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V- 



HISTORY 



OP 



THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 



VOL. II. — Part I. 



HISTORY 



THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 



Br JAMES CRAIGIE ROBERTSON, M.A., 

OAHOV OF GAIITBBBUBT. 



VOLUME I L— (AD. 690-1122.) 



Part L 



NEW EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED. 




LONDON: 
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET. 

1862. 



Tke right qf TramOatim U re$orved. 

I/O . ^^^ . 20J^ , 



IX^XDON : PRTirrR]) BT W. CLOWES AND BONS, 8TA1IFOUD 8TBSET, 
AST) CUASIKO CKOm. 



ADVERTISEMENT. 



This volume has been carefully revised for the present 
edition, and has been enlarged to such an extent that, 
with a view to the reader's convenience, it has been 
thought well to divide it into two parts. 

The Author hopes that the Third Volume of the 
work (to which references are occasionally made in the 
following pages) will be ready for publication before 
the end of next year. 



PrecinctSf Canterbury, 
Jtdy 26, 1862. 



CONTENTS. 



BOOK III. 

FKOM THE ELECTION OF GREGORY THE GREAT TO THE DEATH 
OF CHARLEMAGNE, A.D. 590-814. 



CHAPTEE I. 

Gregoby the Great, aj>. 590-604 ; Columban. aj>. 589-C15. 



Transition to tlie Middle Ages ... 1 

Gregory 2 

Controversy with Eutyohins. t&. 

Election as pope 8 

Epistles 4 

Liturgical reforms 5 

Charities 6 

Political conduct 7 

Administration of the Church ib. 

Controversy with John tlie Faster 8 

Relations with the emperors 11 



Thoodelinda 18 

Treatment of Sectaries and Jews. . . ib. 

Exertions against paganism 14 

Mission to England ib, 

Augustine and the Britons 19 

Death of Augustine 21 

Gregory's works and opinions ib. 

His death 26 

Columhan ib. 

Gall 81 



CHAPTER II. 

Mahomet—the Monothblite Oontbovebst, a.d. 610-718. 



Heraclius 82 

Religious conilition of Arabia 33 

Mahomet 84 

The Koran 85 

Progress of Mahometanism 88 

Monothelism 41 

Ecthesis of Heraclius 44 

Pyrrhus and Maximus 45 

Type of Constans • 46 



Lateran Council 47 

Persecution ofMortin and Maximus 48 

Council under Agatho 50 

Sixth General Council 51 

Council -in Trullo" 54 

Justinian IL 55 

Philippicus 57 

TheMaronitos 58 



CHAPTEB m. 

The Wbbtebn Church raox the Death of Gbbgobt the Great to the 
Pontificate of Gbeqobt XL. a.d. 604-715. 



L The Fapacy 60 

IL Spain 62 

III. France 68 

rV. Ireland 66 

V. England 67 

* Roman and Scottish usages ... 68 

Conference at Whitby 71 

Wilfrid— The<Kloru 72 

Roman usages establisheil ... 76 

Arts and leamiuj? 77 



Monasticism 77 

Bede, Aldhelm, Ccedmon 78 

VI. Germany, &c 79 

(1.) Bavaria* t6. 

Thuringia 80 

Labours of Amandus 81 

Livin — Eligius 82 

Frisia— Wulfram— Egborf ... 88 

WiUibrord 84 






vm 



CONTENTS. 



CHAPTER IV. 

looyooLASM, A.D. 717-775. 



1>AGE 

Growth of rcvereiico for images ... 8G 

Leo the Isauriau 87 

Germanud 90 

" Till' Sure^^ •• ib. 

John of Damascus 91 

Oomuiotioiis in Italy 93 



PAOK 

Constantino Copronymus 97 

Oonncil at Constantinople 98 

Porsteution of monks 99 

The putriurch Constiuitine 101 

Death of CopronymuB 102 



ClTAl^'EK V. 
St. Boniface, a.d. 716-755. 



English missions to Germany 103 

Bonifiebce t&. 

Labours in Frisia and Hescda 104 

Oonseenition at Rome 105 

Daniel of Winchester 106 

TheoakofGeismur 107 

Labours in Bavaria 108 



Charles Martel 108 

Councils 109 

Fulda Ill 

Adelbert and Clement 112 

Virffil of Salzburg 114 

Archbishopric of Mentz 115 

Martyrdom of Boniface 116 



CHAPTER VI. 

PiPIN AMD ChARLEMAGMB, A.D. 741-814. 



Gregory III. and Charles Martel 122 

Change of dynasty in France 123 

Stephen II. and the Lombards ... 125 

Pipin in Italy 127 

Intrusion and deposition of pope 

Constantino 128 

Charlemagne's Lombard marriage 129 

End of tlie Lombard kingdom 130 

Charlemagne at Bome 131 

Loo in. pope 132 



Charlemagne emperor 134 

Wars with the Saxons 137 

Measures for conversion of tlie 

heathen 140 

Encouragement of learning 142 

Alcuin 143 

Education 145 

Service of the Church 147 

Ecclesiastical legislation 148 

Charlemagne and the papacy 149 



CHAPTEli VII. 
The Eastern Chitrch; Contbovebsies of Chablemaones Age, a.d. 775-814. 



L Leo IV 151 

Irene 152 

Council at Constantinople 153 

Second Council of Nicasa 1 51 

Constantino VI 15« 

Nicephorus 100 

Michael Rhangabo t&. 



II. Frankish doctrine as to images 101 

The Caroline Books ib. 

Council of Frankfort 164 

III. Adoptionism 165 

IV. Coutroverdv as to Procession 

of the Holy Spirit 171 



CHAPTER VIII. 
The Obiental Sects. 

I. Monophyaitos 175 I III. Paulicians 

II. Nestorians — Missions tb, \ 



176 



CONTENTS. 



IX 



CHAPTER IX. 



SUPPLXMENTABY. 



FAOE 

I. Intluenoe of the Papacy 186 

Donation of Constantine i6. 

Rciiiiaii influence in England 187 

II. Relations of Oulkoh and 

State 189 

(1.) Confinnation of popes ib. 

(2. S Appointment of biuhops 190 

(3.) Frankly archchaplains 191 

(4.) Councila 192 

(5.) Judicature 198 

UL The Hiebabchy — Adminis- 
tration of the Guuboh ... 194 

(1.) Metropolitans ib, 

(2.) Chorepiscopi 195 

(3.) Archdeacons 196 

(4.^ A^cl^>rie8t8— Bund Deaneries t&. 

(5.) Episcopal visitations 197 

(6.) Parishes 198 

(7.) Local ties of deigy ib, 

(8.) Acephalous clerks ib, 

(9.) Chaplains 199 

(10.) Advocates 200 

(11.) Patronage 201 

(12.) Simony 202 

(13.) Precarious contracts ib, 

(14.) Tithes 203 

(ir).) Benefices 205 

(16.) Division of income ib. 



(17.) Toxation 207 

(18.J Secular omploymenU ib. 

(19.) Position and munnern of Uie 

clergy ib. 

(20.) Celibacy and murnii>j:c 209 

(21.) Canonical life 211 

IV. MONASTIOISM 213 

Benedict of Aniane 220 

Decay of English monasticism ... 221 

Nunneries 222 

Canonesses 223 

y. Bites and Usages ib, 

(1.) Language of Divine service ib. 

(2.) Organs 225 

(3.) The Eucharist 226 

Purgatory — Manes — Fra- 
ternities 228 

(4.) The Lords-day 229 

(5.) Other festivals 231 

(6.) Beverence for saints 232 

Belies 233 

Legends 235 

(7.) Pilgrimages 236 

(8.) Penitential discipline 237 

(9.) Ordeal 2.S9 

(100 Asylum 242 

VI. Slavery 244 



BOOK IV. 



FKOM THE DEATH OF CHABLEMAGNE TO THE DK1»08ITI0N 
OF POPE GBEGOBY VI.. A.D. 814-1046. 

CHAPTER I. 



Loiis TUB Pious, a.d. 814-840; end op the Contbovebsy as to Images, 
a.d. 813-842 : THE False Decretals. 



I. Death of Chark'ma«,nic 249 

IjOuIs the l^ous 250 

Tr.iUsaction8 with Leo III. and 

Stephen IV 251 

Eccltsiiistical and muiiiistic reform 252 
Lothair aasociated in tlie empire ... 253 
Conspiracy and death of Berniml... 254 

Mamuge of Louis with Judilti 255 

Penunce at Attigny ib. 

Lothair at Borne 256 

Intrigues against Louis 257 

The Field of Lies '^00 

DeiKMitiuii iukI restoration of Loiiirt 2G1 
Hwd«tli 2(» 



Northmen and Sanieons 2(i3 

II. Images in the Eost 264 

Leo the Armenian ib. 

Theodore the Stndite 2«>6 

ProcoiKlingd ugainst inui^os 2(>7 

Murder of Leo 270 

Michael the Stammerer 272 

Theophilus 274 

Images restored by Tlieodora 276 

III. Images in France 278' 

Agobard 280 

Claudiiw of Turin 281 

Chanj;o Ki tlie Fniiikinh view 284 

IV. The False Decretals ib. 



CDNTExNTS. 



CHAPTER II. 



The FnANKidu Church and the Papacy from the Death ««f L<jui» the 
Pious to the Deixwition or Cuarleb the Fat, a.d. 840-887. 



1>AGK 

Dbmembcnneat of the empire ...291 

The Northraen 293 

The Saracens 295 

Diminution of the royal power ...297 

The Hierarchy i6. 

Hincmar 299 

The Papaoy 300 

Nicolas 1 302 

Doctrinal oontroversibs 303 

I. The Eucharistic presence ih. 

Pftsohosius Radbert 304 

Ratramn 305 

II. Predestination 307 

Gottschalk 308 

John Scotus Erigena 312 

Councils 317 

Controversy as to ** Trina Doitus" 318 
Imprisonment and death of 
Gottschalk 319 

Questions bet^^'een Rome and 
France 321 



TAUR 

I. Lotliair's marriage and divorce 321 

Synod ofMetz 324 

Louis 11. at Rome 325 

Gunther and Theut<^ud i6. 

Submission of Lothair 327 

Adrian II 329 

Death of Lotlmir 331 

II. Case of clerks ordained by 

Ebbo 332 

III. Case of Rothad of Soisaons ... 335 
lY. Seizure of Lotharingia by 

Charles tlie Bald 340 

y. Cose of Hincmar of Laon 342 

John VIII 347 

Cliarlcs the Bald, emperor ib. 

Council of Pontyon 348 

Last cxpeditiuii and death of 

Charles 350 

John Vin. at Troyes 351 

Deatiis of John and Hincmar 353 

Charles the Fat 354 



CHAPTER III. 
The Greek Church ; Photiub, a.d. 842-898. 



Michael HI 355 

Differences of Greeks and Latins 356 

Deprivation of Ignatius 357 

Photius 358 

Correspondence with Nicolas of 

Rome 301 

Conversion of Bulgaria 365 

Basil the Macedonian 369 

Photius deposed 371 



FrankisJi writings against the 

Greeks 371 

Eighth GeneralCouncil of the Latins 372 

Disputes as to Bulgaria 373 

Photius in captivity 374 

His restoration 375 

Eighth General Council of the 

Greeks 370 

Photius again deprived 378 



CHAPTER IV. 

Spain — England— Missions of the Ninth Century. 



I. Spain 379 

Persecution at Cordova. 380 

II. England— The Danes 383 

Alfred ib, 

III. Moravia— Cyril and Methodius 384 
Bohemia 389 



IV. Christianity m tlie North 391 

Aiiskar 392 

Anskar in Denmark and Sweden 394 
Archbishoprick of Hamburg... 395 

Further labours of Anskai- 397 

Rimbert 400 



CONTENTS. 



XI 



PART 11. 



CHAPTER V. 

From the Dei'osition op Chablbs the Fat to the Death of Pope 
Sylveoteb n., A.D. 887-1003. 



I'AOB 

Character of the tenth century ... 401 

Fourth marriage of Leo VI {b. 

The Greek Church 403 

Arnulf ib, 

Hungarians and Saracens 404 

Germany 405 

France— Hugh Capet 406 

Cession of Normandy 408 

Italy 409 

The Church in France •;... ib. 

Degradation of the Papacy 411 



Deposition of John Xn 416 

Bepuhlican party at Rome 418 

Crescentius 419 

Gregory V. pope 420 

Arnulf of Rheuns 421 

Gerhert 424 

Question as to marriage of Robert I. 428 
Expectation of the second Advent 430 

Gerbert pope (Sylvester II.) 431 

lAst days and deatli of Otho HI. ... 434 
Death of Sylvester 5 



CHAPTER VI. 

From the Death or Pofb BTLVEffTEB XL to the Deposition of Gbbgobt YI., 

Aj>. 1003-1046. 



I. Henry II. emperor 437 

State of Rome 438 

The Normans in Italy 440 

Conrad IL 441 

Benedict IX 442 

Heribert of Milan 443 

Death of Conrad 444 

Tlutie popes 445 



Council of Sutri 446 

II. Heresy in the West 447 

Sect at Orleans 448 

Sect at Arras 450 

Sect at Monteforte 452 

Sect at Ch&lons 453 

Question as to origin of the sects ib. 
Heresies of the East 455 



CHAPTER VII. 

The BsmsH Chubcheb — BIiasiONs of the Tenth and Eleventh Centuries. 



L England 456 

Dimstan 457 

II. Ireland 461 

in. Scotland ib. 

TV. Russia 463 

V. Bohemia 467 

Adalbert of Pnigue 468 

VI. Slavonic Liturgy 469 

VIL Poland 471 



Vm. North Germany 473 

IX. Hungary ib. 

X. Denmark 477 

XI. Sweden 479 

XII. Norway 480 

Olavo Tryggvesen 482 

St Olave 485 

XIU. Iceland 487 

XIV. Greenland and America ... 491 



CHAPTER VUI. 

SUPPLEHENTABT. 

I. The HiERABCHT 493 1 Interference with diocesan 

(I.) The Papacy ib. rights 498 

Metro|>olituns - Tiie pall 496 (2.) Secular importance of bishopd 500 

Lc^tes 498 I Appointment to sees 501 



Xll 



CONTENTS. 



Ohaiteb \lU.—-eontinued. 



pa<;r 

Boy-biBkops 502 

Theophylact of GonBtautinoplo 503 

Simou^' 504 

Investiture ib. 

Belations of bishops and sove- 
reigns 506 

Foundation of sees 507 

Chorepisoopi 508 

Ck)adjuton t6. 

Warlike bishops 509 

(3.) Property of the Church ib. 

Advooates 511 

(A,) Canons 512 

(5.) Morals of tiio clergy 513 

Chaplains and acephalous 

clerks ib. 

Celibacy and marriage 514 

Ratherius 516 

II. MoNAsnciSM 519 

Order of Cluny 521 

OnlerofCamaldoli 525 



PAOK 

Order of Vallombrosa 526 

Beforms in Germany— Hirschau... 527 

Abolition of impropriations 528 

Relations of bishops and monks ... ib. 

Con&aters 531 

III. Rites AND Usages ib. 

(l.J RituaUsts ib. 

(2.) Ifartyrologies and legends ... 5SS 

Canonisation 594 

(3.) Reverence for the Blessed 

Virgin , 535 

(i.) All Souls* Day 536 

{5.S Relics 537 

^6.^ Pilgrimaffos 538 

(7.^ Architeonire 539 

(8.) Penance 541 

Gzconmiunication and ana- 
thema ib. 

Interdict 542 

(9.) Truce of God 545 

IV. Chivalbt 546 



BOOK V. 



FROM THE DEPOSITION OF POPE GREGORY VL TO THE DEATH 
OF POPE CELESTINE HI., a.d. 1046-1198. 



CHAPTER I. 

The Pontificates of Clement IL, Damasus II., Led IX., VicrroB U^ 
Stephen IX., Nicolas IL, and Alezandeb II., a.d. 1046-1073. 



Clement IL 549 

Conflicting views as to reform 550 

Damasus II 552 

Hildebrand 553 

Leo IX 554 

Peter Damiani 555 

Flagellation — Dominic of the 

Cuirass 557 

Damiani on marriage of the clergy 558 

Simony 559 

Leo*s atteinpts at reform ib. 

Council of Rheims 561 

Effects of Leo*s measures 564 

Leo at Worms 565 

Leo and the Normans 566 

His death 568 

Breach with Constantinople ib. 

Victor II 572 

Deatii of Henry IIL 574 

Stephen IX 575 

John of Vellctri 577 



Nicolas n 577 

Troubles at Milan 578 

Legation of Peter Damiani 581 

Decree as to election of popes 583 

Treaty with Robert Guiscard 585 

Norman conquests in Italy and 

Sicily 587 

Death of Nicolas 588 

Alexander U. and Cadalous. ib. 

Abduction of Henry rV 589 

Synod of Osbor 591 

Peter Damiani in retirement 592 

Adalbert of Bremen 593 

Council of Mantua. 597 

Renewed troubles at Milan ib. 

Troubles at Florence 601 

Heniy IV. and Bertha 602 

Lost days and death of Adalbert .. 603 

Disorders of Germany 605 

Deaths of Alexander and Damiani 606 



CONTENTS. 



Xlli 



CHArTER II. 
Grboort VII., A.D. 1073-1085. 



PACK 

Election of Hildebrand as pope . . . 607 

Claims of the Papacy 609 

Gregory and Pliilip I. of France... 612 

TranBactions with Gcnnany 613 

Measures against simony and mar- 
riage of £e clergy 616 

Investiture 619 

Seizure of Gregory by Cencius ... 621 
Communications between Gregory 

and Henry IV 622 

Council at Worms 623 

Exconmiunication of Henry 625 

Excommunication of Gregory 626 

Distress of Henry 627 

Meeting at Tribur 628 

Henry goes into Italy 629 



PACK 

Gregory and Heniy at Canossa ... 631 

Henry and the ItaUans G34 

Election of Rudolf as king of Ger- 
many 637 

War in Germany 638 

Remonstrances of the Saxons 039 

Henry again excommunicated 640" 

Guibert elected antipope 641 

Death of Rudolf. ib. 

Gregory*B preparations against 

Henry 642 

Heniy in Italy (144 

The Normans at Rome 646 

Death of Gregory 647 

His character 648 



CHAPTER III. 
Bebengar, A.D. 1045-1088. 



Doctrine of the eucharistic pre- 
sence : 652 

Ikirengar 653 

f^nfranc 654 

Letter of Dereugar to Lanfranc ... 655 
Councils at Rome,Vercelli, Brionne, 
and Paris 656 



Council at Tours 658 

Berengar before Nicolas II 659 

TreatiseB of Lanfranc and Berengar 660 

Guitmund 662 

Roman council of 1078 663 

Lest years of Berengar 664 



CHAPTER IV. 

From the Death of Gbeoort VII. to that of the Emfebob Henbt IV. ; 
THE First CRrsADE, a.d. 1085-1106. 



Victor m 666 

Urban II 668 

Second Marriage of Countess Ma- 
tilda 670 

Henry in Italy tb. 

Rebellion of Conrad 671 

Sufferings of CluristiausinPalestine 673 

Peter the Hermit 674 

Councils of Piaoenza and Clermont 676 

Prepcmttions for the Crusade 680 

The first expeditions 681 

Leaders of tno regular forces 684 

The CnuAders at Constantinople. . . ih. 



Passage through Asia Minor 687 

Siege of Antioch 688 

Siege of Jerusalem 692 

Kingdom of Jerusalem 695 

Results of the Crusades 698 

The Sicilian monarchy 702 

Death of Urban ib. 

Deaths of Guibert and Pliilip I. ... 703 

Henrv IV. in Germany 704 

Rebellion of the younger Henry . . . 707 

Abdication of Henry rV 708 

His death and character 709 



CHAPTER V. 

England from the Norman Conquest to the Death of St. Anselm, 
A.D. 1066-1108. 



Effects of the Conquest 712 

Lanfranc archbishop of Canterbury 714 
Ecclesiaatical policy of the Con- 
queror 716 



Communications with Gregory VII. 717 

William Rufus 719 

Anselm 721 

His promotion to Canterbury 728 



\\v 



CONTENTS. 



Ohafteb V. — rotitfnued. 



PACR 

DisofnroemontB between William 

ami Ansolm 724 

Council of Rockingham 72G 

Acknowledgment of Urban 728 

Anscira goes to Bomo ^ 729 



paob 

Exile and recall of Anaelm 7H1 

Question of homage 732 

Second exile of Ansolm 734 

Reconciliation with Henry 1 736 

Death of Amk'Ira 738 



CHAPTER VI. 

From tob Death of the Kiifebor Henbt IV. to the Gonoobdat of Wubms, 

A.D. 1106-1122. 



Council of Guastalla 739 

Conferences at Chftlons and Troyes 740 

Henry V. in Italy 741 

Seizure and submisaion of Pas- 

dial II 742 

MoYcments of the Hildebrandiue 

party 744 

Henry in Germany 746 

His second expedition to Italy 747 



Gelosius n., pope ; Gregory VIII^ 

antipope 748 

Calixtusn 750 

Council of Rlieims ib, 

I Conference with Henry I. of Eng- 

I landatGisors 752 

j Punishment of the antipope 755 

1 Dispositions towards peace ib. 

i Concordat of Worms 757 



CHAPTER VII. 

MoNAOTiciSM — New Orders — The Templars and Hospitallers. 



State of Monasticism 760 

New orders : — 

I. Order of Grammont 762 

II. Carthusians 765 

III. Order of Fontevraud 768 

IV. Cistercians 771 



V. Canons regular of St. Au- 
gustine 774 

PraDmonstratensians fb. 

VI. Canons of St. Antony 778 

Templars and Hospitallers 779 
Increased power of Monachism ... 782 



Index 785 



LIST OF BOOKS CITED. 



[Tlu's lift if mpplenientary to that ffiveii in the second edition of the former volume ^ 
atui /« limited to mrh icorhf as are cited throvgJiout some CfmmJeruhle portion of 
the fo! lowing pages. Boohs which are quoted in particular seetiims otdy will be 
found described in the proper pHaces ; and where editimts differeid from those in 
the lists hare been ttsed, the fcwt is expressly meiUioned. In the case of works or 
documents which appear in more Oian one collection, a reference to a single col- 
lection has generally appeared sufficient.'] 

AgobartliiH, ed. Balaze, Paris, 1666. 

Alcninus, e<l Froben, Ratisbon, 1777. 

Anglo-Sivxon Chronicle, transl. by Thorpe (Chron. and Mem. of Great Britain «n<l 

Ireland), Lond. 1861. 
Anaelmus, ed. Gcrberon, Paris, 1721. 
Art (L*) do Vdrifier les Dates, 8vo. edition, Paris, 1819. 
Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, ed. Kerr, Lond. 1857. 
Bohmer, Begesta Karolonun, Stnttg. 

, Pontes Bemm Germanicarom. Stuttg. 1848-5. 

Bonizo, in Oefelii Berum Boicamm Scriptores, t. ii. Augsb. 1763. 

Bouquet, see Recueil. 

Bowden, Life of Gregory VIL, Lond. 1841. 

Browne, Fasciculus Berum expetendarum et fugiendarum, Lond. 1690. 

Busk, Mrs. Hans, Medi«e7al Popes, Emperors, Kings, and Crusaders, Lond. 1854-5. 

CflBsarius Heisterbacenais, Dialogi, Cologne, 1599. 

Cedrenua, in Hist. Byzant. Scriptores, ed. Paris, 1648. 

Chronicles and Memorials of Great Britain and L%land, published undi'r the 

direction of the Master of the Rolls, Lond. 1858, seqq. 
Ciaoonius (t. e. Chacon), Vitie Pontificum Bomanorum et 8. R. E. Cardinaliuni, 

cum notis Oldoini, Rome, 1677. 
Cunningham, Church History of Scotland, Edinb. 1859. 
D'Achery, Spicilegium, ed. Do la Barre, Paris, 1723. 
Diihimann, Gesch. v. Danncmarck, Hamb. 1840, seqq. 
Datt, Volumen Rerum Germanioarum Novum, Ulm, 1698. 
Depping, Expeditions Mari times des Xormands, Paris, 1826. 
Dodechini Annales, in Pistorius, vol. i. [These ought mther to bu eittMl ns 

' Annales S. Disibodi.' See Pertz, xvii. 4^5.] 
Dugdalo, Monasticon Anglicanum, Lond. 1845. 
Ebrard, Das Dogma vom heil. Abendmahl, Frankf. 1844-6. 
Eccard, Corpus Historicum Medii JEy'i, Loipz. 1723. 
Einhaidus, ed. Teulet, Paris, 1840. 

Ellendorf, Die Karolingcr und die Hierarchic ihrer Zeit, Elssen, 18.S8. 
Encyclopedia Britannica, 8th edition, Edinb. 1853-61. 
Fabricius, Bibliotheca Grssca, cd. Harless, Hamb. 1790, seqq. 
Fell, Berum Anglicarum Scriptores, Oxford, 1684. 
Florentius Wigomiensis, ed. Thorpe (English Historical Society). 
Frohcr, Scriptores Rerum Germanioarum, Frankf. 1600, seqq. 
Gale, Rerum Britannicarum Scriptores, Oxford, 1691. 
Geijer, Geschichte Schwedens, Ubers. v. Leffler, Hamb. 1832, seqq. 



XVI LIST OK BOOKS CITED. 

Goorgius Hamartolus, ed. Muralt. St. Petersburg, 1859. 

Gfrorer. Gescli. dor Karolingor, a.d. 840-918. Freiburg, 1848. 

Giannono, Istoria di Napoli, Xaplea, 1770. 

Giesolor, KiroheDgesohiolito, B. ii. ed. 4, Bonn, 1846-8. 

Ginzol, Gofloh. der Slawenapoetel Gjrill a. Method, Loitmcritz, 1857. 

Goldaat, Imperialia Docreta de Cultu Imaginiun, Frankf. 1608. 

, Apologia pro Henrico IV., Hauov. 1611. 

Grub, G., EcclesiaBtical History of Scotland, Edinb. 1861. 

Halm, Gesch. der Ketzer im Mittelaltor, Stuttg. 1845-7. 

Haurcau, Do la Philosophio Scholastique, Paris, 1850. 

Hefele, Gonciliengoscliicbte, Freibui^g, 1855, scqq. 

Helmoldus, in Leibnitz, it 

Helyot, Hist, des Ordros Monostiques, Paris, 1714-9. 

Uincmarus, Paris, 1645. 

Hofler, Die Doutschen Papste, Batisb. 1839, soqq. 

John of Ephesus, transl. by B. Payne Smith, Oxford, 1860. 

Johnson, Laws and Canons of the Church of England, cd. Boron, Oxford, 1850-1. 

Langucdoc, Histoire do, see Vic. 

Leibnitz, Scriptorcs Berum Bransvicensium, Hanov. 1707. 

Ludon, Gksoh. der teutsohen Volks, Gotha, 1825-37. 

Mabillon, Annalcs Ordinis S. Bunodicti, tt. v. vi., Paris, 1713-39. 

MaiUth, Gesch. der Magyaren, Vienna, 1 828. 

Martene et Durand, Thesaurus Xovus Anecdotonun, Paris, 1717. 

CoUectio Amplissimu, 1724-33. 

Martin, Hist de France, ed. 4, Paris, 1855-60. 

Michaud, Hist de Croisades, Brussels, 1841. 

Migno, Patrologia Grseca. [Vols. i. to cviii. contain tlie writers to the time of 
Photius. The series is to be continued.] 

Milman, History of Latin Christianity, 2nd edition, Lond. 1857. 

Montalembert, Los Moines d*Occident depuis S. Benoit jusqult S. Bernard, Paris, 
1860, seqq. 

Mouruvieff, Hist of the Russian Church, transl. by Blackmorc, Oxford, 1842. 

Miinter, Kirchongcsch. von Dannemarck u. Norwegen, Leipz. 1825, seqq. 

Muratori, Annali d' Italia, Rome, 1752-4. 

Onloricus Vitalis, ed. Le Provost, Paris, 1838, seqq. 

Palacky, Gesch. von Bohmen, Prague, 1845, seqq. 

Palgrave, Hist, of Normandy and of England, Lond. 1851, seqq. 

Pertz, Monumenta GcrmaniiB Historica, Hanov. 1826, seqq. [In two divisions — 
Scriptorei and Legea. An alphabetical list of contents is given in vol. xii. of 
the Scriptoros.] 

Potrus Damiani, cd. Cajetan., Paris, 1663. 

Phillips, Englische Reichs- und Rechtsgesohichte, Berlin, 1827-8. 

Pistorius, Rerum Germanicarum Scriptoros, ed. Struvius, Ratisbou, 1726. 

Platina, De Vitis Pontiflcum Romanorum, Cologne, 1568. 

Raumer (F. v.), Gesch. der Hohenstaufen und ihrer Zeit Leipz. 1857-8. 

Bocueil des Historiens de la France (Gallicarum et Francicarum Rerum Scrip- 
tores), Paris, 1738, seqq. [This is usually cited under the name of the first 
editor, Bouquet.] 

Robins, Sanderson, On the Claims of the Roman Church, Lond. 1855. 

Rogerius de Hovcden, in Savile. 

do Wendover, ed. Coxe (English Historical Society). 

Savigny, Goschichte des romisohen Rechts im Mittelalter, Heidelb. 1826-84. 

Savile, Rerum Auglicarum Scriptoros, Lond. 1596. 

Saxo Grammaticus, ed. Stephanius, Sora, 1644. 

Schardius, Syntagma Tractatuum de Juribus Regni et Imperii, &o^ Strasb. 1609. 

Schlosser, Gesch. der bilderstaimenden Kaiser, Frankf. 1812. 



LIST OF BOOKS CITED. XVU 

Schmidt, M. I., Gcschichte der Deutschen, Ulm, 1785-93. 

, C, Histoiro et Doctrine des Cathares ou Albigeois, Paris, 1849. 

Sirmond, Opera Varia, Venico, 1728. 

Snono Sturieson, Hist, of the Kings of Norway, tranaL by Laing, Lond. 1854. 

Soomes, The Anglo-Saxon Church, ed. 2. 

Sparke, Historiee Anglicanas Soriptorea, Lond. 1723. 

Stanley, Lectures on the History of the Eastern Church, Lond. 18G1. 

Stcnzel, Deutschland unter den frankischen Kaisem, Leipz. 1828. 

Stevenson, Church Historians of England, Lond. 185- (incomplete). 

Strahl, Gesch. des Russischen Stoats, Hamb. 1832, seqq. 

Symeon Dunclmensis, in Twysden. 

Tlieodorus Studita, in Sirmond. y. 

Thierry, Hist, de la ConquSte d'Angleterre par lea Normands, Bmx. 1835. 

Thorpe, Ancient Laws and Institutes of England, folio edition. 

Turner, History of the Anglo-Saxons, ed. C, Lond. 183G. 

, History of England during the Middle Ages, Lond. 1825. 

Twysden, Historise Anglicanie Scriptores Decern, Lond. 1652. 

Urspergense Chronicon, auctore Conrado k Lichtenau, Strasb. 1G09. 

Urstisius, Germanise Historid Illustres, Frankf. 1585. 

Vic et Vaissette, Hist de Languedoc, Paris, 1730-45. 

Ussher, ed. Elrington, Dublin, 1847. 

Yoigt, Hildebrand und sein Zeitalter, ed. 2, Weimar, 1846. 

Wharton, Anglia Sacra, Lond. 1691. 

Wilkcn, Gcsch. der EreuzzUge, Leipz. 1807, seqq. 

Wilkins, Concilia Magnsa BritannisQ et Hibemiro, Lond. 1737. 

Will. Malmesburiensis, G^ta Begum, ed. Hardy (Eng. Hist. Soc.). [When the 

author's name only is given, this work is intended.] 
, Geeta Pontificum, in Migne, Patrol, clxxix. 



LIST OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. 



I^OPES OF KoMB. (From JaffiTs Hegesia,) 
{The Nittncs in brackets are those uf Anii^wipes,) 



5iM). 
(KM. 
(K/7. 
G08. 
(iir). 

ciy. 

(338. 
(MO. 
(H2. 
(M9. 
(j54. 
057. 
(r72. 
C7r». 
(378. 
082. 
(U<3. 
(W5. 
08(3. 



(J87. 
701. 
705. 
708. 
708. 
7 If). 
731. 
711. 
752. 



757. 



7(38. 
772. 
70.-». 
810. 
817. 
824. 
827. 



Orogory 1 6(H 

Sabinian 606 

Bonifuco III. (Feb. lU-Nov. 12) 

IJonifaco IV 615 

Deuadedit 018 

U<jnifucoV 025 

Honoriual 638 

Si-verintu 640 

John IV 642 

Theo<lore 1 649 

Martini 653 

Kngeniutf 1 657 

Vitalian 672 

Ailoodutua 676 

Domis 678 

Agatho 681 

Leo II (>83 

BontKiictll 685 

John V 686 

Comm 687 

[Paschul. (>87-01>2.] 
rThoodore, Sept-Dt-c. 687.] 

PiTRiiwI 701 

John VI 705 

John VII 707 

RiHinniuH (Jim. -Ftsb. 7) 

GonHtunthiu 1 715 

GiX'Kory II 731 

Gnpoi^ III 741 

Ziiohuriiu) 752 

Stephen (died without coniic- 

cnition ) • 

Ht^.phenll 757 

Puul 1 707 

[CoiiHtimtino II. 767-8.] 
[Philip, 7(58.] 

Kt<phcn III 772 

Adrian 1 705 

Ix'oIII 810 

BUphcn IV 817 

Piwchall 824 

KiiKoniuH II 827 

Vuhintino (died within a month 

— datcH uncertain) 



827. Gregory IV 

[John— Jon. 844.] 

844. Seigiusa 

847. T^ IV 

855. Benedict UI 

[Anoataaius, Aug.-Scpt 855.1 

858. Nicolaa L 

807. Adrian II 

872. John VIII 

882. Horinnal 

884. Adrian III 

885. Btophon V 

891. Formoaua 

896. Boui&ce VI. (May-June) 
Stephen VI 

897. Romanua (July-NovO 
Theodore II. (Nov.-Deo.) 

898. John IX 

900. Benedict IV 

903. Loo V. (Aug.-Si-pt) 
Ghriatopher 

904. Seigiua HI 

911. Anaatuaiua IIL 

913. Lando 

914. John X 

928. Leo VI 

929. Stephen VII 

931. John XI 

936. Leo VII 

939. Stephen VIII 

942. Murinuall 

946. Agapetua II 

955. John XII 

963. U'oVni 

[Benedict V. May-June 964.] 

965. John XIII 

972. Benedict VI 

[Boniface VII July- Aug. 974.] 

974. Iknodict VII 

983. John XIV 

[Boniface VII. again, 984-5.] 

985. John XV 

990. Gregory V 

[John XVI 997-8.]* 

• 'rhitii> ur«> nTkunrd by Jaffd In tlio twrlort i>f pu|i(M i>f their n'«pectlve namct, but arc i 
loiiiiiioiily oniilU<<l. 



844 

847 
855 
858 

867 
87S 
882 
884 
885 
891 
896 

897 



900 
903 

904 
911 
913 
914 
928 
929 
931 



942 
946 
955 
963 
965 

972 
974 



984 
996 



llbT OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. 



XIX 



A.P. AJ>. 

999. Sylvester II 1003 

1003. John XVI. (Jan. 13-Dec. 7) 

John XVII 1009 

1009. SergiusIV 1012 

1012. Benedict VIII 1024 

[Gregory, Jan.-Dec. 1012.1 

1024. John XVIII 1033 

1033. Benedict IX 1046 

[Sylvester III. 1044-G.] 

1045. Gregory VI 1046 

1046. Clement II 1047 

1047. Damasuall 1048 

1048. Leo IX 1054 

1054. Victor II 1057 

1057. Stephen IX 1058 



A.D. A.D. 

[Benedict X. 1058-9.] 

1059. Nicolas n 1061 

1001. Alexander II 1073 

[Honorius II. 1061-9.] 

1073. Gregory Vn 1085 

[Clement ni. 1080-1100.] 

1086. Victor III 1087 

1088. Urban II 1099 

1099. Paschal II 1118 

[Theoderic, 1100.] 

[Albert. 1102.] 

[Sylvester IV. 1105-1111.] 

1118. Gelasius 11 1119 

[Gregory VIH. 1118-1121.] 

1119. Calixtns II 1124 



EAtfTEBN Emperors. 



641. 



582. Maurice 602 

602. Phocas 610 

610. Heraclius 641 

I Cunstantine IIL 641 

* ( Heracleonas 641 

641. ConstansII 668 

668. Constantino IV. (Pogonatua) 685 

685. Justinian n 695 

695. Leontius 698 

698. Tiberius Apsimar 705 

Justinian II. (restored) 711 

Philippicus 713 

Anastasins II 716 

Theodosius III 717 

Leo m. (the Isaurian) 741 

Constantino V. (Coprony- 

mus) 775 

Leo IV 780 



705. 
711. 
713. 
716. 
717. 
741. 

775. 

-Qrtj Constantino VI 797 

^**"\Irene 802 

802. Nicephorus 811 

811. Stauracius ; 811 

811. Michael L (Rhangabe) 813 

813. Leo V. (the Armenian) 820 

820. Michael IL (the Stammerer; 829 

829. Thoophilus 842 

842. Michael III. (the Drunkard) 867 
807. Basil I. (the Macedonian) ... 886 
886. Leo VL (the Philosopher) ... 911 



911 

to 

959 

959- 
963. 
969. 

976. 

1028. 
1034. 

1041. 
1042 
to 
1056. 
1056. 
1057. 
1059. 

1067. 



1071. 

1078. 
1081. 
1118. 



! Alexander 912 
Constantino VII. (Porphyro- 
genitus — ^alone from 945) 959 
Romanus I. (Lecapenus) ... 945 
919. (Christopher, Stephen, 
Constantino VIII.) 

Romanus II 963 

Nicephorus Phocas 969 

. John Tzimisces 976 

(Basil IL 1025 

IConstantinelX 1028 

Romanus III. (Argyrus) ... 1034 
. Michael IV. (the Paphla- 

gonian) 1011 

, Michael V. (Calaphatcs) ... 1042 

{Zoe. 
Constantinc X. (Monomnchus) 1054 
Theodora (alone from 1054) 1056 
Michael VI. (Stratioticus) 1057 

Isaac Comnenus 1059 

Constantino XII. (Ducas) 1067 

(Eudocia \ .^^^ 

1 Romanus IIL (Diogenes) f *"'* 
Michael VII. (Pampinaces) j 

Andronicus I > 1078 

Constantino XII | 

Nicephorus 111. (Botoniatcs) 1081 
Alexius I. (Comnenus) ...1118 
John, or Calo-Johannes ... 1143 



Western Euperors, from Charlemagne. 

( The date in the frst column is that of auccession to the kingdom of Ocnninj ; that in 
the second^ of the Imperial Corowitum.) 



814 



887 



800. Charlemagne 814 

813. Louis the Pious 840 

817. Lothair 855 

850. Louis II 875 

875. Charles the Bald 877 

884. Cliurles the Fat 887 

896. Amulf 899 

89L Guy 

894. Lambert 

901. Ijuuis of Provence , ^^^ 

916. Berengar ,J pcrors. 



Titular 
Em- 



912 
920 

936 
973 
983 
1002 
1024 
1030 
1050 
110<J 



Connwl I. 9201 Kings 

Henry L (the }of Ger- 

Fowler) 936| many. 

962. Othol 973 

967. OthoII 983 

996. OthoIII 1002 

1014. Henry II 1024 

1027. Conrad II 1(>39 

1046. Henry HI 1056 

1084. Henry IV 1106 

nil. Henr}' V 1125 



LIST OF POPES AND SOTEREIGNS. 



PoPEB or Bomb. (From Jaffifs Btgettu.) 
'[Th€ AuOTrt m br-jckets art ikoM *.f Anti-^'^j>fi.\ 



500. 
6(H. 
607. 
608. 
615. 
619. 
625. 
688. 
640. 
642. 
649. 
654. 
657. 
672. 
676. 
678. 
682. 
683. 
685. 
686. 



687. 
701. 
705. 
708. 
708. 
715. 
731. 
741. 
752. 



757. 



708. 
772. 
795. 
816. 
817. 
824. 
827. 



Gregoiy 1 604 

Sabinian 606 

Boni&ce IIL (Feb. lO-Xov. 12) 

Boniliice IV. 615 

Deofldedit 618 

Boniface V 625 

HonoriusI 638 

Seyerinua 610 

John IV 642 

Theodore 1 649 

Martini 653 

EngeninsL 657 

Vitalian 672 

Adeodatos 676 

Donufl 678 

Agatho 681 

Leo II G83 

Benedict IL 685 

John V 686 

Conon 687 

[Paschal. 687-692.] 
[Theodore, Sept-Dec. 687.] 

Sepgiufll 701 

John VI 705 

JohnVIL 707 

Sisinnius (Jan. -Fob. 7) 

Coiuitantine 1 715 

Gregory IL 731 

Gregory m 741 

Zachariiui 752 

Stoplion (died without conae- 

cration) • 

Stophen n 757 

Paul 1 707 

[CJoiiBtiintinc II. 767-8.] 
[Philip. 768.] 

St4i)hon m 772 

Adrian 1 795 

Tx^oltt 816 

SU'phon IV 817 

Pwjchal 1 824 

Kugenuw II 827 

Viih>ntino (dietl within a montli 

— datcH uncertain) 



827. Gregonr IV 

[John-nJan. 844.] 

»44. Seigius IL 

847. Tico IV 

855. Benedict UL 

[Anastadius, Ang.-Sept 855.] 

858. Nicolas L 

867. Adrian II 

872. JohnVJII 

882. MarinusL 

884. Adrian m 

885. Stephen V 

891. Formoeus 

896. Boniface VI. (Blay-June) 
Stephen VI 

897. Bomanus (July-No vj 
Theodore IL (Nov.-Dec.) 

898. John IX 

900. Benedict IV 

903. Loo V. (Aug.-Sept.) 

Christopher 

904. Seigius in 

911. Anastusius IIL 

913. Lando 

914. JohnX 

928. Leo VI 

929. Stephen VU 

931. John XI 

936. Leo VII 

939. Stephen VIII 

942. MorinusII 

946. AgapetusII 

955. John XII 

963. LeoVni 

[Benedict V. May-June 9G4.] 

965. JohnXIII 

972. Benedict VI 

[Boniface VII July-Aug. 974.] 

974. Benedict VII 

983. John XIV 

[Boniface VII. again, 984-5.] 

985. John XV 

996. Gregory V 

[John XVI 997-8.] • 



844 

847 
8,15 
858 

867 
872 
882 
884 
885 
891 
896 

897 



900 
903 

904 
911 
913 
914 
928 
929 
931 
936 
939 
942 
946 
955 
9G3 
0G5 



972 
974 

983 

984 

996 
999 



* TlH*fu* an> rrckonrd by .Taffd In tlip wrlm uf popos uf their rt't^pcctlvo names, but ore more 
i'unnuunly unUlU^tl. 



List OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. 



XIX 



A.V. A.l>. 

999. Sylvester n 1003 

1003. John XVI. (Jan. 13-Dcc. 7) 

John XVII 1009 

1009. SergiuBlV 1012 

1012. Benedict VIII 1024 

[Gregory, Jan.-Dec. 1012.] 

1024. JohnXVm 1033 

1033. Benedict IX 1046 

[Sylvester III. 1044-0.1 

1045. Gregory VI 1046 

1046. Clement II 1047 

1047. DamasusII 1048 

1048. Leo IX 1054 

1054. Victor II 1057 

1057. Stephen IX 1058 



[Benedict X. 1058-9.] 

1059. Nicolas n lOGl 

1061. Alexander n 1073 

[Honorius II. 1061-9.] 

1073. Gregory Vn 1085 

[Clement UI. 1080-1100.] 

1086. Victor m 1087 

1088. Urban II 1099 

1099. Paschal II 1118 

[Theoderic, 1100.] 

[Albert. 1102.] 

[Sylvester IV. 1105-1111.] 

1118. Gelasius n 1119 

[Gregory VIII. 1118-1121.] 

1119. Calixtus n 1124 



Eastern Emfebors. 



582. Manrico 602 

602. Phocas 610 

610. Heraclius 641 

^«. . j Constantine III. 641 

^'•tHeracleonas 641 

641. ConstansII 668 

668. Constanttne IV. (Pogonatua) 685 

685. Justinian II 695 

695. Leontius 698 

698. Tiberius Apsimar 705 

705. Justinian II. (restored) 711 

711. Philippicus 713 

713. Anastasius II 716 

716. Theodosius UI 717 

717. Leo m. (the Isaurian) 741 

741. Constantino V. (Coprony- 

mus) 775 

775. LeoIV 780 

-jwv jConstantine VI 797 

^^^tlrene 802 

802. Nicephorus 811 

811. Stauracius 811 

811. Michael L (Rhangabe) 813 

813. Leo V. (the Annenian) 820 

820. Michael II. (the Stammerer; 829 

829. Theophilus 842 

842. Michael ni. (the Drunkard) 867 
867. Basil I. (the Macedonian) ... 886 
886. Leo VI. (the Philosopher) ... 911 



Alexander 912 

Constantino VII. (Porphyro- 

genitus — alone from 945) 959 
Romanus I. (Lecapenus) ... 945 
919. (Christopher, Stephen, 
Constantino VIII.) 

Romanus 11 963 

96.3. Nicephorus Phocas 969 

969. John Tzimisccs 976 

Q7ft (Basil IL 1025 

^'^1 Constantino IX 1028 



911 

to 

959 

959- 



1028. 
1034. 



Romanus III. (Arg 
Michael IV. (the 



1034 



:'apJ 



gonian) 1041 

v(~" ' ---- 

1042 (Zoe. 



1041. Michael V.(Calaphatcs)... 1042 



to <Constantine X. (Monomachus) 1054 
1056.(Theodora(alonefroml054) 1056 

1056. Michael VI. (Stratioticus) 1057 

1057. Isaac Comnenus 

1059. Constantino XII. (Ducas) 

[Eudocia ) 

[Romanus III. (Diogenes) ) 

i Michael VII. (Pampinaces) | 
AndronicusI \ 1078 
Constantino XII ) 

1078. Nicephorus III. (Botonintcs) 1081 
1081. Alexius I. (Comnenus) ... 1118 
1118. John, or Calo-Johannes ... 1143 



1067.|j 



1059 
1067 

1071 



WESTEBy EUPEBORS, FROM CUARLEMAGNE. 

( The diite in the first column is that of snccession to the kimjdom of Gcnnmj ; that in 
the second, of the Imperial Corowitpm.) 



814 



887 



800. Cliarlemagne 814 

813. Louis the Pious 840 

817. Lothair 855 

850. Louis II 875 

875. Charles tlio Bald 877 

884. Charles the Fat 887 

896. Amulf 899 

891. Guy j mitniar 

894. I^mbert I ^^'^ 

901. Ijouis of Provence I _^^ " 
916. Berengar ,J pcrors. 



912 
920 

936 
973 
983 
1002 
1024 
1039 
105(i 
1104) 



Conrad I. 9201 Kings 

Henry I. (the } of Ger- 

Fowler) 936 1 many. 

962. Othol 973 

967. OthoII 983 

996. OthoIII 1002 

1014. Henry II 1024 

1027. Conrad II 1039 

1046. Henry IIL 1056 

1084. Henry IV 110(J 

nil. Henr}' V 1125 



zx 



LIST OF POPES AND SOVEREIGNS. 



Kings of Francs fboh the Accession of the Gabolinoian Dtkasty. 

A.D. A.D. AJ>. 

752. Pipin 768 

««o)Cliarlemagno 814 

'^•ICarloman 772 

814. I^uiB the Pious 840 

840. Charles II. (the Bald) 877- 

877. Ixmis II. (the Stammerer) ... 879 

Q-(j rixmis III 882 

^'nCarloman 884 

884. Charles the Fat 888 

888. Odo, orEudes 898 



898. Charles III. (the Bimpio)... 923 

923. Rodolf. 936 

936. Louis rv. (d'Outre-mer) ... 9M 
954. Lothair 986 

986. Louis V. (le Fain&nt) 987 

987. Hugh Capet 996 

996. Robert 1 1031 

1031. Henry 1 1060 

1060. Pliilipl 1108 

1108. Louis VL (the Fat) 1137 



Kings of England. 



800. Egbert 886 

836. Ethelwulf 857 

e;.- /Ethelbald 860 

*^^^-\Ethelbcrt 866 

866. Ethclredl 871 

871. Alfred 901 

901. Edward the Elder 924 

924. Athelstan 941 

941. Edmund 946 

946. Edred 955 

955. Edwy 959 

959. Edgar 975 



975. Edward the Martyr 978 

978. Ethelrodn. (the Unready) 1016 

1016. Edmund Ironside 1016 

1016. Canute 1035 

1035. Harold (Harefoot) 10:^9 

1039. Hardicanute 1042 

1042. Fxlward the Confessor 1066 

1006. Harold 1066 

1066. William I. (the Conqueror) 1087 

1087. William n. (Rufus) 1100 

1100. Henry 1 1135 



A HISTORY 



OF 



THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH. 



BOOK III. 



FROM THE ELECTION OF GREGORY THE GREAT TO THM 
DEATH OF CHARLEMAGNE, a.d. 690-814. 



CHAPTER I. 

GREGORY THE GREAT, a.d. 590-604.— OOLUMB AN, a.d. 589-615. 

The end of the sixth century may be regarded as the boundary 
between early and mediseval Church-History. The scene of interest 
is henceforth varied ; the eastern churches, oppressed by calamities 
and inwardly decaying, will claim but little of our attention, while 
it will be largely engaged by regions of the West, unnoticed, or 
but slightly noticed, in earlier times. The Gospel will be seen 
penetrating the barbarian tribes which had overrun the western 
empire, bringing to them not only religious truth but the elements 
of culture and refinement, adapting itself to them, moulding them, 
and experiencing their influence in return. As Christianity had 
before been affected by the ideas and by the practices of its Greek 
and Roman converts, so it now suffered among the barbarians, 
although rather from the rudeness of their manners than from the 
infection of their old religions. Yet throughout the dreariest of 
the ages which lie before us, we may discern the gracious provi- 
dence of God, preserving the essentials of the truth in the midst 
of ignorance and corruptions, enabling men to overcome the evil 
by which they were surrounded, and filling the hearts of multitudes 
with zeal not only to extend the visible bounds of Christ's kingdom, 
bat also to enforce the power of faith on those who were already 
professedly His subjects. 



2 GREGORY THE GREAT. Book HI. 

Gregory, the most eminent representative of the transition from 
the early to the middle period, was bom at Rome iibout the year 
540.* Ilis family was of senatorial rank, and is said by some 
authorities to have belonged to the great Anician house ;^ he 
was great-grandson of a pope named Felix — either the third or 
the fourth of that name.*^ Gregory entered into civil employment, 
and attained the office of praetor of the city ; but about the age of 
thirty-five '^ he abandoned the pursuit of worldly distinctions, and 
employed his wealth in founding seven monasteries — six of them 
in Sicily, and the other, which was dedicated to St Andrew, in his 
&mily mansion on the Coelian hill at Rome.® In this Roman 
monastery he took up his abode, and entered on a strictly ascetic 
life, in which he persevered notwithstanding the frequent and 
severe illness which his.austerities produced.^ About the year 577, 
he was ordained deacon, and was appointed to exercise his office 
in one of the seven principal churches of the city ;* and in 578, or 
the following year, he was sent by Pelagius II. as his representa- 
tive to the court of Tiberius, who had lately become sole emperor 
on the death of the younger Justin.** The most noted incident 
of his residence at Constantinople was a controversy with the 
patriarch Eutychius, who maintained the opinion of Origen, that 
the " spiritual body " of the saints after the resurrection would be 
impalpable, and more subtle than wind or air. Gregory on the 
contrary held, according to the doctrine which had been recom- 
mended to the western church by the authority of Augustine,* that, 
if the body were impalpable, its identity would be lost ; it will, he 

• Lau, " Oregor 'der Grosse," 10. xxxix. ; Analecta, 502, seaq.) claim him 
Leipz., 1845. as a member of the Benedictine order ; 

*» See Patrol. Ixxv, 241 ; Giacon. i. but it seems verj doubtful (Pagi, x. 

401. 868; Schrockh, xvii. 245). On this 

« The third, according to^ Gregory's depends another question — whether Aa- 

biographer, Paul Wamefrid (c. 1), gustine and his companions in the Elng- 

Baronius (498. 1; 581. 4), Nat. Alex. lish mission were Benedictines. SeeRey- 

(ix. 20), and Lau (9) ; the fourth, ac- nerius de Apostolatu Bened^ctinomm 

cording to John the Deacon (Vita Greg, in Anglia (Duaci, 1626); Sammarth. 

i. 1), the Benedictine biographer, Ste. iii. 6-7 ; MabiU., I. xl. seqq. ; Tho- 

Marthe (L 3), and Fleury (xxxiv. 35). massin, I. iii. 24. 

•» For the date see Pagi, x. 363 ; » Paul. 7 ; Lau, 25. 

Lau, 71. *> A.D. 578. He had been associated 

• Paul. 4 ;' Sammarth. ii. 6 ; Lau, in the empire four years before. Gib- 
120-1. The name of St. Andrew has bon, iv. 253-4. 

now been exchanged for that of the « Enchirid. 88-91 ; De Civ. Dei, xxii., 

founder himself. In like manner, the 11, 20-1. See Gieseler, vi. 427 ; Hagen- 

monastery founded at Canterbury in bach, i. 378. Eutychius has been already 

honour of St. Peter and St Paul, after- mentioned (vol. i., p. 631). John of 

wards took the name of the founder, Ephesus represents hmi as having taught 

St. Augustine ; and for a list of other that " these bodies of men do not attain 

instances see Montalembert, ii. 560. to the resurrection, but others are created 

' Paul. 5. Ste. Marthe (Vita, i. 3) anew, which arise in their stead," pp. 

and MabiUon (Acta SS. Ord. S. Bened. L, 1 47, 1 49, 196. 



CiiAP. I. AD. 690. STATE OF ITALY. '^ 

said, be *' palpable in the reality of its nature, although subtle by 
the eflfect of spiritual grace." Tiberius ordered a book in which 
£utychius had maintained his opinion to be burnt ; and 
the patriarch soon after, on his death-bed, avowed him- 
self a convert to the opposite view, by laying hold of his attenuated 
arm and declaring, '* I confess that in this flesh we shall all rise 
again." ^ 

After his return to Rome," Gregory was elected abbot of his 
monastery, and also acted as ecclesiastical secretary to Pelagius." 
On the death of that pope, who was carried ofl" by a plague in 
January, 590,** he was chosen by the senate, the clergy, and the 
people to fill the vacant chair. He endeavoured by various means 
to escape the promotion ; but the letter, in which he entreated the 
emperor Maurice to withhold his consfent,^ was opened and detained 
by the governor of Rome ; miracles baffled his attempts to conceal 
himself; and he was consecrated in September, SOO.** 

The position which Gregory had now attained was one from 
which he might well have shrunk, for other reasons than the fear 
ascribed to him by an ancient biographer, " lest the worldly glory 
which he had before cast away might creep on him under the colour 
of ecclesiastical government." ' He compares his church to an 
^^ old and violently-shattered ship, admitting the waters on all sides, 
— its timbers rotten, shaken by daily storms, and sounding of 
wreck." * The north of Italy was overrun, and its other provinces 
were threatened, by the Lombards.. The distant government of 
Constantinople, instead of protecting its Italian subjects, acted only 
as a hindrance to their exerting themselves for their own defence. 
The local authorities had neither courage to make war nor wisdom to 
negotiate ; some of them, by their unprincipled exactions, even drove 
their people to espouse the interest of the enemy.* The inhabitants 
of the land had been wasted by war, famine, and disease, while the 
rage for celibacy had contributed to prevent the recruiting of their 
numbers. In many places the depopulated soil had become pesti- 
lential. The supplies of com, which had formerly been drawn 
from Sicily to support the excess of population, were now rendered 

^ Greg. Mondia, xiv. 66. *» Paul, 13 ; Greg. Turon. x. i. ; Pagi, 

■» A.D. 584. Pagi, X. 868, 585 ; Lau, x. 489 ; Lau, 37-40. John the Deacon 

90, 586 ; Dapin, t. 102. Dean Milman thinks it necessary to enter into a formal 

thinka that he was abbot before his mi»- proof that Gre^ry's reluctance was 

tkm to Constantinople, i. 404. real (i. 45)— a vindication of the man 

■ Sammartb. I., vi. 1. » JaflK, 91. which reflects on the age. 

' For the necessity of the emperor's ' Paul. 10. • Ep. i. 4. 

eoDtent, see vol. i. p. 5.50, and Baron. * Kp. v. 41. 
540, lU. 

li*2 



4 STATE OF THE CHURCH— GREGORY'S EPISTLES. Book UL 

necessary b^ the general abandonment of husbandry. Rome itself 
had suffered from storms and inundations, in addition to the common 
misfortunes of the country. So great were the miseries of the time, 
as to produce in religious minds the conviction, which Gregory often 
expresses, that the end of the world was at hand." 

Nor was the aspect of ecclesiastical affairs more cheering. 
Churches and monasteries had been destroyed by the Lombards ;' 
the clergy were few, and inadequate to the pastoral superintendence 
of their scattered flocks ; among them and among the monks, the 
troubles of the age had produced a general decay of morals and 
discipline.^ The formidable Lombards were Arians ; the schism 
which had arisen out of the question as to the " Three Articles," 
continued to hold Istria and other provinces separate from Rome, 
and had many adherents in Gaul.' In Gaul, too, the Church was 
oppressed by the extreme depravity of the princes and nobles, and 
by the general barbarism of the clergy as well as of the people. 
S])ain had just been recovered from Arianism, but much was yet 
wanting to complete and assure the victory. In Afiica, the old 
sect of Donatists took occasion from the prevailing confusions to 
lift up its head once more, and to commit aggressions on the 
Church. The eastern patriarchates were distracted by the Nesto- 
rian and Monophysite controversies ; a patriarch of Antioch had 
been deprived, and the bishop of Rome had reason to look with 
jealousy on his brother and rival of the newer capital. 

The collection of Gregory's letters, early eight hundred and 
fifty in number, exhibits a remarkable picture of his extensive and 
manifold activity. And it is in this that their value mainly con- 
sists ; for, although questions of theology and morality are sometimes 
treated in them, they do not contain those elaborate discussions 
which are found among the correspondence of Jerome and 
Augustine.* Gregory had neither leisure nor inclination for such 
discussions; but his capacity for business, his wide, various, and 
minute supervision, his combination of tenacity and dexterity in 
the conduct of affairs, are truly wonderful. From treating with 
patriarchs, kings, or emperors on the highest concerns of Church 
or State, he passes to direct the management of a farm, the 

» e, g. Dial. iii. 38 ; Ep. iii. 29 ; • Dupin (v. 104, seqq.) pves a sum- 
Baron. 590. 22-5 ; 594. 9 ; Sammarth. mary of the chief points in Gregory's 
II., iv. 4 ; Gibbon, It. 267-8 ; Neander, letters, classed under separate neads. 
T. 155 ; Lau, 60. JafT*^, in his elaborate and valuable 

' Greg. Dial. iii. 36. < Kegesta,' gives an analysis of them, 

^ Lau, 48, 111. arranged in chronological order. 

* Lau, 143. See vol. i. p. 531. 



CiiAP. I. Aj>. 590-604. LITUKGICAL REFORMS. O 

reclaiming of a runaway nun, or the relief of a distressed 
petitioner in some distant dependency of his see.^ He appears as 
a pope, as a virtual sovereign, as a bishop, as a landlord.^ He 
takes measures for the defence of his country, for the conversion 
of the heathen, for the repression and reconciliation of sectaries 
and schismatics; he administers discipline, manages the care of 
vacant dioceses, arranges for the union of sees where impoverish- 
ment and depopulation rendered such a junction expedient, directs 
the election of bishops, and superintends the performance of their 
duties. He intercedes with the great men of the earth for those 
who suffered from the conduct of their subordinates ; he mediates 
in quarrels between bishops and their clergy, or between clergy 
and laity ; he advises on the temporal concerns of churches, and 
in a spirit of disinterestedness and equity very unlike the grasping 
conduct of too many bishops where legacies or other property were 
in question. In his letters to the emperors, although the tone is 
himible and submissive, he steadily holds to his purpose, and 
opposes everything which appears to him as an encroachment on 
the rights of the Church.** 

Gregory lived in a simple® and monastic style, confining his 
society to monks and clergy, with whom he carried on his studies.^ 
He endeavoured to provide for the education of the clergy, not 
indeed according to any exalted literary standard, but in such a 
maimer as the circumstances of his time allowed. He introduced 
a new and more effective organization into his Church.^ -He 
laboured for the improvement of the liturgy, and gave to the 
. canon of the mass the form which it still retains in all essential 
respects.^ He instituted a singing-school, selected music, and 
established the manner of chanting which derives its name from 
him.* He superintended in person the exercises of the choristers ; 
the whip with which he threatened and admonished them was 
preserved for centuries as a relic.*^ The misconduct of persons who 

^ Epp. Tiii. 8-9: ix. 114. good asses. I cannot ride the horse, 

« See Gibbon, iy. 370-1 ; Schrockh, because he is wretched ; nor the good 

ZTii. 278-SO; Neander, v. 15C. For beasts, because they are asses." 

his humane care to lessen the burdens ' Joh. Diac. ii. 11-2; Lau, 68. 

and oppressions of his ro/o/»i\ see Savigny ' Lau, 303. 

in the Philological Museum, ii. 129- ^ See vol. iv. of his works; also 

131. Cambridge, 1833. Palmer's Origines, i. Ill, scqq. ; Gudr- 

< Lao, 105-6. anger, i. 162, se<jq. ; Lau, 244-299. 

• One of his epistles (ii. 32), addressed ' Maimbourg, m Bay le, art. Qregoire /., 

to an agent in Sicily, has been often note O ; Lau, 258. 

quoted as showing both GregorVs hu- ^ Joh. Diac. ii. 5-6. This writer's 

moor and the humbleness of his esta- account of the manner in 'which the 

blishment: **You have sent us," he "Germans or Gauls" performed the 

writes, ** one wretched horse and live Gregorian chant (ii. 7) is too curious to 



6 GR£<JOKY'S CliAKITiES — NEGOTIATIONS. Boos Ul. 

on account of their vocal powers had been ordained> deacons had 
become scandalous ; Gregory, with a council, attempted to remedy 
the evil, not by requiring a greater strictness of behaviour in tiae 
singers, but by enacting that the chanting should be performed by 
subdeacons, or clerks of the inferior orders.*" He laboured dili- 
gently as a preacher, and it was believed that in the composition of 
his discourses he was aided by a special inspiratioii of the Holy 
Spirit, who appeared in the form of a dove whiter than aoow.'' 
When Rome was threatened in 595 by the Lombards under Agilulf, 
the pope expounded Ezekiel from the pulpit, until at length the 
pressure of distress obliged him to desist, as he found that in such 
circumstances his mind was too much distracted to penetrate into 
the mysteries of the prophetic book." " Let no one blame me," he 
says in the last homily of the series, " if after this discourse I cease, 
since, as you all see, our tribulations are multiplied : on every side 
we are surrounded with swords, on every side* we fear the imminent 
peril of death. Some come back to us maimed of their hands,' 
others are reported to be prisoners or slain. I am forced to with- 
hold my tongue from exposition, for that my soul is weary of my 
life." ^ In his last years, when compelled by sickness to withdraw 
fit)m preaching in person, he dictated sermons which were delivered 
by others."* 

The wealth of his see enabled the pope to exercise extemdve 
charities, which were administered according to a regular scheme. 
On the first day of every month he distributed laige quantities of 
provisions, and many members of the nobility were so reduced by 
the calamities of the age that they were glad to share in his bounty. 
Every day he sent alms to a number of needy persons, in all quarters 
of the city. When a poor man had been found dead in the street, 
Gregory abstained for some time from the celebration of the eucha- 
rist, as considering himself to be the cause of his death. He was in 
the habit of sending dishes from his own table to persons whom he 
knew to be in want, but ashamed to ask relief. He entertained 
strangers and wanderers as his guests ; and his biographers tell us 
that on one occasion he was rewarded by a vision, in which he was 

be omitted here, although it has been ri^idas voces jactat, sicque audientium 

partly quoted by Gibbon : *' Alpina animos, quos mulcere debuerat, exas- 

siquidem corpora, Tocnm suarum toni- perando magis ac obstrependo con- 

truis altisone perstrepentia, susceptee turbat." 

modulationis dulcedinem proprie uon *" Hard. iii. 496. 

resultant, quia bibuli gutturis barbara ° Paul. 28 ; Joh. Diac. iv. 70. 

feritas, dum inflexionibus et repercus- ° Horn, in Ezech., prsef. ad. lib. ii. 

siouibus mitcm nititur edere cantile- ^ II. x. 24. 

nam, naturali quodam fragore, quasi i Joh. Diac. iv. 74. 

plaiistra per gradus confuse sonantia. 



Chap. I. aj>. 590-604. ADMINISTRATION OF THE CHURCH. 7 

informed that among the objects of his hospitality had been his 
guardian angel. At another time, it is related, the Saviour appeared 
to him by night, and said to him, ^^ On other days thou hast relieved 
Me in my members, but yesterday in Myself." ' 

Gregory found himself obliged to take an active part in 
political aJBTairs. He desired peace, not only for its own sake, but 
as necessary for the reform and extension of the Church." He 
laboured for it notwithstanding many discouragements, and not- 
withstanding repeated disappointments by the breach of truces 
which had been concluded. He took it upon himself to negotiate 
with the Lombards i and, although slighted and ridiculed by the 
court of Constantinople for his endeavours, he found his recompense 
in their success, and in the gratitude of the people whom he had 
rescued from the miseries of war.* 

The property of the Roman see, which had come to be desig- 
nated as the ^^ patrimony of St. Peter," included estates not only 
in Italy and the adjacent islands, but in Gaul, Illyria, Dalmatia, 
Africa, and even in Asia.^ These estates were managed by com- 
missioners fihosen from the orders of deacons and subdeacons, or 
by laymen who had the title of Defensors. By agents of this class 
Gregory carried on much of the administration of his own patri- 
archate and of his communications with other churches ; and, in 
addition to these, he was represented by vicara — bishops on whom, 
either for the eminence of their sees or for their personal merits, 
he bestowed certain prerogatives and jurisdiction, of which the pall 
was the distinctive badge.^ His more especial care was limited to 
the ** suburbicarian " provinces, and beyond these he did not venture 
to interfere in the internal concerns of churches.^ In Gaul and 
in Spain he had vicars : his influence over the churches of these 
countries was undefined as to extent, and was chiefly exercised in 
the shape of exhortations to their sovereigns ; but he succeeded in 
establishing by this means a closer connexion with the Prankish 
kingdom than that which had before existed; and by thus 
strengthening his interest hi the West, he provided for his church 
a support independent of the power of Constantinople.' 

' Job. Diac. iL 22-30 ; Lau, 303. hb subjects. (VigU. Ep. 6, in Patrol. 

' Lau, 54. Ixix. : Greg. Ep. ix. 11 ; Giesel. I. ii. 

« Sammarth. ii. 2 ; iv. 1 ; Gibbon, iT. 416. Lau, 95.) On its form see n. on 

274 ; L«u, 63-6, 138-142. Ep. i. 28 ; De Marca, 1. vi. c. 6 j Lau, 

• Baron. 591. 30; Giannone, 1. IV. 54. There is an essay by Gamier on 

xi. 1 ; Lau, 50. the pall. Dissert iii. in Lib. Diurn. 

" See Epp. iii. 56-7; ▼. 11. 15, 53; (Patrol, cv.). 
▼i. 34, 62, &c. The emperor's consent ^ Fleury, xxxv. 19 ; Dupin, v. 103. 
was necessary before the pall could be » Lau, 89, 179 ; Neand. v. 162 ; Rett- 

oonferred on any bishops who were not berg, ii. 583. 



8 CONTROVERSY WITH Book UI. 

By the aid of Gennadius, gorernor of Africa, the pope acquired 
a degree of authority before unknown over the Church of that 
counUy.* In his dealings with the bishops of the west, he upheld 
the authority of St Peter's chair as the source of all ecdecdastical 
privileges — ^the centre of jurisdiction, to which all spiritual causes 
ought to be referred as the highest tribunal.^ His agents, 
altJ^ough belonging to the lower grades of the ministry, were 
virtually the chief ecclesiastical authorities within their spheres ; we 
find that subdeacons are in this character empowered not only to 
admonish individual bishops, but even to convoke those of a whole 
province, to administer the papal rebuke to them, and to report 
them to the apostolical chair in case of neglect^ When, however, 
the agents exceeded their general authority, and allowed causes to 
be carried before them without reference to the diocesan, Gregory 
admonished them to respect the rights of the episcopate.^ With 
this lofty conception of the authority of his see, it would appear 
that he was unfeignedly free from personal pride and assumption ; 
but he must be reckoned among those of the popes who have most 
effectively contributed to the extension of the papal dominion. 

Gregory always treated the eastern patriarchs as independent 
lie spoke of the bishops of Alexandria and Antioch as his equals — 
as being, like himself, successors of St Peter, and sharers withiiim 
in the one chair of the same founder ;^ and, although he was involved 
in serious differences with the bishops of the eastern capital, these 
differences did not arise frt)m any claim on the Roman side, but 
from a supposed assumption on the part of Constantinople/ John, 
styled for his ascetic life ** the Faster," was raised to the patriar- 
chate in 585, after having struggled to escape the elevation with 
an appearance of resolute humility, which Gregory at the time 
admired, although he afterwards came to regard it as the mask of 
prida* In 587 a great synod of eastern bishops and senators was 
held at Constantinople for the trial of certain charges against 
Gregory, patriarch of Antioch.^ Over this assembly John 

• Lau, 103-4, 209. stantly allow ? " Perhaps subjecta may 

*» NeaDd. v. 156 ; Lau, 63, 96-100. mean inferior ^ for the whole course of 

« Epp. xiii. 26-7 ; Lau, 112. Gregory's dealmgs with Constantinople 

^ Ep. xi. 37. is against the idea of his havinff re- 

« Epp. vi. 60 ; yii. 40. garded the patriarch as subject to him. 
' In one of his epistles (ix. 12), when e Epp. t. 18, 44. 
meeting a charge of having adopted ^ Gregory was acquitted. The his- 

some ritual noTelties from Constan- torian Evagrius, who was a lawyer of 

tinople, he asks : '* As for the Constan- Antioch, and attended him as his conn- 

tinopolitan Church, who can doubt that sel, gives a very high character of him. 

it is subjecta to the Apostolic See, as (v. 6 ; vi. 7.) On the other side, see 

both the most pious emperor and our the monophysite John of Ephesus, 213, 

brother the bishop of tnat city con- 225. 



C3HAF. L Aj>. 694. JOHN OF CONSTANTIKOPLE. 9 

presided, in virtue of the position assigned to his see by the 
second and fourth General Coundls; and in the acts he 
assumed, like some of his predecessors,* the title of '^ Ecumenical 
(which the Latins rendered by Universal) Bishop." The meaning 
of this term, in Byzantine usage, was indefinite ; there was cer- 
tainly no intention of claiming by it a jurisdiction over the whole 
Church;^ but Pelagius 11., viewing with jealousy the power of 
G)nstantinople, and apprehensive of the additional importance 
which its Ushops might derive fix)m the presidency of a council 
assembled for so important a purpose, laid hold on the title as a 
pretext for disallowing the acts of the assembly, although these had 
been confirmed by the emperor, and forbade his envoy to commu- 
nicate with John.™ 

Gregory, on succeeding Pelagius, took up the question with 
much earnestness. After repeated, but inefiectual, remonstrances 
through his apocrisiary," he wrote to the patriarch himself, to the 
emperor Maurice, and to the empress. To Maurice he 
urged that the title assumed by the patriarch interfered 
with the honour of the sovereiga^ He declared that John was 
drawn by his flatterers into the use of the " proud and foolish " 
word; that the assumption was an imitation of the devil, who 
exalted himself above his brother angels ; that it was unlike the 
conduct of St Peter, who, although the first of the apostles, was 
but a member of the same class with the rest ; that bishops ought 
to learn fix)m the calamities of the time to employ themselves better 
than in claiming lofty designations ; that, appearing now when the 
end of the world was at hand, the claim was a token of Antichrist's 
approach. The council of Chalcedon, he said, had indeed given 
the title to the bishops of Rome ; ^ but these had never adopted it, 
lest they should seem to deny the pontificate to others.** Gregory 
also wrote to Eulogius of Alexandria, and to Anastasius of Antioch, 
endeavouring to enlist them in his cause.' To allow the title to 
John, he said, would be to derogate from their own rights, and an 

' See ToL i. p. 546. inhabitatar. Nam ^uod Grsci €tcn- 

^ Thomassin de Benef. I. i. 11-16 ; menem vocant, a Latinis uon solum or6ts, 

Dopio, T. 25. See RobinB, 199-201. a cujus universitate universalis appel- 

Compare the prefiMie tg the Acts of the latur, yerum etiam habitatio seu locus 

Second Council of NicsBa, bj Anastasius habitabilis nuncupatur." 

the librarian (Hard. iv. 20). " Cum " Greg. Epp. v. IS, 44 ; Joh. Diac. 

^md Cpolim positus frequenter Grsecos It. 51. 

super hoc vocabulo reprehenderem, et ** Lau, 149. 

fitttns Yel arrogantiffi redarguerem, as- '* £p. v. 20. 

serebant, quod uon ideo cecwnenicum, ** That this was a mistake, see toI. i. 

onem multi unicersalan interpretati sunt, p. 546. 

dioerent patriarcham, quod uniyersi or- *> Epp. ▼. 18, 20, 21 ; vi. 3d. 

bis teneat pnesulatum ; sed auod ci;i- ' Epp. ▼. 43 ; vi. 60 ; tU. 27 ; iz. 78. 

dam parti prsesit orbis qa» a Cbristianis 



10 GREGORY'S RELATIONS Book IIL 

injury to their whole order. ^^ Ecumenical bishop *^ must mean scde 
bishop ; if, therefore, the ecumenical bishop should err, the whole 
Church would fail ; and for a patriarch of Constantinople to assume 
the proud and superstitious name, which was an invention of the 
first apostate, was alarming, since among the occupants of that see 
there had been not only heretics, but hereoarchs. These applica- 
tions were of little efiect, for both the Egyptian and the Syrian 
patriarchs had special reasons to deprecate a rupture of the Church's 
peace, and to avoid any step which might provoke the emperor/ 
Anastasius had been expelled from his see by the younger Justin, 
and had not recovered it until after an exclusion of thirteen years 
(a.d. 582-595), when he was restored on the death of Gregory;* 
Eulogius was struggling with the difficulties of the Monophysite 
schism : while to both of them, as orientals, the title of ecumenical 
appeared neither a novelty nor so objectionable as the Roman bishop 
considered it. Eulogius, however, reported that he had ceased to 
use it in writing to John, as Gregory had directed {sicutjussistis)^ 
and in his letter he addressed the bishop of Rome himself as ^' uni- 
versal pope." " I beg," replied Gregory, " that you would not 
speak of directing j since I know who I am, and who you are. In 

dignity you are my brother; in character, my father 

I pray your most sweet holiness to address me no more with the 
proud appellation of ' universal pope,' since that which is given to 
another beyond what reason requires is subtracted from yourself. 
If you style me universal pope, you deny that you are at all that 
which you own me to be universally. Away with words which puflF 
up vanity and wound charity ! " "^ 

John of Constantinople died in 595, leaving no other property 
than a small wooden bedstead, a shabby woollen coverlet, and a 
ragged cloak, — relics which were removed to the imperial palace 
in reverence of the patriarch's sanctity.'' His successor, Cyriac, 
continued to use the obnoxious title ; but Gregory persevered in 

* Lau, 158. patriarchs of Constantinople intended. 

• Evagr. V. 5. (Sec Dupin, v. 110; Laud against 
" Ep. "viii. 30. Baronius, after quoting Fisher, p. 198, ed. Ang. Cath. Lib.) 

gome very insufficient cases of Gregory's Schrockh (xvii. 69-72) is unfair to 

interference in countries beyond his own Gregory in this as in other points, 

patriarchate, exclaims—* ' Sic vides Gre- Gregory, in tacit reproof of John, styled 

gorium,cum refogitdici universalis, uni- himself "servant of God's servants;" 

versalis tamen ecclesioB curam subire I" but this title was not (as has sometimes 

(695. 34-5 ; cf. 50.) The Benedictine been said) invented by him. It wus as 

biographer (III. i. 16-7) says that Gre- old as St. Augustine's time, was used 

gory objected to the title of ecumenical by other bishops, and even by kings, 

only as meaning sole bishop, and not in and did not become peculiar to the popes 

the sense in which later popes have of Rome until the eleventh century, 

used it. The truth is, however, that Ducange, s. w. Scrviis acrvorum Dei; 

he objected to it in the later Roman Schrockh, xvii. 78-9 ; Giescl. I. ii. 414. 

sense rather than in that which the * Theoph. Simocatta, viL 6. 



Chap. I. aj>. 693.^03. WITH MAURICE AND PHOCAS. H 

his remoDstranoeB against it, and, although he accepted the an- 
nouncement of Cyriac's promotion, forbade his envoys at Con- 
stantinople to communicate with the new patriarch so long as the 
style of Ecumenical Bishop should be retained/ 

During his residence at Constantinople, Gregory had been on 
terms of great intimacy with Maurice, who at that time was in a 
private station. But since the elevation of the one to the empire, 
and of the other to St Peter's chair, many causes of disagreement 
had arisen. Maurice favoured John personally ; he represented 
the question of the patriarch's titie as trifling, and was deaf to 
Gregory's appeals on the subject' He often espoused the cause 
of bishops or others whom Gregory wished to censure, and reminded 
him that the troubles of tiie time made it inexpetUent to insist on 
the rigour of discipline.* By forbidding persons in public employ- 
ment to become monks, and requiring that soldiers should not 
embrace the monastic life until after the expiration of 

AD 593 

their term of service, he provoked the pope to tell him 
that this measure might cost him his salvation, although, in ful- 
filment of his duty as a subject, Gr^ory transmitted the law to 
other bishops.^ Moreover there were difierences arising out of 
Gregory's political conduct, which the exarchs and other imperial 
officers had represented to their master in an un&vourable light.^ 
Thus the friendship of former days had been succeeded by aliena- 
tion, when in 602 a revolution took place at Constantinople. The 
discontent of Maurice's subjects, ^hich had been growing for years, 
was swelled into revolt by the belief that, for reasons of disgraceful 
parsimony, he had allowed twelve thousand captive soldiers to be 
butchered by the Avars when it was in his power to ransom them.^ 
The emperor was deposed, and the crown was bestowed on a cen- 
turion, named Phocas, who soon after caused Maurice and his 
children to be put to death with revolting cruelties, which the victims 

y Epp. vii. 4, 31. xi. 8-9. 

' Sclirockh, xvii. 343 ; Lau, 106. "^ See £p. v. 40, to Maarioe, a.d. 594. 

• Baron. 590. 43. ^ Theoph. Simocatta, Yiii. 6-7. Mau- 

^ Ep. iii. 65. Ste. Marthe remarks rice had already been unpopular on 

tbmt the law was needed against those account of the severe economy which 

who in that age were rec^y to take he practised in order to remedjr the 

refhge in cloisters when the state re- profusion of his predecessor Tiberius— 

quired their administrative or military more especially as this general economy 

services, and justifies the regulation as contrasted offensivelv with his excessive 

to soldiers by the analogy of similar liberality towards his own relations, 

canons as to slaves— soldiers being (Job. Ephes. 357-363.) Mr. Finlay (i. 

bound as truly as slaves for the term of 369-370) supposes that he wished to 

their engagement (II. x. 3). As to the punish the troops for their late mutinous 

subsequent alteration of the law, see conduct, and that he did not expect the 

Lau, 109. G>mp. £>e Marca, II. Avars to put them to death. 



12 



GREGORYS LABOURS FOR UNITY. 



IIL 



bore with extraordinary firmness and with devout resignation.* The 
oehaviour of Gregory on this occasion has exposed him to censures 
firom which his apologists have in vain endeavoured to dear hiuL 
Blinded by his zeal for the Church, and by his dislike of the late 
emperor's policy, he hailed with exultation the success of an 
usurper whom sJl agree in representing as a monster of vice and 
barbarity;' he received with honour the pictures of Phocas and 
bis wife, placed them in the chapel of a palace, and addressed the 
new emperor and empress in letters of warm congratula- 
tion.* Encouraged by the change of rulers, he now 
ivrote again to Cyriac, exhorting him to abandon the title which 
had occasioned so much contention.^ Phocas found it convenient 
to favour the Roman side, and for a time the word was given up 
or forbidden.* But the next emperor, Heraclius, again used it in 
addressing the bishops of Constantinople; their use of it was 
sanctioned by the sixth and seventh general councila; and it has 
been retained to the present day.^ 



July, 603. 



Gregory was zealous in his endeavours to extend the knowledge 
of the Gospel, and to bring over separatists to the Church. He 



• Theophanes, 439-443; Simocatta, 
viii. 8-11 ; Joh. Diac. iv. 17-18; Gib- 
bon, iv. 296. 

' Baron. 603. 9 ; Maimbourg, in 
Bayle, art. Gr^joire I. n. H. ; Gibbon, 
iv. 299-300. 

ff Epp. xiii. 31, 39; Baron. 603, 2; 
Lau, 232-3. For censures on his con- 
duct, see Bayle, art Gregoire I. ; Mos- 
heim, ii. 19; Gibbon, iv. 299; Milman, 
i. 460-3. John the Deacon (iv. 23), 
Barouius (603, 7), the Benedictines 
(Vita, IV. vii. 4-5; n. in Ep. xiii. 31), 
and others suggest that Gregory meant 
to indicate to Fhocas vhat his conduct 
ought to be ; that he did not suspect his 
hypocrisy or foresee his misconduct, 
&c. Dom Pitra ^s to the Iliad for a 
justification — ** S'll descend d la louange 
officielle en vers I'assassin de. Maurice, 
sourenofis-nous de Prutm aux jikds 
cTAihiiie" (Hist, de^ S. Leger, p. xxxiii.) 
M. Rohrbacher settles the question more 
boldly, and to his own perfect satis- 
faction. After quoting Gregory's letter 
to Phocas, " C'est ainsi," says the Abb^, 
" que le chef de I'Eglise universelle, le 
chef de Tunivers Chre'tien, juge Tem- 
pereur qui n'est plus, et admoneste celui 
qui le remplace!" (ix. 513.) M. de 
Moutalembert, however, notwithstand- 
ing his general admiration of Gregory, 
is strongly against him in this case 



(ii. 120-3). Gregory's frequent comi>li- 
ments to the Prankish queen Bnmichild 
afford grounds for the same sort of 
charges with his letter to Phocas. The 
Benedictines and other Romanists argue 
that either Brunichild was not what she 
is said to have been, and that the crimes 
of Fredegund have been ascribed to 
her; or that her misdeeds must have 
been after Gregory's death; or that 
Gregory knew of her good actions from 
herself and had no means of knowing 
her evil deeds. (Vita, III. iii. 6; n. in 
Ep. vi. 5 ; Mariana, ii. 108 ; Mouta- 
lembert, ii. 437-8.) Neander in both 
cases excuses him, on the ground 
that he could not get correct informa- 
tion from distant countries, but allows 
that he went too far in his civUities to 
Phocas. (v. 156.) Lau gives up the 
defence (192-3, 233-4). Mr. Hallam 
(Suppl. Notes, 15) and Dr. Perry (190-5) 
incline to think that Brunichild's in- 
famy is partly imdeserved. 

^ Ep. xiii. 40. 

^ It has been said that Phocas after- 
wards granted the title to Gre^ry's 
successors, but see Schrockh, xvii. 73; 
Planck, i. 655. 

^ Sammarth. iii. 1 ; GieseL I. ii. 414. 
See for the later history of the title, 
Schrockh, xvii. 73-8. 



Chap. 1. aj>. 690-M4. TREATMENT OF THE JEWS. 13 

laboured, and with considerable, although not complete success, to 
put au end to the schism of Aquileia and Istria, which had arisen 
out of the controversy as to the ** Three Articles " and the Fifth 
General Council.™ In order to this purpose, he was willing to 
abstain from insisting on the reception of that council : the first four 
councils, he said, were to be acknowledged like the four Gospels ; 
^' that which by some was' called the Fifth " did not impugn the 
Council of Cbalcedon, but it related to personal matters only, and 
did not stand on the same footing with the others,*^ By means 
of this view he was able to establish a reconciliation between 
Constantius, bishop of Milan, an adherent of the Council, 
and Theodelinda, queen of the Lombards, although the ' ' 
queen persisted in refusing to condemn the *' Three- Articles." ^ 
The influence of this princess was of great advantage to the pope, 
both in religious and in political aflairs. According to the usual 
belief, she was daughter of the prince of the Bavarians, and had 
been trsdned in the Catholic faith. It is said that on the death of 
her husband, the Lombard king Authari, her people desired her 
to choose another, and promised to accept him for their 
sovereign ; and her choice fell on Agilulf, duke of Turin, 
who, out of gratitude for his elevation, was disposed to show fevour 
to her religion, and to listen to her mediation in behalf of the 
Romans.^ The statement of some writers,*^ that A^lulf himself 
became a Catholic, appears to be erroneous ; but his son was bap- 
tised into the Church, and in the middle of the seventh century 
Arianism was extinct among the Lombards.' 

Towards those who were not members of the Church Gregory 
was in general tolerant. That he urged the exe^ition of the laws 
against the Donatists is an exception which the fanatical violence 
of the sect may serve to explain, if not even to justify,* He pro- 
tected the Jews in the exercise of their religion,^ and disapproved 
of the forcible measures by which some princes of Gaul and Spain 
had attempted to drive them to a profession of Christianity.^ 

* Epp. iz. 9 ; xii. 33, &c. ; Job. Diac. For the famous '* iron crown " of Agi- 
L 47-50; Lao, 67-71, 143-8. lulf, see the Patrol, xcv. 651-6, and 

» Epp. Hi. 16 ; W. 2-4, 38-9. Dacange, 8. w. Corona Ferrea. 

• Baron. 593. 31-9; 594. 1, seqq. « Paul, de Gestig Langob. iy. 6. See 
Sammartb. II. xii. 1-3. Muratori, Annali, a.d. 599. 

9 Panl. Warnefr. De GestU Langob, » Schrockb, xviii. 131. 

iiL 29, 34 ; !▼. 6, 8 (Patrol, xcv.) ; • Ep. iv. 34, &c. ; Baron. 591. 32-7 ; 

Pagi, X. 506 ; Lau, 46, 61. Rettberg 592. 3-4 ; Lau, 72. 

thinks the story fkbolous, because Pre- * Ep. vi. 23: Schrockb, xvii. 320-3; 

d«par (e. 34) makes bei a Prankish Lau, 142. 

prmoest, and names no other husband * Epp. i. 47 ; iiL 53. Such compul- 

* Ago,* I. e, Agilttlt (il 180.) sory conversions are often mentioned in 



14 ENGLAND. Book UL 

When a bishop of Palermo had seized and consecrated a syna- 
gogue, Gregory ordered that as, after consecration, it could not be 
alienated from the Church, the bishop should pay the value of it to 
the Jews.^ On another occasion, when a convert from Judaism, 
having been baptized on Easter eve, had signalized his zeal by 
invading the synagogue of Cagliari on the following day, and 
placing in it his baptismal robe, with a cross and a picture, of the 
blessed Virgin, he was censured for the proceeding, and it was 
ordered that the building should be restored to the rightful o¥mer8.' 
Sometimes, however, Gregory endeavoured to expedite the conver- 
sion of Jews by holding out allowances of money or diminution of 
rent as inducements, and by increasing the rent of those who were 
obstinate in their misbelief;' and, although he expressed a con- 
sciousness that conversion produced by such means might be hypo- 
critical, he justified them by the consideration that the children of 
the converts would enjoy Christian training, and might thus become 
sincere professors of the Gospel.* 

Gregory endeavoured to root out the remains of Paganism 
which still existed in some parts of Italy, and in the islands of 
Sardinia and Corsica He wrote in reproof of landowners — some 
of them even bishops — ^who allowed their peasants to continue in 
heathenism, and of official persons who suffered themselves to be 
bribed into conniving at it^ Sometimes he recommended lenity as 
the best means of converting the pagan rustics ; sometimes the 
imposition of taxes, or even personal chastisement*' 

But the most memorable of Gregory's attempts for the conversion 
of the heathen had our own . island for its scene. It is probable 
that many of th^ Britons who had become slaves to the northern 
invaders retsdned some sort of Christianity f but the visible appear- 
ance of a church no longer existed among them ; the last bishops 
within the Saxon territory are said to have withdrawn fit)m London 
and York into Wales about the year 587.® The zeal of controversy 
has largely affected the representations given by many writers of 
the subject at which we have now arrived. Those in the Roman 

the records of the time. The IVth in monasteries or elsewhere. C. 60. 

Council of Toledo (a.d. 6Sd) enacted * £p. ix. 55. 

that Jews should not be ** saved against y Ep. ix. 6. 

their will," but that those who had been * E. g. Epp. iv. 32 ; v. 8. 

compelled to profess Christianity in the * Ep. v. 8. 

reiffn of the late king Sisebut, should »» Epp. iv. 23-6 ; v. 41 ; vi. 1, 18; 

still be obliged to adhere to their pro- Lau, 102. 

fession. (C. 57. Cf. Isid. Hispal. Hist. « Ep. ir. 26 ; ix. 65 ; Lau, 242-3. 

Goth. 60, in Patrol. Ixxxiii.) Children «» Lingard,.H. E. i. 89 ; Lappenberg, 

of Jews are to be separated from their i. 63, 133. 

parents, and to be Christianly trained * CoUier i. 144. 



