. Stephen IX. . . 1058 [Benedict X. 1058-9.] 1059. Nicolas II. . . 1061 1061. Alexander II. . . 1073 [Honorius II. 1061-9.] 1073. Gregory VII. . . 1085 [Clement III. 1080-1100.] 1086. Victor III. . . 1087 1088. Urban II. . . . 1099 1099. Paschal II. . ,1118 [Theodoric, iioo.] [Albert, 1 102.] [Sylvester TV no^-im.] LIST OF POPES ANIi SOVEREIGNS. Eastern Emperors. A.D. A.D. 886. Leo VI. (the Philosopher) 911 /Alexander 912 Y J Constantine VII. (Porphyrogenitus — alone from 945) . 959 ?^ J Romanus I. (Lecapenus) 945 959- (^gig (Christopher, Stephen, Constantine VIII.) 959. Romanus II 963 963. Nicephorus Phocas 969 969. John Tzimisces 976 ^^. (Basil II 1025 970- -j Constantine IX 1028 1028. Romanus III. (Argyrus) 1034 1034. Michael IV. (the Paphlagonian) 1041 1041. Michael V. (Calaphates) . 1042 1042 I Zoe. to < Constantine X. (Monomachus) 1054 1056. ( Theodora (alone from 1054) 1056 1056. Michael VI. (Stratioticus 1057 1057. Isaac Comnenus 1059 1059. Constantine XII. (Ducas) 1067 r K Eudocia ' I in7T ^°°7- j Romanus IV. (Diogenes) ) ' {Michael VII. (Parapinaces) | Andronicus I \ 1078 Constantine XII. .......) 1078. Nicephorus III. (Botoniates) 108 1 1081. Alexius I. (Comnenus) 1118 Western Emperors. (The date in the first colunm is that of succession to the kingdom of Germany ; that in th* »econd, of the Imperial Coronation.) Amulf 899 Guy ^ Lambert ( ^i^^l^^ Emperors. Lewis of Provence 1 ^ Berengar / Sr/L-Cthe kowl^r) : Z \ '^'"S^ °' ^"■"^"^- Otho 1 973 OthoII 983 Otho III 1002 Henry 11. . , 1024 Conrad II. ... - ... - 1039 Henry in. . . , 1056 Henry IV "06 Henry V XI25 887 896. 891. 894. 901. 916. 912 920 936 962. 973 967. 9«3 996. 1002 1014. 1024 1027. 1039 1046. 1056 1084. 1106 iiii. XJ1 LIST OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. Kings of France. 888. OdoorEudes . 89S. Charles III, (the Simple) 946. Lewis IV. (d'Outre-mer) 954. Lothair 986. Lewis V. (le Faindant) 98 7. Hugh Capet 996, Robert I. . 7031. Henry I. . . . 1060. Philip I. . . . A.D 898 954 986 987 996 103 1 1060 1 108 Kings of England. 871. Alfred 901. Edward the Elde 924. Athelstan . 941. Edmund 946, Edred 955. Edwy . 959. Edgar 975. Edward the Martyr . 978. Ethelred II. (the Unready) 1016. Edmund Ironside 1016. Canute 1035. Harold (Harefoot) 1039. Hardicanute 1042. Edward the Confessor 1066, Harold 1066. William I. (the Conqueror) 1087. William II. (Rufus) . 100. Henry I. . . . 901 924 941 946 955 959 975 978 1016 1016 1035 1039 1042 1066 1066 1087 HOG "35 HISTORY OF THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. BOOK V. (Continued). FROM THE DEATH OF CHARLEMAGNE TO THE DE- POSITION OF POPE GREGORY VI., a.d. 814-1046. CHAPTER V. FROM THE DEPOSITION OF CHARLES THE FAT TO THE DEATH OF POPE SYLVESTER II. A.D. 887-1003. We now for the first time meet with a long period — including the whole of the tenth century — undisturbed by theological controversy. But we must not on this account suppose that it was an era of prosperity or happiness for the church. Never, perhaps, was there a time of greater misery for most of the European nations ; never was there one so sad and so discreditable for religion. The immediate necessities which pressed on men diverted their minds from study and speculation. The clergy in general sank into the grossest ignorance VOL. IV. I 2 FOURTH MABRIAGE Book V. and disorder,* although an improvement may be traced among them from the time of Ctho I. ; '^ the papacy was disgraced by infamies of which there had been no example in former days. Soon after the beginning of this period the Byzantine church was agitated by a question which also tended to increase its differences with Rome. Leo the Philosopher, the pupil of Photius, after having had three wives who had left him without offspring, m.arried Zoe, with whom he had for some time cohabited.^ According to the Greek historians, the union was celebrated by one of the imperial chaplains before the birth of a child ; and, when Leo had become father of an heir, he raised Zoe to the rank of empress. The marriage would, in A.D. 905. . ^ , , ^ J , ' any circumstances, have been scandalous, for even second marriages had been discountenanced by the church, and a fourth marriage was hitherto unknown in the east. The patriarch Nicolas, therefore, deposed the priest who had blessed the nuptials ; he refused to admit the imperial pair into the church, so that they were obliged to perform their devotions elsewhere; and he refused to administer the eucharist to Leo, who there- upon banished him to the island of Hiereia.<^ The account given by the patriarch himself is somewhat different — that the son of Leo and Zoe was born before their marriage ; that he consented to baptize the child only on condition of a separation between the parents ; that Leo swore to comply, but within three days after introduced Zoe into the palace with great pomp, went through the ceremony of marriage without the interven- tion of any priest, and followed it up by the coronation » Mabill. Annal. iii. 311 ; Hist. Litt. phanes, pp. 370-1, ed. Bonn ; Sym, vi. 2 ; Giesel. II. i. 264. Magist. de Leone, 18 ; Cedrenus, 600- ^ Giesebr. i. 328. 2, and the other writers quoted by * Cedren. 600. Baronius, 901. 2, seqq., and by Pagi ^ See the Ontinuation of Thee in his notes. Chap. V. a.d 905-20. OF LEO VI. 3 of his wife. Nicolas adds that he entreated the emperor to consent to a separation until the other chief sees should be consulted, but that some legates from Rome, who soon after arrived at Constantinople, countenanced the marriage, and that thus Leo was emboldened to deprive and to banish him.^ Euthymius, an ecclesiastic of high character, who was raised to the patriarchate, restored the emperor to communion, but resisted his wish to obtain a general sanction of fourth marriages, although it was supported by many persons of con- sideration.^ On the death of Leo, his brother ^'^' ^^^' Alexander, who succeeded together with the young son of Zoe, Constantine Porphyrogenitus," not only restored Nicolas, but gave him an important share in the govern- ment, while Euthymius on his deposition was treated with barbarous outrage by the clergy of the opposite party, and soon after died.^ Alexander himself died within a year, when Zoe became powerful in the regency, and urged her son to insist on the acknowledgment of her marriage.^ But she was shut up in a convent by Romanus Lecapenus, who assumed the government as the colleague of Constantine, and in 920 the rival parties in the church were reconciled. An edict was published by which, for the future, third marriages were allowed on certain con- ditions, but such unions as that of which the emperor himself was the offspring were prohibited on pain of excommunication.^ At Rome, however, fourth marriages were allovved,^ and on this account an additional coolness • Nic. Ep ad Anastas. Roman.. 8 This epithet seems inconsistem A.D. 912, ap. Baron. 912. 6 Mr. Fin- with the statement that the prince was lay follows this account (ii. 312). See bom before the marriage. Acta SS., Mai. 15, p. 507. ^ Theoph Contin. 378; Cedren. 607. ' 'EWoyiiioiv. Cedren. 602. Sy- * Cedren. 611. meon Magister s word is KoyiKtaraTuv, •^ Theoph. Contin. 397 ; Cedren. 607 ; which is rendered eruditissimi (c. 19). Pagi, xv. 602 ; Schrockh. xxi, 436 ; He says ^.hat the lawfulness of " tetra- Gibbon, iv. 428-9. gamy" was believed to have been re- ' A Roman penitential of the nin^i vealed to Euthymius. ib. century prescribes a fast of three werlLS 4 THE TENTH CENTURY. Book V. arose between the churches, so that for a time the names of the popes appear to have been omitted from the diptychs of Constantinople."^ The Greek church continued to rest on the doctrines and practices established by the councils of former times. The worship of images was undisturbed. The empire underwent frequent revolutions, marked by the perfidy, the cruelty, the ambition regardless of the ties of nature, with which its history has already made us too familiar;^ but the only events which need be here mentioned are the victories gained over the Saracens by Nicephonis Phocas (a.d. 963-969) and by his murderer and successor John Tzimisces (a.d. 969-976). By these princes Crete and Cyprus were recovered, and the arms of the Greeks were carried even as far as Bagdad. And, although their more distant triumphs had no lasting effect, the empire retained some recompense for its long and bloody warfare in the possession of Antioch, with Tarsus, Mopsuestia, and other cities in Cilicia.** In the west, the age was full of complicated movements, which it is for the most part most difficult to trace, and impossible to remember. After the deposition of Charles the Fat, the only representatives of the Carolingian line were illegitimate — Arnulf, a son of the Bavarian Carlo- man, and Charles, styled the Simple, the offspring of Louis the Stammerer by a marriage to which the church refused its sanction. Arnulf assumed the government of Germany, which he held from 887 to 899. He ruled with vigour, carried on successful wars with the Obotrites for third marriage, and of twenty-one condemned the condemnation of fourth for fourth or fifth marriage. Patrol. marriage. Raynald. 1442. 6. cv. 725. " G. Hamart. Contin. 861, 865. See " Schrockh, xxii. 209. Eugenius Gibbon, c. 48. IV., after his negotiations, for union » lb. iv. aa^-E. with the Greek and Oriental churches. Chap. V. a.d. 887-1003. THE HUNGARIANS. 5 and other Slavonic nations of the north, and broke the terror of the Northmen by a great overthrow on the Dyle, near Louvain, in 891.P He also weakened the power of the Moravians ; but in order to this he called in the aid of the Hungarians or Magyars, and opened a way into Germany to these formidable ^'^' ^^' barbarians. 1 No such savage enemy of Christendom had yet appeared.*" They were a people of Asiatic origin, whose language, of the same stock with the Finnish,^ bore no likeness to that of any civilized or Christian nation. The writers of the time, partly borrowing from the old descriptions of Attila's Huns,* with whom the Magyars were fancifully connected, speak of them as monstrous and hardly human in form, as living after the manner of beasts, as eating the flesh and drinking the blood of men, the heart being particularly esteemed as a delicacy. Light in figure and accoutrements, and mounted on small, active horses, they defied the pursuit of the Frankish cavalry, while even in retreat their showers of arrows were terrible." They had already established themselves in the territory on the Danube which for some centuries had been occupied by the Avars. They had threatened Constantinople, and had laid both the eastern empire and the Bulgarians under contribution.^ They now passed into Germany in seemingly inexhaustible multitudes, overran Thuringia and Franconia, and advanced as far as the Rhine. P Schmidt, i. 525-33 ; Luden, vi. « See Ammian. Marcellin. xxxi. 2 ; 239. Jornandes, c, 24. (Patrol. Ixix.) 1 Liutprand, ' Antapodosis,' i. 13, » Regino, a.d. 889 (Pertz, L, or ap. Pertz, iii. ; Schmidt, i. 526 ; Am, Patrol, cxxxii.). See Gibbon, v. 294- Thierry, 'Hist. d'Attila,' ii. 218-21. 8; Sismondi, Rep. Ital. i. 25 ; Giese- Luden disbelieves this (vi. 248) ; but brecht, i. 161, seqq. ; Mailath, i. 15. »ee Palacky, i. 148. There is a curious letter about the ' Luden, vi. 298-9 ; Milman, ii. 369. Hung'anans in D'Achery, SpiciL iii. • Milman, n. on Gibbon, v. 296. 368-70. This seems, however, to be disputed. x Gibbon, v. jsx . See Mrs. Busk, i. 395-6. 6 HUNGARIANS AND SARACENS. Book V, Almost at the same moment the northern city of Bremen ^ was sacked by one division of their forces, and the Swiss monastery of St. Gall^ by another. A swarm of them laid Provence desolate, and penetrated to the Spanish frontier, although a sickness which broke out among them enabled Raymond, marquis of Gothia, to repel them.* Crossing the Alps, they rushed down on Italy. Pa via, the Lombard capital, and then the second city of the peninsula, was given to the flames, with its forty-four churches, while the Magyars glutted their cruelty and love of plunder on the persons and on the property of the inhabitants.^ The invaders made their way even to the extremity of Calabria, while the Italians, regarding them as a scourge of God, sub- mitted without any other attempt at defence than the prayers with which their churches resounded for deli- verance "from the arrows of the Hungarians."*' 1 he Saracens also continued to afflict Italy. A force of them from Africa established itself on the Garigliano (the ancient Liris), and from its fortified camp continually menaced Rome.^ In another quarter, a vessel with about twenty Saracens from Spain was carried out of its course by winds, and compelled to put to land near Fraxinetum.e They fortified themselves against the inhabitants of the neighbourhood, and, after having sub- sisted for a time on plunder, they invited others from y Adam. Brem. i. 54, Ital. i. 243. » Annal. Wirziburg. a.d. 938 (Pertz, • This place is generally identified ii.)- Cf. Ekkehard, jun. ib. 105. seqq. with Frainet, near Frejus (Chron. • Liutprand, Antapod. ii. 15 ; Chron. Novaliciense, ap. Pertz, vii, 108 ; Pagi, .•\ugiense, ap. Baluz. Miscell. i. 499- xv. 608 ; Bouquet : Pertz, iii. 275). 500 ; Gibbon, v. 298-9 ; Sismondi, iii. But some writers think that it was in 367 : Maiiath, i. 9, and Append. 2-4. the peninsula of S. Ospizio, near Nice. *> Flodoard, Annal, 924, ap. Pertz, See Gallenga's Hist, of Piedmont, iii. ; Maiiath. i. 13. Lond. 1855, i. 149. Spruner, in his * Annal. Fuld. a.d, 897, 900, etc. second map of Italy, gives the name (i^ertz, i.) ; Gibbon, v. 300-1 ; Maiiath, in both places, but distinguishes that '• '7- near Nice as " Fraxinetum Saracen- "^ Liutprand, ii. 44 ; Sismondi, Rep. onim/' Chaf. V. A.D. 887-1003. GERMANY. 7 Spain to join them, so that the handful of shipwrecked strangers was gradually recruited until it became a for- midable band. They carried on their ravages far and wide, built many forts among the mountains, seized on pilgrims and traders, stripped them of all that they had, and compelled those who were able to raise large sums by way of ransom/ Some of them even crossed the Mount of Jupiter (now the Great St. Bernard) and estab- lished another settlement at St. Maurice.^ But the garrison of Fraxinetum was at length surrounded and exterminated by William, duke of Aquitaine.^ After the death of Amulf, the Germans were broken up into five principal nations — the Franconians, the Saxons, the Swabians, the Bavarians, and the Lotharin- gians of the debatable land between France and Ger- many, which was sometimes attached to the one country and sometimes to the other — being either transferred by its inhabitants, or annexed by force or by intrigue. These nations were generally under the government of dukes ; * the fear of the Magyars and of the Slaves was the bond which united them in one common interest. Otho of Saxony was regarded as their leader ; but as he felt him- self too old to undertake the labours of royalty, Conrad of Franconia was with his consent elected king of Germany in 912. Conrad found Henry,^ the son of Otho and duke of Saxony, his chief opponent; but on ' See the account of their taking hill of V&elay, in consequence of the Majolus, abbot of Cluny. Radulph. "infestations of Saracens" (Patrol. Glaber, 1. i. a.d. 972, ap. Bouquet, x. ; cxciv. 1592.) Butis there any evidence Vita S. Majoli, ap. Mabill. Acta SS. of their having penetrated so far into Ftn. vii. 778 ; Giesebr. i. 353. France? Or is not the word " Sara- K Liutprand, i. 2-4; ii. 43; v, 9, cen" here, as in many other places, seqq. ; Pagi, xv. 608 ; Sismondi, Hist. used in the general sense of heathens, des Fr. iii. 415. The chronicle of to denote the Northmen ? V^zelay, written by Hugh of Poitiers h Rad. Glaber, 1. i. A.u 97a ; Pajji^ in the latter half of the twelfth century, xvi. 216. states that the monastery founded by ' Giesebr. i. 179, seqq. Count Gerard, in the reign of Charles k lb. i. igi. ihe Bald, was removed by him to the 8 HENRY THE FOWLER. Book V his death-bed, in 919, a desire to prevent discord among the Germans prevailed over all other feelings, and he charged his brother Eberhard, who himself might fairly have claimed the succession, to carry to Henry the en- signs of royalty — the holy lance, the crown and mantle, the golden bracelets and the sword.^ In compliance with Conrad's wish, Henry "the Fowler" (so styled from the occupation in which he is said to have been engaged when the announcement of his intended dignity reached him) ^ was elected king by the Franconians and Saxons, and the other nations accepted the choice. Henry reigned from 020 to Q36, with a reputation seldom equalled for bravery, prudence, moderation, justice, and fidelity. '^ He recovered Lotharingia for Germany, triumphed over the northern Slaves and the Bohemians, took from the Northmen the country between the Eider and the Schley, and erected the marquisate of Sleswick as a bulwark for the security of Germany on that side.** But still more important were his wars with the Hunga- rians. On an expedition which was marked by their usual barbarous ravages, one of their most important chiefs — perhaps, as has been conjectured, the king him- self — fell into the hands of Henry, who refused to release him except on condition of peace, for which A.D. 924. .^ ^^^^g agreed that the Germans should pay gifts by way of annual acknowledgment.P The peace was to last nine years, which Henry employed in pre- parations for war ; and, on its expiration, he returned a scornful defiance to an embassy of the Magyars. He twice defeated the barbarians ; A rapid succession of popes now took place. Elections are followed within a few months or weeks or days by deaths which excite suspicion as to their cause ; in some cases violence or poison appears without disguise. With Sergius III., in 904, began the ascendency of a party which had attempted to seat him in St. Peter's chair after the death of Theodore II. in 897-8,^ but had not then been strong enough to estabUsh him. Its head was Adalbert, marquis of Tuscany, who was leagued with a noble and wealthy Roman widow named Theodora. Theo- dora had a daughter of the same name, and another named Mary or Marozia — both, like herself, beautiful and thoroughly depraved.™ For upwards of fifty years these women disposed at will of the Roman see, which they filled with their paramours, their children, and their grandchildren.'^ Sergius, who held the papacy till 911, is described as a monster of rapacity, lust, and cruelty — as having lived in open concubinage with Marozia, and having abused the treasures of the church for the purpose of securing abettors and striking terror into enemies.^ ^ Hard. vi. 487, seqq. cc. 3, 4, 7, 9. moribus perditissimi, usquequaque ' Liutprand says that his unsuc- fcedissimi," its continuance — unlike cessful attempt was made in rivalry to other governments, in which vice is Formosus (i. 29). But this is a mis- followed by ruin — must be a token of take, arising from the writer's idea especial Divine favour (879. 4 ; 900. that Sergius was (with the short in- 1-6; 908. 7 ; 912. 9-11). Dr. von Doi- terval of Boniface VI.) the next pope linger is content with saying that the to Formosus. See Pagi, xv. 493, 535. papacy is not accountable for evils ™ Liutpr. Antap. ii. 48. See Gre- done while it was in bondage, i. 425. gorov. iii. 275-8, 280-3. o pianck, iii. 254-6. The principal ° Baronius argues that, when the authority for the history of the papacy papacy was filled by a succession of during this time is Liutprand, bishop " homines monstruosi, vita turpissimi, ©f Cremona, whose writings are printed VOL. IV. 2 ih THE ROMAN PORNOCRACY. Boov V. The next pope, Anastasius III, died in 913, and when the papacy again became vacant in the foUov/ing year, by the death of Lando, the power of the "pornocracy" is said to have been scandalously displayed in the appoint- ment of a successor. A young ecclesiastic of Ravenna, named John of Tossignano, when on a mission from his church to Rome, had attracted the notice of Theodora, had been invited to her embraces, and through her in- fluence had been af)pointed to the bishoprick of Bologna. Before consecration he was advanced to the A.D. 914. j^jgj^gj. dignity of Ravenna, and, as she could not bear the separation from him, she now procured his elevation to St. Peter's chair.P Disgraceful as were the in the third volume of Pertz's Monu- menta. His chief work has the title o{ Antapodosis, i.e. Requital, having been written, as he says (iii. i), with a view of at once avenging himself on Berengar and Willa, and repaying credit to those who had benefited his amily and himself. Liutprand's fidelity has been impugned, especially by Mu- ratori, who charges him with " giving credit to all the pasquinades and de- famatory libels of the times " (Annal. v. ii. 16, 36, 43, etc.). Dean Milman hesitates (ii. 376), Luden is unfavour- able (vii. 484), and Liverani, in his 'Life of John X.' (Opere, t. ii. Mace- rata, 1859), is vehement in condemna- tion. But it seems to be generally thought that, with a strong disposition to satire, with furious hatreds and vio- lent partialities, which he does not affect to conceal, and notwithstanding some mistakes, he is in the main trust- worthy (see Schrockh, xxi. 168 ; xxii. 238 ; Planck, iii. 256 ; Sismondi, Rep. Ital. i. 96 ; Pertz, iii. 268 ; Gieseler, II. i. 212 ; Kopke, de Vita et Scriptis Liudprandi, Berl. 1842, pp. 115-36 ; GfrOrer, iii. 1352 ; Giesebr. i. 779). Muratori (V. ii. 34) and Hefele (iv. S^ii) bri.ig testimonies of a more honourable kind to tho character of Sergius ; but these, as Dean Milman remarks (1. c), are not worth much. Mr. ScudamoreC England and Rome,' 435-75) has taken the trouble to dissect the Abb€ Rohrbacher's defence of Ser- gius and other popes, and his charges against Liutprand. I shall not again advert to M. Rohrbacher, whose voluminous compilation — alike defi- cient in knowledge, judgment, vera- city, and style— is only entitled to notice on account of the popularity which it seems to enjoy in the French church of the present day. P Liutpr. ii. 48. Sir F. Palgrave (ii. 87) and Mr. Scudamore (468) suppose the younger Theodora to be meant, but Liutpran 1 's words seem rather to point to the mother. Against this story there is the difficulty raised by Muratori (Annali, V. i. 44) that John appears to have held the see of Ravenna for nine years; but to this Kopke replies that, although John was archbishop in 905 and in 914, he did not hold the see throughout tfce interval, as one Theobald is mca- tioned as archbishop in 907 (p. 92), See Milman, ii. 377 ; Scudamore, 469. M. Duret, of Soleure, is said to hare written a refutation of Liutprand's xiffry. on the supposition that John Chap. V. a.d. 911-54. JOHN X. — ^JOHN XI. IQ means by which his promotion had been earned, John X. showed himself an energetic, if not a saintly pope. He crowned Berengar as emperor — probably with a view of breaking the power of the nobles ; he applied both to him and to the Greek emperor for aid against the Saracens; at the head of his own troops, with some furnished by Berengar, he marched against their camp on the Garigliano, and by the aid of St. Peter and St. Paul (as it is said), he obtained a victory which forced them to abandon that post of annoyance and terror to Rome.. 5. 6. - lb. 9. Chap. V. a.d. 963. t)EPOSlTION OF JOHN Xll. 53 magnitude. He had consecrated the eucharist without communicating ; he had ordained in a stable, and at irregular times ; he had sold episcopal ordination, — in one case to a boy of ten ; his sacrilegious practices were notorious ; he had been guilty of murder, of arson, of revolting cruelties, — of adultery, incest, and every kind of incontinence. He had cast off all the decencies of the ecclesiastical character ; he had publicly hunted, and had dressed himself as a soldier, with sword, helmet, and cuirass ; he had drunk wine " to the love of the devil " ; he was in the habit, while gaming, of calling on Jupiter, Venus, and other demons for aid; he omitted the canonical hours, and never signed himself with the cross." Otho, who could not speak Latin, cautioned the accusers, by the mouth of Liutprand, that they should not bring charges out of envy, as was usual against persons of eminent station; but both clergy and laity, "as one man," imprecated on themselves the most fearful judg- ments in this world and hereafter, if all, and worse than all, that they had said were not true ; and at their entreaty the emperor wrote to John, desiring him to answer for himself. The pope only replied by threats of excommuni- cation against all who should take part in the attempt to set up a rival against him.° The emperor spoke of this as boyish folly, and sent a second letter, which the messengers were unable to deliver, as John was engaged in hunting. Otho thereupon exposed the treachery with which the pope had behaved, after having invited him into Italy for the purpose of aiding against Beren- gar and Adalbert? John was deposed, and Leo, chief " Liutpr, 10. Cf. Bened. Soract. c. 35 This is equal in its kind to anything in (Patrol, cxxxix.). " The Protestants," Baronlus. says Gibbon, " have dwelt with mali- » Liutpr. 13, John wrote " ut no>t cious pleasure on these characters of habeatis licentiam nullum ordinare." Antichrist ; but, to a philosophic eye. The double negative does not escape the vices of the clergy are far less criticism in the reply. dangerous than their virtues" (v. 513). » lb. 14. >2^ VEO VIII. Book V» secretary of the see, a man of good character, but not yet in orders, was elected in his room by the Roman clergy and people, whose choice was approved by the emperor.^ But a conspiracy was already formed against the Germans by means of the deposed pontiff's agents. Even while Otho remained at Rome, with only a few of his soldiers to guard him, an insurrection took place,"" and, after the emperor's departure, John regained possession of the city. Another council was held, which deposed Leo from all clerical orders, annulled his ordinations, and, borrowing the language of Nicolas I. against the synod of Metz,^ declared the late synod infamous ; and the temporary triumph of the Tuscan party was signalized by a cruel vengeance on the hands, the eyes, the tongues, and the noses of their opponents.' Otho was on the point of again returning to expel John, when the pope died in consequence of a blow which he received on the head while in the act of adultery — from the devil, according to Liutprand, while others are content to suppose that it was from the husband whom he had dis- honoured." The Romans, forgetting their late oath, chose for his successor an ecclesiastic named Benedict ; but the emperor reappeared before the city, starved them into a surrender, and reinstated Leo VI IL A council was held, at which Benedict gave up his robes and his pastoral staff to Leo. The pope broke the staff in the sight of * the assembly; the antipope was degraded from the orders above that of deacon, which, at the emperor's «• Liutpr. 16. Baronius (963. 31-7) is followed, with greater moderation, by violent against the council for its irre- Pagi (in loc.) and others (see Murat. gularity, and treats Leo as an antipope Ann. V. ii. 217 ; Schrockh, xxii. 273). — " Nee numerata Leonuni ita nomina- Dr. v. Dollinger's remarks on the sub- torum pontificum series esse facit quod ject are curiously qualified, i. 428. non est ; sicuti nee eanem aliquem «" Liutpr. 16. leonis nomine insignitum vere esse • See vol. ii. p. 374 ; Hard. vi. 66> leonem ipsa nominatio rel numeratio * Liutpr. 18, 19. lantum faeu constitu'-t" (38). He is " Tb q. See Schrockh, xxii. 273-5 CHAfr. V. A. D. 963-66. REPUBLICANS Al' ROME. 2^ request, he was allowed to retain, and was banished to Hamburg. Benedict, who appears to have been a man of high personal character, met with great veneration in the place of his exile, and died there in the following year.^ John XIII., the successor of Leo, was consecrated with the emperor's approbation, in October 965; but within three months he was driven from Rome and imprisoned in a fortress of the Campagna, by a party which had become very powerful, and whose design it was to establish a government on the republican model, under the names of the ancient Roman magistracy, in hostility alike to German emperors and to the papacy.y In consequence of this revolution, Otho found himself obliged again to visit Rome. The pope was restored ; the republican consuls were banished to Germany ; the twelve tribunes were beheaded ; others of the party were blinded or mutilated ; the body ' * 9 • of the prefect who had announced the decree of banish- ment to John was torn from the grave ; his successor in Luden, vii. 529. Bp. Hefele (iv. 590) have wished for, and what Leo, as his seems to think that John died of apo- creature, would have granted (63-5) ; plexy. and that the shorter is probably an » Liutpr. 21 ; Hard. vi. 637 ; Adam abridgment of the other. In the longer Brem. ii. 10 ; Pagi, xvi. 155. In Pertz, form, the privilegiunt is said to be as Leges, ii. 167 8, are two documents, against the Romans, who had forfeited which profess to be by Leo — (i) A/rz- their right of election by abuse (153, vilegium granted to Otho, that he and 163) — " Cuncti enim novimus quod non his successors shall nominate both to est novi juris, nt rex Romanum guber- the empire and to the papacy ; and that, nans imperium sanctae sedis apostolicae if any person be chosen pope by the pontificem eligere et ordinare debeat " clergy and people, the emperor's appro- (151). (2) A cession of donations made bation and z«z'^5j!'zVz^r^ shall be requisite. to the church, which is evidently a Dr. Pertz thinks that the emperors at forgery of the time when the empire the time really had the power here de- and the papacy were at variance in the scribed, but that the document seems eleventh century. See Baron. 964. to betray a later origin. A longer 22-9, with the notes by Pagi and form of this paper has been published, Mansi ; Giesel. II. i. 215 ; Milman, iL from a MS. at Treves, by Floss (' Eine 394 ; Mrs. Busk, i. note 76 ; Gregorov. Papstwahl unter den Ottonen,' Ap- ii. 382. Gfrorer(iii. 1255) defends the pend. 35, Freiburg, 1858). See Hefele, pnvilegium. iv. 592-6 The editor thinks that these f Gibbon, v. 515 ; Sismondi. Re'p torm: s contain just what Otho would Ital. i. 102 : Milman, ii. 394, 395. 26 CRESCENTIUS. Book V. the prefecture, after having been suspended by his haii from the equestrian statue of Marcus AureHus, (which then stood near the Lateran), was paraded about the city, crowned with a bladder and riding backwards on an ass.^ So great was the sensation excited by the report of these severities, that, when Liutprand was sent to Constanti- nople to seek a Greek princess in marriage * for the heir of the empire, Nicephorus Phocas reproached him with his master's " impiety," and alleged it as a reason for treating the ambassador with indignity. Liutprand boldly replied that his sovereign had not invaded Rome as a tyrant, but had rescued it from the disgraceful oppression of tyrants and prostitutes ; that he had acted agreeably to the laws of the Roman emperors, and, had he neglected so to act, he would himself have been "impious, unjust, cruel, and tyrannical."* Crescentius, who is said (but probably without ground) to have been a grandson of Pope John X., by one of the Theodoras,'' became the chief of the republican party, and governed Rome with the title of consul. His cha- racter has been extolled as that of a hero and a patriot ; * yet there is not sufficient evidence to show that his ■ Vita Joh. XIII., Murat. III. ii. when angry, we use no other term of 331. See as to this famous statue insult to our enemies than— Roman ; Gregorov. iii. 387-9. for in this single name of Romans we ' Cc. 4-5 of Liutprand's verj' curious comprise whatever is ignoble, cowardly, and amusing ' Legatio.' Nicephorus greedy, luxurious, lying— in short, all styled Otho pvjya, not /SacrtAea, and vices" (c. 12). On a consideration of complained of his assuming the im- the context, and a comparison of cc. perial title (cc. 2, 25). He said, " as 50, 51, I am unable to agree with Dean if for the purpose of insult"— "You Milman (ii. 396) that the Byzantine are not Romans, but Lombards." Romans are meant, although no doubt Liutprand, notwithstanding the em- the words were intended to include a peror's signs that he wished to con- reflection on them, tinue his speech, interrupted him with »> Hermann. Contract. (Ann. 974, ap, an invective against the Romans from Pertz, v.), wrongly calls him son of their origin under Romulus. "We," Theodora. See Milman, iL 398; he said, "Saxons, Franks, Lotharin- Hefele, iv. 598; Gregorov. iii. 408. gians, Bavarians, Swabians, Burgun- • Sismondi, Rdp. lul. L io;:i. seqm diiui4, despise th;m so much. that. LiiAi'. V. A.D. 966-85. THE PAPACY. $J patriotism arose from any better motive than selfish ambition.** . In 974, when the sceptre of Otho the Great had passed into the hands of a young and less formidable successor,® Crescentius decoyed Pope Bene- dict VI. into the castle of St. Angelo, where he was put to death. While the pope was yet alive, Boniface VII. was set up by the Crescentian party ; but he was obhged to give way to Benedict VII., who was established by the Tusculan interest, and held the see until October 983.' Otho II., who was then in Italy, nominated to the papacy Peter, bishop of Pavia, who, out of reverence for the supposed apostolic founder of the Roman church, changed his name to John XIV. But the emperor died a few weeks later; and by this event Boniface, who . ., ^ in his flight had carried ofif much valuable ^" ' ^ ^' property of the church, and had converted it into money at Constantinople, was encouraged to return to Rome, when he seized John, and shut him up in St. Angelo. The pope is supposed to have been made away with in his prison, either by hunger or by poison ;^ and the in- Aug. 984 to truder, in concert with Crescentius, held the July 985- papacy until his own death, which took place within a year. His body was then dragged about the streets and treated with indignity, until some of the clergy charitably gave it burial.** The next pope, John XV.,* is described as a man of much learning ^^ but it is said that his clergy detested him for his pride,* and the biographer of Abbo of Fleury tells us that the abbot, on visiting Rome, found * Hallam, M. A. i. 221, 222. seen in the crypt. • Peter Damiani has an extravagant ^ Herm. Ann. 985 ; Luden, vii. legend as to the death of Otho I., 276-7. Opusc. xxxiv. 7. 1 According to some writers, another *■ Herm. Contr. Ann. 974 ; Schrockh, John, who is not reckoned in the series xxii. 281, 282 ; Jaffe, 332-6. of popes, held the see for a short time « Baron. 985. i ; Giesebr. i. 604-7. between Boniface and John XV. See Otho II. died on Dec. 7, aged 28, and Murat., Annali, v. 477. was the first emperor who was buried in * See Schrockh, xxii. 283. St, Peter's, where his tomb may still be < Herm. Ana. 986k z)f OTHO III. AND GREGORY V. I^ook V. him " not such as he wished him to be, or such as he ought to have been," but " greedy of base lucre, and venal in all his actions."™ John was held in constraint by the "patrician" Crescentius (son of the former consul of that name)," who would not allow any one to approach him without paying for permission, and seized not only the property of the church, but even the oblations.** At length, unable to endure this growing oppression, the pope re- quested the intervention of Otho III., then ^'^' ^^ ' a youth of sixteen ; but as Otho was on his way to Rome, in compliance with this invitation, he was met at Ravenna by messengers who announced the pope's death, and, probably in the name of a party among the Romans who were weary of the patrician's domination, requested that the king (although he had not yet received the imperial crown) would nominate a successor. The choice of Otho fell on his cousin and chaplain Bruno, a young man of twenty-four, who was thereupon formally elected ;P and the first German pope (as he is usually reckoned) assumed the name of Gregory V.i Gregory crowned his kinsman as emperor on Ascension- day 996,' and, wishing to begin his pontificate with cle- mency, obtained the pardon of Crescentius, ^P • 99 • ^hom Otho had intended to send into exile. But scarcely had the emperor left Rome when Crescentius made an insurrection, and expelled Gregory. After an interval of eight months, the patrician set up an antipope, •n Almoin, c. 11, ap. Mabill. Acta VIII. (a.d. 939-42) was a German, SS. Ben. viii. appointed through the influence of ° The elder Crescentius died in 984, Otho I., and that on this account he as a monk in the convent of St. Alexius, was assaulted by the Romans (see on the Aventine. Gregorov. iii. 411 ; Platina, 151 ; Baron 940. 16 ; Oldoin. Giesebr. i. 681. in Ciacon. i. 708 , Gfrorer, iii. 1207 ; • Schmidt, ii. 65. Palgrave, Norm, and Eng. ii. 247) ; P See Floss, ' Papstwahl,' 46. but others think that he was more « SchrOckh, xxii. 307, 308 ; Planck, likely a Roman (see L'Art de V6rif. iii. 340-5. Some writers, following les Dates, iii. 317). Martinus Polonu.s, say that Stephen ' HOfler, i. 97. See Jaff^, 340. Chaf. V. A D. 985-98. CRESCENTIUS THE YOUNGER. 29 John, bishop of Piai:enza, by birth a Calabrian and a sub- ject of the Greek empire, who had been chap- lain to Otho's mother, the Byzantine princess Theophano, and had been godfather both to the emperor and to Gregory.^ The tidings of the Roman insurrection recalled Othofrom an expedition against the Slaves. He was met by Gregory at Pavia, advanced to Rome, and besieged Crescentius in St Angelo. The German writers in general state that he forced the consul to a surrender, while the Italians assert that he got him into his power by a promise of safety.^ If such a promise was given, it was violated. The patrician was beheaded on the roof of the castle of St. Angelo ; his body was exposed on a gallows, hanging by the feet, after which it was thrown down, and igno. miniously dragged out of the city; and twelve of his chief partisans were put to death." The antipope John, who had shown an intention of placing Rome under the Byzantine empire,^ was cruelly punished, although Nilus, a hermit of renowed sanctity, who had almost reached the age of ninety, had undertaken a toil- some journey from Rossano in Calabria, to intercede for him.y He was blinded, deprived of his nose and tongue^ • Annal. Quedlinburg. 997 (Pertz, mutinied and made overtures to the iii.) ; Thietmar, iv. 21 (ib.) ; Hbfler, i. emperor, who bade them throw the 127. consul from the walls, " lest the Ro- ' Thietmar, iv. 21 ; P. Damiani, mans should say that we stole their Vita Romualdi, 25 (Patrol, cxliv.). prince"; *nd that thus Crescentius See a comparison of the authorities in perished, i. 5. a.d. 998, ap. Bou- Luden, vii. 300-2, and the notes. In quet, x. behalf of the German account, Schmidt " Ann. Quedlinb. 998, ap. Pertz, iii. ; says that Crescentius was tried by a Giesebr. i. 703. Roman tribunal (ii. 67). Radulf the * Arnulf. Mediolan. i. n ; Murat. Bald tells a diflferent story — that Cres- Annali, V. ii. 345 ; Schmidt, ii. 66. centius, in despair, left the castle, >' Vita Nili, ap. Martene, Coll. made his way into the emperor's pre- Ampl. vi. 949 ; or Acta SS., Sept. 26, sence, and threw himself at his feet ; c. 13 ; Neander, Memorials, . 499 ; that Otho, with sarcastic words, Hofler, i. 140. Nilus was born in ordered him to be taken back, and 910, and died in 1005 at Grotta Fer- continued the siege, until the gaiiison rata, where his well-known monastery 3© ARNULF OF REIMS. Book V. Stripped of his robes, and led through the city riding on an ass, with the tail in his hand ; after which, according to some authorities, he was banished to Germany, while others say that he was thrown from the Capitol '^ The varieties of statement as to the authors of his punishment are still greater : one annalist relates that he was blinded and mutilated by some persons who feared lest Otho should pardon him ;* some writers state that Otho and Gregory concurred in the proceedings ; while, according to others, the emperor was softened by the prayers of Nilus, and the cruelties exercised on the antipope were sanctioned by his rival alone.** During the pontificate of John XV. the see of Reims had become the subject of a new contest, more important than that between Artald and Hugh. On the death of archbishop Adalbero, in the year 989, Arnulf, an illegiti- mate son of one of the last Carolingian kings,*' requested Hugh Capet to bestow it on him, promising in return to serve him faithfully in all ways.<^ The new king granted the petition, chiefly with a view to detach Arnulf from the interest of his uncle Charles, duke of Lorraine, the heir of the Carolingian line. The archbishop, at his consecration, took an oath of fealty to Hugh, imprecating the most fearful curses on himself if he should break it.® was founded after the date of his visit arrivera rarement qu'aucun auteur ne to Otho. Acta SS., 1. c. p. 281. vous favorise."— Note D. » Thietmar, iv. 21 ; Pet. Damiani, « Sir F Palgrave thinks that he was Ep. i. 21 (Patrol, cxliv. 253). the offspring of a lawful marriage, but • Ann. Quedlinb. 998. These annals Aat it was afterwards dissolved on the are very unfavourable to John. Ann. ^^round of inequality in condition, ii. 997- 798, 804. •• Richer, iv. 25. *> Vita Nili, 1, c. See Luden, vii. « Among other things, " Fiant dies 300-2, and notes ; Hofler, i. 141 ; Bayle, mei pauci, et episcopaUim meutn acci- art. Othon III., notes P., C, D. " II piat alter'' (Synod. Rem. S. Basoli, est presquc impossible," says Bayle, c. 8). The instrument of his election " de mentir sur ces siecles-lk. Racon- alluded in curious terms to his birth— tcz selon votrc caprice et k tout hasard "Arnulphum regis Lotharli filium, les circonstances de quelque fiiit. il quem etsi altus sanguis vitio temporis Ckai. V, A.D, 989-00. ARNULF OF REIMS. 3I He even received the eucharist in attestation of his fidelity, although some of the clergy* present protested against such an application of the sacrament. But when the arms of Charles appeared to be successful, the gates of Reims were opened to him, and his soldiers committed violent and sacrilegious outrages in the city. The arch- bishop was carried off as if a prisoner, and sent forth a solemn anathema against the robbers who had profaned his church ;s it was, however, suspected that he had a secret understanding with his uncle, and the suspicion was speedily justified by his openly joining Charles at Laon.^ But Laon was soon betrayed into the hands of Hugh by its bishop, Adalbero;^ the king got possession of his rival's person, and imprisoned him at Orleans, where Charles died within a few months ; and a council of the suffragans of Reims was held at Senlis, for the examination of their metropolitan's con- duct. Letters were then sent to Rome both by Hugh and by.the bishops, detailing the treachery of Arnulf, with the wretched state into which his province had fallen, and asking how this " second Judas" should be dealt with.'' But the pope was influenced by a partisan of Arnulf, who presented him v/ith a valuable horse and other gifts ; while the envoys of the opposite party, who made no presents either to John or to Crescentius, stood three days at the gates of the papal palace without being allowed to enter. ^ sub anathemate positi aliquo afifecit and suspected of an amour with Emma, contagio, sed tamen hunc mater eccle- the queen of Lothair, and mother of sia purificans mysticis abluit sacra- the last Carolingian, Lewis "le Fai- mentis." This is supposed to be the neant." Richer, iii. 66 ; Hock, 151, work of Gerbert. Bouquet, x. 401. 152 ; Palgrave, ii. 790. '" " Quorum mens purgatior erat." "^ Syn. Rem. 25, 26 ; Richer, iv Richer, iv. 30. ^i-S. 8 Syn. Rem. 12. i Syn. Rem. 27 ; Syn. Causeiensif *• Richer, iv. 33-6 ; Hock's * Geiv ap. Pertz, iii. Baronius (991. 9) thinks ^rt,' 83, (Wien, 1837). them very unreasonable in being so ■ Adalbero had been a pupil of Ger- soon weary of waiting, seeing that thr bert, and was a man of ability and pope must have been full of business knowledge, but of perfidious character. 3a COUNCIL OF ST. BASLE'S. BoorV, But Hugh now found himself strong enough to act without the pope. In June 991, a synod was held at the monastic church of St. Basle, near Reims, under Siguin, archbishop of Sens.™ The president proposed that, before proceeding to the trial of Arnulf, an assurance of indulgence for the accused should be obtained from the king, because, if his treason were a cause of blood, it would be unlawful for bishops to judge it."^ Some mem- bers, however, remarked that the suggested course was dangerous; if bishops declined such inquiries, princes would cease to ask for ecclesiastical judgments, would take all judicature into their own hands, and would cite the highest ecclesiastics before their secular tribunals ; and, in deference to these objections, the proposal appears to have been dropped. Siguin detailed the pro- ceedings which had taken place ; the pope, he said, had left the bishops of France a year without any answer to their application, and they must now act for themselves. All who could say anything in favour of the accused were enjoined, under pain of anathema, to come forward; whereupon Abbo, abbot of Fieury, and others produced passages from the Isidorian decretals, to show that the synod had no right to judge a bishop — the trial of bishops being one of those "greater causes " which belong to the pope alone.° To this it was answered that all had been •» The acts of this synod, which were Litt. vi. 526, 589 ; Schrockh, xxiL first published by the Magdeburg cen- 286 ; Planck, iii. 307 ; Neander, vi. turiators, are not fully given in any 33 ; Milman, ii. 411 ; Hefele, iv. 607.) edition of the councils, except that by Richer gives an account of the council Mansi. Pertz has printed them, vol. (iv. 53, seqq.), and refers to Gerbert iii. 658, seqq. ; and from his collection for further details (c. 73). For St, they are reprinted in the Patrologia, Easolus, or Basle, and the monastery, vol. cxxxix. Baronius (992. 3, 4, 11) see Flodoard, ii.a, andaLifeby Adso, and others attempt to throw suspicion in the ' Patrologia,' cxxxvii. Thi*. on these acts, as having been drawn up monastery was destroyed in the firsl by Gerbert; but the fact that Gerbert Revolution. 'Actes de la Prov. 04 avows having edited them, with con- Reims,' in Patrol, cxxxix. 189. densations and other such alterations, • C 3. ought rather to tell in favour of their • q. ^^^^ ; Richer, it. #7. a»t>&lantial coirectness. (See Hist C«AP. V. A.D. 991. COUNCIL OF ST. BASLE. 33 done regularly ; that application had been made to the pope, but without effectP Arnulf of Orleans, who was regarded as the wisest and most eloquent of the French bishops,'! spoke very strongly against the Roman claim to jurisdiction. He did not hint, nor does he appear to have felt, any suspicion of the decretals;'' but in opposition to their authority he proved by an array of genuine canons, councils, and papal writings, that for the decision of local questions pro- vincial synods were sufficient ; and he cited the principles of Hincmar as to appeals. The requirements of the decretals, he said, had already been satisfied by the reference which both the king and the bishops had vainly made to Rome. He denied that the Roman pontiff could by his silence lay to sleep the ancient laws of the church, or could reverse them by his sole authority; if it were so, there would really be no laws to rely on. He enlarged on the enormities of recent popes, and asked how it was possible to defer to the sentence of such monsters — destitute as they were of all judicial qualities, of knowledge, of love, of character — very antichrists sitting in the temple of God, who could only act as lifeless idols. It would (he said) be far better, if the dissensions of princes would permit, to seek a decision from the learned and pious bishops of Belgic Gaul and Germany than from the venal and polluted court of Rome. Arnulf of Reims was brought before the council, and protested his innocence of the treachery imputed to him; but he gave way when confronted with a clerk who had P C. 37. owe something more than is admitted « C. I. The speech put into his to the editor. Baronius gives it with mouth is acknowledged by Gerbert to an indignant commentary of interrup- be a summary of his addresses to the tions (902. 15, seqq.). Fleury is more cotmcil, and of his remarks to those favourable. IviL 36. »ho sat near him. Perhaps it may ' SchrOckh, xxii. 389. VOL. IV. 3 34 ARNULF DEPOSED. Book V opened the gates of the city to the besiegers, and who now declared that he had acted under the archbishop's orders,^ On the last day of the synod, when the king appeared with his son and colleague Robert, Amulf pros- trated himself before them, and abjectly implored that his life and members might be spared.^ He was required to surrender the ensigns of his temporalities to the king, and those of his spiritual power to the bishops, and tc read an act of abdication modelled on that by which Ebbo had resigned the same dignity a century and a half before. The degraded archbishop was then sent to prison at Orleans, and Gerbert, who had taken no part in the proceedings against him, was chosen as his successor." This eminent man was bom of humble parentage in Auvergne about the middle of the century, and was ad- mitted at an early age into the monastery of Aurillac,^ where he made extraordinary proficiency in his studies. He had already visited other chief schools of France, when Borel, count of Barcelona, arrived at Aurillac on a devotional pilgrimage, and gave such a report of the state of learning in Spain as induced the abbot to send Ger- bert with him on his return to that country.^ In Spain Gerbert devoted himself especially to the acquirement of mathematical and physical science, which was then almost exclusively confined to the schools of the Saracens ; but it is uncertain whether his knowledge was derived imme- diately from the Moslem teachers of Seville and Cordova,^ or from Christians who had benefited by their instruction." • C. 30. The clerk, Adalgard, had rlUac. See Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. vii. before given evidence to this effect, 7, 8 ; Annal. iii. 293 ; and the Life, by and had offered to prove it by the Odo of Cluny, ii. 2, seqq. : iii. 2 (Pa- ordeal (c. ir). He was afterwards de- trol. cxxxiii., or Acta SS., Oct. 13). posed (c. ss)- * C. 53. ' Richer, iii. 43 ; Hock, 61. " Hock's 'Gerbert/ 103. « W. Malmesl). 284. ' Founded in the end of the ninth » SchrSckh, xxi. 230. Hock (who century by St. Gerard, count of Au- undertakes the difficult task of repre- Chap. V. a.d. 991. GEKlBERT. 35 In 968 he visited Rome in company with his patron Borel, and was introduced to Otho the Great. He then became master of the cathedral school at A.D. 972. Reims, and on a second visit to Italy, in company with archbishop Adalbero, he obtained the abbacy of Bobbio through the interest of the empress Adelaide.^ But he found the property of the abbey dilapidated by his predecessor ; he was involved in con tentions with the neighbouring nobles, who insisted on his confirming grants of the monastic lands which had been wrongfully made to them ; while the monks were insubordinate, and his connexion with the Germans served to render him generally unpopular. •= His position became yet worse on the death of Otho, which took place within a year from the time of his appointment ; and, after having in vain attempted to obtain support from the pope, he resolved to leave Bobbio, although he still retained the dignity of abbot. *^ "All Italy," he wrote on this occasion to a friend, "appears to me a Rome ; and the morals of the Romans are the horror of the world." « Gerbert resumed his position at Reims, where he raised the school to an unrivalled reputation, and effect- ively influenced the improvement of other seminaries.* The study of mathematics, the Arabian numerals, and the decimal notation were now for the first time intro- duced into France.^ The library of the see was enriched by Gerbert's care with many transcripts of rare and valuable books ;^ while his mechanical genius and science senting Gerbert as a sound and consis- <• Hist. Litt. vi. 561. tent "catholic") says that the story of « Ep. 40, ed. Paris, 161 1 ; Hock, 64- his having studied under the Arabs is 7. Cf. Ep. 45. *" Hist. Litt. vi, 563. a calumny, which is not found until a 8 Hock, 149. See Martin, iii. 25. century after his time (pp. 159, seqq.). The statement as to the Arabic figures, See Ampere, iii. 311. however, is disputed. See Hallam, " Hock, 62, 63. Hist. Litt. L 150. • Epp. 2, 3, ap. Bouquet, x. *" Ep. 6, 8, etc., ap. Bouquet, x. 36 GERBERT. Book ?. were displayed in the construction of a clock, of astrono- mical instruments, and of an organ blown by steam ' — apparently the first application of a power which has in later times produced such marvellous effects.'^ He also took an important part in the political movements and intrigues of the time, acting as secretary to Adalbero, who, from his position as archbishop of Reims, exercised a powerful influence in affairs of state.^ Adalbero had fixed on him as his own successor in the archbishoprick ; but Gerbert's humble birth was unable to cope with the pretensions of Arnulf, which, as he asserts, were supported by simoniacal means."* He therefore acquiesced in his defeat, and retained the office of secretary under his successful rival. For a time he adhered to Amulf in labouring for the interest of Charles of Lorraine; but he saw reason to change his course," formally renounced the archbishop's service, and wrote to the archbishop of Treves that he could not, for the sake of either Charles or Arnulf, endure to be any longer a tool of the devil, and lend himself to the maintenance of falsehood against truth.® Hugh Capet gladly welcomed the accession of so accomplished a partisan, and employed him as tutor to his son Robert. P The council of St. Basle wrote to the pope in a tone of great deference, excusing itself for having acted without his concurrence on the ground that he had so long left unanswered the application which had been made to him. But John had already sent northward as his legate an abbot named Leo, who had reached Aix-la-Chapelle when he was informed of Arnulf s deposition. On this the • W. Malmesb. 276. b. ; Richer, iv. loa ; Hock, 80. ^ Sismondi, iv. 119, He afterwards " See Milman, ii. 410. made a famous clock at Magdeburg • Epp. 73, 74, ap. Bouquet, x. 409 ; for Otho III. Thietmar, vi. 67. Richer, iv, 102 ; Hock, 85, 86. » Hock, 69. p Helgald. Vita Roberti (Patrol, cxli * Cout. Mosom. ap. Hard. vi. 735, 911). Ckaf. V. A.D. 9914 GERBERT. 37 legate returned to Rome, and John issued a mandate to the bishops who had been concerned in the council, ordering them to appear at Rome for the trial of Arnulf 's case, and in the meantime to reinstate the archbishop, and to abstain from the exercise of ecclesias- ^ _ ^^ A.D. 994. tical functions.*! The French bishops, in a synod held at Chela,"^ resolved to maintain the decisions of St. Basle ; " the king wrote to John, assuring him that nothing had been done in breach of the papal rights, and offering to meet him at Grenoble, if the pope should wish to investigate the affair;* while Gerbert protested to John that he had done no wrong," and exerted himself, by cor- respondence in all directions, to enlist supporters on his side.^ His tone as to the pretensions of Rome was very decided : thus he tells Siguin of Sens that God's judgment is higher than that of the Roman bishop, and adds that the pope himself, if he should sin against a brother, and should refuse to hear the church's admonitions, must, according to our Lord's own precept, be counted " as a heathen man and a publican"; he declaims on the hardship of being suspended from the offices of the altar, and urges the archbishop to disregard the papal prohibition.^ John, without making any public demonstration for a time, endeavoured, by the agency of monks, to excite discontent among the people of France, so as to alarm the new sovereign.^ Gerbert found his position at Reims extremely uneasy. Some of his most powerful friends were dead. He tells his correspondents that there is a 1 Hard. vi. 729 ; Pertz, iiu 680 ; Giesel. II. i. 219 ; and for Richer's Planck, iiL 315. 316. character, Palgrave, ii. 780-5. ' Seemingly Chelles, between Paris ' Bouquet, x. 418. and Meaux. " lb. 420. Ep. 92. • This council is known only from ^ lb. 413, seqq. 1. iv. 89 of Richer, whose valuable r lb. 413, Ep. 85. history was discovered by Pertz. See • Planck, iii. 317, :^i8. 38 GERBERT IN GERMANY. Book V general outcry against him — that even his blood is required ; * that not only his military retainers, but even his clergy, have conspired to avoid his ministrations, and to abstain from eating in company with him.^ In this distress he was cheered by receiving a letter from Otho III., then in his fifteenth year. Gerbert gladly accepted the invitation, and in the end of 994 repaired to the German court, where he found an honourable refuge, and became the young prince's tutor and favourite adviser. c In this position, where new hopes were set before his mind, he could afford to speak of his arch- bishoprick with something like indifference. He writes to the empress Adelaide (widow of Otho the Great) that, as the dignity was bestowed on him by bishops, he will not resign it except in obedience to an episcopal judgment; but he will not persist in retaining it if that judgment should be against him.^ In 995 the pope again sent Leo into France. The legate put forth a letter to Hugh and his son, by way of answer to Arnulf of Orleans and others who had taken part in the council of St. Basle.® He meets the charges of ignorance against Rome by citing passages of Scripture, in which it is said that God chooses the foolish things of this world in preference to the wise. In reply to the charges of venality, he alleges that our Lord himself and His apostles received such gifts as were offered to them. The bishops, by their conduct towards the Roman church, had cut themselves off from it ; their behaviour to their mother had been like that of Ham to Noah. Arnulf of Orleans, "with his • Bouquet, x. 421, Ep, 96. This others, as Baronius (995. 12), Har- «eems to mean only that there was a douin (vi. 734), and the editor of the wish to ruin him. ' Recueil des Hist, de la France' (x. •• lb. 424, Ep. 102. 424), after it. " Hock, 111-13. • Richer, iv. 95. The letter, which * Ep. 102, L c. Pagi (xv. 336), seems to be incomplete, is printed foi Hock (113), and others, place this the first time by Pertz, iii. 686. Utter before tht' council of Md isson ; Chap. V. A.d. 995-S. COUNCIL OF MOUSSON. 39 apostate son, whoever he may be,''* had written such things against the holy see as no Arian had ever ventured to write. The legate cites the expressions of reverence with which eminent men of former times had spoken of Rome : if, he says, the chair of St. Peter had ever tottered, it had now re-estabHshed itself firmly for the support of all the churches. He reflects on the irregu- larity of the proceedings against Arnulf, and on the cruelty with which he was treated ; and he excuses the pope's neglect of the first application in the matter on the ground of the troubles which were at that time caused by Crescentius. A council, scantily attended by bishops from Germany and Lotharingia, was held under Leo at Mousson in June 995. The bishops of France had refused to appear either at Rome or at Aix;^ Gerbert alone, who had already removed to the German court,^ was present to answer for himself. In a written speech he defended the steps by which he had (reluctantly, as he said) been pro- moted to the see of Reims, together with his behaviour towards Arnulf. He declared himself resolved to pay no heed to the prohibition by which the pope had inter- dicted him from divine offices — ^a mandate (he said) which involved much more than his own personal interest ; but, at the request of the archbishop of Treves, he agreed, for the sake of example, to refrain from celebrating mass until another synod should be held.* Arnulf was restored to his see by a synod held at Reims in 995 ; but he was detained in prison for three years longer."^ Robert I. of France, a prince of a gentle and devout, ' " Cum suo nescimus quo apostata ^ Hugo Floriac. ap. Bouquet, x. filio," t.f. Gerbert, by whom the acts 220. Bp. Hefele (iv. 616) refers to the of the council were drawna up. synod of Reims a speech which is K Pertz, iii. 690. •» Hock, iii. described as delivered "in * Cone. Mosomense, ap. Pertz, iiu Causeio " (Pertz, iii. 69iX 691 : Richer, iv. 102-5. 4«> SEPARATION Of Book V. but feeble character/ who succeeded his father in October 996, had married as his second wife Bertha, daughter of Conrad king of Burgundy, and widow of a count of Chartres. The union was uncanonical, both because the parties were related in the fourth degree, and because Robert had contracted a " spiritual affinity " with the countess, by becoming sponsor for one of her children ; yet the French bishops had not hesitated to bless it, fov in the marriages of princes the rigour of ecclesiastical law often bent to political expediency.™ Robert, however, felt that, on account of this vulnerable point, it was especially his interest to stand well with Rome ; and he despatched Abbo of Fleury as an envoy to treat with the pope in a spirit of concession as to the case of Amulf. The abbot took the opportunity of obtaining privileges for his monastery from the new pope Gregory V. ; ^ he returned to France with a pall for Arnulf ; and in 998 the archbishop was released, and was restored to his see, which had been miserably impoverished during the long contest for the possession of it.*^ But if Robert supposed that his consent to this restora- tion would induce the pope to overlook the irregularity of his marriage, he soon found that he had been mistaken. A synod held at Rome in 998 required him and his queen, on pain of anathema, to separate, and to submit to penance; P and it suspended the bishops who had officiated at the nuptials from communion until they should appear before the pope and make satisfaction for their offence.^ As to the sequel, it is only certain that Robert yielded, and that the place of Bertha was supplied ' Helgald. Vita Robert!, ap. Bou- " Planck, iiL 331, 332 ; Sismondi, quet, X. 98, scqq. He composed iv. 104-6. church hymns, (See Gueranger, i. " Almoin. 11, 12, ap. Mabill. viii. , 300-3, 308.) Sir F. Palgrave rates Gerbert, £p. 102, ap. Bouquet, x. 43^. him more highly than is usual, rol. iii. <* Abbo, £p. iii. 435. c. 2. P Can. 1. 1 Can. 2. Chap. V. a.d. 995-8. ROBERT I. AND BERTHA, 4I by a queen of far less amiable character/ Peter Damiani, in the following century, relates that Bertha gave birth to a monster with the head and neck of a goose ; that the king and the queen were excommunicated by the whole episcopate of France ; that the horror of this sentence scared all men from them, with the exception of two attendants ; that even these cast the vessels out of which Robert or Bertha had eaten or drunk into the fire, as abominable; and that thus the guilty pair were terrified into a separation.^ But the terror to which Robert really yielded was more probably a dread of the spiritual power of Rome, and of the influence which, by uttering an interdict against the performance of religious offices, it might be able to exercise over his subjects ; or it may be that, as is stated by the contemporary biographer of Abbo, he gave way to the persuasions of that abbot, who performed the part of Nathan in convincing him of his sin.^ These triumphs were very important for the papacy, following as they did after a time during which there had been little communication with France, while at home the papal see had been stained and degraded by so much of a disgraceful kind. They assured the popes that they had lost no power by the change of dynasty which had been effected without their sanction." And if, as has been supposed, the sternness with which Gregory insisted on the separation of Robert and Bertha was instigated by the wish of Otho to humiliate the French king, it is one of many proofs that the rise of the papacy to a ' Sismondi, iv, 106. communicated, and thereupon went to • P. Damian. Opusc. xxxiv. 6 Rome for penance. (Ap. Ivon. Decret. (Patrol, cxlv.). ix. 8, Patrol, clxi.) But there seems * Aimoin. Vita Abbonis, ap. Bou- to be no contemporary evidence of this quet, X. 107. Leo IX., in writing to journey. Henry of France, the son of Robert, " Planck, iii, 339, 33a says that the king and queen were ex- 41 END OF THE Book V. superiority over all secular princes was mainly promoted by their attempts to use it as a tool in their jealousies and rivalries against each other.* The victory over the French episcopate was also important in consequence of the position which the popes took in the affair. They had already gained from the French church as much as was requisite for the admittance of their jurisdiction in the particular case — that a metropolitan of France should not be deposed without the concurrence of the pope. This had been allowed by Hincmar himself; it had even been the subject of a petition from the council of Troyes in 867 '/ it was acknowledged by Hugh Capet and his bishops until the pope's neglect of their application pro- voked the inquiry whether they might not act without him. But, not content with this, the popes and their advocates claimed that right of exclusive judgment over all bishops which was asserted for the papacy by the false decretals; and the result was therefore far more valuable for the Roman see than it would have been if the popes had only put forth such claims as were neces- sary for the maintenance of their interest in the case which was immediately before them.^ The young German pope died in February 999.* It was a time of gloomy apprehensions. The approach of the thousandth year from the Saviour's birth had raised a general belief that the second advent was close at hand ; and in truth there was much which might easily be construed as fulfilling the predicted signs of the end — wars and rumours of wars, famines and pestilences, » Planck, iii. 338. bable (vii, 306, 307, 590; cf. Schrockh, y See p. 387. xxi. 315). Gfrorer argues that Gerbert " Planck, iii. 327, 328. must have been at the bottom a^ • There is a mystery about the end Gregory's death, as he was ambitious of Gregory. The Life of Meinwerc of the papacy, and got it on the (ap. Pertz, xi.) states that he was ex- vacancy 1 (iiL 1507). See Milmaa, pelled, and after his restoration, was u. 403. poisoned ; and this Luden thinks pro- Ckap.V. a.d. 999-IOOO. TENTH CENTURY. 4^ fearful appearances in the heavens, faith failing from the earth, and love waxing cold.^ In the beginning of the century, the council of Trosley (Troli, near Soissons)** had urged the nearness of the judg- ment-day as a motive for reformation ; ^ and preachers had often insisted on it, although their opinion had met with objectors in some quarters.® The preamble, " Where- as the end of the world draweth near," which had been common in donations to churches or monasteries,* now assumed a new and more urgent significance ; and the belief that the long expectation was at length to be accomplished, did much to revive the power and wealth of the clergy, after the disorders and losses of the century.^ The minds of men were called away from the ordinary cares and employments of life ; even our know- ledge of history has suffered in consequence, since there was little inclination to bestow labour on the chronicling of events, when no posterity was expected to read the records.^ Some plunged into desperate recklessness of living ; * an eclipse of the sun or of the moon was the signal for multitudes to seek a hiding-place in dens and caves of the earth ; and crowds of pilgrims flocked to Palestine, where the Saviour was pxpected to appear for judgment.^ In the room of Gregory, Otho raised to the papacy the man who had hitherto been its most dangerous opponent. *• Michelet, ii. 358-61 ; Milman, ii, seems to be mistaken in saying that 404. Abbo did not warn against the error " Pagi, XV. 551. until the danger was over, in looi. " Hard, vi, 506. ' As in Marculf, ii. 3, etc. (Patrol. • Ampere, iii. 275. Abbo of Fleury Ixxxvii.). says that in his youth he had heard s Giesel. II, i. 268 ; Sismondi, iv. such preaching at Paris, but had op- 88. See Milman, ii. 405, and his refer- posed it on the authority of the Gospels, ence to Dr, Todd's Donellan Lectures. the Apocalypse, and the book of Daniel ^ Sismondi, iv. 86, 87. (Apologeticus, Patrol, cxxxix. 471). ' Hock, 135. Gieseler dates this statement about *■ Mosheiiu, ii. 293 ; Giesel. II. L 990 (II. L a66), and Sismondi (iv. 87) a68. 169. 44 OTHO m. BookV. Gerbert's learning and abilities had procured for him a great ascendency over the mind of his imperial pupil,* from whom, in the preceding year, he had received the archbishoprick of Ravenna.™ On attaining the highest dignity in the church, he assumed the name of Sylvester II. — a name significant of the relation in which he was to stand to a prince who aimed at being a second Con- stantine." For Otho, who lost his father at the age of three, had been trained by his Greek mother, and by his Italian grandmother, Adelaide, to despise his own coun- trymen as rude, to value himself on the Byzantine side of his extraction, and to affect the elegancies of Greek and Roman cultivation.^ He assumed the pompous titles of the eastern emperors ; he affected to imitate their dress, and introduced into his court the ceremonies of Con- stantinople ; P on re-visiting Germany, he carried with him a number of noble Romans, with a view of exhibiting to his countrymen a refinement to which they had been strangers; he even entertained the thought of making Rome the capital of his empire, and of restoring in its fullest extent the ancient Roman greatness.*! ' Herm. Contract, a.d. iooo. Theophano, after death, appeared to " Gregory's letter, on sending him a nun, "in habitu miserabili," and de- the pall, is in Hard. vi. 740, Hofler clared that she was in torment for groundlessly says that it proves the having introduced into the west Greek archbishoprick to have been given by luxuries of female attire before un- the pope, and not by the imperial known. Othlon. Visio 17 (Pertz, xi. patronage (i. 159). Gfrorer, of course, 385). has his theories (iii. 1502). In allusion P Thietmar, iv. 29. Dr. Pertz has to his three sees, i?eims, /?avenna, and found curious proofs of this at Rome. JPome, Gerbert is said to have com- Giesel. II. i. 221. See Gregorov. iii. posed this line — 498 ; Reumont, ii. 309-12 ; Giesebr. i. 724. " Scandit ab R Gerbertus In R. post papa , Schmidt, ii. 68 ; Hock, 137. Otho lU^allvita Roberti (Patrol cxii. 911). '^ ^^^' °" ^^= elevation of Gerbert, to have granted a charter, by which, re- ° Milman, ii. 416. See as to Sylves- jecting the fabulous donations of Cen- ter 's presumed designs, Gregorov. iii. stantme and others, he states that, as 503 ; Giesebr. i. 719. he had raised his tutor (magister) to • Schmidt, ii. 71 ; Luden, vii. 266. the papacy, so, for the love of him, he There is a legend that his mother, bestows certain territories on St. Peter Chap.V. a.d. 999-1001. SYLVESTER II. 45 The new pope, in order, as it would seem, to reoDncile his present position with his eariier career, granted to Arnulf of Reims the pall and all the other privileges which had been connected with the see/ It was thus made to appear as if Arnulf had been guilty, and as if his restoration were an act of grace on the part of the rival who had formerly been obliged to give way to him. Arnulf held the archbishoprick until the year 1023. Sylvester's pontificate was not eventful. He had the mortification of being foiled by Willigis, archbishop of Mentz, a man who from a very humble origin had raised himself to the primacy of Germany, and who exercised a great influence, both by his position and by his political abilities.^ The contest is said to have arisen out of the pride of the emperor's sister Sophia, who, being about to enter the nunnery of Gandersheim, disdained to receive the veil from any prelate of less than metropolitan dig- nity. "Willigis was therefore invited to officiate at Gan- dersheim, and not only did so, but even held a synod there. Osdag, bishop of Hildesheim, within whose diocese the convent was situated, complained of these invasions, and for a time the matter was accommodated in his favour;* but Willigis again interfered with the rights of the bishop's successor, Bernward. A synod (Pertz, Leges, ii. 162, seqq.). The suppose the letter to be one of Gregot/ document has been much questioned, V., wrongly ascribed to his successor, and has been supposed (as by Pagi, But the explanation given in the text xvi. 391) to be a forgery in the anti- seems to be the true one. See Neand. papal interest executed not earlier vi. 42 ; Hofler, i. iii. than the time of the disputes as to • See Hock, 68 ; Gfrorer, iv. 72 ; investitures. It is, however, defended Giesebr. i. 620-1. Willigis founded by Pertz, Leges, ii. App. 162 ; GfrSrer, the cathedral of Mentz, and the con- ii. 1571; Gieseler, II. i. 221; and vent of St. Stephen, in which he is Giesebrecht, i. 727,851. See Gregorov. buried. His name is still preserved i. 503. by a street in the town. ' Gerb. Ep. cvi. ap. Bouquet, x. * Thangmar. Vita S. Bern. Hildesh. 435 ; or Hard. vi. 76a Pagi (xvi. c. 15 ap. Mabill. Acta SS. Ben., viiL ; 3P7), Planck (iii. 325), and others Acta SS., Oct. 26 ; or Pertz, iv. ^6 AFFAIR OF GANDERSHEIM, Book V held at Rome, in the presence of the pope and of the emperor, decided that Bernward should exercise the rights of diocesan over the community, but left the fur- ther settlement of the case to a synod which was to be assembled in Germany, under the presidency of a papal legate." This assembly met in looi, at Palithi or Polde in Saxony. The archbishop, seeing that its feeling was against him, assumed a tone of insolent defiance towards the legate, broke up the session by means of his dis- orderly adherents, and had disappeared when the council reassembled on the following day. As the influence oi Willigis appeared to render a fair trial hopeless in Ger- many, it was resolved to summon all the bishops of that country to attend a council in Italy ; but, although the papal citation was seconded by the emperor, who needed the aid of their followers for the reinforcement of his army, so powerful were their fears of the primate that hardly any of them appeared. The pope found himself obliged to adjourn the consideration of the question; and on the death of Otho, which followed soon after, the power of Willigis was so much enhanced by the im- portance attached to his voice in the choice of a new emperor, that Sylvester did not venture to prosecute the matter.* In 1007 the controversy was determined in favour of the see of Hildesheim ; but by the authority of the emperor Henry, and without the aid of Rome.^ It was, however, again revived, and was not finally settled until 1030, when Aribo, archbishop of Mentz, acknow- ledged to Godehard of Hildesheim that his pretensions against the diocesan jurisdiction had been unfounded.^ The pilgrims who flocked to the Holy Land were ■ Thangmar. VitoS. Bern. Hildesh. Anaal. iv. 148, seqq. c. 34. ' Annal. Hild. 1030, p. 97 ; Chron. ' « lb. a8-3o ; Planck, iii. 354-65. Hild. ap. Leibnitz, i. 744 ; Vit. S. T Annal. Hildesh. 1007, ap. Pertz, Godeh. c. 31, ap. Mabill. Acta SS. ii. 93 ; Thangmar. 40, 41 ; Mabill. Ben. viii. Chap. V. a.d. looo-i. OTHO III. 47 subjected to much oppression and annoyance by its Mussulman rulers, and frequent complaints of their sufferings were brought into western Christendom. By these reports Sylvester was excited to issue a letter addressed in the name of Jerusalem to the universal church,* beseeching all Christians to sympathize with the afflictions of the holy city, and to aid it by gifts, if they could not do so by arms. The letter was not without effect in its own time, for some enterprises were in con- sequence undertaken against the Saracens ;^ but the great movement of the crusades, of which it may be regarded as the first suggestion, was reserved for a later generation. The young emperor appears to have fallen into a morbid state of melancholy. He had been lately shaken by the deaths of his cousin Gregory V., of his aunt Matilda, abbess of Quedlinburg, who in his absence carried on the government of Germany, and of other relations, which left him without any near kindred except two young sisters, who had both entered the cloister.*' He may, perhaps, have been touched by regret for the cruelties which had been committed in his name against the republicans of Rome ; perhaps, also, the millenary year may have aided in filling his mind with sad and depressing thoughts.*^ After having secluded himself for fourteen days, which he spent in prayer and fasting, he was persuaded by Romuald, the founder of the Camaldo- lite order, to undertake a penitential pilgrimage to Monte Gargano;® he visited the hermit Nilus, near Gaeta, • Ep. evil. ap. Bouquet, x. 426. ** Luden, vH. 308-10. •> A fleet, fitted out by Genoa, Pisa, « P. Damiani, Vita Romualdi, 25 and Marseilles, recovered Sardinia (Patrol, cxliv.) , Chron. Casin. ii. 24 ; from them (Heeren, Hist. Werke, ii. Hofler, i. 180. Peter Damiani says 130) ; but the story of a Pisan expe- that the pilgrimage was undertaken in dition to Syria is fabulous. Sybel, penance for breach of faith with Cres- * Der erste Kreuzzug,' 541. centius, and that Otho made it bare- ° Annal. Quedl. 998, 1000, looa. tooted. 48 LAST DAYS AND Book V. where he displayed the deepest humih'ty and contrition ;* and, after his return to Rome, finding himself still unable to rest, he set out on a long journey through his do- minions beyond the Alps. At Gnesen, in Poland, he knelt as a penitent before the tomb of Adalbert, bishop of Prague, who had been known to him, and perhaps little regarded by him, in earlier days, but had since found the death of a martyr in Prussia, and was now revered as a saint.^ At Aix-la-Chapelle, the emperor indulged his gloomy curiosity by opening the tomb of Charlemagne;^ and in looi he once more arrived at Rome, where he founded in the island of the Tiber a church in honour of St. Adalbert, whom he had already honoured by a like foundation at Aix.^ The south of Italy was in a state of rebellion,^ and an insurrection took place at Rome, where Otho was besieged in his palace.^ It is said that from the walls he indignantly reproached the Romans for their unworthy requital of the favours which he had shown them, even to the prejudice of his own countrymen ; that he received the eucharist with the intention of sallying forth, but was restrained by the exertions of his friends.™ The short remainder of his days was spent in restless movements ' Vita Nili, 8i, ap. Martene, ColL St. Adalbert. (Ademar. i., iii. [in some Ampl. vi. 950. Their meeting is the copies] Patrol, cxli. 49). But Nopp ius subject of one of Domenichino's fres- in his Aachener Chronik (p. 218), coes in the church of the Basilian maintains the identity of the chair monastery founded by Nilus at Grotta which is still shown in the church Ferrata. there with that which was found in the e Thietmar, iv. 28 ; Luden, vii. 313. great emperor's tomb. At Rome the For Adalbert, see below, chap. vii. name of Adalbert has been superseded He was the second person who was by that of St. Bartholomew, whose formally canonized at Rome, Uhic supposed relics (see below, c. IX. iii. 5) of Augsburg having been the first. the emperor placed in the church. See Giesebr. i. 720. Gregorov. iii. 510-11. •> Thietmar, iv. 29. ^ Giesebr. i. 744. * HSfler, i. 181. It is said that Otho ' Thietmar, iv. 30. exchanged the chair in which the body " See Schmidt, L 70 ; Ludca, t»i of Charlemagne had been found sitting, 322, and notes. with the king of Poland, for an arm of Chap. V. a.d. looi-a. DEATH OF OTHO III. 49 and in penitential exercises, while he cherished the in- tention of raising his feudatories for the punishment ol the Romans ; but his projects were cut short by death at Paterno, a castle near Mount Soracte, and within sight of the ungrateful city, on Jan. 24, 1002.^ Although the German chroniclers in general attribute his end to small- pox, a later ^ story, of Italian origin, has recommended itself to some eminent writers p — less perhaps by its pro- bability than by its romantic character. Stephania, it is said, the beautiful widow of Crescentius, provoked by her husband's wrongs and her owni to a desire of deadly vengeance, enticed the young emperor to her embraces, and by means of a pair of gloves administered to him a subtle poison,"^ which dried up the sources of his strength, and brought him to the grave at the age of twenty-two. In fulfilment of a promise which Otho had exacted when he felt that his end was near, his body was conveyed across the Alps by his chancellor, Heribert archbishop of Cologne, and was interred in Charlemagne's minster at Aix-la-Chapelle.^ Within little more than a year, Sylvester followed his » Thietmar, iv. 30; Pagi, xvi. 418 ; Acta SS., Mart. 16). Rupert of Deutz, Murat. Ann. VI. i. 12 ; Gregorov. iii. in his life of the same prelate (c. 10), 519; Reumont, ii. 322. In remarkable says that, while sleeping in his cham- opposition to Thietmar's expressions ber, he was poisoned by the widow of of grief for Otho, Bonizo says that he Crescentius. (lb.) Landulf senior (ii. died without the viaticum, and " was 19, ap. Pertz, viii.) says that she buried in hell. " 1. iv. p. 800 wrapped him in a poisoned deer-skin ; ° See Hock, 140. It is told, but the Saxon annalist (a.d. 1102, ib, vi.), vaguely, in the Life of Meinwerc, c. 7 that when he had left Rome she sent a (Pertz, xi.). poison to him. See, too, the Annals P Murat. Annal. VI. i. 13 ; Sismondi, of Polde (Pertz, xvi. 65) ; and for the Rep. Ital. L in; Milman, iii. 417. fabulousness of the story, Hefelc, iv. See the various accounts in Luden, 621. Cf. Chron. Casin. ii. 24. vii. 323-5, and notes. * Lambert. Tuit. c. 11, Acta SS. 1 " Traditur adulteranda Teutoni- Mart. 16, p. 465. For this church bus." Amulf. Mediolan. i. 12 (Pertz, Otho had obtained privileges from viii.). Gregory V., and had provided a great ' Lambert of Deutz, a biographer of establishment of clergy. Giesebr. I Heribert, archbishop of Cologne, says, 734. **per mulierem veneno perit" (c. 11 VOL. IV. 4 50 DEATH Oi' SYLVESTER II. Book V pupil to the grave. On him too it is said ay looji ^Yi^^ the vengeance of Stephania wreaked itself by a poison which destroyed his voice, if it did not put an end to his life.* But a more marvellous tale s related by the zealous partisans of the see which he had so strongly opposed in its assumptions, and which he had himself at length attained. To the authentic ac- counts of his acquirements and of his mechanical skill they add that he dealt in unhallowed arts, acquired from a book which he had stolen from one of his Saracen teachers. He understood, it is said, the flight and the language of birds ; he discovered treasures by magic ; he made a compact with the devil for success in all his undertakings; he fabricated, under astral iniiuences, a brazen head, which had the power of answering questions affirmatively or negatively. To his question, "Shall I be apostolic pontiff?"" it answered "Yes." When he further asked, " Shall I die before I sing mass in Jeru- salem ?" the reply was "No." But as is usual in such legends, the evil one deluded his victim ; the Jerusalem in which Gerbert was to die was the Roman basilica ol Santa Croce in Gerusalemme.^ * Annal. Saxo, a.d. 1102. projecisse dicunt, et sic truncum " " Apostolicus." Ducange.s. v., and obilsse, et inter beatos collocatum " Suicer, s. v. aTroo-roXtKo?, say that this (a.d. 1005, ap. Fell, 153. Cf. Pet. de was formerly an epithet common to Alliaco, de falsis Prophetis, ap. Gerson, all bishops, but do not mark the time i. 575)- The most romantic form ol when it became restricted to the pope the story is that told by Walter Mapes alone. ('De Nugis Curialiiim,' 170-6, ^ Will. Malmesb. 283. The oldest Camden Soc). William of JNIalme - writer in whom such stories are found bury says that Gerbert went on with is Benno de Vita Hildebr. ap. Goldast. out thinking of repentance, because he Apol. Hen. IV. p. 11. See Ciacon. i. was not likely to go to Jerusalem ; but 753-6 ; DSllinger, ' Papstfabeln,' 157. his letter to the universal church might The various legends are collected by suggest an alternative in keeping with Hock : as a specimen, the Chronicle of the ambitious character ascribed to Melrose may be quoted — " Eundem him — that, if his soul were required of vero [Gerbertum] interius postea com- him, it would not be until he had reu- punctum, et exterius horribiliter afflic- dered his pontificate memorable by the turn, manus et pedes abscisses disbolo recovery of the Holy Land. Another Chap. VI. 51 CHAPTER VI. FROM THE DEATH OF POPE SYLVESTER II. TO THE DEPOSITION OF GREGORY VI. A.D. 1003 — 1046. The unexpected death of Otho III. left his dominions without an heir,* nor had any successor to the empire been provided. After much negotiation, Henry, duke of Bavaria, descended from a brother of Otho the Great, was chosen as king of Germany — chiefly through the influence of archbishop WiUigis, by whom he was crowned af Mentz.^ Henry, who is usually styled the Second,® had been intended by his parents for the ecclesiastical state,** and was a prince of very devout character, so that he attained the honour of canonization, which was conferred also on his wife June 1002. story of an ambiguous prophecy as to dying in Jerusalem, is related of Robert Guiscard (A, Comnena, vi. 6) ; and every reader will remember a parallel in English history. Comp. Ammian. Marcellinus, xxv. 3, as t» Julian's dying at Phrygia; and the account of Frederick II. 's death, in a future volume. Sylvester's tomb, in the Lateran church, was said to exude water " etiam in serenissimo acre, cum non sit in humldo loco" Qoh. Diacon. de Eccl. Lateran., Patrol, cxciv. 1552). This, according to a Vezelay chronicler (Labbe, Biblioth. MSS. i. 395), was in token of the death of a pope ; and, according to another story, which Mr. Gregorovius traces to a misunderstand- ing of a line in Sylvester's epitaph, such deaths were foreshown by a rattling of his bones within the grave. Grabmaler der roro. Papste, p. 43. ' It appears to be uncertain whether Otho had been married (see Hefele, iv. 621). The elder Landulf says that his wife died, and that he sent Arnulf, archbishop of Milan, to seek a Byzan- tine princess in marriage for him. ii. 18. •> Thietmar, iv. 34 ; Pagi, xvi. 421 ; Schmidt, ii. 72-4 ; Gfrorer, iv. 16 ; Giesebr. iL 14, seqq. The constitution of the seven German electors was fabu- lously carried back to this time, and was referred to Gregory V. See Marsil. Patav. in Goldast de Monarchia, ii, 154, quoting Martinus Polonus ; Hard, vi. 745, seqq, ; Ducange, s, v. Elec, tores ; Pagi, xvii. 356 ; Giannone, 1. xiii, I. 5, « He was so as king of Germany, but the First as emperor. * Anoalista Saxo, ap, Pertz, vi. 686 • Giesebr. ii. 78, 594- C2 HENRY II., EMPEROR. Book- V. Cunegunda ;* but his piety was not of a kind to unfit him for the active duties of his position, nor had any emperor since Charlemagne exercised so much of control over the church.* He governed with ability and vigour, in the midst of much opposition and many difficulties, until the year 1024. In illustration of the mixture of saint and statesman in him, we are told that on one occasion he appeared before Richard, abbot of St. Vanne's, at Verdun, in his Lotharingian dominions, and expressed a resolution to become a monk. The abbot, after some consideration, admitted him as a member of his own community, but immediately charged him, by his vow of monastic obedience, to return to the administration of the empire which had been committed to him by God.^ The Italians, on the death of Otho, hastily set up a king of their own, Harduin, marquis of Ivrea. But his power was controlled by the quarrels of various parties, which were too much bent on the advancement of their own private interests to combine in any poUcy for their common country. While the nobles of Italy were desirous of national independence, as being most favourable to their class, the prelates and clergy in general preferred the rule of a German sovereign, as less likely to interfere " See the Acta SS., Jul. 14 ; or 1. c. p. 712 ; Giesebr. ii. 199, and note). Patrol, cxl. 20 ; and the Life of Cune- Abbot Richard was a man of great gunda, ib. 205, seqq. A lameness influence, and much noted for piety, with which Henry was afflicted, while Peter Damiani relates that a monk saw it is traced by some to a wound received him after death toiling in the erection in hunting (Acta SS. 1. c. p. 633), or of lofty buildings — a punishment for to a fall, is referred by his legendary the too great indulgence of his archi- biographer to an angel's having touched tectural taste (Ep. viii. 2); but Ma- a sinew, which shrank, like Jacob's, billon makes light of this vision (Annal. while the emperor was at Monte Gar. iv. 475), and it finds no favour with gano. (Vita Anon. 40, Patrol, cxl. ; the BoUandists. See the Acta SS., ib. pp. 13-14). Giesebrecht throws Jun. 14, p. 455 — "Recte autem arb>- doubt on the lameness, ii. 600, tratur Menardus esse ista intelligenda ' Giesebr. ii. 82. de posnis purgatoriis, cum non sit adaa K Miracula B. Richardi, c. 8, ap. grave flagitium, et ipso inferno dignum, Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. viii. The story insanas substructionum moles medi- is not unsuspected (Acta SS. Bolland., tari." Chap. VI. a.d. ioo2-»4. AFFAIRS OF ITALY. 53 with their own power than that of a nearer neighbour.^ Harduin incurred the detestation of the clergy, not only by such oppressions as were usual, but by acts of savage personal violence against bishops who refused to comply with his will.* To these causes of disagreement was added the rivalry between the two chief cities of northern Italy — Milan, the residence of the later Roman emperors, and Pavia, the capital of the Lombard kingdom. That Harduin had been set up at Pavia ensured him the opposition of the Milanese, headed by their archbishop Arnulf, who in 1004 invited Henry into Italy.^ Harduin found himself deserted by most of his adherents, who flocked to the German standard. Henry was May 15, crowned as king of Italy at Pavia ; but the 'o°4- popular abhorrence of the Germans displayed itself, as usual, in the form of an insurrection. On the very night after the coronation, the king found himself besieged in his palace. The Germans, in order to divert the attack, set fire to the neighbouring houses. Henry's troops, who were at some distance from the city, were recalled by the sight of the flames, and the rising was suppressed ; but a great part of Pavia had been destroyed, and the king recrossed the Alps with a feeling of disgust and indigna- tion against his Italian subjects.* Harduin renewed his pretensions, but in 1012 was compelled by a second expedition of Henry to abdicate ; and, after a vain attempt to recover his power, he ended his days in a monastery — the last Italian of the middle ages who pre- tended to the crown of Lombardy.™ In the meanwhile the Roman factions had taken advantage of the difficulties in which the Germans were involved. John, a son or brother of the younger *^ Schmidt, ii. 235-6 ; Luden, vii. Pertz, iv. 687 ; Luden, viL 361. 361, ^ Sismondi, R^p. Ital. i. 70, 253-4. * See the Life of Henry by Adelbold, ' Thietmar, vi. 6; Luden,^ vii. 375^, who styles Harduin "episcopicida." ™ lb. 430. 54 ROMAN FACTIONS. Book V. Crescentius,'^ for some years governed Rome with the title of patrician, as the head of a republican administra- tion.** It would seem that to him three popes, who filled the chair from 1004 to 1012, were indebted for their elevation. But on the death of the last of these, Sergius IV.,P which followed closely on that of the patrician, the disposal of the papacy was disputed by A.D. 1012. ^jjQj-j^gj. party, headed by the counts of Tusculum, who, like the Crescentians, were descended from the notorious Theodora, her daughter Marozia having married their ancestor Alberic.*i The Tusculan party set up a pope named Benedict, whom they con- trived to maintain against all opposition. Gregory, the popular or Crescentian pope, was expelled from the city, and set off for Germany to implore the aid of Henry.' The king was not unwilling to have a pretext for going to Rome, where he was received with the greatest honours, Feb. 14, 3,nd was made advocate of the church, which 1014. he swore faithfully to protect. But the visit resulted in the establishment not of Gregory, but of his rival Benedict, from whom Henry received the imperial crown.^ ■ See Luden, vii. 408. Gregory, or Gregory drove out Bene- • Sismondi, Rep. lul. L 112. diet. But the second supposition (al- P Sergius was before called Bucca thoughsupportedbyLuden, vii. 617-19) Porci, or Os Porci {Bocca di Porco), implies an almost inconceivable awk- and on his election discarded the un- wardness in the chronicler's language, comely name (Thietmar, vi. 61). He while there is no need to assume that has been confounded with Sergius II. the claimant who applied to Henry (a.d. 844), to whom the first example was the same whom he eventually of such a change of name has conse- supported. See Schrcjckh, xxii. 322-3; quently been referred. But the earliest note on Mosheim, ii. 328 ; Gfrorer, iv. real instance was that of Octavian or 87 ; Jaffe, 356 ; Gregorov. iv. 15. John XII. (see p. 20). See Ciacon. » Thietmar, vi. 61 ; vii. i ; Giesebr. i. 763-s ; Murat. VI. i. 43 ; Schr5ckh, ii. 125. Bemo, abbot of Reichenau, xxii. 322. says that in his own hearing Henry 1 Milman, ii. 421. asked why the Nicene creed was not ' There has been much dispute as to sung in the mass, and was told that the meaning of a passage in Thietmar, the Roman church, having been always n. 6i— whether Benedict drove out orthodox, did not need so to use it Chap. VI. a. u. 1004-20. BENEDICT Vlll. 55 Benedict VIII., a man of ability and vigour, enjoyed greater power than his immediate predecessors, who had been subordinate to the Crescentian family.* His energy was displayed in opposition both to the Greeks (with whom the Crescentian party had been connected)'^ and to the Saracens. He induced the Pisans to attack the infidels in Sardinia, where the Christian inhabitants were oppressed and persecuted; and the expedition resulted in the conquest of the island.^ When a Saracen chief sent Benedict a sack full of chestnuts with a message that he would return at the head of a like number of warriors, the pope sent it back filled with grains of millet, telling the Saracen that, if he were not content with the evil which he had already done, he should find an equal or greater multitude of men in arms ready to oppose him.y In 1020 Benedict went into Germany, ostensibly for the consecration of the church of St. Stej)hen ^ at Bamberg ; but the journey had also the more secret object of asking for aid against the Saracens, and he persuaded the emperor to lead his troops once more into Italy, where Henry delivered Rome from its danger by the overthrow of the enemy.