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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER I
THE CHURCH IN THE TWELFTH CENTURY
3
MILITARY BISHOPS.
Under such influences it was in vain that the better
class of men who occasionally appeared in the ranks of the hierarchy, such as Fulbert of Chartres, Hildebert of
Le Mans, Ivo of Chartres, Lanfranc, Anselm, St.
Bruno, St. Bernard, St. Norbert, and others, struggled to enforce respect for
religion and morality. The current against them was too strong, and they could
do little but protest and offer an example which few were found to follow. In
those days of violence the meek and humble had little chance, and the prizes
were for those who could intrigue and chaffer, or whose martial tendencies
offered promise that they would make the rights of their churches and vassals
respected. In fact, the military character of the mediaeval prelates is a
subject which it would be interesting to consider in more detail than space
will here admit.
The wealthy abbeys and powerful bishoprics came to be largely
regarded as appropriate means to provide for younger sons of noble houses, or
to increase the influence of leading families. By such methods as we have seen
they passed into the hands of those whose training had been military rather
than religious. The mitre and cross had no more scruple than the knightly
pennon to be seen in the forefront of battle. When excommunication failed to
bring to reason restless vassals or encroaching neighbors, there was prompt
recourse to the fleshly arm, and the plundered peasant could not distinguish
between the ravages of the robber baron and of the representative of Christ.
One of the early adventures of Rodolph of Hapsburg,
by which he won the reputation which elevated him to the imperial throne, was
the war declared by Walter, Bishop of Strasbourg, against his burghers, because
they had refused to aid him in gratuitously interfering in a quarrel between
the Bishop of Metz and a troublesome noble. As they disregarded his
excommunication, Bishop Walter attacked them vigorously, when they placed
themselves under the command of Rodolph, and utterly
defeated their pastor, after a war which desolated every portion of Alsace.
The
chronicles of the period are full of details of this nature. Worldly and
turbulent, there was little to differentiate the prelate from the baron, and
the latter had no more scruple in making reprisals on Church property than on
secular possessions. In the dissensions which reduced the wealthy Abbey of St. Tron to beggary, the pious Godfrey of Bouillon, shortly
before the crusade which won for him the throne of Jerusalem, ravaged the abbey
lands with fire and sword. The people, on whom fell the crushing weight of
these conflicts, could only look upon the baron and priest as enemies both; and
whatever might be lacking in the military ability of the spiritual warriors,
was compensated for by their seeking to kill the souls as well as the bodies
of their foes. This was especially the case in Germany, where the prelates were
princes as well as priests, and where a great religious house like the Abbey
of St. Gall was the temporal ruler of the Cantons of St. Gall and Appenzel, until the latter threw off the yoke after a long
and devastating war.
The historian of the abbey chronicles with pride the
martial virtues of successive abbots, and in speaking of Ulric III, who died in 1117, he remarks that, worn out with many battles, he at last
passed away in peace. All this was in some sort a necessity of the incongruous
union of feudal noble and Christian prelate, and though more marked in Germany
than elsewhere, it was to be seen everywhere. In 1224 the Bishops of Coutances, Avranches, and Lisieux withdrew from the army of Louis VIII at Tours,
under an agreement that the king should make legal investigation to determine
whether the bishops of Normandy were bound to serve personally in the royal
armies; if this was found to be the case, they were to return and pay the amercement for deserting him. The decision apparently went
against them, for in 1272 we find them serving personally under Phihppe le Hardi. This
indisposition to fight the battles of others was not often shown when the cause
was their own. Geroch of Reichersperg inveighs bitterly against the warlike prelates who provoke unjust wars,
attacking the peaceful and delighting in the slaughter which they cause and
witness, giving no quarter, taking no prisoners, sparing neither clergy nor
laity, and spending the revenues of the Church on soldiers, to the deprivation
of the poor.