Chap. I. ad. 596. MISSION TO THE ANGLO-SAXONS. 15 

interest have made it their object to narrow as much as possible the 
extent of the British Christianity, to disparage its character, and to 
reflect on the British clergy for their supineness and uncharitableness 
in neglecting to impart the knowledge of salvation to their Saxon 
neighbours. And, while some Anglican writers have caught this 
tone, without sufficiently considering what abatements may fairly 
be made from the declamations of Gildas and from the statements 
of ancient authors unfriendly to the Britons ; or whether, in the 
fierce struggles of war, and in the state of bondage which followed, 
it would have been even possible for these to attempt the conver- 
sion of their conquerors and oppressors — other Protestants have 
committed the opposite injustice of decrying the motives and 
putting the worst constniction on the actions of those who were 
instrumental in the conversion which proceeded fix)m Rome/ 

It will be enough to allude to the £uniliar story of the incident 
which is said to have first directed Gregory's mind towards the con- 
version of the Anglo-Saxons — the sight of the fair-haired captives 
in the slave-market, and the succession of fanciful plays on words 
by which he declared that these Angles of angelic beauty, subjects 
of AdUij king of Deira, must be called from the ire of God, and 
taught to sing AUeluiah.^ The date of this is placed by some in 
the early days of his monastic life ; ^ by others, after his return 
from Constantinople/ He resolved to undertake a mission to 
Britain, and the pope (whether Benedict or Pelagius) «anctioned 
the enterprise ; but the people of Rome, who were warmly attached 
to Gregory, made such demonstrations that he was obliged to 
abandon it/ Although, however, he was thus prevented from* 
executing the work in person, he kept it in view until, after his 
elevation to the papal chair, he was able to commit it to the agency 
of others. 

Ethelbert had succeeded to the kingdom of Kent in 568, and in 593 
had attained the dignity of Bretwalda, which gave him an influence 
over the whole of England south of the Humber.* About 570, as is 
supposed, he had married a Christian princess. Bertha, daughter of 
Charibert,king of Paris, and the saintiy Ingoberga. As a condition 
of this marriage, the free exercise of her reli^on was secured for the 
queen, and a French bishop, named Luidhard, accompanied her to 

' See Schrackh, xvi. 268 ; Neander, » Lau, 36. 

▼. 15 ; Lappenb. i. 136. ^ Paul. 19-21. 

» Beda, ii. 1 ; Paul. 17. Mr. Soames » Beda, i. 25 ; ii. 5 ; Turner, Hist, 

ditbelierea the story. Ang. Sax. Ch. Aoglo-Sax. i. 328, 338 ; Lingard, H. E. 

32-3 ; Latin Ch. 13-4. i. 88 ; Lappenberg, i. 127-8. 

^ Joh. Diac. i. 22 ; Fleury, zxxiv. 35. 



16 ETHELBERT. Boc« HI. 

the Kentish court.'" It is probable that Bertha, in the course of her 
long union with "Ethelberty had made some attempts, at least indi- 
rectly, to influence him in favour of the Gospel ; perhaps, too, it 
may have been from her that Gregory received representations 
which led him to suppose that many of the Anglo-Saxons were 
desirous of Christian instruction, and that the Britons refused to 
bestow it on them." In 596, during an interval of peace with the 
Lombards,® the pope despatched Augustine, provost of his own mo- 
nastery, with a party of monks, to preach the Gospel in England ; 
and about the same time he desired Candidus, defensor of the papal 
estates in Gaul, to buy up English captive youths, and to place 
them in monasteries, with a view to training them for the conversion 
of their countrymen.^ But the missionaries, while in the South of 
France, took alarm at the thought of the dangers which they were 
likely to incur among a barbarous and unbelieving people whose 
language was utterly unknown to them, and their chief returned to 
Rome, with a prayer that they might be allowed to relinquish the 
enterprise. Gregory refused his consent ; he encouraged them to 
go on, and Aimished them with letters to various princes and bishops 
of Gaul, whom he requested to support them by their influence,^ and 
to supply them with interpreters. In 597 Augustine, with about 
forty companions, landed in the Isle of Thanet Ethelbert, on being 
apprised of their arrival, went to meet them ; and at an interview, 
which was held in the open air, because he feared lest they might 
practise some magical arts if he ventured himself under a roof with 
them, he listened to their announcement of the message of salva- 
tion.' The king professed himself unable at once to abandon the 
belief of his fathers for the new doctrines, but gave the missionaries 
leave to take up their abode in his capital, Durovemum, or Can- 
terbury, and to preach freely among his subjects. They entered 
the city in procession, chanting litanies and displaying a silver 
cross with a picture of the Saviour. On a rising ground without 
the walls they found a church of the Roman-British period, dedi- 
cated to St Martin, in which Luidhard had lately celebrated his 

^ Reda, i.25 ; Inett, i. 7. As to Bertha*8 Augastine. But it appears fh>m Ep. yi. 

mother, see the Rer. R. C. Jenkins, in 57, that Augustine and Candidas went 

' Archffiologia Oantiana,' iii. 20-1. into Gaol together. Lingard, A. S. C 

" See Epp. Ti. 58: xi. 29; Inett, i. i. 21. 
8-10; Schrockh, xvi. 269; Lingard, «i Ep. vi. 51-4, ."ST-g ; Beda, i. 23. In 

A. S. C. i. 23. his letter to Theodoric and I'heodehert 

** Lao, 139. (vi. 58) he seems to speak as if he sap- 

» Ep. vi. 7. The commission to posed the Saxons to he their subjects — 

Candidas is placed by many writers (as probably by way of compliment. See 

Thierry, i. 49, and Lau, 213) some Lappenb. i. 118; Thierry, i. 51. 
considerable time before the mission of ' Beda, i. 25. 



CiUF. L Aj>. 697-wi. •!«£ ENGLISH MISSION. 17 

worship ;■ and to this day the spot on which it stood, overlooking 
the valley of the Stour, is occupied by a little church, which, after 
many architectural changes, exhibits a large proportion of ancient 
Roman materials. There Augustine and his brethren worshipped ; 
and by the spectacle of their devout and self-denying lives, and of 
the miracles which are said to have accompanied their preaching,^ 
many converts were drawn to them. Ethelbert himself was bap- 
tized on Whitsunday, 597 ; he declared his wish that his subjects 
should embrace the Gospel, but professed himself resolved to put 
no constraint on their opinions.^ 

Gr^ory had intended that Augustine, if he succeeded in making 
an opening among the Saxons, should receive episcopal consecra- 
tion.* For this purpose the missionary now repaired to Aries ;^ 
and from that city he sent some of his companions to Rome with a 
report of his successes. The pope's answer contains advice which 
may be understood as hinting at some known defects of Augustine's 
character, or as suggested by the tone of his report He exhorts 
him not to be elated by his success or by the miracles which he 
had been enabled^ to perform; he must reckon that these were 
granted not for his own sake, but for that of the people to whom 
he was sent' Having accomplished the object of his journey into 
Gaul, Augustine returned to England by Christmas, 597 ; and 
Gregory was able to annoimce to Eulogius of Alexandria that at 
that festival the missionaries had baptized ten thousand persons in 
one day.* 

In the summer of 601 the pope despatched a reinforcement to 
the English mission. The new auxiliaries — among whom were 
Mellitus and Justus, successively archbishops of Canterbury, and 
Paulinus, afterwards the apostle of Northumbria — carried with 
them a large supply of books, including the Gospels, with church 
plate, vestments, relics said to be of apostles and martyrs, and the 
pall which was to invest Augustine with the dignity of a metro- 
politan.^ Gregory had written to Ethelbert, exhorting him to 
destroy the heathen temples in his dominions ;^ but, on further 
consideration, he took a different view of the matter, and sent after 
Mellitus a letter for the guidance of Augustine, desiring him not 

• That Laidliard was then dead, see Inett. i. 20 ; Lingard, A. S. C. i. 64, 
Pagi, z. 619. 368. 

• See Martineau, 45. seqq. ' Ep. xi. 28; Beda i. SI. (See Smith 
■ Beda, i. 26 ; Pagi, x. 620. in Patrol, xcv. 316.) 

« Beda, i. 23. ■ Ep. viii. 30 ; Beda, i. 27. 

f That his consecration was after his •» Beda, i. 29 ; Epp. xi. 58-63, 66, &c. 

first saccess, not (as some have thought) "^ Ep. xi. 66. 
on his way to Britain— see Pagi, z. 619; 



18 GREGORY'S INSTRUCTIONf Pook HI. 

to destroy the temples, but, if they were well built, to purify them 
with holy water, and convert them to the worship of the true God ; 
thus, it was hoped, the people might be the more readily attracted 
to the new relipon, if its rites were celebrated in places where they 
had been accustomed to worship. By a more questionable accomr 
modation of the same sort — for which, however, the authority of 
Scripture was alleged — it was directed that, instead of the heathen 
sacrifices and of the banquets which followed them, the festivals of 
the saints whose relics were deposited in any church should be 
celebrated by making booths of boughs, slaying animals, and 
feasting on them with religious thankfulness.* 

About the same time Gregory returned an elaborate set of 
answers to some quesGons which Augustine had proposed as to 
diflBculties which had occurred or might be expected to occur to 
him.* As to the division of ecclesiastical funds, he states the 
Roman principle — that a fourth part should be assigned to the 
bishop and his household for purposes of hospitality ; a fourth to 
the clergy ; another to the poor ; and the remaining quarter to the 
maintenance of churches. But he says that Augustine, as having 
been trained in the monastic rule, is to live in the society of his 
clergy ; and that it is needless to lay down any precise regulations 
as to the duties of hospitality and charity where all things are held 
in common, and all that can be spared is to be devoted to pious 
and religious uses. Such of the clerks not in holy ordera^ as might 
wish to marry might be permitted to do so, and a maintenance 
was to be allowed them. In reply to a question whether a variety 
of religious usages were allowable where the faith was the same — 
a ({uostion prol)ably suggested by tlie circumstance of Luidhard's 
having offidated at Canterbury according to the Gallican rite,*^ — 
the pope's answer was in a spirit no less unlike to that of his 
predecessors, Innocent and Leo, than to that of the prevalent 
party in the Latin Church of our own day. He desired Augustine 
to select from the usages of any churches such " right, religious, 
and pious" things as might seem suitable for the new church 

«* Ep. xi. 76 ; Beda, i. 80. See Inett^ Excerptions of Egbert (No. 160, in 
i. 23-6; Lau, 225; Martineau, 53; Wilkinn, i. 112, or Thorpe, 34). The 
Ozanam, 1 59. subdiaconate began to be included among 
• Ep. xi. 64 ; Beda, i. 27. the holy orders about the twelfth cen- 
' " Clerici extra sacros ordines con- tury. (Martene, ii. 2 ; Walter, 485 ; 
stituti." Mr. Kemble (ii. 414) seems Augusti, xi. 224.) Beleth, in the end 
to suppose that by ** sacros ordines" of that century, speaks of it as some- 
orders of monks are meant; bat the times reckoned with the holy orders, 
**holy orders" were those from the and sometimes not. Bationale, 72 
diaconate upwards, as is explained with (Patrol, ocii.). 
reference to Gregory's letter in the ' Johnson s Canons, i. 68. 



Cmat. L ajx. 603. AUGUSTINE AND THE BRITISH CHURCH. 19 

of the English; "for," it was said, "we must not love things 
on account of places, hut places on aocount of good things."** 
With respect to the degrees within which marriage was to be for- 
bidden, Gregory, while laying down a law for the baptized, under 
pain of exclusion from the holy Eucharist, did not insist on the 
separation of those who from ignorance had contracted marriages 
contrary to it : " for,^' he said, " the Church in this time corrects 
some sins out of zeal, bears with some out of lenity, connives at 
some out' of consideration, and so bears and connives as by this 
means often to restrain the evil which she opposes." In answer to 
another inquiry, Augustine was told that he must not interfere 
with the bishops of Gaul beyond gently hinting to them such 
things as might seem to require amendment ; " but," it was added, 
" we commit to your brotherhood the care of all the British 
bishops, that the ignorant may be instructed, the weak may be 
strengthened by your counsel, the perverse may be corrected by 
your authority." 

It was Gregory's design that Augustine should make London 
his metropolitical see, and should have twelve bishops under him ; 
that another metropolitan, with a like number of suffi*agans, should, 
when circumstances permitted, be established at York ; and that, 
after the death of Augustine, the archbishops of London and York 
should take precedence according to the date of their consecration. 
But this scheme, arranged in ignorance of the political divisions 
which had been introduced into Britain since the withdrawal of the 
Romans, was never carried out Augustine fixed himself in the 
Kentish capital, as London was in another kingdom ; and his succes- 
sors in the see of Canterbury have, although not without disputes 
during one period, continued to be primates of all England.* 

The bishops of the ancient British Church were not disposed to 
acknowledge the jurisdiction which Gregory had professed to confer 
on his emissary. In 603, Augustine, through the influence of 
Etbelbert, obtained a conference with some of them at a place 
which from him was called Augustine's Oak — probably Aust Clive, 
on the Severn.*^ He exhorted them to adopt the Roman usages 
as to certain points in which the churches differed, and proposed 
an appeal to the Divine judgment by way of deciding between the 

■* I have combined the reading of kins, i. 398 ; W. Malmesb. Gesta 

Beda, bonis, with that of Gregory's Pont. iii. 7; Stubhs, Chron. Pontif. 

epistles, nobis, Eborac. ap. Twysd. 168G. 

* Beda, i. 29 : Johnson, i. 74 ; Kemble, •* Stevenson, Note on Bed. ii. 2. 

ii. 359. See the letter of Archbishop Others place it in Worcestershire. 

Ralph to Caliztns II., a.d. 1121 ; Wii- (Joyce, 'England's Sacred Synods,' ill.) 

0*2 



20 AUGUSTINE AND THE BRITISH CHURCH. Book IU. 

rival traditions. A blind Saxon was brought forward ; the Britons 
were unable to cure him; but when Augustine prayed that the 
gift of bodily light to one might be the means of illuminating the 
minds of many, it is said that the man forthwith received his sight 
The Britons, although compelled by this miracle to acknowledge 
the superiority of the Roman cause, said that they could not alter 
their custoiiis without the consent of their countrymen; and a 
second conference was appointed, at which seven British bishops 
appeared, with Dinoth, abbot of the great monastery of Bangor 
Iscoed, in Flintshire. A hermit, whom they had consulted as to 
the manner m which they should act, had directed them to submit 
to Augustine if he were a man of God, and, on being asked how 
they should know this, had told them to observe whether Augustine 
rose up to greet them on their arrival at the place of meeting.™ As 
tiie archbishop omitted this courtesy, the Britons concluded that he 
was proud and domineering ; they refused to listen to his proposal 
that their other differences of observance should be borne with if 
they would comply with the Roman usages as to the time of keeping 
Easter, and as to the manner of administering baptism," and would 
join with him in preaching to the English ; whereupon Augustine 
is said to have told them in anger that, if they would not bftve 
peace with their brethren, they would have war with their enemies, 
and suffer death at the hands of those to whom they refused to 
preach the way of life.^ In judging of this afiair, we ^all do well 
to guard against the partiality which has led many writers to cast 
the blame on the Romans or on the Britons exclusively. We inay 
respect in the Britons their deare to adhere to old ways and to 
resist foreign assumption; in the missionaries, their anxiety to 
establish unity in external matters with a view to the great object 
of spreading the Gospel : but the benefits which might have been 
expected were lost through the arrogant demeanour of the one 
party and the narrow and stubborn jealousy of the other.^ 

"> See Ck)llier, i. 177, against Baronios. sioDS. The second view seems to me 

■> " Ut ministeriam baptizandi, quo the more probable, althoagh, if Angus- 

Deo renascimur, juxta morem sanctce tine insisted on the Roman practice of 

Romans et apostolicse ecciesise com- trine immersion, it was contrary to the 

pleatis." Dr. Lingard (A. S. C i. 69, directions given by Gregory for Spun, 

322) and Mr. Stevenson (Elng. Ch. His- where he approved the practice of the 

torians, i. S58) render compkatiSy by Catholics in baptizing by single immer- 

" perfect," and suppose it to refer to sion, because the Arians had used three 

confirmation, which at Rome was ad- as symbolising their doctrine of the 

ministered at the great festivals im- inferiority of the Second and Third per- 

mediately after baptism. Archdeacon sons in the Godh^. £p. L 43. 

Churton (Early Eng. Ch. 44) and Mr. « Beda, ii. 2. 

Martineau ^56) understand it to relate p As nothing is said of any discussion 

to the question of one or three immer- about the Roman supremacy, Dr. Lin- 



Chaf. L his death— writings of GREGORY. 21 

Augnstiiie is supposed to have died soon after the conference."* 
Before his death he had consecrated Justus to the bishoprick of 
Rochester, and Mellitus to that of London, the capital of Saberct, 
nephew of Ethelbert, and king of Essex ;^ he had also consecrated 
Laurence as his own successor. The threat or prophecy which he 
had uttered at the meeting with the Britons was supposed to be 
fulfilled some years after, when Ethelfrid, the pagan king of 
Bemicia, invaded their territory. In a battle at Caerleon 
on the Dee, Ethelfiid saw a number of unarmed men, 
and, on inquiring, was told that they were monks of Bangor who 
had come to pray for the success of their countrymen. " Then," 
he cried, ^^ although they have no weapons, they are fighting 
against us ;" and he ordered them to be put to the sword. About 
twelve hundred, it is said, were slain, and only fifty escaped by 
flight* 

Amidst the pressure of his manifold occupations, and notwith- 
standing frequent attacks of sickness, Gregory found time for the 
composition of extensive works. The most voluminous of these, 
the ' Morals* on the book of Job, was undertaken at the sug- 
gestion of Leander, bishop of Seville, with whom he had made 
acquaintance at Constantinople, where the Spanish prelate was 
employed in soliciting the emperor to aid his convert Hermenegild.* 
Gregory's qualifications for commenting on Scripture were not of 
any critical kind ; he repeatedly states that he was ignorant even 
,of Greek." The nature of his work is indicated by its title. From 
the circumstance that Job sometimes makes use of figurative 
language, he infers that in some passages the literal sense does 
not exist ;' and he applies himself chiefly to explaining the typical 

gird (A. 8. C. i. 67, 62, .3S0) infers that 74). See Hussey, n. in Bed. ii. 3. 

OD that flahject the Britons did not differ ' Inett, i. 38. 

from the missionaries. But how coold ■ Beda, ii. 2. The genuineness of the 

thej have more effectnally disowned words, in which it is said that An- 

iny sadh supremacy than hy their con- gustine was dead long before this, has 

dnct? If, as Dr. Lingard supposes been questioned, but is now generally 

(68), the story his been embellished, the admitted fSoames, Ang. Sax. Ch. 46 ; 

embellishment mast have been in the Stevenson m loc.). MorcoYer, as Ethel- 

Amrou interest. A letter or speech, first frid was a pagan, aud beyond the limits 

Dublishcd by Spelman, in which Dinoth of the Bretwalda's influence, it does not 

IS made to disaTOw the bishop of Rome appear how Augustine could have insti- 

(Fitrol. Izx. 21), is, however, probably gated him against the Britons, if alive 

qmrioiia. See Linsard, A. S. C. i. 71 ; and desirous so to do. 

Gieiel. I. ii. 462; Collier, i. 179; Inett, » Ep. ad Leandr. prefixed to the 

i. 33; Martinean, 57. book; Mariana, iv. 124. See vol. i. 

« His death » placed by some in the p. .'>42. 

■une year, 603 ; by Baronius in 604 ; • Epp. vii. 32 ; xi. 74. 

by otbert, in 605 ; by Pagi, in 607 (xi. * Ep. ad Leandr. c. 3. 



22 GREGORY'S WRITINGS Book HL 

and moral senses — often carrying to an extreme the characteristic 
faults of this kind of interpretation — strange wresting of the 
language of Scripture, and introduction of foreign matter under 
pretence of explaining what is written/ He regards Job as a 
type of the Saviour ; the patriarch*s wife, of the carnally-minded ; 
his friends, as representing heretics; their conviction, as signifying 
the reconciliation of the heretics to the Church. The ^Morals' 
were greatly admired. Marinian, bishop of Ravenna, caused them 
to be read in church ; but Gregory desired that this might be 
given up, as the book, not being intended for popular use, might 
be, to some hearers, rather a hindrance than a means of spiritual 
advancement.' 

The 'Pastoral Rule,' written in consequence of Gregory's 
having been censured by John, the predecessor of Marinian, for 
attempting to decline the episcopate, also contains some curious 
specimens of allegorical interpretation ; ^ but it is characterised by 
practical wisdom and by an experienced knowledge of the heart 
It was translated into various languages ; the Anglo-Saxon version 
was made by king Alfred, who sent a copy of it to every bishop 
in his kingdom for preservation in the cathedral church.^ In 
France, it was adopted as the rule of episcopal conduct by 
reforming synods under Charlemagne and his son ;^ and some 
synods ordered that it should be put into the hands of bishops 
at their consecration.** 

In his 'Dialogues,' addressed to Theodelinda,® Gregory dis- 
courses with a deacon named Peter on the miracles of Italian 
saints. The genuineness of the work has been questioned, chiefly 
on account of the anile legends with which it is filled.' But the 
evidence of the authorship is generally admitted to be suflScient ;' 

y See Milmao, i. 407. Aquisgr. aj>. Sd6, cap. ii. 4, &c. 

* Ep. zii. 24. ^ Huncmftr, t ii. p. 389 ; Dupin, y. 

■ Sach as the commentary on the dis- 194-5 ; Lau, 315. 

qualifications for the priesthood in Leyit. ' Paul. Warnefr. Hist. Langob. it. 5 

xxi. 18. The now, it is said, signifies (Patrol, zcy.). In this circumstance 

discretion, *^ Parvo autem naso est, aui Dean Milman sees the best apology for 

ad tenendam mensuram discretionis iao- the legends which Gregory has stamped 

ueus non est. . . . Nasus enim graudis with his authority. ** They might be, 

et tortus est discretionis subtilitas im- if not highly coloured, selected with 

moderata, qusB, dum plus quam decet less scruple, to impress tlie Lombard 

excreyerit, actionis suse rectitudinem queen with the wonder-working power 

ipsa confundit " (i. 11). of the Roman clergy, and of the ortho- 

»» Pauli, • Konig Aelfred,' 236. Ber- dox monks and bishops of Italy," i. 

lin, 1851. 427. 

^ Cone. Mogunt. ap. Hard. iy. 1008; ' See, for example, the story as to 

C^nc. Rem. c. 10 ; Cone. Turon. c. 8 ; Thcodoric, yol. i. p. 520. 

Cone. Cabilon. c. 1 ; (all a.d. 813.) % Dupin, y. 137-8 ; Schrockh, xyii. 

Cone. Paris, a.d. 829. c. 4; Cone. 322-5 ; Xau, 316-8 ; Bohr, ii. 448. 



Chap. U. AND OPINIONS. 23 

and it is to be noted to Gregory's praise that he repeatedly warns 
Peter against attaching too much value to the miracles which are 
related with such unhesitating credulity.^ In the fourth book, the 
state of the soul after death is discussed. Peter asks why it is that 
new revelations are now made on the subject, and is told that the 
time is one of twilight between the pl*esent world and that which 
18 to come; and that, consequently, such revelations are now 
seasonable.* The doctrine of Purgatory is here advanced more 
distinctly than in any earlier writing.^ The oriental idea of a 
purifying fire, through which souls must pass at the day of judgment, 
had been maintained by Origen ;™ but at a later time the belief in 
a process of cleansing between death and judgment was deduced from 
St Paul's words, that " the fire shall try every man's work,'' and 
that some shall be '^ saved as by fire ;"° and it was supposed that 
by such means every one who died in the orthodox faith, however 
&ulty his life might have been, would eventually be brought to 
salvation. St Augustine earnestly combated this error, and main- 
tained that the probation of which the Apostle spoke consisted 
chiefly in the trials which are sent on men during the present life. 
lie thought, however, that, for those who in the main had been 
servants of Christ, there might perhaps be a purging of their 
remaining imperfections after death ;^ and, although he was 
carefiil to state this opinion as no more than a conjecture, his 
authority caused it to be soon more confidently held.^ Gregory 
lays it down that as every one departs hence, so is he presented in 
the judgment; yet that we must believe that for some slight 
transgressions there is a purgatorial fire before the judgment day.** 
In proof of this are alleged the words of our Lord in St. Matthew 
xii. 32, from which it is inferred, as it had already been inferred 
by Augustine,' that some sins shall be forgiven " in the world to 
come ;" and the doctrine is confirmed by tales of visions in which 
the spirits of persons 8ufi*eriug in purgatory had appeared, and had 
entreated that the eucharistic sacrifice might be offered in order to 
their relief.* A work in which reli^ous instruction was thus 
combined with the attractions of romantic fiction naturally became 

I' See Neand. Y. 202-3. p Giesol. vi. 418-9; Ilagenbach, i. 

• DuJ. iv. 41. 382. 

^ Schruckh, xvii. 332-3; Lau, 508; «» Dial. iv. 39. 

GieseU I. ii. 434-5 ; Hagenbach, i. 382. ' De Civ. Dei, xxi. xxiv. 2. 

■ See vol. i. p. 1 10. ' Against the legend of Gregory's 

■ 1 Cor. iii. 12-15. having delivered the soul of the Km- 

• De QuaittioD. Dulcitii, i. 13-14 ; peror Trajan by his prayers (Job. Diac. 
EDchiridion, 6S -9 ; De Civ. Dei. xxi. li. 440), see Nat. Alex. t. v. Dissert. I . 
26. 



24 WRITINGS AND Book lit 

very popular. Pope Zacharias (a.d. 741-752) rendiered it into 
his native Greek ;^ it was translated into Anglo-Saxon under 
Alfred's care,* by Werfrith, bishop of Worcester;** and among the 
other translations was one into Arabic/ 

Gregory has. been accused of having destroyed or mutilated the 
monuments of ancient Roman greatness in order that they might 
not distract the attention of pilgrims,^ and of having, from alike 
motive, burnt the Palatine library/ and endeavoured to extermi- 
nate the copies of Livy's History." These stories are now rejected 
as fictions invented during the middle ages with a view of doing 
honour to his zeal ;^ but it is unquestionable that he disliked and 
discouraged pagan literature. In the epistle prefixed to his 
^Morals' he professes himself indifferent to style, and even to 
grammatical correctness, on the ground that the words of inspira- 
tion ought not to be tied down under the rules of Donatus.^ And 
in a letter to Desiderius, bishop of Vienne, who was reported to 
h^ve given lessons in ^^ grammar," he does not confine his rebuke 
to the unseemliness of such employment for a member of the 
episcopal order, but declares that even a religious layman ought 
not to defile his lips with the blasphemous praises of false deities.^ 
However this contempt of secular learning may be excused in 
Gregory himself, it is to be regretted that his authority did much 
to foster a contented ignorance in the ages which followed.'* 

In other respects the pope's opinions were those of his age, 
controlled in some measure by his practical good sense. His 
reverence for the authority of the Church may be inferred from 

' Anastasins, 165. iv. 268; Giesel. I. ii. 389. Schrockh's 

" Pauli's Aelfred, 237. dislike of Gregory, however, inclines 

^ Schrockh, xvii. 336. him to believe the tale as to the libraiy, 

« Platina, 84-5. xvi. 59. 

y Joh. Sarisb., Pblycraticns, ii. 26 ; ^ Ad Leand. 5. 

viii. 19 (Patrol, cxcix. 461, 792). In « Ep. xi. 54. See Bayle, note M; 

the first of these passages the authors of Neanaer, v. 207 ; Laa, 304. The Bene- 

the * Art de Verifier les Dates ' (iii. 279) dictines wish to suppose that Gregory 

contend, with seeming reason, that we did not blame the tmng bat the manner, 

ou^ht to read * reprobatiB lectionis But the work from which they quote a 

scripta ' (not ' probatse *\ and to under- sanction of profiine learning is spurious; 

stand astrological books, which were and the parage in the episUe to Lcander 

so styled in the Digest. But in the rather favours the opposite view. (Lau, 

other passage, John sa^s distinctly : 20.) Desiderius was murdered by Bru- 

'*Fertur Gregorius bibliothecam com- nicnild's contrivance in 607, and has 

bussise gentilem, quo divins pa^nse been canonised. Vita S. Desider. ap. 

gratior esset locus, et major auctontas. Bouquet, iii. 484. 

et diligentia studiosior." «* Fleury, xxxvi. 35 ; Giesel. I. ii. 

' The earliest authority for this is 388. The letter is cited as an authority 

Antoninus, Archbishop of Florence in by Atto of Vercelli in the 10th century, 

the 15th century. Bayle, art Qri- De Pressuris Eccles. p. ii. (Patrol. 

goire /., n. N. cxxxiv. 76). 

• See Bayle, notes L, M, N; Gibbon, 



Cbat. L opinions of GREGORY. 25 

his repeated declaratioDS, that he re^rded the first four general 
councils as standing on the same level with the four Gospels/ It 
has been argued from some passages in his works that he held the 
doctrine of transubstantiation in the Eucharist;^ but his words, 
although sometimes highly rhetorical, do not seem to affirm any 
other than a spiritualjpTeaence of the Saviour's body and blood in 
the consecrated elements. 

After what has been said of his character and history, it is hardly 
necessary to state that Gregory was a zealous friend to monachism. 
He protected the privileges and property of monastic societies 
against the encroachments of the bishops, and in many cases he 
exempted monks from episcopal jurisdiction as to the management 
of their afiairs, although he was careful to leave the bishops undis- 
turbed in the right of superintending their morals.* But, notwith- 
standing his love for the monastic life, he detected and denounced 
many of the deceits which may be compatible with asceticism ; 
perhaps his disagreements with John "the Faster" may have 
aided him to see these evils the more dearly.^ With reference 
to the edicts of Justinian which had sanctioned the separation of 
married persons for the sake of the monastic profession, he plainly 
declares that such an act, although allowed by human laws, is for- 
bidden by the law of God.* Nor, although he contributed to 
extend the obligation to celibacy among the clergy, was his zeal 
for the enforcement of it violent or inconsiderate ; thus, in directing 
that the sub-deacons of Sicily should in future be restrained from 
marriage, he revoked an order of his predecessor by which those 
who had married before the introduction of the Roman rule were 
compelled to separate from their wives.^ 

A veneration for relics is strongly marked in Gregory's writings. 
It was his practice to send, in token of his especial favour, 
presents of keys, in which were said to be contained some filings 
of St Peter's chains. These keys were accompanied by a prayer, 
that that which had bound the Apostle for martyrdom might loose 
the receiver from all his sins;* and to some of them miraculous 
histories were attached.™ The Empress Constantina — instigated, 

• Epp. i. 25 ; iii. 10. See above, p. 13. » Ep. xi 45 (col. 1161). See vol. i. 

' As Dialog. W. 58, quoted in Pnef. p. 552. 

Bened. p. 29. See Schrockh, XYii. 305 ; ^ Ep. i. 44. (col. 506.) His regula- 

Laa, 483-4. tions on this subject are summed up by 

» Epp. ii. 42; vi. 11; Tii. 12; viii. Tbeiner, i. 355, s<?7. 

15, 34; ix. Ill ; Conc. Rom. a.d. 601, » Ep. vi. 6^ vii. 28, and elsewhere, 

ap. Greg. t. iii. 1340-2 ; Schrockh, xvii. with some vancty of form. 

301-3. ■ Ep. vii. 26. 

^ Neand. v. 206 ; Lau, 126. 



26 DEATH OP GREGORY — COLUMBAN. Book ill 

it is supposed, by John of Constantinopley with a view of bringing 
the pope into trouble" — asked him to send her the head, or some 
part of the body, of St. Paid, for a new church which was built in 
honour of the Apostle. Gregory answered, that it was not the 
custom at Rome to handle or to dispose of the bodies of martyrs ; 
that many persons who had presumed to^touch the remains of 
St. Peter and St Paul had been struck with death in consequence ; 
that he could only send her a cloth which had been applied to the 
Apostle's body, but that such cloths possessed the same miraculous 
power as the relics themselves. He added, that the practice of 
removing relics gave occasion to fraud, and mentioned the case 
of some Greek monks who, when called in question for digging 
up dead bodies by night at Rome, confessed an intention of 
passing them off in Greece as relics of martyrs.** 

Two of Gregory's letters are addressed to Serenus, bishop of 
Marseilles, who, on finding that some images were the subjects of 
adoration, had broken them; and these letters have a special 
interest from their bearing on the controversy as to images which 
arose somewhat more than a century after. The pope commends 
Serenus for his zeal, but blames him for the manner in which it 
had been displayed. He tells him that modesty ought to have 
restrained him irom an action for which no bishop had given any 
precedent ; that pictures and images serve for the instruction of 
those who cannot read books ; and that for this purpose they 
ought to be preserved in churches, while care should be taken to 
guard against the worship of them.^ 

Gregory's infirmities had long been growing on him. For some 
years he had been seldom able to leave his bed ; ^ he professed 
that the expectation of death was his only consolation, and 
requested his friends to pray for his deliverance from his suf- 
ferings.*^ On the 12th of March, 604, he was released.' 

While the conversion of the English was reserved for the zeal of 
Italian monks, a remarkable body of missionaries set out fit)m the 
shores of Ireland. Their leader, Columban,* bom in the province 
of Leinster about 560, was trained in the great Irish monastery of 
Bangor, which contained a society of three thousand monks, under 

"Baron. 594. 25; 595. 29; Sam- ' Ep. xiii. 22. 

iiiarth.-II. xi. 7. • Lau, 299. 

° Ep. iv. 80. » Vita S. Columb. by Jonas, a mouk 

p Epp. ix. 105 ; xi. 13. See Basnage, of Bobbio, in Mabillou, ii., or Patrol. 

1336. Ixxxvii. 

•» Ep. xi. 44. 



Chaf. 1. A.D. 689-610. MONASTIC RULE OF COLUMBAN. 27 

the goYerDment of its founder, Comgal." G)lumban resolved to 
detach himself from earthly things by leaving his country, after 
the example of Abraham, and in 589^ crossed the sea with twelve 
companions, first into Britain, and thence into Gaul. He had 
intended to preach the Gospel to the heathen nations beyond the 
Prankish dominions ; but the decayed state of reli^on and disci- 
pline offered him abundant employment in Gaul, and, at the 
invitation of Guntram king of Burgundy,^ he settled in that 
country." Declining the king's offers of a better position, he 
established himself in the Vosges, where a district which in the 
Roman times was cultivated and populous had again become a 
wilderness, while abundant remains of Roman architecture and 
monuments of the old idolatry were left as evidence of its former 
prosperity. Here he successively founded three monasteries, 
Anegray, Luxeuil, and Fontaines. For a time the missionaries 
had to endure great hardships ; they had often for days no other 
food than wild herbs and the bark of trees, until their needs were 
supplied by means which are described as miraculous. But by 
degrees the spectacle of their severe and devoted life made an 
impression on the people of the neighbourhood. They were looked 
on with reverence by men of every class ; and while their religious 
instructions were gladly heard, their labours in clearing and tilling 
the land encouraged the inhabitants to exertions of the same kind 
The monasteries were speedily filled with persons attracted by 
the contrast which Columban's system presented to the general 
relaxation of piety and morals among the native monks and 
clergy; and diildren of noble birth were placed in them for 
education.' 

The Rule of Columban was probably derived in great measure 
from the Irish Bangor.^ The main principle of it was the incul- 
cation of absolute obedience to superiors, the entire mortification 
of the individual will^' — a principle which is dangerous, as relieving 
the mind from the feeling of responsibility, and as tending either 
to deaden the spirit, or to deceive it into pride veiled under the 
appearance of humility.'* The diet of the monks was to be coarse," 
and was to be proportioned to their labour. But Columban 

" Jonas, 6-9; Lanigan, ii. 201. » Jonas. 13-19. 

* The HUtoire Litt^raire says 585. ^ Lanigan, ii. 267. 

(iii. 506.) See Rettberg, ii. 37. ' Cc 1. 9. (Patrol. Ixxx.). 

y See Mabiilon. ii. 10. ^ Schrockh, xvii. 423 ; Neandcr, 

« Jonas, 10; Walaf. Strabo, Vita S. Mem. 438; Itettberg, ii. 37. 

Galli, in Bouquet, iii. 474 seqq. ; Kelt- • ** Vilis et vespertmus" c. 3. 
berg, ii. 36-7. 



28 RULE OF COLUMBAN— EASTER CONTROVERSY. Book IU. 

warned against excessive abstinence, as being " not a virtue but a 
vice." " Every day," it was said, " there must be fasting, as 
every day there must be refreshment ;" and every day the monks 
were also to pray, to work, and to read.' There were to be three 
services by day and three by night, at hours variable according to 
the season.^ The monastic plainness was extended even to the 
sacred vessels, which were not to be of any material more costly 
than brass.^ To the Rule was attached a Penitential, which, 
instead of leaving to the abbot the same discretion in the appoint- 
ment of punishments which was allowed by the Benedictine system, 
lays down the details with curious minuteness. Corporal chastise- 
ment is the most frequent penalty. Thus, six strokes were to 
be given to every one who should call anything his own; to 
every one who should omit to say "Amen" after the abbot's 
blessing, or to make the sign of the cross on his spoon or his 
candle ; to every one who should talk at meals, or who should fail 
to repress a cough at the beginning of a psalm. Ten strokes were 
the punishment for striking the table with a knife, or for spilling 
beer on it. For heavier offences the number rose as high as two 
hundred ; but in no case were more than twenty-five to be inflicted 
at once. Among the other penances were fasting on bread and 
water, psalm-singing, humble postures, and long periods of silence. 
Penitents were not allowed to wash their hands except on Sunday. 
They were obliged to kneel at prayers even on the Lord's Day 
and in the Pentecostal seasoa* Columban warned his monks 
against relying on externals; but it may fairly be questioned 
whether his warnings can have been powerful enough to counteract 
the natural tendency of a system so circumstantial and so rigid in 
the enforcement of formal observances.^ 

Columban fell into disputes with his neighbours as to the time 
of keeping Easter, in which he followed the custom of his native 
country.™ He wrote on the subject to Gregory and to Boniface 
(either the third or the fourth pope of that name), requesting that 
they would not consider his practice as a ground for breach of 
communion." In his letters to popes, while he speaks with high 
respect of the Roman see, the British spirit of independence 
strongly appears. He exhorts Gregory to reconsider the question 
of the paschal cycle without deferring to the opinions of Leo or of 

' C. 3. c C. 7. Neander, v. 41-2. 

»> Fleury, xxxv. 10. » See vol. i. p. 544. 

' C. 10. » Epp. i. iii. 
^ Instructio ii. (Patrol. Ixxx. 234); 



CaxT, L A.D. 689-610. COLUMBAN IN BURGUNDY. 29 

Other elder popes ; ^^ perhaps^" he says, '^ in this case, a living dog 
may be better than a dead lion.**^ He even sets the church of 
Jerusalem above that of Rome : " You," he tells Boniface IV^, 
" are almost heavenly, and Rome is the head of the Churches of 
the world, saving the special prerogative of the place of the Lord's 
resurrection;" and he goes on to say that, in proportion as the 
dignity of the Roman bishops is great, so ought their care to be 
great, lest by perversity they lose it.^ Another letter on the 
subject of Easter is addressed to a Gaulish synod. He entreats 
the bishops to let him follow the usage to which he has been 
accustomed, and to allow him to live peaceably, as he had already 
lived for twelve years, amid the solitude of the forest, and beside 
the bones of his seventeen deceased brethren.^ 

After a residence of about twenty years in Burgundy, Columban 
incurred the dbpleasure of king Theodoric H., by whom he had 
before been held in great honour. Brunichild, the grandmother 
of Theodoric, according to a policy not uncommon among the 
queen-mothers of India in ouv own day, endeavoured to 
prolong her influence in the kingdom by encouraging 
the young prince in a life of indolence and sensuality.' Columban 
repeatedly, both by word and by letter, remonstrated against 
Theodoric*s courses : he refused to bless his illegitimate children, 
and, with much vehemence of behaviour,, rejected the hospitality of 
the court, making (it is said) the dishes and drinking-vessels which 
were set before him fly into pieces by his word.' The king, whom 
Brunichild diligently instigated against him, told him that he was 
not unwise enough to make him a martyr, but ordered him to be 
conducted to Nantes with his Irish monks, in order that they might 
be sent back to their own country.* The journey of the mis- 
sionaries across France was rendered a series of triumphs by the 
miracles of Columban, and by the popular enthusiasm in his 
favour." On their arrival at Nantes, the vessel which was intended 
to convey them to Ireland was prevented, by miraculous causes, 
from performing its task ;^ and Columban, being then allowed to 
choose his own course, made his way to Metz, where Theodebert H, 
of Austrasia gave him leave to preach throughout his dominions.^ 

• Ep. L 2. (Eccl. ix. 4.) Velly in the Hist. Litt. xii., AvertiBsem. 
f Ep. V. 10. ix. soqq. 

<t Ep. ii. * Jonas, 33. 

' Walafr. Strabo ap. Bouquet, iii. ■ Id. 38-46. 
474. f n ^ j^ ^^ 

• Jonas, 31-2. There is a yindication t Id. 61 ; Walaf. Strabo ap. Bouquet, 
of Colomhan and his biographer against iii. 475. 



30 COLUMBAN. »«» ni- 

He then ascended the Rhine into Switzerland, and laboured for a 
time in the neighbourhood of the lake of Zurich. At Tuggen, it 
is said, he found a number of the inhabitants assembled around a 
large vat of beer, and was told that it was intended as a sacrifice 
to Woden. By breathing on it, he made the vessel burst with a 
loud noise, so that, as his biographer tells us, " it was manifest that 
the devil had been hid in it'" His preaching and miracles made 
many converts, but after a time he was driven, by the hostility of 
the idolatrous multitude, to remove into the neighbourhood of 
Bregenz, on the lake of Constance, where he found circumstances 
favoiu*able to the success of his work. The country had formerly 
been Christian ; many of its inhabitants had been baptized, although 
they had afterwards conformed to the idolatry of the Alamanni, 
who had overrun it; and the Alamannic law, made under 
Frankish influence, already provided for Christian clergy the same 
privileges which they enjoyed in France.* Columban was kindly 
received by a presbyter named Willimar : ^ he destroyed the idols 
of the people, threw them into the* lake, and for a time preached 
with great success. But in 612, Theodebert was defeated by 
Theodoric, and Columban found it necessary to leave the territory 
which had thus fallen into the possession of his enemy .° He 
meditated a mission to the Slavons, but was diverted from the 
design by an angel, and crossed the Alps into Italy, where he was 
received with honour by Agilulf and Theodelinda, and founded a 
monastery at Bobbio."^ At the request of his Lombard patrons, he 
wrote to Boniface IV. on the controversy of the " Three Articles."* 
His knowledge of the question was very small: he had been 
possessed with opinions contrary to those of the Roman bishops 
respecting it ; and perhaps this difference of views, together with 
the noted impetuosity of his character,' might have led to serious 
disagreements, but that the danger was prevented by his death in 

* Jonas, 53 ; Rettberg, ii. 39. micrologus eloqaentissimo, extremos 

■■ Rettberg, ii. 16-8. The like was priino, peregrinos indigensc, panpercalas 

the case as to the Bavarian law, before prsepotenti (mirum dicta I nova res! 

the conversion of Bavana, ibid. 218. rara avisl) scribere audct Bonifacio 

•» Vit. ap. Pertz, ii. 8. patri Palambos." 

<^ Jonas, 59 ; Pagi, xi. 612. ' Dr. Reeves makes the general re- 

•* Id. 56, 59-60. mark that ** If we may Judge from the 

' £p. V. The remarkable address of biographical records which have de- 

.^lis letter has often been quoted — scendcKl to us, primitive Irish eccle- 

** Pulcherrimo omnium totius EuropsB siastics, and especially the superior 

ccclesiarum capiti, papa prsedulci, pne- class, commonly known as saints, were 

celso prsDsuli, pastorum pastori, reve- very impatient of contradiction, and 

rendissimo speculatori : humillimus very resentful of injury.'* Prolegom. to 

celsissimo, maximo, agrestis urbano, Adamnan, Ixxvii. 



Chap. L a a 610-m. DEATIt OF COLUMBAX — GALL. 31 

615.* In the preceding year he had refused an invitation from 
Qotaire EL., who had become sole king of France, to return to his 
old abode at Luxeuil.^ 

Both Luxeuil and Bobbio became the parents of many mo- 
nasteries in other quarters.^ But the most celebrated of Columban's 
followers was his countryman Gall, who had been his pupil from 
boyhood, and had accompanied him in all his fortunes, until com- 
pelled by illness to remain behind, when his master passed into 
Italy. Gall founded in the year 614 the famous monastery which 
bears his name, and is honoured as the apostle of Switzerland.*^ 
He died in 627.«> 

ff BaroD. 615. 15; Schrockh, ztu. ii., and Pertz, ii. ; also Neander, Ch. 

430 ; Neand. ▼. 46. Hist ▼. 45-9, and Memorials, 450 ; Oza- 

h Jonas, 60-1. nam, 120-7 ; Kettberg, ii. 40-8. 

» Flenrv, xxxvii. 8. » Pagi, xi. 236. 
k For liTCS of St. Gall, see Mabillon, 



( 32 ) BooKlU. 



CHAPTER II. 

MAHOMET — THE MONOTHELITE CONTROVERSY. 
A.D. 610-718. 

PnocAS, after having earned universal detestation during a reign 
of eight years, was dethroned and put to death in 610, by Hera- 
clius, son of the exarch of Africa.* The new emperor found 
himself involved in a formidable war with Chosroes II., king of 
Persia. Chosroes had formerly been driven from his kingdom, 
had found a refuge within the empire, and had been restored by 
the arms of Maurice.^ On receiving the announcement that 
Phocas had ascended the throne, he declared himself the avenger 
of his benefactor ; *^ he invaded the empire, repeatedly defeated the 
usurper's disorderly troops, and had advanced as far as Antioch, 
which fell into his hands immediately after the elevation 
'of Heraclius. The war for which the murder of Maurice 
had been the pretext, did not end on the fall of his murderer. 
Chosroes overran Syria and Palestine ; with one division of his 
A.D. 611- force he conquered Egypt, and carried devastation as 
^22. far as Tripoli, while another advanced to Chalcedon, 

and for ten years presented to the people of Constantinople the 
insulting and alarming spectacle of a hostile camp on the opposite 
shore of the Bosphorus.^ 

Between the Avars, on the European side and the Persians on 
the east, Heraclius was reduced to extreme distress. He had 
almost resolved to return to Aftica, which had recovered much of 
its old prosperity, and was then the most flourishing province of 
the empire ; " but the patriarch of Constantinople obliged him to 
swear that he would not forsake those who had received him as 
their sovereign. At length, after having in vain at- 
tempted to appease Chosroes by offering to become his 
tributary, the emperor determined on the almost desperate enter- 
prise of carrying the war into the enemy's country. He raised a 
large sum of money by loans — borrowing the plate and other 

» Niceph. Cpol. 4 ; Gibbon, iv. 301-2. ^ Niceph. Cpol. 7 ; Gibbon, iv. 302-6 ; 

*» Theoph. Simocatta, iv. 10 ; v. 3 ; Finlay, i. 376. 

Gibbon, iv. 285-6. ' Finlay, i. 389. 
•^ Simocatta, viii. 15. 



Ouf.il aj>. «»-8. HKRACLIUS. 33 

wealth of churches on a promise of repayment with usury. With 

this money he levied an army, and, having secured the forbearance 

of the Avars, he boldly made his way into the heart of Persia.' In 

six brilliant campaigns he recovered the provinces which 

had been lost. Chosroes fled before him, and, in 628, 

was deposed and put to death by his own son Siroes, who was glad 

to make peace with the Romans.' 

The war had on each side been 6ne of religion. Chosroes was 
aided in his attack on Jerusalem by 26,000 Jews, collected from 
all quarters. On the capture of the city he destroyed churches, 
defiled the holy places, plundered the treasures amassed from the 
offerings of pilgrims during three centuries, and carried off into 
Persia the patriarch Zacharias, with the relic which was venerated 
as the True Cross. It is said that 90,000 Christians were slain 
on this occasion, and that many of these were bought by the 
Jews for the purpose of butchering them.*^ A great number of 
Christians, however, found safety by flying into Egypt, and 
were received with extraordinary kindness by John, patriarch of 
Alexandria, whose charities earned for him the title of 'Hhe Alms- 
giver."' Heraclius, in his turn, retaliated on the religion of 
Persia, by destroying its temples, espedally that at Thebarmes, 
the birtlq)lace of Zoroaster, and quenching the sacred fire.*^ 
He restored the cross with great triumph to Jerusalem, and the 
event was commemorated by a new festival — the ^* Exaltation of 
the Cross.'' ^ And the edict of Hadrian against the Jews was 
renewed — ^forbidding them to approach within three miles of their 
holy city." 

While Chosroes was warring against the religion of the empire, 
a more formidable and lasting scourge of Christendom had arisen 
in Arabia.^ The prevailing religion of that country is said to 

' Theopbanes, 466; P»gi, xi. 151; bon, iv. 326-7. There i«, however, a 

An de \4nt !▼. 351 ; Gibbon, ir. 309- difference as to this between the Greek 

10; Sehloflter, 59-9. and the Latin churches. See Pagi, xL 

> Nioeph. Qk>1. 14; Pagi, xi. 226-8 ; 238 ; Fleunr, xxxvii. 34. 

Gibbon, nr. 314-325 ; Finlay, i. 423-5. > Dean Milman (Hist, of Jews, iii. 

^ Thaophanet, 463 Twho gives other 237-240, and n. on Gibbon, iv, 327) 

•tances of Jewidi natred, p. 457) ; questions the stories as to further pun- 

614. 32; Gibbon, !▼. 304-5. ishments inflicted on the Jews for the 



That the story is probably exaggerated, atrocities which they had conunitted 

•ee Sehrockh, xix. 299. under coref of the Persian power. 

> Vita S. Job. Eleemos. ap. Rosweyd, • In addition to my usual authorities 

I 6 (Patn>L Ixxiii.) I have consulted Sale's • Koran,' Lond. 

' Niceph. Cpol. 12 ; Gibbon, iv. 314- 1734 ; Ockley's * History of the Sara-# 

6; Finlay, i. 424. cens,' Camb. 1757 ; White's * Bampton 

"Niceph. Crol. 15; Theopbanes, Lectures for 1784,' Lond. 1811; 'Re- 

273, ed. Paris; Baron. 627. 23-9 ; Gib- marks on the Character of Mahammad,' 

D 



34 MAHOMET. Book HI 

have been founded on a belief in the unity of God ; but this belief 
was darkened and practically superseded by a worship of the 
heavenly bodies, of angels, and of idok^ The ancient sanctuary 
of the nation, the Caaba, or holy house of Mecca, contained a 
number of images answering to that of days in the year.^ Other 
religions also existed in Arabia. Judaism had become the fjEuth 
of some tribes ; orthodox Christian missionaries had made conyerts ; 
and members of various sects, such as Gnostics, Manicheaii% Nes- 
torians, and Monophysites, had found in that country a refuge 
from the unfriendly laws of the empire/ Thus there were abundant 
materials within the reach of any one who might undertake to 
become the founder of a new system. 

Mahomet was bom at Mecca, either in 570 or the following 
year." His temper was naturally mystical and enthusiastic ; he 
was subject from an early age to fits of epilepsy,^ whidi were sup- 
posed to proceed' from an influence of evil spirits ; and in the 
course of his mental conflicts he was often reduced to a state of 
melancholy depression which suggested the thought of suicide.*^ 
He appears to have become possessed with a ruling idea of the 
Divine unity, and with a vehement indignation against idolatry. 
Every year, according to a custom which was not uncommon among 
his countrymen, he withdrew to a cave in a mountain, and spent 
some time in religious solitude ; and in his lonely musings he was 
gradually wrought up to a belief that he was especially called by 

by Col. Vans Kennedy, in ' Transactions of the prophet's name are so Tarious, 

of the Bombay Literary Society/ iii. that, so long as no one of them is gene- 

398-448, Lond. 1823; Forster's * Ma- rally adopted, it appears safest to follow 

hometanism Unveiled/ Lond. 1829 ; the most unpretending manner of speU- 

Mohler, * Ueber das Verhaltniss des ing it — a nUe which I have usually ob- 

Islams zum Evangelium,' in vol. i. of served as to other names, 

his Essays ; DolTinffer, ' Muhammeds ^ Sale, Introd. 14-21 ; Gibbon, y. 17- 

lleligion nach ihrer mneren Entwicke- 22 ; WeU, 20. Dr. Sprenger (p. 103) 

lung and ihrem Einflusse auf das Leben seems to question the monotheistic foun- 

rtj , V^*^«r,' Munich, 1888 ; Weil's dation. 

Mahommed der Prophet/ Stnttg. •» See Koran, c. iii, pp. 47-8 ; Canasin 

;..,9*"*8in de Perceval, « Essai de Perceval, i. 270. 

sur iHist, des Arabes,' Paris, 1847: ' Sale, Introd. 22-4 ; Gibbon, y. 20-1 . 

irving's * Mahomet and his Successors,^ • See Gibbon, v. 24, with Milman's 

A^ ]®^5 Sprenger*B 'Life of Ma- notes; Weil, 81; Sprenger, 76. M. 

2f"fT,\ !^^ *• (reaching to the He- Caussin de Perceval (i. 283), Mr. Ca«e- 

ffol^' ^"a*>abad, 1851 ; Muir's * Life of nove (299), and Mr. Muir (i. 14) are for 

A^homet,; Lond. 1858-61 ; Encyclo- 670. 

f12l^ *^»^*w»nica, 8th edition, art. on » This, which has been treated as 

novo .^°**^* by the JRev. J. G. Caze- a calumny of Christian writers (see 

liKieu's^ ' ^^' * Etudes d'Histoire R^ SchrocJih, xix. 348-9), seems to be now 

on •'nhl ®P- 3» Paris, 1858; Stanley established beyond doubt on Arabian 

•The firat *^tern Church/ Lect. viii. authority. See Weil, 42-5 ; l^renger, 

gruphv (\J^^^^ ®^ an enlarged bio- 77-8; Gfrorer, iii. 26-8; Irving, u 61; 

E»» just o?*"'™*'')' ^y ^^' Sprenger. Mnir, i. 21. 

tempts at ^PP^^'^d (1861). ^The at- - Muir, ii. 71, 84. 
a more correct exhibition 



ciLip. n. A.D. 610. ISLAM. 35 

Grod to be an instrument for the propagation of the true faith, and 
was CeiToured with revelations from heaven.* The ' Koran,' ^ in 
which his oracles are preserved, has much in common with both 
the Jewish and the Christian Scriptures ; but it would seem that 
Mahomet was not acquainted with either the Old or the New 
Testament — that he rather drew his materials, more or less 
directly, from such sources as Tahnudical legends, apocryphal 
Grospels, and other heretical writings, mixed with the old tradi- 
tions of Syria and Arabia.* His own account of the work was, 
that its contents were written from eternity on the '^ preserved 
table " which stands before the throne of God ; that a copy was 
brought down to the lowest heaven by the angel Gabriel (whom 
Mahomet seems to have gradually identified with the Holy Spirit '^), 
and that the sections of it were revealed according as circum- 
stances required.^ The charge of inconsistency between the dif- 
ferent parts was guarded against by the convenient principle that 
a later revelation abrogated so much of the earlier as disagreed 
with it*' By way of proof that he had not forged these revela- 
ticms, which are always uttered in the name of God himself, 
Mahomet repeatedly insists on the contrast between his own illi- 
teracy and lie perfection of the book, both as to purity of style 
and as to substance ; he challenges objectors to produce any work 
either of men or of genii which can be compared with it** The 
onK^les of the Koran were noted down as they proceeded from the 
prophet's mouth ; and after his death they were collected into one 
body, although without any regard to the order in which they had 
been delivered." 

The religion thus announced was styled Islam — a word which 
means mbmissum or resignation to the will of God.' Its single 

« Gibbon, ▼. 27 ; Sprenger, 106-1 11; the Blessed Virgin led him to miscpn- 

Moir* ii. 55 ; and c. iii. ceive the essence of Christian doctrine, 

y This word signifies '* the reading^ or and so alienated him from the fiuth 

ntber that tDhich ought to be read," and is (ii. 19-20). 
applied either to &e whole book or to * Muir, ii. 74, 138. 
anj particular section of it. Sale, In- >> Koran, Cc. 81, 85, 97; Sale, 64; 

trodjp. 56. Gibbon, ▼. 31-3 ; Muir, ii. 137. 

* White, 268 ; Kennedy, 428 ; Mil- ' Ch. xvi. p. 223. 

, ii. 25-6 ; Muir, ii. 185, 288, 306, <* Koran, c. ii. p. 3 ; c. x. p. 170 ; c. 



309. Mr. Forster (c. Tiii.) exhibits a xii. p. 176 ; c. xvi. p. 223 ; c. xvii. p, 

eoUeetion of paraUels between the Koran 236 ; c. xxix. p. 328 ; and elsewhere. 
and the Scriptorcf, many of which are ' Muir, i. Introd. 3-13. A transla- 

Tery striking ; bat this, of course, does tion, arranged according to the dates of 

not prove that Mahomet drew imme- the chapters, has been published by the 

diatelT from the Bible, and Mr. Forster Rev. J. M. Rodwell (Lond. 1862); 

liimself declines to give a judgment on comp. Muir, ii. 318-320; iii. 311-2. 
the question (ii. 75. See DoUinger, ' SSale, Introd. 70, and n. on Koran, 

30-1). Mr. Muir thinks that the pre- p. 36; Sprenger, 168-9. 



Tailmg exaggeration of reverence for 



d2 



36 THE KORAN. Book III. 

doctrine was declared to be, that " There is no God but the true 
God, and Mahomet is his apostle ; " but under this principle was 
comprehended belief in six points — (1) in God ; (2) in his angels ; 
(3) in his scriptures ; (4) in his prophets ; (5) in the resurrection 
and the day of judgment ; (6) in God's absolute decree and pre- 
determination both of good and evil. With these were combined 
four practical duties — (1) prayer, with its preliminary washings 
and lustrations; (2) alms; (3) fasting; (4) the pilgrimage to 
Mecca, which was held so essential that any one who died without 
performing it might as well die a Jew or a Christian.* Judaism 
and Christianity were acknowledged as true, although imperfect, 
religions. Their holy books were acknowledged, and it would 
seem that Mahomet's original intention was rather to connect his 
religion with the elder systems than to represent it as superseding 
them.*' Jesus was regarded as the greatest of all former prophets, 
but although his birth was represented as miraculous,* the belief 
in his Godhead was declared to be erroneous ; He was said to be 
a mere man, and his 'death was explsdned away, either on the 
docetic prindple, or by the supposition that another person suffered 
in his stead.^^ Mahomet asserted that he himself had been fore- 
told in Scripture, but that the prophecies had been falsified by 
those who had the custody of them ; ™ yet he and his followers 
claimed some passages of the extant Scriptures in his favour, such 
as the promise of the Paraclete, and the parable in which the 
labourers were spoken of as called at various times of the day — ^the 
final call being to the reli^on of Islam.° 

The conception of the Divine majesty in the Koran is sublime ; 
the mercy of God is dwelt on in a very impressive manner. But 
the absence of anything like the Christian doctrine of the Incar- 
nation places an impassable gulf between the Creator and his 
creatures ; there is no idea of redemption, of mediation, of adop- 
tion to sonship with God, of restoration to. his image. The Mvine 
omnipotence is represented as arbitrary, and as requiring an abject 
submission to its will.<* The duty of loving their brethren in the 

« Sale, 71-114. (Forgter, i. 366-8, 396-7; ii. 104.) A 

I* Koran, c. v. p. 89 ; Mair, ii. 183, Jew, on embracing Mahometanism, is 

241-4. required, before admission, to profess 

' Koran, c iiL p. 40, c. 19 ; Moir, ii. belief in Jesus as the Christ. lb. i. 

277-282. 867. 

^ Koran, c. iii. pp. 42-3; c iv. pp. " Koran, c. ii. pp. 6, 14, 17; e. iii. p. 

80-1 ; c. y. pp. 92, 98 : c. ix. pp. 152-3 ; 46, &c. Yet see Mnir's Introd. 72. 

c. xix. p. 251 ; c. xliii. ; Gibbon, t. 29- " Koran, c. 61 ; Mair,i. 16-7 ; Mi^er, 

30; Weil, 190-3. Some later Maho- 3.53-5. 

metan teachers come nearer than Maho- <> See Neand. ▼. 117-9; Giesel. I. ii. 

met himself to the truth on this subject. 4G8. 



OiAF. IL CHARACTER OF MAHOMET. 37 

faith is strongly inculcated on the disciples of Islam ; but their love 
is not to extend beyond this brotherhood ; and the broad declara->> 
tions which had held forth the hope of salvation, not only to 
Jews and Christians, but to Sabians, and to ^^ whoever believeth 
in God and in the last day, and doeth that which is right," ^ 
were abrogated by -oracles which denounced perdition against all 
bat the followers of Islam.^ In other respects the new religion 
was unquestionably a great improvement on that which Mahomet 
found established among his countrymen. It benefited society by 
substituting a measure of justice for rude violence, and by abolish- 
ing the custom of putting female infants to death. The general 
tone of its morality is rather austere than (as it has sometimes 
been styled) licentious ; ' instead of being condemned for his sanc- 
tion of polygamy, Mahomet rather deserves credit for having 
limited the license which had before prevailed in this respect, 
although he retained an extreme and practically very mischievous 
fadlity of divorce ; ' but it is one of the most damning traits in his 
character, that he declared himself to be exempt from the restric- 
tions which he imposed on his disciples, and claimed for his laxity 
the sanction of pretended revelations.' 

On the merits of that enigmatical character it would be bold to 
give any confident opinion. The religious enmity by which it was 
formerly misrepresented appears to have little efiect in our own 
time ; we need rather to be on our guard against too favourable 
judgments, the ofispring of a reaction against former prejudices, 
or of an aflectation of novelty and paradox which in some cases 
appears to be not only deliberate but almost avowed. The latest 
and most complete evidence seems to prove that Mahomet was at 
first an honest enthusiast ;° as to the more doubtful part of his 

9 Kosvn, c ii. p. 8 ; c T. p. 92. to Mahomet's own license by speaking 

« Kormn, c iu. p. 47 ; see Sale's of it as a confession of weakness. If 

notes, pp. 9. 47 ; Muir, ii. 296-8, 304 ; Mahomet had so represented it, others 

Caienore, 907. -would have claimed indulgence on the 

' It is, howerer, with some astonish- same plea ; it was therefore necessarily 

ment that I haye read Col. Kennedy's founded on a pretence of superiority. 

words — '* Nerer was a purer religion The caliphs and the rich Mussulmans in 

propagated than his," p. 429. general extended the prophet's privilege 

• Caossin, i. 351 ; Bl uir, ii. 272. On to themselves. See Milman, i. 487 ; 
the degradation of woman under the Muir, iii. 230-7. 

Mahometan system,, and its general "* See Sprenger, 185, and elsewhere ; 

effect on fiunily relations, see DoUinger, Muir, ch. iii. and vol. iv. 312-7. Col. 

20se(|q. Kennedy strongly denies that the pro- 

* See the Koran, c xxiii. pp. 348-9 ; pheU was " an enthusiast or fanatic " 
Gibbon, ▼. 66 ; Hallam, M. A- i. 476-7; (pp. 429, 445) ; but this denial becomes 
Forster, i. 322-9 ; Weil, 400. As to the a truism when, after some defiuition of 
effects (Mf polygamy, see Muir, iii. the word, we are told that " Fanaticism 
234-5. Dr. Weil gives a fidse colouring is peculiar to the Christians," p. 446. 



38 THE HEGIRA. Book lU 

career, I must confess myself unable to enter into the views of his 
admirers ; but I will not venture to judge whether he was giulty 
of conscious imposture, or was blindly carried along by the intoxi- 
cation of the power which he had acquired and by the lust of 
extending it* 

Mahomet had reached the age of forty before (in obedience, as be 
professed, to a heavenly vision) he announced himself as a prophet J 
At first he made proselytes slowly among his friends and 
near relations ; * he then by degrees attempted to publish 
his opinions in a wider circle. But his pretenaons were disbe- 
lieved ; he and his followers were persecuted by the Koreish, the 
tribe which was dominant in Mecca, and had possession of the Caaba ; 
and in 622 (the year in which Heraclius made his first campaign 
against the Peruans) he fled to Yatreb (Medina),* where he had 
already contrived to form a party, and was received as a prince and 
a prophet^ This flight {Hegira) is regarded as the great era in the 
prophet*s life, and as the foundation of the Mahometan chronology.* 
Hitherto he had endeavoured to spread his doctrines by persuasioD 
only ; but now that he was possessed of force, he was charged by 
revelation to use it for the propagation of the fisdth.^ His oracles 
became fierce and sanguinary.^ From leading his little bands of 
followers to attack caravans of merchants, he went on, as his 
strength increased, to more considerable enterprises ; and in 630 
he gained possesion of Mecca, cleansed the Caaba of its idols, 
erected it into the great sanctuary of Islam, and united all the 
tribes of Arabia under his own dominion and in the profession of 
his religion.' 

When his power had become considerable, Mahomet sent envoys 
to the emperor, to the king of Persia, and to other neighbouring 

» See Gibbon, ▼. 68-6 ; Schrockh, xix. • More properly Medtnet-at-Nabi^ 

381; MilmaD, i. 464; Muir, iv. 318- " City of the Prophet," 

320,322. »» Gibbon, t. 43-4; Weil, 72^ 79; 

y Koran, c. x. p. 168, c. 96 ; Canssin, Canssin, i. 365, eeqq. iii. 20 ; Muir, ii. 

i. 354. 210-8; iii. 7-11. 

' Weil, 49. Dr. Sprenger thinks that ^ See Canssin, iii. 16-7. 
his first adherents were not indebted to «« Sale, 48-9, 142 ; Koran, c. xxii. &c. 
him for their religious ideas, but were « Muir, iii. 307-8. ** In the Koran, 
already in possession of them ; that " the yictories are announced, success pro- 
Islam is tne offspring of the spirit of mised, actions recounted ; failure is ex- 
the time ; " that Mahomet did no more plained, bravery applauded, cowardice 
than combine *' the floating elements or disobedience chided ; military or po- 
which had been imported or originated litical movements are directed ; and all 
byothers," while he polluted the system this as an immediate communication 
with his own " immorality and perverse- from the Deity." lb. 224. 
ness of mind," pp. 44, 174-5; cf. Cans- ' Sale. 114; Gibbon, v. 54-7; Weil, 
sin, i. 321-6. Against this see Muir, 218; Caussin, iii. 227-234; Muir, i v. ch. 
Introd. 239. 24, 27. 



CSaf. IL xjk ei 1-632. CONQUESTS OP THE MOSLEMa 39 

princes, declaring his mission as '^ the Apostle of God/' and re- 
quiring them to submit to the faith of Islam. Heraclius is said 
to have received the communication with respect ; the 
Persian king contemptuously tore the letter in pieces ; and 
Mahomet, on hearing of the act, exclaimed, *' It is thus that God 
will tear from him his kingdom, and reject his supplications." ^ 

The duty of fighting for Islam (for arms, and not argument, 
were to be the means for the conversion of all who should refuse 
to believe on a simple announcement of the faith ^) was binding 
on all its professors, except the sick and the feeble, the lame, the 
Uind, and the poor ;' and, lest the believers should at any time 
rest satisfied with their conquests, Mahomet is said to have declared 
that wars for the propagation of the truth were not to cease until 
the coming of Antichrist.^ The fanaticism of the warriors was 
urged on by the inducements of rapine and of lust (for the limit 
which tbe Koran prescribed as to the number of concubines did 
not apply to captives or slaves)." They were raised above regard 
for life by the conviction that they were doing God's will, by the 
belief of an absolute and irresistible predestination^ and by the 
assurance of bliss in paradise ° — a bliss which opened to the sensual 
unlimited gratifications with unlimited powers of enjoyment,^ while 
the martyrs and those who should die in the wars of the faith 
were moreover to be admitted to the transcendent and inefikble 
felidty of beholding the face of God at morning and at evening.^ 
Thus animated, the Moslem armies went forth with an enthusiasm 
which nothing could check. Their immense sacrifices of life in 
bloody battles and in long sieges were repaired by an unfailing 
succession of warriors. Before the death of Mahomet, which took 
place at Medina in 632,** Kaled, " the Sword of God,"' had carried 
his arms into Syria. The energy of Heraclius was consumed by 
disease;' Syria and Egypt, which he had reconquered from Chos- 

t Compare the Koran, c. zzz. p. 430 ; Muir, iii. 303. 

Sale, 53; WeU, 195, 198-9 ; Canssin, ii. > Sale, 103, 133-7 ; Gibbon, v, 48-9; 

189 ; Muir, it 224. The interview with Wachsmuth, AUgem. Cultargeschichte, 

Herulins was at Emesa, on his return i. 517 ; Maurice on the Religions of the 

from Persia, in 629 (Gibt>on, ▼. 58). World, ed. 2, p. 23. 

Chosroes II. is usually named as the <> Koran, c. xxxvii. p. 367; c. xliv. 

king of Persia who received Mahomet's p. 403; c. Iv. p. 433 ; c. Ivi. pp. 434-5 ; 

letter (ib. W. 308) ; but Mr. Muir refers Gibbon, v. 39-40 ; Muir, ii. 141-2. 

it to the reign of Siroes, who dethroned p Sale, 100. 

his fadier in 628, and died early in the <i Gibbon, v. 61-3; Weil, 331. 

following year. iv. 53-4. ' Theophanes, 278, ed. Paris. 

•» DolUnger, 16. • Oedrenns, 430. Mr. Finlay (i. 431) 

^ Koran, c xlviL; c. xlviii. p. 414. shows that Gibbon is mistaken in sup- 

\ Muir, iv, 201. posing the emperor to have given him- 

■ Koran, c xxiii. p. 281 ; Sale, 145-6 ; self up to indolence. 



40 MAHOMETAN CONQUESTS. Book UL 

roes, were again wrested from tbe empire by the new eoemy.^ In 
637 Jerusalem fell into the hands of the caliph " Omar, who binlt 
a mosque on the ^te of the temple,' and within a few years Persia, 
Khorasan, and part of A^a Minor were subdued. The internal 
quarrels of the prophet's followers suspended the {Mt>gre88 of con- 
quest only for a time. For years they threatened Constantinople 

A.D. itself^ although their attempts were unsuoces^iil, and 
6G8-677. ended in the caliph's submitting to tribute;^ and by 
the end of the century they took Carthage and became masters of 
the African provinces (a.d. 698)." 

The progress of the Mahometan arms was favoured by the 
exhaustion of the empire and of Peraa in the course of their recent 
wars.* In Syria and Egypt the greater part of the inhabitants 
were Nestorians or Monophysites, depressed by the imperial laws, 
and ready to welcome the enemies of the Byzantine court as 
deliverers.^ And the conquerors, although indifferent to the dis- 
tinctions of Christian parties for their own sake, were glad to 
encourage and to profit by this feeling. While they drove out the 
Greek orthodox from Egypt, and kept down the Melchites, they 
favoured the sects which were opposed to Rome and to Constan- 
tinople.*' While war was waged without mercy against idolaters^^ 
the *' people of the book " — Jews and Christians — as professors of 
true, although defective, religions, were allowed to live as tribu- 
taries in the conquered lands." But the oppressions to which they 
were subjected,' the advantages offered to converts, and perhaps 

* The charge agminst Omar, of order- y Niceph. Cpol. 22 ; Gibbon, ▼. 174. 
itig the Alexandrian library to be burnt, * Gibbon, t. 142, 150. 

appears to be now r^-established. See *■ Sale, 37 : Gibbon, iv. 308 ; t. 89. 

Matter, * Ecoles d*Alexandrie,' i. 334- ^ Schrockh, xz. 382-3 ; Gibbon, v. 

344; Milman, n. on Gibbon, ▼. 136-8 ; 132; Finlaj, i. 382, 466, 487. 

Churton in Pearson's Vindic. Ignat. ' Fleory, xxxriii. 55; Neand. v. 

2U3. 122; Ockley, i. 309-310; Gfrorer, ii. 

* This -word means successor (of the 36. 

prophet). <* See the Koran, c. ix. — the last- 

> Ockley, i. 229; Gibbon, v. 123-4; revealed chapter. Bnt Christians are in 

Milroan, ii. 41. 1 do not vtotnre any it charged with idolatry, inasmuch as 

opinion as to the tmth of Mr. Fergus- *' they take their priests and monks [t>. 

son's theory, which identifies what is saints] for Gods, and Qirist, the son of 

popularly styled the Mosque of Omar Mary, although thev are commanded to 

with the church built by Constantine worship one God.'' pp. 152-3; Mnir, 

over the Holy Sepulchre (see vol. i. iv. 211-2. 

188). This building is called by Maho- « Koran, c. ix. p. 152. The feeling 

metans '* The Dome of the Rock," while towards Chrbtians, however, afterwards 

they give the name of Omar to a small became more bitter. (Dollinger, 14.) 

mosque at the south-east comer of the As to Mahomet's relations with the 

site of the Tem|>le. Fergusson, in Jews, see Muir, iii. 32-8, 288-294. 

Smith's Bibl. Dictionary, art ** Jem- ' See the capitulation of Jerusalem, 

salem ;" and * Defence against the Edin- in Milman, i. 482-3. 
hwyh Review; Lond. 1860. 



QLkP. U. Atk-cit-eia. MONOTHELISM. 41 

the perplexity of controversies as to Christian doctrine, drew many 
away firom the Gospel to profess the faith of Islam.' 

About the same time when Mahomet began his public career, 
a controversy arose which continued for nearly a century to agitate 
the Church. 

Sergiusy patriarch of Constantinople, who is said to have been a 
Syrian, and connected by family with the Jacobite sect,^ had met - 
with a letter ascribed to his predecessor Hennas,* in About 
which the Saviour was said to have " one will, and one ^•^- ^*^- 
life-giving operation." ^ Struck with the expression, he consulted 
Theodore, bishop of Fharan, in Arabia, a person of whom nothing 
is known except in connexion with this controversy, but who, from 
the reference thus made to him, may be supposed to have enjoyed an 
eminent character for learning, and to have been as yet unsuspected 
of any error in doctrine ; " and as Theodore approved the words, the 
patriarch adopted them, and had some correspondence with other 
persons on the subject ** The doctrine thus started, which was 
afterwards known as M<mothdism^ is summed up in some words 
firom another of Theodore's writings — that ^' in the incarnation of 
our Saviour there is but one operation, whereof the framer and 
author is God the Word ; and of this the Manhood is the instru- 
ment, 80 that, whatsoever may be said of Him, whether as God or as 
man, it is all the operation of the Godhead of the Word." ^ In 
opposition to this, it was contended that the faculty of willing is 
inherent in each of our Lord's natures, although, as his person is 
one, the two wills act in tbe same direction — the human will being 
exerdsed in accordance with the Divine.^ 

Heraclius, in the course of his Persian wars, saw cause to regret 
the policy by which the Nestorians had been alienated from the 
empire,' and to desire that the evils which were likely 
to result from the schism of the Monophysites might be ' ' 
averted* With a view to a reconciliation, he conferred with some 

« Gibbon, t. 31, 17S ; Schrockh, xix. ho-wever, thinks that it may have reaUy 

370 ; Gietel. I. ii. 469-470 ; Milman, i. been the work of Mennas. ix. 97, 100. 

4S7. » Walch, ix. 151 ; Neander, v. 250. 

^ Theophan. 274, ed. Paris. Bat « Walch, ix. 93-4, 98. 

Walch (ix. S3, 101) questions this. "* u e. maintaining of a single will 

* For Mennas, see vol. i., book II. c. only. The name monothelete or monothe- 

13. lite first appears in John of Damascus 

' The Vlth General Council con- {e. g, De Heeresibus, 99). Giesel. I. ii. 

demned the letter as spurious, and it 477. 

was there proved to be wrongly attached c Hard. iii. 768. 

to the Acto of the Vth General Council. i Domer, ii. 259-260. 

(Hard. iii. 1067-70, 1312, 1365.) Walch, ' See vol, i. pp. 455-7. 



42 MONOTHELITE Boat lit 

of their leaders — as Paul, the chief of the party in Armenia, and 
Athanasius, the Jacobite patriarch of Antioch, to whom it is said 
that he offered the Catholic throne of that city on condition of 
accepting the council of Chalcedon. The Monophysites had gra- 
dually become less averse from the substance of that council's 
doctrine ; ' and Heraclius was led to hope that the schism might 
be healed if the Catholics would grant that, although our Lord 
had two natures, yet He had only one will and operation.^ When 
in Lazica, in the year 626, the emperor related the course of his 
negotiations to Cyrus, bishop of Phasis, who, as the question was 
new to him, wrote to ask the opinion of Sergius. He was told by 
the patriarch, in reply, that the Church had pronounced no deci- 
sion on the point ; that Cyril of Alexandria and other approved 
fathers had spoken of " one life-giving operation of Christ, our 
very God ; " that Hennas had used similar expressions ; that he 
was mistaken in supposing Leo the Great to have taught two ope- 
rations, and that Sergius was not aware of any other authority for 
for so speaking." Cyrus was convinced by this letter. Throng 
the emperor's favour, he was soon after promoted to the 
patriarchate of Alexandria, and in 633 effected the re- 
union of the Theodosians, a Monophysite sect, with the Church, 
by means of a compromise which was embodied in nine articles.' 
In the seventh of these it was said that our Lord ^' wrought the 
acts appertaining both to God and to man by one theandrie (t. e. 
divinely-human) operation " — an expression for which tlie authority 
of the writings ascribed to Dionysius the Areopa^te was alleged.' 
The Monophysites regarded the terms of union as matter of 
triumph. " It is not we," they said, " who have gone over to the 
council of Chalcedon ; it is the council that has come over to us." ' 
Sophronius, a learned monk, who was then at Alexandria, was 
greatiy alarmed on seeing the articles. He uttered a loud cry, 
threw himself at the patriarch's feet, and, with a profusion of 

• See vol. i. p. 505. theandrie, but to the statemeDt that the 

« Theophanes, 506 ; Cedrenug, 420. operation was simjJe, (Pagi, xi. 273-4.) 

There are difficulties as to the inter- In the passage of Dionvsins (Ep. 4, 

views with Paul and Athanasias. See Opera, ii. 75. ed. Cordenos, Antwerp, 

Pagi, xi. 219, 243-5, who questions the 1634), they read ** a new theandrie ope- 

story of Athanasius ; Walch, ix. 75-80, ration "—iceui^y (instead of /ilaM) rtni 

90, 104, 109, 151 ; Combefis, Anctaurim, riiy Btav^pitc^y iyipytuw iiiu¥ ircvoXtrfu- 

iii. 17-9; Clinton, ii. 171; Hefele, iii. ti4vos. But although this reading was 

113, 119, 124-5. correct, the singular number and the 

" Hard. iii. 1309, 1337. epithet **new" were in fisiYoar of the 

« lb. 1340-4. Monothelites. Domer, ii. 208. 

y See Domer, ii. 200-4, 235. The « Theophan. 274-5, ed. Paris. 
Catholics did not object to the term 



Cbaf. U. aa ei»-«S4. CONTROVERST. 43 

tears, implored him, by the Saviow's passion, not to sanction such 
Apollinarian doctrines.* Cyrus proposed to refer the matter to 
Sergius, and the jnonk, furnished with a letter to the patriarch of 
CoostanUnople, proceeded to the imperial city. Although himself 
a Monothelite, Sergius did not consider agreement in his opinion 
necessary as a condition of orthodoxy. In conversation with 
Sophronins, he dwelt on the importance of regaining the Mono- 
phyates throughout the Egyptian patriarchate ; he asked the monk 
to produce any express authority for speaking of two operations in 
Christ ; and, as Sophronius could not do this,^ the patriarch ob- 
tained from him a promise to let the question rest Sergius then 
wrote to Cyrus, desiring him to forbid all discussion on the subject, 
lest the late union of parties should be endangered.^ 

In the following year, Sophronius became patriarch of Jeru- 
salem. He seems to have felt that he was thus released from his 
promise — that the alenoe which might have been proper 
in a humble monk would be treachery to the faith in ' ' 
the occupant of a patriarchal throne.^ On hearing of his eleva- 
tion, Sergius took the alarm, and, without waiting for the formal 
announcement of it, wrote to Honorius of Rome, detailing the 
previous history of the question.® The pope, in his answer, 
echoed the opinions of his correspondent; he not only agreed 
with him as to the expediency of enforcing silence, but in a per- 
sonal profession of Monothelism : — " We confess," he says, " one 
will of our Lord Jesus Christ, forasmuch as it is evident that that 
which was assumed by the Godhead was our nature, not the sin 
which is in it — our nature as it was created before sin, not as 
it was oomipted by transgression." ' After discussing St Paul's 
worda as to the will of the flesh and the will of the mind, he con- 
cludes that the Saviour had not the fleshly will ; and he spoke of 
the question as to two operations as one fit only for grammarians.^ 
Sofdu^nius, in his enthrouistic letter, set forth very fully, and with 
great ability, the doctrine of the Incarnation, with special reference 
to the controversy which had arisen.^ He admits the word thecmdric, 

* Mazimiis ap. Baron, zi. 647. this jointly wiUi the Divine will. See 
^ It ia laid that Sophronius after- Dorner, ii. 232. 

wards, in a work which is now lost, f Baronios boldly attempts to* justify 

prodaced six hundred |»saages from the Honorius (633. 32. seqq.). Pagi gives 

nthers in favour of his doctrine. He- up the pope's language and conduct, 

fele, ill. 132. • but maiutams his personal orthodoxy, 

« Scrg. ad Honor, ap. Hard. iii. 1316. xi. 285-298, 390-2. See Combefis, 33-6 ; 

* Neaud. v. 247. Walch, ix. 125-6; Schrockh, xx. 402 ; 

* Hard. iii. 1312-7. Dollinger, i. 157; Hefele, iii. 137. 

' lb. 1320. The answer is obvious— »» Hard. iii. 1257-96; Hefele, iii. 139. 
that, as a part of the sinless nature, Ho The extant works of Sophronius are in 
took the innocent human will, and had vol. Ixxxvii. pt. 3, of the Patrol. Gr. 



44 THE ECTHESIS. Bocw UI. 

but applies it to the joint action of both natures in the Divinely- 
human Person — an application different from that in which it had 
been used by Sergius and his partisans.' Honorius obtained from 
the envoys who conveyed this letter to Rome a promise that their 
master would give up speaking of two wills, if Cyrus would cease 
to speak of one will ;^ but the controversy was not to be so easily 
appeased. 

The siege and capture of Jerusalem by the Arabs may be 
supposed to have soon after engrossed the attention of Sophronius ; 
and he did not long survive."' But before his death he 
led Stephen, bishop of Dor, the first of his sufiragans, 
to Calvary, and there, in the most solemn manner, charged him, 
by the thoughts of the crucifixion and of the last judgment, to 
repair to Rome, and never to rest until he should have obtained 
a condemnation of the Monothelite doctrine." 

The distractions of the church continued, and in 639, Heraclius, 
unwarned by the ill success of his predecessors in such measures, 
put forth, at the suggestion of Sergius, an edict composed by the 
patriarch, which bore the title of JEcthesiSy or Exposition of the 
faith.** After stating the doctrines of the Trinity and of the In- 
carnation, it proceeded to settle the controversy by forbidding the 
discussion of the question as to one or two operations. All opera- 
tion suitable either to God or to man (it was said) proceeds from 
the same one incarnate Word. To speak of a dngle operation, 
although the phrase had been used by certain fathers, caused 
trouble to some ; to speak of two operations, was an expression 
unsupported by any authority of approved teachers, and gave 
offence to mant/y as suggesting the idea of two opposite wills. 
The impious Nestorius himself, although he divided the Person of 
the Saviour, had not spoken of two wills ; one will was to be con- 
fessed, agreeably to the doctrine of the holy fathers, forasmuch as 
the Saviour's manhood never produced any motion contrary to the 
inclination of his Godhead.^ Even if the Ecthesis had not in its 
substance been thus evidently partial to the Monothelites, no satis- 
factory result could have been reasonably expected from a docu- 
ment which aimed at putting an end to differences by concealing 
them, or from a policy which, in silencing both parties, necessarily 
favoured the more subservient, while it was galling to the more 
zealous. 

1 Hard. iii. 1280 B. See Dorner, ii. 214. Clinton, ii. 175. 

>• Houor. Kp. 5 (Patrol. Ixxx.) ; Hefele, » Hard. iii. 713. 

iii. 147. o Walch, ix. 139-141. 

« Theophanes, 520 ; Pagi, xi. 314 ; f Hard. iii. 796. 



Qup.il AJK6S4-646. MONOTHELISM. 45 

The Ectbesis was approved by councils at Constantinople under 
Sergius and hia successor Pyrrhus, and at Alexandria under Cyrus.^ 
The patriarchates of Antioch and Jerusalem, suffering under the 
oppression of the Arabs, were in no condition to oppose it. But 
Honorius of Rome was dead; his successor, Severinus 
(whose pontificate lasted only two months, and was 
chiefly remarkable for the plunder of the papal treasures by the 
exarch of Ravenna '), appears to have rejected the new formulary ;" 
and the next pope, John IV., with a council, certainly did so. 
Ileradius hereupon wrote to John, disowning the authorship of the 
Ecthesis ; it had, he said, been drawn up by Sergius some years 
before, and . he had only consented to issue it at the patriarch*s 
urgent entreaty.* 

Heradius died in February 641, leaving the empire jointly to 
Constantine, son of his first marriage, and Heradeonas, the ofispring 
of his second marriage with his niece Martina.^ Constantine 
survived his father little more than three months, and Martina 
then attempted to rule in the name of her son ; but the senate, 
backed by the army and by the inhabitants of the capital, deposed 
her and Heradeonas, as guilty of the death of Constantine, whose 
son, Constans II., was then set on the throne.^ On this revolution 
the patriarch Pyrrhus, who was regarded as an accomplice of 
Martina, thought it expedient to abandon his dignity, and sought 
a refiige in Africa.^ There he met with Maximus, a man of noble 
Byzantine family, who, after having been a secretary of state under 
Ileraclius, had embraced the monastic profession, and became the 
ablest controversialist in opposition to Monothelism.' In 645, a 
disputation was»held between the two, in the presence of Gregory, 
governor of the prorince, with many bishops and other eminent 
penona* Pyrrhus started with the proposition that, as the Saviour's 
person is one. He could have but one will ; to which Maximus replied 
that, as He is both God and man, each of his natures must have its 
own proper will. The discussion was long, and was carried on with 
much acuteness ; but, in addition to the superiority of his cause, 

< Hard. iii. 798-S04 ; Pagi, xi. 336. « Nic. Cpol. 19-20 ; Gibbon, iv. 402-2. 

' Anaitas. Patrol, cxxviii. 709. He y Nic. Cpol. 21 ; Theophanes, 508 ; 

vas cboflen, a.d. 6S8 ; conflnned and Oedren. 430 ; Gibbon, iv. 402. 

died, 640; Cenni, ib. 715. * Baron. 640. 5; Dupin, vi. 43; 

• See Walcb, xi. 146-8; Hefele, iii. Walch, ix. 194. His works, among 
159. nrhich are commentaries on the pseudo^ 

• Maximna, ap. Baron, xi. 640-9; Dionysins, were edited by Gombefis, 
Walch, ix. 199. Paris, 1675, and are reprinted in the Pa- 

• Niceph. Cpol. 10, 18. The inces- trol. Gr. 

toons union is placed b 613 by Baron. * Printed at the end of Baroiiius, toI. 
(613. 3). See Pagi, xi. 119. xi. See Domer, ii. 222-3. 



46 TYPE OP CONSTANS II. Book IIL 

Mazimus had evidently the advantage in ability and in dialectic 
skill. At length Pyrrhus avowed himself convinced, and he accom- 
panied Maximus to Rome, where the pope, Theodore, 
admitted him to communion, and treated him as patri- 
arch of Constantinople. But Pyrrhus soon after went to Ravenna, 
and there (probably under the influence of the exarch, and in the 
hope of recovering his see) retracted his late professions. On 
hearing of this relapse, Theodore held a council, at which Pyrrhus 
was condemned and excommunicated ; and, in order to give all 
solemnity to the sentence, the pope subscribed it in the wine of the 
cucharistic cup, and laid it on the tomb of St. Peter.^ 

Both John IV.*' and Theodore had urged the successive emperors 
to withdraw the Ecthesis, which was still placarded by authority. 
In 648, Constans put forth a new formulary, which was intended 
to supersede the Ecthesis, and is known by the name of the l^fpe 
(or Model) of faith. The tone of this document (of which the 
patriarch Paul was the author) is less theological than that of the 
Ecthesis, and more resembles that of an ordinary imperial decree. 
While, like the earlier edict, it forbade the discussion of the con- 
troversy, and the use of the obnoxious terms on both sides, it did 
so without betraying an bclination to either party ; and it enacted 
severe punishments against all who should break the rule of silence.** 

Paul had carried on some unsatisfactory correspondence with 
Rome on the subject of the controversy, when at length Theodore, 
with a council, declared him excommunicate. On being informed 
of the sentence, the patriarch overthrew the altar of the papal 
chapel at Constantinople ; he forbade the Roman envoys to cde- 
brate the Eucharist, treated them with harshness, and persecuted 
their partisans.*^ At this stage of the proceedings it was that the 
Type appeared; but, notwithstanding the publication of it,«the 
controversy raged more and more fiercely. Maximus was un- 
ceasing and indefatigable in his exertions to stir up opposition to 
the Monothelite doctrines ; and Rome was beset by applications 
from African councils, from Greece, and from other quarters, to 
act in defence of the faith.^ 

In July, 649, Theodore was succeeded by Martin, and in Oc- 
tober of the same year the new pope held a synod, which, from 

^ Theophanes, 509 ; Anastas. 138-9. ^ Hard. iii. 614. 
It afterwards became usual, in si^^ing <* lb. 824-5. See Hefele, iii. 189. 
solemn documents, to make the sign of ^ Ih. 700. 

the cross **calarao in pretioso Christi ' lb. iii. 702, 720, 728, 738, &c.; 

sanguine intincto." Ducange, 8, v. Walcb, ix. 208 ; Neand. v. 257. 
Crux, p. 679. See Martene, i. 263» 



QuF. n. AA 645-». FIRST LATERAN COUNCIL. 47 

having met in the ^* Basilica of ConstaDtine," adjoining the Lateran 
palace, is known as the First Lateran Council. It was attended 
by a hundred and five bishops, among whom was the bishop of 
Ravenna.' In the course of five sessions the history of the contro- 
versy was discussed, and the chief documents of it were examined. 
Stej^en of Dor presented a memorial, praying that the errors of 
Monothelism might be rejected, and stating the solemn charge 
which the patriarch Sophronius had laid on him with regard to it.^ 
Passages from the writings of the leading Monothelites were con- 
frcmted with extracts from Catholic fathers,* and were paralleled 
with the language of notorious heretics.^ The Type of Constans 
was said to place truth and error on the same level, to '' destroy 
the righteous with the wicked ; "™ to leave Christ without will and 
operaliony and therefore without substance and nature." The 
Council declared that there are in the Saviour two natural wills 
and operations, the Divine and the human, — *' the same one Lord 
Jesus Christ wilUng and working our salvation both as God and 
as man." ^ Among the contents of the twenty canons, the doctrine 
of two imited wills and of two operations was laid down, and an 
anathema was uttered against all who should deny it^ The ex- 
pression '^ one theandric operation " was denounced,*^ and anathemas 
were passed against Theodore of Pharan-, Cyrus of Alexandria, 
and Sergius, Pyrrhus, and Paul of Constantinople, with the '^ most 
impious Ecthesis" and the '^most impious Type," which Sergius 
and Paul respectively had persuaded HeracUus and the reigning 
emperor to issue.' Martin followed up this council by announcing 
its decisions to the emperor, to the patriarchs, to the bishops of 
Africa, and to other important persons both in the east and in the 
west' The pope's language throughout these letters is in a tone 
of extreme denunciation, although he may perhaps have thought 
to guard himself against the emperor's resentment by professions 
of great reverence for his person, and by referring the Ecthesis 
and the Type to Sergius and Paul as their authors.^ 

While the council was sitting, the exarch Olympius arrived at 
Rome, with instructions to enforce the signature of the Type, and, 

f The Acts, in Hardouin, iii. 687, ^ Hard. iii. 783, seqq., 891, seqq. 

leqq., embody some documents already *" lb. 825. (Genes, xviii. 23.) 

quoted. " lb. 700-717. 