* but by the emperor's desire it was * Not, as some writers say, of the introduced. (De Ofhcio Missael, 2, cathedral— that having been consecra- I'atrol. cxlii.) The answer is incon- ted in loii or 1012 (Pertz, xvii. 635-6 ; Fistent with the explanation proposed Pagi, xvi. 469 ; Giesebr. ii. 62), — by Martene (De Antiq. Eccl. Ritibus, although the pope on this occasion 1. 138)- -that the creed was saiii, bestowed additional privileges on the though not stmg. It is more probable see. Ep. 25 (Patrol cxxxix.); Giesebr. that the omission arose out of the ii. 171. controversy as to Filiogue in the time °- Annal. Quedl. loao ; Vita Henrici, of Charlemagne (see vol. iii. p. 159). cc. 25, se(iq. ap. Pertz, iv. ; Gfrorer, Mabill. Annal. iv. 235 ; Schrockh, xxii. iv. 126. It was probably at Bamberg 324-5. See Krazer de Liturgiis, 451. that Henry granted a charter which 'Gfrorer, iv. 92 ; Giesebr. ii. 123, has sometimes been referred to his visit 174. to Rome in 1014. By this the dona- " GfrSrer, iv. 12a. tions of former emperors are confirmed, « Chron. Pisan. ap. Murat. vi. 108, and the new see of Bamberg, with the 167, abbey of Fulda, especially made over y Thietmar, vii. 31, to the papacy, while it is provided 56 THE NORMANS Book V. A new power had lately appeared in the south of Italy. The Normans, after their conversion, had caught up with peculiar enthusiasm the passion for pilgrimages which was then so general. Companies of them — usually armed, for defence against the dangers of the way — passed through France and Italy, and, after visiting Monte Gargano, which was famous for an appearance of the archangel Michael, ** they took ship from the southern harbours of the peninsula for the Holy Land.*^ Early in the eleventh century, a body of about forty Norman pilgrims, who had returned from the east in a vessel belonging to Amalfi, happened to be at Salerno when the place was attacked by a Saracen force. The prince, Guaimar, was endeavouring to raise the means of buying ofif the infidels ; but the Normans, after giving vent to their indignation at the cowardice of the inhabitants, begged him to furnish them with arms, sallied forth against the enemy, and by their example roused the spirit of the Greeks to resistance. The prince rewarded their aid with costly presents, and offered them inducements to remain with him ; and although they declined the invita- tion for themselves, they undertook, at his request, to make his circumstances known in their own country.^ The sight of the rich and unknown fniits of the south,® of the silken dresses and splendid armour which they carried that the pope is to be chosen in the * See the lessons of the Roman Bre- presence of the imperial commissioners viary. May 8 ; Acta SS., Sept. t. viii. (Pertz, Leges, ii. App. 174). Schrockh 54-63- (xxii. 323-4) and Planck (iii. 373) speak " Giannone, ii. 150-1. of it as certainly spurious ; but Pertz, ** lb. 152. GfrSrer (iv. 12), Giesebrecht (ii. 172-3), • So in an earlier age Narscs is said and Villeraain (Hist, de Gregoire to have sent to the Lombards in Pan- VII. i. 237) suppose it to be only inter- nonia, "multimoda pomorum genera polated. Gieseler gives no opinion aliarumque rerum species quarum (II. i. 224). See a dissertation by Italia ferax est," by way of inviting Cenni, Patrol, xcviii. 609, seqq. ; them into Italy (see vol. ii. p. 319). Murat. Annal. VI. i. 60 ; and on Paul. Diacon. dc Gestis Langob. iL 5 the dite, see Pagi .ind Mansi. xvi. (Patrol, xcv.). S16 Chap. VI. a.d. ioi6-ag. IN ITALY. 57 home, excited the adventurous spirit of the Normans.^ A chief named Osmond Drengot, who was on VT. 1-- J 1 • A.D. 1016. uneasy terms with his duke in consequence of having slain a nobleman who enjoyed the prince's favour,^ resolved to go into Italy with his family. He waited on the pope, who advised him to attack the Greeks of Apulia, and before reaching Monte Gargano the band was increased to the number of about a hundred warriors;^ These adventurers entered into the service of the neigh- bouring princes and republics,' mixed in their quarrels, and aided them, although not with uniform success, against the Saracens and the Greeks. They were rein- forced by outlaws of the neighbourhood, and by fresh migrations of their countrymen ; they obtained grants from Henry and from the government of Naples, founded and fortified the town of Aversa in 1029, and established themselves as an independent power, with a territory which was divided into twelve counties — their chief ' Chron. Casin. iii. 37 ; Amatus, i. and Le Provost's note. 17-19, i.e. 'L'Ystoirede li Normant,' *> Rad. Glaber, iii. i ; Sisraondi, iv. published by the Soc. de I'Hist. de 161-2. France, Paris, 1835 an old translation j .. ^^^^ ^oc. nunc iUo contempto. plus tri- of a chronicle written by Amatus, a buenti monk of Monte Cassino, while Deside- Semper adhaerebant, servire libentius illi rius (afterwards pope Victor III.), was Omnes gaudebant a quo plus accipiebant. abbot of that house (Petr . Diac. de VV. ^"^- ^//"'«^. i- ^^-4. (Ptrtz, ix.) Illustr. Casin. 20, Patrol, cxlviii. ; Tosti, " I'la quidem teUus nuUius muneris expers, Storia di Mtecass. i. 348-54, 417-19). Foetibus arboreis uberrima, vitibus. agris, The editor, M. Champollicn-Figeac(p. ^'^'^"' " *=^''"' "'""''l"^ ^«'=°'« ... . r 1 1 • , nitebat ; xlvi. seqq.) identifies the chronicler Sed vulgus stoHdum, pravum. rude, futile. with a bishop of Nusco. (See Giesel. vanum. II. ii. 236; Giannone, ii. 149.) The Otia long^a sequi solitum, fugiensque time of this bishop, St. Amatus, how- laboris, ever, is matter of dispute, as, while ^^'"'^ manuque pigrum. nee pace nee ' , , . . . , utile bello, some place him in the nth century, t7,„„ „:,: „^. .. -- ., , „*,, ,. , , . , , , ■" Ergo viri potiundi fimbus the Bollandists date his death so late iUis as 1193. Acta SS., Aug. 3, pp. 709-10. Spem rapiunt animo," etc. Giesebrecht places the chronicler's \Pseud6\ Gunther. Ligurinus, i. 686, death in 1093 (ii- 57o). which is the ^^^ year given by Ughelli (vii. 533) tor It would seem that even before this the death of the bishop. time there were many Normans serving K Amatus, i. 20 ; Guil. Gemet. vii. as mercenaries in Italy. Finlay, •^(Patrol, cxlix.); Order. Vital. 535, ' Greece and Trebizond,' 6a. 58 CONRAD fl. Bock V. bearing the title of duke of Apulia^ But they soon dis- played the habits of robbers, and were at war with all around them. Churches and monasteries were especial sufferers from their rapacity.^ Both Henry and Benedict died in 1024. The Tusculans filled the papacy with a brother of the deceased pope, named John, in whose favour they bought the suffrages of the Romans with a large sum of money — a proceeding which the strength which they had by this time acquired would perhaps have rendered unnecessary, but for the circumstance that John was a layman.™ As Henry was childless, the empire was again without an heir. The Sept. 8, choice of the electors fell on Conrad of Fran- 1024. conia, who was descended from a daughter of Otho the Great ° and is styled the Salic, probably in order to signify that he sprang from the noblest race of the Franks.^ A difficulty was raised by Aribo, archbishop of Mentz, and other bishops, on the ground that Conrad had contracted a marriage within the fifth degree ; he was even required to renounce either his wife or the dignity to which he had been chosen. But he firmly refused to consent to a separation, and his queen was crowned at Cologne by the archbishop, Pili- grin, who, after having joined in the opposition, requested that he might be allowed to perform the ceremony.? The election of Conrad was justified by a course of govern- ment which occasioned the saying that his throne stood on the steps of Charlemagne.'i •^ Gul. App. L 165-87 ; Giannone, ii. Pertz, xi. ; Stenzel, i. 8-14 ; Luden, 173, seqq. viii. 17-24. By this Piligrin hoped to > Qui. App. i. 232 ; Rad. Glaber, iii. supersede the influence of the primate I ; Gibbon, v. 326, seqq. ; Sismondi, Aribo, who had crowned Conrad at R^p. Ital. i. 173-4. Mentz, but had refused to crown Gisela. ™ Rad. Glab. iv. i ; Planck, iii. 370. Giesebr. ii. 226-8. ■ Pagi, xvi. 546. 1 " Sella Chuonradi habet ascensoria • Schmidt, ii. 931-4 ; Giesebr. ii. Caroli ; " or, in poetical form, 218-25. " chounradus Caroli premit ascensona P Wippe, Vita Chlionradi, c. 2. ap. regis." Wippo, f^ Chap. VI. ad. 1024-33. CONRAD IL S9 It was now considered that the kingdom of Italy de- pended on Germany, and that the German sovereign was entitled to the empire, but was not actually emperor until his coronation at Rome."" In 1026 Conrad was crowned as king of Italy at Milan by the archbishop Heribert." He was met by the pope at Como, and, after having sup- pressed a formidable insurrection at Ravenna, he received the imperial crown at Rome on Easter-day 1027.* The ceremony was rendered more imposing by the presence of two kings — Canute of England and Denmark," who had undertaken a pilgrimage, and returned with a grant of privileges for the English church ;^ and Rodolph of Pro- vence, to whose dominions Conrad succeeded in 1032, by virtue of a compact which had been made between the king and the late emperor.^ From Rome Conrad pro- ceeded into the south, where he received the oath of fealty from the local princes, bestowed fresh grants on the Nor- mans, and took measures for organizing a resistance to the Greeks.'' On the death of John XIX., in 1033, the Tusculan party appointed to the popedom his cousin Theophylact, a boy of ten or twelve years of age.^ But this extravagant stretch of their power resulted in its overthrow. The young pope, who styled himself Benedict IX., appeared to be intent on renewing the worst infamies of the preceding ' Pagi, xvi. 558 ; Hallam, M. A. i. visit to Rome in 1031 ; but Wippo, a 22-4. Henry II., until crowned by the contemporary, seems preferable as au- pope, styled himself Kmg- of the thority. See the Mon. Hist. Brit. Romans, (Diplom. 60-1, Patrol. 429, 821. cxxxix. ; Cenni, ib. xcviii. 664), and ^ Wilklns, i. 297. such became the practice. Poggio y Rodolph for a time attempted to objects to it, as giving the idea that set aside the compact, on the ground rex was a lower title than imperator. that it had been made with Henry, Hist. Florent in Murat. xx. 381. not as king of the Germans, but as his " Luden, viii. 45. nephew and natural heir. Luden, viii. * Wippo, 13-16. 32 ; Giesebr. ii. 144-6, 232, 272-80. " He was not yet king of Norway ' Wippo, 17 ; Luden, \\\\. 54. CThorpe, n, on Flor. Vigom. i. 185). * Baron. 1033. 5-8. The English writers place Canute's 6o TROaBLES OF ITALY. Book V. century ; his shameless debaucheries, although they have been questioned, are established on the testimony of one of his successors — Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, who in 1086 ascended the papal chair as Victor III.* Conrad had chiefly owed his Italian kingdom to the influence of Heribert archbishop of Milan, who had op- posed the attempt of the nobles to set up a French rival, Odo of Champagne.*' The archbishop relied on the interest which he had thus established, and, elated by his spiritual dignity, by his secular power, and by the success which had attended his undertakings, he behaved with great violence in the commotions of the country.^ These had become very serious. While the nobles cried out against the bishops, their own retainers, or valvassors^^ rose against them; bloody conflicts took place, and Conrad, at Heribert's invitation, again went into Italy for the purpose of investigating the cause of the troubles.* In an assembly at Pavia, the nobles charged the archbishop with having deprived many of them of their fiefs, and with having invited their vassals to insurrection ; and Heribert, instead of attempting to clear himself, addressed the emperor with such insolence that an order was given for his arrest. No Italian would dare to touch him ; but the Germans were less scrupulous, and he was carried off as a prisoner.^ The national feeling of the *• Bibl. Patr. xviii. 853. Mr. Lea (on Leo, Gesch. v. Italien, L 401-a. Sacerdotal Celibacy, 186) gives from ^ See Murat. Ann. VL i. 139 ; Sa- Ludewig's Reliquiae Msctorum., xiL vigny, iii. 105 ; iv. 478. 14s, a story that Benedict after death *■ Herm. Contract. Ann. 1035 ; Wippo, appeared in the form of a bear, and 34 ; Arnulf, ii. 12. with the ears and tail of an ass, declar- 6 Landulf. sen. ii. 22 ; Annates Mag- ing that, as his life had been beastly, deb. ap. Pertz, xvi, 171 ; Murat. Ann. he was condemned to wear the shape VL i. 145 ; Stenzel, i. 61 ; Sismondi, of a beast until the judgment-day, after Rep. Ital. i. 77-8 ; Luden, viii. 11 1-16 : which he was to be plunged into hell. Giesebr. ii. 629. Heribert himself « Wippo, 7 ; Arnulf. Mediol. ii. 2 refers to this capture in a deed of gift (Pertz, viii.) ; Giesebr. ii. 313, seqq. to a monastery. Ughelli, iv. io> ^ Arnulf, ii. 10 ; Stenzel, i. 59. See Chap. VI. a.d. 1033-37- HERIBERT OF MILAN. 6l Italians was shocked by such an act against so eminent a prince of the church ; even the archbishop's enemies shared in the general indignation and alarm, while his partisans, by means of the clergy and monks, industriously agitated the multitudes. Long trains of penitents in sack- cloth and ashes swept solemnly through the streets, and filled the churches with their litanies, imploring St. Am- brose to deliver his flock.^ The guardians to whose care Heribert had been committed allowed him to escape; he returned to Milan, and held out the city against the emperor, who, finding himself unable to take it, desolated the surrounding country.^ Conrad found it convenient to ally himself with pope Benedict, who had lately been ex- pelled by the Romans, and whom, in other circumstances, he would have avoided with disgust ; an anathema was uttered against Heribert for his rebellion, and the pope sanctioned the nomination of one of the imperial chaplains to the see of Milan.'^ But both clergy and people adhered to the archbishop, who now offered the crown of Italy to Odo of Champagne. The tempting proposal induced Odo to relinquish an expedition which he had made into Conrad's Lotharingian territory, and to set out towards the Alps ; but he was intercepted and killed by Gozzelo, duke of Lorraine, and the emperor became undisputed master of Lombardy.^ The pope, in reward for his services, was conducted to Rome and reinstated in his office by Conrad; and the vices which he had before displayed were now rendered more odious by the addition of tyrannical cruelty towards those who had opposed him.™ After hav'ag again visited the south of Italy, the emperor returned to Germany, with health shaken by a h Landulf, ii. 22. Chron. S. Laurent. Leod. in Patrol • Herm. Contract. A.D. 1037 (Pertz, clxx. 689. v.); Wippo, 35 ; Arnulf, ii. 13-14. * Herm. A.D. 1037 ; Amulf, ii. 14. •^ Herm. Contr. a.d. 1038 ; Annal. " Luden, viii. 127, 193 ; GfrOrer, Saxo, ap. Pertz, vi. 68o-i ; Rupert. Tuit. 384. 62 DEATH OF CONRAD II. Book V sickness which had been fatal to many of his followers. The last months of his Hfe were spent in travelling oyer various parts of his dominions ; and at Aries, in the autumn of 1038, he republished a law which he had before promulgated at Milan, and which became the foundation of the feudal law of Europe — that the in- ferior vassals, instead of being removable at the will of their lords, should possess a hereditary tenure, which was to be forfeited only in case of a condemnation for felony pronounced against them by the judgment of their equals." On the 4th of June 1039, Conrad died at Utrecht.^ Heribert found means of once more establishing himself in Milan,? was reconciled with Conrad's successor, Henry III., and held the see, although not without much disquiet from the conten tions between the nobles and the popular party, until his death in 1045.1 In 1044 Benedict was again driven from Rome, and John, bishop of Sabina, was set up in his room, under the name of Sylvester III. Within three months, how- ever, Benedict was able to expel his rival ; and — induced, according to one account, by love for the daughter of a nobleman who refused to allow the marriage except on condition of his vacating the papacy — he sold his interest in it to John Gratian, a presbyter who enjoyed a high " Pertz, Leges, ii. 39, or Patrol. scribes it as a lofty pole fixed on a cli. 1043 ; Giannone, ii. 168 ; Sismondi, carriage, with two white flags pendant iv. 228 ; Luden, viii. 121. The enact- from a golden apple at the top of the ment of Milan is referred by some to pole, and midway a figure of the 1026, but was more probably in 1037. Saviour on the cross, with extended See Sismondi, R. I. i. 74; Hallam, arms, " ut qualiscunque foret belli M A. i. 118. eventus, hoc signo [Mediolanenses] ° Wippo, 39. confortarentur inspecto." ii. 16, and P It was at this time that the arch- Bethmann's note ; Giesebr. ii. 338. bishop adapted the cctrroccio, which ** Annal. Saxo, ap. Pertz, vi. 684 ; had before been used in religious pro- Amulf, ii. 15-20; Murat. Ann. VI. i. cessions, to the purpose of a military 166, etc. Wippo says that Henry III. sUndard, in which character it after- disapproved of his father's proceedings wards became famous. Arnulf de- against the archbishop, 35. Chap. VI. a.d. 10.18-44 THREE POPES. 63 reputation for austerity of life. But Benedict »vas disap- pointed in his love, and resumed his pretensions to the see, so that Rome was divided between three popes — " three devils," as they are styled by an unceremonious writer of the century^ — each of them holding possession of one of the principal churches — St. John Lateran, St. Peter's, and St. Mary Major.» Benedict was supported by the Tusculan party, and Sylvester by a rival faction of nobles, while Gratian, who had assumed the name of Gregory VI., was the pope of the people.* The state of things was miserable ; revenues were alienated or inter- "■ Benzo, IV. vii. 2 (Pertz, xi. 670). • Herm. Contr. a.d. 1044 ; Bonizo, 801 ; Desiderius (Victor III.), Dial. 3 (Bibl. Patr. xviii. 853); Bollinger, i. 432 ; Luden, viii. 636 ; Milman, ii. 426 ; etc. Here again Bayle's remark, quoted at p. 30, will apply. Waltram, bishop of Naumburg, states that Bene- dict, on account of his ignorance, caused another to be consecrated with him for the performance of the eccle- siastical offices ; and that, as this arrangement offended many persons, a third pope was set up instead of the two. (De Investitura Episcoporum, ap. Schard. 74.) Otho of Freising (vi. 32, ap. Urstis. t. i.) says that, after three popes — Benedict, Sylvester, and a presbyter named John — were already set up, Gratian bought himself in as a fo7er(k— allowing Benedict to retain the revenue from England. This story is followed by Baronius (1044. ii), Chacon (i. 781), and Planck (iii. 381-6), but is generally considered erroneous (Pagi, xvi. 659 ; Giesel. II. i. 226). Bonizo (801) places the setting up of Sylvester later than that of Gratian. Luden, who chiefly follows Bonizo, thinks that the nobles opposed to the Tusculan party, wishing to get rid of Benedict, fixed on John Gratian as the fittest person for the popedom ; but that he, judging the time unfavourable to the interest of the nobles (more especially as Henry III. had just, in opposition to that class, promoted a clerk of humble birth, named Guy, to Milan), resolved to rely on the people, and bought their suffrages ; that when Benedict had been persuaded to retire (partly from a feeling of his unfitness for the office), John was chosen by the acclamation of the people ; that the nobles, finding themselves deceived in him, set up Sylvester ; and the Tuscu- lans, conceiving from the rivalry of the other parties a hope of re-establishing their own interest, again put Benedict forward (viii. 193-4). Gfrorer, as usual, has a theory which is also in some degree countenanced by Giesebrecht (ii. 412-13) — that John Gratian was an instrument of the reforming monastic party, headed by Odilo of Cluny ; and that the money which he spent was supplied by an association, founded by William, late duke of Aquitaine, which aimftd at rendering the church independent of the secular power (iv. 387, 395-401). Jaffe dates the expul- sion of Benedict within the first seven days of January 1044 : the setting-up of Sylvester, about Feb. 22 ; his expul- sion by Benedict on April 10 ; the ssdv to Gratian on May i t Gfr5rer, iv. 385. 64 GREGORY VI. Book V. cepted, churches fell into ruin, and disorders of every kind prevailed." That Gregory was regarded with ardent hope by the reforming party in the church appears from a letter written on his elevation by Peter Damiani, a person who became very conspicuous in the later history of the time.^ But it is said that the urgency of circumstances obliged him to devote himself to expeditions against the Saracens and the robber chiefs who impoverished the Roman treasury by plundering pilgrims of the gifts intended for it ; and that on this account the Romans provided him with an assistant for the spiritual functions of his office.^ The scandalous condition of affairs cried aloud for some remedy, and Peter, archdeacon of Rome, went into Germany to request the intervention of Henry III., the son and successor of Conrad.^ The king resolved to set aside all the claimants of the apostolic chair,* and, before setting out for Italy, he gave a token of the course which he intended to pursue by citing before him and depriving Widgers, who had been encouraged by the dis- orders of Rome to thrust himself into the archbishoprick of Ravenna.^ At Parma he assembled a council, but, as no pope was present, the investigation into the pretensions of the rivals was adjourned.^ Gregory met the king at Dec 20 Piacenza, and by his desire convened a second 1046. council at Sutri.* The other claimants of the papacy were cited, but did not appear ; Benedict, who " D5llinger i. 433. " ^^^ Sunamitis nupsit tribus maritis. Ep. Rex Henrice, Omnipotentis vice, ^ „,' ' *, , ... r.. Solve connubium, trifonne, dubium 1 " y W. Malmesb. 1. u. c. 201 ; Sis- ^^^^ ^ ^^ mondi, Rdp. Ital. i. 116. See Mu- rat. Ann. VI. i. 178 ; Milman, ii. Cf. Annal. Palidens., ib. xvi. 68. 427 ; see too, Joh. Petrib. ap. Sparke, • Victor. III. Dial. 3 (Bibl. Patr. 80, ^v"i- S53) « Bonizo, 801. The Saxon annalist " Gesta Epp. Leodiens. (Patrol gives a rhyming prayer, as having cxlii. 747): Luden, viii. 197. been addressed to Henry by a ' D5Uinger, i. 433. hermit :— " Bonizo, 801 ; Ludea, Chap. VI. a.d. 1046. COUNCIL OF SUTRI. 65 had retired to a monastery, was not mentioned in the pro- ceedings ; Sylvester was declared to be an intruder, was deposed from the episcopate and the priesthood, and con- demned to be shut up in a cloister. Gregory, who presided over the council, and had perhaps shared in inviting Henry's interference, was then, to his astonishment, desired to relate the circumstances of his own elevation. With the simplicity which is described as a part of his character,® he avowed the use of bribery (which was perhaps too notorious to be denied) ; but he said that as, in consideration of his repute, large sums of money had been bestowed on him, which he had intended to expend on pious objects, he had been led to employ a part of them in this manner by a wish to rescue the holy see from the tyranny of the nobles, from its calamities and disgrace. Some members of the council suggested to him that the use of such means was unwarrantable. At these words a new light broke in on the pope; he ac- knowledged that he had been deceived by the enemy, and requested the bishops to advise him.^ According to one account, they answered that he would do better to judge himself: whereupon he confessed himself unworthy of the papacy, and stripped off his robes in the presence of the council.^ Other writers state that he was warned to anticipate a deprivation by resigning ; while, according to a third statement, he was deposed.^ The papacy was vacant ; and Henry proceeded to fill it with a pope of his own selection. • Bonizo, 802. Nat. Alex. xiii. 10; Planck, iii. 387-9; ' lb. Schmidt, ii. 253 ; Dollinger, i, 433 ; 5 Victor, Dial, 3 (Bibl. Patr. xviii. Luden, viii. 202 ; Giesel. II. i. 227 ; 853). and the ingenious theories of Gfrorer, * Herm. Contr. a.d. 1046. See v. 424. VOL. iv; $l5 iSooKV CHAPTER VII. THE BRITISH CHURCHES — MISSIONS OF THE TENTH AND ELEVENTH CENTURIES. I. The most remarkable subject in the religious history of England between the death of Alfred and the Norman conquest is the struggle between the monks and the secukx' clergy. The distaste for monachism which had grown up among the Anglo-Saxons has been mentioned in a former chapter.* The long continued invasions of the Danes contributed to the decline of the system, not only by laying waste a multitude of religious houses and butchering or dispersing their inmates, but by compelling men to study almost exclusively the arts of self-preserva- tion and self-defence.^ Thus the monastic life became extinct in England ; and when Alfred attempted to revive it by founding a monastery for men at Athelney and one for women at Shaftesbury, it was found that, although Shaftesbury prospered under the government of one of the king's own daughters, no Englishman of noble or free birth could be persuaded to embrace the monastic profession ; so that Alfred was obliged to stock his establishment at Athelney with monks and children from abroad.^ In some of the religious houses which had suffered from the Danish ravages, a new class of inmates estab- lished themselves. Perhaps (as has been suggested) many of them were persons who had belonged to those inferior orders of the clergy which were not bound to celibacy. Such persons may, in the scarcity of other clerks, have been raised by bishops to the higher degrees, » Vol. iii. p. 22T. " Asser, in Mon. Hist. Brit. 493 5 "^ Lingard, A. S. C. iL 359> Chap. VII. a.d. 900-25. ENGLISH MONACHISM. 67 without being required to forsake their wives ; and the practice thus begun may have been extended to a general neglect of enforcing celibacy on the ministers of the church.^ From this and other causes it came to pass that the monasteries were occupied by a married clergy, among whom, without accepting too literally the gross accusations of their enemies, we may reasonably beUeve that there was much of irregularity and of worldly- mindedness.® The monastic life, properly so called, was no longer followed ; the Englishmen who wished to lead such a life either withdrew to lonely hermitages or betook themselves to foreign monasteries, among which that of Fleury on the Loire — lately reformed by Odo of Cluny, after having fallen into an utter decay of discipHne* — was the most favourite resort.^ Such was the state of things when Dunstan entered on his career of reform. Dunstan was born about the year 925, of noble parentage, in the neighbourhood of Glastonbury — a place which enjoyed a peculiar veneration, not only on account of the legends which made it the scene of the first preaching of Christianity in Britain by Joseph of Arima- thea,*^ but also from later associations. The fame of St. Patrick was fabulously connected with Glastonbury ; it was even said to be his burying-place, and on account of this connexion it was much frequented by Irish, some of whom lived there in the practice of strict devotion, although not bound by any monastic rule, and drew a large number of pupils from the surrounding country.* d Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 252-4. Collier, i. 15, seqq. Glastonbury was ^ See Kemble, ii. 454-7. the only British foundation which had f A.D. 930. Mabill. Annal. iii. 400-1. retained its sanctity in Anglo-Saxon 8 Vita Odonis, ap. Mabill. Acta SS. times. Palgrave, 'Anglo-Sax. Com- Ben. vii. 291 ; Vita Abbonis, ib. viii. monwealth,' i. 152. 36; Gerv. Dorob. ap. Twysden, 1645; > Will. INIalmesb. 1. c, 1688 ; Gesta Lingard, A. S. C, ii. 262. Regum, 22 ; Acta SS., Feb. i, p. 107; h W. Malmesb. de Antiq. Glaston. Mart. 17, p. 528. See Villanueva's Ecclesije, Patrol, clxxi.x. 1683. See edition of St. Patrick, 294-7, and the 68 btJNsTA^. ftooK V. Under these masters Dunstan became a proficient in the learning of the time, and acquired extraordinary accom- plishments in calligraphy, painting, sculpture, music, mechanics, and the art of working in metals, so that his skill and ingenuity brought on him the charge of magic.^ His earlier history abounds in details of rigid asceticism, in tales of strange miracles, of encounters with devils, and of fierce mental conflicts.^ Having been introduced at the court of king Edmund, he received from him the church of Glastonbury, with a grant of new privileges ; and he erected a magnificent abbey, which he filled with Benedictine monks — the first of their kind who had been seen in England for two hundred years.™ Dunstan acquired high office and powerful influence in the state. We are familiar from childhood with some version of the story of his contest with Edwy *' the All-fair " — how on the coronation-day he forcibly dragged the A.D. 95 -9. j^-^g ^^^j^ ^YiQ society of Ethelgiva, and com- pelled him to rejoin the boisterous festivity of his nobles f notes ; Bridfert. Vita Dunst. 5 (Patrol. the coarse language wJiich Dr. Lingard cxxxix.), where the Glastonbury saint is (A. S. C. ii. 274-5, 445"?) quotes from said to have been Patrick the younger. monkish writers, as proving that she k Osbern, ap. Wharton, ii. pp. 92-5. w^as not queen, but a woman of loose See for Dunstan the Acta SS., May reputation, is nothing more than such 19. writers would have applied to any ^ Osbern, 96, seqq. The most famous woman whose marriage was a breach of his victories over the devil, although of the extravagant prohibitions then placed by local tradition at the archi- established— as Dr. Lingard must have episcopal residence of Mayfield, where very well known (seeTheiner, i. 541-2). "St. Dunstan's anvil, hammer, and There is also much disingenuousness in tongs" are still exhibited (Murray's Dr. Lingard's account of the later story Handbook for Kent and Sussex, ed. i, (ii. 277-8). See Turner, Hist. Anglos. p. 231), belongs to the time when he was ii. 252 ; Lappenb. ii. 132 , Milman, iii. » monk of Glastonbury. Osbern, c. 14. 20. The clearness and fairness of Mr. >" W. Malmesb. G. R. 143. Osbern Hallam (M. A. i. 516 ; Suppl. Notes, (100) has misled some writers into sup" 185) present a striking contrast to the posing that they were the first who had Romanist historian's artifices. In the ever appeared in England. See Whar- Supplemental Notes, Mr. Hallam ton, ii. 91-2 ; Kemble, ii. 451-2. comes nearer than before to the com- " As to the controversy respecting mon story. Mr. Soames, who here Ethelgiva's character and position, I takes an unexpected line, is favourable shall content myself *^ith saying that to Odo, on the strength of his scacty Chap. VII. a.d. 935-60. DUNSTAN. 69 the expulsion of the monks by Edwy from Glastonbury and Abingdon, the only monasteries which then belonged to them ; the exile of Dunstan, and his triumphant return as a partisan of the king's brother Edgar, who forced Edwy to a partition of the kingdom, and soon after be- came sovereign of the whole. Under Edgar, Dunstan enjoyed an unHmited power. In 958 he obtained the bishoprick of Worcester, to which in the following year that of London was added j and in 960 he was advanced to the primacy of Canterbury, as successor of his friend and supporter Odo.** He received the pall at Rome from John XII. ,p and, with the approbation of the pope and of the king, he began a reform of the clergy. Edgar, whose co-operation was exacted as a part of the penance incurred by his having carried off a novice or pupil from the nunnery of Wilton,'^ is said to have inveighed at a council in the severest terms against the corruptions of the seculars.'' The sees of Worcester and Winchester were filled with two of the archbishop's most zealous partisans — Oswald, a nephew of the late primate,^ and Ethelwold, abbot of Abingdon, who was styled "the father of monks," and was a confidential adviser of the king.* Seculars were ejected wherever it was possible ; all the higher preferment was exclusively bestowed on the regu- lars ; monks were brought from Fleury and other foreign monasteries, to fill the places of the expelled clergy, and remains (Patrol, cxxxili.), and even may be found in Aelred, ap. Twysden, palliates the hamstringing of the 360, or in Wilkins, i. 246) is probably a queen ! (182-7). Dean Kook's belief later invention. See Lingard, A. S, C. (i. 380), that Odo was dead when this ii. 288. took place, seems open to question. ' See his Life in the Acta SS., Feb. o W. Malmesb. Gesta Pontif. (Pa- 29. trol. clxxix 1453) ; Lingard, A. S. C. ' Saxon Chron. a.d. 984 ; Flor ii. 281-2. Wigorn. i. 139 ; Hist Abingdon, ed P Joh. XII. Ep. 9 (Patrol, cxxxili.) ; Stevenson (Chr. and Mem.), i. 356 Bridfert. Vita Dunst. 27-8. Ethelwold, like Dunstan, was famous 4 Osbem, iii. for his mechanical skill, and was ■■ The speech ascribed to him (which sxpert in bell-founding. 70 CONTEST BETWEEN MONKS Book V. to serve as examples to the English of the true monastic life." The canons of Winchester are described by Ethelwold's biographer as sunk in luxury and licentious- ness ; they refused to perform the offices of the church, and it is said that, not content with marrying, they in- dulged themselves in the liberty of changing their wives at pleasure.^ The bishop, armed with a special authority from the pope, John XIIL, summoned them to appear before himself and a commissioner from the king. Throwing down on the floor a number of monastic cowls, he required the clergy either to put on these or to quit their preferments. Three only complied, and the rest were dismissed with pensions from the property of the church.^ The reformation of Worcester was effected by means of another kind. Oswald, with a company of monks, established in the city a service which rivalled that of the cathedral. The people flocked to the new comers ; and the canons of the cathedral, finding them- selves deserted, were reduced to acquiesce in the bishop's measures.^ In other parts of his diocese, however, Oswald purged the monasteries by a forcible expulsion of the married clergy, and established monks in their room/ During the reign of Edgar, forty-seven monasteries were founded, restored, or recovered from the secular clergy. The monks were governed by a rule ° Hist. Abingd. ii, 259 ; Theiner, i. reference is given. 549. Fleury also contributed to the ' Vita Ethelw. ap. Mabill. Acta SS. advancement of learning in England. Ben, vii. 602. See the Life of Abbo, who was invited « n, ^^ . joh. XIII. ad Edgar, by Oswald, and taught at Ramsey, cc. ap. Hard. vi. 640 ; Lingard, A. S. C. 4-6 (Patrol, cxxxix. 390-3). Cardinal ii. 291 ; Kemble, ii. 461. The old Pitra says that Abbo "n'eut besoin biographer says that some of the que de trois ans pour cre'er en Angle- seculars attempted to poison Ethel- terre des e'coles de mathematicians wold, but that he escaped by exerting qui, cinquante ans apres lui, le dis- his faith in the promise, Mark xvi. 18. putaient aux plus florissantes de la Mabill. 1. c. ; Hist. Abingd. ii. 261. France, et I'emportaient sur celle des x Eadmer. ap. Wharton, U. aoc, Arabes k Cordoue." (Etudes sur les t Vita, 7, Actes des SS., xciiL). But for this bo ' Chap. VII. a, d. 960-78. AND SECULAR CLERGY. 71 modified from that of St. Benedict, and chiefly derived from Fleury.2 Under the next king, Edward the Martyr, a reaction appeared to be threatened. Some noblemen expelled the regulars from monasteries situ- ' '^'^ ated on their lands, and reinstated the seculars with their wives and children.* Councils were held for the consideration of the matter. At Winchester, Dunstan is said to have gained a victory *by means of a crucifix which uttered words forbidding the proposed change.^ At Calne, where the cause of the seculars was eloquently pleaded by a Scottish or Irish bishop named Beornhelm, Dunstan solemnly told the assembly that he committed the cause of his church to God — on which, it is said, the floor of the hall in which the council was assembled im- mediately gave way; some were killed and many were severely hurt ; while the archbishop and the friends who surrounded him were saved by the firmness of the beam over which they stood.<^ The story of the speaking crucifix appears to be a fiction ; ^ the other may be ex- plained without the supposition either that a miracle was wrought in behalf of Dunstan, or that he deliberately con- trived a fraud which involved the death or bodily injury of his opponents.® The regular clergy got the victory » Hist. Abingd. i. 121, 344 ; Lingarc* cious. Mr. Turner condemns him A. S. C. ii. 299. (Hist. Ang.-Sax. ii. 273-4, and Append. * Flor. Wigorn. a.d. 975. to B. vL c. 7), but Mr. Soames is dis- ^ Osbern, 112 ; Wilkins, 1. 261. posed to acquit him (205X Sir J. Southey refers this to ventriloquism. Mackintosh argues that a contrivance Vindiciae, 258. was very improbable (i. 55). Dr. Lap- •^ Osbern, 112 ; Chron. Sax. a.d. penberg points out that, according to 978. Some writers say that Dunstan Florence and the Saxon Chronicle., the alone escaped. See the quotations in sufiferers were not* the secular clergy Turner's Appendix. (the objects of Dunstan's enmity), but ** Soames, 202-3. the nobles of the realm (i. 415); and • Fuller (i. 106), Southey (Vindi- parallels have been produced— as that cise, 254), and Dean Milman (iii. 20), of a diet at Erfurt, in 1184 (Annal. point to the archbishop's known skill Pegav. ap. Pertz, xvi. 265 ; Albert. \n mechanical contrivances as suspi- Stad. ib. 560 ; Arnold. Lubec. iv. »«J, 72 REGULAR AND SECULAR CLERGY. Book V. for the time, but it was very imperfectly carried out. With the exception of Worcester and Winchester, no cathedrals were reformed. Dunstan, although he lived to 988,* made no attempt to introduce a change at Canterbury — whether it were that he was afraid to venture on such a work, or that reform appeared less necessary there than elsewhere ; ^ and his coadjutor Oswald, on being translated to the archbishoprick of York, held that see for twenty years (972-992) without disturbing the seculars of his province.^ The renewal of the Danish invasions diverted the general attention from such matters. Canterbury was transferred to monks by archbishop Aelfric, in 1003 ;^ but the other cathedrals remamed in possession of the seculars until the end of the Anglo-Saxon period, and throughout the kingdom the triumph of the one or of the other party depended on their strength in each locality.^ At the council of and an English assize in the last cen- beam. For this, see Gibson, in Turner, tury (Churton, 250) ; to which may be ii. 281-2 ; Stevenson, n. on Sax. Chron. added one which occurred on a visit 73 ; Thorpe's transl. p. 99 ; and on the of Pius IX. to the church of St. general question, Collier, i. 469 ; Pal- Agnes, near Rome, in 1S55, aad which grave. Hist. Anglos. 280; Martineau, is there commemorated by a ludicrous 195. ' Pagi, xvi. 290. picture. That the sinking of the floor e Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 289. is said to have taken place immediately *• lb. 290. See Raine, i. 124, For after Dunstan had appealed to heaven the small extent and short duration of (a circumstance on which Turner and the reform, see Jos. Robertson, Pref, Southey much rely) may possibly be to Stat. Eccl. Scot, ccxiv. seqq. an exaggeration of a very familiar > Wilkins, i. 282 ; Sax. Chron, a.d. sort ; and,. if so, the suspicion of con- 995: Lingard, ii. 294; Thorn, ap, trivance is greatly weakened. Dr. Twysd. 1781. Florence of Worcester Lingard, with needless unfairness, gives ascribes the change to Abp. Sigeric, a turn to the story by representing the a.d. 990 (i. 149. See W. Malmesb. Saxon Chronicle as stating that Dun- Gesta Pontif. p. 32, ed. Hamilton). Stan escaped by catching at a beam. After the massacre of monks, with This is, indeed, countenanced by the archbishop Alphege, by the Danes, in version wliich Dr. Lingard quotes 1012, the discipline of Canterbury from Henry of Huntingdon — "trabe again decayed (Gervas. in Twysd. quadam apprehensa " (A. S. C. ii. 1650). Soon after the conquest an 302) ; but, as appears from more attempt was unsuccessfully made to accurate translations, the Chronicler eject the monks. See Alex. II. Ep, really says that the archbishop i/d^^rf, 144 (Patrol, cxlvii ). vfpporfed khnself^ or was stayed on a ''• Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 325-6, Chap. VII. IRELAND. 73 Enham, in 1009, it was laid down that all marriage of the clergy is improper ; but the council seems to have practically contented itself with attempting to suppress the greater evils which had arisen from such prohibi- tions — that clerks took more than one wife at a time, or discarded one for another.^ The secular clergy of England continued to marry, and their issue was regarded as legitimate.™ II. In common with other western countries, Ireland suffered severely from the ravages of the Northmen,^ and in resistance to these enemies the clergy frequently took to arms.*^ Favoured by the discords of the native chiefs, the Danes made extensive settlements in Ireland ; their princes were estabHshed at Dublin, Limerick, and Waterford —the last of these a town altogether of their own foundation.P Various tribes of Northmen contended for the possession of Dublin. But the power of the strangers was weakened by their internal feuds, and was at length irrecoverably broken at the great battle of Clontarf, fought on Good Friday 10 14, where Brian Boru, king of all Ireland, fell at the age of eighty-eight in lead- ing on his countrymen to victory.^ Dublin, Waterford, and Limerick, however, still remained in possession of the Danes. The Danes (or Ostmeti) of Dublin were gradually converted to Christianity. They would not. About however, receive bishops from the Irish, but ^'^' ^040' 1 C. 5 (Thorpe, 134). See Milman. sisted the pope in a matter of discipline iii. 21. (see below, c. ix. iii. 8). Dean Hook "1 Theiner, ii. 570. As to the cha- justly praises his ability as a statesman, racter of Dunstan, see Lappenberg, i. i. 410. 416-17 ; Kemble, ii. 449, 459, 460. His ° See Lanigan, iii. 270, seqq. 346, labours to revive learning deserve to be 366, 373, etc. ; King, 379, seqq. mentioned to his credit (Lingard, A. o lb. 386. S. C. ii. 310 ; Neander, vi. 93) ; and P lb. 389. also the firmness with which he re- q Lanigan, iii. 491 : King, 41^. 74 SCOTLAND. Book V. sought consecration for their pastors from the English church, with which their own race had become closely connected/ And it was by means of this Danish inter- course with England that Ireland was for the first time brought into connexion with the Roman church.^ III. The obscurity which hangs over the church- history of Scotland during this period has been lamented by all who have made that history the special subject of their inquiries.* The ancient chronicles have perished, and the story, instead of resting, as elsewhere, on the satisfactory evidence of contemporary narratives, must be sought out and pieced together by the laborious in- dustry and the doubtful guesses of the antiquary. Scot- land was much infested by the Danes, who succeeded in establishing themselves in the country to such a degree that a large Scandinavian element may to this day be traced among its population." In 806, they attacked lona, where sixty-eight of the monks were slain ; ^ and it appears that, in consequence of the dangers to which St. Columba's island sanctuary was exposed, Kenneth III. in 849 translated the patron's relics, and removed the seat of the Scottish primacy, to Dunkeld.^ From that time the abbots of Dunkeld exercised the same authority over the church which had before been vested in the ^ Lanfranc. Epp. 36-8. lately been collected in Mr. Skene's • King, 420. Lanigan dates the con- ' Chronicles of Picts and Scots,' Edin- version of these Danes in 948, and burgh, 1867; but their scantiness and the beginning of their connexion with the large mixture of fable which is Canterbury after the Norman con- unmistakable in them render them of quest. little use except to readers who make * E.£^., Russell, i. 89 ; Grub, i. 224. Scottish history their special study.] The reader will see how much I am " See Worsaae's 'Account of the indebted to Dr. Grub's learned work. Danes and Norwegians in England, His sources are, in great part, such as Scotland, and Ireland,' London, 1852. I could not have attempted to ex- » Grub, i. 125 ; T. Innes iio-n. plorc ; and he seems to have gathered J Grub, i. 129, Haddan-Stubbs, ». from them all that has yet been dis- 142-4, covered. [The oldest materials have Chap, VII. a. d. 806-1046, SCOTLAND. 75 abbots of lona ; but the abbot of lona continued to be the head of the Columbite order of monks.^ About 905 it is believed that Dunkeld itself became unsafe, and that the primacy was translated to St. Andrews ; * and in this more permanent seat it acquired a character more nearly resembling the primacy of other countries, by being vested in the bishops of St. Andrews, who were styled " Episcopi Scotorum," while the other bishops of the kingdom were subject to them in the same manner as they had formerly been to the successors of Columba in lona and Dunkeld.^ In the absence of certain information, writers of Scottish history have freely indulged in fables and wild conjec- tures. Nor has the national fondness for claiming eminent men as our countrymen been limited to those cases in which the ambiguous term Scotus might give some plausi- bility to the claim — such as that of the philosopher John, whose other designation, Erigena^ has been interpreted as meaning a native of Ayr 1 ^ Thus it has been attempted, in opposition to clear historical evidence, to maintain that Alcuin was a Scotsman ; ^ that Einhard, the biographer of Charlemagne, was a Scot whose real name was Kineard f that Raban Maur was a Scot, and a monk of Melrose ; ^ and even one of the more critical writers, although he grants the English birth of Alcuin, yet imagines that in the same age there was another Albinus,^ a native of Scotland, to whom he ascribes the authorship of the Caroline Books.^ It is unnecessary here to go into a controversy which has been waged as to a class of ecclesiastics styled » Haddan-Stubbs, ii. 161. Ireland, 59. » lb. 166. '' Spottisw. i. 42. » lb. 148, 172 ; Stuart, Pref. to • Dempst. 414. ' Book of Deer,' cii., cxxvii. ' lb. 545. « Dempster, 42, ed. Bannatyne ^ Alcuin is sometimes so calle^. Club; Spottiswoode, i. 93. See Ware, »• Skinner, i. 142. ^nti(^. of Ireland, 4-5; Writers of 76 SCOTLAND— CULDEES. Book V. Culdees/ in whom a precedent has been sought for the presbyterian form of church-government. Their name, which signifies servants of God—z, designation specially restricted to monks,^— is first found in Ireland ; ^ and the Culdees of Scotland appear to have been in reality a species of monks, who usually lived together in societies of twelve, with a prior at the head of each. Their dis- cipline, originally strict, became relaxed in consequence of the Danish invasions, and through the natural course of monastic institutions, so that they married, and transmitted their endowments to their children.™ But so far were they from rejecting the episcopal polity, that in many cases they were attached to cathedrals (as in the archiepiscopal church of York) ;" and in some places, as at St. Andrews, they claimed a share in the election of the bishops.° At St. Andrews they retained until the twelfth century the Scottish or Irish ritual, which had been used at York until the time of AlcuinP — celebrating their services in a retired corner of the church ; ^ but, notwith- standing this and other peculiarities, the contentions which are recorded between such societies and bishops did not relate to any difference in reHgion, but to questions of property or privileges.'' » For late notices of the Culdees, see " Hist. Fundationis Hospitalis S. Dr. Reeves' very learned dissertation Leonardi Ebor., in Monast. AngL vL (Transact, of Royal Irish Academy), 60S ; Raine, i. 154 ; Reeves, 59. Dubl. 1864; Acta Sanctorum, Oct. t. ° Stuart, cxx.-i. It was not until viii. 164-8 ; Joseph Robertson, Introd. 1273 that they were debarred from to Concilia Scotise, 204, seqq. ; Had- this at St Andrew's, and they strug- dan-Stubbs, ii. 175, seqq. For an gled to recover it afterwards. Reeves, account of the controversy, which was 40 ; Grub, i. 343 ; see Theiner,' Monu- begun by Blondel, Reeves, 67, seqq. menta,' 53, 67. Lanigan (iv, 301) '' lb. 1-2. wrongly styles them secular canons. ' A.D. 792, Haddan-Stubbs, ii. 175 ; Stuart, cxxii. p See vol. iii. p. 231, cf. Reeves, n. on Adamnan, 368 ; Ep. 2, p. 85. See vol. iii, p. 4.15. 79-8c). ' Pagi, XV. 7-^ Chap VII. a. d. 870-988. OLGA — ^VLADIMIR. 79 received impressions which led her to seek for admission into the church.® Olga, who at baptism took the name of Helena, endeavoured, after her return to Novogorod, to spread her new faith among her subjects. Her son Svatoslaff, however, withstood her attempts to convert him, alleging that his nobles would despise him if he should change his religion.* Vladimir, the son and successor of Svatoslaff, was importuned, it is said, by the advocates of rival religions — of Judaism, of Islam, and of ^'^' ^ ' Greek and Latin Christianity. He saw reason for rejecting the Jewish and Mahometan systems, and, in order that he might be able to decide between the two forms of Christianity, he sent commissioners to observe the religion of Germany, of Rome, and of Greece. When at Con- stantinople, they were deeply impressed by the magni- ficent building of the patriarchal church, and by the solemn, majestic, and touching character of the eucharistic service which they witnessed ; they told the Greeks who were with them that during the performance of the rite they had seen winged youths circling through the church and chanting the Trisagion.^ By the report of these envoys Vladimir was determined to adopt the Christianity of the Greeks.'^ In 988, having taken the city of Kor- « Neander remarks it as curious, that was the same who was afterwards Constantine, while he relates very fully bishop of Magdeburg. See Mabill. in the ceremonial of her reception, says Acta SS., Jun. 20, p. 28 ; Stiltinck, nothing of her baptism (v. 451). Some ib. Sept. t. ii. p. x. ; Pagi, xv. 103; German writers state that Olga made Schrockh, xxi. 515-17 ; Strahl, i. 95 ; an insincere application to Otho I. on Neand. v. 452. <" Nestor, i. St-j. the .subject of Christianity, and that in « It would seem that they mistook consequence a bishop, named Adalbert, the deacons and subdeacons of the was sent into Russia, where he had church for angels. See Stanley, 357, difficulty in escaping death (Thletmar, and his reference to Bunsen, ' Chris- ii. 14 ; Annal. Quedlinb. a.d. 960, ap. tianity and Mankind,' vii. 45. t»ertz, iii.). Some would read Rjigia *" Tha same story is by some referred {i.e. the island of Rugen) for Ruscia ; to an ezrlier time. See Nestor, i. xaa-g, but Mabillon and Pagi maintain that 145-9: Schrockh, xxi. 5x1, 5x7-19; Russia is meant, and that Adalbert Mouravieff, 12, 354 ; Strahl, i. 107. 8o CONVERSION OF RtJSSiA. 1?ook V. sun' from the empire, he made proposals for the hand of a Greek princess, Anna, sister of the emperor Basil II. and of Theophano, wife of Otho II. To the difficulties raised on the ground of religion, he answered that he was willing to become a Christian. His resolution was shaken by a temporary blindness, which he ascribed to the vengeance of the gods against his apostasy ; but at Anna's urgent request he consented to be baptized, and his change of religion was justified by the recovery of his sight as he received the imposition of the bishop of Korsun's hands. The marriage took place forthwith, and Korsun either was restored to the empire, or became the dowry of Vladimir's bride> According to Russian writers, Vladimir, who at baptism had taken the name of Basil, renounced the laxity of his former life for a strict observance of conjugal fidelity and of other Christian duties ; and both he and Anna are numbered among the saints of their churchj The Latins,'" however, assert that his actions did no credit to his new profession. On his return to Kieff, the grand-prince ordered the idol of Perun, the chief Russian god, to be dragged through the streets at a horse's tail, and thrown into the Dnieper. Many of the Russians burst into tears at the sight; but when a proclamation summoned them to repair to the river next day, on pain of being regarded as rebels, the dutiful people argued that, if the proposed change of religion were not good, the prince and the nobles would not recommend it. A general baptism of the population took place. "Some," says Nestor, "stood in the water up to their necks, others up to their breasts, ' Apparently the ancient Cherson The statements as to the disposal of (see vol. ii. p. 273); Gibbon, v. 317; Korsun appear to arise from varying Paris, note on Nestor ; Spruner, Map translations of Nestor. See the editor'* It. of Europe ; Mouravieff, 13 ; Finlay, note, p. 134. ii. 422. Schrockh (xxi. 519) takes it ' Schrockh, xxi. 522-3. for Kertch. ■ E.g., Thietmar, vii. 5a. ^ Ncitor, i. 130-4 ; Strahl, i. 109-10. Chap. VII. a.d. 988-1051. CHRISTIANITY IN RUSSIA. 81 holding their young children in their arms ; the priests read the prayers from the shore, naming at once whole companies by the same name. " ° Bishopricks were now established, churches were built on the Byzantine model by Greek architects,'' relics were imported, schools were opened, and children were obliged to attend them, al- though it is said that the mothers wept, and were as much afraid to send their children for instruction as if they had been sending them to death.? The Scriptures, in Cyril's Slavonic version, were introduced — a fact which, in de- fiance of chronology, has been turned into the statement that Cyril himself laboured as a missionary among the Russians. 'I On the death of Vladimir, in 1015, the division of his dominions among his twelve sons, and the bloody family discords which ensued, interfered with the progress of the gospel. But Yaroslaff, who at length became the sole ruler of the country, zealously carried on the ^.d. 1019. work. He caused translations of some 1054. edifying Greek books to be made for the benefit of his subjects, encouraged the composition of original religious works, and even himself took part in the literary labour. •■ The ' Nomocanon,' or collection of ecclesiastical laws, by Photius, was introduced as the rule of discipline. The clergy were exempted from taxes and from civil duties ; but, whereas they had until then ' * "^ * been subject to the patriarch of Constantinople, Yaroslaff was careful to place the church on a national footing, with a native Russian for its primate.^ ° Quoted by Mourav. 15. The judgment is tran.sferred from the French translation does not very Bulgarian Bogoris to the Russian closely agree. Vladimir. Mourav. 11. ° Nestor, i. 137. "■ Nestor, i. 176-7; Strahl, i. ie8, f lb. 136. 169. <> See Schrockh, xxi. 512, 521, etc. ; • Nestor, i. 179 ; Moura/. 9n , Mourav. 17, 21. The story of a prince's Strahl, i. 148, 164. conversion by a picture of the last VOL. IV. '6 ft2 BOHEMIA. Book V. V. Although Bohemia had been reckoned among Christian countries, the gospel was but very imperfectly established in it. On the death of duke Radislav, in 925, his mother Ludmilla (whose conversion has been already mentioned)^ undertook the care of his two sons, Wenceslav and Boleslav. But the widow of Radislav, Dragomira, who was a zealous pagan, contrived that Ludmilla should be murdered— a crime to which she was instigated alike by the violence of religious enmity and bv a fear of losing her share in the adminis- A D 027 tration." Notwithstanding his mother's efforts to turn him away from Christianity, Wenceslav was deeply devoted to it. He lived a life of the strictest sanctity, and is supposed to have been on the point of exchanging his crown for the monastic cowl when his reign was violently brought to an end. His brother Boleslav attacked him when on his way to perform his devotions in a church. Wenceslav, being the stronger of the two, disarmed the traitor, threw him to the ground, and uttered the words " God forgive thee, brother ! " But the cries of Boleslav brought his servants to the spot, and, supposing their master to have been attacked, they fell on the duke and slew him.* Boleslav, who is styled " the Cruel/' usurped the govern- ment. On the birth of a son, soon after, he was led by a strange mixture of motives to devote the child to a religious life by way of expiation ; y but for many years he carried on a persecution of his Christian subjects, expelling the clergy and destroying churches and monas- * Vol. iii. p. 465. uttered blasphemies as she was passing » ActaSS.,Sept. i6,p. 349; Palacky, a church at Prague. JEn. Sylvius, i. 304. Dragomira, who is described Hist Eohem. c. 15. by Cosmas of Prague (i. 15, ap. Pertz, ^ Gumpold. Vita Wencesl. c. 19, ap. U.) as " de durissima gente Luticensi, Pertz, iv. ; Acta SS., Sept. 28 ; Palacky, ct ipsis saxis durior ad credendum," is i. 209. Wenceslav became the patroo said to have been swallowed up, with saint of Bohemia. lb. aia her chariot and horses, for havii g 7 Palacky, I 310. Chap. VII. a.d. 995-96. ADALBERT OF PRAGUE. 83 tenes. In 950, after a long struggle against the power of Otho I., he was obliged to yield, and the emperor, in granting him a peace, insisted that he should establish freedom of religion, and should rebuild the churches which he had demolished.^ During the remaining seven- teen years of Boleslav's reign the church enjoyed peace; but the complete establishment of Christianity was the work of his son Boleslav " the Pious," who . 1 r .^ ■ A.D. 967. took vigorous measures for the suppression of paganism, and with the consent of the emperor, and that of Wolfgang bishop of Ratisbon, to whose see Bohemia had been considered to belong, founded in 973 the bishoprick of Prague. The diocese was to include the whole of Boleslav's dominions, and was to be subject to the archbishop of Mentz, as a compensation for the loss of the suffragan see of Magdeburg, which had lately been erected into an independent archbishoprick.* The second bishop of Prague was a Bohemian of noble family, who had studied under Adalbert, archbishop of Magdeburg, and, at receiving confirmation from him, had adopted the prelate's name in- stead of the Bohemian Woytiech.*' The bishop displayed great activity in his office. He persuaded the duke to build churches and monasteries, and, as his German edu- cation had rendered him zealous for the Latin usages, he exerted himself to suppress the Greek rites which had been introduced b/ way of Moravia. He found that much paganism was still mixed with the Christian profession of his flock, and that gross disorders and immoralities pre- vailed among them ; — that the clergy lived in marriage or ■ Schrockh. xxi. 437. Thietmar, iv. 19 ; Cosmas, i. 25-6. In • Cosni. Prag. i. 21 ; Vita Wolf- consequence of this, the Bohemian kangi, 29 (Patrol cxlvi.) ; Palacky. i. Woytieck and the German Adalbert 329. are to this day regarded as correspond- «> Pagi, xvi. 249. ing names. P*lacky, i. 234. « Vita Adalb. ap. Pertz. iv. c. 3 ; 84 ADALBERT OF PRAGUE. Book V. concubinage; that the people practised polygamy, and marringo within the forbidden degrees ; that they sold their serfs and captives to Jewish slave-dealers, who dis- posed of them to heathens and barbarians— sometimes for the purpose of sacrihce/^ Adalbert set himself to reform these evils; but the rigour of his character and his somewhat intemperate zeal excited opposition, which was greatly swelled by his attemptin^^ to introduce the Roman canons without regard to the national laws, and to assert for the church an immunity from all secular judgments.^ The feuds of his family were also visited on the bishop, and such was the resistance to his authority that he twice withdrew from Bohemia m disgust, and made pilgrimages to Rome and to Jerusalem. In obedience to a Roman synod, he resumed his see ; but he finally left it in 996,^ and, with the sanction of Gregory V., who gave him the commission of a regionary archbishop, he set out on a missionar)- expedition to Prussia, where, after ineft'ectual attempts to convert the barbarous people, he was martvred on the shore of the Frische Halt" in April 997. ? Boleslav, duke of Poland, who had encouraged the mission, redeemed the martyr's corpse, and placed it in a church at Gnesen, where, as we have seen, it was visited with great devotion by 0th III. in the year 1000. On that occasion the emperor erected Gnesen into an archbishop- rick, which he bestowed on one of Adalbert's brodiers.^ In 1039, while the Polish throne was vacant and the countr>' was a prey to anarchy, the Bohemians, under Bretislav I., took possession of Gnesen, seized on the * '^'^ta. 9-1 -• said that, when the Prussians would • Schrockh. xxl 441-3. not listen to Ad.iibert. he addressed his ' Cosmas, L 29-30 ; Chron. Casin. ii. preach-.ng to the cows and asses, which 17: Vita, 22; AcU SS., Apr. 23, p. nodded their heads in token of assent. 176 : Pagi, x\-i. 270, 297 ; Palacky, i. Dubra\-ius, in Canis. iii. i. 57. '3S-4I. " Thietmar, iv. 2S : Annal. Hildesh. « Vita, 30; Thietmar, iv. 19. It is 1001 (Pertz, iii.); Palacky, i. 246. Chap. VII. SLAVONIC LITURGY. S5 vast treasures which had been accumulated around the shrine of Adalbert, and resolved to carry off the body of the saint, whose memory had risen to great veneration in his native country. Severus, bishop of Prague, who had accompanied the army, took advantage of the feeling. He declared that Adalbert had appeared to him in a vision, and had made him swear that the Bohemians, as a condition of being allowed to enjoy the presence of the martyr's relics in their own land, would bind themselves to the observance of such laws as he had in his lifetime unsuccessfully attempted to establish among them. The relics were then with great solemnity translated to Prague ; but Polish writers assert that the invaders were mistaken in their prize, and that the real body of St. Adalbert still remained at Gnesen.^ VI. The Slavonic liturgy, which had been sanctioned by pope John VIII, for Moravia, was introduced from that country into Bohemia, and naturally excited opposi- tion on the part of the German clergy who laboured among the Slavonic nations. A letter bearing the name of John XIII., which, in professing to confirm the founda- tion of the see of Prague, requires the Bohemian church to use the Latin language and rites, is said to be spurious.^ But the use of the Slavonic liturgy was represented by its opponents as a token of heresy.^ The abbey of ' Bracisl. Leges, Patrol, cli. 1257 ; first real conversion of the Bohemians Cosm. Prag. ii. 3-5 ; Acta SS , Apr. was set on foot, refrained from intro- 23. PP 177 203-7 ; I*^gi> ^^- 621 ; ducing their liturgy into that country Palacky, i. 280 : Ropel, 1. 178. The out of respect for the rights of the Polish Annals in Pertz, xix. mention bishops of Ratisbon. the translation, 587, 621. ^ C. Schmidt suspects that the use k Ep 32 (Patrol, cxxxv.); Jaffe', of the vernacular was really connected 947. Gieseler cites it as genuine (II. with Catharist (or Manichaean) opin- i. 359), and Ginzel defends it (135). ions, both at Sazawa and m the region But in any case it gives no support to where it was proscribed by che council Ginzel's assumption (131-3) that the of Spalatr.- (see below). L 16, 52. Slavonic missionaries, by whon; the 86 SLAVONIC LITURGY. Book V. Sazawa, founded in 1038, became the chief school of the native Bohemian monasticism, and maintained the Slavonic form.'" In 1058 the Slavonic monks were ex- pelled from it by duke Spitihnew ; but five years later they were restored by duke Wratislav,'^ who endeavoured to obtain from Gregory VII. an approbation A.D.I o. Qf ^j^gjj. ygj-nacular service-book. The pope, however, replied in terms of strong disapprobation. It was, he said, God's pleasure that Holy Scripture should not be everywhere displayed, lest it might be held cheap and despised, or should give rise to error ; the use of the vernacular had been conceded only on account of temporary circumstances, which had now long passed away.*> Wratislav, who adhered to the emperor Henry IV. in his contest with Gregory, continued to sanction the Slavonic ritual at SazaAva ; but in 1097 it was again suppressed by his successor, Bretislav II., and the monastery was filled with monks of the Latin rite, who destroyed almost all the Slavonic books.? Yet the liturgy thus discountenanced by Rome and its partisans was revived from time to time in Bohemia ; and in the convent of Emmaus, at Prague, founded in the fourteenth century by the emperor Charles IV., it was especially sanctioned by pope Clement VI., although with the con- dition that the use of it should be limited to that place.** ■n rflonach. Sazav. in Patrol, clxv. account of our Lord's journey to Em- 278. The fragments of the Sazawa maus being the Gospel for the day offices are of the Greek rite, Ginzel, (Ginzel, 148). The monks were driven 140. See above, vol. iii. p. 462. out by the Hussites, and were restored " Monach, Sazav. 280-1. in 1584 ; but, in 1635 — in consequence Ep. vi. II (Hard. vi. 1435) ; Giesel. of the overthrow of protestantism in II. i. 359; Gfrorer, iv. 346. Bohemia— the Slavonic liturgy was P Mon. Saz. 283-4 '• Ginzel, 145. suppressed, and the convent of Em- 1 Giesel. II. i. 360; iii. 334. Theo- maus was transferred to Spanish Bene- bald.. Bell. Hussit. 72 ; Palacky, II. ii. diclines (Ginzel, 149-51). It would 297-8. See Ginzel's Appendix, 92-4. seem, therefore, that Gieseler is mis- The monastery of Emmaus was so taken in supposing the Slavonic liturgy called because its church was conse- to be still used ther». II. i, 360. crated on Easter Monday, 1372, — the Cmai>. VII. POLAND. 87 In some cases where people of Slavonic race bordered on the Greek empire, the popes found it expedient to gratify their national feelings by allowing the vernacular service ; but elsewhere they endeavoured to root it out. Thus, although Alexander II., in 1067, permitted the Slavonic rite in the province of Dioclea,f a council held at Spalatro in the following year, under a legate of the same pope, condemned it, on the ground that the Slavonic letters (to which the name of " Gothic " was given) had been invented by Methodius, a heretic, who had written many lying books in the Slavonic tongue against the Catholic faith.^ The Slavonic liturgy, how- ever, has continued to be used in many churches of Illyria down to the present time, although unhappily its antiquated language has not only become unintelligible to the people, for whose edification it was originally intended, but is said to be little understood even by the clergy who officiate in it.' VII. It has been supposed that some knowledge of Christianity found its way into Poland from Moravia, and more especially by means of Christian refugees after the ruin of the Moravian kingdom." Yet nothing considerable had been effected towards the conversion of the Poles, when in 965 their duke, Mieceslav, married Dambrowka, a daughter of Boleslav the Cruel, of Bo- hemia. Two years later Dambrowka persuaded her husband to embrace the Christian faith,^ and he pro- ' Ep. 47 (Patrol, cxlvi.). where the Slavonic service is used, see • Ginzei, Ann. 89. It is evident, as Ginzel, 125-31, Gieseler (II. i. 361) says, that these " Ropell thinks this a mistake. L learned fathers confounded Methodius 622. with Umias ! "" Thietmar, iv. 35 ; Pagi, xv. 159 ; » Ginzel, 169, 170. The Illyrian Ropell, i. 623-6. The Polish chronicles Utiual, however, (i.e. the book of (i- 5, ap. Pertz, ix, ; Annal. Pol. a.d. offices for baptism, marriage, etc.), is 942, ib. xix.) say that she made him in modern language. (Ib. 165, 174.) promise before maryiafic to do w. For a list of churches and monasteries _ , 88 CHRISTIANITY IN Booic V. ceeded to enforce it on his subjects under very severe penalties ; thus, any one who should eat flesh between Septuagesima and Easter was to lose his teeth. The German chronicler who relates this — Thietmar, bishop of Merseburg — adds that among a people so rude, who needed to be tended like cattle and beaten like lazy asses, means of conversion akin to the severity of their barbaric laws were more likely to be useful than the gentler methods of ordinary ecclesiastical disci- pline.y The story that the Polish church was organized under the superintendence of a papal legate, with seven bishop- ricks and two archbishopricks, is now exploded.^ Posen was the only bishoprick in the country, and was subject to the archbishops of Magdeburg, until in looo Gnesen was made an archiepiscopal and metropolitan see by Otho III.* Although the original Christianity of Poland was derived from Greek sources, the fourth wife of Mieceslav, Oda, daughter of a German marquis, in- fluenced the duke in favour of the Latin system. This princess was active in the encouragement of monks, and in works of piety and charity ; and the clergy, in con- sideration of the benefits which the church derived from her, were willing to overlook the fact that her marriage was a breach of the vows which she had taken as a nun.** The establishment of the Latin Christianity was com- pleted under Boleslav,'' who has been already mentioned as the patron of Adalbert's mission to Prussia. The popes were careful to draw close the bonds which con nected Poland with Rome; and from an early time (although the precise date is disputed), a yearly tribute y viii. 2. ever, continued subject to Magdeburg ' Pagi, xvi. i6o; Giescl. II. i. 364 ; until 1035. Herzog, xii. 416. Wiltsch, i. 396. b Thietmar, iv. 36 ; Schrackh, xa. 'Pagi, xvi. 395; SchrSckh, "xi. 495. 497 ; RopcU, i. 629-31. Posen. now- <= Chron. Polon. i. 11, Chap. Vli. A.v. 9^7 1C4S. POLAXD. 89 ' of a penny was paid by every Pole, with the excep- tion of the clergy and nobles, to the treasury of St. Peter.d The title of king, which Boleslav acquired, was pro- bably bestowed on him by Otho III. on the occasion of his visit to Gnesen.® If, however, the dignity was con- ferred by the imperial power, the popes, according to a story of doubtful authority, soon found a remarkable opportunity of exhibiting and increasing their spiritual jurisdiction over the new kingdom.* After the death of •king Mieceslav or Miesco II., in 1034, Poland fell into a miserable state of confusion. Paganism again reared its head ; there was much apostasy from the gospel, bishops and clergy were killed or hunted out, churches and monasteries were burnt, and the Bohemian invasion, already mentioned, was triumphant.^ The Poles, it is said, at length resolved to offer the crown to Casimir, a son of the late king, who had been driven into banish- ment ; and, after much inquiry, he was discovered in a monastery — either that of Cluny or the German abbey of Braunweiler. Casimir had taken the monastic vows, and had been ordained a deacon ; and the abbot de- clared that, although grieved for the misery of Poland, he could not release the prince from these engagements, unless by the pope's permission. For this, application was made to Benedict IX., by whom, after much entreaty, Casimir was discharged from his ecclesiastical obligations, and was given up to the Poles, with permission to marry and to undertake the government ; but the pope stipu- lated that, in remembrance of their having received a king from the church, every male of the nation should «• Some date this from the reign of i. 129 ; Gfrorer, iv 79. Mieceslav ; others from Otho's visit ^ Schrockh, xxi. 503. F,tt Dethier, to Gnesen ; others from the reign of I. c, 1370, seqq. Casimir. See Dethier, in Patrol, cli. ' Planck, iii. 376. 386 . Schrockh, xxi. 503, 505 ; Ropell. « Rdpell, i. 175 go NORTH GERMANY. Born V. use a certain sort of tonsure, and that other marks of subjection should be shown to the see of St. Peter.^ VIII. During the tenth century the German sove- reigns—especially Henry the Fowler and Otho the Great — laboured to provide for the suppression of paganism in the northern part of their dominions.* With a view to this, bishopricks were estabUshed at Meissen, Merseburg, and elsewhere, and Magdeburg was erected into a metropolitan see.^ But little impression could be made on the Slavonic tribes in those quarters.^ A natural prejudice was felt against the gospel as a religion which was offered to them by the Germans ; the German missionaries were ignorant of Slavonic ; and it is said that the clergy showed greater eagerness to raise money from the people than to instruct them.™ From time to time extensive insurrections against the foreign power took place, and in these insurrections churches were destroyed and clergy were slain. In 1047, the kingdom of the Wends was established by Gottschalkj, who zealously endeavoured to promote Christianity among his subjects. He founded churches and monas- teries, and, like the Northumbrian Oswald, he himself often acted as interpreter while the clergy preached in a tongue unintelligible to his people.'^ But in 1066 Gott- schalk was murdered by the pagans ; many Christians were massacred at the same time, among whom the aged John, a native of Ireland and bishop of Mecklenburg, '' Dlugloss, ap. Baron. 1041. 3-11. xxi. 449, seqq. But the story is considered fabulous ^ Joh. xiii., Epp. 2, 9, 10 (PatroL (Mabill. Annal. iv. 397 ; Stenzel, i. cxxxv.). 78 ; R6pell, i. 180). The Chron. Polon. * On these, see Adam, i. 10. has nothing of it, but states that Ca- °» Adam, iii. 22. simir was living in Germany, under " lb. 18-20 ; Helmold. i. 19-aa (Leib« the protection of Henry III. i. 18, 19 nitz, ii.) ; Acta SS., Jan. 7; Ludeu, (Pcrtz, ix.X viii. 650. ' Adam Brcm. iL 3 ; sec Schrockh, Chm". Vll. HUNGAftr. pi' was singled out as a victim for extraordinary cruelties ; and Christianity appeared to be extirpated from the country.^ IX The history of the introduction of Christianity into Hungary has been the subject of disputes, chiefly arising from the question whether it was effected by the Greek or by the Latin church. p It appears, in truth, that the first knowledge of the gospel came from Constanti- nople, where two Hungarian princes, Bolosudes and Gyulas, were baptized in the year 948. Bolosudes relapsed into paganism, and, after having carried on hostilities against both empires, he was taken and put to death by Otho the Great in 955. But Gyulas remained faithful to his profession, and many of his subjects were converted by the preaching of clergy who were sent to him from Constantinople, with a bishop named Hiero- theus at their head.** The great victory of Otho in 955 ' opened a way for the labours of the neighbouring German bishops among the Hungarians. About twenty years later,^ Pilligrin, bishop of Passau, reported to pope Benedict VII. that he had been entreated by the people of Hungary to assist them; that he had sent clergy and monks, who had baptized about five thousand of them ; that the land was full of Christian captives, who had formerly been obliged to conceal their religion, and had only been able to get their children baptized by stealth, but that now the hindrances to the open profession of Christianity were removed ; that not only the Hungarians, but the Slavonic tribes of the neighbourhood, were ready to embrace the • Ad. Br. iii. 49-50. ' See p. 9. See Acta SS., Sept. 2, pp. 469, • Hard. vi. 695 ; but Pagi seems to »eqq. ; Schrockh, xxi. 529-31. place the letter in 979 (xvi. 246). Jaffe 1 Cedren. 636 ; Schroclch, xxi. 526 ; refers the pope's answer to 974. Mailath. i. 23. ^2 HtJNGARY. Book t. gospel ; and he prayed that bishops might be appointed for the work. This representation of the state of things may probably have been heightened by Pilligrin's desire to obtain for himself the pall, with the title of archbishop of Lorch, which had been conferred on some of his pre decessors, while the rest, as simple bishops of Passau, had been subject to the archiepiscopal see of Salzburg. The pope rewarded him by addressing to the emperor and to the great German prelates a letter in which he bestows on Pilligrin, as archbishop of Lorch, the juris- diction of a metropolitan over Bavaria, Lower Pannonia, Moesia, and the adjoining Slavonic territories.* Yet little seems to have been done in consequence for the conversion of the Hungarians ; Wolfgang, who was sent as a missionary to them, met with such scanty success, that Pilligrin, unwilling to waste the energies of a valuable auxiliary in fruitless labours, recalled him to become bishop of Ratisbon."^ Geisa, who from the year 972 was duke of Hungary, married Sarolta, daughter of Gyulas, a woman of mascu- line character, and by her influence was brought over to Christianity. Although the knowledge of the faith had been received by Sarolta's family from Greece, her husband was led by political circumstances to connect his country with the western church, and he himself appears to have been baptized by Bruno, bishop of Verdun, who had been sent to him as ambassador by Otho L^ But * Hard. vi. 689-90. There is a letter Vivilus (see vol. ill. p. 68), removed the in the name of pope Symmachus (a.d. see to Passau (Rettberg, ii. 245). The 500) to Theodore, bishop of Lorch (the emperor did not confirm the archi- Roman Laureacum), conferring on hini episcopal dignity of Pilligrin (Gfrorer, the pall, as metropolitan of Pannonia, iii, 1373), and his successors in the on the ground that the see had been bishoprick of Passau were suffragans founded by the same apostles with that of Salzburg. Wlltsch, i. 377-9. of Rome (Patrol. Ixii. 72). But this is " Othlon. Vita Wolfkangi, i3(Pcrtt, now regarded as a forgery (Rettberg, i. iv. or Patrol, cxivi.). 151 : Pertz, xvii 481). Lorch was de- » Schrockh, xxi. ^2 ; Mail^th, L stroyed by the Avars in 738, when 31-4. Chaf. VII. A.D. 97i-T038. ST. STEPHEN. 93 Geisa's conversion was of no very perfect kind While professing himself a Christian, he continued to offer sacrifice to idols, and, when Bruno remonstrated, he answered that he was rich enough and powerful enough to do both.y In 983 or the following year, a bishop named Adalbert — probably the celebrated bishop of Prague ^ — appeared in Hungary, and baptized Geisa's son Walk, who was then four or five years old.* This young prince, to whom the name of Stephen was given, became the most eminent worthy of Hungarian history. Unlike his father, he received a careful education. In 997 he succeeded Geisa, and he reigned for forty-one years, with a deserved reputation for piety, justice, bravery, and firmness of purpose.^ A pagan party, which at first opposed him, was put down; he married a Bavarian princess, Gisela, sister of duke Henry (afterwards the emperor Henry II.), and in 1000 he obtained the erection of his dominions into a kingdom from Otho III.® In ful- filment of a vow which he had made during the contest with his heathen opponents, he earnestly exerted himself for the establishment of Christianity among his subjects. His kingdom, which he extended by the addition of Transylvania, and part of Wallachia, (a territory known y Thietmar, viii. 3 (who calls Geisa by the pope ; but the utmost that can Dewix). truly be said is, that the pope bcs:o»e• Schri ckh, xxi. 343. including Iceland and Greenland. (Cf. <» Ludcn, vi. 393. vol. iii. p. 472, as to Anskar.) But in its ' Miinter, i. 352. genuine form it is merely a general • Thietmar, i. 9 ; Munter, i. 350. confirmation of his archiepiscopal » For Unni, see the Acta Sanctorum, rights. See Acta SS., L c. p. 383; Got. 21. There is a document by Patrol, c.xxxii. 813, which pope John X. grants him » Helmold. i. 8 ; Munter, i. 348-59. jurisdiction over the whole of the north. Chap. Vtt. A.D. 9oo-io3& r>RNMAniS. 9) of fJie exclusive truth of his religion, Poppo (it is said) underwent the ordeal of putting on a red-hot iron gauntlet, and wearing it without injury to his hand, until the king declared himself satisfied.^ From that time Harold attached himself exclusively to Christianity, although he was not baptized until Otho the Great, after defeating him in 972, insisted on his baptism as a con- dition of peace.y The intemperate zeal with which the king now endeavoured to enforce the reception of the gospel provoked two rebellions, headed by his own son Sweyn ; and, after a reign of fifty years, Harold was dethroned, and died of a wound received in battle.^ Although Sweyn had been brought up as a Christian, and had been baptized at the same time with his father, he persecuted the faith for many years, until, towards the end of his life, when his arms had been triumphant in England, he was there brought back to the religion of his early days.* In 1014 he was succeeded by Canute, who, both in England and in his northern dominions, endea- voured by a bountiful patronage of the church to atone for his father's sins and for his own.^ When present at the coronation of Conrad as emperor,^ he obtained from him a cession of the Mark of Sleswick.*^ Monasteries were founded in Denmark by Canute, and perhaps the payment of Peter's pence was introduced by him ;« hospitals for Danish pilgrims were established at Rome and at some stations on the way to it.* Three bishops and a number of clergy were sent from England into » Widukind, iii. 65 (Pertz, iii.) : ("^vi. 252) place his death in 980; Thietmar, ii. 8 ; Saxo Grammat. 189. Schrockh (xxi. 350) in 986 ; IMunter The variations of the story are given (i. 387) a"d Gieseler (II. i. 348) in 991. by Miinter, i. 375. Comp. Adam » Saxo Gramm. 186-8 ; Munter, i, Brem. ii. 33, and Lappenberg's note, 400- ** Saxo, »u<. in Pertz, vii. 318. " See p. 59. y Ad. Brem. ii. 3. ^ Luden, viii. 51. ' lb. £5-6 : Helmold. 1 15 ; Munter, * Munter, ii. 461-2, 637 »• 375-87» Boxonius (980. xi) and P*gi ' Miinter, i. 40^. VOU IV. f g8 DENMARK. — SWEDEN* tcoK r. Denmark ; but Unwan, archbishop of Bremen, regarding these bishops as intruders into his province, caught one of them, compelled him to acknowledge the metropolitan rights of Bremen, and sent him to Canute, who thereupon agreed to submit the Danish church to the jurisdiction of A.D. 1043- that see.^ Sweyn Estrithsen, who, eight years 1067. after the death of his uncle Canute, obtained possession of the Danish throne, although a man of in- temperate and profligate life,^ was very munificent to the church, and did much for the extension of Christianity in the islands of his kingdom. The English missionaries had preached in their native tongue, while at every sentence their words were explained by an interpreter ; but Sweyn, to remedy this difficulty for the future, jjrovided that such foreigners as were to labour in the instruction of his subjects should be previously initiated in the Danish language by the canons of Hamburg.* Among the memorable events of this reign was the penance to which the king was obliged to submit by William, bishop of Roskield, for having caused some refractory nobles to be put to death in a church — a penance imitated from that of Theodosius. Sweyn died in 1076.'^ XI. The Christianity planted by Anskar in Sweden was almost confined to the neighbourhood of Birka, and for about seventy years after the apostle's death the country was hardly ever visited by missionaries.* Unni, ju-chbishop of Bremen, after the expedition to Denmark which, has been mentioned,"^ crossed the sea to Sweden K Ad. Brem. ii. 53. There is a sus- ' Schrockh, xxi. 353, 359. pected grant to Unwan of legatine ^ Saxo, 209-11 ; Schrdclch, xxi. ^56- power over all the northern regions 7. William of Roskield was an from Benedict Vll I. Ep. 37 (Patrol. Englishman. Saxo, 205. (.xxxix.) ' Schrockh. xjci. 360-1. " Sajio, Ml. «" P. 96. CHAP.Vlt OLAVE StOTKONtJNG. g^ in 935, and laboured there until his death in the following year." A mixture of paganism and Christianity arose, which is curiously exemplified in a drinking-song still extant, where the praises of the divine Trinity are set forth in the same style which was used in celebrating the gods ofWalhalla.« The reign of Olave Stotkonung,P who became king towards the end of the tenth century and died about 1024,^ was important for the propagation of the gospel in Sweden. Some German clergy, and many from England, were introduced into the country ; among them was Sigfrid, archdeacon of York, who laboured among the Swedes for many years. Two of his relations, who had joined him in the mission, were murdered by heathens. The chief murderer escaped, and his property was con- fiscated ; some of his accomplices, who were found, were, at Sigfrid's intercession, allowed to compound for their crime by payment of a fine ; and the funds thus obtained served to found the bishoprick of Wexio, to which Sigfrid was consecrated by the archbishop of Bremen.'^ Olave had meditated the destruction of the temple at Upsal, which was the principal seat of the old idolatry ; he was, however, diverted from his intention by the entreaties of his heathen subjects, who begged him to content himself with taking the best portion of the country, and building a church for his own religion, but to refrain from attempt- in? to force their belief On this he removed AD lOI s» to Skara, in West Gothland, and founded a ' ' see there, to which Thurgot, an Englishman, was conse- crated.^ The ancient Runic characters were superseded " Ad. Brem. i. 62-4; Acta SS., Oct. father in the kingdom, as he was old 2t, p. 391. " Schrockh, xxi. 362. enough to take a personal share in the P I.e.t Lap king, because he is said government soon after his father's to have been king while yet in his death, i. 119. nurse's lap. But Geijer remarks that, 'J lb. 126. if this be true, Olave must in his child- ' Schrockh, xxi 3*v5. hood have been associated with his • Ad. Brem. u. 5& tdd SWEDEN. feooK V. among the Swedes by the Latin alphabet, and the influence of Christianity triumphed over the national love of piracy.* But the violence of the measures by which Olave endeavoured to advance the gospel excited a general hatred against him among the adherents of the old religion, and he was obliged to admit his son Emund to a share in the government. Emund, after his father's death, had a disagreement with the archbishop of Bremen, and set up some bishops independent of that prelate's metropolitan jurisdiction — having obtained consecration for them in Poland. '^ But this arrangement was given up by his second successor, Stenkil, whose mild and wise policy was more favourable to the advancement of the faith than the more forcible proceedings of Olave had been. Under Stenkil, the number of churches in Sweden was increased to about eleven hundred.^ His death, which took place in io66,y was followed by bloody civil wars, and for a time paganism resumed its ascendency ; but in 1075 king Inge forbade all heathen worship, and, although this occasioned his expulsion, while his brother-in-law Soen was set up by the heathen party, Inge eventually recovered his throne, and, after much contention, Christianity was firmly established in the country.^ According to Adam of Bremen, a contem- porary of this king, the scandal produced by the covetous- ness of too many among the clergy had been the chief hindrance to the general conversion of the Swedes, whom he describes as well disposed to receive the gospel.* XII. Among the Norwegians, some converts had been * SchrSckh, xxi. 307. « lb. 132-5 ; Glesel. II. i. 350. " Ad. Brem. iii. 14. *■ ' Descriptio Insularum,' ai, ap. * Schrockh, xxi. ,«;7i. i ert?, 'i-u. f Gaijufr, L ^31. Chap, VII. NORWAY. lOI made in the time of Anskar, and the more readily because the profession of Christianity opened to them the trade of England and of Germany. Yet such converts, although they acknowledged the power of Christ, and believed him to be the God of England, had greater confidence in the gods of Odin's race, whom they regarded as still reign- ing over their own land ; ^ and it was not until a century later that a purer and more complete Christianity was introduced into Norway. Eric " of the Bloody Axe/* whose cruelties had rendered him detested by his subjects, was dethroned in 938 by his brother Haco.° The new king had been educated as a Christian in the English court, under Athelstan, and was resolved to establish his own faith among his subjects.*^ Some of his chief adherents were won to embrace the gospel. He postponed the great heathen feast of Yule « from midwinter in order that it might fall in with the celebration of the Saviour's nativity ; and while the other Norwegians were engaged in their pagan rejoicings, Haco and his friends, in a building by themselves, kept the Christian festival. Clergy were brought from England, and some congregations of converts were formed.' But when the reception of Christianity was proposed in the national assembly, a general murmur arose. It was said that the rest of Sunday and Friday, which was required by the new faith, could not be afforded. The servants who had attended their masters to the meeting cried out that, if they were to fast, their bodies would be so weakened as to be unfit for work. *• Miinter, I. 435. Anglia, 1. 371-3. « Snorro Sturleson, L 316 ; Munter, * This name is derived from hjol or i. 441. hjul, a wheel, and has reference to the * Snorro, i. 310. Dr. Lappenberg circle of the year- Yule being the thinks that the Athelstan in question time at which the decreasing and the may have been, not the great Anglo- increasing days meet. See Thorpe, Saxon king, but Guthrun-Athelstan, ' Northern Mythology,' ii. ^ one of tJ^e Danish kings of Easf ^ Snorro, L ^6. 102 NORWAY — HACO. Book V. Many declared that they could not desert the gods under whom their forefathers and themselves had so long prospered ; they reminded the king how his people had aided him in gaining the crown, and told him that, if he persisted in his proposal, they would choose another in his stead.^ Haco found himself obliged to yield. He was forced to preside at the next harvest sacrifice, where he publicly drank to the national gods ; and, as he made the sign of the cross over his cup, Sigurd, his chief adviser, told the company that it was meant to signify the hammer of their god Thor. The heathen party, however, were still unsatisfied. Eight of their chiefs bound them- selves to extirpate Christianity ; they assaulted and killed some of the clergy, and at the following Yule-feast Haco was compelled to submit to further compliances —to drink to the gods without making the sign of the cross, and to prove himself a heathen by partaking of the liver of a horse which had been offered in sacrifice.^ Feeling this constraint intolerable, he resolved to meet his opponents in arms ; but an invasion by Eric's sons, who had obtained aid from Harold Blaatand of Denmark, induced the N orwegian parties to enter into a reconciliation, and to turn their arms against the common enemy. From that time Haco lived in harmony with his people, not only tolerating their heathenism, but himself yielding in some degree to the influence of a heathen queen. In 963 his nephews renewed their attack, and Haco was mortally wounded. He expressed a wish, in case of recovery, to retire to some Christian land, that he might endeavour by penance to expiate his compliances, which weighed on his conscience as if he had been guilty of apostasy. But when his friends proposed that he should be carried to England for burial, he answered that he was unworthy of it — that he had lived as a heathen, and as a heathen I Snorro, i. 328-9 ; MGnter, i, 4AV4. ^ Snorro, i. 330-1. Cpmp. above, p. 83. Chap. VII. /.d. 957-95. OLAVE TRYGGVESEN. I03 should be buried in Norway.^ His death was lamented by a scald in a famous song, which celebrates his recep- tion into Walhalla, and intimates that, in consideration of the tolerance which he had shown towards the old religion, his own Christianity was forgiven by the gods.^ Harold, the son of Eric, who now became master of the kingdom, endeavoured to spread Christianity by forcible means. After some commotions, in the course A.D. 977. of which the son of Eric was slain, Harold Blaatand added Norway to his dominions, and appointed a viceroy named Haco, who, unlike his master, was so devoted a pagan that he sacrificed one of his own children. The viceroy exerted himself for the restoration of paganism, and, by the help of the party who adhered to it, established himself in independence of the Danish king. But the oppressed Christians invited to their relief Olave, the son of a petty prince named Tryggve, and Haco was dethroned in 995.^ Olave Tryggvesen is celebrated in the northern chroni- cles as the strongest, the bravest, and the most beautiful of men.™ After a life of wild adventure, in the course of which he had visited Russia and Constantinople, and had spread terror along the coasts of the western ocean, he had been baptized by a hermit in one of the Scilly Islands, and had been confirmed by Elphege, bishop of Winchester, in the presence of the English king Ethelred." Although his Christian practice was far from perfect (for, among other things, he married his step- mother, and endeavoured to obtain a knowledge of the future by the arts of divination), yet his zeal for his new » Snorro, i. 344-6; Miinter, 1. 450. ^ Snorro, 1. 397. For his history ^ It is translated by Bp. Miinter, i. see the vi"' Saga. Hume confounds 452-s, and by Mr. Laing, Snorro, L him with St. Olave. i. 120. 3^6. " Fior* Vigorn. i. 152; Snorro, L » Munter, i. 458 63. 39*« 104 m,AVE TRYGGVESEN. Book V. religion was unbounded, and manifested itself in exertions for the spreading of the faith which savoured less of the Christian spirit than of his old piratical habits, and of the despotism which he had seen in Russia and in the eastern empire.^ Gifts and privileges of various kinds, and even marriage with the king's beautiful sisters, were held out to the chiefs as inducements to embrace the gospel ; while those who should refuse were threatened with con- fiscation of property, with banishment, mutilation, tortures, and death.P In the most blamable of his proceedings, Olave was much influenced by the counsels of Thang- brand, a German priest from whom he had derived his first knowledge of the gospel, but whose character was so violent that he did not scruple even to kill those who offended or thwarted him.'i The king visited one district after another for the purpose of establishing Christianity. " Wheresoever he came," says Snorro Sturleson, in describing one of his circuits, *' to the land or to the islands, he held an assembly, and told the people to accept the right faith and to be baptized. No man dared to say anything against it, and the whole country which he passed through was made Christian." ^ Strange stories are related of the adventures which he encountered in destroying idols and temples, and of the skill and presence of mind with which he extricated himself from the dangers which he often incurred on such occasions. In one place Olave found eighty heathens who professed to be wizards. He made one attempt to convert them when they were sober, and another over their horns of ale ; and, as they were not to be won in either state, he set fire to the building in which they were assembled. The chief of the party alone escaped from the flames ; Ad. Brem. ii. 38 ; Snorro, i. 427, P Munter, i. 468 ; Neand. V. 4o9- seqq. ; Schrockh, xxi. 377-9 ; Munter, « lb. 407. »• i^' ^9i- ' i 454- Chap. VII. a.d. 995-1000. OLAVE TRYGGVESEN. 