Such a prelate was Lupold, Bishop of
Worms, whose recklessness provoked his brother to say, "My lord bishop,
you scandalize us laymen greatly by your example. Before you were a bishop you
feared God a little, but now you care nothing for him", to which Bishop Lupold flippantly retorted that when they both should be in
hell he would exchange seats if his brother desired. During the wars between
the emperors Philip and Otho IV he personally led his
troops in support of Philip, and when his soldiers hesitated about sacking
churches, he would tell them that it was enough if they left the bones of the
dead. The story is well known of Richard of England, and Philippe of Dreux, the
warlike Bishop of Beauvais, who had shown himself equally skilful and ruthless
in the predatory warfare of the age, and who, when at last captured by Earl
John, complained to Celestin III of his imprisonment as a violation of
ecclesiastical privileges. When Celestin, reproving him for his martial
propensities, interceded for his release, King Richard sent to the pope the
coat of mail in which the prelate had been captured, with the inquiry made to
Jacob by his sons, "Know, whether it be thy son's coat?" to which the
good pontiff responded by abandoning the appeal.
A different result, not long
afterwards, attended a similar experience of Theodore, Marquis of Montferrat,
when he defeated and captured Aymon, Bishop of
Vercelli. It happened that Cardinal Tagliaferro,
papal legate to Aragon, was tarrying at Geneva, and, hearing of the sacrilege,
wrote in threatening wise to the marquis, who responded with the same inquiry
as King Richard, sending him the martial gear of the prelate, including his
sword still stained with blood. Yet the proud noble felt his inability to cope
with his spiritual foes, and not only liberated the bishop, but surrendered to
him the fortress which had been the occasion of the war. Even more instructive
is the case of the Bishop-elect of Verona, who, in 1265, when marching at the
head of an army, was taken prisoner by the troops of Manfred of Sicily.
Although Urban IV was busily urging forward the crusade which was to deprive
Manfred of life and kingdom, he had the assurance to demand the liberation of
his bishop, telling Manfred that if he had a spark left of the fear of God he
would dismiss his prisoner. When Manfred replied, evading the demand with
exuberant humility, Clement IV, who had meanwhile succeeded to the papacy,
called upon Jayme I of Aragon to intervene. Neither pope seemed to imagine
that there could be any hesitation in acceding to the preposterous claim, and
King Jayme interposed so effectually that Manfred offered to release the bishop
on his swearing not to bear arms against him in future. Even this condition was
not accepted without difficulty. When the spiritual character thus only served
to confer immunity for acts of violence, it is easy to understand the
irresistible temptation to their commission.
The impression which these worldly and turbulent men
made upon their quieter contemporaries was, that pious souls believed that no
bishop could reach the kingdom of heaven. There was a story widely circulated
of Geoffroi de Peronne,
Prior of Clairvaux, who was elected Bishop of Tournay, and who was urged by St. Bernard and Eugenius III
to accept, but who cast himself on the ground, saying, "If you turn me
out, I may become a vagrant monk, but a bishop never!" On his death-bed he
promised a friend to return and report as to his condition in the other world,
and did so as the latter was praying at the altar. He announced that he was
among the blessed, but it had been revealed to him by the Trinity that if he
had accepted the bishopric he would have been numbered with the damned. Peter
of Blois, who relates this story, and Peter Cantor, who repeats it, both
manifested their belief in it by persistently refusing bishoprics; and not long
after an ecclesiastic in Paris declared that he could believe all things except
that any German bishop could be saved, because they bore the two swords, of the
spirit and of the flesh. All this Caesarius of Heisterbach explains by the rarity of worthy prelates, and
the superabounding multitude of wicked ones; and he
further points out that the tribulations to which they were exposed arose from
the fact that the hand of God was not visible in their promotion. Language can
scarce be stronger than that employed by Louis VII in describing the
worldliness and pomp of the bishops, when he vainly appealed to Alexander III
to utilize his triumph over Frederic Barbarossa by reforming the Church.
In fact, the records of the time bear ample testimony
to the rapine and violence, the flagrant crimes and defiant immorality of these
princes of the Church. The only tribunal to which they were amenable was that
of Rome. It required the courage of desperation to cause complaints to be made
there against them, and when such complaints were made, the difficulty of
proving charges, the length to which proceedings were drawn out, and the
notorious venality of the Roman curia, afforded virtual immunity. When a resolute
and incorruptible pontiff like Innocent III occupied the papal chair, there was
some chance for sufferers to make themselves heard, and the number of such
trials alluded to in his epistles show how wide-spread and deep-rooted was the
evil.