* Hard. iii. 713. ° lb. 920-1. 

• lb. iiL 771, seqq.; 853, seqq. As ? Co. 10, 14. 

the pseado - Dionysian writings were *> C. 15. See above, p. 42, note '. 

quoted, Baronius takes occasion to in- ' C. 18. 

leigh against the " perfHctam frontem * Hard. iii. 625-34, 655, 933, &c. 

recentioram hareticomm," who have * Schrockh, xx. 430. 
impngned them. 649. 19. 



48 SEIZURE AND BANISHMENT OF MARTIN. Book IIL 

if possible, to carry off the pope to Constantinople. H^ did not, 
however, execute his commission, probably because he meditated a 
revolt, and was willing to pay court to the papal party ; and he 
was soon after killed in Sicily on an expedition against the Sara- 
cens.^ Martin, notwithstanding the fresh provocation which he had 
given to the court, appears to have been left in peace for three 
years and a half, until a new exarch, Theodore Calliopas, appeared, 
who seized him and despatched him towards the eastern capital. 
The tedious journey lasted from the 19th of June, 653, to the 
17th of September in the following year. The pope was treated 
without any consideration for his office, his age, or the weakness 
of his health. Although his conductors often landed for recreation, 
he was never allowed to leave the vessel except at Naxos, where 
he remained a year on shore, but debarred from such conlfbrt as 
he might have received from the visits or from the presents of his 
friends. On reaching Constantinople he lay for a day on the 
deck, exposed to the mockery of the spectators who crowded the 
quay; and he was then removed to a prison, where he was 
confined six months.' During this time he was subjected to re- 
peated examinations, which, however, did not relate to charges of 
erroneous doctrine, but to political ofiences, such as an alleged 
connexion with Olympius, and even with the Saracens. He was 
subjected to extreme cruelty ; he was paraded about the streets as 
a criminal sentenced to death; and would probably have been 
executed but for the intercession of the patriarch Paul, who was 
then dying, and, on receiving a visit from the emperor, ex|H*es8ed 
his fear lest this unworthy treatment of a bishop opposed to him 
might tell against him at the judgment-day.^ Martin, who had 
borne his trials with much dignity and courage, was then banished 
to Cherson,* where he lingered for a time in want of the neces- 
saries of life. Two letters are extant in which he pathetically 
complains of the neglect in which he was left by his flock, and by 
the many who had formerly partaken of his bounty.* In this exile 
he died, in September 655.^ 

Maximus, the most learned and most persevering opponent of 
Monothelism, was carried to Constantinople with two disciples in 
the same year with Martin * (a.d. 653). The three were kept in 

" Anastas. 139; Baron. 649. 49-51; Paul, Pyrrhus received the patriarchate, 

Pngi, xi. 42a but held it only for a few months. 

* Accounts by Martin himtelf and ' See vol. i. p. 507, 

another, in Hardouin, iii. 673, seqq., * Hard. iii. 686-8. 

688; Pagi, xi. 481, 451-8. »• Pagi, xi. 464. 

T HardL iii. 6S3, On the death of <* lb. xi. 435. The documents re- 



CkAP. IL Aj)w «53-M«. MAXIHUS. 49 

prison until after the banishment of the pope, and were then 
hrought to examination. Agamst Maximus, too, an attempt was 
made to establish a political crime by the charge of a 
ooDnexion with Gregory, goTemor of Africa, who had ^" ' 
rcTolted.^ But the accusations were chiefly of a theological or 
Bcclesiagtical kind. Among other things, it was imputed to him that 
he had offended against the imperial privileges by denying that the 
emperor possessed the priesthood ; by uttering an anathema against 
the Type, which was construed into anathematising the emperor 
himself; and by denying that the imperial confirmation gave 
validity to canons. To these heads he answered, that the emperor 
coold not be a priest, inasmuch as he did not administer the sacra- 
mentSy and was spoken of as a layman in the offices of the church ; 
that his anathema against the Type applied only to the false 
doctrine which it contained ; and that, if councils became valid by 
the emperor's confirmation, it would be necessary to receive the 
Arian councils to which such sanction had been given.® " Are you 
alone to be saved," it was asked, " and are all others to perish ? " 
" God forbid," he answered, " that I should condemn any one, or 
should claim salvation for myself only I But I would rather die than 
have on my conscience the misery of in any way erring as to the 
fidth."' Maximus and his companions were inflexible in their 
ojnnions, although kindness as well as severity was employed in 
order to influence them, and although they were pressed by the 
authority of the new pope, Eugenius, who had complied with the' 
wishes of the court* They were sent into exile at Bizya in Thrace ; 
and, after having been there subjected to great severities, were 
agsdn carried to Constantinople, where they underwent a fresh 
examination.'^ Their invincible constancy was punished by the 
loss of their tongues and of their right hands ; they were banished 
to Lazica ; and after a time they were separated, for the purpose 
of adding to their sufferings. Maximus sank under the cruel 
treatment which he received in August 662 ; one of his disciples 
(who both bore the name of Anastasius) is said, notwithstanding 
his mutilations, to have still effectively served the faith both by 
speech and by active correspondence, until his death in 666.* 
Constans IL, by whose authority these barbarities were sanc- 

lUiDg to Maximus are printed, with a f lb. 613. Eu^nius had been chosen 
transTatioD bv Anastasius the Librarian, during the lifetime of Martin. See 

in Tol. cxxix. of the L^tin 'Patro- Hefele, iii. 215. 

logia/ * Patrol, oxxix. 619-621. 

* Patrol, cxxix. 603. • lb. 657, 683; Pagi, xi. 503-4, 519- 

• lb. 0O9, 611, 613. 20; Hefele, iii. 20.')-214. 
' lb. 611-3. 



50 COUNCIL UNDER AGATHO. Book III. 

tioned, had put his own brother to death, and by this and other 
acts had provoked the detestation of his eastern subjects. Yielding 
to the general feeling, he withdrew from Constantinople in the 
year 663, and visited Rome, where he was received with great 
honour by the bishop, Vitalian.*^ After having stripped off the 
brazen roof of the Pantheon (which had been a church rince the 
reign of Phocas), and having plundered it and other churches of 
their precious ornaments, the emperor passed into Sicily, where he 
indulged his tyranny and vices without control, until in 668 he was 
murdered in a bath at Syracuse.™ The fate of pope Martin had 
disposed his successors, Eugenius and Vitalian, to peaceful courses, 
A.D. And the controversy smouldered until Adeodatus, the 
672-677. successor of Vitalian, again broke off communion with 
Constantinople ;° whereupon the patriarchs Theodore of Constan- 
tinople and Macarius of Antioch excited a commotion by attempting 
to strike out of their diptychs the name of Vitalian, the only recent 
pope who had been commemorated in them.** 

The son and successor of Constans, Constantine IV., who is 
styled Pogonatus (the Bearded), was distressed by the divisions of 
the Church, and resolved to attempt a remedy. He therefore 
wrote to Donus, bishop of Rome, desiring him to send 
some delegates to Constantinople, for the purpose of 
conferring on the subjects in dispute.^ Before this letter arrived 
at Rome, Donus had been succeeded by Agatho, who, on 
receiving it, assembled a council. Among the hundred 
and twenty-five prelates who attended, were the Lombard pri- 
mate, Mansuetus of Milan, two Prankish bishops, and 
the famous Wilfrid of York ; the rest were subjects of 
the empire.^ Monothelism was condemned, and two prelates with 
a deacon were sent to Constantinople as representatives of the pope, 
bearing with them a letter to the emperor, which was intended to 
serve a like purpose with Leo*s famous epistie to Flavian in the 
Eutychian controversy ; ' while the council was represented by 
three bishops, with other clerks and monks.' The pope in his 
letter expresses regret that the unquiet circumstances of Italy 
prevent the possibility of deep theological study, and professes to 

^ Anastas. 141 ; Muratori, a.d. 663. p Hard. iii. 1043-7. 

Baronius makes amusing excuses for ^ See Inett, i. 92, seqq. Pagi pUoes 

this, 663. 3-5. the council in 679 ; Jaffi^ and Hefele 

» Theophanes, 538 : Paul Wamef. (iii. 229), in March, 6S0. 

Hist Langob. vi. 11; Anastas. 141. ' Domer, ii. 229, 248. See vol. i. 

» Neand. v. 266. pp. 463, 471. 

o Walph, ix. 376. See Hard. iii. 1163, • Hard. iii. 1076-7. 
U67. 



Qup. U. AA €<s-Mi. SIXTH GENERAL COUNCIL. 51 

rdy, not on the learning of his deputies, but on their faithfulness 
to the doctrine of earlier councils and fathers.^ 

Constantine now determined, instead of the conference which 
had been intended, to sununon an *^ ecumenical " synod — ^by which 
term, howcTer, it would seem that he meant nothing more than one 
which should represent the whole empire ; for no subjects of other 
goTemments were present^* This assembly — the Sixth General 
Coundl, and Third Council of Constantinople ' — met in a room of 
the palace, whidi, from its domed roof, was styled TVulltis/ The 
aeanons were eighteen in number, and lasted from November 7th, 
680, to September 16th in the following year. The emperor pre- 
aded in person at the first eleven sessions and at the last ; ' in his 
absence, the presidential chair was imoccupied. At the earlier 
meetings, the number of bishops was small ; but it gradually rose 
to nearly two hundred. Among them were George, patriarch of 
Constantinople, and Macarius of Antioch (whose dignity was little 
better than titular) ;* while the sees of Alexandria and Jerusalem 
were represented by two presbyters. Twelve high officers of the 
em|nre, and some monks, were also present.^ 

The proceedings were conducted with a decency and an impar- 
tiality of which there had been little example in former assemblies 
of the kind, and the emperor sustained his part in a very creditable 
manner.^ The principal documents of the controversy were read, 
and extracts from the writings of the Monothelites were compared 
with passages intended to refute or to support them, or to prove 
their identity in substance with heresies which had been already 
condemned.^ At the eighth session, the patriarch of March?, 
Constantinople professed his adhesion to the views of ^^^' 
Agatho and the Roman synod, and the bishops of his patriarchate 
followed the example.® But Macarius of Antioch still maintained 
the doctrine of a single theandric will and operation — that, as the 
nund moves the Body, so in Christ the divine will directed the 
humanity.' He produced a collection of authorities in favour of 

• Hwd. iii. 1077. ^ Hard. iii. 1056. 

■ n>. 1049; Walch, Ix. 891. « Walch, ix, 428; Schrockh, xx. 

* The lixth is the last which any 445; Giesel. I. ii. 475. 

Anglican writers acknowledge as a <* Hard. iii. 1152-4; 1202, teqq.; 

General Council. 1226-1304. 

r Hard. iiL 1055. On the word, see • lb. 1157, 1163-6. ' 

fiaron. 680. 41, with Pagi's notes; ' lb. 1171. Macarius held that this 

Hefele, iii S36. was consbtent with the Chalcedonian 

" Pighius, a Romanist, ventnret to call doctrine of the two natures, inasmuch 

the genuineness of the Acts in question as the one nature was active, and the . 

on account of the part thus ascribed to other was a passive instrument. Dor- 

the emperor! Walch, ix. 388-9. ner, ii. 207, 231. 

■ See Gieseler, 1. ii. 470. 

E 2 



52 CONDEMNATION OF MONOTHELISM, Bo« IlL 

his opinion ; but the council, after examining these, pronounced 
them to be spurious or garbled, or, where genuine, to be misap- 
plied, — as when words which had really been used to express the 
relations of the Divine Persons in the Trinity were transferred to 
the relations of the Saviour's Godhead and manhood.^ As the 
Syrian patriarch persisted in his opinion, declaring that he could 
not abandon it even on pain of being cut in pieces and cast into 
the sea, he was deposed and excommunicated, with a disciple 
named Stephen ; and, while the emperor was hailed as a new Con- 
stantine the Great, a new Theodosius, a new Marcian, anathemas 
were loudly uttered against Macarius as a second Apollinaris and 
Dioscorus.** 

The fifteenth session was marked by a singular incident An 
aged monk named Polychronius presented a confession of Saith, 
April 26, and undertook to prove its correctness by raising a dead 
^^^' man to life. He said that he had seen a vision, in which 

a person of dazzling brightness and of terrible majesty had told 
him that whosoever did not confess a single will and theandric 
operation was not to be acknowledged as a Christian. The synod 
adjourned to the court of a public bath, and a corpse was brought 
in on a bier. Polychronius laid his creed on the dead man's 
breast, and for a long time whispered into his ears ; no miracle, 
however, followed. The multitude, who had been admitted to 
witness this strange experiment, shouted out anathemas against 
Polychronius as a deceiver and a new Simon ; but his confidence 
in his opinions Was unshaken by his failure, and the synod found 
it necessary to depose him.* 

The faith on the subject in dispute was at length defined. The 
Monothelites were condemned as holding a heresy akin to those of 
Apollinam, Severus, and Themistius ; as destroying the perfection 
of our Lord's humanity by denying it a will and an operation.*^ 
The doctrine of the Incarnation was laid down, according to the 
earlier decisions of the church ; and to this it was added, — " We 
m like manner, agreeably to the teaching of the holy fathers, 
declare that in Him there are two natural wills and two natural 
operations, without division, change, separation, or confusion. 

wVJP"?^ iii. 1149, 1175, seqq. See xxi.) Macarius, Polychronius, and 

hu*^' ^ ^^®- others were sent to Rome, where two of 

laarS^' iii. 1166, 1175, 11S2, 1198, the party retracted, and were absolTcd 

* Ih t^ ^y ^^^^ ^^' ' **"^ ^^^ others, being obsti- 

thp ^' '^^^'^^ Bufinos relates that nate, were imprisoned in monasteries. 

otZf^JT"^ nionk Macarius the elder Anastas. de Leone II. (Patrol, cxxviii. 

^n /."I / **?**»« ^y «i»i^ » dead 847.) 

"^^ ^^ ^fe- Hist. MoWTaS. (Patrol. »« Hard. iU. 13989. 



Ouf,IL MJK Ml. AND OF POPE HONORIUS. 53 

And these two natural wilk are not contrary, as impious heretics 
pretend ; but the human follows the divine and almighty will, not 
lasting or opposing it, but rather being subject to it ; for, ac- 
flording to the most wise Athanasius, it was needful that the will 
of his flesh should be moTed, but that it should be subjected to his 
diTine wilL . . . As hb flesh, although deified, was not destroyed 
hj his Godhead, so too his human will, although deified, was not 
destroyed." "... An anathema was pronounced against the chief 
kaders of the Monothelites. The name of Honorius had been 
imnoticed by the Roman councils — a fact which significantly proves 
that, while desirous to spare his memory, they did not approve of 
the part which he had taken in the contrqyersy. John IV. in his 
letter to Constantino, the son of Heraclius, had endeavoured to 
dear his predecessor by the plea that he had only meant to deny 
the existence of two contrary wills in the Saviour, " forasmuch as 
in His hiunanity the will was not corrupted as it is in ours ;"" and 
Maximus, in his conference with Pyrrhus, had been unwilling to 
^ve the Monothelites the benefit of a Roman bishop's authority.^ 
But the general council, after examining the letters of Honorius, 
declared that ^ in all things he had followed the opinions of Sergius 
and had sanctioned his impious doctrines ; " and the Monothelite 
pope was included in its anathema.^ 

The decisions of the council were confirmed by the emperor, and 
severe penalties were enacted against all who should contravene 
them.^ Pope Agatho died in January 662, while liis legates 
were still at Constantinople ; but his successor, Leo H., zealously 

■ H). 1400. 108), Noel Alexandre (x. 463-8), and 

* lb. 611. Against thU plea, see others take a (more or less) simi- 
Walch,ix. 127-132; Hefele, ill. 149. lar line, and are refuted by Walch, 

• Max. aj>. Baron, xi. 645. ix. 409-418 ; Scbrockh, xx. 446-8 ; 
r Hard. lii. 1331-4. The condemna- Gieseler, I. ii. 477-8; Domer, ii. 217- 

tion of Honorius has caused great diffi- 220. There is an essay in favour 

eultj to some Roman controversialists, of Honorius by Molkcnbuhr (Patrol. 

Baronios pretends that the acts of the Ixxx.). In our own time, Dollinger 

eoondl are interpolated, and that the (i. 157-8) and Hefele (who argues the 



of Honorius has been substituted matter yery fully and with great cau- 
in them for that of Theodore, the pre- dour, iii. 150-2, 264-284) give up the 
decessor of George in the patriarchate pope, although they suppose that he 
of Constantinople (681. 13-21; 682. 4). thought more souudly than he expressed 
The groundlessness of this is shown by himself ; even Bohrbacher can only 
Pagi, who himself maintains that Hono- excuse him by representing him as 
rins was personally orthodox, and that the dupe of Sergius, and concludes his 
be was condemned only on account of remarks on the subject by saying that 
his " economy " in attempting to stifle ** Nous y voyons un avertissement divin 
the discnssion of the question (xi. 31-32), k tons ses successeurs, de bien peser les 
Bellarmine (De Kom. Pont. v. 11), paroles de leurs ccrits, et de ne jamais 
Gamier (Dissert, ii. in Lib. Dium. traiter Icgdrement Ics questions de doc- 
Patrol, cv.), P^tau (De Incam. I. xxi. trine." (x. 88, 167-8, 381.) 
144), Combefis (in Auctar. Bibl. Pa- •» Hard. iii. 1445-1457. 
tmn^ iii.), Muratori (Annali, IV. i. 



54 COUNCJL - IN TRULLO.*' Bock III. 

exerted himself to procure the reception of the coundl by the 
churches of the west. In letters to the emperor, to the Spanish 
bishops, and to others, Leo expressed his approval of the con- 
demnation of Honorius, on the ground that that pope, instead of 
^ purifying the Apostolic Churdi by the doctrine of apostolical 
tradition," had '^ yielded its spotlessness to be defiled by profiBUie 
betrayal of the fsdth.*' ' 

The last two general councils, unlike those of earlier times, had 
confined themselyes to matters of faith, and had not passed any 
canons relating to other subjects. In order to supply this defect, 
Justinian II., who in 685 succeeded his father Constanline Pogo- 
natus,' assembled a ne^ synod, which is known by the name of 
Thdlan^ from having been held in the same domed hall with the 
late general council, and by that of Quinisexty as being supple- 
mentary to the fifth and sixth councils.^ Its hundred and two 
canons were subscribed by the emperor and by the four eastern 
patriarchs ; and immediately after the imperial signature, a space 
was left for that of Sergius, bishop of Rome. It does not appear 
whether Sergius had been invited to send special deputies to the 
council ;^ his two ordinary representatives at Constantinople sub- 
scribed, and iasily metropolitan of Gortyna, in Crete, professed to 
sign as representing the ^ whole synod of the Roman Church." ' 
But among the canons were six which offended the pope, as incon- 
sistent with the rights or the usages of his Church.^ The 2"^ 
in enumerating the earlier canons which were exclimvely to be 
observed, sanctioned eighty-five under the name of apostolical, 
whereas Rome admitted only fifty ; * and it omitted many synods 
which were of authority in the west, together with the whole body 
of papal decretals. The 13^ allowed tihose of the clergy who had 

' Hard. iii. 1476. So he elsewhere says * Gibbon, iv. 405. 
that Honorioa ** flamniam haretici dog- * The most probable date is 691 

matis non, ut decnit apostolicam aucto- (Pagi, xii. 120 ; Hefele, iii. 299). Some 

ritatem, incipientem extinxit, scd neeli- place it in 692 (see Walch, ix. 44) ; 

gendo confovit" (1730). Baronios has others, as early as 6S6 (see Hefele, 1. e.) ; 

recourse to his fiimiliar derice of de- Hardouin, as late as 706. 
daring the letters to be forged (683. 14). • Schrockh, xix. 509. 
Pagi owns their genuineness, but says ' Hard. iii. 1697-9. On these signa- 

that Honorius is only censured in them tures see Pagi, xii. 122 ; De Marca, V. 

for snpineness and conniyance — not for x. 3: Hefele, iii. 314. 
heresy. But, eyen if Leo's words did 7 Schri)ckh, xix. 508 ; Giesel. I. ii. 

not necessarily imply more than this, 480. 

his meaning certainly went further, * See Drey, Ueber die Constitut. u. 

since he unreservedly recommends the Kanones der Apostel, 203-9, 419. In 

decisions of the council, and names the decree of Grelasius as to books 

Honorius with Theodore of Pharan, allowed or forbidden (see yol. i. 536), 

Sergius, &c., among those who were the whole of the Apostolical Canons 

condemned as traitors to the faith, are condemned. (Patrol, lix. 163.) 
( 1 730.) See Hefele, iii. 279, seqq. 



OiiAF. IL AJtt. «86-«M. JUSTINIAN IL 55 

mairied before thmr ordination as subdeacons to retain their wives.* 
The SG*"* renewed the decrees of the second and fourth general 
councils as to the privileges of the see of Constantinople. The 55^ 
ordered that the ^ apostolical " canon which forbade fasting on any 
Saturday except Easter-eve should be extended to Rome, where all 
the Saturdays of Lent had until then been fast-days. The 67^ 
forbade the eating of blood. The 82°*^ prescribed that the Saviour 
should be represented in his human form, and not under the sym- 
bolical figure of a lamb.** In contradicting Roman usages, the 
13*** and 55*** canons expressly stated that they were such, and 
required the Roman Church to abandon them ; it would seem, 
indeed, as if the eastern bishops were bent, as at Chalcedon, on 
moderating the triumph of Rome in the late doctrinal question by 
legislating on other matters in a manner which would be unpala- 
table to the pope ;^ and the recognition of these canons by the east 
only, where they were quoted as the work of the sixth general 
council, was the first manifest step towards the separation of the 
Greek and Latin Churchea^ 

On receiving the canons, Sergius declared that he would rather 
die than consent to them. The protospathary Zacharias was com- 
missioned to seize him and send him to Constantinople. But a 
rising of the people, and even of the soldiery, who looked more to 
the bishop of Rome than to their distant imperial master, compelled 
2^acharias in abject terror to seek the protection of his intended 
prisoner.® About the same time, the vices of Justinian, the 
exorbitant taxation which was required to feed his ex- 

, , , . , . , . . 1 . 1 . A.D. 695. 

penses, and the cruelties which were committed m his 
name by his ministers, the eunuch Stephen and the monk Theo- 
dosius, provoked a revolt, by which a general named Leontius was 
raised to the throne. From regard for the memory of Constantino 
Pogonatus, Leontius spared the life of Justinian ;^ but the deposed 
emperor's nose was cut oflF (a mutilation which had become common 
in the east), and he was banished to the inhospitable Chersonese.* 

* From this time the bishops of the (a-d. 872-892) sanctioned such of the 
Greek Church were chosen from among TruUan canons as were not contrary to 
the monks. Finlav, ii. 113. the Roman decrees or canons, or to good 

^ "MM. Raoul-Kochette and Didron morals. (Anast Praef. ad Synod. viL 

observe, that the council wished to Patrol, cxxix. 196.) See the Preface to 

effect an entire substitution of history Theodore the Studite, in Sirmondi Opera 

for sj^mbolism " (Lord Lindsay on Varia, tom. v. b. c, and Nat Alexand. 

Christian Art, i. 72), and from about x. 473, seqq. 
this time Raoul-Rochette dates the intro- ' Anastas. 149. 
duction of the crucifix (ibid. 91). See ' Niceph. Cpol. 26. Schlosser ques- 

vol. i. p. 346. tions this motive, but seemingly without 

^ GieseL L ii. 479. reason, 109. 

* Gietel. I. ii. 481. Pope John VIIL ' Theophanes, 562-5. 



56 JUSTINIAN U. Book UI. 

LeoDtius, after a reign of three years, was put down by Tiberius 
Apsimar, and was committed to a monastery. The Chersonites, 
in fear that the schemes which Justinian was undisguisedly forming 
for the recovery of his throne might draw on them the suspicion 
and anger of the new emperor, resolved to put the exile to death 
or to send him to Constantinople ; but the design became known 
to him, and he sought a refuge among the Chazars of the Ukraine, 
where he married a sister of the reigning prince. Even among 
these remote barbarians, however, he found that he was 
* in danger from the negotiations of Apsimar; and his 
desperation urged him to attempt the execution of the design which 
he had seemed to have abandoned.^ While crossing the Euxine 
in a violent storm, his companions exhorted him, as a. means of 
obtaining deliverance, to promise that, if restored to the empire, 
he would forgive his enemies. " May the Lord drown me here," 
he replied, " if I spare one of them ! " and when his daring enter- 
prise had been crowned with success, the vow was terribly fulfilled. 
Lcontius was brought forth from his monastery ; he and Apsimar 
were laid prostrate in the circus, and, as the emperor looked on 
the games, his feet pressed the necks of his fallen rivals, while the 
multitude shouted the words of the 91"* Psalm — ^ Thou shalt tread 
upon the lion and the adder." The two were then dragged about 
the streets of the city, and at length were beheaded.* All who 
had taken part in the expulsion of Justinian were mercilessly 
punished ; many of them were tied up in sacks, and were cast into 
the sea. The patriarch Callinicus, who had been driven by the 
tyrant's oppression to favour the rebellion of Leontius, was deprived 
of his eyes and nose, and was banished to Rome.^ For some 
unknown reason, Felix, archbishop of Ravenna, was blinded, 
deposed, and sent into exile in Pontus ; ™ and Constantine of Rome 
— the seventh Greek refugee from the Mahometan conquests who 
successively filled the see " — might well have trembled when in 710 
he was summoned to Constantinople. Perhaps Justinian may have 
required the pope's presence with a view of enforcing the Trullan 
Council on the west ; perhaps he may have meant to secure his 
own authority in Italy against a repetition of such scenes as that 
which had taken place in the pontificate of Sergius.® But Con- 

*» Niceph. Cpol. 27. a.d. 709. Felix was restored by Phi- 

* Tbeophanes, 574 ; G. Hamartolus, lippicus. AgneU. 1. c. 707. 

pp. 622-3; Schlosser, 110-4. ° The election of so many Greeks 

^ Nic. Cpol. 28; Pagi, xii. 191 ; Gib- seems to indicate an influence of the 

bon, iv. 406-8. exarchs. Murat. a.d. 706. 

" Agnellus, Patrol, cvi. 704 ; Muratori, " Giesel. I. ii. 488; Milman, ii. 142. 



Out, IL aa «»-T11. PHILIPPICDS. 57 

teitine's ready and courageous obedience appears to have dis- 
mned the tyrant. Justinian received the pope as an equal ; it is 
even said that, at the first meeting, he fell down and kissed his 
feet;'' and Constantine returned home with a confirmation of all 
die piivilegea of his Church. It has been conjectured that these 
EiTouTB were not obtained without the pope's consenting to the 
canoDs of the Quinisext coundl in so far as they were not directly 
contrary to the Roman traditions.^ 

Justinian's abuse of his recovered power excited his subjects to a 
fresh rebellion, which began by an outbreak of the Chersonites, on 
whom he had intended to avenge by an exemplary cruelty the 
treachery which they had meditated against him during his exile/ 
In 711 he was again dethroned and was put to death. His young 
son Tiberius, who had been crowned Augustus, fled to the church 
of the Blachemffi, hung the relics which were regarded as most 
sacred around his neck, and clasped the altar with one hand and 
the cross with the other ; but a leader of the insurgents pursued 
him into the sanctuary, plucked the cross from him, transferred the 
relics to his own neck, and dragged the boy to the door of the 
church, where he was immediately slain. Thus ended the dynasty 
of Heraclius, about an hundred years after the accession of its 
founder.' 

The revolution reused to the throne an adventurer named 
Bardanes, who on his accession took the name of Philippicus. 
Bardanes was of a Monothelite family, and his early impriissions 
in &vour of the heresy had been confirmed by the lessons of 
Stephen, the associate of Macarius of Antiock^ It is said that, 
many years before, he had been told by a hermit that he was one 
day to be emperor ; and that he had vowed, if the prophecy should 
be fulfilled, to abrogate the Sixth General Council." He refused 
to enter the palace of Constantinople until a picture of the council 
siiould have been removed ; he publicly burnt the original copy of 
its acts, ordered the names of Ilonorius, Sergius, and the others 
whom it had condemned, to be inserted in the diptychs,* ejected 

In 700, Jiutinian bad sent the TraUan 514-5. As to the treatment of the 

canons to John VII., desiring him to cooncil by later popes, see Hcfele, iii. 

lay them before a council, and to accept 317. - 

or reject them in detail; but the pope, ' Nic. Cpol. 29-30; Schlosaer, U9- 

" humana fragilitate timidns," declined 123. 

the task, and sent them back untouched. • Nic. Cpol. 31; Theophanes, 583: 

lie diefl soon after. Anastas. in Patrol. Gibbon, iv. 408-9 ; Schlosser, 124-5. 

cxxxviii. 930 ; Murat. a.d. 70«. » Agatho Diac. ap. Hard. iii. 1836 ; 

i» Anastas. 153. Dean Milman re- Walch, ix. 430. See p. 52. 

gards this as a western fiction, ii. 85. " Theophanes. 581. 

'* Anast. 153; Pagi, xii. 220 ; Murat. * An account of these proceedings is 

Ann. IV. i. 292-3: Schruckh, xix. given by a deacon named ^Vgatho, who 



58 THE MARONITES. 



UOOK 111. 



the ortbodox patriarch Cyrus, and required the bishops to subscribe 
a Monothelite creed. The order was generally obeyed in the east, 
but at Rome it met with different treatment Constantine refused 
to receive it ; the people would not allow the emperor to be named 
in the mass, nor his portrait to be admitted into a church, where, 
instead of it, they hung up a representation of the Sixth Council ; 
and, on the arrivsJ of a newly-appointed commander from Constan- 
tinople, an outbreak took place, which was only suppressed by the 
pope's interposition on the side of authority/ Philippicus, after a 
reign of a year and a half, during which he had given himself up 

to extravagance and debauchery, was deposed and blinded. 

His successor, Anastasius, was a Catholicf ; and John, who 
had been intruded into the patriarchate of Constantinople on the 
deprivation of Cyrus, now sued for the communion of Rome, pro- 
fessing that he had always been orthodox at heart, and that his 
compliance with -the late heretical government had arisen from a * 
wish to prevent the appointment of a real Monothelite.* The 
pope's answer is not known ; but in 715 John was deprived, and 
Germanus, bishop of Cyzicum, was appointed to the patriarchal 
chair.* Anastasius was dethroned in 716 by Theodosius IIL, and 
Theodosius, in the following year, by Leo the Isaurian, whose reign 
witnessed the commencement of a new and important controversy. 

The readiness with which the formulary of Philippicus was 
received by the eastern bishops and clergy, may be regarded not 
only as a token of their subserviency, but also as indicating that the 
Monothelite party at that time possessed considerable strength.^ 
The public profession of Monothelism, however, soon became 
extinct, its only avowed adherents being the Maronite community 
in Syria. A monastery, dedicated to a saint of the name of 
Maron,^ stood between Apamea and Emesa as early as the sixth 
century ; and in the end of the seventh it was under the government 
of another Maron, who died in 701."^ The name of Maronitcs, 
which ori^nally belonged to the members of this monastery, was 
gradually extended to all the inhabitants of the district of Lebanon,^ 
. a population chiefly composed of refugees from the Saracen con- 
quests. Among these the Monothelite opinions were held ; and, 

had written the original acts. Hard. iii. « See Theodoret, Hist Relig., 16. 

1836, seqq. ^ Schrockh, xz. 452-4. 

r Anastas. 153 ; Schlosser, 127. ' See Walch, ix. 477. Against the 

» Hard. iii. 1837. Pagi defends the identification of Maronites with Mar- 

patriarch*8 «• economy/' xii. 234. cUntes (as by Walch, ix. 485 ; Schrockh, 

• Baron. 714.3-4; Pagi, xii. 255-261. xix. 44; xx. 454), see Giesefer, I. ii. 

»> Gieael. 1. ii. 482. 483. ' 



GkAT. n. Ajfc Tii-nt. THE ICARONITES. ^^ 

wUIe the other Christian communities of Syria bad each its political 
attachment — ^the Jacobites being connected with the Mahometan 
oonquerors, and the Catholics (or Melchites) with the emperor — 
fhe Maronites preserved their independence together with their 
peculiar doctrines, under the successors of Maron, who styled them- 
aelTes patriarchs of Antioch. Thus the community continued until, 
in the age of the Crusades (a.d. 1182), they submitted to the 
Latin patriarch of Antioch, and conformed to the Roman church,^ 
whidi in later times has been indebted to the Maronites for many 
learned men.^ 

' Tliej were then aboat 40,000 in from the charge of Monothelism. Bat 

nomber. WiD. Tyr. xxii. 8 (Patrol. Pagi (xi. 311-3, 602-4; xii. 77; xviii. 

ed.) ; Gibbon, iy. 3S3-5; Wilkins, III. 211-2) is said to be the only consider- 

iL 204. able non-Maronite authority among the 

' Of these the Assemanni are the Romanbts who takes this view. See 

aioft iknuras. They and other Maro- Walch, ix. 476 ; Schrockh, xx. 454-6 ; 

oitet attempt to clear their ancestors Dollinger, L 163. 



( 60 ) Book III. 



CHAPTER III. 

THE WESTERN CHURCH FROM THE DEATH OF GREGORY THE GREAT 
TO THE PONTinCATE OF GREGORY THE SECOND. 

A.D. 604-715. 

I. The relations of the papacy with the empire during the period 
between the first and the second Gregories may in some degree be 
understood from the foregoing chapter. 

The Monothelite controversy for a time weakened the influence 
of Rome, both through the error of Honorius in favouring the 
heretical party and through the collisions between the papacy and 
the imperial power. But although Martin suffered severely in 
person for his proceedings in the Council of Lateran, these pro- 
ceedings — the assembling of such a synod without the emperor's 
sanction, and the bold condemnation of his ecclesiastical measures 
— ^remained as important steps in the advance of the papal claims ; 
and in no long time the authority of the Roman name was re- 
established by the sixth general council.* At that council the tide 
of Ecumenical or Universal Bishop^ which Gregory had not only 
denounced in others but rejected for himself, was ascribed to 
Agatho by his representatives,^ and the bishops of Rome thence- 
forth usually assumed it^ 

Agatho obtained from Constantine Pogonatus an abatement of 
the sum payable to the emperor on the appointment of a pope ; ** 
and the same emperor granted to Benedict II. that, in order to 
guard against a repetition of the inconveniences which had been 
felt from the necessity of waiting for the imperial confirmation, 
the pope should be consecrated immediately after his election.' 
Yet the confirmation by the secular power still remained necessary 
for the possession of St Peter's chair/ and disputed elections gave 
the exarchs of Ravenna ample opportunities of interfering in the 
estabUshment of the Roman bishops ; ^ if indeed the meaning of 

" Walch, ix. 292 ; Giesel. I. ii. 487. stasius (144) — an expression 'which may 

*> Hard. iii. 1424-6. mean either that the payment was 

c It occurs in the profession of faith lessened or that it was abolished. 

to be made by a bishop according to « lb. 146. 

the * Liber Diumus/ about a.d. 682-5, ' As appears from the Liber Diuruus. 

c. iii. tit. 6 (Patrol, cv.) ; Giesel. I. (See vol. i. p. 550.) Giesel. L ii. 487. 

ii.487. t Milman, ii. 83. 

<> ** Relevata est quantitas/' says Ana- 



Qup. in. Aj). «04*»15. THE PAPACY. 61 

the edict for the immediate consecration of the pope were not that 
the exarch 8 ratification should be sufficient, without the necessity 
of referring the matter to Constantinople.^ 

The political influence of the popes increased in proportion as 
the emperors were obliged by the progress of the Saracens to con- 
centrate their strength for the defence of their eastern dominions, 
and to devolve on the bishops of Rome the care of guarding against 
the Lombards. The popes now possessed some fortresses of their 
own, and from time to time they repaired the walls of Rome.* 
The Italians came to regard them more than the sovereigns of 
Constantinople ; and such incidents as the rising of the soldiery 
against the attempt to carry off Sergius, a similar rising in the 
pontificate of John VI.,^ and the refusal of the Romans to recog- 
nise the authority of Philippicus, are significant tokens of the power 
which the bishops of Rome had acquired in their own city." 

The desolation of the churches of Palestine by the Saracens, 
and the withdrawal of the patriarchs from Antioch and Jerusalem 
to the enjoyment of a titular dignity within the empire, furnished 
the popes with a pretext for a new interference in the affairs of the 
east. A bishop of Joppa had taken it on himself, perhaps with 
the imperial sanction, to fill up some vacant sees. In opposition 
to him, Theodore of Rome commissioned Stephen bishop of Dor 
(whose name has occurred in the history of the Monothelite con- 
troversy) ° to act as his vicar in the Holy Land. The execution 
of the conmiisKon was resisted by the influence of the patriarchs of 
Alexandria and Antioch ; but similar delegations were aftenivards 
given by other popes, although it does not appear with what 
effect** 

The differences between the popes and the court encouraged 
the archbishops of Ravenna to set up pretensions to independence, 
which they rested on the eastern principle that the civil importance 
of their city ei^tled it to such ecclesiastical dignity.^ The claim 
caused considerable difficulty to the popes, but was at length set 
at rest, in 683, by Leo IL, who obtained an imperial order that 
the archbishops should repair to Rome for consecration.^ The 
schism of Istria, which had arisen out of the controversy on the 
Three Articles in the middle of the sixth century,' was, after many 

k Note in Modieim, ii. 83. But see "* Hard. iii. 639, 642, 717 ; Baron. 
Pagi, xii. 40. 643. 13 ; Walch, ix. 214 ; Oiesel. I. ii. 

> Schr6ckh, xix. 513; Giesel. I. ii. 4S7-8 ; Hefele, iii. 207. 

485-6. P Giesel. I. ii. 489. See A^ell. Hist, 

k AJ). 701. Anaitas. 151. Pontiff. Ravenn.— Patrol, cvi. 270, &c. 

> Gietel. I. ii. 488. :^ Agnell. 689 ; Anastas. 145. 

■ Pp. 44, 47. ' See vol. i. p. 531 ; ii. pp. 4, 18. 



62 SPANISH CHURCH. Book III. 

temporary accommodatioDs, finally healed by Sergius in 698.' 
But in l^e Lombard kingdom, although Catholicism was esta- 
blished from the reign of Grimoald (a.d. 662-671), the church 
still remidned independent of Rome, and the entire relations of 
the Lombards with the papacy were not of any cordial or satisfac- 
tory kind.^ 

II. The history of the Spanish Church for a century after its 
abjuration of Arianism consists chiefly in the records of its synods. 
These assemblies did not confine themselves to the matters of 
ecclesiastical regulation, but also took an active concern in the 
afiairs of state.*^ As the sovereignty was elective, the voice of the 
bishops was mfluential in the choice of kings.; and the kings, who, 
from the time of Recared, were solemnly crowned by the chief 
pastors of the church,* were naturally desirous to fortify their 
throne by the support of the clergy. Hence the bishops acquired 
very great politictil importance : they were charged wilii the over- 
sight, not only of the administration of justice, but of the collection 
of taxes/ By this relation between the ecclesiastical and the 
secular powers, the Church became nationalised, and the connexion 
with Rome, in which the Catholic bishops had at first found a 
means of influence and strength, was gradually weakened during 
the lapse of time from the period of the reconciliation." Gregory 
had bestowed the pall on his friend Leander, bishop of Seville, but 
no record is found of its arrival in Spain ; * later bishops of Seville 
do not appear to have applied for it ; ^ and the primacy of Spain 
was transferred by the royal authority from that city to the capital, 
Toledo.'^ 

The most eminent men of the Spanish Church during this time 
were Isidore, bishop of Seville {Hispalensis)^ and Ildefonso, bishop 
of Toledo. Isidore, the brother and successor of Leander, held 
his see from 595 to 636, and was a voluminous writer. His works, 
which are very miscellaneous in character, are little more than 
compilations, and are valuable chiefly for the fragments of earlier 
writings which are preserved in them. But his learning and 

' Anastas. 150; see Pagi, xii. 169; poses that Leander may have died be- 

Giesel. I. ii. 410. fore iU arriyal. I. ii. 495. 

* Giesel. I. ii. 489-490. ^ See as to Isidore, Arevalo^ * Isido- 
"* Schri3ckh, xiz. 451 ^ seqq. riaoa/ i. 22 (Patrol. Izzzi.). 

* Lembke, i. 85. « Giesel. 1. c. There is a fable that a 
f Planck, ii. 263-5 ; Giesel. I. ii. 494. bishop of Seville went into Africa, and 
' Planck, ii. 693, 701 ; Guizot, ii. tamed Mahometan ; and that there- 

331. upon King Chindasointha transferred 

* Greg. Ep. iz. 121. Gieseler sup- the primacy. See Mariana, iv. 218. 



OUF. IIL A j>. 604-716. FRANCE. 63 

gemos were in his own day admired as extraordinary, and his 
bine afterwards became such that in the ninth century his name 
WIS employed to bespeak credit for the great forgery of the De- 
cretals.*^ ndefonsoy who filled the see of Toledo in ^e middle of 
the seYenth century, distinguished himself in asserting the perpetual 
Tirginity of the &i^our's mother. His exertions are said to have 
been rewarded by her appearing in splendour over the altar of his 
cathedral, and presenting him with a magnificent vestment, to be 
worn at the celebration of the Eucharist on her festivals.® 

In the first years of the eighth century, king Witiza forbade 
appeals to Rome, authorised the marriage of the clergy, and ob- 
tained for his measures the sanction of a synod held at a.d. 7oi- 
Toledo in 701 ; and it is said that he threatened such ^^• 
of the clergy as should oppose these measures with death.' This 
prince IB described as a prodigy of impiety, tyranny, and vice ;* 
but it has been shown that the darkness of his reputation appears 
more strongly in later writers than in those who lived near his own 
time ; ^ and it has been conjectured that he may have only meant 
to prevent the recurrence of complaints against the immorality of 
the clergy by reviving the liberty of marriage, which had always 
ensted during the Arian period of the Spanish Church.* But, 
whatever may have been his motives or the detmls of his acts, the 
effects of these were soon brought to an end by the Arab conquest 
of Spain, which dethroned his successor Roderick.^ The 
mountaineers of the north alone retained their indepen- 
dence with their Christianity. The Christians who fell under the 
Mahometan dominion received the same humiliating toleration in 
Spain as elsewhere ; and in their depressed condition they were 
glad once more to look for countenance to the see of Rome. 

UI. In France the disorders of the time tended to lessen the 
connexion of the Church with Rome. Such differences as arose 
were necessarily decided on the spot; and there is hardly any 
trace of intercourse with the papal see between the pontificates of 

* Biariana, iv. 209. See the collec- to it. iii. 326. 

tioD of testimouies in his honour, ' Mariana, i v. 308 ; Baron. 701. 11-2. 

Patrol. Ixxzi. 198-205 ; Izxxii. 65-70. ^ Sec Giesel. I. ii. 495. 

For the pseudo-Iaidorian Decretals, see * lb. 497. The vulgar story repre- 

bdow. Book IV. c. i. s. 4. sents him as having sanctioned a Maho- 

• C^rila, Vita Hdef. 7 (Patrol, xcvi.) ; metan license as to the marriage both 
Mariana, ir. 233-42. of clergy and of laity. Pseudo-Liut- 

' Marimoa,iv.305-tf; Baron. 702. 12; prand,Chron. 174, 181. (Patrol. cxxxvi.) 

Planck, ii. 703. The synod is doubtful. ^ Isid. Paccns. Chrou. Mr. 749 (Pa- 

(SehnJckh, xix. 463.) Hefele takes no trol. xcvi.) ; Pagi, xii. 229 ; Gibbon, v. 

notice of the law as to marriage ascribed 155-7. 



64 FRANCE. Book 111. 

the first and the second Gregories.™ The same troubles which 
led to this efiect caused a general decay of discipline both among 
the clergy and in the monasteries." When men of the conquering 
race began to seek after the emoluments and dignities of the 
Church — a change which is marked by the substitution of Teutonic 
for Roman names in lists of bishops from the seventh century ** — 
they brought much of their rudeness with them, and canons against 
hunting and fighting prelates began to be necessary.^ 

At the same time the wealth and temporal influence by which 
such persons were attracted into the ranks of the clergy were con- 
tinually on the increase. Vast gifts of land and of money were 
bestowed by princes on churches and monasteries, sometimes from 
pious feeling, sometimes by way of compromise for the indulgence 
A.D. 628- of their vicious passions. Thus Dagobert, the last Mero- 
638. vingian who possessed any energy of character, by the 

advice of St Eligius, his master of the mint, enlarged a little 
chapel of St Denys, near Paris, into a splendid monastery, fur- 
nished it with precious ornaments, the work of the pious goldsmith, 
and endowed it with large estates, which were partly derived from 
the spoil of other, religious houses.^ This prince, " like Solomon," 
says Fredegar, " had three wives and a midtitude of concubines ; " 
and the chronicler seems to consider it as a question whether his 
liberality to the church were or were not sufficient to cover his 
sins.' Another writer, however, not only speaks without any 
doubt on the subject, but professes to give conclusive information 
as to the fate of Dagobert A hermit on an island in the Medi- 
terranean, it is said, was warned in a vision to pray for the Frankish 
king's soul. He then saw Dagobert in chains, hurried along by 
a troop of fiends, who were about to cast him into a volcano, when 
his cries to St Denys, St. Michael, and St. Martin, brought to 
his assistance three venerable and glorious persons, who drove off 
the devils, and, with songs of triumph, conveyed the rescued soul 
to Abraham's bosom.' 

On the re-union of the monarchy under Dagobert's father, 
Clotsure II., the bishops were summoned to an assembly of the 

■ Gaizot, ii. 167. ■ G^sta Dagob. (cc 23, 44). Baronins 

■ Pagi, xi. 576 ; Giesel. I. ii. 49?. (647. 5) maintains the truth of this 
® Pitra, Vie de S. L^ger, 150. story, which is represented on the 
p Ozanam, Civ. Chr^t chez les Francs, beautiful monument of Dagobert, erected 

89. at St. Denys by St. Louis. Pan dis- 

•» Gesta Dagoberti, 17 (Patrol, xcvi.). believes the legend, but says that Dago- 

' *'^ Seems," I must say ; for the |>as- bert repented Jbetimes, and liTed many 

sage is beyond my power of construmg. years in piety. This, boweTer, seems 

Fredeg. Chron. c. 60 (Patrol. Ixxi.). very questionable. 



CtoAP.ni. Ao^. 604-716. LEODEGAR 65 

leudesj and seventy-nine of them appeared at it. The laws passed 
by ihe joint consent of the spiritual and temporal aristocracies 
8how traces of ecclesiastical influence, not only in the 
increase of clerical privileges, but in the humane spirit 
which pervades them.* From that time bishops appear mixing 
deeply in political strife. Saints become conspicuous objects of 
general interest." The severity of their lives acquires for them 
reverence and power, but this power is exercised in the rude con- 
tentions of the aga One of the most famous of these saints, 
Leodegar (or Leger), bishop of Autun, may be mentioned by way 
of example.* Leodegar was sprung from or connected with the 
"most powerful families of the Frankish nobility. He acquired 
great credit with Bathildis, the saintly Anglo-Saxon, who rose 
from the condition of a captive to be queen of Clovis II. 

AD 670 

and regent of Neustria, and by her he was promoted 
from the abbacy of St. Maixent to the see of Autun.^ He is cele- 
brated for the austerity of his life, for his frequency in prayer, for . 
bis eloquence as a preacher, for his bounty to the poor and to his 
church, and for his vigilant administration of his episcopal office.* 
But he appears as the political chief of a powerful party of nobles ; 
he takes the lead in setting up and in dethroning kings ; and, if he 
did not actually bear the title of Mayor of the Palace, he for a time 
exercised the power of the mayoralty in the Neustro-Burgundian 
kingdom. After various turns of fortune, Leodegar fell into the 
hands of his rival Ebroin, who caused his eyes to be put out — an 
operation which he bore with perfect calmness, singing psalms 
during the execution of it* Two years later, by order of Ebroin, 
he was exposed to tortures, his lips were cut off^, his tongue was 
cut out, and he was dragged over sharp stones with such violence, 
that for a time he was unable to stand. Notwithstanding the loss 
of his organs of speech, however^ the bishop was able to speak as 
well as ever.^ His sufferings and his merits excited a general 
enthusiasm in bis favour, and Ebroin, in -alarm, resolved on his 
death. A great council of bishops was summoned, and Leodegar 
was accused before it of having been concerned in the death of 
Childeric II. — a prince who had owed his throne to huu, but h^d 
afterwards imprisoned him in the monastery of Luxeuil, and, during 

« Michelet, i. 364 ; Giesel. L ii. 447. ' Vita Bathild. (Patrol. Ixxxvii.) ; 

• SUmondi, ii. 56-8. Ursin. 1 ; Pitra, 109, 244. • 

' See the old Liyes, by Ureinus and ■ Vita Anon. 1. 
another. Patrol xcvi. ; also * Vie de • lb. 10. 
8. L^/ by Dom Pitra, Paris, 1846; ^ lb. 13; Pitra, 341. 
and MilmaD, ii. 158, seqq. 



66 IRISH CHURCH. . Book III. 

Leodegar*s confinement, had been put to death by the party with 
which the bishop was connected.^ He finnly denied the charge, 
and referred to God as his witness.** But his guilt was considered as 
certain ; his robe was rent, in token of degradation from his 
order ; and, although a bright light appeared around his 
head in attestation of his innocence and sanctity, he was beheaded 
by order of Ebroin.® Leodegar was revered as a martyr, and is 
said to have performed innumerable miracles after death. Yet 
among his opponents also were some who are ranked in the 
number of swnts — such as Audoen (or Ouen), bishop of Rouen, 
the friend and biographer of St. Eligius, Praejectus (Prix) of 
Clermont, and Agilbert of Paris. Ouen's part in the struggle is 
celebrated for the short and significant answer which he gave 
when consulted by Ebroin — "Remember Fredegund,"' — words 
which may have been intended only to recommend the imitation 
of that fiimoiis queen's readiness and decision, but which we can 
. hardly read without thinking also of the unscrupulous wickedness 
by which her purposes were accomplished. 

IV. The Irish Church, from which Columba had gone forth to 
labour in Scotland, and Columban in Gaul and Italy, was in these 
ages fruitful in missionaries^ of whom many further notices will 
occur hereafter. But its internal history, however full of interest 
for the antiquarian inquirer, ofiers little that can find a place in 
such a narrative as this. It will be enough to mention here cer- 
tain peculiarities of administration which not only throw light on 
the condition of the Irish Church, but serve also to explain the 
"unusual arrangement " ^ of St Columba's foundation at lona, 
and to account both for the commonness of the episcopal title 
among the Irish missionary clergy, and for the irregular diaracter 
of their proceedings. 

In the early Irish Church it was held that the power of ordina- 
tion belonged to the bishops alone ; but the episcopate was merely 
a personal distinction, which conveyed no right of local jurisdiction.** 
The number of bishops was unlimited,* and, like the chorepiscopi 

« Sismondi, ii. 68-9. f Beda, iii. 4. See vol. i. p. 543. 

•• Vita, 14 ; Pitra, 378. »» For the substance of this paragraph 

« Vita, 14-5. In the account of his I am indebted to the Rev. K. King's 

death, Pitra chiefly follows a very legend- * Memoir Introductory to the Early His- 

ary " Passion.*' Rohrbache/even exceeds tory of the Primacy of Armagh ;' Ar- 

his usual absurdity of manner in an magh, 1854. Comp. Ware, 'Antiq. of 

attack on Sismondi for some inaccura- IreUind,' 232-6. 

cies as to this saint, x. 327. * Bernard. Vita S. Malachis, 19 

' Gesta Regum Franc. 45 (Patrol. (Patrol, clxxxii.) ; Kinv^s Primer, 985-6. 
xcvi.). 



CiULP.UI. A.D.604-»15. ENGLAND. 67 

of other countries, they were consecrated by a single bishop.^ The 
position of Irish bishops, therefore, was widely different, both in 
spiritual and in temporal respects, from that of bishops elsewhere. 
The care of the ecclesiastical property was from early times com- 
mitted to officers who were styled Erenachs ; and, by a remarkable 
variation from the usual order of the Church, the spiritual govern- 
ment was exercised by a class of persons who, as having succeeded 
to the churches of eminent early missionaries, were styled their 
Coarbs or successors.™ These coarbs occupied positions which had 
originally been held by abbots; and while some of them were 
bishops, they more commonly belonged to the order of presbyters. 
The office of erenach was not transmitted from father to son, but 
according to the system of tanistry — a tanist, or successor, being 
chosen during the lifetime of each holder." The dignity of coarb 
was not originally restricted to particular families ; but from the 
tenth century it seems to have become for the most part hereditary 
— passing from a deceased, possessor to his brother, his nephew, or 
(as the marriage of the clergy was usual in the Irish Church) to 
his son." The erenachs were oripnally taken from the ranks of 
the clergy, but the office gradually fell into the hands of laymen ; ^ 
and at length — ^probably in consequence of the Danish invasions 
in the tenth century, when the power of defending the Church's 
possessions became a chief qualification for ecclesiastical govern- 
ment — ^the laity were even admitted to the office of coarbs ; so 
that, according to a complaint of St Bernard, the church of 
Armagh was held by eight laymen in succession.^ 

V. The early history of Christianity in the various Anglo-Saxon 
kingdoms is marked by much similarity of circumstances. Mis- 
sionaries meet with a friendly reception: the king, after some 
prudent hesitation, becomes a convert, but his successors relapse 
into heathenism ; until, after a time, the throne is filled by a prince 
who had learnt the truths of the Gospel in exile, and the profession 
of the fsiith is restored. Matrimonial alliances exercise the same 

^ LAnfraDC, Ep. 38 (Patrol. c1.) ; King informs me that until about the 

Anaelm. Cantuar. £pp. iii. 1 A2, 147 (ib. year 1000 the title Coarb is never used, 

clix.) ; Job. Tinmuth. in King, Primer, except in connexion with the name of a 

1007. Lanigan supposes that there was person {e. g, "Coarb of Patrick"); 

an order of bishops consecrated in afterwards it is sometimes, although 

the caDonical manner, and that besides seldom, connected with the name of a 

these there was an order of chorepiscopi place {e, g. ** Coarb of Armagh"). 

consecrated by one bishop. But ^]r. " King, Mem. 19. 

King shows tluit there is no ground for ° Ib. 21. 

this. (Memoir, 9-11.) p lb. 26. 

" Kuie, Memoir, Preface, and pp. i Ib. 22-3; Bern. ViU Malach. 19. 

6, 17. Comp. Lanigan, iv. 80-6. Mr. See below, Book V. c. xi. 6. 

f2 



68 ENGLISH CHURCH. R^k "1- 

influence in the spreading of religion which had before been seen 
among the barbarian conquerors of Gaul, Spain, and Italy. Among 
the evidences by which the Gospel was recommended, we find 
frequent mention of miracles, and not uncommonly the argument 
from temporal interest — the experience of the fruitlessness of 
serving the pagan deities, and the inference that they had no 
power to help or to punish.' 

In the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons two rival agencies were 
concerned — that of the Irish or Scottish, and that of the Roman 
party." Some of the difiFerences as to usage between the Roman 
missionaries and the native clergy have already been mentioned — 
among them, the variation as to the time of Easter, produced by 
the adhesion of the Britons to a cycle which at Rome had long been 
obsolete.* Another subject of contention was the form of the tonsure. 
It was not until monachism became popular that any tonsure was 
introduced ; nor was it common among the western clergy until 
the sixth century." But a far earlier prigin was now claimed for 
the fashions which contended in Britain. The Romans, who shaved 
the crown of the head, in imitation of the crown of thorns, deduced 
their practice from St Peter ; * while that of the Scots and Irish, 
who shaved the front as far as the ears, in the form of a crescent, 
was traced by its opponents to Simon Magus — a derivation which 
the Scots appear not to have disputed, contenting themselves with 
insisting on the virtues of some who had used theur tonsure.^ The 
degree in which the Irish were affected by these differences may be 
inferred from the statement of Laurence, the successor of Augustine, 
that an Irish bishop named Dagan refused, when in England, to 
partake of food with the Italian clergy, and even to eat under the 
same roof with them.* Honorius and other bishops of Rome 
endeavoured to allay these differences by writing to the bishops of 
the national party.* They succeeded in gaining the Irish,*" and 

» For instance, the 8i>eech of the iii. 69 ; ViUanueva, n. in S. Patric. 

Northumbrian priest Coifi (Beda, ii. 34-8. Mabillon says that the Scottish 

13). The argument, however, might tonsure was ascribed to Simon because 

be turned against Christianity also ; it was *• qualis Simoni Mago aliisque 

thus the East Saxons apostatised during hominibus calvis sponte nascitur." (iii. 

a pestilence. Beda, iii. 30. prsef. p. ix.) The authority for the 

* On the shortcomings of the Romans sorcerer's baldness is not cited. A 
in their missionary work, see Hook, i. more probable explanation is given by 
113-120. Thomassin (I. ii. 28. U) and Smith, 

* Vol. i. p. 644; vol. ii. p. 20. See the editor of Bede (Patrol, xcv. 331), 
Smith's Dissertation in Patrol, xcv. —that the objectionable tonsuro was re- 
317, seqq. ferred to Simon as havinff been, accord- 

" Thomassin, I. ii. 27. 13-14 ; Smith, ing both to Scripture and to legend, the 

1. c. 328-9. adversary of St. Peter. Sec vol. i. p. 4 1 . 

« Greg. Tnron. de Miraculis, i. 28. « Beda, ii. 4. 

y Ceolfrid, Ep. lid Naitan. ap. Bed. • lb. 19. 

V. 21 ; Lingard, A. S. C. i. 54 ; I^nigan, «» The Roman Easter wa« received in 



QiAr.Uf. Aa».604-63S. SCOTTISH MISSIONARIES. 69 

even some of the Britons ; but the Scots continued obstinately to 
bold out 

Paulinus, the first archbishop of York, had, after the defeat and 
death of his convert Edwin of Northumbria, withdrawn to 
the bishoprick of Rochester, while the northern kingdom 
fell back into idolatry/ Oswald, who in 635 ascended the North- 
umlxian throne, had been converted while an exile in Scotland, 
and, in undertaking the convermon of his subjects, naturally looked 
to the same Church through which he had himself received his 
knowledge of the Gospel.^ At his request a bishop was sent from 
lona ; but the missionary was a man of stem character, and, after 
a short trial, withdrew in anger and despair at the obstinacy of 
the Northumbrians. The fathers of lona® met in consultation, 
and he indignantly related to them the failure of his enterprise ; 
when, after he had finished, one of the monks, in a gentle tone of 
voice, told him that he had proceeded wrongly, and ought rather 
to have condescended to the rudeness and ignorance of those to 
whom he had been sent. Immediately the brethren exclaimed 
that the speaker, Aidan, was right ; that the method which he 
had suggested was the true one, and that he was himself the fittest 
person to execute it' He was forthwith consecrated as a bishop,* 
and was recommended to Oswald, who assigned the island of Lin- 
disfame for his residence. Here Aidan established a system 
closely resembling that of lona ; the bishops, with their stafi^ of 
clergy, living according to monastic rule, in a community governed 
by an abbot.** Oswald zealously assisted his labours in spreading 
the Gospel ; and, as Aidan was but imperfectly acquainted with 
the language ^f the country, the king himself, who had learnt the 

the south of Ireland about a.d. 633 ; xcW.) ; Hist. Eccles. !▼. 27. See vol. i* 

but the northern Irish held out longer, p. 543. Dr. Ijingard speaks of the 

Beda, in. 3 ; Lanigan, ii. 389 ; Reeves, system of Lindisfame as identical with 

n. on Adamnan, p. 27. Archbishop thatof lona(A. S.C. i. 154) ;butaccord- 

Ussher has published a letter from an ing to Mr. Grub there was '* this im- 

Irish monk named Cummian to Segenus, portant difference, that at Lindisfame 

abbot of lona, a.d. 634, in defence the abbot, who presided oyer the monas- 

of the change. Appendix to * Religion stery, occupied his proper place in sub- 

of Ancient Irish, in Works, iv. 432- ordination to the bishop." (i. 77.) Mr. 

443. Grub's own quotations from Bede, 

« Beda, ii. iO. however, seem to prove that, while the 

* lb. iii. 3. monks were under the bishop's spiritual 

* See Grub, i. 76. care, the abbot was supreme in the 
' Beda, iii. 5. government of the monastery — the 
' Against the extravagant assump- bishop being in this respect under him. 

tioD of Presbyterian writers that Aidan The real difference appears to have 
received his episcopal consecration from been that the bishops of Lindisfame 
presbyters (Cunningham, i. 81-3), see had diocesan authoritpr, which the Scot- 
Grub, i. 153-6. tish bishops of that time (like the Irish) 
^ Beda, Vita S. Cuthb. 16 (Patrol, had not. 



70 SCOTTISH MISSIONARIES IN ENGLAND. Book 111. 

Celtic during his exile, often acted as interpreter while the bishop 
delivered his religious instructions.* 

Aidan's settlement at lindisfame was followed by a large immi- 
gration of Scottish missionaries into England. Bede — Roman as 
he is in his affections, and strongly opposed to their peculiarities — 
bears hearty witness to the virtues of these northern clergy — their 
zeal, their gentleness, their humility and simplicity, their earnest 
study of Scripture, their freedom from all selfishness and avarice, 
their honest boldness m dealing with the great, their tenderness 
and charity towards the poor, their strict and self-denying life.^ 
" Hence," he writes, with an implied allusion to the degeneracy of 
his own time, " in those days the religious habit was held in great 
reverence, so that wheresoever any dork or monk appeared, he was 
joyfully received by all as the servant of God ; even if he were met 
with on his journey the people ran to him, and, with bended neck, 
were glad to be either signed with his hand or blessed by his 
mouth ; and they diligently gave ear to his words of exhortation. 
And if perchance a priest came to any village, forthwith the 
inhabitants gathered together, and were careful to seek from him 
the word of life." " Of Aidan himself the historian says that he 
thoroughly endeavoured to practise all that he knew of Christian 
duty ; and that, even as to the paschal question, while he erred 
in differing from the Catholics, he earnestly studied to unite with 
them in celebrating the great facts of our redemption through the 
passion, resurrection, and ascension of the Saviour." Aidan's suc- 
cessors were of like character. By them Christianity was not only 
spread over Northumbria; but other kingdoms, as Mercia and 
Essex, even to the northern bank of the Thames, w^re evangelised 
by missionaries who derived their orders immediately or more 
remotely from St. Golumba's foundation at lona.** 

But collisions with the Roman party were inevitable. Oswy, 
the brother and successor of Oswald, who had learnt his Chris- 
tianity and had been baptised in Scotland, married a Kentish 
princess, Eanfleda. The royal pair adhered to the customs of 
their respective teachers ; and thus, while Oswy was celebrating 
the Easter festival, the queen was still engaged in the penitential 
exercises of Lenti" The king's eldest son and colleague, Alfrid, 
strongly took up the Roman views, and expelled the Scottish 

> Heda, iii. 3. priestly domination was carried among 

** ill. 2, 4, 17, 26. the Anglo-Saxons ! i. 55. 

" iii. 2(i. See Wordsworth, Eccles. " Beda, iii. 17. 

Sonnets, pt i. 19. Hume refers to the " lb. 21, 22, 24. 

passage as showing the height to which p lb. 25. 



Our. III. Aj».e36-664. CONFERENCE AT WHITBY. 71 

monks fipom a monastery at Ripon in order to substitute Roman- 
ises, under Wilfrid, a priest of Northumbrian birth, who, having 
become discontented with the customs of Lindisfame, had been 
sent by Eanfleda's patronage to Rome, and had returned to his 
native country with a zealous desire to propagate the 
usages of the Roman Church.^ The paschal question ^'^' ^^' 
was discussed in a conference at Streaneshalch (Whitby), in the 
presence of Oswy and his son. Ou the part of the Scots appeared 
Colman of Lindisfame, with Cedd, a Northumbrian, who had been 
consecrated as bishop by Aidan's successor Finan, and had eft'ected 
a second conversion of Essex ; ' and they were strengthened by the 
countenance of the royal and saintly abbess Hilda, in whose 
monastery the conference was held. On the other side stood 
Agilbert, a native of France, who had studied in Ireland, and 
had held the see of Dorchester in Wessex," with Wilfrid, whom 
the bishop, on the plea of his own inability to speak the language 
of the country fluently, put forward as the champion of Rome. 
Wilfrid argued from the custom of that Church in which St. Peter 
and St Paul had lived and taught, had suffered and had been 
buried. St John, to whom the other party traced its practice,* 
had, he said, observed it from a wish to avoid offence to the Jews ; 
but the churches which that Apostle had governed had, since the 
Council of Nicsea, conformed to the Roman usage ; and neither 
St John, nor even the founder of lona, if alive, would maintain, 
in opposition to Rome, a practice which was observed only by a 
handful of infflgnificant persons in a remote comer of the earth. 
On Wilfrid's quoting our Lord's promise to bestow on St. Peter 
*' the keys of the kingdom of heaven," Oswy asked Colman whether 
these words had really been spoken to the Apostle. The bishop 
assented, and owned, in answer to a further question, that he could 
not produce any such grant of authority to St Columba. ^* I tell 
you then," said the king, " that Peter is the doorkeeper whom I 
will not gainsay, lest percliance, if I make him my enemy by dis- 
regarding his statutes, there should be no one to open the door of 
heaven to me."" The Roman party was victorious, and, while 

•» lb. 25 : V. 1 9 ; Life of Wilfrid, by mistake to identify the Scottish practice 

Eddi, 2-7, in Gale, Hist. Brit Veteres, i. with that of the Quartodedmans. See 

Wilfrid was born in 634. Eadmcr, vol. i. p. .^44. 

Vita Wilf. 4. (Patrol, clix.) For his first " Beda, iii. 25. Archdeacon Churton 

journey to Rome, see Pagi, xi. 514-5. (p. 78) and Mr. Martineau (p. 80) 

r Beda, iii. 22. speak of these words as a jest, and sup- 

• lb. 7. He had resigned it in 661. pose that the council assented to them 
Note in Godwin, De Praisulibus, 279. as such. But there is no ground for 

* It was, however, as we have seen, a this, except the wish of the writers to 



72 WILFRID. Book HI. 

some of the Scots conformed, Colman and others withdrew to their 
own country.* 

The bishoprick thus vacated was bestowed on Tuda, who had 
been already consecrated in the southern part of Ireland, where 
the Roman usages were established;^ and when Tuda, in less 
than a year, was carried ofiF by a pestilence,* Wilfrid was appointed 
to succeed him. But the zealous champion of Roman customs 
chose to take his title from York, which Gregory the Great had 
marked out as the seat of an archbishop,* rather than from the 
Scottish foundation of lindisfame ; and as the bishops of England 
were all more or less tainted by a connexion with Scottish or Irish 
orders, he was not content to receive his consecration at their 
hands. He therefore passed into France, where he was conse- 
crated, with great pomp, by Agilbert, now bishop of Paris,** and 
twelve other prelates.*' On his return to England, the vessel in 
which he was embarked was stranded on the coast of Sussex. The 
savage and heathen inhabitants rushed down to plunder it, headed 
by a priest, who, *' like another Balaam," ^ stood on a rising ground 
uttering spells and curses. But the priest was killed by a stone 
from a sling ; the crew repelled three attacks, and, as the as- 
siulants were preparing for a fourth, the returning tide heaved oflF 
the vessel, which then made its way prosperously to Sandwich. 
Wilfrid now found that his scruples as to ordination had cost him 
dear ; for, during his absence, the Northumbrian king had bestowed 
the bishoprick on Ceadda (or Chad), who. had been consecrated in 
England, and had entered on his see. He, therefore, retired to 
his monastery of Ripon, where he remained for some years, except 
when invited to perform episcopal functions in a vacant or unpro- 
vided diocese.® 

In the year 664 (the same year in which the conference took 
place at Whitby) a great plague carried oflF the first native arch- 
bishop of Canterbury, Frithona, who, on his elevation to the see, 
had assumed the name of Adeodatus or Deusdedit^ The kings of 
Northumbria and Kent agreed to send a presbyter named Wighard 
to Rome for consecration to the primacy ; but Wighard died there, 
and pope Vitalian, apparently in compliance with a request from 

save the king's character for theoloprical ^ Agilbert has ah-eady been mentioned 

argument, while they leave his decision in this character, p. 66. See Pagi, xi. 

and that of the assembly without a 640; Hussey, u. in B^. p. 167. 

»potive. c Eddi, 12 ; Beda, iii. 28; iv. 19. 

' Beda, iii. 26-8. «» Eddi, 13. 

y lb. 26. e lb. 14. 

' lb. 27. t Beda, iv. 1 ; Godwin, 40. 

• See p. 19. 



Qur.m. AJ». 664-9. THEODORE OF CANTERBURY. 73 

die kings, chose Theodore, a native of Tarsus, to take his place.^ 
Theodore was ah-eady sixty-six years of age. He was of eminent 
repute for learning ; but his oriental birth suggested some sus- 
picions,^ and he was not consecrated until, by allowing 
his hmr to grow for four months, he had qualified him- 
self for receiving the Latin tonsure instead of the Greek.* Theo- 
dore arrived in England in 669, and held his see for twenty-one 
years, with the title and jurisdiction of Archbishop of all England ; 
for York had had no archbishop since Paulinus. Under Theodore 
the churches of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms, which until then had 
been independent of each other, were for the first time united ; 
and in other respects his primacy is memorable in the history of 
the English church. The resort of English students to the monas- 
teries of Ireland, as seminaries superior to any that could be found 
in their own country,^ was now checked by the establishment of 
schools, in which the learning and the science of the age were 
taught, and it is said that not only Latin, but the Greek primate's 
native tongue, was spoken as fluently as English."* To Theodore 
has also been ascribed the division of the country into parishes ; 
and although this idea is now generally abandoned, it seems to 
be admitted that he may have paved the way for the parochial 
division by introducing the right of patronage, which had been 
established in his native church by Justinian." 

The archbishop visited every part of the country. On reaching 
Northumbria, he inquired into the case of Chad, and disallowed 
his consecration — partly, it would seem, because it was not derived 
from a purely Roman source, and partly on account of Wilfrid's 
prior claims to the see. The bishop meekly replied, *'If you 
judge that I have not received the episcopate rightly, I willingly 
retire from my office, of which, indeed, I never thought myself 
worthy, but which, although unworthy, I agreed to undertake for 
the sake of obedience to command." Theodore was 
struck with this humility ; he reordained him through 
all the grades of the ministry ; and, while Wilfrid took possession 
of the Northumbrian diocese, Chad, after a short retirement in 
the monastery of Lastingham, was appointed by the king of 

i Beda, iii. 29 ; iv. I ; Milman, ii. 30. the whole head. Thomassin, I. ii. 28. 

* The more naturaUy, as the visit of 10-11 ; Martene, ii. 15. 
Constans to Rome (p. 50) had taken ^ Beda, iii. 27. 
place shortly before. Hook, i. 148. » lb. iv. 2. 

• The Greek tonsure, which was re- "See vol. i. p. 554 ; Collier, i. 262 ; 
lerred to St Paul as its author, consisted Inett. i. 154 ; Lappenb. i. 190. 

in shaving (or rather in closely clipping) 



74 WILFRID. Book III. 

Mercia, on the archbishop's recommendation, to the see of Lich- 
field.o 

Gregory's scheme for the ecclesiastical organisation of England 
had never taken effect. The bishopricks had originally been of 
the same extent with the kingdoms, except that in Kent there was 
a second see at Rochester.^ Theodore was desirous of increasing 
the episcopate, and, in a council at Hertford, in 673, proposed a 
division of the dioceses ; but, probably from fear of opposition, he 
did not press the matter.** ISoon after this council, Wilfrid again 
fell into trouble. Egfrid, the son and successor of Oswy, was 
offended because the bishop, instead of aiding him to overcome 
the inclination of his first queen for a life of virginity, had encou- 
raged her in it, and had given her the veil ; and the king was 
further provoked by the suggestions of his second queen, who invi- 
diously dwelt on Wilfrid's wealth, his influence, and the splendour 
of his state.' The primate lent himself to the royal schemes, and 
not only disregarded the rights of Wilfrid, by erecting the sees of 
Hexham and Sidnacester (near Gainsborough) within his diocese, 
but superseded him by consecrating a bishop for York 
itself, as well as bishops for the two new dioceses which 
had been separated from if Wilfrid determined to seek redress 
from Rome. A storm, which carried him to the coast of Friesland, 
saved him from the plots which, through Egfrid's influence, had 
been laid for detaining him in France ; ^ and he remained for some 
time in Frisia, where his labours were rewarded by the conversion 
of the king, Aldgis, with most of the chiefe and some thousands of 
the people. On his arrival at Rome, in 679, his case was investi- 
Oct. 679. gated by pope Agatho, with a council of fifty bishops. It 

(Jaffe.) ^j^g decided that, if has diocese were divided, the new 
sees should be filled with persons of his own choosing, and that 
those who had been intruded into them sliould be expelled ; " and 
Wilfrid was invited to take a place in the council against the 
Monothelites, where he signed the acts as representative of the 
whole church of Britain.* 

The Roman Council had denounced heavy penalties against all 
who should contravene its decisions; kings, in particular, were 

«» Beda, iv. 2-3. « YAd\, 25-6. 

p See Lingard, A. S. C. i. 86; Lap- • WiUiins, i. 44-7; Eddi, 29-31. For 

pt'uberg, i. 183. documents relating to Wilfrid, see Pa- 

<i Wilkins, i. 43 ; Inett, i. 96 ; Lin- trol. Ixxxix. 46, seqq. 
gard, A. S. C. i. 132-3. « Hard. iii. 1131. See Pagi, xi, 628 ; 

' Beda, iv. 19 ; Eddi, 23; Inett, i. 89. Collier, i. 248 ; Inett, i. 99 ; Hefele, iii. 

' Beda, iv. 12 and notes ; Eddi, 23 ; 229 ; and p. 50 of this yolome. 
SCO Johnson, i. 118. 



Cbap.IIL a j>. 6^3-702. WILFRID. 75 

threatened with excommunication. But Egfrid, instead of submit- 
ting, imprisoned Wilfrid on his return from Italy, and only offered 
to release him, and to restore him to a part of bis old diocese, on 
condition of his renouncing the papal statutes. The imprisonment 
lasted nine months, at the end of which Wilfrid was set at liberty 
through the influence of the queen, who had been smitten widi 
dangerous illness for possessing herself of his reliquary.^ He now 
sought a field of labour at a distance from his persecutors — the 
kingdom of Sussex, the scene of his perilous adventure in returning 
from France many years before. Until this time the only Chris- 
tian teachers who had appeared in Sussex were six poor Irish 
monks, who had a little monastery at Bosham, but made no pro- 
gress in converting the inhabitants. The king, however, Ethel- 
walch, had lately been baptised in Mercia, and gladly patronised 
the new preacher of the Gospel. The people of Sussex were in- 
debted to Wilfrid for the knowledge of fishing and other useful 
arts, as well as of Christianity. He established a bishoprick at 
Selsey, and extended his labours to the Isle of Wight and into the 
kingdom of Wessex." 

Theodore, at the age of eighty-eight, feeling the approach of 
death, began to repent of the part which he had taken against 
Wilfrid. He sent for him, begged his forgiveness, re- 
conciled him with Aldfrid,* the new king of North- 
umbria, and urged him to accept the succession to the primacy. 
Wilfrid professed a wish to leave the question of the primacy to 
a council ; but he recovered the sees of York and Hexham, with 
the monastery of Ripon.^ The archbishop died in the same year, 
and was succeeded by Berctwald ; and after a time Wilfrid was 
again ejected for refiising to consent to certain statutes which had 
been enacted by the late primate. He withdrew into Mercia, 
where he remained until, in 702, he was summoned to appear 
before a synod at Onestrefield, in Yorkshire. On being required 
by this assembly to renounce his episcopal office, and to content 
himself with the monastery of Ripon, the old man indignantly 
declared that he would not abandon a dignity to which he had 
been appointed forty years before. He recounted his merits 
towards the Church — saying nothing of his zealous labours for the 
spreading of the Gospel, of his encouragement of letters, or of the 
stately churches which he had erected, but insisting on his oppo- 

^ Eddi, 33-8. yiously mentioned. MabiU. y. 702. 

' Beda, iv. 13, 16; v. 19; Eddi, 40-1. *» Eddi, 41-2. 
■ A different person from AlfHd pre- 



76 WILFRID. Book III. 

sition to the Scottish usages, on his introduction of the Latin chant, 
and of the Benedictine rule ; and again he repaired to Rome, while 
his partisans in England were put under a sort of excommunica- 
tioa® The Pope, John VI., was naturally inclined to favour one 
whose troubles had arisen from a refusal to obey the decrees of 
Theodore except in so far as they were consistent with those of 
the Apostolic see. And when, at Easter 704, the acts of Pope 
Agatho's sjmod against the Monothelites were publicly read, the 
occurrence of Wilfrid's name among the signatures, with the coin- 
cidence of his being then again at Borne, as a suitor for aid against 
oppression, raised a general enthusiasm in his favour.^ He would 
have wished to end his days at Rome, but by the desire of 
John VIL, whose election he had witnessed, he returned to 
England, carrying with him a papal recommendation addressed to 
Ethelred of Mercia and Aldfrid of Northumbria.® The primate, 
Berctwald, received him kindly ; but Aldfrid set at nought the 
pope's letter, until on his deathbed he relented, and the testimony 
of his sister as to his last wishes procured for Wilfrid a restoration 
to the see of Hexham, although it does not appear that he ever 
recovered the rest of his original diocese. In 709 Wilfrid closed 
his active and troubled life at the monastery of Oundle.' 

The Roman customs as to Easter and the tonsure gradually 
made their way throughout the British Isles. In 710 they were 
adopted by the southern Picts, in consequence of a letter addressed 
to King Naitan (or Nectan) by Ceolfrid, abbot of Jarrow.* It 
was in vain that Adamnan, abbot of lona, who had been converted 
to the Roman usages in Northumbria, attempted, ip the last years 
of the seventh century, to introduce them into his monastery ; ** but 
he was more successful among his own countrymen, the northern 
Irish, who at his instance abandoned their ancient practice about 
697 ;* and at length, in 716, Egbert, an English monk who had 
received his education in Ireland,^ induced the monks of St. Co- 
lumba to celebrate the Catholic Easter.™ The ancient British 
Church adhered to its paschal calculation until the end of the 
eighth century, but appears to have then conformed to the Roman 

« Eddi, 43-7. "This," says Fuller, • Patrol. Ixxxix. 69. 
"maybe observed in this Wilfrid; his ' Eddi, 54-61: Beda, iv. 20; Pagi, 

irdptpya were better than his fpya, his xii. 201; Lingaro, A. S. C. i- 144. 
casual and occasional were better than t Beda, ▼.21. 

his intentional performances; which ^ lb. ▼. 15; Reeves's Adamnan, xlviii. 
shows plainly that Providence acted • Beda, v. 15; Reeves, li., 27. 
more vigorously in him than his own ^ Beda, iii. 4. 
prudence." i. 133. " lb. v. 22. He died on Easter-day, 

•* Eddi, 51; lieda, v. 19. 729. lb. 



C&^.IIL Aj>. 604-716. ARTS AND LEARNING IN ENGLAND. 77 

usage; and, if disputes afterwards arose on the subject, they 
excited little attention, and speedily died away.° 

Christianity had had a powerful eflFect on the civilisation of the 
Anglo-Saxons,® and through the exertions of Theodore, Wilfrid, 
and others, arts and learning were now actively cultivated in 
England. Benedict Biscop, the founder of the abbey of Wear- 
mouth, who was the companion of Wilfirid in his first visit to Rome, 
brought back with him the arch-chanter John, by whom the 
northern clergy were instructed in the Gregorian chant, the course 
of the festivals, and other ritual matters.^ From six expeditions 
to Rome Benedict returned laden with books, relics, vestments, 
vessels for ' the altar, and religious pictures.** Instead of the 
thatched wooden churches with which the Scottish missionaries 
had been content,' Benedict and Wilfrid, with the help of masons 
from France, erected buildings of squared and polished stone, with 
glazed windows and leaded roofs." W^ilfrid built a large structure 
of this kind over the little wooden church at York, in which 
Paulinus had baptised the Northumbrian king Edwin, but which 
had since fallen into disrepair and squalid neglect.* At Ripon 
he raised another church, which was consecrated with great pomp 
and ceremony ; two kings were present, and the festivities lasted 
three days and nights.'* Still more remarkable than these was his 
cathedral at Hexham, which is described as the most splendid 
ecclesiastical building north of the Alps.* Benedict Biscop's 
churches were adorned with pictures brought from Italy. Among 
them are mentioned one of the Blessed Virgin, a set of scenes from 
the Apocalypse, representing the last judgment, and a series in 
yhich subjects fi^m the Old Testament were paralleled with their 
antitypes from the New ; thus, Isaac carrying the wood for his 
sacrifice corresponded to our Lord bearing the Cross, and the 
Brazen Serpent to the Crucifixion.^ 

Monasteries had now been founded and endowed in great 
numbers. In some of them recluses of both sexes lived, although 
in separate parts of the buildings.* Many ladies of royal birth 
became abbesses or nuns ; and at length it was not unusual for 
English kings to abdicate their thrones, to go in pilgrimage to 

■ LiDgard, A. S. C. i. 63. • Beda, W. Abb. 5 ; HoBsey, n. in 

« Milman, ii. 18. Bed. p. 319. 

' Beda, Hist. Eccl. iv. 18; Vitas Ab- * Eddi, 16. 

batam, 6. " lb. 17. 

^Beda, W. Abb. 3;Lingard,A.S.C. * lb. 22. Ricard. Hagustald. ap. 

i. 207 ; Southey, Vindicise, 61, seqq. Twysden, 290-1. 

' Beda, iii. 25. See Beeres's Adamnan, r Beda, YY . Abb. 9. 

p. 177. « lingard, A. S. C. i. 211, 214. 



78 BEDE— ALDHELM— CAEDMON. Book III. 

Rome, and there to end their days in the monastic habit* But 
among the Anglo-Saxons, as elsewhere, the popularity of monach- 
ism was accompanied by decay .^ Bede, in his Epistle to Egbert, 
archbishop of York (a.d. 734), draws a picture of corruptions in 
discipline and morals, both among monks and clergy, which con- 
trasts sadly with his beautiful sketch of the primitive Scottish 
missionaries. , Among other Uiings he mentions a remarkable 
abuse arising out of the immunities attached to monastic property. 
Land among the Anglo-Saxons was distinguished aafolkland or 
Iceland. The folkland was national property, held of the king on 
condition of performing certain services, granted only for a certain 
term, and liable to resumption ; the bocland was held by iook 
or charter, for one or more lives, or in perpetuity, and was 
exempted from most (and in some cases from all) of the duties with 
which the folkland was burdened. The estates of monasteries 
were bocland, and, so long as the monastic society existed, the 
land belonged to it. In order, therefore, to secure the advantages 
of this tenure, some nobles professed a desire to endow monasteries 
with tiiC lands which they held as folkland. By presents or other 
means they induced the king and the witan (or national council) 
to sanction its conversion into bocland; they erected monastic 
buildings on it, and in these they lived with their wives and 
families, styling themselves abbots, but having nothing of the 
monastic character except the name and the tonsure.^ 

Among the men of letters whom the English church produced 
in this age the most celebrated is Bede. The fame which he had 
attained in his own time is attested by the fact that he was invited 
to Rome by Sergius I., although the pope's death prevented the 
acceptance of the invitation ; * and from the following century he 
has been commonly distinguished by the epithet of Venerable.* 
Bom about the year 673,' in the neighbourhood of Jarrow, an oflF- 
sboot from Benedict Biscop's abbey of Wearmouth, he became an 
inmate of the monastery at the age of seven, and there spent the 
remainder of his life. He tells us of himself, that, besides the 
regular exercises of devotion, he made it his pleasure every day 

• Beda, iv. 19; v. 7; Baron. 709. 5. questioned, as b^ Lingard (A. 8. C. ii. 

>> See Bede's account of Coldingham, 190-2, and note K) ; but see Mr. Hardy's 

j-v. 25 ; Inett, i. 126-7 ; Lingard, A. 8. C. note on Malmesbury, and Mr. Steven- 

i. 230. son's Preface to transl. of Bede, xiv.- 

« Beda, Ep. ad Egbert, c. 7 ; Lingard, xvi., where the writer retracts an opi- 

/^. S. C. i. 226-7, 407-413; Kemble, i. nion which he had before expressed 

^92-304 ; ii. 225-8 ; Lappenberg, i. 578- against the story. Comp. Mabillon, 

0C\ HaUam, Supplem. Notes, 264, and Patrol, xc. 16. 

j^is quotation from Allen. e Stevenson, Preface, xxii. 

•* Will. Malmesb. 57-8. This has been ' Pagi, xii. 402. 



GkAP.UL AJ>.604-f34. BAVARIA. 79 

" either to learn or to teach or to write something." ' He laboured 
asaduotisly in collecting and transmitting the knowledge of former 
agesy not only as to ecclesiastical subjects but in general learning. 
His history of the English Church comes down to the year 731, 
— ^within three years of his own death, which took place on the eve 
of Ascenfflon-day, 734, his last moments having been spent in dic- 
tating the conclusion of a version of St. John's Gospel.** 

Aldhelm, bishop of Sherborne, who died in 709, was distin- 
guished as a divine and as a poet* And Caedmon, originally a 
servant of St Hilda's abbey, at Streaneshalch, displayed in his 
native tongue poetical gifts which his contemporaries referred to 
miraculous inspiration.^ The Anglo-Saxons were the first nation 
whidi possessed a vernacular religious poetry ; and it is remarked 
to the honour of the Anglo-Saxon poets, that their themes were 
not derived from the legends of saints, but irom the narratives of 
Holy Scripture."* 

VI. During this period much was done for the conversion of 
the Grermanic tribes, partly by missionaries from the Frankish 
kingdom, but in a greater degree by zealous men who went forth 
from Britain or from Ireland. Of these, Columban and his dis- 
ciple Gall, with their labours in Gaul and in Switzerland, have 
been already mentioned." 

(1) The conversion of the Bavarians has been commonly re- 
ferred to the sixth century, so as to accord with the statement 
that Theodelinda queen of the Lombards, the correspondent of 
Gregory the Great, was a Bavarian princess, and had received 
an orthodox Christian training in her own land. But even if this 
statement be mistaken,^ it is certain that the Bavarians had the 
advantage of settling in a country which had previously been 
Christian (for such it was even before the time of Severin) ; p 
jand the remains of its earlier Christianity were not without effect 
on them. 

In 613 a Frankish council, in consequence of reports which had 
reached it, sent Eustasius, the successor of Columban at Luxeuil, 
with a monk named Agil, into Bavaria, where they found that 

f Hist V. 24. 154-5; Southey, Vindic. 197, seqq. For 

^ Cothbert. Vita Beds (Patrol, xc. translated specimens of Caedmon see 

40; Sterenson, Prefto Bede, xvii. xix. ; Conybeare's Anglo-Saxdh Poetry, and 

Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 200, 410*; Southey, Turner, Hist. Anglos, iii. 314-324. 

Vindidse, c. iii. ^ Milman, IL 40-1 ; Giesel. I. ii. 501. 

» Lingard, A. a C. ii. 184-9. His " Pp. 2C-31. 

works are in the Patrologia, Ixxxix. •» See p. 13, note K 

^ Beda, iv, 24 ; Lingiu^, A. 8. C. ii. ' See vol. i. p. 495. 