10$ but he afterwards fell into the king's hands, and was thrown into the sea.^ Another obstinate pagan and sorcerer had a serpent forced down his throat; the creature ate its way through his body, and caused his death.* A less unpleasing tale relates Olave's dealings with a young hero named Endrid, who at length agreed that his religion should be decided by the event of a contest between himself and a champion to be appointed by the king. Olave himself appeared in that character ; in a trial which lasted three days, he triumphantly defeated EndriJ in swimming, in diving, in archery, and in sword- play ; and having thus prepared him for the reception of Christian doctrine, he completed his conversion by instructing him in the principles of the faith." The insular parts of Olave's dominions were included in his labours for the extension of the gospel ; he forced the people of the Orkneys, of the Shetland, the Faroe, and other islands, to receive Christianity at the sword's point.^ In obedience to a vision which he had seen at a critical time, Olave chose St. Martin as the patron of Norway, and ordered that the cup which had been usually drunk in honour of Thor should in future be dedicated to the saint.y In 997 he founded the bishoprick of Nidaros or Drontheim. Olave's zeal for Christianity at length cost him his life. Sigrid, the beautiful widow of a Swedish king, after having resisted the suit of the pretty princes of Sweden so sternly that she even burnt one of them in his castle, in order (as she said) to cure the others of their desire to win her hand,^ conceived the idea of marrying the king of Norway, and with that view visited his court. Olave was inclined to the match; but, on her refusal to be • Munter, I 487. * ' Munter, i. 480, 550-2 ; Grub, i. 9^6. t Snorro. i. 448- * Schrockh, xxi. 378, • ftjunter, i. 474-«{. • Snorro, i. 41;^. 106 OLAVE TRYGGVESEN. Book V. baptized, he treated her with outrageous indignity, which filled her with a vehement desire of revenge. Sigrid soon after married Sweyn of Denmark. Her new husband, and the child of her first marriage, Olave Stotkonung, combined, at her urgent persuasion, in an expedition against Norway, and their force was strengthened by a disaffected party of Norwegians, under Eric, son of that Haco whom Olave had put down. A naval engagement took place, and the fortune of the day was against Olave. His ship, the "Long Dragon," after a desperate defence, was boarded ; on which the king and nine others, who were all that remained of the crew, threw themselves into the sea, in order that they might not fall into the hands of their enemies.* Rude and violent as Olave was, he was so beloved by his subjects that many are said to have died of grief for him, and even the heathens cherished his memory. He was beheved to be a saint ; it was said that he had performed miracles, and that angels had been seen to visit him while at his prayers ; and legends represented him as having long survived the disastrous fight. Nearly fifty years later, it is told, a Norwegian named Gaude, who had lost his way among the sands of Egypt, was directed by a dream to a monastery, where to his surprise he found an aged abbot of his own country. The old man's questions were such that the pilgrim was led to ask whether he were himself king Olave. The answer was ambiguous ; but the abbot charged Gaude, on return- ing to Norway, to deliver a sword and a girdle to a warrior who had sought death with Olave but had been rescued from the waves ; and to tell him that on the fatal day no one had borne himself more bravely than he. Gaude performed his commission, and the veteran, on receiving the gifts and the message, was assured that • Saorro, i. 433, 469, seqq. ; Miinter, i. 49 j. Chap. VII. a.d. 1000-33. ST. OLAVE. IO7 the Egyptian abbot could be no other than his royal master.** The progress of the gospel in Norway was slow during some years after the end of Olave Tryggvesen's reign. But his godchild Olave, <= the son of Harold, who became king in 1015,^ was bent on carrying on the work. Many missionaries were invited from England ; at their head was a bishop named Grimkil, who drew up a code of ecclesiastical law for Norway.® Although his own character was milder than that of Olave Tryggvesen, the king pursued the old system of enforcing Christianity by such penalties as confiscation, blinding, mutilation, and death,* and, like the elder Olave, he made journeys throughout his dominions, in company with Grimkil, with a view to the establishment of the faith. He found that under the pressure of scarcity the people were accus- tomed to relapse into the practice of sacrificing to their old gods. He often had to encounter armed resistance.^ At Dalen, in 1025, the inhabitants had been excited by the report of his approach, and on arriving he found 700 exasperated pagans arrayed against him. But, although his own party was only half the number, he put the peasants to flight, and a discussion on the merits of the rival religions ensued. Grimkil — "the homed man," as the heathens called him from the shape of his cap or mitre — maintained the cause of Christianity ; to which the other party, headed by a chief named Gudbrand, replied that their own god Thor was superior to the Christians' God, inasmuch as he could be seen. The * Munter, i. 493-5. • Ad. Brem. ii. 55. This code, « This connexion between the two which is known by the name of Krist- Olaves is, however, doubtful See itirett, is now lost, although fragments Acta SS., Jul. 29, p. 105. exist in the laws of Iceland and in ^ Mr. Laing dates his accession in the latter Norwegian law. Munter, L this year, and his death in 1030 (ii. 501-2. 339). Others give the dates 1017 and ' Snorro, ii. 79, 147. 1033 respectively. Munter, i. 500. « I/b. 178-9. I08 ST. OLAVE. BookV. king spent a great part of the following night m prayer. Next morning at daybreak the huge idol of Thor was brought to the place of conference. Olave pointed to the rising sun as a visible witness to his God, who created it ; and, while the heathens were gazing on its brightness, a gigantic soldier, in fulfilment of orders which he had before received from the king, raised his club and knocked the idol to pieces. A swarm of loathsome creatures, which had found a dwelling within its body, and had fattened on the daily offerings of food and drink, rushed forth ; and the men of Dalen, convinced of the vanity of their old superstition, consented to be bap tized.*^ The forcible means which Olave used in favour of his religion, the taxes which he found it necessary to impose, and the rigour with which he enforced the suppression of piracy and robbery, aroused great discontent among his subjects. Canute of Denmark and England was en- couraged to claim the kingdom of Norway ; his gold won many of the chiefs to his interest, and Olave, finding him- self deserted, fled into Russia, where he was honourably received by Yaroslaff, and was invited to settle by the offer of a province.^ But, while hesitating between the acceptance of this offer and the execution of an idea which he had entertained of becoming a monk at Jeru- salem, he was diverted by a vision, in which Olave Tryggvesen exhorted him to attempt the recovery of the kingdom which God had given him.'^ The Swedish king supplied him with some soldiers ; and on his landing in Norway, multitudes flocked to his standard. Olave re- fused the aid of all who were unbaptized ; many received baptism from no other motive than a wish to b^ allowed * Snorro, ii. i5S-6a Compare voL Vigorn. i. 184. L p. 395. * Snorro, ii. 295-4 * Snorro, ii. 154, 268, 273, 287 ; FJor. C«AP. Vlt. A.D. tois-ja ST. OLAVE* I09 to aid him ; and his soldiers marched with the sign of the cross on their shields.^ On the eve of a battle he gave a large sum of money to be " ' '^ ' laid out for the souls of his enemies who should fall ; those who should lose their lives for his own cause, he said, were assured of salvation.™ But the forces of the enemy were overpowering, and Olave was defeated and slain.** After a time his countrymen repented of their conduct towards him. It was rumoured that he had done miracles in Russia, that on his last fatal expedition his blood had healed a wound in the hand of the warrior who killed him ; a blind man, on whose eyes it had been accident- ally rubbed, recovered his sight; and other cures of a like kind were related.** A year after his death his body was disinterred by Grimkil, when no signs of decay ap- peared, and the hair and nails had grown. The remains of the king were removed to the church of St. Clement at Nidaros, which he himself had built, and when, in the following century, a cathedral was erected by the sainted archbishop Eystein (or Augustine) they were enclosed in a magnificent silver shrine, above the high altar, p St. Olave was chosen as the patron of Norway ; his fame was spread far and wide by a multitude of miracles, and pilgrims from distant countries flocked to his tomb for cure :^ tribute was paid to him by Norway and Sweden ; and churches were dedicated to his honour, not only in the western countries, but in Russia and at Constanti- nople.'' Canute, after becoming master of Norway, encouraged religion there as in his other dominions. By him the first Benedictine monastery in the kingdom was founded 1 Snorro, ii. 303-9, 320. Munter, ii. 404. *■ lb. 313. ■ lb. 332. 1 Ad. Brem. Descr. Insularum, 32. ° lb. 297, 306,333, 340-8 ; Acta SS,, "■ Snorro, ii. 380 2 ; Schrockh, jcxf. fuly 39, p. 109 ; Munter, i. 513. 434'S' Sse Thorpe's 'Northern Idytlie- t Snorro, ii. 315, 3^9 ' »"• 38. «oS '• ^^SY,' "' 3'J. ^11- ttO tCELAkfi. iBooKV near Nidar6s." Harold Hardrada, Olave's half-brother, a rough and irreligious man, who became king in 1047, had some differences with pope Alexander II., and with Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen. The king said that he knew no archbishop in Norway except himself, and obtained ordination for bishops from England and from France ; while Adalbert, declaring that he had but two masters, the pope and the emperor, paid no regard to the northern sovereign, and without his consent erected sees in his dominions.* Norway, like the rest of western Christendom, submitted to the dominion of Rome." XIII. Iceland became known to the Norwegians in 860, when a Norwegian vessel was cast on its coast.^ In 874, the first Norwegian colonist, Ingulf, settled in the island ; and in the following years many of his country- men resorted to it, especially after the great victory of Harold the Fairhaired at Hafursfiord, in 883, by which a number of petty kings or chiefs were driven from their native land to seek a home elsewhere.^ The colonists were of the highest and most civilized class among the Northmen, and the state of society in the new community took a corresponding character. The land was parcelled out, aAd the Icelanders, renouncing the practice of piracy, betook themselves to trade — exchanging the productions of their island for the corn, the wood, and other neces- saries which it did not aftbrd.^ A republican form of • Schrockh, xxi. 383. the scltlemciit was going on lasted ' Ad. Brem. iii. 16 ; Schrockh, xxi. about sixty years. At the end of that 46^ : Alex. II. ap. Hard. vL 1079. timetheisland was as fully peopled as it » See, for the character of the Nor- has ever been since, and the number ucgians, Ad. Brem. Descr. Insul. 20. of inhabitants may be reckoned at "Henderson's Iceland, I. xiii, 50,000." Dasent, Pref. to ' The Story (Edinb. 1818); Rafn, ' Antiquitates of Burnt Njal' (Edinb. 1861), p. 45. Americanac,' 8 (Havniae, 1837). ■ Laing, i. 56-8. But Henderson ' Rafh, 8 ; Snorro, i. 280 ; Deppin?, states that there is evidence that wood 45-7' "The period duiing vkhich formerly grew ic Iceland. (I, x. ; Chap. "^1. A.D. 860-981. tCELAND. iH government was established, and lasted for four hundred years. It had its national and provincial assemblies ; its chief was the "lawman,"* elected for life, whose office it was to act as conservator of the laws; and with this magistracy the function of priest was joined. The worship of Odin was established, but it would seem that there was an entire freedom as to religion.^ It is said that the colonists found in Iceland traces of an Irish mission — such as service-books, bells, and pastoral crooks — although the natives, having been left without any clergy, had relapsed into paganism.*^ Some of the Norwegians themselves may also have carried with them such mixed and imperfect notions of Christianity as were to be gathered in the intercourse of their roving and adventurous life ;^ but the knowledge of the gospel was neither spread among the other members of the commu- nity nor transmitted to their own descendants.® In 981, an Icelander named Thorwald, who had formerly been a pirate, but even then had been accustomed to spend such part of his plunder as he could spare in redeeming captives from other pirates, brought with him to the island a Saxon bishop named Frederick, by whom he had comp. Encycl. Britann. art. Iceland.) g, ed. Parthey, Berl. 1870). See also Adam of Bremen says, " Nullae ibi IMiinter, i. 520 ; Rafn, 204 ; Laing, i. fruges, minima lignorumcopia." Descr. 40; Dasent, Pref. to Njal, 7-8; Insul. 35. Reeves, n. on Adamnan, ii. 42, p. 169. * Lb£-sd£^umadr,utterer or ■publisher Professor Innes derives the earlier of the law. Henderson, I, xxii. ; mission from lona (' Scotland in the Dasent, in Oxford Essays for 1858, p. Middle Ages,' loi). Lanigan supposes 207. that the Irish clergy remained until ^ Schrockh, xxi. 387 ; Henderson, I. the arrival of the Norwegians, and jtvi.-xxiv. ; Deppiiig, ii. 49-60 ; Mdntcr, were then expelled, iii. 228. i. 521-6. '' Thus Helgi is described as "much « The old authorities for this (Ari mixed in his faith. He trusted in Erode, etc.) are collected by Rafn, Christ, but invoked Thor's aid when 603-5. Dicuil, an Irish monk, in a sent to sea or in any difficulty." His treatise ' De Mensura Orbis,' written knowledge of Christianity had been A.D. 825, shows himself acquainted gained in Iceland . Dasent, Oxf. Ess. with the existence of Iceland, which iSo. he calls TAtle (pp. 42-3, and Praef. p. « Munter« i. SH'S- tti tCELAN5. fcooKV been converted.* A church was built, and Frederick's instructions were well received, although most of his proselytes refused to be baptized — being ashamed, it is said, to expose themselves naked at the ceremony, and to wear the white dress which in their country was worn by children only.^ An important convert, named Thorkil, before submitting to baptism, desired that it might be administered by way of experiment to his aged and infirm father-in-law ; and, as the old man died soon after, Thorkil put off his own baptism for some years.^ The worshippers of Odin were roused to enmity by the rough manner in which Thorwald proceeded to spread his religion. After five years he and the bishop were expelled, and took refuge in Norway, where Thorwald, meeting with one of those who had most bitterly opposed him in Iceland, killed him. Frederick, hopeless of effect- ing any good in company with so lawless an associate, returned to his own country, and it is supposed that Thorwald, after many years of wandering, in the course of which he had visited the Holy Land, founded a monastery in Russia or at Constantinople, and there died.* Olave Tryggvesen — partly, perhaps, from political motives — was desirous of establishing the gospel in Iceland, and, after some earlier attempts to forward its progress, sent Thangbrand, the German priest who has been already mentioned, into the island in 997. The choice of a missionary was unfortunate ; Thangbrand, it is said, performed some miracles ; but he proceeded with bis usual violence, and, after having killed one of his opponents, and two scalds who had composed scurrilous ' MOnter supposes Frederick to have •* Mflnter, i. 531. been an ecclesiastic of Hamburg or * lb. 532 ; ii. 695. See the 'Quarterly Bremen, ordained by the archbishop Review,' Jan. 1862, p. 120. art. ' Ice- for the mission, i. 527- hjnd and the Change of Faith.' • Schrock]!, jjd. 3£8-ga Chap. Vlt. A.D. 997-1056 ICELAND. IIJ verses on him, he was expelled.'^ Olave, on receiving from Thangbrand a report of the treatment which he had met with, was very indignant, and was about to undertake an expedition for the punishment of the Ice- landers, when Gissur and Hialte, two natives of the island, obtained his consent to the employment of milder measures for the conversion of their country- •D .-u ■ c c A.D. 1000. men. oy the promise of a sum of money (which, however, was rather a lawful fee than a bribe),^ they secured the co-operation of the lawman Thorgeir, who, after addressing the national assembly in an exhorta- tion to peace and unity, proposed a new law by way of compromise. All the islanders were to be baptized, the temples were to be destroyed, and public sacrifices were to cease ; but it was to be allowed to eat horseflesh, to expose children, and to offer sacrifice in private.™ The proposal was adopted, and Christian instruction gradually prevailed over such remnants of heathenism as the law had sanctioned. St. Olave took an interest in the Chris- tianity of Iceland; he sent an English bishop named Bernard to labour there, and exerted himself to procure the acceptance of Grimkil's ecclesiastical laws, and the abolition of the practice of exposing children."* Although Iceland was from time to time visited by bishops, the need of a fixed episcopate was felt, and in 1056 the see of Skalholt was erected. Isleif, a son of Gissur, who had been educated at Erfurt and had made a pilgrimage to Rome, was elected a bishop, and, in obedience to an order from the pope, was consecrated by Adalbert of Bremen.^ With the consent of a younger •' Snorro, i. 442 ; Burnt Njal, ii. 63- n Munter, i. 544 ; Neand. v. 419. 76 ; Munter, i. 535-6 ; Quart. Rev. A revision of Grimkil's code for Ice- ,30.3. land was executed in 1123. Hender- ' Dasent, n. on Njal, ii. 79. son, I. Hi. •» Snorro, L 548 ; Burnt Njal, u. " Victor II. Ep. 5 (Patrol, cxliii.) ; 76-80 ; Munter, i. 541 ; Quart. Rev. Adam Brem. Descr. Insul. 35 ; Munter. ,35.8. u. 4I5- I' would seem that Isleif W4i VOL. IV. S 114 ICELAND. Cook V. Gissur, who had succeeded his father Islelf in the bishop- rick of Skalholt, a second see was founded at Hollum in 1105.P The bishops, being taken from the most distin- guished families, and invested, Hke the priests of the old idolatry,^ with secular power, became the most important members of the community. Adam of Bremen, who draws a striking picture of the contented poverty, the piety, and the charity of the islanders, tells us that they obeyed their bishop as a king."^ In 1 1 2 1 the first Ice- landic monastery was founded, and at a later time the island contained seven cloisters for men and two for women.^ The Icelanders traded to all quarters ; their clergy, educated in Germany, France, and England, carried back the knowledge and the civilization of foreign countries. And in this remote and ungenial island grew up a vernacular hterature of annals, poems, and sagas or historical legends— the oldest Hterature of the Scandi- navians, and the only source of information as to a great part of northern history. This literature flourished for two centuries, until, on the reduction of Iceland to tribute by the Norwegians in 1261, Latin became there, as elsewhere, the language of letters.* XIV. From Iceland the gospel made its way into a yet more distant region. In 982, a Norwegian named Eric the Red, who had fled to Iceland in consequence of having killed a man, and was there sentenced to banishment on account of a feud in which he was involved, determined to seek out a coast which had some years be- much troubled by foreign bishops — (Camden, 'Anglica, Normannica,' etc. probably Irish — who visited his country 721). and stirred up disaffection. Munter, • Munter, ii. 671. Innocent III. ii. 416, 1096. speaks unfavourably as to the state of P Munter, ii. 420. Iceland. Ep. i, 320 (Patrol, ccxiv.). «i Dasent, Pref. to Njal, 46-8. * Schrockh, xxL 391 ; Munter, l ' Desc Insul. 35 ; cf. Girald. Cam- 546 ; Depping, ii. 191-4. brens. Topogr. Hibemiae, ii. 13 Chap VII. GREENLAND. "S fore been seen by one Gunnbiorn.^ Four years later, when the time of his banishment was expired, Eric revisited Iceland, and induced many of his countrymen to accom- pany him to the land of his refuge, to which — with a design, as is said, of attracting adventurers by the promise which it conveyed — the name of Greenla.nd was given. ^ In 999, Leif, the son of Eric, made a voyage to Norway, where Olave Tryggvesen induced him to receive baptism; and on his return to Greenland he was accompanied by a priest.y The colony flourished for centuries. In 1055 (a year before the foundation of the first Icelandic see), a bishop was consecrated for it by Adalbert of Bremen. There were thirteen churches in the eastern part of Green- land, four in the western, and three or four monasteries.* Sixteen bishops in succession presided over the church of Greenland. From the year 1276 they took their title from the see of Gardar; they were subject to the archbishop of Nidaros, and were in the habit of attending synods in Norway as well as in Iceland. And even from this extremity of the earth tribute was paid to the successors of St. Peter.a But from the middle of the fifteenth century Greenland was lost to the knowledge of Euro- peans. The ice accumulated on its shores, so as to render them inaccessible, and the seventeenth bishop destined for the church was unable to land. The pestilence known as the " Black death" wasted the population, and it is sup- posed that, when thus weakened, they were overpowered Dy tribes of Skrallings (Esquimaux) from the continent » Rafn, 9-11, 91 ; Henderson, I, on account of the rich verdure, Adam xxviii. ; Laing, iii. 143. On the dis- of Bremen says that it was because the crepalhcies of the accounts, see Rafn's inhabitants were " a salo caerulei.'' Preface, xii.-xiii. Descr. Ins. 36. " "Dicebat enim, hanc rem homiui- f Snorro, i. 455, 465 ; Rafn, i6, 117. bus suasuram eo demigrare, quod teira * Victor II. Ep. 5 ; Munter, i. 557 ; specioso nomine gauderet " (Particula ii. 672-3 ; Laing, i. 141. Th-; number de Eiriko, ap. Rafn, 14), But, although of churches and monasteries is some- from this and other statements it what variously given, would seem that the name was given » MOnter, i. 556^ ; cf u. 444, 470 Il6 AMERICA. BookY. of North AiLtrica, the ancestors of the present inhabit- ants.^ The Northmen appear to have pushed their discoveries from Greenland to the American continent. In the year I GOO, Leif, the son of Eric the Red, incited by the narrative of Biorn, the son of Heriulf, as to his adven- tures when in search of Greenland,<= sailed southward, and explored several coasts, to one of which the name of Vinland (or Wineland) was given, because one of his companions, a native of southern Germany, recognized the vine among its productions. Further explorations were afterwards made in the same direction ; and settle- ments were for a time effected on the shores of the great western continent.*^ A bishop named Eric is said to have accompanied an expedition to Vinland in 1121;® but nothing further is known of him, and it would seem that no confidence can be placed in the conjectures or inquiries which profess to have found in America traces of a Christianity planted by the Scandinavian adventurers of the middle ages.^ *> Munter, i. 560, and the Bull of Ni- the cape. Laing, i. 150 ; Rafn, 409 ; colas v., ib. 584 ; Laing, i. 145, 152-3. Scoresby, in Encycl. Brit., 8th edit There were two districts in the colony xi. 39 (art. Greenland). — Ostre Bygd and Westre Bygd, of *= Rafn, 21-7. which the eastern was the more •* Ib. 261. flourishing. These are described as • Partic. de Graenlandis, ap. Rafn, separated by a waste twelve miles in 35-6. An account of this voyage is extent (Rafn, 315). Cape Farewell interpolated in some copies of Snorro was long supposed by geographers to Sturleson. (See Laing, iii. 344, seqq. ; have been the point of division, and Adam Brem. Descr. Insul. 38.) Vin- there was a belief that the eastern land is supposed to have been Rhode settlement had escaped the fate of the Island, or in its neighbourhood. (En- western, so that descendants of the cycl. Brit. ii. 698, art. /Jw/^wrt.) Rafn Scandinavian colonists might still exist identifies it with Nantucket, xxxiv. ou the icebound coast of East Green- 425. land. But a Danish expedition in «" See Munter, i. 562-3 , Laing, i. 1829-30 could find no trace that East 161, seqq. It has been said that in Greenland had evei been inhabited ; the nth century an Irish buhop named and it seems to be now agreed that the John preached and was martyred in *jicient settlements were both on the the regions thus discovered. But the coast north-west of Cape Farewell, story arises out of a confusion between Okue By^d being the ^uut nearest to the /jnerican Vinland and the la»d of CHAPTER VIII. HERESIES. AD. 1000 — 1052. The beginning of the eleventh century is remarkable for the appearance of heretical teachers in various parts of Italy and France. It would appear that the doctrines professed by some of these persons had long been lurking among the ItaHans, and that now the discredit into which the church had fallen combined with the general suffering and distraction of the time to draw them forth into publicity and to procure adherents for them.'* From the fact that Gerbert, at his consecration as archbishop of Reims (a.d. 991), made a profession of faith in which he distinctly condemned (among other errors) some leading points of the Manichasan system,^ it has been inferred ^ that heresy of a Manichsean character was then prevalent in some neighbouring quarter; but perhaps it may be enough to suppose that the Manichseism which Gerbert wished to disavow was one of the many errors with which he was personally charged by the enmity or the credulity of his contemporaries. '^ The opinions which were now put forth were of various kinds. One Leutard, a man of low condition, who about the year 1000 made himself notorious in the neighbourhood of Chalons-on-the-Marne, would seem to have been a crazy fanatic. He professed to have received commands from heaven while sleeping in a field ; whereupon he went home, put away his wife "as if by evangelic precept," and, going into a church, the Wends in North Germany— John 404 ; Neand. vi, 348. having been really bishop of Meek- •> Hard. vi. 725. ienburg (see above, p. 90). Rafn, « Hahn, L 31 ; C. Scli/nidt, i. jj. 461-2. ** GieseL II. L 408. • Luden, viii. 103-4; Giesel. II. i. Jl8 HERESIES. IBookV. broke the crucifix.® Pie denounced the payment of tithes, and said that some parts of Scripture were not to be believed, aiihough, when summoned before the bishop of the diocese, he alleged scriptural texts p.s evidence of his mission. For a time Leutard found many proselytes ; but the greater part of them were recovered by the bishop, and their leader drowned himself in a well.' In another quarter, Vilgard, a grammarian of Ravenna, who was put to death for his heresy, attempted a revival of the classical paganism — maintaining "that the doctrines of the poets were in all things to be believed " ; and we are told that demons used to appear to him by night under the names of Virgil, Horace, and Juvenal.^ The historian from whom we derive our knowledge of Vilgard and Leutard relates also that paganism was very common in Sardinia, and that many professors of it went from that island into Spain, where they attempted to spread their opinions, but were driven out by the catholics.'^ A sect of Manichseans is said to have been detected in Aquitaine in 1017,* and in 1022^ a more remarkable party of the same kind was discovered at Orleans. These are reported to have derived their opinions from a female teacher,^ who came out of Italy, and was so " full of the devil" that she could convert the most learned clerks.™ * "CrucemetSalvatorisimaginem." ^ Maitland, Letter to Mill, Lond. Perhaps, however, these were distinct 1839, P- 29 ; Giesel. II. i. 408-10. things. ' Ademar, iii. 59, says from a rustic, ' Rad. Glab. ii. 11 ; Hahn, i. 31. who in some texts is described as of * Rad. Glab. ii, 12. Perigueux. The accounts by Radulf * lb. the Bald, Ademar, and the unknown ' Ademar, iii. 49 ; Hahn, i. 33. The writer who is the chief authority on council of Charroux (Cone. Carofense) the subject — apparently a biographer against these sectaries (Hard. vi. 844) of Arefast (Maitl. 19)— are given by has been variously dated from 1017 to Hardouin, vi. 821, seqq. See also the 1031. Pagi says that it was called by Appendix to Dr. Maitland's Letter. William of Aquitaine in 1028, on find- Heretics at Perigueux will come before ing that they were again making head us at a later date. (xvi. 565). See Ademar, iii. 69 (Pertz, " Rad. Glab. iii. & Chap. VIII. a. a 1000-22. SECTARIES AT ORLEANS. ttg For a time tlie sect grew in secret. Its leaders were two ecclesiastics named Stephen and Lisoi — ^both respected for their piety, their learning, and their charity, while Stephen was confessor to Constance, the queen whom Robert of France had espoused on his forced separation from Bertha. Among the proselytes were ten canons of the cathedral, and many persons of rank, not only in Orleans and its neighbourhood, but even in the royal court.^ The discovery of these sectaries is variously related. The most circumstantial account ° ascribes it to Arefast, a Norman noble, who, having allowed a chaplain named Herbert to go to Orleans for the purpose of study, was startled by finding on his return that he had there imbibed new and heretical opinions. At the desire of king Robert, to whom, through the medium of the duke of Normandy, he reported the matter, Arefast proceeded to Orleans for the purpose of detecting the heretics, and by the advice of a clergyman of Chartres, whom he had consulted on the way, he affected to become a pupil of Stephen and Lisoi.P They taught him that Christ was not really born of the virgin Mary ; that He was not really crucified, buried, or risen ; that baptism had no efficacy for the washing away of sin ; that priestly con- secration did not make the sacrament of the Redeemer's body and blood ; that it was needless to pray to martyrs or confessors.'^ On Arefast's asking how he might attain salvation, if the means to which he had hitherto looked were unavailing, the teachers replied that they would bestow on him the imposition of their hands, which would cleanse him from all sin and fill him with the Holy Spirit, so that he should understand the Scriptures in their depth I* Rad. Glab. iii. 8 ; Ademar, iii. wrote his book 'Contra Mendacium,' 59. Radulf calls Stephen by the name against the employment of such artifices of Herbert. See n. in Bouquet, x. 35. for the detection of the Priscillianists. Anon. ap. Hard. vi. 822. Retract, ii. 60. ► In am earlier age, St. Augustine '^ Hard. vi. 823 ; Hahn, i. 36-7. 1J6 HERETICAL PARTIES Book? and true dignity; that they would give him heavenly food, by which he would be enabled to see visions and to enjoy fellowship with God. By this mysterious food, which was represented as having the power to confirm disciples immoveably in the doctrines of the party, was doubdess meant something of a spiritual kind — the same with the consolameftfum of somewhat later sectaries/ But a wild story was imagined in explanation of it — that the heretics at some of their meetings recited a litany to evil spirits ; that the devil appeared in the form of a small animal ; ^ that the lights were then extinguished, and each man embraced the woman nearest to him — even if she were his mother, his sister, or a consecrated nun. A child born of such intercourse was, at the age of eight days, burnt at a meeting of the sect ; the ashes were preserved, to be administered under the name of '' heavenly food " ; and such was the potency of this "diabolical" sacrament that any one who received it became irrevocably bound to the heresy.* Robert, on receiving information from Arefast, repaired to Orleans, where the whole party of the sectaries was apprehended, and Arefast appeared as a witness against them. They avowed their doctrines, and expressed an assurance that these would prevail throughout the world. They professed to entertain views far above the appre- hension of ordinary Christians — views taught to them inwardly by God and the Holy Spirit. They spoke with contempt of the doctrine of the Trinity, and of the miraculous evidence of Scripture. They maintained that the heavens and the earth were eternal and uncreated. They appear to have also maintained that the sins of sensuality were not liable to punishment, and that the ' Neand. vi. 352. plied the sectaries with money, iii, • Ademar says that the devil used 59. to appear first as a negro, and then ' Anon. ap. Hard. vi. 824. as an angel of light, and daily sup- CHAP.Vin. A.i>.K>22-5. AT ORLEANS AND ARRAS. 1J»1 ordinary duties of religion and morality were superfluous and useless." After a vain attempt to reclaim the sectaries, they v/ere condemned to death. Such of them as were clerks were deposed and were stripped of their robes. While the trial was proceeding, queen Constance, by her husband's desire, had stood on the steps of the church in which it was held, in order that her presence might restrain the populace from rushing in and tearing the accused to pieces. Bent on proving that her abhorrence of heresy prevailed over old personal attachment, she thrust her staff into one of her confessor's eyes as he was led out after condemnation. Two of the party, a clerk and a nun, recanted ; thirteen remained steadfast, and approached the place of execution with a smiling and triumphant air, in the expectation of deliverance by miracle. One historian of the time relates that, when the flames were kindled around them, yet no interposition took place, they cried out that the devil had deceived them ; '^ but according to another account they retained their exultant demeanour to the last.y Some dust, which was supposed to be the "heavenly food," was thrown into the flames with them.^ The body of a canon named Theodatus, who had been a member of the sect but had died three years before, was taken from the grave and cast into unconsecrated ground.* In 1025, Gerard, bishop of Arras and Cambray, a pupil of Gerbert,^ discovered in the former city some sectaries who professed to have received their opinions from an " Rad. Glab. ap. Bouquet, x. 36; resolute and heaven-supported martyrs Anon. ap. Hard. 825. These authori- to the pure and unadulterated faith of ties do not altogether agree. Some the Gospel." 'The Vallenses and AJbi- Protestant writers, as Basnage, have genses,' quoted by Maitland, Letter ta contended that, since the Orleans sec- Mill, 12. taries disparaged the sacraments, they ^ Rad. Glab. ap. Bouquet, x ^8 cannot have been wrong in any other y Ademar, iii, 59. point! (See Schrdckh, xxiii. 331.) ^ Anon. ap. Hard, vi 8j6. Mr. Faber maintains that " they were * Ademar, iii. 59. no Manich^ans, but, on the contrary, •> Patrol, cxlii. ij6j. 1 2a SECTARIES AT ARRAS, BookV. Italian named Gundulf.'' The bishop placed them before a council, and drew forth an acknowledgment of their doctrines. They denied the utility of baptism and the eucharist, resting their objections to baptism on three grounds — the unworthiness of the clergy ; the fact that the sins renounced at the font were afterwards actually committed ; and the idea that an infant, being incapable of faith or will, could not be benefited by the profession of others.* They were charged with denying the use of penance,^ with setting at nought the church, with con- demning marriage,* with refusing honour to the confessors, and limiting it to apostles and martyrs alone.^ They held that churches were not more holy than other build- ings ; that the altar was merely a heap of stones, and the cross was but like other wood.^ They condemned episcopal ordination, the distinction of orders and ranks in the ministry,* the use of bells, incense, images, and chanting,^ and the practice of burying in consecrated ground,^ which they asserted that the clergy encouraged for the sake of fees. It would seem also that they denied the resurrection of the body.™ In answer to the bishop, they professed that their opinions were scriptural ; that their laws bound them to forsake the world, to abstain from fleshly lusts, to earn their maintenance by the work of their hands, to show kindness to those who opposed them. If they observed these rules, they had no need of baptism ; if they neglected the rules, baptism could not profit them.° Gerard combated the opinions of the party at great length, with arguments agreeable to the theology of the * Synod. Atrebat. ib. 127X. * lb. 1286, 1291, 1303, 1306. ^ Ib. 1272. > " In atriis domus Domini." Ib * Ib. 1296. 1295' ' Ib. 1299. « Schrockh, x.xiii. 334, seqq. ; Hahu, * Ib. 1301. , 41. * Ib. 1284, i5p4. * atrol. cxlii. 127a. ' lb. lagi, 1294, ijor ChAP.VlII. A.P.109S-44. TOULOUSE, ANT) MONTEFORTE. I23 age ; and, although we may smile at the miraculous stories which he adduced," we must honour his wisdom and ex- cellent temper. He blamed them especially for holding an opinion of their own merits which was inconsistent with the doctrine of divine grace.? The sectaries, who appeal to have been men of simple mind and of little education, were convinced — rather, it would seem, by the bishop's legends than by his sounder reasons. They prostrated themselves before him, and expressed a fear that, since they had led others into error, their sin was beyond for- giveness.'i But he comforted them with hopeful assurances, and, on their signing a profession of orthodoxy, received them into the communion of the church."^ Heresy of a Manichaean character was also taught at Toulouse, where, although the professors of it who were detected were put to death,^ their opinions continued to spread in the district; and in 1044, Heribert, archbishop of Milan, when on a visitation of his province, discovered a sect at Monteforte, near Turin.^ The chief teacher of this sect was named Gerard ; it was patronised by the countess of Monteforte, and among its members were many of the clergy. When questioned as to his belief, Gerard gave orthodox answers ; but on further inquiry it proved that these answers were evasive. The sectaries held that by the Son of God was meant the human soul, beloved by God and born of Holy Scripture ; that the Holy Spirit was the understanding of divine things ;" that they might be bound and loosed by persons who were authorized for the work, but that these were not the clergy « E.g., coll. 1282-3. 27 (Pertz, viii.) ; that given by Radulf P Patrol, cxlii. 1309-10 ; Hahn, i. the Bald, under an earlier date (iv. 2), 39-41. is considered by Neander to be fabu> 1 Patrol, cxlii. 1284. lous. vi. 359. ■■ lb. 1311-12 " Neander thinks that with these • Ademar, iii. 59. opinions the literal doctrine of the * Giesfei. II. i. 412-13. The account Godhead may also have been held, vu of this sect is taken from Landulf, ii. 360. 124 SfeCtARIES At MONTEFOftT£. ISookV. of the church. They said that they had a high priest different from the pontiff of Rome — a high priest who was not tonsured, one besides whom there was no other high priest and no sacrament ;^ that he daily visited their brethren who were scattered throughout the world, and that, when God bestowed him on them, they received forgiveness of all sin.^ They had a peculiar hierarchy of their own ; they lived rigidly, ate no flesh, fasted often, kept up unceasing prayer by alternate turns, and observed a community of goods. They inculcated the duty of virginity, living with their wives as mothers or sisters, and believed that, if all mankind would be content to live in purely spiritual union, the race would be propagated after the manner of bees.^ They considered it desirable to suffer in this life in order to avert sufferings in the life to come ; hence it was usual that those among them who had escaped outward persecution should be tortured and put to death by their friends. The members of the sect were seized and were removed to Milan. Attempts were made to reclaim them, but with- out effect ; and the magistrates^ on learning that they had endeavoured to gain converts among the country people, ordered them, although without the archbishop's consent, to be carried to a place outside the city, where they were required, on pain of burning, to bow to the cross, and to profess the catholic faith. Almost all refused ; they covered their eyes with their hands, and rushed into the fire which was prepared for them. It is generally assumed by modern writers, on grounds * "Noncst alius pontifex, nee mys- coslo circumiens radiis suis etiam de terium." cloacis membra dei vestri colligit" y HahnC. 45) supposes that a human Aug. c. Faust, xx. 10); Gieseler (II. priest was meant. Baur (Manich Re- i. 413), and C. Schmidt (ii. 146), to ligions system, 304) refers the descrip- the Holy Ghost, which seems to acric« tion to Christ in the form of the sun, best with the last words in the text, circling round the earth, according to and with "mysterium." the Manichacan doctrine ("Alius in ^ Hahn, i. 44. Chap. VIII. A.D. io44-5a- WAZO AGAINST PERSECUTION. 12$ which it is impossible to discover, that the statement of Heribert's freedom from any share in the fate of these unfortunate fanatics is untrue. But in another quarter, at least, a voice was raised by a bishop in behalf of Christian principle and humanity as to the treatment of religious error. Wazo, bishop of Lidge, who died in 1048, received a letter from Roger, bishop of Chalons-on-the-Marne, re- porting the appearance of some heretics who avowed the doctrines of Manes, and supposed him to be the Holy Ghost. Among other things, Roger states that even the most uneducated persons, when perverted to this sect, became more fluent in their discourse than the most learned clerks; and he asks how he should deal with them. Wazo tells him in reply, that forcible measures are inconsistent with our Lord's parable of the tares ; that bishops do not at their ordination receive the sword ; that their power is not that of killing but of making alive; that they ought to content themselves with ex- cluding those who are in error from the church, and preventing them from spreading the infection. The writer who has preserved the correspondence enforces this advice by the authority of St. Martin,^ and expresses a belief that the bishop of Tours would have strongly re- probated the punishment of some sectaries who were put to death at Goslar in 1052.^ The origin of the sects which thus within a short period appeared in so many quarters is matter of doubt and controversy. The heretical parties north of the Alps professed for the most part to have received their opinions immediately from Italy; but it is asked whether they had been introduced into that country by Paulician refugees, the offspring of the Paulicians who in 969 had been trans- • See vol. L p. 408. For the history of the increased severity «> Gesta Episcop. Leodiensium, 62-4 of punishment for heresy, Planck, IV. (Pertz, via.). For the sectaries of ii. 442-5»' Gyslar, s«« Herin. Contr. a- P. 1053, 126 ORIGIN OF THE HERESIES. Book V. ported by John Tzimisces from Armenia to Thrace, and established as guards of the western frontiers of his empire, with permission to retain their religion ;<= — or whether they were derived from Manichseans who, not- withstanding the vigorous measures of Leo the Great and other popes for the suppression of the sect, had secretly continued to transmit their doctrines from generation to generation in Italy.^ The avowal of the party at Monte- forte, that they did not know from what part of the world they had come,® which had been cited in behalf of the connexion with Paulicianism, appears rather to favour the opposite view, inasmuch as it would seem to imply not only a foreign origin (which was common to both Manichseans and Pauhcians), but an establishment of their doctrines in Italy long before the then recent time at which Paulicianism had been introduced into Europe. Moreover the sectaries of Monteforte differed from the Paulicians in the rejection of flesh and of marriage, in the system of their hierarchy, in maintaining the distinction between elect and hearers; and the western sects in general paid honour to Manes, whereas the Paulicians anathema- tized him. The indistinctness with which the Manichaean tenets appear in some of the cases has been accounted for by supposing that the obscure followers of Manes, lurking in corners for centuries, were kept together rather by ex- ternal observances than by any accurate knowledge of the system which they professed ; while something must also be allowed for the defectiveness of the notices which have reached us. It seems, therefore, possible that the new heretics may have derived their opinions from the Mani- * See Gibbon, v. 281 ; Anna Com- the theory of a connexion with the nena, L xiv. pp. 450-2, ed. Paris. Paulicians. Gieseler takes the opposite " Mosheim (ii. 391), Gibbon (iv. side (II. i. 405). Others suggest the 283), Schrockh (xxiii. 334, 345), and Priscillianists or the Euchites (ib. • Dr. Maitland (' Facts and Documents Neand. vL 348). See C. Schmidt, i. relating to the Albigenses and Wal- 18. dcnses,' Lond. 1832, sect, iv.), advocate • Landulf, ii. a8, p. 66. Chap. VIII. THE PAPACY. I27 chseans ; and, according to the advocates of this view, it was not until the east had been brought into communica- tion with the west by the crusades that the western sectaries learnt to trace a likeness between themselves and the Paulicians, which, by means of fabulous inventions, was then referred to a supposed connexion in earlier times. But there seems to be a deficiency of proof for the suppo- sition that the Manichsean sect had continued to exist in Italy — the only evidence of its existence after the time of Gregory the Great being apparently the mention of some heretics who are styled Arians, but may (it is suggested) possibly have been Manichseans, at Padua in the tenth century.* In the east also the beginning of the eleventh century was marked by the rise or by the increased activity of some heretical sects — as the Athinggani, the Children of the Sun, and the Euchites ; but their influence was so limited that it is unnecessary here to give any particular account of them.s CHAPTER IX. SUPPLEMENTARY. I. The Hierarchy. (i.) The relations of the papacy with secular powers, and especially with the emperors of the west, were »■ Dr. Maitland says (p. 89) that he .-vnd, moreover, it describes the Mani- can find no Manichseans in Europe for chaeans not as Italians, but as Africans, more than 400 years before the affair The mention of the Paduan heretics is at Orleans. The only evidence which taken from Hofler (i. 211-12) ; they were Gieseler produces is the continued discovered by a bishop named Peter denunciation of Manichaeans in the (a.d. 919-22), and were extinguished commission given to bishops. But it by one of his successors, Gauzelin, is clear that this was merely a form half a century later, retained after the cause of it had passed 8 See for these sects Neand vi away (see above, vol. iii. p. 66, note ^) ; 341-7 ; Giesel. II . i. 4oy-3. 128 THE PAPACY. Book V. governed rather by circumstances than by any settled principles. On each side there were claims which were sometimes admitted and sometimes denied by the other party ; but even when they were admitted, the enforce- ment of them depended on the questions whether the claimant were strong and whether circumstances were favourable to him. The German emperors still retained the same rights of sovereignty over Rome which had been held by the Carolingians. The imperial share in the appointment of the pope by means of commissioners continued, and popes were even glad to sanction it afresh, as a means of averting the disorders incident to an election carried on amid the fury of the Roman factions and the violence of the neighbouring nobles. A synod under John IX. in 898, when Lambert had been crowned as emperor, enacted that, for the prevention of such tumults and scandals as had taken place through the absence of imperial commissioners, the presence of commissioners should be necessary at future elections ;^ and in another canon it threatens the emperor's indignation, as well as spiritual penalties, against any who should renew the dis- orders which had been usual on the death of a pope, when the palace was invaded by plunderers, who often extended their depredations over the city and its suburbs.^ And, although the document bearing the name of Leo VIIL, which confers on Otho the Great and his succes- sors the power of nominating to the papacy as well as to the empire, is probably spurious, its provisions agree with the state of things which actually existed at the time.<^ The emperor was regarded as having the right to decide the • C. X. ap. Pertz, Leges, ii. App. Glesel. II. i. 210. 158 ; or Hard, vi. 489. This synod has *> C. xi. The plunder of a bishop's sometimes been wrongly dated in 904. property on his death was usual else- See above, p. 16 ; Pagi, xv. 489, 494, where. Atto, in Patrol, cxxxiv. 87. 529 ; Murat. Awl \. i. 307 ; ii. 15; • See above, p. 25, note *. Chap. IX. POPES ANt> EMPEkORS. i2() appeals of Roman subjects who had been aggrieved by the pope.** Emperors even deposed popes, and that not by any wanton exercise of force, but as if in the fuitil- ment of a duty attached to their office ; thus we have seen that the proceedings of Otho the Great against the wretched young debauchee John XII. were under- taken reluctantly and as a matter of necessity.® It was considered that even the pope was not irresponsible on earth, and that for the execution of manifest justice on the chief pastor of the church the highest secular autho- rity was entitled to intervene.* Yet on the whole the popes were gaming, and were preparing to secure advan- tages for their successors. It seems probable that Charlemagne, in projecting the revival of the Roman empire, may have hoped to become master of the popes ; but the result was advantageous to the papacy. Leo III. surprised Charlemagne himself into receiving the crown from his hands ; and although the great emperor was careful that his son should assume it in such a manner that it should appear to be held in- dependently of the Roman sanction, Lewis submitted to be crowned afresh by Stephen IV. The popes continued to crown the emperors until an opinion was settled in the minds of men that the highest of secular dignities could only be conferred by God himself through the instru- mentality of His chief minister, the successor of St. Peter ; and, although the possession of the Italian king- dom was regarded as implying a title to the empire, the imperial name was not assumed by the German sove- reigns of Italy until after a coronation at Rome by the pope.s * Schmidt, ii. 167. Adv. SImouiacos, iii. 15 (Patrol, cxliii.). 8 P. 22. Humbert, however, re- ' Schmidt, ii. 167, 216. gatds the extinction of the Othos in 8 Ducange, s. v. Imperator, p. 772 > the third generation as a judgment on Planck, iii. 270. thair interference in spiritual things. VOL. IV. 9 1^0 THE PAPACY. Book V. As the eastern bishops, by appealing to the emperor in their differences, had established an imperial supremacy in spiritual things, so the princes of the west, by referring their quarrels to the pope, and by asking him to ratify their conquests, contributed to invest him with a power of arbitration and control which more and more claimed a superiority over all secular government. And this was enhanced by the pope's assumption of an universal cen- sorship of morals, and by his wielding the terrors of ex- communication, which were able to make kings tremble, not only by the direct exclusion from spiritual privileges, but through the apprehension of the effects which such a sentence might produce among their people. The wideness and variety of the scene on which the popes acted were also conducive to the growth of their autho- rity, since an attempt which was foiled by the energy of one opponent succeeded elsewhere against the weakness of another, and thenceforth became a precedent for general application.^ In newly-converted kingdoms, such as Hungary and Poland, the power of the pope over the national church was from the first established as a principle ; ^ nor did the shameful degradation of the papacy during a large portion of the time now under review produce any considerable effect on its estimation in foreign countries, where litde or nothing was heard of the pope as an individual, and he was regarded only as the successor of the chief apostle.^ The territorial power and income of the papacy were limited by the encroachments of the Italian nobles and by the invasions of the Saracens. But the popes found new sources of wealth in the practice of annexing to their see the revenues of bishopricks and abbeys in various parts of Christendom, and in payments levied from •^ Schmidt, ii. 691. ^ lb. 270, 287, 37a. ' PlancK, iii. 889. Chap. IX. PAPAL TItLES. t^l countries which were in communion with them, such as the Peter-pence of England and the tribute paid by Poland. And a continual succession of forgeries made it appear that such territories as the see of Rome possessed were but portions of a far larger inheritance, which of right belonged to it by virtue of donations bestowed by emperors and other sovereigns from the time of Constantine the Great.^ The policy of the popes towards the church aimed at centralizing all authority in the papacy. The principles of the forged decretals were taken as a foundation of their claims. Titles more pompous than before were given by those who wished to pay court to them, and were not refused. The epithet universal^ which Gregory the Great had declared to be unfit for any Chris- tian prelate, was addressed to Nicolas I. by Adventius bishop of Metz and by Charles the Bald ; ™ and it after* wards became usual. Adventius styles Nicolas, " Your Majesty "" — a phrase which was very commonly used by Peter Damiani in addressing the popes of his time.° Theotmar, archbishop of Salzburg, and his suffragans addressed John IX. as " Supreme Pontiff and Universal Pope, not of a single city but of the whole world." p Some bishops avowed that they held their episcopate from God through St. Peter — i.e. through the apostle's successors in the see of Rome.i The claims involved in the new pretensions of the papacy were at first somewhat indefinite. What was meant by the pope's universal episcopate ? What was his supreme judicature ? When and how was this to be exercised? But when once such vague and sounding titles had been impressed on the • Schrockh, xxii. 395-6, 400. Chartres and papal legate. Patrol. "» Hard. v. 321, 323. cci. 171. " lb. 321, c. P Hard. vi. 483. " In the i2th century, Arnulf of ' As Heriveuc, and a synod at Lisieux uses it to Geoffrey bishop of Reims, a.d. 900 ; lb. 467. t^2 tHE PAPACY.. BookV. general mind, it was in the power of the popes to make almost any deductions whatever from them.'' The claim which Nicolas advanced for obedience to all the de- crees of popes rested on a different gromid from that which had sometimes been put forward by his predeces- sors. In earlier times, such a claim was founded on the supposition that Rome was the most faithful guardian of apostolic faith and practice, or, at the utmost, that the pope was the highest expounder of the law — not that he pretended to a power of legislation. But now it was rested simply on the ground that Rome was Rome ; and the matter set forth under the sanction of such a preten- sion consisted of a forgery which professed to derive a new and unheard-of system of papal domination from the earliest ages of the church." The party which relied on the authority of the decretals was bent on humbling the class of metro- politans. There are circumstances which seem to indicate that metropolitans had begun to assume power greater than that which had in earlier times belonged to them. But the design was not limited to reducing them within their ancient bounds; they were not to be allowed any power of judicature over bishops; and when they were stripped of their judi- cial power, their authority as superintendents or in- spectors was not likely to be much regarded,* It v/as the interest of bishops to aid the popes in a course which annihilated the power of metropolitans and pro- vincial synods over members of the episcopate, and subjected these to the pope alone. There were even inducements which might persuade metropolitans to consent to sacrifice the independence of their own order. They, in common with other bishops, were strengthened ' Planck, iii. 807-8; Gieseler, II. i. « Planck, iii. 812^15. »54-5- t lb. 788, 790, 818. Chap. IX. METROPOLITANS. 1 33 against secular princes by an alliance with the papacy. They felt that their dignity was enhanced by a connexion with a power which exalted religion above all earthly authority;" and the use of the pall was of great effect in reconciling them to the change. The pall, originally a part of the imperial attire, had been at first bestowed by the eastern emperors on the patriarchs of their capital. In the fifth and sixth centuries it was conferred on other patriarchs ; and in time it was given by popes and patri- archs to bishops, although the imperial consent was necessary before the honour could be conferred on a bishop whose predecessors had not enjoyed it.* The pall was sent by the popes to their vicars ; it was regarded as the mark of a special connexion with the Roman see, to which the receiver was bound by a strict oath of subjection and obedience. When some metropolitans had thus received it, others, wishing to be on a level with them, made application for a like distinction, so that it " SchrOckh, xxii. 461 ; Planck, iii. and was not attached to his see. (Ep, 855. ii. 35, A.D. 1126, Patrol, clxxi.) The '^ lb. 857-8. There is much informa- claim of Dol rested on a fiction that a tion as to the pall in Dr. Rock's British archbishop named Samson— ' Church of our Fathers,' vol. ii. In some say of York, some of Menevia the east, patriarchs gave it to all (St. David's), while others suppose him bishops (135). In the west it was to have been a regionary bisLop, with- attached (although probably not until out any fixed see — established himself after the time now under review) to there, taking his pall with him. the ^wA^/77V/^jofOstia, Lucca, Verona, (Hoveden, 453 ; Wendover, iii. 144.) Parma, Autun, Dol, and Bamberg See Raine, i. 10 ; Girald. Cambr. de (157). It was buried with the person Jure, etc., Menev. Eccl. t. ii. 151, 167, to whom it had been granted. (See with Wharton's notes; In vectiones,t.iiL Ducange, s. v. Pallium, 3.) Under 46-7, Itin. Kambrise, ii. i (C. & M.); Charlemagne, the pall was given with Innoc. III. Ep. ii. 82-8; Acta SS. his consent, and probably according to Jul. 28 ; Haddan-Stubbs, i. 149-59 . his will (Waitz, iii. 354, see above, vol. ii. 76, 91-6. Among Stephen of Tour- iii.p. 212). Hildebert, as archbishop of nay's letters (Patrol, ccxi.) are several Tours — a see which was long in con- from Philip Augustus and others, tinual conflict with the claims of the remonstrating with Innocent III. for Breton church to independence of its favouring Dol in opposition to Tours, metropolitan jurisdiction — argues that Cf. Innoc. Gesta, (Patrol, ccxiv. 83, the pall had been bestowed on Baldric etc.X of Dol as a personal distinction only. 134 THE PALL. BookV. came to be regarded as the ensign of metropolitan dignity, and that this dignity came to be regarded as a gift of the pope/ Nicolas I., in his answer to the Bul- garians, lays it down that their future archbishop shall not exercise his office until he receive the pall from Rome ; such, he says, is the usage in Gaul, Germany, and other countries;^ and John VIII., at the synod of Ravenna in 877, enacted that every metropolitan should, within three months after his election, send to Rome a statement of his faith, together with a petition for the pall.* While the metropolitans thus received some com- pensation for the loss of their independent power, in their special connexion with Rome, and in their exercise of jurisdiction as delegates of the pope, the pall became not only a mark of their subjection, but a source of profit to the Roman treasury. Although Gregory I. had positively forbidden that anything should be paid for it,*" fees were now exacted, and so heavy were they in some cases that Canute, on his pilgrimage to Rome, com- plained to the pope of the oppressive amount required from Enghsh archbishops, and obtained a promise of an abatement in future.^ That metropolitans submitted to exorbitant payments for the sake of obtaining this ensign, is a proof that the advantage of such a sanction for their authority must have been very strongly felt. The metropolitans lost less in England and in Germany than elsewhere. In England the whole foundation of the church rested on the primacy of Canterbury. In Germany the metropolitans of Mentz, Cologne, Treves, and Salzburg, held high dignities of the empire as annexed to their sees. Yet, in the case of the great German prelates, there was the disadvantage that the ' Planck, Hi. Sea^g. * Patrol. Ixxvii. 13.57. ■ C. 73. Hard. v. 377. • Canut. ap. Will. M;ilmesb. 3xa • C. I. Har4. vi. x&i, Chap, IX. LEGATES. 1 35 popular opinion unconsciously referred their power not to their spiritual but to their secular offices.^ In addition to their vicars, the popes appointed legates to exercise some of their functions, such as that of holding councils for the investigation of cases which had been referred to Rome, or in which the popes took it on themselves to interfere. These legates were sometimes ecclesiastics sent from Italy ; but, as foreign ecclesiastics were regarded with suspicion by princes, it was more usual to give the legatine commission to some bishop of the country in which the inquiry was to take place.® Even kings were sometimes invested with the authority of papal deputies, as we have seen in the instance of Charles the Bald at the council of Pontyon.* The claim of the popes to exclusive jurisdiction over bishops was uncontested from the time of the victory gained by John XV. and Gregory V. in the affair of Arnulf of Reims.s Persons nominated to bishopricks, if they found any difficulty in obtaining consecration from their own metropolitan, sought it at the hands of the pope; and a Roman synod under Benedict VL, held probably in 983, with a view to the suppression of simony, directed that not only bishops but priests or deacons should repair to Rome for ordination, if it were not to be obtained without payment at home.^ Yet to the end of the period the prelates of France and Ger- many resisted some attempts of the popes to encroach on their rights; for the title of "universal bishop" was admitted only as implying a power of general over- sight — not as entitUng the popes to exercise episcopal functions in every diocese.^ This resistance was espe- cially shown when the popes attempted to interfere with « Planck, iii. 795-6 ; Schmidt, i. 685. « Planck, iii. 844. • lb. 696 ; Planck, iii. 429. ^ Hard. vi. 712 ; Planck, iii. 883. i Vol. iii. V 408 ; Schrockh. xxii. 469. ' lb. 832 ; Giesel. II. i. 25S. 258. 136 PAPAL INTERFERENCE Book V. the penitential discipline. Every bishop had been formerly regarded as the sole judge in cases of penance within his own diocese — as the only person who could relax the penance which he had himself imposed. The bishop's power of absolution was still unassailed ; there were not as yet any cases reserved for the decision of the pope alone. But the popes began to claim a juris- diction as to penance similar to that which they were gradually establishing over the church in other respects ; they asserted a right of absolving from the penance to which offenders had been sentenced by other bishops. The resort of penitents to Rome had been encouraged by various circumstances. In many instances bishops had themselves consulted the pope, or had recommended an application to him, either with a view of escaping responsibility in difficult cases, or in order that the long and toilsome journey to Rome might itself in some measure serve as a penitential exercise.^ But when penitents began to flock to Rome for the purpose of obtaining from the pope the absolution which was refused by their own diocesans, or in the belief that the absolution of St. Peter's successor was of superior virtue,^ the practice drew forth strong and frequent protests from councils and from individual bishops."* Ahyto (or Hatto) ^ Planck, iii. 684-5. exempted him from the jurisdiction of * Nicol. I. Ep. 208 ad Carol. Calv all but the pope, and that his successors ap. Hard. v. 235 : Neand. vi. 151. continued to enjoy this privilege, with "" See Morin. de Poenitentia, 1. vii, that of being consecrated by the pope c. 16. A bishop who had been irregu- himself, to which Leo IX.. in the middle larly intruded into the see of Le Puy- of the nth century, added the dignity en-Velay, was set aside by the Roman of the pall. (Sylvest. IL Ep. 4, Patrol, synod of 998 (see above, p. 40), and it cxxxix. ; Hist, de Languedoc, ii. 133- was ordered that a new bishop should 4.) The archbishops of Toledo and be consecrated by the pope (cc. 5-7). Tarragona having disputed to which The reason of this order was, that of them the bishop of Burgos ought the metropolitan, the archbishop of to be suffragan, Urban IL, in 1097, Bourges, had been concerned in the exempted the diocese from the jurisdic- consecration of the intruder ; but the tion of both. The exemption was con- consequence was that Sylvester 1 1., on firmed by Alexander III. and by consecrating the new bishop in 999, Lucius IJI., and in 1574 Burgos was Chap. IX. WITH BISHOPS. I37 of Basel, about 820, orders that penitents who wish to visit the apostoHc city should first confess their sins at home, '' because they are to be bound or loosed by their own bishop or priest, and not by a stranger."'* When an English earl, who had been excommunicated by Dunstan for contracting an unlawful marriage, had suc- ceeded, by the employment of influence and money at Rome, in obtaining from the pope a mandate that the archbishop should restore him, Dunstan firmly refused to comply. " I will gladly obey," he said, " when I see him repentant ; but so long as he rejoices in his sin, God forbid that, for the sake of any mortal man, or to save my own life, I should neglect the law which our Lord has laid down for His church."" And to the end of the period a like opposition to the papal assumptions in this respect was maintained.? All that was as yet conceded to the pope was a power of granting absolution on the application, or with the consent, of the bishop by whom penance had been imposed.^i But in this, as in other matters, principles had already been introduced by which the popes were in no long time entirely to overthrow the ancient rights of the episcopal order.'" (2.) The secular importance of bishops increased. They took precedence of counts, and at national assemblies they sat before dukes.^ In France many prelates took advantage of the weakness of the later Carolingians, or of the unsettled state of the new dynasty, to obtain grants of royalties {regalia) — privileges especially belonging to the crown, such as the right to made a metropolitan see by Gregory of Fulbertto John XIX., in Bouquet, XIII. Mariana, vi. 164, note, edd. x. 473 ; and the second council of Sabau y Blanco. Limoges, a.d. 1031, in Hardouin, " Capit. 18 (Patrol, cv.). vi. 890-2. o Osbert. Vita Dunst. ap. Mabill. 1 Nat. Alex. xiii. 135 ; Planck, iii vii. 685. 837, 848 ; Giesel. II. i. 258. P See canons 16 and i8 of the council ' Planck, iii. 690, 875, pf Selingenstadt, a.d. 1022 : a Letter ■ lb. 486. 138 SECULAR DIGNITY OF BISHOPS. Book V. coin money, to establish markets, to levy tolls, to build fortifications, and to hold courts of justice, even for the trial of capital offences.* Towards the end of the period, however, these bishops for the most part found it neces- sary, for the sake of security against the aggressions of the nobles, to place themselves under the feudal protection of the sovereign; and in consideration of this the royalties were again resigned." But it was in Germany that the bishops acquired the greatest power. The repeated changes of dynasty in that country were favourable to them. Each new race found it expedient to court them; and the emperors, partly out of respect for religion, partly from a wish to strengthen themselves by the support of the clergy, and to provide a counterpoise to the lay nobility,^ favoured the advance of the order by bestowing on them grants of royalties, and whole counties or even duchies, with corresponding rights of jurisdiction. ^ In proportion as the bishops became more powerful, it was more important for princes to get the appointment of them into their own hands. The capitulary of Lewis the Pious, which enacted a return to the ancient system of free elections, had never taken effect to any con- siderable extent. In France, in England, and in Germany, the choice of bishops was really with the sovereign; even where the right of nomination was contested (as it was by Hincmar in the cases of Cambray and Beauvais),^ the opponents of the crown allowed that the royal licence must precede the election of a bishop, and that the royal confirmation must follow on it. Although the church petitioned for free elections, it » Murat. Antiq. Ital. t. vi. Dissert. y Planck, iii. 496 ; Schrockh, xxli. 71 ; Mosh. ii. 284 ; Planck, iii. 459. 589 ; Luden, vii. 194 ; Giesel. II. j, " lb. 492. 244 ; Giesebr. ii. 9. * W. Malmesb. 655 ; Giesebr. i}. » Vol. iii. pp. 371, 414, 14- Chap. IX. APPOINTMENT OF BISHOPS. 1 39 would have been well content to secure a right of rejecting persons who were unfit in respect of morals or of learning.* Even a pope, John X., allows that, by ancient custom, the king's command is required in order to the appointment of a bishop, although he also mentions the necessity of election by the clergy and of acclamation by the laity.^ Election was for the most part nothing more than acquiescence in the sovereign's nomination; so that while Adam of Bremen always speaks of bishops as being appointed by the emperor, Thietmar generally speaks of them as elected.*^ A sovereign might refuse to confirm an election, and any substitute proposed by him in such a case was sure to be accepted by the electors.^ And it was in vain that complaints were raised against the system of royal control, or that attempts were made to limit it by laying down new rules as to the qualifications requisite for the episcopate.® A remarkable proof of the degree in which the German sovereigns believed the disposal of bishopricks to be a right of their own office, is found in the fact that Henry the Fowler granted to Arnulf duke of Bavaria the privilege of appointing bishops within that territory.' The saintly emperor Henry II. made bishops by direct nomination — possibly (as has been suggested) from a wish to secure the appointment of better men than the flocks would have been likely to choose for themselves ; and it is said that a comparison between the bishops who owed their sees to his patronage and those who were afterwards elected by the clergy bears out the • Cone. Valent. III. a.d. 855, c. 7 ; « lb. See Acta SS., Oct. 26, pp. Planck, iii. 396-8, 407; Schmidt, i. 974-S- 667. '^ Schmidt, ii. 206-8; Giesel. II. L »> Ad. Herim. Colon, ap. Hard. vi. 245. 455 ; ad Carol. III. ib. 456. See • Planck, iii. 399, 406-9. «chrockh, xxii. 423. ' Thietmar, i. 15. 140 PATRONAGE BookV. wisdom and the honesty of his policy.^ We are told that the emperors were sometimes directed by visions to promote certain deserving persons to vacant bishopricks, or to refrain from opposing their election.^ In the Greek church also the emperors continued to nominate to the most important sees.* Nicephorus Phocas enacted that no bishop should be appointed with- out the imperial consent, and when a see was vacant, he committed the revenues to the care of an officer, who was bound to limit the expenditure to a certain sum, and to pay over the residue to the treasury.^ The patriarch Polyeuctus refused to crown John Tzimisces, unless on condition that the law of Nicephorus should be abro- gated ; but the emperor, immediately after his corona- tion, proceeded to exercise his prerogative by nominating a patriarch for Antioch.^ Bishopricks became objects of ambition for persons ol noble or even royal birth, so that it was at length a rare and surprising case, and even serious objections were raised, when any one of humble origin was elevated to such a position.™ Attempts were made to render the possession of sees hereditary in certain families ; and in Germany these attempts took a peculiar and remarkable turn. A prelate was often able to secure the succession to his see for a nephew or a cousin ; and the interest of families in such cases led them not to impoverish but to enrich the see, with a view to the benefit of their own members who were to hold it. It was regarded as a part of the family property, and the bishop might rely on the support of his kinsmen in all his differences and feuds « Schmidt, ii. 209 ; Schrockh, xxii. ' lb. 664-5 • Schrockh, xxii. 427. 425. See hereafter, book VI. c. xiii. "" -E.g., in the case of Gerbert ; of sect. 1-2. Willigis of Mentz (Thietmar, iii. 3) ; "» SchrOckh, xxii. 423. of Durandus of Liege (Sigeb. Gembl. ' lb. 426. A.D. 1021); of Otho of Bamberg (Pertz, k Cedren. 658. xii. 751). Chap. IX. OF BISHOPRICKS. I4I with his other neighbours." Henry II. was fond of be- stowing bishopricks on wealthy persons, who might be likely to add to the riches of their sees, such as Mein- werc of Paderborn, of whose relations with his imperial patron and kinsman many humorous tales are told by his biographer.** But the disposal of bishopricks from motives of family interest naturally introduced great abuses. Atto bishop of Vercelli, who in the earlier part of the tenth century wrote a treatise ' On the Hardships of the Church,' tells us that the princes of his time were indifferent as to the character of those whom they nominated to high spiritual office — that wealth, relationship, and subserviency were the only qualities which they looked for ; p and not only unfit persons, but boys, were appointed to sees,^ from those of Rome and Constantinople downwards. Atto describes one of these boy prelates, at his consecration, as answering by rote the questions which were put to him, either having been crammed with the answers or reading them from a memorandum ; as dreading, in case of failure, not lest he should lose the grace of consecra- tion, but lest he should fall under the rod of his tutor ; and having no conception either of the responsibilities of his office, or of the temptations which would beset him.'' A particularly scandalous case was that of Theophylact, whom his father, the emperor Romanus, resolved to raise to the patriarchate of Constantinople on a vacancy which occurred in 928. As the prince was only eleven years of age, a monk named Trypho was made temporary patri- " Planck, iii. 491-5. "^ys. as to the general condition of "Vita Meinwerci, cc. ti, etc; bishops— " Irreligiose eliguntur, in- (Pertz, xi.); Acta SS., Jun. 5. aniter ordinantur, indifferenter aocus- P DePressuris Eccles.pt. ii. (Patrol. antur, injuste opprimuntur, perfide cxxxiv. 69). Atto held his see from dejiciuntur, crudeliter aliquando el 92410960. necantur." p. 85. 1 De Press. Eccl. ii. col. 75' He ' Col. 75. 142 THEOPHYLACT OF CONSTANTINOPLE. BookV. arch ; but when desired to resign his office, three years later, he was unwilling to comply. It is said that Theo- phanes, bishop of Csesarea, waited on him, and, with great professions of friendship, told him that the emperor intended to eject him on the ground that he was ignorant of letters: "If," he said, "you can disprove this objec- tion, you have nothing to fear." At the suggestion of his insidious visitor, Trypho wrote his name and style on a paper, which was afterwards annexed to another, containing an acknowledgment that he was unfit for the patriarchate, and expressing a wish to retire from it. Trypho was thus set aside, and, after a vacancy of a year and a half, Theophylact, at the age of sixteen, became patriarch in 933, being installed in his office by legates of pope John XI. ^ During three-and-twenty years Theo- phylact disgraced the patriarchal throne. He introduced indecent music and dances into the service of the church; but he was chiefly distinguished by his insane fondness for horses, of which he kept more than two thousand. Instead of the ordinary diet, they were fed with dates, figs, raisins, almonds, and other fruits, which were steeped in costly wines and flavoured with the most delicate spices. It is related that once, while performing the eucharistic rites on Thursday before Easter, the patriarch was informed that a favourite mare had foaled ; where- upon he immediately left the church, and, after having gratified himself by the sight of the mother and her off- spring, he returned to finish the service of the day. In order to provide for the vast expenses of his stud, he shamelessly sold all sorts of spiritual offices. Theophy • lact's end was worthy of his life ; his head was dashed • Theoph. Contin. ed. Bonn. 421-2 ; above, p 19), obtained letters from the Cedren. 627-9 > Finlay, ii. 356. Liut- pope by which the patriarch and his prand says that Theophylact was an successors were authorized to wear the eunuch ; and that his father the pall without special permission. Le- emperor, by presents to Alberic (see gatio, 62. See Ffoulkes, ii. 27. Chap. IX. SIMONY. I43 against a wall in riding, and, after having lingered two years, he died in consequence of the accident' Complaints of simony in the appointment to ecclesi- astical offices, whether high or low, are incessant during this period.** The simoniacal practices of sovereigns are supposed to have originated from the custom of offering gifts on being admitted to their presence. Those who were promoted by them to ecclesiastical dignities testified their gratitude by presents, which in course of time took the nature of stipulated payments.'^ The working of the system became worse when bishops, instead of making payment at the time of their promotion, relied on the revenues of their sees for the means of raising the money, as in such cases they were tempted to dilapidate the episcopal property, to oppress their tenants, to engage in unseemly disputes, and to allow their churches to go to ruin.y In respect of simony the German emperors were pure, as compared with other western princes ; but although some of them made formal resolutions to refrain from selling their patronage, and to restrain the simoniacal practices of other men,^ their necessities interfered with the fulfilment of their good intentions.* Cardinal Humbert, who had enjoyed an opportunity of observing the Greek church when engaged on a mission to Constantinople, states that the sale of bishopricks was not practised there as in the west.^ The practice of paying for preferments, as distinguished from ordination, found defenders ; but the defence was indignantly met by such writers as Humbert ° and Peter Damiani. The * Cedren. 638-9. "lb. iii. 7; Giesel. II. L 250; * As a specimen of simoniacal trans- Gfrorer, iv. 137-40. actions, see the agreement for the sale * Such was the case of Conrad. See of thebishoprickof Albi, Hist deLan- Wippo, c. 8; Luden, viii. 36, and guedoc, ii. 182, and Append. 202. note. *■ Stenzel, L 108. •* Adv. Sim. iii. 10. y Hurab. adv. Simoniacos, ii. 35-6 " lb. iii. i, seqq. This work is in Fatiol. cxliii.). the form of a dialogue betweeo Car- 144 INVESTITURE. Book V. distinction between orders and benefices, says Peter, is as absurd as if one were to say that a man is father of his son's body only, and not of his soul.^ Bishops were invested in their sees by the western sovereigns. SymboHcal forms of investiture are men- tioned as early as the time of Clovis,® and it is said that Lewis the Pious invested bishops by delivering to them the pastoral staff.^ But the use of such ceremonies does not appear to have been introduced as a regular practice until the age of the Othos,^ and was perhaps not com- pletely established until the end of the tenth century.^ The investiture related to the temporalities of the see, which the sovereign was supposed to bestow on the bishops. Hincmar, in his answer to Adrian II., when desired to renounce communion with Charles the Bald,* marks the distinction between his temporalities, which were at the king's disposal, and his spiritual office, in which he regarded himself as independent. " If I were to act according to your judgment," he tells the pope, *' I might continue to chant at the altar of my church, but over its property, its income, and its retainers, I should no longer have any power." ^ When the feudal system was established, it was natural that bishops, as well as dukes and counts, should be invested in their possessions, and they may have found their advantage in a tie which entitled them to the protection of their liege re/ior (the reformer) and Corrupt or « See Humb, adv. Sim. iii. ii, col. (the advocate of the existing system). 1156. See Epp. i, 13 ; v. 13. *■ Mosh. ii. 347 ; Planck, iii. 32. • See Nat. Alex. xiii. 641; Giesel. ISIarsilius of Padua (for whom see here- II. i. 245, The various forms of in- after) says that pope SimpUcius (a.d. vestiture are given by Ducange, s. v. 468, 483) was represented as the first Investitura. who forbade taking investiture from a f Adam. 13rem. i. 32. Ebbo, during layman. This was, of course, a mis- his intrusion into Reims (see vol. iii. take; but I have not discovered the p. 384), is said to have consecrated with origin of it. « See vol. iii. p. 397. ring and staff. Cone. Suess. a.d. 853, ^ O-^&i^, ii. 697. See Planck, iii. ap. Hard. v. 51. 461, 472* Chap. IX. INVESTITURE. I45 lord.^ But it became a matter of complaint that the estates and temporal privileges of bishops were conferred on them by means of instruments which symbolized their spiritual character — the ring, the figure of marriage with the church, and the crozier or crook, the ensign of pastoral authority. The use of such instruments provoked objections, because they were liable to be interpreted as signifying that the spiritual powers of the episcopate were derived from the gift of earthly princes."^ By the institution of investiture sovereigns gained new means of control over bishops. They not only held over them the fear lest their gifts might be withdrawn," but were able to use the investiture so as to secure for themselves the patronage of sees. In order to elude the royal nomination, bishops sometimes consecrated to a see immediately on the occurrence of the vacancy, and thus threw on the sovereign the difficulty and the odium of dislodging a prelate who was already in possession. But princes were now able to prevent such consecrations, by providing that on a bishop's death his ring and staff should at once be seized and sent to them by their officers ; for without these insignia the consecration of a successor could not proceed.^ Hence, as we shall see hereafter, it was complained that by the system of in- vestiture the right of canonical election was annulled. Sometimes the election of a bishop was notified to the court, with a petition for his investiture, and in such cases it was always in the prince's power to substitute another person for him who had been chosen. Sometimes investiture was given in the name of the sovereign by the prelate who took the chief part in the consecration.? ' Planck, ill. 437, 458. ° Ebbo, in Vita Otton. Babenberg., ™ Humb. adv. Sim. iii. 6; Nat. Pertz, xii. 827. Alex. xiii. 639. See Ch. de Remusat, p Schrockh, xxii. 434-6; Planck, ui. ' S. Anselme,' 281. 469. " Planck, iii. 467. VOL. IV. XO 140 RELATIONS OF Book V. Notwithstanding all the lofty pretensions which eccle- siastics now set up as to the superiority of spiritual over royal power,*! they did not practically gain much.*" Hinc- mar and his brethren of the council of Quiercy told Lewis of Germany that bishops ought not, like secular men, to be bound to vassalship ; that it was a shameful indignity ihat the hands which had been anointed with holy chrism, and which daily consecrated the Re- deemer's body and blood, should be required to touch the hands of a liege-lord in the ceremony of homage, or that the lips which were the keys of heaven should be obliged to swear fealty.^ But they did not obtain any exemption in consequence of this representation ; and Hincmar himself was afterwards, as a special affront, required to renew his oath of fealty to Charles the Bald.* Although bishops were exempt from the power of all inferior judges, kings still retained their jurisdiction over them.*^ Hincmar, in his greatest zeal for the immunities of the clergy, went only so far as to maintain that the royal judgment must be guided by the laws of the church.^ The enactments of some synods, that a bishop should not be deposed except by twelve members of his own order,y are not to be regarded as withdrawing bishops from the judg- ment of the sovereign, but as prescribing the manner in which this should be exercised. And in cases of treason princes deposed by their own immediate autho- rity. == When Hugh Capet brought Arnulf of Reims to trial before the synod of St. Basle, no complaint was made of his having already imprisoned him ; the pre- ^ See, for example, the council of 483-5 ; Giesel. II. i. 246. St. Macra, a.d. 881, capit. i. ; and " Hincmar, Quaterniones (Patrol. above, vol. iii. p. 336. cxxv. 1050, etc ). ; G.esel II. i 252. X Ep ^^ (p^^^^j ^^^ j . ^^^ pj^^^^^ iLp. and Ludov. Germ, regem. c. iii. 439. 15. Hard V. 475-6. y E.g., Cone. Tribur. A.n. 895. c 10. See vol. m. p. 409 ; Planck, iu. « Planck, iii. 411 ; Giesti. II. i. 248. Chap. IX. BISHOPS AND PRINCES. I47 siding archbishop's proposal, that before proceeding to the investigation the synod should petition for the security of Arnulf s life, is a proof that the king's power to inflict capital punishment on the accused prelate was admitted; and it was only through the weakness of Robert and through the support of the emperor Otho that the pope was able in that case eventually to triumph.* While feeble princes yielded to the hierarchy, powerful princes often dealt forcibly with its members. Otho the Great, in punishment of political misdeeds, banished an archbishop of Mentz to Hamburg, and shut up a bishop of Strasburg in the monastery of Corbey ;^ and, for the offence of having received a duke of Saxony with honours too much resembling those which were paid to the imperial majesty, he obliged Adalbert, archbishop of Magdeburg, to compound by heavy penalties — a horse for every bell which had been rung and for every chandelier which had been lighted.*^ Conrad II., on his last expedition to Italy, carried about with him a train of captive bishops ; ^ and when Henry III. deposed Widgers from the archbishoprick of Ravenna, the act was highly extolled by the greatest zealot for the privileges of the church, Peter Damiani.® Although the German emperors, like the Carolingians, assembled synods, took part in them, and ratified their proceedings, they did not, like the Carolingians, publish the decrees as their own enactments.* And the privileges of sovereigns in general with respect to such assemblies were diminished. Although it was still acknowledged that they had the power of summoning councils, their right in this respect was no longer regarded as exclusive, so that both in France and in Germany councils were gathered •Planck, iii. 440; Giesel. II. i. 1 wippo, Vita Chuonr. (Patrol, cxlii. 847. 1245). «» Widukind, ii. 25 (Patrol, cxxxviii.). " Ep. viii. 2. • Thietmar, u. 18. ' Pl^nck, iii. 419 ; Schmidt, ii. 204-6, 148 ERECTION OF SEES. Book V. without asking the sovereign's permission.^ Through the carelessness of the bishops, the custom of holding regular synods fell into disuse ; and when they were revived in a later age, the powers which kings and emperors had formerly exercised in connexion with them were for- gotten.^ It was regarded as a right of sovereigns to found bishop- ricks and archbishopricks, and the German emperors exer- cised it by erecting and endowing sees, — some of them perhaps as much from motives of policy as of devotion .i The consent of the prelates whose interest was affected by the new foundation was, however, regarded as neces- sary,^ and in order to obtain it the founders were some- times obliged to submit to concession and compromise. Henry II. even prostrated himself repeatedly before a council at Frankfort in 1006, that he might obtain its assistance in overcoming the objections raised by the bishop of Wiirzburg against the proposed see of Bamberg;^ and when Otho III. took it on himself to erect the arch- bishoprick of Gnesen without asking the consent of the metropolitan of Posen, out of whose province that of Gnesen was to be taken, the chronicler who relates this speaks doubtfully as to the legaHty of the act.°^ The popes now began to claim the right of confirming these founda- tions ; but, from the fact that princes laboured to pro- pitiate the local prelates, instead of invoking the pope to e Planck, iii. 420-2, 921-2. cxl. ; ib. coll. 66-91 ; Vka Henr. c. a •» Ib. 423-5, 430-1, (ib.) ; Giesebr. ii. 52, seqq. ; and a ' Mosheim, ii. 264 ; SchrSckh, xxii. letter from Arnulf, bishop of Halber- 427-8. stadt, entreating the bishop of Wiirz- *' ^.^., in the case of the bishoprick burg to consent (ib. cxxxix. 1498). of Prague, where Wolfgang, in con- The erection of the see was confirmed senting to lessen the diocese of by John XVII. (Hard. vi. 769, 770) Ratlsbon, acted against the advice of and by Benedict VIII. (Patrol, cxxxix. all his clergy. Othlon. 29. See above, 1585). See Hefele, iv. 63a, seqq. p. 83. ™ " Ut spero, legitime, sine con- ' Thietmar, vL 23 ; Planck, iii. 848. sensu tamen prsefati prsesulis, etc.* As to the foundation of Bamberg see Thietmar, iv. 28. See above, p. 83, Henry's charter (Diplom. 3;?), Patrol. Chap. IX. CHOREPISCOPI. — COADJUTORS. I49 overrule their objections, it is clear that the popes were not as yet supposed to have supreme jurisdiction in such cases." Towards the middle of the ninth century there were con- siderable dissensions on the subject of the chorepiscopi in France. They had become more and more dissatisfied with their position ; they complained that their emoluments bore no proportion to their labour, as compared with those of the diocesan bishops, while on the other side there were complaints that the chorepiscopi were disposed to exceed the rights of their commission. The decretals, fabricated in the interest of the bishops, were adverse to the claims of the chorepiscopi.^ Raban Maur, however, in con- sequence of an application from Drogo of Metz, wrote in favour of them, and especially in support of their power to ordain priests and deacons with the licence of their episcopal superiors.? The troubles occasioned by Gott- schalk may perhaps have contributed to exasperate the difference between the two classes, for Gottschalk had been ordained by a chorepiscopus during the vacancy of the see of Reims; and, notwithstanding the powerful authority of the German primate, the order of chorepis- copi was abolished throughout Neustria by a council held at Paris in 849.'! In the eleventh century a new species of assistant bishops was for the first time introduced. Poppo, bishop of Treves, in 1041 requested Benedict IX. to supply him with a person qualified to aid him in pontifical acts, and the pope complied by sending an ecclesiastic named Gratian, who must doubtless have already received ° Schmidt, ii. 222. ' Hrabanus,' 146-8 ; Gfrorer, Karol i. E.g.y Damasus, Ep. 5 (Hard. i. 21 t, 256-8. There were, however, 768, seqq.). some chorepiscopi after this time. P A.D. 847-8. Hard. v. 1417-24 ; Hinschius, Prolegg. to the Decretals Patrol, ex. 1 195, seqq. 203. ^ Giesel. II. i. 6g ; Kunstmann's 150 WARLIKE BISHOPS. BookV. episcopal consecration.'" The novelty of the case con- sisted in the application to the pope, and in the fact that the coadjutor was appointed by him. It was not, however, until a later time that such coadjutors became common in the church.^ The practice of taking part in war, which had so often been condemned by councils, became more general among bishops during this period. When the feudal relations were fully established, a bishop was bound, as a part of his duty towards his suzerain, to lead his con- tingent to the field in person, and it was only as a matter of special favour that a dispensation from this duty could be obtained.* The circumstances of the time, indeed, appeared in some measure to excuse the warlike pro- pensities of bishops, who might think themselves justified in encouraging their flocks, even by their own example, to resist such formidable and pitiless enemies of Christ- endom as the Saracens, the Northmen, or the Hunga- rians." Some prelates distinguished themselves by deeds of prowess, as Michael, bishop of Ratisbon, in the middle of the tenth century, who, after losing an ear and receiving other wounds in a battle with the Hungarians, was left for dead on the field. While he lay in this condition, a Magyar fell on him, with the intention of despatching him ; but the bishop, " being strengthened in the Lord," grappled with his assailant, and, after a long struggle, succeeded in killing him. He then with great difficulty made his way to the camp of his own nation, where he was hailed with acclamations both as a priest and as a warrior ; and his mutilation was thenceforth regarded as an honourable distinction.^ ' Bencd. IX. Ep. 5 (Patrol, cxli.). » Planck, iii. 783-6. Papebroch improbably supposes this * lb. 464 ; Giesel. II. i. 247, Gratian to have been the same who " Neand. vi. 83. bought the papacy of Benedict. N. '^ Thietmar, ij. 17. The Saxon Chro- in loc nicle and Florence of Worcester, under CHAr. IX. TITHES. »5» (3.) Although donations of land were still made to the church, its acquisitions of this kind appear to have been less than in earlier times — partly, perhaps, because such gifts may have seemed to be less required. y The clergy, therefore, felt the necessity of turning to the best account the revenues to which they were already entitled ; and especially the tithes. Tithe had originally been levied from land only, but the obligation of paying it was now extended to all sorts of income.