Yet, even under him, the protraction of the proceedings, and the evident
shrinking from final condemnation, show how little encouragement there was for
prosecutions likely to react so dangerously on the prosecutor. Thus, in 1198,
Gerard de Rougemont, Archbishop of Besançon, was accused by his chapter of perjury, simony,
and incest. When summoned to Rome the accusers did not dare to prosecute the
charges, though they did not withdraw them, and Innocent, charitably quoting
the woman taken in adultery, sent him back to purge himself and be absolved.
Then followed a long course of undisturbed scandals, through which religion in
his diocese became a mockery. He continued to live in incest with his
relative, the Abbess of Remiremont, and other
concubines, one of whom was a nun, and another the daughter of a priest; no
church could be consecrated or preferment conferred without payment; by his
exactions and oppressions his clergy were reduced to live like peasants, and
were exposed to the contempt of their parishioners; and monks and nuns who
could bribe him were allowed to abandon their convents and marry. At last
another attempt was made, in 1211, to remove him, which, after more than a
year, resulted in a sentence that he should undergo canonical purgation; i. e., find two bishops and three abbots to join him in an
oath of disculpation, when negotiations as to the
character of the oath ensued, lasting until 1214. Finally the citizens rose and
drove him out; he retired to the Abbey of Bellevaux,
where he died in 1225.
Maheu de Lorraine, Bishop of
Toul, was a prelate of the same stamp. Consecrated in 1200, within two years
his chapter applied to Innocent for his deposition, alleging that he had
already reduced the revenues of the see from a thousand livres to thirty. It was not until 1210 that his removal could be effected, after a
most intricate series of commissions and appeals, interspersed with acts of
violence. He was wholly abandoned to debauchery and the chase, and his favorite
concubine was his daughter by a nun of Epinal, but he
retained a valuable preferment, as Grand-prévôt of
Saint-Dié. In 1217 he caused his successor Renaud de Senlis to be murdered,
soon after which his uncle, Thiebault, Duke of
Lorraine, happening to meet him, slew him on the spot. Ordinary justice,
apparently, could do nothing with him.
Very similar was the case of the Bishop
of Vence, whom Celestin III had ordered suspended and
sent to Rome to answer for his enormities, and who had defiantly continued in
the exercise of his functions. On Innocent's accession, in 1198, his
excommunication was ordered, which was equally ineffectual; and at length, in
1204, Innocent sent peremptory orders to the Archbishop of Embrun to investigate the charges, and, if they were found correct, to depose him.
Meanwhile the diocese had been brought to the verge of ruin, the churches were
demolished, and divine service was performed in only a few parishes. So in
Narbonne, the headquarters of heresy, the Archbishop, Berenger II, natural son of Raymond Berenger, Count of
Barcelona, preferred to live in Aragon, where he held a rich abbey and the
bishopric of Lerida, and never even visited his province. Consecrated in 1190,
he had never seen it in 1204, though he drew large revenues from it, both in
the regular way and by the sale of bishoprics and benefices, which were
indiscriminately bestowed on children or on men of the most abandoned lives.
The condition of the province, the highest ecclesiastical dignity of France,
was consequently shocking in the extreme, through the misconduct of the clergy,
the boldness of the heretics, and the violence of the laity. As early as the
year 1200, Innocent III summoned Berenger to account.
In 1204 he made another attempt, continued during the following years, as no
amendment was visible, and as the farce of appeals from legate to pope was
persistently kept up. At length, in 1210, we find Innocent still writing to his
legate to investigate the archbishops of Narbonne and Ausch and execute without appeal whatever the canons require, but it was not until
1212 that Berenger was removed. It is probable that
even then he might have escaped had not the legate, Arnaud of Citeaux, been
desirous of the succession, which he obtained. We can readily believe the
assertion of a writer of the thirteenth century, that the process of deposing a
prelate was so cumbrous that even the most wicked had no dread of punishment.
ABUSES OF PAPAL PREROGATIVE.
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