80 BAVARU— THURINGIA. B.x>k III. 

many of the inhabitants were infected with heretical opinions which 
are (perhaps somewhat incorrectly) described as Photinian.** 

About the middle of the seventh century, Emmeran, a bishop 
of Aquitaine, was stirred by reports which reached him as to the 
heathenism of the Avars in Pannonia, to resign his see, with the 
intention of preaching the Gospel in that country. , Accompanied 
by an interpreter skilled in the Teutonic dialects, he made liis way 
as far as Radaspona (Ratisbon), where he was kindly received by 
Theodo, duke of Bavaria. Theodo, who was already a Christian, 
represented to the bishop that the disturbed state of Pannonia 
rendered his undertaking hopeless ; he entreated him to remain in 
Bavaria, where he assured him that his zeal would find abundant 
exercise ; and, when argument proved ineffectual, he forcibly 
detained him.' Emmeran regarded this as a providential intima- 
A.D. 649- tion of his duty ; and for three years he preached with 
652. great diligence to the Bavarians. At the end of that 

time he set out for Rome, but it is said that he was pursued, over- 
taken, and murdered by the duke's son, in revenge for the dishonour 
of a sister, which the bishop, although innocent, had allowed the 
princess and her paramour to charge on him." 

In the end of the century, Rudbert, bishop of Worms, at the 
invitation of another duke named Theodo, undertook a 
mission into the same country. He baptised Theodo, 
and founded the episcopal city of Salzburg on the site of the old 
Roman Juvavium.* To the labours of Rudbert is chiefly due the 
establishment of Christianity in Bavaria. It would seem, how- 
ever, that he eventually returned to his original diocese of 
Worms.'* 

(2) The Christianity of the Thuringians has, like that of the 
Bavarians, been referred to the sixth century.* The country and 
its rulers were, however, still heathen, when, in the latter part of 

1 Jonas, Vita Eustas. 3, seqq. (Patrol. Rettb. ii. 201. 

Ixxxvii.); Neander, v. 51-3; Rettb. ii. ■ So Rettberg (ii. 210-1) infers from 

1S7-9. the "words of the * Conversio Bagoario- 

' M. Am^^ Thierry thinks that rum' — ^*' ad propriam remeayit sedem." 

Theodo wished, for political reasons, to But the editor in Pertz's collection. Dr. 

present the conversion of the Avars. Wattenbach, supposes that Salzburg is 

Hist d'Attila, ii. 134-6. meant. There has been much disputing 

• Vita Emmerammi, rewritten by Me- whether Rudbert flourished in the sixth 

ginfired, in the 11th century (Patrol, or in the seventh century ; but it would 

cxli.). The s^ry is fuU of iniprobabi- seem that 'the earlier date is chiefly 

lities (see Schrdbkh, xix. 158 ; Kettb. ii. maintained from motives of local par- 

191). tiality. See Pagi, xii. 155-8 ; Giesel. I. 

» Vito, ap. Mabill. iii. 339, seqq.; ii. 506; Rettberg, ii. 193-9. 

Bouquet, iii. 632 ; Conversio Bi^^oario- ^ See Schrockh, xvi. 264-5 ; Rettb. ii. 

rum, c. i. ap. Pertz, xi. ; Pagi, xii. 271; 297-8. 



OfcAF. DL AMANDUS. 81 

the seventh century, an ' Irish bishop named Kyllena or Kilian 
appeared in it at the head of a band of missionaries, and Tnet with 
a friendly reception from the duke, Gozbert, whose residence was 
at Wiirzburg. After a time, it is said, Kilian went to Rome, and, 
having been authorised by pope Conon to preach where- 
soever he would, he returned to Wiirzburg, where Goz- 
bert now consented to be baptised. The duke, while yet a heathen, 
had married his brother's widow, Geilana ; and, although he had 
not been required before baptism to renounce this union (which 
was sanctioned by the national customs), KiUan afterwards urged a 
separation as a matter of Christian duty. Gozbert was willing to 
make the sacrifice ; but Geilana took advantage of his absence on 
a warlike expedition ' to murder Kihan, with two com- 
panions who had adhered to him. The bodies of the 
martyrs were concealed, but their graves were illustrated by 
miracles ; and the vengeance of Heaven pursued the ducal house, 
which speedily became extinct.** 

(3). The tribes to the north of France were visited by mis- 
sionaries both from that country and from the British Isles. 
Among the most eminent of these was Amandus, a native of Aqui- 
taine, who was consecrated as a regionary (or missionary) bishop 
about the year 628, and laboured in the country near the Scheld. 
The inhabitants are described as so ferocious that all the clergy 
who bad attempted to preach to them had withdrawn in despair."^ 
Amandus was fortified with a commission from king Dagobert, which 
authorised him to baptise the whole population by force ; but he 
made little progress until, by recovering to life a man who had been 
hanged, he obtained the reputation of miraculous power.^ 
In consequence of having ventured to reprove Dagobert 
for the number of his wives and concubines, he was banished ; but 
the king, on marrying a young queen, discarded the others, re- 

y Pagi, xii. S9. The ouly points which can be regarded 

' This eirconistance is said to be an in- as certain are the mission of Kilian and 

terpoIatioD in the Life. Mabill. ii. 992. his murder in the neighbourhood of 

• Pagi, xiL 106. Wurzburg. Rettb. ii. 304. 7. See the 

* Vita Kiliani, ap. Mabill. ii. 991-3. notes on Menard's Martyrolo^, Jul. S. 
This story may be traced in its gradual (Patrol, cxxiv.) ; Schrockh, xix. 144-7 ; 
growth, Arom the notice in Raban Lanigan, iki. 115-121. 

Slaur's Martyrology (July 8, Pa- «• Vita 8. Amandi, 6 (Patrol. Ixxxvii.). 

trol. ex.), through that of Notker There is also a metrical Life in vol. 

(Patrol, cxxxi.), &c. Besides the le- cxxi., and one in prose, written in the 

gendary appearance of the part which lith century by Philip de Harveng. in 

relatet to Gosbert and his family, the vol. cciii. 

expedition of an Irish bishop to Rome is •* Vita, 7-8 ; Neand. v. 54-6; Rettb. i. 

a circamttance which savours of inven- 554. 

tkm later than the time of Boniface. * Pagi, xi. 2Ce-7. 

O 



82 AMANDUS—LIVIN — ELIGIUS. Book HI. 

called Amandus, entreated his forgiveness, and, on the birth of a 
prince, engaged him to baptise the child. It is said that at the 
baptism, when no one responded to the bishop's prayer, 
the mouth of the little Sigebert, who was only forty days 
old, was opened to utter "Amen."* Amandus, who preferred 
the life of a missionary to that of a courtier, hastened to return 
to his old neighbourhood, where, although he had to endure many 
hardships, with much enmity on the part of the heathen popula- 
tion, and was obliged to support himself by the work of his own 
hands, his preaching waanow very effectual. After a time his zeal 
induced him to go as a missionary to the Slavons on the Danube ; 
but, as he was received by them with an indifference which did 
not seem to promise either success or martyrdom, he once more 
resumed his labours in the region of the Scheld, and, on the death 
of a bishop of Mastricht, he was appointed to that see in the year 
647.*^ He found, however, so much annoyance both from the dis- 
orders of the clergy and from the character of the people, that 
he expressed to pope Martin a wish to resign the bishoprick. 
Martin, in a letter ^ which is significant as to the position of the 
Roman see, endeavoured to dissuade him from this desire. He 
requests Amandus to promulgate the decisions of the Lateran 
synod agiunst the Monothelites, which had just been held,^ and, 
with a view to fortifying himself against the empire, he urges the 
bishop to aid him in strengthening the connexion of king Sigebert 
with Rome. Notwithstanding the pope's remonstrances, however, 
Amandus withdrew from his see, after having held it three years, 
and he spent the remainder of his days in superintending the 
monasteries which he had founded.™ 

About the same time with Amandus, and in districts which 
bordered on the principal scene of his labours, two other celebrated 
missionaries were exerting themselves for the furtherance of the 
Gospel. One of these was Livin, an Irishman, who became bishop 
of Ghent, and was martyred about the year 650 ; " the other was 
Eligius (or Eloy), bishop of Noyon. Eligius was originally a gold- 
smith, and, partly by skill in his art, but yet more by his integrity, 
gained the confidence of Clotaire IL He retained his position under 

' Pagi, xi. 337. 428 ; Rettb. i. 555. In a written codicil, 

' Vita Amandi, 14-5 ; Gesta Dagob. he directs that he should be buried in 

24 (Patrol, xcvi.); Vita Sigeb. 4-5 (ib. his monastery of Elnon, and imprecates 

Ixxxviii.). curses on any one who should remove his 

* Vita, 9-10. bones. Patrol. Ixxxvii. 1273. 

• Hard, iil 945-8, » Vita S. Livini ap. Mabill. ii. 449 
^ See p. 47. (wrongly ascribed to St. Bonifbce). 

« Vita, 10, 11. 16; Pagi. xi. 412, 



CiiAF. UL FRISIA. 83 

Dagobert,^ to whom he became master of the mint, and coins of 
his workmanship are still extant.^ While yet a layman he was 
noted for his piety. The Bible always lay open before him as he 
worked ; his wealth was devoted to religious and charitable pur- 
poses ; he made pilgrimages to holy places ; he built monasteries ; 
he bought whole shiploads of captives — Romans, Gauls, Britons, 
Moors, and especially Saxons from Germany ** — and endeavoui ed 
to train them to Christianity/ Such was his charity that strangers 
were directed to his house by being told that in a certain quarter 
they would see a crowd of poor persons around the pious gold- 
smith's door ; * and already, it is said, his sanctity had been 
attested by the performance of many miracles/ After having 
spent some time in a lower clerical office, he was consecrated 
bishop of Noyon in 640, bis friend and biographer Audoen (or 
Ouen) being at the same time consecrated to the see of Rouen/ 
The labours of Eligius extended to the neighbourhood of the 
Scheld. The inhabitants of his wide diocese were generally rude 
and ferocious; part of them were heathens, while others were 
Christians only in name, and the bishop had to encounter many 
dangers and to endure many insults at their hands."^ His death 
took place in the year 659/ 

(4). Among the tribes which shared in the ministrations of 
Eligius were the Frisians, who then occupied a large tract of 
country/ The successful labours of Wilfrid among them at a later 
time (a.d. 678), have already been mentioned;* but the king 
whom he converted, Aldgis, was succeeded by a heathen, Radbod.** 
Wulfram, bishop of Sens, at the head of a party of monks, under- 
took a mission to the Frisians/ He found that they were accus- 

• Vita S. En^., i. 5, 9, 14 (Patrol, as a piece of Christian teaching by ' 

IzxxTii.). Ascnbed to St. Ouen, but Mosheim, Maclaine, Dr. Robertson, and 

probably altered or re-written by a later other writers of the last century, whose 

hand (lb. 478 ; Rettb. ii. 508). misrepresentations have been repeatedly 

' Barth^lemy, in bis translation of exposed, especially by Dr. Maitland, in 

the Life (Paris, 1847), gives engravings his vii*^ Letter on ** the Dark Ages." 

of some of these. It is printed not only in the Life of 

^ See Bartb^emy, note, p. 338. Eligius, but in the Appendix to St. Au- 

' Vita, i. 10, 15-18, 21. gustine's works (Patrol, xl. 1169-1190), 

■ lb. 20, 37, &c. « lb. 22-31. and is said to be iu great part derived 

" lb. ii. 2; Gallia Christ quoted in from the sermons of St. Coesarius of 

Patrol. Ixxxvii. 485-6 ; Pagi, xi. 345. Aries, which were very popular in Gaul. 

« Vita, ii. 3, seqa.; Barth^emy, 358. Bahr, ii. 4G8. • Vita, ii. 3. 

y The sermon of Eligius, *De Recti- • Page 74. ^ Rettb. ii. 502, 512. 

tudine Catholics) Conversationis,* — or ^ Life, by Jonas, in Mabill. iii. 357, 

rather the composition which his bio- seqq. The date is uncertain. Pagi 

grapher gives as containing the essence gives 689 (xii. 177); Baronius, 700; 

of many of his sermons (Vita, ii. 15-6 ; Dollinger, about 712 (i. 314). Neander 

Earths. 412),— is celebrated on account thinks that Wulfram was probably later 

of the iojostice done to its character than Willibrord, v. 60. 

g2 



8-t WULFRAM— WILLIBRORD. ^ Book III. 

tomed to offer human sacrifices, the victims being put to death by 
hanging. In answer to the taunt that, if his story were true, the 
Saviour of whom he spoke ^^ could recall them to life, he restored 
five men who had been executed, and, after this display of power, 
his preaching made many converts. Radbod had allowed one of 
his children to be baptised^ and had himself consented to receive 
baptism ; but, when one of his feet was already in the font, he 
adjured the bishop in God's name to tell him in which of the 
abodes which he had spoken of the former king and nobles of the 
nation were. Wulfram replied, that the number of the elect is 
fixed, and that those who had died without baptism must neces- 
sarily be among the damned. " I would rather be there with my 
ancestors," said the king, "than in heaven with a handful of 
beggars;" he drew back his foot from the baptistery, and re- 
mained a heathen.® 

But the chief missionary efibrts among the Frisians proceeded 
from the British Islands. Egbert, a pious Anglo-Saxon inmate of 
an Irish monastery (the same who afterwards persuaded the monks 
of lona to adopt the Roman Easter),' conceived the idea of preach- 
ing to the heathens of Germany. He was warned by visions, and 
afterwards by the stranding of the vessel in which he had embarked, 
that the enterprise was not for him ; but his mind was still intent 
on it, and he resolved to attempt it by means of his disciples.^ One 
of these, Wigbert, went into Frisia in 690, and for two years 
preached with much success. On his return, Willibrord, 
a Northumbrian, who before proceeding into Ireland had 
been trained in Wilfrid's monastery at Ripon, set out at the head 
of twelve monks, — a further opening for their labours having been 
made by the victory which Pipin of Heristal, the virtual sovereign 
of Austrasia, had gained over Radbod at Dorstadt Pipin received 
the missionaries with kindness, gave them leave to preach in that 
part of the Frisian territory which had been added to the Prankish 
kingdom, and promised to support them by his authority. After 
a time Willibrord repaired to Rome with a view of obtaining the 

«* ** Christus tuus." Jonas, 6. and, as ttoo versions of the main story 

• Jonas, 9-11. Neander (v. 60) sup- are found, which differ considerably 

Soses that Radbod was not sincere in his from each other, but agree in showing 
esire of baptism, and that he spoke " in that one who is reprolraite would, even 
a half bantering way." But there is no at the last moment, be excluded from 
trace of this in the original writer, and baptism and salvation, Rettberg thinks 
his report of the adjurations which the that the whole is an invention devised 
king used is decisive against the sup- in behalf of the rigid predestinarian 
position. That lUdbod (as Jonas i*e- doctrine (ii. 515-6). In tnis he is fol- 
iates) died within three days after his lowed by Ozanam, 167. 
rejection of baptism is certainly untrue : ' See p. 76. » Beda, v. 9. 



Gbat. m. ij>.e8»-»3». WILLIBRORD. 85 

papal sanction and instructions for his work, as also a supply of 
relics to be placed in the churches which he should build.** On 
his return, the work of conversion made such progress, that Pipin 
wished to have him consecrated as archbishop of the district in 
which he had laboured, and for this purpose sent him a second 
time to Rome. The pope, Sergius, consented, and, in- 
stead of Willibrord's barbaric name, bestowed on him 
that of Clement The archbishop's see was fixed at Wiltaburg,* 
and he appears to have succeeded in extirpating paganism from 
the Frankish portion of Frisia.^ He also attempted to spread the 
Gospel in the independent part of the country, and went even as 
far as Denmark, where, however, his labours had but little effect 
In his return he landed on Heligoland, which was then called 
Fositesland, from a god named Forseti or Fosite.™ The island 
was regarded as holy ; no one might touch the animals which 
lived on it, nor drink, except in silence, of its sacred well : but, in 
defiance of the popular superstition, Willibrord baptised three 
converts in the well, and his companions killed some of the con- 
secrated cattle. The pagan inhabitants, after having waited in 
vain expectation that the vengeance of the gods would strike the 
profane strangers with death or madness, carried them before 
Radbod, who was then in the island. Lots were cast thrice before 
any one of the party could be chosen for death. At length one 
was sacrificed, and Willibrord, after having denounced the errors 
of heathenism with a boldness which won Eadbod's admiration, 
was sent back with honour to Pipin." The renewal of war between 
Badbod and the Franks interfered for a time with the work of the 
missionaries. After the death of the pagan king, in 719, circum- 
stances were more favourable for the preaching of the Gospel in 
the independent part of Frisia ; and Willibrord continued in a 
course of active and successftil exertion until his death in 739.® 
Among his fellow-labourers during a part of thi^ time was Boni- 
face, afterwards the apostle of Germany. 

* lb. V. 10-1; Alcuin. Vita WiUib. i. Franks), may both be right; and that 

3-6 (Patrol, ci.). Dr. Lingard (A. 8. C. ii. 333), who sets 

' Utrecht then belonged to Radbod, Bede aside in favour of Alcuin, is mis- 
while Wiltaburg, on the opposite side taken in identifying the towns, 
of the Rhine, was Frankish (Gieseler, ^ Schruckh, xix. 152. 
II. i. 24). It would seem, therefore, ■ He was supposed to be the son of 
that Bede, who states that Pipin gave Balder. Thorpe, Northern Mythology, 
the archbishop Wiltaburg (t. 1 1 ), and i. 30. 
Alcain (i. 12), who says that Charles ° Alcuin, i. 9-10. 
Martel gave him Utrecht (which had in ° Rettb. li. 520-1. 
the interval come into possession of the 



( 8() ) 



CHAPTER IV. 

ICONOCLASM. 
A.D. 717-775. 

The gradual advance of a revcreuce for images and pictures,* 
from the time when art began to be taken into the service of the 
Church, has been related in the preceding volume.^ But when it 
had reached a certain point, art had little to do with it It was 
not by the power of form or colour that the religious images 
influenced the mind ; it was not for the expression of ideal purity 
or majesty that one was valued above another, but for superior 
sanctity or for miraculous virtue.* Some were supposed to have 
fallen down from heaven; some, to have been the work of the 
evangelist St Luke; and to others a variety of legends were 
attached. Abgarus, king of Edessa, it was said, when in corre- 
spondence with our Lord,^ commissioned a painter to take the 
Saviour's likeness. But the artist, dazzled by the glory of the 
countenance, gave up the attempt ; whereupon the Saviour himself 
impressed his image on a piece of linen, and sent it to the king. 
This tale was unknown to Eusebius, although he inserted the 
pretended correspondence with Abgarus in his history ;* and the 
image was said, in consequepce of the apostasy of a later king, to 
have been built up in a wall at Edessa, until, after a concealment 
of five centuries, it was discovered by means of a vision. By it, 
and by a picture of the Blessed Virgin, " not made with hands," 
the city was saved from an attack of the Persians.^ Qoths of a 
like miraculous origin (as was supposed) were preserved in other 
places;* and many images were believed to perform cures and 
other miracles, to exude sweat or odoriferous balsam, to bleed, to 
weep, or to speak. 

When images had become objects of popular veneration, the 

• In the accoant of the controversies shoold be impregnable (De Bello Pers. 

as to "images," the irord wiU be used ii. 12); but he does not mention the 

to express paintings as well as works of image. 

sculpture. ' Evagrius, v. 27 ; Cedren. 176-7. 

»» Pp. 345-6, 567-8. f Gibbon, iv. 465-7 ; Neand. v. 278. 

^ Milman, ii. 90-3. Heraclius took one with him in his 

•* See vol. i. p. 3. Persian expedition. Georg. Pisida de 

« i. 13. Procopius, two centuries Exp. Pers. i. 139, seqq. (Patrol. Gr. 

later, says that oar Lord was popularly xcii.) 

believed to have promised that Edessa 



Ckat. IV. A.». 717. LEO THE ISAURIAN. 87 

cautions and distinctions which divines laid down for the regulation 
of it were found unavailing. Three hundred years before the time 
which we have now reached, Augustine, while repelling the charge 
of idolatry from the Church, had felt himself obliged to acknow- 
ledge that many of its members were nevertheless " adorers of 
pictures ;"'* and the superstition had grown since Augustine's day. 
It became usual to fall down before images, to pray to them, to 
Idas them, to bum lights and incense in their honour, to adorn them 
with gems and precious metals, to lay the hand on them in swearing, 
and even to employ them as sponsors at baptism.* 

The moderate views of Gregory the Great as to the use and the 
abuse of images have been already mentioned.*^ But although, of 
the two kindred superstitions, the reverence for relics was more 
characteristic of the western, and that for images of the eastern 
CJhurch,"* the feeling of the West in behalf of images was now 
increased, and the successors of Gregory were ready to take a 
decided part in the great ecclesiastical and political movements 
which arose out of the question. 

Leo the Isaurian, who had risen from the class of substantial 
peasantry through the military service of Justinian II., until in 717 ° 
he was raised by general acclamation to the empire, was a man of 
great energy, and, as even his enemies the ecclesiastical writers do 
not deny, was possessed of many noble qualities, and of talents 
which were exerted with remarkable success, both in war and in 
civil administration.^ In the beginning of his reign he was 
tiireatened by the Arabs, whose forces besieged Constantinople 
both by land and by sea ; but he destroyed their fleet by the new 
invention of the " Greek fire," ^ compelled the army to retire with 
numbers much diminished by privation and slaughter, and by a 
succession of victories delivered his subjects from the fear of the 
Arabs for many years.** 

It was not until after he had secured the empire against foreign 
enemies that Leo began to concern himself with the afiairs of 
religion. In the sixth year of his reign "" he issued an edict 
ordering that Jews and Montanists should be forcibly baptised. 

k See vol. i. p. 346. Finlay, ii. 17, 29. 

» Basnage, 1335; Schrockh, xx. 515-6 ; *» Gibbon, iv. 410-1 ; Schlosser, 140-2 ; 

Neand. ▼. 278 ; Schlosser, 410. Finlay, vol. ii., c. 1. 

*■ Page 26. To the same purpose is p As to this, see Gibbon, iv. 182-4. 

EiTi of another letter, which, however, i Nic. Cpol. 35; Theophan. 607-613 ; 

boars under sospicion — ^ix. 52, Ad Finlay, ii. 17-22. 

Secnndinum. ' Schlosser, 161. I have generally 

" Neand. v. 278. followed this writer as to the order and 

" Theophan. 600-6; Pagi, xii. 263; dates of the proceedings under Leo. 



88 LEO THE ISAURIAN. B<»k UI. 

The Jcfws submitted in hypocrisy, and mocked at the rites which 
they had undergone.* The Montanists, with the old fanaticism of 
the sect whose name they bore,* appointed a day on which, by 
general concert, they shut themselves up in their meeting-houses, 
set fire to the buildings, and perished in the flames. 

From these measures it is evident that Leo seriously mis- 
conceived the position of the temporal power in matters of religion, 
as well as the means which might rightly be used for the advance- 
ment of religious truth. In the following year, after a 
consultation with his officers, he made his first attempt 
against the superstitious use of images." The motives of this 
proceeding are matter of conjecture.* It is said that he was 
influenced by Constantine, bishop of Nacolia, and by a counsellor 
named Bezer, who had for a time been in the service of the caliph, 
and is described as an apostate from the faith.^ Perhaps these 
persons may have represented to him the difficulties which this 
superstition opposed to the conversion of Jews and Mahometans, 
who regarded it as heathen and idolatrous;* they may, too, have 
set before him the risk of persecution which it must necessarily 
bring on the Christian subjects of the caliphs.* Leo had seen that 
towns which relied on their miraculous images had fallen a prey 
to the arms of the Saracens, and that even the tutelar image of 
Edessa had been carried ofi^ by these enemies of the cross.^ And 
when, by whatsoever means, a question on the subject had been 
suggested, the inconsistency of the popular usages with the letter 
of Holy Scripture was likely to strike forcibly a direct and un- 
tutored mind like that of the emperor.*' But in truth it would 
seem — and more especially if we compare Leo's measures against 
images with those against Judaism and Montanism — ^that his object 

■ See Schrockh, xix. 316. Manichseans, p. 42, ed. Rader. 

* W^hether they were the same sect ■ Schlosser, 166. The chronology is 

with the Montanists of earlier history, doubtful. See Hefele, iii. 345, who 

is a question. Deao Milman supposes questions the statements as to a con- 

them to haTe been probably Manichse- sultation. 346. 

ans (ii. 96). Barouius also thinks that > See V^Talch, x. 204 ; Gfrorer, ii. 

they may have been Manichaeans, and 102. 
supposes that they were called Mon- y Theophan. 617-8. 
tanists {Viomavohs, Theophan. 617), ■ V^Talch, x. 216-8; Scblosser, 161. 

from having been driven to take refuge See Hefele, iii. 343. 
among the mountains (722. 1). But see ■ Spanheim, * Historia Imaginum Re- 

Pagi's note to the contrary. The sect stituta ' (Miscellanea Sacrse Antiquitatis, 

may have been identical with the early vol. i. Lugd. Bat. 1703), p. 729. 
Montanists, although its doctrines may ^ Gibbon, iv. 467. It is said to have 

have undergone much change in the been bought from the Saracens, and 

course of five centuries and a half. Peter transferred to Constantinople, by the 

of Sicily, in the ninth century-, however, emperor Romanus Lecapenus. Cedren. 

mentions the Montanists as distinct from 178. «= Gicsel. II. i. 2. 



CaiLi>..IY. AJ>. »»-«. IMAGES FORBIDDEN. 89 

was as much to establish an ecclesiastical autocracy as to purify 
the practice of the Qiurch.^ 

The earlier controversies had shown that the multitude could be 
Tiolently agitated by subtle questions of doctrine which might have 
been supposed unlikely to excite theur interest. But here the 
matter in dispute was of a more palpable kind. The movement 
did not originate with a speculative theologian, but with an 
emperor, acting on his own will, without being urged by any party, 
or by any popular cry. An attack was made on material and 
external objects of reverence, on practices which were bound up 
with their daily fiatmiliar religion, and by means of which the 
sincere, although unenlightened, piety of the age was accustomed 
to find its expression. It merely proposed to abolish, without pro- 
viding any substitute, without directing the mind to any better and 
more spiritual worship ; and at once the people, who had already 
been discontented by some measures of taxation, rose in vehement 
and alarming commotion against it. The controversy which had 
occupied the Church for a century was now forgotten ; Monothelites 
were absorbed among the orthodox when both parties were thrown 
together by an assault on the objects of their common veneration.® 

Leo would seem not to have anticipated such an excitement 
He attempted to allay it by an explaniation of the edict which had 
been issued. It was tiot, he said, his intention to do away with 
images, but to guard against the abuse of them, and to protect 
them from profanation, by removing them to such a 
height that they could not be touched or kissed.^ But 
the general discontent was not to be so easily pacified, and events 
soon occurred which added to its intensity. A Saracen army, 
which had advanced as far as Niciea, was believed to be beaten off 
by the guardian images of the city.* A volcanic island was thrown 
up in the ^Egean, and the air was darkened with ashes — prodigies 
which, while the emperor saw in them a declaration of heaven 
against the idolatry of his subjects, the monks, who had possession 
of the popular mind, interpreted as omens of wrath against his 
impious proceedings.** The monkish influence was especially 
strong among the islanders of the Archipelago. These rose in 
behalf of images ; they set up one Cosmas as a pretender to the 

* Finlay, ii. 10. 67. cultu Imaginum/ Francof. 1608, p. 16. 

•Baron. 722.3; Walch, x. 78; Karon. 726. 1-5 ; Schlosser, 167. Walch 

Schrockh, xx. 513 ; Neand. v. 273, 306 ; (x. 225-6) and Hefele (iii. 347) question 

DoUinger, i. 348; Giescl. II. i. 5-6; this. 

MilmaD, ii. 87-9. » Thcophan. 624. 

' Goldast. * Impi'rialia Dccreta de •• Nic. Cpol. 37. 



90 GERMANUS — "THE SURETY." Book III. 

throne, and an armed multitude, in an ill-equipped fleet, appeared 
before Constantinople. But the Greek fire discomfited the dis- 
orderly assailants ; their leaders were taken and put to death ;* 
and Leo, provoked by the resistance which his edict had met with, 
issued a second and more stringent decree, ordering that all images 
should be destroyed, and that the place of such as were painted on 
the walls of churches should be covered with whitewash.^ 

The emperor, relying on the pliability which had been shown on 
some former occasions by Germanus, patriarch of Constantinople,"* 
had made repeated attempts to draw him into the measures against 
images.'^ But Germanus, who was now ninety-five years of age, 
was not to be shaken. He reminded Leo of the oaUi which he 
had taken at his coronation, to make no innovations in religion. 
It is said that in a private interview he professed a conviction that 
images were to be abolished, " but," he added, " not in your 
reign." " In whose reign, then ? " asked Leo. " In that of an 
emperor named Conon, who will be the forerunner of Antichrist** 
" Conon," said the emperor, "is my own baptismal name."® Ger- 
manus argued that images were meant to represent, not the Trinity, 
but the Incarnation ; that, since the Saviour*s appearance in human 
form, the Old Testament prohibitions were no longer applicable ; 
that the Church had not condemned the use of images in any 
general council : and he referred to the Edessan impression of our 
Lord's countenance, and to the pictures painted by St Luke. " If 
I am a Jonas," he said, " throw me into the sea. Without a general 
council, I can make no innovation on the faith.** He 
refused to subscribe the new edict, and resigned his see, 
to which his secretary Anastasius was appointed.^ 

A serious disturbance soon after took place on the removal of a 

noted statue of the Saviour, which stood over the *' Brazen Gate '* 

of the imperial palace, and was known by the name of 

* " the Surety.'* ^ This figure was the subject of many 

marvellous legends, and was held in great veneration by the people. 

* Theophan. 624; Schlosser, 170-1. of the promise to ConoD that he should 

Mr. Finiay thinks that this insurrec- be em^ror, Finlay, ii. 29-32. 

tion was provoked by heavy taxation, p Nic. Cpol. 38; Vita Steph. jiin. 

and that ihe question of images was in Patrol. Gr. c. 1085; Theophau. 

added to the grievance, ii. 43. 626-9 ; Baron. 726. 6 ; Pagi, xii. 387-8 ; 

^^ Gibbon, IV. 468. See Walch, x. Walch, x. 172, 182, 240; Schlosser, 

225-6. 175-6. 

" Giesel. II. i. 3. *» ' Ayrupcoyrrr'hs. This name was de- 

" See the letters of Germanus, Hard, rived from a tale of iu having miracu- 

iv. 240-261. lously become security for a pious sailor 

*» Theophan. 626-7. Against this story who had occasion to borrow money, 

see Basnage, ii. 1345. For the legend Hefelp, iii. 348. 



CMAjr. IV. AJK »a6-T30. JOHN OF DAMASCUS. 91 

When, therefore, a soldier was commissioned to take it down, 
crowds of women rushed to the place, and clamorously entreated 
him to spare it He mounted a ladder, however, and struck his 
axe into the face ; whereupon the women dragged down the ladder, 
the soldier was either killed by the fall or by their hands, and his 
body was torn in pieces.' They were now excited to frenzy, and, 
having been joined by a mob of the other sex, nished to the new 
patriarch's house with the intention of miu'dering him. Anastasius 
took refuge in the palace, and the emperor sent out his guards, 
who suppressed the commotion, but not without considerable 
bloodshed/ " The Surety " was taken 'down, and its place was 
filled with an inscription, in which the emperor gave vent to his 
enmity against images/ 

This incident was followed by some proceedings against the 
popular party. Many were scourged, mutilated, or banished ; and 
the persecution fell most heavily on the monks, who were especially 
obnoxious to the emperor, both as leaders in the resistance to his 
measures, and because the images were for the most part of their 
manufacture. Leo is charged with having rid himself of his con- 
troversial opponents by shutting up schools for general education 
which had existed since the time of the first Christian emperor," 
and even by burning a splendid library, with the whole college of 
professors who were attached to it.'^ 

But beyond the emperor's dominions the cause of images found 
a formidable champion in John of Damascus, the most celebrated 
theologian of his time.^ John, according to his legendary bio- 
grapher, a patriarch of Jerusalem who lived two centuries later, 

■* Gregor. II. ap. Hard. iv. II. rSraroi AvUpts) is suspicious. Basnage 

■ Theophan. 622-3. See the various (1346) says that the library was reaUT 
accounts in Walch, x. 178-180. The destroyed by an accidental fire, which 
women who perished on this occasion he places under Basiliscus, and Mr. 
were afterwards canonised. Schlosser, Finlay under Leo (ii. 52). Walch re- 
178-9. eards the story as fabulous (as does also 

* Theod. Stndita, p. 136. Georgii^s Hefele, iii. 346), but thinks that the 
Hamartolus tells us that the emperor schools may have been suspended for a 
wrote on an image of Christ, ** O, time by Leo (x. 184, 231-4). Schlosser, 
Saviour, save thysolf and us!" and however, upholds it. 1G3-4. 

threw it into the sea, which rebuked r Baron. 727, 18-20. John was author 

his impiety b^ conveying the image to of the earliest work of systematic theo- 

Rome, cxlviii. 15. logy> 'A Correct Exposition of the 

* Theophan. 023. Orthodox Faith.' (^EfcSoo-ir &«cpi/3^y rtyi 

■ G. Uamart. cxlviii. 13; Cedren. 6p$o96^ovirl(rrttas.) This was long the 
454. Spanheim, who defends the icono- standard authority in the Greek church, 
clasts against all accusations, asserts In the west, it became known from the 
that this is a fiction of the nth century. 12th century by a Latin translation, 
Hamartolus, who was unknown to and John is considered as the ancestor 
Spanheim, shows that it was current in of the schoolmen. Schroekh, zx. 230- 
the 9th century ; but his manner of 327 ; Hagenbach, i. 390-1 ; Gfrorer, iL 
introducing the story (^m^I 8i rtytt vkF' 107 ; Giesel. vi. 438. 



92 JOHN OF DAMASCUS — Book IIF. 

was a civil officer, high in the service of the caliph of Damascus, 
when his writings against the emperor's measures provoked Leo to 
attempt his destruction.' A letter was counterfeited in imitation 
of his handwriting, containing an offer to betray Damascus to the 
Greeks, and this (which was represented as one of many such 
letters) Leo enclosed to the caliph, with expressions of abhorrence 
against the pretended writer's treachery. The caliph, without 
listening to John's disavowals of the charge, or to his entreaties 
for a delay of judgment, ordered his right hand to be cut off ; and 
it was exposed in the market-place until evening, when John 
requested that it might be given to him, in order that by burying it 
he might relieve the intolerable pain which he suffered while it hung 
in the air. On recovering it, he prostrated himself before an image 
'of the Virgin Mother, prayed that, as he had lost his hand for the 
defence of images, she would restore it, and vowed thenceforth to 
devote it to her service. He then lay down to sleep ; the " Theo- 
tokos" appeared to him in a vision, and in the morning the hand 
was found to be reunited to his arm. The caliph, convinced of 
John's innocence by this miracle, requested him to remain in his 
service ; but John betook himself to the monastery of St. Sabbas, 
near Jerusalem, where the monks, alarmed at the neophyte's great 
reputation, were perplexed how to treat him, and subjected him to 
a variety of degrading, and even disgusting, trials. But his spirit 
of obedience triumphed over all; he was admitted into the 
monastery, and was afterwards advanced to the order of presbyter. 
Of the three Orations in which John of Damascus asserted the 
cause of images, two were written before, and the third after, the 
forced resignation of Germanus.* He argues that images were 
forbidden to the Jews lest they should fall into the error of their 
heathen neighbours, or should attempt to represent the invisible 
Godhead ; but that, since the Incarnation, these reasons no longer 
exist, and we must not be in bondage to the mere letter of Scrip- 
ture.^ True it is that Scripture does not prescribe the veneration 
of images ; but neither can we read there of the Trinity, or of the 
Coessentiality, as distinctly set forth ; and images stand on the 
same ground with these doctrines, which have been gathered by 
the fathers from the Scriptures. Holy Scripture countenances 
images by the directions for the making of the Cherubim, and also 
by our Lord's words as to the tribute-money. As that which bears 

* Vita Joh. Damascen. 15-20, in bis nage, 1279 ; Spanheim, i. 740. 
works, ed. Le Qaien, Paris, 1712, t. i. ■ Walch, x. 170. 
pp. x.-xiii. Against this tale, see Has- ^ Orat i. 7» 8, 16 ; ii. 7, 8. 



Cmjkr, IV. Aj>. n9-M. HIS ORATIONS. 93 

Cse?ar*8 image is Caesar's, and is to be rendered^ to him ; so, too, 
that which bears Christ's image is to be rendered to Christ, foras- 
much as it b Christ's.*^ That images are material, is no good 
reason for refusing to reverence them ; for the holy places are 
material, the ink and the parchment of the Gospels are material, 
the eucharistic table, its vessels and its ornaments, — nay, the very 
body and blood of the Saviour,-;-are material.^ " I do not," says 
John, "adore the matter, but the Author of matter, who for my 
sake became material, that by matter He might work out my 
salvation." • Images, he continues, are for the unlearned what 
books are for those who can read ; they are to the sight what 
speech is to the ears/ He distinguishes between that sort of 
worship which is to be reserved for God alone,* and that which 
for His sake is given to His angels and saints or to consecrated 
things.^ He rejects the idea that, if the images of the Saviour 
and of the Blessed Virgin are to be allowed, those of the saints 
should be abolished ; if (he holds) the festivals of the saints are 
kept, if churches are dedicated in their honour, so, too, ought 
their images to be reverenced.* He adduces a host of authorities 
from the fathers, with much the same felicity as his quotations 
from Scripture,*^ while the story of Epiphanius and the painted 
curtain," which had been alleged by the iconoclasts, is set aside 
on the ground that the letter which contains it might be a forgery, 
or that Epiphanius might have intended to guard against some 
unrecorded local abuse ; that the Cypriot bishop's own church still 
used images, and that, in any case, the act of an individual does 
not bind the whole church." He denies that the emperor has any 
authority to legislate in ecclesiastical affairs: — "The well-being 
of the state," he says, " pertains to princes, but the ordering of the 
church to pastors and teachers ;" and he threatens Leo with scrip- 
tural examples of judgment against those who invaded the rights 
of the church.** 

• In Italy, the measures of Leo produced a great agitation. The 
allegiance of that country had long been gradually weakening. 
The exarchs were known to the people only as taxgatherers who 
drained them of their money, and sent it off to Constantinople ; for 
defence against the Lombards or other enemies, the Italian sub- 

« lb. i. 20 ; ii. 20, 21 ; iii. 11. ^ lb. i. 27 Beqq. ; ii. 2.3 ; Hi. 39. See 

* lb. ii. 14 ; cf. i. 15. Dapiu, vi. 102 ; Schrockh, xx. 547-8. 

• lb. i. 16. ' lb. i. 17. " See vol. i. p. 346. 

« AoTptia, service. " Orat i. 26. In ii. 18, he says abso- 

•» Orat. i. 14; iii. 16-39. lately that the letter b forg.d. 

« lb. i. 19, 21; ii. 11, 15. « lb. ii. 12. 



94 AGITATION IN ITALY. Book III. 

jects of the empire were obliged to rely on themselves, without any 
expectation of effective help from the emperor or his lieutenant.^ 
The pope was the virtual head of the Italians ; and the connexion 
which the first Gregory and his successors had laboured to establish 
with the Prankish princes, as a means of strengthening themselves 
against the empire, had lately been rendered more intimate by the 
agency of the great missionary Boniface.^ But the ancient and 
still undiminished hatred with which the Romans regarded their 
neighbours the Lombards weighed against the motives which 
might have disposed the popes to take an opportunity of breaking 
with the empire ; and Gregory II., although he violently opposed 
Leo on the question of images, yet acted in some sort the part of a 
mediator between him and his Italian subjects. '^ 

Gregory, on receiving the edicts against images, rejected them. 
The people of Ravenna expelled the exarch, who sought a refuge 
A.D. 726- at Pavia. Liutprand, king of the Lombards, eagerly 
730. toot advantage of the disturbances to pour his troops 

into the imperial territory, and, sometimes in hostility to the 
exarch, sometimes in combination with him against the pope, 
endeavoured to profit by the dissensions of his neighbours. The 
exarch was killed in the course of the commotions. * The pope, 
hoping for the conversion of Leo (as it is said by writers in the 
Roman interest '), restrained the Italians from setting up a rival 
emperor; and, when Liutprand, in alliance with a new exarch, 
appeared before the walls of Rome, he went out to him, and pre- 
vailed on the Lombard king to give up his design against the city. 
Thus far, therefore, it would appear that the Emperor was chiefly 
indebted to Gregory for the preservation of his Italian dominions.^ 
But the relations between these potentates were of no friendly 
kind. It is said that repeated attempts were made by Leo's order 
to assassinate Gregory ; perhaps the foundation of the story may 
have been that, as the pope himself states, there was an intention 
of carrying him off to tiie east, as Martin had been carried off in- 
the preceding century." On the resignation of Germanus, Gregory 
refused to acknowledge his successor,* and wrote to Leo in a style 

r Schrockh, xix. .M8 ; Milman, ii. account (ii. 204-7) is the clearest See 

143. also Baron. 726. 25, seqq. ; Walcb, x. 

< Schrockh, xix. 519-20. See the 248-255,280; Schrockh, xix. 52, seqq. ; 

next chapter. Schlosser, lf>7-9; Giesel. II. i. 32-3; 

' Schlosser, 172-4. • Anastas. 156. Hefele, iii. 352, seqq. 

* lb. 157; P. Wamefr. de Gestis " Grec. II. ap. Hard. iv. 11 ; Anastas. 

Langob. vi. 49. The history of these 156-7; Walch, x. 283-5; Schrockh, 

movements is very intricate, and is full xix. 521 ; xx. 548. 

of matter for dispute. Dean Milman's * Schlosser, 177. 



OiAF. vr. AA 136-730. GREGORY IL 95 

of Tebement defiance/ He urges the usual arguments in behalf 
of images, and reproaches the emperor with his breach of the most 
solemn engagements. " We must/' he gays, " write to you grossly 

and rudely, forasmuch as you are illiterate and gross Go 

into our elementary schools, and say, ' I am the overthrower and 
persecutor of images ;* and forthwith the children will cast their 
tablets at you, and you will be taught by the unwise that which 
you refuse to learn from the wise." Leo, he says, had boasted of 
being like Uzziah ;' that, as the Jewish king destroyed the brazen 
serpent after it had existed 800 years, so he himself had cast out 
images after a like time ; and the pope, without raising any ques- 
tion either as to Jewish or Christian history, makes him welcome 
to the supposed parallel. It would, he says, be less evil to be 
called a heretic than an iconoclast ; for the infamy of the heretic 
is known to few, and few understand his ofience ; but here the 
guilt is palpable and open as day. Leo had proposed a council, 
as a means of settling the question ; but he is told that the proposal 
is idle, inasmuch as, if a council were gathered, he is unfit to take 
the part of a religious emperor in it. To say, as he had said, " I 
am emperor and priest," might become one who had protected and 
endowed the church, but not one who had plundered it, and had 
drawn people away from the pious xSntemplation of images to 
frivolous amusements ; emperors are for secular matters^ priests 
for spiritual. The pope mocks at the thVeat of carrying him off to 
Constantinople ; he has but to withdraw twenty-four furlongs from 
the walls of Rome into Campania, and his enemies would have to 
pursue the winds. Why, it had been asked, had the six general 
councils said nothing of images ? As well, replies Gregory, might 
you ask why they said nothing of common food and drink ; images 
are matters of traditional and unquestioned use ; the bishops who 
attended the councils carried images with them. The emperor is 
exhorted to repent and is threatened with judgments ; he is charged 
to take warning from the fate of the Monothelite Constans, and 
from the glory of that prince's victims, the martyrs M aximus and 
Martia 
The sequel of Gregory's proceedings is matter of controversy. 

y His two letters (Hard. iv. 1-18) Hefele, however, is inclined to agree 

were first published by Baronius (xii. with Baronius as to the earlier of the 

346-359), but were wrongly referred by letters (iii. 370-2). Their genuineness 

him to the year 726, whereas the^ were has been Questioned, but is generally 

really written about 729, according to allowed. Walch, x. 174; Schrockh, 

Muratori (IV. i. 343) and JaflK, or xx. 535-6. 

within the last four months of 730, * The mistake will be readily seen. 
according to Pagi. (xii. 345, 390.) 



96 GREGORY III. Book III. 

Extreme Romanists and their extreme opponents agree in stating 
that the pope excommunicated the emperor, withdrew his Italian 
subjects from their allegiance, and forbade the payment of tribute — 
by the rightful exercise of apostolical authority, according to one 
party; by an anti-Christian usurpation according to the other.* 
But more temperate inquirers have shown that these representa- 
tions are- incorrect The popes of that a^e made no pretension to 
the right of dethroning princes or absolving subjects from their 
allegiance ; Gregory, in his second letter, while he denies that the 
emperor is entitled to interfere with the Church, expressly disclaims 
the power of interfering with the sovereign. The story as to 
the withdrawal of tribute seems to have grown out of the fact of a 
popular resistance to an impolitic increase of taxation.^ Although 
Gregory condemned iconoclasm, it appears that he did not pro- 
nounce any excommunication against the emperor ; and, even if he 
excommunicated him, the sentence would have been unheeded by 
the Church of Constantinople. The utmost that can be established, 
therefore, appears to be, that, by raising a cry against Leo as a 
heretic and a persecutor, he rendered him odious to his Italian 
subjects, and so paved the way for that separation from the empire 
which followed within half a century.*^ 

In the following year Gregory II. was succeeded by a third 
pope of the same name, for whom it was still held necessary that, 
before his consecration, the election should be confirmed 
by the exarch.*^ Gregory III., a Sjrrian by birth, was 
zealous in the cause of images, and laboured to increase the 
popular veneration of them. He remonstrated with Leo against 
his iconoclastic proceedings, and held a council of ninety- 
eight bishops, which anathematised all the enemies of 
images, but without mentioning the emperor by name.® Leo, 
indignant at the pope's audacity, imprisoned his envoys, and 
resolved to send a fleet to reduce Italy into better subjection. 

• Baronius says that the pope, aAer (who, however, questions whether there 

long forbearance, foand that it was time were any new tax) ; Milman, ii. 150 ; 

to lay the axe to the rcot of the tree, Hcfele, iii. 358. 

and to say, "Cot it down;" thus giving « See Nat. Alex. xi. 169-174; De 

his successors an example not to sutler Marca. III. xi. 3 ; Muratori, Ann. IV. i. 

obstinately heretical princes to reign 342 ; Pagi, xii. 390 ; Walch, x. 263-275, 

(730. 5). See also Bellarmine, DeRora. 280-2 ; Giannone, i. 405-7 ; Gibbon, iv. 

Pontif. V. 8 ; and, on the extreme pro- 473-4 ; Schrockh, xix. 522-7 ; xx. 531 ; 

testaut side, the Magdeburg Centuries, note in Mosheim, ii. 164; Milman, ii. 

Cent. VIII., pp. 380, 518 (ed. Basil. 147-9 ; Hefele, iii. 358-9. 

1624); or Spanheim, 732-4. Thefoun- «• Pagi in Patrol. Ixxxix. 559; Mil- 

dation of this account comes from the man, ii. 150. 

Greek writers, as Theophanes (621-9), • Aiiastas. 158; Walch, x. 175; 

G. Hamartolus, cxlviii. 18. Schrockh, xx. 548. 

»» Pagi, xii. 390 ; Walch, x. 249 



Qur.nr. AJ^.m-Ui, CONSTANTINE COPRONYMUS. 97 

But the fleet was disabled by storms, and the emperor was obliged 

to content himself with confiscating the papal revenues 

(or •* patrimony ") in Sicily, Calabria, and other parts of 

his dominions, and transferring Greece and Illyricum from the 

Roman patriarchate to that of Constantinople/ 

Gregory IIL was succeeded in 741 by Zacharias, and Leo by 
his son Constantino, whose reign extended to the unusual length 
of thirty-fomr yeara This prince (who is commonly distinguished 
by the name Copronymus^ derived from his having in infancy 
polluted the baptismal font)^ is charged by the ecclesiastic^ 
writers with monstrous vices, and with the practice of magical 
arts ;^ while his apologists contend that he was remarkably chaste 
and temperate/ The characteristics which are beyond all con- 
troversy, are his vigour, his ability, and his cruelty.*^ In war he 
successfully defended his empire against Saracens, Bulgarians, and 
other enemies, and under him its internal administration was 
greatly improved." 

The Saracen war, and the discontents arising out of the question 
as to images, encouraged the emperor's brother-in-law, Artavasdus, 
to pretend to the throne; it would seem, indeed, that he was 
ahnost forced into this course by the jealousy of Constantine." 
Artavasdus appealed to the popular affection for images, and 
restored them in all places of which he got possession. He was 
crowned by the patriarch Anastasius, who, holding the cross in his 
hands, publicly swore that Constantine had avowed to him a belief 
that our Lord was a mere man, born in the ordinary way.** 
Pope Zacharias acknowledged Artavasdus as emperor ; ^ but, after 
having maintained his claim for three years, the rival of Constan- 
tino was put down, and he and his adherents were punished with 
great severity. Anastasius was blinded, and was exhibited in the 
hippodrome, mounted on an ass, with his face towards the tail ; 
yet, after this, Constantine restored him to the patriarchate, by 
way, it would seem, of proclaiming his contempt for the whole 
body of the clergy.^ 

It is said that (]!onstantine expressed Nestorian opinions, and a 

' Hadrian I. in Patrol, xcviii. 1292 ; •» Theofllkn. 683-5. 

Pigi, xii. 731 ; Walch, x. 262 ; Schlosser, •» Gibbon, iv. 411-2 ; Schlosser, 222-4. 

190-5: Giesel. II. i. 33. " Schlosser, 201. » Theophan. 639. 

» Tlieophan. 613. This story has, p He dated by the year of Arta- 

however, been questioned, and other yasdus' reign, e, g, Ep. 6 (Patrol, 

reasons have been given for the name. Ixxxiz.). Schrockh, xix. 543. Hut 

See Ducance, s. v. Caballinw, this, says Hefcle, did not imply partisan- 

^ Theophan. 636, 685, 694. ship. iii. 378. 

* Basnage, 1356-7 ; Walch, x. 361. "i Theophan. 647-8 ; Milman, ii. 110. 

H 



98 COUNCIL AT CONSTANTINOPLE. Book III. 

disbelief in the intercession of the Blessed Vir^n and of the saints. 
But if so, the words were spoken in conferences which were in- 
tended to be secret ; and it was the emperor's policy to feel his 
way carefully before taking any public step in matters of religion/ 
On the question as to images, he wished to strengthen himself by 
the authority of a general council, and summoned one to meet in 
the year 754, having in the preceding year desired that, by way of 
preparation, the subject should be discussed by the provincial 
assemblies of bishops." The see of Constantinople was then vacant 
by the death of Anastasius — a circumstance which may have tended 
to secure the ready compliance of some who aspired to fill it.^ The 
remaining three plitriarchs of the East were under the Mahometan 
dominion, and Stephen of Rome disregarded the imperial citation. 
In the absence of all the patriarchs, therefore, the bishops of 
Ephesus and Perga presided over the council, which was held in a 
palace on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus, with the exception of 
the final sitting, which took place in the church of the Blachemce." 
The number of bishops, although collected from the emperor's 
dominions only, amounted to three hundred and thirty-eight,* and 
their decisions, after sessions which lasted from February to August, 
are described as unanimous — a proof rather of the subjection in 
which the episcopate was held than of any real conviction. 

The assembled bishops professed to rest their judgment on the 
authority of the fethers, from whose writings extracts were read. 
They declared all representations made for religious purposes by 
the art of painter or sculptor to be presumptuous, heathenish, and 
idolatrous.^ Those who make such representations of the Saviour, 
it is said, eithei* limit the incomprehensible God to the bounds of 
created flesh, or confound the natures, like Eutyches, or deny the 
Godhead, like Arius, or, with Nestorius, separate it from the man- 
hood so as to make two persons.' The eucharist alone is declared 
to be a proper image of the Saviour — the union of the Divine 
grace with the material elements typifying that of the Godhead 
with his human form.* All images, therefore, are to be removed 
out of churches. Bishops, priests, or deacons contravening the 

' Theophan. 671, 678 ; *Neand. v. 213. Its definitions are in the sixth 

307. See Gfrorer, ii. 139. session of the second Council of Nic«a, 

■ Basnage, 1354. Hard. iy. 325, seqq. 

« This remark of Schlosser (213) « Hard. iv. 345. 

seems more reasonable than that of 7 lb. 380, 415. * lb. 360-1. 

Spanhcira (754), — that, if Constantine • lb. 368-9. The inconsistency of 

had wished to influence the Council, he this with the later Roman doctrine is 

would have filled the patriarchal throne evident, as otherwise the humanity 

with a tool. would be docetic, 

« Theophan. 59, ed. Paris ; Schlosser, 



CtaAF. IT. AJ). t»4. REMOVAL OF IMAGES. 99 

decisioiis of the Goancil, whether by invoking images, by wor- 
shipping them, by setting them up, or by secretly keeping them, 
are to be deposed; monks and lay persons offending in like 
manner are to be excommunicated*' But it was ordered that no 
one should deface or meddle with sacred vessels or vestments, 
under pretext of their being adorned with figures, unless by per- 
miasion of the emperor or of the patriarch ; and that no person in 
authorily should despoil churches on this account, as had already 
been done in some instances.^ With a view, perhaps, of clearing 
themselves fipom the aspersions which were thrown on the emperor's 
faith, the bishops formally declared the lawfulness of invoking the 
Blessed Virgin and the saints.** And they pronounced anathemas 
against all religious art,® anathematising by name some noted 
defenders of images — Germanus, George of Cyprus, and John of 
Damascus, whom they designated by the name oi Mansoury loaded 
with a profusion of dishonourable epithets, and denounced with a 
threefold curse.*^ 

Fortified by the decisions of the council, Constantine now 
ordered that all images should be removed. For the religious 
paintings on church-walls, he ordered that other subjects, such as 
birds and fruits, or scenes from the chase, the theatre, and the 
circus, should be substituted.** He required the clergy and the more 
noted monks to subscribe the decrees of the synod ;* and at a 
later time an oath against images was exacted Ax)m all the inha- 
bitants of the empire.*^ It does not appear that any of the bishops 
refused to comply ; but the monks were violent and obstinate in 
their resistance, and the emperor endeavoured to subdue them by 
the most barbarous cruelties." The zeal of the monks in behalf 
of images provoked him even to attempt the extirpation of 
monachism by forcing them to abandon their profession." Thus 
we read that a number of monks were compelled to appear in the 
hippodrome at Constantinople, each holding by the hand a woman 
of disreputable character, and so to stand while the populace 

^ Hard. iv. 416-7. •» Theophan. 659. Vita Stephani 

« lb. 4*20-1. jiinioris, iu Patrol. Gr. c. 1113. Hence 

^ lb. 429-432. the biographer of Stephen speaks of 

* lb. 424, seqq. him as having turned a church into 

' It would seem that this was the inr»pofpv\dKiov (Psalm Ixxxviii. i. Lxx.), 

name of John's father, or was slightly kuL hpvfoaKVKtiov, 1120. 

varied from it, and was intended to be ' Schrockh, xx. 561-3. 

understood as meaning a bastard. See "» a.d. 766. Niceph. Cpol. 47. Walch, 

Theophan.342,cd.Paris; Georg. Hamart. x. 381. Neander (v. 307) supposes that 

pp. 639, 651 ; Cedren. 456 ; Ducange, it was only enforced in Constantinople. 

Gloss. Med. et Inf. Gnccitatis, s, v. "See Theophan. 684 ; Schrikkh, xx. 

nwffohp ; Fabriclus, Bibl. Gr. ix. 685. 504, seqq. 

« Hard. iv. 437 ; Theophan. 643. ■ Niceph. Cpol. 46. 

h2 



100 ICONOCLASTIC PERSECUTION OF MONKS. Book HI. 

mocked at them and spat on them.® The new patriarch, Constan- 
tine, whom the emperor had presented to the council in that 
character on the last day of its meeting,^ was obliged publicly to 
forswear images, and, in violation of the monastic vows which he 
had taken, to attend the banquets of the palace, to eat and drink 
freely, to wear garlands, to witness the gross spectacles, and to 
listen to the indecent language and mu3ic, in which the emperor 
delighted. Monasteries were destroyed, converted into barracks, 
or applied to other secular uses.^ The governor of the Thracian 
Theme, Michael Lachanadraco/ especially distinguished himself 
by the energy of his proceedings against the monks. He assembled 
a great number of them in a plain, and told them that such of 
them as were inclined to obey the emperor and himself must forth- 
with put on a white dress and take wives ; while those who should 
refuse were to lose their eyes and to be banished to Cyprus. Some 
of them complied, but the greater part suffered the penalty. Lach- 
anadraco put many monks to death ; he anointed the beards of 
some with a mixture of oil and wax, and then set them on fire ; he 
burnt up monasteries, sold the plate, books, cattle, and other pro- 
perty which belonged to them, and remitted the price to the 
emperor, who publicly thanked him for his zeal, and recommended 
him as an example to other governors." Relics were to some 
extent involved in the fate of images, although not so much as 
consistency might have seemed to require.* Lachanadraco seized 
all which he found carried about the person, and punished the 
wearers as impious and disobedient The relics of St. Euphemia, 
at Chalcedon, which even as early as the time of the Fourth 
General Council had been famous- for miraculous virtue,^ and 
were believed to exude a fragrant balsam, were thrown into the 
sea, and the place where they had been preserved was defiled. 
But it is said that they were carried by the waves to Lemnos, 
where visions indicated the spot in which they were to be found, 
and secured their preservation until more favourable times.* 

The monks, on their part, no doubt did much to provoke the 
emperor and his oflScers to additional cruelty by violent and fana- 
tical behaviour. Thus, one, named Peter " the Caly"bite," ^ made his 

» Theophan. 675-6. p lb. 6?>9. hare reprobated in the opposite party. 

< lb. 675, 684. ' lb 684-5. » GieseL II. i. 5. 

■ lb. 688-690. Spanheim sets off the " See vol. i. p. 468. 
dragoons of Louis XIV.*s time agaiost « Theophan. 679. 
this iconoclastic draco. Basnage, by his r From KaX6$ri, a shed or hut. It 
tone in speaking of persecution carried would seem that Theophanes has con- 
on by iconoclasts, shows not a little of founded two monks, Andrew and Peter, 
that persecuting spirit which he would See Hefele, iii. 390, 394. 



Caukr.Vf. ▲jk.m-YCT. THE PATRIARCH CX)NSTANTINE. 101 

way into the presence of Constantine, and upbraided him, as a new 
ValeDB and Julian, for persecuting Christ in his members and in 
his images. For this audacity Peter was scourged in the hippo- 
drome, and was afterwards strangled.' Another famous sufferer 
was Stephen, who had lived as a monk for sixty years. He boldly 
defied the emperor; he remained unshaken by banishment or 
tortures, and, by way of illustrating the manner in which insults 
oflRsred to images might be supposed to affect the holy persons whom 
they represent, he produced a coin stamped with the emperor's head, 
threw it on the ground, and trod on it. In consequence of this act 
he was imprisoned ; but the sympathy of his admirers was displayed 
so warmly that Constantine was provoked to exclaim, *' Am I, or 
is this monk, emperor of the world ? " The words were caught 
up as a hint by some courtiers, who rushed to the prison and 
hrcke it open. Stephen was dragged through the streets, by a 
rope tied to one of his feet, until he was dead, and his body was 
then toim in pieces, which were thrown into a place appropriated 
to the burial of heathens and excommunicate persons, of suicides 
and of criminals.^ 

The patriarch Constantine, after all his compliances, was 
accused of having held treasonable communications with Stephen, 
and of having spoken disrespectfully of the emperor ; and on these 
charges he was banished to an island, while Nicetas, an eunuch of 
Slavonic origin, was raised to the patriarchate in his stead. In the 
second year of his banishment, Constantine was brought 
back to the capital. Afl;er having been beaten until he 
could not walk, he was carried into the cathedral, where the 
accusations against him were read aloud, and at every count of 
the indictment an imperial ftmctionary struck him on the face. 
He was then forced to stand in the pulpit, while Nicetas pro- 
nounced his excommunication ; after which he was stripped of the 
pall, the ensign of his ecclesiastical dignity, and was led backwards 
out of the church. On the following day he was carried into the 
hippodrome ; his hair, eyebrows, and beard were plucked out ; he 
was set on an ass, with his face towards the tail, which he was 
compelled to hold with both hands, and his nephew, whose nose 
had been cut off, led the animal around, while the spectators 
hooted at and spat on the fallen patriarch. He was then thrown 
violently to the ground, his neck was trodden on, and he lay pros- 

* Theophan. 363, ed. Paris ; Basnage, phan. 674 ; BaroD. 754. 26, seqq., with 
1356. Pagi's notes ; 762. 3 ; 765. 6-10 ; 767. 

• Nic. Cpol. 46; sec the Life of 9- 19; Schlosser, 228. 
Stephen Id Patrol. Gr. c. ; also Theo- 



102 THE PATRIARCH CX)NSTANTINE. Book III. 

trate, exposed to the jeers of the rabble, until the games of the 
day were over. A few days later, some patricians were sent to 
question him in prison as to the emperor's orthodoxy, and as to 
the decisions of the council against images. The wretched man, 
thinking to soothe his persecutor's rage, expressed approval of 
everything. "This," they said, '*was all that we wished to hear 
further from thy impure mouth ; now begone to cursing and 
darkness!" Constantino was immediately beheaded, and his 
head, after having been publicly exposed for three days, was 
thrown, with his body, into the same place of ignominy where 
Stephen had before been buried.'* 

These details have been given as a specimen of the cruelties 
which are ascribed to Constantine Copronymus. To the end of 
his reign he was unrelenting in his enmity against the worshippers 
of imagea In the year 775, while on a military expedition, he 
was seized with a burning pain in his legs, which (it is said) forced 
from him frequent cries that he already felt the pains of heU. He 
died at sea, on his way to Constantinople.^ 

»» Theophan. 677-683. « lb. 693-4. 



ciiAF.v. ( 103 ) 



(JHATTER V. 

ST. BONIFACE. 
A.D. 716-755. 

Among the missionary enterprises of the Anglo-Saxons had been 
some attempts to convert the nations of Northern Germany. 
Suidbert, one of the original companions of Willibrord, was con- 
secrated in England during his master's first visit to Rome, and 
went forth to preach to the Bonictuarians, who occupied a territory 
between the Ems and the Yssel ; but the disorders of the country 
obliged him to withdraw irom it, and he afterwards laboured 
on tiie Lower Rhine.* Two brothers, named Hewald, and dis- 
tinguished from each other by the epithets White and Black, are 
also celebrated as having penetrated into the country of the Old 
Saxons, and having there ended their lives by martyrdom.^ But 
no great or lasting missionary success had been achieved to the 
east of the Rhine in the lower part of its course until the time of 
Boniface.® 

This missionary, whose original name was Winfrid,** was bom 
at Crediton, in Devonshire, of a noble and wealthy family, about 
the year 680.® It was intended that he should follow a secular 
career ; but the boy was early influenced by the discourse of some 
monks who visited his father's house, and at the age of seven he 
entered a monastery at Exeter, from which he afterwards removed 
to that of Nutscelle (Nutshalling or Nursling) in Hampshire.^ 
Here he became famous for his ability as a preacher and as an 
expositor of Scripture.* He was employed in important ecclesias- 
tical business, and had the prospect of rising to eminence in 

* Beda, v. 1 1 ; Vita Saidberti, ap. pope at his consecration. But it ocean 
Leibnitz, Scriptores Kenim BruDsric ii. earlier, and was probably assumed when 
2S3, seqq. ; Uettberg, ii. 395, 423, 525. he became a monk. Laden, v. 454 ; 

I* Beda, y. 10. The details of the story Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 33S ; Rettb. i. 

are legendary. See Rettb. ii. 397-9. 334-5. 

* Giesel. L ii. 507 ; Rettb. i. 309. « Not later than C83. See Rettb. i. 
The chief authorities as to St. Boniface 330. 

are his own correspondence, and the ' Willib. 1-2 ; Kemble, ii. 452. The 

lives by his disciple Willibald, and by disappearance of Nutscelle from the list 

Othlon, a monk of Ratisbon, in the of English monasteries is traced to the 

latter part of the eleventh century ; all ravages of the Danes. M^Cabe's Catho- 

printed in the Patrologia, vol. Ixxxix. lie History of Kngland, L 616. 

«* The name of ]k>niface is generally « Willib. 2-3. 
said to have been given to him by the 



104 BONIFACE. Book IU. 

the diurch of his own country ; but he was seized with an earnest 
desire to labour for the extension of the Gospel, and, with two 
companions, he crossed the sea to Frisia, in the year 716.^ The 
state of things in that country was unfavourable for his design. 
Charles Martel, the son of Pipin of Heristal by a concubine, had 
possessed himself of the mayoralty of the palace in Austrasia, and 
was now engaged iif war with Radbod of Frisia, who had made an 
alliance with Kagenfrid, the mayor of the Neustrian palace.^ The 
pagan prince had destroyed many churches and monasteries, and, 
although he admitted Boniface to an interview, he refused him 
permission to preach in his dominions." Boniface therefore returned 
to Nutscelle, where the monks, on the occurrence of a vacancy 
in the headship of their house, were desirous to elect him abbot 
But his missionary zeal induced him to withstand their impor- 
tunities ; by the assistance of his bishop, Daniel of Winchester, 
he secured the appointment of another abbot, and in the spring 
of 717 he set out for Rome.™ A letter from Daniel procured him 
a kind reception from Gregory II., who held many conferences 
with him during the following winter ; and in 718 Boni&ce left 
Rome, carrying with him a large supply of relics, with a letter ^ 
in which the pope authorised him to preach to the heathens of 
Germany wherever he might find an opportunity. After having 
surveyed Bavaria and Thuringia, he was induced by tidings of 

Radbod's death to go again into Frisia, where for three 

years he laboured under Willibrord. The aged bishop 
wished to appoint him his successor; but Boniface declined the 
honour, on the ground that, as he was not yet fifty years old, he 
was unfit for so high an o£Sce, and that he must betake himself to 
the sphere for which the pope had especially appointed him.® lie 

therefore took leave of Willibrord, and passed into Hessia. 

Two local chiefe, Detdic and Dierolf, who, although pro- 
fessing Christianity, were worshippers of idols, granted him leave 
to establish himsetf at Amanaburg, on the Ohm (Amana'^), where 
in a short time he reclaimed them from their heathenish practices, 
and baptised many thousands of Hessians. On receiving a report 
of tliis success, Gregory summoned Boniface to Rome, and, afl«r 
having exacted a formal profession of faith, ordained him as a 

»» Willib. 4 ; Tagi, xii. 272. with this occasion a passage in the let- 

' Willib. 4 ; Pagi, xii. 250, 266 ; Sis- ter of Bugga to Boniface (Ep. 3), and 

luondi, ii. 112. supposes that Boniface acted on an inti- 

^ Willib. 4. " lb. 5. matiou received in a dream. But the 

" Gre^. II. Ed. i. Patrol. Ixxxix. connexion seems questionable. 

° Willib. G. Neander (v. 64) connecte p Willib. 7. See Kettb. i. 339-340. 



GkAP.T, jun.Tie.W4. CONSECRATION AT ROME. 105 

regionary bishop,* at the same time binding bun to the papal 
see by an oath, which was a novelty as imposed on a Nov. 30, 
misfflonary, although, with some necessary changes, it was ^^^* 
the same which had long been required of bishops within the proper 
patriarchate of Rome/ Standing at the tomb of St. Peter, to 
whom the oath was addressed, Boniface solemnly pledged himself 
to obey the apostle, and the pope as his vicar ; in no wise to consent 
to anything against the unity of the Catholic Church ; in all things 
to keep his faith to the apostle, and to the interests of the Eoman 
see ; to have no communion or fellowship with bishops who might 
act contrary to the institutions of the holy fathers ; but to check 
such persons, if possible, or otherwise to report them faithfully to 
his lord the pope." 

The bishop received from the pope a code of regulations for 
the government of his church^ (probably the collection of Diony- 
sius Exiguus) ; and, having learnt by experience the importance of 
securing the countenance of princes for missionary undertakings, 
he carried with him a letter from Gregory to Charles Martel, who, 
under the name of the effete descendants of Clovis, was the virtual 
sovereign of their kingdom." He was also furnished by the pope 
with letters to the nations among which his labours were to be 
employed.* Charles Martel received the missionary coldly ; such 
enterprises as that of Boniface had no interest for the rude warrior,y 
nor were the clergy of his court likely to bespeak his favour for 
one whose life and thoughts widely differed from their own. Bo- 
niface, however, obtained from Charles the permission which he 

4 WiUib. 7 ; Othlon, i. 13-4. made far too much of a passag^e in 

' See the ' Liber Diurnos/ iii. S (Pa- Othlon, where it is said that Bonifieice, 

trol. CT.) ; De Marca, Tii. 6; Schrockb, in applying to Carloman for support, 

xix. 173-6; Neand. v. 66; Giesel. II. " poposcit ut Christianae religionis cul- 

i. 22. turam, quam pater ejus in promptissimo 

■ Patrol. Izxzix. 803. animo coepit et excoluit, ipse quoque pro 

* Willib. 7. Dei amore, suique regni stabilitate . . . 

" Greg. £p. 2. To the ordinary ao-. eodem animo excoleret " (Othl. i. 33 ; 

counts of the *' do-nothing " MeroTin- Perry, 284). The occasion on which 

gian kings {e,g, that given by Einhard, such words are said to have been used 

Vita Caroli, 1.), Theophanes (619) and will warrant us in deducting largely 

Cedrenos (4.53) add the Byzantine idea from their apparent meaning. On the 

as to their long hair— that it grew along other hand, M. Michelet (iL 11) ques- 

their backs, as in hogs ! Gregory of tions whether Charles was a Christian 

Tours speaks of their " whips of hair " at all— but on no better grounds than 

(Jhgella crimum), vi. 24 ; viii. 10. that the epithet Martel reminds the his- 

' Greg, Epp. 3-7. torian of the hammer ascribed to Thor I 

y I leave this as it stood before the Against this, see Martin, ii. 206. The 

publication of Dr. Perry's work, in name does not aopear in any writer 

which the religion of Charles Martel is before the eleventh century. lb. ; Lu- 

more favourably represented. In parti- den, iv. 469. 

cular, it seems to me that Dr. Perry has 



106 BONIFACE IN Book UI. 

desired to preach beyond the Khine, with a letter of protection/ 
which proved to be very valuable/ 

In Hessia and Thuringia, the countries to which he now re- 
pairedy Christianity had already been long preached, but by isolated 
teachers, and witbout any regular system.^ The belief and the 
practice of the converts were still largely mixed with paganism ; 
Boniface even speaks oi presbyters who offered sacrifices to the 
heathen gods.^ The preachers had for the most part proceeded 
from the Irish Church, in which diocesan episcopacy was as yet 
unknown, and the jurisdiction was separate from the order of a 
bishop ; they had brought with them its peculiar ideas as to the 
limitation of the episcopal rights ;** they were unrestrained by any 
discipline or by any regard for unity ; they owned no subjection to 
Bome, and were under no episcopal authority.^ Boniface often 
complains of these preachers as " fornicators and adulterers " ' — 
words which may in some cases imply a charge of real immorality, 
but which in general clearly mean nothing more than that the 
Irish missionaries held the doctrine of their native church as to 
the lawfulness of marriage for the clergy.' He speaks, too, of 
some who imposed on the people by pretensions to extraordinary 
asceticism — feeding on milk and honey only, and rejecting even 
bread.** With these rival teachers he was involved in serious and 
lasting contentions. 

Among the collection of Boniface's correspondence is a letter 
from his old patron, Daniel of Winchester,* containing advice for 

' £p. 11. cause some of them have often been 

" Ep. 12, c. 702 ; Rettb. i. 343. proved to be Manichseans, and others to 

*> Willib. 8 ; Rettb. i. 346-7 ; ii. 310. be rebaptised (t. e. Donatists). Neander 

« His report of this is known from a (v. 62), Rettberg (i. 312), and others, 

letter of Pope Zacharias to him. Zach. suppose this to have been carelessly 

Ep. 11 (Patrol. Ixxxiz. c. 44). Rett- copied by a scribe from a form of older 

berg thinks that these were not Chris- date, since it occurs almost in the same 

tians who had fallen into idolatry, but words in an epistle of Gregory the 

heathens who, without renouncing their Great (ii. 37), and in a form ascribed to 

own religion, had taken up some Chris- Gelasius I. (Patrol, liz. 137 ; Lib. Dium. 

tian forms, (ii. 579.) See Schmidt, iii. 9, ib. cv.) Ozanam, however, thinks 

i. 408. that the prohibition was applicable to 

^ See p. 66. the circumstances of Germany in the 

« Willib. 8; Rettb. i. 317. time of Boniface, and that the ascetic 

' E, g, Epp. 12, 27, 49 ; Ep. Zach. 11. pretenders of whom Boniface compliuns 

col. 944. were Manichsaus. (Civil. Chr^t. 192.) 

' Schrbckh, xiz. 185 ; Theiner, i. 409, But he does not explain how the African 

414 ; Rettb. i. 320-3. church of the eighth century could have 

^ Ep. 12. col. 701 ; Rettb. i. 313. In sent forth such persons, how it is that 

the letter by which Gregory II. recom- Donatists are also mentioned in that 

mended Boniface to the people and age, or bow it is that the same words 

clergy of Germany (Greg. II. Ep. 4), are found in Gregory the Great and in 

it is said that he is not to acknowledge the older Roman formularies. 

Africans pretending to holy orders, be- • Ep. 14. 



Qur.y. AJKYSir^m. HESSIA AND THURINGIA. 107 

the conduct of his missionary work. The bishop tells him that, 
in discusdons with the heathen, he ought not to question the 
genealogies of their gods, but to argue from them that beings 
propagated after the fashion of mankind must be not gods but 
men. Hie argument is to be urged by tracing back the genea- 
levies to the beginning ; by asking such questions as — '^ When was 
the first god generated? To which sex did this god belong? Has 
the generation of gods come to an end ? If it has ceased, why ? 
Is the world older than the gods ? If so, who governed it before 
they existed ?" The missionary must argue mildly, and must avoid 
all appearance of insult or offence. He must contrast the truth of 
Christianity with the absurdities of the pagan mythology. He 
must ask how it is that the gods allow Christians to possess the 
fairest places of the earth, while their own votaries are confined to 
cold and barren tracts ; he is to dwell on the growth of the Chris- 
tian church firom nothing to the predominance which it has already 
attained. 

It would seem, however, that Boniface rarely had occasion to 
enter into arguments of this sort, but was obliged to rely on 
others of a more palpable kind.^ He found that an oak near 
Geismar, sacred to the thunder-god Donar,*" was held in great 
reverence by the Hessians, and that the impression which his 
words made on the people was checked by their attachment to 
this object of ancestral veneration. He therefore, at the sug- 
gestion of some converts, resolved to cut down the tree. A multi- 
tude of pagans assembled and stood around, uttering fierce curses. 
Band expecting the vengeance of the gods to show itself on the mis- 
sionary and his companions. But when Boniface had hardly begun 
bis operations, a violent gust of wind shook the branches, and the 
oak fell to the ground, broken into four equal pieces. The pagans 
at once renounced their gods, and with the wood of the tree Boni- 
face built a chapel in honour of St. Peter." 

After this triumph his preaching made rapid progress. He 
founded churches and monasteries, and was reinforced by many 
monks and nuns from his native church, who assisted him in the 
labours of conversion and Christian education.® Gregory lU., 
soon after being raised to the popedom, in 732, conferred on him the 
pall of an archbishop ;" and when in 738 Boniface paid a third 

^ Rettb. i. 407-8. god, Woden, for him. i. 344. 

» The T/ior of Scandinavian mylho- » Willib. 8. 
logy. (Grimm, Deutsche Mythologie, *» lb. ; Othlon, i. 25; Rettb. i. 403. 
G2-3, 172.) As being the ttod of thunder p Greg. HI. £p. 1 (PatroL Ixxxix.); 

he is caUed JupUer (Willib. 8), whence WiUib. 8. 
Rettberg wrongly substitutes the cAir/ 



108 CHARLES MAIITEL. ^ook IlL 

visit to Borne, he was received with the honour due to a missionary 
who had by that time baptised a hundred thousand con- 
verta* On his return northwards, he was induced by 
Odilo, duke of Bavaria, to remain for a time in that country, where 
he had ahready laboured about three years before/ He found 
there a general profession of .Christianity ; but there was only one 
bishop, Vivilus by name; there was no system of ecclesiastical 
government ; and, as in other parts of Germany, he had to contend 
with the rivalry of the irregular missionaries from Ireland. He 
divided the country into four dioceses — Salzburg, Passau (which was 
assigned to Vivilus), Batisbon, and Freisingen ;* and, having thus 
organised the Bavarian church, he returned to the more especial 
scene of his labours. 

The name of Charles Martel is memorable in the history of the 
Church and of the world for having turned back the course of 
Mahometan conquest. The Saracens of Spain had overrun the 
south of France, had made their way as far as the Loire, and 
were marching against Tours, with the intention of plundering 
the treasures which the devotion of centuries had accumulated 
around the shrine of St Martin, when they were met by Charles, 
at the head of an army collected irom many races — Franks, 
Germans, Gauls, men of the north, and others. His 

A*D 732 

victory near Poitiers (although the slaughter has been 
vastly exaggerated by legendary writers) * put a stop for ever to 
the progress of their arms towards the north ; and while they were 
further weakened by internal dissensions, Charles, following up his 
advantage, succeeded in driving them back beyond the Pyreneesc" 
But the vast benefit which he thus conferred on Christendom was 
purchased at a cost which for the time pressed heavily on the 
Church of France. In order to meet the exigencies of the war, 
he seized the treasures of churches, and rewarded the chiefs who 
followed him with the temporalities of bishopricks and abbeys ; 
so that, notwithstanding his great services to the Christian cause, 
his memory is branded by the French ecclesiastical writers as 
that of a profane and sacrilegious prince, and a synod held at 

<i Greg. III. Ep. 7, col. 584 ; Willib. 9. tin, ii. 202-6 ; Hallam, Supplem. Notes, 

' V^ilUb. 9; Pagi, xii. 428; Kettb. 24; Laden, iv. 105-6. The Arabian ac- 

i. 346. counts ascribe the defeat to the Divine 

• Willib. 9 ; Greg. III. Ep. 4, 7 ; vengeance for the cruelties of which the 
Kettb. 349-350. invaders had been guilty. Conde, ' Do- 

* It is said that the Infidels lost minacion de los Arabes en EspaSia/ 44, 
375,000 men, and the Christians only ed. Paris, 1840. 

1500. Paul. Wamef. De Gestis Lan- " Gibbon, v. 186-9. 
gob. vi. 46 ; see Sismondi, ii. 132 ; Mar- 



CkAT.V. AAt»-t43. COUNCTLS UNDER BONIFACE. 109 

Quiercy in the year 858, assured one of his descendants that for 
this an Eucherius, bishop of Orleans, had seen him tormented 
** in the lower hell." " 

Boni£Eice, although he found the name of the Frankish mayor 
a powerful assistance in his labours beyond the Rhine/ was 
thwarted at the Frankish court by the nobles who had got posses- 
sion of ecclesiastical revenues, and by the rude, secular, fighting 
and hunting bishops, who were most congenial to the character 
of Charles.* In a letter to Daniel of Winchester, he complains 
of being obliged to have intercourse with such persons. The 
bifibop in reply wisely advises him, on scriptural authority, to 
keep himself pure, and to bear with such faults in others as it may 
not be in his power to amend.* 

Both Gregory III. and Charles Martel died in 741. The new 
pope, Zacharias, extended Boniface's power by authorising him 
to reform the whole Frankish church.^ The sons of Charles were 
glad to avail themselves of the assistance of Rome in a work of 
which they felt the necessity ;^ and from Carloman, who had 
succeeded to the mayoralty of Austrasia, while Pipin held that of 
Neustria, Boniface received an amount of support which he had 
hitherto in vain endeavoured to obtain."^ He now erected four 
bishopricks for Hesse and Thuringia ;® and in 742, at the request 
of Carloman (as he says), was held a council for the reformation 
of the church — the first Austrasian council which had met for 
eighty years.' This council was for some years followed by 
others, collected from one or from both divisions of the Frankish 
territory. They were not, however, composed of ecclesiastics only, 
but were mixed assemblies of the national estates ;' and, while 
Boniface was acknowledged in his high office as the pope's com- 
missioner, the decrees were set forth by the Frankish princes in 
their own name,** and appointments which had been already made 
by the papal authority were again made, afresh and indepen- 
dently, by the secular power. Even the jurisdiction of Boniface 
over other bishops was thus granted anew to him.* Their canons 

* Ep. ad LadoY. regem Germanise, ' Rettb. i. 346-7. 

ap. Hard. y. 469. The stor^ U ftill of « Bp. 49 ; Zach. Ep. 1 ; Rettb. i. S51 ; 

anachromsms : e, g. the saint who is Hefele, iii. 462-3. 

said to have seen the sufferings of Charles ' Ep. 49, col. 745; Pagi, xii. 446, 

after death, himself died before him. 478. There had been more recent 

See Baron, 789. 2 ; 741. 16-21 ; Pagi, synods in Neustria. Rettb. i. 880. 

xii. 466-470; Mabillon, iil 595. ' Rettb. i. 854, 363. 

y Ep. 12. col. 702. ** E. g. Cone. Germ. I. ap. Hard. iii. 

« Epp. 49, 75; Greg. IF. Ep. 9. 1919; Ckmc. Suession. ib. 1932-4. 

■ Epp. 12-13. ' Cone. Germ, c 1, ap. Hard. iii. 

^ Zach. Ep. 6. 1920 ; Rettb. i. 854. The genuinenessof 

' Phmck, li. 726. these cooncils has been denied without 



110 COUNCILS UNDER BONIFACE. Book III. 

were directed towards the establishment of order in the church 
by providing for annual synods, by forbidding ecclesiastics to 
hunt, to hawk, to serve in war ; by the enforcement of celibacy on 
the clergy ; by subjecting the clergy to the bishops, and discoun- 
tenancing such as were under no regular disciplined An attempt 
was made to recover to their proper uses the ecclesiastical 
revenues which had been alienated by Charles Martel. The first 
council ordered their restoration," but this was not to be so easily 
effected. The council of the following year was reduced 
* to attempt a compromise, by allowing that, in considera- 
tion of the wars and of other circumstances, the property should 
for a time be retained by the lay holders, but that for each casata 
a solidus should be paid to the ecclesiastical owners." But in the 
later councils the subject does not appear, and it would seem that 
the attempt was given up as hopeless.^ The councils also madfe 
enactments for the suppression of heathen practices,'* such as 
divination, the use of amulets, needfire (i. e. the production of fire 
by the firiction of wood and tow),H and the offering of sacrifices, 
whether to the old pagan deities, or to the saints who, with some 
converts, had taken their place — practices of which some, with a 
remarkable tenacity, have kept their hold on the northern nations 
even to our own day.' 

reason by some Romanists, on account Grimm, 'Deutsche Mythologie,* 570, 

of the position assigned in them to the where a great mass of learning on the 

secular power. (See Schrockh, xix. 204.) subject is collected. In the 1 7th cen- 

Their chronology is elaborately dis- tury it was used in Aberdeenshire, where 

cussed by Hefele, iii. 467, sqq. it was stigmatised as " a Mghlatid prac- 

k E. g. Cone. Germ. cc. 1, 3, 4 ; Hard, tice." (Presbytery Book of Strathbogie, 

iii. 1920. pub. by the Spalding Club, 1843, p. 117.) 

*" Can. 1. Grimm (567) quotes Logan's 'Scottish 

■ Cone. Liptinense, c. 2. ^ By some Gael ' for evidence that it is still used in 

this council is placed at Lestines, near Caithness. Hefele seems to be wrong 

Cumbra^, by others at Ettines, near (iii. 466) in identifying the needfire with 

Binch, in Hainault (Perry, 300). The a Greek superstition condemned by the 

casata, like the English hide of land, was Trullan council, i. 65. 

a quantity sufficient for the maintenance » See Grimm, passim ; Rettb. i. 370 ; 

of one family (Ducange, s. v. Camta), W. MiiUer, ' Altdeutsche Religion,' Got- 

The solidus is reckoned in the Ripua- ting. 1844, pp. 114, seqq. Quarterljr Rev. 

rian laws as the equivalent of two oxen ex. 169-171. The curious ' Indiculus 

(Ozanam, 138); but its value varied paganiarumvelsuperstitionum/ annexed 

much. See Ducange, s. v. ; Hefele, iii. to the Cone. Liptinense (Hard. iii. 1923 ; 

469. Pertz, Leges, i. 19), was probably con- 

«» Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 847. See Perry, temporary, although not the work of that 

299-304. ' council. See notes on it in Hefele, iii. 

p Cone. Germ. L c. 5 ; Cone. Liptin. 471-7. The like is to be said of the 

c. 4 ; Cone. Suession. c. 6. vernacular form of baptismal professions 

^ Nodfyr, from ndthefiy to compel, be- and renunciations — ** Forsachistu Dia- 

cause the fire was forced out of the bole, &c.'* — where after the devil are 

wood (Wiirdtwcin, in Patrol. Ixxxix. mentioned the old pagan gods, (ibid.) 

814), or from n/>f, need, because used in Rettb. i. 328, 360. Hefele says that this 

times of calamity (Ducange, s. v. Nedfri), form shows traces of Boniface's Anglo- 

On the manner of producing it, see Saxon dialect, iii. 470, 478. 



Chap.V. aj).T4»-4. foundation of FULDA. HI 

In 742 Boniface laid the foundation of the great abbey of 
Fulda, by means of Sturmi, a noble Bavarian, whom he had 
trained up in his seminary at Fritzlar/ The original intention 
was unconnected- with educational or missionary plans — to pro- 
vide a place for ascetic retirement. Sturmi and his companions 
were diarged to seek out a remote and lonely position in the 
Buchonian forest, between the four nations to which their master 
had preached ; and, when they had fixed on a suitable spot, on 
the banks of the river Fulda, they had to clear it by cutting down 
trees, which furnished them with materials for a little chapels 
Sturmi was afterwards sent to Monte Cassino and other It^dian 
monasteries, in order that he might become acquainted with the 
best monastic systems," and the rule established at Fulda was 
more rigid than that of St Benedict. The monks were never to 
eat flesh ; their strongest drink was to be a thin beer,* although 
wine was afterwards allowed for the sick. They were to have no 
serfs, but were to subsist by the labour of their own hands.^ The 
new foundation soon became important, and was extended to pur- 
poses beyond those which Boniface had had in view. Princes and 
nobles enriched it with gifts of land, and both from tlie Frankish 
kings and fi-om the popes it enjoyed special privileges ; although 
grave doubts have been cast on the documents by which some of 
these are said to have been conferred, and especially on the grant 
by which Zacharias is represented as exempting it from all juris- 
diction save that of the apostolic see." 

Boniface continued to meet with difficulties. His scheme of 
a regular organisation, by which bishops were to be subject to 
metropolitans, and these to the successor of St Peter, did not find 
favour with the Frankish prelates. Of three on whom the pope 
intended to confer the pall, and who had been persuaded to 
apply for it, two afterwards refused it, probably in consequence 
of having further considered the obligations to Rome which it 
involved.* And he still had to encounter the opposition of irre- 
gular or heretical teachers, whom he describes as far more numerous 

• Ep. 75; Egil. Vita S. Sturmii, ap. 91 ; Zach. Ep. 15. See Schrockh, xix. 
Peitz, ii. 366 ; Rettb. i. 346. Pagi places 22G-7 ; Bohmer, Regesta Karol. 1. Rett- 
the foundation in 744. xii. 516-7. berg regards these pieces as spurious or 

*■ Vita Sturm, p. 367. interpolated. Such exemptions as that 

^ lb. p. 372. said to have been granted by Zacharias 

' lb. 371. Dr. Pertz adds a note which were not known until later, i. 613-622. 

looks significant—" Cf. Mc'moires du ■ Zach. Epp. 5, 6 ; Fleury, xlii. 37 ; 

l^ron de Poellnitz ! " Planck, ii. 727 ; Neand. v. 88 ; Gieseler, 

r Epp. 75 ; Rettb. i. 371-4. II. i. 25; Rettb. i. 362. 

* Perts, ii. 370 ; Pipin. ap. Bonif. Ep. 



112 ADELBERT AND CLEMENT. Book III. 

than those of the Catholic communion, and as stained in many 
cases with the most infamous vices.^ 

Of these opponents the most noted were Adelbert and Clement/ 
Adelbert was of Gaulish descent, and had obtained uncanonical 
consecration as a bishop from some ignorant members of the 
order. He is described as affecting extraordinary sanctity, and 
the accounts of him lead us to suppose him a person of fanatical 
character. He relied much on a letter which was written in the 
name of the Saviour and was s^d to have been sent dpwn from 
heaven.^ He said that an angel had brought him some relics of 
surpassing sanctity from the ends of the earth. In opposition to 
the regular bishops and clergy, he held meetings in fields and at 
wells ; and in such places he set up crosses and built little oratories. 
He opposed the practice of pilgrimage to Rome. He prayed to 
angels of names before unknown, such as Tubuel, Sabuoc, and 
SimieL He is said to have dbparaged the saints and martyrs, 
refusing to dedicate churches in their honour, while, with a self- 
importance which, however inconsistent, is certainly not without 
iparallels, he dedicated them in his own name instead.^ A life of 
him, filled with tales of visions and miracles, was circulated ;' and 
— whether from vanity or in order to ridicule the relics which 
Boniface had brought from Rome^ — he distributed the parings of 
his own nails and hair among his admirers. These, it is said, 
spoke of his merits as something on which they might rely for 
aid ; and, when they prostrated themselves at his feet, for the 
purpose of confesdng their sins, he told them that it was needless 
— that he knew all things and had forgiven all their misdeeds, so 
that they might go home in peace, with the assurance of pardon. 

