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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
4
ABUSES OF PAPAL PREROGATIVE.
Even where the enormity of offences did not call for
papal intervention, the episcopal office was
prostituted in a thousand ways of oppression and exaction which were
sufficiently within the law to afford the sufferers no opportunity of redress.
How thoroughly its profitable nature was recognized, is shown by the case of a
bishop who, when fallen in years, summoned together his nephews and relatives
that they might agree among themselves as to his succession. They united upon
one of their number, and conjointly borrowed the large sums requisite to
purchase the election. Unluckily the bishop-elect died before obtaining
possession, and on his death-bed was heartily objurgated by his ruined kinsmen,
who saw no means of repaying the borrowed capital which they had invested in
the abortive episcopal partnership. As St. Bernard
says, boys were inducted into the episcopate at an age when they rejoiced
rather at escaping from the ferule of their teachers than at acquiring rule;
but, soon growing insolent, they learn to sell the altar and empty the pouches
of their subjects. In thus exploiting their office the bishops only followed
the example set them by the papacy, which, directly or through its agents, by
its exactions, made itself the terror of the Christian churches.
Arnold, who
was Archbishop of Treves from 1169 to 1183, won great credit for his astuteness
in saving his people from spoliation by papal nuncios, for whenever he heard of
their expected arrival he used to go to meet them, and by heavy bribes induce
them to bend their steps elsewhere, to the infinite relief of his own flock. In
1160 the Templars complained to Alexander III that
their labors for the Holy Land were seriously impaired by the extortions of
papal legates and nuncios, who were not content with the free quarters and
supply of necessaries to which they were entitled, and Alexander graciously
granted the Order special exemption from the abuse, except when the legate was
a cardinal. It was worse when the pope came himself.
Clement V, after his
consecration at Lyons, made a progress to Bordeaux, in which he and his
retinue so effectually plundered the churches on the road that, after his
departure from Bourges, Archbishop Gilles, in order to support life, was
obliged to present himself daily among his canons for a share in the
distribution of provisions; and the papal residence at the wealthy Priory of Grammont so impoverished the house that the prior resigned
in despair of being able to reestablish its affairs, and his successor was
obliged to levy a heavy tax on all the houses of the order.
England, after the
ignominious surrender of King John, was peculiarly subjected to papal
extortion. Rich benefices were bestowed on foreigners, who made no pretext of
residence, until the annual revenue thus withdrawn from the island was computed
to amount to seventy thousand marks, or three times the income of the crown,
and all resistance was suppressed by excommunications which disturbed the
whole kingdom. At the general council of Lyons, held in 1245, an address was
presented in the name of the Anglican Church, complaining of these oppressions
in terms more energetic than respectful, but it accomplished nothing. Ten
years later the papal legate, Rustand, made a demand
in the name of Alexander IV for an immense subsidy—the share of the Abbey of
St. Albans was no less than six hundred marks—when Fulk,
Bishop of London, declared that he would be decapitated, and Walter of
Worcester that he would be hanged, sooner than submit; but this resistance was
broken down by the device of trumping up fictitious claims of debts due Italian
bankers for moneys alleged to have been advanced to defray expenses before the
Roman curia, and these claims were enforced by excommunication.
When Robert Grosseteste of Lincoln found that his efforts to reform his
clergy were rendered nugatory by appeals to Rome, where the offenders could
always purchase immunity, he visited Innocent IV in hopes of obtaining some
change for the better, and on utterly failing, he bluntly exclaimed to the
pope, "Oh, money, money, how much thou canst effect, especially in the
Roman court!" This special abuse was one of old standing, and complaints
of its demoralizing effect upon the priesthood date back from the time of the
establishment of the appellate jurisdiction of Rome under Charles le Chauve. Prelates like Hildebert of Le Mans, who honestly sought to better the depraved lives of their clergy,
constantly found their efforts frustrated, and had scant reticence in
remonstrating. Remonstrances, however, were of little
avail, though occasionally an upright pope like Innocent III, whose biographer
finds special cause of praise in his refusal of "propinas" - gifts
or bribes for issuing letters - would sometimes recall a letter of remission
avowedly issued in ignorance of the facts, or would even grant to a prelate the
right to punish without appeal, while other popes were found who sought to
neutralize the effects of their letters without diminishing the business and
fees of the chancery. Even when papal letters were not of this demoralizing
character, they were never issued without payment. When Luke, the holy
Archbishop of Gran, was thrown in prison by the usurper Ladislas,
in 1172, he refused to avail himself of letters of liberation procured from
Alexander III, saying that he would not owe his freedom to simony.
This was by no means the only mode in which the
supreme jurisdiction of Rome worked inestimable evil throughout Christendom.
While the feudal courts were strictly territorial and local, and the judicial
functions of the bishops were limited to their own dioceses so that every man knew
to whom he was responsible in a tolerably well-settled system of justice, the
universal jurisdiction of Rome gave ample opportunity for abuses of the worst
kind. The pope, as supreme judge, could delegate to any one any portion of his
authority, which was supreme everywhere; and the papal chancery was not too
nice in its discrimination as to the character of the persons to whom it issued
letters empowering them to exercise judicial functions and enforce them with
the last dread sentence of excommunication—letters, indeed, which, if the papal
chancery is not wronged, were freely sold to all able to pay for them.
Europe
thus was traversed by multitudes of men armed with these weapons, which they
used without remorse for extortion and oppression. Bishops, too, were not
backward in thus farming-out their more limited jurisdictions, and, in the
confusion thus arising, it was not difficult for reckless adventurers to
pretend to the possession of these delegated powers and use them likewise for
the basest purposes, no one daring to risk the possible consequences of
resistance. These letters thus afforded a carte blanche through which injustice
could be perpetrated and malignity gratified to the fullest extent. An
additional complication which not unnaturally followed was the fabrication and
falsification of these letters. It was not easy to refer to distant Rome to
ascertain the genuineness of a papal brief confidently produced by its bearer,
and the impunity with which powers so tremendous could be assumed was irresistibly attractive. When Innocent III ascended the throne he found a
factory of forged letters in full operation in Rome, and although this was
suppressed, the business was too profitable to be broken up by even his
vigilance. To the end of his pontificate the detection of fraudulent briefs
was a constant preoccupation. Nor was this industry confined to Rome. About the
same period Stephen, Bishop of Tournay, discovered in
his episcopal city a similar nest of counterfeiters,
who had invented an ingenious instrument for the fabrication of the papal
seals. To the people, however, it mattered little whether they were genuine or
fictitious; the suffering was the same whether the papal chancery had received
its fee or not.
Thus the Roman curia was a terror to all who were
brought in contact with it. Hildebert of le Mans
pictures its officials as selling justice, delaying decisions on every pretext,
and, finally, oblivious when bribes were exhausted. They were stone as to
understanding, wood as to rendering judgment, fire as to wrath, iron as to
forgiveness, foxes in deceit, bulls in pride, and minotaurs in consuming everything. In the next century Robert Grosseteste boldly told Innocent IV and his cardinals that the curia was the source of all
the vileness which rendered the priesthood hissing and a reproach to
Christianity, and, after another century and a half, those who knew it best
described it as unaltered.
EXTORTIONS OF THE BISHOPS.
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