^ " Perhaps," says the council of Trosley, ** some one may say, ' I am no husbandman ; I have nothing on which to pay tithe of the fp'its of the earth or even of flocks.' Let such an one hearken, whosoever he be — whether a soldier, a merchant, or an artisan : — The ability by which thou art fed is God's, and therefore thou oughtest to pay tithes to Him." * Many canons are directed to the enforce- ment of tithes on land newly brought into cultivation ; *» and many are directed against claims of exemption. Such claims were sometimes advanced by persons who held lands under ecclesiastical owners, and pretended that it was an oppression to require a second rent of them under another name.'' The council of Ingelheim, held in 948, in the presence of Otho I., enacted that all questions as to tithes should be subject to the decision of the bishops alone ; and a great council at Augsburg, four years later, confirmed the rule. A. D. 1056, give an account of a warlike ^ Planck, 111.620-3. Gerhoch con- bishop of Hereford, Leofgar, who was trasts the earlier emperors, from Con- slain in battle by the Welsh, with some stantine to Lewis the Pious, with " the of his clergy. Abbots also fought Othos, Henries, and such like " — "The against the Northmen.and some of these former enriched churches, the latter monastic warriors were encouraged by plundered them." De JEdif. Dei, 9 the apparition of St. Benedict— as (Patrol, cxciv.). Hugh of Fleury, a.d. 878 (Almoin. ■ There is a curious enumeration of de Miraculis S. Ben. i. i ; Patrol. the various kinds of titheable property cxxxix.), and the monks of Monte by a synod at Exeter in 1287. Wilkins, Cassino (Chron. Casin. ii. 71). Against ii. 159. clergy going to war, see Fulbert, Ep. • C. 7. Hard. vi. 531 (a.d. 909). 112 (Patrol, cxli.). ^ Planck, iii. 629. <^ lb. 627-8. Iji ECCLESIASTICAL REVENUES. Book V. The amount thus added to the revenues of the clergy must, after all possible deductions for difficulties of collection, for waste, and for other allowances, have been very large ; but the individual members of the body were not proportionately enriched. The number of the clergy was greatly increased; and, although the principle had been established that "benefice is given on account of office or duty,"® it was considered to be satisfied by imposing on the superfluous clerks the duty of reading the church-service daily, so that they became entitled to a maintenance.* The bishops, as their state became greater, found themselves obliged to keep a host of expensive retainers. Knights or persons of higher rank who were attached to the households of the great prelates — often by way of disarming their hostility ^ — were very highly paid for their services ; the free men whom the bishops contributed towards the national force, or whom they hired to fight their feuds, were costly, and, as the prelates found themselves considered at the national musters in proportion to the number of their followers, they often, for the sake of supporting their dignity, led more than the required number with them.^ According to the system of the age, all these adherents were paid by fiefs, which were either provided out of the estates of the church or by assigning them the tithes of certain lands. Such fiefs in general became hereditary, and thus the episcopal revenues were consumed by the expense of establishments which it was impossible to get rid oO The vidames or advocates in particular pressed heavily on the church. The wealth and privileges of the clergy '^ Cone. Ingilh. c. 9 ; Cone. August. e Gerhoh. de iEdif. Dei, 6; Schmidf, A.D. 952, c. 10 : Planck, iii. 635. ii. 496. • " Beneficium datur propter ofifi- '' lb. 192 ; Planck, iii. 656-60, cium. ( Planck, iii. 639, 652. ' lb. ; Giesel. II. i. 248. Chap. IX. AL»VUCAT£S. I53 continually excited the envy and cupidity of their lay neighbours, who were apt to pick quarrels with them in order that there might be a pretext for seizing their property. Every council has its complaints of such aggressions, and its anathemas against the aggressors. But the denunciation of councils, or even of popes, were of little or no avail ; force alone could make any im- pression on the rough and lawless enemies of the clergy. The vidames, therefore, if they discharged their office faithfully, had no easy task in defending the property of the churches or monasteries with which they were con- nected. But not only was the price of their assistance often greater than the damage which they averted ; they are charged with neglecting their duty, with becoming oppressors instead of defenders, with treating the property of the church as if it were their own.^ The oppression of the advocates was especially felt by monastic bodies, which often found it expedient to pay largely to the sovereign for the privilege of being able to discharge these officers. The advocateship became hereditary ; in some monasteries it was reserved by the founder to himself and his heirs, who thus, by the power of preying not only on the original endowment, but on such property as the community afterwards acquired, were in no small degree indemnified for the expense of the foundation. In some cases, the advocates appointed deputies, and thus the unfortunate clients had two tyrants under the name of defenders.^ Vast, therefore, as the revenues of the church appear, much of its wealth was merely nominal. A large part passed from the clergy to lay officials, and the rest was exposed to continual danger in such rude and unsettled times.™ ^ Abbo Florlac. can. 2 (Patrol. Schmidt, ii. 189-90 ; Planck, iii. 661-3 cxxxix.) ; Planck, iii. 606-12. Gregorov. iii. 488. ' Ducange, s. v. Advocatiis, p. 109 ; "> Planck, iii. 613. 1^4 GREEK CLERGY. — CANONS. uookV The condition of the Greek clergy is described by Liutprand as inferior to that of their Latin brethren. Their manner of Hfe struck him as sordid ; and, although some of the bishops were rich and others were poor, they were all alike inhospitable. The bishops were obliged to pay tribute to the emperor; the bishop of Leucate swore that his own tribute amounted to a hundred pieces of gold yearly ; and Liutprand cries out that this was a manifest injustice, inasmuch as Joseph, when he taxed all the rest of Egypt, exempted the land which belonged to the priests.^ (4.) An important change took place in the canonical bodies, which, as we have seen, had originated towards the end of the preceding period. Although the canonical life was attractive as offering almost all the advantages of monasticism with an exemption from some of its draw- backs, the restraints and punctilious observances of Chrodegang's rule were felt as hardships by many who had been accustomed to the enjoyment of independence. The canons had taken a high position. From living with the bishop they were brought into a close connexion with him : their privileged body acquired something like that power which in the earliest ages had belonged to the general council of presbyters ; and they claimed a share in the government of the diocese.^ The bishop, however, had at his disposal the whole revenues of the church, and although he might be obliged to set aside a certain portion for the maintenance of the canons, he had yet in his hands considerable means of annoying them. He could stint them in their allowances, he could increase their fasts, he could be niggardly in providing for occa- sions of festivity. Complaints of bishops against canons and of canons against bishops became frequent.P " Legatio, 63. 642, 751-5. ° Schrockh, xxii. 498 ; Planck, iii. P Planck, iii. 756-7. Chaf. IX. CANONS. t55 The first object of the canons was to get rid of the bishop's control over their property. The composition made between Gunther of Cologne and his chapter, at a time when he had especial reason to court them, is the earliest instance of its kind. By this the canons got into their own hands the management of their estates, and were even enabled to bequeath their houses or other effects to their brethren without any reference to the archbishop.*! The instrument was confirmed by a great council held at Cologne in 873 under archbishop Willibert, whose reasons for consenting to it are un- known; and the new arrangement was soon imitated elsewhere/ After having gained this step, the canons in various places, and more or less rapidly, advanced further. They abandoned the custom of living together, and of eating at a common table ; each had a separate residence of his own within the precincts of the cathedral. They divided the estates of the society among themselves, but in such a way that the more important members secuicd an unfair proportion ; while many of them also possessed private property.^ The canons purchased special privileges from kings and emperors, from bishops and from popes. The vacancies in each chapter were filled up by the choice of the members, and nobility of birth came to be regarded as a necessary qualification. Marriage and concubinage were usual among this class of clergy ; and their ordinary •J Hard. vi. 139. See vol. iii. p. while the usual interpretation appears 376. the more probable. 'Hard. vi. 137-42; Planck, iii. » Ratherii Judicatum(Patr. cxxxvi.); 642-8 ; Gfrorer, Karol. i. 368 ; ii. 92-3. Gerhoh. inPs. Ixiv. 35, 125 (ib. cxciv.); Bp. Hefele (iv. 492) supposes this Schrockh, xxii. 499 ; Planck, iii. 764. arrangement to relate, not to the Peter Damiani wrote two tracts against cathedral, but to collegiate churches the abuses in the canonical life — Opusc. which had until then depended on it. xxiv. ' Contra clericos regulares pro- The text, however, seems corrupt, and prietarios ' ; Opusc. xxvii. ' De Com- as incapable of yielding the one sense muni vita canonicoruni.' as the other without some alteration ; Ijfi MORALS OF TH£ CLERGY. BookV. Style of living may be inferred from the statement of Ratherius, bishop of Verona, that the simplicity of his habits led his canons to suppose him a man of low origin, and on that account to despise him.* At length the duties of the choir — the only duties which the canons had con- tinued to acknowledge — were devolved on "prebendaries" engaged for the purpose, and the canons, both of cathedral and of collegiate churches, lived in the enjoy- ment of their incomes, undisturbed even by the obligation of sharing in the divine offices."^ Thus by degrees the system which Chrodegang had instituted became extinct. The revivals of it which were attempted by Adalbero of Reims,^ by Willigis of Mentz, and other prelates, were never of long continuance ; ^ and in a later time that w^hich had been a violation of the proper canonical discipline became the rule for the foundation of cathedral chapters on a new footing. ^ (5.) The dissolute morals of the clergy are the subject of unceasing complaint. The evils which arose out of the condition of domestic chaplains increased, notwith- standing all the efforts of bishops and of councils to introduce a reform. The employers of these chaplains engaged them without any inquiry as to their morals, their learning, or even their ordination ; they claimed for them the same exemption from episcopal jurisdiction which was allowed to the clergy of the royal chapel, and every employer considered it a point of honour to support his chaplain in any violation of ecclesiastical laws or in any defiance of bishops,^ * Rather. Qualitatis Conjectura, 2. century, lived with the strictness of • Schmidt, ii. 493 ; Planck, iii. 763. monks ; they had daily to exhibit some « Richer, iii. 24. tasks to the dean " ut timidius in claus- y Mabill. ActaSS. Ben. VII. p.viii.; tro quam in scholis manum ferulae Pagi, xvi. 33 ; Planck, iii. 765. Yet subducere viderentur." Pertz, vi. 686. the Saxon annalist says that the canons » Planck, iii, 766. of Hildesheim, down to the eleventh ■ lb. 565-8, 575. See in Thietmas Chap. IX. CHAPLAINS. 15^ The mischiefs connected with this class of clergy were in great measure chargeable on the practice of the bishops themselves in conferring orders without assigning a particular sphere of labour to the receiver. The origin of such ordinations has been already traced ; ^ but now even the higher orders of the ministry were thus bestowed, for the sake of the fees which had become customary.*' Canons were passed that no one should be allowed to officiate in a church without the bishop's licence, and without producing a certificate of his ordination ; while other canons forbade the appointment of chaplains without the bishop's consent.** The council of Ravenna under John VIIL, in 877, enacted that every presbyter should at ordination be appointed to some particular church ; « but the custom of ordaining without such a title was already too firmly established. Among the many abuses which arose out of the sale of spiritual preferments was the practice of patrons who insisted on presenting their nominees without allowing the bishop to inquire into their qualifications, or even into the validity of their ordination.^ In opposition to this the council of Seligenstadt, in 1022, ordered that no layman should present a clerk without submitting him for examination to the bishop. ° (6.) But the chief subject of complaint and of ecclesias- tical legislation is the neglect of celibacy and chastity by the clergy. The older canons, which forbade clergymen vi. SQ, the account of the outrage were severely punished by Henry oflfered by some retainers of Gero, II. ; but it was probably not often marquis of Magdeburg, to Arnulf, that any such interposition of the bishop of Halberstadt, for remon- sovereign took place. strating with one of their master's '' Vol. iii. p. 194. chaplains as to the uncanonical amuse- " Planck, iii. 570-2 ; IV. ii. 313-14. ment of falconry (a.d. 1013). In that •* lb. iii. 573-8. case, indeed, both the marquis (al- • C. 14. though he was not, as Planck says, ' Planck, iii. 779. personally concerned) ^nd his men * C- 13- 158 CELIBACY AND MARRIAGE Book V. to entertain in tlieir houses any women except their nearest relations, were found, instead of acting as an effective restraint, to tempt them to more frightful kinds of sin ; and even the company of mothers, aunts, and sisters was now prohibited.^ Riculf, bishop of Soissons, ordains in 889 that, lest the sins of Absalom and of Lot should be repeated, not even the nearest kinswomen of the clergy should dwell with them ; if a clergyman should invite his mother, his sister, or his aunt to dinner, the women must return before nightfall to their own home or lodging, which must be at a distance from the parsonage.^ As experience seemed to point out more and more the expediency of relaxing the law of celibacy, councils became stricter in their requirements. Sub- deacons were required at ordination to promise that they would never marry, or, if already married, they were required to renounce their wives ; ^ a council at Augsburg in 952 enacted that all manner of clerks of mature age should be compelled to observe continency, " even although unwilling." ^ The clergy, however, when forbidden to marry, indem- nified themselves by living in concubinage — sometimes, as appears from a canon passed at Poitiers in 1000, re- sorting to strange expedients for the purpose of conceal- ing their female companions ; ™ and they married in con- tempt of the prohibitions. Atto describes clergymen as openly living with itieretricidce. — a term which he would probably have applied to wives no less than to unmarried companions — as making them the heads of their estab- lishments, and bequeathing to them the money which '' Cone. Namnet. c. 3, ap. Hard. vi. ' Constit. Ricalfi, c. 14 (Hard. vi. 457. [Perhaps this ought to have been 417). cited in the preceding book; as the ^ Cone. Biturie. A.D. 103 1, c 6. canons, while dated by some about ' C. 11 (Pertz, Leges, ii.). 89s, are referred by others to a council "° '* Nullus presbyter neque diaconus held at Nantes in 658. Hefele, iii. 97.] foemlnam in sua domo teneat, neque in Cf. Giesel. II. i. 321. cellario, neque in secreto loco" C. 6. Chaf. I)C OF THE CLERGY. I55 had been gained from the holy oblations ; thus diverting to harlots that which of right belonged to the poor. In consequence of these scandals, he says, many persons, to their own spiritual hurt, withheld their oblations; and the clergy, when called to account for their misconduct by bishops, had recourse to secular protectors, whose alli- ance enabled them to defy their ecclesiastical superiors.^ From the bishops downwards, it was common both in Germany and in Italy for the clergy to have wives, and that without any disguise ; ^ and the same was the case in Normandy, as well as in the independent church of Brittany.P In order to judge fairly of such persons, we must not regard them from the position of either the modern opponents or advocates of clerical celibacy. Living and holding office as they did under a law which forbade marriage, we cannot respect them for their viola- tion of that law. Yet if they believed the prohibition to be merely a matter of ecclesiastical discipline, and not enforced by the Divine word, — if they saw that the in- expediency of such discipline was abundantly proved by experience, — and if they found that those who were charged with the maintenance of the canons were willing to tolerate a breach of them in this respect, provided that it were managed without any offence to public decency, we may suppose that the clergy in qucotion were reason- ably justified to their own consciences. We may hold them excusable, if we cannot join with those who would admire them as heroic or enlightened. " Ep. 9 (Patrol, cxxxiv.). He ear- ac totius corporis luxus non resolveret nestly warns against all society with inflagitium?" Col. 118. women : " Difficile evadere potestis, <» Theiner, i. 479 ; Giesel. H. L 322- nisi ab earum censor tio declinetis. 3 ; Gfrorer, iv. 155-6. Quern enim compti crines, venusta p Vita Herluini, Patrol, cl. 699. St. fades, nictatio palpebrarum, elisio ocu- Anselm writes to Urban II. that a brum, affabilitas sermonum, garrula bishop of Beauvais is persecuted for modulatio, risus facilis, blanda suasio, keeping the sons or chosen heirs of praeclara monilia, schemata vestium, his canons from succeeding to tlieu olfactio unguentorum, mollis incaasus. benefices. Ep. ik 33, p. 354. r63 RATHERIUS. Bijok V. The acts of Dunstan in England have been already related, and we have seen that his reformation, which for the time appeared to be triumphant, was not of any long continuance — at least in its full extent. Reformers in other quarters failed to obtain even a temporary success. Among the most remarkable of these was Ratherius, a native of Liege, who acquired great fame for learning, eloquence, and strictness of Hfe, and in 931 was advanced to the see of Verona by Hugh the Great of Provence, in fulfilment of a promise which Hugh was disposed to evade, but which was enforced by the authority of the pope.^ Ratherius represents the Italian clergy in the darkest colours : ^ they were, he says, so grossly ignorant that many of them did not know the Apostles* creed,^ while some were anthropomorphites ; * and their obstinate unwillingness to chant the Athanasian creed suggested suspicions of Arianism." They were stained by all manner of vices : ^ the bishops were altogether secular in their manners, and even in their dress — hunting, hawking, gaming, delighting in the company of jesters, minstrels, and dancing-girls.^ They were luxurious in their food and drink ; they were utterly careless of their duties, and set the church's laws at nought;^ instead of dividing their revenues according to the canons, they appropriated all to themselves, so that the poor were robbed, and churches, which had suffered from the neg- ligence of bishops or from the violence of pagans, lay in ruins ; ^ they despised all who showed the fear of God ; ^ Hugh consented, in the belief that * Serm. ii. 29. Ratherius was dying, and was angry " Itiner. 7. at his recovery. Rather. Ep. v. 4 * lb. 5 ; Vogel, i. 242, 292 ; Theiner, (Patrol, cxxxvi.); Vogel, 'Ratherius i. 509, seqq., 521. von Verona und das zehnte Jahrhun- ^ Prseloq. v. 6-7, 11, 18-19. dert,' Jena, 1854, i. 52. " lb. 12 ; De Cont. Can. i. 6. ' De Contemptu Canonum, i. 4 ; ii- ' Praeloq. v. 7 , Synodica ; Lib. Apo %-i : Discordia, i. loget, 5. • Umcrarium, 6. Chap. IX. RATHERIUS. l6l they took pride in splendid furniture and equipages, without any thought of Him who was laid in a manger and rode on an ass.^ Unhappily Ratherius was altogether wanting in the prudence which would have been re- quisite for deahng with such persons; his intemperate zeal, his personal assumption, his passionate impatience of opposition, his abusive language and unmeasured severity in reproof, alienated the clergy, laity, and monks, with whom he had at first been popular, while his inde pendent spirit and his determination to maintain the rights of his see provoked the licentious and cruel king.*' Hugh, on a charge of treason, ' ' ^^^* imprisoned him at Pavia for two years and a half,<^ while the bishoprick was given to Manasses, archbishop of Aries, who also held the sees of Trent and Mantua, and had the effrontery to justify his pluralities by alleging that St. Peter had been bishop of Rome, Alexandria, Antioch, and Aquileia.^ In 939, Hugh for reasons of policy restored Ratherius ; but the bishop was again obliged to leave his see,* and Jiis impracticable character provoked his expulsion or compelled his withdrawal from other preferments which he successively obtained — from Liege, to which he had been promoted by the influence of Bruno of Cologne ; ^ a third time from Verona, which he had recovered through the patronage of Otho the Great by the ejection of a more popular bishop*^ (a.d. 963) ; from the abbey of St. Amand, which he is said to have purchased of king Lothair ; from the abbey of *• Praeloq. v. 9-10. for a time he governed or administered " Vogel, i. 54. See the ' Qualitatis the see of Vicenza (v. 1032). Conjectura,' 2, seqq. ^ Voge!, i. 124-9. '^ Epp. V. 4-5 ; Hist. Litt. vi. 341. ^ Phrenesis, i ; Folcuin, Gesta Liutprand, Antap. iv. 6. He had Abbat. Lobb. 23 (Patrol, cxxxvii.) ; also a design of annexing Milan to his Vogel, i. 180-4, 192-4- preferments (lb. v. 26) ; but in this it ^ Ep. v. 8 ; Privileg. Ottonis(Patrot. does not appear that he succeeded. cxxxv. 539); Folcuin, 24 ; VogeJ, x. Ughelli does not mention him as arch- 255, 302, 306, 411-20. bishop of Milan (v. 93), but says that VOL. IV. Tl l62 CELIBACY AND MARRIAGE BookV Haumont, and from that of Lobach or Lobbes, on the Sambre, the place of his education, which he had held with the bishoprick of Liege, and of which in his latter days he again became the head through the expulsion of his predecessor Folcuin.* Ratherius died at Namur in 974, at the age of 82.^ He was throughout a vehement opponent of marriage among the clergy , yet he seems at last to have been convinced that the attempt was hopeless, and to have contented himself with endeavour- ing to preserve the hierarchy from becoming hereditary, by desiring that the mamed priests should choose laymen as husbands for their daughters, and should not allow their sons to become clerks.^ It was not on religious grounds only that the celibacy of the clergy was enforced ; for the possessions of the church were endangered by the opposite practice. The married clergy often contrived to make their livings hereditary ; or they alienated ecclesiastical property to their children, whom, in order to render such alienations secure, they placed under vassalage to some powerful layman.™ Clergymen of servile birth were careful to choose women of free condition for wives and concu- bines, so as to ensure for their offspring the privileges of ' Vogel, i. 182, 426-7, 430-1 ; Hist whose benefit he wrote a grammar Litt. vl. 452; Schrockh, xxii. 513-22. with the title of 'Sparadorsum* (Spare It is Folcuin who gives the story as to back), — so called because the pupil by the purchase of St. Amand. (C. 28 ; learning it might escape chastisement cf Rather. Praeloq. v. 33 ; Ballerini, Folc. 20 ; Vogel, i. loi. Praef in Praeloq. 1. v.) Mabillon thinks ^ lb. 434. it a calumny, imposed on the abbot by > De Nuptu Illicito, 4 ; Vogel, 1. some one who wished to flatter his dis- 347. "Si multinubos a clericatu like of Ratherius (Acta SS. Ben. vii. repeilerem," he asks, " quem nisi 479); but Vogel maintains its truth, puerulos in ecclesia relinquerem? Si while he contends that the transaction mamzeres abjicerem, quem ex eisdem was not inconsistent with the ab- puerulis staie in choro permitterem ? " horrence of simony which Ratheiius Itinerar. 5, professed (i. 427-8). After one of his » Victor III. Dial. iii. (Bibl. Patr. expulsions from Verona, the bishop xviii. 853 e) ; Planck, iii. 600 ; Theiner, became tutor to a young nobleman, for i. 458-9 ; Giesol. II. i. 336. Chap. IX. OF THE CLERGY i6$ freemen by virtu of the legal principle that the child must follow the condition of the mother. Benedict VIII., at a council held at Pavia in 1022, inveighed with great severity against those who by such means impoverished the church.n " Let the sons of clergy be null," he says; "and especially the sons of such clerks as belong to the family" {i.e. to the serfs ») "of the church. Yea, let them— let them, I say — I say they shall— be null." They shall neither follow their mother in freedom nor their father in inheritance ; they shall be serfs of the church for ever, whether bom of wives or of concubines j they may in mercy be allowed to serve as Nethinims — hewers of wood and drawers of water — but must not aspire to any higher ministry. Their mothers shall be driven out, and shall be compelled to leave behind them all that they have gotten from the church. The pope's address to the council is followed by canons which enact that no member of the clergy shall have a wife or a con- cubine ; that the children of clerks shall be condemned to hopeless servitude ; and that no judge shall, under pain of anathema, promise them freedom or the power of inheriting. These canons were confirmed by the authority of the emperor Henry II., and were enforced by civil penalties.P Some canons forbade, not only that any one should give his daughter in marriage to a clerk, but that any lay person should intermarry with the child of a clerk ; Thomassin, II. iii. 3. 37 '» Planck, 696. iii. 725. An instance of the bad effects " Theiner, \. 526-7 ; Giesel, il. i. of s^ch annexation in the case of St. 2^6, 1 66 MONASTICISM. Book V. The council of Trosley, in 909, laments the general corruption. Some monasteries, it is said, have been burnt or destroyed by pagans, some have been plundered of their property, and those of which the traces remain observe no form of a regular institute. They have no proper heads; the manner of life is disorderly; some monks desert their profession and employ themselves in worldly business; as the fine gold becomes dim without the workman's care, so the monastic institution goes to ruin for want of regular abbots. Lay abbots with their wives and children, with their soldiers and their dogs, occupy the cloisters of monks, of canons, and of nuns; they take it on themselves to give directions as to a mode of life with which they are altogether unacquainted, and the inmates of monasteries cast off all regard for rule as to dress and diet. It is the predicted sign, the abomination of desolation standing in the place where it ought not.® About the same time we are told that John, afterwards abbot of Gorze, on resolving to become a monk, could not find any monastery north of the Alps, and hardly any one in Italy, where the regular discipline was observed.* (2.) Soon after this a reformation was set on foot in various quarters. The lead in the new movement was taken by Berno, abbot of Beaume, and founder and abbot of Gigni.s He had already established a reform in these two societies, when in 912^ he was invited to Cluny by William, duke of Auvergne or Upper Aquitaine, who desired him to choose a spot within the dukedom for the foundation of a monastery;* and Berno made choice of • Cap. 3. Hard. vi. 510-13. Ben. viL 70 ; Bolland. Acta SS. Jan. ' Vita, 20 (Patrol, cxxxvii.). For a 13. Berno was probably a count, but curious story of monastic disorders, this is not certain. Mab. 66. see the ' Destructio Monasterii Far- ^ Pagi, xv. 575. fensis,* by Abbot Hugh, in Murat. ' Vita Bernon. ap. Mabill.^ Acta Sg. Antiq. Ital. vi. 275, seqq. Ben. vii. 76. K Barou. 912-18 ; MabUl. Act Chap. IX. FOUNDATION OF CLUNY. 167 Cluny itself. A society of canons had been founded there in the preceding century,^ but the buildings were then occupied by the duke's hunting establishment. In his " testament," or charter, William declares that he gives the estate for the foundation of a monastery in honour of St. Peter and St. Paul ; first, for the love of God, then for the souls of the late king Odo, of his own wife, kindred, and friends, for the good of the catholic faith, and of all orthodox Christians in times past, present, or to come. Berno is to be the first abbot, and after his death the monks are to enjoy the uncontrolled election of their superior. They are to be exempt from all inter- ference of the founder and his family, of the king's majesty, and of every other earthly power. The duke solemnly charges all popes, bishops, and secular princes to respect their property; he prays the two apostles and the pope to take the monastery under their special protection, and imprecates curses on any one who shall invade it.^ Berno, like St. Benedict and other monastic founders,™ began with a company of twelve monks.^ The institu- tions of Cluny excited emulation, and other monasteries were committed to the abbot for reform. In 927, Berno was succeeded by his disciple Odo, whose fame so much eclipsed that of his master that even some members of the Cluniac order have spoken of Odo as their founder. <> To the rule of St. Benedict Odo added many minute ob- servances. p Thus the monks were required at the end of meals to gather up and consume all the crumbs of their k See MabiU. ib. 74-S. " P°' *'^"^" '^ " T.^"' ^ I ^"'f •'' , 1 TT J • c^*T,-^^« Chaucer, The Somfnour's 1 ait. ' Hard. vi. 547, seqq. See the con- firmation by pope Agapetus, ibid. 601 ; " Radulph. Glab. m. 5. also Alex. II. Ep. 43, ad Hugon. ° See Baron. 912-17 ; Pagi, xv. 576 Abbat. Clun., ib. vi. 1109. For the Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. vii. 127. early history of Cluny, see Maitland's p See, e.g:., the rules as to shavbff. *Dark Ages,' c. 18. Antiq. Consuetud. Cluo. iii. i6 (Patrol » See vol. ii. pp. 347. 4oa- cxxxix.). 1 68 CLUNY. BookV. bread. There was at first a disposition to evade this regulation; but when a dying monk exclaimed in horror that he saw the devil holding up in accusation against him a bag of crumbs which he had been unwiUing to swallow, the brethren were terrified into obedience.*! Periods of strict silence were enforced; and stories are told of the inconveniences to which the Cluniacs sub- mitted rather than break this rule — as that one allowed his horse to be stolen, and that two suffered themselves to be carried off as prisoners by the Northmen.'^ For their communications among themselves at such times a code of signals was established, which the novices were obliged to learn.^ The monks were bled five times a year, and it is doubtful whether Odo permitted the use of any medical treatment except bleeding* and the applica- tion of cautery. When two of his monks entreated him to allow them some medicine, he consented, but told them in anger that they would never recover; and the result justified his foresight, if not his humanity.'* The fame of Cluny spread. Odo, at the request of popes, thrice visited Italy for the purpose of reconciling princes, and he availed himself of these opportunities to introduce his reforms into that country.^ • 942- 5- Under his successor, Aymard, no fewer than 278 charters, either bestowing or confirming gifts, attest the wealth which was attracted to the monastery by the spectacle which it exhibited of revived austerity.^ A 1 Vita S. Odonis, ap. Mabill. Acta had died through neglecting to take SS. Ben. vii. 159. care of himself after receiving medicine »■ Mabill. Annal. iii. 457. from him. Atto, c. 43, ap. Mabill. • Antiq. Consuet. ii. 3-4 ; Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. ix. 285. Acta SS. Ben. vii. 129 ; Vita, ib. 167. » Hist. Litt. vi. 232-3. For his re- • Consuet. ii. 21. forms at Rome under the patronage of " Nalgold. ap. Mabill. 1. c. 196. In Leo VII. and of the senator Alberic, the chapter "De Infirmis " meat is see Bened. Soract. in Pertz, iii. 71; allowed, but there is no mention of Gregorov. iii. 337 ; Reumont, iL 253. medicine (Consuet. iii. 27). St. John ' Mabill. Acta SS. Bep. vii. 31$. Gualberi excommunicated a monk who Chap. IX. CLUNY. 169 series of conspicuous saints maintained and advanced the renown of the Cluniacs. Majolus, or Mayeul, who, in consequence of Aymard's having lost his sight, was appointed his coadjutor in 948,^ and became sole abbot in 965, had before joining the congregation refused the archbishoprick of Besan9on,» and on the death of Benedict VI., in 974, he declined the popedom.^ The fifth abbot, Odilo, was equal to any of his predecessors ^,d, gg.. in reputation and in influence. Popes treated 1049. him as an equal; kings and emperors sought his friendship and were guided by his advice; bishops repaired to Cluny, to place themselves as simple monks under his govern- ment.*' His contemporary Fulbert of Chartres styles him "the archangel of the monks ";<^ another contemporary, the notorious Adalbero of Laon, in a satirical poem calls him ^^King Odilo of Cluny."« He was believed to have the power of miracles, and an extraordinary efficacy was ascribed to his prayers. Benedict VHL, it is said, appeared to John bishop of Porto, telling him that he was suffering torments, but that he could be delivered by the prayers of Odilo. The abbot, on being informed of this, engaged in the charitable work, and after a time the release of the pope was shown in a vision to one of the monks of Cluny.* In days when the popes were far from saintly, the people looked away from them to the head of the great monastic society, whose position was such that he refused to exchange it for an archbishoprick, or even for St. Peter's chair.^ " Patrol, cxxxvii. ; Syrus, Vita Ma- " Rex est namque meus Rex Odilo Clunla- joli, iv. 1-2, ib. " Syrus, i. 12. »> Ib. iii. 8. « Sylvest. II. Ep. ii. 12 (Patrol. Comp. the notes, ib. 81-2. cxxxix.); Jotsald. Vita Odilon. i. 8, ' Jotsald, ii. 14; P. Damiani, Vita ap. Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. viii. 600 ; Odil., Patrol, cxliv. 937. Schrbckh, xxiii. 37. * Schrockh, xxiii. 36, Odilo re- d Fulb. ap. Bouquet, x. 456. fused Lyons, and was blamed on that * A monk is represented ass?iying— ?iccount by John XVIII. (Hard, yj^ censis. Adalb. Carm. ad Rodbert. regem, ns. (Bouq X. 67.) lyo CONGREGATION OF CLUNY. Book V. The reform begun at Cluny extended far and wide. When a revival of the true monastic asceticism had been displayed in any province, a regard for public opinion and for self-preservation urged the imitation of it on the other communities of the neighbourhood.^ A general zeal for monachism sprang up; multitudes of men became monks, many offered their children, some even devoted themselves and their posterity as serfs to a monastery, in the hope of a reward in heaven.* Princes or bishops often employed the Cluniacs in carrying out a - forcible reformation ; many monasteries of their own accord conformed to the Cluniac rule, and placed themselves in connexion with the mother society.'^ The nature of this connexion was various ; in some cases, the affiliated monastery was in strict subjection, so that it not only looked to Cluny for its abbots and priors, but did not even receive a novice without a reference to the **arch- abbot"; in other cases the lesser monastery enjoyed inde- pendence in the administration of its own concerns and in the choice of its superiors, while it acknowledged the great abbot as its chief, and regarded him as invested with a supreme authority and entitled to watch over its disci- pline. ^ Thus was formed the " Congregation of Cluny," the first example in the west (if we except the peculiar system of St. Columba) of an organization which had been intro- duced into Egypt by Pachomius in the earliest age of monasticism.™ The work of establishing this organization 838 ; Radulph. Glaber, v. 4, and notes ' Mabill. Annal. iii. 490 ; Planck, in Bouq. x. 61.) Peter Damiani, in iii. 707-8 ; Giesel. II. i. 302. See his Life of Odilo, states that he was above, vol. iii. p. 264; and Ducange, mild in imposing penances, and that, s. v. Oblati. when blamed for this, he used to say ^ Syrus, Vita Majoli, ii. 21 ; Planck, — " If I am to be damned, I would iii. 7i3-i5' rather that it should be for mercy ' Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. VII. xxvii.; than for harshness or cruelty," Col. Planck, iii. 714-15. 930. •" See vol. ii. p. 7 ; Mabill. VII. ^ Chron. S. Benig. Divion. (Patrol. xxv, cbcii. 813, 837); Planck, iii. 703. Chap. IX. ROMUALD. I7I was accomplished by the sixth abbot, Hugh, who succeeded Odilo at the age of twenty-five in 1049, and governed the society for sixty years." The number of monasteries connected with Cluny, in France, in Germany, in Italy, in England, and in Spain, amounted by the end of the twelfth century to two thousand. ° (3.) About a century after the origin of the Cluniac order, another famous society was founded by Romuald, a nobleman descended from the ducal family of Ravenna. Romuald' s early life was dissolute, but at the age of twenty he was suddenly reclaimed from it. His father, Sergius, had been engaged in a dispute as to some property with a kinsman. The two met, each at the head of his partisans, and Sergius slew his opponent. Romuald, who had been concerned in the fray, although he had not himself shed blood, was so much shocked by the result, that he entered the monastery of St. ApoUinaris with the intention of doing penance for forty days, and while there he was determined, by visions in which the patron saint of the house appeared to him, to embrace the monastic life.P After having spent three years in the monastery, he placed himself under the tuition of a hermit named Marinus, who was in the habit of daily reciting the whole psalter, saying thirty psalms under one tree and forty under another. Romuald was required to respond in these exercises, and whenever he failed (as often happened from his slowness in reading), he received a blow from the hermit's staff. By the frequent repetition of this, he lost the hearing of his left ear, whereupon he humbly begged that the chas- » Mabill. VII. xxii.-xxvii. ; Hist. ment of Frenchmen, while the abbot Litt. ix. 466, There is a Life of Hugh of Cluny drew ;^ 2000 yearly from in Hildebert's works, pp. 909-44, ed. them. Monast. Angl. V. iii.-iv. Beaugendre, Paris, 1706 ; also in Pa- P Pet. Damiani, Vita S. Romualdl, trol. clix., and Acta SS. Apr. 29, cc. 3-S- (Opera, ii. 188, seqq.) There » Schrockh, xxiii. 40 ; Planck, iii. is a later Life, by a Camaldolite named 711-12. The Cluniac houses in Jerome, in the Acta Sanctorum. KeU. England were all under the govern- 7« 172 ST. ROMUALD. Book V. tisement might be transferred to the right ear. Although he used afterwards to relate the story of his training as a matter of amusement, " Hilariter." P. Dain. ^, * See Giesebr. ii. loS. •■ lb. 19-ai. • P. JJatii. 63-A. Chap. IX. ORDER OF CAMALDOLI. 1 73 among the Apennines in the year loiS.'^ He began by building five cells and an oratory. The inmates were to live as hermits, and were not to associate together except for worship. Their duties as to devotion, silence, and diet, were very rigid ; but Romuald, although he often passed days in entire abstinence, would not allow his disciples to attempt a like austerity; they must, he said, eat every day, and always be hungry. A vision of angels ascending Jacob's ladder induced him to prescribe a white dress, whereas that of the Benedictines was black.^ Romuald died in 1027, at the age of a hundred and twenty.^ Rudolf who was " general " of the Camaldolese from 1082, mitigated the severity of the rule, and added to the hermits an institution of coenobites, whose habits gradually became very different from those prescribed in the original foundation. These monks became an order, with monasteries affiliated to Camaldoli ; but it did not spread to any great extent, although it has continued to the present day.* (4.) Another monastic reformer was John Gualbert, a Florentine of noble birth, whose conversion, like that of Romuald, arose out of one of the feuds which were characteristic of his age and country. Having been charged by his father to avenge the death of a kinsman, he met the murderer on Good Friday in a narrow pass near the bottom of the hill on which stands the monastery * Schr5ckh, xxili. 46. Mablllon by the Bollandists (Feb. 7, pp. 103, says it was not before 1023. Acta SS. 120) has some words about Camaldoli ; Ben. IX. xxxiii. but Mabillon supposes them to be in- y Hieron. 61. On monastic dress, terpolated. See his Preface to the Bee Mabill. VII. xxx. seqq. Life, and note on the passage (viii. » P. Damiani, loi ; Pagi, xvi. 363. 247, 268). The later life (61) says It is conjectured that by Aqua Bella, that the name ( = Campus Malduli) in c. 73, Damiani means Camaldoli ; was given at the request of one but, with the exception of this slight Maldulus, who bestowed the site on and doubtful mention, the biographer St. Romuald. says nothing of Romuald's most re- • Mabill. Ann. iv. 263 ; Schrcickh, nuikable deed. The text published xxiii. 4S-9. ly^ ST. JOHN GU ALBERT. Book V, of St. Miniato, and was about to execute his vengeance; but when the guilty man threw himself from A.D. I02 . j^.^ j^^^g^ ^^^ placed his arms in the form of a cross, as if expecting certain death, Gualbert was moved to spare him in reverence for the holy sign and for the solemn day.^ He then ascended the hill in order to pay his devotions in the monastic church, and, while engaged in prayer, he saw a crucifix incline its head to- wards him, as if in acknowledgment of the mercy which he had shown. By this miraculous appearance Gualbert was moved to become a monk f but his father, on hear- ing of his design, rushed to St. Miniato, assailed him with reproaches, and threatened to do mischief to the monas- tery. Gualbert, however, persevered in his resolution, and distinguished himself so much by his asceticism that ten years later his brethren wished to elect him abbot."* But he declined the dignity, and soon after left the monastery — in disgust at the election of a simoniacal abbot, according to some authorities,^ while others sup- pose that he withdrew out of a desire to avoid the distrac- tion occasioned by crowds of visitors.* After a sojourn at Camaldoli (where he gained instruction from Romuald's institutions although the founder was already dead),* Gualbert fixed himself at Vallombrosa, and there founded a society of hermits in 1039.^ To these a body of cceno- * Atto (general of Vallombrosa, who scene, with an inscription in Latin died in 1153), Vita Gualb. c. 2 (Mabill. verse. The miraculous crucifix is nO\r ix.); Andreas, Vita Gualb. 2-4 (Patrol. in the church of the Holy Trinity at cxlvi.). Florence, to which it was removed in * Atto, 3. Similar stories are told, 1671. See the Acta SS. Jul. 12, pp. with great varieties of circumstances 299-300, 429. - as by Peter Damiani (Opusc. xl. c. ^ Atto, 5-9. 3); Roger of Wendover (iv. 236, ed. • Andr. 9; Atto, 9-11 ; Acta SS. pp. Coxe) ; Csesarius of Heisterbach 3o3-5. (Dialog, viii. 21); Thomas of Can- ' Mabill. Anna!, iii. 299. timpr^ (Bonum Universale, II. xviii. « See the Acta SS. 1. c. p. 319; 3 ; and in Acta SS., Mai. 28, p. 848). Andr. 12 ; Atto, 13. The place where Gualbert met his •> lb. 12 ; Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. uiemy is marked by a picture of the IX. 274. CrtAF. IX- VALLOMBROSA. 1 75 bites were afterwards added, and the organization of the order was completed by the institution of lay-brethren, whose business it was to practise handicrafts and to man- age the secular affairs of the community, while by their labours the monks were enabled to devote themselves wholly to spiritual concerns.* The rigour of the system was extreme ; novices were obliged to undergo a year of severe probation, during which they were subjected to degrading employments, such as the keeping of swine, and daily cleaning out the pigsty with their bare hands ; ^ and Gualbert carried his hatred of luxury so far as to condemn the splendour of monastic buildings.^ His anger against offences is said to have been so violent that delinquents *• supposed heaven and earth, and even God Himself, to be angry with them " ; but to the penitent he displayed the tenderness of a mother.™ For himself he declined ordination, even to the degree of ostiary." He deviated from the Benedictine rule by attiring his monks in gray, but the colour was afterwards changed to brown, and eventually to black. Gualbert built and reformed many monasteries,** and in obedience to pope Alexander n. he reluctantly became head of the order which he had founded. His death took place in 1093.P (5.) In Germany the attempts at monastic reform met with much stubborn resistance. The monks sometimes deserted their house in a body, as when Godehard, after- wards bishop of Hildesheim, attempted to improve Hersfeld, although he at length succeeded in bringing them back.'i Sometimes they rose in rebellion against » Andr. 26-7 ; Mabill. IX. xl. Mar- ' Atto, 40. tene carries back the institution of lay- " Andr. 28. brethren {Fratres converst) in monas- " lb. 29. teries to the 5lh century, when they ° Atto, 23-4, 33. apiwar to have existed at Lerins. Coll. p lb. 73 ; Schrockh, xxiii. $1. dmpX. vi. Praef. 87-97. '' ^'**' ^^^^ • -^^ta SS., Mau 4. ^ Andr. 17 ; Theiner, ii. 82. 176 MONASTIC REFORM. Book V. their refermmg abbots, beat them, blinded them, or even attempted their lives.'' The general feeling of his class is expressed by Widukind of Corbey, who gravely tells us that a "grievous persecution" of the monks arose about the year 945, in consequence of some bishops having said that they would rather have a cloister occu- pied by a few inmates of holy life than by many careless ones — a saying which the chronicler meets by citing the parable of the tares.^ Yet even in Germany some improvement was at length effected, — partly through the policy of the saintly emperor Henry II., who vigorously endeavoured to forward measures of reform, and dealt unceremoniously with monastic property.* (6.) In the course of these reforms, the lay impropria- tions were very generally got rid of. Many of the holders spontaneously resigned their claims ; others were con- strained by princes to do so, and new grants of Hke kind were sparingly made.** The practice, however, was not extinct, and monasteries, as we have seen, suffered griev- ously from the exactions of the advocates whose duty it was to protect them.^ Kings often interfered in their affairs, and the privileges of free election which monastic bodies had received, or even purchased, from bishops, from princes, and from popes, were found in practice to be utterly unavailing against a royal nomination of an abbot.y The change of dynasty in France had a very favourable effect for monasteries. Hugh Capet, before his elevation to the throne, had held the abbacies of St. Denys and St. Germain, and was styled abbot-count.^ But from a ' See instances in Planck, iii. 702- 90. 4 ; Theiner, i. 527 ; Giesel. II. i. * P. 153 ; Schrockh, xxiii. 99-101. 299. ^ Planck, iiu 721-7. ' Widuk. ii. 37 (Pertr, iii. 448). " " Abbacomes." Sec Diicange, ' Giesebr. ii. 84. s. y. " Planck, iii. 706; Gfrorer, iv. 189- Chap. IX. BISHOPS AND MONASTERIES. 177 wish, probably, to secure to himself the interest of the monks, he resigned his abbacies, restored to the monastic communities the power of choosing their superiors, and on his death-bed charged his son Robert to refrain from alienating monastic property, and from interfering with the right of free election.* (7.) The power of bishops over monasteries was dimin- ished during this period. Any impression which the decay of monastic discipline might have made on the populai mind in favour of episcopal superintendence was neutral- ized by the sight of the disorders which prevailed among the bishops themselves, and by the fact that many of them, by impropriating the revenues of abbacies, contri- buted largely to the evils in question.^ And when the monks had been restored to reputation and influence by the reforms of the tenth century, they began to set up claims against the episcopal authority Abbo of Fleury led the way by refusing to make the customary profession of obedience to his diocesan, the bishop of Orleans.*^ A spirit of strong hostility arose between the two classes, and was signally displayed when a council at St. Denys, in 997, proposed to transfer to the parochial clergy the tithes which were held by monastic bodies, as well as those which were in the hands of laymen. The monks of St. Denys rose in tumult, and with the aid of the populace dispersed the assembled prelates ; the president of the council, Siguin archbishop of Sens, as he fled, was pelted with filth, was struck between the shoulders with an axe, and almost killed. Abbo, as the leader of the monastic opposition, was charged with having instigated the rioters j and, although he vindicated himself in a letter addressed to king Hugh and his son, it is evident, from • Helgald. Vita Robert!, c. 14 (Bou- ^ Planck, lii. 724-5. quet, X. 104); Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. « Mabill. 1. c. VIII. vii.; Planck, Vll. Ixvi.; VIII. ii. 'ii. 70-1- VOL. IV. 13 1 78 MONASTIC PRIVILEGES Book V. the relish with which his biographer relates the flight of the bishops, that the monastic party were not unwilling to see their opponents discomfited by such means.*^ Abbo went to Rome for the assertion of the monastic privileges, and afterwards, when sent on a mission as to the question of the archbishoprick of Reims, he obtained from Gre- gory V. a grant that the bishop of Orleans should not visit the monastery of Fleury except by invitation from the abbot.® Monastic communities were naturally disposed to con- nect themselves immediately with the papal see — since the papacy was the only power to which they could appeal against bishops and princes. Some of them, as that of Cluny, were placed by their founders under the special protection of the pope, and a small acknowledgment was paid to Rome in token of such connexion.^ Yet the exemption which monasteries thus obtained from the control of their diocesan bishops was not as yet intended to debar the bishop from exercising his ordinary right of moral oversight, but to secure the monks against abuses of the episcopal power — against invasion of their property, interference in the choice of abbots, unfair exactions, or needless and costly visitations.*^ And such papal grants as affected to confer privileges of greater extent were set " See Almoin. Vit. S. Abbonis, c. 9 ; Ep. il. 69 (ad Cunib. Taurin.). The Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. viii. 39 ; Hard. proofs of a monastery being subject to vi. 755, a bishop were — (i) Obedience ; (2) * Aimoin. 12. See above, p. 40. .S^w^^^/j, the payment of yearly dues ; Abbo was afterwards murdered in an (3) Procurations, the bishop's right insurrection at the monastery of La of being entertained at the cost of the Reole, in Gascony. Aimoin. 2». monks ; (4) Si^lemn processions, his <■ Planck, iii. 734-8. Thus Vendome right of celebrating mass and of hold- paid twelve soliiii yearly. Alex. II. ing meetings within the monastery. Ep. 13. (Patrol, cxlvi.) ; cf. Godef. The ordination of monks, the benedic- Vindoc. Ep. i. 9 (ib. clvii. 49). tion of abbots, the giving of chrism, K Thomassin, I. iii. 37 ; Planck, iii. the consecration of churches and altars, 736; Giesel. II. i, 303. Gregory VII. were distinct rights, independent of says that such exemptions were granted the question of subjection. Mabili, " propter infestationempraesidentium." Acta SS. Ben. IX. xii. Chap. IX. AND EXEMPTIONS. 179 aside. Sylvester II. acknowledged, in a question as to a monastery at Perugia, that a monastic body could not transfer itself to the pope's immediate jurisdiction without the consent of the diocesan.*^ The contest between the abbey of Fleury and its diocesans was not concluded by the grant bestowed on Abbo ; for some years later we find John XVII. complaining to king Robert that the archbishop of Sens and the bishop of Orleans treated the apostolical privileges with con- tempt, and had even ordered Gauzelin, the successor of Abbo, to throw them into the fire ; while Fulbert, bishop of Chartres, who endeavoured to act as a mediator, declares that it was impossible for the abbot to escape from his duty of canonical obedience.* Gregory V. failed in an attempt to exempt Hirschau from the authority of the bishop of Constance ; and when a later pope, John XVIIL, granted the abbot of Hirschau a licence to say mass in the episcopal habit (for this was one of the forms in which the assumption of abbots displayed itself), the bishop complained to Conrad the Salic. Pressed at once by the emperor and by the bishop, the abbot was obliged to give up to his diocesan the episco- ' pal staff and sandals which he had received from the pope, and these insignia were publicly burnt at the next diocesan synod.'' In T025, at the synod of Anse (near Lyons), a complaint was made by the bishop of Macon, within whose diocese Cluny was situated, that the archbishop of Vienne had officiated at consecrations and ordinations in the abbey. The abbot, Odilo, produced a privilege from the pope, authorizing the brotherhood to invite any bishop whom they might choose for the performance of such offices, but the council declared that no privilege could ^ Planck, iii. 741. known (Annal. iv. 290). ' Joh. XVII. Ep. 12 (Patrol. '' Herm. Contr. a.d. 1033 ; Mabill cxxxix.) : Fulb. Epp. 16-17 (ib. cxli.). Acta SS. Ben. VIII. xii.-xiii. Mabillon says that the result is not l8o CCNFRATERS. Boose V. be valid against the ancient canons which invested bishops with jurisdiction over the monasteries within their dioceses.^ As the question continued to be disputed, Alexander 11. , in 1063, committed the investigation of it to cardinal Peter Damiani, who (as might have been expected from his monastic character and prejudices) gave a decision in favour of the abbot ; and the pope renewed the grant, allowing the Cluniacs to call in any- other bishop than their diocesan, and ordering that no bishop should lay them under interdict or excommunica- tion. °^ Although the time was not yet ripe for the full display of monastic independence, the course of things was rapidly tending in that direction. (8.) The continued popularity of monachism is shown, among other instances, by the means which secular per- sons took to connect themselves with it. Carrying out the principle of the brotherhoods which from the sixth century had been formed for the purpose of commending their deceased members to the Divine mercy by prayers and masses," it became usual to seek enrolment as con- fraters of a monastery, and by such a connexion the confrater was entitled to expect spiritual benefits from the prayers of the society. In this manner Conrad 1. was associated with St. Gall, and Henry II. with Cluny.° Another practice, which has been traced by some as high as the seventh century, was that of putting on tlie monas- ' Hard. vi. 840. ° See vol. iii.p. 238 ; Cone. Attiniac. "> Alex. II. Epp. 14-15 (Patrol, cxlvi.); a.d. 765; Concil. Dingolfing. a.d. Synodalis Definitio (ib. cxlv. 859); Pet. 772 (?), cc. 13-14 ; Mabillon, Analecta, Dam., ' Iter Gallicum,' cc. 13, 18 (ib.). 159-61 ; Martene, Thes. i. 255-9. Among other offences, the bishop of ° Ducange, s. v. /V^/^rwzVai-; Giesel. Macon, being uncertain as to the ex- II. i, 303. SeeGiesbr. ii. 199. Henry tent of his jurisdiction, had stationed II. by gifts procured canonries at himself outside the abbey, and ex- Paderborn for himself and Cunegunda, claimed, "//"there be in this monastery expressly stipulating that they should any whom I am entitled to excom- receive clothing and maintenance lik« municate, them I excommunicate'." the other canons. Ib. 8i, (ib. 861). Chap. IX. POPULARITY OF MONACHISM. l8l tic habit in dangerous sickness — a new form^ apparently, of the obligation to penance which had been more anciently undertaken in such circumstances. If one who had taken the habit, on recovering, returned to secular life, his relapse was disapproved ;P but it was sometimes found that even the monastic habit, where it was retained, was no security against a return to the sins of the earlier life.'i Monasteries or monastic orders were often connected with each other by the bond of mutual intercession and by mutual commemoration of deceased brethren •/ and the deaths of abbots or of other distinguished members in any monastery were in such cases announced to the other houses of the association by circulars which were conveyed by special messengers.^ In the eleventh century, then, monasticism was again in the fulness of its influence. The scandals of its past decay were more than retrieved by the frequent and widely extended reformations which had taken place — each of them displaying in freshness and fervour a zeal and a rigour which for the time captivated the minds of men, and forbade them to admit the thought that that which was now so pure might itself also in time decline. P Pet. Damian. Opusc. xvi. 2 (Pa- another for the purpose of asking each trol. cxlv.) ; Mabili. Acta SS. Ben. establishment to assist in praying for VI. xcix.-cii., IX. xHii.; Schrockh. delivery from purgatory of the souls xxiii. 94. Those who thus took the of two deceased priors," and 653 habit were in Spain styled confessors. religious houses entered into an en- (Ducange, s. v. Confessor.') Theprac- gagement for mutual intercession with tice seems to have been offensive to that of Durham. (Pref to Catalogue the secular clergy. See Chron. Casin. of Materials for British History, iii. iv. 72. » Patrol, cxxiii. -iv.; Hist. Litt. V. (c. 21). See Ducange, art. Media . _ Vita; Daniel, Thosaur. Hymnol. ii. 'Patrol, cxxxi.; Acta SS. Apr. 6, 331 : Herzog, art. Notker; Hefele, vi. p. 584 : Schrockh, xxiii. 214-21. This 43^^; In the Gesta Trevir. Archiepp. Notker {Balbulus) must be distin- (Martene, Coll. Ampl. iv. 246) wc find 1 84 HAGIOLOGY. BookV. produced in vast numbers. Older lives were re-written ; new legends were composed, as substitutes for the more authentic records which had perished in the ravages of the Northmen ; many narratives, with the holy men and women who were the subjects of them, sprang from the invention of the monks. Not only was there much like- ness of detail between stories of this kind, but even the whole accounts of some saints were identical in every- thing except the names> Few men in those days shared the scruples of Letald, a monk of Mici, who, in the preface to a biography, blames the practice of ^'^' ^ °' attempting by falsehoods to enhance the glory of the saints, and says that, if the saints themselves had been followers of lies, they could never have reached their perfection of holiness.^ From the time when St. Dionysius, the martyr of Paris, was identified with the Areopagite of Scripture,™ other churches endeavoured to invest their founders with a like venerable character. Among them was the church of Limoges, which, as its first bishop. Martial, had been reckoned by Gregory of Tours with the companions of Dionysius in the third century,^ now referred him, as well as the founder of the see of Paris, to the apostolic age. At a council held at Limoges in 1023, a question arose as to the proper designation of the saint : the bishop, Jordan, was for styling him confessor, but Hugh, abbot some nuns singing it at the Salve graphics of saints for whom the most Eegiiia in Treves cathedral, " de con- venerable antiquity was pretended, silio archiepiscopi et prselatorum et De Pignoribus Sanctorum, i. 3 (Pa- prsedicatorum," by way of appeal trol. clvi. 624). against a tyrannical neighbour who ' Ep. Dedic. ad Vit. Juliani (Patrol. wivhed to deprive them of some pro- cxxxvii. 782). See, however, for other pcrty bequeathed to them. See here- instances, Digby, 'Mores Catholici, alter, Book IX. c. viii. sect. 2. 3. x. 517-19. ed. i. ^ See Glesel. II. i. 313. Guibert of ■" See vol. i. p. 217; vol, iii. i>. Nogent, in the end of the twelfth 358. century, says that he himself had often ° Greg. Turon. i. i3, b«cn asked to write imaginary bio- Chap. iX. S'i. MARTIAL AN APublLE. 1S5 of St. Martial's, insisted that his patron was entitled to be called apostle, as having been one of the seventy disciples. Among the most strenuous advocates of the abbot's view was the chronicler Ademar, who had received his educa- tion in the monastery of St. Martial : in a vehement letter on the subject, he professes his belief in a legendary life of the saint as being of apostolic antiquity, and no less authentic than the four Gospels ;0 and he strongly declares that no mortal pope can deprive of the apos- tolical dignity one whom St. Peter himself reveres as a brother apostle. p The matter was taken up by councils at Poitiers and at Paris ; whosoever should refuse the title of apostle to St. Martial was branded as being like the Ebionites, who, out of enmity against St. Paul, limited the number of apostles to the original twelve ; and John XVIII. , on being appealed to, declared that it would be madness to question the saint's right to a name which was given not only to the companions of the first apostles, but to St. Gregory for the conversion of England, and to others for their eminent labours as missionaries.^ The apostolic dignity of Martial, which raised him above martyrs, to whom as a confessor he would have been inferior, was confirmed by councils at Bourges and at Limoges in 103 1, and bishop Jordan acquiesced in the decision.'' The number of saints had increased by degrees. Char- lemagne, as we have seen, found it necessary to forbid the reception of any but such as were duly accredited;^ but the multiplication went on, the bishops being the o Patrol, cxli. 93-6. apostolic dignity ; and Alban Butler, P lb. 106. in his account of St. Martial (June 30), « Hard. vi. 837-8 ; Pagi, xv. 590 ; says nothing of all these proceedings, Mosh. ii. 386 ; Schrockh, xxiii. 145-8 ; but contents himself with the account Giesel. II. i. 315. given by Gregory of Tours, which " Hard. vi. 852, seqq. The Bolland- places the saint in the third century. ists (June 30, pp. 490, seqq.) are • Vol. iii. p. 247. against the claim of St. Martial to 1 86 CANONIZATION. Book V. authorities by whom the title of sanctity was conferred.* In the end of the tenth century, a new practice was introduced. At a Roman council, held in 993, Ludolf, bishop of Augsburg, presented a memoir of Ulric, one of his predecessors who had died twenty years before, and referred it to the judgment of the bishops who were present, as being an assembly guided by the Holy Spirit. The sanctity of Ulric was attested by stories of miracles, wrought both in his lifetime and after death; and the pope, John XV., with the council, ordered that his memory should be venerated as that of a saint, in words which, while they refer all holiness and religious honour to the Saviour, yet contain the dangerous error of interposing his saints as mediators between Him and mankind." This was the first authentic instance in which canoniza- tion {i.e. the insertion of a name in the canon or list of saints) ^ was conferred by the decree of a pope. The effect of such a decree was to entitle the saint to reverence throughout the whole of western Christendom, whereas the honour bestowed by bishops or provincial councils was only local. ^ But the pope did not as yet claim an exclusive right ; metropolitans continued to canonize, sometimes with the consent of popes, sometimes by their own sole authority, until Alexander HI., in 1170, de- clared that, "even although miracles be done by one, it is not lawful to reverence him as a saint without the sanctfon of the Roman church." ^ Yet in whatever * Mosh. ii. 294-5. See the com- * The word was not used until the plaints of Gulbert of Nogent, De Pign. twelfth century. Mabill. Acta SS. Sanctorum, i. i (col. 614). Ben. VII. xliv. " Hard. vi. 727. A Life of Ulric is y lb. 416 ; Annal. iv. 84 ; Acta SS. in Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. vii., Pertz, Bolland., Jul. 4, p. 79. It is said that iv. .and the Patrol, cxlii. The earth Nicolas I., with a council, decreed the in which his body had lain is said to be canonization of St. Anskar, but only by sovereign as a protection against dor- way of confirming the previous canon- mice, for " all who devoutly hold him ization of him by Rimbert. Munter, in honour." Acta SS., Jul. 4, pp. 88, i. 320; Herzog, vii. 327. 00, 134-5. ' Alex. III. ap. Greg. IX., D«>crptal. Chap. IX. THE BLESSED VIRGIN. 1 87 hands the formal sanction might be lodged, the character of saintship was mainly conferred by the people. When a man of reputed holiness died, miracles began to be wrought or imagined, an altar was built over the grave, and an enthusiasm was speedily raised which easily made out a case for canonization. Bishops and popes felt the expediency of complying with the popular feeling, and thus the catalogue of saints was continually swelled by fresh additions.* Stories of miracles done by the saints abounded, and they show how the belief in such interpositions, as pro- bable in every variety of occasions and circumstances, was likely to place these lower mediators in the way of the Author of all miracles. The oppressiveness of too frequent miracles, and the bad effects which the posses- sion of wonder-working relics produced on monks, were felt by many abbots, and some of them, like Hildulf ^ of Moyen-Moutier in an earlier time, took means to deliver their monasteries from such dangerous privileges.<= (3.) The honours paid to the blessed Virgin were continually advancing to a greater height. The most extravagant language was used respecting her, and was addressed to her. Peter Damiani speaks of her as " deified," ^ as " exalted to the throne of God the Father, and placed in the seat of the very Trinity."® " To thee," he says, ** is given all power in heaven and in earth; nothing is impossible to thee, to whom it is possible even to raise again the desperate to the hope of bliss. For thou approachest the golden altar of man's xlv. I ; Mabill, Acta SS., Ben. VII. »> See vol. iii. p. 244. xiv., liii.-liv. ; Schrockh, xxviii. 172 ; « See instances in Gieseler, II. i. Planck, IV. ii. 704-9. 310. " Schrockh, xxiii. 141. See Guib. •* Serm. 44, p. 100, col. 2, e. Novig. de Pigiiorib. SS. i. i (Patrol. • lb. 40, p. 91, col. i, c. •^•i 614). 1^'^ ALL S0UI5* DAY. Book V. reconciliation, not only asking but commanding ; as a mistress, not as a handmaid." * He revels in the mystical language of the Canticles, which he interprets as a song in celebration of her nuptials with the Almighty Father. s Saturday was regarded as especially consecrated to the Virgin,^ and offices of prayer to her were framed. The Ave, or angelic salutation, became an ordinary part of devotion,' and traces are found of what was afterwards styled the Rosary — the repetition of a certain number of prayers (as the Paternoster fifteen times, and the Ave a hundred and fifty times) in her honour.^ New titles were invented for her; thus Odo of Cluny styled her " mother of mercy. " The newly converted Hungarians were taught by a Venetian, on whom king Stephen had bestowed a bishoprick, to call her " lady " or " mistress," and they were placed under her special protection as " the family of St. Mary." i (4.) The festival of All Saints, which had been insti- tuted at Rome in the eighth century,™ and had been al- ready known in England, was in 835 extended to France, Germany, and Spain, by Gregory IV.° In the end of the tenth century a new celebration was annexed to it. A French pilgrim, it is said, in returning from Jerusalem, was cast on a little island of the Mediterranean, where he met with a hermit who told him that the souls of sinners were tormented in the volcanic fires of the island, and that the devils might often be heard howling with rage ' Serm. 43, p. loi, col. i, a. 745, ed. Antv. 1572). B " Epithalamium." Serm. 11, p. ' P. Dam. 1. c. 3; Mabill. Acta SS. 3, col. 1, d. These passages (which I Ben. VII. lix. have verified) are given, with others, ^ lb. Ixi.-lxiii. ; Giesel. II. 1.317-19; by Gieseler, II. i. 316-17. Peter has a ii. 472 ; Herzog, art. Roseiikranz. strange legend as to devotion to the ' Vita Steph. 16 (Patrol, cli.) ; Virgin. Kp. vi. 39. Schrockh, xxiii. 153. '' See P. Dam. ' De Bono Suffra- '" See vol. iii. p. 241. £;iorum,' Opusc. xxiv. 4; Durand. " Sigeb. Annal. 835 (Patrol, clx.); Rationale, IV. i. 31-3 ; Vincent. Ferrer. Martene, iii. 215 ; Mosh. ii. 24S. Serin, m Parasceue, (Pars Hyem. d. Chap. IX. RELICS. 1 89 because their prey was rescued from them by the prayers and alms of the pious, and especially of the monks of Cluny. On reaching his own country, the pilgrim, in compliance with the hermit's solemn adjuration, reported this to abbot Odilo, who in 998 appointed the morrow of All Saints to be solemnly observed at Cluny for the repose ot all faithful souls, with psalmody, masses, and a copious distribution of alms and refreshment to all poor persons who should be present.^ The celebration was early in the next century extended to the whole Cluniac order; and eventually a pope (it is not certain who) ordered its observance throughout the church. p (5.) The passion for relics was unabated, and was gratified by the "invention" (as it was somewhat am- biguously called) of many very remarkable articles. Among those discovered in France during the tenth century were one of our Lord's sandals at St. Julien in Anjou, part of the rod of Moses at Sens,^ and a head of St. John the Baptist (for more than one such head were shown) at St. Jean d'Angely.*" Vendome boasted the possession of one of the tears shed by the Saviour over Lazarus, which had been caught by an angel, and given "> Statut. Odilonis (Patrol, cxlii. rum' I. iii. 2 (Patrol, clvi.): ' Gesta 1037) ; Anliq. Consuet. Cluniac. i. 42 Dei per Francos,' i. v. (ib.). The (ib. cxlix.); Jotsald. Vita S. Odil. ii. genuineness of the St. Jean d'Angely 14 (Mabillon, viii.) ; P. Dam. Vita S. relics is denied by the Bollandists Odil. (Opera, ii. 183). The story is (June 24, pp. 648 52). See in the somewhat differently told by another same volume a very full account of all biographer (Mabill. viii. 5S5). Gie- the relics attributed to the Baptist, pp. seler thinks the legend as to the origin 612-84. As to the head at St. Sylves- of the festival later than Odilo's time. ter's "in Capita" at Rome (which is II. i. 320. nearly entire, and therefore cannot be P Augusti, iii. 276; Giesel. II. i. admitted to be true without disallowing 319-21. The Chronicle of Hildesheim the claims of similar relics in other mentions its introduction there by places), the editor, Papebroch, suggests Herman, who became bishop in 1063 that, although supposed to be genuine Leibn. i. 747. by Boniface VIII. and other popes, it 1 Radulf. Glab. iii. 6. probably belongs to some less eminei { ' Ademar, iii. 56 (Pertz, jv.). See St. John, 412-13, 6?^. OuJb. Novig. ' De Pignorrbtts Sanct^ IQO RELICS. Book V. by him to St. Mary Magdalene.^ The discoveries extended far back into the Old Testament history; there were relics of Abraham and hairs of Noah's beard ; * for of any additional improbability arising from the greater remoteness of time the age was altogether insensible. These relics drew vast crowds of pilgrims, and became important sources of wealth to the monasteries or churches which possessed them. For the sake of such sacred objects, theft had always been reckoned venial ; and now, as we have seen, the peasantry of Catalonia were even ready to murder St. Romuald in the hope of obtaining benefits from his remains." The impostures connected with this superstition were numberless, and they were not always successful. Relics were sometimes tested by fire, as those found in the Arian churches on the conversion of Spain to orthodoxy had been.^ Radulf the Bald gives an account of a fellow who went about under different names, digging up bones and extolling them as relics of saints. At a place in the Alps he displayed in a portable shrine some fragments which he styled relics of a martyr, St. Just, *nd pre- tended to have discovered by the direction of an angel. A multitude of cures were wrought — a proof, says the chronicler, that the devil can sometimes do miracles ; and the people of the neighbourhood flocked to the relics, " each one regretting that he had not some ailment of which he might seek to be healed." The impostor grew into high favour with a marquis who had founded a monastery at Susa, and when a number of bishops had met for the consecration, the pretended relics, together with others, were placed in the church ; but in the course of the following night, some monks who were watching • See MabilL Annal. IV. 532-3, and * Schrockh, xxiii. 172. the engravings there ; SchrOckh, xxiii. » P. 172. 180-3. * Giesel. II. i. 311. See vol. u. p. 357. Chap. OC. RELICS. \9i saw a number of figures, black as Ethiops, arise out of the box and take to flight. Although, however, the fraud was thus miraculously discovered, we are told that the common people for a time adhered to their belief in the relic-monger.y Nor were the dealers in relics the only persons who practised on the popular credulity in this respect ; another class made it their trade to run about from one shrine to another, pretending to be cured by the miraculous virtue of the saints.* Contests sometimes arose as to the genuineness of relics. The monks of St. Emmeran at Ratisbon disputed with the great French abbey of St. Denys the possession of its patron's body.* The body of St. Gregory tht Great was believed at once to be in St. Peter's at Rome, and to have been secretly carried off to St. Medard's at Soissons; while Sens, Constance, and somewhat later Torres Novas in Portugal could each display his head.** The monks of Monte Cassino denied the genuineness of the remains which had been translated to Fleury as those of St. y Rad. Glab. iv. 3(a.d. 1027). into the interest of their rivals, re- ^ Giesel. II. i. 311. quested him to suspend his judgment » The German claim is said to have until they should have examined the arisen out of the fact that Charles the tomb in their own abbey, and the Simple gave one of the saint's hands to result of a solemn opening was in Henry the Fowler ; but it was pre- their favour. (' Detectio corporum tended that the whole body had been SS. Dionysii, etc.. Bouquet, xi. 470-4, stolen from St. Denys by one Gisalbert, Pertz, xi. 343-75). Giraldus Cambrensis, from whom it was said to have been in the beginning of the 13th century, obtained and transferred to Ratisbon says that the monks of St. Denys, after by the emperor Arnulf (Patrol, cxiiii. having pledged the head of their patron 789-90 ; Pagi, xvii. 667 ; Mabill. to the archbishop of Paris, substituted Annal. iii. 266). The pretensions of another head for it (Spec. Ecclesiae, Ratisbon were attested by many mira- in Works, ed. Ercwer, iv. 58). At cles, and a diploma which bears the a later time there was some dispute name of Leo IX., a.d. 1052, professes between Paris and the neighbouring to decide in favour of them, after full abbey as to the head of St. Denys inquiry on the spot (Hard. vi. 965). See Gerson, t. iv. 721 ; Monach. Btit the document is spurious (Cossart, Sandionys., Chron. Karoli VI., L ib. 1032 ; Launoy, de duobus Dionysiis, xxvii. c. 13 ; Juven. des Ursins, a.d 470, seqq. ; Pagi, xvii. 68 ; Hefele, iv. 1385, p. 187. 727). The monks of St. Denys, fenr- *» Acta SS., Mart 12, pp. laj-.^, ing that I.eo was about to be drawn 702 PILGRIMAGES. prxov V Benedict,'^ and the saint himself was said to have con- firmed the denial by visions; Canterbury and Glaston- bury had rival pretensions to St. Dunstan;*^ and we have seen that both Gnesen and Prague claimed to possess the real body of St. Adalbert, the apostle of Prussia.^ (6.) Pilgrimages were more frequent than ever. Rome was, as before, the chief resort, and the hardships of the way were sometimes enhanced by voluntary additions, such as that of walking barefoot.^ Compostella became another very famous place of pilgrimage from the time when the relics of St. James the Greater were supposed to be found there in 8i6.s Many ventured to encounter * Chron. Casin. ii. 48 ; iv. 29 (Pertz, vii.) ; Tosti, i. 182-3. See above, vol. iii. p. 217, and a dissertation at the end of Mabillon's Annals, vol. vi. There is a letter of pope Zacharias, desiring the monks of Fleury to restore the stolen body to Monte Cassino(Ep. 17, Patrol. Ixxxix.). In a document of which the genuineness is doubtful, Alexander II. is represented as warranting the reality and the integrity of St. Benedict's body as preserved at Monte Cassino, and discovered during the rebuilding of the church by abbot Desiderius, in 1071. (Patrol, cxlvi. 1425.) Urban II., in a bull printed by Tosti, relates that, while at Monte Cassino, he had a vision of St. Benedict, who asked him " Cur de nostra corporali pra;sentia duLitas?" ii. 83-5, cf 7-9. ^ The question as to Dunstan's body was revived so late as the time of Abp. Warham, when it was decided in favour of Canterbury. Wharton, Ang. Sacr. i. 147 ; Hook, i. 423-7; vi. 345. * P. 85 See for other instances, Giesel. II. i. 316; Vogel, ' Ratherius,' i. 255-7. The chronicler of Monte Cassino (ii. 24) relates that the citizens of Benevento, on being asked by Otho III. to give him the body of the apostle St. Bartholomew, palmed off on hiin the less precious relics of St. Paulinus of Nola ; and the emperor, on discovering the fraud, besieged the city, although without success. Sollier, after a full discussion of the claims of Rome and Benevento, decides that there are relics of St. Bartholomew in both places ; but whether those which were translated from Benevento were the greater or the less part of the body, he professes himself unable to determine. Acta SS., Aug. 25, pp. 77-100, ' Schrockh, xxiii. 202. 8 Hist. Compostell. i. 2 (Patrol, clxx.) ; Acta SS. Jul. 25, pp. 32, seqq. Schrockh, ii. 107, xxiii. 202 ; Prescott, ' Ferdinand and Isabella,' i. 283. Although the body of the apostle had the head attached to it, the treasures of Compostella were afterwards in- creased by another head of him, which had been stolen from a church near Jerusalem by Burdinus, bishop of Coimbra (afterwards antipope under the name of Gregory VIII.). Seethe Acta SS., Jul. 25, pp. 12-18, 24-5. But .according to the editor of the Hist. Compostell., ///^^ head had really belonged to St. James the Less. Part of the greater St. James's head was also said to be in St. Vedast's at Arras, (Acta SS. Jan. 3, p. 158) ; and Geddes professes to have seen yet another Chap. IX. PILGRIMAGES* I93 the dangers of the long and toilsome journey to Jeru- salem, where from the ninth century was displayed at Easter the miracle of the light produced without human hand — " considering the place, the time, and the inten- tion, probably the most offensive imposture to be found in the world." '^ This pilgrimage was often imposed as a penance ;^ and the enthusiasm for voluntarily undertaking it was intensely excited by the approach of the thousandth year from the Saviour's birth, and the general expectation of the end of the world. Beginning among the humblest of the people, the feeling gradually spread to the middle classes, and from them to the highest — to bishops, counts, and marquises, to princes and noble ladies ; to die amid the hallowed scenes of Palestine was regarded as an eminent blessing, as an object of eager aspiration ; and, after the alarm of the world's end had passed away, the pilgrimage to Jerusalem still continued to be fre- quented. In 10 10 the church of the Holy Sepulchre was destroyed by the caliph Hakem, a frantic tyrant, who invented a new religion, still professed by the Druses of Lebanon.^ It was believed that the caliph was instigated to this by some western Jews, who alarmed him by representing the dangers likely to result from the interest with which the Sepulchre was regarded by Christians ;^ and the Jews of France and other countries paid heavily head of him at Braga. Tracts, ii. 219, 1238. 33). There is a treatise on the Lond. 1713. history of the "holy fire," by Mosheim. •» Stanley, ' Sinai and Palestine,' * Wilken, i. 34. 464. See the French pilgrim Bernard ^ Gibbon, v. 400, with Milman's (about A. D. 870) in Patrol, cxxi. 572; notes; Jowett's ' Christian Researches Rad. Glab. iv. 6, p. 51 ; Guib. Novig. in Syria,' 41, Lond. 1826 ; DoUinger, ' Gesta Dei,' viii. 10 (Patrol, clvi. 827); 'Muhammed's Religion,' etc., Miin- Ducange, s. v. Ignis, p. 758 ; Mabill. chen, 1838, p. 122. Annal. iii. 165-8 ; Schriickh, x.xiii. ' Rad. Glab. iii. 7. Another account 203-4. When this exhibition was taken is that Hakem was exasperated by a up by the Laiin canons of the Holy monk named John, who was angry Sepulchre, Gregory IX. forbade it, v/ith the patriarch Zacharias for re- " quia Dominus, ut pro ipso loquamur, fusing to consecrate him as a bishop, oiendacio nostro non eget " (Raynald. Besant and Palmer's ' Jerusalem,' VOL. IV, 13 194 ARCHITECTURE. BookV, in blood and suffering for the suspicion."^ After the assassination of Hakem the caHphs resumed the former system of toleration. Hakem's mother, a Christian, began the rebuilding of the church ; increasing crowds of pilgrims flowed eastward, carrying with them gifts in aid of the work, and returning laden with relics ;^ and the fashion continued to become more general until in the last years of the century it produced the crusades." (7.) The beginning of the eleventh century was marked by an extraordinary activity in church-building. There had been Httle disposition to undertake such works while the expected end of all things forbade the hope of their endurance; but when the thousandth year was completed, the building of churches became a passion. It was not limited to the work of providing for necessity by the erection of new buildings or by enlargement of the old, nor even to the addition of embellishments; but churches which had in every way been found amply sufficient were destroyed in order that more costly structures might be raised in their stead. " It was," says a chronicler, "as if the world were re-awaking, as if it everywhere threw away its old dress, and put on a white vesture of churches." p And the effect on the art of architecture was important. Charlemagne's great church at Aix had been copied (although not without the introduction of original features) from the Byzantine type, as exhibited at Ravenna, and after it many churches along the Rhine had displayed Byzantine characteristics, especially the surmounting cupola.i St. Mark's at Venice, a church of very oriental Lond. 1872, p. 103, (a book which p Hope, 112, 128, 217 ; Ampere, iii. contains much information on the 244 ; Fergusson, i. 594. The term subject of pilgrimages, but is un- Byzantine must not, however, be too fortunately not supplied with refer- strictly taken here. See Fergusson, i, ences). 352. >" Rad. Glab. 1. c. «« Hope, 123; Fergusson, il. 240, n lb. ao2. lb. 4. Chap IX. GLASS-PAINTING. I95 Style, was built between 977 and 1071/ But in general the ecclesiastical architecture of the west was Roman, and the plan of the basilica was preserved. The churches of the eleventh century maintain the continuity of Roman art, but have yet a new character of their own. It is no longer Roman art in debasement, but a style fresh and vigorously original — the solemn, massive, and enduring architecture which, in its various modifications, has been styled Romanesque, Lombard, or Norman.* It would appear that the art of staining glass, which afterwards became so important in the decoration of churches, was already invented, although the date of the invention is unknown.* There has, indeed, been much confusion on this subject, through the mistaken assump- tion that passages which contain any mention of coloured windows must relate to the painting of figures on the glass, whereas the older descriptions of such windows in reality mean nothing more than the arrangement of pieces of coloured glass in variegated patterns." Perhaps the earliest distinct notice of stained glass is in Richer's history, where we are told that, towards the end of the tenth century, Adalbero, archbishop of Reims, adorned ' Amp&re, iii. 248. And the real meaning of them does not ■ See Martin, iii. 38-41 ; Caumont, imply anything beyond flain glazing Ab^c^daire, i. 54 ; Ampere, iii. 464. (which was then a rarity) and a root' * Emeric David, quoted by Ampere, ornamented with gilding. Compare iii. 252, 342. M. de Montalembert (ii. the prose description, in note, I. c. 291) infers from Venantius Fortiniatus " This is the true explanation of that the church of St. Germain-des- passages in which Anastasius speaks of Pr&, at Paris, had not only organs (see Leo I II. as having adorned the Lateran above, vol. iii. p. 232) but stained glass church with windows, "ex vitro windows, about the year 600. But the divcrsis coloribus" (Patrol, cxxviii. only lines in which there is anything 1236), and of Benedict III. as having on which such a statement as to the embellished St. Mary's in the Traste- windows could be founded, are these:— vere "vitreis coloribus" (ib. 1354), as also probably of the description which "Prima capit radios vitreis oculata fenestris. Gozbert, abbot of Tegernsee, gives of *nificisque m '-' "' ' •" arce diem. Artificisque manu [a/, manus] clausit in , ., ..j.i.-i.i arce diem ^^^ wmdows presented to his church Cursibusauroraevagaluxlaqueariacomplet, about the year.iooo (Ep. 3, ib. cxxj Atque suis radiis et sine sole micat." See Labarte on the Arts, etc ol Vtn. FctCm. Misctll. ii. i4'(Patrol. Ixxxviii.). Middle Ages, Lond. 1855, pp. 65- igS PENANCE. Book V. liis cathedral with windows "containing divers histo- Hes."^ (8.) The system of Penance underwent some changes. Things which had been censured by councils in the eswlier part of the ninth century became authorised before its end ; thus the penitential books, proscribed (as we have seen) by the council of Chalons in 813/ are named by Regino among the necessary furniture of a parish priest's library, as to which the bishop is to inquire at his visitation.^ By means of these books any re-enact- ments of old canons, or any new canons which appeared to increase the severity of penance, were practically evaded.* The rich could commute their penance for payments to churches — for works of public utility, such as the building of bridges and making of roads — for alms to the poor, for liberation of slaves or redemption of captives, for the purchase of masses and psalmody ;^ while for the poorer classes the Penitentials provided such commutations as pilgrimages, recitations of psalms 01 other devotional exercises, visiting the sick, and burying the dead.*' The system of vicarious penances, which has been already noticed as existing in England,<^ was, with some varieties, practised in other countries also.® 'Councils might and did enact that with the outward acts -which were prescribed the right dispositions of the heart should be joined. But how were these to be secured or ascertained? — how were the penitents to be preserved * iii. 23. M. Labarte does not cite in supposing the clergy to have had as ithis passage, but sets aside all supposed yet no pecuniary interest in the cora- cvidence earlier than the eleventh cen- mutation, see Gieseler, II. i. 316. tury, p. 68. ° See the Laws of Edgar, cc. 14-19, y Vol. iii. p. 253. in Thorpe, 412-14 ; Planck, iii. 477-80. » Inquis. Episcopi, 95 (Patrol, cxxxii. <• Vol. iii. p. 252. 191). They are prescribed by Rathe- « -E.g:, Regino de Discipl. Eccl. ii. rius and by Ulric of Augsburg (ib. 438-46 (Patrol, cxxxii.). See Planck, cxxxv. 1274 ; cxxxvi. 564). iii. 681 ; Neand. vi. 150; Giesel. U. i. » Planck, jL 672-5. 336. * That Planck (iii. 678) was mistaken Chap. IX. EXCOMMUNICATION AND ANATHEMA. 1 97 from the delusions which a formal prescription of external acts, as equivalent to repentance, could hardly fail to engender ?*" And the dangers of such a system were the more serious, because, by a departure from the view taken in the early ages, penance was now supposed able not only to restore the offender to the church on earth, but to assure him of the divine forgiveness.^ With a view of increasing the hold of church-discipline on the minds of men, a distinction was invented between excommunication and anathema, and the assistance of the secular power was called in to enhance by civil penalties the terror of these sentences. Excommunication was exclusion from the privileges of the church; the heavier doom of anathema placed the offender under a curse.^ The council of Pavia in 850 enacted that the excommunicate person should be incapable of holding any military ofhce or any employment in the service of the state, and should be debarred from ordinary inter- course with Christians.^ But anathema inflicted further punishments ; the culprit against whom it was pronounced could not be a party in ecclesiastical suits, he could not make or establish a will, he could not hold any property under the church, he could not even obtain justice in secular courts where an oath was required, because he was not admissible to swear. No priest would bless the marriage of such a person ; the last sacraments were denied to him, and he was to be shut out from Christian burial— penalties which, if the sinner himself were un- moved by them, were likely to act powerfully on the minds of some who were connected with him, and often drew from these large offers of payment for the recon *■ Planck, iii. 682 ; Fleury, Disc, at assumptions of the clergy as to ; end of b. li'x. c. 16. tion (about A.D. 1000). Patrol cH. e Schrockh, xxiii. 137. See a letter 693-8. from a citizen of Spires to Heribert, *• Planck, iii. 504-9; Giesel. U, \. i6g. ^chbishop of Cologne, qn the mw * Cone. Regioticin. c. i-.., 198 INTERDICT. BOOK V. ciliation which it was supposed that the church could bestow even after the offender had passed from the worlds The forms of curse became more elaborately- fearful, and tales are told of the effect which they took on the unhappy men against whom they were launched, causing them to die suddenly in their impiety, or to wither away under the tortures of long and hopeless disease.^ There were, however, some for whom the disabilities annexed to anathema or excommunication had little terror. Emperors and kings, counts and dukes, were strong enough to get justice for themselves, although under a sentence which would have debarred meaner men from it ; they could obtain the ministrations of religion from chaplains, in defiance of all ecclesiastical censures ; they held their secular positions unaffected by the denuncia- tions of the church.™ In order to bring such powerful offenders under control the Interdict was devised — a sentence which placed a whole district or kingdom under ban, closing the churches, silencing the bells, removing the outward tokens of religion, and denjing its offices to the people, except in such a measure and with such cir- cumstances as tended to impress the imagination with a deeper horror. '^ The infliction of penalties which involved alike the innocent and the guilty had been disapproved in earlier days.** The first known attempt at imposing ^ Planck, iii. 512-15; Giesel. II. i. (Hard. vi. 465), with Richer's account 342. It is said that St. Gerard, bishop of the death of Winemar, one of the ofToul, who died in 994, used every murderers (i. 18). There is a collection evening, at his devotions, secretly to of forms in Martene, De Antiq. EccL take off all the excommunications Ritibus, ii. 322-5. which he had uttered, lest .inyofthe °» Planck, iii. 515. guilty persons should die unabsolved " For an elaborate description of the during the night ; and that he imposed effects of an interdict, see Hurler, the sentence afresh in the morning. * Gesch. Innocenz III.' i. 374, seqq. Vita, c. 2, ap. Martene, Thes. iii. 1054. ^'^' ^- * See, for example, the curse uttered *• See St. Augustine's remonstrance by a synod at Reims against the mur- with Auxilius, Ep. 350 (t ii. coL n is not uniformly marked. Some- « Hugo. Flav. I. c. SeeKluckhohn times pax means the scheme of un- as to Germany, England, Italy, an * For this supposition, see Luden, not clear. viii. 640, who follows Herman the 2o8 CLEMENT n. Book VI. to proceed to the election of a pope. They answered that they were bound by an oath to choose no other pope during the Hfe-time of Gregory, but begged that the king would give them one who might be useful to the church ; whereupon Henry was invested with the ensigns of the patriciate, and in the character of chief magistrate of Rome presented Suidger to the assembly. In answer to his question whether any worthier pope could be named from among the Roman clergy, no voice was raised by way of objection; and the king, leading Suidger by the hand, seated him in St. Peter's chair, where he was hailed with acclamations as Clement the Second.^ On Christmas day, the anniversary of the day on which, nearly two centuries and a half before, Charlemagne had been crowned by Leo III. — the imperial coronation of Henry and his queen Agnes was celebrated with extraordinary splendour and solemnity.^ The emperor was earnestly bent on a reformation of the church, and had selected Suidger as a fit agent for the execution of his plans. Soon after his election the pope held a council with a view to the correction of abuses, and it was decreed that any one who had received ordination from a simoniac, know- ing him to be such, should do penance for forty days.® But beyond this little or nothing is known of Clement, except that he visited the south of Italy, and that after a pontificate of less than ten months he died at a monastery near Pesaro, in October 1047;* whereupon Benedict IX., *= Ordo Romanus, Patrol, xcviii.p. of an imperial coronation, see Gre- 763, seqq. ; Herm. Contr. a.d. 1046; gorov. iv. 56, seqq. Victor III., Dial. iii. p. 854; Bonizo, « Hard. vi. 923-5. 802 ; HOfler, i. 232. The consent of *■ See Pagi, xvii. lo-ii ; Luden, the patrician was held to be necessary viii. 218 ; Stenzel, i. 118. Gregorovius to the appointment of a pope. See believes that Clement was poisoned by Grcgorov. iv. 62-4, and his quotations. Benedict's contrivance (iv. 67). But ^ Patrol. L c. ; Hoflcr, i. ^34-50 ; for this there is no older authority Giesebr. ii. 416-20. For the ceremony than Lupus the protospaiiiary (Chroa Chap, I. a.d. 1046-47, HENRY III. ON SIMONY. 