While Adelbert gathered his sect in Austrasia, Clement was 
preaching in the German territory.^ Of this .person, who was a 
Scot from Ireland, we are told that he set at nought all canons 

^ See Zach. Ep. 11, col. 944. « Rettberg is annecessarily perplexed 

* The chief sources of information by the seeming inconsistency, (i. 315.) 

respecting them are Bonif. Ep. 57, and Walch supposes the story to have grown 

Goncil. Rom. ap. Hard. iii. 1935-41, or out of the circumstance that the name 

Patrol. Ixxxix., 831 seqq. of " Adelbert's chapels*' was popularly 

^ It is not said that Adelbert was the used. x. 47. 

writer of this letter. Walch (x. 24, 41) ' The opening of this is preserved in 

identifies it with a letter for which a the acts of the Roman synod. Adelbert, 

like origin was pretended in the time of it was said, was sanctified while yet in 

Gregory the Great and with one which the womb ; and this grace was intimated 

was condemned in a capitulary of Char- to his mother, during her pregnancy, by 

lemagne, a.d. 789. (Pertz, Leges, i. 65, a vision of a calf issuing from her right 

c. 77.) The object of that letter was to side ! 

enforce a rigid observance of the Lord's « Walch, x. 48. 

Day. »« Rettb. i. 324. 



Chap.V. A.D.7«4-t. ADELBERT AND CLEMENT. 113 

and all ecclesiastical authority ; that he^ despised the writings 
of the most esteemed fathers, such as Jerome, Augustine, and 
Gregory ; that he had two sons born in " adultery " (f. e. in 
wedlock*), and yet considered himself to be a true Christian 
' bishop ; that he judaically held marriage with a brother's widow 
to be lawful ; that he believed our Lord's descent into hell to have 
delivered the souls of unbelievers as well as believers ; and that 
on the subject of predestination he held horrible opinions, contrary 
to the catholic faith.^ 

Boniface brought the case of Adelbert before a Neustrian 
council at Soissons in 744, and obtained a condemnation of the 
heretic, with an order that the crosses which he had erected should 
be burnt" But in the following year Adelbert as well as Clement 
appears to have been in full activity. Boniface procured a censure 
of both from another council," and reported the matter for inves- 
tigation to Pope Zacharias, whom he requested to obtain from 
Carloman an order that they should be imprisoned, and debarred 
from communication with all faithful Christians.** In consequence 
of this application, the documents of the case were examined by 
a Roman synod, which sentenced Adelbert to be deposed, put 
to penance, and, in case of obstinacy, anathematised with all his 
followers ; while Clement was to be forthwith subjected to depo- 
sition and anathema.!* Two years later, however, the two again 
appear ; it would seem that, besides enjoying a great amount of 
veneration with the common people, who had persecuted Boniface 
for his proceedings against Adelbert,** they even had some influence 
over Carloman himself;' and it was probably in consequence of 
this that Zacharias now advised a course of dealing with them 
which is hardly consistent with the decided condemnation before 
passed on them.* The further history of Clement is utterly 
unknown ; as to Adelbert it is stated by a writer of questionable 
authority that he was imprisoned at Fulda, and made his escape 
from the abbey, but was murdered by some swineherds whom he 
met with in his flight^ 

* Theiner, i. 416. Leges, i. 21. 

^ Ep. 57. As might be expected, " Cone. German. III. ap. Hard. iii. 

Walch (x. 64), Schrockh (xix. 214-6), 1933. 

and most especially Neander (v. 78 ; ° Ep. 57. 

Mem. 467) and Baron Bunsen (Zeichen p Cone. Rom. ap. Hard. iii. 1940-1 ; 

der Zeit, i. 91-4), take np the cause of Zach. Ep. 10, c. 942. 

Adelbert and Clement, and strain their <i Ep. 57, c. 752. 

powers of conjecture to draw forth a ' Anon. Mogunt ap. Pertz, ii. 854 ; 

favourable meaning from the unfavour- Iicttb. i. 314. 

able representations by which alone we • Ep. 9. See Hefele, iii. 513. 

know anything of these teachers. * Auon. Mogunt. ap. Pertz, ii. 355 ; 

" Capitol. Suession. 7, ap. Pertz, Rettb. i. 368-370. 

I 



1 14 VIRGIL OF SALZBURG. Book III. 

Another person with whom Boniface came into collision was an 
Irish ecclesiastic named Virgil." Virgil, when ordered by him to 
rebaptise some persons at whose baptism the words of administra- 
tion had been mutilated by an ignorant priest, appealed against 
the order to Rome ; and Zacharias pronounced that the sacrament 
was valid, inasmuch as the mistake did not proceed from heresy, 
but only from grammatical ignorance.* Some time after 
this, Virgil was nominated to the see of Salzburg,^ when 
Boniface objected to him that he held the existence of another 
world below ours, with a sun, a moon, and inhabitants of its own. 
Zacharias condemned the opinion, and summoned Virgil to Rome ; ■ 
but it would seem that he was able to clear his orthodoxy, as he 
was allowed to take possession of Salzburg and was eventually 
canonised.* 

The German church had now advanced beyond that stage in 
which its primate might fitly be a missionary, without any determi- 
nate see.** Boniface wished to fix himself at Cologne — probably 
with a view to Frisia, which, since the death of Willibrord, in 
739, he had regarded as included within his legatine care ; and 
to this he obtained the consent of the Frankish chiefs, and the 
sanction of' Pope Zacharias.^ But before the arrangement could 
be carried into effect, events occurred which caused it to be set 
aside. In 744, the same year in which the see of Cologne became 

• See Vit S. Virgilii, ap. MabilL iv. which reached the pope was, that he 
309. held the existence of men belonging to 

' Zach. Ep. 7. The priest baptised a different species from ours — not par- 

" in nomine ratria, et Filia, et Spiritua takers in the seed of Adam or in the 

Sanct^." Christian redemption. (See Bayle, art. 

^ Virgil administered the diocese for Virgile de Salzhoftrg ; Neand. v. 86 ; 

two (or, as Rettb. ii. 234, argues, for Ozanam, 134 ; Whewell, Hist, of Induc- 

tvpenti/'two) years before receiving con- tive Sciences, i. 272, ed. 2 ; Rettb. ii. 

secration ; and in the mean time ordina- 236 ; Rohrbachcr, xi. 39-40 ; Hefele, iii. 

tions, &C., were performed for him by 523.) Dr. Newman^however, supposes 

one of his countrymen named Dobda, him to have been charged with teaching 

who was in episcopal orders. At length " the existence of the antipodes," and 

Virgil yielded to the importunities of tells us that ** the Holy See apparently 

bis flock and of the neighbouring evaded the question .... passing over, in 

bishops, and was consecrated m 767 [?J. a matter not revealed, a philosophical 

.(Canisius. ed. Basnage, III. ii. 287.) opinion " (Lectures on University Snb- 

The peculiar system of the Irish church, jects, Ix>nd. 1859, p. 280). But in truth 

^rhich has been already explained (p. 66), Zacharias condemned very strongly the 

disposes of the construction put on this opinion imputed to Virgil, — the pope's 

case by Rcttberg (ii. 234) and others. only doubt being whether Virgil really 

* Zach. Ep. U, coll. 946-7. The case held it. 

of Virgil is celebrated as a parallel to • Pagi (xii. 538, 549) and others 

that of Galileo— his opinion, according deny the identity of St. Virgil with the 

to those who so regard the matter, hav- object of Boniface's suspicion ; but Ma- 

ing been, that he believed the roundness billon (iv. 308) and Lanigan (iii. 184) 

of the earth and the existence of anti- maintain it. 

podcs. Writers anxious for the credit •» Rettb. i. 366. 

of Rome replv that, whatever his opi- <^ Zach. Ep. 10, coll. 940, 942 ; Pagi, 

uion may really have been, the report xii. 523 ; Neand. v. 89. 



Chap.V. A.D. 745-762. AROHBISHOPRICK OF MENTZ. 115 

vacant by the death of Raginfrid,** Gerold, bishop of Mentz, was 
slain in a warlike expedition against the Saxons, and his son, 
Gewillieb, who until then had been a layman of Carloman's court, 
was consecrated to the see. In the following year the new bishop 
accompanied the Mayor of the Palace to war, with a resolution to 
avenge his father's death ; he discovered the Saxon by whose hand 
it had been caused, and, while the Prankish and the Saxon armies 
were encamped on opposite banks of the Weser, invited him to 
a conference in the midst of the stream. The two rode into the 
water, and, at their meeting, the bishop stabbed the Saxon — an 
act which was the signal for a battle, in which the Pranks were 
victorious. Gewillieb returned to his see as if he had done nothing 
inconsistent with his episcopal character ; nor does it appear that 
any disapprobation of it was felt by Carloman or his nobles.® 
But Boniface, after having go lately exerted himself to procure the 
enactment of canons against clerical warriors, now felt himself 
bound to enforce them, and submitted the case of Gewillieb to a 
council, which declared the bishop guilty of blood. Gewillieb 
yielded, resigned his see, and spent the remainder of his life in the 
enjoyment of some lesser benefices ; and Boniface was unwillingly 
obliged by the Prankish nobles to accept the bishoprick thus 
vac^ited, as the seat of his metropolitan jurisdiction,' 
instead of that which he had himself chosen. The 
pope acquiesced in the change, and subjected to him, as archbishop 
of Mentz, the dioceses of Worms, Spires, Tongres, Cologne, and 
Utrecht, with all the nations of Germany which had received the 
Gospel through his labours.* 

In 747 Carloman resigned his power, and became a monk on 
Mount Soracte, from which, on finding himself disquieted by the 
visits of his countrymen, he afterwards withdrew to Monte Cassino.^ 
This change, by which the whole power of the Prankish kingdom 
was thrown into the jjiands of Pipin, would seem to have operated 
to the disadvantage of Boniface.* It has been very generally 
believed that he officiated at the coronation of Pipin at Soissons, 
when the Mayor of the Palace at length assumed the name of 
King* (a.d. 752) ; but the evidence of this is open to much doubt, 

•• Hefele, iii. 494-5. i. 379. 

« Othlon, i. 37 ; Anon. Mogunt. ap. •• Elnhard, Vita Carol. 2 ; Petr. 

Pertz, ii. 354. Casin. in Patrol, clxxiii. 1070; Mabil- 

' Cone. Germ. III. ap. HArd. iii. 1934- Ion, iv. 124-6 ; Baron. 747, 4-10. 
6; Zach. Ep. 10^ col. 942; Schrockh, > Rettb. i. 184-5. 
xix. 232-3; Laden, iv. 167; Ketlb. i. ^ Eiuhard, Annal. a.d. 750; Annal. 

3«i5-7 ; Hefele, iii. 511-2. Laurissens. a.d. 760 (Pertz, i. 138-9). 

» Zach. Epp. 11, col. 947 ; 14 ; Rettb. 

I 2 



116 LAST YEARS OF BONIFACE. Book 111. 

and it has even been argued that, instead of promoting, he opposed 
the revolution which transferred the crown from the descendants 
of Clovis to another dynasty." The duties of his oflSce began to 
weigh heavily on him. He had still to struggle against much 
opposition on the part of bishops and clergy," while his labours 
were greatly disturbed by the frequent incursions of pagans, 
by whom he reported to Pope Stephen in 752 that thirty 
churches in his diocese had been burnt or demolished.^ He had, 
with some difficulty, obtained permission from Rome to nominate 
a successor to the see of Mentz when he should feel the approach 
of death,P and, with Pipin's consent, he now raised to it 
* his countryman and disciple Lull, who, however, had a 
much more limited authority than Boniface,'^ and did not receive 
the pall till twenty years later.' 

It had been Boniface's intention to spend his last days in his 
monastery of Fulda,* but he felt himself once more attracted to 
Frisia, the scene of his early labours. He again set forth as a 
missionary bishop, descended the Rhine, and, having consecrated 
Eobau to the see of Utrecht,* laboured with his assistance among 
the Frisian tribes. Many thousands were baptised, and Boniface 
June 5, had appointed the eve of Whitsunday for the meeting 
'^^^' of a large number of converts at a place near Dockum, 

" This is Rettberg's view. A short is not evident, inasmuch as the rite was 
time before the change, Boniface sent practised both in the eastern empire and 
Lull to Rome on a mission so confiden* m Spain ; and moreover, the founder of 
tial that the purport of it could not the earlier dynasty appears to have l)een 
safely be committed to writing. (£p. crowned by St. Remigius. (Teittam. S. 
75.) Rettberg argues that such a mis- Remigii, ap. Flodoard. UUt. Rem. i. 
sion was more hkely to have been 18, Patrol, cxxxv. 67 ; Lehuerou, ' In- 
against than in favour of the actual stitutions Carolingiennes,' ii. 329.) The 
holder of power among the Franks, who tone of Boniface^ letter to the arch- 
wished to add the title to the reality chaplain Fulrad (Ep. 79) certainly 
of sovereignty— that Boniface was de- seems to show that his relations with 
sirous to withhold the pope from acting Pipin were not such as might have been 
on considerations of interest (i. 18H). expected if he had done the new king 
He compares the chronicles which name the essential service which is gene- 
Boniface as having crowned Pipin with rally supposed. Rettb. i. 384-5. Comp. 
those which omit his name, and plau- Schrockh, xix. 234-6 ; Sismondi, ii. 
slbly accouuU for the insertion or the 164-5; Neand. v. 94-5; Lingard, A.S.C. 
statement in the former class (i. 384- ii. 349 ; Hefele, iii. 535-7. 
392). Boniface's share in the affair had ° Zach. Ep. U. 
before been denied by some GaUican <> Ep. 78; Zach. Ep. 10, col. 940. 
writers. Ozanam makes no other reply p Ep. 49, col. 746 ; Zach. Epp. ii. 9 ; 
to Rettberg as to the question whether U, col. 947. 
Boniface promoted the change, than ^ Pagij xii* 587. 
that, as he sees no wrong in the conduct ' Rettb. i. 575. See Flodoard, Hist, 
ascribed to the archbishop, he thinks it Rem. ii. 17 ; Mabill. iv. 394-5. 
unnecessary to clear him from it. He • Ep. 75. 

says that Boniface must have officiated * Willib. 11 ; Mabill. iv. 3 ; Rettb. i. 
at the coronation, because such cere- 396 ; Hefele, iii. 539. Perhaps, as Pagi 
monies were new to the Franks, and (xii. 621) and others say, Boni&ce re- 
must have been introduced from Eng- garded himself as bishop of Utrecht, and 
land. The necessity of this, however, Eoban as his coadjutor. See Ep. 90. 



CHAr.y. A.D. 752-6. MARTYRDOM OF BONIFACE. 117 

in order that he might bestow on them the rite of confirniatioa 
But instead of the neophytes whom he expected, an armed band of 
pagans appeared and surrounded his tent. The younger members 
of his party were seizing weapons for defence, but he exhorted 
them to give up the thoughts of preserving the life of this world, 
and to submit to death in the hope of a better life. The pagans 
massacred the whole company — fifty-two in number. They carried 
oflF from the tent some chests which they supposed to be full of 
treasure, but which in reality contained books and relics ; and it 
is said that, having drunk up a quantity of wine which they found, 
they were excited to quarrel about the division of the fancied spoil, 
and avenged the martyrs by almost exterminating each other." 
Eoban had shared the fate of Boniface, but their missionary labours 
were continued by Gregory, abbot of Utrecht,* and before the end 
of the century, the conversion of the Frisians was completed by 
Lebuin, Liudger, and others. > 

The body of Boniface was conveyed up the Rhine to Mentz, and 
thence, in compliance with a wish which he had often expressed,* 
was carried to the abbey of Fulda ; and, although no miracles are 
related of him during his lifetime (unless the destruction of the oak 
of Geismar be reckoned as an exception), his remains, both on the 
way to their resting-place and after they had been deposited there, 
are said to have been distinguished by profuse displays of miraculous 
power.* His name for ages drew pilgrims and wealth to Fulda, 
and he was revered as the Apostle of Germany — a title which he 
deserved, not as having been the first pf eacher of the Gospel in 
the countries where he laboured, but as the chief agent in the 
establishment of Christianity among the Germans, as the organiser 
of the German church. The church of Saxon England, from 
which he proceeded, was immediately, and in a more particular 
manner than any other, a daughter of the Roman. Teutonic by 
language and kindred, Latin by principles and aflfection, it was 
peculiarly fitted to act in the conversion of the German nations 
and to impress its converts with a Roman character. And this 
was especially the work of Boniface. He went forth to his labours 
with the pope's commission. On his consecration to the episco- 
pate, after his first successes, he bound himself by oath to reduce 

• WiUib. 11 ; Pagi, xi. 626. » A', g, Ep. 75. The saint, however, 

* Life of Gregory by Liudger, in found it necessary to repeat his wish in 
Mabill. iv. 320, seqq. He is sometimes a yision before LuU and the people of 
wrongly styled a bishop. Mabill. iii. Mentz would let the body go. Othlon, 
PrsEil See also Kettb.ii. 531-3; Neand. ii. 25; Eigil. Vita Sturmii, 16 (Pj^- 
Memorials, 470-3. trol. ct.). 

T^ Kettb. ii. 637-540. • Willib. 12 ; Rettb. i. 401. 



118 CHARACrER OF 



DuoKlU. 



all whom he might influence to the obedience of St. Peter and his 
representatives. The increased powers and the wider jurisdiction 
bestowed on him by later popes were employed to the same end. 
He strove continually, not only to bring heathens into the church, 
but to check irregular missionary operations, and to subject both 
preachers and converts to the authority of Rome. Through his 
agency the alliance naturally prompted by the mutual interest of 
the papacy and the Frankish princes was efiected. And, whether 
he shared or not in the final step by which the papal sanction was 
used to consecrate the transference of the crown from the Mero- 
vingian to the Carolingian line, his exertions had undoubtedly 
paved the way for it. To him belongs in no small measure the 
authorship of that connexion with the northern rulers which en- 
couraged the popes to disown the sovereignty of Constantinople ; 
and, on the other hand, to him is to be traced the character of the 
German church in its submission to Rome from the time of the 
first council held under Carloman in 742.^ 

But these facts afibrd no warrant for the charges brought 
against Boniface by writers of the last century.^ One who, 
after having passed his seventieth year, resigned the primacy of 
the Frankish church to set out as a simple missionary to the 
barbarous Frisians, with an expectation (as it would seem) ^ of the 
violent death which he met, may safely be acquitted not only of 
personal ambition, but of having been ^^a missionary of the 
papacy rather than of Christianity."® His labours for the papacy 
were really performed, because, trained as he had been under 
the influences communicated to his native church by Theodore 
and Wilfrid, he believed the authority of Rome to be the true 
means of spreading Christianity among the heathen, and of re- 
viving it from decay in countries where it was already established. 
It may have been that in his zeal for unity he made too little 
allowance for the peculiar tempers and positions of men, or that 
he was sometimes guilty of injustice towards his opponents ; nor 
can it be pretended that his opinions were in advance of the age 
in which he lived, whereas ingenious conjecture may ascribe to the 
sectaries Adelbert and Clement all the spiritual enlightenment of 
modern Heidelberg or Berlin. But let it be considered how little 
such men, however highly they may be estimated, could have 

^ Guizot, ii. 173; GieseL II. i. 23; as carrying the depreciation to an ex- 

Michelet, ii. 16. treme. 

« Such as Mosheim (ii. 119) and <* Will ib. 11 ; Othlon, ii. 20-1. 

Schrockh. Kettberg (i. 310) mentious " Thus Schrockh describes him, xix. 

J. £. C. Schmidt's Church History 242. 



0»AP. V. BONIFACE. 119 

effected; how powerless such teaching, the offspring of their 
personal discoveries or fancies, must have been for the great work 
of suppressing heathenism; how distracting to the heathen must 
have been the spectacle of rival and discordant types of Christianity ; 
how necessary the operation of one uniform and organised system 
must have reasonably appeared to Boniface, whether for the exten- 
sion of the gospel or for the reform of the church, for an effective 
opposition to the rudeness, the violence, the lawless passions with 
which he had on all sides to contend. That Boniface ever used 
force as an instrument of conversion there is no evidence what- 
ever ; his earnestness in the promotion of education proves how 
thoroughly he desired that understanding should accompany the 
profession of belief And that the knowledge which he wished 
to spread by his educational institutions was to be drawn from 
the Scriptures, of which he was himself a diligent student,' appears 
from the eagerness with which he endeavoured to obtain as many 
copies as possible of the sacred books for the instruction of his 
couverts.^ His letters and other writings give us the impression, 
not only of a great missionary, but of a man abounding in human 
feelings and affections.^ 

Strenuous as Boniface was in the cause of the papacy, his con- 
ception of it was far short of that which afterwards prevailed. 
He regarded the pope as the supreme ecclesiastical judge, the 
chief conservator of the canons, the highest member of a graduated 
hierarchy, superior to metropolitans, as metropolitans were to 
ordinary bishops, but yet not as belonging to a different order 
from other bishops, or as if their episcopacy were derived from 
him and were a function of his.* Much has been said of the 
strange questions on which he sometimes requests the pope's advice 
— as to the lawftilness of eating horseflesh, magpies, and storks ; 
as to the time when bacon may be eaten without cooking, and the 
like.** Such questions have been regarded as proofs of a wretched 
scrupulousness in themselves, and the reference of them to Rome 
has been branded as disgracefiil servility. But — (besides that we 
are not in a condition to judge of the matter without a fuller 
. knowledge of the circumstances) — it is easy to discover some 
grounds of justification against these charges. Thus the horse 
•was a favourite victim of the gods among the northern nations, 
so that the eating of horseflesh was connected with the practice 

' Willib. 3. » Kettb. i. 411. 

« Epp. 12, col. 702; 19, 38, 42, &c. ^ Greg. III. Ep. I ; Zach. Ep. 13. 

k Ozanam, 210-1. 



120 CHARACTER OF 



BooKia 



of heathen sacrifice.^ And the real explanation of sudi questions 
would seem to be, not that Boniface felt himself unable to answer 
them, or needed any direction from the pope, but that he was 
desirous to fortify himself with the aid of the highest authority 
in the church for his struggle against those remnants of barbaric 
manners which tended to keep up among his converts the remem- 
brance of their ancient idolatry.™ 

If Boniface's zeal for Rome was strong, his concern for reli^on 
and morality was yet stronger." He remonstrated very boldly 
against some regulations as to marriage which were said to have 
the authority of Rome, but which to him appeared immoral ; he 
denied that any power on earth could legalise them.** He re- 
monstrated also against the Roman view which regarded ^' spiritual 
affinity " — i. e. the connexion formed by sponsorship at baptism — 
as a bar to marriage.** He strongly represented to Zacharias the 
scandal of tlie heathenish rejoicings and banqueting which were 
allowed at Rome at the beginning of the year, and the manner in 
which persons who had visited Rome referred to these as a warrant 
for their own irregularities.*' He protested against the simoniacal 
appearance of the charges exacted for palls by the pope's officials, 
whether with or without their master's knowledge.*" And, as a 
counterpoise to all that is said of Boniface's deference to the popes, 
we must in fairness observe (although his assailants have not 
adverted to it) the tone of high consideration in which Zacharias 
answers him,* and the earnestness with which he endeavours to 
vindicate himself from the suspicion of countenancing abuses — a 
remarkable testimony to the estimation in which the Apostle of 
Germany was held. Nay, if an anonymous biographer may be 
believed, Boniface, towards the end of his life, protested against 
Stephen H. for having, during his visit to France, consecrated a 
bishop of Metz — an act which the archbishop regarded as an 
invasion of the metropolitical privileges of Treves ; and Pipin's 
mediation was required to heal the difference between the pope 

* Agathias, i. 7 (p. 28) ; Grimm, of Norway and Iceland, Book IV. c vii. 

*Deat8che Mythologie,' i. 4i-3;Oza- sections 12-13. 

nam, 189. In England, Egbert's Peni- " Luden, iv. 470 ; Rettb. i. 418. 

lential allowed horseflesh to be eaten, ° Giesel. II. i. 27 ; Rettb. i. 412-3. 

"licet maltse familiee earn emere nolint" ^ Ep. 49, col. 746. 

(c. 38, ap. Wilkins, i. 123^. But the p Epp. 39-40. 

papal legates at Chalcythe, in 785, de- i Ep. 49, col. 747. 

nounced the eating of it as not prac- ' Zach. Ep. vi. 2. See De Marca, VI. 

tised by aiiy "Orii-ntals" (c. 19)— i. e. x. II-. 

nations to the east of Enghmd. Sec • Epp. 1, 6. 
hereafter the accounts of the conversion 



Chap.v: BONIFACE. 121 

and him whom many writers have represented as the abject slave 
of Rome.* 

The spirit of unfair disparagement, however, has now passed 
away ; " and both the church from which Boniface went forth and 
the nations among which he ministered may well combine to do 
honour to his memory. 

* Anon. Mogunt. ap. Pertz, ii. 356; though in communion with Rome, is 

Rettb. i. 413; Milnian, ii. 60. The very violent in his enmity to the hier- 

bishop in question was Chrodegang, as archy, vindicates Bouifaoe. * Die Ka- 

to whom see below, c. IX. iii. 21. rolinger und die Hierarchie ihrer Zeit,' 

° Even Ellendorfy a writer who, al- i. 87. 



( 122 ) ikioKiii. 



CHAPTER VI. 

PIPIN AND CHARLEMAGNE. 
A.D. 741-814. 

The alienation which the iconoclastic controversy tended to pro- 
duce between the Byzantine emperors and the bishops of Rome 
was increased by other circumstances. The nearest and most 
dreaded neighbours of the popes were the Lombards. The hatred 
with which the Romans had originally regarded these on account 
of their Arianbm had survived their conversion to orthodox Chris- 
tianity, and had been exasperated by political hostility. During 
the iconoclastic troubles, the Lombards, under Liutprand, appear 
by turns to have threatened the popes and to have affected to 
extend alliance and protection to them, with a view of using them 
as instruments for weakening the imperial influence in Italy.* 
When that influence seemed to be irreparably injured by the course 
which events had taken, the Lombards overran the exarchate, 
and advanced to the walls of the pope's own city. Gregory III., 
after a vain attempt to obtain aid from Constantinople, resolved to 
call in new allies from beyond the Alps — the nation of the Franks, 
who had been catholic from the beginning of their Christianity, 
with whom he had lately formed a closer connexion by means of 
Boniface, and whose virtual sovereign, Charles Martel, was marked 
out by his triumph over the Mahometan invaders of his country as 
the leader and champion of Western Christendom.^ As, however, 
it was natural to suppose that the Frankish mayor would prefer 
the prosecution of his victories on the side of Spain to 
engaging himself in new quarrels elsewhere, the pope 
strengthened his petition for aid by the most persuasive gifts and 
proposals ; he sent to Charles the keys of St. Peter s tomb, with 
some filings of the Apostle's chains ; it is said that he offered to 
bestow on him the title of consul or patrician*^ of Rome, and even 

• Schrockh, xix. 532-4. See above, sel. II. i. 38). According to one read- 

p. 94. ing of Gregory's first extant letter 

^ Milman, ii. 153. (which conveyed his second request for 

*■' The title of Patrician, in the later aid), the pope offered the kingdom (reg- 

days of the empire, designated tlie dig- num) to Charles ; but the true reading 

nily next to the throne, and mi^ht be is nnjmn or rotjam— i. e. petition. See 

held with several high offices (De Marca, Ceuni's note on the letter. Patrol, xcviii. 

I. xii. 4 ; Ducange, s. v. ratricias; Gie- C7 ; Schrockh, xix. 538-541. 



CuAF. Vi. A.D. 726-752. ROMK AND THE FRANKS. 123 

to transfer the allegiance of the Romans from the empire to the 
Frankish crown/* A second and a third application 
followed soon after. The pope's tone in these is ex- ' ' 
tremely piteous ; but he endeavours to excite Charles against the 
Lombards by motives of jealousy as well as of piety. Not only, 
he says, have they laid waste the estates of St. Peter, which had 
been devoted to the purposes of charity and religion, but they have 
plundered the Apostle's church of the lights bestowed on it by the 
Frankish viceroy's ancestors and by himself; nay, Liutprand and 
his son Hildebrand are continually mocking at the idea of relief 
from the Franks, and defying Charles with his forces.® It would 
seem that the letters were favourably received ; but they produced 
no result, as the deaths of both Gregory and Charles followed 
within the same year.' 

In the room of Gregory, Zacharias, a Greek by birth, was 
chosen by the Romans, and was established in the papacy, without 
the confirmation either of the emperor or of the exarch — the first 
instance, it is said, of such an omission since the reign of Odoacer.^ 
By repeated personal applications to Liutprand, the pope obtained 
the forbearance of the Lombards and recovered some towns which 
they had seized.** His relations with the empire are obscure ; the 
state of affairs was indeed so unsettled that these relations were 
full of anomaly and inconsistency. But under his pontificate took 
place an event which produced an important change in the position 
of the papacy towards the Franks, and consequently in its position 
towards the empire. Pipin, whose accession, first, to a portion of 
his father's power, and afterwards to the remainder, on the resig- 
nation of his brother Carloman, has already been mentioned,* now 
thought that the time was come for putting an end to the pageant 
royalty of the Merovingians. Two confidential ecclesiastics, Burk- 
hacd, bishop of Wiirzburg, and Fulrad, archchaplain of 
the court, were sent to Rome with instructions to ask, in * ' 
the name of the Frankish nation, whether the real holders of power 

•• Fredeg. Contin. a.d. 741 (Patrol. Peter's was then without the waHs of 

Izxi.); Annal. Mettens. a.d. 741 (Pertz Kome» the plunder of the church does 

i.) See Pagi, xii. 453-5 ; Muratori, not imply that the Lombards had en- 

Annali, IV. ii. 6 ; Martin, ii. 215. tered the cit? (as Barouius inferred). 

• Patrol, xcviii. 64-8. Muratori thinks ' SchrucTch, xix. 53S-9. 

that by " Ecclesia S. Petri " the pope « See vol. i. p. 548. Schrockh (xix. 

does not mean the huUdinj, but the AV/- 539) thinks the statement as to Zacha- 

ttutn Chitrch (Anuali, IV. ii. 9). Some rias wanting in proof. At all events he 

words unnoticed by Muratori, however, was, as pope, a subject of the empire, 

can, as Dean Milman remarks (ii. 155), which some have denied. 

♦* scarcely be explained but of the actual " Anastas. l(>2-3. 

omamente of the church." Yet, as St. » Pp. 109, 115. 



124 ZACHARIAS AND PIPIN. B«>k III. 

or the nominal sovereigns ought rather to reign.*' The answer of 
Zacharias was favourable to the wishes of those who proposed the 
question ; and at the national assembly of Soissons, in the year 
752,''' Pipin was raised aloft on a buckler, amid tlie acclamations 
of his people, and was crowned king of the Franks, while the last 
of the long-haired Merovingians, Childeric III., was tonsured and 
shut up in the monastery of Sithiu." 

The amount of the pope's share in this revolution, and the 
morality of his proceedings, have been the subjects of much con- 
troversy. Einhard, in the earlier part of the following century, 
speaks of the deposition as effected by the '^ command," and of the 
coronation as performed by th6 " authority," of the Roman pontiff;** 
but (besides that this writer may have misapprehended the real 
course of the affair) a comparison of other passages will show that 
the meaning of his words is less strong than might at first sight 
appear, and is reconcilable with the facts which are otherwise 
ascertained. The matter really came before Zacharias in the 
form of a question from the Frankish estates; his answer was 
an opinion, not a command ; and the sovereignty was bestowed 
on Pipin, not by the pope, but by the choice of his own country- 
men, although the pope's opinion was valuable to him, as assisting 
him to supplant the nominal king, and yet throwing over the 
change an appearance of religious sanction which might guard it 
from becoming a precedent for future breaches of fealty towards 
Pipin's own dynasty.^ The view afterwards maintained by 
Gregory VII. and his school*^ — that the successor of St. Peter 
exercised on this occasion a right inherent in his office, of deposing 
sovereigns at will — is altogether foreign to the ideas of the time, 
and inconsistent with the circumstances of the case/ 

^ Einhard, Annal. a.d. 750 ; Pagi, king of their choice upon their shields* 

xii. 563. never dreamed that a foreign priest had 

■ March 1, according to Pagi, xii. conferred upon him the right of govem- 
570-3 ; but Mansi (ibid.) thinks that it ing. Yet it was easy for succeeding 
was after July 2. See Bohmer, Regesta advocates of Rome to construe this 
Karolorum, 1. transaction very favourably for its usur- 

■ St. Bertiu's, near St. Omer. pation over the thrones of the earth " 

• *• Jussu" (Vita Carol. 1) ; " per auc- (Middle Ages, i. 523). See Nat. Alex- 
toritatem/' ib. 3. and. xi. 175, seqq. ; Schrockh, xix. 551 ; 

' Giesel. 11. i. 3.5. See Neand. v. Schmidt, i. 300, 378 ; Planck, ii. 731 ; 

165. . Giesel. II. i. 37. Luden thinks that 

*» Greg. VII. Epp. iv. 2 ; viii. 21 Pipin was urged on by Boni&ce or by 

(Hard. VI. 1345, 1471). the pope, in the expectation that the 

* ** It is impossible," says Mr. Hallam, church would be the chief gainer by the 
•* to consider the reference as to the de- change of dynasty (i v. 181). But this 
position of Childeric in any other light seems inconsistent with such facts as 
than as a point of casuistry laid before are known ; and, as we have seen (p. 
the first religious judge in the church. 116), Boniface was, perhaps, even op- 
Certainly the Franks, who raised the posed to the change. 



Chap. Vr. a.d. 751. STEPHEN II. 125 

It is evident that the pope's answer was prompted rather by a 
consideration for his own interest in securing the alliance of Pipin 
than by any regard for strict moral or religious principle. Yet 
we should do Zacharias injustice by visiting it with all the reproba- 
tion which modem ideas of settled and legitimate inheritance might 
suggest. The question proposed to him was one which must have 
seemed very plausible in times when might went far to constitute 
right, and when revolutions were familiar in every state. The 
Frankish monarchy had been elective at first, and had never been 
bound down to the rule of strictly hereditary succession. It was 
held that any member of the royal house might be chosen king;" 
thus Clotaire IV. had been set up by Charles Martel in 717,* and 
Childeric III. himself was a Merovingian of unknown parentage, 
whom Pipin and Carloman had found it convenient to establish in 
742, after the nominal sovereignty had been five years vacant" It 
was also held among the Franks that kings might be set aside on 
the gi'ound of incapacity. The only principle, therefore, which 
was violated in the transference of the crown was that which limited 
the choice of a sovereign to the Merovingian family ; and, in order 
to cover this irregularity in the eyes of the nation, it is said to have 
been pretended that Pipin was himself a Merovingian.* More- 
over, by whatever means the change of dynasty may have been 
vindicated or disguised, it does not appear to have shocked the 
general moral feeling of the age ; and this, although it will not 
suffice to justify Zacharias, must be allowed in some measure to 
excuse him. 

Zacharias died in March, 752, a little before or after y the con- 
summation of the act which he had sanctioned. Stephen, who 
was chosen in his room, did not live to be consecrated, and is 
therefore by most writers not reckoned in the list of popes, so that 
his successor, another Stephen, is sometimes styled the second, 
and sometimes the third, of that name.'' Aistulf was now king of 
the Lombards, and renewed the aggressions of his predecessors 
on Rome.* Stephen, by means of splendid presents, obtained from 
him a promise of peace for forty years ; but the treaty was almost 
immediately broken by Aistulf, who seized Ravenna, and required 

• Finhard, Vita Car. I. i. p. 122. 

« Pagi, xii. 277. • Ellendorf, in his hatred of popes, 

■ Pa^, xii. 488-9 ; Sismondi, ii. 129. takes up the cause of the Lombards, 

* Lehuerou, ii. 98-111, 326. iirhoiii he supposes to have been zealous 
^ See p. 124, note ". friends of the church, although enemies 

■ Anastas. 105 ; Pagi, xii. .578 ; to its temporal power and wealUi (i. 
Schrockh, xix. .553. Stephen I. was the 101-2). He denies that Aistulf threat- 
ooDtemporary of St. Cyprian. See toI. ened Rome, p. 111. 



126 STEPHEN IN FRANCE. Book III. 

the Romans to own him as their lord. The pope, in his distress, 
sent envoys to beg for aid from the emperor, and in the mean time 
he aflSxed the violated treaty to the cross, and occupied himself 
in imploring the help of God by solemn prayers and penitential 
processions. But the mission to Constantinople proved fruitless ; 
and when Stephen, relying on the success of his predecessor 
Zacharias in similar attempts, repaired to Pavia, in the hope of 
moving Aistulf by personal entreaties, — although he met with 
respectful treatment, he was unable to obtain any promise of for- 
bearance.** His only remaining hope was in Pipin, with whom 
he had opened a secret negotiation.^ He therefore resolved to 
proceed into France, and, as Aistulf endeavoured to dissuade 
him, the fear lest the Lombard should detain him by force added 
speed to his journey across the Alps. On hearing of the pope's 
approach, Pipin sent his son Charles — the ftiture Charlemagne — 
to act as escort; and he himself, with his queen, the younger 
princes, and the nobles of his court, went forth a league from the 
.Ian. 6, palace of Pontyon-le-Perche to meet him. Stephen and 

^^- his clergy appeared in sackcloth and ashes, and, throw- 

ing themselves at the king's feet, humbly implored his assistance 
against the Lombards. Pipin received the suppliants with marks 
of extraordinary honour ; he prostrated himself in turn before the 
pope, and walked by his side as he rode.** 

Stephen's stay in France was prolonged by illness, which com- 
pelled him to remain until the summer at St. Denys.® During this 
time an unexpected opponent of his suit appeared in the person of 
the abdicated Carloman, who, at the instigation of Aistulf, had been 
compelled by the abbot of Monte Cassino to leave his monastic 
retreat for the purpose of urging his brother to refuse the desired 
assistance. But Stephen exerted his pontifical authority over the 
monk, and Carloman was shut up in a monastery at Vienne, where 
July 28, he died soon after.' A second coronation, in which 

7^- Pipings sons were included, was performed at St Denys 

by the pope's own hands ; and, in the hope of securing the new 
dynasty against a repetition of the movements by which its own 
royalty had been won, the Prankish nation was charged, under 
pain of excommunication, never to choose any other king than 
a descendant of him whom God and the vicar of the apostles had 

^ Anastas. 167; Vita Chrodegangi, c. as they are not irreconcilable. S«e 

24 (Pertz, x.) ; Pagi, xii. 580. Schrockh, xix. 557 ; Milman, ii. 177. 

e See his letters, Patrol, xcviii. 100-6. * See the * Kevelatio Stepbani/ Patrol. 

** The French writers relate the be- Ixxxix. 1022. 

havioar of Stephen, the Italians that of ' Anastas. 169. 
Pipin. I have combined the accouts 



CiiAP. VI. A.n.752 5.' DOXATTON OF PTPIN. 127 

been pleased to exalt to the throne. Pipin was also invested 
with the dignity of patrician of Rome/ 

In the same year, Pipin, although some of the Frankish chiefs 
opposed the expedition, and even threatened to desert him,** led 
an army into Italy, and compelled Aistulf to swear that he would 
restore to St. Peter the towns which he had seized. But no 
sooner had the northern forces recrossed the Alps than the Lombard 
refused to fulfil his engagements, invaded the Roman territory, 
wasted the country up to the very walls of Rome, and laid siege 
to the city itself.* As the way by land was blocked up, the pope 
sent off by sea a letter entreating his Frankish ally once more to 
assist him.** Another and a more urgent entreaty followed ;" and 
finally the pope despatched at once three letters," of which one was 
written in the name of St. Peter himself— an expedient which may 
perhaps have been suggested or encouraged by the impression as 
to the character of the Franks which he had derived from his late 
sojourn among them.** In this strange document the apostle is 
represented as joining the authority of the Blessed Virgin with his 
own ; supplication, threats, flattery are mingled ; and, in considera- 
tion of the aid which is asked for the defence of the papal tempo- 
ralities, assurances are given not only of long life and victory, but 
of salvation and heavenly glory — apparently without any reserve or 
condition of a moral kind.? Whether induced by these promises, 
or by other motives, Pipin speedily returned to Italy, ^ ^ ^^ 
besieged Aistulf in Pavia, and forced him, as a condition 
of peace, to make a large cession of cities and territory, which were 
transferred to the Roman See, and for the first time gave the pope 

K Anastas. 1 67-8 ; Clausula de elect, sacr^ Ik Dieu ; 1e troupean de J^us- 

Pipini (Patrol. Ixxxix. 978, note); Ein- Christ soot lea corps, et non pas les 

hard, a.d. 753; Sismondi, ii. 187; Mil- &mes; les promesses temporelles de Tan- 

man, ii. 177-8. From the expression of cienne loi sont mdlces avec les spirituelles 

the ' Clausula '— " Tali omnes interdicta de l*ETangile, et les motifs les plus saints 

et lege excommunicationis constrinxit " de la religion employ^ pour une afiaire 

— it has been inferred that Stephen d'etat " (xliii. 1 7 ; comp. Discours, ii. 

threatened an Interdict. But interdictus 3, and Marat. Annali, IV. ii. 47). 

here means simply a prohibition, and These ohserrations raise the wrath of 

interdicts (in the ecclesiastical sense of Rohrbacher, xi. 115. (See too Cenni, in 

the word) were of later inventioD. See Patrol, xoviii. 103.) M. Ozanam (231) 

below, Book IV. c. viii. 8. defends the letter— or rather considers 

•» Einhard, Vita Car. 6. it to be above the need of defence — be- 

' Anastas. I70j Baron. 755. 1, seqq. cause it was the custom of the time to 

^ Patrol, xcviii. 103. substitute in charters, &c, the name of 

" lb. 107. ■ lb. lU-126. a founder or of a patron saint for that of 

° Milman, ii. 181. his church. But this is obviously no 

p Fleury calls this ** un artifice sans parallel to a letter in which St Peter is 

exemple devant ni apr^ dans toute represented as saying, not that he writes 

rhistoire de I'Eglise, ' and remarks, by Stephen, but that Stephen and the 

*' L'Rglise y signifie, non Tassembl^ Roman church write through him. 

des fideles, mais les biens temporels con- 



128 



POPE CONCTANTIKE II. Book HL 



the position of a temporal prince.** Some Byzantine envoys, who 
were present at the conclusion of the treaty, urged that the ex- 
archate should be restored to their master, to whom it had belonged 
before it was seized by the Lombards ; but Pipip replied that he 
had conquered for St. Peter, and could not dispose otherwise of 
that which he had offered to the apostle.' Yet it does not appear 
that the gift was one of independent sovereignty ; the territories 
bestowed on the pope were held under the Prankish crown," and, 
on the other side, the anomalies of the relation between the popes 
and the empire became now more complex than ever. While Pipin 
was patrician of Rome by the pope's assumption of a right to 
confer the title — while the pope received from the Prankish king 
lands which the emperor claimed as his own — while Rome continued 
to be virtually separated from the empire by the consequences of 
the iconoclastic controversy — the popes were still regarded as 
subjects of the emperors, and dated by the years of their reign.* 

In 757 Stephen II. was succeeded by his own brother, Paul, 
who held the pontificate ten years." While Paul was on his death- 
bed, Toto, duke of Nepi, made his way into Rome, at the 
head of an armed multitude, forced some bishops hastily 
to ordain his brother, Constantine, through all the grades of the mi- 
nistry, and put him in possession of the papal chair.'' The intruder 
bad held it for thirteen months, when he was ejected by an oppo- 
site party, and Stephen III. (or IV.) was established in his stead. 
Constantine's partisans were subjected to the barbarous punishments 
usual in that age — such as the loss of the eyes or of the tongue ; 
he himself, after having been thrust into a monastery by one faction 
of his enemies, was dragged out of it by another, was blinded, 
and in that condition was left in the public street.'^ A council 
was held under the sanction of Charles and Carloman, who had 
just succeeded their father Pipin in the sovereignty of the 
Franks and in the patriciate of Rome. Constantine was 
brought before this assembly, and was asked why he had pre- 
sumed, being a layman, to invade the apostolic see. He declared 
that he had been forced into the oflBce against his will ; he threw 
himself on the floor, stretched out his hands, and, with a profusion 
of tears, entreated forgiveness for his misdeeds. On the following 

1 Anast 171; Gibbon, iy. 488-490; ritories acquired by the popes in this 

Schrockh, xix. 566-7 ; Savigny, i. 358. age, see Hefele, iii. 541-2. 

' Anastas. 123. * Schrockh, xix. 567-571, 576; Mil- 

• See Murat Ann. IY. ii. 50, 172; man, ii. 185. 

Planck, ii. 743, 752-5; Guizot, ii. 335; " Anastas. 172. 

Luden, v. 215, and note. For the ter- » Id. 174. r Id. 176. 



Chap. VI. a.p. 765-770. POPE CONSTANTINE U. 129 

day he was again brought before the council, and was questioned 
about the " impious novelty " of his proceedings with a strictness 
which drove him to turn upon his judges by answering that it was 
not a novelty, and naming the archbishop of Ravenna and the 
bishop of Naples as having been advanced at once from a lay 
condition to the episcopate. At this reply the members of the 
council started from their seats in fury. They fell on the blind 
man, beat him violently, and thrust him out of the church in 
which their sessions were held. They then proceeded to annul the 
ordinations and other official acts which he had performed as pope, 
burnt the records of his pontificate, and denounced anathemas 
against any one who should aspire to the papacy without haiang 
regularly passed through the grade of cardinal priest, or cardinal 
deacon. Stephen himself, with all the clergy and a multitude of 
the Roman laity, prostrated themselves, and with tears professed 
contrition for having received the eucharist at the usurper's hands ; 
and a suitable penance was imposed on them.' 

It was the interest of the popes to prevent the formation of any 
connexion between their Frankish allies and the hated Lombards. 
Stephen, therefore, was beyond measure disquieted when intelli- 
gence reached him, in 770, that Desiderius, the successor of 
Aistulf, had projected the union of his family with that of Pipin 
by a double tie — that he had oflTered his daughter in marriage to 
either Charles or Carloman, and that their sister was engaged to 
Adelgis, son of the Lombard king. The pope forthwith addressed 
an extraordinary letter to the Frankish princes.* As they were 
both already married, he tells them that it would be sin to 
divorce their wives for the sake of any new alliance. But moral 
or religious objections hold a very subordinate place in the remon- 
strance, while the pope exhausts himself in heaping up expressions 
of detestation against the Lombards, and in protesting against 
the pollution of the royal Frankish blood by any admixture with 
that "perfidious and most unsavoury" race — since from such a 
marriage no other than a leprous oflspring could be expected.*' 
The epistle concludes with denunciations of eternal fire, and the 
pope states that, in order to give it all possible solemnity, it was 

« Id. 176-7. See Hefele, iii. 403-7. certam est" (256). The last words are 

' Patrol, xcviii. 255-2G2. See Marat, sometimes interpreted as meauinff that 

Ann.' IV. ii. 90. the Lombards had introduced the le- 

*» " Quod splendiflua ac nobilissima prosy into the world, or, at lenst, into 

regalis Testrs potential proles perfida Italy. (See Manzoni, Disoorso Storico, 

(quod absit!) ac fatentissinui I^ngobar- Opere, i. p. 248, ed. Paris, 1843.) But 



dorum gente poUuatur, qu» in numero the sense given in the text appears to 
gentium nequaquam computatur, de agree best with the tenor of the letter, 
cogos natione et leprotoram genus oriri 



130 END OF THE LOMBARD KINGDOM. Book III. 

laid on St Peter's tomb, and the eucharistlc sacrifice was offered 
on it Charles, unmoved by this appeal, repudiated his wife and 
espoused the Lombard princess ; but within a year — for 
what reason is unknown,*" but certainly not out of any 
regard to Stephen's expostulation — she was sent back to her 
father's court, and another queen, Hildegard, took her place. 

In his relations with Stephen, Desiderius was studious to main- 
tain a specious appearance of friendship, while he resisted or eluded 
all applications for the restoration of what were styled " the rights 
of St. Peter." ^ On the election of Adrian as Stephen's successor, 
the LfOmbard king made overtures to him, and promised 
' ' "* to satisfy all his demands, if the pope would visit him 
at Pavia; but the invitation was refiised. Desiderius avenged 
himself by ravaging the borders of the papal territory, and Adrian 
invoked the aid of Charles.® Carloman had died in 771, and 
Charles, without any regard to the rights of his brother's family, 
had united the whole of the Prankish dominions under his own 
rule. Desiderius, stimulated perhaps rather by his own daughter's 
wrongs than by a disinterested regard for justice, had espoused 
the cause of the disinherited princes, and had requested the pope 
to crown them ; but Adrian, from unwillingness to embroil himself 
with Charles, and consequently to place himself at the mercy of 
the Lombards, had refused.' Charles now readily listened to the 
petition of his ally. lie asked Desiderius to give up the disputed 
territory, and offered him a large sum of money as compensation, 
while the pope sent repeated embassies to the Lombard king, and 
at last proposed to pay him the desired visit, on condition that 
Desiderius should first perform his part of the agreement by 
restoring the rights of St Peter. Desiderius, supposing that 
Charles must be fiilly occupied by his war with the Saxons, 
attempted to satisfy him with evasive answers, and even assured 
him that the papal territory had already been restored ; but his 
representations had no effect on Charles, who, in 773, invaded 
Italy,^ besieged him in Pavia, and overthrew the Lom- 
bard dominion.* Desiderius was compelled to become 

« " lucertum qua de causa," Einhard, ' Anastas. ISO, seqq. 

Vita Car. 18. See Baron. 771. 3; Murat. ' Eiuhard, Vita Car. 3-6; Anastas. 

Ann. IV. ii. 93; Manzoni, i. 237; 181. 

Schrockb, xix. 683-4; Luden, iv. 260- « Anastas. 183-5; Eiuhard,Annal.A.D. 

3, 613. 773; Vita Car. 7. (Although I quote 

•* Under the name of "justitiao S. these works, which bear the name of 
Petri " were comprehended all sorts of Kiuhard, together, it ought to be men- 
thin^ which could be claimed as be- tioned that the annalist is now sup- 
longiug to the church. Manzoni, i. posed not to be identical with the 
238-9. biographer.) 



Cbaf.VI. A.D.771-7P6. CHARLEMAGNE AT ROME. 131 

a monk at Liege.** His son Adelgis escaped to (^Dstantinoplc, 
where, although the honour of the patriciate was conferred on 
him, Charles was able to prevent him from obtaining any 
eflTective aid for the recovery of his inheritance.* Twelve 
years later, by a convention with the Lombard duke of Benevento, 
Charles became lord of the remaining part of Italy."' 

During the siege of Pavia, in 774, Charles paid his first visit 
to Rome, where he arrived on Easter-eve. The magistrates were 
sent by the pope to meet him at the distance of thbrty miles from 
the city. A mile outside the walls, the soldiery appeared, with all 
the children of the schools, who bore branches of palm and olive, 
and hailed him with hymns of welcome. The sacred crosses were 
carried forth as for the reception of an exarch, and Charles, 
dismounting fr^m his horse at the sight of them, proceeded on 
foot towards St Peter's, where the pope and all his clergy were 
assembled on the steps and in the principal porch of the church. 
The king, as he ascended, kissed each step; on reaching the 
landing-place he embraced the pope, and, taking him by the 
right hand, entered the building, while the clergy and monks 
loudly chanted " Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the 
Lord." He kept the festival season vrith a great appearance of 
devotion ; he enlarged the donation which Pipin had made to the 
church, confirmed it by an oath, and solemnly laid the deed of 
gift on the Apostle's tomb.™ The actual extent of his donation 
is, however, uncertain. It is said to have included not only the 
exarchate of Ravenna, but the dukedoms of Spoleto and Bene- 
vento, Venetia, Istria, and other territories in the north of Italy — 
in short, almost the whole peninsula — together with the island of 
Corsica ;° yet some of these had not as yet been acquired by the 
Franks, and in the event the papal rule seems to have been 
really limited to the exarchate, which was itself held not in abso- 
lute sovereignty, but in dependence on the Prankish monarchs. 
It would appear, therefore, that CTiarles, in his gratitude for the 
opportunity of interfering in the afiairs of Italy, professed to 
bestow on the pope spoils which had not at the time been fully 
won, and that he was afterwards indisposed to carry his promises 

^ Pagi, xiii. 101. at Constantinople. (See Murat. Ann. 

» Einhard, a.d. 774; Schloswr, 252. IV. ii. 463; and the notes on Theo- 

According to Theophanos (718) Adelgis, phanes.) 

who had taken the name of Theodotus, ^ Einhard, Vila Car. 10; Annal. aj). 

was kiUed in 788 in an unsuccessful 786. 

Invasion of the Neapolitan territory (see " Anastas. 185-6; Schrockh, xix. 

Pajri, xiii. 232). But others (as the 588; Gibbon, iv. 487. 

Poi3ta Saxo, 1. i. A.j>. 774) represent ■ Anastas. 186. 
him as having died in advanced age 

K 2 



132 CHARLEMAGNE AND THE POPES. Book HI. 

into effect** The king visited Rome again in 781, and a third 
time in 787 ; and on each occasion the Church was enriched by 
gifts, bestowed, as he professed in the language of the age, 
*' for the ransom of his soul." ^ His connexion with Adrian was 
cemented not only by interest, but by personal regard, and on 
hearing of the pope's death, he is said to have wept for him as for 
a brother.** 

In 795, Adrian was succeeded by Leo III. The political con- 
dition of Rome for many years before this time is very obscure. 
According to some writers,' it had been a republic, under the 
popes, from the date of Pipin's donation (a.d. 755) ; but against 
this view it has been urged that the letter of Adrian to the emperor 
Constantine and his mother, on occasion of the second council of 
Nicsea, proves that even so late as 785 the imperial sovereignty 
continued to be in some degree acknowledged." Although, how- 
ever, the Byzantine rulers were now in agreement with Rome on 
the question of images, the older differences as to that question 
had produced a lasting estrangement ; so that Leo, in announcing 
his election to Charlemagne, sent him the banner of Rome with the 
keys of St. Peter's tomb, and begged him to send commissioners 
for the purpose of administering to the citizens an oath of alle- 
giance to the Prankish crown.* Whether we regard this as an 
illustration of the relations which already existed between Rome 
and the Franks, or as a voluntary act, by which the pope, for the 
sake of gaining a powerful protector, placed himself and his people 
in a new relation of dependence — it proves both that the connexion 
with the eastern empire was severed, and that, if Rome had for a 
time been independent, it was no longer so.^ 

The promotion of Leo deeply offended some relations of Adrian 
who had occupied high positions in the papal government They 
April 25, waited upwards of three years for an opportunity of 
799. gratifying their enmity ; and at length, as the pope was 

conducting a procession through the streejs of Rome, a party of 
his enemies rushed forth, dispersed his unarmed companions, threw 
him from his horse, and attempted to deprive him of his eyes and 
tongue. Whether from haste or from pity,* they did their work 

• See Schrockh, xix. 588-592; Gib- • Giesel. II. i. 41. (See below, 

bon, ix. 489; Murat Ann. IV. ii. 106, p. 153.) 

116, 156 ; Milman, ii. 197-8. « Einhard, a.d. 796. 

p **Pro mercede animaj." Adrian. ■ See Schrockh, xix. 600; Ellendorf, 

ad Carol., Patrol, xcviii. 404 ; Schrockh, i, 19.5. 

xix. 592. « Theophan. 732 ; Schrockh, xix. 

1 Einhard, Vita Car. 19. 602-3. 

' As Pagi, xiii. 320. 



Chap. VI. a i>. 795-800. LEO III. 133 

imperfectly ; but Paschal and Campulus, two of Adrian's nephews, 
dragged the wounded pope into the church of a neighbouring 
monastery, threw him down before the altar, attempted to complete 
the operations which had been begun, and, after having beaten 
him cruelly with sticks, left him weltering in his blood. Notwith- 
standing all these outrages, Leo retained his sight and his speech ; 
it was popularly believed that he had recovered them through the 
help of St Peter/ Through the aid of his friends, he was enabled 
to escape from Rome ; under the escort of the duke of Spoleto, 
a vassal of the Prankish king, he reached that city ; and Charles, 
who was detained in the north by the Saxon war, on receiving 
a report of his sufferings, invited him to Paderbom, where he was 
received with great honour.* 

About the same time that Leo arrived at Paderbom, some 
envoys firom Rome appeared there, with serious charges against 
him. Charles promised to investigate these charges at Rome ; 
and, after having sent back the pope with a convoy of two arch- 
bishops, five bbhops, and five counts, who re-established him in 
his see, the king himself proceeded by slow and indirect Nov. 29, 
journeys towards the city, where he arrived in the end ^®^' 
of November, 800.» The inquiry into Leo's case was opened 
before an assembly of archbishops, bishops, abbotei, and Dec. 1, 
nobles ; but no testimony was produced against the ®^- 
pope, and the prelates and clergy who were present declined the 
office of judging, on the ground of an opinion which had gradually 
grown up, that the successor of St. Peter was not amenable to 
any human (or, rather, perhaps, to any ecclesiastical) judgment** 
On this Leo declared himself ready to clear his innocence d^ 23, 
by an oath ; and on a later day, he ascended the pulpit, ^^' 
and solemnly swore on the Gospels that he had neither committed 
nor instigated the offences which were laid to his charge.*' The 

y Anastas. 197-8. (See the Torious adultery or perjury. He treats the 

accounts in Murat Ann. IV. ii. 202-5.) matter very tenderly, as if he believed 

The monk of St. Gall assures us that Leo to be guilty, yet wished to uphold 

both for use and for appearance the new the credit of the Roman See. (Ep. 92 ; 

eyes were far better than the old. Gesta Lorenz, Life of Alcuin, 199-201.) The 

Oiroli, i. 28. words or Leo's purgation, " nee per- 

• Einhjird,A.D. 799; PoetaSaxo,255; petravi nee p^tftetrari jussi" (Peril, 
Anastas. 198. Leg«. "• 15). »wm inconsistent with 

• Einhard, a.d. 800; Schruckh, xix. the idea that unchastity was the sin 
G03-4. imputed to him. Dean ^lilman (ii. 205) 

•» Anastas. 199; see toI. i. p. 549; therefore thinks that he was charged 

and Giesel. I. ii. 403-4 ; II. i. 43. with spiritual adultery— i. e. simony— a 

« Anastas. 199. The nature of these sin of which Alcuin writes, in 803, tha 

charses is unknown. Alcuin mentions it prevailed almost up to the apostolic 

the intrigues of some persons who chair (Ep. 116). Yet the >ut need doi 

attempted to get the pope deposed for relate to all the charges. 



134 . CHARLEMAGNE Book HI. 

conapimtors who had been concerned in the assault on him were 
soon after tried, and, as they could make no defence, were con- 
demned to death ; but at the pope's request the sentence was 
commuted to banishment.* 

' But between the purgation of Leo and the trial of his assailants 
an important event had taken place. On Christmas-day — the 
first day of the ninth century, according to the reckoning then 
observed in the west* — Charles attended mass in St Peter's, when, 
as he was kneeling before the altar, the pope suddenly placed a 
splendid crown on his head, and the vast congregation burst forth 
into acclamations of " Life and victory to Charles, crowned by God 
emperor of Rome !"' Leo then proceeded to anoint Charles and 
his son Pipin, king of Italy, and led the way in doing homage to 
the new emperor.^ In conversation with his attendants, Charles 
professed great surprise, and even displeasure, at the coronation, 
declaring that, if he had expected such a scene, not even the holi- 
ness of the Christmas festival should have induced him to go into 
the church on that day.** There can, however, be little question 
that his elevation to the imperial dignity had been before arranged. 
Perhaps the idea had been suggested to him by a letter in which 
his confidential friend Alcuin spoke of the popedom, the empire, 
and the sovereignty of the Franks as the three highest dignities in 
the world, and pointed out how unworthily the imperial throne, the 
higher of the two secular monarchies, was then filled.* On his 
way to Rome, the king had visited Alcuin at Tours ; and he now 
received from him as a Christmas-gift a Bible corrected by the 
learned abbot's own hand, with a letter in which the present was 
said to be intended in honour of the imperial power.'' It may 
therefore be conjectured that the assumption of the empire had 
been settled between Charles and I..eo during the pope's residence 
at Paderbom ; or, at least, that Leo had there discovered the 
king's inclination, and that Alcuin had been for some time in the 
secret."* 

Yet we need not tax Charles with insincerity in his expressions 

' Einhard, a.d. SOl ; Ado, A.d. 800 * Anastas. 199. 

(Patrol, cxxiii.). »» Einhard, Vita Car. 28. 

« Teulet, D. in Einhard, i. 249. ^ Ep. 80; liettb. i. 430. Luden thinks 

' ** Carolo piissimo Augusto a Deo that the idea of ^e empire arose in the 

coronato, magno, pacificu imperatori, mind of Charles as the case of Leo 

Tita et victoria." (Anast. 199.) The pressed Italian affairs on his attention, 

metrical biographer thus paraphrases iv. 405, seqq. 

the cry— ^ Ale. Epp. 103, 185 ; Lorenz, 278-9. 

- Anguato Carolo magno. pacomque ferenU. "' Schrockh, xix. 24 ; Rettb. 1. 431 ; 

Imperil merito Uumaiii WM-ptra toiienti, Milman, ii. 206 ; Mouiiier, Vie d'Alculn, 

Glorta, prospertfaa, n-gnuni, pax, vita, trium- 225-<J. See Murat. Ann. IV. ii. 212-5. 
phua ! "—i'oi-'ta S^Ojco, 259. 



Ciup. VI. AD. 800. EMPEROR. 135 

of dissatisfaction after the coronation ; rather, as dissimulation was 
no part of his general character, we may suppose that, while he 
had desired tlie imperial title, he was displeased at the manner in 
which it was conferred. He may have regarded the pope's act as 
premature, and as an interference with hia own plans. He may 
have seen that it was capable of such an interpretation as was 
afterwards actually put upon it — as if the pope were able to bestow 
the empire by his own authority — a pretension altogether incon- 
sistent with the whole spirit of Charlemagne's policy." Perhaps it 
had been the king's intention to procure his election by the Ro- 
mans, and afterwards to be crowned by the pope, as the Greek 
emperors, after having been elected by the representatives of their 
subjects, were crowned by the patriarch of Constantinople ; whereas 
he had now been surprised into receiving the empire from the 
pope, when the acclamations of the Romans did not precede, but 
followed on, the imposition of the crown by Leo.^ Although, 
however, the pope's act was capable of an interpretation agreeable 
to the claims of his successors in later times, such claims appear to 
have been unknown in the age of Charlemagne ; Leo, after having 
placed the crown on his brow, was the first to do homage to him 
as a subject of the empire.? 

By the coronation of Charles, Rome was finally separated from 
the Greek empire, and again became the acknowledged capital of 
the West. Charlemagne was invested with the double character 
of head of Western Christendom and representative of the ancient 
civilisation.^ The Byzantine court was nuturally ofiended by a 
step which appeared to invade its rights, both of dignity and of 
sovereignty ; but Charles, by a conciliatory policy, overcame the 
irritation ; his imperial title was recognised by Ihe ambassadors of 
Nicephorus in 812, and the Greek emperors addressed his son as 
emperor, although not of Rome, but of the Franks.' 

■ Luden, iv. 420-4. 281 ; Martin, ii. 487. The question 

" Fuuck, Ludwig der Fromme, 243; whether Charlemagne's imperial title 

Ellendorf, i. 198-9. Ozanam suggests was intended to supersede that of the 

that Charles was averse from sinking Byzantines— cither on the supposition 

his German nationality in the traditions that the empire was tmnsfened from 

of Home, and that he did not for some east to west (Gesta Epp. Meteos. Patrol., 

time accommodate himself to the change clxiii. 593; BarOn. 800. 91-3), or that 

(362). But the Capitul. Aquisgr. of 8u2, he was chosen to fill the place yacated 

which M. Ozanam quotes, seems to be by tlie dethronement of Coiistantine VI. 

against this. (l^hron. Moissiac. ap. Pertz, i. 305; 

»• Giauuone, i. 511,seqq. ; Schn3ckh, Palgrave, Normandy and England, i. 

xix. 605; Neander, v. 165 ; Milman, ii. 29), need not be here discussed. See 

207-8. . Mr. llallam's remarks, Suppl. Notes, 

1 Sismondi, ii. 383 ; Milman, ii. 26-8. In later times the emperors of 

2(17-8. the East and of tlie West qt^irrelled 

' Eiuhard. Vita Car. 28 ; Schlosser, about the title, each of them assaming 



136 CHAliLEMAGNE. BookUI. 

The* reign of Charles the Great," or Charlemagne, from the 
A.i). 768- time of his father's death, extended to nearly half a 
®^^- century. His fame rests not only on his achieyements 

as a warrior and as a conqueror, but on his legislation and admi- 
nistration both in civil and in ecclesiastical affairs ; on his care for 
the advancement of learning, of commerce, of agriculture, of archi- 
tecture, and the other arts of peace ; on the versatility and capacity 
of a mind which embraced the smallest as well as the greatest 
details in the vast and various system of which he was the head. 
His wars, aggressive in their form, were essentially defensive ; his 
purpose was, to consolidate the populations which had settled in 
the territories of the Western empire, and to secure them against 
the assaults of newer migrations. Carrying his arms against those 
from whom he had reason to apprehend an attack, he extended 
his dominions to the Eider and to the Ebro, over Brittany and 
Aquitaine, far towards the south of Italy, and eastward to the 
ITieiss and the Save.* The impression which he produced on the 
Greeks is shown by their proverb, ** HsLve the Frank for thy 
friend, but not for thy neighbour." " His influence and authority 
reached from Scotland to Persia; the great caliph Haroun al 
Raschid exchanged presents with him, and complimented him by 
sending him the keys of the holy sepulchre;^ and, although the 
empire of Charlemagne was broken up after his death, the eflfect of 
its union remained in the connexion of western Christendom by one 
common bond.> On looking for the emperor's defects, we must 
notice as an injustice altogether without excuse the seizure of his 
brother's dominions, to the exclusion of his nephews ; we see that 
his policy was sometimes stern, even to cruelty ; and in his personal 
conduct we cannot overlook an excessive dissoluteness, which con- 
tinued even to his latest years, and of which the punishment was 
believed to have been revealed by visions after his death.* But with 
this exception, his private character appears such as to increase our 

it for himself while he styled the other 265, seqq. ** I padri Bollandisti, ed 

kmtj. For the ByzanUne view of the altri, cousiderate tante yirtii, e massi- 

questioD, see Cinnamus, y. 10. mamente la religione di questo firan 

* The -epithet Magnus was not giveu priDcipe, hanno sustenuto che si fatte 
to him until after his death (Pagi, xiii. concubine fossero mo^li di coscienza ; 
536). M. Michclet asserts that the mogli, come suol dirsi, della mauo 
name Chailemngne is not formed from sinistra; e per6 lecite, e non contrarie a 
Caro'us Mapmsj but from Carlonuin (ii. gl' insegnamenti della chiesa. la quale poi 
33). But his arguments are ridiculous, solamente uel Coucilio di Treuto diede 

* Guizot, ii. 188-191. un misliore regolamento al sacro con- 
■ Einhard, 15. * Ibid. tratto del matrimonio. Si ci6 ben suf- 
7 Quart. Rev. xlviii. 423. See too fista, ne lascer6 io ad altri la dvcisione *' 

Luden, v. 185-6, and Sir J. Stephen's (Murat. Ann. IV. ii. 209). The Vision 
Third Lecture on Modem History. of Wettiu is enough to expose this sup 

* Visio S. Wettini, ap. Mabillon, v. position. 



Chap. VI. aj). 768-814. WAR WITH THE SAXONS. 137 

admiration for the great sovereign. He was in general mild, open, 
and generous ; his family affections were warm, and his friendships 
were sincere and steady.* 

The wars of Charlemagne against the barbarians were not reli- 
gious in their origin ; but religion soon became involved in them. 
His conquests carried the Gospel in their train, and, mistaken as 
were some of the means at first employed for its propagation, the 
result was eventually good.** Of his fifty-three campaigns, eighteen 
were against the Saxons of Germany.® Between this people and 
the Franks wars had been waged from time to time for two 
hundred years. Sometimes the Franks penetrated to the Weser, 
and imposed a tribute which was irregularly paid ; -sometimes the 
Saxons pushed their incursions as far as the Bhine ; and on the 
borders of the territories the more uncivilised of each nation 
carried on a constant system of pillage and petty annoyance 
against their neighbours.^ The Saxon tribes were divided into 
three great associations — the Westphalians, the Angarians, and 
the Qstphalians; they had no king,^and were accustomed to 
choose a leader only in the case of a national war.* Their valour 
is admitted even by the Frankish writers; the perfidy which is 
described as characteristic of them may, in some degree, be ex- 
plained and palliated by the fact that they were without any 
central government which could make engagements binding on the 
whole nation.' 

The war with the Saxons lasted thirty-three years — from 772 
to 805. In the first campaign, Charlemagne destroyed the great 
national idol called the Irminsul, which stood in a mountainous 
and woody district near Eresburg (now Stadtberg).» The Saxons 

* Einhard, 19. of its origin. But it would seem rather 

^ Rettb. ii. 374, 394. that irmin is au adjective, meaning 

^ See a list of his expeditions in strong, powerful (Rettb. ii. 385), or 

Guizot, ii. 186. univeraai ([Grimm, 104); and thus the 

^ Einhard, 7 ; Rettb. ii 382. IrmmatU is supposed to have been a 

' Poota Saxo, ap. Pertz, i. 228. See huge trunk of a tree, placed erect, and 

Luden, iv. 277. regarded by the Saxons as supporting 

' Martin, ii. 258 ; Milman, ii. 220. the universe. (See Adam of Bremen, 

« Einhard, a.d. 772. What the Ir- i. 8, in Pertz, vii. 285.) Grimm (759) 

minsul was, is matter of conjecture, renders it " altissima, universalis co- 

The last syUable, which answers to the lumna,'' and connects the Irminsul with 

modern German Sauie, may, like that the tree Yggdrasil of Scandinavian mv- 

word, denote either a piiiar or a statue, thology ffor which see Thorpe, North- 

hy some writers it is supposed that em Mytnology, i. 11-3, Loud. 1 85 1 J. 

Innin means the German hero Herman Comp. Schruckh, xix. 256 ; Turper, i. 

or Armiuius, and that the snl was a 222-6; Pfister. i. 417; Pertz, iii. 423 

figure of him. (See Grimm, Deutsche (note on Widukind, i. 12) ; Milman, ii. 

Mythologie, 3i7.) This is the opinion 219. Deau Milman appears to me to 

of Luden (iv. 282-4, 520), although he have somewhat misrepresented Luden's 

thinks that the Saxons, while they re- feeling as to the destruction of this 

taincd the name, had lost the memory monument 



138 SAXON WAR. BooKllL 

retaliated in the following year by attacking the monasteries and 
churches planted on their frontiers, killing or driving out the 
monks and clergy, and laying the country waste as far as the 
llhihe.** Stiurmi, the successor of Boniface, was obliged to fly 
from Fulda, carrying with him the relics of his master.* The 
Saxons associated their old idolatry with their nationality, and the 
Gospel with the interest of the Franks.*^ 

A passage in the life of St Lebuin has been connected with the 
origin of the Saxon war, but ought probably to be referred to a 
somewhat later date.™ Lebuin, an Englishman, had preached 
with much success and had built several churches among the 
Frisians about the Yssel, when an incursion of the neighbouring 
heathens disturbed him in his labours. On this he determined 
boldly to confront the enemies of the Gospel in all their force, 
and, undeterred by the warnings of his friends, he appeared in his 
pontifical robes in the national assembly of the Saxons, which was 
held at Marklo, on the Weser. He spoke to them of the true 
God, he denounced their i^latry, and told them that, unless they 
would receive the Gospel and be baptised, God had decreed their 
ruin by means of a powerful king, not from afar, but from their 
own neighbourhood, who would sweep them away like a torrent. 
The eflfect of such an address was violently to exasperate the 
Saxons ; and it was with difficulty that some members of the 
assembly saved the zealous missionary from the rage of their bre- 
thren. ITie pagans burnt his church at Deventer, and in conse- 
quence of this outrage Charlemagne with the Franks, who were 
informed of it when met in council at Worms, resolved on an 
expedition against them." 

The absence of Charlemagne on expeditions in other quarters, 
as in Italy or in Spain, was always the signal for a rising of the 
Saxons. After a time, as we are told by an annalist of his reign,** 
he was provoked by their repeated treacheries to resolve on the 
conversion or the extermination of the whole race. In his attempts 
at conversion, however, he met with difficulties which it would seem 
that he had not expected. Whenever the Saxons were defeated, 
multitudes of them submitted to baptism without any knowledge 
or belief of Christian doctrine ;P but on the first opportunity they 
revolted, and again professed the religion of their fathers. The 

^ Poeta Saxo, ap. Pertz, i. 230; Rettb. See Luden, iv. 281. 

ii. 375, 404. «> Einhard, a.d. 775. 

» Eigil, Vita Sturm. 24 (Patrol, cv.). p " Solitfl siinulatione," says the 

^ Rettb. ii. 383. » lb. 406. auiialist. Eiub. a.d. 780; comp. Vit. 

" Vit. S. U-buiiii, ap. Periz, ii. 302-3. Car. 7. 



Chap. VI. a.d. 772-806. WIDIKIND. 139 

long war was carried on with much loss on both sides; on one 
occasion Charlemagne beheaded 4500 prisoners, who had been 
given up to him as having shared in the last insurrection,** 
and this frightful bloodshed, instead of striking the ex- 
pected terror into the barbarians, excited them to an unusually 
wide-spread and formidable rising in the following year/ A chief 
named Widikind had thus far been the soul of the Saxon move- 
ments. After every reverse, he contrived to escape to Denmark, 
where he found a refuge with the king, who was his brother-in- 
law ; and when his countrymen were ripe for a renewal of their 
attempts, he reappeared to act as their leader. But in 785, 
having secured a promise of impunity, he surrendered himself, 
together with his brother Abbo, and was baptised at Attigny, 
where Charlemagne officiated as his sponsor; and — ^whether an 
intelligent conviction contributed to his change of reli^ous pro- 
fession, whether it arose solely from despair of the Saxon cause, or 
whether his conversion was merely to a belief in that God whose 
worshippers had been proved the stronger party — his engagements 
to the king were faithfully kept.' The Saxons were now subdued 
as far as the Elbe, and many of the fiercer idolaters among them 
sought an asylum in Scandinavia, where they joined the piratical 
bands which had already begun their plundering expeditions, and 
which were soon to become the terror of the more civilised nations 
of Europe.* 

Charlemagne proceeded to enact a law of extreme severity." It 
denounces the penalty of death against the refusal of baptism; 
against burning the bodies of the dead, after the manner of the 
pagans; against eating flesh in Lent, if this be done in contempt 
of Christianity ; against setting fire to churches or violently entering 
them and robbing them ; against the murder of bishops, priests, or 
deacons; against the offering of human sacrifices, and against 
some barbaric superstitions.* All persons were to pay a tenth 

1 Einhard, a.d. 782 ; Pocta Saxo, ap. hoc ipsam iucenderit, vel camem ejus ad 

Peru. i. 238 ; Ozanam, 249. 'comedcndum dedcrit^ rcl ipsam comederit, 

' Sismomli, ii. 204 ; Lnden, iv. 337. capitis sententia punietur." (c. 6.) On 

■ Einhard, a.d. 785 ; Martin, ii. 3U0 ; the words in italics, which are clearly 
Rettb. ii. 407-8. directed against S'lpcrstition^ Ozanam 

* Einhardt Vita Car. 14 ; Gibbon, iv. absurdly founds a charge of cannibalism 

500 ; Rettb. ii. 384. against the Germans (227; comp. Rettb. 

" ** Capitula de partibns Saxonise " ii. 390). Grimm contrasts this law 

(Paderboru, a.d. 785). Pertz, Leges, i. with the superstition which has prevailed 

48-50. in some places even to our own times — 

■ *' Si quis a diabolo deccptns ere- " It is not witchcraft, but the killing of 
diderit, secundum morem paganorum, supposed witches, that the enlightened 
vimm aliquem aut foeminam itrigam law denounces as diabolical and heathen." 
esse et homines comedere, et propter Deutsche Mythol. 1021. 



140 CHARLEMAGNE'S MEASURES BookIU. 

part of their " substance and labour " to the church.y All children 
were to be baptised within a year from their birth, and parents 
who should neglect to comply with the law in this respect were to 
be fined in proportion to their quality. Fines were also enacted 
against those who should sacrifice in groves or do any other act of 
pagan worship. In the case of those offences which were punish- 
able with death, the law did not admit the pecuniary commutations 
which were a feature of all the Germanic codes ; but instead of 
them there was the remarkable provision, that, if any person guilty 
of such offences would of his own accord confess them to a priest, 
and express a desire to do penance, his life should be spared on 
the testimony of the priest* The rigour of this capitulary was 
unlike the general character of Charlemagne's legislation and was 
meant to be only temporary. It was modified by an enactment 
twelve years later, which again allowed the principle of composition 
for capital offences.* 

The conversion of the Saxons was urged on by a variety of 
measures. Gifts and threats were employed to gain them.^ 
Charlemagne offered them union with the Franks on equal terms, 
freedom from tribute, and exemption from all other imposts except 
tithes.^ Bishopricks were gradually established among them, mo- 
nasteries were founded in thinly inhabited districts, towns grew 
up around these new foundations, and each became a centre for 
diffusing the knowledge of religion and of civilisation.^ The 
Saxon youths who were received as hostages were committed to 
bishops and abbots for instruction ; ® and, by a strong measure of 
policy, ten thousand Saxons were in 804 removed from their own 
country into the older "Prankish territory, where they became 
incorporated with the conqueror's original subjects.' 

A like system of extending the profession of the Gospel with his 
conquests was pursued by Charlemagne in other quarters — as 
among tfie Frisians, the Wiltzes, (a Slavonic people north of the 
Elbe,) the Bavarians, the Avars in Pannonia, and the Bohemians. 
Among the missionaries who were most distinguished in the work 

' By a constimtioD of the preceding Leges, i. 75) ; comp. Rettb. ii. 591. 

year (784) the Saxons were bound to *» Alcuin, Ep. 3 (a.d. 790). 

annex a glebe (matisiis) to every church ^ £inh. Vita Car. 7 ; Kettb. ii. 409- 

and to pay tenths and ninths (payments 410. 

which will be explained herfafter, c. ^ Mabill. III. xxxiii. ; Ozanam, 260. 

IX. iii. 14) to the bishops and clergy. For the dates of the Saxon bishopricks, 

(Pertz, Leges, ii. Append. 1.) But the see Schrockh, xix. 270; Rettb. ii. 417; 

document is questionable, and the learned Giesel. IL i. 143. 

<^Jtor especially suspects the order as to « See a list in Pertz, Leges, L 89 f a.d. 

^f^hs. 802). This was repeatedly done. Rettb. 

" C. 14. ii. 392. 

* Capital. Saxon, a.d. 797 (Pertz, ' Einhard, 7 ; Rettb. ii. 392. 



Chap. VI. a.d. 786-804. FOR CONVERSION OF THE HEATHEN. 141 

of conversion were Gregory, abbot of Utrecht;* Liudger, a 
Frisian, who had studied under Alcuin at York, and became 
bishop of Mimigardeneford (Munster) ; ^ Willehad, a Northum- 
brian, bishop of Bremen ; ^ Sturmi, of Fulda, and Arno, archbishop 
of Salzburg^ Ingo, who laboured in Carinthia, may be men- 
tioned on account of the singular means which he took to convince 
the heathens of their inferior condition — admitting some Christian 
slaves to his own table, while for their unconverted masters food 
was set outside the door, as for dogs. The inquiries to which this 
distinction ^ave rise are said to have resulted in a great accession 
of converts."* 

But although the policy of Charlemagne did much to spread the 
profession of Christianity, the means which he employed were open 
to serious objection. The enforcement of tithes naturally raised 
a prejudice against the faith of which this payment was made 
a condition, and in 793 it even produced a revolt of the Saxons." 
Alcuin often remonstrated against the unwise exaction.^ He 
acknowledged the lawfulness of tithes ; but how, he asked, would 
an impost which was ill borne even by persons who had been 
brought up in the catholic Church, be endured by a rude and 
barbarous race of neophytes ? Would the Apostles have enforced it 
in such circumstances ? When confirmed in the faith, the converts 
might properly be subjected to burdens of this kind ; but until 
then, it would be a grievous error to risk the faith itself for the 
sake of tithes. In like manner he argued against the indiscri- 
minate administration of baptism. Instruction, he said, should 
first be given in the great heads of Christian doctrine and practice, 
and then the sacrament should follow. Baptism may be forced on 
men, but belief cannot. Baptism received without understanding 
or faith by a person cajmble of reason, is but an unprofitable 
washing of the body.P He urges that new converts should be 
treated with great tenderness, and that able preachers, of such 
character as may not bring discredit on their teaching, should be 
sent to instruct them.*i 

During the latter part of the Merovingian period, learning had 

K See p. 117. he also calls him father and mmi. Rettb. 

^ Vita S. Liudgeri, Pertx, ii. 405, ii. 237. 
seqq. On the name of his see, see Rettb. ■» Conversio Bagoariorum et Carant- 

ii. 429. anorum, c.^7 (Pertx, xi.). Ginzel seems 

* Vita S. Willeh., Pertz, ii. 380. to misunderstand the passage in making 

k Schrockh, xix. 288 ; Rettb. ii. 238. Ingo a duke (69). 
Alcuin in his letters calls Arno brother, " Einh. a.d. 79 i ; DoUinger. i. 319. 
which has been sapposed to mean that « Epp. 28, 31, 37, 79, 80, &c. 
they were related m that degree ; but p Ep. 31. « Ep. 87. 



142 CHARLEMAGNE'S ENCOURAGEMENT Booilll. 

continually declined A new era of intellectual activity now began/ 
Charlemagne himself made earnest efforts to repair the defects of 
his early training. He began in mature age to learn the art of 
writing ; but, although he practised diligently, he never attained 
facility, in it, or, at least, he was unable to master the diflSculties 
of the ornamental calligraphy on which the professional writers 
of the time prided themselves." We are told that he became as 
familiar with Latin as with his mother-tongue, and that, although 
he could not express himself with readmess in Greek, he was well 
acquainted with the language.^ The object of his endeavours was 
necessarily rather to revive the ancient Roman culture than to 
originate a new literature ; " yet, while he encouraged the study of 
the classic languages among his subjects, he did not neglect his 
native German ; he laboured to raise it to the rank of a cultivated 
tongue by reducing it to a grammatical system, he collected its 
old heroic ballads, and gave Teutonic names to the winds and 
months.* Nor, although his care for the German was little 
seconded in his own time,^ and although the Latin had become 
the authorised language of the Church, were the emperor's exer- 
tions in this respect without effect ; for a vernacular literature now 
arose which had much influence on the education of the people. 
Among its remains are poems and hymns, metrical harmonies of 
the Gospels, and glosses on the Bible, for the use of the clergy.* 

The instruments of the intellectual reform which Charlemagne 
contemplated were not to be found in his own dominions. He 
therefore sought for them from Italy and from the British islands, 
the only countries of the West in which the study of general 
learning was then pursued.* The chief of these were Paul Wame- 

' Gaizot, iii. 207, 330 ; Ampere, iii. (530),*understand the words to relate not 

2 ; EUendorf, i. 309. to ordinary but to ornamental writing. 

" " Tentabat et scribere, tabuhsque ct That the emperor used a mark by way 

codicilios ad hoc in lecto sub cerviciilibus of signature, does not, as has been some- 

circutnferre aolebiU, vt, cum vacuum tcinpus times supposed, prove that he was unable 

essetf tnanum Uteris effingaidis assucsceret ; to write his name. See Maitland, " Dark 

sed panim successit labor prsposterus et Ages,*' 13-5. 

sero iuchoatus." (Einhard, 25.^ From * Einhard, 25. 

this it has been inferred 'that he could *> Hohr, Karol. Litt 18. 

not write. (Gibbon, iv. 501 — who, by * Einhard, 29. 

omitting the words here printed in 7 See Luden, iv. 209-210, 570. 

italics, deprives his readers of a some- * Giesel. II. i. 91-2. 

what important part of the evidence ; * The monk of St. Gall, who wrote a 

Sismondi, ii. 319 ; Hallam, ii. 351, and gossiping and not very authentic life of 

Suppl. Notes, 388.) The meaning, how- Charlemagne — deriving his materials 

ever, seems rather to be that he couid chiefly from the current popular stories 

write, although not well or easily. Pagi of his time (Hist. Litt. v. 616; Bahr, 

(xiii. 154), the authors of the Histoire 238) — tells us tliat the emperor, finding 

Litt<$rairede la France (iv. 370), Schriickh the means of intellectual cultivation 

(xx. 48), Ampere (iii. 30-8), Biihr (Ka- far short of his wishes, exclaimed, 

rolingische Litteratur, 15;, and Ozanam ** Would that I had twelve clerks as 



Chap. VI. a.d. 769-814. OP LEARllING. 143 

frid, a Lombard, Peter of Pisa, and — ^the most important for 
talents, for influence, and for the length of his labours among the 
Franks — Alcuin, a native of Northumbria. 

Alcuin (or Albinus) was bom about the year 735.** After having 
studied in the cathedral school of York, under archbishop Egbert, 
brother of the Northumbrian king Eadbert, he was qrdained a 
deacon,^ and became master of the school, which he raised to such 
reputation that many foreigners resorted to it for instruction.*^ He 
had already visited the Continent, when Eanbald, his old fellow- 
pupil, on being promoted to the see of York in 780, sent him to 
Rome for the purpose of bringing back the pall, the symbol of 
the archiepiscopal dignity which had been recovered for York by 
Egbert after having been suspended since the time of Pauliuus. 
At Parma, Alcuin fell in with Charlemagne, who invited him to 
settle in France. With the permission of his own king and of 
Eanbald, he accepted the proposal, and was appointed to ^.^^ 732. 
the mastership of the Palatine school,® an institution 79i>. 
which had existed under the Merovingians,' and was now revived. 
This school accompanied the movements of the court. The pupils 
were the members of the royal family, with noble youths who 
belonged to the household, or had been permitted by the sovereign 
to partake of the education thus provided.* Charlemagne himself, 
with his sons, his daughters, and some of his courtiers, became the 
scholars of Alcuin.** It has been supposed that they formed an 
academy, in which each bore the name of some ancient worthy ; 
thus Charles himself is styled David, Alcuin is Flaccus, Angilbert 
is Homer. But the only evidence in favour of the supposition is 
the fact that such names are used in correspondence.' Alcuin's 
instructions were given rather in the form of conversation than of 
lectures.^ He taught the seven sciences which were distinguished 

learned as Jerome and Augustine !'* To though he visited France in 7S2, he did 

which Alcuin replied, " The Creator of not settle there until 793. 

heaven and earth has had no more like ' See Hist. Litt. iii. 424 ; Pitra, Vie 

those two ; and you would have twelve !" de S. Le^er ; Ozanam, 459. 

Pertz, ii. 734. ' Crevier, i. 47 ; Ozanam, 459-464, 

^ Vita Alcuini, in Frohen's edition of 537 ; Giesel. II. i. 84. 

his works, or Patrol, c. ; Loreoz, Life ^ Einhard, 19. 

of Alcuiu, transl. by Jane M. Slee, * See Schruckh, xix. 50-2 ; Guizot; it 

London, 1837 ; Alcuin, par F. Mounier, 242 ; Lorenz, 20-48, 150-2 ; Mounier, 

Paris, 1853. 56, 88 ; Luden, v. 206, 568. 

« Mounier (17) and others say that *' Guizot, ii. 238. The dialogue be- 

Mabillon (Elog. Hist, in Ale. c. 3 ; tween Alcuiu and the prince Pipin 

Patrol, c.) is mistaken in supposing him (Patrol, ci. 975-980), which M. Guizot 

a monk. quotes as a specimen of the teaching, is* 

* Vita, 2-5 ; Lorenz, 8-11. however, said to be really translate or 

* Lorenz (12-4), Pagi (xiii. 154), and copied from a Greek work of the time 
Luden (iv. 384, 552;, think that, al- of Hadrian. Finlay, ii. 268. 



144 ALCIHN. HoobHI. 

as liberal, and were afterwards classified under the titles of 
Trivium and Quadrivium — the Triviura ethical, consisdng of 
grammar, rhetoric, and dialectics; the Quadrivium physical, — 
arithmetic, music, geometry, and astronomy ; while above these 
two clasfifes was a third — Theology." His writings on these 
subjects contain little of an original kind, and may be regarded 
as mere notebooks of his teaching." His other works are very 
various — commentaries on scripture, litur^cal treatises, tracts on 
the controversies of the age and on practical religion, poems, lives 
of saints, and a large collection of letters. They appear to be 
justly described by Floury as displaying more of labour than of 
genius, more of memory' than of invention or taste ;^ but in esti- 
mating the merit of the man we are bound to compare him with 
his contemporaries. His work was that of a reviver.^ 

Alcuin was not only the instructor of Charlemagne in religion 
and letters, but his most confidential adviser in aflairs of state. 
After having taught the Palatine school for fourteen years (with 
the interval of a visit to his native country), he became weary 
of a court life, and expressed a wisB to retire to Fulda for the 
remainder of his days ; but Charlemagne provided another retreat 
for him, by bestowing on him the abb^y of St. Martin, at Tours, 
a monastery of great wealth, but notorious for the <Us- 
orderly character of its inmates ; *i and with this he 
retained some other preferments which he had before received. 
Alcuin in some measure reformed the monks of St. Martin's, 
although an afiray in which they were concerned towards the end 
of his life proves that the reformation was by no means perfect.' 
He enriched the library of the abbey by importing books from 
England, and under his government its school attained great 
fame. We are told by his old biographer that he would iiot allow 
the pupils to read the "falsehoods" of Virgil, in which he had 
formerly delighted, and that when one of them secretly trans- 
gressed the rule, Alcuin by supernatural knowledge detected him." 
Among his scholars during this period were Raban Maur, after- 
wards abbot of Fulda and archbishop of Mentz, Haymo, bishop of 

" Isid. Hispal. Etymolog. i. 2 (Patrol. p Bahr, 348. 

Ixxxii.) ; Ampere, iii. 73-4 ; Hettb. ii. <i Vita, G ; Lorenz, 131 ; Moanier, 

798. See Job. Sarisbur. Metalog, i. 12 236-8. 

seqq. (Patrol, cxcix.). The first meu- ' To this affair relate Epp. 118, 119, 

tioD of this cycle of sciences is in St. 195. Charlemagne was very angry with 

Augustine, De Ordine, ii. 12-15 (Patrol, the monks, and with Alcuin for sap- 

xxxii.) ; Giesel. II. i. 82. See, however, porting them in their misconduct. See 

Hanrcsau, i. 20-1. his letter, in Houquet, v. 628 ; and below 

■ Mounier, 30, seqq. c. IX. v. 10, 

» xlv. 19. ■ Vita, 10. 