209 supported by his kinsmen, and by Boniface, the powerful marquis of Tuscany, seized the opportunity of again thrusting himself for a time into possession of the vacant see.s The emperor had returned to Germany in June 1047, carrying with him the deposed pope, Gregory. At a great assembly of bishops and nobles, which appears to have been held at Spires, Henry strongly denounced the simony which had generally prevailed in the disposal of church preferment. He declared himself apprehensive that his father's salvation might have been endangered by such traffic in holy things. The sin of simony, which infected the whole hierarchy, from the chief pontiff to the doorkeeper, had drawn down the scourges of famine, pestilence, and the sword; and all who had been guilty of it must be deposed. These words spread consternation among the prelates, who felt that they were all involved in the charge, and implored the emperor to have pity on them. He replied by desiring them to use well the offices which they had obtained by unlawful means, and to pray earnestly for the soul of Conrad, who had been a partaker in their guilt. An edict was published against all simoniacal promotions, and Henry solemnly pledged himself to bestow his ecclesiastical patronage as freely as he had received the empire.^ But while the emperor projected a reformation of the church by means of his own authority, there was among the clergy a party which contemplated a more extensive A.D. 1047, Patrol, civ.), and Romuald giving a bishoprick to a clerk in con- of Salerno (Chron. a.d. 1047, Murat. sideration of a silver squirt which he vii.), — both of the following century. had formerly taken from him("fistu- 8 Annales Roraani, ap. Pertz, v. lam argenteam, quo adolescentes 469. aquam jaculari consueverunt"), and of •» Rad. Glab. v. 5. See Stenzel, ii. visions by which he was haunted in 132. Pagi (xvii. 7) thinks that Cle- consequence. Th. de Vrie, in Von d. ment was present at this assembly. Hardt, Concil. Constant, i. 63. There is a strange legend as to Henry's VOL. IV. 14 210 IMPERIAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL Book VI. reform, and looked to a different agency for effecting it. This party was willing for the time to accept Henry's as- sistance;* for his sincerity was unquestionable, his power was an important auxiliary, and his objects were in some degree the same with its own. Like the emperor, these reformers desired to extirpate simony, and to deliver the papacy from the tyranny of the Italian nobles. But their definition of simony was more rigid than his ; with simony their abhorrence connected the marriage and concubinage of the clergy — offences which Henry (perhaps from a consciousness that his own character was not irreproachable as to chastity)^ did not venture to attack; and above all things they dreaded the ascendency of the secular power over the church. To the connexion of the church with the state, to the feudal obligations of the prelates, they traced the grievous scandals which had long disgraced the hierarchy — the rude and secular habits of the bishops, their fighting and hunting, their unseemly pomp and luxury, their attempts to render ecclesiastical preferments hereditary in their own families. And what if the empire were to achieve such an entire control over the papacy and the church as Henry appeared to be gaining ? What would be the effect of such power, when transferred from the noble, conscientious, and religious emperor to a successor of different character? The church must not depend on the personal qualities of a prince ; it must be guided by other hands, and under a higher influence ; national churches, bound up with and subject to the state, were unequal to the task of reformation, which must proceed, not from the state, but from the hierarchy, from the papacy, from heaven through Christ's vicegerent, the successor of St. Peter; to him alone on earth it must be subject; • See Pet. Daniiani, ' Lib. Cratissi- ^ See Rad. Glab. v. i. Luden dis- mus.' c. 3^, believes this charge, vjii. 644. Chap. I. a. d. 1047. VIEWS OF REFORM. 211 and for this purpose all power must be centred in the papacy.* Henry had exacted from the Romans an engagement, for which he is said to have paid largely, that they would not again choose a pope without his consent."™ A depu- tation in the interest of the reforming party now waited on him with a request that he would name a successor to Clement. They would have wished for the restoration of Gregory VI. ; but, as such a proposal was likely to offend the emperor, they begged that he would appoint Halinard, archbishop of Lyons, who was well known and highly esteemed at Rome in consequence of frequent pilgrimages to the " threshold of the apostles." " Hali- nard, however, had no wish for the promotion, and sedu- lously abstained from showing himself at the imperial court. Henry requested the advice of Wazo, bishop of Liege, a prelate of very high reputation, whose wise and merciful views as to the treatment of heretics have been mentioned in a former chapter ;<* the answer recommended the restoration of Gregory, whose deposition Wazo ven- tured to blame on the ground that the pope could not be judged except by God alone. But before this letter reached the emperor, his choice had already fallen on Poppo, bishop of Brixen, who assumed the Dec. 25, name of Damasus H.p The new pope was ^°47- conducted to Rome by Boniface, marquis of Tuscany, and Benedict fled at his approach; on the 17th of July, 1048, he was installed in St. Peter's chair; and on the 9th of August he was dead.^ The speedy deaths of two • Vol^t, ' Hildebrand,' 8-9 ; Remusat Divion. ap. Pertz, vli. 237. ' S. Anselme,' 186. » See p. 113. Also Herzog, xvii. "' Vita Halinardi, c. 7 (Mabill. ix.) ; 571: Annal. Rom. (Pertz, v, 469). The p Anselm. Gesta Episc. Leod. c. 65 continual mention of the influence of (Pertz, vii.). money at Rome is a remarkable feature q Herm. Contr. a.d. IC48, and note. in these Annals. Pertz, v. 128 ; Jaffe » Vita Haliu. c. 7 ; Chron. S. Benign; 2I« BRUNO OF TOUL. BookVI. German popes were ascribed by some to poison ; *" the opinion of another party is represented by Bonizo, bishop of Sutri, who tells us, in the fierceness of national and religious hatred, that Damasus, " a man full of all pride," was appointed by the patricial tyranny of Henry, and that within twenty days after his invasion of the pontifical chair he " died in body and in soul."^ The emperor was again requested to name a pope, and fixed on his cousin Bruno. More than twenty years before this time Bruno had been chosen as bishop by the clergy and people of Toul, had accepted that poor see against the will of the emperor Conrad, who had destined him for higher preferment; he enjoyed a great reputation for piety, learning, prudence, charity, and humility; he was laborious in his duties, an eloquent preacher, a skilful musician, and was not without experi- ence in public affairs.* From unwillingness to undertake the perilous dignity which was now offered to him, he desired three days for consideration, and openly con- fessed his sins wiih a view of proving his unfitness. But the emperor insisted on the nomination, and at a great assembly at Worms, in the presence of the Roman en- voys, Bruno was invested with the ensigns of the papacy." After revisiting Toul he set out for Italy in pontifical state; but at Besan9on it is said that he was met by Hugh abbot of Cluny, accompanied by an ItaHan monk named Hildebrand ; and the result of the meeting was memorable.^ ' As to Clement, see p. 208, note ' ; or doubted by Pagi (xvii. 20), Stenzel as to Damasus, Benno (in Goldast. (i. 121), Giesebrecht (ii. 457), and Apol. Henrici, 13). others. Some place it at Cluny (as » Bonizo, p. 803 ; Luden. viii. 221. Qtho of Freising, vi, 33) ; some at » Wibert, Vita Leonis, ii. 8-13 (Ma- Worms, where tbey suppose Hilde- bill. ix.) ; Giesebr. ii. 452-5. brand to have been at the time of the " Wibert, ii. 2. pope's nomination ; others say that * The interview is not mentioned Leo sent for him. I follow Bonizo by Wibert, and is therefore questioned (803) in referring the meeting to 2e- tJHAP, I. A.D. 1048. ttlLDEBRAND. 213 Hildebrand was born of parents in a humble condition of life near Suana (now Sovana), an ancient Etruscan city and the seat of a bishoprick, between loio and io2o.y From an early age he wa'^ trained at Rome for the ecclesiastical profession under an uncle, who was abbot of St. Mary's on the Aventine.'' He embraced the most rigid ideas of monachism, and, disgusted by the laxity which prevailed among the Italian monks, he crossed the Alps, and entered the austere society of Cluny, where it is said that the abbot already applied to him the prophetic words, "He shall be great in the sight of the Highest."* After leaving Cluny he visited the court of Henry,^ and on his return to Rome he became chaplain'^ to Gregory VI., whose pupil he had formerly been. On the deposition of Gregory, Hildebrand accompanied him sangon. (See Schrockh, xxi. 339 ; Theiner, ii. 6 ; Neand. vi. 50 ; Giesel. II. i. 231 ; Voigt, 8 ; Luden, viii. 227; Bowden, i. 139 ; Hofler, ii. 6 ; Gfrorer, iv. 448 ; Giesebr. ii. 648 ; Villemain, i. 280-2 ; Hefele, iv. 679). Floto argues against the story, and supposes Hilde- brand to have been not the master but the pupil of Bruno (i. 173-4). He seems to prove that Hugh could hardly have been present, as he had been only just chosen abbot, and was not yet installed ; but his argument against the alleged route rests on the mistake ot supposing y4«^«j/rt to mean A-Ugsburg, instead of Aosta. y ]\L.^ill. Acta SS. Ben. ix. 406 ; Voigt, I. His father has been com- monly described as a carpenter ; but Giesebrecht thinks that he was more likely a peasant (iii. 11-12, 1080). [Even if the late Professor Gfrorer were a more satisfactory writer, I should feel little shame in confessing that I have not read his Life of Gregory VII., which has been published since the first edition of this volume ; for it so far exceeds all reasonable limits as to fill (without reckoning the index) seven large volumes— equal to about 8,000 of my pages ! M. Villemain's long pro- mised 'Hist, de Gregoire VII.' has appeared since his death (Paris, 1873), but is somewhat disappointing. The summary of Hildebrand's life and labours, which is announced in the table of contents, is not to be found.] ' Paul. Bernriedensis, Vita Gregorii, c. 9, ap. Mabill. ix Fables as to his early years may be found in the Annal. Saxo. (Pertz. vi. 701). * Paul. Bernr. 2 (who wrongly calls the abbot Majolus, mstead of Odilo— Majolus having really died before the birth of Hildebrand). ^ lb. 7. A legend in the Annals of Polde (Pertz, xvi. 60, 70) represents the beginning of his acquaintance with the court as earlier. <= Domestic clerks, of whatever order, were the chaplains of the persons to whose household they were attached. Thus Norbert the founder of the Praj- monstratensians, while a subdeacon, is styled the capellaiius of Henry V. Hermann. Tomac. de Restaur. S. Mart Tornac. 85 (Patrol, clxxx.). 2t4 HlLDfiBRANi). ftooK Vl. into Germany, and at his patron's death, in the beginning of 1048, he again withdrew to Cluny.* There it may be supposed thai he brooded indignantly over that subjection of the church to the secular power which had been exemplified in the deprivation and captivity of Gregory ; and that those theories became matured in his mind which were to influence the whole subsequent history of the church and of the world. The character of Hildebrand was lofty and command- ing. His human affections had been deadened by long monastic discipline ; the church alone engrossed his love. Filled with magnificent visions of ecclesiastical grandeur, he pursued his designs with an indomitable steadiness, with a far-sighted patience, with a deep, subtle, and even unscrupulous policy. He well knew how to avail himself of small advantages as means towards more important ends, or to forego the lesser in hope of attaining the greater. He knew how to conciHate, and even to flatter, as well as how to threaten and denounce. Himself impenetrable and inflexible, he was especially skilled in understanding the characters of other men, and in using them as his instruments, even although unconscious or unwilling. In his interviews with Bruno, Hildebrand represented the unworthiness of accepting from the emperor that ^ Hildebrand says of himself, at the bable that he went at Gregory's re- Roman synod of 1080, that he accom- quest (31). Floto, altering nostri to panied Gregory VI. over the Alps vestri in Greg. Ep. i. 79, supposes that "unwillingly " (Hard. vi. 1589) ; hence the deposed pope and his companion there is a question whether, on account lived at Cologne (i. 155). The state- of some unknown share in the late ment that Hildebrand was prior of affairs of Rome, he was included in Cluny (Godefr. Viterb. in Patrol, the order for his master's banishment, cxcviii. 973) seems to have arisen from as is asserted by Benno (ap. Goldast. a confusion between him and another 13); or whether his "unwillingness" of the same name. MabiU. Acta SS. merely relates to his dissatisfaction on Ben. ix. 407 ; Annal. iv. 479. See the account of the treatment of Gregory. Boll.-indist Acta SS., May 25, pp. See Mabill. Anu.il. iv. 479 ; Luden, 106-7. viii. 207-8, 643. Voigt thinks it pro- Chap. I. ad. 1049. LEO IX. 2 1 5 dignity which ought to be conferred by the free choice of the Roman clergy and people. His lofty views and his powerful language prevailed ; the pope laid aside the ensigns of the apostolical office and, taking Hildebrand as his companion, pursued his journey in the simple dress of a pilgrim. It is said that miracles marked his way ; that at his prayer the swollen waters of the Teverone sank within their usual bounds,® to give a passage to him and to the multitude which had gathered in his train ; and his arrival at Rome, roughly clad and barefooted, raised a sensation beyond all that could have been produced by the display of sacerdotal or imperial pomp. In St. Peter's he addressed the assembled Romans, telling them that he had come for purposes of devotion; that the emperor had chosen him as pope, but that it was for them to ratify or to annul the choice.* The hearers were strongly excited by his words ; they could not but be delighted to find that, renouncing the imperial nomination as insufficient, he chose to rest on their own free election as the only legitimate title to the papacy. Nor was Bruno an unknown man among them ; for yearly pilgrimages to Rome had made them familiar with his ^ , .... „ ,1 , ., , Feb. 12. sanctity and his virtues ;^ and he was hailed with universal acclamations as Pope Leo the Ninth. Hildebrand was now the real director of the papacy. Leo ordained him subdeacon, and bestowed on him the treasurership of the church, with other preferments. Among these was the abbacy of St. Paul's, on the Ostian way, which he restored from decay and disorder, and to which he was throughout life so much attached that, whenever he met with a check in any of his undertakings, he used to send for some of the monks, and ask them what sin they had committed to shut up God's ear against • Wibert, Vita Leonis, ii ». « Wibert, ii, l- ' lb; : Bonizo, 803. ai6 PETER DAMIANI. Book VJ their intercessions for him.^ The party of which Hilde- brand was the soul was further strengthened by some able men whom Leo brought from beyond the Alps, and established in high dignities — such as the cardinals Humbert, Stephen/ and Hugh the White, Frederick, brother of Godfrey duke of Lorraine, and Azoline, bishop of Sutri. But above all these was conspicuous an Italian who was now introduced among the Roman clergy — Peter Damiani.^ This remarkable man was bom at Ravenna, in the year 1007.^ His mother, wrought to a sort of frenzy by the unwelcome addition to a family already inconve- niently large, would have left the infant to perish ; but when almost dead he was saved by the wife of a priest, whose upbraidings recalled the mother to a sense of her parental duty.™ Peter was early left an orphan, under the care of a brother, who treated him harshly, and employed him in feeding swine ; but he was rescued from this servitude by another brother, Damian, whose name he combined with his own in token of gratitude.^ Through Damian's kindness he was enabled to study ; he became famous as a teacher, pupils flocked to hear him, and their fees brought him abundant wealth. His life meanwhile was strictly ascetic; he secretly wore sackcloth, he fasted, watched, prayed, and, in order to tame his passions, he would rise from bed, stand for hours in a stream until his limbs were stiff with cold, and spend the remainder of the night in visiting churches and reciting the psalter.° In the midst of his renown and prosperity Peter was struck by the thought that it •» p. Bernried. 13-14 ; Bonizo, 803. "> Vita, c. 2, prefixed to his works. Giesebrecht places Hildebrand's ap- » Although he is sometimes called pointment to St. Paul's in 1059, under Petrus Damian?^, the name is more Nicolas II. iii. 52, 1086. properly Damian/— r.^. the brother of ' See Hist. Litt. viil i. Damian. Murat. Annal. VI. i. 39. ^ Bonizo, 803. Vita, 3. ' Murat. Ann. VI. i. 39. Chap. I. A.b. ic^g. PETER DAMIANI. 21; would be well to renounce his position while in the full enjoyment of its advantages, and his resolution was determined by the visit of two brethren from the hermit society of Fonte Avellano in Umbria. On his giving them a large silver cup as a present for their abbot, the monks begged him to exchange it for something lighter and more portable; and, deeply moved by their un- worldly simplicity, he quitted Ravenna without the knowledge of his friends, and became a member of their rigid order. P Peter soon surpassed all his brethren in austerity of life, and even gained the reputation ot miraculous power. He taught at Fonte Avellano and in other monasteries, and was raised to the dignity of abbot. "i The elevation of Gregory VI. was hailed by Peter with delight, as the dawn of a new era for the church,"" and, although his hopes from that pope were soon extinguished by the council of Sutri, he was able to transfer his confidence to Henry IH., so that he even rejoiced in the emperor's obtaining a control over elections to the papacy.^ He still, therefore, continued hopefully to exert himself in the cause of reform, and he was employed by Henry III. to urge on Pope Clement the necessity of extirpating the simony which the emperor bad found everywhere prevailing as he returned homewards through northern Italy.*^ The character of Peter Damiani was an extraordinary mixture of strength and of weakness. He was honest, rigid in the sanctity of his Hfe, and gifted with a ready and copious eloquence ; but destitute of judgment or discretion, the slave of an unbounded creduHty and of a P Vita 4. See also Opusc. xiv. t. united with the Camaldolites until the iii. 140-3. There is a dissertation by i6th century. See the Acta SS., Feb. Grandi in the * Patrologia,' cxliv., 23, p. 413 ; cf. Oct. 14, p. 88. written to show that this society i Vita, 5-13. ■" See p. 64 belonged to the order of Camaldoli ; ■ Liber Gratissimus (Opusc. vi.)c. 36 but according to others, it was not ' P. Dam. Ep. i. 3. 2lS PETER DAMIANI. Huuk VI. simple vanity, and no less narrow in his views than zealous, energetic, and intolerant in carrying them out. His reading was considerable, but very limited in its nature, and in great part of a very idle character. His letters and tracts present a medley of all the learning and of all the allegorical misinterpretations of Scripture that he can heap together; his arguments are seasoned and enforced by the strangest illustrations and by the wildest and most extravagant legends. The humour which he often displays is rather an oddity than a talent or a power; he himself speaks of it as "buffoonery,"" and penitentially laments that he cannot control it. In our own age and country such a man would probably be among the loudest, the busiest, the most uncharitable, and the most unreasonable enemies of Rome; in his actual circumstances Peter Damiani was its most devoted servant. Yet his veneration for the papacy did not prevent him from sometimes addressing its occupants with the most outspoken plainness,^ or even from remon- strating against established Roman usages, as when he wrote to Alexander 11. against the decretal principle that a bishop should not be accused by a member of his flock, and against the practice of annexing to decrees on the most trivial subjects the awful threat of an anathema.^ In such cases it would seem that he was partly influenced by a strong and uncompromising feeling of right, and partly by his passion for exercising in all directions the office of a monitor and a censor. If Hildebrand under- stood how to use men as his tools, Peter was fitted to be a tool.^ He felt that Hildebrand was his master, and his service was often reluctant ; but, although he vented his discontent in letters and in epigrams, he obeyed his " hostile friend," his " saintly Satan.'^^ ■ " Scurrilitas," Ep. v. 2. * See Ep. ii. 8. » £'.^., Ep. i. s,to Victor II. " I.e. adversary or accuser. Ep. i, f £p. i. m. See Schmidt, ii. 298-9. 11. Chaf. L t»ETER DAMlANt. iig The superstitions of the age had no more zealous votary than Peter Damiani. His language as to the blessed Virgin has already been noticed for its surpassing extravagance.^ From him the practice of voluntary flagellation, although it was not altogether new,*^ derived a great increase of popularity. He recommended it as "a. sort of purgatory," and defended it against all assail- ants. If, he argued, our Lord, with his apostles and martyrs, submitted to be scourged, it must be a good deed to imitate their sufferings by inflicting chastisement on ourselves ; if Moses in the Law prescribed scourging for the guilty, it is well thus to punish ourselves for our misdeeds ; if men are allowed to redeem their sins with money, surely those who have no money ought to have some means of redemption provided for them ; if the Psalmist charges men to " praise the Lord on the timbrel," th^ since the timbrel is an instrument made of dried skin, the commandment is truly fulfilled by him who beats by way of discipline his own skin dried up by fasting.^ Cardinal Stephen ventured to ridicule this devotion, and induced the monks of Monte Cassino to give up the custom of flogging themselves every Friday, which had been adopted at the instance of Peter;® but the sudden and premature deaths of Stephen and his brother soon after gave a triumph to its champion, who represented the fate of the brothers as a judgment on the cardinal's profanity.* In addition to other writings, Peter contributed to the cause of flagellation a life of one Dominic, the great hero of this warfare against the flesh.s Dominic had been *> p. 187. ' De Laude Flagellorum.* = It is mentioned by Regino (De » Chron. Casin. iii, 20. Discipl. Eccles. ii. 442, seqq., Patrol. ' Opusc. xlii. c. 2. cxxxii.). See Mabill. VIII xvi; ; e Opera, ii. 2i», seqq. See Acta SS Schrockh, xxiv. 132 ; Giesel. II, i. 340. Oct. 14. ^ Epp. V. 8; vi. 26; Opusc. xlii.. ^26 JDOMINIC OF THE CUIRASS. Book Vt. ordained a priest ; but, on discovering that his parents had presented a piece of goat- skin leather to the bishop by whom he had been ordained, he was struck with such horror at the simoniacal act that he renounced all priestly functions, and withdrew to the rigid life of a hermit. He afterwards placed himself under Damiani, at Fonte Avellano, where his penances were the marvel of the abbot and of his brethren. Next to his skin he wore a tight iron cuirass,^ which he never put off except to chastise himself. His body and his arms were confined by iron rings ; his neck was loaded with heavy chains ; his scanty clothes were worn to rags ; his food consisted of bread and fennel ; his skin was as black as a negro's from the effects of his chastisement.^ Dominic's usual exercise was to recite the psalter twice a day, while he flogged himself with both hands at the rate of a thousand lashes to ten psalms. It was reckoned that three thousand lashes — the accompaniment of thirty psalms — were equal to a year of penance; the whole psalter, therefore, with its due allowance of stripes, was equivalent to five years. In Lent, or on occasions of special peni- tence, the daily average rose to three psalters; he "easily" got through twenty — equal to a hundred years of penance — in six days ; once, at the beginning of Lent, he begged that a penance of a thousand years might be imposed upon him, and he cleared off the whole before Easter. He often performed eight or even nine psalters within twenty-four hours, but it was long before he could achieve ten ; at length, however, he was able on one occasion to accomplish twelve, and reached the thirty- second psalm in a thirteenth.^ These flagellations were supposed to have the effect of a satisfaction for the sins of other men.^ In his latter years, for the sake of greater *> Hence the epithet by which he is ' Vita, ii. ^ lb. 8-10. known, Loricn/us. ' Fleury, 1. 62. Chap. I. PETER DAMIANT. 221 severity, Dominic substituted leathern thongs for the bundles of twigs which he had before used in his disci- pline. He also increased the number of the rings which galled his flesh, and the weight of the chains which hung irom his neck ; but we are told that sometimes, as he prayed, his rings would fly asunder, or would become soft and pliable."^ The death of Dominic, who had become prior of a convent on Mount Soavicino (or San Vicino) in the march of Ancona, appears to have taken place in the year 1060.'* The marriage of the clergy was especially abominable in the eyes of Peter Damiani. He wrote, preached, and laboured against it; his language on such subjects is marked by the grossest and most shameless indecency. Soon after Leo's accession he presented to him a treatise, the contents of which may be guessed from its frightful title—' The Book of Gomorrha.'« The state- ments here given as to the horrible offences which resulted from the law of clerical celibacy might have suggested to any reasonable mind a plea for a relaxation of that discipline ; but Peter urges them as an argument for increasing its severity. He classifies the sins of the unchaste clergy, and demands the deposition of all the guilty. Leo thanked him for the book, but decided that, although all carnal intercourse is forbidden to the clergy by Scripture and the laws of the church, all but the worst and the most inveterate sinners should be allowed, if penitent, to retain their offices.P A later pontiff, Alexander II., obtained possession of the manuscript under pretence of getting it copied ; but he showed his «» Vita, 10-12. Cf. p. Dam. Ep. L 4 : which Mabillon » See the Acta SS., Oct. 14, p. 617 (Annal. iv. 501) supposes to show that and Auctar. 88, against MabilL ix. 149, Leo was afterwards persuaded by the who dates it in io6i. censured party to object to the book as o Opusc. ix. See Theiner, ii. 24. too free-spoken. P Leo IX. Ep. 15 (Hard. vi. 976). 222 LEO IX. Book VI. opinion of its probable effects by locking it up, and the author complains that, when he attempted to reclaim it, the pope jested at him and treated him like a player.^ The act of Leo in renouncing the tide derived from the imperial nomination might have been expected to alarm and offend Henry. His kinsman, the object of his patronage, had become the pope of the clergy and of the people, and might have seemed to place himself in oppo- sition to the empire. But the emperor appears to have regarded Leo's behaviour as an instance of the modesty for which he had been noted. He made no remonstrance ; and Hildebrand was careful to give him no provocation by needless displays of papal independence.'" Leo found the treasury so exhausted that he even thought of providing for his necessities by selling the vestments of the church.^ But by degrees the rich and various sources which fed the papal revenue began to flow again, so that he was in a condition to carry on his admini- stration with vigour, and to undertake measures of reform. A synod was held at which he proposed to A.D. 1049. ^^^^Y the orders of all who had been ordained by simoniacs. It was, however, represented to him that such a measure would in many places involve a general deprivation of the clergy, and a destitution of the means of grace. The definition of simony had in truth been extended over many things to which we can hardly attach the idea of guilt. The name was now no longer limited to the purchase c*f holy orders, or even of benefices : it was simony to pay anything in the nature of fees or first- fruits, or even to make a voluntary present to a bishop or patron ; it was simony to obtain a benefice, not only by payment, but as the reward of service or as the tribute of kindness. " There are three kinds of gifts," says Peter <» Ep. ii. 6, where he requests Hilde- Luden, viii. 239 ; Bowdeii, ii. 146. brand to help him in recovering it. Wibert, ii. 3. Chap. I. a. d. 1049-51. CANONS AGAINST SIMONY. 223 Damiani ; " gifts of the hand, of obedience, and of the tongue."^ The service of the court he declares to be a worse means of obtaining preferment than the payment of money ; " while others give money, the price paid by courtly clerks is nothing less than their very selves.* In consideration of the universal prevalence of simony, therefore, Leo found himself obliged to mitigate his sen- tence, and to revert to the order of Clement II., that all who had been ordained by known simoniacs should do penance for forty days.y It would seem also that at this assembly the laws for the enforcement of celibacy were renewed—the married clergy being required to separate from their wives, or to refrain from the exercise of their functions, although it was probably at a later synod that Leo added cogency to these rules by enacting that any " concubines " of priests who might ^'^' ^°^^ ' be discovered in Rome should become slaves in the Lateran palace.* Leo entered on a new course of action against the dis- orders of the church. The bishops were so deeply impli- * Ep. ii. I. This classification seems conveys nothing but condemnation to have become current. See, e.£:, (Adv. Simoniacos, ii. 26, etc., Patrol. Chron. Casin. iv. 120. cxliii.). In the next generation, Bruno, " Ep. i. 13. bishop of Segni and abbot of Monte * Opusc. xxii. c. 2 ; cf. Lib. Gratis- Cassino, wrote a tract in answer to the sim. c. 35 (Opera, iii. 36, seqq.). This idea that, through the universal simony, book was written against the opinion the christian ministry had perished, that orders given by simoniacs are in- He lays down that the grace of ordina- valid. Peter argues that the grace of tion depends on the receiver ; as, if a ordination does not depend on the man simoniac be ordained by a catholic, the who gives it, but on his office. The bishop's blessing is turned into a curse, children of blind or deformed persons so, if a catholic be ordained by a simo- do not inherit the defects of their pa- niac, that which for the giver's sin rents (c. 28). Even miracles have been would be a curse, becomes j. blessing done by simoniac and incontinent to the faithful receiver. Patrol, clxv. bishops and clergy, and by persons 1133. who had been ordained by such bishops y Hard. vi. 991. (28-9). Humbert, on the other hand, » P. Damiani, Opusc. xvili. (Patrol, maintained that, as the sacraments cxlv. 411); Bonizo, 1. 5 (ib. cl. 821); of heretics are invalid, and simony is Bemold. a.d. 1049 (ib. cxlviii.). Sc* heresy, the ordination given by simo- Theincr, ii. 31 ; Hefele, iv. 68a. niacs, even although it be gratuitous, 224 ^^^ ^X. Bock VI. cated in these that from them no thorough reformation could be expected ; the pope would take the matter into his own hands, and would execute it in person. Imitating the system of continual movement by which Henry carried his superintendence into every corner of the A.D. 1049. . , ^ ^ ■ -^ r ■ u .• empire, he set out on a circuit of visitation. On the way he visited Gualbert of Vallombrosa, an im- portant ally of Hildebrand and the reforming party.* He crossed the Alps, and redressing wrongs, consecrating churches, and conferring privileges on monasteries as he proceeded, he reached Cologne and Aix-la-Chapelle. At Aix he effected a reconciliation between the emperor and Godfrey duke of Lower Lorraine, who for some years had disturbed the public peace. The duke was sentenced to restore the cathedral of Verdun, which he had burnt ; he submitted to be scourged at the altar, and laboured with his own hands at the masonry of the church.^ As bishop of Toul (which see he retained for a time, as Clement H. had retained Bamberg) Leo had promised to be present at the consecration of the abbey church of St. Remigius at Reims. He now announced his intention of fulfilling the promise, and from Toul issued letters summoning the bishops of France to attend a synod on the occasion.*^ The announcement struck terror into many — into prelates who dreaded an inquiry into their practices, and into laymen of high rank whose morals would not bear examination ; and some of these beset the ears of the French king, Henry L It was, they said, » Atto. Vita S. Joh. Gualb. c. 26 Mathildis. i. 16, ap. Pertz. xii.) ; and (Mahill. ix.). Henry III. himself submitted to chas- " Lambert. Hcvsfeld. a.d. 1046, tisement by Hanno of Cologne. Vita 1049 (Pertz, v.): Gesta Epp. Virdun., Annonis, ib. xi. 469. Patrol, cciv. 926. There were other * Hard. vi. 993-4. Leo resigned e-xamples of such flagellation in that Toul in 105 1, saying that he had kept age Boniface, marquis of Tuscany, it until then out of a wish to benefit was flo-geil at the altar for simony by the poor bishoprick by his power as Guy, abbot of Pomposa (Donizo, Vita pope. Wibert, ii. 8 ; Giesebr. ii. 493. Chap. I. A.D. 1049. COUNCIL OF REIMS. 2i5 a new thing for a pope to assume the right of entering France without the sovereign's permission ; the royal power was in danger of annihilation if he allowed the pope to rule within his dominions, or countenanced him by his presence at the council. Henry had already accepted an invitation, but these representations alarmed him. He did not, however, venture to forbid the in- tended proceedings, but excused himself on the plea of a military expedition, and begged that Leo would defer his visit until a more settled time, when the king might be able to receive him with suitable honours. The pope replied that he was resolved to attend the dedication of the church, and that, if he should find faithful persons there, he intended to hold a council.^ The assemblage at Reims was immense. The Franks of the east met with those of Gaul to do honour Oct. 2, to the apostle of their race, the saint at whose ^o49- hands Clqvis had received baptism; and even England had sent her representatives.® There were prelates and nobles, ckrgy and monks, laymen and women of every condition, whose offerings formed an enormous heap. All ranks were mingled in the crowd ; they besieged the doors of the church on the eve of the ceremony, and thousands passed the night in the open air, which was brilliantly lighted by their tapers.^ The pope repeatedly threatened to leave the great work undone, unless the multitude would relax its pressure. At length the body of St. Remigius was with difficulty borne through the mass of spectators, whose excitement was now raised to the uttermost. Many wept, many swooned away, many were crushed to death. The holy relics were lowered into the church through a window, as the only practicable •^ Hard. vi. 996. See Hefele, iv. Ang.-Sax. Chron. p. 242. 686. Humbert strongly charges Henry ' Hard. vi. 998. with simony (Adv. Sim. iii. 7). VOL, IV. *5 226 COUNCIL OF REIMS Book VI. entrance, whereupon the crowds, excluded by the doors, seized the hint, and swarmed in at the windows. Instead of being at once deposited in its intended resting-place, the body was placed aloft above the high altar, that its presence might give solemnity to the proceedings of the council.^ On the day after the consecration the assembly met. Some of the French bishops and abbots who Oct. 3-5. ^^^ ^^^^^ ^.^^^ ^^^^^ unable to attend, having been compelled to join the royal army;** but about twenty bishops and fifty abbots were present — among whom were the bishop of Wells, the abbot of St. Augus- tine's at Canterbury, and the abbot of Ramsey.^ The pope placed himself with his face towards the body of St. Remigius, and desired the prelates to sit in a semicircle on each side of him. It was announced that the council was held for the reformation of disorders in the church and for the general correction of morals ; and the bishops and abbots were required to come forward, and to swear that they had no been guilty of simony either in obtaining their office or in their exercise of it. The archbishops of Treves, Lyons, and Besan^on took the oath. The arch- bishop of Reims requested delay ; he was admitted to two private interviews with the pope, and at the second session he obtained a respite until a council which was to be held at Rome in the following April.^ Of the bishops, all but four took the oath ; of the abbots, some swore, while others by silence confessed their guilt.^ Hugh bishop of Langres (who, before the investigation of his own case, had procured the deposition of an abbot of his diocese for incontinence and other irregularities), was charged with many and grievous of- c Hard. vi. 999-1000. S. Aug. ii, 3 (Patrol, civ.), ^ lb. 996. ^ Hard. 1003. " lb. xooa , Ooscelin Hist. Transl. ' lb. Cc. t3, 14. ■ Cc 8-10, 31, 31-3= ■ c. 49. ° Ep. viL P Ep. vL 2^8* feOMAN tEC^ATlON feooKVt Roman church, in which the Greek retails the topics of the letter to the bishop of Trani, while the Latin refutes him point by point, and retorts by some charges against the Greeks. 'Adversus Graecorum Calumnias.' ■ lb. 409-15. Bibl. Patr. xviii. 391. ' ' Commemaratio Brevis.' HuxL ' ' I)e Azymo, de Sabbato, et de vi. 967-8. Nuptiis Sacerdotum.' lb. 405 9. CHAt>. I. A.b. 1054. AT CONSTANTINOPLE. 23Q solemnly anathematized them with all heretics, "yea, with the devil and his angels, unless they repent."" Having left the church, they shook off the dust from their feet, exclaiming, -"Let God look and judge !"-^ and, after charging the Latins of Constantinople to avoid the communion of such as should " deny the Latin sacrifice," they set out on their return, with rich presents from the emperor.y A message from Constantinople recalled them, as Michael had professed a wish to confer with them. But it is said that the patriarch intended to excite the multi- tude against them, and probably to bring about some fatal result, by reading in the cathedral a falsified version of the excommunication.^ Of this the legates were warned by the emperor, who refused to allow any conference except in his own presence ; and, as Michael would not assent, they again departed homewards. The further proceedings between the emperor and the patriarch are variously related by the Greeks and by the Latins. The points of controversy were discussed for some time between Michael, Dominic patriarch of Grado, on the Latin side, and Peter, patriarch of Antioch, who attempted to act as a mediator.** A legation was also sent to Con- " Hard. 969. See Ffoulkes' ' Christ- as there ate five senses, so there are endom's Divisions,' ii. 41-2. It is to be properly but five patriarchs, and among remembered that this was two months these the title of patriarch is especially after Leo's death. given to the bishop of Antioch alone— * Exod. V. 21. those of Rome and Alexandria being y Hard. vi. 968. styled pope; those of Constantinople 2 This is Humbert's statement. lb. and Jerusalem, rt^<;/^/'ij/zal ±$i ARiALt) AND LANDULF. fiooK vi. significant of parties opposed to the clergy, whether their opposition were in the interest of the papacy ° or of sectarianism. Archbishop Guy, by the advice of Stephen IX., cited Ariald and Landulf before a synod, and, on their scorn- fully refusing to appear, excommunicated them ; but the pope released them from the sentence. Stephen then sum- moned them to a synod at Rome, where they asserted their cause, but were opposed by a cardinal named Dio- nysius, who, having been trained in the church of Milan, understood the circumstances of that church, and strongly denounced the violence with which they had proceeded in their attempts at reform. Stephen, although his feehng was on the side of Ariald, affected neutrality between the parties, and sent a commission to Milan; but his short pontificate ended before any result appeared.^ cffectus. Venintamen si quando quis probatiorifueritinterpretatussententia, concedo equidem tota mentis tran- quillae convenientia, dummodo nomen concordet operi, opus vero respondeat nomiui." By many writers this has been represented as a derivation which Amulf not only seriously adopted, but had found annexed to the word Patarini in the dictionary which he consulted. It is, however, clear' that the dictionary said nothing about Patarivi. Bonizo says, without hesi- tation, " Paterifios, i. e. pannosos, vocabant " (p. 805) ; and Giulini (quoted by Pert?, viii. 20) says that they were so called from the Rag-fair of Milan— "la contrada de' rivendu- glioli di panni vecchi, detti da noi Patari" Was Arnulf really in doubt, or did he mean anything more than to amuse himself with the likeness of sound between Patari7iia.nd the Greek word which he had lighted on ? Prof. Floto supposes that, as a man of rank, he was above knowing the real deriva- tion (i. 237). Bonizo goes on — " Et illi quidcm dicentes fratri Racha rei erant judicio ; rachos enim Graece, Latine pannus dicitur." (!) See Du- cange, s. v. Paterini ; Pagi, xvii. 141 ; Murat. Antiq. v. 84 ; Theiner, ii. 59 ; Neand. vi. 67 ; C. Schmidt, in Herzog, art. Patarener. The name, like that of the Gtieicx or Beggars in the Low Countries, seems to have been at first given in derision, and then assumed by the party. As used to designate the sectaries of the middle ages, it has been strangely interpreted by etymo- logists who confine their view to that later use. See the British Magazine, xvi. 601, seqq. " Hugh of Flavigny says that the adherents of Gregory VII. were so called by way of reproach (Pertz, viii. 462). Gieseler thinks that, from having been used to designate the opponents of clerical marriage, the term was extended to signify those who opposed marriage m general, as was usually the case with the sectaries in question. II. ii. 540. P Arnulf, lii. 13 ; Landulf, iii. 11-13 : Voigt, 52. Chap. I. A.D. 10578. P. DAMIANI AT MILAN. ^C7 The intervention of Nicolas II. was now requested by Ariald, and Peter Damiani was sent to Milan as legate, with Anselm, the original author of the troubles, as his colleague.1 They found the city in violent agitation. The Milanese, roused by the alarm that their ecclesiastical independence was in danger, were now as zealous on the side of the clergy as they had lately been against them. Loud cries were uttered against all aggression ; the Roman pontiff, it was said, had no right to force his laws or his jurisdiction on the church of St. Ambrose. Bells pealed from every tower, handbells were rung about the streets, and the clangour of a huge brazen trumpet summoned the people to stand up for their threatened privileges. The legates found themselves besieged in the archbishop's palace by angry crowds ; they were told that their lives were in jeopardy ; and the popular feeling was excited to frenzy when, on the opening of the synod, Peter Damiani was seen to be seated as president, with his brother legate on his right hand, while the successor of St. Ambrose was on the left."^ Guy — whether out of real humility, or with the design of inflaming yet further the indignation of his flock ^ — professed himself willing to sit on a stool at the feet of the legates, if required. A terrible uproar ensued, but Peter's courage and eloquence turned the day. Rushing into the pulpit, he addressed the raging multitude, and was able to obtain a hearing. It was not, he said, for the honour of Rome, but for their own good, that he had come among them. He dwelt on tlie 1 Hildebrand is said by Arnulf (iii. from difficulty. 14) to have been with them, which ' P. Dam. Actus Mediolancnses, is certainly a mistake, as Damiani's cc. 31-2 (t. iii.); Vita, 16. report of the proceedings at Milan is • "Dicant id non simplici factum addressed to him. I.andulf (iii. 13) mtentione qui volunl," etc, s.iys P. and Bonizo (805) say that Hildebrand Damiani (c. 32) ; but he himself was in the commission sent by Sfe- acquits the archbishop. f/t^n ; but this too appears not free 254 SUBJECTION OF MILAN TO ROME. Book VI. superiority of the Roman church. It was founded by God, whereas all other churches were of human founda- tion ; the church of Milan was a daughter of the Roman, founded by disciples of St. Peter and St. Paul; St. Ambrose himself had acknowledged the church of Rome as his mother, had professed to follow it in all things, and had called in pope Siricius to aid him in ejecting that very heresy of the Nicolaitans which was now again rampant. "Search your writings," exclaimed the car- dinal, *' and if you cannot there find what we say, tax us with falsehood."* Since Damiani himself reports his speech, it is to be supposed that he beUeved these oold assertions ; at all events, the confidence and the fluency \vith which he uttered them, the authority of his position, and his high personal reputation, prevailed with the Milanese. The archbishop and a great body of the clergy forswore simony, bound themselves by oath to labour for the extirpation of it, and on their knees received the sentence of penance for their past offences." The result of the legation was not only the condem- nation of the practices which had been complained of, but the subjection of the Milanese church to that of Rome.^ In April 1059 Nicolas held a council at Rome, which was attended by a hundred and thirteen prelates,y among whom was Guy of Milan. The archbishop was treated with studious respect ; he was seated at the pope's right hand, and, on his promising obedience to the apostolic see, Nicolas bestowed on him the ring, which the arch- bishops of Milan had usually received from the kings of Italy. Ariald stood up to accuse him, but was reduced to silence by Cunibert of Turin and other Lombard t p Ijam. c 32. insensati Mediolaiienses, quis vos fa»- " Jl^- 33-5- cinavit?" iii. 15. » Arnulf hereupon l^reaks out— " O ' Hard. vi. jo6i, seqq Chaf. I. A.D. IOS9. COUNCIL AT ROMF. '^5 bishops.* It was enacted that no married or concubinary priest should celebrate mass, and that the laity should not attend the mass of such a priest ; » that the clergy should embrace the canonical life ; ^ that no clerk should take preferment from a layman, whether for money or gratuitously ; ^^ that no layman should judge a clerk, of whatever order.^ The council also discussed the case of Berengar, a French ecclesiastic, who was accused of heresy as to the doctrine of the eucharist.® But its most important work was the establishment of a new procedure for elections to the papal chair. The ancient manner of appointing bishops, by the choice of the clergy and people, had been retained at Rome, subject to the imperial control; but the result had not been satisfactory. The nobles and the people were able to overpower the voice of the clergy ; to them were to be traced the ignominies and the distractions which had so long prevailed in the Roman church — the disputed elections, the schisms between rival popes, the promotion of scandalously unfit men to the highest office in the hierarchy. It was therefore an object of the reforming party to destroy the aristocratic and popular influences which had produced such evils. Independence of the imperial control, which had of late become an absolute power of nomination, was also desired ; but the imperial interest was ably represented in the council by Guibert, the chancellor of Italy, and the Hildebrandine party were for the present obliged to be content with a compromise.* It was enacted that the cardinal-bishops should first treat of the election ; that they should then call in the cardi- nals of inferior rank, and that afterwards the rest of the clergy and the people should give their assent to the ' Arnulf, iil. 15- * See below, chap. iii. - Can. 3. " C. 4. ' Planck, iv. 72-5 ; Gicscl. II. ». 3jS; ti C. 6. " C. 10. Stenzel, i. 200 ; Bowden, i. 199. 256 DECREE OF NICOLAS II. Book VI, choice. The election was to be made " saving the due honour and reverence of our beloved son Henry, who at present is accounted king and hereafter will, it is hoped, if God permit, be emperor, as we have already granted to him ; and of his successors who shall personally have obtained this privilege from the apostolic see."^ By this enactment the choice of pope was substantially vested in the cardinals. The term cardinal had for many ages been used in the western church to signify one who had full and permanent possession of a benefice, as dis- tinguished from deputies, assistants, temporary holders, or persons limited in the exercise of any rights belonging to the incumbency.^ But at Rome it had latterly come to bear a new meaning. The cardinal-bishops were the seven bishops of the pope's immediate province, who assisted him in his public functions — the bishop of Ostia being the chief among them ; ^ the cardinal-priests were the incumbents of the twenty-eight " cardinal titles " of chief parish churches in the city.^ By the constitution « Hard. vi. 1065-6 ; Pertz, Leges, ii, xi. 152-6 ; Giesel. IL i. 235. App. 176. On the variation of copies. In the tenth century, they had see Schmidt, ii. 470 ; Schrockh, xxi. been styled Roman bishops (Thomass. id^-t; Giesel. IL i. 236-8 ; Luden, viii. I. ii. 116. 6). For the history of the 264; Hefele, iv. 757; Reumont, ii. cardinalate, see Ciacon. i. 113-20; 1 1 86; Giesebr. iii. 44; Cartwright on Onuphr. Panvinius (the biographer of Conclaves, 11-14. the popes) in Spicileg. Roman, ix. 469, "» The Donatist Petilian, at the con- seqq. (Rom. 1843) ; Planck, IV. i. 76. ference of Carthage in 411 (see vol. ii. ^ Ducaiige, s. v. Cardinnlis, p. 175 ; p. 134), by way of contrast with the Schrockh, xxi. 367-9. See Gregorov. i. catholic bishops, whom he styles "ima- 266-72 ; Reumont, ii. 70. Anacletus I glnes," describes a bishop of his own is represented in the false Decretals sect as " cardinalis atque authenticus " as saying that the Roman see is "cardo (Collat. Carthag. 165, Patrol, xi.). Ge- et caput" (Patrol, cxxx. 78); and lasius I. (a.d. 492-6) uses "cardinalis Leo IX. says that the cardinals were pontifex " in the sense of an ordinary so styled because " cardini illi, quo bishop, as distinguished from a visi- cseteramoventur, viciniusadhaerentes" tator (ap. Gratian. Deer. I. xxiv. 3, (Ep. i. ad. Mich. Cerular. c. 32 ; Hard, ib. clxxxviii.). See, on the use of vi. 914). A writer of the beginning of the term, Ducange, s. v. Cardinalis ; the 15th century supposes them to Patrol, cxix. 729; Thomassin, I. ii. have their name "a cardinibus vel lis L; Murat. Antiq. Ital. Dissert. quatuor cardinalibus virtutibus quibu'; Ui. ; Schrockh, xxi. 366-7 ; Auijusti, pollcre dtbent : scilicet prudenti.t. Chap. I. a.d. 1059. FOR ELECTION OF POPES. 257 of Nicolas, the initiative in the election was given to the cardinal-bishops. The other cardinals, however, were to be afterwards consulted, and a degree of influence was allowed to them ; while the part of the remaining clergy and of the laity was reduced to a mere acceptance of the person whom the cardinals should nominate.^ The imperial prerogative is spoken of in words of in- tentional vagueness, which, without openly contesting it, reserve to the pope the power of Hmiting or practically annihilating it, as circumstances might allow; and whatever might be its amount, it is represented not as inherent in the office of emperor, but as a grant from the pope, be- stowed on Henry out of special favour, and to be per- sonally sought by his successors.™ The time for venturing on this important innovation was well chosen ; for there was no emperor, and the prince for whom the empire was designed was a child under female guardianship, the sovereign of an unruly and distracted kingdom.^ In the same year Nicolas proceeded into southern Italy, iemperantia, fortitudine, et justitia." yet no members of the electoral (Aureum Speculum Paps, in Fascic. college below the order of priest; Rer. Exp. et. Fug. ii. 96). Ferretti of but afterwards, on the complaint of the Vicenza (a very affected writer) says, deacons and lower clergy, that they "quibus cardo januse coelestis infigi- were excluded, some deacons were tur" (Murat. ix. loio). The Greek added to the body. The steps are historian G. Pachymeres supposes uncertain ; but it is supposed that the them to be themselves called hinges, college of cardinals was thus arranged u)S Qvpa.% ovcnjs tov irdira, Kara rnv by Alexander III. (Mosheim, 11. 331- Xpio-Tou ti.Cm Stenzel, i. 193, 214. Hanno, not- lux totius Germanise," (Catal. Ar withstanding his palpable defects of chiepp. Colon, in Bohmer, Fontes, ii character, was held in very high 274). Some letters of Hanno are esteem by hvs contemporaries, and was published in the appendix to Floss's afterwards canonized. See Lambert, * Papstwahl unter den Ottonen.' Chap. I. a.d. 1062. ABDUCTION OF HENRY IV. 265 Henry on an island of the Rhine,® he described this vessel in such terms as excited in the boy a wish to see it. No sooner was Henry on board than the rowers struck up the river. The king, suspecting treachery, threw himself overboard, but was rescued from the water by Count Eckhardt, one of the conspirators ; his alarm was soothed, and he was landed at Cologne. The people of that city rose in great excitement, but were pacified by the archbishop's assurances that he had not acted from any private motives, but for the good of the state; and, by way of proving his sincerity, Hanno published a decree that the administration of government and justice should be vested in the archbishop of that province in which the king should for the time be resident.*^ Hanno had thus far supported the Lombard pope, but he now found it expedient to make common cause with the Hildebrandine party ; indeed it is probable that his late enterprise had been known beforehand to Godfrey of Tuscany, if not to Hildebrand and the other eccle- siastical leaders.® Peter Damiani, who had already, by letters written with his usual vehemence, urged Henry to put down the antipope,* and Cadalous himself to retire " See Floto, 1. 201. The island had which, however, the cardinal abund- its name from St. Suidbert (see above, antly answers] — "sagitta producta de iii. 62), who founded a monastery on pharetra Satanae, virga Assur, filius it. (Beda, v. 11; Rettberg, ii. 423.) Belial, filius perditionis qui adversatur By changes in the course of the river et extollitur super omne quod dicitur it has become united to the mainland, Deusaut quodcolitur, vorago iibidinis, and is now the site of Kaiserswerth. naufragium castitatis, Christianitatis Giesebr. iii. 81. opprobrium, ignominia sacerdotum, J Lambert, Ann. 1062 ; Voigt, 63-4. genimen vipcrarum, fcetor orbis, spur- « Benzo, ii. 15 ; Planck, IV. i. 90-1 ; citia sa^culi, dedecus universitatis, Milman, ii. 496. serpens lubricus, coluber tortuosus, *■ Ep. iii. 3. As a specimen of stercus hominum, latrina criminum, Peter's style, the description ofCada- sentinavitiorum, abominatio coeli, pro lous may be quoted— " Veterrimus ille jectio paradisi, pabulum tartari, stipula draco, perturbator ecclesiae, eversor ignis aeterni, qui audacter provocat in apostolicae disciplinae, inimicus salutis bella Coelestem, et dicit insipiens iq humanae, radix peccati, praeco diaboli, corde suo ' Non est Deus' " (p. iii). apostolus antichrist!, et— quid plura The vagueness of all this abuse ii dicam?"— [a very natural question, remarkable. 266 COUNCIL OF OSBOR. Book VI from the contest,^ now addressed Hanno in a strain of warm congratulation — comparing the abduction of Henry to the good priest Jehoiada's act in rescuing the young Joash from AthaHah, and exhorting the archbishop to take measures for obtaining a synodical declaration against Cadalous.^ Guibert, the chief supporter of the imperial interest in Italy, was deprived of his chancellorship ; ' and in October 1062 a synod was held at Osbor,^ where Peter appeared, and presented an argument for Alexander in the form of a dialogue between an "Advocate of the Royal Power" and a " Defender of the Roman Church." ^ The Roman champion, as might be expected, is fortunate in his opponent. The advocate of royalty, ill acquainted with the grounds of his cause, and wonderfully open to conviction, is driven from one position after another. His assertion that popes had always been chosen by princes is confuted by an overwhelming array of instances to the contrary.™ The donation of Constantine is triumphantly cited.'^ The royalist then takes refuge in the reservation which the late pope's decree had made of the imperial prerogative ; but he is told that, as the Almighty sometimes leaves His promises unfulfilled because men fail in the performance of their part, so the grant made by Nicolas to Henry need not be always observed ; that the privileges allowed to the king are not invaded, if during his childhood the Roman church — his better and spiritual mother — exercise a guardian care like that which his natural mother exerts in the political administration of his kingdom. « K Ep. i. 20. ^ lb. 6. reality of the synod (viii. 684-7). ' Bonizo, pp. 806, 808. Against him, see Voigt, 76. Comp. ^ This name is generally supposed Mansi, n. in Nat. Alex. xiii. 494. to be an Italian corruption of ^7(f;s^7/rf ' Opusc. iv. t. iii. 21, seqq., or Hard (Schrockh, xxi. 538 ; Stenzel, i. 220 ; vi. 119, seqq. See Hefele, iv. 790. Wattenbach, n. on Chron. Casin. iii. "• P. 72. 19, ap. Tertz, vii. ; Hefele, iv. 790 ; " P. 23. Giesebr. Iii. 90X Ludea denies the • Pp. 23-4. Bp. Hefele fw. 787.4) Chap. I. a. d. 1062. RETIREMENT OF P. DAMIANI. 267 The pamphlet was read before the synod, which acknowledged Alexander as pope, and excommunicated his rival. It was the feast of St. Simon and St. Jude, the anniversary of the antipope's election ; and a prediction which Damiani had confidently uttered, that, if he should persist in his claims, he would die within the year,P was proved to be ridiculously false. The prophet, however, was not a man to be readily abashed, and professed to see the fulfilment of his words in the excommunication — the spiritual death — of Cadalous.^i Peter had by this time withdrawn from the eminent position to which Stephen IX. had promoted him. His reforming zeal had been painfully checked by the supine- ness of those with whom he was associated. His brother cardinals, to whom he addressed an admonitory treatise on their duties,*" continued to live as if it had never been written. His attempts to stimulate pope Nicolas to a thorough purification of the church were but imperfec-tly successful, although he cited Phineas as a model, and Eli as a warning.^ Moreover, in his simple monkish earnest- ness for a religious and moral reformation, he was unable to enter into Hildebrand's deeper and more politic schemes for the aggrandisement of the hierarchy; he felt that Hildebrand employed him as a tool, and he was dissatis- fied with the part.^ He had therefore repeatedly entreated Nicolas to release him from his bishoprick, on the plea of age, and of inability to discharge his duties." The pope refused his consent, and Hildebrand, unwilling to lose shows from this dialogue that Nicolas Damiani in Paradise as rebiikin? the did not, as some have supposed, recall pride of later cardinals. Parad. xxi. the privilege allowed to the German fin. sovereign by his decree of 1059 as to » Opusc. xvii., " DeCoeiibatu Cleri- the choice of popes. corum," t. iii. 165-7. p "Non ego te fallo, ccepto morieris in * Stenzel, i. 280. ,„no." Ep. \. ■20, ad Cadal. " Op use. xix. " De Alxlicatioo* I P. Dam. Opusc. XVIII. ii. 8. Episcopatus." "• Kp. ii. I. Daute represents Peter 268 YOUTH OF HENRY IV. Book Yl the services of a man so useful to his party, told the cardinal that he was attempting under false pretences to escape from duty ; but Peter persisted in his suit, and in the first year of Alexander's pontificate^ he was allowed to retire to his hermitage of Fonte Avellano. There he spent part of his time in humble manual works ; among his verses are some which he sent to the pope with a gift of wooden spoons manufactured by himself^ But he continued to exercise great influence by his writings ; he was consulted by multitudes as an oracle;'^ and from time to time he left his wilderness, at the pope's request, to undertake important legations. The empress-mother Agnes, after the death of bishop Henry of Augsburg, placed herself under the direction of Damiani; and, having been brought by him to repent of her policy towards the church, she submitted to penance at the hands of Alexander, and became a nun in the Roman convent of St. Petronilla.* Hanno and his associates had loudly censured Agnes for the manner in which she educated her son ; but when they had got the young king into their own hands, his education was utterly neglected. No care was taken to instruct him in the duties of a sovereign or of a Christian man. His talents, which were naturally strong, and his amiable dispositions were uncultivated ; the unsteadiness ^ Pagi, xvii. 192. to Damiani, that, since the chief of y Carm. 183-5, t. iv. p. 21. men is thus short-lived, all men should ' See Ep. i. 15, p. 11, where he com- be warned to prepare for death. That plains that, although no longer a bishop, secular princes often live long, is be- he has still to bear the burden of the cause there are many of them, and the episcopal office. Among the questions death of one is not felt beyond his own proposed to him was one by Alexander dominions. But the pope, being sole — Why popes were short-lived, seldom universal bishop of the church, is like exceeding four or five years in the see ? the sun, whose eclipse overcasts all The answer was a tract, * De Erevitate nations (c. i), VitaeRomanorum Pontificum'(Opusc. • Baron. 1062. 86, seqq. ; P. Dam. xxiii.), which was presented to Alex- Epp. viL $-8 ; Opusc Ivi. ; FlotO, i ander as he returned from the council 293. of Mantua. The reason is, according Chap. I. a.d. 1062 5. ADALBERT OF BREMEN. 269 of character which was his chief defect was unchecked ; no restraint was opposed to his will ; he was encouraged to waste his time and his energies in trifling or degrading occupations — in hunting, gaming, and premature indul- gence of the passions.^ Hanno, finding that he himself was distasteful to Henry, both on account of the artifice by which he had obtained possession of the king's person and because of his severe and imperious manners,*' called in the aid of Adalbert, archbishop of Bremen and Ham- burg. The character of this prelate has been very fully depicted by the historian of northern Christianity, Adam, who, as a canon of his church, had ample opportunities of knowing him. Adalbert was a man of many splendid qualities. His person was eminently handsome ; he was distinguished for eloquence and for learning ; his morals, by a rare exception to the character of the age, were unimpeached ; his devotion was such that he wept at the celebration of the eucharistic sacrifice.*^ He had laboured with zeal and success for the spreading of the gospel among the northern nations — extending his care even to the Orkneys and to Iceland.® He had conceived the idea of exalting Bremen to the dignity of a patriarchate,' and it was a desire to promote the interest of his see which first led him to frequent the imperial court. He b Bruno de Bello Saxonico, ap. Orkneys, he says, had been before Pertz, V. 331-4 ; Schmidt, ii. 205, 273 ; governed by English and Scottish Voigt 65 "Infelicitervixit," says the bishops, but Adalbert consecrated Saxoii annalist, "quia sicut voluit Turolf for them, as bishop of Blascona vixit." Pertz, vi. 697. -a place which the editors do not « Lambert. Ann. 1063, p. 166 ; Sten- pretend to identify (ib.). For the Nor- ^gj J wegian connexion with the Orkneys d Adam. Brem. iii. i ; Lambert, Ann. and Western Isles, see Keith's ' Cata 1072, p. 189. log"^ °f Scottish Bishops, ed. 1, pp. • See Adam, iii. 11, seqq., and the 130, 175 : Grub, c. xvii. . additions at the end of book iii. pp. ' Ad. Brem. iii. 2 Heobtamedpri 364-7. His description of the Orkneys. vileges for his see from Oement I L L situated between Norway, Britain, (Ep. 4). Leo IX. (Ep. 77). ■;ind Victor and Ireland (Descr. Insul. 34). seems II. (Ep- s)- Patrol, cxlu.-iu. to include the Hebrides. These 27© ADALBERT OF BREMEN. Book VI acquired the confidence of Henry III., whom he attended into Italy in 1046 ; it is said that the emperor even wished to bestow the papacy on him, and that Suidger of Bamberg, who had been a deacon of the church ot Hamburg,^ was preferred by Adalbert's own desire.^ The hope of erecting a northern patriarchate ended with the death of the archbishop's patrons, Henry and Leo IX., and from that time he devoted himself to political ambi- tion.^ The faults of his character became more and more developed.^ His pride, vanity, ostentation, and prodi- gality were extravagantly displayed. His kindness and his anger were alike immoderate. The wealth which he had before spent on ecclesiastical buildings was now lavished on castles ; ^ he maintained a numerous and costly force of soldiers ; and to meet the expenses of his secular grandeur he oppressed the tenants of his church and sold its precious ornaments.™ He entertained a host of parasites, — artists, players, quacksalvers, minstrels, and jugglers ; one was a baptized Jew, who professed the science of alchemy ; others flattered their patron with tales of visions and revelations, which promised him power, long life, and the exaltation of his church. While engaged in the society of these familiars, the archbishop would refuse an audience to persons who wished to see him on the gravest matters of business ; sometimes he spent the night in playing at dice, and slept throughout the day." His eagerness to extend the possessions of his see, and to render it independent of lay control, in- volved him in many quarrels with neighbouring nobles;** and his favourite table-talk consisted of sarcasms on these powerful enemies — the stupidity of one, the greed ot K Munter, ii. 82. * lb. 45. i" Ad. Brem. iii. 7, va " lb- 35-38 ; Bruno de Bello Saxon. ' lb. 33. ap. Pertz, V. 330-1 ; Stenzel, i. 234. ^ lb. 35, sQ. * Ad. Brem. iii. 5. ' lb. 9, 10, 361 CHAP. 1. A. D. 1062-65. HANNO AND ADALBERT. 2;i another, the boorishness of a third. p At the same time he was proud of his own descent from the counts palatine of Saxony ; he spoke with contempt of his predecessors in the archbishoprick as a low-born set of men,i and even claimed kindred, through the family of the Othos, with the emperors of the eastJ To the poor his behaviour was gentle and condescending ; he would often wash the feet of thirty beggars ; but to his equals he was haughty and assuming.^ The young king was won by the fascination of Adalbert's society, and after a time Hanno found it expedient to admit his brother archbishop to a share in the administra- tion.* The misgovernment of these prelates was scanda- lous. Intent exclusively on their own interest and on that of their partisans, they appropriated or gave away estates belonging to the crown, while they used the royal name to sanction their plunder of other property. The wealth of monasteries, in particular, was pillaged without mercy. To Hanno his rapacity appeared to be justified by the application of the spoil to religious uses ; Adalbert was rapacious in order to obtain the means of maintaining his splendour. Hanno, a man of obscure birth," practised the most shameless nepotism in the bestowal of ecclesias- tical dignities, while Adalbert disdained such expedients for enriching his kindred.'' The sale of church prefer- ment was openly carried on ; a historian of the time tells us that money was the only way to promotion.^ The feuds and insubordination of the nobles became more uncontrollable; nor were ecclesiastics slow to imitate their example. Thus, in consequence of a question as to precedence between the bishop of Hildesheim and the P Ad. Brem. iii. 39. 1063, p. 162. q lb. 68. ° Floto, i. 196, 285. , 1^ =" Adam. iii. 34 ; Lambert, O. tfifj- , Ib"^ 2/ Stenzel, i. 222,233. t Ad. BreM. iiL ^j; Lambert, Ann. ' Lambert, p. 166. 372 MISGOVERNMENT OF GERMANY. Book VI. abbot of Fulda, a violent aftray took place between their retainers in the church of Goslar, at Christmas 1062, and the quarrel was renewed with still greater fury at the following Whitsuntide, when the king's presence was no more regarded than the hohness of the place. Henry was even in personal danger, and many were slain on both sides. The great monastery of St. Boniface was long disturbed by the consequences of these scenes, and was impoverished by the. penalties imposed on it for the share which its monks had taken in them.^ Adalbert gradually supplanted Hanno. At Easter 1065, he carried Henry to Worms, where the young king, then aged fifteen, was girt with the sword, and was declared to be of age to carry on the government for him- self. Thus the regency of Hanno ceased, while Adalbert, as the minister of Henry, for a time enjoyed undivided power.* Under his administration the state of things became continually worse. Simony was more shamelessly practised than ever ; the pillage of monasteries was carried on without measure ; for the archbishop taught the young king to regard monks as merely his stewards and bailiffs.^ Adalbert's private quarrels were turned into affairs of state, and he took advantage of his position to inspire Henry with a dislike of the Saxons and others who had offended him. The discontent of his enemies and of those who suffered from his misgovernment rose at length to a height, and at a diet which was held at Tribur, in January 1066, Henry was peremptorily desired by a powerful party of princes and prelates to choose between the resignation of his crown ' and the dismissal of the archbishop of Bremen. Adalbert was compelled to make a hasty flight; he was required to give up almost the whole revenue of his see to his enemies ; and his lands ' Laaibert, pp. 164-5 ; Voigt, 65-71. zel, i. 236-7. • Lambert, Ajin. 1065, p. 168 ; Sten- *• Lambert, d. 167. Chap. I. a.d. 1063-67. FALL OF THE ANTIPOPE. jy* were plundered, so that he was reduced to support him- self by appropriating religious and charitable endowments, and by oppressive exactions which are said to have driven some of the victims to madness and many to beggary.^ Hanno resumed the government. His rapacity and nepotism were unabated, but sometimes met with suc- cessful resistance. A nephew named Conrad, whom he had nominated to the archbishoprick of Treves, was seized by the people, who were indignant at the denial of their elective rights ; the unfortunate man was thrice thrown from a rock, and, as he still lived, was despatched with a sword. Land. iii. 26. Among other things, « Amulf, 19. Perhaps a fresh cx- he alleged a late discovery of children's communication had been uttered bones in a cistern (p. 92). See above, against Ariald by Guy. Comp. Amulf, g iii. 13 with Landulf, ni. 16, and th« '« I^nd. iii. 22-7. "°'^^ ^" ^"^^' * lb. 28. 278 MURDER OF ARIALD. Book VL and about twelve of their adherents. These were attacked by the younger clergy, with some lay partisans of the archbishop. Ariald was nearly killed ; Herlembald fought desperately, and cut his way out of the church. The Patarines, on hearing of this, rose in the belief that Ariald was dead, and their numbers were swollen by a multitude of peasants from the neighbourhood, who had repaired to Milan for the festival ; they stormed the cathedral and the archiepiscopal palace, dragged the archbishop out, handled him roughly, and left him hardly alive. Next day, when the peasantry had left the city, the nobles and clergy resolved to take vengeance for these outrages. Ariald fled in disguise, pursued by two clerks with a party of soldiers, while the archbishop laid an interdict on the city until he should be found. The unfortunate man was betrayed by a companion into the hands of a niece of the archbishop named Oliva, who directed five of her servants to conduct him to an island June 27, i^ the Lago Maggiore. On arriving there, 1066.' his guards asked him whether he acknow- ledged Guy as archbishop of Milan. "He is not," said Ariald, " nor ever was, for no archbishop-like work is or ever was in him." The servants then set on him, cut off his members one by one, with words of savage mockery, and at length put an end to his life, and threw his body into the lake. Some months after the murder, the corpse was found, and Herlembald compelled the archbishop to give it up ; it was carried in triumph to Milan, and miracles were reported to be performed by it. By these scenes the exasperation of Herlembald and his party was ren- dered more intense than ever.^ In the following spring, the pope visited Milan, on his ' Acta SS., Jun. 27, p. 251. 122-3; Milman, ii. 509. Landulfsays B Bonizo, 808 ; Andreas, 58-79 (Pa- that the body honoured as Ariald's |ro). cxliii.) ; Voigt, loj ; fhewer, ij. was really that of a woman, iii. 30. Chap. I. a.d. 1066-9. TROUBLES AT MILAN. j^g (vay to the council of Mantua, where he made some regulations as to discipline, and canonized Ariald as a martyr.^ Two Roman cardinals were soon afterwards sent as legates to Milan. They entered on their com- mission in a temperate and conciliatory spirit. Aug. i, It was decreed that the clergy should sepa- 1067. rate from their wives or concubines j that such of them as should persist in defying this order should be deprived of their office ; but that no one should be deprived except on confession or conviction, and that the laity should not take the punishment of offending clergymen into their own hands.' These orders, however, had little effect. Herlembald, dissatisfied with the moderation of the commissioners, again went to Rome, where Hildebrand joined him in maintaining the necessity of appointing a. new archbishop instead of Guy, whose tide they de- clared to be invalid, as being derived from the imperial nomination.^ Guy himself at length became weary of his uneasy dignity. He expressed a wish to resign, , and sent his ring and crosier to the king, with a request (which is said to have been supported by money ^) that a deacon named Godfrey might be appointed as his successor; but, although Henry accepted the recommendation, and nominated Godfrey to the see, the Milanese refused to receive him. Nor were Herlem- bald's party able to establish a young ecclesiastic named Atto, whom they set up as a rival archbishop ; on the day of his consecration he was driven from the city, after having been compelled to forswear his pretensions. The church was in a state of utter confusion. Hildebrand declared the oath extorted from Atto to be null, and n Landulf junior, ap. Mabillon, Ana- ' Hard. vi. 1081-$. ♦ecta, 487 (Paris, 1723) ; cf. Alex. " Amulf, iii. 21. Epp. 93-A(Pafrol. cxlyi..); Acta SS. ^ Bonizo. S07, Jyo- 97- 28o TROUBLES AT FLORENCE. Book VI. procured a like declaration from the pope.™ Godfrey was excommunicated by Alexander, and was persecuted by Herlembald, who, by intercepting the revenues of the archbishoprick, rendered him unable to pay a stipulated pension to Guy ; and the old man, in distress and dis- content, allowed himself to be decoyed into a reconcilia- tion with Herlembald. He was allowed to retain the title of archbishop, but was kept as a virtual prisoner in a monastery, while Herlembald wielded the ecclesiastical as well as the secular power in Milan.'^ Guy died in 107 1, but the troubles of his church were not ended by his death. While these scenes were in progress at Milan, disturb* ances of a similar kind took place at Florence, where John Gualbert and the monks of Vallombrosa publicly accused the bishop, Peter, of simony, and declared the ministrations of simoniac and married clergy to be invalid.^ After much contention and some bloodshed,? they proposed to decide the question by ordeal. The bishop refused to abide such a trial, and the pope, who had been appealed to, discouraged it ; but a monk named Peter undertook to prove the charge. Two piles of wood were erected, ten feet in length, and with a narrow passage between them. The monk celebrated the eucharist, and proceeded to the place of trial, clothed in the sacerdotal vestments. After praying that, if his charge againt the bishop of Florence were just, he might escape unhurt, he entered between the burning "> Arnulf, iii. 22, 25, iv. 2 ; Landulf charge of simony, Peter Damiani sen. iii. 18; Bonizo, 810. wrote Opusc. xxx. "De Sacramentis " lb, 809 ; Arnulf, iii. 22. per improbos administratis." •> Berthold. Ann. 1067 (Pertz, v.); p The biographers of Gualbert charge Atto, Vita S. Joh. Gualb. cc. 10, 60, the bishop with attempting to get rid seqq. (Mabill. ix.) ; Andreas, 81, seqq. of his enemies by sending soldiers to (Patrol, cxlvi.) ; Baron. 1063, 1-60. bum them in a monastery. Ar^Jreas, Against those who refused to communi- 83 ; Atto, 60. cate with the bishop on account of the 1 Mansi in Baron, xvii. 238. Chap. I. a.d. 1067-9. HENRY IV. AND BERTHA. 28 1 piles, barefooted and carrying the cross in his hands. For a time he was hidden by flames and smoke ; but he reappeared uninjured, and was hailed by the spectators with admiration and triumph."^ The bishop, a man of mild character, yielded to the popular clamour by with- drawing from Florence ; but he retained his office until his death, and the diocese was administered in his name by a deputy.^ The zeal of the monk Peter, who acquired the name of " the Fiery," * was rewarded by promotion to high dignity in the church. Under Gregory VII. he became cardinal-bishop of Albano, and was employed as legate in Germany. '^ Henry III. had chosen as a wife for his son, Bertha, daughter of the marquis of Susa, whose powerful interest in Italy he hoped to secure by the connexion.^ The princess was beautiful, and, as appeared in the varied trials of her life, her character was noble and affectionate; but the young king, from unwiUingness to forsake his irregularities, was reluctant to fulfil the engagement. After recovering from an illness which his physicians sup- posed to be desperate, he was persuaded by the entreaties of his nobles to marry Bertha in 1066 ; but regarding her as forced on him by his enemies, he felt a repugnance towards her, and three years later he formed a design of repudiating her.y With a view to this, he endeavoured to secure the interest of Siegfried, archbishop of Mentz, by a promise of aiding him in enforcing the payment of ' Atto, 64; Victor III. Dial. iii. in ' "Petrus Igneus." See Ciacon. i. Bibl. Patr. xviii, 855, where it is said 863-6. " Bernold. ap. Pertz, v. 436. that he dropped a handkerchief in his * Luden, viii. 290. passage, and went back to recover it. ^ Voigt, in-12; Giesebr. iii. 133. There is a curious note on ordeals in Bruno (De Bello Saxonico, 7, ap. Tosti, StoriadellaContessaMatilde, 90. Pertz, v.) says that he endeavoured to • See Theiner, ii. 109-11. Some entrap her into adultery with one of monastic historians represent the his courtiers. That the storj' is in- matter differently. credible, see Stcnzel, ii. 62-3. 282 HENRY IV. AND BERTHA. Book VI tithes from Thuringia to his see, and Siegfried willingly- listened to the inducement .== He wrote to the pope on behalf of the divorce, although in a tone which showed that he was somewhat ashamed of his part ; he had (he said) threatened the king with excommunication unless some definite reason were given for his desire of a separa- tion.* Peter Damiani was once more sent into Germany, and assembled a synod at Mentz, from which city, at Henry's summons, it was transferred to Frankfort. After a discussion of the matter, the legate earnestly entreated Henry to desist from his purpose, for the sake of his own reputation, if he were indifferent to the laws of God and man. He told him that it was an accursed project, unworthy alike of a Christian and of a king ; that it was monstrous for one whose duty bound him to punish misdeeds, to give so flagrant an example; that the pope would never consent to the divorce, nor ever crown him as emperor if he persisted in urging it. The king submitted, although unwillingly, and soon resumed his licentious habits.'^ But the character of Bertha gradually won his affection, and, so long as she lived, her fidelity supported him in his troubles.^ About this time Adalbert, after a banishment of three years from the court, recovered his position, and for a time conducted the government with absolute power.<^ He resumed his ambitious project of erecting his see into a patriarchate.® The evils of his former administration were renewed, and even exceeded. Ecclesiastical pre- terments were put up to open sale in the court ; and it is • Lambert, Ann. 1069, p. 174. The Abhandlungen der Berliner Academic, I'art of Thuringia which was imme- 1854, p. 443 ; Giesebr, iii. 1106. diately subject to Mentz had been ex- *> Lambert, Ann. 1069, pp. 175-6. empt ever since the conversion of the * Stenzel, I 258. people, while another part paid tithes ^ Adam. Brem. iii. ^8 ; Lambert, to the abbots of Fulda and Hersfeld. Ann. 1072. Siegfried claimed all. Luden, viii. 412. « Adaja, iii. 5$^ • Hard. vL 1164. See Ranke, ia Chap. I. a.d. 1066-72. LAST DAYS OF ADALBERT. 283 said that a general disgust was excited by the sight of the shameless traffic in which monks engaged, and of the hoarded wealth which they produced, to be expended in simoniacal purchases.* Feuds, intrigues, discontent, abounded. The writer to whom we are indebted for the fullest account of Adalbert's career describes his last years with a mixture of sorrow and awe — dwelling fondly on his noble gifts, relating his errors with honest candour, and lamenting his melancholy perversion and decline. It seemed as if the archbishop's mind were disordered by the vicissitudes through which he had passed. His days were spent in sleep, his nights in waking. His irritability became intolerable ; to those who provoked him he spoke with an indecent violence of language ; or he struck them, and sometimes so as even to draw blood. He showed no mercy to the poor ; he plundered religious and charitable foundations, while he was lavish in his gifts to the rich, and to the parasites whose flatteries and prophecies obtained an ever-increasing mastery over him. Yet his eloquence was still unabated, and gave plausibility to his wildest extravagances and to his most unwarrantable acts.^ His nearest relations believed him to be under the influence of magic, while he was himself suspected by the vulgar of unhallowed arts — a charge for the falsehood of which the historian solemnly appeals to the Saviour and to all the saints.^ His health began to fail; a woman, who professed to be inspired, foretold that he would die within two years unless he amended his life ; but he was buoyed '' Lamb. Ann. 1071, p. 189. of Polde— "Ferebaturimaginem quan- e Adam, 61. dam ad instar [mcnsuram Annal. h lb. 62. Such charges were common Palith.] digiti, ex JEgYPto adlatam, in those times. Benno says that Hilde- adorare ; a qua quoties rcsponsa brand practised magic, having derived [oracula, A. P.] quacrebat, nccesse his art from Gerbert, through Benedict erat homicidium [Christianum immo- IX. (ap. Goldast. Apol. pro Henr. IV. lare, A. P.] aut in summo fcsto adul- 11). And of Henry IV. we are told by terium procurarc." Pcrtz, yi. 697; ,the Saxo;;i Annalist and by the ^onalist xy\. IQ. 284 DEATH OF ADALBERT. Book VI. up by the assurances of other prophets, that he would live to put all his enemies under his feet, and almost to the last he relied on these assurances in opposition to the warnings of his physicians.^ Omens of evil were ob- served at Bremen : crucifixes wept, swine and dogs boldly profaned the churches, wolves mingled their dismal bowl- ings with the hooting of owls around the city, while the pagans of the neighbourhood burnt and laid waste Hamburg, and overran Nordalbingia. The archbishop gradually sank. It was in vain that the highest dignitaries of the church sought admittance to his chamber ; he was ashamed to be seen in his decay. The king alone was allowed to enter ; and to him Adalbert, after reminding him of his long service, committed the protection of the church of Bremen. On the i6th of March 1072 the archbishop expired at Goslar — unlike Wolsey, with whom he has been compared,^ in the recovery of his power, and in the retention of it to the last ; but, like Wolsey, lamenting the waste of his life on objects of which he had too late learnt to understand the vanity. His treasury, into which, by rightful and by wrongful means, such vast wealth had been gathered, was found to be entirely empty; his books and some relics of saints were all that he left behind him.^ On the death of Adalbert, Henry, lin deference to the solicitations of his nobles and to the cries of his people, requested Hanno to resume the government. The arch- bishop reluctantly consented, and, although his rapacity and sternness excited complaints, the benefits of his vigorous administration speedily appeared. Nobles were compelled to raze their castles, which had been the strong- holds of tyranny and insubordination ; justice was done without respect of persons ; it seemed, according to the Adam, iii. 63-4. Essay on Hildebrand. * By Sir James Stephen, in his ' Adam, iii. 63-7. Chap. I. a.d. 1072-;^. DISORDERS OF GERMANY. 285 best annalist of the age, as if for a time the minister had-infused into the indolent young king the activity and the virtues of his father.™ But Hanno was wesiTy of his position, and under the pretext of age and ^.d. 1062. infirmity, resigned it at the end of nine Christmas, months ; when Henry, feeling (according to Lambert's expression) as if he were delivered from a severe school- master, plunged into a reckless career of dissipation and misgovernment.^ He neglected public business; violences were committed against nobles, the property of churches and monasteries was bestowed on worthless favourites, the hills of Saxony and Thuringia were crowned with fortresses intended to coerce the inhabitants, and the garrisons indulged without restraint their love of plunder and destruction, their insolence and their lust.° In Thuringia, the prosecution of Siegfried's claim to tithes was used as a pretext for the military occupation of the country; it had been agreed that the king was to enforce the claim by arms, on condition of sharing in the spoil. Siegfried, by a letter in which he plainly hinted a bribe, endeavoured to draw Hildebrand into his interest-^ In March 1073 a synod met at Erfurt, in the king's presence, for the consideration of the question ; when the abbots of Fulda and Hersfeld appeared in opposition to the arch- bishop. The Thuringians made an appeal to the pope, but Henry threatened ruin and death against any one who should attempt to prosecute it ; and when the synod agreed on a compromise unfavourable to the Thuringians, he forbade the abbots to report the result to Rome.*^ Henry had incurred the general detestation of his sub- •" Lambert, Ann. 1072, pp. 189-90. 146. This writer, whose Annals end in 1077, ° Lambert, Ann. 1073, p. 192 ; Voigt. did not give Henry credit for the 113-32 ; Stenzel, i. 276. qualities which he afterwards dis- p Hard. vi^. 1194. played. 1 Lamb. Ann. 1073. p. 193; Hard. •> Id. Ann. 1073, p. 192 ; Voigt, 138, vi. 1191. jr86 TRIUMPHS OF THE PAPACY. Book VI. jects, which was swollen by exaggerated and fabulous tales of his misconduct ; ' the Saxons, the Thuringians, and the Swabians, exasperated by the wrongs which they had suffered and by the dread of further evils, were ready to break out into rebellion.^ The cries of Germany at length reached Alexander, who summoned the archbishops of Mentz and Cologne, with the bishop of Bamberg, to Rome, and reproved them for their slackness in discouraging simony. Hanno was gently treated, and was presented with some precious relics ; Siegfried's offer of a resignation was declined ; Otho of Bamberg confessed his guilt, but it is said that he appeased the papal anger by valuable gifts, and he received the honour of the pall.* The greatest prelates of Germany were at the pope's feet ; the two metro- politans of England had just been compelled to appear before him — Lanfranc of Canterbury, that he might personally receive the pall which he had in vain en- deavoured to obtain without such appearance ; and Thomas of York, that he might refer to the successor of St. Peter and of St. Gregory a question as to the EngHsh primacy." By these triumphs over national churches, Alexander was encouraged to enter on a contest with the chief representative of the secular power. In October 1072, he had held a conference at Lucca with Beatrice and her daughter Matilda on the means of reforming their royal kinsman ; and, as it was agreed that gentle ■■ See Floto, c. 58, legates, a young clerk insolently placed • Voigt, 152-3. before him a short verse of a psalm. * Lamb. Ann. 1070 (which is too " If," he said, "you will explain this early a date); Voigt, 153 ; Giesebr. iii. verse to me correctly, not according to 151-3, 1107. That Bamberg, although its mystical or allegorical meaning, only a bislioprick, usually had the pall, but in the literal sense of the words, I see p. 133. Otho was involved in will allow that you are clear from all serious troubles under Gregory VII., charges, and are worthy of your and was at last compelled to retire bishoprick." Lamb. Ann. 1075, p. into a cloister. At an inquiry into his 221. conduct, in the presence of the pope's " See hereafter, c. v. Chap. I. a.d 1072-3. DEATH OF ALEXANDER II. 287 measures would be ineffectual, he proceeded, at a synod in the following Lent, to excommunicate five counsellors who were charged with exerting an evil influence over Henry, and summoned the king himself to make satis- faction to the church for simony and other offences. Hanno and the bishop of Bamberg, who were on the point of returning home, were charged with the deli- very of the mandate; but on the 21st of April 1073, Alexander died, and it remained unanswered and un- enforced.^ Peter Damiani had died in the preceding year, on his return from a mission to Ravenna, where he had been employed in releasing his fellow- citizens from the excom- munication brought on them by their late archbishop, as a partisan of the antipope Cadalous.y CHAPTER n. GREGORY VII. A.D. 1073- 1085. HiLDEBRAND was uow to assume in his own person the majesty and the responsibility of the power which he had so long directed.* » Ekkehard, a.d. 1073 ; Bonizo, 1. * His mastery over the late popes vi. fin. It has been supposed (as by had been the subject of epigrams by Voigt, 158-9 ; Bowden, i. 306-7) that Peter Damiani :— Alexander went so far as to summon "Viverevis Romjef dara depromito voc(^— Henry to Rome, — a step without Plus domino Papae quain Domno parco example in earlier times. But the ^^P*- Carm. 149 (Patrc/. cxW.). statement is said to rest only on a ., ^^^^^^ ^.^^ ^^,^_ ^^^ ^^ prostratus adoro misconstruction of Ekkehard's words -j^-^j f^^j^ j^^j^ doiniuum, te facit iste " litteras Alexandri apostolici, regem Deum." vocantes ad satisfactionem." Floto, ^'"'"*- »95(^»- J. g Benzo repeatedly says that he fed y Vita, 21 ; Pagi, xvii. 344. Comp. Nicolas II. " velut asinum in stabulo" Ep. i. 14- a). Arnulf 0/ 288 ELECTION OF GREGORY VII. Book VI. At the death of Alexander II., Rome, by a fortune rare on such occasions, was undisturbed by the rage of its factions.^ Hildebrand, as chancellor of the see, ordered a fast of three days, with a view to obtaining the Divine guidance in the choice of a pope. But next day, while the funeral rites of Alexander were in pro- April 22, gress, a loud outcry arose from the clergy I073- and the people, demanding Hildebrand as his successor. The chancellor ascended the pulpit, and attempted to allay the uproar by representing that the time for an election was not yet come ; ^ but the cries still continued. Hugh the White then stood forth as spokesman of the cardinals, and, after a warm panegyric on Hildebrand's services to the church, declared that on him the election would fall, if no worthier could be found. The cardinals retired for a short time, and, on their reappearance, presented Hildebrand to the mul- titude, by whom he was hailed with acclamations.*^ The name which the new pope assumed — Gregory the Seventh — naturally carried back men's thoughts to the last Gregory who had occupied St. Peter's chair.® By choosing this name, Hildebrand did not merely testify his personal attachment to the memory of his master and patron ; it was a declaration that he regarded him as a legitimate pope, and was resolved to vindicate the principles of which Gregory VI. had been the repre- sentative and the confessor against the imperial power by which he had been deposed. Milan intimates that the popes were that nothing should be done for the afraid of him (iv. 2). Benno, with his election of a pope or of a bishop until usual outrageousness, says (ap. Brown, after the see had been three days Fascic. Rer, Exp., etc., i. 85) that he vacant. Anast. ap. Murat. iii. 135. beat Alexander, and kept him on an '' Bonizo, 811 ; Hard. vi. 1195. The allowance of five soh'di a day, while he scene seems to have taken place in the himself grew immensely rich on the church of St. Peter ad Vincula. Pet. poils of the papacy. Pisan. in Watterich, i. 293 ; Hefelc^ * Greg. Epp. i. 1-4. v. 2. • Boniface III. had decreed, in 607, ^ Baron. 1073, 25. Chai-. II. AD. I07V GREGORY VII. 289 At the outset, however, Hildebrand did not wish pre- maturely to provoke that power. The proceedings which Alexander had commenced against Henry were allowed to drop ; and, although the pope at once took on himself the full administration of his office,* he sent notice of his election to the king, and waited for the ro}al confirmation of it. The German bishops, who knew that his influence had long governed the papacy, and dreaded his imperious character and his reforming tendencies, represented the dangers which might be expected from him ; and, in consequence of their representations, two commissioners were despatched to Rome, with orders to compel Hilde- brand to lesign, if any irregularity could be found in his election. The pope received them with honour; he stated that the papacy had been forced on him by a tumult, against his own desire, and that he had deferred his consecration until the choice should be approved by the king and princes of Germany. The commissioners reported to Henry that no informality could be discovered, and on St. Peter's day 1073 Hildebrand was consecrated as the successor of the apostle.^ It was the last time that the imperial confirmation was sought for an election to the papacy. In the letters which he wrote on his elevation, Hilde- brand expresses a strong reluctance to undertake the ' Voigt, 184. XXV. 432 ; Voigt, 169 ; Luden, viii. 703 ; B Lambert, p. 194 (who, however, Bowden, i. 319 ; Milman, ii. 515). wrongly puts the consecration on the Ranke (Abhandl. d. B«rlincr Acad.. Purification in the following year); a.d. 1854, p. 446), followed by Gicsc- Bonizo, Sii ; Planck, IV. i. 100-3, brecht (iii. 241, iiiS) and Kioto (ii. 113-15. A story told by Bonizo (811), g.s), throws doubts on the fact of the and more distinctly by the cardinal of royal confirmation, and thinks that Aragon, two centuries later (Muratori, Lambert, in his monkish partiality or iii. 304), that Hildebrand begged credulity, has given Gregory credit Henry not to confirm his election, on this occasion for "a moderation because, if pope, he must feel himself and humility which were far from obliged to correct the king's vices, is him." On the other side see Hcfcle, v. generally rejected, as inconsistent with ^.g. his letters of the time. (See Schrockh. VOL. IV. 19 290 GREGORY VII. Boor VI. burden of tlie dignity which had been thrust on him ; *• and his professions have been often regarded as insincere. But this seems to be an injustice. Passionately devoted as he was to the cause which he had espoused, he may yet have preferred that his exertions for it should be car- ried on under the names of other men ; he had so long wielded in reality the power which was nominally exer- cised by Leo, Victor, Stephen, Nicolas, and Alexander, that he may have wished to keep up the same system to the end. If he had desired to be pope, why did he not take means to secure his election on some earlier vacancy? Why should we suppose that his promotion as the suc- cessor of Alexander was contrived by himself, rather than that it was the natural effect of the impressici^n which his character and his labours had produced on the minds of the Roman clergy and people ? And even if he thought that matters had reached a condition in whi'ih no one but himself, acting with the title as well as wi'h the power of pope, could fitly guide the poHcy of tKe church, why should we not believe that he felt a ml unwillingness to undertake an office so onerous and ro full of peril? His letters to princes and other great personages might indeed be suspected ; but one which he addressed in January 1075 to his ancient friend and superior, Hugh of Cluny,^ seems to breathe the unfeigned feeling of. his heart. Like the first pope of his name, and in terms partly borrowed from him,^ he laments the unhappy state of ecclesiastical affairs. The eastern church is failing from the faith, and is a prey to the Saracens. Westward, southward, northward, there is hardly a bishop to be seen, but such as have got their office by unlawful means, or are blameable in their lives, and devoted ';o worldly ambition ; while among secular princes there \s ■> Epp. i. i.seqq., 70. ^ See above, vol. ii. p. 369. ' Ep. U. 49. fiiAp. II, A.D. 1073, GRKGORY VII. 2()J no one who prefers God's honour and righteousness to the advantages of this world. Those among whom he lives — Romans, Lombards, and Normans — are worse than Jews or pagans. He had often prayed God cither to take him from the world or to make him the means of benefit to His church; the hope that he may be the instrument of gracious designs is all that keeps him at Rome or in life. But, whatever his private feelings may have been, Hildebrand, when raised to the papacy, entered on the prosecution of his schemes with increased energy. The cormptions of the church, which he traced to its con- nexion with the state, had led him to desire its independ- ence ; and it now appeared that under the name of independence he understood sovereign domination. In the beginning of his pontificate, he spoke of the spiritual and the secular powers as being like the two eyes in the human body,^ and therefore apparently on an equality ; but afterwards they are compared to the sun and the moon respectively™ — a comparison more distinctly insisted on by Innocent III.," and which gives a great superiority to the priesthood, so that Gregory founds on it a claim to control '' after God " the actions of kings ; and still later (as we shall see hereafter),^ his statements as to the power of temporal sovereigns became of a far more depreciatory character. And, as he brought out with a ' Ep. i. 19. carum,' published since the second ™ lb. vii. 25, ad Willelm. Anglia edition of this volume). The common Regem ■ "Qua tamen majoritatis et • reading is "apostolicx dignitatis." minoritatis distantia religlo sic se "Patrol, ccxvi, 1035, 1184. 1186; inovet Christiana, ut cura et dispensa- Greg. IX. Dccret. 1. I. tit. xxxiil. c. 6. uone apostolica dignitas post Deum Sec Schmidt, iii. 308, and Cieseler, 11. gubemetur regia." This is the read- ii. 109, who quote a commentator as lug of the Vatican MS., as given by s;iying, " Papam esse millics septin- Gksebrecht, ' De Greg. VI I. Registro genties quadragies qualer imperatore emendando' (Brunsv. 1850), and in et regibus sublimiorcm." Sec herc- Jaff<£'s edition of Gregory's letters (vol. after. Book VII. c. viii. sect. i. ii. of the ' Bihliotheca RerumGermani - Pp. 316, 34-^- 292 HIERARCHICAL SYSTEM Book VI new boldness the claims of the church against the state, it was equally his policy to assert a despotic power for the papacy against the rest of the church,? while all his aggressive acts or claims were grounded on pretexts of ancient and established right.^ The principles of his system are embodied in a set of propositions known as his " Dictate," "^ which, although probably not drawn up by himself, contains nothing but what may be paralleled either from his writings or from his actions.^ These maxims are far in advance of the forged decretals. It is laid down that the Roman pontiff alone is universal bishop ; that his name is the only one of its kind in the world. *^ To him alone it belongs to depose or to reconcile bishops ; and he may depose them in their absence, and without the concurrence of a synod." He alone is entitled to frame new laws for the church — to divide, unite, or translate bishopricks.^ He alone may use the ensigns of empire ; all princes are bound to kiss his feet ; he has the right to depose emperors, and to 1' Gieseler, II. i. 5. the Dictate as the work of Gregory in ^1 Luden, vili. 541. a Vatican MS. Dupin contents himsell ■^ Hard. vi. 1304. with saj'ing that, if not by an enemy, » " Being iterated in his own epistles, they are the work of an " entete " par- and in the Roman councils under him tisan (viii. 69). Gieseler observes as to extant " (Barrow, 17). Baronius, who their form that they look like the head- sees nothing wrong in them, considers ings of a set of canons passed at some them genuine, and refers them to the synod under Gregory (II. ii. 7, 8). council of 1076, at which Henrj' IV. See too Fleury, Ixiii. 12 ; Hefele, v. 67. was excommunicated (1076 31). Some Giesebrecht thinks that they are Gre- Gallican writers (as Pagi, xvii. 454 ; gory's own, and points out that he had Nat. Alex, xiii. Dissert. 3) have argued asked Peter Damiani to draw up such that they are not only spurious, but a summary of the papal privileges- are an enemy's misrepresentation of which Peter neglected to do. (P. Dam., Gregory; but this view (although Mr. Actu; Mediolan., Patrol, cxlvi. 89), iii. Bowden inclines to it, ii. 51) is gener- 270, 1121. ally regarded as a device suggested ' Cc. 2, 11. See Giesel. II. iu 1. by the position of those writers (see The meaning is supposed to be that no Mosheim, ii. 336 ; Schrockh, x\v. otiier is to be styled pope. Gavanti, 520 ; Planck, IV. i. 165 ; Voigt. 3S8), i. 241, ed. Aui:sburg, 1763. and Prof. Giesebrecht (p. 5) remarks " Cc. 3, 5. that it is confuted by the occurrence of * Cc. 7, 13. C«AP. ir. or GREGORY Vll. 293 Absolve subjects from their allegiance.' His power supersedes the diocesan authority of bishops.* He may revise all judgments, and from his sentence there is no appeal* All appeals to him must be respected, and to him the greater causes of every church must be referred.'' With his leave, inferiors may accuse their superiors.'^ No council may be styled general witliout his command.'' The Roman church never has erred, and, as Scripture testifies, never will err.® The pope is above all judgment, and by the merits of St. Peter is undoubtedly rendered holy.^ The church, according to Gregory, was not to be the handmaid of princes, but their mistress ; if she had received from God power to bind and to loose in heaven, much more must she have a like power over earthly things.^ His idea of the papacy combined something of the ancient Jewish theocracy with the imperial traditions of Rome.'^ Gregory boldly asserted that kingdoms were held as fiefs under St. Peter.' From France he claims tribute as an ancient right ; he says that Charlemagne acted as the pope's collector, and bestowed Saxony on the apostle.^ He declares that Spain had of old belonged to St. Peter, although the memory of the connexion had been obscured during the Mahometan occupation; and on this ground he grants to the count of Roucy (near Reims) all that he may be able to regain from the Arabs, to be held y Cc. 8, 9, 12, 27. • C. 22. « Cc. 14, 15- ' Cc. 19. 23. » c i8. ^ Ep. iv. 2 ; Hard. vi. 1346. b Qq^ 20 21. *" Ncand. vii. 112. <= C. 24. ' This infringement on the 'It is remarkable that he never ap- privlleges secured to bishops by the peals to the donation of Constanfiiie forged decretals (see vol. iii. p. 321, and (Dollinger, Papstfabcln, 78. 84). Was compare Peter Damiani, above, p. 218) this because he doubted its jienuinc was intended to bring bishops more ness, or because he scorned the idea of under the control of the papacy. obligation to the emperor as a found;*- Schmidt, ii. 297, 298. tion of his claims to temporal power? d (J. 16. k Ep. viii. 33 294 CLAIMS OF TttE PAPACY. Book VI. under the apostolic see.^ To Solomon, king of Hungary he writes that that kingdom had been given by the holy Stephen to St. Peter; he rebukes him for taking in- vestiture from the king of Germany, tells him that there- fore his reign will not be long, and in writing to the next king, Geisa, he traces Solomon's fall to this unworthy submission.™ He makes similar claims to Bohemia," to Denmark,^ to Poland, p to Provence, Corsica, Sardinia, England,*! and Ireland."" By conferring the title of king on the duke of Dalmatia, he binds him to be the vassal jf the holy see;^ where he does not pretend an ancient right, he offers to princes — even to the sovereign of Russia among them — a new and better title from St. Peter ; ^ and in the event it was found that the hope of a title which professed to consecrate possession, to heal all irregularities, and to silence all questions as to the mode of acquisition, was the most powerful means of inducing princes to submit to the pretensions of Rome." The sternness of Gregory's resolution to carry out his prin- ciples was expressed by the frequent citation of a text from Jeremiah — " Cursed be he that keepeth back his sword from blood."* But in his deaUngs with princes he showed nothing of that fanaticism which disregards persons and circumstances. He could temporize with the strong, while he bent all his force against the weak. ' Epp. i. 7 ; iv. 28. Mariana is more after, ch. xi. sect. 6. Spanish than papal as to this (vi. 39, • See Ep, vii. 4. edd Sabau y Blanco). See Baron. 1073. * Epp. ii, 74 ; i.\-. 3 (for Bavaria). 36, as to the expeditions of French " See Gregorov, iv. 168. aci Venturers in Spain ; and as to count ^ Jer. xlviii. 10. But his explana- Ebolus of Roucy, see Suger. Vit. tions render the words less alarming : Ludov. Grossi, 5 (Patrol, clx.xxvi.). " Hoc est, qui verbum praedicationis "» Epp. ii. 13, 63, 70. a carnalium hominum retinet increpa- " lb. 7. tionc"(Ep. ii. 5); "«.<». verbum praedi- • lb. 51, 75. cationis a carnalium vitas interfectione" P lb. 73. (iii. 4); "verbum correctionis a prave "I See below, ch. v, viventium increpatione" (iv. i); "qui "■ If the letter in Ussher's ' Sylloge ' doctrinam subtrahit ab occisionc car- (Work*, vol iv.) be genuine. See here- nalis vitae " (vii. 23). C'HAr. II. A. D. 1073. PHILIP I. \Jl' FRANCE. ^95 He was careful lo strike where liis blows might be most effective. Philip I. of France had succeeded his father at the age of seven, and, with a natural character far inferior to that of Henry IV., had grown up in a hke freedom from wholesome restraint, and in a like want of moral training.^ Gregory, soon after his election, addressed a letter to the king, censuring the disorders of his government ;^ and Philip answered by promising amendment, but took little p; ias to fulfil his promise. On this the pope wrote to some French bishops and nobles, in terms of the severest denunciation against their sovereign. Philip, he said, was not a king but a tyrant — a greedy wolf, an enemy of God and man. By the persuasion of the devil he had reached the height of iniquity in the sale of ecclesiastical preferments ; he paid no regard to either divine or human laws; a loose was given to perjury, adultery, sacrilege, and all manner of vices, and the king not only encouraged these but set the example of them. Nay, not content with this, he even robbed foreign merchants who visited his dominions — ^an outrage unheard of among the very pagans. The bishops were charged to remonstrate, and were assured that their obligations of fealty bound them not to over- look the sovereign's misdeeds, but to reprove them ; the kingdom must not be ruined by " one most abandoned man."** Gregory told Philip himself that France had sunk into degradation and contempt ; he threatened to excommunicate and interdict him, to withdraw the obedience of his subjects, to leave nothing undone in order to wrest the kingdom from him, unless he repented.'* Yet all this led to no result. Philip was too indolent T Sismondi, iv. 381. ' Epp. i". 35 : i>- 5- t Ep. i. 35. * lb. i. 36, 56; 11. 16, ja. 296 GREGORV Vtl Book VI. to enter into a direct conflict with the pope ; he allowed the Koman legates to hold synods and to exercise discipline in his dominions ; but he grudged the diminu- tion of his revenues by their proceedings, and, when he found that they especially interfered with his patronage or profit in the appointment or deposition of bishops and abbots, he opposed them with a sullen and dogged resistance.*' Gregory repeatedly wrote to him, admonished him, and expressed hopes of his amendment.*^ No amendment followed; but the pope was too deeply engaged in other business, and too much dreaded the spirit of the French nation — in which the nobles were gradually rallying round the throne, while the church was more united than that of Germany — to take any steps for the correction of the king.*^ While Gregory spared Philip, and while (as we shall see hereafter)* he dreaded William of England and Normandy, his most vigorous efforts were employed against the king of Germany, the heir of the imperial dignity. If he could humble the highest and proudest of crowns, the victory would tell on all other sovereigns ; and the papacy, in such strength as it had never before possessed, was measured against the empire in its weak- ness. Germany was now in a miserable state of distraction. The young king had given much just cause of discontent, while his subjects were not disposed to hmit their demands within the bounds of reason. The garrisons of the Saxon and Thuringian fortresses excited by their outrages the violent indignation of the people, and the complaints which were addressed to Henry against them were re- ceived with scorn and mockery.^ Sometimes he refused * Sismondi, xv. 440, 442, 459. s Lamberf, pp. 194, 196, 231-4. * E.g., Ep. viii. 20. Against Lambert's representation of * Sismondi, iv. 474 ; Voigt, 16a, Henry as given up to indolence and 991-3. f Ch. V. pleasure, see Gicscljr. iii. 170. Chaf. il. AD. 1073 4- DlSORDEKb Of GERiMANY. ig-j to see the deputies who were sent to him , '' it is said that on one occasion, when some envoys waited on him at Goslar by his own appointment, they were detained in his ante-chamber all day, while he amused himself by playing at dice, and at length were told that he had retired by another way.* It was believed that the king intended to reduce the Saxons to slavery, and to seize on their country for his own domain. The whole pojDulation rose in frenzy ; a confederacy was formed which included the primate Siegfried, with the abbots of Fulda and Hersfeld ; and a leader was found in Otho of Nordhcim. Both among princes and among prelates many were ready to disguise their selfish ambition under the cloak of patriotism and religion ; and loud cries were raised for a new king.^ The exasperation of the Saxons was yet further increased when Henry endeavoured to engage the barbarians of the north — Poles, Luticians, and Danes — to take up arms against them. Gregory in the beginning of his pontificate wrote to Godfrey of Tuscany ^ and to other relations of Henry, entreating them to use their influence for the king's amendment. Henry, feeling the difficulties of his position, and not suspecting the extent of the great scheme for the exaltation of the papacy at the cost of the empire, addressed the pope in a tone of deference ; he regretted his own past misconduct — his encouragement of simony, his negligence in punishing ofl:enders ; he owned himself unworthy to be called the son of the cliurch, and re- quested Gregory to aid him in appeasing the distractions of Milan, where a new clamiant, Tedald, nominated by the king at the request of the citizens, who disownetl '' Lambert, 224. enmity against Henry renders the ' Bruno de Bello Saxon, ap. Pertz, story very questionable. Sec Ludcn, V. 336. This is placed on St. Peter's viii. 707 ; Floto, i. 363. day 1073, the day of Gregory's conse- ^ Lambert, Ann. 1073, p. 204. cration. But the bitterness of Bruno's ' Ep. i. 9. 2g}i DESTRUCTION OF THE HARZBURG. Book VI. both Godfrey and Atto,™ was now engaged in a con- test for the archbishoprick with Atto and the faction of Herlembald." The troubles of Germany increased. In March 1074 an agreement was extorted from Henry that the hated fortresses should be destroyed. The great castle of the Harz was at once that in which the king took an especial pride, and which was most obnoxious to his people. It included a church, which, although built of wood, was splendidly adorned ; a college of monks was attached to the church, and in its vaults reposed the bodies of the king's brother and infant son. Henry dismantled the fortifications, in the hope of saving the rest ; but the infuriated peasantry destroyed the church, scattered the royal bones and the sacred relics, carried off the costly vessels, and proceeded to demoHsh other fortresses in the same riotous manner.^ The Saxon princes endeavoured to appease the king's indignation by representing to him that these outrages were committed without their sanc- tion, and by promising to punish the ringleaders; but he refused to listen to their apologies, inveighed against the Saxons as traitors whom no treaties could bind, and complained to the pope of the sacrileges which had been committed at the Harzburg.p About the same time the tumultuary spirit of the Germans showed itself in out- breaks in various quarters. The citizens of Cologne expelled their archbishop, Hanno, but he soon reduced them to submission, and punished them with character- istic severity.'! ■ Luden, ix. 36. Atto went to bald was killed in a street affray, Rome, where he quarrelled with Grc- April 1075 (Arnulf, iv. 10), and was gory and died excommunicate. Floto, canonized by Urban II. Acta SS., ii. 139. Jun. 27 ; Pagi, xviii. 42. " The letter (Hard. vi. 1220) has « Lambert, pp. 210, 211 ; Bruno, been questioned ; but see Voigt, 190. 334, 340 ; Voigt, 258, 262. For the Milanese troubles, Landulf. p Lambert, p, 211. sen. iii. 32 ; Pagi, xvii. 418. Herlem- q lb. pp. 212-15 ; Voigt, 266-75. C-HAr. II. A. D. 1074. MISSION TO HENRY. 299 In April 1074 Gregory sent the empress-mother Agnes, with four bishops, on an embassy into Germany. They were received at Nuremberg by Henry, but refused to hold any communication with him until lie should have done penance for his offences against the church. Out of deference to his mother, the king submitted to this condition ; in the rough garb of a penitent, and with his feet bare, he sued for and received absolution ; and his excommunicated courtiers were also absolved, on swear- ing that they would restore the church property wliicli they had taken."^ Henry was disposed to accede to the pope's intended measures against simoniacs, as he hoped by such means to get rid of some bishops who had opposed him in the Saxon troubles.^ It was proposed that a council should be held in Germany, under a legate, with a view to investigating the cases of bishops suspected of having obtained their promotion by un- lawful means. The primate Siegfried — a mean, selfish, and pusillanimous prelate — made no objection to the proposal. But Liemar, archbishop of Bremen, a man of very high character for piety, learning, and integrity,'' declared that it was an infringement on the rights of the national church ; that, in the absence of the pope, tlie archbishop of Mentz alone was entitled to preside over German councils, as perpetual legate of the holy see. In consequence of his opposition, Liemar was suspendetl by the envoys, was cited to Rome, and, as he did not appear, was excommunicated by Gregory, who wrote to him a letter of severe rebuke ; and otlier prelates wlio » Lambert, p. 215 ; Beruold, A.u. p. 44S. 1074 : Floto, ii. 14. The authority for ' Lambert, pp. cif, 216 : Vyl^t, 276 ; Henry's penitential dress is an un- Ludcn, viii. 552-7. printed work of Manegold (for whom ' Even the violent Bonizo styles him see below, ch. iv.), quoted by Floto. " virum cloquentissimum ct libcr.-Uibus But Giesebrecht denies die truth of studiis adprimc cviuliiiun," 1. fii. the scene, iii. 1020. Cf. Ranke in (Patrol, cl. 837). Abhandl. d. Berliner Acad. \.v. 1854, 300 Gregory's measures against simony BookVI. took part with him were suspended until they should clear themselves before the pope." Agnes and her com- panions were dismissed by the king with gifts, and were assured that he would aid the pope in his endeavours to suppress simony.'^ Gregory still had hopes of using Henry as an ally. In December 1074 he addressed to him two letters — the one, thanking him for his promise of co-operation ; ^ the other, remarkable as announcing the project of a crusade. The pope states that fifty thousand men, from both sides of the Alps, were ready to march against the infidels of the east, if he would be their leader ; that he earnestly wishes to undertake the expedition, more especially as it holds out a hope of reconciliation with the Greek church ; and that, if he should go, Henry must in his absence guard the church as a mother, and defend her honour. ^'^ Even so late as July 1075, he commended the king for his co-operation in discountenancing simony, and for his desire to enforce chastity on the clergy, while he expressed a hope that this might be regarded as a pledge for yet more excellent things.* In the meantime the pope's measures of reform were producing a violent commotion. Gregory was resolved to proceed with vigour in the suppression of simony and of marriage among the clergy. Like Peter Damiani, he " Lambert, 216; Bonizo, 811 ; Greg. meam, si oporteret, vobiscum pro Ep. ii. 28. Christo ponerem ; quas mihi semper ^ Bonizo, 811 ; Bcrthold, a.d. 1074 cupio in a?terna patria adhserere" (p. (Pertz, v.). Agnes died at Rome, 533). Ep. ii. 37 is an invitation to all Dec. 14, 1078, Giesebr. lii. 457-8. Christians to join the crusade. In y ii. 30. another quarter we find Gregory cor- « Ep. ii. 31. See Hefele, v. 33. In responding with a Mahometan king, Jaffe's edition, p. 532, there is a letter Anzir of Mauritania, in terms which from Gregory to the countess Matilda, recall to mind the opinion of thelatitu- inviting her to join the expedition, and dinarian party among the Spaniard* telling herthatthe empress-mother had as to the agreement of the two religions already promised to do so. " Ego (see vol. iii. p. 453). Ep. ili. 21, autem, talibus ornatus sororibus, liben- • Ep. iii. 3. tissime mare transircm, ut animam Chap. II. a.d. 10745. AND MARRIAGE OF CLERGY. 301 included under the name of simony all lay patronage of benefices ; that which is given to God (it was said) is given for ever, so that the donor can thenceforth have no further share in the disposal of it.^ In enforcing celi- bacy on the clergy, he was probably influenced in part by his strict monastic ideas, and in part by considera- tions of policy. By binding the clergy to single life, he might hope to detach them from their kindred and from society, to destroy in them the feeling of nationality, to consolidate them into a body devoted to the papacy, and owning allegiance to it rather tlian to tlie temporal sovereigns under whom they enjoyed the benefits of law and government, to preserve in the hierarchy wealtli which might have readily escaped from its hands through the channels of family and social connexions. At his first synod, in Lent 1074, canons were passed against simony and clerical marriage. The clergy who were guilty of such practices were to be debarred from all functions in the church ; the laity v/ere charged to refuse their ministrations ; it was declared that their blessing was turned into a curse, and their prayer into sin — that disobedience to this mandate was idolatry and paganism.*^ Even if such enactments did not directly contradict the long acknowledged principle of the church, that the validity of sacraments does not depend on the character of the minister, their effect was practically the same ; for it mattered not whether the sacrament:-, were annulled, or whether the laity were told that attend- ance on them was sinful.*^ The charge to the laity had, * Placidus Nonantul. (one of Gre- Gratian, Decret. I. l.xx.xi. 15, Patrol gory's party, about a.d. hoc), de clx.xxvii.), and by Gerhoch (In Psalm Honore Ecclesiae, 7 (Patrol, cxllii.). x., ib. cxciii. 794). See Gregory's " The acts of the council are lost, letters to the archbishops of Mentz and but its decrees are partially known of Magdeburg, and to the bishop o' from a defence of it by Eernold of Constance, in Jaffe's edition, 523-6. Constance (Hard. vi. 1523, seqq.). '^ Sigeb. Gembl. Ann. 1074 (Peru. That against marriage is preserved by vi.) ; Schrockh, xxv. 445 ; Bowdcn, ii. 302 OPPOSITION TO GREGORY Book VI. indeed, already been given by Nicolas and by Alexander;^ but the decrees of those popes appear to have been little known or enforced beyond the bounds of Italy,^ and north of the Alps the canon against the marriage ot the clergy was received as something wholly new. In Ger- many it aroused a general feeling of indignation among the clergy, s They declared that it was unwarranted by Scripture or by the ancient church ; that the pope was heretical and insane for issuing such an order, in contra- diction to the Saviour and to St. Paul ; ^ that he required the clergy to live like angels rather than men, while at the same time he opened the door to all impurity; that they would rather renounce their priesthood than their wives.* Some bishops openly defied the pope — not from any personal interest, but because they felt for the misery which his measures would inflict ontheclerg)', their wives, and their families. Otho of Constance, one of Henry's excommunicated counsellors, who had befone tolerated the marriage of his clergy, now put forth a formal sanction of it.^ Altmann of Passau, in pubHshing the decree, was nearly killed.' The primate, Siegfried, on being required to promulgate it,™ desired his clergy to 25. Burkhardt, bishop of Worms, who * Gratian, 1. cit., cc. 5, 6. died in 1026, had made it a matter for ' Bernold, Ann. 1073 (Pertz, v.), a year of penance if any one had says that Gregory forbade throughout despised the ministrations of a married the catholic church what his prede- priest. (Decret. 1. xx., Patrol, cxl. cessors had forbidden in Italy. 963.) For the history of the subject e See a letter in Martene, Thes. i. see Lea, 203-4. I' '^ do* easy to see 230-41, which has been ascribed tc how the words as to the change of Sigebert of Gemblours. See Giesel. blessing into a curse can be regarded II. ii. 16. as meaning less than that the sacra- " St. Matt, xix, 11 ; I Cor. vii. 9. ments are invalid, and the decree ' Lambert, 218. That by GalUcn seems clearly to contradict the council Lambert means Germany is clear from of Gangra (see vol i. p. 444). The pp. 238, 255. Cf. Hefele, v. 6. apologist attempts to defend it by '' Greg. Extrav. 12-13 (Patr.cxlviii.); citing prohibitions against communi- Paul. Bernried. Vita Gregorii, 37, 41 : eating with heretical teachers (Hard. Theiner, ii. 183; Luden, viii. 563. vl. 1541). See the devices of Urban ' Vita Altm. c. 11 (Pert:?, xii. 33a) II. and Gratian in Grat. Deer. I. Dist. "" Greg. ed. Jaflc, p. 533 xxxii. (-. 6 (Patrol, clxxxviii.). Chap. II. a.d. 1074-5. AS TO MARRTACF, OP THF, CLERHY. y:)T, put away their wives within six months. As the order was ineffectual, he held a synod at Erfurt, in October 1074, where he required them to renounce either their wives or their ministry, and at the same time he revived his ancient claim to tithes, which the Thuringians supposed to have been relinquished. A band of amied Thuringians broke in, and the council was dissolved in confusion." Siegfried requested that the pope would modify his orders, but received in answer a rebuke for his want of courage, and a command to enforce them all.° A second council was held at IMcntz, in October 1075 ; but, notwithstanding the presence of a Roman legate, the clergy were so furious in their language, their looks, and their gestures, that Siegfried was glad to escape alive. Having no inclination to sacrifice himself for another man's views, he declared that the pope must carry out his schemes for himself, and was content with ordering that in future no married man should be promoted to ecclesiastical office, and with exacting a promise of celibacy from those whom he ordained. f In France, the excitement was no less than in Germany. A council at Paris, in 1074, cried out that the new decrees were intolerable and irrational; Walter, abbot of Pontoise, who attempted to defend them, was beaten, spitted on, and imprisoned ; ^ and John, archbishop of Rouen, while endeavouring to enforce them at a provincial synod, was attacked with stones and driven to flight.'" Gregory in one of his letters mentions a report (for whicli, however, there is no other authority) that a monk had even been burnt at Cambray for publishing the proliibition of marriacfe. ^5^ n Lambert, 218-19. ix. o Ep. iii. 4. Sept. 3, 1075. ' Order. Vital, .v. a. p Lambert, 230: SchrOckh, xxv. • Ep. iv. =0. It was probably about 46- Voio-t, 283. this time that the letter in the name * « VitjvS Galterii.c. 10, ap. Mablllon, of Ulric (see p. 1^4) apprarc.l, an Bonlzo, 816. See 1 Berthold, p. 287. Hcfcle, V. 79-80. ' Lambert, 355. 330 HENRY CROSSES THE ALPS. Book VI. Burgundy, where he spent Christmas at Besaneon with his maternal great unele Duke WilHam.^ At the foot of Mont Cenis, he was honourably received by his mother-in-law Adelaide, and her son Amadeus, marquis of Susa : but, says Lambert of Hersfeld, " the anger of the Lord load turned from him not only those who were bound by fealty and gratitude, but even his friends and nearest kindred;"*^ and Adelaide refused him a passage, except on condition of his giving up to her the disposal of five bishopricks situated within her territory. With such a proposal, which seemed as if intended to embroil him further with the pope, it was impossible to comply ; but Henry was fain to ])urchase the passage by ceding to her a valuable territory in Burgundy." The Avinter was of extraordinary severity. The Rhine and the Po were thickly frozen over from Martinmas until the end of March ; in many places the vines were killed by the frost ; the snow which covered the Alps was as hard and as slippery as ice.^ By the help of guides, the royal party with difficulty reached the summit of the pass; but the descent was yet more hazardous. The men crept on their hands and knees, often slipping and rolling down the glassy declivities. The queen, her child, and her female attendants, were wrapped in cow-hides, and in this kind of sledge were dragged down by then guides. The horses were led, with their feet tied to- gether ; many dropped dead through exhaustion, some fell from precipices and perished, and almost all the rest were rendered unserviceable.^" Having achieved this perilous passage, the king arrived ' Lambert, 253. marchioness rich presents, and that ' lb. 256. she, in return, provided everything "Id. This is questioned by J. requisite for the passage of the Alps). ▼on Muller and by Ludcn (ix. in), ii. 123. See too Giesebr. iii. 190-1. as albo by Flolo (who, however, » Lambert, 256 ; Berthold, 287. supposes that Henry gave the > Lambert, 256. Chap. II. a.d. 1076-7. HENRY IN ITALY. 3a I at Turin, where he met with a reception which contrasted strongly with the behaviour of his northern subjects. The Itahans remembered the effects produced by former visits of German emperors ; they looked to Henry for a redress of their grievances, for a pacification of their discords ; the Lombards were roused to enthusiasm by a belief that he was come to depose the detested Gregory. Bishops, nobles, and a host of inferior partisans flocked around him, and, as he moved onwards, the number of his followers continually increased.^ The proceedings at Tribur had opened a magnificent prospect to Gregory; he might hope to extinguish the imperial power, and to create it anew in accordance with his own principles.^ Contrary to the advice and en- treaties of his Roman counsellors,^ he set out for Germany under the guidance of the countess (or marchioness) Matilda, who, by the murder of her husband, the younger Godfrey of Lorraine, and by the death of her mother, had lately become sole mistress of her rich inheritance.*^ The '* Great Countess " was not more remarkable for power and influence than for character. Her talents and accom- plishments were extraordinary ; no sovereign of the age was more skilful in the art of government ; and with a masculine resolution and energy she united the warmth of a woman's enthusiastic devotion.*^ Her marriage with the imperialist Godfrey, the son of her stepfather, had been disturbed by differences of feeling and opinion, and after a short union the pair had lived apart in their respective hereditary dominions.® The attachment with * Lambert, 256 ; Voigt, 430. the marriage, see Tosti, La Contessa » lb. 424. Matilde, 111-12, Florence, 1859. Father ^ Ep. Extrav. 13. Tosti wrongly says that Baronius « Beatrice died in April 1076. Do- denies the marriage (m). That the great annalist (1074. 22-5) is mistaken mzo, Luden, viiL 542; Stenzel, L 351- in supposing them divorced without See Giesebr. iii. 193-5. having cohabited, is shown by Pagi, « Lambert, 257. As to the time of xviii. 381. Floto (U. 20) thinks that VOL. IV. *' 222- GREGORY AND MATILDA. Book VI. which she devoted herself to the pope was a mark for the slander of Gregory's enemies, but needs no other explanation than that acquaintance with her from her early years which had given him an opportunity of imbuing her mind with his lofty ecclesiastical principles, and of gaining over her the influence of a spiritual father.*" In company with Matilda the pope was advancing north- wards, when, on hearing that Henry had reached Vercelli, and finding himself disappointed in his expectation of an escort from the princes of Germany, he was persuaded by her to withdraw to Canossa, a strong Apennine fortress belonging to the countess. There they were joined by the marchioness Adelaide of Susa and her son, who seem to have accompanied the king across the Alps,s by Hugh abbot of Cluny, the godfather of Henry and the ancient superior of Gregory, and by other persons of eminent dignity.*^ The bishops and others of the king's party who de- sired reconciliation with the pope appeared gradually at Canossa. Some of them had eluded the sentinels who guarded the Alpine passes ; some had fallen into the Gregory's influence contributed to Dante del Romano pontificato." Tosti, the separation, and cites Ep. i. 47, in 130. which the pope, a few weeks after the s Floto, ii. 125-8. marriage, exhorts Matilda to cultivate ^ Berthold, 288-9 : Bonizo, 1. viii. ; an ascetic sanctity. The elder Landulf Card, de Aragonia, ap. Murat. iii. 307. groundlessly charges Matilda with in- Luden, on mere conjecture, thinks stigating the assassination of Godfrey. that Gregory had no intention of going iii. 31. to Germany, but had agreed, at Ma- ' Planck, IV. i. 214; Stenzel, ii, 27; tilda's request, to rective Henry at Stephen's Essays, ii. 46 ; Villemain, Canossa (ix. 106). Abbot Hugh had •Greg. VII.', ii. no, seqq. The visited Henry at Spires, and, having scandal was, as we have seen, alluded then gone to Rome with a view of to in the letter of the bishops from nterceding for him, had been put to Worms. Waltram mentions it, but penance for his intercourse with the does not seem to believe it, although king while excommunicate. (Berthold, he censures Matilda's masculine con- 1. c). The letter of Henry III. asking duct as inconsistent with St. Paul's him to be godfather to his son is in view of female duty (ap. Freher, i, Dacher. Spicileg. iii. 443, where 219). Lambert refutes the imputations. the index wrongly attributes it to (257). " Matilde fu la Beatrice di Henry V. See Giesebr. ii. 650. Chap. II. a.d. 1077. HENRY AT CANOSSA. 323 hands of Henry's enemies, and had been obh'ged to pay- heavily for leave to pursue their journey. On their arri- val Gregory ordered them to be confined in solitary cells, with scanty fare ; but after a few days he summoned them into his presence, and absolved them on condition that, until the king should be reconciled, they should hold no intercourse with him, except for the purpose of persuading him to submission.^ For Henry himself a severer treatment was reserved. On arriving before Canossa, the king obtained an inter- view with Matilda, and prevailed on her, with Adelaide, Hugh of Cluny, and other influential persons, to entreat that the pope would not rashly believe the slanders of his enemies, and would grant him absolution. Gregory answered that, if the king believed himself innocent, he ought to wait for the council which had been appointed, and there to submit himself to the pope's impartial judg- ment. The mediators represented the urgency of the time— that the year of grace was nearly expired ; that the hostile princes were eagerly waiting to catch at the ex- pected forfeiture of the kingdom ; that, if the king might for the present receive absolution, he was willing to con- sent to any terms or to any inquiry. At length the pope, as if relenting, proposed that Henry, in proof of his peni tence, should surrender to him the ensigns of royalty, and should acknowledge that by his offences he had rendered himself unworthy of the kingdom. The envoys, shocked at the hardness of these conditions, entreated Gregory not to "break the bruised reed"; and in condescension to their importunities he promised to grant the king an interview.^ But before this interview a deeper humiliation was to be endured. Henry was admitted, alone and unattended, within the second of the three 1 Lambert, 257-8, " lb. 258. JZ4 INTERVIEW BETWEEN GREGORY Book VI. walls which surrounded the castle.^ He was dressed in the coarse woollen garb of a penitent; his feet were bare; and in this state, without food, he remained from morning till evening exposed to the piercing cold of that fearful winter. A second and a third day were spent in the same manner ; Gregory himself tells us that all within the castle cried out against his harshness, as being not the severity of an apostle, but barbarous and tyrannical cruelty.'" At last Henry, almost beside himself with the intensity of bodily and mental suffering, sought a meeting with Matilda and the abbot of Cluny in a chapel of the castle, and persuaded them to become sure- •'^"' ^ ' ties for him to the pope ;° and on the fourth day he was admitted to Gregory's presence. Numb with cold, bareheaded and barefooted, the king, a man of tall and remarkably noble person,^ prostrated himself with a profusion of tears, and then stood submissive before the pope, whose small and slight form was now withered with austerities and bent with age.P Even Gregory's sternness was moved, and he too shed tears. Otbert, c i (Pertz, xii. 271) ; Floto 1864, by Dean Stanley, see Milnian, ii. 148. ed. 3, vol. iv. 97. P Donizo, ii. c. i ; Milman, iii. 72. » Ep. iv. 12. H Berthold, a.d. 1077; Floto, il " Donizo, ii. c. i (Pertz, xii. 381). 13a. Chap. II. a.d. 1077. AND HENRY. 325 conditions, he was* to lose all further hope of grace/ The king was brought so low that even these terms were thankfully accepted ; but Gregory would not trust him unless the abbot of Cluny, with other persons of high ecclesiastical and secular dignity, undertook to be sureties for his observance of them.» The pope then proceeded to the celebration of mass, and, after the consecration, desired Henry to draw near. " I," he said, "have been charged by you and your adhe- rents with simony in obtaining my office, and with offences which would render me unworthy of it. It would be easy to disprove these charges by the evidence of many who have known me throughout my life ; but I prefer to rely on the witness of God. Here is the Lord's body ; may this either clear me from all suspicion if I am innocent, or, if guilty, may God strike me with sudden death ! " A thrill of anxiety ran throughout the spectators ; the pope amidst their breathless silence underwent the awful ordeal, and they burst into loud applause. Then he again addressed the king — " Do, my son, as you have seen me do. The princes of Germany daily beset me with accusations against you, so many and so heinous that they would render you unfit not only for empire, but for the communion of the church, and even for the common intercourse of life; and for these they pray that you may be brought to trial. But human judgment is fallible, and falsehood and truth are often confounded. If, therefore, you know yourself to be guiltless, take this remaining portion of the Lord's ■■ Lambert, 259 ; Promissio Henrici, "do justice according to the pope's ap. Pertz, Leges, iL 50. Waltram judgment, or make agreement accord- (161) remarks on the insidious nature ing to his council " ; and he supposer ■of tiie terms. Ranke points out that the rest of Lambert's statement to b« the "Promissio" says nothing about the monastic version- Abhandl. d. the suspension of royalty, etc., but Berl. Acad. a.d. 1854, p. 457. merely that the emperor would in his ■ Lambert, 259. differences with the German princes 386 CANOSSA. Book VI. body, that so God's judgment may approve your inno- cence." The ordeal was unequal. The charges from which the pope had purged himself were distinct and palpable; those against the king were unnamed, infinite in variety, extending over his whole life, many of them such as he would have met, not with a denial but with explanation and apology. He shuddered at the sudden proposal, and, after a brief consultation with his friends, told the pope that such a trial, in the absence of his accusers, would not be convincing ; he therefore prayed that the matter might be deferred until a diet should meet for the consideration of his case. Gregory assented, and, on leaving the chapel, invited the king to his table, where he conversed with him in a friendly tone, and gave him advice as to his future conduct* While the king remained in the castle, the bishop of Zeitz was sent out to absolve, in the pope's name, those who had held intercourse with Henry during his excom- munication. His message was received with derision. The Italians cried out that they cared nothing for the excommunication of a man who had been justly ex- communicated by all the bishops of Italy — a simoniac, a * Lambert, 259-60. As totheadmini- Giesebrecht is also inclined to dis- stration of the eucharist, the ancient believe it, although he supposes that writers are not agreed. Bonizo(l. viil.), such a story was told' at the time by Donizo (ii. 144), and Waltram (161), Gregory's partisans in Germany, who »ay that the pope gave it to Henry ; represented the refusal of the eucharist lierthold (290), that he offered it, and as a proof of Henry's guilt (iii. 401-2, Jiat Henry declined it as being un- "34)- See Ranke, in Abhandl.d. Bed. worthy. Gregory himself does not Academic, a.d. 1854, p. 457. On the inention this point (Ep. iv. 12). Lam- wickedness involved in the pope's Bert's story is followed by Leo (i. 458), alleged proposal, Stenzel and Dean by Stenzel (i. 409-11), and by Dean Milman speak strongly; while Tosti Milman, who gives the scene very (212) and Hefele (v. 89-90) argue that strikingly (iii. 71-4) ; cf. Annal. Palith. he did not give the sacrament the cha- ap. Pertz, xvi. 72. Luden (ix. 1 12-15, racter of an ordeal. The protestant and notes) and DSllinger (ii. 131) deny Leo's justification of Gregory (i. 459) the truth of it, apparently from a feel- is hardly to be paralleled by anything kng that it is not creditable to Gregory. in Baronius. Chap. II. a.d. 1077. HENRY AND THE ITALIANS. 327 murderer, an adulterer. They charged Henry with having humbled them all by his abasement; he had thought only of himself, he had made peace with the public enemy, and had deserted those who, for his sake, had exposed themselves to hostility and danger. They spoke of setting up his son, the young Conrad, as king — of carrying the prince to Rome for coronation, and choosing another pope." Henry, on joining his partisans, found that a change had come over their dispositions towards him. The chiefs returned to their homes without asking his permission ; and as he marched along, the general dissatisfaction was apparent. No cheers or marks of honour greeted him ; the provisions which were supplied to him were scanty and coarse ; and at night he was obliged to lodge in the suburbs of towns, as the inhabitants would not admit him within their walls. The bishops, who were especially indignant, held a meeting at Reggio, and combined to excite their flocks against him.^ It is said that, when some Saxon envoys expressed their alarm in consequence of Henry's absolution, the pope endeavoured to reassure them in these words — " Be not uneasy, for I will send him back to you more culpa- ble than ever." The story is generally discredited, on the ground that, even if Gregory had been capable of the profound wickedness which it implies, he would not have been so indiscreet as to avow his craft.^' Yet it is hardly conceivable that he should have expected the king to fulfil the engagements which had been so sternly exacted from him in his distress. While the abasement to which Henry had been forced to stoop greatly ex- ceeded all that could have been anticipated, the grace « Lambert, 260-1 ; Voigt, 442-3- Schmidt, ii. 317 : Schrockh, xxv. 493 : - Lambert, 261. Planck. JV. i. 183-4; Stenzel. ... 23; 7 Waltram (ap. Freher, i. 161) is Milman, iii. 74- the only authority for the story. See 32g HENRY IN ITALY. BookTL which had been granted to him was far short of his expectations. He was still at the mercy of the offended princes of Germany ; his royalty, instead of being restored, seemed to be placed hopelessly beyond his reach. And the temper of the Italians — the enthusiasm with which they had received him, their burning animosity against his great enemy — proved to him that his humiliation had been needless. Although for a time he behaved with an appearance of submission to the pope — partly out of deference to his mother, who visited him at Piacenza ^ — he wished to find some pretext for breaking with Gre- gory, and assured the Italians that he had submitted to him only for reasons of temporary necessity, but that he was now resolved to take vengeance for the indigni- ties to which he had been subjected.* They flocked again to his standard ; he resumed the insignia of royalty ; Liemar of Bremen, with his excommunicated advisers, again appeared at his side, and with them were many who had avoided him daring his excommunication. Large contributions of money poured in from his adherents, and he again felt himself strong.^ He asked the pope to allow him to be crowned at Monza, as if his absolu- tion had restored him to the kingdom of Italy ; but the request was refused.^ He then invited Gregory to a conference at Mantua; but Matilda, acting either on information or on suspicion of some treacherous design, persuaded the pope to avoid the risk of danger.^ ■ Bonizo. 1. viii.; Floto, ii. 130. vice simulata obedientia apud Moytiam Agnes died Dec. 14, 1077. Berthold, regalia insignia non usurpavit ; quae 303- tamen non multo post contra bannum ■ Lambert. 261 ; Stenzel, iL 416. domini papae resumere, et interdicta * Lambert, 262 ; Schrockh, xxv. 497. regni gubernacula usurpare, non ti- ' P. Bernr. 86 ; Voigt, 444. Bp. muit." Hefele (v. 92) says that Henry caused '^ Donizo (ii. 134-46) speaks as if it himself to be crowned with the iron were certain that Henry meant to seize crown, probably at Pavia ; but this the pope ; but it seems to be merely a seems hardly to lie in the words of suspicion. See Luden, ix. 125 ; Mil- his authority, Paul of Bemried : " ES man, iii. 77 ; Hefele, v. 92. Chap. II. a.d. 1077. DIET AT FORCHHEIM. 329 Gregory remained at Canossa, or in its neighbourhood, until the month of August ; ® and during his residence there, the countess bequeathed her inheritance to the Roman see * — a donation which was afterwards renewed, and which, although it never fully took effect, con- tributed much in the sequel to the temporal power of the popes. s The princes of Germany considered that Henry, by going into Italy, had broken the engagements which he had made with them at Tribur, and they resolved to proceed to further measures.^ A diet was summoned to meet at Forchheim, in Franconia, in March 1077. The king excused himself from attending it, on the ground that, being on his first visit to Italy, he was occupied with the affairs of that country, and was un- willing to offend his Italian subjects by hastily leaving them/ The pope declined the invitation, on the plea that Henry refused to grant him a safe-conduct ; but he was represented at the meeting by legates. It was his wish to keep matters in suspense until the king, by some breach of the conditions on which he had been absolved, should give a clear pretext for deposing him ; and the legates were instructed accordingly. They were to endeavour that, if the state of the country would permit, the election of a new king should be deferred until their master could himself go into Germany; but if the princes were bent on taking it in hand at once, they were not to oppose them. To the princes he wrote that they should carry on the government of the country, but should refrain from any more decided step until • Berthold, 291, bert's history ends. For skill in nana *■ Donizo, ii. 173. See too Chron. tion he is allowed to be the chief of Casin. iii. 49, with note in Pertz ; mediaeval historians ; but his authority Tosti, 221, seqq. in some points has of late been seriously K Mosh. ii. 340k questioned, as trf Ranke (AbhandJ. d. •> P. Bernr. 88. Berliner Acad. 1854). Giesebrecht, and * Lambert, 262. At this point Lam- Floto. J20 ELFXTION OF RUDOLF. Book VI. the case of Henry should be fully examined in his own presence.* But the Germans were furious against Henry, and would endure no delay. The legates, after express- March 15. .^g ^j^g pope's feeling, said that it was for the princes to decide what would be best for their country, and were silent ; and Rudolf, duke of Swabia, formerly one of Henry's chief supporters, and connected both with him and with Bertha by having married a sister of each, was chosen as king.^ The first to vote for him was the pri- mate Siegfried, whose eagerness to secure the tithes of Thuringia had contributed so largely to Henry's errors and unpopularity."^ The legates confirmed the choice, and proposed conditions for the new sovereign. He was to discourage simony and was to grant freedom of elec- tion to sees ; and the kingdom was not to be hereditary, but elective — a provision intended to make its posses- sors feel the necessity of keeping well both with the pope and with the princes.^ Rudolf was crowned at Mentz on the 26th of March by Siegfried and the arch- bishop of Magdeburg. On the day of the coronation a bloody affray took place between the populace and Rudolfs soldiers; and this inauguration of the new reign was too truly ominous of its sequel.** Siegfried was driven from his city, never to return to it.P By the violent measure of setting up a rival king the ^ p. Bemr. 88 ; Voigt, 455, 459. numeramus ; homicidia ejus digito- ' P. Bemr. 93-4 ; Berthold, 292. rum ostensione adhuc recensere j^os- •" lb. sumus. Tres uxores ejus, quas aperte " Bruno, c. 91 ; Voigt, 457 ; Giesebr. solcmni nuptiarum apparatu duxit, iiL 433. eodem simul tempore viventes et novi- P. Bemr. 96; Bernold, Ann. 1077 ; mus et nominamus " (Martene, Thes. Ekkehard, p. 202 ; Bruno, c. 92 ; Ber- i. 225). He had also been continually thold. p. 292. Rudolf was hardly a in conflict with the bishops of his terri- man to do much credit to the choice torj'. Giesebr. iii. 434. of the riijid ecclesiastical party — p Ekkehard, 202; Sigebert, A.D. "Perjuria ejus facile convincimus," 1077. He died in 1084. Annal. Saxo, says Wcnrich, in the name of Bp. 721. Dietrich of Verduo, "sed non facile Chap. II, a.d. 1077-80. CIVIL WAR IN GERMANY. 33 1 feeling of loyalty was reawakened in many who had long been discontented with Henry's government, and, when he returned into Germany, his force increased as he went on. He enriched himself, and found means of reward- ing his adherents, by confiscating the estates of his chief opponents.^ With Rudolf were the mass of the Swa- bians, Saxons, and Thuringians ; with Henry were Fran- conia and Bavaria. Yet in countries where the majority favoured one of the rivals, the other also had adherents, so that the division penetrated even into the bosom of families.^ The bishops were for the most part on Henr/s side; many abbeys sent their contingents to swell his army, and the populations of the towns were generally with him, out of gratitude for the privileges which they had received from him, and for the protection which he had afforded them against the tyranny of princes and nobles.^ For three years the contest was carried on; the land was desolated by the ravages of war, especially by the outrages of the barbarous and half-heathen Bohe- mians, whom Henry had called to his aid, and who revelled in acts of profanity and sacrilege, of lust and cruelty.* Three great battles were fought ; at Melrich- stadt, in August 1078, and at Fladenheim (or Flarchheim) in January 1080, Rudolf was declared the victor; but so slight was his superiority and so severe was his loss that the victories were little more than nominal." In the meantime the anarchy of Germany was frightful. Neither Henry nor Rudolf dared to execute justice from fear of alienating their followers. Violence met with no check, nobles and knights built castles and lived by robbery, and the wretched people were ground to the dust by oppres- sion of every kind.^ The north of Italy too was in a 1 Berthold, 295-8. Milman, iii. 83. ■• Voigt, 465 ; Stenzel, i. 424. " Bruno, cc. 96-102 ; Voigt, 49i-<. • Voigt, 462-5 ; see Floto, ii. c. 26. * Stenzel, i. 194. t Berthold, 295-313 ; Beriiold, 434 i 332 POLICY OF GREGORY. Book VI. State of continual agitation. Guibert of Ravenna and Tedald of Milan were indefatigable in their exertions against Gregory. Imperialist and papalist bishops fought for the possession of sees, and strove to outbid each other by grants of privileges to their people.^ Gregory found that he had gone too far — that Henry possessed a strength which the pope had not suspected when at Canossa he subjected him to such humiliation as could never be forgiven ; and he was displeased that the princes, by electing Rudolf, had taken into their own hands the determination which he had wished to reserve for himself. During the war he refrained from showing any decided favour to either party. It was in vain that Rudolf entreated his recognition, and that Henry urged him to excommunicate the rebel leader, although Gregory said that he would do so unless Rudolf should be able to justify his conduct. ^ He gave to each of them alike the title of king ; he assured the envoys of each that he was anxious to do justice — that he would go into Germany and decide between them ; and he asked both to grant him a safe-conduct. His legates went from Henry to Rudolf, and from Rudolf to Henry j they took money from each, and spoke to each in terms of encouragement,* while they were instructed by their master, if either of the rivals should be contumacious, to anathematize him, and to adjudge the kingdom to his more submissive opponent.^ The Saxons were indignant at this wavering conduct, so widely different from their expectations. In five letters,"^ written in a plain and downright tone of remon- strance and with a scanty observance of the usual forms, y Voigt, 486. that Gregory might appear before the » Ep. ix. 133 ; Bonizo, 816-17 ; Voigt, world as an abettor of the rebellion. 473. Luden thinks that Henry's re- ix. 123. » Bruno, 116. quest was made, not with any expecta- *> Ep. iy. 23-4; v. 15 ; vi. i; Voigt. tion of its being granted, but in order 471-2. <= 5r»uio, 107-15. Chap. II. a.d. 1077-80. CORRESPONDENCE WITH GERMANS. ^;^^ they represent to Gregory the sufferings which they had brought on themselves by what they had supposed to be an obedience to his instructions. They tell him that they had reUed on the firmness of Rome; that, after having urged them into danger, he had deserted them ; that they are too simple to understand the subtle and equivocal policy by which he acknowledged two kings at once, and seemed to pay greater honour to him whom he had deposed than to the king whose election they had believed to be warranted by the papal sanction.^ Gregory in reply endeavoured to justify himself by dwelling on the exigencies of the time, and on his wish to do impartial justice. He denied that he had insti- gated the election of Rudolf; he disowned the acts of his legates who had confirmed that election and had pronounced a fresh excommunication against Henry at Goslar in November 1077.® But the Germans treated his excuses as subterfuges ; they told him that he ought either to have refrained from proceeding against Henry or to follow up his acts by openly aiding them. They beseech him to have regard to his own reputation, and to the effusion of blood which must lie at his door if he should continue his course of indecision.^ At length the tidings of the battle of Fladenheim (Jan. 27, 1080) roused the pope to a bolder pro- March 7, ceeding. At the council which was held in the ^°^°* following Lent, and which was the most fully attended ^. « Ep. ix. 3. y lb. ic. ?fi^ VOL. IV. 2^8 Gregory's preparations bookVL see/ The legate in France, Hugh, bishop of Die, was reproved for unseasonably enforcing the rigour of the canons. He was ordered to restore some Norman bishops whom he had deposed for refusing to attend a synod. He was to absolve certain knights who had impropriated tithes and had taken the part of simoniac and concubinary clergymen.^ The bishops of Paris and Chartres, against whom Hugh had proceeded in a summary manner, were treated by the pope with indul- gence.^ Above all, the legate was to beware of irritating the king of England, whom Gregory, although he pro- fessed himself not blind to his faults, declared to be far more worthy of approbation than other kings. <= To every one but Henry the pope breathed conciliation ; and in this spirit he sought an alliance with the Normans of the south — selfish, faithless, profane, and sacrilegious robbers as he well knew them to be. The power and the ambition of the Normans had been continually on the increase. Robert Guiscard had been suspected as an accompUce in the plot of Cencius,^ and had for some years been under excommunication for his invasions of the patrimony of St. Peter ; ^ but Gregory, by the mediation of Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, now eagerly patched up a treaty with him. Guiscard Tune 29, swore to defend the pope ; he was released 1080. from his excommunication without any pro- fession of penitence ; and, instead of exacting restitution from him, Gregory added to a renewal of the grants of Nicolas and Alexander the following remarkable words : — " But as for the territory which you unjustly hold, we now patiently bear with you, trusting in Almighty God and in your goodness, that hereafter your behaviour with • Ep. ix. 33. ' lb. 5. •» lb. 1S-16. ^ lb. 5. " P. Bernr. 48. « Hard. vi. 1573 ; Pertz, ix. 280 Ed. ii. 9. Chap. II. ad. io&-> i. AGAINST HENRY. 3^0, respect to it will be such, to the honour of God and of St. Peter, as it becomes both you to show and me to accept, without peril either to your soul or to mine."^ It is said that, in consideration of the expected aid, he even promised Guiscard the imperial crown.s In Germany, the partisans of Rudolf set up Count Herman of Salm or Luxemburg as his successor. Gre- gory instructed his legates to see that no one should be chosen who would not be obedient to the Roman see and sent them a form of oath to be taken by the new king, which reduced the kingdom, and consequently the empire, to a fief of the church.^ But Herman was unable to gain any considerable strength, and Henry was safe in disregarding him. Henry's successes revived the disposition to ask whether the pope were justified in deposing March 15, sovereigns; and, in answer. to a renewed in- 1081. quiry from Herman, bishop of Metz, Gregory laid down more fully than before his views of the papal authority.* He cites the same passages of Scripture on which he had relied in his former letter. He magnifies the sacerdotal power above that of temporal sovereigns. The instances of Theodosius and Childeric are reinforced by a fabulous excommunication of Arcadius by pope Innocent,'^ and by a forgery, apparently of recent date, in which Gregory the Great is represented as threatening to deprive of his dignity any king or other potentate who should invade the monastery of St. Medard at Autun.^ But the most remarkable words of the letter are those in which the f Hard. vi. 1451. 1152. P Guil. Appul. iv. 31. This sccins ' Kp. viii. 21. very questionable. ^ Hard. vi. 1471, c. See Waltram, '' Ep. ix. 3; Schmidt, ii. 296; ap. Freher, i. 164; Barrow, 29. Giesebr. iii. 530. The election of ' Hard. vi. 1470 The forgeries are Herman seems to have taken place in Greg. Ep. xiii. 8-9 (Patrol. Ixxvii.) at Ochsenfurt, on the Main, in the Append, ad. Epp., ib. 1330. See beginning of August, 1081. Ib. 535, Gieseler, IL ii. 8. 340 HENRY IN ITALY. Book VI, pope contrasts the origin of secular with that of eccle- siastical power. "Shall not," he asks, "the dignity invented by men of this world, who even knew not God, be subject to that dignity which the providence of Almighty God hath invented to His own honour, and hath in compassion bestowed on the world ? Who can be ignorant that kings and dukes took their beginning from those who, not knowing God, by their pride, their rapine, perfidy, murders, in short by almost every sort of wickedness, under the instigation of the prince of this world, the devil have in blind ambition and intolerable presumption aimed at domination over other men, their equals ? " ™ The bold assertions of this letter called forth many replies from the controversialists of the oppo- site party, both during the lifetime of Gregory and after his death.'^ In the spring of 1081 Henry descended on Italy. Gregory, in a letter to Desiderius of Monte Cassino, speaks of him as being at Ravenna with a small force, and expresses a confident belief that he will not obtain either supplies or recruits in his further advance. " If we would comply with his impiety," says the pope, " never has any one of our predecessors received such ample and devoted service as he is ready to pay us. But we will rather die than yield." ° The king's army, however, (although he had been obliged to leave a large force "* Hard. vi. 1471. "Are we reading name of Dietrich of Verdun (Martene, a journalist of Paris in 1791?" asks Thesaur. i. 214, seqq.); Sigebert of Dean Milman (iii. 94). We have Gemblours (see Peru, vi. 272 ; Giesel. already had a less explicit passage of II. ii. 16); Waltram of Naumburg (in the same sort in the earlier letter (p. Goldast. Apolog. pro Hen. IV., or in 316). Honorius of Autun cites Cain Freher. t. i.) ; Hugh of Fleury, 'De as a type of the secular authority, and Regia Potestate et Sacerdotali Digni- Abel of the ecclesiastical (' De Aposto- tate' (Patrol, clxiii. ; see especially lico et Augusto,' c. i. Patrol, clxxii.). 939-41). Comp. Nat Alex. t. XIIL See the developments of such ideas by Diss. iL 10. the Jesuits, in Giesel III. ii. 623-8. *' Ep. ix. 10, April sS. " E.g., Wenrich, writing in the Chap. II. a.d. 1081-3. SIEGE OF ROME. 34 j behind him as a safeguard to the peace of Germany p ), was far stronger than Gregory represented it to be. He ravaged Matilda's territories, and laid siege to her capital, Florence ; but, finding that the capture was likely to detain him too long, he relinquished the attempt, and on Whitsun-eve appeared before the walls of Rome.^i As he had expected the city to open its gates, he was unpro- vided with the means of assaulting it, and the siege lasted nearly three years — the king withdrawing during the unhealthy seasons, while such of his troops as remained on duty suffered severely from the climate.'' Gregory, although shut up in his city, and even there regarded with dislike by the mass of the inhabitants, who were influenced by Henry's largesses, and ascribed to the pope all the sufferings which they endured on account of the siege, abated nothing either of his pretensions or of his activity ; ^ he held his synods as usual, he renewed his canons and his anathemas against the imperialists and their practices, he continued, by his legates and corre- spondence, to superintend the affairs of the church in foreign and distant countries.* When Henry, in the sum- mer of 1083, had gained possession of the Leonine city, the pope resisted all the importunities of the Roman nobles, clergy, and people, who endeavoured to persuade him to a reconciliation ; he would consent to no other terms than that the king should resign his dignity and should submit to penance. '^ All attempts at negotiation were fruitless. The pope held a last council, at which he is described as having spoken with the voice not of a man but of an angel ; and, without naming Henry, he anathe- matized him among those who had intercepted bishops P Hefele, v. 146. 532, 1151. 1 Benzo, 1. v. ; Voigt, 561. His "■ Voigt, 578. proclamation to the clergy and people • Pet. Pisan. ap. Watterich, i. 306 of Rome at this time is in the Cod. * Voigt, 532-3. Udalrici, No. 187. See Giesebr. iii. "lb. 577. 342 CORONATION OF HENRY. Book VI. on their way to the assembly.^ The Romans, it is said, in order to obtain a cessation of hostiUties, swore to Henry that either Gregory or another pope should crown him by a certain day. Gregory, on hearing of this, was indignant, but discovered an evasion : if Henry would submit, he would crown him as emperor ; if not, he would let down a crown to him from the tower of St. Angelo, accompanied by his curse.y At length the Romans, weary of the siege, made terms with the king, and ten March 21 days before Easter 1084 he became master 1084. of the greater part of the city. Guibert summoned Gregory to a council, but the invitation was disregarded.^ The antipope was formally enthroned in the Lateran church on Palm Sunday, and on Easter-day performed in St. Peter's the imperial coronation of Henry and Bertha.^ Gregory took refuge in the castle of St. Angelo, and a few of his partisans, chiefly nobles, held out in their for- tified houses. In his distress the pope had entreated the aid which Guiscard was bound by his feudal obligations to render ; but the Norman was engaged in an expedition which his daring ambition had led him to undertake against the Greek empire,^ and during his absence Henry, who had entered into an alliance with Alexius Comnenus and had received a subsidy from him,'^ exerted himself to '^ Bernold, 438 ; Voigt, 580. « Benzo, 1. vii. Prol. y Bernold, 438 (Pertz, viii. 461). » There is some confusion between The story seems suspicious, not so an incomplete inauguration of Guibert much on account of the dishonesty at Whitsuntide 1083, and the more which it imputes to Gregory, as of its formal ceremony in 1084. See Bernold, childishness ; but it is generally re- p. 438 ; Pagi, xvii. 544 ; Voigt, 587-8 ; ceived, as by Voigt (581), Stenzel (i. Stenzel, i. 486 ; Jaffe, 444. 485), and Floto (ii. 260), although Gre- *> Anna Comnena, i. 15; iv.-v. > gor«vius(iv. 225) and Hefole (v. 156) Malatcrra, ii. 24, seqq. ; Guil. Appul. doubt it. Giesebrecht supposes that iv. 181. See Gibbo.i, v. 351-2; Pa^i, Gregory spoke of giving the crown xvii. 553. with his curse, and that the rest was •= Anna Comn, iii. p. 93 ; v. 3 ; added by the Roman nobles in repeat- Giesebr. iii. 55a ing his words to Henry, iii. 552. Chap. II. a.d. 1084. THE NORMANS IN ROME. 343 create an interest in the south of Italy. Guiscard, on returning from the east, was occupied for a time in queuing the opposition which had been thus excited ; ^ but in Gregory's extremity the long-desired aid arrived. Guiscard had sent before him a large sum of money, which the pope had employed in purchasing the favour of the Romans ; ® and the Norman chief himself now appeared at the head of 6000 horse and 30,000 foot — a wild and motley host, in which were mingled adventurers of many nations, and even a large number of unbelieving Sarace>ns.* Henry, apprehending no danger, had sent away a great part of his troops, and, as the remainder were unequal to encounter these unexpected enemies, he retired at their approach, taking with him forty hostages, and assuring his Roman friends that he would soon return.^ The gates were closed against the Normans, but some of them found an entrance by an old aqueduct, close to the gate of St. Laurence, and admitted the rest into the city. For three days Rome was subjected to the horrors of a sack. Butchery, plunder, lust, were uncontrolled. The inhabitants, driven to despair by these outrages, rose on their assailants, and Guiscard, to quell their resistance, ordered the city to be set on fire. The conflagration which followed raged fai and wide, and has left its permanent effects in the deso- lation which reigns over a large portion of ancient Rome. The Romans were at length subdued ; multitudes were carried oft' by the Normans as prisoners, and many thousands were sold for slaves.^ Gregory was again master of his capital. Guiscard, immediately after having eff"ected an entrance, ^^^^ ^^ had carried him in triumph from the fortress J Giannone,!. x. c. 5 ; Luden, ix. 194. « Malaterra, iii. 37 : "^'^'gt. 59°- Lupus Protospath. Ann. 1083 »» Bonizo, 818 ; Bernold. 441 : Lan- (Pcrtz, v.). '^"•f ^^°-' "^ 33 : Voigt, 591-2 ; Gre- ' GuiL Appul. iv. 565. gorov- »v. 233-40. 344 ^AST DAYS AND Book VI. of St. Angelo to the Lateran palace, and, falling at his feet, had begged his blessing. But the pope was sick of the Romans, of whose baseness and corruption he had had so much experience ; he was unwilling to look on the ruins of his city ; he shrank from the reproaches which were likely to be directed against him as the author of the late calamities, and felt that he could not trust him- self to his people if the protection of the Normans were withdrawn.^ He therefore left Rome in company with his allies, and, after a visit to Monte Cassino, retired to Salerno. There, in the month of July, he held a synod, at which he renewed the anathemas against Henry and the antipope,^ and addressed a letter to all faithful Chris- tians, setting forth his sufferings for the freedom of the church, complaining of their supineness in the cause, and urging them, as they would wish for forgiveness, grace, and blessing, here and hereafter, to help and succour their spiritual father and mother — St. Peter and the Roman church.^ During the following winter he fell sick, and, as his illness increased, he became aware that his end was near. He entreated the friends who stood around his bed to tell him if they had observed in him anything which needed correction.™ He declared his faith as to the eucharist — probably with a view of clearing himself May 25, from the suspicions of Berengarianism which 1085. his enemies had industriously cast on him. He forgave and absolved all whom he had anathematized, with exception of the emperor and the antipope ; but with these he charged his adherents to make no peace unless on their entire submission.^ A fearful tempest was • Hugo Flavin, ap. Pertz, viii, the contrary, state that he absolved ♦62. all ; that he acknowledged himself to ■^ Bemold, 441 ; Voigt, 605-6. have sinned greatly in his office, and ' Ep. E.xtrav. 64 (Patrol, cxlviii.). sent his confessor to request Henry's '" Hug. Flavin, ap. Pertz, viii. 466. forgiveness (Benno, p. 17 ; Sigeb ° P. Bemr. no; Urban II. ap. Hug Gemblac. Ann. 1085— see Bethmann's Flavin p. 466. The imperialists, on note ; MS. Brit Mus. ap. Pertz, viii Chap. II. a.d. 1084-5. DEATH OF GREGORY VII. 345 raging without as his friends hung over the dying pope.* Gathering himself up for a final effort, he exclaimed, in words which have been iiiterpreted as a reproach against Providence, but which may perhaps rather imply a claim to the beatitude of the persecuted — "I have loved righteousness, and hated iniquity; therefore I die in exile." — " My lord," a bishop is said to have replied, "in exile thou canst not die; for, as vicar of Christ and of His apostles, thou hast received from God the heathen for thine inheritance, and the utmost parts of the earth for thy possession ! " p The strength and towering grandeur of Gregory's character, the loftiness of his claims, the intrepid firm- ness with which he asserted them through all changes of fortune, the large measure of success which crowned his efforts, in his own time and afterwards, have won for him enthusiastic admirers, not only among persons who are attached to the church of Rome by profession or by sym- pathy, but among those modern idolaters of energy whose reverence is ready to wait on any man of extraordinary abilities and of unrelenting determination.^ But we may hesitate to adopt an estimate which scorns to inquire into the righteousness either of his objects or of the moans which he employed. Gregory found the papacy in miserable degradation ; he left it far advanced towards dominion over the king- 471). Gieseler is inclined to believe Salerno above mentioned). Gregory's the story of the forgiveness, and to grave in the cathedral of Salerno was suppose that the rest was invented marked only by a simple stone, unti, by the imperialist party (II. ii. 33). John of Procida (for whom see herei Stenzel (i. 523) and Giesebrecht (iii. after), two hundred years later, gave 571) take the opposite side. Comp. him a more splendid monument. That Pagi xvii. 566. which now exists dates from 1578. o Lupus Protosp. A.D. 1085 (Pertz, Hefele, v. 165 ; Gregorov. ' Denkmaler V,). der rom. Papste,' 50. P P. Bemr. no. The reply is given 1 See, e.g., Professor Voigt's Preface less confidently than Gregory's speech to the and edition of his Life of Hilde- (which is illustrated by the letter from brand. 346 CHARACTER OF Book VI. doms of the world. The progress which it had made under his administration is significantly shown by the fact that the decree of Nicolas II. as to. the election of popes, which had at first been resented as an invasion of the imperial rights, was now the ground on which the impe- rialists were fain to take their stand,'' while the papalists had come to disavow it as unworthy of their pretensions.^ The old relations of the papacy and of the empire were to be reversed ; the emperor was no longer to confirm the election of popes, or to decide between rival claimants of the see, but the pope was to hold the empire at his disposal.*^ The successor of St. Peter was to give laws to mankind. We may reasonably believe that Gregory was sincere ; we may beHeve that, in forming and in carrying out his great design, he was not actuated by selfish personal ambition ; that he would have been content to go on to the end of his life directing the execution of his policy under the names of other men — anxious only that the policy should succeed, not that the author of it should be conspicuous, and willing that its triumph should be deferred until after he should himself have passed away from earth. But is this enough to entitle him to our approval ? Are we to admire a wisdom so blind as that which would remedy the evils of secular misrule by setting up a universal spiritual despotism, and thus, by a »■ Bonizo, 8i8. iii. 50). Anselm of Lucca says that the ■ Thus, when in 10S4 Otho, bishop Germans, by their act of deposition of Ostia (afterwards Urban II.), re- against Nicolas (see p. 261), had for- ferred to the necessity of the emperor's feited the benefit of his decree ; that consent to the election of a pope, a single patriarch, with his council, was Desiderius (afterwards Victor III.) incompetent to abrogate the laws of replied that neither pope nor any other the whole church ; and, moreover, that man could rightly make such a rule. the decree had been tampered with by " Quod si hoc a Nicolao Papa factum the antipope's party. Adv. Guib. est, iujuste procul dubio et stultissime Antip. ii. (Patrol, cxlix. 364). Comp. factum est, nee pro humana stultitia p, 263, note p. potest aut debet amittere suam digni- * See Honorius of Autun, 'De Apo Uteao ecclesia," etc (Chroa. Casin. stolico et Augusto.' 4 (Patrol, clxxii.);. Chap. II. GREGORY VII. 347 certain consequence, plunging the spiritual power deeply into secularity? Or shall we sanction the idea of a conscientiousness so imperfect that, in pursuit of one engrossing purpose, it disregards all the ordinary laws of equity, truth, and mercy ? We read of Gregory with awe, mixed perhaps with admiration, perhaps with aversion ; but in no human bosom can his character awaken a feeling of love. The ruthless sternness of his nature may be illustrated by an incident which occurred before his elevation to the papacy. Thrasimund, a monk of Monte Cassino, had been appointed by the abbot, Desiderius, to the abbacy of the dependent monastery of Tremiti. A rebellion broke out among his monks, and he suppressed it with great rigour, blinding three of them, and cutting out the tongue of a fourth. Desiderius, on hearing of this, was overwhelmed with grief; he dis- placed the abbot, and put him to penance for his cruelty. But Hildebrand justified the severity which had been used, and contrived that Thrasimund should be promoted to a higher dignity." The exaltation of the i)apacy was Gregory's single object. For this he sacrificed Eerengar;-"^ he acted doubly with the Germans ; he excited the multitude against the clergy and the empire ; he occasioned an endless amount of confusion, bloodshed, and misery. He took advantage of Henry's youth, of the weakness of his position, of the defects of his character ; he used his triumph over him inhumanly, and when Henry had again become strong, Gregory, for the sake of gaining allies against this one enemy, was willing to connive at all which he had before denounced as abominable. Other popes had used the censures of the church as means of » Chron. Casin. iii. 95. Eenno tells Gregory's cruelty, pp. 4-5- outrageous and iucredible stories of =* See the next cliapter. 348 CHARACTER OF Book VI. influencing princes through the discontent of their people; but Gregory was the first who assumed the power of releasing subjects from their obedience. He argued that Scripture made no difference between princes and other men as to the exercise of those powers of binding and loosing which the Saviour committed to His church. But it was forgotten that Scripture allows a discretion in the employment of ecclesiastical censures : that the greatest of the western fathers had strongly insisted on the inex- pediency of rigidly enforcing discipline in cases where it would lead to a dangerous disturbance in the church ; y nor does Scripture give any countenance to the idea that the censures of the church deprive a sovereign of his right to civil obedience.^ Gregory was not without enthusiasm. He instituted a new office in honour of the blessed Virgin, and relied much on her aid and on that of St. Peter ;^ he expected to obtain revelations from heaven by means of visions ;^ he even fancied himself an oracle of the Divine will, and dealt in predictions of temporal weal or woe, which, as we have seen, were in some cases signally unfortunate. Yet in many respects he rose above the superstitions and the narrow opinions of his age. He remonstrated humanely and wisely with the king of Denmark against the cruelties which in that country were practised on women accused of witchcraft.^ In the eucharistic con- troversy raised by Berengar, while he appears himself to have held the opposite doctrine, he allowed that of Berengar to be sufficient for communion with the church.<^ y Augustin. adv. Parmen. III. ii. 13. " Ep. vii. 21. This passage was afterwards quoted «* There is in the Lambeth library by Ivo of Chartres and by Godfrey of a commentary on St. Matthew by a Vendome. writer named Hildebrand, whom some * See Fleury, Disc, at end of book have identified with Gregory. In a lix. § 18 ; Nat. Alex. xiii. 551, seqq. passage of this, published by AUIx * Neand. vi. 117. with the ' Determinatio Joannis Pari- * See the next chapter. siensis ' (see hereafter, book VII. c. Chap. II. GREGORY VII. 349 In the controversy with the Greek church, he showed himself superior to the zealots of either side by regarding the use of leavened or of unleavened bread as indifferent.® And, deeply monastic as was his own character, he was free from the indiscriminate rage for compelling all men to enter the cloister. He censures his old superior, Hugh, for having admitted a duke into the society of Cluny — thereby releasing him from the duties of his office, and leaving a hundred thousand Christians without a keeper. Such a man, he says, ought to have retained his place in the world, where, although piety is not uncommon among priests, and monks, and the poor, the instances of it among princes are rare and precious.* The plea that Gregory lived in a dark age is therefore only available in a modified degree for his defence, since it appears that in many things he was more enlightened than his contemporaries. And in admitting this plea for him, or for any other man to whom Holy Scripture was open, we must be careful never to let it cover the viola- tion of duties which Scripture unequivocally enjoins — of justice and mercy, of charity and simplicity; while, on the other hand, we must deny him the credit of any good which it may have pleased the Divine providence to bring out of his acts, if such good were beyond Gregory's own wish and intention. No doubt that elevation of the papacy in which he was the most effective agent was in the middle ages a great and inestimable bulwark against secular tyranny. But why should one usurpation be necessary as a safe- viiL sect 3), and reprinted In the ready, on occasion, to go further ; and •Patrologia' (cxlviii. 823), after an Wharton has pointed out that, in addi- examination of the different views as to tion to differing in various respects the eucharist, it is concluded that the from Gregory, the writer is proved to elements become the body and blood be of later date (probably about 11 50) of Christ, but that we should not in- by quoting St. Bernard (Patrol. 825). quire how the conversion takes place. " Ep. viii. i ; Hard, vu 1451. Gregory would, indeed, have been f Ep. iii. 17. Pagi show.s that Hugh satisfied with such a view, but he wa» dtike of Burgundy is meant, xvil 488. 350 GREGORY VII. Book VL guard against another? Why, if the investiture of bishops by princes was worse in its practical conse- quences than in its theory, should we be required to sympathize with one who opposed it by a system of which the very theory is intolerable ? Spiritual tyranny is worse than secular tyranny, because it comes to us with higher pretensions. Against the oppressions of worldly force religion may lift up her protest ; to those who suffer from them she may administer her consola- tions ; but when tyranny takes the guise of religion, there is no remedy on earth, except in that which is represented as rebellion against God's own authority. The power of the hierarchy, as established mainly through the labours of Gregory, served as a protection against the rude violence of princes and of nobles ; but it claimed for itself an absolute dominion over the minds and souls of men, and it did not hesitate to enforce this by the most inhuman and atrocious measures. And how much of what was worst in the secular power may have arisen out of a reaction against the extravagant claims of the papacy ! While we freely and thankfully acknowledge the good which resulted from Gregory's exertions, we may yet ask — and we may refuse to accept a theoretical assertion as an answer to the question — whether it would not have been infinitely better for mankind, and even for the hierarchy itself, that the power of the gospel should have been enforced on the world by milder and truer means ?° P After the celebration of Gregory as malorum prolapsum, ficIcHum com- a saint had been granted by earlier munione regnoque privavit, atque sub- popes to certain places (see the Acta ditos populos fide ei data liberavit," SS., May 25, pp. 570-3), and forcer- many prelates of France refused to use tain monastic orders, Benedict XIII., the office, and it was forbidden in that in 1729, put forth an office in his country, in the imperial dominions, honour for general use. But as it was and by the protestant government of said in the legend for the day that Holland. See Schrockh, xxv. 528-9; Gregory " Henricum, in profundum Gue'ranger, ii. c. 21. Chap. IIL S5 CHAPTER III. BERKNGAR. A.D. 1 045 -1 088. In the middle of the eleventh century a controversy arose as to the manner of the Saviour's presence in the eucharist. On this question the church had not as yet pronounced any formal decision, or proposed any test of orthodoxy.'^ A real presence of Christ was generally held ; but the meaning of this reality was very variously conceived.^ Thus, in England, Aelfric, who is supposed to have written at the beginning of the century, and whose homilies were read as authoritative in the Anglo- Saxon churches, had laid down in these homilies the very doctrine of Ratramn — that the presentee of Christ is not material but spiritual.'^ But in countries nearer to the * See Schrockh, xxiii. 490 ; Gieseler, II. i. 275. ^ Milman, ii. 447. "= .£'.^., " Great is the difference be- tween the invisible might of the holy housel and the visible appearance of its own nature. By nature it is corrupti- ble bread and corruptible wine, and is, by the power of the Divine word, truly Christ's body and blood ; not, how- ever, bodily, but spiritually. Great is the difference between the body in which Christ suffered, and the body which is hallowed for housel. ... In His ghostly body, which we call housel, there is nothing to be understood bodily, but all is to be understood spiritually. It is, as we before said, Christ's body and His blood, not bodily, but spiritu- ally. Ye are not to inquire how it is done, but to hold in your belief that it is so done." (Homily ii. "Of the Sacrifice on Easter-day." Aelfric, ii. 271-.}, ed. Thorpe. See other passages in Routh, Scriptorum Eccl. Opuscula, ii. 168, seqq.). There has been much controversy as to who this writer was. He stj'les himself "monk and priest." It seems probable that he was net Aelfric archbishop of Canterbury (a.d. 996-1005), although this view has lately been revived by Dean Hook (i. 435), nor Aelfric archbishop of York (a.d. 1023-51), although Wharton (Ang. Sac. i. 124-35) and Mr. Soames (227-9) think that he was, and Mr. Thorpe inclines to the same opinion (Pref. to Aelfric) But that his homilies were used by authority in the Anglo-Sa.\on church certain (see Thorpe's Preface ; John son's Canons, i. 387 ; and Liiigard, A. S. C. i. 319). Dr. Lingard attemjits to get over the difficulty of the case by arguing that the honiilist was not either of the archbishops ; that perhaps other Anglo-Sa.von writers, if they could be found, might prove to have taught differently from him , that his doctrine was not native to England, but derived from "Bertram, a foreign writer" 3ja EUCHARISTIC DOCTRINE. Book VI. centre of the papal influence the opinions of Paschasius had by degrees won general acceptance, and any devia- tion from them was now regarded as an innovation on the faith. In the beginning of the century, Leutheric, archbishop of Sens, who had been a pupil of Gerbert, was called in question for substituting for the usual form of address to communicants the words — " If thou art worthy, receive." The scanty notices of Leutheric leave it doubtful whether his offence consisted in holding that none but the worthy could really be partakers, or in giving the eucharist the character of an ordeal ',^ but, whatever it may have been, he was silenced by king Robert I., and quietly submitted to the sentence.® Fulbert, bishop of Chartres, a friend of Leutheric, and one of the most eminent teachers of his age, while he maintained that the eucharist was a pledge, would not, with Paschasius, affirm its identity with the body in which the Saviour was born and was crucified ; and he speaks strongly against gross and material mis- conceptions on the subject. It is, however, doubtful in how far Fulbert would have agreed with the doctrines (p. 311); that his homilies, compiled, take to infer from Aelfric's language according to the author's own state- that the Anglo-Saxon church was mcnt, from fathers and later authors, formally and consciously opposed to are not faultless, but exhibit such Rome on the doctrine of the eucharistic defects as might be expected from the presence. The real explanation is, age ; that he has been misunderstood, that England was somewhat behind and, after all, did not teach what Dr. countries nearer to Rome in following Lingard is pleased to describe as "pro- the progress of Roman opinion; and testant" doctrine, but that with the this will account for the fact, which " figure " Aelfric held the reality also Dr. Lingard endeavours to turn to fii. 314-19, 457, seqq. ; see Routh, ii. account (H. E. i. 334), that there were 185). Dr. Rock also attempts to make English bishops in the Roman council, out that, on the whole, Aelfric agrees under Leo IX., which condemned with the Roman doctrine (' Ch. of our Berengar. Fathers,' i. 22-4). Hardouin took a <• Schrockh, xxiii. 503 ; Giesel. II. i. bolder way to get rid of this inconve- 276. nient witness — by finding a Hebrew « Helgald. Vita Roberti, c. 4, ap. etymology for his name, and thence Bouquet, x. 100; Hugo Flavin, ib. arguing that he never really existed I 230 ; Baron. 1004. 5. (Socunes. 226). It is, howeveir, a mis- Chap. ill. a. d. 1000-45. BERENGAR. 3i;3 which were afterwards propounded by his pupil iierengiir.' Berengar was born at Tours about the year looo, and was educated under Fulbert, in the cathedral school of Chartres.e His opponents afterwards described him as having in his early days exhibited n, passion for novelty, as having despised books and criticized his teacher.^ William of Malmesbury adds that, as Fulbert was on his death-bed, he singled out Berengar from the crowd which filled the chamber, and, declaring that he saw beside him a devil enticing people to follow him, desired that he might be thrust out' But even the less improbal)le of these stories appears to be refuted by the tone in which an old fellow-pupil of Berengar reminded him of the days when they had studied together under the venerated bishop of Chartres.*^ In 103 1 Berengar returned to his native city, where he became schoolmaster and treasurer of the cathedral. The reputation of the school was greatly raised by him, and his authority as a theologian stood high.^ Eusebius Bruno,™ bishop of Angers, out of respect for his character and learning, bestowed on him the archdeaconry of that city, which Berengar held with- out relinquishing his preferments at Tours." It appears to have been in 1045, or soon after, that Berengar began to make himself noted by advocating a doctrine which he professed to have derived from Scotus Erigena, under whose name Ratramn's treatise appears to have been really intended." The earliest notices of the novelties imputed to Berengar are contained in letters of f Sec Fulb. Ep. i. ad Adeodatum ' W. Malmesb. 465. (Bibl. Patr. xviii. 5) ; Schrockh, xxiii. ^ Adelman. in liibl. Patr. xviii. 438. 503-6; Gieseler, II. i. 276. Eishop ' Hist. Litt. viii. 109. Cosin (' Hi.st. Transubstantiationis '" On his name, .see Diipin, vHi, 7. Papalis,' in Works, ed. Ang. Cath. Lib. " Schrockh, xxiii. 507. The 'His- iv. 114) supposes that Berengar took toire Litteraire de la France,' however, his doctrine from Fulbert. says that the archdeaconry \\ as given a Nat. Alex. viii. 497. by Bnino's predecessor, and mi later >' Ciuitmund. in Bibl. Patr. xviii. than 1040. viii. 200. ^i " Sec vol. jii. p. 348; Giesel. II. i. VOL. IV. 23 354 LAiN'FRANC. ho<,K VI cxposlulatlon addressed to liini by two other old pupils of Fulbert — Hugh, bishop of Langres, whose deposition at the council of Reims for gross offences has been already mentioned,? and Adelman, schoolmaster of Li^ge, who afterwards became bishop of Brixen.^i These writers entreat Berengar to abandon his dangerous speculations, Vdelman tells him that in countries of the German as well as of the Latin tongue he was reported to have forsaken the unity of the church. In 1049, Berengar addressed a letter to Lanfranc, master of the monastic school of Bee in Normandy. Lanfranc was born at Pavia about the year 1005. He received a legal education; and, while yet a young man, became distinguished as an advocate. But the spirit of adventure led him to leave his country; he travelled through France, attended by a train of pupils, and, after having taught for a time at Avranches, was on his way to Rouen, when he was attacked by robbers, who plundered, stripped, and bound him. In his distress he made a vow to amend his life, and when, on the following day, he was set free by some travellers, he asked them to direct him to the humblest monastery with which they were acquainted. They answered that they kncAv of none poorer or less esteemed than the neighbouring house of Bee (or Le Bec),"^ which Herluin, an old soldier who had turned monk, was then building. Lanfranc found the 123, 276; Haptenbach, ii. 91; Floss, Berengar, a.d. 1051 (Acta SS. Ben. in Patrol, c.xxil. 20, seqq. Berengar IX. x.). But it is generally dated supposed the treatise to have been earlier. Sudendorf assigns it to 1047-8. written at the request of Charlemagne (' Berengarius Turonensis,' Hannov. —a mistake for Charles the Bald. Ep. 1850, p. 7.) There is a letter by Wolf- ad Ricardum, Hard. vi. 10C5. helm, abbot of Braunweiler, against P P. 228. Berengar, in the Patrol, cliv, 412-14. <« Hugo, in Bibl. Patr. xviii. 