CHAP. VI. Aj).YM-8l4. CHARLEMAGNE'S CARE FOR EDUCATION. H5 

Ilalberstadt, and other eminent men of the next generatioa^ He 
kept up a frequent correspondence with Charlemagne on politics, 
literature, science, and theology ; and (as we shall see hereafter) 
he continued to take part in the controversies of the time. From 
some expressions in his letters it appears that he was dissatisfied on 
account of the novelties introduced into the teaching of the Palatine 
school by his successor, an Irishman named Clemient.** At length 
he obtained the emperor's leave to devolve the care of discipline in 
each of his monasteries on younger men,* and he died in 804.y 

Charlemagne was bent on promoting education among every 
class of his subjects. He urged his nobles to study, and loudly 
reproved those who considered their position as an excuse for 
negligence.* The laity were required to learn the Creed and 
the Lord's Prayer, — in Latin, if possible, with a view to bringing 
them within the Roman influence. Fasting and blows were some- 
times denounced against any who should disobey.^ But it was 
found that the hardness of the task was regarded by many })er8ons 
as even more formidable than such penalties ; and it also appeared 
that many of the clergy were themselves unable to teach the forms 
in Latin. The re-enactments and the mitigations of such rules 
sufficiently prove how difficult it was to carry them into execution.** 
The clergy were charged to explain the Creed and the Lord's 
Prayer to their people,* and sponsors at baptism were required to 
prove their acquaintance with both forms.** 

With a view to improve the education of the clergy, Charle- 
magne ordered in 769 that any clergyman who should disregard 
his bishop's admonitions to learn should be suspended or deprived.* 
In 787 he issued a circular to all metropolitans, bishops, and 
abbots, complaining of the incorrect style which appeared in many 
letters addressed to him from monasteries. This want of skill 
in writing, he says, leads him to apprehend that there may be 
also an inability to miderstand the language of Scripture rightly ; 
he therefore orders that competent masters should be established, 
and that study should be diligently urged on.' Two years later 

« Hiit. Litt. iv. U; Lorenz, 169-173. 130\ Cone. Mogunt. A.d. 813. c. 45. 

For the emineDt men formed under »» Giesel. II. i. 90-1 ; Rettb. ii. 36, 

Charlemagne and Alcuin, see Froben, 454-6. 

De Vita Ale. c. 10; EUendorf, i. 815; « Capit a.d. 789, c. 69. Hatto. bishop 

Mounier, 1 88. of Basel, about 820, orders that the forms 

■ Ep. 82, Patrol, e. 266 ; see Mounier, be learnt " tarn Latme quam barbariee." 

95-9. Hard. iv. 1240. 

" Epp. 175-6. •* Capit. a.d. 804 (Pertz, Leges, i. 

7 Schroekh, xix. 87. 128). 

' Monach. SangalL i. 3. ' Peru, Leges, i. 34. 

• Capit A.D. 804 (Perts, Leges, i. ' Encycl. de litteris colendis. lb. 52. 

L 



146 CHARLEMAGNE'S CARE FOR EDUCATION. Book ID. 

he ordered that there should be a sdiool in every cathedral and 
monastery, open not only to the servile class (from which the clergy 
were usually taken), but to the freebom ; that instruction should 
be given in psalmody, music, grammar, and eomj/uium (a tend 
which denoted the art of reckoning in general, but more espedolly 
the calculation of the calendar) \^ and that care should be taken 
for the correct writing of the service-books.^ He employed Paul 
Wamefrid to compile a book of homilies from the fisithers, and 
published it with a preface in his own name.* These homilies 
were arranged according to the eccleaastical seasons. It seems to 
have been at first intended that they should be read in Latin, the 
language of both the church and the state ; and that it was a 
concession to national feeling when councils of the emperor's last 
year directed the clergy, in using them, to render them into a 
tongue intelligible to the people — whether the ^^ rustic Roman" 
of Gaul, or the Teutonic.^ As the manuscripts of the Scriptures 
had been generally much corrupted by the carel^sness of copyists, 
Charlemagne, with Alcuin's assistance, provided for the midtipli- 
cation of correct copies."* While the pupils of the schools were 
employed in transcribing the less important books for churches, 
none but persons of mature age were allowed to write the gospels, 
the psalter, or the missal.° Manuscripts were acquired for libra- 
ries from England, Italy, and Greece.^ Presbyters were before 
ordination to be examined as to their faith, as to their knowledge 
of the creed and the Lord's prayer, of the canons, the penitential, 
the gospels, the homilies, the public services, the rites of baptism 
and the eucharist, and their power of instructing their flocks.? 

In addition to the education of the clergy, a new feature appears 
in the Articles of Theodulf, bishop of Orleans, where it is ordered 
that in every parish the clergy should provide a school for free- 
born children as well as for serfs. The payment for instruction 
was to be only such as the parents of the pupils should freely give. 

t Dacange in voc. o Lorenz, 56. A Rheims Pontifical of 

>» Capit A.D. 789, c. 71. Cf. Cone. Ca- the 9th centurr, in the coronation »er- 

bilon. A.D. 813, c. 3. For an account of vice, directs the archbishop to pray, 

the most fiunons cathedral and monastic *' Ut [Dens] regale solam, videlicet 

schools ander Charlemagne, see Hist Saxonom, Merciorum, Nordanhymbro- 

Litt. iv. 12-7. rumqne soeptra non deserat" — a curious 

* See Patrol, xcv. 1154, seqq. evidence as to the quarter from which 

^ Bouquet, v. 622; Pertz, Leges, i. the oflBce was borrowed (Rock's * Church 

45 ; Cone. Rem. II. (813), c. 15 ; Cone, of our Fathers,' i. 283 ; comp. Martene, 

Turon. III. (813), e. 1 7. ii. 217, 225), although it gives no warrant 

"* Capit A.D. 782 (Pertz, Leges, i. 45), for Ozanam's opinion as to the coronation 

Hist. Litt iv. 19-20; Schrockh, xix. ofPipin. (See p. 116, note ".) 

48-9 : XX. 197. p Capit. A.D. 802 (PerU, Leges, i. 107). 

■ Capit A.D. 789, c. 71. Cf. Capit a.d. 81 1 (ib. 171). 



Chap. VI. a.i>. 768-814. SERVICE OF THE CHURCH. 147 

The bishop also invites the clergy to send their relations to the 
monastic schools.^ But the attempt to establish parochial schools 
does not appear to have been carried far even in the diocese 
of Orleans, and there is no evidence of its having been imitated 
elsewhere/ 

Charlemagne paid much deference to the usages of Rome, as 
the most venerable church of the West He obtained from Adrian 
the Roman code of canons (which was founded on the collection of 
Dionysius Exiguus), and in 789 he published such of them as he 
considered necessary for his own dominions.' The Roman method 
of chanting had b^n already introduced into Gaul. Pope Paul 
had sent books of it to Pipin, and had endeavoured to procure its 
establishment; but, although he was supported by Pipin in the 
attempt,^ the Gallican chant still prevailed. During Charlemagne's 
third visit to Rome, in 787, disputes arose between the Prankish 
and the Roman clergy on the subject of the liturgy and the chant. 
The Franks relied on the king's protection ; but, to their dismay, 
he asked them, ** Which is purer — the stream or the source?" — a 
question which admitted but of one answer ; and on this answer 
he acted." He carried back into France two skilful clerks to teach 
the Roman chant, and stationed one of them at Metz, while the 
other was attached to the court.'^ He also established the sacra- 
mentary of Gregory the Great in the Prankish church ;y it is even 
said that, in his zeal for conformity to Rome, he endeavoured to 
suppress the Ambrosian forms at Milan, by destroying the service- 
books, or carrying them " as if into exile " across the Alps ; but 
that miracles came to the rescue of the venerable ritual, eo that 
Pope Adrian, who had instigated the attempt against it, was 
brought to acquiesce in the local use of it' Charlemagne paid 

4 Theodulph. Capit. 19-20 ( a.d. 797), of Angouldme tells ns that they learnt the 

Hard. iv. 916. Roman chant, ** excepto quod tremulas 

' Gaizot, ii. 259 ; Giesel. II. i. 90. vel vinnolaa sive coflisibiles vel seca- 

■ Conip. Hard. iiL 2033, seqq^., with biles voces in canta non poterant per- 

iy. 826, or Pertz, Leges, i. .54. Sirmoud fecte ezprimere Franci, naturali voce 

thinks that the canons were procured barharica frangentes in gatture voces 

on his third visit to Rome in 787, rather potias quftm exprimentes.*' (Pertz, i. 

than (as is most commonly said) on his 171.) The editor shows, from Isidore 

first visit, in 774. Patrol. Ixvii. 135-8. of Seville (Etymol. IIL xx. 13), that 

* See Capit. 789. 79, ap. Pertz, Leges, the epithet vtHmtlus or tinmUaius comes 

1. 60; Pagi, xii. 645; Ducange, s. v. from cwwt», a cnrl—cmcintws moliiter 

CantuB Rommwis, ftexus, 

« Monach. Engolism. ap. Pertz, i. ^ Adrian, in Patrol, xcviii. 436. 

171. • The only authority for this is the 

« Libri Carol, i. 6 (Patrol, xcviii.) ; elder Landulf, a Milanese chronicler 

Mon. Sangall. i. 11 (ib.); Gu^ranger, i. who wrote about a.d. 1070 (Hist. Me- 

251-4. The rough voices of the Franks diol. ii. 10-2: Patrol, cxlvii.). He says 

were still complained of, as in the time that many of the Milanese clergy were 

of Gregory the Great (p. 6). The monk slain in defence of their books. 

L 2 



148 ECCLESIASTICAL LEGISLATION Book IlL 

special attention to the solemnity of divine worship. The cathedral 
which he built at his favourite place of residence, Aix-la-Chapelle, 
was adorned with marble pillars from Rome and Ravenna, and was 
furnished with vestments for all its clergy, down to the meanest of 
the doorkeepers.* He diligently frequented the services of his 
chapel ^ both by day and by night, and took great pains to improve 
the reading and the singing ; '* for," says Einhard, " he was very 
skilful in both, although he neither read publicly, nor sang, except 
in a low voice and together with others." ^ A biographer of more 
questionable authority tells us that he used to point with his finger 
or with his staff at any person** whom he wished to read ; and when 
thus ordered to begin, or when warned by a cough * from the 
emperor to stop, the reader was expected to obey at once, without 
any regard to sense or to the division of sentences. Thus, it is 
said, all were kept in a state of continual attention, because each 
might be called on at any moment. No one could mark his own 
portion with his nail or with wax ; and all became accomplished 
readers, whether able or not to understand the language and the 
matter/ Charlemagne himself is said to have composed hymns — 
among them the ** Veni Creator Spiritus ;" ^ but as to that hymn, 
at least, the statement appears to be groundless.^ 

Charlemagne's ecclesiastical legislation was carried on by his 
own authority. He regarded it as the duty of a sovereign to watch 
over the spiritual and moral well-being of his subjects ; he alleges 
the reforms of Josiah as a scriptural precedent for the part which 
he took in the regulation of the church.^ Ecclesiastical subjects 
occupy more than a third of his capitularies.™ The ecclesiastical 
as well as the other laws were proposed in the ai?semblies which 
were held yearly in March and in autumn, and which bore at once 
the character of synods and of mails or diets. The clergy and the 
liuty sat together or separately, as was most convenient, according 
to the nature of the subjects- proposed to them." Discilssion was 

• Einhard, 17, 26; Adrian, ad Carol. « "Sono gutturis." 
Patrol, xcviii. 371 ; Poeta Saxo, 1. v. ' Monach. Sangall. i. 7. 
(Patrol, xcix. 731-2) ; Gibbon, vi. 420. « Gudranger, i. 188. 

*» The chapel of the Frank kings was •» It rests on the authority of Ekke- 

80 called from the cappa or cloak of St. hard's Life of Notker the Stammerer 

Martin, which was kept in it ( Walafr. fc. 18, ap. Canis. III. ii.). Against it, 

Strabo, De Keb. Eccl. 31, Patrol cxiv. ; see Mabill. in Patrol, cxxxi. 990. 

Dacauge, s. v. Capelld), Thomassin, •» Capit. Aquisgr. a.d. 789 (Pcrtz, 

however (1. ii. 109), identifies the word Leges, i. 54). 

with cfipsa, a reliquary. » 415 out of 1126; Guizot, ii. 198. 

* Einhard, 26. On the character of the capitularies, see 
•* The writer's language seems to Guizot, p. 230. 

imply that he means to speak of the » Thus, in 813, assemblies were con- 
hoiwehold in general, and not of the vened at Aries, Mentz, Tours, and Chd* 
clergy only. lons-sur-Saone. In these the bishops 



Chap. VL a.d. 768-814. AND POSITION OF CHAKLEMAGNE. 149 

allowed ; but both the initiative and the decision belonged to the 
sovereign, and in his name the decrees were published,® 

The coronation of Charlemagne as emperor, although it did not 
add to the power which he before possessed over his subjects, in- 
vested him with a new and indefinite majesty. He was no longer 
the chief of a nation qf warriors, but the representative of the 
ancient Roman traditions and civilisation, the anointed head of 
Western Cliristendom.P The empire was to be a consecrated 
state, with the same ruler in ecclesiastical as in civil affairs, and 
this ruler directing all to the glory of God.*> In 802 an oath of 
allegiance to him as emperor was required of those who had already 
sworn to him as king ; and whereas such oaths had not before 
been imposed among the Franks, except on persons who held 
office or benefice under the crown, all males above the age of 
twelve were now required to swear/ The civil hierarchy in all its 
grades corresponded to the ecclesiastical ; and forthwith a new 
system of commissioners {Mim Dominici) ■ was set on foot. These 
were chosen partly from the higher ecclesiastics and partly from 
the laity. They were to be men superior to all suspicion, fear, or 
partiality ; they were to make circuits for the inspection of both 
secular and spiritual matters ; they were to control the local ad- 
ministrations ;. to take care of churches, of widows, orphans, and 
the poor ; to exercise a censorship of morals ; to redress wrongs, 
or to refer to the emperor such as were beyond their power ; to see 
to the due execution oC the laws which were passed in the national 
assemblies.^ In spiritual as well as in temporal affairs, the emperor 
was regarded as the highest judge, beyond whom no appeal could 
be made;" in authorising the canons of Adrian's collection, he 
omitted that canon of Sardica which prescribed in certain cases a 
reference to the bishop of Rome.* While he cultivated friendly 
relations with the popes, while he acknowledged them as the highest 

treated on matters of faith and disci- ^ve, Nonn. and Eng. i. 27-8 ; MilmaD, 

pUne, the monks and abbots on monastic li. 207. 

life, and the counts and judges on secular ^ Pfister, L 436 ; Palgrave, i. 397 ; 

questions. See Hard. iv. 1008; Luden, Milman, ii. 211. 

V. 148. ' Pertz, Leges, i. 91 ; Martin, ii. 344. 

» l>e Marca, VI. xxv. 5 ; Baluz. Pnef. • PEster. i. 452-3 \ Ellendorf, i. 257. 

ad Capitular. (Patrol, xcvii.) ; Pagi, * See the instructions to them when 

xiii. 119 ; Guizot, ii. 194-G; Giesel. Il.i. first sent out, April 802, in Pertx, 

57; Martin, ii. 276; Milman, ii. 223; Leges, i. 197. Comp. De Bfarca, IV. 

Kettb. i. 424. For some strong ex- vii. 6-8; Guizot, ii. 192; Rettb. i. 433-4, 

pressions of synods as to Charlemagne's 456. ■ Gfrbrer, * Karolinger,' i. 74. 

ecclesiastical position, see Ellendorf, i. * See vol. i. p. 304, and compare the 

' * the '^ ' ' * 



234-5. Uoman with the Frank code (Patro! 

p Ilalla -- - - 

Sismondi, 



r llallam, i. 10, and Supnl. Note?, 27 ; Ixvii. 178 ; xcvii. 152, seqq. ; Giesel. II. 
1, ii. 383 ; Kettb. i. 432-5 ; Pal- i. 63). 



150 ECCLESIASTICAL POSITION OF CHARLEMAGNE. BookIIL 

of bishops, and often consulted them and acted on their suggestions, 
the authority by which these were enforced on his subjects was his 
own ; nor did the popes attempt to interfere with the powers which 
he claimed. On the conquest of Italy, he assumed the same control 
over the eecle^astical aJSEeurs of that country which he had been 
accustomed to exercise in his hereditary kingdom, and the popes 
submitted to him as their lord and judge/ Lofty titles and 
flattering language were, indeed, often addressed by bishops and 
others of the Franks to the successors of St. Peter ; but the real 
amount of the authority which these enjoyed during this period is 
to be measured by the facts of history, not by the exaggerations of 
rhetorical or interested compliment' 

y GieseL IT. i. 40-2 ; Rettb. ii. 439. churches. (See below, c. IX. iii. 10.) 

M. Lehueron, however, argues that he Instit. M^ov. et GaroliDgiennes, ii. 358- 

held his superiority over the Koman 360. 

church in the character of its Dt^enaor, * See Planck, ii. 769, 785, 797-8 ; 

Uke the advocates or Yidames of iener Giesel. II. i. 60-1. 



cmaj-. VII. Aj>.m-i%o. f 151 ) 



CHAPTER VIL 

THE EASTERN CHURCH — CONTROVERSIES OF CHARLEMAGNE'S AGE. 

A.D. 775-814. 

I. CONSTANTINE Copronymus was succeeded in 775 by his son 
Leo IV., who, although opposed to the worship of images, was of 
gentler and more tolerant character than the earlier princes of the 
Isaurian line. Although the laws of the iconoclastic emperors 
remained unaltered, the monks who had been persecuted and 
banished were now allowed to return ; and a great excitement was 
raised by the reappearance of these confessors in the cause of the 
popular religion. The empress, Irene, was of an Athenian family 
noted for its devotion to images ; she herself cherished an enthusiastic 
reverence for them, and, although her father-in-law, Constantine, 
had compelled her to forswear them, she appears to have thought 
that in so sacred a cause her oath was not binding. She now 
exerted her influence as &r as she dared; by her means some 
monks and other friends of images were promoted to bishopricks, 
although for the time they were obliged to conceal their opinions.* 

Notwithstanding the general mildness of Leo's disposition, his 
feeling on the subject of images was strong; and, when some of 
them had been found under Irene's pillow, he ordered certain 
great officers, who had been concerned in introducing them into 
the palace, to be flogged and tonsured ; he put one of these officers, 
who had especially provoked him, to death ; and he separated 
from the empress, although she denied all concern in the affair.^ 

After a reign of four years and a half Leo died, — more probably 
by a natural consequence of the illness with which he had long 
been afflicted, than either by a miracle of judgment on his impiety, 
or (as some modem writers have supposed) by poison ;^ and Irene 

• Theophanes, 696 ; Gibbon,! v. 412-3, ipote where the crown had touched his 

492 ; Schlouer, 250-3. head, and that he died in coniequence. 

^ Theophan. 701 ; Schlosser, 258-9. The supposition of iK>ison is put forward, 

Mr. Finlay questions this story, ii. 83. more or less positively, by Spanheim 

« Theophanes (702) saYS that Leo, (789), Basnage (359). Mosheim (ii. 65), 

being excessively fond of jewels, took and, of course, by Gfrorer, who everv- 

down and wore a crown adorned with where discovers mysterious crimes (li. 

very 'precious gems, which hong in the 155) ; but is declared by Schlosser (259) 

cathedral ; that in punishment of this to be groundless, 
sacrilege, carbuncles broke out in the 



152 IKENE. BooKia 

was left in posBCSsiun of the government, as guardian of her son 
(^nstaiitine VI., a boy ten years old. The empresB, 
however, felt tliat it was necessary to proceed with 
caution in carrying out her wishes. She was, indeed, sure of the 
monks and of the populace : but' the authority of a council, which 
claimed the title of Ecumenical, was against her : the great body 
of the bishops was opposed to images ; and, although the weU 
tried pliancy of the eastern clergy gave reasons for hoping that 
these might be gained, there was a strong iconoclastic party among 
the laity, while the soldiery adhered to the principles of the late 
eniiKtror, whose memory was cherished among them as that of a 
bravo and successful general.^ At first, therefore, Irene ventured no 
further than to publish an edict for general liberty of conscience. 
The monks who were still in exile returned, images were again 
displayed, and many tales of past sufferings and of miracles swelled 
the popular enthusiasm.* 

In August 784, Paul, patriarch of Constantinople, suddenly 
n^ni^ied his dignity, and retired into a monastery, where he was 
visited by Irene and some high officers of the empire. When 
(|Ui!8ti()ne(l as to the cause of his resignation, he professed deep 
remorse for having consented to accept the patriarchate on con- 
dition of op])osing the restoration of images; he deplored the 
condition of his church, oppressed as it was by the tyranny of the 
state, and at variance with the rest of Christendom; and he 
declared that the only remedy for its evils would be to summon 
a general council for the purpose of reversing the decrees of the 
iconoclastic synod which had been held under Constantino.' We 
need not seek for an explanation of the patriarch's motives in the 
sup|)oaition of collusion with the court. He may, like many others, 
have been sincerely attached to the cause of images, and, when 
seized with sickness, may have felt a real compunction for the 
compliances by which he had gained his elevation. And his death, 
which followed immediately after, is a strong confirmation of this 
view."* 

Irene summoned the people of the capital to elect a new 
jiatriarch. No one {assessed of the requisite qualifications was to 
be found among the higher clergy, as the bishops were disaffected 
to the cause of images, while the abbots were too ignorant of the 
management of affairs. The person selected by the court, and, 

^* Wuk-h. X. . "1-^7 ; <*»^l>on, iv. 492. k Neand. v. 311-2. Basnage and 

^ Hu^jphm, 70-1. Spauheini grouudlessly suppose that Paul 

I[». 708 ; (J, iiaiuurt. cclvi. 12 ; Hard, was deponed. Sec WaJch, x. 509. 
»^- •»7; «chl(,^.r, 27-4-«. 



Chap. VII. aj). 784-6. TARASIUS. 153 

according to one writer,*^ suggested by Paul himself, was Tarasius, 
a secretary of state, a man of noble birth, of consular dignity, and 
of good personal reputation. The multitude, who had no doubt 
been carefully prompted, cried out for his election, and the few 
dissentient voices were overpowered. Tarasius, with an appearance 
of modesty, professed his reluctance to accept an office so foreign 
to his previous habits, and declared that he would only do so on 
condition that a general council should be forthwith summoned for 
the consideration of the all-engrossing subject* With this under- 
standing he was consecrated ; and Adrian of Rome, on receiving 
a statement of his faith, admitted him to communion, professing to 
consider the exigency of the case an excuse for the irregularity of 
his promotion.^ 

A council was now summoned, and measures were taken to 
render it yet more imposing than the numerous synod by which 
images had been condemned under the last reign. The pope was 
invited to send representatives, if unable to attend in person.™ He 
deputed Peter, chief presbyter of his church, with Peter, abbot of 
St Sabas, and furnished them with a letter, in which he hailed the 
emperor and his mother as a new Constantino and a new Helena, 
and exhorted them to repair the misdeeds of their predecessors by 
restoring images in the church." Some things of a less agreeable 
kind were added: — a demand for*the restoration of all that the 
iconoclastic emperors had taken from St Peter, remarks on the 
irregularity of raising a layman to the patriarchate of Con- 
stantinople, and objections to the title of Ecumenical, which had 
been given to Tarasius in the imperial letter.** 

As the empire was at peace with the Saracens, invitations were 
also addressed to the patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, and 
Jerusalem. But the bearers of these letters fell in with some 
monks, who, on learning the object of their journey, earnestly im- 

^ Ignatius, in his Life of Tarasius. because, having been sent on other 

See Walch, x. 493. Hut the story is business, they had acted in the council, 

unsupported and improbable. lb. 509. although they professed to have done 

^ Hard. iv. 24-5 ; Theophan. 709-712. so under compulsion; and that Rome 

^ Hard. iv. 97 ; Theophan. 713. regarded it as only a local synod. But 

•" Hard. iv. 22 ; Walch, x. 532. See Theodore's statement is contradicted by 

Hefele, iii. 414-6. the documents, and is supposed to have 

" Hard. iv. 79-92. arisen out of the circumstance that, 

® Ibid., 93-0. Basnage (1362), Gib- when the meeting of the council was 

bon (iv. 492), aud others, suppose that deferred, the legates did not procure 

the two Jloman presbyters had no spe- any new commission. (Schlosser, 288 ; 

cial commission and were disowned by Neand. v. 314-5.) Theodore was in- 

the pope on their return. The only an- clined to disparage the council because 

thority for this is Theodore the Studite, he thought it too lenient in its treatment 

who states (Ep. I. 38, p. 254), that the of persons who had formerly opposed 

envoys were deposed, "as they say,** images. 



IM SECOND COUNCIL OF KIC^A. BookUL 

jlionA them to proceed no further, ance any sudi communication 
from the em[Hre would be sure to exasperate the jealousy of the 
Mahometan tyrants, and to faring additional oppressbns on the 
church. ' The monks offered to send to the council two of thdr 
own number, whom they proposed to invest with the character of 
secretaries to the patriarchs; these, they said, would suffidently 
rejH^sent the faith of the eastern church, and the personal at- 
tendance of the patriarchs was no more requiate than that of the 
Roman bishop. The messengers agreed to this strange proposal, 
and returned to Constantinople ¥rith two monks named John and 
Thomaa^ 

The council was to meet at Constantinople in the beginning of 
August 786. But during the week before the appointed day, the 
opponents of images held meetings for the purpose of agitation, 
and, although Tarasius ordered them to leave tiie city, many of 
tiiem still remained. On the eve of the opening, there was an out- 
break of some imperial guards and other soldiers belonging to the 
iconoclastic party ; and on the following day a still more serious 
tumult took place. When Tarasius and other members of the 
council were assembled in the church of the Apostles, a multitude 
of soldiers and others, abetted by some iconoclastic bishops, broke 
in on them, and compelled them to take refuge in the sanctuary. 
The soldiers who were summoned to quell the uproar refused to 
obey orders. Tarasius ordered the doors of the sanctuary to be 
shut. The iconoclasts forced them, but, without being dismayed 
by the threatening appearance, the patriarch opened the council, 
and conducted its proceedings until a message arrived from Irene, 
desiring her friends to give way ; ^ on which the iconoclastic bishops 
raised a shout of victory. The empress allowed the matter to rest 
until, having lulled suspicion, she was able quietly to disband the 
mutinous soldiers and to send them to their native places ;' and in 
September of the following year, a synod of about 350 bishops, 
with a number of monks and other clergy, met at Nicaea, a place at 
once safer from disturbance than the capital, and of especially ve- 
nerable name, as having been the seat of the first general council." 

The first places of dignity were given to the Roman envoys, who 
had been recalled, after having proceeded as far as Sicily on their 

p Hard. iv. 136-141, 456; Spanb. ' Theophan. 715-6 ; Theodor. Studit. 

805-8; Walch, x. 551-8. Schlosser Laudatio Platonis, 24 (Patrol. Gr. 

(281) not altogether unfiurly reminds xcix.). 

us of Pscudartabas in the * Achamians.' ■ On the number of which the council 

On the other side see Hefele, iii. 427. consisted, see Walch, x. 550; Schlosier, 

1 Hard. iv. 25-8; Theophan. 714-5; 288-9. 
Walch, X. 535-7 ; Schlosser, 285-6. 



CHAP. YIL Aj>. 78^-7. SECOND COUNCIL OF NICiRA. 155 

way homeward/ Next to these was Tarasius, the real president of 
the assembly ;'' and after him were the two representatives (if they 
may be so styled) of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. A 
number of civil dignitaries were also present^ The first session 
took place on the 24th of September, and the business proceeded 
with great rapidity. Six sessions were held within thirteen days, 
a seventh followed a week later, and the final meeting was held at 
Constantinople on the 23rd of October/ 

From the beginning it was assumed that the object was not to 
discuss the question, but to re-establish the worship of images ; 
bishops who were known to be opposed to it had not been invited 
to attend.* The pope's letter was read at the second session, but 
with the omission of the refiections on Tarasius, and of the request 
that the rights of the Roman see might be restored.^ A number 
of bishops who had taken part in the iconoclasm of the last reigns, 
came forward to acknowledge and anathematise their errors, and 
humbly sued for admission to communion.^ In answer to ques- 
tions, some of them said that they had never until now had the 
means of rightly con^dering the subject ; that they had been edu- 
cated in error ; that they had been deceived by forged and garbled 
authorities ; or that they had been sealed up under a judicial 
blindness.^ Questions arose as to admitting them to communion, 
as to recognising them in offices to which they had been conse- 
crated by heretics,^ and, with respect to some, whether, as they 
had formerly been persecutors of liie faithful, they ought not to be 
treated with especial severity.*' The monks were throughout on 
the side of rigour; but the majority of the council, under the 
guidance of Tarasius, was in favour of a lenient courte. The 
canons were searched for precedents ; and a discussion ensued as 
to the application of these — with what class of heretics were the 
iconoclasts to be reckoned ? Tarasius was for putting them on the 
footing of Manichaeans, Marcionites, and Monophysites, as these 
sects had also been opposed to images ; all heresies, he said, were 
alike heinous, because all did away with the law of God. The 
monastic party declared that iconomachy was worse than the worst 
of heresies, because it denied the Saviour's incarnation.' But the 
majority was disposed to treat the penitents with indulgence, and 
they were received to communion.* There were loud outcries 

» Hard. iv. 27 ; Walch. x. 538. • Hard. iv. 93. >» lb. 37, aeqq. 

• Walch, X. 561-2. See Hefele, i. 27. «= lb. 47. 166, 300, Ac. 

« Hard. iv. 34. «• lb. 61. « lb. 125. 

y See Walch, x. 560, 579-580. ' lb. 50-60. 

» SchloMer, 200. » lb. 76, 129-136. 



156 SECOND COUXaL OF NICAA. Bmia 

against the iconoclasts, as atheists, Jews, and enemies of the 
truth ; ^ and when a proposal was made to call than Saraoens, it 
was answered that the name was too good for them.' 

According to the usual practice of councils, authorities were 
cited in behalf of images, and the oppoation to them was par- 
alleled or connected with all sorts of hereaes.^ The extracts pro- 
duced from the earlier Fathers are really irrelevant; for tiie 
images of which they speak were either scenes from sacred history, 
or memorial portraits (like that of Meletius of Antioch, which is 
mentioned by St. Chrysostom ™), and they afford no sanction for 
the practices which were in question before the coundl."^ A 
large portion of the quotations consisted of extracts from legen- 
dary biographies, and of tales of miracles wrought by images, to 
which some of the bishops were able to add similar marvels fit)m 
dieir own experience.^ From time to time the reading of these 
testimonies was interrupted by curious commentaries fit)m the 
hearers. Thus, after a passage from Gregory of Nyssa, in 
which he spoke of himself as having been affected to tears by 
a picture of the sacrifice of Isaac, a bishop observed, ^ The Esither 
had often read the history, but perhaps without ever weeping; 
yet, as soon as he saw the picture, he wept." " If," said another, 
*' so great a doctor was edified and moved even to tears by a pic- 
ture, how much more would it affect lay and unlearned people ! " 
Many exclaimed that they had seen such pictures of Abraham as 
that which Gregory described, although it does not appear whether 
they had experienced the same emotion at the sight ** If Gregory 
wept at a painting of Abraham," said Theodore, bishop of Catana, 
*' what should we do at one of the incarnate Saviour?" ** Should 
not we too weep," asked Tarasius, " if we saw a picture of the 
crucifixion ? " and his words were received with general applause.^ 

A famous story, which had already served the uses both of 
controversial and of devotional writers,*^ was twice read,' An 
aged monk on the Mount of Olives, it was said, was greatly 
tempted by a spirit of uncleanness. One day the demon appeared 
to him, and, after having sworn him to secrecy, offered to discon- 
tinue his assaults if the monk would give up worshipping a picture 
of the Blessed Virgin and the infant Saviour which hung in his 

»» Hard. iv. 189. » lb. 292. "" E. g. Hard. iv. 185, 205-212. 

^ lb. 159, seqq. p lb. 165. 

"• lb. 164 ; Chrys. de S. Melet. (t. ii. ** Moscbus, Prat. Spirit. 45 (Patrol. 

.'il9, c. ed. Montf.). Gr. Ixxxvii.) ; Job. Damasc. Orat. I. (t. 

" Sec an analysis of the extracts in i. 328). 

Dupin, vi. 140, seqq. ' Hard. iv. 208, 316. 



Chap.VU. aj).787. second COUNCIL OF NICiEA. 157 

cell. The old man asked time to consider the proposal, and, not- 
withstanding his oath, applied for advice to an abbot of renowned 
sanctity, who blamed him for having allowed himself to be so far 
deluded as to swear to the devil, but told him that he had yet 
done well in laying open the matter, and that it would be better 
to visit every brothel in Jerusalem than to refrain from adoring the 
Saviour and His mother in the picture. From this edifying tale, 
a twofold moral was drawn with general consent, — that reverence 
for images would warrant not only unchastity, but breach of oaths ; 
and that those who had formerly sworn to the iconoclast heresy 
were no longer, bound by their obligations.' 

At the fifth session, the Roman legates proposed that an image 
should be brought in and should receive the adoration of the 
assembly. This was solemnly done next day ;^ and at the same 
session the conclusions of the iconoclastic synod of 754 were read, 
each paragraph being followed by the corresponding part of a long 
refutation, which was declared to have been evidently dictated by 
the Holy Ghost.»» 

At the seventh session, the decree of the council was read and 
subscribed. It determined that, even as the figure of the cross 
was honoured, so images of the Saviour and the Blessed Virgin, of 
angels and of saints, whether painted or mosaic or of any other 
suitable material, are to be set up for kissing and honourable 
reverence (Ȥo<rxi5viQ(nv), but not for that real service (Xar/jciotv) 
which belongs to the Divine nature alone.' Incense and lights are 
to be o£Pered to them, as to the cross, the Gospels, and other holy 
memorials, ^* forasmuch as the honour paid to the image passes on 
to the original, and he who adores an image adores in it the person 
of him whom it represents." An anathema was pronounced against 
all opponents of images, and the signing of the decree was followed 
by many acclamations in honour of the new Constantine and 
Helena, with curses against iconomachists and heretics of every 
kind.y These outcries were repeated at the eighth session, when 
the members of the council appeared at one of the palaces of Con- 
stantinople, and both the emperor and his mother subscribed the 
decree.* The council, which after a time came to be regarded 

■ Hard, vr, 209. Lord's answer to the tempter — " Thoa 

» lb. 321. shalt xoorship (wpoffKvrfifffis) the Lord thy 

^ lb. 325 ; Schrockh, xx. 578-9. God, and Him only shalt thou serve 

" Hard. iv. 456. "We have," as (Aorp«^<reif)." Service^ it was siud, is 

Dean Miiman remarks (ii. 126), " no here restricted to Qod <m/y, bat not so 

word to distinguish between wpwrK^tniffis worship! Hard. iv. 204. 

and Kanptia:^ One of the cooncirs )" lb. 469-472. 

arguments had been drawn from our " lb. 481-5. 



158 IRENE AND CONSTANTINE. BookIIL 

both by the Greeks and by the Latins as the seventh General 
Council,* also passed twenty-two canons, chiefly relating to eccle- 
siastical and monastic discipline.^ It is to be observed that the 
images sanctioned at Nicaea were not works of sculpting, but 
paintings and other representations on a flat surface — a limitation 
to which the Greek Church has ever since adhered;^ and that 
there is as yet no mention of representing under visible forms the 
Trinity, the Almighty Father, or the Holy Spirit^ 

Constantine VI. grew up in the society of women and eunuchs, 
and in entire subjection to his mother. With the view, perhaps, 
of cutting oflF from the iconoclasts the hope of assistance from the 
west, she had negotiated for him a marriage with one 
'of Charlemagne's daughters ; but, soon after the Nicene 
synod, as the iconoclasts were no longer formidable, while she 
may have feared that such a connexion might endanger her own 
ascendancy,® she broke off the engagement, greatly to the indigna- 
tion of the Frankish king, and compelled her son against his 
will to marry an Armenian princess named Marina or Mary.^ 
Instigated, it is said, by some persons who professed to have 
discovered by magic that the empire was to be her own, she paved 
the way for a change by encouraging her son in cruelties and 
debaucheries, which rendered him odious to his subjects, and 
especially to the powerful monastic party .« At the age of twenty, 
Constantine resolved to throw off the yoke of his mother and her 
ministers ; he succeeded in possessing himself of the government, 
and for some years the empire was distracted by revolutions, carried 
on with all the perfidy and atrocity which were characteristic of the 
later Greeks.^ Constantine was at length persuaded to readmit 
his mother to a share of power, and she pursued towards him the 
same policy as before. He fell in love with a lady of her court, 
Theodote, and resolved to divorce his wife and to marry the object 
of his new attachment The patriarch Tarasius at first opposed 

■ On the history of its reception see seen in the H6tel Cluny, at Paris. 
Palmer on the Church, ii. 201, seqq. <* MabiU. V. xiv. Raonl-Rochette re- 
ed. 1. fers the first personal representations of 

k See Hard. iv. 485, seqq. the Almighty Father to the 9th century; 

^ Basnage, 1364. The appearance of Didron,to the 12th. Lindsay on Chris- 

reUef is, however, given to many of them tian Art, i. 75. 

by the covers of silver or other metal « Schlosser, 305 ; Finlay, ii. 93. 

in which they are enshrined— the nimbi ' Theophan. 705, 718; Einhard, a.d. 

(or glories) and the dresses being 786; Paul. Wamefr. Hist. Miscella. 23 

wrought in the metal, which has open- (Patrol, xcv. 1118); Murat, IV. ii. 133, 

ings for displaying the faces and hands 162 ; Schlosser, 300. Einhard says 

of the picture. Professor Stanley in- that Charlemagne refused to give his 

forms me that in Russia these covers daughter, a.d. 78S. 

are peculiar to pictures of historical or v Theophan. 719 ; Walch, x. 503. 

miraculous fame. A specimen may be ^ Theophan. 720-5 ; Finlay, ii. 94. 



Chap. VII. a.d. 787-802, IRENE AND CONSTANTINE. 159 

the scheme, but Constantine, it is said, threatened that, if the 
Church refused to indulge him, he would restore idolatry;* and 
Tarasius no longer ventured to resist.^ Marina was shut up in a 
convent, and the second nuptials were magnificently celebrated in 
September 795.™ Some monks, who vehemently objected to these 
proceedings, and went so far as to excommunicate the emperor, 
were treated with great cruelty.** It has been supposed that Irene 
even contrived the temptation to which her son yielded ; she at 
least beheld his errors with malicious satisfaction, and fomented 
the general discontent which they produced.® By degrees she 
secured to her own interest all the persons who were immediately 
around him ; and at length, when her scheme appeared to be 
matured, he was by her command seized at his devotions,^ was 
carried into the purple chamber in which he had been bom, and 
was deprived of his eyesight with such violence that the operation 
almost cost him his life.^ Immediately after this, a fog of extra- 
ordinary thickness obscured the air and hid the sun for seventeen 
days. By the people of Constantinople it was regarded as de- 
claring the sympathy of heaven with the horror generally felt ak 
the unnatural deed by which Irene obtained the empire.' 

Irene reigned six years after the dethronement of her son. 
According to the Greek writers, (whose testimony, however, is 
unsupported by those of the west,) she was engaged in a project for 

1 rohs yaohs rSav cl8(6x»v hvoiyu. Ce- Schlosser (327-330), and FiDlay (ii. 100) 

dren. 472, d. Walch (x. 554) supposes show that he long survived. Cf. Theoph. 

that Constantine threatened to remove contin. ii. 10 ; G. Hamart cdix. 5 ; 

images, and that the form in which the cclxvii. 28. 

threat appears comes from Cedrenus. ' G. Hamart. cclvii. 18. On the dis- 

Bat it is hardly conceivable that party graceful manner in which writers &- 

spirit could have induced the chronicler vourable to the cause of images have 

to describe churches withovt images as attempted to palliate Irene's guilt, see 

** temples of idols;** besides that the Walch, x. 589; Milman, ii. 131. The 

temples seem to be spoken of as distinct words of Baronius are well known, but 

from churches, and as shut up when the must be quoted here : — " Scelus plane 

threat was uttered. execrandum, nisi justitise zelus ad id 

k Theophan. 727-8 ; Vita Theodor. fietciendum excitasset. . . . 8i enim reg- 

Studit 18, 19,26; Baron. 795. 43, seqq. nandi cupidine Irene in filium molita 

" Cedren. 472 ; Pagi, xiii. 301. esset insidias, detestabilior A^ppina, 

■ Theod. Studit Laudatio Platonis, Neronis matre, ftiisset, cum ilia sua) 

26-9 (Patr. Gr. xcix.); Vita Theod. quoque vitSB dispendio filium imperare 

Stud. 20 ; Baron. 795. 43-59. msduisset. Contra vero, quod ista reli- 

'* Theophan. 729 ; Schlosser, 310. gionis causa, amore justitise, in filium 

^ els iraitdKX.r)ffiv. says Theophanes. perpetrata creduntur, ab oriental ibus 

His translator renders the words ** ad nonnullis, qui facto aderant, viris sanc- 

preces ; ** Goar (not. in loc.) understands tissimis eadem post hsec meruit preeco- 

wapJiKKiiffis to mean a religious procession ; nio celebrari." ( 796. 8. ) Our own con- 

Schlosser (326), a private chapel, temporary, the Abb^ Rohrbacher, is little 

1 Theophan. 730-2. It has been very short of Baronius. (xi. 220-1.) Irene 

generaUy inferred from the historian s was canonised by the Greeks. Finlay, 

words that Constantine died under the ii. 102. 
operation. But Gibbon (iv. 414-5), 



100 THE GREEK EMPIRE. Bwin. 

reuniting the empires by a marriage with Charlemagne/ when, in 
October 802, she was depo^ by the secretary Nicejdionia, and 
was banished to Lesbos, where she died within a few months.^ 

Nicephorus, who is described as Iiaving surpassed all his prede* 
cessors in rapacity, lust and cruelty," was bent on subjecting the 
hierarchy to the imperial power. He forbade the patriarch to 
correspond with the pope, whom he considered as a tool of Charie- 
magnc ; and he earned the detestation of the clergy by heavily 
taxing monastic and ecclesiastical property which had until then 
been exempt, by seizing the ornaments of churches, by stabling 
his horses in monasteries, and by extending a general toleration 
to iconoclasts and sectaries.* In 811,y Nicephonis was killed in 
a war with the Bulgarians, and his son Stauracius, after a reign 
of little more than tuv'o months, was thrust into a monastery, where 
he soon after died of wounds received before his accession.' On 
the deposition of Stauracius, his brother-in-law, Michael Rhan- 
gabe, wiis compelled to accept the empire, and images were again 
restored to honour. The iconoclastic party, however, continued 
to exist. An attempt was made by some of its members to set a 
blinded son of Constantino Copronymus on the throne ; * and on 
the alarm of a Bulgarian invasion, soon after the elevation of 
Michael, a very remarkable display of its spirit took place. While 
the clergy, the monks, and vast numbers of the people, were. 
deprecating the danger by processions and prayers, some icono- 
chistic soldiers broke open the mausoleum of the emperors, pros- 
trated themselves on the tomb of Copronymus, and entreated him 
to save the state; and they asserted that, in answer to their 
prayers, he had appeared to them on horseback, and had gone 
forth against the barbarians ; " whereas," says Theophanes, ** he 
dwells in hell with devils." ^ Although the motive of these men 
was more probably fraud than fanaticism — (for, besides the story 
of the apparition, they pretended that the mausoleum had been 
opened by miracle) — we may infer the existence of a strong attach- 
ment to the memory of Constantino among the party to which 
such an imposture could be addressed with any hope of finding 
believers.'' 

• Theophan. 736 ; Cedren. 474. Agwnst to him— partly, perhaps, on account of 

the story, see Gibbon, iv. 509 ; Schlosser, the emperor's enmity to the clergy. 

338 : Laden. V. 12-3. ^ Theophan. 764; Pagi, xHl. 470. 

» Theophan. 738-745 ; G. Hamart. Gibbon, v. 292. 

ccJix. ; Gibbon, iv. 415-6. [ 2^?*°*^* ^It^' b lu 

- Theophan. 775-8, 765. ' P^JR^"/ ' '^,,. ^^' 781. 

« Gibbon, iv. 494; Finlay, i. 110-6, '^ See Ualch, x. 540. 
125. Mr. Finlay is rather fovourable 



Chap. VII. a.d. 802-813. IMAGES IN THE WEST. 161 

Michael, although a man of estimable character, proved unequal 
to the government of the empire, and, after a reign of 
two years, he was deposed and tonsured, while a general 
named Leo was raised to the throne. Michael, who by a clemency 
unusual in such cases, was allowed to retain not only his life but 
his eyesight, survived his dethronement thirty-two years,* 

II. While the decree of the second council of Nicaea established 
a reconciliation between Rome and Constantinople, and was gladly 
confirmed by the Pope, it met with a less favourable reception 
north of the Alps. In the Frankish church a middle opinion on 
the subject of images had prevailed ; as the eastern Christians had 
been led to cherish their images for the sake of contrast with their 
Mahometan neighbours, so the Franks were restrained from excess 
in this kind of devotion by the necessity of opposing the idolatry 
of the unconverted Germans.® The question had been one of those 
discussed by a mixed assembly of clergy and laity which 
was held under Pipin at Gentilly, in the presence of * ' 
envoys from Pope Paul and of ambassadors from Constantine 
Copronymus ; and, although their decision on this point is not re- 
corded, there can be no reasonable doubt that it agreed with the 
general views of the national church.' 

Adrian sent the acts of the Nicene council to Charlemagne, 
with an evident expectation that they would be received by the 
Franks. But the late rupture of the match between the king's 
daughter and the son of Irene had not tended to bespeak from him 
any favourable consideration of the eastern decrees ; and his own 
convictions were opposed to them. He sent them to Alcuin, who 
was then in England ; and it is said that the English bishops 
joined in desiring their countryman to write against the council.*^ 
Alcuin made some remarks on the Nicene Acts, in the form of a 
letter ; and out of these probably grew a treatise in four books, 
which was put forth in the name of Charlemagne, and is known by 
the title of the " Caroline Books." It is supposed that Alcuin, who 
returned to France in 793,** was the chief author, but that he was 
assisted by other ecclesiastics, and that the king himself took part 

* Theophan. 779, 783-4 ; G. Hamart. Schrockh, xix. 566 ; Gie«el. II. L 93 ; 

cclxi. 5-6; Gibbon, iv. 417 ; Schlosser Neand. v. 323; Hefele, iii. 400. 

says 35 years. 392. » Svm. Dunelm. a.d. 792 ; Rog. 

« Mabill. V. xxiv-v. ; DoHinger, i. Hoveden, ap. Savile, 232, b. Dr. Lin- 

856-7 ; Milman, iL 235. Some other gard attempts to explain away their 

reasons which DoUinger gives for the statements. A. S. C. ii. 114-6, and Ap- 

Frankish view appear untenable. pend. G. 

' See Einhard, ad. 767 ; Spanheim, ** Pagi, xiii. 257. 
778 ; Basnage, 1357 ; Walch, xi. 33-5 ; 



102 THE CAItOLINE BOOKS. Book in. 

in the revision of the work.' The tone of this treati^ is firm and 
dignified. Althougli great deference for the apostolic see is pro- 
fessed, the writer resolutely maintains the Frankish view as to 
images, and unsparingly criticises the grounds alleged for the doc- 
trine which was held in common by the east and by Rome. While 
the iconoclasts and the Byzantine cpuncil of 754 are blamed for 
overlookin^r the distinction between images and idols, their mistake 
is declared to be much less than that committed by the Nicene 
synod in confounding the use of images with the worship of them ; 
the one error is ascribed to ignorance, the other to wickedness.^ 
Much is sfiid against the style of language officially employed by 
the Byzantine court, which is censured as trenching on the honour 
due to God." The synod is blamed for having allowed itself to 
be guided by a woman, contrary to St Paul's order that women 
should not be admitted to teach." Its pretension to be ecumenical 
is denied, on the ground that it neither was assembled from all 
churches, nor holds the faith of the universal Church ;® its claim 
to Divine sanction is also disallowed. i' It is said to be madness 
for one portion of the Church to anathematise other portions in a 
matter as to which the apostles had not laid down any rule ; and 
much more so when the opinions so branded are agreeable to the 
earlier councils and Fathers.'^ The passages which had been cited 
at Nicaea from Scripture and the Fathers are examined, and are 
cleared from the abuse there made of them.' The council is 
censured for having admitted many stories of a fabulous or apo- 
cryi)hal kind.** The account of our Lord's correspondence with 

• See Dupin, vi. 146 ; Mosh. ii. 167 ; in order to be refuted. (See Walch, xi. 

Walch, xi. 66-8; Schrockh, xx. 585-8 ; 51,61-2; Lorenz, 117-8.) Butitsgenu- 

Giesol. II. i, 94; Lorcnz, 119; Neand. ineness is now acknowledged. See Du- 

V. 324-5; mhr, 346; Gfnirer, iii. 624; pin, vi. T^O ; Dollinger, i. 358; Bahr. 

Hardwick, 54; Milnian, ii. 236. The 345; Hefcle, iii. 653-4. Hefele gives 

' Libri Carolini ' were first published in an index to the quotations made iu this 

1549 by Jean du Tillet, afterwards treatise from the Nicene Acts, 665-8. 

bishop of Meaux, who styled himself The Caroline Books are reprinted iu Gol- 

" Eli. Phili." By /J/i. was meant Elijah, dast's *Imperialia Decreta,' and thence 

in allusion to the connexion between that in Migne's * Patrologia,* xcviii. But 

prophet and St. John the Baptist, whose Hefeic says (653) that the best edition 

name the editor bore; perhaps, too, as is that by Hermann, Hanover, 1731. 

Bayle says (Art. Dn Tillet, note B), ^ Pracf. ap. Goldast. 92, 94; Lib. t 

Du Tillet ma]^ have intended to hint 27 ; iv. 4, p. 473. 

that he was to imitate Elijah's exertions " i. 1-4. " iii. 13. 

against idolatry. " Phili." was an ab- «* iv. 28. This shows that the fact of 

breviatiou of Phihjra, the Greek name the pope's having presided by his le- 

for the tilia or lime-tree. (Schrockh, xx. gates, was not, in the opinion of the 

584.) Some Romanists have pretended Franks, enough to warrant the recep- 

that the book was a forgery of the re- tion of the council, without the consent 

former Carlstadt; others, that it was of the chief churches. Fleury, xliv. 58. 

written by a heretic of Charlemagne's ^ iii- 14. •> iii. 11-2. 

time, and was sent by the king to Home ' i- 5, seqq. ; ii. 1, seqq. • iii. 30. 



Chap. VII. a.d. m 4. THE CAROLINE BOOKS. 163 

Abgarus is questioned ;' the legend of the monk and the devil of 
uncleanness is strongly reprobated ;" doubts are expressed as to 
the truth of many miraculous tales ; and it is argued that, even if 
the miracles were really wrought by the images, they would not 
warrant the worship of these/ Remarks are made on expressions 
used by individual bishops at the council/ Among these there is 
the important misrepresentation that Constantius, of Constantia in 
Cyprus, is charged with having placed the adoration of images on 
the same level with that of the Trinity, and as having anathema- 
tised all who thought otherwise ; whereas in reality he had distin- 
guished between the devotion paid to images and that which was 
to be reserved for the Trinity alone." The arguments advanced 
in behalf of images are discused and refuted. The honours paid 
in the east to the statues of emperors had been dwelt on by way 
of analogy ; but it is denied that this is any warrant for the worship 
of images, — " for what madness it is to defend one unlawful thing 
by another I" — and the conduct of Daniel in Babylon is cited as 
proving the sinfulness of the eastern practice.* It is derogatory to 
the holy mystery of the eucharist — to the cross, the symbol of our 
salvation and sign of our Christian profession, — to the consecrated 
vessels, and to the sacred books, — that the veneration paid to these 
should be paralleled with the worship of images.** The reverence 
due to relics, which had either been part of the bodies of saints or 
had been connected with them, is no ground for paying a like 
regard to images, which are the mere work of the artist* Christ 
and his saints desire no such worship as that in question ; and, 
although the more learned may be able to practise it without 
idolatry, the unlearned, who have no skill in subtle distinctions, 
will be drawn to pay really divine worship to that which they see. 
The guilt of causing offence must rest, not on those who allow 
images and only refuse worship to them, but on those who force 
the worship on others.** The only proper use of them is by way of 
ornament, or as historical memorials ;" it is absurd to say that ibey 
represent to us the merits of the saints, since these merits are not 
external.' The right use of images for remembrance is strongly 
distinguished from the plea tiiat it is impossible to remember God 
without them ; Uiose persons (it is said) must have very faulty 

t iY. 10. Acts. See Hefele, iii. 651, 660. 

■ iii. 31. « iii. 25. • iii. 15. 

r iii. .-J, seqq., 17, »eqq. »» H. 27-30. ' in. 24. 

« Comp. ill. 17 with Hard. iv. 152. •» iii. 16, fin. ' i. 16. 

This mUtake probabW aroM from the ' i. 17, pp. 175-6, ed. Goldaat. 
tMulness of the trauslation of the Nicene 

M 2 



164 COUNCIL OF FRANKFORT. Book III. 

memories who need to be reminded by an image — who are unable 
to raise their minds above the material creation except by the 
help of a material and created object/ The king concludes by 
declaring to the pope that he adheres to the principles laid down 
by Gregory the Great in his letters to Serenus of Marseilles,** and 
that he believes this to be the rule of the Catholic Church. Images 
arc to be allowed ; the worship of them is not to be enforced ; it 
is forbidden to break or to destroy them.* 

These books (or perhaps the propositions which they were 
intended to enforce, rather than the treatise itself*') were commu- 
nicated to the pope, and drew forth from him a long reply. But 
the arguments of this attempt are feeble, and its tone appears to 
show that Adrian both felt the weakness of his cause, and was 
afraid to offend the great sovereign whose opinions he was labouring 
to controvert.™ 

It is doubtful whether these communications took place before 
or after the council which was held, under the presidency of Charle- 
magne, at Frankfort in 794." This council was both a diet of the 
empire and an ecclesiastical synod. Bishops were assembled from 
Lombardy and Germany as well as from France ; some represen- 
tatives of the English church, and two legates from Rome, were 
also present ;^ and, at the king's suggestion, Alcuin was admitted 
to a place on account of the service which he might be able to 
render by his leaming.P The question of images was dealt with in 
a manner which showed that the council had no idea of any right 
on the part of Rome to prescribe to the Frankish church. The 
second canon adverts to " the late synod of the Greeks, in which 
it was said that those should be anathematised who should not 
bestow service or adoration on the images of the saints, even as 
on the Divine Trinity." .In opposition to this, the fathers of 
Frankfort refuse " both adoration and service of all kinds " to 
images ; they express contempt for the eastern synod, and agree 
in condemning it.*i The passage especially censured by this canon 
is the speech wrongly ascribed in the Caroline Books to the 
Cyprian metropolitan Constantius, and the misrepresentation is 
probably to be charged on the imperfect state in which the Nicene 

K Lib. Carol. iL 22. writings. 

^ See above, p. 26. * iv. ult. <> The whole number of bishops is said 

•» See Hefole, iii. 669. to have been about 300 ; but Walch (ix. 

•» Neand. v. 335 ; Milman, ii. 237. 761) says that this number rests on no 

His answer is in Hard. iv. 773, seqq. authority older than Baronius. 

■ Neand. v. 336. Walch places the p C. 56. Hard. iv. 909. 

council first (xi. 72) ; Gieseler (H. i. i " Contempserunt." lb. 904. 
95-6) places it after the exchange of 



Chap. VII. A.V.19L ADOPTIONISM. 



165 



acts were presented to the Frankish divines. But, whatever the 
rea:?on of it may have been, and however the members of the 
Frankfort council may have misapprehended the opinions of the 
orientals, there is no ground for arguing from this that they 
did not understand and plainly state their own judgment on the 
question/ 

Notwithstanding the opposition to his views on the subject of 
images, Adrian continued to cultivate friendly relations with 
Charlemagne ; the political interest which bound Rome to the 
Franks was more powerfiil than his sympathy with the Greeks as 
to doctrine. The retention of Calabria and lllyricum, which had 
l)een taken from the Roman see by the iconoclastic emperors in 
the earlier stage of the controversy, alienated the popes more and 
more from the Byzantine rule, until in 800 the connexion with the 
east was utterly severed by the coronation of Charlemagne as the 
sovereign of a new empire of Rome. 

III. Before proceeding to the question of images, the council of 
Frankfort had been occupied with the doctrine of a Spanish bishop, 
named Felix, on the relation of our Lord's humanity to the 
Almighty Father. The term adoption' had been applied to the 
Incarnation by some earlier writers and in the Spanish Liturgy ; it 
appears, however, not to have been used in its strict sense, but 
rather as equivalent to assumption' The passages which Felix 
and his party produced from the Fathers as favourable to their 
view, spoke of an adoption of nature, of fleshy or of manhood ; 
whereas they themselves made an important variation firom this 
language by speaking of an adoption of the San} 

The Adoptionists were charged by their opponents with Nes- 
torianism," and in spirit the two systems are unquestionably similar. 
Yet the Adoptionists admitted the doctrine which had been settled 

' This evasion is attempted by Baro- dum carnis hamilitas achptatnr" Alcuio 

nius (794. 36-7) and by Dollinger (i. (Adv. Felic. vi. 6) waa for reading mio- 

357). Elsewhere l^aronius argues that ratur, and Hincmar charges Felix with 

the Council of Frankfort could not have having bribed Charleraa^e*s librariao 

really condemned that of Nico^, because to falsify the manuscnpt of Hilary 

whatever it may have determined must (Pncf. in Dissert, ii. de Prsdestina- 

have been meant with submission to the tione, Patrol, cxxv. 55) ; but the oon- 

Roman see I Other Komish evasions text seems to show that adoptatur, which 

are collected by Basnage (1368-9) and is found in most MSS., is right, and that 

Gieseler, I. ii. 96. it is used in the sense of asswnptum. 

• See Giesel. II. i. 111-2, and, as to N. in loc.ed. Bened. ; Walch, ix. 897-9 ; 

the Spanish Liturgy, Lesley's Preface to Giesel. II. i. 112 ; Hefele, iii. 670. 
it, Patrol. Ixxxv. 41 ; Gu^ranger, i.212. * DiiUinger, i. 360; Domer, ii. 317. 
There was a dispute as to a passage in " E. tj. Cone. Fraucof. Ep. ad Epis- 

St Hilary of Poitiers (De Trinitate, ii. ctjpos Hisp. 23 (Patrol, ci. 1342). 
27)—" Potestatis dignitas non amittitnr 



166 A1K3PTI0NISM. Bo«m. 

as orthodoxy for three centuries and a half: they made no objec- 
tion to the tenn Deipara (or Theatokoii)^ as applied to the mother 
of the Saviour s humanity ; they allowed the union of natures in 
Ilim.* The distinctive peculiarity of the party was^ that, while 
they granted the communication of properties between the two 
natures, they insisted on distinguishing the manner in which the 
predicates of the one nature were given to the other ; they regarded 
it as a confusion of the natures, and a virtual merging of the 
humanity, to say that Clirist was proper and real Son of God, not 
only in his Godheiid but in his whole person/ He camiot, they 
said, be properly Son of God as to his human nature, unless it he 
supposed that the humanity and fleshly substance were derived from 
the very essence of God.* The highest thing that can befall 
humanity is to bo ado])ted into sonship with Grod ; more thai) this 
would l)c a chan<^ of nature.' Christ's humanity, then, is adopted 
to sonship ; in one sense this adoption existed from the moment of 
his conception ; in another, it began at his baptism, when He 
passed from the condition of a servant to that of a Son ; and it 
was consummated in his resurrection.^ He cannot have two 
fathers in the same nature ; in his humanity He is naturally the 
Son of David, and by adoption and grace the Son of God. By 
nature He is the ** only-begotten " Son of God ; by adoption and 
grace the " first-begotten." "" In the Son of God the Son of man 
becomes very Son of God ; but it is only in a nuncupative way, as 
was the ciise with those of whom He himself said that the Scripture 
" called tliem gods to whom the word of God came ;" his adoption 
is like that of the saints, although it is after a far more exoellent 
fashion/^ The Adoptionists also pressed into their service texts 
which were in truth meant to set forth the reality of our Lord's 
manhood, and its inferiority to, or dependence on, his divinity.* 

Felix, who has been mentioned as a chief assertor of this doctrine, 
was bishop of Urgel, in Catalonia, then a part of Charlemagne's 
dominions. He was a man of great acuteness and learning ; his 
reputation was such that Alcuin sought his correspondence, and, 
even after the promulgation of his heresy, continued to speak with 
much respect of his sanctity.^ His associate Elipand, bishop of 

« Dorijcr, ii. 307-310. Hispan. c. 9 (Patrol, ci. 1324). 

r Walch, ix. 8^.2-4, 891 ; Dorner, ii. ^ (St. Job. x. 3.5); Pel. ap. Ale. iv. 

312. 2; Walch, ix. 875, 915; Dorner, ii. 

' Felix ap. Ale. i. 12 ; Dorner, ii. 313. 312-7. 

• Dorner, ii. 314. ' Schn.ckh, xx. 470-1 ; Neand. ▼. 

^ Fel. ap Ale. ii. 1« ; Walch, ix. 867, 221-2 ; Dorner, ii, 314. 

K73-8; Neaiul. v. 223-5; Dorner, ii. ' Ale. Ep. iv., p. 7; Cf. t. i., p. 733. 

:jl5-8. Lorenz, 257. 

' Fil. ap. Ale. iii. I ■ Kp. Kpiscc. 



Chap. VII. a. u. 1 83-794. FELIX AND ELIPAND. 167 

Toledo, and primate of Spain under the Mahometan dominion, 
was far advanced in life when the controversy broke out He 
appears to have been a person of violent and excitable temper, 
and very jealous of his dignity.^ His style is described as more 
obscure than that of Felix, and it is therefore inferred that he was 
more profound.* 

The early history of the Adoptionist doctrine is unknown. It is 
probable that Felix was the originator of it, and perhaps he may 
have been led into it by controversy with his Mahometan neighbours, 
to whom this view of our Lord's humanity would have been less 
repulsive than that which was generally taught by the church.*' 
At least, it appears certain that, whether the author of the doctrine 
or not^ Felix was the person who did most to reduce it to a system." 
A corresj)ondence took place between him and Elipand ; 
and the primate employed the influence of his position in * * 
favour of the new opinion, which soon gained many adherents.** 
The first opponents who appeared against Adoptionism were Beatus, 
an abbot, and Etherius, bishop of Osma, who had formerly been 
his pupil. Elipand, in a letter to an abbot named Fidelis, de- 
nounced the two very coarsely ; he even carried his intolerance so 
far as to declare that all who should presume to di£Per from him 
were heretics and slaves of Antichrist, and that, as such, they must 
be rooted out.)* Etherius and Beatus rejoined at great length, in a 
book which, as to tone, appears almost worthy of their antagonist *! 
The pope, Adrian, now had his attention drawn to the controversy, 
and in 785 wrote a letter to the orthodox bishops of Spain, warning 
them against the new doctrine as an error such as no one since 
Nestorius had ventured on.*^ 

This letter, however, failed to appease the diflferences which had 
arisen. A council which is said to have been held against the 
Adoptionists at Narbonne, in 788, is generally regarded as ficti- 
tious.* But in 792, Charlemagne summoned Felix to appear 
before a council at Ratisbon, where he abjured and anathematised 
his errors. The king, who presided at the council, appears to 

»• Walch, ix. 724; Neand. v. 216. Alcuiu, i. 793. 

• Dorner, ii. 322. *» " Ad Elipandum" (Patrol, xcvi. 893 

^ See Ale. Ep. 85; Neand. v. 218- seqq.). There is a life of Bcatu» in the 

2-(). same volume, Arom Mabillon, v. 735. 

" Neand. v. 218 ; Dorner, il 306. ' Patrol, xcviii. 374. Walch (iz. 747) 

■ Pagi, xiii. 752. questions the genuineness of the letter, 

« Walch, ix. 743; Schrockh, xx. 461. but, as Schrockh (xx. 466) thinks, on 

r Elip. ap. Beat. i. 40-4 (Patrol, xcvi.) ; iubufficient grounds. 

Walch, ix. 731-2. Felix charges Beatus " See Walch, ix. 749-751 ; Schrockh, 

and Etherius with confounding the Sa- xx. 406 ; Hefelc, iii. 620-1. 

viour's natures " sicut vinum ct aquam." 



168 ADOPTIONISM CONDEMNED. Book III. 

have doubted either the Bincerity of his new profession, or his 
steadiness in adhering to it, and therefore sent him in chains to 
Rome, where he was imprisoned by order of the pope. He ob- 
tained his liberty by drawing up an orthodox confession of faith, 
to which he swore in the most solemn manner, laying it on the 
consecrated elements and on St. Peter s tomb. But on returning 
to Urgel, he again vented his heresy, and, in fear of Charlemagne's 
resentment, he fled into the Mahometan part of Spain.* Elipand 
and other Spanish bishops wrote to Charlemagne and to the bishops 
of France, requesting that Felix might l>e restored to his see, and 
that measures might be taken for suppressing the opinions of Beatus, 
who was charged in the letters with profligacy of life, and was also 
styled a false prophet, on account of some speculations as to the 
fidfilment of the Apocalypse, into which he had been led by the 
oppressed condition of the Spanish church." These letters were 
forwarded by Charlemagne to the pope, who thereupon despatched 
a second epistle into Spjun, denouncing the doctrine of the Adop- 
tionists and threatening to excommunicate them if they should 
persist in it.* 

The council of Frankfort was held between the time of Charle- 
magne's application to Adrian and the receipt of the pope's answer.^ 
No representative of the Adoptionist party appeared ; but Alcuin, 
who had been summoned from England to take part in the con- 
troversy,' argued against their doctrine, and the council in its first 
canon unanimously condemned it as a heresy which " ought to be 
utterly rooted out of the church."* The Italian bishops adopted a 
treatise against Adoptionism drawn up by Paulinus, patriarch of 
Aquileia ; and this was sent into Spain, together with a letter from 
the bishops of Gaul, Aquitaiue, and Germany to the Spanish bishops, 
and with one from Charlemagne to Elipand and his brethren.^ 
Alcuin addressed a tract against the Adoptionists to the bishops 
of the south of France,^ and also wrote in a respectful tone to Felix 
himself, urging him to give up the term adoption^ which he professed 
to consider as the only point in which the bishop of Urgel varied 
from the Catholic faith.*^ In consequence of this letter, Felix 
addressed a defence of his doctrine to Charlemagne, who there- 

» Cone. Rom. ap. Hard. iv. 928 ; Ale. * Loreuz, 76. 

adv. Elip. iv. 16 ; Einhard, a.d. 792 ; • Hard. iv. 904. 

Walch, ix. 752-4. •» The three doeuments are in Har- 

» Elip. Ep. 3 (Patrol, xcvi.) ; Ep. doain, iv. 873-903; see Waleh, iz. 691, 

Episcc. Hisp. ib. ci. 1821 ; Cf. Mabillon, 792. 

ib. xcvi. 890. *^ Opera, i. 759-782. 

* Hard. iv. 865. ^ lb. 784. 

y Neaud. v. 228. 



CHAK VU. A.D. 794-6. ALCUIN AGAINST FELIX. 1 69 

upon desired Alcuin to undertake a formal refutation of the 
Adoptionists. The abbot accepted the taak, but stipulated that 
time should be allowed hira to examine their citations, with the 
help of his pupils, and begged that the book of Felix might also 
be referred to the pope, to Paulinus of Aquileia, and to other 
eminent bishops ; if, he said, all should agree in their judgment 
on the point in question, it might be concluded that they were all 
guided by the same Holy Spirit.* 

Alcuin then produced a treatise in seven books — " these five 
loaves and two little fishes," as he styles them/ The foundation 
on which he chiefly grounds his argument is the unity of the 
Saviour's person. Although Felix had not ventured to deny this, 
it is urged that in consistency he must do so, like Nestorius, since 
he divides Christ into two sons, the one real, the other nuncupative.^ 
The same person cannot be at once the proper and the adopted 
son of the same father ; Christ alone has by nature that which we 
have through Him by adoption and grace.** The Sonship is not 
founded on the nature, but on the person ; the two natiu^s do not 
form two sons, since they are themselves not separate, but in- 
separably united in the one Christ ; the whole Christ is Son of 
God and son of man : there is no room for an adoptive sonship.* 
Christ was very God from the moment of his human conception.*' 
Felix, it is argued, had erred through supposing that a son cannot 
be proper unless he be of the same nature with the father ; whereas 
the term proper does not necessarily imply identity of substance 
between that which is so styled and that to which it is ascribed : 
as may be seen by our speaking of " proper names " and " proper 
[i. a own] possessions." " A man is the proper son of his parents 
both in body and in soul, although the body only be of their seed ; 
and in like manner Christ in his whole person, in manhood as well 
as in Godhead, is proper Son of God." But, moreover, says Alcuin, 
the whole matter, being supernatural, cannot be fitly measured by 
human analogies. Christ is Son of God the Father, although his 
flesh be not generated of God ; and to deny the possibility of this 
is to impugn the Divine omnipotence.** The censure of Frankfort 

« Ep. 69 ; Lorenz, 132. Hence it is aiiy deeper argiiment— how is the fury 

evideut that Alcuin had no idea of papal of Elipand against the doctrine of the 

infallibility. Neand. v. 231. church to be accounted for, if his own 

' Opera, i. 788. doctrine were the same ? 

f Lib. i. 11 ; iv. 5 ; Dorner, ii. 325. •» ii. 12 ; iii. 2 ; Domer, ii. 325. 

Walch argues that the Adoptionists were ^ ii. 12 ; vii. II. 

orthodox, since they did not say that •• iv. 8-10. 

Christ in his twofold sonship was nUus "» v. 3 ; Dorner, ii. 325. 

ft alin9, but that He was son aiitcr ct » iii. 2 ; v. 3 ; Domer, ii. 324. 

niiter, (ix. 881-4.) But— not to go into *> i. 9 ; iii. 2. 



170 ADOPTIONISM. Book 111. 

was followed up by a council held at Friuli, under Paulinus 
of Aquileia, in 796,p and by one which met at Eome under Leo 
UI. in 799. At Friuli it was laid down that the Saviour is 
^^ one and the same son of man and Son of God ; not putative 
but real Son of God ; not adoptive, but proper ; proper and not 
adoptive in each of his natures, forasmuch as after hb assumption 
of manhood, one and the same person is inconfusibly and insepar- 
ably Son of God and of man."** The Roman council also con- 
demned the Adoptionists, but with so little knowledge of the 
matter as to accuse them of denying that the Saviour had any 
other than a nuncupative Godhead/ 

In the meantime Leidrad, archbishop of Lyons, Nefrid, bishop 
of Narbonne, and Benedict, abbot of Aniane, were sent into the 
district in which Felix had spread his opinions. They laboured 
with much success in confutation of Adoptionism, and, having met 
Felix himself at Urgel, they persuaded him, by an assurance of 
safety, to proceed into France, in order that he might answer for 
himself before a council, which was to be held at Aix-la-Chapelle.' 
At Aix, the Adoptionist was confronted by Alcuin, who 
had been drawn from his retirement at Tours for the 
purpose. The discussion lasted for six days, and Felix at length 
professed to be convinced by some passages from the Fathers 
which had not before been known to him. He retracted his errors, 
condemned Nestorius, and exhorted his clergy and people to 
follow the true faith.^ As, however, his former changes suggested 
a suspicion of his constancy, he was not allowed to return into his 
diocese, but was committed to the care of the archbishop of Lyons, 
^idrad and his brother commissioners went again into Catalonia 
for the purpose of rooting out the heresy ; and it is said by Alcuin 
that, during their two visits, they made twenty thousand converts 
— bishoj)s, clergy, and laity." 

Elipand, not being a subject of Charlemagne, was more difficult 
to deal with than his associate. He now entered into controversy 
with Alcuin, whom he treated with his usual rudeness, reproaching 
him as the chief persecutor of Felix, and taxing him (among other 
things) with having 20,000 slaves, and with being proud of his 
wealth.^ Alcuin replied in four books, and the death of Elipand 

p As to the date of this, which some 1399 seq<^. 

wrongly place in 791, see Patrol, xcix. « Alcuin, Ep. 92, 176; Vita Ale. 7 ; 

534-6 ; Hefele, iii. 674. Hard. iv. 929-934. 

1 Hard. iv. 756. ' lb. 928. ■ Ep. 92, p. 136: Comp. Walch, ix. 

• Ale. Ep. 92, t. i. p. 136, ad Leidr. 776. 

xc. ib. 860 ; Pagi, xiii. 350. Benedict's ' Elip. Ep. iv. 5 (Patrol, xcvi.). The 

tract against Felix is in the Patrol, civ. address of the letter may be quoted as a 



CuAi-.Vll. A.D.798-8i«. CONTROVERSY AS TO PROCESSION. 171 

(whom some writers improbably represent as having at last 
renounced his heresy),* followed soon after. Felix remained at 
Lyons with Leidrad, and afterwards with his successor Agobard. 
He occasionally vented some of his old opinions, but, when Ago- 
bard argued with him, he professed to be convinced. After his 
death, however, which took place in 818, it was found that he had 
left a paper containing the chief points of his heresy in the form 
of question and answer ; and Agobard found himself obliged to 
undertake a refutation of this, in order to counteract the mischief 
which it was likely to produce, as coming from a person who had 
been much revered for sanctity .^ Although the Adoptionist doc- 
trine has been revived or justified by some writers of later times, 
it never afterwards gained any considerable influence/ 

IV. Towards the end of Charlemagne's reign a controversy 
arose as to the Procession of the Holy Spirit In the Latin Church 
it had always been held that the Third Person of the Godhead 
proceeds from the Second as well as from the First* The same 
doctrine which the Latins thus expressed — that the Godhead of 
the Holy Spirit is communicated not only from the Father but 
from the Son — had also been held by the Greeks in general ; but, 
as the word proceed is in Scripture used only of his relation to the 
Father,^ they had not applied it to express his relation to the Son.*' 
Thus the second General Council, in the words which it added to 
the Nicene creed in opposition to the Macedonian heresy, defined 
only that the Holy Ghdst " proceedeth from the Father." Theo- 
doret, indeed, had used language which seems irreconcilable with 
the western belief ;•* but it is not to be understood as expressing 
more than the private opinion of a writer whose orthodoxy was not 
unimpeached on other points ; and as yet no controversy either of 
fact or of expression had arisen as to this subject between the two 
great divisions of the church. 

specimen of the Spanish primate's style : nana, v. 67. See Antonio, in Patrol* 

— *' Revereudissimo fratri Albino dia- xcvi. 857. 

oono,nonChristiminbtro,sedantiphra8ii ^ Agob. adv. Felioem, 1-6. 

Beati fcetidissimi discipulo .... novo " Schrockh, xx. 494 ; Giesel. II. i. 

Arrio, sanctorum venerabilium patrum 117. 

Ambrosii, Augustini, Isidori, Hieronymi, " See quotations fh>m Hilanr, Am- 

doctrinis contrario— si se convertent ab brose, Angustine, and Leo the Great, in 

errore vise sme, a Domino setemam sa- Pearson on the Creed, ii. 430-1, ed. 

latem ; et si noluerit, stemam damna- Barton, Oxf. 1833 ; Petav. de Trin. vii. 

tionem." The slaves are supposed to 8 ; Giesel. II. i. 107. 

have been those attached to the estates ^ St John, xv. 26. 

belonging to St. Martin's Abbey and to « Pearson, ii. 432-3 ; Petav. vii. 3 ; 

Alcuin's other preferments. See his Schrockh, xx. 499. 

answer to the charge, Ep. ad Leidr. t * See Pearson, ii. 434 ; Petav. vii. 17 ; 

i.861. Schrockh, XX. 501. 
« Vita Beati ap. Mabill. v. 737 ;, Ma- 



172 CONTROVERSY AS TO PROCESSION BoobUI. 

In the west, the procession of the Spirit from the Son was in 
time introduced into creeds.* It is found in the Athanasian Creed, 
a form which was undoubtedly of western composition, but of 
wliich the date is much disputed/ The first appearance of the 
doctrine in tlie Nicene or Constantinopolitan creed was at the third 
council of Toledo, in 589;* and it .was often enforced by later 
Spanish councils, under the sanction of an anathema.^ It would 
seem to have been from Spain that the definition made its way into 
France, where the truth of the Double Procession was not con- 
troverted, but some questions were raised as to the expediency or 
lawfulness of adding to the Nicene Creed.* 

The origin of the diflerences on this subject in the period now 
before us is not clear.*' There was some discussion of 
' it at the council of Gentilly, where the ambassadors of 
Constantino Copronymus were present ;°* but (as has been already 
.stated") the details of that council are unknown. At the council 
of Friuli, in 796, Paulinus maintained the expediency of the defi- 
nition, " on account of those heretics who whisper that the Holy 
Spirit is of the Father alone, and proceedeth from the Father 
alone ;" he defended it against the charge of novelty, as being not 
an addition to the Nicene Creed, but an explanation of it;** and 
the council adopted a profession of faith in which the Double 
Procession was laid down.P 

The matter came in a more pressing form before a synod held 
at Aix in 809, when a complmnt was made that one John, a monk 

** See Pelav. vii. 2. or eighth century, and says that the tes- 

' A table of the different opinions as timouies alleged for it before the latter 

to its date and authorship is given by part of the eighth are very uncertain. 

Waterland, iii. 117, ed. 1843. Gerard He considers the name FiJes Athawisii 

Vossius once thought that it was the to be intended as the opposite of Fi<Us 

-work of a Frenchman, in the reign of Ariiy and infers that the Creed was 

Pipin or of Charlemagne, but afterwards composed in Spain, the country where 

modified his opinion so far as to say Ariauism kept the longest hold (II. i. 

that the Creed was not older than a.d. 109-110). Mr. Harvey thinks that it 

GOO (ib. lOS). Quesnel ascribed it to was probably made by Victricius, bishop 

Vigilius of Tapsus vA.d. 484), and has of Rouen, in defending himself against 

been followed by many in this opinion a charge of heresy, a.d. 401. (* The 

(ib. HI). Waterland himself {ih. 213- Three Creeds,' 584 seqq., Camb. 1854.) 

9) supposes it the work of Hilary of The proof of this does not appear very 

Aries, composed after his elevation to convincing, 

the bishoprick (a.d. 429), and in conse- if Hard. iii. 472. 

quence of the retractation of Leporius *» Schrockh, xx. 503-4 ; Giesel. II. i. 

(see vol. i. p. 436). Gieseler, m his 107. See Isid. Hispal. Ep. 6 (Patrol, 

posthumous Lectures on the History of Ixxxiii.) and Gonzalez, Pref. to the 

Doctrines (Lehrb. vi. 325), says that it Spanish Canons, ib. Ixxxiv. 

is probably of the sixth century ; but in ' Giesel. II. i. 108-9. ^ Ib. 

another passage (which may have been " Einhard, a.d. 767. 

composed or revised later than the Ia*c- " P. 161. " Hard. iv. 850. 

tures, although it was published during i* Ib. 855. 
his lifetime) he refers it to the seventh 



Chap. VII. a.u. 767-809. OF TIIK HOLY SPIRIT. 173 

of St. Sabas, had attacked the Frankish monks and pilgrims at 
Jerusalem on account of this doctrine, and had attempted to drive 
them away by force.^i The council approved of the addition to the 
creed/ and Charlemagne sent two bishops and Adelhard, abbot of 
Corbie, to Rome, with a request that the pope would confirm the 
judgment Leo, at a conference with the envoys, of which a 
curious account is preserved,' expressed his agreement in the 
doctrine of the Double Procession, but decidedly opposed the 
insertion of it into the creed. It would, he said, be wrong to 
insert it, since a council guided by wisdom from above had omitted 
it ; and, moreover, the point was one of those which are not neces- 
sary to salvation for the mass of ordinary Christians. It is said 
that he put up in St. Peter's two silver shields engraved with the 
creed of Constantinople in Greek and in Latin, and that on both 
the words which express the procession of the Spirit from the Son 
were omitted. But, in order that there might be no doubt as to 
his opinion on the question of doctrine, he sent into the east a 
confession of faith in which the Double Procession was twice dis- 
tinctly affirmed.* We hear no more of the difference between the 
Eastern and Western Churches on this subject until at a later time 
it was revived and led to important consequences. 

It may be difficult to follow, and impossible to read with interest, 
the history of such controversies as those on Monothelism and 
Adoptionism ; and the Church has often been reproached with the 
agitation into which it was thrown by questions which never enter 
into the consideration of the great body of Christian believers. 
We ought, however, to remember that an error which is to agitate 
the Church internally must not begin by setting at nought the 
decisions of former times ; the spirit of speculation must fix on 
some point which is apparently within the limits already prescribed 
for orthodoxy. Hence, in the controversies which relate to the 
highest Christian doctrines, the ground is continually narrowed, as 
we proceed from Arianism to Nestorianism and Eutychianism, and 

< Ep. Monachorum in Monte Oliveti (809-53). Pagi argues a^nst him (xiii. 

habitantiam (Patrol, cxxix. 1257) ; Ein- 455-6). Comp. Mosheim, ii. 1C7, and 

hard, a.i>. 809 ; Ado, a.d. 8()9 (Patrol. Schrockh, xx. 506. 

cxxiii.). Ado finds the double proccs- • Hard. iv. 969-973. 

sion clearly (npcrte) laid down in Reve- * Leo, Ep. 15 (Patrol, cii.) ; Anastas. 

lat. xxii. I. (col. 133.) ib. cxxviii. 1237; Pet. Lombard, Sen- 

' Baronius says that the question at tent. I. xi. 2 (ib. cxcii.) ; Pagi, xiii. 457. 

Aix did not relate to doctrine, but solely See Hefele, iii. 702-3. 
to the addition of Filioque in the Creed 



174 INCREASED SUBTLETY OF CONTROVERSlEa Biwk 111. 

from these to the errors which have lately come before us ; while 
' each question, as it arose, required to be discussed and decided by 
the lights of Scripture and of the judgments which had been before 
pronounced. It is not, therefore, the Church that deserves to be 
blamed, if the opinions against which its solemn condemnations 
were directed beceune successively more and more subtle ; and the 
reader must be content to bear with the writer, if their path should 
sometimes lie through intricacies which both must feel to be 
uninviting and wearisome. 



Chap. VIII. a.d. 590-814. ( 175 ) 



CHAPTER VIII. 

THE ORIENTAL SECTS. 

I. It has been mentioned, in the sketch of the Mahometan conquests, 
that the Arabs took advantage of the enmity between the Catholics 
and the Jacobites (or Monophysites) to enlist the depressed and 
persecuted sectaries on their side.' For the services thus rendered, 
the Jacobites were repaid by a superior degree of favour from their 
new masters when Egypt and Syria had fallen under the rule of 
the caliphs. Many of those whom the measures of Heraclius had 
driven to profess Catholicism now returned to the open avowal of 
their old opinions ; and the church further lost, not only by the 
progress of the sword and doctrines of Islam, but by the defection 
of many of its own members to the heretical Christianity. 

The Jacobites continued to be strong in Egypt, and also in the 
more westerly countries of Asia, where they were now under the 
government of a patriarch resident at Amida. But the party had 
been extirpated in Persia,^ and it made po further progress towards 
the east.^ 

II. The history of the Nestorians during this period was more 
remarkable. They, like the opposite sect, were at first courted 
and afterwards favoured by the Mussulmans on account of their 
hostility to the orthodox church. At their head was a bishop 
known by the title of Catholic or Patriarch of Babylon ; his resi- 
dence was originally at Seleucia or Ctesiphon,** but on the founda- 
tion of Bagdad by Almansur, in 762, the patriarch removed his 
seat to that city.* In the eighth century, the Nestorians got a 
footing in Egypt;' and in the east they laboured with great 
activity to propagate their form of Christianity, without, appa- 
rently, any rivalry on the part of the Catholics. Following the 
course of trade, Nestorian missionaries made their way by sea 
from India to China, while others penetrated across the deserts to 
its northern frontier.* A stone discovered at Si-ngan-foo, in 
1625, bears a long inscription, partly Syriac and partly Chinese, 
recording the names of missionaries who had laboured in China, 

• P. 40. • Pagi, xiii. 6 ; WHtsch, i. 451. 

<» See Tol. i. p. 538. ' Schrockh, xx. 377. 

« Schrockh, xx. 378. ' Mosheim, Hist. TarUronim Ecclesi- 

^ From A.D. 498. Wiltach, i. 216. astica, 12. 



176 NESTORIAN MISSIONS. Bom in. 

with the history of Christianity in that country from the year 636 
to 781. Its fortunes had been varied by success and persecution ; 
but in the eighth century it had usually enjoyed great favour from 
the emperors, and many churches had been built With these 
details the inscription contains a summary of Christian doctrine 
and practice, in which a tinge of Nestorianism is discernible.^ It 
would seem that this early Christianity of China fell with the 
dynasty which had encouraged it ; for some missionaries who about 
the year 980 were sent by the Catholic of Babylon into that 
country found the churches destroyed, and could only hear of one 
native who continued to profess their own religion.* 

The jmtriarch Timothy, who held his office from 777 to 820, 
reduced the Nestorian metropolitan of Persia to subjection, and 
was especially active in organizing missions.*" By the preachers 
whom he sent out, a knowledge of Christianity was spread in 
Hyrcania, Tartary, Bactria, and other countries of central Asia, 
where it long retained a hold. Bishops and metropolitans, owning 
allegiance to the patriarch of Babylon, were established in those 
vast regions, and with a view to this a singular ritual provision was 
made by Timothy — that, if no more than two bishops could be 
procured for the consecration of a brother, the canonical number 
should be made up by allowing a book of the Gospels to supply the 
place of the third.™ 

III. The tenets and character of the Paulicians have been the 
subject of controversy, which has been too often largely influenced 
by the party interests of those who have shared in it Writers of 

* Mosheim (ib. Append. 4-28'j gives a the Jesuits could not have forced; that 

copy of the inscription after Kircher, both the Chinese and the Syriac cha- 

and M. Pauthier has lately published it racters agree in form with the alleged 

in the original languages, with a trans- date ; that its statements fall in with 

lation and a fac-simile (L' Inscription other circumstances which could not 

Syro-Chinoise de Si-ugan-fou, Paris, have been known to the Jesuits; and 

18.58). The genuineness of this record that no suspicion of its genuineness has 

has been disputed, but seems to be now been entertained by native Chinese 

commonly, although not universally, scholars. Moreover, if the Jesuits had 

admitted. M. Pauthier, in another ventured on a forgery, they would have 

pamphlet, has defended it against recent made it more favourable to their own 

objections (De I'Authenticitd de I'lnscr. views. As to the fact of Christianity 

Nestorienne de Si-ngan-fou, Paris, 1857). in China, there is sufficient testimony of 

As it was through Jesuit missionaries other kinds. See Mosh. ii. G2, and Hist, 

that it became known to Europe, it has Tartar. 9-13 ; Schrockh, xix. 293-6 ; 

been regarded as a fraud of the Society. Gieseler, 1. ii. 437 ; Gibbon, iv. 378, and 

But it appears that the Jesuits did not Dean Milman's notes, 

see the stone until three years after it ' Pauthier, .Authent. de Tlnscr. 95. 

had been discovered by some Chinese ^ Schrockh, xx. 37G. 

workmen in digging the foundation of a " Mosh. Hist. Tart. 15; Schrockh, 

house, and had been placed in a Chinese xix. 297 ; Gibbon, iv. 377 ; Neander, v. 

temple; that it contains things which 123. 



Chap. Vlll. 



PAULICIANISM. 



177 



the Roman Church have professed to discover in the Paulicians the 
ancestors of the protestant reformers, and have transferred to these 
the charges of Manichaeism which are brought against the ancient 
sect." On the other hand, some protestants have ventured to 
accept the pedigree, and, with a confidence which equally disdains 
facts and reason, have asserted that the Paulicians were guiltless 
of the heresies imputed to them — that they were the maintainers 
of what such writers suppose to be a purely scriptural Cliristianity.** 
It would be useless to enter here into a discussion of these rival 
extravagances. 

Although it is agreed that the word Paulician is a barbarous 
formation from the name Paul^ there is a question as to the 
person from whom the designation was taken. Some trace it to 
one Paul of Samosata — not the notorious bishop of Antioch, in 
the third century, but a Manichaean of later, although uncertain, 
date ; ^ others to an Armenian who was eminent in the sect about 
the time of Justinian II.*i But the most probable supposition 
appears to be that it is derived from the name of the great 
Apostle, whom the Paulicians affected especially to regard as 
their master.' 

used the saine materials. Some sup- 
pose that Photius wrote first, and that 
his treatise was known to Peter. (See 
Gieseler, PrsBf. vi.-viii. ; Wolf, Prtef. ad 
Phot. ; Mosh. ii. 253^ notes ; Schrockh, 
XX. 365 ; Dowling's Letter to Maitland 
on the Paulicians, Lond. 1835, p. 32; 
Gfrorer, ii. 224) ; but Cardinal Mai and 
the Editor in the ' Patrologia ' (civ. 
Prsef. vi.) think that Photius borrowed 
from Peter. George, who styles himself 
"The Sinner" (Hamartolus), a Greek 
monk of the 9th century, gives an 
account of the Paulicians in the 238th 
chapter of his Chronicle, and incident- 
ally mentions (sect 12) that he had 
elsewhere written Zth, irXdrovs against 
them. 

P See Phot. 1. i. c. 2; Pet. Sic. 36- 
8, ed. ' Rader ; Georg. Hamartolus, 
ccxxxviii. 1 ; Cedren. 432. 