417 ; "■ So called from its (JtT/^, or brook Adelman. ib. 438. The bishoj>'s letter ('' Rivum, qui Beccus dicitur," Chron. must have been written before his Beccense, Patrol, cl. 641). Caudebec, deposition in October, 1049. That of Bolbec, and other Norman names, Adelman is placed by M.ibillon about retain this vestige of the Scandinavian the time of the synod of Paris ntninst language. Chap. HI. a.d. 1049. IlERFNGAR TO LANFRANC 355 abbot labouring witli hi.s (nvn hands at the work, and was admitted into his society in 1042/ The poor and des- pised little monastery soon became famous as a seminary of learning/ and it is not impossible that, among the motives by which Berengar was led to attack Lan franc's doctrine, there may have mingled some feeling of jealousy at this unexpected and successful rivalry of his own fame as a teacher." In the letter which he now wrote, he expresses surprise that Lanfranc should (as he heard) have espoused the eucharistic doctrine of Pascha- sius, and should have condemned that of Scotus as here- tical; such a judgment, he says, is rash, and unworthy of the " not despicable wit" which God had bestowed on Lanfranc. He taxes him with insufficient study of the Scriptures, while, for himself, lie professes to be still but imperfectly acquainted with them. He proposes a con- ference on the point in question, and in the meantime tells Lanfranc that, if he considers Scotus heretical, Ambrose, Augustine, and Jerome must be included in the same sentence.^ When this letter reached Bee, Lanfranc was absent ; and there is some uncertainty as to the next part of the story. Lanfranc states that he had gone to Italy — apparently after having attended the council of Reims, and in the train of Leo IX. / and that the letter, having been opened by some clerks, brought his own orthodoxy into suspicion. To this Berengar answers that it could ■ Milo Crisp. Vita Lanfranci, c. i, flattering " I (' Berengariiis Turonen- ap. Lanfr. ed. Dachery ; Vita Herluini, sis,' in Select Works, iv. 76, Donaiu) ap. Mabill. Acta SS. Ken. ix. ; Orderic. schingen, 1822). Milo Crispin, in Vital. 1. iv. t. ii. 109. saying that Berengar wrote to Lan- * Vita Lan f. 2; Guil. Gemet. vi. 9, franc ^' quasi familiari suo" (c. 3), ap. Ilouquet, x. 35. seems to mean tliat there was not such » Guitnmnd brings this charge an intimacy between the two as would against Berengar very coarsely. Bibl. have warranted the familiar address. Patr. xvii. 441. ^ Lanf. de Euchar. c. 4. See HI ;. ^ Hard. vi. ioi6. Lcssing speaks Litt. viii. 263 ; Leasing, 7^. •if this letter as " frier -lly, modest, and T^c6 LANFRANC AND BERENGAR. Book VI. not have had such an effect, inasmuch as it showed that the opinions of the person addressed were different from those of the writer, and agreeable to the doctrine which Lanfranc described as being generally held ;^ and on the strength, chiefly, of this reply some modern writers have charged Lanfranc with a complication of intrigue and falsehood, and have supposed that he went to Rome for the express purpose of denouncing Berengar.* If, how- ever, we look to probability only, ^\^thout claiming any consideration for Lanfranc's character, we may fairly see reason to question these inferences. Lanfranc could not but have foreseen Berengar's obvious and plausible answer, and would hardly have provoked it, unless he were conscious that his own story was nevertheless true. The mere rumour that a reputed heretic had written to Iiim would naturally raise suspicions ; and it would circulate far more widely than the contents of the letter. Nor was it necessary that Lanfranc should act the part of an informer ; for Leo had in all likelihood heard of Berengar wlnle yet bishop of Toul — situated as that see is in a district where Berengar's opinions had early excited attention, and on the direct road between the cities from which Adelman and Hugh had sent forth their remonstrances ; and it is now known that the pope had spoken of Berengar's alleged errors before leaving Rome for his late circuit beyond the Alps.'' » Bereng. de Sacra Coena, p. 36, ed. quam ecclcsia tenet" (c. 3). But too Vischer, Berol. 1834. The discovery much is made of this. The other of this work overthrows Mabillon's evidence, and even the biographer's conjecture that Lanfranc referred to a own context, show that he was wrong ilifferent letter from that which nov.' in using words which might lead us to rxists. Acta SS. Ben. IX. vii. suppose that Berengar's affair was the » See Lessing, 80 ; Schrockh, xxiii. special cause of Lanfranc's journey to 516; Neaiul. vii. 227. The only other Rome. All that can be truly said is, ground for these charges is a passage that Lanfranc, while at Rome, was in the Life of Lanfranc by Milo Cris- engaged in the affair, pin : "Romam peticrat causScujusdam '' This appears from a letter of -lerici, nomine Berengarii, qui de Bnino of Angers, first published by Sacramento aitaris aiiter dogmatizabat Sudendorf. See S>i4Md. 15, 99. Chap. IIJ. a. u, 105c. COUNCIL OF VERCELLI. ^^57 A synod was held at Rome, where, aller his letter to Laiifranc had been read, Berengar was - . , , . , A.D. 1050. excommunicated —a suitable punishment, sa}- his opponents, for one who wished to deprive the church itself of its communion in the Saviour's body and blood.^ Lanfranc was then required to give an account of his faith, which he did to the satisfaction of the assembly ; and Berengar, in order that he might have an oppor- tunity of defending himself, was cited to a synod which was to meet at Vercelli in the following September. He was disposed to obey the summons, although some friends urged on him that, according to the canons, the pope's jurisdiction was limited to the case of appeals, and that questions ought to be decided in the province where they arose.'* But the king, Henry I., to whom he applied as the head of St. Martin's monastery, instead of aiding him in his journey, committed him to prison, seized his property, and laid on him a fine which, according to Berengar, was greater in amount than all he had ever possessed.^ Being thus detained from attending the coun- cil, he was again condemned in his absence. A passage was read from the book ascribed to Scotus, in which the eucharist was spoken of as a figure, a token, a pledge of the Saviour's body and blood. On this, Peter, a deacon of the Roman church (most probably Peter Damiani 0, exclaimed — " If we are still in the figure, when shall we get the reality ? " Scotus was condemned, with his ad = Lanf. 4 ; Bernold. de Bercii^. Con- special connexion, as abbot, witli dcranatione Multiplici (Hard. vi. St. Martin's- not, as Lcssin^,' (102 1013). The author of this tract thousht, on account of liis general (formerly styled ' Anonynnis Ciiiftlc- prerogative- sec Schrockh, xxiii. 518- tianus,' after his first editor, Chiftlet) 19 ; Staudlin, in Bcreng. Pncf. 14. was Bernold of Constance, the chroni- Against Gfrorcr's wild fancier as m cler (Pertz, v. 386). Berengar denies this part of the story (iv. 547-8), sec the charge. De Sac. Ccen. 38. Sudend. 109; Hefele, iv. 709. d Bereng. 41-2. ' As Leasing (103) awd Sudeudorf « lb. 42. That the application was (109) suppose. laade to Henry on account of his ^^S COUNCILS AGAINST Boti^ VI mirer, and the book was committed to the flames.s One of Berengar's brother canons, who had been sent by the church of Tours to request the pope's intercession for his release, on hearing him styled a heretic, cried out to the speaker—" By the Almighty God, thou liest ! " Another clerk, indignant at the summary condemnation of Scotus, protested that by such inconsiderate haste St. Augustine himself might be condemned ; and the pope ordered that these two should be imprisoned, in order to protect them from the fury of the multitude.^ Through the influence of Bruno and other friends, Berengar recovered his liberty. He protested loudly against the injustice done him by the pope, who ought, he said, rather to have resented the imprisonment of one who was on his way to the papal judgment-seat than to have taken advantage of it in order to condemn him in his absence ; ^ and he desired an opportunity of maintain- ing his opinions before a council."^ It would seem to have been in 1051 that Berengar appeared in Normandy, and was condemned by a council held at Brionne in the presence of duke William ; ^ and in the same year a council was summoned to meet at Paris for the consideration of his opinions. On this Theotwin, the successor of Wazo in the see of Liege, addressed a letter to king Henry. After stating that Berengar, in addition to his errors on the eucharist, was accused of " destroying lawful marriage " and of denying infant-baptism — charges which seem to have been alto- gether groundless — he speaks of the difficulty arising from the circumstance that Bruno, one of Berengar's « Lanf. 4 ; Beicng. 43 ; Bcrnold. ap. ' JJcreng. 42. Hard. vi. 1013. '^ Ep. ad Ricardum, Hard. vi. ** Bercng. 47 (in answer to Lan- 1024-6; Neand. vi. 229. franc's assertion that the two were ' Durandi abbat. Troarnensis Liber sent to defend Berengar's cause, and de Corp. et Sang. Christi (ap. Lanfr. that they broke down in the attempt, Append 106). Sudendorf dates thj» *- 4)- work in 1058. p. 27. oUap, IM A.b. 10J04. nERENGAl*. -^cy :hief partisans, was a bishop, and therefore subject tu the pope's judgment alone ; and he suggests that, in order to overcome this difficulty, the king should not allow any discussion of the question, but should proceed against the Berengai'ians as heretics already condemned.'" The council was held in October ; Berengar, deterred by rumours which reached him, did not appear, and it is said that the assembly, not content with condemning his doctrine and that of Scotus, decreed that he and his followers should be forcibly seized, and, in case of obstinacy, should be put to death. ° In 1054 Berengar was cited to appear before a council which was to be held at Tours under Hildebrand, as papal legate. He looked forward to this as an oppor- tunity of vindicating himself, and, before the meeting of the assembly, he showed the legate a collection of authorities for his doctrine.'^ To the charge of assert- ing that the elements after consecration in no respect differed from what they were before it, he answered that such was not his opinion ; that he believed them, when ^ Hard. vi. 1023-4. himself lived. Sudendorf (31) points " Durand. Troarn. 107. Lessiuy: uut a new evidence in favour of the altogether denies the genuineness of council of Paris — the 'Annales Elno- Theotwin's letter and the truth of Du- nenses Minores,' first published by '•and's statements as to the councils of Pertz (v. 20), which place it in October, Urionne :utd Paris. Schrockh (xxiii. 1051. I have followed him (12, 30) in 520-2), Staudlin (ap. Vischer, 15), and adopting that year for both the coun- Neander (vi. 231), are more or less cils— which Durand (probably from a for the councils. Gieseler (II. i. 280-1) failure of memory) refers to 1053, while points out that Theotwin's letter is some place them as early iis 1050. proved to be genuine by Guitmund's One argument against the council mention of it in his treatise against of Brionnc is, that the mon.-istery of r.erengar (Bibl. Patr. xviii. 441). He Pratellaj (Pre'au.x), whence Berengar gives up the council of Paris, and is said to have gone to it, was not thinks, as does also Sudendorf (12), founded until 1053 (Hoflcr, ii. 112). lliat a passage of Berengar's letter to But there is a charter of 1034 in >ts Ascelin, which speaks of a journey favour (Bouquet, .\i. 387) : -I'ld sec undertaken for the purpose of appear- Cossart, ap. Hard. vi. ioi8 ; Nat. ing before a council, relates to the Alex. xiii. 508. Hefele places the council of Vercelli. But he holds that council of Brionne before that of Durand may be taken as authority for Vercelli. ir. 710. what passed in Normandy, where he » Sudend. 130. See Hefele, iv. 738. 36d fiERENGAR. feoOKVI. consecrated, to be tlie very body and blood of Christ.? Hildebrand, satisfied with this statement, proposed that Berengar should accompany him to Rome, and should there clear himself before the pope ; and that in the mean- time he should give such explanations as might satisfy the assembled bishops. These explanations were received with some distrust ; it was suggested that perhaps Berengar might say one thing with his mouth and hold another thing in his heart. He therefore confirmed the sincerity of his profession by an oath — that the bread and wine are, after consecration, the body and blood of Christ. But the serious illness of Leo obliged Hildebrand to return in haste to Rome, and the arrangement which liad been made was not carried out.i The enemies of Berengar state that, being unable to defend his heresy, he recanted it at Tours, and afterwards resumed the profes- sion of kJ But this is a misrepresentation founded on their misconception of the real nature of his doctrine.^ The controversy rested throughout tlie pontificates of Victor and of Stephen, until 1059, when Berengar appeared at Rome before the synod held by Nicolas 11.^ This appearance would seem to have been voluntary ; he probably relied on the favour of Hildebrand, to whom he carried a letter from his only lay supporter whose name is known to us — Geoffrey, count of Anjou— requesting that the cardinal would not temporize, as at the council of Tours, but would openly befriend the accused." But the majority of the council proved to be strongly hostile, and Berengar's friends were afraid to speak, while Hilde- y jkrcng. 50.1. « Ep. X. in Sudendorf, 215-19. who " ^^- "^^-S- gives a Life of Geoffrey— a powerful, ' Unfr. c. 3 ; Bcrnold, ap. Hard. warlike, rough, and lawless prince, ""■ \°'^-. step-father of the empress Agnes (cf • Lessing (120) shows that Ordcric Gesta Consnlum Andegav. c. 10, ap Vitahs IS wrong in supposing Lanfranc Dachery, Spicil. iii.). The letter is to have been at the council of Tours. evidently written bv an ecclesiastic in ^<-'« P- «55. Geoffrey's name. Chap, rtl a t.. 1054-9. KETRACTATIUN AX ROMK. 5O1 brand was unwilling to imperil his own intliicnce, and the cause which he had most at heart, by encumbering him- self with the defence of the suspected heretic.^ Beren- gar complains tliat the council behaved to him not only without Christian kindness, but without reason. They stopped their ears when he spoke of a spiritual partici- pation in the eucharist ; •^' and, when he proceeded to argue in the dialectical form, they desired him to produce authority rather than arguments which they dreaded as sophisms.'' He reproached the pope for exposing him to beasts, instead of instituting a deliberate inquiry by competent persons ; to which Nicolas only replied that he must blame Hildebrand.* Finding his attempts at a defence hopeless, Berengar desisted. A confession draAvn up by cardinal Humbert, and embodying a strong and unequivocal assertion of a material change in the sacra ment, was produced ; ^ and Berengar, overpowered (as he tells us) by the fear of death and by the tumult of his opponents, took the document into his liands, prostrated himself in token of submission, and cast his own writings into the fire.^ But on returning to his own country Berengar again openly taught his old opinions, and they were widely spread by the agency of poor students.^ He denounced * Neand. vi. 235. ^- Lanfr, c. 7. (Vita 8), but this seems liardly con- y Bereng. 63-72. * JJereng. 72-3. sistent with Berengar's wor.ls to him : ^ "Panemetvinum... postconsecra- " Egu longc verius te quid cum Nicolao tionein non solum sacramentium, sed cgerim novi .... manu, quod men- etiam verum corpus et sauguineni ditciieradtepc>-i'e>iit,nowi\\\isy^n^i\" Domini iiostri Jesu Christi esse, et etc. A later story was, that he scnsualiter, non sokun sacramcnto attended Ilerluin to tlic council, and, sed in verltate, manibus sacerdotum wlicn others were unaldc to answer tractari, frangi, et fidclium deotibus Berengar, exposed his errors with bucii atteri." Lanfr. c. 2; Hard. vi. 1064. sUill that Berengar exclaimed, "Aut See Jer. Taylor, Works, ed. Eden. v. tu es Laulrancus, aut tu es Diabo ^58. lus." Thom.de Eccleston, in ' Monu- = Bereng. 72-3. He denies Lan- menta Franciscana,' 43, Loud. 1S58 franc's statement (c. 2), that he sub- (Chron. and Mem.), scribed and swore to the confession. '' Bernold. ap. Hard. vi. 1015; W. Lanfranc is said to have 1 'eon present. Malmesh. 462. Lessing (48-i>) con- 302 LAN FRANC AND BERENGAR k^ok VI the treatment which he had received from the late coun- cil, to which (he said) he had gone, not as a culprit, but of his own free will ; « he reflected severely on Leo, Nicolas, Humbert, and the Roman church;^ he main- tained that his own doctrine was that of St. Augustine, while the doctrine of Lanfranc and Paschasius was no better than " a dotage of the vulgar." ° Lanfranc wrote to reproach him, Berengar rejoined, and a controversy ensued in which the opinions of each party were brought out into greater distinctness than before. Lanfranc's treatise *0f the Body and Blood of the Lord' was written between 1063 and 1070,^ The work opens by blaming Berengar for spreading his errors in an underhand manner, and for declining to argue before competent judges. Lanfranc then gives an account of the proceedings under Leo and Nicolas. He remarks on his opponent's dialectical subtleties.^ He asserts the doctrine of Paschasius, and supports it by quotations from ecclesiastical writers. That the elements after con- secration are still styled bread and wine, he accounts for by saying that in Scripture things are often called by the jecturcs that he did not agaui publish or to Lanfiiinc, as archbishop of Can- his doctrines until after the deaths of terbuiy ? Nicolas (io6x) and of Humbert (1063). k Lanfr. 4. « Bercncj. 72. '' For the date, see Lessing, c. ili. : ' He styled the church "ecclcslain Schrockh, xxiii. 528; Giesel. II. i. malignantium, concilium vanitatis, nee 285. The authors of the ' Hist. Litt. apostolicaiii, sed sedem Satanse " ; and, de la France' (vlii. 212, 288) had instead of pontifueni, called Leo auempted to show that it was not foinpijican and pidpijiccin (Lanfr. v.Titten before 1079, "o as to give it j6; Bernold. ap. Hard. vi. 1014. Cf. the credit of finally convening Bcreii- Bereng. 39, 41. 71). In Msrtene's gar. Their argument, that, if Berengar "rhesaurus/ i. lyG, is a letter which ha 1 been still inclined to defend his the editors suppose to have been pro- errors, he would have answered it, is bably written by Paulinns, primicerius destroyed by the discovery of the of i\lcnt-r, to Berengar, approving his answer which he actually wrote (■^ec doctrine and his defence of it, but below). The mention of the synod of blaming him "quod de tanla persona 1079, in c. 2, on which the Hist. Litt. sacrilegium dixisti, .... quia multa greatly relies, is an interpolation, humilitate tanto in ecclesia culmini est found only in one MS. Lessing, 51-4. defercndum." Does this refer to Leo? ' C. 7. LHAF. Ill A.D. 1060-7U. ON iHE EL'CHARlbT. ^O' name of that from which they are made ; thus man is spoken of as earth, dust, ashes ; or they are named alter something which they resemble — as Christ is styled a lion and a lamb.'^ He represents Berengar as holding the sacrament to be nothing more than a figure and a memorial. ^ Berengar replied in a treatise which, after having been long unknown, has in late times been partially recovered, and has thrown a new and important light on his opinions."^ He gives (as we have seen) a version of the previous history different in many respects from that which had been given by Lanfranc. His fiuilt in the synod under Nicolas consisted (he says) not in having sworn — (for that was not required of him) — but in having been silent as to the truth." He had yielded to the fear of death and of the raging multitude, and in behalf of this weakness he cites the examples of -Aaron and of St. Peter ; to have adhered to the confession extorted from him would have been as if the apostle had persisted in the denial of his Lord." There is something like effront- ery in the tone of contempt and defiance which Berengar assumes after having submitted to such humiliations ; but, while we cannot give him credit for the spirit of a martyr, his words are a valuable evidence of the uselessness ot force as a means of religious conviction. He strongly protests against the employment of swords and clubs and uproar by way of argument ;•' he declares against the principle of being guided by the voice of a majority, while he yet states that the supporters of his own views k C. 20. Berengar answers this, p. adv. Lanfrancuin liber posterior,' c. a tract professing 113-2. His treatise is declared by Peter to set forth his views, and probably the Venerable to be the best of all written soon after his death), first those against Berengar's opinions. lb. published by Mai, and reprinted in the clxxxix. 780. Patrologia,' cxlv. 879, seqq. ' See Hard. vi. 1015-16. Berengar's " Bereng. ap. Mart. ro8. accoimtofitisin Martene, Thes. Anec- » Bowden, ii. 246. Gregory was dot. iv. 09. seqq. often reproached by them for'favouring k It asserted, however, the identlt.\- lierengar. Benno (ap. Goldast. 3) cf the eucharistic with the natur.U attacks him for ordering a fast with body of the Saviour. if^ference to this question. CuA). HI. A.u. 1073-S0. SECOND RF/rRACTATION. 367 Gregory, to save his own roputaticMi, was ahoiii to imprison him for life. At the Lent synod of 1079, which consisted of a hundred and fifty bishops and abbots,*^ Berengar was required to sign a confession that the elements are "substantially" changed into the real, proper, and life-giving body and blood of Christ. A bold evasion suggested itself to his mind — that sjtbstan- tially might be interpreted to mean 7vhile retainino; their stib stance ! — and he professed himself ready to subscribe.'' In answer to a question whether he understood the form in the same sense as the council, he said that lie under- stood it agreeably to tlie doctrine which he had privately exjilained to the pope some days before. Such a speech was not likely to be acceptal^le to Gregory, who there- upon told him that he must prostrate himself in token of unreserved submission, and must own that he had hitherto sinned in denying a substantial change. Be- rengar, in fear of anathema and of violence, obeyed — as God (he says) did not give him constancy ;'i and, after having been charged to refrain from teaching, except for the purpose of recovering those whom he had misled, he was dismissed with a commendatory letter, addressed to all the faithful, in which the pope ordered that no one should injure him in person or in property, and that no one should reproach him as a heretic, forasmuch as he had been acknowledged as a son of the Roman churcli.'' After returning to France, Berengar regretted his late compliance, and once more openly professed his real opinions. In loSo, he was summoned before a council at Bordeaux,^ where his statements seem to have been accepted ; and in the same year Gregory wrote to desire o Bernokl (who was himself present), ■" Hard. vi. 1585 ; Gxftf.. Ep. Kxlrav. i;i Hard. vi. ioi6. 41 (Patrol, cxlviii.). See Gicsebrecht. p BerenK;ap. Murt. 105. De Gre-. VII. Reglstro emeiidando. M lb. 109. '" '7- • Ilard- V'- VS87 368 LAST YEARS OF BERENGAR. Book VI. tliat the archbishop of Tours and the bishop of Angers would protect him against the count of Anjou, who had been incited by his enemies to persecute him.* Berengar was allowed to spend his last years unmolested in an island of the Loire near Tours, where he died in 1088." The latest of his known writings is a letter addressed to a friend on the occasion of Gregory's death, in which he speaks of the pope with regard, expresses a conviction of his salvation, and excuses his behaviour towards himself.^ The memory of Berengar was reverenced in the district of Tours, and there was, down to late times, a yearly solemnity at his tomb.-^' Hence it has been argued that he finally renounced his heresy,^ having, as was supposed, been converted by Lanfranc's book. But the groundless- ness of that supposition has been abundantly shown by the discovery of his answer to Lanfranc ; nor is there any reason to question the statement of his contemporary Bemold that he persevered in his opinions to the last.^ * Ep. Extrav. 53. Dullinger, i, 378. To these Romanists » Chron. Tuion. ap. Bouquet, xii. is to be added the "Old-Lutheran" 461-5 (where Berengar is described as Guericke, who still treats him as a " in grammaticii et phllosophia claris- Calvinistic heretic, ii. 168-74. simus, et in negromantia peritissi- " Hard. vi. 1016. The chronicle of nuis"). William of Malniesbury (463) Tours, however, .states that he died i^ivcshis epitaph, by Hildebert, bishop "Tidelis et vere catholicus " (Bouquet, of Le Mans, and afterwards archbishop Nii. 465)- William of JIalme.sbury says, of Tours, one of the most famous " /Evo austeriore ita resipuit, ut sine scholars of the age, who has been retractatione a quibusdam sanctus ha- generally (but perhaps wrongly) de- bcatur, innumeris bonis, maximeque scribed as a pupil of Berengar. (See humilitate et eleemosynis,approbat\is," Hist. Litt. xi. 251 ; Bourasse in Patrol. etc. (462). Coleridge in the transJ-ition clxxi. 20). The concluding lines are— of " the last words of Berengarius," on " Post obiuim sccuiii vivam, secum rcriiii- which his own eloquent lines are escaiii, founded, has overlooked the real poin: Nee fiat ineliorsorsmeasorte sua." of the saying in Malmesbury (465)- » Sudend. 232. " Hodie .... apparebit mihi Domi- y it was celebrated in Alexandre uus mens Jesus Christus, fropter Noel's day (xiii. 522), and may possibly fccnitentiarn ut spero, ad gloriaiii ; le so still. ve! propter alios {i.e. those whom he '■ Mabill. Acta SS. Ben. IX. x.wiii. ; had led astray) w/" thueo, ad panam." Nat. .Mex. xiii. 5;'2 ; Pagi, xvii 598 ; Ckap. IV. A.u. 1085. THE PAPACY' VACANT. 569 The recineiy of his trealisc, and of other writings, has placed his doctrines in a clearer light, and it is now acknowledged, even by writers of the Roman church, that, instead of supposing the eucharist to be merely figurative, he acknowledged in it a real si)iritual change, ^^'hile he denied that doctrine of a material change which has become distinctive of their own communion,'^ CHAPTER IV. FROiM THE DEATH OF GRKGORY VII. TO THAT OF THF. EMPEROR HENRY IV. THE FIRbT CRUSADE. Gregory VII. left behind him a powerful and resolute party. It could reckon on the alliance of the Normans, for whom it was important that the pope should be favourable to their own interest rather than to that of the emperor ; and it was supported by the devoted attach- ment of the countess Matilda.^ On the other hand, the emperor's strength in Italy was greater in appearance than in reality ; for, although many of the chief cities were with him, a strong desire of independence had arisen among them, and he could not safely rely on them unless in so far as his interest coincided with their private objects.^ When asked on his death-bed to recommend a suc- cessor, Gregory had named Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, and first cardinal-i^resbyter of the Roman b Mabillon inferred this from the had vindicated him while less was MS. of the synod of 1079 (Acta Ben. known of hiswntin-i(iv. 116), and had SS. IX. xv.-xxii. : Aiialecta, 513, seqq.). been blamed lor so doin- Ijy Fecht, .1 Seethenoteon Kat. Alex. xiii. 521: Luther.'.n, quoted by Lcssinic, 17- Martene, Tlies. iv. 107. lip. Cosin • Planck, iV. i 200. * ib .i/y. VOL. IV. 24 5»pO" VICTOR III. iooKTt church, and had desired that, it the abbot should refuse the papacy, either Otho, bishop of Ostia, Hugh, arch- bishop of Lyons (the same who, as bishop of Die, had been legate in France '^), or Anselm, bishop of Lucca, the chaplain and chief counsellor of Matilda, should be chosen.^ The general wish was for Desiderius, but he ob- stinately refused — perhaps from unwillingness to exchange his peaceful dignity for one which, although loftier, must involve him in violent contentions with the emperor and the antipope.^ A year had elapsed, when at Whitsuntide T 086 he was persuaded to go to Rome, supposing that he was then no longer in danger of having the popedom forced on him. Preparations were made for an election, and, by the advice of Desiderius, Otho was about to be chosen, when an objection was raised that he Avas canoni- cally disqualified, as being already a bishop. Although this impediment had in later times been often disre- garded, the mention of it served to divert the multitude^ who cried out for Desiderius. The abbot, struggling, and refusing to put on a part of the pontifical dress, was enthroned, and greeted as Victor IIL ; but immediately afterwards he left the city, and, renouncing the dignity which had been thrust on him, withdrew to his monas- tery.' Ten months more passed away, and in March 1087 Desiderius summoned a council to meet at Capua, with a view to a new election. At this meeting Roger, son of Robert Guiscard,» and Jordan, prince of Capua, with a * See Hug. Flavin, in Pertz, viii. vendi, sedet miracula, credo, faciendi." 410, 460. Giesebrecht questions this. say nothing of his including him in the '"■ 563. recommendation. '• Chron. Casin. iii. 65 ; Hug. Flavin. « Chron. Casin. iii. 65 ; Stenzel, i. 1. ii. (Pertz, viii. 466) ; Codex Udalrici, 539. 166. Paul of Bernried (109, iii) and ' Chron. Casin. iii. 66-7. Anselm's biographer (c. 32. .ap. Periz, e Guiscard had died in Cephalonia, XII. ). although they state that Gregory on a new expedition against the Greek bequeathed his mitre to Anselm, " tan- empire, July 1085. Anna Comnena, quam poteslatem suani ligaudi et sol- vi. 6 ; Gibbon, v. 356. Chap, IV. a.d. 10S5-7. VICTOR III. 37' number of bishojjs, threw theJiisclves at his fed, and entreated liiui to retain the papacy ; but iiugh of Lyons and Otho of Ostia objected to him, and required an examination into his conduct. By this opposition De- siderius was determined to accept the office wliich he had so long declined.'^ He repaired to Rome under the protection of a Norman force, which wrested St. Peter's from tlie antipopc ; and on the 9th of May he was conse- crated.^ The partisans of Guibert, however, soon after recovered possession of the church, and, after the fashion of the ancient Donatists, they washed the altars in order to cleanse them from the polhition of the Hijdebrandine mass.^' Although the new pope had been among the most devoted of Gregory's adherents, it would seem that he was now weary of conflict, and desirous to gratify his natural inclination for peace. ^ Of his late opponents, Otho submitted to him : but Hugh, who himself aspired to the papacy, addressed to Matilda two letters, in which he charged him with apostasy from Gregory's policy, and with a disposition to grant unworthy concessions to the emperor.™ By this letter Victor was greatly exasperated, and at a synod at Benevento, in the month of August, he excommunicated the archbishop. The synod renewed the anathema against the antipope and the decrees against investiture. After three sessions had been held, the pope was struck with palsy ; and, having been removed to Monte Cassino, he died there on the i6th of September." Victor has left three books of Dialogues, ^ Letter of Hugh to Matilda, in AVilliam of Malmcsbury (446). by tha Hug. Flavin. (Pertz.viii. 467) ; Chron. writer who is known as Benedict o Casin. iii. 68. * lb. 68-9. Peterborough (Vita Hcnr. II. 687, cd. k lb. 69. " Stenzei, i. 540. Hearne), and others. Some have "Hug. Lugd. Epp. 8-9 (Patrol. styled him a martyr, on the groundless (.jvii.). supposition that he was poisoneil » Chron. Casin. iii. 72-3. Fabulous through the emperor's contriraucf-. «^ccounts of his death are given by Acta SS. Sept. 16, p. 375. 372 URBAN II. Book VI. wliicli arc valuable as throwing light on the history of his time, while, by the excessive crcduHty which he displays, as well as by their form, they remind us of his model, the Dialogues of Gregory the Great." Another long vacancy in the popedom followed. The antipope had possession of Rome, and the emperor's power was formidable to the inheritors of Gregory's prin- ciples. But they were encouraged by the resolution ot Matilda; and in March 1088 a council met at Terracina for the appointment of a successor to Victor. In con- sideration of the difficulties of the time, the form of election prescribed by Nicolas II. was set aside. About forty bishops and abbots were present, together with envoys from the Great Countess, and from some prelates beyond the Alps. The clergy of Rome were represented by the cardinal of Porto ; the people, by the prefect of the city ; and Otho, bishop of Ostia, who had again been recommended by Victor on his death-bed, was unanimously chosen.^' The new pope, who took the name of Urban II.,'' was a Frenchman of noble family. He was educated at Reims, under Bmno, afterwards famous as the founder of the Carthusian order, and became a canon of that city ; but he resigned his position to enter the monastery of Cluny. In consequence of a request which Gregory had made, that the abbot would send him some monks who might be fit for the episcopate, Otho left Cluny for Rome in 1076 ; he was employed by the pope in important business, and was advanced to the see of Ostia. "^ Urban's principles were the same with those of Gregory, and, if ° They arc in Bibl. Patr. xviii. name of Urban III. I' Cliron. Casin. iv. 2. ' Guib. Novig. Gesta Dei, ii. i : '' Uenno calls him Turbanus, as Order. Vital, iv. n (t. ii. 244): Hist. luivin- troubled the church (Vita Hil- Litt. viii. 516. There is a Life of del), up. Browne, i. 82), and the same Urban bj- Ruinart In Patrol, cli. 1 Iirmgc was afterwards practised on the Chap. IV. a.u. 10S7.8. STATK Of' MAI^Y. 37:i he had not tlie originality of his master, he was not inferior to him in firmness, activity, or enterprise ; while witli these qualities he combined an artfulness and a caution which were more likely to be successful than Gregory's undisguised audacity and assumption." At the time of the election, Rome was almost entirely in the hands of the antipope, so that Urban, on visiting it, was obliged to find shelter in the island of the Tiber ; while such was his poverty that he was indebted to one of the Frangipani family, and even to some women of the humblest class, for the means of subsistence.* The city was a scene of continual struggles between the opposite parties. Their nuitual exasperation may be imagined from an instance on each side : that Bonizo, a vehement partisan of Urban, on being appointed to the see of Piacenza, after having been expelled from that of Sutri, was blinded and was put to death with horrible mutila- tion by the imperialists of his new city ;" and that Urban declared it lawful to kill excommunicate persons, provided that it were done out of zeal for the church.^ Henr}% w^hen compelled by Robert Guiscard to retire from Rome, had returned to Germany in 1084. He • Stenzel, i. 542; Milman, iii. 113; ^ Ep. ad Godefr. Ep. Lucanum, Glesebr. iii. 593. ap. Gratian. Deer. II. xxiii. qu. 5, c. t Godef. Vindoc. Ep. i. 8 (Patrol. 47. The same doctrine had been pro- clvii.); Bemokl, Ann. 10S9 (p. 448): pounded in Gregor>''s time by a fanati- Schruckh, x-.vv. 14. The following: cal priest named Manegold, who also epigrams were composed in the cha- held that the " Henricians " might not racters of Clement and Urban— he: prayed for because they sinned against the Holy Ghost (Giesel. II. ii. CX-EM. "DicrlsUrbanus. cum sis pro- Although Manegold was con- jertu-5 ab urbe ; y{- , ^ * , ^ , , Vel luuta nomen. vel regred.aris ■=> Jered by some to be a troublesome ad iirhem." man ("homo importunus"), his writ- l/RB, "Nomen habfs Clemens, seil ings were received " as the an ;\ver4 of Cl-rnr-is non i.ntes esse. ^ heavenly oracle " by others (t'.erhoh. D.rn tit.i solvendi sit tradita Dialog, de Clericis sxc. et regul.. Pa - luilla potestas." , . .--> r-i . • Crr;,.;...s>«r.T.^a. ijlP.rrof. cxciv.). "«•• ^f'^' J.-^'^-^C) Floto give, ex- tracts from his unpubhshed book A.l • Bemold, A.D. 1089, p. 449. As to Cebhardum," il. 154. 289, 299, etc. \hc date, see Watterich, i, prolegg. 30. See too Patrol dv, 147. seqq. .-J, STATE OF GERMANY. Book VI lound the country in great disorder, and in August 1086 be was defeated by the Saxons and their allies, at the Bleichfeld, near Wiirzburg.y But by degrees he was able to conciliate many of his old opponents,'' and his strength increased ; in the following year he received the submission of his rival Herman,*^ and in ro88 he reduced the Saxons to tranquiUity.'' In consequence of these successes, the bishops of the opposite party were expelled froi:e their sees, so that Urban had only four adherents among the prelates of Germany.^ While the warriors fought the batdes of the papacy and the empire with the sword, the theologians of the parties carried on a fierce controversy with the pen — some of them with learning, decency, and Christian feeling ; others with outrageous violence, reckless falsehood, and disgusting buffoonery. <^ In 1089, Urban issued a decree by which the sentences of Gregory were somewhat modified. Anathema was denounced in the first degree against the emperor and the antipope ; in the second degree, against such as should aid them, or should receive ecclesiastical dignities y Ekkeh. 206 ; Bernold. 445. maRterofTreves^andafterwarilsbisIinp '■ Annal. Magdeb. ap. Pertz, .\vl, of Vercelli (who wrote under the 178. direction of Dietrich bishop of Verdun), " Kkkeh. 207. For the insignifi- and Wido or Guy, bishop of Fer- cance into which Herman had fallen, rara ; among those who disgraced it see Waltram, ii. 16 ; Floto, ii. 30S. were Benno bishop of Osnaburg, and »> Annal. Saxo, 723. Benzo (see p. 263). The bishop of «= lb. 722 : Ekkeh. 209 ; Bernold, Ferrara's treatise * De Schismate Hil- 449 ; see as to Adalbero of Wurzburg, debrandi ' is pubhshed for the first Acta SS., Oct. 6, p. 462. There are time in vol. xii. of Pertz's 'Monu- letters of Urban as to the consecration menta * (1856). The author had been of a bishop for Halberstadt at Rome, an adherent of Gregory, but after the because the schism prevented his beiny pope's death joined the imperialists. consecrated at Mentz. The pope ex- In the first book he appears strenu- horts the people to resist the rival ously to defend Gregorj' ; but the imperialist bishop. Epp. loo-a (Pa- second is a dialogue between a very irol. cli.). simple Hildebrandine " Proponens " '^ See Stenzel, I. 496 515. Amoi;g and a "Respondens" of Clement's the respectable writers on Henry's side party, who overthrows all that had were Waltram bishop of Naumburg, been before said. The \vork was Sie^eLertofGRmblourSjWenrich school- written betweea 1085 and iioo(p, 149). Chap. IV. a.d. 1086-92. HENRY TV, TN TTAT.Y. 375 from them ; while those who should merely communicate with them were not anathematized, but were not to be admitted to catholic fellowship except after penance and absolution.*^ In the same year the antipope Clement was driven out of Rome by the citizens, who are said to have exacted from him an oath that he would not attempt to recover his dignity.* A negotiation was soon after opened between the parties, on the condition that Henry should be acknowledged as emperor, and Urban as pope. But it was abandoned through the influence of the imperialist bishops, who naturally apprehended that they might be sacrificed to the proposed reconciliation. » Urban now persuaded Matilda, at the age of forty- three, to enter into a second marriage, with a youth of eighteen — the younger Welf, son of the duke of Bavaria.'' The union was one of policy ; the pope hoped to secure by it a male head for his lay adherents, to fix the allegi- ance of Matilda, who had now lost the guidance not only of Gregory but of Anselm of Lucca,^ and to engage the elder Welf to exert all his influence in Germany against the emperor.'^ On hearing of the event, which had for some time been kept secret from him, Henry a.d, crossed the Alps in the spring of 1090, and 1090-92. for three years ravaged Matilda's territories. ^ Mantua, after a siege of six months, was surrendered to him 1))' treachery."^ The countess, reduced to great distress^ entered into negotiations at Carpineto, and was about to yield, even to the extent of acknowledging Clement as pope, when the abbot of Canossa, starting up with the air of a prophet, declared « Urban. Append, ap. Hard. Ep. i ; Ann. VI. ii. 30. I'.emold, 449- " Schmidt, ii. 339- ' Beriiold, 450. ' Bernuld, pp. 45o-3- See Hoto, n. K lb. ; Schrackh, xxvi. 15. 334- »' Bernold, 449. *" Donizo, 1. ii. cc. 4-5 ; licrnold. > Anselm's death is placed in March AM. 1091, p. 451. i£>86 by Pagi, xvii. 574. ^intl Mnratori 376 HENRY IV. AND ADELAIDE. Book VI. that to conclude peace an such terms would be a sin against every Person of the Divine Trinity, and the treaty was broken off.^ Henry attempted to take Canossa, the scene of his memorable humiliation ; but he was foiled, partly through the dense gloom of the weather, and lost his standard, which was hung up as a trophy in the castle-chapel.^ The antipope had found means of re-establishing him- self at Rome, in 1091 ;p but in- 1094 Urban again got possession of the Lateran, through the treachery of the governor, who offered to surrender it for a certain sum. There were, however, no means of raising this until Godfrey, abbot of Vendome, who had arrived at Rome on a pilgrimage of devotion, by placing at the pope's disposal not only his ready money but the price of his horses and mules, enabled him to complete the bargain.*! 'Ihe empress Bertha had died in 1088,'" and in the following year Henry had married Adelaide or Praxedes, a Russian princess, and widow of Uto, marquis of Sax- ony.^ The marriage was unhappy, and Henry relapsed into the laxity of his early life.*^ But worse infamies were now imputed to him ; " it was asserted that he had compelled Adelaide to prostitute herself to his courtiers, that he had required his son Conrad to commit incest with her, and that, when the prince recoiled with horror from the proposal, he had threatened to declare him a supposititious child.^ The empress was welcomed as ■* Donizo, ii. c. 7. See Muratori's 603), adopts this view, note in Pertz, xii. 392. t See Giesel. II. ii. 40. There are o Doni7o, ii. 680-723. strange fables in the Annals of VoUi I' Kernold, 451. (Pertz, xvi. 71). " (Todefr. Vindoc. Ep. I 8 (Patrol. » Luden, ix. 255. rlviii.). r Ekkehard, in ann. ' Donizo, ii. c. 8 ; BernoIJ, Ann. • Id. A.D. 10S9; Annal. Saxo, p. 1094, p. 45S. The empress mid the 721 ; Giesebr. iii. n66. Some writers story to the pope, to whom she w^s strangely make lier a sister of Oodfrey introduced by the Countess Matilda uf Bouillon. The Hist. L.tt, (viii. 599, Ann, S. Disib. ap, Pcrtz, xvii. 14. Cmap. IV. AD. 1092-4. REBELLION OF CONRAD. 377 an ally by Matilda, and her story was related before a synod at Constance, in io94.>' What her motives may have been for piiblisliing a tale so revolting, so improba- ble, and in parts so contradictory to itself — whether she were disordered in mind, or whether, in her ignorance of the language in which her depositions were drawn up, she subscribed them without knowing their contents- it is vain to conjecture.^' But the story furnished her husband's enemies with a weapon which they employed with terrible eftect against him.*'^ About the same time, Conrad appears to have been tampered with by some of the anti-imperialist ^ clergy. This prince had grown up at a distance from Henry, and without experiencing his influ- ence ; for in early childhood he had been committed to the archbishop of Milan for education, and many years had passed before the troubles of Germany permitted the father and the son to meet again.^ To a character like Conrad's — gentle, studious, devout, and dreamy^ — the long and hopeless contentions of the time, its rude hostilities, the schism of western Cliristendom, could not l)ut be deeply distasteful ; it would seem that the work of alienating him from his father was easy, and that he was preparing to leave the court when Henry, suspecting the intention, committed him to custody. Conrad, however, found means to escape, and sought a refuge with Matilda, who had perhaps been concerned in the practices by which he had been incited to rebel,*^ and now received y Remold, 457-8. It is commonly ■ Donizo compares Matilda to De- said that she herself told it there ; but, Lorah, and styles Adelaide the Jael as Luden remarks (ix. 609), this does who drove tlie nail into the temple of not seem to be implied in the chroni- tlie imperial Sisera. ii. c. S. cler's words — " Querimonia pervenii." 'i Floto, ii. 148, 152. * See Gibbon, v. 407; Schrockh, " Ekkeh. an; Milman, iii. 115, xxvi. 18 ; Stenzel, i. 552 ; Sismondi, iv. Floto, ii. 346. 499: Luden, ix. 256: Gie<-,el; Ii. ii. " Alurat. Ann. VI. ii. 57, io; Milman, iii. i}S. 378 SUFFERINGS OF CHRISTIANS Book VI. hi in with honour, while Urban released him from his share in tlie emperor's excommunication. He was crowned at IMonza as king of Italy, by Ansclm, arch- bishop of Milan ; and many Lombard cities declared in his favour.® How little the prince's own will concurred in the movements of which he was the nominal head, appears from the fact that he always continued to style Henry his lord and emperor, and would not allow him to be spoken of with disrespect.* The rebellion of his son inflicted on Henry a blow in comparison of which all his earlier sufferings had been as nothing. He cast off his robes, secluded himself in moody silence, and, it is said, was with difficulty prevented from putting an end to his own life." But a new movement, which now began, was to be far more valuable to Urban and to the papacy than any advantages which could have resulted from the contest with the emperor. For many years the hardships inflicted on pilgrims by the Mahometan masters of the Holy Land had roused the pity and the indignation of Christendom.'' The stream of pilgrimage had continued to flow, and with increasing fulness. Sometimes the pilgrims went in large bodies, which at once raised the apprehensions of the Mussul- mans that they might attempt to take possession of the country, and, by the wealth which was displayed, excited their desire of plunder. A company headed by Lietbert, bishop of Cambray, in 1054, was so numerous that it was styled " the host of the Lord " ; but the bishop and his followers had the mortification of findirig that Jerusalem was for the time closed against the •Remold, 456; Aniiii!. S. Disib. Eccard, i. o[6. A.D. 1093. See Stengel, i. 550 ; Luden, e Bernold, 450. ix. 25 1 -a. '' VViU'-en, I. 4 s. Ei ket. 9ti ; Chron. S. Partal np. Chap. IV. a.d. 1000-94. IN PALESTINE. 379 euUance of Christians.' Ten years later, on a revival of the belief that the day of judgment was at hand,'' a still greater expedition set out under Siegfried of Mentz, whose mean and tortuous career was varied from time to time by fits of penitence and devotion. The pilgrims were repeatedly attacked, and, out of 7000 who had left their homes, 5000 fell victims to the dangers, the fatigues, and the privations of the journey.' A fresh race of conquerors, the Seljookian Turks, had appeared in the east. They carried their arms into Asia Minor, wrested all but the western coast of it from the Greeks, and in 107 1 humiliated the empire by taking prisoner its sovereign, Romanus Diogenes. Their conquests were formed into a kingdom to which they insolently gave the name of Roum (or Rome), with Nicaea, the city venerable for the definition of orthodox Christianity, for its capital ;'" and in 1076 they gained possession of Palestine. Under these new masters the condition of the Christian inhabitants and pilgrims was greatly altered for the worse. With the manners of barbarians the Turks combined the intolerant zeal of recent converts to Islam ; and the feelings of f^uropean Christians were continually excited by reports of the » Vita Lietb. 32 (Patrol, cxlvii.). History of Croyland which bears his ^ The ground of this belief was, name is shown to be spurious by Sir F. that Easter fell on March 27, which Palgrave in the 'Quarterly Review,' was marked in the calendar as the an- xxxiv, 289-96 (compare Stevenson, niversary of the Saviour's resurrection. Pref. to Ingulf, and Hardy's Cata- Vita Altmanni Patav. c. 3 (Pertz, .xii.). logue, ii. 62, seqq.). It has been sup- . * Lambert, Ann. 1064-5 ; Marianus posed by some writers that the * His- Scotus ap. Pertz, v. 559; Vita Alt- toria Croylandensis ' is founded on u manni, 3-5. Giesebrecht thinks that genuine earlier work (see Lingard, i, the state of politics in Germany had 460; Lappenberg, I. Ixii.-iv. ; Hardy, uiorr; to do with Siegfried's pilgrimage Pref. to Monum, Hist. Brit. 19) ; but than any higher motive (iii. in). this opinion would seem to be unten- Among the pilgnms was Ingulf, an able since Mr. Riley's dissection of tha Englishman by birth, who had been forgeryin the 'Archseological Journal/ secretary to William of Normandy, vol. xix., London, 1862. See Sir. T and afterwards became abbot of Croy- D. Hardy's Catalogue, ii. 61 g. fend rOrdpric. Vjtal ii, 9S5). The ™ See Gibbon, cb, IvU. 380 PROJECTS OF CRUSADES. Book VI. exactions, the insults, and the outrages to which their brethren in the east were subjected." The idea of a religious war for the recovery of the Holy Land was first proclaimed (as Ave have seen^) by Sylvester II. Gregory VII., in the beginning of his pontificate, had projected a crusade, and had endeavoured to enlist the emperor and other princes in the cause ;p but as the object was only to succour the Byzantine empire, not to deliver the Holy Land, his proposal failed to excite any general enthusiasm, and led to no result.*! His successor, Victor, had published an invita- tion to a war against the Saracens of Africa, with a promise of remission of all sins to those who should engage in it ; and a successful expedition had been the consequence.*" But now a greater impulse was to be given to such enterprises.^ Peter, a native of Amiens, had been a soldier in his youth. He was married, but withdrew from the society " Gibbon, v. 403. To these I have added the histories by *> P. 47. P See p. 300. Wilken, Michaud, and Sybel (' Der '1 Sybel, 189; jNIilman, iii. 129. erste Kreuzzug,' Diisseldorf, 1841), ■■ Cliron. Casin. iii. 71. with the Essays on the Influence of • The chroniclers of the time in the Crusades by Heeren (Histor. general give some account of the first Werke, ii. Gottingen, 1821), and irusade. Of those who have specially Choiseul-Daillecourt (Paris, 1824). Of made it their subject, vol. civ. of the the two chief recent histories, Wilken's ' Patrologia' contains Anselmof Ribe- is the more solid, and Michaud's the mont ('Ep. ad Manass. Rem.'), Ra- more interesting. Von Sybel aspires dulf of Caen (' Gesta Tancredi ' — to be the Niebuhr of the crusade — which I have read in Muratori, vol. dissecting the old narratives and re- V.), Raymond de Agiles (' Hist. Fran- constructing the storj'. Michaud has forum'), Robert of St. Remi ('Hist. analysed the whole literature of the Hierosolymitana'), Tudebod (' Hist. crusades in his ' Bibliotheque des . 1095. URBAN AT PIACENZA. 383 bisliops, four thousand clergy, and thirty thousand laity ; and, as no building was large enough to contain this multitude, the greater sessions were held in a plain near the city.*^ The project of a holy war was set forth ; ambassadors from the Greek emperor, Alexius Comncnus, stated the distress of the eastern Christians, and the formidable advances of the Turks. The hearers were moved to tears by these details ; the pope added his exhortations, and many bound themselves by oath to engage in the crusade/' But the Italians of that day possessed neither the religious enthusiasm nor the valour which would have fitted them to sustain the brunt of such an enterprise ; and Urban resolved that the grand inau- guration of it should take place in his native country. Other affairs were also transacted at Piacenza. Canons were passed against Simoniacs, Nicolaitans, and lierenga- rians ; the antipope was solemnly anathematized ; and the empress Adelaide was brought forward to excite indigna- tion and revolt against her husband by the story of his alleged offences.^ In his progress towards France, Urban was received at Cremona by Conrad, who obsequiously held his stirrup. The prince was rewarded by a promise of Germany and the imperial crown, and was yet further bound to the papal interest by a marriage which Urban and Matilda arranged for him with a wealthy bride, the daughter of Roger, grand count of Sicily.* On entering France the <= Hard. vi. 1714 ; Bernold, 462 ; see Michaud, i. 57, Sybel, 8, and Fin- Gibbon, V. 407. lay, 118, who think it genuine, at least '1 Bernold, 462 ; Gibbon, v. 408. in substance. Palgrave supposes botli Some writers question the Greek em- the letter and tlie embassy to Iiavc bassy. As to a letter said to have been been tricks of Bohemund, who might written by Alexius to Robert, count of have found in southern Italy persons Flanders, in which the emperor says able to write Greek and to pass them- that he would rather be subject to the selves off for B3'zantines, iv. 507, 514. Franks than to the Turks, and holds « Bernold, 462 ; Ekkeh. a.d. 1099. out lower as well as higher motives for fin. Adelaide retired into a nunnery, coming to the rescue of Constantinople *" Bernold, 463 ; INlalaterra, iv. 23. ^'Patrol, civ. 465 ; Guib Novig. i. 5), 384 MARRIAGES OF PHILIP OF FRANCE. Book Vr. pope was met by the gratifying information that Ansehii, archbishop of Canterbury, had at length succeeded in l)rocuring for him the acknowledgment of his title in J'^ngland.- The case of Philip, king of France, divided the popes attention with the crusade. Philip, whose increasing sloth and sensuality had continued to lower him in the estimation of his feudatories and subjects, had in 1092 separated from his queen Bertha, and married Bertrada, wife of Fulk, count of Anjou.^' There was no formal divorce in cither case ; but the separation and the marriage were justified on the ground that both Bertha and Bertrada were widiin the forbidden degrees of relationship to their first husbands — a pretext which, between the extension of the prohibitory canons and the complicated connexions of princely houses, would have been suflFicient to warrant tlie dissolution of almost any marriage in the highest orders of society. No one of Philip's immediate subjects would venture to officiate at the nuptial ceremony, which was performed by a Norman bishop ; ^ but the union had been sanctioned by a council at Reims in 1094, when the death of Bertha appeared to have removed one important c Milman, iii. 121. See the next torlans (Pref. 18), where a history of chapter. the fashion is given. The author of *> Bertrada was of the family of the 'Eulogium Historiarum' (Chron. Montfort, and her son by Fulk was and ^lem. of G. B.) says of such grandfather of Henry II. of England shoes, " Potius juuicantur ungulse (Palgrave, 'Norm, and Eng.' iv. 249, dtemonumquamornamentahominum.' 266). Fulk had already buried one iii. 231 (a.u. 1362). The count after- wife, and divorced two who were still wards mairied a fifth wife, and was living, when he married Bertrada (Re- visited on friendly terms by Philip and cucil dcs Hist. xvi. Pref. 38). He is Bertrada. Ordcric. iii. 388. celebrated in the history of fashion as ' Urban, in 1092, says that the having devised, for the purpose of con- bishop of Senlis was supposed to have ccaling his ill-shapen feet, the long- blessed the nuptials (Ep. 63, Patrol, pointed shoes, "en poulaine," which cli.). Orderic names Odo of Bayeux for three centuries defied the anathc- (iii. 387) ; but see the editor's note, mas of councils (Order. Vital, iii. 323; Brial holds with William of Malmes- Sismondi, iv. 500); but his claim to bury (Gesta Regum, 404) that William originality of invention is disproved by archbishop of Rouen olficiuted. Rec. Brial in voU xvi. of the French His- des Hist. \vi. Pref 49. Chap. IV. a.d. 1095. COUNCIL OF CLERMONT. 385 obstacle to it'^ Ivo, bishop of Chartres, a pious and honest prelate, who was distinguished above all his con- temporaries for his knowledge of ecclesiastical law, alone openly protested against it ; he disregarded a citation to the council, and was not to be moved either by the king's entreaties, or by imprisonment and the forfeiture of his property.^ Hugh, archbishop of Lyons, who had been reconciled with Urban and restored to his office of legate,™ excommunicated the king in a council at Autun, which was not then within the kingdom of France ; ^ but Philip obtained absolution from Rome by swearing that, since he had become aware of the pope's objections to his marriage, he had abstained from conjugal intercourse with Bertrada. Urban, however, now knew that this story was false, and was resolved to strike a decisive blow. A council had been summoned to meet at Clermont in Auvergne. The citations to it were urgent, and charged the clergy to stir up the laity in the cause of the crusade.^ Among the vast assemblage which was drawn together were fourteen archbishops, two hundred and twenty-five bishops, and about a hundred abbots ; p the town and all the neighbouring villages were filled with strangers, while great numbers were obliged to lodge in tents.i The sessions lasted ten days:'^ the usual canons were passed in condemnation of simony, plu- ralities, and impropriations ; the observation of the truce of God was enjoined;^ and Urban ventured to advance a step beyond Gregory, by forbidding not only the prac- tice of lay investiture, but that any ecclesiastic should ^ Rec. des. Hist. xvi. Pref. 58. the numbers, Hist. Litt. viii. 225. ' Ivo, Epp. 14-15, 20-3 (Patrol. 1 Michaud, i. 59. clxii.) ; Neand. vii. 167. ' There is no official record of the ™ Hist. Litt. ix. 310, council, and our accounts of it must be " Hard. vi. 1711. drawn from the chroniclers. Hbt.Litt * Wilken, i. 51. viii. 544, «• See, as to the various reports of * Hard, vi. 1718-20. VOL. IV. 25 ^86 COUNCIL OF CLERMONT. Book VI. swear fealty to a temporal lord — a prohibition which was intended entirely to do away with all dependence of the church on the secular power.* Philip, the suzerain, although not the immediate ruler of the country in which the council was held, was excommunicated for his adultery with Bertrada ; and, startling as such an act would have been at another time, it was not only allowed to pass, but even was unnoticed, amid the engrossing interest of the greater subject which filled the minds of all." At the sixth session the crusade was proposed. Urban ascended a pulpit in the market-place and addressed the assembled multitude. He dwelt on the ancient glories of Palestine, where every foot of ground had been hallowed by the presence of the Saviour, of his virgin mother, of prophets and apostles. Even yet, he said, God vouch- safed to manifest his favour to it in the yearly miracle of the light from heaven, by which the lamps of the holy sepulchre were kindled at the season of the Saviour's passion — a miracle which ought to soften all but flinty hearts.^ He enlarged on the present condition of the sacred territory — possessed as it was by a godless people, the children of the Egyptian handmaid ; on the indignities, the outrages, the tyranny, which they inflicted on Chris- tians redeemed by Christ's blood. He appealed to many of those who were present as having themselves been eye-witnesses of these wrongs. Nor did he forget to speak of the progressive encroachments of the Turks on Christendom — of the danger which threatened Constan- » C. 15. The reason assigned was, xxi. 4) and others have supposed that in somewhat stronger language, the Gregory issued a similar decree ; but same which had been advanced by this is a mistake, although there can Hincmar (see p. 146)— that it was abo- be little doubt that the abolition of minable that hands which consecrated homage was part of his plan. Planck, the body of the Lord should be defiled IV. ii. 13. by being placed between hands stained " Guib. Novig. ii. 2; Milman, iii. by impurity, rapine, and bloodshed 122. (c. 9, ap. Hard. vi. 1739 ; Roger * Hard. vi. 1726, 1*. See above pii Hoveden. 268). De Marca (VIIL 193. Chap. IV. a.d. 1095. THE CRUSADE. 387 tinople, the treasury of so many renowned and precious relics.y "Cast out the bondwoman and her son!" he cried; "let all the faithful arm. Go forth, and God shall be with you. Turn against the enemies of the Christian name the weapons which you have stained with mutual slaughter. Redeem your sins by obedience — your rapine, your burnings, your bloodshed. Let the famous nation of the Franks display their valour in a cause where death is the assurance of blessedness. Count it joy to die for Christ where Christ died for you. Think not of kindred or home; you owe to God a higher love ; for a Christian, every place is exile, every place is home and country." He insisted on the easiness of the remedy for sin which was now proposed — the relaxation of all penance in favour of those who should assume the cross.^ They were to be taken under the protection of the church; their persons and their pro- perty were to be respected, under the penalty of excom- munication. For himself, he would, like Moses, hold up his hands in prayer for them, while they were engaged in fighting the Amalekites.^ The pope's speech was interrupted by an enthusiastic cry from the whole assemblage — " God wills it ! " ^ — words which afterwards became the war-cry of the cru- saders ; and when he ceased, thousands enlisted for the enterprise by attaching the cross to their shoulders. The y Hugo Floriac. ap. Pertz, ix. 392. proceedings at Clermont. The sum- ■' Plenary indulgence {i.e. forgive- mary in the text is put together from ness, not of particular sins, but of all) William of Tyre (i. 15), a Vatican MS. was now, for the first time, introduced. (Hard, vi, 1725), and William o Fleury, Disc, sur les Croisades, c. 2 ; Malmesbury (527, seqq.). The state- see below. Book vi. c. xiii. 4. 12. ment of Michaud (i. 61) and otheis, » On the various versions of Urban's that Peter the Hermit excited the speech, see Hist. Litt. viii. 547-57 council by his eloquence, is unwar- Michaud, i. 64; Milman, iii. 133 ranted by the old accounts. Sybel, i7e). Hefele, v. 207. It seems probable •» "jDiex lo volt 1 " Wilken, i. 53; that they represent several speeches Michaud, i. 64. made by him in the course of the 388 PREPARATIONS FOR Book VI. most important promise of service was that of Raymond of St. Gilles, the powerful count of Toulouse, who was represented at the council by envoys. <^ Adhemar of Monteil, bishop of Le Puy, who had already been a pil- grim to Jerusalem,*^ stepped forward with a joyous look, declared his intention of joining the crusade, and begged the papal benediction.® A cardinal pronounced a con- fession of sins in the name of all who were to share in the expedition, and the pope bestowed his absolution on them.* Adhemar was nominated as legate for the holy war; the pope, in answer to a request that he would head the Christian army, excused himself on the ground that the care of the church detained him ; but he pro- mised to follow as soon as circumstances should allow.^ It was believed that the resolution of the council was on the same day known throughout the world, among infidels as well as among Christians.^ Urban remained in France until August of the year 1096, and held many councils at which he enforced the duty of joining the holy war. The bishops and clergy seconded his exhortations, and everywhere a ferment of preparation arose. Famines, pestilences, civil broils, por- tents in the heavens, had produced a general disposition to leave home and to engage in a career of adventure.* Women urged their husbands, their brothers, and their sons to take the cross ; and those who refused became marks « Fulcher, i. i ; Baldric, 1069 ; Order. thor of the hymn " Salve regina," Vital, iii. 469 ; Gibbon, v. 410. which from the name of his see was '^ Adhemar had been a soldier in his styled "antiphona Podiensis." (Hist. youth, and, on his return from the Langued. 311 ; Alber. 3 Font. ap. Holy Land, he had gone to war with Bouq. xiii. 697.) See as to him Pal- the viscounts of Polignac, who had grave, iv. 561, 565. usurped a third part of the revenue of * Bald. 1069 ; Order. Vital, iii. 469. his cathedral. The bishop was success- ' Rob. S. Remig. i. 2. ful, and forced them to a compromise ^ Wilken, i. 55-6 ; Michaud, i. 65. by which, for a certain sum, they gave ^ Rob. S. Rem. i. 2. up all claims on his church (Hist, de ' Bernold, 460-1 ; Ekkehard, 213 ; Languedoc, ii. 271, 289, Append. No. Guib. Novig. iii. 3; Chron. S. Maxent. 4). He is said to hav« been the au- ap. Bouquet, xii. 403 ; Wilken, i. 76. Chap. IV. a.d. 1095-6- THE CRUSADE. 389 for universal contempt.^ Men who on one day ridiculed the crusade as a chimera, were found on the next day- disposing of their all in order to join it.^ Lands were sold or mortgaged, to raise the means of equipment for their owners ; ™ artisans and husbandmen sold their tools ; the price of land and of all immoveable property- fell, while horses, arms, and other requisites for the expe- dition became exorbitantly dear.° A spirit of religious enthusiasm animated all ranks, and with it was combined a variety of other motives. The life of war and adven- ture in which the nations of the west found their delight was now consecrated as holy and religious ;° even the clergy might without scruple fight against the enemies of the faith.P The fabulous splendours and wealth of the east were set before the imagination, already stimulated by the romantic legends of Charlemagne and his peers. 392 DISASTERS OF Book VL animated by the vilest fanaticism. It is said that their march was directed by the movements of a goose and a goat, which were supposed to be inspired.^ Their passage through the towns of the Moselle and the Rhine, the Maine and the Danube, was marked by the plunder and savage butchery of the Jewish inhabitants, who in other quarters also suffered from the fury excited among the multitude against all enemies of the Christian name. Bishops endeavoured to rescue the victims by admitting them to a temporary profession of Christianity ; but some of the more zealous Jews shut themselves up in their houses, slew their children, and disappointed their per- secutors by burning themselves with all their property."^ No provision had been made for the subsistence of these vast hordes in the countries through which they were to pass. Their dissoluteness, disorder, and pkmder- ing habits raised the populations of Hungary and Bulgaria against them ;^ and the later swarms suffered for the misdeeds of those who had gone before. Gottschalk and his followers were destroyed in Hungary, after having been treacherously persuaded to lay down their arms.° • Alb. Aq. i. 31; Guib. Novig. viii. church, and murdered all, of whatever g. See Michelet, iii. 25 ; Wilken, i. sex or age, who refused to become 96 ; Michaud, i. 88-90. Dean Milman Christians. (De Vita sua, ii 5, Patrol, quotes from Billings on 'The Temple clvi.) Hugh of Flavigny has a curious Church' (but without confidently passage — " Certe minim videri potest adopting it), an explanation which con- quad una die pluribus in locus exter- nects these creatures with gnosticism. minatio ilia [Judaeorum] facta est. Note on Gibbon, v. 418. quanquam a multis improbetur fac- °" Ekkehard, Ann. 1096 ; Annal. tum et religioni adversari judicetur. Saxo, 729 : Gesta Treverorum, c. 17, Scimus tamen quia non potuit immu- ap. Pertz, viii. ; Alb. Aq. i. 26 ; An- tari quin fieret, cum multi sacerdotes, nal. S. Disib., 1096. Guibertof Nogent data excommunicationis sententia, relates that, while some were making multi principes, terrore comminatio- their preparations for the crusade at nis, id perturbare conati sint." Chron. Rouen, they began to ask, "Why 1. ii.. Patrol, cliv. 353. should we go so far to attack God's ° Ekkehard, 215 ; Alb. Aq. i. 7-13 : enemies, when we have before our Guib, Novig. ii. 4 ; AnnaL S. Disib. eyes the Jews, than whom no nation a.d. 1096. is more bitter iu enmity to Him?" ° Alb. Aq. i. 25; Will. Tyr. i. 2j-i; They then drove the Jews into a Wilken, L 96. Chap. IV. a.d. 1096. THE FIRST CRUSADERS. 393 Others were turned back from the frontier of that country, or struggled home to tell the fate of their companions, who had perished in battles and sieges ; while want and fatigue aided the sword of their enemies in its ravages. p The elder Walter died at|Philippopoli;'i but his nephew and Peter the Hermit struggled onwards, and reached Constantinople with numbers which, although greatly- diminished, were still imposing and formidable."^ The emperor Alexius was alarmed by the unexpected form in which the succour which he had requested presented itself; and the thefts and unruliness of the strangers disturbed the peace of his capital.^ It is said that he was impressed by the eloquence of Peter, and urged him to wait for the arrival of the other crusaders ; but the hermit's followers were resolved to fight, and the emperor was glad to rid himself of them by conveying them across the Bosphorus.* A great battle took place under the walls of Nicasa, the city which had been hallowed for Christians by the first general council, but which had become the capital of the Turkish kingdom. Walter the Pennyless, a brave soldier, who had energeti- cally striven against the difficulties of his position, was slain, with most of his followers. Many were made prisoners, and some of them even submitted to apostatize. The Turks, after their victory, fell on the camp, where they slaughtered the unarmed and helpless multitude; and the bones of those who had fallen were gathered into a vast heap, which remained as a monument of their luckless enterprise." The scanty remains of the host were rescued by Alexius, at the request of Peter, who had P Bemold, a.d. 1096. 1 Order. Vital, iii. 479. that the crusaders were preceded by ' Walter arrived on Aug. i. Sybel, swarms of locusts, p. 284. 250. * Ann a Comn. p. 286 ; Rob. S. Rem, • Anna Comnena, 1. x. p. 283, ed. >. 3. Paris ; Guib. Novig. iv. 2 ; Baldr. " Id. 4 ; Anna Comn. x. p. 287 ; Allx 107 1 : Gibbon, v. 431. Anna says Aq. i. 22. 39^ THE FIRST CRUSADE. Book VI returned to Constantinople in disgust at the disorderly character of his companions; they sold their arms to the emperor, and endeavoured to find their way back to their homes.^ It is reckoned that in these ill-conducted expeditions half a million of human beings had already perished, without any other effect than- that of adding to the confidence of the enemy, who dispersed the armour of the slain over the east in proof that the Franks were not to be dreaded.^ In the meantime the more regular forces of the crusa- ders were preparing. Every country of the west, with the exception of Spain, where the Christians were engaged in their own continual holy war with the infidels,^ sent its contributions to swell the array.^ Germany, at enmity with the papacy, had not been visited by the preachers of the crusade, and, when the crowds of pilgrims began to stream through the country, the inhabitants mocked at them as crazy, in leaving certainties for wild adventure ; but by degrees, and as the more disciplined troops appeared among them, the Germans too caught the contagion of enthusiasm. Visions in the sky — combats of airy warriors, and a beleaguered city — added to the excitement. It was said that Charlemagne had risen from his grave to be the leader, and preachers appeared who promised to conduct those who should follow them dry- shod through the sea.^ * Alb. Aq. i. 23 ; Baldr. 1073 ; 28 ; Gibbon, v. 436-7. Order, iii. 491; Wilken, L 88-94; ^ This was the age of the Cid, whose Michaud, i. 94 ; Sybel, 254. death is placed in 1090. Pagi, xviii. 7 Raym. deAgiles, 5; Guib. Novig. 109. ii. 5 ; Wilken, i. 101. Heeren obser^'es * William of Maln\esbury takes the that the estimates of the crusaders, opportunity to satirize his neighbours being formed merely by conjecture, — "Tunc Wallensis venationem sal- must be received with much distrust tuum, tunc Scottus familiaritatem (8-;). Fulcher of Chartres reckons the pulicum, tunc Danus continuationem fighting men of the first crusade at potuum, tunc Noricus cruditatem re- Boo, 000, and the whole multitude at liquit piscium." $?}■ ten times that number ! i. 4 ; comp. '" Ekkehard, 2T4-»;v Alb. Aq. iii. 37 : Choiseul-Daillecourt, Chaf. IV. A.D. 1096. GODFREY OF BOUILLON. 395 Of the chiefs, the most eminent by character was Godfrey of Bouillon, son of Count Eustace of Boulogne, who had accompanied William of Normandy in the in- vasion of England, and descended from the Carolingian family through his mother, the saintly Ida, a sister of Godfrey the Hunchbacked.® In his earlier years, Godfrey had been distinguished as a partisan of the emperor. It is said that at the Elster, where he carried the banner of the empire, he gave Rudolf of Swabia his death wound by driving the shaft into his breast, and that he was the first of Henry's army to mount the walls of Rome.^ His services had been rewarded by Henry with the marquisate of Antwerp after the death of his uncle Godfrey, and to this was added in 1089 the dukedom of Lower Lorraine, which had been forfeited by the emperor's rebel son Conrad.® A fever which he had caught at Rome long disabled him for active exertion ; but at the announce- ment of the crusade he revived, and — partly perhaps from a feeling of penitence for his former opposition to the pope — he vowed to join the enterprise, for which he raised the necessary funds by pledging his castle of Bouillon, in the Ardennes, to the bishop of Liege.* Godfrey is described by the chroniclers as resembling a •= Genealog. Comitum Buloniensum, Otbert, (who will be mentioned again ap. Pertz, ix. 300-1 ; Vita Idse, Patrol. hereafter) was so anxious to get pos- clv. ; Order. Vital, iii. 612. session of it, that for this purpose he ^ W. Tyr. ix. 8 ; W. Malmesb. 572 ; stripped St. Lambert's relics of their Gibbon, v. 423 ; Wilken, i. 68. Von golden case, and sold the ornaments of Sybel rejects the accounts of God- his churches. It was to become per- frey's earlier history, and labours to manently the property of the see, unless show that his character has been un- redeemed within a certain time by duly exalted and idealized. (262, 535, Godfrey or one of his next three suc- seqq.) See Giesebr. iii. 370. cessors ; and so it remained (Gesta e SIgebert, Ann. 1089 ; Luden, ix. Pontif. Leodiens. ap. Bouquet, xiiu 65. 607). See the 'Triumphale Buloni- *■ Alb. Aq. V. 13 ; W. Tyr. ix. 8 ; cum' of Reiner, a monk of Li€ge, i. i W. Malmesb. 574 ; Michaud, i. 96. (Patrol, cciv.), where it is said that As the castle, from its position, had Godfrey's brother Eustace, on return- been a source of great annoyance to ing from the Holy Land, renouncfiij f^e people of the diocese, the bishop, all claim to if. 396 LEADERS OP fHE CRUSADE. Book VI. monk rather than a knight in the mildness of his ordinary demeanour, but as a Hon in the battle-field — as wise in counsel, disinterested in purpose, generous, affable, and deeply religious.^ Among the other chiefs were his brothers Eustace and Baldwin; Hugh of Vermandois, brother of the king of France ; the counts Raymond of Toulouse, Robert of Flanders, Stephen of Blois and Chartres; and Robert duke of Normandy, the brave, thoughtless, indolent son of William the Conqueror.^ Each leader was wholly independent of the others, and the want of an acknowledged head became the cause of many disasters.* In order that the passage of the army might not press too severely on any country, it was agreed that its several divisions should proceed to Constantinople by different routes.^ Godfrey, at the head of 10,000 horse and 80,000 foot, took the way through Hungary, where his prudence was successfully exerted in overcoming the exasperation raised by the irregular bands which had preceded him.i The crusaders from Southern France in general went through Italy, and thence by sea either to the ports of Greece and Dalmatia, or direct to Constantinople.™ A large force of Normans, under Roger of Sicily and Bohemund, the son of Robert Guiscard by his first marriage, were engaged in the siege of Amalfi, when Hugh of Vermandois with his crusaders arrived in the neigh- bourhood. The enthusiasm of the strangers infected the besiegers, and Bohemund, who had been disinherited in favour of his half-brother, and had been obliged to content himself with the principality of Tarentum, resolved to turn the enterprise to his own advantage. He raised the 8 Radulph. Cadom. 14 ; Rob. S. "^ Wilken, 1. 77. Rem. i. 3 ; W. Tyr. ix. 5. » Ekkehard, 215 ; Alb. Aq. iL 6; ^ Urban. Ep. ad Alex. Comn. ap. Wilken, i. 104. Hard. 1645; Radulph. Cadom. 15. "• Fulcher, i. a; W Tyr. ii. 17, • Sybel, a83. seqq. Chap. IV. a.d. 1096. CRUSADERS AT CONSTANTINOPLE. 397 cry of '* God wills it ! " and, sending for a mantle of great value, caused it to be cut up into crosses, which he distributed among the eager soldiers, by whose defection Roger found himself compelled to abandon the siege. The new leader was distinguished by deep subtlety and selfishness ; but with him was a warrior of very opposite fame — his cousin or nephew Tancred, whose character has (perhaps not without some violence to facts) been idealized into the model of Christian chivalry." The gradual appearance of the crusading forces at Con- stantinople renewed the uneasiness of Alexius, and the accession of Bohemund, who had been known to him of old in Guiscard's wars against the empire, was especially alarming." That the emperor treated his allies with a crafty, jealous, distrustful policy, is certain, even from the panegyrical history of his daughter Anna Comnena ; p but the statements of the Latin chroniclers ^ are greatly at variance with those of the Byzantine princess, and it would seem that there is no foundation for the darker charges of treachery which they advance against Alexius."^ Godfrey was obliged to resort to force in order to establish an understanding with him;» and the emperor then took another method of proceeding. While obliged to entertain his unwelcome visitors during the remainder of the winter season, he plied the leaders with flattery and with gifts, and obtained from one after another of them ^ - , . , . ^ . A.D. 1097. an act of homage, with a promise to resign to him such parts of their expected conquests as had " Tudeb. 1. i. col. 767 ; Rob. S. Tudeb. L ii. col. 770 ; Guib. Novig. Rem. ii. 2 ; Guib. Novig. iii. 2 ; Chron. iv. 21. Casin. iv. 11 ; Lupus Protospatha, P Pp. 293, seqq. Ann. 1096, ap. Pertz, v. ; Orderic, iii. •! See, e.g.. Will. Malmesbr. 525 ; 487; Wilken, i. 123-4. As to Tan- R. de Agiles,_;)awzw; Ekkehard, 216; cred's parentage, see Giannone, 1. ix. Rad. Cadom. 9 ; Chron. S. Pantaleon. c. 7 ; Murat. Ann. VI. i. 73. Sir F. ap. Eccard. i. 912. Palgrave makes Bohemund a deep "■ Schrockh, xxv. 64 ; Wilken, i. 109. mover in the crusade from the first. * A. Comn. p. 294 ; Guib. Novig. ii Comn. 1. X. pp. 285, 303-5 ; 5 ; W. Tyr. ii. 6-8. 398 THE CRUSADERS IN ASIA. Book VL formerly belonged to the empire ; in return for which he promised to provide for their supply on the march, and to follow with an army for their support. He skilfully decoyed one party across the Bosphorus before the arrival of another ; and by Whitsuntide 1097 the whole host had passed into Asia.* They had been joined at Constantinople by Peter the Hermit," and were accom- panied by an imperial commissioner, whose golden sub- stitute for a nose excited the wonder and distrust of the Franks.^ The Turks of Roum were now before them, and, on approaching the capital of the kingdom, their zeal and rage were excited by the sight of the hill of bones which marked the place where Walter and his companions had fallen.y Nicsea was besieged from the 14th of May to the 20th of June, but on its capture the Latins were disappointed of their expected plunder by finding that the Turks, when it became untenable, had been induced by the imperial commissioner to make a secret agreement for surrendering it to Alexius. The discovery filled them with disgust and indignation, which were hardly mitigated by the presents which the emperor offered by way of compensation ; and they eagerly looked for an oppor- tunity of requiting their perfidious ally.^ A fortnight later was fought the battle of Dorylasum, in which the fortune of the day is said to have been turned by heavenly champions, who descended to aid the Christians.* The victory was so decisive that " A. Comn. pp. 298-300 ; Rob. S. naso simo mentis proditionem satis in- Rem. ii. 3 ; Guib. Novig. iii. 2 ; Order, dicabat " (Matth. Paris, Hist. Angl. i. Vital, iii, 499 ; Gibbon, v. 432-5 ; 93. Wilken, i. 119-21 ; Michaud, i. 111-17 ; ^ Wilken, i. 141. Sybel, 319, seqq, » A. Comn. 1. xi. pp. 310-11 ; Alb. '' Alb. Aq. ii. 19. Aq. ii. 22-7 ; R. Agil. 4 ; Fulcher, i. * "Naso desciso, et ob id utens 4; Guib. Novig. iii. 5 ; Baldr. 1083-4; aureo " (Guib. Novig. iv. 4). *' Nares W. Tyr. iii. n ; Ord. Vital iii. 506-7 ; habens mutilas, in signum mentis per- Wilken, i. 150. versae" (W, Tyr. ii. 23). "Qui in * R. Agil. 6 (who, however, adds. Chap. IV. a.d. 1097. SIEGE OF ANTIOCH. 399 the sultan of Roum was driven to seek support among the brethren of his race and religion in the east.'' The army had already suffered severely, and, as it advanced through Asia Minor, it was continually thinned by skirmishes and sieges, by the difficulties of the way, and by scarcity of food and water.^ The greater part of the horses perished, and their riders endeavoured to supply their place by cows and oxen — nay, it is said, by the large dogs and rams of the country.^ Godfrey was for a time disabled by wounds received in an encounter with a savage bear.® Disunion appeared among the leaders/ and some of them began to show a preference of their private interests to the great object of the ex- pedition.^ Baldwin, disregarding the remonstrances of his companions, accepted an invitation to assist a Chris- tian prince or tyrant of Edessa, who adopted him and promised to make him his heir. The prince's subjects rose against him, and, in endeavouring to escape by an outlet in the wall of the city, he was pierced with arrows before reaching the ground, whereupon Baldwin estabhshed himself in his stead. ^ But the great mass of the crusaders held on their march for Jerusalem. At length they arrived in Syria, and on the i8th of October laid siege to Antioch. The miseries endured during this siege, which lasted eight months, were fright- ful. The tents of the crusaders were demolished by the winds, or were rotted by the heavy rains, which converted " Sed nos non vidimus ") ; Michaud, Not. p. 362, i. 143-7. Here we meet with a well- ^ Alb. Aq. iv. 1-7 ; Gibbon, v. 440. known name, — " Robertus vero Pari- "•■ lb. 438 ; Wilken, i. 157. siensis, miseris volens succurrere, * Rob. S. Rem. iii. 4 ; Tirdeb. ii. 3. sagitta volatili confixus et extinctus « A!b. Aq. iii. 21 ; W. Tyr. iii. 18. est" (Alb. Aq. ii. 39). AnnaComnena ^ Alb. Aq. iii. 8-1 1. says that the Frank who, at the « Michaud. i. 141. homage to Alexius, took the emperor's •> Fulcher, i. 6 ; AIIx Aq. iii. 19-94 seat, was badly wounded at Dorylaium Guib. Novig. iii. 6; W. Tyr. iy. 5 (pp. 300-1, 317); and Ducange favours Wilken, i. 167-9; Sybel, 376. the opinion of his identity with Robert. 400 SIEGE OF ANTIOCH. Book VI. their encampment into a swamp ; * their provisions had been thoughtlessly wasted in the beginning of the siege, and they were soon brought to the extremity of distress ; the flesh of horses, camels, dogs, and mice, grass and thistles, leather and bark, were greedily devoured; and disease added its ravages to famine.^ Parties which were sent out to forage were unable to find any suppHes, and returned with their numbers diminished by the attacks of the enemy. ^ The horses were reduced from 70,000 to less than 1000, and even these were mostly unfit for service.™ Gallant knights lost their courage and deserted ; among them was Stephen of Blois, who, under pretence of sickness, withdrew to Alexandretta, with the intention of providing for his own safety if the enterprise of his comrades should miscarry.^ The golden-nosed Greek commissioner, looking on the ruin of the crusaders as certain, obtained leave to depart by promising to return with reinforcements and supplies, but was careful not to reappear.^ Peter the Hermit, unable to bear the privations of the siege, and perhaps the reproaches of the multitude, ran away, with William, count of Melun, who, from the heaviness of his blows, was styled " the Car- penter " ; but the fugitives were brought back by order of Bohemund, who made them swear to remain with the army.P Yet in the midst of these sufferings the camp of the crusaders was a scene of gross Hcentiousness, until the legate Adhemar compelled them to remove all women from it, to give up gaming, and to seek deliver- ance from their distress by penitential exercises.*^ As the spring advanced, the condition of the army improved ; ' Fulch. i. 7 ; Rob. S. Rem. iv. 2 ; ° Fulch. i. 7 ; Alb. Aq. iii. 14 ; Alb. Aq. iii. 52 ; W. Tyr. iv. 17. Tudeb. col. 794 ; W. Tyr. v. 10. " R. Agil. 5. ° Tudeb. I. ii. col. 780 ; Guib. • W. Tyr. iv. 17. Novig. iv. 51 ; W. Tyr. iv. 21. "^ Ans. de Ribodim. col. 473 ; Tudeb. P Rob. S. Rem. iv. 3 ; Tudeb. coL 1. ii. col. 780 ; R. Agil. 8 ; Alb. Aq. iv. 779 ; Guib. iv. 4. b8. h R. Agil. 8 ; VV. Tyr. iv. a». Chap. IV. a.d. 1097-8. DISTRESS OF THE CRUSADERS. 401 supplies of provisions were obtained from Edessa, and from Genoese ships which had arrived in the harbour of St. Symeon ; most of the deserters returned ; and on the 2nd of June, through the treachery of one Firuz, who had opened a negotiation with Bohemund, and professed to embrace Christianity, the crusaders got possession of the city, although the fortress still remained in the hands of the enemy.'" The capture of Antioch was marked by barbarous and shameful excesses.^ All who refused to become ChriS' tians were ruthlessly put to the sword.^ The crusaders, unwarned by their former distress, recklessly wasted their provisions, and when, soon after, an overwhelming force of Turks appeared, under Kerboga, prince of Mosul, who had been sent by the sultan of Bagdad to the relief of Antioch, they found themselves shut up between these new enemies and the garrison of the fortress."^ Their sufferings soon became more intense than ever. The most loathsome food was sold at exorbitant prices ; old hides, thongs, and shoe-leather were steeped in water, and were greedily devoured ; ^ even human flesh was eaten. Warriors were reduced to creep feebly about the silent streets, supporting themselves on staves .^ The cravings of famine levelled all ranks ; nobles sold their horses and arms to buy food, begged without shame, or intruded themselves unbidden at the meals of meaner men ; while some, in despair and indiflerence to life, with- ' Radulph. Cadom. 58-72 ; Alb. Aq. Latine, et infidelitatis nota rufis inuri- iv. 20-6 ; Rob. S. Rem. v. 4 ; Baldr. tur, isdem ergo a sua minima linea col. 1 102 ; Will. Tyr. v. 11-23 I W. exorbitasse probatur." Guib. Novig. Malmesb. 556-8 ; Ord. Vital, 524, vi. 5. seqq. ; Gibbon, v. 442-6 ; Wilken, i. » Order. Vital, iii. 540; Rad. Cad. 67. 176-201 ; Michaud, ii. 10-41 ; Sybel, * Ans. de Ribodim. col. 474. 383-410. Firuz afterwards relapsed. " Fulch. i. 11 ; Alb. Aq. iv. i ; The Franks called him Pyrrhus, and Ans. de Ribodim. col. 474. thus he came under the odium attached * R. Agil. 16; Tudeb. coL 797. to the traditional complexion of Judas. Alb. Aq. iv. 34 ; Baldr. col. 1117. " Si enim Pyrrhtcs Grsce rufus est ' W. Tyr. vi. 7. VOL. IV. 26 402 THE HOLY LANCE. Book VL drew to hide themselves and to die/ Many deserted, — William the Carpenter being especially noted among them for the violation of his late oath ; and while some of these were cut off by the enemy, others surrendered them- selves and apostatized.^ Rumours of the distress which prevailed, even exaggerated (if exaggeration were possible), reached Stephen of Blois in his retreat; regarding the condition of his brethren as hopeless, he set out on his return to the west, and, on meeting Alexius, who was advancing with reinforcements, he gave such a representa- tion of the case as furnished the emperor with a pretext for turning back, and leaving his allies to a fate which seemed inevitable.^ In the extremity of this misery, Peter Bartholomes, a disreputable priest of Marseilles, announced a revelation which he professed to have thrice received in visions from St. Andrevy — that the lance which pierced the Redeemer's side was to be found in the church of St. Peter. The legate made light of the story ; but Raymond of Tou- louse, to whose force Peter was attached, insisted on a search, and, after thirteen men had dug a whole day, the head of a lance was found.^ The crusaders passed at once from despair to enthusiasm. Peter the Hermit was sent to Kerboga, with a message desiring him to with- draw ; but the infidel scornfully replied by vowing that the invaders should be compelled to embrace the faith of Islam, and the Christians resolved to fight. After a solemn preparation by prayer, fasting, and administration of the holy eucharist, all that could be mustered of effective soldiers made a sally from the city, with tlie » Rad. Cad. 73, seqq. ; Alb. Aq. iv. Aq. iv. 37-40; W. Tjt. vi. 9-12. 36, seqq. ; R. S. Rem. vi. 3 ; W. Tyr. <= R. Agil. 14-15 ; Alb. Aq. iv. 44-7 ; vi. 7 ; Order. Vital, iii. 546-51 ; Wilken, W. Tyr. vi. 14. See the Hist. Langued. i. 210 ; Michaud, ii. 45-7. ii. 309-10. Anna Comnena confounds ■ Guib. Novig. vi. 3. this Peter with the Hermit and with * Anna Comn. 1. xi. pp. 324-5 ; Alb. Adhemar. 1. xi. p. 326. Chap. IV. A.D.1098. TAKING OF ANTIOCH. 403 sacred lance borne by the legate's chaplain, the chro- nicler Raymond of Agiles.** The Saracens, divided among themselves by fierce dissen- sions, fled before the unexpected attack, leaving behind them an immense mass of spoil ; and again the victory of the Christians was ascribed to the aid of celestial warriors, who are said to have issued from the neighbouring mount- ains in countless numbers, riding on white horses, and armed in dazzling white.® The fortress was soon after surrendered into their hands ; ^ but the unburied corpses which poisoned the air produced a violent pestilence, and among its earliest victims was the pious and martial legate Adhemar.^ Fatal as this visitation was to those who had been enfeebled by the labours and privations of the siege, it was yet more so to a force of 1500 Germans, who arrived by sea soon after its appearance, and were cut off almost to a man.^ Godfrey, fearing a return of the malady which he had caught at Rome, sought safety from the plague by withdrawing for a time into the terri- tory of his brother, Baldwin of Edessa,^ A report of the capture of Antioch and of the legate's death was sent off to Urban, with a request that he would come in person to take possession of St. Peter's eastern see, and would follow up the victory over the unbehevers by reducing the schismatical Christians of the east to the communion of the Roman church.^ In the meantime •* R. Agil. 17 ; Ans. de Ribodim. white and riding white horses, which col. 475 ; Rob. S. Rem. vii. 2 ; Tudeb. in every encounter spread destruction col. 800. See the extracts from Mus- among the infidels; and the question sulman writers in Michaud, Bibl. des revealed to the crusaders that they Croisades, iv. 9. were supported by superhuman aid. « Rob. S. Rem. vii. 3-4; Baldr. col. Rob. S. Rem. v. 4. 1123; Fulcher, i. 14; Will. Tyr. vi. '' Id. vii. 4 ; Tudeb. col. 800. 18-22; Rad. Cad. 100; Orderic, iii. - Alb. Aq. v. 4; Baldr. col. 1127. 548-59 ; Wilken, i. 213-24 ; Michaud, •" Alb. Aq. v. 23 ; W. Tyr. vii. 8. ii. 50-9. Firuzis said, in a conference ' Alb. Aq. v. 13. with Bohemund, to have asked where '-^ The letter is in Fulcher, i 15. were the quarters of a troop, armed in 404 ADVANCE OF THE CRUSADERS. Book VI. the Greek patriarch was reinstated, although he soon found himself compelled to give way to a Latin ; ' and, after much discussion between the chiefs who asserted and those who denied that the conduct of Alexius had released them from their promise to him, Bohemund, in fulfilment of a promise which he had exacted as the condition of his obtaining the surrender of the city, was estabhshed as prince of Antioch.°^ Although the discovery of the holy lance had been the means of leading the crusaders to victory, the impos- ture was to cost its author dear. The Normans, when offended by his patron Raymond of Toulouse in the advance to Jerusalem, ridiculed the idea of St. Andrew's having chosen such a man for the medium of a revelation, and declared that the lance, which was clearly of Saracen manufacture, had been hidden by Peter himself. Peter offered, in proof of his veracity, to undergo the ordeal of passing between two burning piles, and the trial took place on Good Friday 1099. Pie was severely scorched ; but the multitude, who supposed him to have come out unhurt, crowded round him, threw him down in their excitement, and, in tearing his clothes into relics, pulled off pieces of his flesh with them. In consequence of this treatment he died on the twelfth day ; but to the last he maintained the credit of his story, and it continued to find many believers." ' Alb. Aq. V. 1 ; Will. Tyr. vi. 23. sed quia de lancea Domini dubitavi, "• Rob. S. Rem. v. 4; viii. i; R. qui maxime credere debuissem, de- Agil. 8, 21 ; Baldr. col. 1104, 1128 ; ductus sum in infernum, ibique capilli Wilken, i. 265 ; Sybel, 455. mci, ex hac dextera parte capitis, et " Rad. Cadom. 102, 108 ; Tudeb. medietas barbae combusta est ; et col. 807 ; R. Agil. 28-31 ; Will. Tyr. licet in poena non sim, tamen clare vii. 18. Guibert of Nogent is indig- Deum videre non potero, donee capilli nant with Fulcher for doubting the et barba sicut fantea uerant mihi suc- truth of the tale (Fulch. i. 10 ; Guib. creverint " (27). The chronicler also viii. 9). Raymond of Agiles has a relates that he himself had secretlj'- story of a priest to whom the legate doubted, and was put to confusion by Adhemar appeared after death, saying, finding, after the ordeal, that Peter " Ego sum in choro cum beato Nicolao, had been informed of his doubts by a Chap. IV. a.i>. 1099. JERUSALEM. 405 The ravages of the plague, and the necessity of re- cruiting their strength after the sufferings , • 1 , n , , , • 1 r A.D. 1099. which they had undergone, detained the crusaders at Antioch until March of the following year." Three hundred thousand, it is said, had reached Antioch, but famine and disease, desertion and the sword, had reduced their force to little more than 40,000, of whom only 20,000 foot and 1500 horse were fit for service ;P and on the march to Jerusalem their numbers were further thinned in sieges and in encounters with the enemy, so that at last there remained only 12,000 effective foot-soldiers, and from 1200 to 1300 horse. 'J Aided by the terror of the crusade, the Fatimite Arabs had succeeded in recovering Jerusalem from the Turks j and before Antioch the Christian leaders had received from the caliph an announcement of his conquest, with an offer to rebuild their churches and to protect their religion, if they would come to him as peaceful pilgrims. But they disdained to admit any distinction among the followers of the false prophet, and replied that, with God's help, they must win and hold the land which He had bestowed on their fathers.'' On the 6th of June, after a night during which their eagerness would hardly allow them to rest, they arrived in sight of the holy city. A cry of "Jerusalem ! Jerusalem ! It is the will of God !" burst forth, while with many the excess of joy could only find vent in tears and sighs. All threw themselves on their knees, and kissed the sacied ground. But vision of the blessed Virgin with bishop "J R. Agil. 38. The chronicler of Adhemar (28). Matthew Paris (of the St. Pantaleon's, at Cologne, says that 13th century) says that the lance was in this march they suffered from proved to be genuine "percopiosum hunger to such a degree as to eat ignis incendium, tarn in ligno quam in "corpora Sarracenorum jam foeten- mucrone." Hist. Angl. i. 133. tium." Eccard, i. 913. o Wilken, i. 253. ' Ekkehard, 217 ; Rob S Rem. v. P R. Agil. 25 ; Gibbon, v. 452 ; Mi- i ; W. Tyr. vii. 23. chaud, 'i. 81. 406 THE FIRST CRUSADE. Book VI. for the necessity of guarding against attack, they would have continued their pilgrimage with bare feet ; and they surveyed with eager credulity the traditional scenes of the Gospel story, which were pointed out by a hermit of Mount Olivet.^ The Christians who had been expelled from the city, and had since been miserably huddled together in the surrounding villages, crowded to them with tales of cruelty and profanation, which raised their excitement still higher. Trusting in their enthusiasm, and expecting miraculous aid, they at once assaulted the walls ; but they were unprovided with the necessary engines, and met with a disastrous repulse.*^ During the siege of forty days which followed, although those who could afford to buy were well supplied with food and wine," the crusaders in general suffered severely from hunger, and yet more from the fierce thirst produced by the heats of midsummer, and from the burning south wind of that parched country. The brooks were dried ; the cisterns had been destroyed or poisoned, and the wells had been choked up by the enemy ; water was brought in skins from a distance by peasants, and was sold at extravagant prices, but such was its impurity that many died of drinking it ; ^ the horses and mules were led six miles to water, exposed to the assaults of the Arabs ; many of them died, and the camp was infected by the stench of their unburied bodies.^ The want of wood was a serious difficulty for the besiegers. In order to remedy this, the buildings of the neighbourhood were pulled down, and their timber was employed in construct- ing engines of war ; ^ but the supply was insufficient, until Tancred (according to his biographer) accidentally • Rad. Cad. 111-13 ; Baldr. col. 1139 ; * R. Agil. 35 ; Alb. Aq. vi. 6; Guib. W. Tyr. vii. 24-5. Novig. vii. 2 ; Will. Tyr. viii. 4. t Fulcher, i. 18 ; Will, Tyr. vii. 23 ; y Baldr. col. 1141 ; Will. Tyr. viil Michaud, ii. 92-4. 7 ; Order. Vital, iii. 602. " Fulcher, i. 18 ; Alb. Aq. vi. 7. ' Baldr. col. 1141. Chap. IV. a.d. 1099. SIEGE OF JERUSALEM. 407 found in a cave some long beams which had been used as scaling-ladders by the Arabs in the late siege, and two hundred men under his command brought trees from a forest in the hills near Nablous."^ All — nobles and com- mon soldiers alike — now laboured at the construction of machines, while the defenders of the city were engaged in similar works, with better materials and implements. But the Christians received an unexpected aid by means of a Genoese fleet which opportunely arrived at Joppa. The sailors, finding themselves threatened by an over- whelming naval force from Egypt, forsook their ships and joined the besiegers of Jerusalem, bringing to them an ample supply of tools, and superior skill in the use of them.^ At length the works were completed, and the crusaders, in obedience, it is said, to a vision of the legate Adhemar, prepared by solemn religious exercises for the attack of the city. After having moved in slow procession around the walls, they ascended the Mount of Olives, where addresses were delivered by Peter the Hermit and Arnulf, a chaplain of Robert of Normandy. The princes composed their feuds, and all confessed their sins and implored a blessing on their enterprise, while the Saracens from the walls looked on with amazement, and endea- voured to provoke them by setting up crosses, which they treated with every sort of execration and contempt.*^ On the 14th of July a second assault was made. The besiegers, old and young, able-bodied and infirm, women as well as men, rushed with enthusiasm to the work. The towering structures, which had been so laboriously built, on being advanced to the walls, were opposed by the machines of the enemy ; beams and long grappling- hooks were thrust forth to overthrow them ; showers of * Rad. Cad. 120-1 ; Michaud, ii. 97, ^ W. Tyr, viii. 8-io. Cf. Cafar in who, in his appendix, identifies this Pertz, xviii. 44. v'itL the ancient forest of Sharon. " R. Agil. 36-7 ; W. Tyr. 8, 1 1, 408 JERUSALEM TAKEN Book VL arrows, huge stones, burning pitch and oil, Greek fire, were poured on the besiegers ; but their courage did not quail, their engines stood firm, and the hides with which these were covered resisted all attempts to ignite them. The fight was kept up for twelve hours, and at night the Christians retired.*^ Next day the contest was renewed, with even increased fiary. As a last means of disabling the great engine which was the chief object of their dread, the Saracens brought forward two sorceresses, who assailed it with spells and curses ; but a stone from the machine crushed them, and their bodies fell down from the ramparts, amid the acclamations of the besiegers.® In the end, however, the crusaders were repulsed, and were on the point of yielding to despair, when Godfrey saw on the Mount of Olives a warrior waving his resplendent shield as a signal for another effort.* Adhemar and others of their dead companions are also said to have appeared in front of the assailants, and after a fierce struggle they became masters of the holy city — the form of the legate being the first to mount the breach. It was noted that the capture took place at the hour of three on the afternoon of a Friday — the day and the hour of the Saviour's passion. § The victory was followed by scenes of rapine, lust, and carnage, disgraceful to the Christian name. The crusaders, inflamed to madness by the thought of the wrongs inflicted on their brethren, by the remembrance of their own fearful sufferings, and by the obstinate resistance of the besieged, spared neither old man, woman, nor infant. They forced their way into houses, slew the inhabitants, and seized all the treasures that Gibbon, v. 457. 53-5. « Will. Tyr. vii. 18 ; ix. i ; xi. 15, « See Alb. Aq. vi. 46-51, 58-62 ; riii. 26. 16-17 ; Will. Tyr. ; Schrockh, xxv. •* R. Agil. 35, 40 ; Wilken, 1. 301-6. 86-90. « Beraold, 466; Alb. Aq. vii. 7 ; »» Paschal II., Epp. 20, 28-9; Will Fulcher, i. 21 ; Guib. Novig. viii. i. Tyr. xi. 28. ^ Will. Tyr. ix. 15-18 ; Wilken, iL * See below, ch. viL Chap. IV. EFFECTS OF THE CRUSADES. 413 became the capital, was now isolated between the Latins of Syria and the Byzantine empire.^ But although the crusaders had saved the empire of Alexius, his relations with them were of no friendly kind. They taxed him with perfidy, with deserting them in their troubles, with secretly stirring up the infidels against them.^ They held themselves released by his conduct from the feudal obligations which they had contracted to him; Bohemund, who, after a captivity in the east, had revisited Europe, and had married a daughter of Philip of France,™ even for a time alarmed the empire by a renewal of his father's projects against it.° Instead of effecting, as had been expected, a reconciliation between the eastern and the western churches, the crusade had the effect of embittering their hostility beyond the hope of cure.** In endeavouring to estimate the crusades — the Trojan war of modern history p (as they have been truly styled) — we must not limit our consideration to their immediate purpose, to the means by which this was sought, or to the degree in which it was attained. They have often been condemned as undertaken for a chimerical object ; as an unjust aggression on the possessors of the Holy Land ; as having occasioned a lavish waste of life and treasure ; as having inflicted great hardships on society by the trans- ference of property, the impoverishment of families, and the heavy exactions for which they became the pretext ; as having produced grievous misrule and disorder by drawing away prelates, nobles, and at length even sovereigns, from their duties of government at home to engage in the war with the infidels.*! Much of this censure, however, seems ^ Gibbon, v. 467. ' Will. Tyr. x. 13. ii. c. 18 ; Finlay, 143, seqq. ^ Fulcher, ii. 28. o Fleury, Discours, c. 9. " Bernold, 466 ; Anna Comn. xi.- P See Heeren, 42. xiii. ; Fulcher, ii. 36-7 ; Alb. Aq. x. 1 See Mosheim, ii. 312 ; Gibbon, v ^9-43; Zonaras, xviii. 25; Wilken, b. 411. 414 THE CRUSADES, Book VI to be unfounded. The charge of injustice is a refinement which it is even now difficult to understand, and which would not have occurred to either the assailants or the assailed in an age when the feeling of local religion (how- ever little countenanced by the new Testament) was as strong in the Christian as in the Jew or the Moslem — when the Christians regarded the holy places of the east as an inheritance of which they had been wrongfully despoiled, and which they could not without disgrace, or even sin, leave in the hands of the unbelievers/ But in truth the crusades were rather defensive than aggressive. They were occasioned by the advance of the new tribes which with the religion of Mahomet had taken up that spirit of conquest which had cooled and died away among the older Mahometan nations. They transferred to the east that war in defence of the faith which for ages had been carried on in Spain. ^ And while this was enough to justify the undertaking of the crusades, they led to results which were altogether unforeseen, but which far more than outweighed the temporary evils produced by these expeditions.^ The idea of a war for the recovery of the land endeared to Christians by the holiest associations was of itself a gain for the martial nations of the west — raising, as it did, their thoughts from the petty quarrels in which they had too generally wasted themselves, to unite their efforts in a hallowed and ennobling cause. It was by the crusades that the nations of Europe were first made known to each other as bound together by one common interest. Feudal relations were cast aside ; every knight was at liberty to follow the banner of the leader whom he might prefer ; instead of being confined to one small and narrow ■■ " Dominicse sepulturae. quam in ses, ap. Pertz, xviii. 268. Christianorum opprobrium, ad quos * Guizot, i. 151 ; Mackintosh, i. 123- jure haereditario special, irreverenter 6 ; Milman, iii. 147-8. deiinent Sarraccni." Annal. Januen- ' Choiseul-DaiJl«courl, 320. Chap. IV. THE CRUSADES. 415 circle, the crusaders were brought into intercourse with men of various nations, and the consequences tended to mutual refinement. And, while the intercourse of nations was important, the communication into which persons of different classes were brought by the crusades was no less so; the high and the low, the lord and the vassal or common soldier, the fighting man and the merchant, learned to understand and to value each other better." The chivalrous spirit, of which France had hitherto been the home, now spread among the warriors of other countries, and the object of the crusades infused into chivalry a new religious character.^ Nor was chivalry without its effect on religion, although this influence was of a more questionable kind. In the cause of the cross, the canons against clerical warriors were suspended ;y and the devotion which knights owed to their ladies tended to exalt the devotion of the middle ages to her who was regarded as the highest type of glorified womanhood.^ The Christians of the west were brought by the crusades into contact with the civilization of the Arabs, new to them in its character, and on the whole higher than their own. After the first blind fury of their enmity had passed away, they learned to respect in their adversaries the likeness of the virtues which were regarded as adorn- ing the character of a Christian knight; and they were ready to adopt from them whatever of knowledge or of refinement the Orientals might be able to impart.*'^ Lite- rature and science benefited by the intercourse which was thus established.^ Navigation was improved; ships of in- creased size were built for the transport of the armaments " Guizot, i. 149 ; SIsmondi, vi. 129- cited great horror among the Greeks. 31. See Anna Comn. 1. x. p. 292, ed. Paris. ^ Gibbon, v. 428 ; Heeren, ii. 127, ^ Heeren. ii. 184 ; Milman, iii. 154. 180-4 ; Milman, iii. 153. * Heeren, ii. 72 ; Milman, ii. 154. y See Ducange, s. v. Hostis, 718. »> See Heeren, pt. iii., and Chois • The nghting clergy of the west ex- Daillecourt, pt. iv. 4l6 THE CRUSADES. Book VI. destined for the holy wars. Venice, Genoa, Pisa, and Marseilles were enriched by the commerce of the east ; the gems, the silks, the spices, and the medicines of Asia became familiarly known in Europe ; new branches of industry were introduced ; and the inland trading cities gained a new importance and prosperity by aiding to distribute the commodities and luxuries which they received through the agency of the great seaports.® The political effects of the crusades on the kingdoms of western Europe were very important. They tended to increase the power of sovereigns by lessening the number of fiefs. As many of the holders of these were obliged to sell them, in order to find the means of equipment for the holy war, the feudal power became lodged in a less number of hands than before, and kings were able to make themselves masters of much that had until then been independent of their authority. <^ At the same time the class of citizens was rising in importance and dignity. As the wealth of towns was increased by commerce, they purchased or otherwise acquired privileges, and became emancipated from their lay or ecclesiastical lords. It was the interest of kings to favour them, as a counterpoise to the power of the nobles; and thus, more especially in France, the strength of the crown and the liberty of the trading class advanced in alliance with each other.® And, although slowly and gradually, the crusades contributed towards the elevation of the peasantry, and the abolition of slavery in western Europe.* To the clergy the transfer of property occasioned by the crusades was very advantageous. Sees or monasteries " See Heeren, pt. ii. ; Chois.-Daille- • Heeren, ii. 203-17, 241 ; Chois.- court, pt. ii. ; Robertson's 'Charles v.' Daillecourt, 50-61; Michaud, x. 95- i. 23-6; iii. 221, seqq., ed. Oxford, 102 ; Stephen, Lect. v. ; Michelet, iii. 1825 ; Wilken, ii. 191-3 ; Forster's 67. • Mahometanism Unveiled,' cc. 12-13. ' Heeren, iL 217-40 ; Cbois.-Daille- * Guizot, i. 158. court, 43-53. Chap. IV. THE CRUSADES. 4 1 'J could not permanently suffer by the zeal of" crusading bishops or abbots, inasmuch as the incumbents could not dispose of more than a life-interest in their pro- perty. And, while they were thus secured against loss, the hierarchy had the opportunity of gaining immense profit by purchasing the lay estates which were thrown into the market at a depreciated value, while in such purchases they were almost without rivalry, as the Jews, the only other class which possessed the command of a large capital, were not buyers or cultivators of land.^ But the popes were the chief gainers by the crusades. By means of these enterprises they acquired a control over western Christendom which they might otherwise have sought in vain. They held in their own hands the direction of movements which engaged all Europe ; and their power was still further increased, when, in the second crusade, sovereign princes had shown the example of taking the cross. The spirit of the time then embol- dened the popes to propose that emperors and kings should embark in a crusade ; to refuse would have been disgrace- ful ; and when the promise had been made, the pope was entitled to require the fulfilment of it whenever he might think fit. Nor would any plea of inconvenience serve as an excuse ; for what was the interest of a prince or of his dominions to the general concern of Christendom?^ In the east, the popes extended their sway by the estab- lishment of the Latin church, while they claimed the suzerainty of the territories wrested from the infidels. And while in the west the holy war afforded them a con- tinual pretext for sending legates to interfere in every country,^ they also gained by means of it a large addition to their wealth. The contributions which had at first e Schmidt, ii. 49S ; Heeren, ii. 152. 140-2. * Fleury, Disc. c. 8 : Heeren. ii. • lb. 547. vc«-. IV. «7 4ii THE SICILIAN MONARCHY. Book VI. beon a free offering towards the cause became a per- manent tribute, which was exacted especially from the monks and clergy ; and when this took the form of a certain proportion of the revenues, the popes were thus authorized to investigate and to control the amount and the disposal of the whole property which belonged to ecclesiastical or monastic foundations.^ Urban felt the addition of strength which he had gained by the crusade. He compelled Conrad to renounce the po\ver of investiture, which the prince had ventured to exercise at Milan ; and in a council held ai Bari, in 1098, with a view to a reconciliation with the Greeks, he would have excommunicated the king of England for his behaviour to the primate Anselm, had not Anselm himself entreated him to refrain.^ But to his surest alHes, the Normans of the south, the pope was careful to give no offence. Roger, grand count of Sicily, had now firmly established himself in that island, and, while he allowed toleration to the Mahometan inhabitants, had restored the profession of Christianity, founded bishopricks, and built many churches and monasteries."' In 1098 the grand count was offended by finding that the pope, without consulting him, had appointed the bishop of Trani legate for Sicily; and, in consequence of his remonstrances at a council at Salerno, a remarkable arrangenient was made, which, from the circumstance that it lodged the ecclesiastical power in the same hands with the civil, is known as the "Sicilian Monarchy.'' By this the pope invests Roger and his successors with the character of perpetual legates of the apostolic see ; all papal mandates are to be executed through their agency, and they are to have the right ^ Htercii. ii. 147, 150; MUman, iii. ' Eadmer, 53. See the next chapter, 145- *" Malaterra, iv. 7. Chap. IV. a.d. 10989. DEATH OF URBAN II. 419 of selecting such bishops and abbots as they may think fit to attend the papal councils." In explanation of a grant so unlike the usual policy of Rome, it has been conjectured that the pope, being aware that the Normans would be guilty of many irregularities in the administration of the church, yet being resolved not to quarrel with such valuable auxiliaries, devolved his autho- rity on the prince with a view to rid himself of personal responsibility for the toleration of these irregularities.^ In 1099, the antipope and his adherents were finally driven out from Rome, where they had until then kept possession of some churches ; and Urban became master of the whole city.P But on the 29th of July in that year he died — a fortnight after the taking of Jerusalem, but before he could receive the tidings of the triumph which had crowned his enterprise. Planck, IV. i. 243 interpolated, and in its present form P Bernold, 466. comes from the antipope Anacletus II. "i Schrockh, xxvi. 33. (58 ; cf. A.D. 1130. 53); and from the ■■ He is supposed, while cardinal, to words of the document — "o«ini vitee have built the present church, remov- tuse tempore, vel filii tui Simonis, aut ing into it the choir of John VIII. 's alterius qui legitimus tuus hseres exti- time from the older church below— terit"— he argues that, even if genuine, that having been ruined in the great it bestowed the privilege on Roger and conflagration caused by Robert Guis- his sons only— not on their posterity, card's troops. See Quart. Rev. cxv. and stUl less en any others who might 230-1. 420 DEATH OF THE ANTIPOPE. Book VI. by birth, who had been a monk at Cluny, and, having been sent to Rome at the age of twenty, on the business of his monastery, had obtained the patronage of Gregory, by whom he was employed in important affairs and pro- moted to the dignity of cardinal. Rainier on his election assumed the name of Paschal 11.^ In the following year, Guibert or Clement III., the rival of four successive popes, died at Castelli. ep . I icx). rpj^^^ YiQ ;vas a man of great abilities and acquirements, and was possessed of many noble qualities, is admitted by such of his opponents as are not wholly blinded by the enmity of party ;* and his power of securing a warm attachment to his person is proved by the fact that in the decline of his fortunes, and even to the last, he was not deserted."^ His grave at Ravenna was said to be distinguished by miracles, until Paschal ordered his remains to be dug up and cast into uncon- seprated ground.^ Three antipopes — Theoderic, Albert, and Maginulf, the last of whom took the name of Sylvester IV. — were set up in succession by Guibert's party ; but they failed to gain any considerable strength, and Paschal held undisturbed possession of his see.^ Philip of France, after having been excommunicated 6 ^^ Urban at Clermont, had succeeded, through the intercession of Ivo of Chartres, in obtaining absolution, which was pronounced by the pope in a council at Nismes, on condition of his for- swearing further intercourse wi-th Bertrada.== This pro- • Pandulph. Pisan. ap. IMurat. iii. Ekkehard, a.d. iioo. 354- '^ Codex Udalrici, 173; Annal. S. ' ^.^., Ekkehard, 219; Pandulph. Disib. a.d. 1099. 375 : Chron. Petershus. in Patrol. y Pandulph. 355. As to Maginulf cxliii. 332. see Paschal, Ep. 168 (Patrol, clxiii.). " Milman, iii. 160; Giesebr. iii, * Bernold, 464; Brial, in Rec. des 504-s, 695. He is said to have ex- Hist. xvi. Pref. 74. See Hefele, V. pressed regret that he had allowed 222. himself to be set up as an antipope. Chap. IV. a.d. 1096-H08. PHILIP AND BERTRADA. 421 mise, however, was soon violated, and in 1097 the king was again excommunicated by the legate, Hugh of Lyons. The pope, greatly to his legate's annoyance, was pre- vailed on to grant a second absolution in the following year;* but in iioo the adulterous pair incurred a fresh excommunication at Poitiers.^ Four years later, on the king's humble request, supported by the representations of Ivo and other bishops, who had met in a council at Beaugency,<= Paschal authorized his legate, Lambert bishop of Arras, to absolve them on condition that they should never thenceforth see each other except in the presence of unsuspected witnesses.*^ At a synod at Paris in 1 105, the king appeared as a barefooted penitent, and both he and Bertrada were absolved on swearing to the prescribed conditions ;« yet it appears that they after- wards lived together without any further remonstrance on the part of the pope.* Philip on his death-bed, in 1 108, expressed a feeling that he was unworthy to share the royal sepulchre at St. Denys, and desired that he might be buried at Fleury, in the hope that St. Benedict, the patron of the monastery, would intercede for the pardon of his sins.^ * Brial, 1. c. 76-8. Malmesbury adds that this was at •> See Order. Vital, iii. 389 ; Hug. Fleury (Gesta Regum, 404). But the Flavin, in Patrol, cliv. 384, seqq. statement is unsupported by the French <= Ivo, Ep. 144 (Patrol, clxii.) ; Brial, writers. (See Bouquet, xiv. 811, where 70, 95 (who shows, from Ivo's letters, there is a letter from Hugh of Cluny, that the excommunication was not exhorting the king to enter that monas- regarded as releasing Philip's subjects tery.) Guibert of Nogent tells us that from their allegiance). Philip, for his misdeeds, lost the power '^ Ep. 35, ap. Hard. vi. of healing the king's evil by his touch, « lb. 1S75. but that his son Lewis recovered it f Brial, 100. Some have supposed (De Pignoribus Sanctorum, i. i, Pa- that Paschal at last sanctioned their trol. clvi.). Dachery supposes this to union. lb. 105-6 ; see Schrockh, xxvi. be the earliest notice of the practice 72 : Giesel. II. ii. 47 ; Sismondi, v. 15. (not. in loc.) ; but Pagi infers from a e Order. Vital, iv. 284 ; Suger- Vita passage in the Life of Robert I. that Ludov.Grossi, i.e. 12 (Patrol. clxxxvi.). the gift was first bestowed on that Henry of Huntingdon says that Philip king (Helgald. Vita Rob., Patrol, cxli. in his last days became a monk (1. vii., 931 ; Pagi, xviii, 540). Although Gui- Patrol. cxlv. QS2), and William of bert says (1. c.) that he does not know 422 HENRY IV. IN GERMANY. Book VI. The marriage of Matilda with the younger Welf had been a matter of pohcy, not of affection. The countess, finding her political strength increase, treated her young husband with coldness ;^ and Welf was disgusted by discovering that the rich inheritance, which -had been a chief inducement to the connexion, had already been made over in remainder to the church. A separation took place. Welf, as the only possible means of annulling the donation, invoked the emperor's aid, and his father, the duke of Bavaria, hitherto ^ Henry's most formidable opponent in Germany, now joined him with all his influence.^ On returning to his native country, after a sojourn of nearly seven years in Italy, Henry met with a gene- ral welcome. He devoted himself to the government of Germany, and for some years the stormy agitation of his ]ife was exchanged for tranquil prosperity. His conciliatory policy won over many of his old opponents, whose enmity died away as intercourse with him revealed to them his real character ; ^ and at a great of any such gift in the kings of Eng- after the death of our Edward the Con- land, William of Iklalmesbury (222) fessor" [whereas the reigns of the two ascribes it to Edward the Confessor. had really some years in common]. A contemporary biographer of Edward On the other hand, the authors of the mentions (as Malmesbury also does) 'Art de Verifier les Dates,' v. 520, are the case of a scrofulous young woman clearly wrong in inferring from Guibert who was told in a dream that she of Nogent's words that the kings of might be cured if the king would wash England did not claim the gift of her, and was cured accordingly ; but heahng until they assumed the title nothing is said by this writer as to a and arms of France. A note in Bou- customary power of healing by touch. quet, xx. 20, refers for information to (See Lives of Edward, ed. Luard, 428, Peyrat's Antiquities of the French in Chron. and Mem. of G. B., Lond. King's Chapel, 1. ii. c, 60. See also 1858. Comp. Bouquet, xiv. 222 ; Lecky's Hist, of Christian Morals, ii. Aelred in Patrol, cxlv. 761.). English 387, where a treatise by J. Brown, writers have supposed that the French ' Charisma Basilicon,' 1684, is quoted, kings derived their power of healing '' Cosmas of Prague gives a strange from their connection with the royal account of their wedded life, ii. 32 blood of England. See Fuller, i. (Pertz, ix.). See Tosti's Contessa 224-8 ; and Collier, i. 532-5, who main- Matilde, 297, against Baronius. tains that England had a long priority, • Bernold, 461-7,; Murat. Ann. VI. because Philip "was near 200 years ii. 67. ^ Luden, ix. 289. Chap. iV. a.d. 1095-1102. HENRY AND THE PAPACY. 423 diet at Cologne, in 1098, he obtained an acknowledgment of his second son, Henry, as his successor, in the room of the rebel Conrad, while, with a jealousy suggested by sad experience, he exacted from the prince an oath that he would not during his father's lifetime attempt to gain political power.^ The emperor's ecclesiastical preroga- tive was acknowledged ; although his excommunication was unrepealed, even bishops of the papal party com- municated with him and were fain to take investiture at his hands. "^ The Jews, who had suffered from the fury of the crusading multitudes, were taken under his special protection, and from that time were regarded as immediately dependent on the crown." The death of the antipope Clement, and the substitu- tion of Paschal for Urban, appeared to open a prospect of reconciliation with Rome ; and circumstances were rendered still more favourable by the removal of Conrad, who died in iioi, neglected by those who had made him their tool, but who no longer needed him.« Henry announced an intention of crossing the Alps, and sub- mitting his differences with Rome to the judgment of a council. But — whether from unwillingness to revisit a country which had been so disastrous to him, from a fear to leave Germany exposed, and in compHance with the dissuasions of his bishops, or from an apprehension that the pope, elated by the success of the crusade, would ask exorbitant terms of reconciliation p — he failed to make his appearance ; and Paschal, at a synod in March 1102, » Vita Henrici, c. 7 (Pertz, xii.). I ° Murat. Ann. VI. ii. 91 ; Stenzel, quote this henceforth as the work of i. 568 ; Luden, ix. 288. Ekkehard Otbert, bishop of Liege, to whom (a.d. iioi) says that some suspected Wattenbach, the editor in Pertz's col- poison ; Landulf the younger, that lection (269), agrees with Goldast that Conrad was poisoned by Matilda's it is probably to be assigned. physician. Hist. Medio). 1 (Patrol. "> Bernold, Ann. iioo ; Luden, l\. clxxiii.). 293- ° Ekkehard, Ann. 1098; Milraan, 571 iti. 163. p See Schmidt, ii. 367; Stenzel, i 424 PEACE OF GERMANY. Book VI. renewed his excommunication, adding an anathema against all heresies, and " especially that which disturbs the present state of the church" by despising ecclesias- tical censures.^ Yet the emperor's clergy still adhered to him; among them, the pious Otho of Bamberg, after- wards famous as the apostle of Pomerania, who acted as his secretary and assisted him in his devotions.^ Henry spent the Christmas of 1102 at Mentz, where he declared a resolution of abdicating in favour of his son, and setting out for the holy war, as soon as he should be reconciled with the pope.^ At the same time he proclaimed peace to the empire for four years, — that no one should during that time injure his neighbour, whether in person or in property ; and he compelled the princes to swear to it.* The decree was obeyed, and Germany by degrees recovered from the wounds inflicted by its long distractions. The peaceable classes — the merchant and trader, the husbandman and the artisan — carried on their occupations unmolested ; the highways were safe for travellers, and the traffic of the rivers was unimpeded by the little tyrants whose castles frowned along the banks. '^ But the discords of Germany were only laid to sleep for a time. Intrigue was busy among the clergy, with whom the principles of Gregory had made way in proportion as their utility for the interests of the class became more apparent. Many bishops were won over from Henry's party, and were ready to coun- tenance a new movement against him.^ And a renewal of civil war was sure to be welcome to the nobles and 1 Hard. vi. 1863 ; Ekkehard, 223-4. clix. 932. ' Herbord. Vita Ottonis, 3-4, ap. ' Pertz, Leges, ii. 60 ; Sigebert, Pertz, xii. Cf. Chron. St. Pantal. ap. Ann. 1103 ; Ekkehard, Ann. 1103; Eccard, i. 917. For Otho, see here- Stenzel, i. 576. A council at Mentz after, c. xi. sect. 8. in 1085 had enacted the treuga Dei {at » There is a letter to Hugh of Cluny, Germany. Hefele, v. 164. expressing this intention, and request- " Otbert, 8. ing the abbot's mediation. Patrol. ^ Schmidt, ii. 354. Chap. IV. a.d. 1102-4 REBELLION OF HENRY'S SON. 425 their armed retainers, who fretted against the forced inaction which was so opposite to the habits of their former lives, while many of them, being no longer at liberty to resort to violence and plunder, found themselves reduced from splendour to poverty.^ The younger Henry was now tampered with. The young nobles, with whom the emperor had studiously encouraged him to associate, were prompted to insinu- ate to him that he was improperly kept under — that if he should wait until his father's death, the empire would probably then be seized by another ; and that the oath exacted of him by his father was not binding.^ These suggestions were too successful. In December 1 1 04, as the emperor was on an expedition against a refractory Saxon count, his son deserted him at Fritzlar, and to all his overtures and entreaties made no other answer than that he could hold no intercourse with an ex- communicate person, and that his oath to such a person was null and void.^ There is no evidence to show that the pope had been concerned in suggesting this defection ; but the prince immediately asked his counsel, and was absolved from his share in the emperor's excommuni- cation by the legate, Gebhard of Zahringen, bishop of Constance.^ On declaring himself against his father, the young Henry at once found himself at the head of a powerful party, among the most conspicuous members of which was Ruthard, archbishop of Mentz, who had been charged with misdemeanours as to the property of the Jews slain by the crusaders, and had found it expedient to abscond when the emperor proposed an inquiry into y Otbert, 8. 97 (Patrol, cliv.). Gebhard had got ^ Id. 9. The prince was bom ia his see by the expulsion of an impe- 1081. Floto, i. 319. rialist bishop, and had afterwards " Otbert, 9 ; Ekkehard, 227. been dispossessed by Henry's power. *• Annal. S. Disib. a.d. 1105 ; Sten- (Chron. Pttershus. in Patrol. cxIiiL zel, i. 586. See the Chron. S. Hub. c. 337-8, 348.) 426 IMPRISONMENT OF HENRY IV. Book VI. his conduct.'' For a year Germany was disquieted by the muster, the movements, and the contests of hostile armies. The prince, however, professed that he had no wish to reign — that his only motive in rebelling was to bring about his father's conversion ; and, with consistent hypocrisy, he refused to assume th'e ensigns of royalty. <* On the 2ist of December 1105, an interview between the father and the son took place at Coblentz. The emperor's fondness burst forth without restraint ; he threw himself at the feet of his son, and confessed him- self guilty of many offences against God, but adjured the prince not to stain his own name by taking it on himself to punish his father's misdeeds.® The behaviour of the young Henry was marked throughout by the deepest perfidy. He professed to return his father's love, and proposed that they should dismiss their followers with the exception of a few knights on each side, and should spend the Christmas season together at Mentz. To this the emperor consented, and in his interviews with his son, as they proceeded up the bank of the Rhine, he poured forth all the warmth of his affection for him, while the prince professed to return his feelings, and repeatedly gave him the most solemn assurances of safety. But at Bingen Henry found himself made prisoner, and he was shut up in the castle of Bockelheim on the Nahe, under the custody of his enemy Gebhard of Urach, bishop of Spires, who had lately been promoted to that see by the rebel king.' The em.peror was rudely treated and ill fed ; his beard was unshorn; he was denied the use of a bath ; at Christmas the holy eucharist was refused to him, nor was he allowed the ministrations of a confessor ; and he was « Ekkehard, Ann. 1098 ; Addit. ad. 370 ; ad Hug. Cluniac, Patrol, clix. Lambert, ap. Pistor. i. 426. 935 ; Floto, ii, 400. <* Ekkeh. a.d. 1105. ' lb. 403. • Henr. Ep. atlPhilipp. ap. Sigebert. Chap. IV. a.d. 1104-6. HIS FORCED ABDICATION. 437 assailed with threats of personal violence, of death or lifelong captivity, until he was persuaded to surrender the ensigns of his power — the cross and the lance, the crown, the sceptre, and the globe— into the hands of the rebel's partisans.^ He entreated that an opportunity of defend- ing his conduct before the princes of Germany might be granted him ; but, although a great diet was about to meet at Mentz, he was not allowed to appear before it — under the pretext that his excommunication made him unfit, but in reality because it was feared that his appear- ance might move the members to compassion, while the citizens of Mentz, like the inhabitants of most other German cities, were known to be still firmly attached to him.^ On the 31st of December he was removed to Ingelheim, where he was brought before an assembly composed exclusively of his enemies. Worn out by threats and ill usage, he professed himself desirous to resign his power, and to withdraw into the quiet which his b'ge rendered suitable for him. The papal legate and the fallen emperor's own son alone remained unmoved by his humiliation. In answer to his passionate entreaties for absolution, the legate told him that he must acknowledge himself guilty of having unjustly persecuted Gregory. Henry earnestly desired that a day might be allowed him to justify his conduct before the princes of the empire, but it was answered that he must at once submit, under pain of imprisonment for life. He asked whether by unreserved submission he might hope to obtain absolution ; but the legate replied that absolution could only be granted by the pope himself. The emperor, whose spirit was entirely broken, so that he was ready to catch at any hope, however vague, and to comply with any terms, promised to satisfy the church e Henr. Ep. ad Philipp. I. c. ; ad 231. Hug. 1. c. 936 ; Otbert, 10 ; Ekkehard, ^ Id. 231 ; Luden, ix. 325. 428 LAST DAYS AND Book VI. in all points ; ' it is even said that he solicited, for the sake of a maintenance, to be admitted as a canon of Spires, a cathedral founded by his grandfather and finished by himself, and that the bishop harshly refused his request.^ On the festival of the Epiphany, the younger Henry was crowned at Mentz by archbishop Ruthard, who at the ceremony warned him that, if he should fail in his duties as a sovereign, his father's fate would over- take him.i The violence of his ecclesiastical abettors was shown by disinterring the bones of deceased impe- rialist bishops.™ But serious outbreaks in favour of the dethroned emperor took place in Alsatia and elsewhere ; " and after a time, alarmed by rumours that his death or perpetual captivity was intended, he contrived to make his escape by the river to Cologne.^ At Aix-la-Chapelle he was met by Otbert, bishop of Liege, to whose affectionate pen we are chiefly indebted for the knowledge of his latest fortunes,? and under the bishop's escort he proceeded to Liege.^ The clergy of that city had steadily adhered to him, and when Paschal desired count Robert of Flanders to punish them for their fidelity, one of their number, the annalist Sigebert of Gemblours, sent forth a powerful letter in defence of their conduct, and in reproof of the papal assumptions.'* From his place of refuge Henry addressed letters to the kings of France, England, and * Ekkehard, a.d. iio6; Ep. ad Phi- 68, seqq. ; Rupert. Tuit. Chron. (Pa- lipp. 1. c. 371 ; ad Hug. 1. c. 936 ; trol. clxx. 698). Hard. vi. 1880 ; Otbert, 10. Hist. Abing. i. 486 ; Ang. Sax. 1458)- Collier, i. 521 ; Lingard, i. 341-2. Chron. A.D. 107 1 ; Flor. Wigorn. ii. "^ Will. Neubrig. i. i, p. 13 ; Bromton 5 ; Lingard, i. 469-70 ; Lappenberg, ii. (who, however, mentions both stories), 96. The privilege of asylum was sup- ap. Tvvysden, 962. posed to be secured for property so e Eadmer, 29; W. Malmesb. ii. 421; deposited. See, e.g., the canons of a Sym. Dunelm. 195 ; Wendover, ii. i. council of Ossory, about 1320, \n Wil- Lappenberg does not decide between kins, li. 503. William is said to have the statements (ii. 67). Aldred had also seized the charters and statutes of also crowned Harold, according to monasteries. (M. Paris, Hist. Angl. Florence of Worcester (i. 224) and i. 13.) Symeon of Durham (193), although ^ See the contemporary Life, in William of Poictiers (Patrol, cxlix. Lives of Edward, edited by the Rev. ^245) and Orderic (iii. 17), as well as H. R. Luard (Chron. and Mem.), pp. the Bayeux Tapestry, represent Sti- 399,415. gand as havmg officiated. Dean Hook ^ Archd. Churton (272) and Dean (i. 514) follows Orderic and William, Hook (i. 496) speak of it as then iiitro- but Lingard (i. 360) and Lappenberg dticed. But earlier instances are men- (i. 532) seem to be right m preferring tionedinthe Monasticon, e.g., the gift the statement of the English chroni- of Lewisham to St. Peter's of Ghent by clers to that of the foreigners. Alfred's mother, vi. 987. "^ Will. Malmesb. G. P. in Pattvil, ^ Ang.-Sax. Chron. a.d. 1058 ; W. clxxix. 1459. Malmesb. Gesta Pontif . (Patrol, clxxix. VOL. IV. 28 434 THE ENGLISH CHURCH Book VI. a living bishop j with having irregularly held at once the sees of Winchester and Canterbury ; with the want of a properly-conferred pall, and with having used for a time that of his ejected predecessor.^ These pretexts served for the deprivation of the archbishop, which was followed by that of other native prelates, so that, with a isingle exception, the English sees were soon in the hands of Normans, who either had been appointed under Edward or were now promoted by the Conqueror.^ The system of preferring foreigners was gradually extended to the abbacies and lower dignities, and for a long series of years it was hopeless for any Englishman, whatever his merit might be, to aspire to any considerable station in the church of his own land.^ One Norman only, Guitmund, ' Flor. Wig. ii. 5 ; Rog. Hoveden, bishoprick was the pious and simple- 265, b ; Inett, ii. 7. Dean Hook shows reason for thinking that Stigand him- self was not present (i. 522). At this council the crown was placed on Wil- liam's head by the legates, who are therefore said by Lanfranc's biographer to have " confirmed him as king of England " (c. 6 ; cf. Order. Vital, iv. 8). But it seems to have been nothing more than the observance of a custom usual among northern nations, that at certain festival seasons the king wore his crown, which was placed on his head by some eminent prelate. (See Cosm. Pragens. i. 28, and the note in Pertz, viii. ; Inett, ii. 11.) At Christmas 1 109, during a vacancy in the see of Canterbury,therewas a quarrel between the archbishop of York and the bishop of London (as provincial dean of Can- terbury) for the right of " crowning " Henry I. They wished to follow this up by a struggle for precedence at the king's table, but he ordered them both to be turned out of the hall. (Eadmer, Hist. Nov. p. 83.) See, too, a story as to archbishop Ralph at the second MJarriage of Henry, in 1. vi. init. ** Inett. ii. 14-15; Lappr ). ii. 100. The only Englishman who retained his minded Wulstan, of Worcester. W. Malmesb. ii. 450. See Acta SS., Jan. 19 ; iElred in Patrol, cxciv. 779-Si. ' Ingulph. ap. Fell, 70 ; Eadmer, 29, 87 ; Lingard, i. 457. In 1114 the monks of Canterbury cried out against the appointment of any more foreigners, on the ground that there were persons " patriee lingua;" who equalled Lan- franc in learning and Anselm in piety, and like them were monks ; but the candidate whom they carried, Ralph bishop of Rochester, although he had long lived in England, was not only "si genus explores, spectabili Norman- orum prosapia oriundus," but himself a native of Normandy ; and the lan- guage which was mentioned as one of his qualifications was not English, but "genialis soli, id est Cenomannici, ac- curatus et quasi depexus sermo." Hence it would seem as if the monks did not venture to object to Normans as "aliense gentis," but only to persons who, like Lanfranc, Anselm, and Fari- cius, who was proposed to them as the successor of Anselm, were Italians, or otherwise not subjects of the king of England. (W. Malmesb. G. P. 1506.) The tirst archbishop of English birta Chap. V. a. d. 1066-70. AFTER THE CONQUEST. 435 the opponent of Eerengar, is recorded as having ventured to refuse an Enghsh bishoprick, and to protest against a system so adverse to the interests of the church and of the people.'" The later Anglo-Saxon clergy are very unfavourably represented to us by writers after the conquest. It is said that they were scarcely able to stammer out the forms of Divine service — that any one who knew "grammar " was regarded by his brethren as a prodigy ;° and religion as well as learning had fallen into decay. But, although the increase of intercourse with other countries eventually led to an improvement in the English church, it seems questionable whether the immediate effect of the change introduced by the conquest v/as beneficial. The new prelates were in general chosen for other than ecclesi- astical merits; they could not edify their flocks, whose language they would have scorned to understand ; ° the Anglo-Saxon literature, the richest by far that any Teutonic nation as yet possessed, fell into oblivion and contempt ; the traditions of older English piety were lost ; and there was no love or mutual confidence to win for the new hierarchy the influence which the native pastors had been able to exert for the enforcement of religion on their people.P But while the dignities of the church were commonly bestowed on illiterate warriors or on court-chaplains, the primacy was to be otherwise disposed of Lanfranc had been sentenced by William to banishment from Normandy after the conquest, Thomas Becket rior setas ilhim compescebat, et tumul- (a.d. 1 1 62), was not, as has often been tus multimodarum occupationum ad supposed, a Saxon, but a Norman by alia necessario attrahebat." Ord. Vit. descent. iv. 11. ■" Ord. Vit. 1. iv. 13. See above, p See Lappenb. ii, 97-102. Sir F. Vol. iv. p. 365. Palgrave, however, shows reason for " W. Malmesb. ii. 417-18. Cf. Ord. believing that the change effected by Vit iv. 10. William was much less than is com- » William himself attempted to learn monly supposed. Norm, and Engl. it; " ast a perceptione hujusmodi du- iii. c. 15. 436 LANFRANC, ARCHBISHOP Book VL for opposing his marriage with Matilda, as being within the forbidden degrees ; bat, as he was on his way to leave the country, an accidental meeting with the duke led to a friendly understanding, so that Lanfranc was employed to obtain the pope's sanction for the union, and a removal of the interdict under which William's territories had been laid.^ His success in this commission recommended him to the duke's favour ; he was transferred from Bee to the headship of St. Stephen's at Caen, the noble abbey which William was required to found in penance for the irregularity of his marriage, and, after having already refused the archbishoprick of Rouen, he was now urged to accept that of Canterbury/ It was not without much reluctance that he resolved to undertake so onerous a dignity among a people of barbarous and unknown language ; and the difficulties which he experienced and foresaw in the execution of his office speedily induced him to solicit permission from Alexander II. to return to his monastery ;^ but the pope refused to consent, and Lanfranc thereupon requested that the pall might be sent to him. The answer came from the archdeacon Hilde- brand — that, if the pall could be granted to any one without his personal appearance at Rome, it would be granted to Lanfranc; but that the journey was indis- pensable.^ On his arrival at Rome, the archbishop was treated with extraordinary honour. The pope, who had formerly been his pupil at Bee, rose up to receive him, explaining that he did so out of regard not for his office but for his learning ; and it was not until after this that he desired Lanfranc in his turn to perform the reverence which was due to St. Peter." He « Vita Lanfr. 7-8. ' Liber Diumus,' c. iv. in Patrol, ct.) ; ' lb. 4, 6 ; Guil. Gemet. vii. 26. and the popes were soon obliged to ■ Ep. I ; Orderic, I. iv. t. ii. 212. give way on the point Giesel. II. u ' Inter Epp. Lanfr. 6. This had not 235. been the case in earlier times (see the *» Vita Lanf. 11 ; Eadmer, 30. Chap. V. a. d. 1170-87. OF CANTERBURY. 437 bestowed on him two palls, as a mark of signal considera- tion — a compliment of which it is said that there has never been another instance^ — and invested him with the authority of legate. A question as to precedence was raised by Thomas, archbishop of York, who had accom- panied Lanfranc to Rome and contended that, by the terms of Gregory's instructions to Augustine, the primacy of England ought to alternate between Canterbury and the northern see, for which he also claimed jurisdiction over Worcester, Lichfield, and Lincoln. ^ The pope declined to give judgment, and remitted the questions to England, where, after discussions in the king's presence at Winchester and at Windsor, they were decided in favour of Lanfranc on the sround of ancient custom. . A.D. 1072, The archbishop of York was required to pro- mise submission to Canterbury, and, with his suffragans, to attend councils at such places as the archbishop of Canterbury should appoint.^ Lanfranc exerted himself to reform the disorders of the English church (which it is very possible that, as a man trained in entirely different circumstances, he may have somewhat overrated),* and in his labours for this purpose he was effectually supported by the king, who bestowed on him his full confidence, and usually entrusted him ^ Will. Malmesb G. Pontif., Patrol. Rad. de Diceto, ib. 483. clxxix. 1460 ; Rocl?s ' Church of our * Lanfr. Ep. 3 ; Vita, lo-ii ; Wil- Fathers,' ii. 151. kins, i. 324-5. y W. Malmesb. G. P. 1460-1. See * Matthew Paris says of Lanfranc, vol. ii. p. 392 ; and for the York ver- that, although a saintly man, he was sion of the affair, Stubbs, in Twysden, inflated by his learning and dignity, 1685-1706 : Raine, i. 148. Some docu- and charged the English prelates, ments produced by Lanfranc in this "licet sanctos et Deo acceptos," with affair were of questionable genuineness ignorance. (Hist. Angl. i. 14-15.) But (Haddan-Stubbs, iii. 68). It is said elsewhere (p. 38) he says of him " nun- that the appointment of Thomas was quam humilitatis metas propter littera- objected to on the ground that he was turas eminentiam manifeste transgressus the son of a priest, but that Lanfranc est, nisi in depositione beati Wulstani interceded for him, and persuaded the episcopi Wigorniensis." pope to overlook this irregularity. 438 ECCLESIASTICAL POLICY OF Book VL with the regency during his own absence on the continent. The primate used his influence to obtain the promotion of deserving men to bishopricks.** Many churches which had fallen into ruin were rebuilt — among them the pri- mate's own cathedral.^ Sees which had been estabhshed in villages or small towns were removed to places of greater importance ; thus the bishoprick of Selsey was transferred to Chichester, that of Sherborne to Sarum, Elmham to Thetford, Dorchester (in Oxfordshire) to Lincoln, Lichfield to Chester^ — a change agreeable to the ancient system of the church, but perhaps suggested by the policy of William, who, by thus placing the bishops in fortified cities, secured their assistance in preserving the subjection of the people.® Lanfranc — "the venerable father and comfort of monks," as he is styled by the Anglo-Saxon chronicler^ — was zealous for celibacy and monasticism. The effects of Dunstan's labours had passed away, and the English clergy had again become accustomed to marry freely; but the Italian primate renewed the endeavour to substitute monks for secular canons in cathedrals, and serious struggles arose in con- sequence.s Nor was the enforcement of celibacy on the clergy complete; for, although a council at Winchester in 1076 enacted that no canon should have a wife, and that for the future no married man should be ordained priest or deacon, the rural clergy were, in contradiction to the regulations which Gregory VII. was labouring to enforce elscv/here, allowed by the council to retain their wives. '^ William was greatly indebted to Rome. His expedi- •" Lappenb. 11. 107-8. populous town, but merely a fortress. " See Willis, Architect. Hist, of ' a.d. 1089. Canterbury Cathedral, 14. k W. Malmesb. G. P. 1478 ; Eadmer, '' W. Malmesb. G. Regum, 479 ; 10, 32. See Hefele, v. 48. For a list Rob. de Monte, A.D. 1133 (Patrol, clx.). or" the places where this change was ^ Lappenberg, ii. 126, who, in proof made, see Wharton, Ang. Sac. ii. 35a. of the opinion, remarks that Old ^ Can. i (Wilkins, i. 367), Sarum, one of the new sees, was not 9- Chap. V. a.d. 1066-87. WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR. 439 tion had been sanctioned by a consecrated banner, the gift of Alexander 11.,^ and he had found the papal support valuable in carrying out his plans as to the English church. But he was determined to make use of Rome — not to acknowledge her as a mistress. He held firmly in his own grasp the government of the church. By refraining from the sale of preferment — however he may have been guilty of simony in that wider definition which includes the bestowal of benefices for service or by favour — he earned the commendation of Gregory ;^^ but he pro- moted bishops and abbots by his own will, invested them by the feudal forms, and took it upon himself to exempt the abbey which was founded in memory of his victory near Hastings from all episcopal and monastic jurisdic- tion.^ No pope was to be acknowledged in England, except by the king's permission ; nor, although William allowed legates to hold synods in furtherance of his own views, was anything to be treated or enacted at these meetings without his previous sanction. The bishops were for- bidden to obey citations to Rome ; they were forbidden to receive letters from the pope without showing them to the king ; nor were any of his nobles or servants to be excommunicated without his licence. °^ The bishop was no longer to sit in the same court with the sheriff", but his jurisdiction was confined to spiritual matters." The ' W. Mulmesb. 410. sents these words as spoken by William ^ Ep. ix. 5. I cannot agree with Rufus on being asked by the monks Dr. Lappenberg (ii. 139) that the to let them choose their own abbot in praise was either ironical or meant to the room of Scolland's successor, Guy point out what William ought to do. (ib. 1794) ; and, in any case, they ' Chron. de Bello, 25-8 (Lond. X846). would .seem to belong to Rufus, as Gervase of Canterbury says that when ScoUand died only four days (or accord - Lanfranc, on the death of Scolland, ing to Goscelin, only one day) before abbot of St, Augustine's, asked leave the death of the Conqueror in Nor- to nominate an abbot, as his pre- mandy. See Thorn, 1792 ; Goscelin. decessors had done, the Conqueror Transl. S. Aug. ii. 41 (Patrol, civ.), answered that he was resolved to "^ Eadmer, 29-30. "keep all the staves in his own hands" " Wilkins, i. 368. This severance ^(Twysdcn, 1327). Bjut Thorn repre- of jurisdicti&n, howev.er, 'wcaise tiw 440 WILLIAM I., LANFRANC, Book VI. tenure of frank-almoign (or free alms), under which the bishops had formerly held their lands, was exchanged for the feudal tenure by barony; and the estates of the clergy became subject to the same obligations as other lands « In his ecclesiastical policy William was willingly seconded by the primate. Lanfranc was indeed no devoted adherent of Gregory, with whom he was pro- bably dissatisfied on account of the indulgence which the pope had shown to his antagonist Berengar. In a letter to a partisan of the antipope, he professes neutrality as to the great contest of the time, and even shows an inclina- tion towards the imperial side. After censuring the unseemly language which his correspondent had applied to Gregory, he adds — "Yet I believe that the emperor has not undertaken so great an enterprise without much reason, nor has he been able to achieve so great a victory without much aid from God." And, while he advises Guibert's agent not to come to England, it is on the ground that the king's leave ought first to be obtained — that England has not rejected Gregory, or given a public adhesion to either pope, and that there is room for hear- ing both parties before coming to a decision.? If such was the archbishop's feeling as to the controversy between the pope and the emperor, he could hardly fail to be wholly with his own sovereign in any questions between England and Rome. Gregory, in his letters to William and to Lanfranc, spoke of the king with profuse expressions of the deepest respect, as incomparably superior to all other princes of the age ; and, when obliged to censure any of his acts, he was careful to season the censure with compliments to the ground for great claims on the part of 49 ; Blackstone, i. 141. the clergy. See Inett, ii. 60-2. p Ep. 59 (probably addressed to » Rog. Wendover, ii. 7 ; IneU, u. Cardinal Hugh the White) Chap. V. a.d. 1066-87. AND GREGORY VII. 44 1 king's character, with remembrances of their old mutual regard, and of the services which he had rendered to "WiUiam in former days.<^ But these blandishments were thrown away on a sovereign whose policy was as decided, and whose will was as strong, as those of Gregory him- self. When, in 1079, the pope required William to see to the payment of Peter-pence from England, and to swear fealty to the apostolic see, the reply was cool and peremptory — " Your legate has admonished me in your name to do fealty to you and your successors, and to take better order as to the money which my predecessors have been accustomed to send to the Roman church ; the one I have admitted; the other I have not admitted. I refused to do fealty, nor will I do it, because neither have I promised it, nor do I find that my predecessors have performed it to yours." ^ The payment was to be made, not as a tribute, but as alms.^ On receiving this answer, the pope declared that money without obedience was worthless, and at the same time he complained of the king's conduct in other respects ; that, by a presumption which no one even among heathen princes had ventured on, he prevented the prelates of his kingdom from visiting the apostle's city ; that he had promoted to the see of Rouen the son of a priest — an appointment to which Gregory was resolved never to consent. His legate was charged to threaten William with the wrath of St. Peter unless he should repent, and to cite certain representatives of the English and Norman bishops to a synod at Rome.^ No heed was paid to this citation ; but the pope sub- mitted to the slight ; and it is certain that, but for the voluntary retirement of William's nominee, Guitmund, the ally of Lanfranc in the eucharistic controversy, the 1 E.g., Epp. L 31, 70; vi. 30; viL • Inett, ii. 42. 83, 25. * Ep. vii. I (Sept. 23, 1079, Jaff(£). ' Inter Epp. Lanfr. 7. 442 WILLIAM I. AND GREGORY. B<^^k VL object'on in the case of Rouen would have been with- drawn." Equally unsuccessful were the pope's attempts on Lanfranc. Again and again invitations, becoming by degrees more urgent, required the archbishop to appear at Rome, where he had not been since Gregory's election. After a time the pope expresses a belief that he is influenced by fear of the king, but tells him that neither fear, nor love, nor the difficulties of the journey, ought to detain him.'' Lanfranc, in his answer, showed no dis- position to comply; and he alluded, with an indifference which must have been very annoying, to the failure of the pope's claim to fealty.^ At length Gregory summoned the archbishop to set out for Rome within four months after receiving his citation, and to appear there on a certain day, under pain of deposition ;^ but the citation was as vain as those before it, and the threat was never followed up.* Gregory again found himself obliged to remonstrate in the case of William's half-brother, Odo, bishop of Bayeux. Odo, deluded (it is said) by the arts of sooth- sayers, who assured him that a person of his name was to be pope, sent large sums of money to Rome for the pur- pose of securing himself an interest there, and enlisted a considerable force with which he intended to make his way to Italy. But William, on discovering the project, arrested and imprisoned him ; and, in answer to an objection as to the bishop's spiritual character, declared that he had proceeded against him, not as bishop, but as earl of Kent.^ Gregory expostulated with the king, in- sisting on the immunities of the clergy, with the pretended " Guitmund was made cardinal by the Scots {i.e. Irish), who weie said to Gregory himself. See p. 3O5, n. '. be in the habit of selling their wives ; -'' Ep. vi. 30 (Mart. 25, 1079). and the English too, if any of them y Lanfr. Ep. 8. did so. Append. Ep. i. '■ Ep. ix. 20 (Dec. 4, 1081). ^ See Palgrave, iii. 546 ; Order. * In one of his letters to Lanfranc, Vital, vii. 8 (t. iii. 189, seqq.). The Gregory begs the archbishop to restrain Odo, or Otbo, who became pope wg» Chap. V. a.d. J066-89. WILLIAM II. 443 saying of St. Ambrose, that royalty is less comparable to the episcopal dignity than lead to gold, ^ and quoting the text — " He that toucheth you, touch eth the apple of Mine eye;"*^ but Odo remained in prison until his brother, when dying, reluctantly ordered his release ; <= and here, as in the other cases, conduct which would have drawn down the most awful thunders of Rome on the head of a weaker prince, was allowed to pass unpunished in the stern, able, powerful, and resolute master of England and Normandy. In 1087 the Conqueror was succeeded by William Rufus. For a time the new king was kept within some degree of restraint by the influence of Lanfranc, who had been his tutor; but on the archbishop's death, in 1089, his evil dispositions were altogether uncontrolled. William, according to an ancient writer, " feared God but little, and men not at all." * His character was utterly pro- fane ; his coarse and reckless wit was directed not only against the superstitions of the age, or against the clergy, whom he despised and hated, but against religion itself.^ The shameless debaucheries in which he indulged gave an example which his subjects were not slow to imitate.*^ The rapacity by which he endeavoured to supply his profuse expenditure^ fell with especial weight on the property of the church. In former times the revenues of a vacant abbey had been committed to the bishop, and those of a vacant bishoprick to the archbishop, under whose superintendence they were applied to religious or Urban II. Dr. Lappenberjj thinks it niandy on the crusade, but died at probable that Gregory invited the Palermo on the outward journey, bishop of Bayeux to aid him with an Palgrave, iv. 592. army against the emperor, and even <■ W. Malmesb. 495 ; see Rog. Wen- flattered him with the hope of succeed- dover, ii. 160. ing to the papacy, ii. 137. ^ See for instances, Eadmer, 52. " See above, p. 316. '' Order. Vital, iv. 9; H. Hunting '' (Zach. ii. 8) ; Greg. Ep. xi. 2. don, 1. viL, Patrol, cxcv. 934. « Flor. Wigorn. ii. 20. Odo after- » For this, S Proslogion, c. 4. The tablets on prsesumamus ratione discutere, ita which he had sketched out his argu- negligentia mihi videtur si, postquam ment twice disappeared, having, it was confirmati sumus in fide, non studemus supposed, been made away with by quod credimus intelligere " (Cur Deus the devil. Joh. Sarisb 5. Chap. V. ANSELM. 447 named Gaunilo wrote a short tract in reply, objecting that the conception of a thing does not imply its existence, and exemplifying this by the fabulous island of Atlantis f to which Anselm rejoined that the illustration was inappli- cable to the question, since existence is a part of the perfections which are conceived of as belonging to the Deity. *! The character of Anselm was amiable, gentle and modest. Simple and even severe, in his own habits, he was indulgent to others, and the confidence which he placed in those below him, with his indifference to the vulgar interests of the world, was often abused. Edmer draws a very pleasing picture of his familiar intercourse and relates many stories which illustrate his wisdom, his kindly temper, his mild, yet keen and subtle humour.® In one of these stories, an abbot "who was accounted very religious" applies in despair for advice as to the treat- ment of the pupils in his monastery ; he had flogged them indefatigably both by day and by night, but, in- stead of amending, they only grew worse. Anselm by de- grees leads him to understand that so brutal a discipline could only be expected to brutalize its objects, and the abbot returns home to practise a gentler and a wiser system.^ But as the exercise of Awselm's philosophical genius was subordinated to the strictest orthodoxy, so with his calm and peaceful nature he combined the most unbending resolution in the cause of the hierarchical system. To this he seems to have adhered, not from any feeling of interest or passion, or even of strong personal « * Liber pro Insipiente ' (a title re- for 1853, pp. 5, 236. Anselm's argu- ferring to Anselm's quotation of Ps. raent did not find favour with the «v. i), in Anselm's works, 36. schoolmen in general, but has become ^ ' Liber Apologeticus contra Gauni- famous in later times as revived, and tonem respondentem pro Insipiente,' perhaps independently (although this \b. 37-40 See Hist. Lift. viii. 153 ; is not certain), by Des Cartes, Remu- Hasse, ii. 241 ; Ritter, vu. ,135-8; Arch- sat, 527-31 ; Neand. viii. 125-6. bishop Thomson's Bamptun Lectures * Eadm. 16-21. •" lb. 8. 448 ANSELM, Book VI. conviction, but because it was sanctioned by the church, while the scandalous abuses perpetrated by such sovereigns as William Rufus tended to blind him to the existence of dangers on the other side ; and his assertion of it was marked by nothing of violence or assumption, but by an immoveable tenacity and perseverance.^ Anselm was already known and honoured in England, which he had visited for the purpose of superintending the English estates of his abbey. He had been ac- quainted with the Conqueror, who, in conversing with him, laid aside his wonted sternness ; ^ and he had been the guest of Lanfranc, who had profited by his advice to deal tenderly with the peculiarities and prejudices of the people committed to his care.^ It was with great reluctance that, during the vacancy of the archbishoprick, he yielded to the repeated invitations of Hugh Lupus, earl of Chester, who desired to see him in a sickness which was supposed to be mortal : for he knew that popular opinion had designated him as the successor of his old master ; he was unwilling to exchange his monastery, with its quiet opportunities of study and thought, and his position of influence as a teacher, for the pomp and troubled dignity of the English primacy; and, honouring royalty, disliking contention, but firmly resolved to main- tain the cause of the church, he shrank from the con- nexion with such a prince as William — a connexion which he compared to the yoking a young untamed bull with an old and feeble sheep.^ He therefore endeavoured, R Remusat, 286 ; Martineau, 302. fession of Christ's name, but because ^ Eadm. 33. he would not redeem himself with ' In particular, Lanfranc questioned money." Anselm showed how, even the title of archbishop Alphege, mur- without inquiring further into the dered by the Danes in ioi2(Ang. Sax. history, the national reverence might Chron. in Ann. ; Osbern. Vita Elph. be justified, and Lanfranc was con- in Patrol, cxlviii.), to the character of vinced. Eadm. 10-11. See Guib saint and martyr, in which the English Novifif. in Patrol, clvi. 614. regarded him, " although they do not ^ Eadmer, 36 ; Remusat, 155-7. deny that he was slain, not for the con- Chap. V. a. d. 1093. ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY. 449 with a sincerity which cannot reasonably be questioned, to decline the office ; but he was carried into the sick king's chamber at Gloucester, the crosier was forced into his hands, and notwithstanding his struggles he was hurried away to a neighbouring church, where the people received him with acclamations as archbishop, and the clergy sang " Te Deum " for the election.^ He did not, however, consider himself at liberty to accept the primacy until he had been released from his obligations to his monks, to the archbishop of Rouen, and to his sovereign, duke Robert of Normandy.-" The king recovered, and relapsed into courses even worse than before." The works of amendment which he had begun were undone, and when Gundulf, bishop of Rochester, ventured gently to remind him of his late promises, he disavowed the obligation in a speech of outrageous profanity." Anselm waited on him at Dover, and stated the terms on which only he would consent to be archbishop — that he should be allowed to enjoy all the rights of his see which Lanfranc had possessed, with such portions of its alienated property as he might be able to recover; that William should pay him the same regard in spiritual matters w^hich the king claimed from the archbishop in temporal things ; and that no offence should arise as to his acknowledgment of pope Urban, who had not yet been recognized in England. The answer was, that he should have all which Lanfranc had had, but that the other points must remain undecided for the present. P The archbishop was invested in September ' Anselm, Ep. iii. 1-2 ; Eadm. 13, mihi intulerit." Eadm. 37. 34-6. '' Id. ; Anselm, Ep. iii. 24. P"or ■" Ep. iii. 4, 10. the trial on Penenden Heath be- " Henr. Huntingd. !. vii. (Patrol. ween Lanfranc and Odo, who, as ear cxcv. 834). of Kent, had seized many manors be ° " Scias, O cpiscope, quod per longing to the a chbishoprick, s<5e sanctum vultum de Lucanunquam me Ernulf, in Patrol, clxiii. 1449, seqq. De«s bonum habebit pro maio quod VOL. IV. 29 45© DISAGREEMENTS BETWEEN i^ooK ▼!. 1093, but his consecration did not take place until the 4th of December. At this ceremony the archbishop of York, who took the chief part in it, objected to the title of " metropolitan of all England," on the ground that it implied a denial of the metropolitan dignity of his own see. The objection was allowed, and the title of primate was substituted.*! The first entrance of Anselm into his city had been dis- turbed by the appearance of Flambard, who in the king's name instituted against him a suit of which the subject is not recorded ;■■ and other events soon occurred to justify the apprehensions with which he had undertaken his office. William was busy in raising subsidies for an intended expedition into Normandy, and the archbishop, after his consecration, was advised by his friends to send him a contribution of five hundred pounds, in the hope that it might render the king favourable to the church. William was at first pleased with the gift, but some of his advisers persuaded him that it was too little — that the archbishop, in consideration of his promotion, ought to have given twice or four times as much. Anselm replied that he could not raise more without distressing his tenants; that it should not be his last gift; that a little freely given was better than a larger sum extorted : and, as William persevered in refusing the money, he bestowed it on the poor for the benefit of the king's soul, comfort- ing himself with the thought that he could not be charged with even the appearance of simony.^ The king was deeply offended. He evaded the fulfilment of his pro- 1 Eadm. 13, 37 ; R. de Diceto, 491 ; ■ Ep. iii. 24 ; Eadm. 13, 38. Dr. Wendov. ii. 44. But Stubbs, the Lingard observes (i. 539) that the chronicler of York (Twysd. 1707), says money was probably borrowed, as the that primate was the original word, tenants of the see had been so drained and metropolitan the substitute ; and by the royal exactions during the va- in this evidently wrong statement he is cancy that for three years Anselm v-^3 followed by Mr. Raine, i. 153. obliged to anticipate his inco-..;. - Eadm. 37. Eadm. 85. Chai.V. a. d. 1093-4. WILLIAM II. AND ANSELM. 45 1 mise as to the restoration of the archbishop's estates.* He refused him leave to hold a council for the suppression of disorders among the clergy and monks, and for the general reformation of morals ; and when Anselm urged the necessity of filling up the vacant abbacies, he asked, "What is that to you? — are not the abbeys mine?" "They are yours," replied the primate, "to defend and protect as advocate, but they are not yours to invade and to devastate."" The knowledge of the royal dis- favour naturally raised up or encouraged a host of lesser enemies, who industriously persecuted Anselm by their encroachments on his property and by other annoyances.^ The bishops advised him to propitiate William by a new offering of five hundred pounds ; but he declared that he would not oppress his exhausted tenants, and that such a proceeding would be alike unworthy of the king and of himself.y Notwithstanding all discouragements, the archbishop set vigorously about the work of reform. In the begin- ning of Lent, when the court was at Hastings, he refused to give the customary ashes and benediction to the young nobles who affected an effeminate style of dress and manners — wearing long hair, which they curled and adorned like women. It is not to be supposed that he regarded for their own sake these follies, or the fashion- able shoes in which the invention of Fulk of Anjou^ had been developed by one of William's courtiers, who twisted their long points into the likeness of a ram's horn.* But he dreaded the tendency of such fashions to extinguish a high and active spirit, and he denounced t Ep. iii. 24. See Corp. Jur. Civ. t. vi., Genev. 1625, • Eadm. 39. Matthew Paris says Index, s. v. Principis. that William preyed on monasteries * Eadm. 17. " non recolens scriptum. Omnia s Id. 39. principis tuitione non depopulatione." ■ See p. 384. (Hist. Angl. i. 35.) This seems to • Order. Vital, iii. 323. who styles refer to a principle of the civil law. the master of this fashion " nebula." 452 WILLIAM II. AND ANSELM. B*c:t Eoethius, Scotus Erigena, and others, writers. Hard- vi. 1733. to the same nff^ct (ii. 16). Lau CMAr. V A-D. roo8-a ANSET.M AT ROME. 459 ing day, when he spoke with a clearness and an eloquence which won universal admiration,' The pope then entered on the grievances of the English church ; the council was unanimous for the excommunication of William ; and, Urban, inspirited by his success in the great movement of the crusade, was about to pronounce the sentence, when Anselm, throwing himself at his feet, entreated him to forbear, and gained fresh admiration by this display of mildness towards his oppressor.^ The archbishop accompanied Urban to Rome, where he was treated with a reverence second only to the pope, while the people, impressed by his demeanour, spoke of him not as *' the man" or "the archbishop," but as "the holy man."^ About Christmas envoys from England appeared — William of Warelwast being one. The pope told them that their master must restore everything to the archbishop on pain of excommunication; but in private interviews they were able, by means of large presents, to obtain a truce until Michaelmas.* At the synod of the fol- lowing Lent, the decrees against investitures and homage were renewed, and were received with general acclama- tion.'^ Reginger, bishop of Lucca, introduced the subject of Anselm's wrongs in an indignant speech, to which he added emphasis by striking the floor with his pastoral staff; and it was with difficulty that the pope prevailed on him to desist, while Anselm, to whom the mention of his case was unexpected, took no part in the scene.^ It was, however, now evident to him that he could not expect any strenuous assistance from Urban, and he withdrew to Lyons, where for a year and a half he was entertained with the greatest honour by archbishop Hugh."" During ' Eadm. 53. His arguments were •» Id. 21. • Id. 54. afterwards embodied in a book, at the ^ " Fiat ! fiat ! " Id. 55 ; Rog. request of Hiidebert of Le Mans. Hoveden, 268. ' Eadm. 55. Hildeb. Epp. ii. 9, 13 (Patrol, clxxi.) » Ep. iv. 117. Matthew Paris, who « Radra. 53. places Anselm's first exile too early 460 ANSELM RETURNS TO ENGLAND. Book VX. this residence at Lyons he was informed of the pope's death, in July 1099, and of WiUiam's mysterious and awful end, in August 1100.° Henry I., at his coronation, promised to redress the grievances in the church and in the civil administration from which his subjects had suffered during the late reign. Flambard, who had succeeded William of St. Calais as bishop of Durham, was committed to the Tower .^ The king resolved to fill up the vacant bishopricks and abbeys ; he urgently invited Anselm to return, P and, on his arrival, apologized for having been crowned in the primate's absence. 'i But a subject of difference soon arose. The custom of investiture and homage, which were regarded as inseparable, was so firmly settled in England, that Anselm, notwithstanding his lofty ecclesiastical principles, had without scruple submitted to it at his elevation to the primacy.'" But when he was now required to repeat his engagements, in acknowledgment of the new sovereign, he answered that it was forbidden by the Roman council which he had lately attended. He declared that, although the objection to the ceremony was not his own, he held himself bound to maintain the council's decrees, and that, if the king would not admit (Hist. Angl. i. 52), says that he came 57). According to another account, over privately to remonstrate with he was informed of William's death by William on the oppression of the a vision in the night. Matth. Paris, church, and that, while living con- Hist. Angl. i. 53. cealed in London, he consecrated « Ang.-Sax. Chron. iit)o-i : Foss, Samson as bishop of Worcester (ib. i. 65. He made his escape, and even- 97). But that consecration (June 15, tually recovered his see. For some 1096) was really before Anselm went remarkable practices of Flambard as abroad. See Godwin, 456. to the bishoprick of Lisieux, see Ivo ° Eadm. 22, 55-6. John of Peter- Carnot. Epp. 149, 153-4, i57 (Patrol, borough relates that Anselm, on visit- clxii.); cf. Sym. Dunelm. Continuat. ing Hugh of Cluny, was told by him col. 61. " Rex ille proxima nocte ante Deum p Anselm, Ep. iii. 41, ductus et adjudicatus tristem damna- 1 Eadm. 57. See Rainc J wt. UoBis sententiain accepit." (Sparke, ' Lappenberg. ii. 249. Chap. V a.d. iioo-i. QUESTION OF HOMAGE. 461 them, he could not communicate with him or remain in England. He suggested, however, that Henry might ask the pope to dispense with the enforcement of them in his dominions.^ A truce until Easter was agreed on, and, soon after it had expired, the king received an answer to a letter which he had written to the pope. In this answer Paschal dwelt on the distinction between ecclesiastical and secular power, but without touching the question whether investiture and homage were really an invasion of the church's spiritual rights.* The king found it necessary to temporise. He feared the influence of his brother Robert, who had returned from the east, adding to the charm of his popular manners the fame of a brave warrior who had borne a conspicuous share in the delivery of the holy sepulchre from the in- fidels. Henry, therefore, could not afford to alienate the clergy, while he was unwilling to give up so important a part of his prerogative as that which was now assailed." The nobles in general were opposed to the ecclesiastical claim, and the bishops joined them in declaring that, rather than yield the national rights, they would expel the primate from the realm, and renounce their connexion with Rome.^ Gerard, archbishop of York, Herbert of Norwich, and Robert of Coventry, were sent to Rome on the part of the king ; Baldwin and another monk on that of Anselm. The bishops were charged with a letter, in which Henry, while professing his desire to respect the pope as his predecessors had done, declared himself resolved to uphold the rights of his crown ; if, he said, he were to abase himself by suffering them to be diminished, neither his nobles nor his people would endure it ; and • Ep. iii. 100 ; Eadm. 57. Wharton's mistake in publishing this ' Eadmer gives it, p. 59. letter (Ang. Sac. ii. 178)35 if it were " Id. 57. not in Gerberon's edition. Cf. Epp ' Anselm. ad Paschalem, Ep. iv. 4. iii. 37 ; iv. 2, 6. Martene (Thesaur. i. 273) has exposed 463 QUESTION OF HOMAGE. Book VI he desired Paschal to choose between a relaxation o£ the decrees and a loss of England from his obedience.^ In answer to the solicitations of the bishops, the pope declared that, even to save his life, he would ^" ° ' not recede from the decrees; he wrote to the king that his treatment of the church was as if an unnatural son should reduce his mother to bondage ; and he addressed to Anselm a letter of commendation and encouragement.^ The bishops, however, who brought back the letter for Henry, professed to have been verbally assured by the pope that, if the king would in other respects discharge his duties well, he should not be troubled on the subject of investiture. The archbishop's envoys said that they had received no such communi- cation : but the bishops rejoined that it had been made in secret ; that the pope would not commit it to writing, lest it should come to the knowledge of other princes, who might thereupon claim a like allowance. A vehement dispute followed. Baldwin indignantly insisted that he and his companion ought to be beUeved, supported as they were by the pope's letters. It was replied that the word of an archbishop and two bishops ought to outweigh that of two monklings,^ who by their very profession were disqualified for bearing witness in secular courts; that it was far superior to sheepskins bescribbled with ink, and with a lump of lead appended to them : to which Baldwin rejoined that the question was not secular but spiritual.^ A fresh reference was made to Rome, for the y The letter is given by Bromton, merly been advocate of the church of ^nn. 1 103, ap. Twysden, 499. Tournay. Herm. Tomac. de Restaur. * Eadm. 61. Hume, after a fruitless S. Martini Tomac. 13 (Patrol, clxxx.). search for the text, " I have said ye '' Eadm. 62. Dr. Lappenberg seems are gods," which Paschal quotes in to think the pope had acted with one of his letters, supposes it to be pro- duplicity (ii. 250-1). Dean Church bably " a forgery of his Holiness " (!). acquits him (208). Professor Hasse ;. rot (Transl. 155) thinks that the bishops • * MonachellL" Baldwin had for- had misunderstood him ; M. de Re'mu- Cma?. V. A o. 1102-3. COUNCIL AT LONDON. 463 purpose of ascertaining the pope's real sentiments,*^ and in the meantime Anselm agreed that he would not suspend communion with the king, or with those who were invested by him. But he refused to consecrate some clergy of the court who were nominated to bishop- ricks ; and, although the archbishop of York was willing to take the chief part in the rite, two of the nominees declined to receive consecration on such terms.<^ At Michaelmas 1102, a council was held at London, and, by Anselm's desire, it was attended by the nobles of the realm, in order to add force to its decisions. A number of abbots were deprived for simony or other irregularities ; the obligation of celibacy was now for the first time extended to the parochial clergy of England ; ® and the other canons bear sad evidence to the condition into which religion, discipline, and morality had sunk under the misgovernment of William Rufus.^ The enforcement of celibacy met with strong opposition, espe- cially in the province of York, where many of the priests preferred the alternative of shutting their church-doors, and giving up the performance of all Divine service." The king and the archbishop received answers from the pope ; but Henry refused to make known the contents of that which was addressed to " ' him, and Anselm refrained for a time from opening the other, lest it should involve him in fresh difficulties. The king made an opportunity of visiting him at Canterbury, and proposed that the archbishop should himself go to aat, that in conversation he had spoken appeterent, in immunditias horribiles in a conciliatory tone, supposing that adChristianinominissummumdedecus the parties would come to an agree- inciderent." Henr. Huntingd. 1. vii., ment. 302. Patrol, cxcv. 244. The words are •* Anselm, Ep. iii. ^3. repeated by Rob. de Monte, a.d. * Eadm. 63-4. 1102 (ib. clx., or Pertz, vi.). • " Quod quibusdam mundissimum ' Eadm. 63 ; Wilkins. i. 382. visum est, quibusdam periculosum. « Sym. Dunelm. Aim. 1102. ijj. NCo dum tnundilias viribus majores Twysden, 228. 464 SECOND RETIREMENT fiooic VI. Rome with a view of obtaining a relaxation of the decrees. Anselm repHed that, although old and infirm, he was willing to undertake the journey, but that he would not do anything to the injury of the church, or to his own discredit ; whereupon he was assured that he would only be expected to confirm the evidence of the king's own envoys as to the state of English affairs.^ The archbishop set out, and, on arriving at Bee, opened the pope's letter, by which he found that Paschal solemnly disavowed the words imputed to him by Henry's late envoys, and placed the three prelates under censure until they should make satisfaction.^ After a journey in which honours everywhere waited on him, he reached Rome, where about the same time William of Warelwast arrived as representative of the king. At an audience of the pope, the envoy declared that his master would rather lose his crown than abandon the right of investiture. Paschal replied that he himself would die rather than yield up his claim ; but, by way of conciliation, he confirmed in some other points the usages which had been introduced by William the Conqueror. Anselm soon discovered that his opponents were employing the pecuniary arguments which were generally successful at Rome ; and, after having received the papal blessing, with a vague confirmation of the privileges of his see, he again withdrew to the hospitality of Hugh of Lyons, who, since his former visit, had performed the pilgrimage to Jerusalem.'^ On the way he was overtaken by William of Warelwast, who travelled for some time in his company, and at parting told him that the king would gladly see him back, if the archbishop would do as his predecessors had done to the crown. Anselm considered this as for- bidding his return, miless he would agree to terms which '• Eadm. 65. ^ Id. 66-7- ; Remusat, 336. Anselm, Ep. 'w t* • Eadm. 65. Chap. V. a.d. 1103-5. OF ANSELM. 465 the late Roman canons had rendered impossible; and he wrote from Lyons to warn the king that on him must be the guilt of any mischiefs which might follow.^ Henry committed the property of the archbishoprick to the care of two of Anselm's retainers, who, as would appear from a hint of Edmer, did not exercise their stewardship very faithfully.*" He repeatedly desired the primate to return, but without offering any mitigation of his conditions ;" while Anselm, in answer to letters from some of the clergy, who urged him to redress the disorders of the church, steadily declared that he could not return unless the king would make concessions." The arch- bishop attempted by frequent messages to urge the pope to a more decided course ; but although he prevailed on Paschal to excommunicate the Norman counsellors who had maintained the principle of investiture, and the ecclesiastics who accepted it, no sentence was uttered against the king himself p At length Anselm resolved to take further steps on his own responsibility. In the spring of 1105, he visited Henry's sister, the countess of Blois, and told her that he was about to excommunicate the king. The countess was greatly alarmed by this information, as such a sentence might have dangerous effects at a time when Henry was at war with his brother Robert, and when his subjects were discontented on account of its cost. She therefore earnestly endeavoured to mediate between the king and the archbishop, and succeeded in bringing them to a conference at the castle ' Ep. iii. 88 ; iv. 46 ; Eadm. 68. the king justified the speech of William ■» Id. 69. of Warelwast, and the interpretation " E.g., Ep. iii. 94, and the answer, which the archbishop put on it, 96 ; Eadm. 70. although the prohibition was not "> Ep. iii. 90 ; Eadm. 69. Dr. Lap- generally known in England. Eadm. penberg censures Anselm for remaining 69, 71; Inett, ii. 114; Remusat^ m learned ease at Lyons, and throwing 337. on Henry the blame of forbidding his p Eadm. 70. cturn (ii. 254). But it appears that VOL. IV. 2P 466 AGREEMENT BETWEEN Book Vt. of L'Aigle in Normandy, on the eve of St. Mary Mag- dalen (July 21). *i But although at this meeting Henry professed himself willing to give up the revenues of Canterbury, the question of homage and investiture was still a bar to reconciliation ; and again a reference to Rome was necessary.'^ Many of the English clergy had taken advantage of the primate's absence to defy the late canons as to celibacy, and Henry conceived the idea of turning their irregulari- ties to profit by imposing a fine on them. As, however, the produce of this measure fell short of his expectations and of his necessities, he proceeded to levy a fine on every parish-church, holding the incumbents answerable for the payment. It was in vain that two hundred of the clergy, arrayed in their robes of ministration, waited on him with a petition for relief; and Anselm found himsell obliged to address to the king a remonstrance against his usurpation of ecclesiastical discipline.^ The primate received fresh letters, detailing the increased confusion which prevailed among his flock, and earnestly entreating him to return. Gerard of York, and other prelates who had formerly been his opponents, now wrote to acknow- ledge their error, and declared themselves ready not only to follow but to go before him in the endeavour to heal the wounds of the church.* At length William of Warelwast and Baldwin, who had been sent to Rome as representatives of the king and of the archbishop respectively, returned with the proposal of a compromise — that the king should forego investiture, but that, until he should come to a better mind, bishops and abbots should be permitted to do homage, while those who had been invested by him were to be admitted to communion on such terms as the two envoys should agree •J Ep iii. no; Eadm. 71. • lb. iii. 109; Eadm. 71-3. ' Ep. iii. no; iv. 73. * Ep. iii. 121 ; Eadm. 7X-3. Chap. V a.d. 1105-7. MENRY I. AND ANSELM. 467 on." These conditions were ratified at Bee on the 25th of August 1 1 06, when the king promised to restore to Anselm the profits of the see during his absence, to abstain from the revenues of vacant bishopricks and abbeys, and to remit all fines to the clergy.^ The victory over Robert at Tenchebray, on the 28th of September, was regarded by many as a blessing on the peace which had been concluded with the church.^ Anselm was received in England with enthusiasm. The queen, " Maud the Good,'' who had always regarded him with the highest reverence and had corresponded with him in his exile, went before him from stage to stage, to direct the preparations for his entertainment.* He soon after joined with the archbishop of York in consecrating five bishops, among whom were his old antagonist William of Warelwast and the two who had refused to be consecrated in the primate's absence.** A council was held at Westminster in 1107, when the king formally relinquished the privilege of investiture, and the archbishop promised to tolerate the ceremony of homage, notwithstanding the condemnation which Urban had pronounced against it.^ The king had conceded, and Anselm was congratulated by his correspondents as victorious ; yet in truth Henry, by giving up an indifferent formality, was able to retain the old relations of the crown with the hierarchy, and even the nomination of bishops.*' At this council, and at one held in the follow- " Ep. iii. 114 ; Eadm. 74. sed rellgiosorum se penitus committit " Id. 75. y Id. 76. consilio." Hence Inett (ii. 122), Dean * Id. See for this queen's character. Church (220-1), and Mr. Martineau W. Malmesb. 650-1. (309). suppose that the king virtually ^ Sym. Dunelm. Ann. 1107. gave up his patronage. But the »• Eadm. 76 ; Wilkins, iii. 386-7. meaning seems merely to be that he <= Planck, IV ii. 23; Lingard, ii. took advice as to the fitness of his 17-18: Phillips, i. 129 ; Remusat, 367- nominees. (See Hasse, Transl. 194.) 70. Anselm soon after wrote to the Malmesbury's account of the accom- pope— " Rex ipse in personis eligendis modation is — " Rex investituram nvillatemis propria utitur voluntate, annuli etbacuH indulsit inperpetuum : 468 A.D. 1107-9. LAST YEARS OF ANSELM Book VL ing year, the canons against the marriage of ecclesiastics were renewed with great strictness ; but the pope con- sented for a time that the sons of clergymen might be admitted to orders, on the remarkable ground that "almost the greater and the better part of the English clergy" were derived from this class.^ During the short remainder of his life, Anselm enjoyed the friendship and respect of Henry. Notwithstanding his growing infirmity, he continued to write on theological and philosophical subjects ; on his death-bed he expressed a wish that he might be permitted to live until he had solved a question as to the origin of the soul — because he feared that no other person would be able to give a right solution. After his death, which took place in April 1 109,® the primacy was allowed to remain vacant until 1 1 14, when it was conferred on Ralph, bishop of Rochester, who had administered its affairs during the interval.* retento tantum {al. tamen) electionis suevit, se nihil magis habere suspectum et regalium privilegio." P. 50. quam quod eum Deus in tola vita ** Eadm. 76. nulla corripueratadversitate." Opera, * Id. 25-6. John of Salisbury re- ii. 54, ed. Giles, ports a saying which shows that •" Eadm. 86 ; W. Malmesb. G. P. Anselm was not disposed to make too 1506. An enthusiastic descripti*', of much of what he had suffered from the prosperity of the English clergy William Rufusand Henry—" Perpetua and monks about this time is given by laude illustrium doctorum doctor An- Baldric of Del, in his ' Itinerarium ' selmus, ut a suis accepi, iicere con- (Patrol, clxvi. iiji). END OF VOL. IV. Printed by llazell, Watson, d: Vimy, Ld., London and Aylesbury. 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