1 See Phot. i. 18. 

' This is the opinion of Gibbon (▼. 
274) ; DoUinger (i. 34.3) ; HaUam (M. 
A. ii. 439) ; and Neander (v. 340-1). " In 
an Eastern mind," says Dean Milman, 
*' it is not difficult to suppose a fusion 
between the impersonated, deified, and 
oppugnant powers of good and evil, and 
St. Paul's high moral antagonism of sin 
and grace in the soul of man— the in- 
born and hereditary evil, and the infused 
and imparted righteousness" (iv. 103). 

N 



" See Rader, in the verses prefixed to 
his translation of Petr. Siculus ; Baron. 
810. 7 ; BcNBsuet, Hist, des Variations, 1. 
xi. IS, seqq. 

o Some letters by the Rev. G. S. 
Faber, in vols, xiv.-xv. of the * British 
Magazine,' may be mentioned as ex- 
amples of this class. Neander, not being 
hampered by the same doctrinal scruples 
as the English patrons of the sect, is 
able to take a somewhat bolder view ; 
he traces the Paulicians to his favourite 
Marcion (see vol. i. p. 59), and acknow- 
ledges their Gnosticism and Dualism, 
while he holds that under these forms 
they apprehended a spiritual Christian- 
ity, derived from St. Paul and St. John ! 
(v. 342). The principal sources of infor- 
mation as to the sect are Photius in the 
Ist of his four books against the Mani- 
chsans, (printed in Wolfs ' Anecdota 
Gneca,' tt. i.-ii. Hamb. 1722, and in the 
Patrol. Gr. vol. cii.,) and Petrus Siculus, 
whose tract was published, with a bad 
Latin version by Rader, a Jesuit, at 
Ingoldstadt, in 1604, and has been edited, 
with a new translation, by Gieseler 
(Giittingen, 1846). In the Patrol. Gr. 
vol. civ. this tract, with three discourses 
against the Manichsans by the same 
author, is reprinted from Mai's collec- 
tion. The two chief works have much 
in common, the authors having probably 



1 78 PAULICI ANISM — CONSTANTINE. Boo* 111. 

Gnosticism, banished from other parts of the crapirOy had taken 
refuge in the countries bordering on the EuphrateB, where, in 
course of time, the remnants of its various parties had come to 
be confounded under the general name of Manichseans.' In this 
region, at the village of Mananalis, near Saoiosata, lived about 
the year 653 one Constantino, who is described as descended 
from a Manichaean family.^ A deacon, who was returning firom 
captivity among the Saracens, became his guest, and, in acknow- 
ledgment of his hospitality, left with him a manuscript containing 
the Gospels and St Paul's Epistles. Constantine read these, 
applying the principles of his old belief to the interpretation of 
them ; and the result was, that he renounced some of the grosser 
absurdities in which he had been tramed, burnt the heretical 
books which it was a capital crime to possess, and put forth a 
system which, by means of allegorical and other evasions, he pro- 
fessed to reconcile with the letter of the New Testament, while in 
reality it was mainly derived from the doctrines of his hereditary 
sect." Although he is usually styled a Manichaean, it would 
appear that the term is not to be strictly understood. His 
opinions were probably more akin to Marcionism, which is known 
to have been strong in the region of the Euphrates two hundred 
years earlier;^ and his followers freely anathematised Manes, 
among other heresiarchs.y 

Constantine styled himself Silvanus, and the leaders who suc- 
ceeded him assumed the names of Titus, Epaphroditus, Timothy, 
and others of St. Paul's companions.* In like manner they affected 
to tnmsfer to the chief communities of their sect the names of 
churches in which the apostle and his associates had laboured." 
The Paulicians acknowledged St. Paul's epistles, with those of 
St. James, St John, St Judc, and the Acts. .They also origi- 
nally admitted the four Gospels, although it would seem that they 

Gieseler (II. i. 15) says that, when the Gfrorer, ii. 201. 

party had styled itself after the apostle, • Gibbon, v. 273. 

Its enemies referred the name to one of * Pet. Sic. 40-2 ; Pagi, xi. 459. 

the later Pauls as its founder. Mr. » Pet. Sic. 40-2 ; Phot. i. 3, 16 ; G. 

Dowling, on the contrary, thinks that it Hamart. 1. c. 2, 12. 

first got its name from one of the others, *■ See vol. i. p. 443; Mosh. ii. 251 ; 

and then affected to explain it by a Schrbckh, xx. 370 ; Neand. v. 337 ; 

reference to St. Paul. He admits that Giesel. II. i. 14. 

there is no real connexion with the y Phot. i. 4, 16 ; Pet. Sic. 62. 

Samosatenian, and would therefore de- " Phot. i. 4 ; G. Hamart. 3. It is 

rive the name from the Armenian Paul, said that Constantine pretended to be 

Guericke (ii. 83) well remarks that, the same with St. Paul's Silyanus (Phot. 

when the designation after the apostle i. 16 ; Pet. Sic. 44) ; but this is un- 

had been adopted, the frequent recur- likely. 

rence of the name Paul among the " Phot. i. 5. 

sectaries is easily understood. See too 



Chap. vril. AD. 653. PAUUCI AN DOCTRINES. 179 

afterwards rested exclusively on those of St Luke and St John, if 
they did not absolutely reject the others. *» They rejected the Old 
Testament, and they especially denounced St. Peter, as a betrayer 
of his Lord and of the truth ; nor was their enmity without reason, 
says Peter of Sicily, since that apostle had prophesied against their 
misuse of St Paul.'' 

The Paulicians held that matter was eternal ; that there were 
two gods — the one, generated of darkness and fire, the creator and 
lord of the present world, the God of the Old Testament and of 
the Church ; the other, the Supreme, the object of their own 
worship, the God of the spiritual world which is to come.^ They 
held that the soul of man was of heavenly origin, imprisoned in a 
material body.® They not only refused to the Blessed Virgin the 
excessive honours which the Catholics had gradually bestowed 
on her, but are said to have altogether disparaged her; they 
denied her perpetual virginity, while they maintained that our 
Lord did not really take of her substance, but brought his body 
from heaven, and that his birth was only in appearance.' They 
objected to the order of presbyters, because the Jewish presbyters 
or elders had opposed the Christ ; « their own teachers were 
not distinguished by any special character, dress, manner of life, 
or privileges. Of these teachers several grades are mentioned, 
but they did not form a permanent hierarchy ; thus, when the 
*^ companions in travel,"** who had been associated with the last 
great master of the sect, died out, the ^^ notaries," whose business it 
was to copy the writings which were acknowledged as authoritative, 
became its chief instructors.* The Paulicians reverenced Constan- 
tine and three others of their leaders as apostles or prophets.^ 
They rejected the sacraments : Christ, they said, did not give his 
disciples bread and wine, but by the names of these elements He 
signified his own sustaining words;'" and the true baptism is He 

^ See Pet Sic. 18, with the marginal ^ Pet. Sic. 42. 
note by a later writer ; Phot. i. 8 ; Neand. •" G. Hamart 7 ; t^v 0e(ay koI 

y. 370. tppiieriiy r&v ayi»y fiwrrriplofy rov <r^ 

« (2 Pet iii. 16). Pet Sic 20; Phot. Aurroj koL diiaroi iivrdXif^uf 

i. 8; G. Hamart 9. The charge of be- ArorpAfro* (Pet Sic. 18). Rader ren- 

traying the truth had r^erence to Gal. ders the last words ccnversionem negetU — 

ii 11, seqq. as if a denial of transubstantiation were 

* Pet Sic. 16-8 ; Phot i. 6. regarded by the Greek Church of the 
« Neand. v. 358-9 ; Diillinger, i. 345. ninth century as a mark of heresy. 
' Phot. i. 7 ; Pet Sic 10 ; G. Ha- But the real meaning — that the Pau- 

mart. 6. licians reftued to partake of the sacra- 

« Phot. i. 9. mental elements (" pjerceptionem recu- 

•» (rvvMritJLoi—from Acts xix. 29; 2 sant " — Gieseler) — is clear from an- 

Cor. viii. 19. other pas.^age (p. 66), where a member 

• Pet Sic 72; G. Hamart. 1 1 ; Neand. of the sect is asked SiA rl oit fura- 
▼. 365 ; Dowling, 19. Xafi0dif§is, The Jesuit editor's mistike 

N 2 



180 PAULICIANISM — SrMEON, fcoKlIL 

himself, who declared Himself to he thfe "living water."" They 
spat on the cross and attacked the catholics on account of their 
reverence for images, while they themselves paid reverence to the 
book of the Gospels, as containing the words of Christ.® They 
allowed themselves a great license of equivocation as to their 
opinions ; and in the same spirit they did not scruple to attend 
the catholic worship or sacraments.^ They claimed for themselves 
exclusively the title of Christians, while they styled the Catholics 
Bonurns^ as having merely a political religion.*! Their own places 
of worship were not styled temples or churches, but progeuchce — 
houses of prayer/ By the modem patrons of the Faulicians, their 
opposition in some of these points to the current errors or supersti- 
tions of the time has been traced to an unbiassed study of Holy 
Scripture ; but it may be more truly explained by their connexion 
with older sects, which had become separate before the corruptions 
in question were introduced into the Church itself. 

Constantino fixed himself at Cibossa, in Armenia, where he 
presided over his sect for twenty-seven years, and made many 
converts, both from the church and from the Zoroastrian religion.* 
At length the matter was reported to the emperor Constantine 
Pogonatus, who sent an officer named Symeon to Cibossa, with 
orders to put the heresiarch to death, and to distribute his followers 
among the clergy and in monasteries, with a view to their being 
reclaimed.* Symeon carried off Constantine and a large body of 
the sectaries, wliom he drew up in a line, and commanded to stone 
their chief. Instead of obeying, all but one let fall the stones 
with which they were armed ; but Constantine was 
killed, like anotlier Goliah (as we are told), by a stone 
from the hand of a youth — his own adopted son Justus." As the 
sectaries proved obstinate in their errors, Symeon entered into 
conference with some of them ; the effect was, that, being ignorant 
as to the grounds of his old religion, he became their convert, and, 
after spending three years at Constantinople in great uneasiness of 

is corrected by Mai, Patrol. Gr. civ. 1255. mere cleansing of the flesh. See Ce- 

■ G. Hamart. 9. Photius (i. 9) says drenns, 435. 

that they allowed themselves to be <» Phot. i. 7; G. Hamart 13. See 

baptised by clergy who were captive John of Oznun, patriarch of Armenia, 

among them, although they supposed a.d. 718-729, in Neand. v. 345 ; Giesel. 

the effects to be profitable only to the II. i. 13. 

body. (Cf. G. Hamart 14.) Ncander p Phot. i. 6-9; G. Hamart. 10, 14; 

(v. 363) gives an improbable expla- Cedren. 435. 

nation of the statement. We may, i Phot. i. 6 ; G. Hamart. 6. 

perhaps, rather understand that in this, ' Phot. i. 9. 

as in other things, they showed a pre- " Pet. Sic. 44. 

tended conformity to the usages of the ' lb. 49. 

church, and mocked at baptism as a « Phot i. 16; Pet. Sic. 44. 



CuAP.VUI. A.U. 653-722. GEGNiESIUS. 181 

mind, he fled, leaving all his property behind hiin, and took up his 
abode at Cibossa, where, under the name of Titus, he became the 
successor of Constantine.* After a time, Justus was struck by 
the seeming inconsistency of the Paulician doctrines with a text> 
which refers the spiritual as well as the material world to the same 
one Creator. He proposed the difficulty to Symeon, expressing 
a fear that they might both have been m error, and might have 
misled their followers; and, on finding that Symeon would not 
satisfy him, he went to the bishop of a neighbouring town, 
Colonia (now Calahissar), and exposed the tenets of the About 
sect. The bishop reported the case to the emperor, ^•^' ^^^• 
Justinian II., and, in consequence, Symeon, Justus, and many of 
their followers, were burnt to death on one large pile.* 

Among those who escaped this fate was an Armenian named 
Paul,* who took up his abode near Phanaroea, at a place which is 
said to have derived its name^ Episparis, from the sowing of 
spiritual tares there by the elder Paul, the Samosatenian.*" The 
sect revived under the Armenian Paul, but at his death the head- 
ship of it was contested by his two sons. Gegnajsius, the 
elder, to whom his father had given the name of Timothy, 
rested his claims on hereditary succession, while the younger, 
Theodore, relied on* an immediate commission from heaven;*^ and 
their dispute reached the ears of Leo the Isaurian, who ordered 
Germanus, patriarch of Constantinople, to examine 
Gegnajsius. The Paulician was skilful enough to meet 
all questions with answers which appeared satisfactory. He 
anathematised all who denied the orthodox faith, for by that name 
he secretly intended his own heresy. He anathematised all who 
refused to worship the cross, for by the cross he meant our Lord 
himself stretching out his arms in prayer or benediction. He anathe- 
matised all who refused worship to the Theotokos, into whom the 
Saviour entered — understanding under this description the heavenly 
Jerusalem, into which Christ has entered as the forerunner of his 
elect. By the Catholic church, he meant his own sect ; by baptism, 
Christ the "living water;" by the body and blood of Christ, the 
Saviour's words of instruction : he therefore anathematised all who 
rejected any of these, and, having thus satisfied Germanus, he was 
sent home with favourable letters from the emperor.^ 

« Phot. i. 16 ; Pet. Sic. 46. above, agrees with them. 

y Coloss. i. 16. ^ (». Hamart. 1 ijvicnrup^y (lidvia, 

* Phot. i. 17 ; Pet. Sic. 46-50. Matt. xiii. 25). 

• Pet. Sic. 48, says that some derived * Phot. i. 18 ; Pet. Sic. 48. 
the name of the sect from this Paul. • Phot. i. 18; Pet. Sic. «). 
Mr, Dowling, as has been mentioued 



182 PAUUCIANISM — SERGIUS. Bock la 

The abhorrence which the Paulicians professed for images 
might have been supposed likely to recommend the party to the 
iconoclastic emperors. But it would seem that these princes rather 
feared to connect themselTCs with the disrepute which its other 
opinions had brought on it ;* and thus we find that Leo and his 
son, instead of favouring the Paulicians, transported many of them 
from Armenia into Thrace/ After various fortunes, the headship 
of the sectaries had fallen to one Baanes,^ who is styled ** the 
filthy,"** and may therefore be probably supposed to have sanc- 
tioned some of the immoralities which are too often lightly imputed 
to all heresiarchsJ But when the Paulicians had sunk thus low, 
a reformer appeared in the person of a young man named Sfti^us. 
Sergius was converted to Paulicianism by a female theologian. 
The historians of the sect relate that this woman, having fixed on 
him as one whom it was desirable to gain, entered into conversa- 
tion with him, and, after some compliments on his learning and 
character, asked him why ho did not read the Scriptures. He 
answered that such studies were not lawful for Christians in 
general, but only for the clergy — an idea which Chrysostom had 
strongly opposed,*^ but which since his time had become fixed in 
the popular belief, although without any formal authority from the 
Church. " It is not as you think," she rejoined ; "for there is no 
acceptance of persons with God, since He will have all men to be 
saved, and to come to the knowledge of the truth." And she 
went on to tell him that the clergy mutilated and corrupted the 
word of God, and that such of them as did miracles would be 
found among those to whom Christ will say in the judgment-day, 
" I never knew you." Sergius began to read the Scriptures, and, 
under the tuition of his instructress, he learnt to apply to the 
Catholics all that is there said against the fleshly Israel, and to 
regard the Paulicians as the true spiritual Church of Christ" He 
assumed the name of Tychicus," and became a new founder of the 
sect, which is said to have lield his writings in equal 
veneration with the Scriptures themselves.'' His own 
morals would seem to have been unimpeachable, since Photius 
and Peter of Sicily can only charge him with hypocrisy ; ^ and he 
reformed the morality of the Paulicians, in opposition to the prin- 
A.D. 801- ciples of Baanes. For thirty-four years — from the reign 
835. of Irene to that of Theophilus — Sergius laboured inde- 

^ Giesel. II. i. 16. Photius with promiscuous incest, &c. 

f Theophan. 662. i. 10. •' See Giesel. II. i. 15. 

» Pet.- Sic. 54; Phot. i. 20. ™ Phot. i. 20; Pet. Sic. 56-8. 

»» d pvwap6s. " Pet. Sic. 54. ° lb. 18. 

' The Paulicians are charged by p lb. 60; Phot i. 21. 



CuAP.VilJ. A.D. »a2-835. SERGIUS. 183 

fatigably in the cause of Paulicianism. He is said to have 
indulged in unseemly boasting of his success ; to have preferred 
himself to the earlier teachers of the party ; to have styled himself 
the resplendent lampy the shining lighty the life^ving star^ and 
even the Paraclete,^ 

The emperor Nicephorus was friendly to the sect, and granted 
it toleration in Phrygia and Lycaonia. Theophanes tells a.d. 802- 
us that he engaged in magical practices with " the ®^^' 
Manichseans who are called Faulicians," in order to obtain victory 
for his arms.' Under Michael Rhangabe severe laws were enacted 
against these heretics ; such of them as should be obstinate in their 
errors were to be put to death. A party in the church, 
headed by Theodore the Studite, opposed the infliction 
of death as the punishment of heresy ;' but Theophanes argues 
that this view is absurd, since St Peter inflicted death on Ananias 
and Sapphira, and St Paul says that persons who are guilty of 
certain sins are worthy of deatL^ To these scriptural authorities 
for persecution Peter of Sicily adds another — the command, 
** Those mine enemies, which would not that I should reign over 
them, bring hither and slay them before me." " 

Leo the Armenian, iconoclast as he was, continued the perse- 
cution of the Paulicians. The sectaries, as usually a.d. 813- 
happens, were exasperated by such treatment. The ^^* 
deaths of some of their chiefs were avenged by the slaughter of a 
prefect and a bishop who had been active against them.* They 
lived in constant hostility to their neighbours, and, as opportunity 
favoured, they broke out from their bounds, devastated, plundered, 
and slaughtered ; their female captives, it is said, were given up 
to promiscuous lust ; the children were either killed or sold to the 
Saracens ; and Sergius found himself unable to restrain the excesses 
of his followers.^ Sergius himself was slain with his own axe by 
a man who had found him cutting wood, in the year 835.' His 
reforms had led to the separation of the sect into two hostile 
branches ; and, after his death, his followers, wishing to clear them- 
selves from the obloquy attached to the Baanites, fell on these, 
and carried on a bloody contest with them, until a " companion in 

1 Phot. i. 21 ; Pet. Sic. 62. We have ' Theophan. 759; Schrockh, xxiii. 319. 

already had instances of assaminff this ' Theod. Stud. Ep. ii. 155 ; Schrockh, 

last title, in Montauus, Manes, and Ma- xxiii. 319. 

hornet (L 74, 134; ii. 36). That Sergius * Rom. i. 32; Theophan. 771. 

cannot have meant to identify himself " St. Luke xix. 27 ; Pet. Sic. 38. 

with the Holy Spirit appears from the « Pet. Sic. 71 ; Phot. i. 24. 

fact that he placed himself lower than y Pet Sic. 62. 

St. Paul. Neand. v. 350. * lb. 71 ; Phot. i. 24. 



184 PAUUCIANISM — CAKBEAS. Book UL 

travel '* of Sergius, named Theodotus, succeeded in recalling both 
parties to a remembrance of their common faith.* 

After the re-establishment of images, under the regency of 
Theodora,^ the empress was urged by the yictorious party to 
undertake the suppression of Paulicianism, whether by convermon 
or by force ; and, as the' sectaries resisted all attempts which were 
made to gain them, the fury of persecution was let looee among 
them. It is said that not less than 100,000 were slain by the 
sword, beheaded, drowned, or impaled.^ Among the victims was 
the father of Carbeas, captain of the guard to the prefect 
of the east. Carbeas, on hearing of his parent's fate, 
renounced his allegiance to the empire, and, with 5000 companions, 
sought a refuge among the Saracens. The caliph gladly welcomed 
the fugitives, and granted them leave to settie within his territory, 
where, on the same principle by which they had justified their 
occa^onal conformity to the church, they adopted externally the 
rites of Islam.** Carbeas built or enlarged and fortified several 
towns, of which Tephrica was the chief and became the head- 
quarters of the sect.® Paulicians from other quarters flocked to 
the new home which was opened for them ; and the numbers of 
the party were swelled by refugees who sought an asylum from the 
imperial laws, and, according to its enemies, by others who found 
an attraction in the license of morals which it granted to its 
members.' The Paulicians harassed their neighbours of the 
empire by continual aggressions.^ Under the command of Carbeas, 
their forces, in conjunction with the Saracens, gained a great 
victory over Michael, the son of Theodora, under the walls of 
Samosata ;** and in the reign of the emperor Basil, Chrysocheir, the 
son-in-law of Carbeas,* advanced through Asia Minor with an 
army made up of Paulicians and Saracens, pillaged An- 
cyra, Nicaea, Nicomedia, and other cities, gave up images 
and relics to his followers for profanation, and stabled his horses 
in the cathedral of Ephesus. Basil was reduced to sue for peace ; 
but (Chrysocheir refused it except on the intolerable condition that 
he should give up the east to " the servants of the Lord."*' The 
emperor had no choice but to carpy on the war ; he advanced into 
the Paulician country, and took some of the towns, but was obliged 
to relinquish the siege of Tephrica.*" Chrysocheir again invaded 

- Phot. i. 22 ; Pet. Sic. 71. ' Pet. Sic. 73. 

^ A.u. -842. Theophan. Contin. iv. s Cedren. 542. 
16. >> Theophan. Contiu. iv. 23; Phot. i. 

^ Cedren. 541 ; Schlosser, 657-5CU. 26 ; Cedren. .545 ; Gibbon, v. 279. 
«* Phot. i. 26. » Phot. i. 28. 

* Cedren. 541. ^ Gibbon, v. 280. " Ibid. 



CHAP.vm. A.DW842-8Y0. CHRYSOCHEIR— PETER OF SICILY. 185 

the imperial territory ; but his troops werc^ defeated by one of 
BasiFs generals, and he himself, as he fled, was closely 
followed by one Pylades, who had formerly been his * ' 
captive. It was in vain that he reminded his pursuer of the kind- 
ness with which he had treated him ; a wound from the lance of 
Pylades compelled him to drop from his horse, and, as he lay 
stunned by the fall, some other Greeks despatched him. His head 
was carried to the emperor, who fulfilled a vow and gratified his 
enmity by piercing it with three arrows." After the death of 
Chrysocheir, the Paulicians ceased to be formidable. Tephrica 
was destroyed, yet a remnant of the sect continued to assert its 
independence for a century later.** 

In another quarter, the heresy had been kept up by the 
descendants of those who were transported into Thrace by 
Constantine Copronymus.^ It was in order to guard the newly- 
founded church of Bulgaria from the infection of its Thracian 
neighbours, that Peter of Sicily, about the year 870, addressed to 
the Archbishop of the Bulgarians the tract which is a chief source 
of information as to the sect, drawing hie materials in part from 
the observations and inquiries which he had made during a 
residence of nine months at Tephrica, on a mission for negotiating 
an exchange of prisoners.** 

» Const. Porphyrog. Vita Basil. 42-3; •» Pet Sic. 2, 74. Ou the date, see 
Cedren. 570-3. Pagi, xv. 230; Gieseler, Praf. in Pet. 

" Gibbon, v. 281. p Ibid. Sic. iii.-iv. 



( 186 ) Book III. 



CHAPTER IX. 

SUPPLEMENTARY. 

L Infiuenoe of the Papacy. 

The preceding chapters have set before us the changes which took 
place in the position of the patriarchs during the seventh and eighth 
centuries — the sees of Alexandria, Antioch,and Jerusalem reduced 
to subjection under the Mahometan rule ; the bishops of Constan- 
tinople becoming more and more tools and slaves of the imperial 
court ; while in the west the power of the Roman bishop is greatly 
and rapidly increased. This advance of the papacy was much aided 
by the circumstance that Rome, although often taken by barbarians, 
never remained long in their possession/ It alone retained its 
ancient character, while in all other quarters the old national dis- 
tinctions were obliterates by successive invasions. The poDes alone 
kept their ground amid the revolutions of secular powers; and 
their authority was vastly extended as nation after nation of the 
barbarian conquerors was brought within the sphere of Christian 
influenqe. As in former times the bishop of Rome had been 
regarded by the orientals as the representative of the whole western 
church, so he now appeared to the new nations of the north and of 
the west as the representative and source of Christianity on earth. 
St Peter was regarded as holding the keys of heaven, and as 
personally connected with his successors.^ The popes strengthened 
their position at once by detaching themselves A'om the Byzantine 
empire, and by entering into an alliance with the princes of the 
west on terms such as the empire had never admitted. They 
were connected by mutual interest with the Prankish kings, especi- 
ally with those of the second dynasty, and Charlemagne's conquests 
gave them a supremacy over the church of northern Italy, which 
they had in vain desired in the time of the Lombard princes.*^ By 
the donations of Pipin and of Charlemagne they acquired a new 
secular power ; and it would seem to have been in the early part 
of the ninth century that the forged Donation of Constantine 
appeared, to assert for them a more venerable claim to a wider 
jurisdiction, and to incite the Prankish sovereigns to imitate the 

• Guizot, ii. 329. »• Gieseler, 11. i. 34. « Guizot, ii. 332. 



CtaAF.IX. 



INFLUENCE OF THE PAPACY. 



187 



bounty of the first Christian emperor.*^ Constantine, it was said, 
was baptised by Pope Sylvester, and, at his baptism, received the 
miraculous cure of a leprosy with which he had been afflicted ; 
whereupon, in consideration of the superiority of ecclesiastical to 
secular dignity, he relinquished Borne to the pope, conferred on 
him the right of wearing a golden crown with other insignia of 
sovereignty, and endowed the apostolic see with Italy and other 
proviDoes of the west** This forgery seemed to justify the Somans 
in withdrawing themselves from the empire ; it seemed to legiti- 
matise the possession of all that the popes had gained, since this was 
but a part of what was said to have been bestowed on their see by 
the first Christian emperor ; and the fable retained its credit, although 
not altogether unquestioned,^ throughout the middle ages.* 

The mission of Augustine introduced the papal influence into 
England, where a new church arose, strongly attached to Rome, 
and fruitful in missionaries who established the Roman ascendancy 



** Thus Adrian styles Charlemagne a 
*^ new Constantine " in magnifying the 
bounty of the elder emperor. Patrol, 
xcviii. 306. 

« lb. Ixxiv. 523 ; of. clxxxvii. 460. 
The forger of the ninth century here 
confoanaed the extent of the empire in 
the vest under Constantine with that 
to which it had shrunk in his own time. 
Giesel. II. i. 190. 

' See the letter of Wetzel (seemingly 
a follower of Arnold of Brescia) to 
Frederick Barbarossa, a.d. 1152, in 
Patrol, clxxxix. 1423, D. 

« Gregory of Tours, in describing the 
baptism of Clovis, says, " Procedit 
noYus Constantinus ad lavacrum, dele- 
turus leprse ceteris morbum," &c. (ii. 
31), where the leprosy of sin is evi- 
dently meant. The story of a bodily 
disease and cure, however, is found in 
the *Acta Sylvestri,' which, although 
apocryphal, are reckoned by Gelasius I. 
among approved writings (Patrol, cxxvii. 
1511 ; xcviii. 271 ; lix. 173; cf. Laur. 
VaU. in Fascic. Rerum, i. 141 ; Nic. 
Cusan. ib. 158), and are cited by 
Katramn, in the ninth century, as the 
work of the historian Eusebius (Contra 
Graecorum Opposita,iv. 3, Patrol, cxxi.). 
G. Hamartolas has the story of the 
baptism and cure (c. clxxvi. 1, 2), but 
the Greek writers know nothing of the 
Donation. The first distinct mention 
of it is by iEneas, bishop of Paris, about 
868 (Adv. Grsecos, c. 209 ; Patrol. cxxL). 
Bcrengosus, abbot of St. Maximus at 
Treves, in the twelfth century, recon- 
ciles the statements that Constantine 



was baptised by Sylvester and that he 
was baptised by Eusebius (see vol. i. 
p. 213) by saying that the name Eusebius 
means a good writer^ and therefore was 
^ven to Sylvester as being a "scribe 
instructed unto the kingdom of right- 
eousness " ! (De Laude et Invendone S. 
Crucis, iii. 7 ; Patrol, clx.). Another 
mediaeval opinion was that the emperor, 
after having been baptised into the 
Church by Sylvester, was re-baptised 
into heresy by Eusebius (Anselm. Ha- 
velb. Dialog, iii. 21 ; ib. clxxxviii.). 
On the revival of a spirit of inquiry, 
the story of the Donation was attacked 
by Lorenzo Valla and others (see the 
Fasciculus, i. 128, seqq.), and was soon 
found to be indefensible. Baronius gives 
up the document, but attempts to main- 
tain the fact of the Donation. He in- 
dulges in ingenious conjectures, such 
as that Constantine may have made 
the gift, and Sylvester may have mag- 
nanimously refused it ; or that the 
forgery was contrived in the Greek 
interest, with a view of ascribing the 
power of the popes to a human origin 
(324. 118-20). Tillemont (Emp. iv. 
142) exposes the disingenuousness of 
Baronius, and now even the Abbd 
Rohrbacher is ashamed to uphold the 
fable of the baptism (vi. 284-5). Comp. 
Crakanthorp's * Vindication of Constan- 
tine,' Lond. 1621; De Marca, iii. 12; 
Nat. Alex. viii. ; Dissert. 25 ; Mosh. ii. 
141 ; Gibbon, iv. 490-1 ; Schrockh, xix. 
595-7 ; Fabric. Bibl. Grwc. vi. 697 ; 
Giesel. II. i. 41, 189-191 ; Neand. v. 168 ; 
Gfrorer, * Die Karolinger,* i. 76. 



188 ROMAN INFLUENCE IN ENGLAND. Book 111. 

in Germany and in Gaul. The Englbh church owned subjection to 
the pope, not so much on account of his supposed succession to 
St Peter, as because, having derived its origin from Rome, it was 
included in the Roman patriarchate by the same principle which 
subjected the Abyssinians to the see of Alexandria.** But as the 
papal power increased elsewhere, the subjection of England to it 
became also greater. The Council of Cloveshoo/ assembled by 
Ethelbald, king of Mercia, opened with the reading of two letters 
from Zacharias, " the pontiff and apostolic lord, to be venerated 
throughout the world ;" and it is acknowledged that the recital of 
these documents, in which he exhorts the English of every degree 
to reformation, under the threat of an anathema, was in obedience 
to his " apostolical authority." ^ In 785, two Roman legates — the 
first (as they said) who had been sent into England since the time 
of Augustine ^ — visited this country, and, with a view to the refor- 
mation of the church, councils were held in their presence in 
Mercia and in Northumbria. Offa, king of Mercia, then the 
most powerful of the English kingdoms, attended the Mercian 
assembly at Chalchythe." In consequence of some offence which 
he had taken, on political or other grounds, at Janbert, archbishop 
of Canterbury, he wished that Lichfield should be erected into an 

*^ Planck, ii. 704, 715. See as to the second cauon, in which the bishops 

Abyssinian Church, toI. i. p. 289. bind themselves to cultivate peace and 

* This place has been identified with charity, " without fiattery of any per- 

Cliff-at-Hoo, near Rochester (Fuller, i. son," is not meant to refer to the pope, 

152); Shovesham, now Abingdon (Rapin, but is to be explained by the fact that 

n. in Fuller ; Somner and Gibson, quoted the assembled prelates were subjects of 

by Wilkins, i. 161 ; Johnson, i. 292-4) ; different sovereigns (i. 390-1). I must, 

Tewkesbury (Kemble, ii. 191), &c. Mr. indeed, avow my inability to sympa- 

Thorpe says that the true date is 742, thise with the contentiousness which 

instead of 747, as usually ]^yen (note on some respectable Anglican writers think 

Lappeub. tr. i. 225). it necessary to display on such points. 

^ Wilkins, i. 94 ; Johnson, i. 243. A To mix up the question of our present 
letter in which Boniface sent some position as to Uome with inquiries 
canons lately passed by a council at into the history of the Anglo-Saxon 
Mentz to Guthbert, archbishop of Can- church, tends to obscure historical 
terbury, and urged the assembling of truth, while it is altogether needless 
a council for reformation of abuses in and useless for the purposes of con- 
England (Ep. 63, Patrol. Ixxxix.), b troversy. If we believe ourselves able 
supposed to have been a chief cause to show that tlie Roman claims and 
of the meeting at Cloveshoo (Inett, i. peculiarities of doctrine are unwar- 
174; Johnson, i. 241). Much has been ranted by the primitive church, we 
made by some protestant controversial- can surely afford to discuss their 
ists of the fact that, although the Ger- growth in a spirit of dispassionate 
man canons were in general adopted at impartiality. 
Cloveshoo, one relating to the pope was ™ Wilkins, i. 14«. 
omitted. But I must agree with Dr. ° Bishop Gibson supposes this place 
Lingard (Angl.-Sax. Ch., i. Append, to be Kelceth, in Lancashire (Johnson, 
G) and Hefele (iii. 531-2), that the i. 265). Dr. Lirganl suggests Chelsea 
estimation in which the pope was hold (Hist. Eng. i. 1 lO-l) ; Mr. Soames, 
by the English council is ^ufficiiutly Chalk, or Challock, which arc both in 
proved by the preface to its canons, as Kent. Aug. Sax. Ch. 107. 
quoted in the text ; and also that the 



Chap. IX. CONFIRMATION OF I>OPES. 180 

archiepiscopal see. Janbert strongly opposed a scheme by which 
his metropolitan authority was to be limited to the kingdoms of 
Kent and Sussex ; but it is supposed that the legates at Chalchythe 
favoured the change,*' and it received the sanction of pope Adrian.^ 
Some years later, however, Kenulph, the second successor of Offa, 
having annexed Kent to Mercia, and being desirous to conciliate 
the clergy of his new territory,** joined with Athelard, archbishop 
of Canterbury, in a request that Leo III. would again reduce the 
see of Lichfield to its original condition. Athelard went to Rome 
in order to press the suit ; the pope consented, and with his license 
the new archbishoprick was abolished by a council held at Cloveshoo 
in 803/ 

Ina, king of Wessex, in 725 ^ resigned his crown, and went on 
pilgrimage to Kome, where he ended his days as a monk ; and his 
example was followed by other Anglo-Saxon sovereigns. It has 
been said that the tribute of a penny from every hearth in England, 
afterwards known as liomescot or Peterpenee,^ was first granted by 
Ina, and was confirmed by Ofla in 794." But it would seem that 
the donation of Ina is imaginary, and that in the case of Ofia a 
payment of 365 marks* towards the lighting of St. Peters and 
the relief of pilgrims— an eleemosynary grant from the crown — 
has been confounded with the Romescot of a later time, which was 
a tax levied on the subject, and was interpreted by the advocates 
of the papacy as an acknowledgment that this island was held in 
fee from the successors of St. Peter.*' 

II. Belations of Church and State. 

(1.) The right of confirming elections to the papacy had been 
exercised by the Byzantine emperors, either personally or through 
their representatives, the exarchs, from the reconquest of Italy under 
Justinian until the iconoclastic disputes led to the omission of the 
form in the case of Zacharias. The Carolingian emperors assumed 
the same privilege' as a part of their sovereignty.* The story 

^ Johnson questions this. i. 283-4. money due at the Annnnciation was 

p See Johnson, i. 283-7, and the edi- styled " our Lady's rent." Collier, i. 

tor's notes; Collier, i. 319; Lingard, 335-6. 

Hist Eng. i. 140. ■ Baron. 775. 10 ; Ducange, s. v. 

1 Lappenb. 1. 233. •* Vcnariiis S. Petri;** Fuller, i. 148, 

' W. Malmesb. i. 87-9; WUkins, i. 161. 

160-6. * " Mancusw.** Bee Ducange, s. v. 

• Lappenb. i. 261. y See W. Malmesb. 1. ii. c. 109 ; 

* This name was derived from the Inett, i. 220-2 ; Lingard, A. S. C. i 282- 
circumstance that it was payable at the 3; Hist. Eng. i. 142-6, 161 ; Lappenb. i. 
feast of St. Peter ad VinctUa (com- 195,231. 

monly called Lammas, from the charge ■ See Book IV. c. i. 
** Peed my lambs **). lu like manner ■ Guizot, ii. 337. 



190 APPOINTMENT OF BISHOPS. I^mk III. 

that, during Charlemagne's risit to Rome in 774, Adrian, with a 
synod of a hundred and fifty-three bishops, bestowed on him and 
his succe^ors the right of nominating the popes,*' is now rejected,* 
and, with other such inventions, is supposed to have originated in 
later times from the wish of the Roman party to represent the 
superintendence which the Frank princes exercised over ecclesiastical 
affisiirs as derived from the gift of the popes.^ 

(2.) In the east, where no political power was attached to the 
episcopal office, the emperors had not usually interfered in the 
appointment of bishops, except at Constantinople and other cities 
in which they themselves resided.® The second council of Nicaea 
enacted ^ that bishops should be chosen by their episcopal brethren, 
and that any nomination by princes should be invalid. But in the 
new states of the west, the position of the bishop as great land- 
owners, and the political importance which they acquired, occa- 
sioned a remarkable mixture of secular and spiritual things. 
Although it was again and again laid down by Frankish coundb 
that the elections of bishops should be fi«e, without any other con- 
dition than the approbation of the sovereign, the usual practice 
throughout the period appears to have been that bishops were 
appointed by the crown, whether the nomination were or were not 
followed by a formal election on the part of the clergy and people.* 
In 614 a synod at Paris enacted that a bishop should be appointed 
without any payment, by the concurrence of the metropolitan and 
bishops of the province with the clergy and people of the city.** 
But Clotaire II., in ratifying the canons, introduced considerable 
alterations in favour of the royal prerogative ; among them, he 
required that a bishop should be consecrated under a mandate 
from the crown, and reserved to himself the power of naming a 
clerk from his household to a vacant see, although he promised in 
so doing to have regard to the learning and merit of the nominee.* 
It has been supposed that Charlemagne, by a capitulary of 803,*^ 

»» Gratian. Decret. I. Ixiii. 22 (Patrol, a less evil to leave the appointment to 

clxxxvi.). the crown than to the rude laity in 

' Thomassin. 11. ii. 20-.5; Pagi, xii. general. 

410-l;n.inMoeheim,ii.l44-5;8€hrockh, *> Hard. iii. 551. 

xix. 599. ' ** Vel certe si de palatio eligitur, 

** Giesel. II. i. 40-1. . per meritum persons et doctrins ordi- 

' Flcury, Disc, ii.sect. 10 ; Schrockh, netur." (Pertz, Leges, i. 14.) Plaock 

xix. 408. (ii. 119) and Rettber^ (i. 293) give 

' C. 3. the interpretation which I have fol- 

« Fleury, Disc. ii. sect 10 ; Schrockh, lowed; but Thomassin (II. ii. 10. 13; 

xix. 409-410; Planck, ii. 112-8; Rettb. 13. 6) thinks that the words were 

ii. C05-7. Perhaps, as Dom Pitra says meant to allow the bishops a power 

(Vie de S. L<5^t, 154-5), the bishops, of examining the nominee's qualifi- 

while they maintained the theory of cations, 

election, may have found it practically i' Hard. iv. 453, c. 2. 



Chap. IX. PRANKISH ARCHCHAPLAINS. 191 

professed to restore the ancient usage of election by the clergy and 
people ; but no such enactment was really issued until the reign of 
Louis the Pious,™ while it is certain that in the appointment of 
bishops the great emperor practically followed the example of his 
predecessors, and that he was imitated by his descendants." 

In Spain, the fourth council of Toledo, in 633, enacted that a 
bishop should be chosen by the clergy and people of his city, and 
that the election should be approved by the metropolitan and 
synod of the province.** But at the twelfth council of the same 
place, in 681, the appointment of bishops by the royal authority 
alone is mentioned as a matter of settled custom. The process by 
which this change was effected is unknown.^ 

In England, although Wihtred, king of Kent, in 696, dis- 
claimed the right of appointing bishops,** the royal authority 
influenced their appointment, as they were chosen by the witte- 
nagemote of each state in the presence of the king.^ And here, as 
in other countries, the influence of the crown gradually became 
more absolute. From letters written by Alcuin, a century after 
Wihtred's time, on a vacancy in the archbishoprick of 

. AD 796 

York, it appears that the ancient freedom of election was 
then giving way ; that kings assumed an increased control over the 
choice of bishops, or even disposed of sees by gift* In the ninth 
century, the nomination of bishops had passed into the hands of 
the sovereign, while a shadow of the earlier system was kept up in 
a formal election of the person so appointed, and in the publication 
of his name from the pulpit of the cathedral, to which announce- 
ment the people replied by acclamations and wishes of long life to 
their new pastor.^ 

(3.) The Frankish sovereigns, in their continual movements, 
required a staff* of clergy to attend on them for the performance 
of Divine service. At the head of this body was placed the Arch- 
chaplain, whose oflBce became one of great importance. Sometimes 

" Capit Aquisgr. a.d. 817, c. 2. See represented by the Centuriators and 

Rettb. ii. 607. Baronins, who say " ipsum mendacii 

■ See the Formularies of Marculf, i. arguit et objurgat." See Bouquet, v. 

5-7 (Patrol. Ixxxvii.) ; Planck, ii. 119; 570; Patrol, xcviii. 416-8. 
Guizot, ii. 320 ; Ellendorf, i. 239. There » C. 19. 

was some difference between Adrian p Cone. Tolet. XII. c. 6. See Tho- 

and Charlemagne on the subject of a massin, II. ii. 15; Schrockh, xix. 414. 
commissioner being sent to attend the i Wilkins, i. 57. 
election of an archbishop for Ravenna '' Kemble, ii. 221. 
in 789. But the pope's objection to * Epp. 48-9. See Lingard, A. S. C. i. 

this went no farther than pointing out 9''2-3 ; Blackstone, i. 380. 
that it had not been done on a former *■ Planck, ii. 122; Lingard, A. S. C. 

occasion; and the tone of his letter, 11.24; Lappenb. i. 183; Kemble, ii. 

which is very respectful, is greatly mis- 377. 



192 COQNCILS. Book III. 

it was filled by a presbyter ; sometimes by a bishop, who, in such 
a case, required a special dispensation for absence from his diocese ; 
but, whether bishop or presbyter, the archchaplain stood next in 
dignity to the family of the sovereign, and at synods he took pre- 
cedence even of archbishops. Combining the functions of chancellor 
with those of chaplain, he acted as a minister of the crown for 
spiritual affairs; he received reports from the bishops as to the 
state of their churches, prepared the king's ecclesiastical capitularies 
and other documents, and conducted his correspondence on matters 
which concerned the church.^ Such being his position, it depended 
on individual character whether the archchaplain should sway the 
prince in the interest of the hierarchy, or* the prince should by 
means of him obtain a control over the administration of the 
church.* 

(4.) The mixture of clergy and laity in the Frankish councils 
has been already mentioned.^ The capitularies bear a marked 
impress of clerical influence ; * but it was often possible for sove- 
reigns, by the help of their lay vassals, to overrule the proposals of 
the bishops as to ecclesiastical afiairs, or to carry measures not- 
withstanding their opposition.* Sometimes, however, the clergy 
were assembled by themselves, as at Verne or Verneuil, in 755, 
where abbots for the first time appear as members of a Frankish 
council.** 

In Spain, from the time when king Recared and his nobles 
appeared at Toledo, for the purpose of arranging the change from 
Arianism to the catholic faith (a.d. 589), mixed councils of clergy 
and laityy- summoned by the sovereign, were frequently held.'' 
At the earlier sessions of these, from the seventeenth council of 
Toledo, in 694, the affairs of the church were first discussed by the 
bishops and abbots, without the presence of the laity ; but on the 
fourth day, the nobles, the judges, and others, were called in to 
take a part in their deliberations."^ 

Among the Anglo-Saxons, the kings and other laymen attended 
ecclesiastical synods, while the bishops sat in the wittenagemotes, 
or national assemblies. The part which the laity took, however, 

■ Adaihard. de Ordine Palatii, ap. " Planck, ii. 148. 
Hincmar. t. ii. 206-8 ; Thomass. I. ii. »» Rettb. ii. 626. 

110; Pagi, xiii. 169; Planck, ii. 150; « Cone. Tolet. IV. ad. 589, c. 4; 

Luden, v. 152-3; Ducange, s. voc. Ca- Lembke, i. 85. 

peilanfts, where a list of the archchaplains ** Cone. Tolet. XVII. c. 1 ; Schrockh, 

is given. xix. 462; Planck, ii. 144; Gibbon, iii. 

* Planck, ii. 149-152; Guizot, ii. 32. 420-2. On the clerical influence trace- 

J' See vol. i. 556 ; vol. ii. . able in the ancient Spanish laws, see 

■ Sismondi, ii. 176-8; Guizot, ii. Guizot, i. 488. 
226-7. 



cmf.ix. judicature. 193 

in councils, did not extend to matters purely spiritual, although it 
was for the wittenagemote to confirm, by the authority of law, the 
decisions of the clergy in such matters.*^ Bishops took precedence 
of the lay nobility ; and sometimes the archbishops signed the acts 
of synods before the king himself, as was the case at Chalchythe 
m 785/ 

(5.) The claims of the ecclesiastical and secular judicatures in 
France were variously settled by successive enactments. It may 
be said in general, that, while the clergy were not amenable to 
secular judgment in questions between members of their own 
order, or in the case of ecclesiastical offences, the trial of questions 
between clerks and laymen belonged to a mixed tribunal of lay 
and spiritual judges.* Priests and deacons were in no case to 
be tried except with the bishop's knowledge or co-operation; 
and in important criminal charges, this privilege was extended to 
the lower clergy.** The principle of mixed tribunals was approved 
by Charlemagne ; * and although he seems to have in some of his 
laws exempted the clergy from all secular judgment in questions 
which concerned their own persons,*^ this exemption was far short 
of that for which the high hierarchical party contended at a later 
time. For in cases which related to the possessions of clergymen, 
the secular judges still had a share ;™ the right of judicature was 
not regarded as inherent in the episcopal office, but as granted, 
and therefore revocable, by the sovereign, so that in the ninth 
century bishops are threatened with the loss of it if they neglect 
to exercise it rightly ;° and from metropolitans, as from secular 
judges, the appeal lay to the emperor, beyond whom there was no 
appeal.** Among the Franks, as formerly under the Roman 
empire, there were many canons to prohibit clerks from carrying 
their grievances to the sovereign, without abiding the judgment 
of their immediate superiors, or obtaining the leave of these.P 

* Joyce, England's Sacred Synods, judgment. (See vol. i., p. 297.) By 
127. some it is considered a forgery j Gieseler 

'Johnson, i. 2S4; Planck, ii. 146; thinks that it may be a genuine Y'ui/oMu; 

Soames, 2G7. law. See Gies. II. i. 79-80 ; Hallum, 

t Cone. Paris, a.d. 614, c. 4; Edict. Middle Ages, i. 5(i8, and Suppl. Notes, 

Clotar. ap. Hard. iii. 654 ; Capit. Aquisgr. 183. 

A.D. 789, c 28 ; Planck, ii. 1 62-8 ; Rettb. ^ Capit. a.d. 789, c. 38 ; Capit. Langob. 

ii. 640. A.D. 80S, c 12 ; Giesel. II. i. 77 ; Miche* 

* Pertz, Leges, i. 34 ; Rettb. ii. 640-1. let. ii. 38. 

» Capit. Fraucof. a.d. 794, c. 30. It ■ Capit. Langob. a.d. 803, c. 12. 

is agreed that Charlemagne was not the » Carol. Calv. Capit. a.d. 8C9, c. 7, 
author of a law ascribed to him, and ' Patrol, cxxxviii. 733; Planck, ii. 171. 

dated in 810 (Hard. iii. 940-1), renew- *» Cone. Francof. a.d. 794, c. 6 ; De 

ing the pretended law of Constantine, Marca, IV. vii. 1 ; Planck, ii. 171, 179, 

by which one party in a suit might 180, 189 ; Giesel. II. i. 57, 78. 

ct>//i/>tf/ the other to submit to the bishop's f E. g. Cone. Paris, a.d. 614, c. 3; 

O 



1 94 llETBOrOUTAKS. Book UI. 

Gotaire IL, in his edict of 614, ordered that no such recourae to 
the king should be allowed, except in order to sue for pardon ; but 
the royal letter of pardon was a protection against all punishment, 
and the bishops were bound to obey it.^ 

In Spain^ canons are found which forbid ecclesiastics to judge in 
cases of blood, or to inflict mutilation of the members/ 

In England, the judgment of clerks was as yet on the same 
footing with that of tlie laity.' But this was before a mixed 
tribunal — the bishop sitting in the county-court, with the ealdorman 
or (mrl, as the priests of the old Saxon heathenism had done/ 
T\ui iMipal legates at the council of Chalchythe objected to this 
custom, us tending to implicate the bishops too much in worldly 
afFaini.'^ Notwithstanding their remonstrance, however, the prac- 
timi UHofiiliK^HH of the system secured its continuance, until the 
spiritual jurisdiction was separated from the secular by William the 
Con(|ueror, at the instance of his Norman ecclesiastical advisers.^ 

III. The Hierarchy, — Administration of the Church, 

(1.) The metropolitan organisation had originally grown out of 
an analogy with the civil divisions of the Roman empire. In the 
Frankish kingdom, where no such division existed, the system fell 
into decay,y and, although Boniface, under the authority of Pope 
Zacharias, and with the countenance of Pipin and Carloman, 
attempted to restore it, his success was very imperfect.* Charle- 
magne, when at Rome in 774, was urged by Adrian to undertake 
the revival of the metropolitan jurisdiction,* and established it not 
only in his original dominions, but in those which he acquired.** 
But the new metropolitans had not the same influence as those 
of earlier times. In the national assemblies the metropolitan met 
the suflragan bishops as his peers, and a suffragan might by 
character or ability become more important than his ecclesiastical 
superior ; while the growing connexion between France and Rome, 
and the increase of the papal power, drew the Frankish clergy to 

Cone Rem. a.d. 625 (or 630), c. 18; " Cone. Chalch. a.d. 785, c. 10. 

Gone. Cabilon. a.d. 650, c. 15; Cone. * Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 102 ; Kemble, 

Vera. A.D. 755, c. 18. ii. 384. See below, Book V. c v. 

•» Hard. iii. 55*. Against the con- ^ See vol. i. p. 556. 

struction which would limit the effect ■ See Zachar. Ep. 8, c. 1 (Patrol, 

of the pardon to civil offences, see Ixxxix.) ; Cone. Vera. a.d. 755, c. 2 ; 

Planck, ii. 190-2. Pagi, xii. 495 ; Thomass. I. i. 33 ; 

' Cone. Tolet. IV. a.d. 633, c. 31 ; Planck, ii. 639-641. 

Cone. Tolet. XI. a.d. 675, c. 6. • Adr. Ep. 55 (Patrol, xcvi.) 

• Planck, ii. 175; Kemble, ii. 437. ^ Capit. a.d. 779 (Peru, Le^, i. 

• Lingard, A. S. C. i. 101 ; Loppenb. 36) ; Capit. a.d. 789, c. 8 ; Pagi, xiii. 
i. 577 ; Kemble, ii. 385. 98. 



Chap. IX. CHOREPISCOPI. 195 

look beyond their metropolitans to the yet higher authority of 
the popes.*^ 

(2.) In the eighth and ninth centuries we find frequent mention of 
Chorepiscopi — a title which in this period has some variety of applica- 
tion. Of those who were subject to the diocesan bishops, some had 
episcopal consecration, while the greater number were merely pres- 
byters, enjoying a delegated authority in rural places.* But besides 
these, there are frequent denunciations of chorepiscopi who were in 
the habit of wandering about, without any local authority, and of 
interfering with the rights of the established bishops by conferring 
orders and performing other episcopal acts.* The chorepiscopi of 
this class who disturbed the Frankish church were for the most 
part from Ireland,^ where the peculiar system of the Church encou- 
raged the multiplication of bishops without local jurisdiction ; » 
while others may have been consecrated by chorepiscopi who had 
themselves received consecration as assistants to the diocesan 
bishops. But even when the original appointment and consecra^ 
tion were regular, chorepiscopi were often disposed to presume 
beyond their proper function. Charlemagne, in a letter,^ states 
that the proceedings of these persons had caused great trouble 
and scandal ; that priests, deacons, and subdeacons, who had been 
ordained by bishops, denied the validity of orders conferred by 
chorepiscopi ; and that Pope Leo had disallowed the acts of these 
intruders. They are (he continues) not really bishops, since they 
neither have been consecrated by three bishops, nor possess epis- 
copal titles to sees. Ordination, confirmation, veiling of nuns, 
consecration of chmrches and of altars, belong only to diocesan 
bishops, and not to chorepiscopi or presbyters, who correspond to 
the seventy disciples, and not to the Apostles. The emperor says 
that chorepiscopi had been made by bishops in ignorance of eccle- 
siastical decrees, and from a wish to devolve their own labour on 
others ; and he forbids that any should be made in future.* But 
in the following century we again meet with notices of this class — 

« Planck, ii. 649-650. " because we are not certain how or by 

' Zachar. Ep. 8, c. 1; Pagi, xiii. whom they were ordained." (c. 5.) The 

552-3. Comp. vol. i. p. 161. real intention of this canon was to check 

• done. Vera. A.D. 755, c. 13; Giesel. the proceedings of the roving Irish 

II. i. 68. bishops and clergy— not (as has been 

' MabUl. III. XX. supposed) to deny the validity of Irish 

ir See p. 66. The third council of orders. (Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 23.) 

Chalons, a.d. 813, speaks of "Scots" Johnson wrongly applies it to the Scots 

as ordaining irregularly, and declares of the North, i. 3ii2-3. 

such ordination to be void. (c. 43.) A *• Hard. iii. 946-950. 

council at Chalchythe, in 816, forbade • lb. ; Rettb. ii. CO'J. 

'* Scots" to officiate in English dioceses. 



196 ARCHDEACONS — ARCHPRIESTS. Book 111. 

most commonly in the way of censure, or of prohibition from 
exceeding the limits of their commission.*^ 

(3.) Towards the end of the eighth century, the office of arch- 
deacon acquired a new character and importance. In earlier 
times, there had been only one archdeacon in each diocese ; but, 
with a view to a better superintendence of the clergy, the dioceses 
of the Prankish empire were now divided into archdeaconries,"* in 
which the archdeacons, although themselves only deacons, had 
jurisdiction over presbyters, and exerpised all the ordinary admi- 
nistration, except such acts as especially belonged to the episcopal 
order .° The office became so lucrative that laymen attempted to 
intrude into it — an abuse which was forbidden by a capitulary of 
805,® and by many canons of later date.P As the archdeacons 
were not removable except for some grave oflFence,^ it was soon 
found that many of them endeavoured to render themselves 
independent of their bishops ; ' and from canons of the ninth 
century it would appear that their exactions, and the insolence of 
their followers, were severely felt by the clergy subject to their 
jurisdiction/ 

(4.) The archdeaconries of the new organisation were divided 
into deaneries {decaime\ each under an archpriest or rural-dean 
{archi-fresbyter)} The clergy of each deanery met on the first of 
every month,^ for conference on spiritual and ecclesiastical afikirs. 
The conference was followed by a dinner ; but complaints soon 
arose that these entertainments led to excesses, which more than 
counterbalanced the benefits of the meeting. Hincmar, archbishop 

k E, g. Cone. Worm. a.d. 829, c. 6 625, c. 19 ; Cone. Cabilon. a.d. 650, 

(Pertz, Leges, i.) ; Cone. Meld. a.d. 845, e. 5. 

c. 44. SeeDe Marea, II. 14, who traces i Planek, ii. 591. 

their continuanee to the circumstance ''lb. 594-5 ; iii. 769. 

that their ordinations, althongh pro- * See Capit. Wormat aj>. 829, c. 7 ; 

hibited, were not annulled ; alsoGfrorer, Cone. Aquisgr. II. a.d. 836, c. 4; Hinc- 

*Die Karolinger/ i. 258. mari Capitula, c. 1, a.d. 877 (Opera, i. 

■ Planck, ii. 585-7. ITie arrange- 738) ; Planck, iii. 774. 

ment is usually ascribed to Heddo, bishop *■ Thomass. I. ii. 1, 5; II. i. 3.5, 3; 

of Strasburg, who is said to have formed Planck, ii. 58G-7. The council of Pavia, 

his diocese into seven archdeaconries, under the emperor Louis II., a.d. 850, 

with the consent of Pope Adrian, in orders that archpriests should be every- 

774. (Patrol, xcvi. 1243; Planck, ii. where established. Bishops must not 

589-590 ; Giesel. II. i. 67-8.) But object, on the ground that they are 

Rettberg says that the documents on themselves equal to the whole care of 

which this statement rests are spurious, their dioceses ; but the archpriests most 

ii. 69. be strictly subject to them, and must 

" Thomass. II. i. 19, 9; Augusti, make reports to them. (c. 13.) This 

xi. 209. order was renewed in a capitulary of 

• C. 15 (Pertz, Leges, i. 132.) the emperor Lambert, a.d. 898, c. 12 ; 

p See Planck, iii. 771-2, Similar ca- Pertz. Leges, i. 565. 

nons against the invasion even of paro- « Hence the meetings were styled 

chial cures by laymen are found under Kalendte. Ducange, s. v., p. 962. 
the Merovingians. Cone. Rem. a.d. 



Cbaf.IX. episcopal VISITATIONS. 197 

of Rheims, in his injunctions of 852, found it necessary to denounce 
the ahuse, and to lay down rules for moderation, restricting the 
allowance of the clergy on such occasions to three cups for each.* 

(5.) The bishops were required to visit throughout their dioceses 
every year.^ The expense of entertaining them on their circuits 
was often complained of by the clergy ; with a view to limiting it, 
the seventh council of Toledo ordered tliat the bishop should not 
on such occasions take more than five (or, according to another 
reading, fifty) horses in his train, and that his stay in each parish 
should not exceed one day.* But even after this limitation, the 
expense continued to be heavy, as appears from the list of pro- 
visions required by a Lombard capitulary of 855, which includes 
a hundred loaves, four large swine, a lamb, a pig, fifty pints of 
wine, and a sufficiency of honey, oil, and wax.^ Louis the Pious, 
in 829, charges his commissioners to inquire whether the bishops 
in their visitations are burdensome to the clergy .*» A capitulary of 
Charles the Bald, in 844, denounces the misbehaviour which was 
common among the attendants of bishops when on visitation, and 
provides that the clergy of five neighbouring parishes shall combine 
to supply provisions for the usual hospitality to their diocesan. 
The priest at whose house the entertainment is held is to contri- 
bute in the same proportion as the others, with " perhaps " the 
addition of firewood and utensils.^ The third council of Valence, 

^ C. 15 (Opera, i. 7U). Compare the proving the archbishop hecause after this 

statutes of Kiculf, bishop of Soissons, order he had taken 70 men in addition 

forty years later, c 20 (Patrol, cxxxi.). to 40 horses (ib. Ep. 1498). The same 

y Capit. A.D. 769, c. 7 ; Cone Arelat. pope wrote to the clergy of Berkshire 
A.D. 813, c. 17; Thomass. III. iii. 6. that they were not boundto supply their 
These yisitations were called Scnde—K archdeacon with dogs or hawks, to re- 
word which is usually supposed to be a ceive him more than once a year, or oo 
corruption of Synodi, (Giesel. II. i. 73.) such occasions to furnish him with more 
But Augnsti (ix. 124) and Rettberg (ii. than was necessary for a day and a 
742) prefer to deduce it from an analogy night for himself and a train of 7 horses, 
between the episcopal visitation and that 7 *' persons," and 7 foot-servants (£p. 
of X\ie missm ot Sendiiraf, The articles 1371.) One of Becket's correspondents 
of inquiry drawn up for bishops by Re- says of the bishop of Nevers, ** Qui in 
gino are curious. See Patrol, cxxxii. terra sua quituUcitn esset contentus, apud 
187-191. nos [scil. in Normannia] triginta sex 

» Cone. Tolet VII., a.d. 646, c. 4. equitaturas adducit." (Patrol, cxc. 727.) 

The authority of MSS^ is in favour of May not quindenarium be possibly the 

quinquwjenarifun, although editors and true reading of the Toledo canon? 

other writers generally prefer quinarium, • Capit. Ticiu. c 16 (Perti, Leges, i. 

But if the higher number be too large, 432). 

the lower seems hardly large enough ** Hard. iv. 1282. 

to be fixed as an extreme. Five hundred « C. 4. Planck says that by this ca- 

years later we find Pope Alexander III. pitulary the laity might be asked to join 

ordering that the archbishop of Sens in bearing the cost. (ii. 617.) But the 

shall not burden the abbey of St. Ger- real meauinc is, that the clergy should 

main des Pr^ by taking more than 40 take some of the laity with them to the 

horses and 44 men on his visitation of visitation, 
it (Ep. 1286, 1439; Patrol, cc.), and re* 



198 PARISHES — LOCAL TIES OF CLERGY. BcxwIIL 

in 855, censures an abuse which some bishops had introduced by 
exacting visitation-dues of their clergy at times when they omitted 
to visit.** 

(6.) The parochial system was not yet completely organised in 
the Frankish church ; the people in country places were often 
dependent for divine offices on the clergy of the cathedral city, 
or on the chaplain of some neighbouring castle.* The division of 
England into parishes has (as we have already seen) been ascribed 
to the Greek archbishop, Theodore ; but, whatever his share in 
promoting it may have been, the general establishment of the 
system appears to have been slowly and gradually effected.^ 

(7.) With a view of enforcing ecclesiastical discipline, it was 
attempted by frequent enactments to bind the clergy by strict 
local ties. No sti-anger was to be admitted to officiate without 
producing letters of license and recommendation from his bishop.^ 
Fugitive clerks were to be examined and sent home;^ wandering 
clergy or monks, who disturbed the church by teaching error, or 
by raising unnecessary questions, were to be apprehended, carried 
before the metropolitan, and put to suitable penance ; * all the 
clergy of a diocese were to be subject to the bishop's jurisdiction.*' 
Presbyters were obliged to remain in the diocese where they were 
ordained ; some councils required a promise that they would do 
so,™ and Charlemagne even imposed an oath to that efFect.** No 
bishop was to receive a clerk from another diocese, or to promote 
him to a higher degree ; but, while this was absolutely forbidden 
in a capitulary for France, the corresponding enactment for 
Lombardy allows it with the consent of the bishop to whose 
didcese the clerk had belonged.** And it is evident, from facts 
which continually meet us in history and biography, that with 
such consent it was not unusual for clergymen to pass from one 
diocese, or even from one kingdom, to another. 

(8.) During the earlier ages, ordination had not been conferred 
without a title (i. e. without assigning a particular sphere of labour), 
except in rare and extraordinary instances, such as that of St 

«» C. 22. * Cone. Vera. a.d. 755, cc. 8, 11; 

• Milman, n. 232. Capit. a.d. 779, c. 4; Capit a.d. 802, 

' See p. 73 ; Collier, i. 540-6; Bing- c. 12. 
ham, IX. Tiii. 4 ; Blackstone, i. 99-100; ™ Cone. Valent A.D. 524, c. 6; Gone 
Lingard, A. S. C. i. 156-7. Hispal. II. a.d. 619, c. 3, and other 

f Cone. Aquisgr. a.d. 789, c. 3 ; Cone. Spanish councils cited by Planck, ii. 
Francof. a.d. 794, c. 28; Cone. Turon. 575-6 ; Capit. Aquisgr. a.d. 801, c. 13. 
A.D. 813, c. 13. » Cap. Aquisgr. a.d. 789, c 24, &c. 

''See Perta, Leges, i. 36, c. 6, aj>. 
779. 



•» Cone. Mo^nt. a.d. 813, c. 31. 
* Couc. Ticm. a.d. 850, c. 21. 



Chap. IX. ACEPHALOUS CLERKS — CHAPLAINS. 1 99 

Jerome.'* The same rule was now often re-enacted ;^ but an 
exception was necessarily made in the case of missionaries, and 
was by degrees extended to other cases. Although the ancient 
canons as to the requisites for ordination were still in force, an 
important novelty was introduced, after the sixth century, by 
means of the tonsure. This was regarded as conferring the 
character of a clerk, without ordination to any particular grade 
of the ministry ; and thus clerks were made in great numbers, 
without any regard to the canonical conditions or impediments of 
ordination.' It may easily be conceived that much disorder was 
introduced by these "acephalous" (or headless) clerks, who 
enjoyed the immunities of the clerical state without being bound 
by its obligations.' 

(9.) The example of the royal household in France induced 
persons of rank to establish domestic chaplains.* These were often 
disposed to set the bishops at defiance ; and it appears from the 
testimony of many councils that the institution had an unfavourable 
effect on the religion of the people in general. It is represented 
that the absence of the lord from the parish-church encourages his 
dependents to absent themselves ; that the clergy have no oppor- 
tunity of enforcing the duties of the rich and powerful ; " and there 
are frequent complaints of attempts to withdraw the ecclesiastical 
dues from the bishops and parochial clergy, in order to provide 
for the chaplains by means of them.* But in addition to these 
evils, the chaplains were usually persons of low and disreputable 
character; they were miserably paid, disrespectfully treated by 
their employers, and required to perform degrading services-^ 
The position and habits of chaplains were found to bring discredit 
on the whole body of the clergy, and hence Agobard, archbishop 
of Lyons, in the reign of Louis the Pious, felt himself called on to 
write a treatise in vindication of " the privilege and rights of the 
priesthood." After showing from Scripture the estimation in 
which the clergy ought to be held, he proceeds by way of contrast 
to describe the abuses of his own time. Every person of any pre- 
tension to station, he says, then kept a priest of his own — " not 
to obey him, but continually to exact obedience from him, and that 

p See voL 1. p. 322; Cone. Chalced. * Planck, ii. 89, Gaizot, n. 41-2; 

A.D. 451, c. 6 ; Thomass. I. 2, 34. Neand. v. 150. 

t E. g. Cone. Franeof. a.d. 794, e. 27 ; ■ Capit. Attiniae. a.d. 822 ; Convent. 

Cone. Moeunt. a.d. 813, c. 22. Ticin. 855, c. 3 (PerU, Leges, i.) ; Cone. 

' Planck, ii. 76-8 ; Gaizot, ii. 37. Paris, VI. a.d. 829, c. 47. 

• The Monk of St. Gall, in his life of » E. g. Conv. Ticin. a.d. 855, c. 11. 
Charlemagne (i. 8), styles them Circvm- ^ Cone. Ticin. a.d. 850, c. 18. 
celliona. 



200 CHAPLAINS — ADVOCATES. Book lU. 

in unlawful as well as in lawful things." The chaplains were 
employed to do the work of bailifis, butlers, grooms, or dog- 
keepers, to wait at table, to lead ladies' horses. As no respectable 
clergyman would accept such a position, the patrons, whose chief 
object was to obtain an excuse for deserting the public offices of 
religion, and emancipating themselves* from the control of the 
clergy, cared nothing how gross the ignorance of their chaplains 
might be, or how infamous their lives. They usually took one of 
the serfs on their estates, or procured a person of servile birth for 
the purpose, and were oiFended if the bishop hesitated to ordain 
him as a matter of course.* Even if we might implicitly believe 
all that has lately been written against the English domestic chap- 
lains of the seventeenth century ,'^ it would appear that the class had 
lost nothing in dignity between the age of Agobard and that of 
Eachard. 

(10.) A new species of ecclesiastical officers arose in Gaul 
during the sixth and seventh centuries, under the title oi AdvocateSj 
DefeMor%^ or Vicedomini — a word from which are formed the French 
Vidame and the German Vitzthum}' Except in name^ these bore 
no resemblance to the defensors of the earlier ages \^ the new office 
grew out of the peculiar circumstances of the Prankish church. 
The bishops and clergy required the assistance of force to protect 
them against the outrages of their rough and lawless neighbours. 
Their landed possessions imposed on them duties which were in- 
consistent with their spiritud office, or which, at least, might be 
more conveniently performed by laymen — such as secular judicature, 
(when it was committed to them), and the leading of the contingents 
which their estates were required to furnish to the national army.** 
Moreover, as, by the Germanic laws, none but freemen, capable of 
bearing arms, were entitled to appear in law-suits, the clergy (like 
women, old or infirm persons, and children) required substitutes 
who might appear for them, and, if necessary, might go through 

« Agob. de Privilegio et Jure Sacer- sort of paraUel in some African canons 

dotii, c. II. The CouncU of Worms, in of the fifth century ; bat an examination 

829, in consequence of the complaints of them will show that he is mistaken, 

which had been made against bishops See Cone. Garth. V. a.d. 401, c 9 (the 

for refusing ordination to chaplains, same with Can. 75 of the African code); 

enacts that laymen shall choose nt per- Cone. Milev. II. a.d. 416, c 16. In the 

sons, and that bishops shaU not reject first of these, Planck alters the appli- 

candidates without assigning some evi- cation by reading ipsis (the bishops) for 

dent reason, c. 16 (Pertz, Leges, i.) da (the poor). For the early Defensors, 

• Macaulay, Hist of England, i. 326- see vol. i. p. 553. 

7, ed. 4 ; Thackeray's * Esmond.* ^ Dncange, s. vv. Advocatiis, Vicedonu- 

•» Schrockh, xxvii. 107. nus ; Planck, ii. 454-0 ; Hallam, Midd. 

<^ Planck, ii. 453. This writer finds a Ages, i. 143 ; GieseL II. i. 76-7. 



Chap. IX PATRONAGE. 201 

the ordeal of battle in their behalf.* For such purposes it was 
necessary to call in the aid of some neighbouring layman, dis- 
tinguished by influence or by personal prowess ; and his scr^ces 
were usually recompensed by the use of lands belonging to the 
church, and adjacent to his own, in addition to a share of the fines 
inflicted in his court, and to other pecuniary dues.' The appoint- 
ment of an advocate was at first a voluntary act ; but Charlemagne 
ordered that every church should be provided with such a champion. 
The qualifications for the oflSce were very particularly defined, with 
a view of guarding against misconduct or encroachment ; and the 
advocates were subject to the inspection of the imperial commis- 
sioners.* The sovereign assigned advocates to churches which 
were themselves unable to find any. As such grants had the 
nature of a favour, the advocates thus appomted required higher 
terms than those whom churches chose for themselves ; and from 
tliem the others gradually learnt to assume a superiority over the 
ecclesiastical bodies with which they were connected, to claim dues 
which absorbed a large portion of the revenues, and to become 
tyrants instead of protectors,** both to the clergy and to their 
tenants. It was not, however, until after the period which we are 
now surveying that their relation to the church assumed this 
character. 

(11.) Another encroachment on the church arose out of the 
system of lay patronage, which had become general throughout 
the west' In some cases, the right of presentation to a church 
expired with the founder, while in others it was continued to his 
representatives.^ But patrons were not always content with the 
power of nominating clerks. Sometimes the builder of a church 
reserved to himself a certain portion of its revenues ; sometimes 
the church was built on speculation — the founder expecting to get 
more than a reimbursement from tlie oblations, while he made a 
composition to pay the incuml>ent a certain allowance." Against 
this practice canoQs were directed, which forbad bishops to con- 
secrate churches erected on such conditions ; " but the patron was 
considered to have a legal interest in the preservation and right 
disposal of the property belonging to his church." Charlemagne 

• Planck, ii. 455-7 ; Rettb. ii. 611-2. rich IV.,' i. 83. 

' Ducange, s. ▼. Advocatas, p. 107 ; 'See vol. i. p. 554. 
Planck, ii. 459, 463. ^ Planck, ii. 623-5. 

K Capit, A.D. 783, c. 3 ; A.D. 802, " Planck, ii. 634 ; Lingard, A. S. C. 

c. 13. i. \92; Rettb. ii. 617. 

^ Ducange, 8. ▼. ilrfiw. p. 108; Planck, ■ Cone. Bracar. a.d. 572, c. 6. 
ii. 464-6 ; Rettb. ii. 616 ; Floto, * Hein- » Planck, ii. 627 ; Rettb. ii. 617. 



202 SIMONY. Book UI. 

allows the sale of churches ;^ and Louis the Pious enacted that, if 
the incumbent of a church should have a surplus of income, he 
should pay "due service" to his landlord.** The division of 
inheritance was sometimes carried into the disposal of church- 
patronage, so that an " altar " might be divided into several por- 
tions, belonging to a like number of priests : ' such divisions were 
forbidden by a capitulary of Louis the German, in 85 L' 

A canon of the fourth Council of Toledo provides that, if 
the founder or benefactor of a church, or his descendants, fall 
into poverty, an allowance shall be made to them out of its 
revenues.* 

The question of patronage was a fruitful source of disagree- 
ments between bishops and secular lords." Canons were passed 
for the purpose of guarding against abuses on both sides — 
enacting that no layman should present or eject a clerk without 
the consent of the bishop ; while, on the other hand, the bishop 
was forbidden to reject a presentee except on good and valid 
grounds.* 

(12.) In the beginning of the period, we find many denuncia- 
tions of simony in the writings of Gregory the Great. He complains 
of this "first of heresies," this " buying and selling of doves in the 
temple," as prevailing in all quarters — in Gaul, in Germany, in 
Africa, in Greece and Epirus, in the patriarchates of Alexandria, 
Antioch, and Jerusalem i^ and he continually urges both princes 
and high ecclesiastics to join with him in labouring to suppress it 
But in defiance of all denunciations and penalties, the evil con- 
tinued, and from age to age there are frequent complaints both 
against patrons who, for the sake of gifts, nominated worthless 
persons to ecclesiastical office, and against bishops who corruptly 
conferred ordination.* 

(13.) The Frankish church continued to increase in wealth. 
Estates, sometimes of very great extent, were bestowed on it with 
the declared object of securing for the giver the remission of his 
sins and the salvation of his soul.^ And the inducements to make 

p Capit. Francof. a.d. 794, c. 54 (Pa- 813); Capit. a.d. 817, c. 9 ; Thomass. 

trol. xcvii.). II. i. 31. 

1 Capit. A.D. 817, c. 10. r E. g. Epp. v. 53, 55, 57 ; vi. 8 ; ix. 

' Thomass. II. i. 31-4. 49, 106; xi. 46 ; xii. 28 ; xiii. 41 ; Horn. 

* C. 5. Cf. Couc. Tribur. a.d. 895, in Evang. I. iv. 4. 

c. 32. « E. g. Capit. a.d. 789, c. 21 ; Cone. 

* Cone. Tolet. IV., a.d. 633, c. 38. Mog. a.d. 813, c. 30 ; Cone. Rem. a.d. 
** Rettb. ii. 618. 813, c. 21 ; and some of the canons cited 

* Capit. A.D. 809 (Pertz, Leges, i. in note above. 

161); Cone. Arclat. c. 4; Cone. Mo- • See Marcalfs Formalaries, ii. 2, 
gunt c. 29; Cone. Turon. c. 15^all in seqq. (Patrol. Ixxxvii.) 



Obat. IX. PRECARLE — TITHES. 203 

such donations were increased by the system of precarums con- 
tracts — so called because the giver, in endowing the church with 
his lands, prayed that the use of them might be allowed him for 
his lifetime, or perliaps that it might be continued to one or more 
persons in succession after him.^ Thus many who would have 
scrupled to deprive themselves of the income arising from an estate, 
were enabled to perform an act of bounty without expense to 
themselves, or even to make a profit by it; for the church, in 
consideration of the reversion assured to itself, in many cases 
allowed a donor to enjoy not only his own land, but other lands of 
perhaps much greater value than that which was eventually to 
pass from his heirs.* With a view to the limitation of this abuse, 
it was enacted by the council of Epemay, in 846, that a donor of 
land should not be allowed to receive more than twice the value 
of his gift by way of addition ; that kings should not sanction 
precarious contracts except at the request of the church ; and that, 
agreeably to ancient custom, the contract should require renewal 
every fifth year."* 

(14.) The lands of the church were cither cultivated by its 
serfs for the benefit of the owners, or they were let to tenants, 
whether free or servile, who paid a fixed proportion of the produce 
by way of rent.® In addition to these lands and to the oblations, 
tlie ecclesiastical revenues were now swelled by the general impo- 
sition of tithes. Under the old Roman system, a tenth of the 
produce of land was paid by the coloid to the state as rent ; and 
when lands were granted on this condition to a corporation, a 
second tenth — a ninth of the remaining produce — was paid by 
the tenant to whom it was underlet. Tliese two payments were 
known by the name of " tenths and ninths " (decimce et n<moe)J 
The church, as a large holder of lands under the state, exacted 
the ninths from its tenants ; while sometimes, by special grant, 
it was excused from the payment of the fiscal tenth, and conse- 
quently was entitled to receive tenths as well as ninths for its own 
benefit.* 

The ecclesiastical or Levitical tithe was a third charge, distinct 
from these rent-payments.** The earliest canon which required 

I* They were also styled pnrstaria, be- was sometimes continaed to one or more 

cause the church lent the lands on the successors. Ducange, s. v. Precana, 
terms proposed. Rettb. ii. 704. See >* C 22. See Pertz, Leges, i. 388, 

Marcolf, ii. 40, and many forms in the 390. 
appendix ; Thomass. III. i. 8 ; Gnizot, « Rettb. ii. 718-720. 
iii. 26. Ducange, s. vv. Prattaria, Pre- ' Rettb. ii. 708-710; Giesel. II. i. 74. 
carui. K Rettb. ii. 627-633, 710, 713. 

' Planck, ii. 390-4 ; Rettb. ii. 704-5. >> See Giesel. II. i. 74 ; DoUinger, ii. 

See Marcalf, IL 39. The additional grant 32; and Rettb. ii. 711-5, with hu cita- 



204 TITHES. Book HI 

it was passed, by the council of Macon, in 585.* But it would 
seem that this canon had little effect, and no attempt to reinforce 
it was made by the Prankish councils during the remainder of 
the Merovingian period.^ Pipin for the first time added the autho- 
rity of the secular power to that of the church for the exaction 
of tithes;" but little was done until the reign of Charlemagne, 
who, by a capitulary of 779, enacted that they should be paid." 
The payment was enforced, not only by excommunication, but 
by heavy civil penalties, graduated according to the obstinacy of 
the delinquent;^ and the obligation was extended to the newly- 
acquired territories beyond the Rhine, where (as we have already 
seen) it had the effect of exciting a strong prejudice against the 
Christian faith.^ The council of Prankfort (a.d. 794) represents 
the opposition to tithes as one of the offences by which a late 
scarcity had been provoked; devils, it is said, bad been seen 
devouring the hoarded com of those who refused the church its 
due, and voices had been heard in the air, uttering reproof of the 
general sin.^ 

The tithe had at first been exacted only for com. It was then 
extended to other productions of the soil, such as flax and wine, 
and in some places to the increase of animals. The enactments 
of Charlemagne's time usually speak of it as payable on the 
"whole property;"' but it was long before the clergy succeeded 
in establishing a general compliance with their claims in this 
respect 

The capitulary of 829 forbids the receiver of tithe to give the 
payers food, or any other consideration which might lead them to 
suppose that the payment depended on their own vrill.' 

In England, tithes appear not to have been enforced until 
about the end of Bede's lifetime.* But soon after this, they are 
mentioned in the Excerptions of Egbert, archbishop of York;" 
and Boniface, whose exertions contributed to the establishment of 
the impost among the Pranks and their dependents, is a witness 
for the payment of tithes in his native country.* 

tions from the capitularies of 779, the •» Capit. Langob. a.d. 803, c. 19 ; 

councils of Frankfort and Mcntz, &c. (ib.) ; Giesel. II. i. 74. 

I C. 5. See vol. i. p. 555. p See p. Ul. « C. 25. 

k As to a council at Rouen, in^hich ' E. g. Capit. Aquifgr. a.d. 801, c. 6 ; 

passed a canon for tithes, and is wn>n^ly Planck, ii. 419-23; Rettb. ii. 716. 

referred to this period, see Hefele, lii. • Cc. 5, 7 (Peru, Leges, i.) 

89. * A.D. 730. See Lingard, A. S. C. i. 

" Encycl. de Letaniis faciendis, a.d. 183. 

765 (Patrol, xcvi.. 1519) ; Rettb. ii. ■ No. 43. Johnson, i. 229 (a.d. 740). 

714. * Ep. ad. Cudberct. (Patrol. Ixxxix. 

» C. 7 (Pcrtz, Leges, i.) 767) ; Kemble, ii. 480. There has been 



Chap. IX. BENEFICES — DIVISION OF FUNDS. 205 

(15.) The abase by which the Frankish princes granted the 
beneficial use of church-lands to laymen had defied the eflbrts of 
Boniface, and continued throughout the reign of Charlemagne. 
The holders of such benefices ^ were now required by canons to 
pay tenths and ninths to the church, and also to repair, or con- 
tribute to repair, the churches which were situated on their lands.' 
But it would appear that great difficulty was found in enforcing 
the canons against this powerful class ; the council of Tours, in 
the last year of the reign, states that complaints had often been 
made to the missi of their neglect to pay tenths and ninths, but 
that such complaints met with no attention.^ 

(16.) The disposal of the church's income was still in the hands 
of the bishops ; but in the new kingdoms of the West the deacons 
did not, as such, take the same part in the administration of it 
by which their order had become so important in the earlier 
ages.** The steward {oecmomus), by whom the bishop was assisted 
in this part of his administration, might be either a deacon or a 
priest ; his dignity was next to that of the bishop, and he had the 
guardianship of the see when vacant.*^ In some places the division 
of the funds was q^jtadripartite— one portion being assigned to the 
bishop and his household, one to the rest of the clergy, one to the 
poor and strangers, and one to the fabric and expenses of the church ; 
in other places, it was tripartite — a third to the bishop, one to the 
clergy, and one to the necessities of the church.** The tripartite 
division was known as the Spanish custom ; the quadripartite, as 
the Roman:® and bishops are found announcing that, although 
entitled to the third part which was prescribed by the canon of 
Toledo, they will be content with a quarter, agreeably to the 
us^ige of Rome.' The bishops were sometimes charged by the 

much discussion as to a grant by which * Cone. Francof. a.d. 794, cc. 2.5-6 ; 

Ethelwulf, the father of Alfred, in 854- Cone. Mogunt. a.d. 813, c. 42; Cone. 

5. bestowed some kind of tenth on the Arel. a.d. 813, c. 25. 

church. (Asser, in Mon. Hist. Brit * C. 33. 

470; Ang. Sax. Chron. a.d. 855.) This •» Planck, ii. 445-7. See vol. i.pp. 157, 

has been described as the first English 300. 

law for the general payment of tithes « Thomass. III. ii. 8-9. 

(Inett, i. 271-280); but the best autho- * See Cone. Tolet. IV. a.d. 633, c. 

rities consider that it related, not to 33; Capit. a.d. 799, c. 13; Capit. 

tithes i>ayable by the king's subjects, Aquisgr. a.d. 801, c. 7, etc. ; Planck, ii. 

but to a tenth part of the crown land 240 ; Kettb. ii. 722. Thomassin men- 

in Wessex. See Spelman's Life of tions other divisions, III. ii. 15-8. 

Alfred, with Heame*s note, Oxf. 1709, ' See Pope Simplictus, Ep. 3, a.d. 475 

p. 22; Lingard, Hist. Eng. i. 175; Hal- (Patrol. Iviii.). Archdeacou Hale, in two 

lam, Snppl. Notes, 181 ; Williams, n. in pamphletspublishedin 1832-3, has shown 

Florent. Wigorn. i. 74. reason for believing that these divisions 

7 This was the only sense of the word never existed in England. 

baiejice then known. Ducange, s. v. Be- ' E, <j, Heito, of Basel, about a.d. 820, 

nefidum; Fleury, Disc ii. c 8. See Capit. 15 (Hard. iv. 1243). So the 

Quixot, iiL 22. Lombard bishops at Pavia, a.d. 856, c. 



208 DIVISION OF FUNDS. Boor HI. 

inferior clergy with taking more than their due proportion, and 
from the sixth century downwards canons were passed in order to 
restrain them from doing so.k Even where the full amount of the 
clergy's share was fsurly paid to them as a body, the allowance of 
each individual still depended on the will of the bishop, who thus 
had every clerk at his mercy.** Where the tithe was paid in kind, 
it is probable that some composition was agreed on between the 
local clergy and the bishops, in order to avoid the inconveniences 
of removing it.* The council of Worms, in 829, ordered that 
bishops who had a sufficiency from other property should relinquish 
their canonical share of the tithes for the uses of the church and 
of the poor.'' 

Capitularies were often passed to prevent the payers of tithes 
from taking the disposal of them into their own hands, instead of 
leaving it to the bishops ; and from transferring the payment from 
the church to which it rightfully belonged, to some other, which 
private reasons might lead them to prefer. In such cases, the 
missi were to take care that proper restitution should be made."* 

There is some inconsistency in the enactments of Spanish coun- 
cils as to the dues which should be paid to the bishops. The 
second council of Braga, in 572, forbids«them to take the third 
part of the oblations, and instead of it allows them only a yearly 
payment of two solidi from each parish." The fourth council of 
Toledo, held in 633, under a different government, in enacting 
that the bishop should not take more than a third, makes no 
reference to the canon of Braga. But another council at Toledo, 
in 646, re-enacts that canon ; and one yet later, in 655, reverts to 
the system of allowing the bishop a third.® The exaction of two 
solidi afterwards found its way into France ; but thero, in course 
of time, the bishops, instead of acknowledging it as a substitute for 
the third part, required it as an additional due, under the name of 
Cathedraticum, ^ 

The burdens imposed on the clergy by the expenses of the 

15 (Pertz, L^ges, i.). Such passages leans, a.d. 797, forWds the storing of 

seem to refute the opinion quoted from hay or other crops in churches, c 8 

Fra Paolo by Archd. Hale (i. 21), that (Hard. iv. 914). 

the tripartite and quadripartite divisions ^ C. 5 (Pcrtz, Leges, i.) 

did no more than prescribe the appro- " E. g. Capit, a.d. 828, c. 6 ; Capit. 

priation of portions to certain uses, with- Ticin. a.d. 860, c. 17. 

out requiring that the portions should " C. 2. 

be equal. " Planck, ii. 607-613. 

t Cone. Carpentorat. a.d. 527 (Patrol. p Capit Tolos. a.d. 844, c. 2. It is 

Ixxxiv. 289), and the Spanish councils here prescribed as a substitute for cer- 

cited below. See Planck, ii. 601-2. tain payments in kind. Cf. Dncange, 

^ Planck, ii. 598-60(>. s. v. (\4hcdraticHm ; Planck, ii. 617. 

» lb. 610. Theodulf, bishop of Or- 



CtaAP.lX. TAX Ai;iON — SECULAR EMPLOYMENTS. 207 

bishop's visitation have already been mentioned.** The new insti- 
tution of archdeacons, who claimed dues in right of their office, 
also contributed to impoverish the parochial clergy/ 

(17.) The estates of the church in France, with the exception of 
the parish-priest's manms or glebe," were subject to the payment 
of all the ordinary taxes, unless exempted by special privilege. 
The case was very different in England, where church-land was 
exempt from all but what was styled the "threefold necessity" 
(trinoda necessitas) — the obligation to contribute towards the 
national forces, the building of fortresses, and the expense of 
bridges and highways.* 

(18.) As in earlier ages, canons continued to be passed for- 
bidding the clergy to engage in secular employments." In England, 
the mass^priests were required to learn some handicraft, to practise 
it, and to teach it to their clerks ; not, however, with a view to 
their own gain, but in order that they might avoid the temptations 
of idleness, and might have the means of relieving the poor.* 
And similar orders are found in France and elsewhere/ 

(19.) The high social position of ecclesiastics in the Germanic 
kingdoms appears, from the rates at which their lives were valued. 
The payment known by the name of wehr^ an institution common 
to the whole German race,' was originally intended as a composi- 
tion which should satisfy the relations of a slain person for his life, 
and should re-establish peace between them and the slayer, so that 
the nation might not, on account of private enmities, be deprived 
of the service of its members.* The principle by which the female 
relations of the slain man were excluded from any share of this 
payment — namely tliat they were not capable of carrying on a 
feud — might naturally have been considered as extending to the 
clergy;^ but when these became a powerful order, the church 
claimed a wehr for their death. In France, the wehr of a pres- 
byter was equal to that of a count ; the wehr of a bishop, to that 
of a duke.* In England an archbishop was rated in this respect 

•» P. 197. ' Planck, ii. CI 7. tiiigiiished as wj/iss-prieste. lb. 147. 

• lb. iii. 445-6. See below, p. 253. J Thomass. III. 3, 12. 

• See Cone. Bcrghamst. a.d. C9G, iu > Tacit. Germ. 21. Compare Grote, 
Wilkius, i. 50: Kthelbald, a.d. 742, ib. Hist, of Greece, ii. 131, as to the iroirJ^ 
86 ; Kemble, ii. 436. of the Homeric Greeks. 

• E. g. CoDC. Forojul. c. 5 (Hard. iv. • Turner, ii. 507-610 ; Rettb. i. 643- 
858); Cone. Moguiit. a.d. 813, c. 14 ; 6; Perry, c. x. Marculf gives the form 
Cone. Cabil. a.d. 813, c. 12; Couc. of an acquittance from the relations of 
Meld. A.D. 845, c. 49. a slain man for the wehr, ii. 18 (Patrol. 

' Canons of K. Edgar (Thorpe, Ixxxvii.). 

396) ; Lingard, A. 8. C. i. 169. The »» Kettb. ii. 645. 

Anglo-Saxons gave the title of priest to « The wehr, as fixed in the additions 

all the clergy ; the presbyters were dis- to the Salic luw, a.d. 803, was, for a 



208 SOCIAL POSITION OF CLERGY. BookUL 

as equal to an athelinff, or priuce of the blood ; a bishop, to an 
ealdorman, or earl ; a mass-priest, to a tJume or lesser nobla* 

In days when the lay nobles were' unable to read or write, the 
possession of learning marked out ecclesiastics as the only persons 
qualified for many impoitant offices. The bishops, as men of 
counsel, got precedence of the counts, the men of tiie sword.® It 
was the policy of Charlemagne to elevate the hierarchy by way of 
a counterpoise to the power of his rude vassals.'^ He orders that 
all shall pay obedience to the bishops, and declares that those who 
refuse it shall have no home within the empire, " even if they were 
his own sons."* 

As the secular advantages of the clerical profession became 
greater, it was sought by members of the dominant race, who had 
before left it in the hands of the conquered. The occurrence of 
barbaric names among the clergy from the seventh century indicates 
the time when Franks began to enter into ecclesiastical orders ; ^ 
and very soon after, the effect of the change is seen in the necessity 
of laws to restrain the clergy from secular habits and occupations. 
Bishops led to the field the troops which their lands were required 
to furnish towards the national anny, and not only gave their per- 
sonal attendance (which was a matter of obligation, and might in 
some respects have been beneficial), but engaged in bodily service. 
They were unwilling to admit that their spiritual calling could 
deprive them of the birthright which belonged to every free Frank, 
to share in the wars of his people ; they wished, too, by proving 
themselves men of action, to show that their property was not to 
be invaded with impunity by their lay neighbours.* Boniface 
endeavoured to suppress such practices; it was enacted that the 
clergy should not carry arms ; that only so many of them should 
accompany the army as might be requisite for the duties of chap- 
lains, and that these should confine themselves to their proper 
office.^ But the reform seems not to have lasted long ; Charle- 
magne renews the orders of his father's time, and exhorts the 
clergy, instead of bearing arms, to trust in God for protection.™ 

sub-deacon, 300 solidi ; for a deacoo, jority, but in many cases they were 

400 ; for a monk, 400 ; for a priest, 600 ; adopted by the Romanized Gauls. Riick- 

for a bishop, 900. Pertz, Leges, i. 113; ert, ii. 400. 

Kettb. i. 645-8. * Ducange, s. v. I/oatis, p. 717 ; Planck, 

^ Thorpe, 79 ; Turner, iii. 233 ; ii. 222-4. 

Kemble, ii. 399, 434. ^ Karlom. Capit. a.d. 742, c. 2 ; Capit. 

« Planck, ii. 87-9. Vernier, a.d. 7.'i3. c. 16. 

' Ilallam, Midd. Ages, i. 112. °> Capit. a.d. 769, c. 1 ; Capit. a.d. 

« Hard. iv. 940. 789, c. 69. From the oixier of 769, 

»» See above, p. 64. Fleury, Disc. ii. *• ut sacerdotcs neque Christianorum ne- 

c. 8. Such names were soon in a ma- que paganorum sanguiucm fundant " 



Chap. IX. MARRIAGE OF THE CLERGY. 209 

A suspected document represents him as explaining that the object 
of such enactments was not, as the bishops had supposed, to deprive 
them of their honours." But even during the remaining years of 
his reign fresh prohibitions were necessary ; and when tiie strong 
hand of the great emperor was removed, the warlike inclinations of 
the Frank bishops were displayed in a greater degree than ever.** 
In England, also, the clergy were disposed to bear arms, as a 
right belonging to their free condition, and canons were passed to 
check the practice.** 

With the carrying of arms other secular habits and amusements 
are forbidden to the clergy — as the keeping of hounds and hawks,** 
games of chance,^ noisy entertsdnments, worldly songs and instru- 
mental music," and the company of minstrels and buffoons.^ 

(20.) The most remarkable regulations as to the marriage of 
the clergy during this period belong to the east — being those of 
the Trullan Council (a.d. 691 ?). This council is strongly opposed 
to second marriages. Presbyters who persist in such marriages 
are to be deposed ; if the second wife be dead, or if they separate 
from her, they are allowed to hold their rank, but are excluded 
from priestly functions. If a priest, a deacon, or a subdeacon 
marry a widow, he shall separate from his wife, shall be suspended, 
and shall be incapable of higher promotion.^ The council forbids, 
on pain of deposition, the practice of African and Libyan bishops, 
who were reported to cohabit with their wives ; the wife of a bishop 
is ordered to separate from him, and to go into a convent* It 
censures the practice of the Armenians, who required that the 
clergy should be of priestly family, and allowed those who were so 
born to officiate as singers and readers without receiving the ton- 
sure ;^ and it forbids the clergy to marry after their ordination as 
subdeacons.* But in its 13th canon, after stating that the Roman 

(c. 2) it appears that the clergy had *» Schrockh, xiz. 450 ; Planck, ii. 

already made a distinction in favour of 225. 

slaughtering pagans, which was after- p E.g, Egbert, Excerpt 155 (Wil- 

wards fully sanctioned in the crusades. kins, i. 112) ; Liogard, A. S. C. i. 103- 

" The word honores is supposed by 5, 170. i Capit. a.d. 869, c 3. 

some to mean dignities, the prohibition ' Cone. Mogunt. a.d. Bid, c 14 ; 

of arms being regarded as degrading to Canons of K. Edgar, 64 (Thorpe, 401). 

free-bom Franks ; others refer it to the • Cone. Forojul. c 5 (Hard. iv. 858). 

fefs held by bishops ; as if, by being * Cone Turon. Ill a.d. 813, c. 5 ; 

disarmed, they would become unable to Canons of Edgar, 58 (Thorpe, 401). 

defend these (see Schrockh, xix. 449 ; > C 3. 

Neaud. v. 140). But both the petition " Cc 12, 48. This is regarded by 
by which Charlemagne is said to have some as the first ecclesiastical law to 
been requested at Worms, in 803, to pre- such eflfect, although it had been pre- 
vent bishops from taking the field, and ceded by the civil law of Justinian (vol. 
the answer here quoted (Hard. iv. 941- i. p. 552). See Schrockh, xix. 477 ; 
3), are omitted by Pertz, and are now Giesel. I. ii. 480. 
regarded as spurious. Rettb. ii. 637. r C. 33. ' C 6. 

P 



210 MARRIAGE OF THE CLERGY. BookUL 

church exacted of persons ordained as presbyters or deacons a pro- 
mise to abstain from their wives, it expressly sanctions the contrary 
practice, and grounds its sanction on the '^ Apostolical Canons." 
No promise is to be required, no separation is to be -enforced ; 
deposition is threatened against any one who shall deprive priests, 
deacons, or subdeacons of their wives, and against all members of 
these orders who under pretence of religion shall separate from 
their partners. And, while the 29th canon allows the clergy of 
" barbaric " churches to separate, if they think it their duty to do 
so, and if their wives consent, the permission is declared to be 
granted only in condescension to the weak scrupulousness^ which 
may be expected in such churches. 

A council which in this and other points directly and avowedly 
contradicted the principles and usages of Rome was not likely to 
find favour with the popes, and, as we have seen, it was rejected by 
Sergius I.^ But the sanction which it gave to the marriage of the 
clergy has ever since continued to regulate the discipline of the 
Greek church. 

In the west, the period presents us with many enactments against 
the marriage of the clergy. The Merovingian kings added their 
authority to confirm the ecclesiastical canons which forbade it.*^ 
But it would seem that, notwithstanding the frequency of the pro- 
hibitions, many of the clergy continued to marry — more especially 
where the authority of the popes was not fully established, as in 
Lombardy, Spain, and some parts of Gaul and of Germany.^ The 
see of Chur, in the Grisons, was hereditary in a family of bishops 
who combined the powers of spiritual and civil government The 
wife of one of these, about the middle of the seventh century, in 
signing documents, styled herself episcapa or antistita Curiensis ; 
and the marriage of the bishops implies that the clergy were also 
at liberty to marry.® 

A question put by Augustine to Gregory the Great seems to 
show that marriage had been usual among the British clergy.* 
The law of the Anglo-Saxon church on this subject was the same 
with that of Rome ; but here too there is frequent proof that the 
clergy continued to enter into the married state ; nor was their 

• fuKpo^vxicu ' " An clerici non continere valentes 
^ Page 55. possint contrahere ; et si contraxeriDty 
< Theiner, i. 375. an debeant ad sfficulam redire." (In- 

• lb. 434 ; Rettb. ii. 656-7. tem^. 2. ap. Greg. F|». xi. 64.) Instead 

• Theiner, i. 433-4; Rettb. ii. 134-8. of fhlly answering this question, Gregory 
Ducange, with reference to the gives the direction as to clerks in the 
** bishopess/' erroneously interprets an- lower orders, quoted at p. 18. See 
tistUa by ahboUissa. Theiner, i. 379. 



Chaf. IX. CELIBACY — RULE OF CHRODEGANG. 21 1 

marriage annulled or the issue of it declared legitimate until the 
latter part of the twelfth century.* 

As in the earlier periods, the canons for the enforcement of celi- 
bacy are accompanied by many which indicate the disastrous 
effects of such measures. There are very frequent enactments as 
to the entertainment of women in the houses of the clergy. The 
fourth council of Toledo (a.d. 633) renews the orders of earlier 
Spanish councils that the concubines of clerks shall be sold ; ^ the 
ninth council of the same place (a.d. 655) adds that their children 
shall be serfe of the church.* Some canons forbid the clergy to have 
as inmates of their houses even those nearest female relatives who 
had been allowed by the council of Nicaea,*^ — alleging by way of 
reason that other persons had often been introduced under the 
pretence of relationship, and that even the laws of nature had been 
violated. The councils of Charlemagne's reign in general, how- 
ever, are content with renewing the Nicene rule."* 

(21.) An important attempt at reform was made about the year 
760 by the institution of the canonical life. The title of canons 
(canonici)^ which had formerly been given to all the clergy, on 
account of their being enrolled in the canon or register of the 
church, and entitled to maintenance from its funds,° was now 
applied in a new meaning, to designate clergy who lived under a 
canon or rule, resembling that of the monastic communities.^ 
The idea of such an institution was not new ; for in earlier times 
Eusebius of Vercelli, Hilary of Aries, and the great Augustine 
had shown the example of living together with theur clergy ;^ and 
more recently, a like practice had been usual in missionary bodies, 
where the bishop lived with his staff of clergy and monks."! But it 
was now reduced to a regular system by Chrodegang, a nephew of 
Pipin, and archbishop of Metz.' 

Chrodegang's scheme was in great measure an adaptation of the 

ff Lingard, A. S. C. i. 176 ; Kemble, excludes all women, c. 11. 

ii. 443-7 ; Rettb. ii. 655. » Tbomass. I. iii. 9, 1 ; Dncange, i. ▼. 

^ C. 43. See vol. i. p. 552. » Schrockh, xx. 80 ; Rettb. i. 495. 

» C. 10. p Vita Hilar. Arel. 15 (Patrol. 1.) ; 

^ Cone. Forojul. a.d. 796 (?) c. 4 Thomass. I. iii. 2. 

(Hard. iv. 858) ; Egbert, Excerpt. 1 5, A.D. •» Rettb. ii. 662-4. 

740 (Wilkins, i.) ; Theodulphi Capitul. ' The see of Metx was only a bishop- 

12 (Hard. iv. 905) ; Capit Aqoisgr. A.D. rick ; but Chrodegang, who held it from 

801, c. 15 (Pertz, Leges, i.). The third 742 to 766, and some of his successors, 

coancil of Braga, ▲.d. 675, allows none received the title of archbishop, with 

but the mother, unless with a special the pall, from the pope as a personal 

license, c. 5. distinction. (Anastas. m Patrol. Ixxxix. 

" E. g, Capit a.d. 789, c. 3 ; Capit 1056 ; Sigeb. Gemblac Vita Deodorici 

A.D. 806, c 1; Cone Mogunt a.d. 813, Mettens. 10, ap. Perts, iv. ; Bettb. i. 

c. 49. So Cone Aquisgr. A.D. 816, c 39. 494-5.) There is an imperfect Life of 

But the second oonncil of Aix, jld. 836, him in Pertz, x. 

p 2 



212 RULE OF CHRODEGANG — CANONS. Book III. 

Benedictine rule to the difiFerent circumstances of the clergy. The 
bishop held a place corresponding to that of the Benedictine abbot, 
the archdeacon answered to the provost or prior, the seniors had 
the same oversight in both systems.* Like Benedict, the father of 
the canonical institute prescribed a common dwelling, an uniform 
dress, a common table, a common dormitory, unless where the 
bishop should be pleased to allow an exception.^ The clergy were 
required to attend certain services daily." Every day they were 
to practise manual labour,* and were to devote certain portions of 
their time to study.^ The younger members of the society were 
to show respect to the elders — ^as by rising and bowing when they 
passed, by asking their benediction, by standing in their presence, 
unless permitted to sit down.' All were to confess to the bishop in 
Lent, and again in autumn; stripes or imprisonment were the 
penalties for going to any other confessor. All who were not 
prevented by sin were to communicate every Sunday and on other 
chief festivals.* Articles of clothing were to be supplied at stated 
times ; the elders were then to ^ve up the clothes which they 
had worn, and these were to be transferred to the juniors.** All 
were to take their turns in the services of the house; each was 
in his order to cook for a week, the archdeacon and the cellarer 
being the only exceptions.* Laymen were not to be admitted, 
except for some special purpose, such as that of assisting in the 
kitchen ; and they were to leave the house as soon as their work 
was done.^ 

The dietary of the canons was more liberal than that prescribed 
by the Benedictine rule.* They were permitted to eat flesh, except 
during penitential seasons.' 'iliey had an allowance of wine (or 
of beer, if they preferred it), graduated according to their rank — 
for priests and deacons, three cups at dinner and two at supper ; 
for subdeacons, two at each meal ; for the lower orders, two at 
dinner and one at supper.* There were to be seven tables in the 
haU,** appropriated respectively to the bishop, to the various orders 
of canons, to strangers, and to the clergy of the city, who on 
Sundays and other festivals dined in the college, and partook of 
the instruction which was given in the chapterhouse.* Edifying 
books were to be read at meals, and, in order that they might be 

• Ghrodeg. Regula (ap. Hard. W. 1181 115. ' C. 22. 
seqqA c. 35. f C. 23. ^ C. 20. 

• Cc. 3-4. » Cc. 5-7. • C.8. The captYu/um, or chapterhouse, 
' C. 9. ' C 8. was 8o called because among the Bene- 
■ C 2. * C. 14. dictines a chapter of their founder's rule 
^ C. 29. ' C. 24. ^ C. 3. was there read every day. Ducange, 

• See Cone. Aquisgr. a.d. 816. 1. i. c. s. ▼. ; Walter, 308. 



Chap. IX. MONASTICISM. 213 

heard, silence was to be kept, '* because it is necessary that, when 
one taketh his bodily food, then also the soul should be reireshed 
with spiritual food."^ 

The most important difiFerence from the Benedictine rule was, 
that the canons were allowed to enjoy individual property- — 
whether that which they had before entering into the society, or 
such fees and presents as they might receive for the performance 
of religious offices. They were, however, obliged at their death 
to leave all to the brethren." 

From Metz the rule of Chrodegang soon made its way to other 
cities." The number of its chapters was increased by additions 
from 34 to 86.^ Charlemagne even wished to reduce the whole 
of the clergy to this system ;^ and, although the attempt failed, 
and the great majority of the clergy continued to live as seculars,** 
many colleges of canons were formed, under the government of 
abbots, in addition to the cathedral bodies for which the scheme 
had originally been intended.' The rule was sanctioned fopi'general 
use by a great council at Aix-la-Chapelle under Louis the Pious, 
in 816 ;■ and by the middle of the ninth century it was established 
in almost all the cathedrals of France, Germany, and Italy, and 
had also been adopted in England.^ The clergy found their 
account in the apparent strictness of the new system, as a means 
of recovering much of that popular admiration which the monks 
had long enjoyed ta*the prejudice of the hierarchical orders." In 
consequence of this strictness, donations were largely bestowed on 
the canonical societies. The cathedral chapters became wealthy and 
powerful, and soon began to assert a claim to act as the bishop's 
advisers, and to share in the administration of the diocese.' 

IV. Manasticism. 

During these centuries the monks played an impiortant part in 
Westerir Christendom. The missions to the Germanic nations 

"^ C. 21. " Cc. 31-2. rule to that of the Aix council, see He- 

" Planck, ii. 558-60. fele, iv. 16. Gerhoh of Reichersperg, a 

<» Both foims are given by Hardooin, severe hierarchi^t of the twelfth cen- 

iv. 1181, seqq.; and in the Patrologia, tory, reflects severely on the Aix mle 

Ixzxix. as a mongrel production, enacted by 

P Capit Langob. a.d. 782, c. 2 ; Capit. secular authority alone, without papal 

Aqnisgr. a.d. 789, c. 72 ; Capit. a.d. 805, sanction. In Psalm. Ixiv. cc. 123, seqq. ; 

c. 8. De Aedif. Dei, 3, &c. (Patrol, cxciv.) 

<i Milman, ii. 229. * Planck, ii. 560 ; Lingard, A. S. C. 

' Thomass. I. iii. 9, 7 ; Rettb. ii. 667. i. 163. 

■ The council also made other regu- " Planck, ii. 562-4; Guizot,ii. 313-5. 

lations for canons. Lib. i. cc 115, ' Planck^ ii. 632. 
seqq. On the relations of Chrodegang's 



214 MONASTICISM. Bo«tm . 

were chiefly their work ; they planted colonies in lonely places, 
where towns soon grew up, as at Fulda, St. Gall, Eichstedt, and 
Fritzlar ; and with the knowledge of relipon, they spread that of 
agriculture and civilisation among the people.^ Through the 
employment of monks in missionary labour, ordination was more 
largely introduced into their ranks, as a necessary qualification 
for missionary duties.' In some cases, sees were usually filled with 
monks from certain abbeys — ^an arrangement the more natural 
because learning was chiefly cultivated in the monastic sodeties. 
Thus Strasburg received its bishops from Munster, Spires from 
Weisseuburg, Constance from Reichenau or St. Gall.* 

The reputation of sanctity continued to wait on the monks. The 
term religum^ which had been specially applied to the monastic 
profession by a council at Orleans as early as 549,** became more 
and more restricted to it^ Entrance on the monastic state was 
regarded as a second baptism. Theodore of Canterbury curiously 
carries out the idea by ordering that the novice shall for seven 
days have his head covered with the cowl, aa» the head of the 
newly-baptised was covered with the chrism or veil ; ^ and a like 
order, although with an abridgment of the time to three days, 
was made under Louis the Pious in 817.* Persons of high rank 
flocked into the cloisters ; it was no unusual thing even for kings 
and queens to resign their royalty and assume the monastic habit' 

During the earlier part of the period there was a considerable 
variety of rules. That of St. Columban for a time appeared to 
rival the Benedictine code in popularity. It became not uncommon 
to combine the two ;* but by degrees the rule of St. Benedict 
triumphed, as being the more practically sensible, the less rigorous, 
and the more elastic.** With slight modifications in particular 
cases, it was commonly adopted in France, where a great excite- 
ment in its favour was produced by the translation of the founder's 

T Schrockh, xx. 16; PlaDck, ii. 482. 719: cf. Montalembert, L 142), although 

The ciyilising agency of the monks is Eucherius is supposed to have died not 

eloquently described in M. de Monta- later than 450. 
lembert's work. c Schrockh, xx. 6. * Thorpe, 307. 

» Schrockh, xx. 5-7 ; Planck, ii. 472. « Gapit. Aquisgr. c. 35. 

• Planck, ii. 470, 520. ' See a list in Schrockh, xx. 10-1. 

^ C. 19. In Salvian, the term reli- Spanish councils order that the widows 

gvm includes clergy as well as monks of kings shall not remarry, and shall 

(Baluz. in Salv. Patrol, liii. 31, 86, 209). retire into a nunnery. Ck)nc. Tolet. 

The council of£paone,A.D. 51 7, uses the XIII. a.d. 685, c. 5; Cone. Cosaraug. 

word relvjio to signify the profession of III. a.d. 691, c. 5. 
oeUbacy (c. 19 : see Hefele, ii. 666). It » Nat. Alex. x. 177; Mabill. V. xll, 

seems, however, to have the monastic Ixxxiv., seqq. ; Montalembert, ii. 499. 
sense in Eucherius, who says, " nnus ^ Thomass. I. iii. 24-5 ; D'Achery, n. 

in religionis, alius in saoerdotii nomen in Lanfranc. Ep. 32 (Patrol, d.) ; Kettb. 

asoendit'* (ad Valerianom, Patrol. 1. u. 679-682. 



Chap. IX. EXEMPTIONS. 215 

relics to Fleury in 750.» In England, too, where it was intro- 
duced by Wilfrid, it soon became general, although not without 
some mixture of the old national usages.*' But the Spanish 
monasteries continued until the ninth century to be governed by 
rules which had been compiled, partly from eastern sources, by 
Isidore of Seville, Fructuosus of Braga, and other native bishops.™ 
The monasteries in general continued to be subject to the juris* 
diction of their diocesan bishops ;^ but exemptions, of whicli we 
have already seen traces in the sixth century,** now became more 
common, and the authority of Gregory the Great had an important 
share in advancing the practice.^ It would appear, however, that 
the reason of such exemptions in this period is not to be sought in 
any ambition or assumption on the part of the monks, but in the 
oppressive conduct of bishops.** These from the seventh century 
began to claim a share in the ^fts bestowed on monasteries. 
They exacted unreasonable payments from the monks for the 
dedication of their churches, for the consecration of chrism, for 
ordaining their clergy, and installing their abbota A large part 
of the revenues was absorbed by the expense of visitations ; and, 
in addition to this, the bishops extorted heavy fees under the 
names of catJiedraticum and the like.' Where the choice of an 
abbot belonged to the monks, the bishops often endeavoured to 
wrest it from them, and exercised it without any regard to the 
welfare of the house, or to the pretensions of its more eminent 
members, who might have reasonably expected to succeed to the 
dignity.' The grossness of the tyranny practised by some prelates 
may be inferred from the fact that the monastic bodies often 
appealed against it to synods, and that these, although composed 

I Adrevald. de Transl. et Miracalis ^ Lingard, A. S. C. i. 205-6. 
S. Bened. (Patrol, cxxiv.) ; Schrockh, " Schrockh, zx. 19-35. Isidore is in 
XX. 15; PUmck, ii. 488. Charlemagne, the Patrol, vol. Ixxxiii., Fructuosus in 
in his capitulary of 811, asks, " Utrum .¥0!. Ixxxvii. Valerius, an abbot in the 
aliqui monachi esse possint prseter eos latter part of the seventh century, gives 
qui regulam S. Benedicti observant. In- a very un&vourable account of Spanish 
quirendum etiam,^i in Gallia monachi monachism. ib. 437. 
fuissent priusquam traditio regal® S. " Capit. Aquisgr. a.d. 802, c. 15 ; 
Benedicti in has paroechias pervenisset " Thomass. I. iii. 27. 
(Pertz, Leges, i. 166, c. II): and in <» Vol. i. p. 559. 
another paper, ** Qua regula monachi p See Giesel. I. ii. 426. 
vixissent in GaUia, priusquam regula S. t See e. g. the behaviour of the bishop 
Benedicti in ea tradita fuisset, cum lega- Sidonius towards the monks of St Gall : 
mus S. Martinum et monachum fuisse (Ratpert. de Casibus S. Galli, 2, Pertx, 
et sub se monachos habuisse, qui multo ii. ; Baron. 759. 9-10); and the privi- 
ante S. Benedicto \sic] fuit" (ib. 168, lege granted by Pope Adeodatus to the 
c. 12). These questions prove that in monastery of St. Martin at Tours. Pa- 
France the systems of the earlier mona- trol. Ixxxvii. 1143. 
chism had been superseded by the Be- ' Planck, ii. 502-3 ; Guizot, ii. 92-3. 
nedictine, but the object of them is * Planck, ii. 503 ; Lingard, A. S. C. 
matter of conjecture. i. 209. 



216 MONASnCISlf . Book m. 

of bishops, felt themselTcs obliged to condeiim it in strong terms, 
and to forbid its oontinuanoe.^ In some cases during the eighth 
century, it was provided that, if the diocesan bishop would not 
perform his functions with respect to a monastery on reasonable 
terms, the abbot might apply to another." On the whole, it may 
be said, that the exemptions of this period were not sought for the 
sake of emancipation from the ri^tfiil authority of the bishops, 
but from their rapacity. The bishop still retiuned his general 
supervision of religion and morals in the exempt monasteries; 
he was even entitled to inquire into the administration of the 
temporalities, while he was restrained from acts of plunder and 
oppression.* 

When some monasteries had obtiuned such privileges, it became 
usual with founders to insist that those which they established 
should stand on a level with others in this respect^ There were, 
too, certain monasteries which were styled royal — either from 
having been founded by princes, or from having obtsuned their 
special protection ; and these were exempt from all jurisdiction 
except that of the sovereign, which was exercised through the 
missi and the bishops.' Some, of more than ordinary dignity, 
had bishops of their own, resident within their walls, as was the 
case at St Denys.* And in addition to these, it appears that the 
popes had already commenced a practice of granting exemption 
from all authority but their own.^ The first instance is conunonly 
said to have been a grant from Zacharias to the abbey of Fulda ; 
but the genuineness of the document is much questioned.® If 
genuine, it was granted at the request of Boniface himself, and 
therefore not with an intention to injure the rights of the diocesan.** 
But when the archbishoprick and the abbacy which had been 
united in the Apostle of Germany were divided, the privileges 
conferred on Fulda, and the renown which it acquired as the 
resting-place of his remains, excited the jealousy of Lull, his 
successor in the see of Mentz. The archbishop complained that 
the exemption wrongftdly interfered with his jurisdiction. He is 
said to have persecuted the abbot, Sturmi, by unscrupulous means 

« E,g, Cone Tolet IV. a.d. 633, c Thomass. I. iii. 35: Planck, u. 511-2 ; 
61 (which says that bishops treat their Rettb. ii. 669. 
monks like slaves); Cone. Tol. IX. a.d. • Mabill. III. xx. See Patrol. Ixxxix. 

^'^•'piiSlck u 675-6 ^^^* ' ^^- ?• ^P- ^^ ^'^- *^-^ J ^'*- 

jriancK, u. b75;6. cange, s. v. Episcopus, p. 62. 

ITT ^""T^'dI* "; 2?: ^» ^ ^*«^ »» Planck, ii. 519-36.^ 

lio ?^. iJ^.^^'^An"; ^^"®' ^^^-^* ' ^"^- "• 677; see p. 111. Sach 

r'pUnAic I" .-,!;• ^^^"^- exemptions of earliir date are midoubt- 

T Planck, 11. 510. edly forgeries. 

■ Dacange, s. vv. Monasteria Regalia ; «« Planck, ii. 536-9. 



Chap. IX. EXEMPTIONS. 217 

— even inducing Pipin, by a charge of treason, to banish him for 
two years ; and the enmity between the two continued to the end 
of the abbot's life, so that, on his deathbed, in declaring his for- 
giveness of all men, he thought it necessary to mention Lull by 
name, as being the person who most especially needed it® 

Exemptions existed also in the patriarchate of Constantinople, 
where some monasteries were discharged from the bishop's autho- 
rity and subject to the metropolitan, while others were subject to 
the patriarch only. In token of these privileges, the metropolitan 
or patriarchal crosier was erected over the altar in the chapel of 
the monastery/ 

The second council of Nicaea allowed abbots, if they were pres- 
byters, to onkdn the lower clergy of their monastery.*^ The rule 
was adopted in the west, and from this and other circumstances, it 
came to pass that the inmates of a monastery, with very few excep- 
tions, belonged to some grade of the hierarchy.^ 

The age of admission to the monastic communities was variously 
fixed. The Trullan council lays down that it ought not to be 
under ten.* Theodore of Canterbury names fifteen as the age for 
monks, and sixteen or seventeen for nuns.^ The capitularies of 
789 re-enact the old African canons which forbade the reception 
of women before the age of twenty-five, unless for some special 
reason.™ But, besides those who took the vows on themselves, 
children might be devoted by their parents to the monastic state ; 
and in this case, as in the other, there was no release from its 
obligations." Charlemagne, however, endeavoured to put some 
limit to the practice, by ordering that, " saving the authority of 
the canons," girls should not be veiled until they were old enough 
to understand their engagements.^ 

Many orders are found against the admission of serfs into 
monasteries without the consent of their masters, and of freemen 
without license from the sovereign. It was not unusual to make 
a false profession of withdrawing frt)m the world, for the sake of 
escaping from military service. In order to check this abuse, 
Charlemagne orders, in 805, that those who forsake the world 
shall be obliged to live strictly according to rule, either as canons 
or as monks.^ 

• Vita S. Stumxii, ap. Perte, ii. 373-7 ; ^ Capitul. 1 18 (Hard. iii. 1 778). 

Mabill. iv. 279-84, 400. Rettberff (i. ■ 0. 46. 

610-6) thinks that LuU meant to daim " " Monachos aut paterna devotio ant 

the abbacy as attached to his see, and propria professio facit" Cone. Tolet. 

regarded Stormi only as a vice-abbot. 1 V. a.d. 633, c. 49 ; Rettb. ii. 691, 696. 

' Schrockh, XX. 66-7. See vol. i. p. 561. 

» Cone. Nic. II. A.D. 787, c. 14. • Capit a.d. 805, c. 14. 

^ Planck, ii. 472-3. * C. 40. . » lb. 10. 



218 MONASTICISM. BookIIL 

Although the observance of the same rule was a bond of union 
between monastic societies, no more intimate connexion was as yet 
organised in the west. Some of the greater monasteries had 
celb or priories dependent on them ;** but, except on this very 
limited scale, there was no affiliation of one religious house to 
another, nor was there any subjection^ of many to a common head, 
as had been the case in the system of St Pachomius/ It was 
usual for an abbot, in sending forth one of his monks to found a 
new comnxunity, to release him from the vow of obedience so soon 
as he should be able to establish a footing.' During the earlier 
part of the period, it was forbidden to an abbot to have more than 
one monastery,* although Gregory the Great allowed it in some 
cases;" but this rule was afterwards disregarded. Pluralities, 
both ecclesiastical and. monastic, became frequent, and sometimes 
both kinds were held by the same person. Thus, about the year 
720, Hugh, a member of the Carolingian family, was at once 
bishop of Paris, Rouen, and Bayeux, and abbot of Fontenelle and 
Jumieges.* In the instances where a see was usually filled from 
a particular monastery, the bishops often united the abbacy with 
their higher office ; and where bishops were able to usurp the 
nomination to an abbacy, they sometimes took it for themselves. 
Thus Sidonius, bishop of Constance, who had already got posses- 
sion of the abbey of Reichenau, resolved in 759 to make himself 
master also of that of St. Gall ; and, although we are told by the 
monastic historians that his rapacity was punished by a death like 
that of Arius, the next bishop, John, not only engrossed the same 
rich preferment, but towards the end of his life formed a scheme 
of providing for his three nephews by transferring the bishoprick 
to one of them, and an abbacy to each of the others.^ 

Many of the monastic societies were specially exempted by 
sovereigns from all public imposts and tolls.' But such exemptions 
were as often tokens of poverty on the part of the house as of 
extraordinary royal favour. Thus, in a list of the Frankish 
monasteries, drawn up at Aix-la-Chapelle, in 817, where they 
are ranged in three classes, as owing to the prince both giha and 
military service, as owing gifts only, or as free from all duty except 

1 MabUl. VII. xxii. xxvii. ■ Epp. x. 61 ; xi. 72. 

' See vol. i. p. 316. The order of St. " Schrockh, xx. 71. 

Qolumba, in which the abbot of lona ^ Rat^rt. de Casibus S. Galli, 2-3 

was the general superior (see vol. i. p. (Pertz, li. 63) ; Planck, ii. 521. 

543), was an exception to the usual sys- ' See e. g. the charter granted to Corbie 

tern of the west. by Clotaire III. in 669 (Hard. iiL 1010), 

* Planck, ii. 4D4-5. and many in Bouquet, t.v. 

* Cone. Epaon. a.d. 517, c. 9. 



Chap. IX. MONASTICISM. 219 

prayer, the most distinguished foundations are for the most part 
included in the most heavily burdened class.* 

As monasteries grew rich, some evil consequences followed. 
The vow of poverty was considered to be satisfied by the renun- 
ciation of individual property. Where its obligation was felt as 
matter of conscience, the monks retained their original simplicity 
of dress and food, while their superfluous wealth was spent on 
other objects, such as the erection of costly buildings.** But very 
commonly the possession of the means of luxury introduced the 
enjoyment of it. In the east, the confessor Maximus, in the 
middle of the seventh century, denounces the disorderly lives of 
monks, and says that their profession of piety was no better than 
hypocrisy.*^ Charlemagne in 811 censures the abbots as caring 
only to swell the numbers of their monks and to obt£un good 
chanters and readers, without any solicitude as to their morals. 
He sarcastically asks how the monks and clergy understand the 
text against entangling themselves with the affairs of this life ; 
whether they suppose the only difference between themselves and 
secular men to consist in their being unmarried and carrying no 
arms ; whether those can be said to have forsaken the world who 
are incessantly striving to increase their possessions by all sorts of 
means — who use the hopes of heaven and the terrors of hell, the 
names of God and the saints, to extort gifts not only from the rich 
but from the poor and ignorant, and, by diverting property from 
the lawful heirs, drive many to theft and robbery. How, he 
continues, can they be said to have forsaken the world who suborn 
perjury in order to acquire what they covet? or those who retain 
their secular property, and are surrounded by bands of armed 
men?^ 

Abbots, as well as bishops, were addicted to war, to hunting 
and hawking, to games of chance, to the company of minstrels 
and jesters. There are many ordinances against irregularities of 
this kind — some of them extending to abbesses also;* and there 
are frequent complaints of gross immorality among recluses of both 
sexes, with attempts to restrain such practices.' 

* Pertz, Leges, i. 223 ; Planck, ii. for gloves, girdles, or the binding of 
51G. ^ Lingard, A. S. C. i. 225. books ; but in such cases it would seem 

^ Dnpin, vi. 25. that the work was to be performed by 

* Pertz, Le^es, i. 167-8. the lay dependants of the house. See 

* E. g. Capit A-D. 789, c. 15 ; Capit the charters granted by Charlemagne to 
A.D. 802, c. 19 ; Cone Mogunt. A.D. 813, St. Den^s, in 774 (Bouquet, v. 727; ; and 
c. 17. Some monasteries had a special to Sithiu (St. Bertin's, at St. Omer), in 
permission to kill the beasts of the chase, 788 (ib. 752). 

that the flesh might be used for the re- ' E, g. Cone Nic II. a.d. 787, c. 20 ; 
fection of sick members, and the skins Cone Trallan. ^.d. 691, e 47 ; Cone. 



220 BENEDICT OF ANIANE. Boos IIL 

Towards the end of the period, a remarkable reformer of the 
monastic life appeared in France. Witiza, afterwards known as 
Benedict of Aniane, was of Gothic descent, and son of the count 
of Maguelone in Septimania. When a boy, he was placed in the 
court of Pipin, to whom he became cupbearer, and he continued 
in the service of Charlemagne. In returning from Rome after his 
master's visit to Adrian in 774, he narrowly escaped drowning in 
a vain attempt to save his brother,^ who had rashly plunged into 
a swollen ford ; and, in gratitude for his preservation, he carried 
out a thought which he had already for some time entertained, 
of embracing the monastic life, by entering the monastery of 
St Seine, in Burgundy.^ Although he had assumed the name of 
Benedict, the rule of the Nursian monk appeared to him fit only 
for weak be^nners,* and he rushed into the austerities of eastern 
monachism. He macerated his body by excessive fasting ; his 
dress was of rags, swarming with vermin, and patched with a 
variety of colours ; he took very little sleep, and that on the bare 
ground ; he never bathed ; he courted derision and insult as a 
madman, and often expressed his fear of hell in piteous outcries. 
His abbot repeatedly urged him to relent from these rigours, but 
Benedict was inflexible.*' 

On the death of the abbot, Benedict was chosen as his successor ; 
but he fled from St Seine, and built himself a little hermitage on 
his father's estate, by the bank of the river Aniane.™ Some monks 
attempted to live with him, but found themselves unable to support 
the excessive severity of his system." In course of time, how- 
ever, a considerable society was gathered around him, and a 
monastery was erected near his cell. Benedict himself took part 
in the building of it ; he and his monks were obliged to carry 
the materials, as they were unable to provide oxen for the work.® 
TTie walls were of wood ; the roof was thatched with straw ; the 
vestments for divine service were coarse, whereas silk was usually 
employed for such purposes ; the eucharistic vessels were of wood, 
afterwards of glass, and finally of pewter. The monks lived chiefly 
on bread and water, varied sometimes by milk, and on Sundays and 
holydays by a scanty allowance of wine.P If the rigid simplicity 
of Benedict's first arrangements was partly dictated by fear lest 
richness of architecture and of ornament should prove injurious to 
monastic discipline,"^ he must afterwards have changed his opinion 

Arelat. a.d. 813, c 7 ; Capit Aquisgr. "^ C. 7. ■» C. 10. 

A.O. 802, c. 17. » C. 11. *» C. 12. P C. 14. 

' Vita ap. Mabill. v. 192 seqq. c. 1. t This was sometimes matter of oom- 

^ C. 2. * C. 8. plaint. See Mabill. V. ciii. and the ca- 



Cbap.IX. decay of MONACHISM IN ENGLAND. 221 

on the subject ; for in 782 the humble wooden buildings made way 
for a splendid monastery. The church was adorned with marble 
pillars ; there were several costly chapels ; and all that belonged 
to the furniture and to the services was of unusual magnificence/ 
Charlemagne, who had contributed to the expense, exempted the 
monastery from all taxes, and from the jurisdiction Both of bishops 
and of counts." 

Benedict became a man of great note and influence. His name 
has already come before us, as one of the commissioners employed 
by Charlemagne to reclaim the adherents of Felix of Urgel;* 
Louis the Pious, while king of Aquitaine, employed him to reform 
the monasteries of that country ; and the efiect of his institutions 
was widely felt.'* He collected in two books the monastic rules 
of the east and of the west ; in a third book he added the rules for 
nunneries ; and from the whole he composed a " Harmony of the 
Rules," in which the precepts of St. Benedict on every subject are 
illustrated by those of other monastic legislators.^ In his reforms 
he was content to enforce the Benedictine system, which experience 
had shown him to be better suited for general use than the rigours 
of oriental monachism.^ In his own practice, he was obliged to 
abate somewhat of the violence with which he had begun ; but his 
life continued to be strictly ascetic, and he shared with his monks 
in the labours of ploughing, digging, and reaping.* Soon after the 
accession of Louis to the empire, he resigned the abbacy of Aniane, 
and removed to a new royal foundation on the bank of the Inda, 
near Aix-la-Chapelle ;* and, after having played an important part 
during the earlier years of his patron's reign, he died at the age of 
seventy, in 821.*' 

In England, monachism fell into decay from the earlier part of 
the eighth century.*' The monasteries were oft;en invaded and oc- 
cupied by secular persons, and, although a canon of Cloveshoo was 
directed against this evil, the terms which are used significantly 
prove that the council had little hope of being able to suppress it.** 
Boniface in his letters to Archbishop Cuthbert, and to Ethelbald, 

pitulaiy of 811, ell. Funck's idea ' 'Concordia Regularam,' printed with 

(Ludwi^ d. Fromme, 239) that Charle- his other writings in vol. ciii. of the 

magne, m his sarcastic questions of that * Patrolo^a.' 

year (quoted ahove, p. 219), intended to r Neand. vi. 98. » Vita, 32. 

glance at Benedict, seems extremely im- * lb. 48. Charter of Louis, a.d. 821, 

probable. Patrol, civ. 1105. It was afterwards 

r C. 26. called Comeliusmiinster. See Rettb. i. 

• A.D. 787. Bouquet, v. 751 ; MabiU. 548. 

V. 202 ; Patrol, civ. 1419, seqq. ^ Schrockh, xx. 36. 

• Seep. 170. «= Seep. 78. 

• Vita, 36, 40 ; MabUl. v. 218. ^ Cone. Clovesh. a.d. 847, c. 45. 



222 DECAY OF MONACHISM IN ENGLAND— NUNNERIES. BookUI. 

king of Mercia, complains that the English monasteries are op- 
pressed beyond any others in Christendom ; that their privileges 
are violated, that they are heavily and unjustly taxed, that they 
are ruined by the expense of entertaining the king and his hunting 
train ;® that the monks are forced to labour at the royal buildings 
and other works/ 

But much blame is also laid on the communities themselves. 
The monks are often charged with riotous living and with drunken- 
ness, which Boniface describes as a peculiarly national vice ;^ and 
the fondness for gay clothing, which was another characteristic of 
the English, defied all monastic rules. Boniface complains of it 
to Cuthbert ; ^ the council of Cloveshoo censures it in clergy, in 
monks, and in nuns, denouncing especially in men the affectation 
of a laical head-dress, and the fashion of adorning the legs with 
fillets of various colours ;^ the council of Chalchythe*' desires monks 
and canons to use the same habit with those of the continent,™ 
" and not dyed with Indian dye, or very costly." But some years 
later Alcuin is foimd continuing the complaint against such va- 
nities ; and the love of them was not to be overcome." 

In addition to the causes which have been mentioned — the se- 
cular oppression to which the monks were subjected, and their own 
unwillingness, when the first period of fervour had passed away, to 
bear the 'restraints of the monastic rule— the introduction of the 
canonical life contributed to the decline of English monachism. 
The occupants of religious houses became canons instead of monks; 
and about the middle of the ninth century the Benedictine order 
was almost extinct in England.^ 

The regulations of this period as to female recluses correspond 
in general character with those for monks. Abbesses are required 
to be subject to their bishops ;^ they are censured for interfering 
with the sacerdotal function by presuming to veil virgins, and to 
give benedictions and imposition of hands to men — apparently by 

• The cost of entertaining sovereigns * Cc. 19, 28. 

was also complained of elsewhere. See ^ a.d. 785, c. 4. 

Dacange, s. v. Gista. "* That this is the meaning of Orien- 

' £p. G2 (Patrol. Ixxxix. 761) ; Ep. tales appears from Can. 19 (see above, 

ad Cudberct. c. 11, ap. Bed. ed. Hussejr, p. 120, note *)• I" a doubtful epistle, 

353. This passage does not appear in Charlemagne is represented as styling 

Dr. Giles' edition of Boniface, or in the himself the most powerful of eastern 

Patrologia (Ep. 63), but was edited by and Offa the most powerful of tccMcm 

Spelman from a MS. Dr. Giles gives kings (Patrpl. xcviii. 937). 

it in his 'Anecdota Bedco, &c.' Lond. ■ Epp. 9 (Patrol, c. 151); 14(ib. 165); 

1851, p. 16. 224 (ib. 499) ; Lingard, A. S. C. i. 232. 

» Ep. ad Cudb. 10 ; Cone. Clovesh. c. « Lingard, A. S, C. i. 233-6. 

21 ; Lingard, A. S. C. i. 232-3. ' E. fj. Cone Forojul. a.d. 796 (?), 

*> C. 9. c 47 ; Cone. Cabilon. A.D. 813, c 65. 



Chap. IX. LANGUAGE OF DIVINE SERVICE. 223 

way of ordination to th^ lower grades of the ministry.*^ There are 
frequent complaints of dissolute life in nunneries, and the abbesses 
themselves are sometimes charged with a share of tlie guilt' Other 
canons are directed against the practice of allowing widows to take 
the veil during the first agitation of their bereavement, as it had 
been found that such nuns often relapsed into worldly business or 
gaieties, and endeavoured to secure at once the privileges of the 
monastic and of the secular life." 

The Benedictine rule was adapted to the use of female societies; 
and towards the end of the period the example of Chrodegang's 
rule led to the institution of canonesses, who lived together under a 
less rigid code than nuns, and without being obliged to give up 
their private property.* 

V. EUes and Usages. 

(1.) Throughout the West, Latin had from the first been used 
as the language of Divine service. As it was spoken in all the 
western provinces of the empire, there was no necessity for trans- 
lating the liturgy into other tongues ; and, after the barbarian 
conquests, Latin remained as the language of superior civilisation, 
and especially as that of the clergy, whose ranks were for a long 
time generally filled from among the Romanized inhabitants.^ 
It was the medium by which nations carried on their official inter- 
course ;' it alone remained stable, while the dialects of the invaders 
were in a course of fluctuation and change ; and, where new 
languages were formed on its basis — a process in which the ecde-- 
siastical use of the Latin contributed greatly to secure its pre- 
dominance — the formation was gradual, so that it would have been 
impossible to fix on any time at which the ancient Roman tongue 
should have been disused as obsolete.^ The closer connexion 
established with Rome by Kpin and Charlemagne confirmed the 
use of Latin in the Frankish church. And thus an usage which 

1 Capit. A.D. 789, c. 75. advantages takea of them for mischief, 

■" E. g, a capitulary of 789 (Pertz, i. c. 14. 
68, c. 3) forbids nuns to write or to send * Capit. Aquisgr. a.d. 817, c 21 ; 
amatory verses {tcinileuchs. See Rettb. Cone. Wormat. a.d. 829, c. 17 (Pertas, 
i. 452 ; ii. 695). There are prohibitions Leges, i. 343) ; Cone. Paris, a.d. 829, cc. 
of intercourse between monks or clergy 39, 44. 
and nuns (Rettb. ii. 695). The Council » Rettb. ii. 697-8. 
of Aix-la-ChapeUe, in 836, states that ■ Hist. Litt. iii. 15 ; Neand. v. 174-5. 
many nunneries have become lupa- * Milman, vi. 258. 
Tuiria, and this, in some cases, because ^ Schmidt, i. 183 ; Milman, i. 377 ; 
the abbesses starved their nuns into ii. 351. On the graidual corruption of 
temptation (cc 12-3). Abbesses are Latin, see Ducan^e's Preface to his 
ordered to take care that there be not Glossary ; Hist. Litt. i. 27, seqq. ; Hal- 
many dark comers in their houses, as lam, M. A. ii. 340-351. 



224 LANGUAGE OF DIVINE SERVICE. Book UL 

originally arose out of circumstances, came at length to be regarded 
as necessary, and at a later time to be justified by theoretical 
argument,* although confessedly as contrary to the practice of the 
ekrly church * as it appears to be to reason. Charlemagne, how- 
ever, notwithstanding his attachment to the Roman ritual, combated 
the growing opinion on this point. '' Let no one," it is said in his 
capitulary at the council of Frankfort, " suppose that God may not 
be prayed to except in three languages ; forasmuch as in every 
tongue God is worshipped, and man is heard if he ask the things 
which are right." ^ 

The chanting was now left to the choir, and the people joined 
only in the Ki/rie eleSsonJ^ But Charlemagne and others were 
careful that preaching — which by means of missions regained an 
importance which it had once appeared likely to lose — should be 
frequent, and in the vulgar tongue.*^ His measures for the instruc- 
tion of the people in the Creed and the Lord's Prayer have been 
noticed in a former chapter.* 

In England, Latin was employed as the ritual language, not 
only by Augustine and his followers, but by the Scotch and Irish 
teachers, who had been accustomed to it in their native churches.^ 
The Epistle and Gospel, however, were read in the vernacular 
tongue, and in it sermons were delivered.* The Scotch or Irish 

.' Neand. v. 175. Fleury (Disc. ii. aUas omnes ad laudem et gloriam 

23) and Dr. Lingard (A. 8. C. L 308) suam" (Ep. 107, ap. Hard. vi. 86). 

allege, in favour of Latin service, that, The legend of St. LudmiUa, in relating 

but for the necessity of learning the the same matter, tells us, " Erant qui 

language for this purpose, the clergy of blasphemabant Slovenicas litteras, lo- 

the dark ages would have altogether qucntes — 'Dedecet ullum populum ha- 

neglected it, and consequently would bere libros hos, nisi Hebraicos, Grsecos, 

have allowed the remains both of Latinosque, secundum titulum Pilati * — 

pagan and of Christian antiquity to quos papa Pilaticos assedas et trilingues 

perish. But this argument from a sup- nominans daomavit." c. 6, ap. Ginzel, 

posed result, whatever it may be worth Anh. 25. 

m itself, has obviously nothing to do ^ Giesel. ii. 279 ; Rettb. ii. 779. 

with the justification of using an un- There is a curious passage in the 27th 

known tongue in service — much less of canon of Cloveshoo, as to those who 

retaining it, when the dark ages were at sing without understanding the words — 

an end. exhorting them to suit their own 

■ Martene, i. 101. thoughts and desires to them. See John- 

^ Capit. Francof. a.d. 794, c. 52. M. son's note, i. 259. 
Guizot supposes (ii. 226) that the Ian- <* Gone. Arel. a.d. 813, c 10, &c. ; 

gruages meant are Greek, Latin, and Rettberg, ii. 772-4. See above, p. 146. 

German. But the very thing which is Such sermons of the time as remain are 

condemned is the prejudice against the Latin ; but they were either the originals 

use of German : the three languages or translations of the German or ** rustic 

were evidently those written over the Roman,*' which was preached to the 

cross, as appears further from the people. Rettb. i. 775-7. 
words of John VIII. in sanctioning the * See p. 145. 

Slavonic liturgy. " Qui fecit tres ' Johnson, L xiii. - xiv. ; Lingard, 

linguas principales, Hebneam, scilicet, A. S. C. i. 302. 
Gnccam, et Latinam, ipse creavit et ' Jjingard, i. 307-8. 



Chai-. IX. ORGANS. 225 

liturgy was suppressed by the council of Cloveshoo in those parts 
of southern England where it had before been used;** but, not- 
withstanding the influence of Wilfrid, it kept possession of the 
church of York until the time of Alcuin, who is found recom- 
mending that it should be abandoned.* It would, however, seem 
that, in the adaptation of the Roman ritual for England, some use 
was made of that license of selection from other quarters which 
had been granted by Gregory to Augustine^ 

In the East, Greek had been the usual language of the Chun^h, 
and continued to be so under the Mahometan rule, where Arabic 
was used for the ordinary business of life. The Monophysites of 
Egypt, however, employed the Coptic in their service, and the 
Nestorians the Syriac.™ 

(2.) The use of organs was now brought into the service of the 
Latin church. The earliest mention of such instruments (as dis- 
tinguished from the ancient hydraulic organ, of which the invention 
is ascribed to Archimedes °) is perhaps in a passage of St. Augus- 
tine.^ Venantius Fortunatus, bishop of Poitiers about the year 
600, compares the voices of boys and men in a choir to the smaller 
and the larger pipes of an organ respectively,' but does not speak 
of the instrument itself as used in churches ; so that his words are 
not inconsistent with the opinion which ascribes the introduction 
of organs into churches to Pope Vitalian (a.d. 657-672.)** It 
appears from the testimony of Aldhelm that they were known in 
England at the beginning of the eighth century ;' but it would 
seetn that, after the age of Venantius, the organ had again 
become a novelty to the Franks when one was sent by Constantino 
Copronymus as a present to Pipin in 757.' The St Gall bio- 
grapher of Charlemagne tells us that a similar instrument, " emu- 
lating at once the roar of thunder and the sweetness of the 

•» Cc. 13, 15 (a.d. 747). des-Pr^8, at Paris, had an organ in the 

' Ep. 171, ad Symeonem. time of Venantins; but it will be seen 

^ Lingard, A. S. C. i. 294-5. (See that this is a mistake. 

above, p. 18.) *> "Ut quidam volunt." Platina, 96. 

™ Fleary, Disc. ii. 7. ' *Aldh. de Laudibus Virginum (Pa- 

" Plin. Hist. Nat vii. 38 ; Tertull. de trol. Ixxxix. 240) ; Turner, Hist. 

Anima, 14; Claudian. de Consul. Mall. Anglos, iii. 457-8; Lingard, A-S.C. ii. 

Theod. 315. See Ducange, s. v. Or- 37.5-6. 

(janum. * Einhard, a.d, 757. The author of 

° Enarr. in Psalm. Ivi. 16; cf. Isid. the article Organ in the 'Encyclopedia 

Hispal. Etymol. ii. 21. Britannica' (xvi. 709) supposes that the 

P "nicpuerexigalsattempentorganAcannto word orqana here may mean 'Various 

Inde senex largam ructat ab ore tabam." musical instruments.'* But there is no 

ifijoeBanea. H. 13 (Patrol. Ixxxvlil.). ^^^^ for seeking so to explain it. 

This seems to be the passage to whic^ more especially as the best MSS., ac* 

M. de Montalembert refers (ii. 291) a* cording to Pertz, read "orgauum.*' 

proving that the church of St. Germain- 

Q 



226 EUCHARISnC doctrine. BookHI. 

lyre," which was brought by some Greek ambassadors to the great 
emperor, excited the imitative talent of the Franks ;* and so skilful 
did they become in the manufacture, tliat about a century after the 
date of Constantine's gifl to Pipin, Pope John VIIL is found 
requesting a bishop of Freisingen to send him an organ, because 
those of the north were superior to any that could be made in 
Italy.^ 

(3.) The history of the eucharistic doctrine during this period 
has been disputed with as much zeal and partiality as if the 
question between modem Rome and its opponents depended on 
the opinions of the seventh and eighth centuries. The word 
figure^ when it occurs, is hailed by one party, and such words as 
hody^ bloody or changed^ by the other, as if they were sufficient to 
determine the matter. But the truth seems to lie between the 
extremes. Both in language and in opinion there was a progress 
towards the doctrine of transubstantiation, and the feeling of 
individuals may have closely bordered on it ; but there was no 
recognition, nor apparently even any assertion, of more than an 
effective grace, by which the consecrated elements, while retaining 
their original substance, convey to the faithful receiver the benefits 
of the Saviour's death. Some passages of Bede and of Alcuin, 
for example, which are produced by Romanists as favourable 
to their views,* appear really to maintain nothing beyond the 
doctrine of the English Reformation ; when Alcuin speaks of a 
bishop as consecrating bread and wine into the mbstanee of our 
Lord's body and blood,'' it would seem that by " substance " he 
does not mean any thing material, but only a virtual efficacy; 
and after this, the Caroline Books, in which Alcuin himself is 
supposed to have been largely concerned, express themselves in a 
manner entirely accordant with our own eucharistic doctrine." 

John of Damascus appears to have gone further than any of the 
western teachers. He rejects the term " figure," as unauthorised 
by Scripture, and declares the consecrated elements to be " the 
very deified body of the Lord." * Yet the sense of this startling 
expression may be reduced by a comparison with the language 

t Moil. Sangall. ii. 10. y £p. 36, p. 49. Dr. Lingard, how- 

" A.D. 873. Joh. Ep. I (Patrol, e^er, quotes the words as conclusiye in 

cxxvi.). Baldric, archbishop of Dol, favour of transubstantiation. A. S. C. 

in the beginning of the twelfth century, ii. 465. 

mentions with admiration an organ at ' E, g. ii. 27 (pp. 274-8, ed. Goldast.) ; 
Fecamp, as the first which he had seen, iy. 14 (pp. 419-420). The words which 
although he had travelled widely in Dr. Lingard quotes from the latter pas- 
France, and had visited England. Iti- sage (A. S. C. ii. 464) do not warrant 
nerarium, 7 (Patrol. clxTi.). his inference from them. 
« See Schrbckh, xx. 164-5. • De Fid. Orthod. iv. 12 (t. i. 271). 



CHAP. IX. EUCHARISTIC DOCTRINE AND USAGES. 227 

then current as to the union of our Lord's natures or wills — where 
it was said that the flesh or the human will was " deified " by its 
connexion with the Godhead.^ If the meaning were more than 
this parallel would warrant — if John intended to maintain that the 
material elements were changed, instead of being united with 
something higher — it is certain that the eastern chiurch did not 
adopt his view.*^ The Eucharist was mentioned in the controversy 
as to images by the hostile synods of Constantinople and Nicsea. 
The iconoclastic assembly declares that the only true image of the 
Savioinr is the Eucharist — meaning that the union of the Divine 
grace with the earthly elements represents that union of Godhead 
and manhood in his person which images failed to convey, inas- 
much as. they could only set forth the humanity. The Nicene 
council, in answering this, finds fault with the term imager as being 
one whidi no father had applied to that which is His body and 
blood.*^ Yet no objection is made to the substance of the com- 
parison ; nor do we find anywhere in this controversy the distinction 
which must have occurred if the modem Roman doctrine as to the 
sacrament had been then received — that the consecrated elements 
are unlike images, forasmuch as they are not a representation, but 
are really Christ Himself.® 

Instead of the common bread in which the Eucharist had originally 
been administered, wafers were now substituted in the west They 
were of very fine flour, unleavened, round in shape, and stamped 
with an instrument/ The communion of infants appears to have 
been still in use,^ and many superstitions were practised with the 

*> E. g, in the sixth general coancil it is said to have shed blood {e, g, Greg. 

is said Uiat the hinnan flesh and will are Turon. vi. 21, and frequent instances in 

"deified, not destroyed." (See p. 53.) Gregory the Great). These might be 

See too 1. iii. c. 17, of Damascene s own supposed evidence of a belief in tran- 

work, where he explains how Christ's substantiation ; but we find also in 

flesh can be said to be ** deified " — that Gregory the Great (Ep. iy. 30) a story 

it is not by any change or confusion, of a cloth which, haymg been applied 

but merely by union, the two natures to the body of a saint, shed blood on 

remaining entire and distinct. I have, being cut. This cannot mean that the 

however, some doubt as to the pos- cloth had been changed into the saint's 

sibility of dealing the passage in the body, but only that the virtue of the 

text by this parallel. There would body had been communicated to it ; and 

be no difficulty if he had said that the the explanation wiU serve for the other 

bread and wine are deified ; but instead cases. 

of this he says that they are the deified ' Mt^iU. Acta SS. III. xxxv.-xL, xlv. 

body. seqq. ; Analecta, 538, seqq. ; Rettb. ii. 

•^ Schrockh, xx. 174. 786-7. 

*» Hard. iv. 868-372. That this asser- » Schrockh, xx. 175. For its con- 

tion was incorrect, see Schrockh, xx. tinuance into the twelfth century, see 

161-3. D'Achery, n. in Guib. Noviirent. (Fatrol. 

• Schrockh, xx. 592 (from Bossier's clvi. 1023). Compare Lanfranc, Ep. 33 

Bibliothek d. Kirchenvater). During (ib. cl.). See, however, Waterland, vi. 

this period there are many tales of 67, ed. Oxf. 1843 ; and vol. i. p. 165. 



miracles in which the consecrated host 



Q 2 




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*s^v£L .m. lies Vnir:! iuuuu.s ji iv f^cies' ^ 

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sesis if ieil laii ^iims:rr_ mil rie iCi* :c iie r^iionHiii^ tii» 

r.nic xsnear^i : "ae ifea a: sura, 'rlg.7n^ 'Sfjxm; •ttTrnjajr- <ui skbs 
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KidriL in liL-> ^ ~ O&sir^ * ncyiC 

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» 'l.Kjir- T- ig. fiic*z. :t. |.:4. ii«^ zu* J*ii'-rnjrirf .'^ICranr Chbw^ w. 



Chap. IX. THE LORD^S DAY. 229 

With the belief in purgatory, that in the utility of masses for 
the departed grew. Fraternities were formed, especially among 
monks, to say a certain number of masses for the soul of every 
brother at his death, and on the anniversary of it, or to provide 
for the purchase of them by a payment, which in England was 
called souhcot.^ The performance of these masses became an im- 
portant source of income to the clergy, and is recognised as such 
by Chrodegang's rule/ Additional altars were on this account 
erected in churches, which before had only one.* Masses were 
also used in order to obtain temporal benefits, such as fair weather 
or seasonable rain.* 

(4) A greater strictness in the observance of the Lord's-day 
had gradually been introduced into the church,^ and occupations 
which councils of the sixth century had vindicated against a 
judaizing tendency,*^ were now forbidden as contrary to the 
sanctity of the day, which it became usual to ground on the fourth 
commandment.*^ Many canons throughout this period, and shortly 
after, enact that it should be kept by a cessation from all trade, 
husbandry, or other manual labour. No lawcourts or markets . 
may be held, men are to refrain from hunting, women must not 
sew, embroider, weave, card wool, beat flax, shear sheep, or 
jmblicly wash clothes.® No journeys were to be taken except such 
as were unavoidable ; and these were to be so managed as not to in- 
terfere with the duty of attending the church-service.' Theodore of 
Canterbury states that the Greeks and the Latins agree in doing no 
work on Sunday ; that they do not sail, ride, drive, except to church, 
hawk, or bathe ; that the Greeks do not write in public, although at 
home they write according to their convenience.* Penalties were 
enacted against such as should violate the sanctity of the day. 
Thus the council of Narbonne, in 589, condemns a freeman to 

of Wettin (see p. 136), in the ninth cen- 1, 116, seqq. 

tary, marks, as M. Ampere observes, an « Cone. Matisc. a.d. 585, c. 1 ; Cone, 

important step in the progress towards Narbonn. a.d. 589, c. 4 ; Greg. Ep. ix. 1 ; 

Dante — the introduction of political Cone. Cabil. I. a.d. 650, c. 18; Gone, 

matter into snch narratives, and the Clovesh. a.d. 747, c. 14 ; Capit. a.d. 

employment of them as vehicles of per- 789, c. 80 ; Cone. Foroj. a.d. 796 (?), 

soi.al reproof. c. 13 ; Thcodulph. Cap. 24 (Hard. iv. 

"" Mabill. III. Ixxxvi. seqq. ; Dacange, 917); Cone. Arel. ^.d. 813, c. 16; 

8. V. Fratemiias (3) ; Soames, A. S. C. Cone. Cabil. a.d. 813, c. 50 ; Cone. 

282 ; Rettb. ii. 788-9. Mogont. a.d. 813, c. 37 ; Laws of 

J' C. 32 ; see Mabill. III. xliii. Northumbrian Priests, in Thorpe, 421, 

' Mabill. III. Iv.-lvi. No. 55, &c. 

• Schrockh, xx. 182; Rettb. ii. 788. ' The council of Aix-la-Cbapelle, in 

^ See vol. i. p. 349. 836, suggests that marriages should not 

« E. g. Cone. Aurel. III. a.d. 538, be celebrated on Sunday, lii. 18. 

c. 28. ' Poenitentiale, c. 8 (Patrol, xcix.). 

^ See He8sey*8 Bampton Lectures, ed. 



230 THE LOpi/S DAY. BD«m. 

IMiy six solidif and a serf to receive a hundred lashes.^ Ina, 
king of Wessex (a.d. 688-725), directs that, if a serf work on the 
Lord's-day by his master s order, he shall be free ; if at his ova 
will, he shall pay a fine or shall ^'suffer in bis hide.'*' The 
council of Berghamstcad (a.d. 696) enacts that a freeman break- 
ing the rest of the day shall undergo the htcigfctng^ and imposes 
a heavy fine on a master who shall make his servant work betweoi 
the sunset of Saturday and that of Sunday.*" The authority of 
pretended revelations was called in to enforce the obeervance of 
the I^rd*s-day. It appears that this was the object of a letter 
which was «iid to have fallen from heaven in 788» and of whidi 
('harlemagne, in his capitulary of the following year, orders the 
su|)pre88ion ; " and the same pious fraud, or something of the same 
kind, was ein|)loycd in England"^ Under Louis the Pious, ooundls 
are found 8|)eaking of judgments by which persons bad been 
punished for working on the Lord's-day — some had been struck 
by lightning, some lamed in their members, some reduced to 
iisht's hy visible fire. The clergy, the nobles, and the emperor 
himself, are desired to show a good example by a right obeervance 
of the day J* 

IJut the* idea of identifying the Lord's-day with the Jewish 
sabbath was condemned. Gregory the Great speaks of it as a 
doctrine of Antichrist, who, he says, will require the observance of 
both days— of the Sabbatli, for the sake of Judaism ; of the Lord's- 
day, because he will pretend to rival the Saviour's resurrectioD. 
Gregory goes on to notice the scruples of some who held that it 
was wrong to wash the body on the Lord's-day. It is allowed* 
he says, for necessity, although not for luxury, and he adds a 
curious attempt at Scriptural proof. "i The councils of Lestines 
and Verne censure an extreme rigour in the observance of the 
day, as ** belonging rather to Jewish superstition than to Christian 
duty." ' 

The Lord's-day was commonly considered to begin on Saturday 
evening, and to reach to the corresponding hour on Sunday.* 

I* C. 4. of this coancil is supposed to haye been 

' C. 3, in Thorpe, 45 ; Comp. Laws of lierstcad, near Maidstone. 

Edward and Gnthruu, c. 7, ib. 73. ° Capit. 77. See above, p. 112, note'. 

•' * Jleahfiuuj ' — 1.^. a neck-catch — pro- " Soames, A. S. C. 257. 

perly a sort of pillory ; but, as this was v Cone. Paris, VI. a.d. 829, i. 50; iii. 

very early disused, the word came to 19 ; Cone. Wonnat. a.d. 829, c 11 

mean a fine or pecuniary commutation (Pertz, Leges, i.). ** £p. ziiL 1 . 

for the ignominy, graduated according ' Cone. Liptiu. a.d. 743 (Hard. iii. 

to the offender's rank. See Thorpe, 1924-6): Cone. Vern. a.d. 755, c. 14 

Glossary to Ancient Laws and Insti- (Pertz, tx^ges, i.). 

tutes. ■ Capit. a.d. 789, c. 15 (Pertx, Leges, 

" C. 10-12 (Thorpe, 17). The place i. 57); Cone. Francof. a.d. 794, c. 2L 



Chap. IX. FESTTIVALS. 231 

Such, as we have seen, was the length of the labourer's rest in 
England at the time of the council of Berghamstead (a.d. 696) ; 
but by the middle of the tenth century it was extended, and reached 
from nones (3 p.m.) on Saturday to the dawn of Monday/ 

(5.) The festival of All Saints (which was intended to make up 
for the defects in the celebration of saints individually °) has been 
generally connected with the beginning of this period, when Boni- 
face IV. obtained a grant of the Pantheon at Rome from Phocas, 
and consecrated it as the church of St Mary ad Martj/res in 607/ 
It would, however, appear that a festival of martyrs, on May 13, 
which arose out of the consecration of the Pantheon, has been con- 
founded with All Saints' Day (Nov. 1), and that the latter was 
not observed at Rome until the eighth century/ It was raised to 
the first class of festivals, and was recommended for general cele- 
bration, by Gregory IV. in 835.* In the east, the Sunday after 
Whitsunday had been connected with the memory of All Saints as 
early as the time of St. Chrysostom.* 

The growing reverence for the Blessed Virgin led to an increase 
of festivals dedicated to her. The " Presentation in the Temple " 
became the " Purification of St. Mary." Her Nativity (Sept. 8) 
was already celebrated both in the east and in the west,^ and her 
own " Presentation" (i. e. her supposed dedication to the service 
of the Temple) was established as a festival in the Greek church 
(Nov. 21), although it was not adopted in the west until the 
fourteenth century.*" In Spain, the appearance vouchsafed to Ilde- 
fonsus of Toledo occasioned the establishment of the ^^ Expectation 
of St Mary " (Dec. 18).* The Assumption (Aug. 15) was also 
now introduced. In the silence of Scripture as to the Blessed 
Virgin's death, legends on the subject had arisen. At the time of 
the council of Ephesus (a.d. 431), she was supposed to have spent 
her last years with St John in that city, and to have been interred 
in the church where the council met. But afterwards it came to 
be believed that she had been buried in the valley of Jehoshaphat, 
and thence had been caught up to heaven. From this tale, which 

• Lingard, A. S. C. i. 310-1. ed. Aug. Vindel. 1763; Martene, iii. 

«" Pseado-AIcuinus de Div. Officiis, 31 21.5. 

(Patrol, ci.). • Augusti, iii. 271 ; Giesel. 1. cit. 

« Anastas. 135; Baron. 607. 1. *» Martene, iii. Ill ; Aagusti, iii. 

f Giesel. II. i. 160-1. See Martene, 105. 

i. 215. Auffosti seems to be wrong in « Martene, iii. 217 ; Aagusti, iii. 

supposing that the festivals are the 107. 

same, and that the celebration was ^ See above, p. 63 ; Pseudo-Liutprand. 

transferred from May to November by Chron. a.d. 657 (Patrol, cxxxvi. 1019); 

Gregory III. (iii. 272-3). Baron. 657. 56, and Pagi, xi. 509 ; 

' Gavanti, Thes. Sac. Rituum, ii.243, Martene, i. 199. 



232 REVERENCE FOR SAINTS. BooKltt 

originated in a conjecture of Epipfaanius that she never died,^ and 
was afterwards supported by sermons falsely ascribed to Jerome 
and Augustine, the festival of the Assumption took its rise/ In 
one of the Capitularies it is mentioned as a subject for inquiry;' 
but the observance of it is sanctioned by the Council of Ments, 
in 813.^ The other festivals named in the same canon are — 
Easter with the week following, Ascension-day, Whitsunday and 
the week after it, the Nativity of St John Baptist, St. Peter and 
St. Paul, St. Michael, St Bemigius, St Martin, St Andrew, four 
days at Christmas, the Circumcision, the Epiphany, the Purifica- 
tion, the dedication of each church, and the feasts of the martyrs 
and confessors whose relics are preserved in the diocese or parish.' 
This last provision contained the germ of a great multiplication 
of festivals, which naturally ensued as saints of local fame became 
more generally celebrated, and as their relics were more widely 
dispersed.*' 

The Council of Mentz also sanctions the celebration of the 
Ember-weeks,™ which was now generally established. 

(6.) The superstitions connected with an excess of reverence 
for saints were continually on the increase. Stories of visions in 
which saints appeared, and of miracles performed by them, are found 
in immense profusion — so "great, indeed, that even some contem- 
poraries began to murmur. Thus we are told by the biographer 
of Hildulf, abbot of Moyen-Moutier, in the Voages," who died 
in 707, that the death of one of his monks named Spinulus was 
followed by a number of miracles. Three mineral springs burst 

« Hficr. Ixxviii. U. of the death of saints, without imply- 

' Giesel. II. i. 157-160. Gregory of ing anything miraculous. See Ducange, 

Tours is supposed to be the oldest s. ▼. 

authority for the Assumption (De Gloria « " Interrogandum relinquimus." An- 

Martyrum, i. 4; August!, iii. 113). segis. Capitul. i. 168, ed. Baluie, i. 732. 

Arculf, a pilgrim to Jerusalem in the The date is probably 809 (Piper, * Karls 

end of the seventh century, says that des Grossen Kalendarium/ 70, Berlin, 

the Virgin was buried in the valley of 1858). The Assumption is in Charle- 

Jehoshaphat, but that how or by whom magne's Calendar of 781, ib. 27. 

her body was removed, and m what *» C. 36. 

phice she awaite the resurrection, no « ** Parochia." See an English list 

man knoweth(AdamnandeLocis Sanctis, in Alfred's Laws, c. 43 (Thorpe, 40-1). 

13 ; Patrol, liucxviii.). In the eighth There is much information on these 

century Willibald, an English pilgrim matters in Piper's pamphlet, cited above. 

(or his biographer), says that she died ^ Schriickh, xx. 140. 

in Jerusalem, and that angels carried " C. 34. 

her away out of the hands of the " In a life composed in the eleventh 

apostles to Paradise (Willib. Peregri- century (c. 3, Patrol. cJi.), and in a 

natio, c. 8, ap. Canis. ii. 112; cf. chronicle in D'Achery's Spicilegiam (ii. 

Andr. Cretens. m Dormitionem S. Mar. 607), he is said, but untruly, to have held 

Patrol. Gr. xcvii. 1057; Bemardi Mo- the archbishoprick of Trdves before re- 

nachi Itmerarium, a.d. 870, Patrol. Lat. tiring to this monastery (c. 3, Patrol. 

cxxi. 572). The term assumptio is used cli. ; Rettb. ii. 467-9, 523). 



Chap. IX. RELICS. 233 

forth in the abbey garden, and crowds of people were attracted 
to the place. Hildulf understood the advantages which his house 
was likely to derive from the offerings of pilgrims ; but he feared 
that the monks might be drawn away from their proper work to 
attend to earthly business : he therefore knelt down at the tomb 
of Spinulus, and, after having thanked God for the assurance of 
liis brother's beatification, charged the deceased monk, by the 
obedience which he had owed him while alive, to save the society 
from the threatened danger. Spinulu3 complied ; the springs 
dried up, and the miracles ceased.** Other stories might be pro- 
duced, which show that some persons felt the general craving 
after miracles to be unwholesome in its effects, even where they 
did not venture to question the reality of the wonders which were 
reported.^ 

The passion for relics was more and more developed. The 
second Council of Nicaea orders that no chiu'ch should be con- 
secrated without some relics, and imputes a disregard of them to 
the opponents of images ;'i but these, as we have seen,' were 
anxious to relieve themselves of the odium. Relics of our Lord 
and of his Virgin mother, the most precious class of all, were mul- 
tiplied. The seamless coat and the napkin which had bound the 
Saviour's head in the sepulchre were each supposed to be preserved 
in more than one place.® Among the treasures of the abbey of 
Centulles,' under Angilbert, who died in 801, were fragments of 
the manger in which our Lord was laid, of the candle lighted at 
his birth, of his vesture and sandals, of the rock on which He sat 
when He fed the five thousand, of the wood of the three taber- 
nacles, of the bread which He gave to his disciples, of the cross, 
and of the sponge ; with portions of the Blessed Virgin's milk, of 
her hair, her dress, and her cloak." In honour of the Cross were 
instituted the festivals of its Invention and Exaltation.'^ 

Other relics also were diligently sought for, and were highly 
prized. Not only are saints said to have appeared, as in former 
ages, for the purpose of pointing out the resting-places of their 

° Vita Hildulphiy ap. MabUl. iv. 149) quotes from Heideg^r de Pere- 

478-9. giinat. Relig., a curioas list of molti- 

p See Mabill. III. Ixxxviii.; Schrockh, pUed relics connected with oar Lord. 

XX. 116-7. Amnio, bishop of Lyons» ^ This abbey, near Abbeville, after- 

aboat the middle of the ninth cen- wards took the name of its founder, St. 

tuiy, speaks of pretended miracles, and Riquier. 

of impostures practised by pretended "^ Vita S. Angilberti, c. 9, ap. Mabill. 

demoniacs. (Inter Opera Agobardi, ii. v. 113-4; Chron. CentuU. ii. 5 (Patrol. 

142-3.) dxxiy.). See D'Achery, n. in Guib. 

1 C. 7. ' P. 163. Novig. Patrol, clvi. 1044. 

• Schrockh, xx. 121-4. August! (x. * Schrockh, xx. 120. 



234 



RELICS. 



bookul 



renuuns,^ but it was believed that sometimes, in answer to earnest 
prayer, relics were sent down from heaven.* A great impulse was 
given to this kind of superstition when, on the approach of the 
Lombards to Rome, in 761, Pope Paul removed the bodies of 
saints from their tombs outside the city to churches within the 
walls.^ The Prankish records of the time abound in accounts of 
the translation of relics to various places in Prance, and of the 
solemnities with which they were received.^ The very connexion 
with Rome was supposed to confer a sanctity and a miraculous 
power. Thus it is related that Odo, duke of Aquitaine, a con- 
temporary of Charles Martel, having got possession of three 
sponges which had been used in wiping the pope's table, divided 
them into little morsels, which he caused his soldiers to swallow 
before a battle ; that no one of those who had partaken was 
wounded, and that while 375,000 Saracens were slain in one day, 
the duke's losses throughout the war amounted only to 1500 men.^ 
Charlemagne repeatedly condemns some ecclesiastical supersti- 
tions, as well as those of the heathens whom he subdued. He 
forbids the veneration of fictitious saints and doubtful martyrs;^ 
the invocation or worship of any but such as the Church had 
sanctioned, or the erection of memorials to them by the way-dde ;* 



y Thus Pope Paschal I. (A.D. 817-824) 
states that one day when he had fallen 
asleep during the psalmody before St. 
Peter's tomb, St. Cecilia appeared to 
him, assuring him that, although the 
Lombards under Aistulf had sought for 
her body, the vulgar belief of their 
havine found it was quite incorrect, 
and that the discovery was reserved 
for him. Ep. i. (Patrol, cii.): comp. 
Anastas. 216. 

« Schrockh, xx. 125. 

■ Anastas. 173. 

^ In answer to the archchaplain Ful- 
rad, who had asked for the body of a 
saint. Pope Adrian says that he had 
been deterred by revelations from dis- 
turbing any more bodies, but informs 
him where one which had formerly 
been granted might perhaps be obtained 
(Bouquet, v. 560). Among Einhard's 
works (ii. 176-377, ed. Teulet) is a tract 
on the translation of two saints named 
Marcellinus and Peter (a.d. 829), which 
gives a ver^ curious view of the prac- 
tices of relic-hunters and of the super- 
stitions connected with the veneration of 
relics. Einhard's agents stole the bodies 
by night from a church at Rome— an 
act which appears to have been regarded 
as quite lawful in such cases. (See vol. i. 



p. 354.) Of the miracles which fol- 
lowed, one specimen may be given. A 
deacon, who was charged to convey a 
portion of the relics as a present from 
Einhard to a monastery, stopped to feed 
his horses in a meadow. Forthwith the 
occupier of the land appeared — a hunch- 
back, whose face was swollen by violent 
toothache — armed with a pitchfork, and 
beside himself with rage on account of 
the trespass. In answer to his outcries, 
the deacon fold him that he would do 
better to kneel down before the relics, 
and pray for the cure of his toothache. 
The man laid down his pitchfork, and 
obeyed ; and when he rose up, after a 
few minutes, his face was reduced to its 
natural size, and he was fVeed not only 
from his toothache but from his de- 
formity (pp. 328-330). St. Willibrord 
dealt more severely with a churl who 
remonstrated aj^inst a similar trespass. 
He deprived him of the power of drink- 
ing, and the man suffered horribly until 
the Saint, on revisiting the place after 
a year, released him. Vita S. Willibr. 
(Mabill. iii. 612-3). 

<^ Anastas. 155. 

«* Capit. A.u. 789, c. 42. 

* Capit. Francof. a.d. 794, c. 42. 



Chap. IX. LEGENDS. 235- 

the circulation of apocryphal or questionable narratives ;' the intro- 
duction of new names of angels, in addition to those for which 
there is authority — Michael, Gabriel, and Raphael.* The council 
of Mentz forbids the translation of the bodies of saints, unless with 
permission from the sovereign and the bishops.^ 

Legendary lives of saints were now produced in wonderful 
abundance, and were the most popular literature of the times. In 
addition to their falsehood* (which, where consciously introduced, 
may have been held excusable by the writers for the sake of the 
expected good effects), and to their enforcement of all the errors 
which had grown upon the Church, they carried the minds of men 
to look for visible prosperity and chastisement according to indi- 
vidual desert in the ordinary government of the world.** Yet the 
evil of such legends was not without a large compensation of good. 
They set forth the power of religion, not only in miracles but in 
self-denial and renunciation of earthly things. In contrast with the 
rudeness and selfishness which generally prevailed, they presented 
examples which taught a spirit of gentleness and self-sacrifice, of 
purity, of patience, of love to God and man, of dismterested toil, 
of forgiveness of enemies, of kindness to the poor and the oppressed. 
The concluding part of the legend exhibited the saint triumphant 
after his earthly troubles, yet still interested in his brethren who 
were engaged in the struggle of life, and manifesting his interest 
by interpositions in their behalf. And above all there was the 
continual inculcation of a Providence watching over all the affairs 
of men, and ready to protect the innocent, or to recompense and 
avenge their sufferings." 

' Capit. A.D. 789, c. 77. Alfred Maury, in hU * Essai Bur les 

tf lb. c 16. This professes to be L^ndes Pieiises da Moyen-Age ' 

from a caDon of Laodicea (a.d. 372 ?), (Paris, 1843)— an able and learned b(K>k, 

c. 35, which, however, prohibits all bnt written on the principles of Stranss 

invocation of angels. The new tarn — ^traces the fictions of the hagiologists 

^ven to the prohibition may have been to three causes — (I.) The attempt to 

mtended agunst such teachers as Adel- assimilate the lives of their subjects to 

bert (See above, p. 112.) Among that of our Lord or to those of Scripture 

other superstitions which are forbid- saints. (2.) The mistake of understand- 

den were the baptisinf; of bells (Cap. ing literally things which were said in 

A.D. 789, c. 69), the practices of divina- a figurative sense — f.^., where a spiritual 

tion and sortilege (ib. c. 68), and the was represented as a bodily cure. (3.) 

employment of charms against sickness The invention of stories in order to 

in men or in cattle. Cone. Turon. a.d. explain symbols of which the real 

813, c. 42. meaning had been lost. As to this last, 

>> C. 51 (A.D. 813). see also Dollinger, ' Hippolytus u. Kal- 

' I must confess my inability to ac- listus/ 63. 

cept M. Ampere's definition of the ^ Fleury, Disc. ii. 3. 

legend—" Ce r^t, souvent merveilleuz, " Guizot, Lecture 1 7; Lubell, * Gregor 

qw personne ne fabrique sciemment, et que v. Tours,* 388 ; Ampere, ii. 360 ; Ste- 

tout l€ monde altire et fdUijie sans le phen's Lectures, i. 142. 
rouMr" (i. 310-1; cf. li. 355-6). M. 



236 PILGRIMAGES. Book UI. 

(7.) Even as early as the fourth century, some of the e^dls 
attendant on the general practice of pilgrimage had been noticed 
by Gregory of Nyssa and others ;° and strong complaints of a like 
kind continue to be found from time to time. Gregory the Great 
tells Rusticiana, a lady of the imperial court, that, while she had 
been on a pilgrimage to Sinai, her affections had been at Constan- 
tinople, and expresses a suspicion that the holy objects which she 
had seen with her bodily eyes had made no impression on her heart.** 
But the idle spirit in which pilgrimages were often undertaken 
was not the worst mischief connected with them. Boniface writes 
to Archbishop Cuthbert, that of the multitude of English women 
who flocked to Rome, only a few escaped the ruin of their virtue ; 
that it was rare to find a town of Lombardy or France in which 
some dishonoured English nun or other female pilgrim had not 
taken up her abode, and by her misconduct brought disgrace on 
the church of her native land.^ Another unhappy effect of pil- 
grimage was, that for the sake of it bishops and abbots absented 
themselves for years from their proper spheres of labour, to the 
great injury of religion and discipline among those committed to 
their care.*^ 

From Britain, pilgrimages were most commonly made to Rome, 
where the English had a quarter of their own, known, as the 
biographer of the popes informs us, by the Saxon name of the 
BurgJ Some pilgrims from our island even found their way to 
the Holy Land.' In France, the chief place of pilgrimage was 
the shrine of St. Martin, at Tours; but the resort from that 
country to Rome became greater after the accession of the Caro- 
lingian dynasty. The lives of pilgrims were regarded as sacred ; 
many hospitals were built for their reception,^ — among them, one for 
Latin pilgrims, which was founded at Jerusalem by Charlemagne." 
The emperor in 802 orders that no one, whether rich or poor, 
shall refuse to pilgrims a roof, fire, and water, and encourages 
those who can afford more to greater hospitality by a consideration 
of the recompense which Scripture promises.* There are, however, 
canons against some of the abuses connected with pilgrimage. 
The Council of Verne, in 755, orders that monks shall not be 
allowed to wander to Rome without their abbot's consent.^ The 

■ Vol. i. p. 356. « Ep. iv. 46. Willibald the biographer of St. Bonifece, 

P Ep. 63 (Patrol. Ixzxix.). in Canisius, ii. 100, seqq. 

•» Fleury, Disc. ii. 5. * Capit. Langohard. a.d. 782, c. 10. 

' Anastas. 2U; Paul. Warnef. vi. 37. » Bernard! Itinerarium, a.d. 870, in 

• See the Liyea of the Saxon Willi- Patrol, cxxi. 572. 

bald, afterwards the first bishop of ' Capit. Aquisgr. a.d. 802, c. 27. 

Eichstedt, and probably the same with y C. 10. 



Chap. IX. PILGRIMAGES — PENITENTIAL BOOKS. 237 

Council of Chalons, in 813, forbids the clergy to go either to 
Rome or to Tours without leave from their bishop ; and while it 
acknowledges the benefit of pilgrimage for those who have con- 
fessed their sins and have obtained directions for penance, who 
amend their lives, give alms, and practise devotion, it denounces 
the error of such as consider pilgrimage a license to sin, and begs 
the emperor to take measures against a common practice of nobles 
who extorted from their dependents the means of paying the 
expense of their own pilgrimages.* 

In some cases, persons who had been guilty of grievous sin were 
condemned by way of penance to leave their country, and either to 
wander for a .certain time, or to undertake a pilgrimage to some 
particular place. Many of them were loaded with chains, or with 
rings which ate into the flesh and inflicted excessive torture." 
Ethelwulf, the father of Alfred the Great, at his visit to Rome in 
855, obtained from Benedict III. the privilege that no Englishman 
should ever be obliged to leave his own country for this sort of 
penance ;^ but long before his time impostors had found their 
account in going naked and in irons under the pretence of having 
been sentenced to pilgrimage. The capitulary of 789 forbids such 
vagabonds to roam about the country, and suggests that those who 
have really been guilty of some great and unusual offence may 
perform their penance better by remaining in one place.* 

(8.) The discipline of the Church in dealing with sin was now 
regulated by Penitential Books. These books were of eastern 
origin ; the earliest of them was drawn up by John, patriarch of 
Constantinople, the antagonist of Gregory the Great ;*^ the first in 
the western church was that of Theodore, the Greek archbishop of 
Canterbury, which soon gained a great authority in the continental 
churches as well as in England.* The object of Theodore was to 
reduce penance to something practicable, as the impossibility of 
fulfilling the requirements of the ancient canons had led to a 
general evasion or disregard of them.' While the penalties which 

* Cc. 44-5. «= C. 78 : cf. Capit. a.d. 802, c. 45. 

■ Notices of this are foand as early as ^ Schrdckh, xx. 146-7. John's Peni- 

Gregory of Tours, in the end of the tential is in the Appendix to Moriuus, 

sixth century. De Glor. Confess. 87 ; De Poenit. 77, seqq. ; and in the Patrol, 

see Martene, i. 268 ; Ducange, s. t. Or. Ixxxviii. For the western Peni- 

Peregrinatio, tentials, see Walter, Kirchenrecht, 179- 

»» Th. Rudbome, Hist. Winton., in 182. 

Wharton, i. 202 ; Liugard, H. E. i. 177. • Lingard, A. S. C. i. 335. It is in 

According to Gaimar, this privilege was Thorpe, 277, seqq., and (with iUustra- 

obtained for the English by Canute, on tions by Petit) in vol. xcix. of the 

his visit to Rome in 1027 or 1031 (Mon. Patrologia. 

Hist. Brit. 821). ' PUmck, ii. 292 ; Rettb. ii. 740. 



238 PENITENTIAL BOOKS. Book in. 

he appointed were at least as severe as in earlier times, a scheme 
of commutation was introduced ; for example, a certain amount of 
fasting might be redeemed by the recitation of a prescribed number 
of psalms. From this the transition was easy to a system of pecu- 
niary commutations* — a system recommended by ihe analogy of 
the wehr.^ That institution had been extended from its original 
character of a composition for life to the case of lesser bodily inju- 
ries, so that the loss of a limb, an eye, a finger, or a tooth was to 
be atoned for by a fixed pecuniary fine ;* and the principle was now 
introduced into the penitentials, where ofiences were rated in a scale 
both of exercises and of money nearly resembling that of the civil 
damages. As yet, however, these payments were not regarded as 
a source of profit to the Church, but were to be given to the poor, 
according to the penitent's discretion.^ In England, the rich were 
able to relieve themselves in their penance by associating with 
themselves a number of poor persons for the performance of it 
By such means, it was possible to clear off seven years of penitence 
within a week ; and, although the practice was condemned by the 
Council of Cloveshoo,™ it was afterwards formally sanctioned.*^ 

The necessary effect of the new penitential system was not only 
to encourage the fatal error of regarding money as an equivalent 
for sin — an error against which some councils protested in vain,® 
while the language of others seems to countenance it^ — but to 
introduce a spirit of petty traffic into the relations of sinners with 
their God. In opposition to this spirit Gregory III. said that 
canons ought not to lay down exactly the length of time which 
should be assigned to penance for each offence, forasmuch as that 
which avails with God is not the measure of time but of sorrow. *i 
The Council of Chalons denounces the penitential books, of which 
it says that " the errors are certain and the authors uncertain ;'* it 

» Theodore, in Thorpe, 309-310, 345 j but one not possessing means may not 

Egbert, c. 2 (Wilkins, i. 115); Lingard, so proceed, bat must seek it in him- 

A. S. C. 335-7. self the more diligently ; and that is 

*> Planck, ii. 296 ; Rettb.ii. 737, 741-2. also justest, that every one avenge his 

See above, p. 207. own misdeeds on himself, with dili- 

• See Alfred's Laws, in Thorpe, 41-4 ; gent bdt (compensation). Scriptum est 

Perry, 436. enim. Quia unnsquisque onus suom por- 

k Planck, ii. 330 ; Rettb. ii. 741-2 ; tabit" 

Grimm, Deutsche Rechtsalterthiimer, <> Cone. Clovesh. c. 26 ; Cone. Cabil. 

661-4, Gotdng. 1828. a.d. 813, c. 36. 

"» A.D. 747, c. 27. P Cone. Agath. a.d. 506, c. 6 ; Cone 

** Turner, Hist. Anglos, iii. 86 ; Lin- Matisc. a.d. 585, c. 4. The Capit. 

gard, A. S. C. i. 338-9. See the chapter Aquisgr. a.d. 816, c. 1, speaks of 

** Of powerful Men " in Edgar's canons " pretia peccatorum." See vol. i. p. 

(Thorpe, 414-5). The conclusion is — 553. 

" This is the alleviation of the penance <) Hard. iii. 1870 ; cf. Halitgar. Pnef. 

of a man powerful, and rich in friends ; ad Poenitent. (Patrol, cv. 654, 657). 



Chap. IX. PENANCE — EXCOMMUNICATION — ORDEALS. 239 

charges them with " sewing pillows to all arm-holes/' and requires 
that penance should be restored to the footing of the ancient 
canons;' and there are similar passages in other French councils 
of the ninth and tenth centuries.' 

Confession of secret sins was much insisted on ; but the priest 
was regarded rather as an adviser than as a judge, and the form of 
his absolution was not judicial but deprecatory.* Absolution was 
usually given immediately after confession, and the prescribed 
penance was left to be performed afterwards, so that, whereas in 
earlier ages the penitents had been excluded for a time firom 
the full communion of the Church, they now remained in it 
throughout.** 

The penalty of excommunication became in the Frankish church 
much more sevece than it had formerly been. The Council of 
Verne lays down that an excommunicate person ^' must not enter 
the church, nor partake of food or drink with any Christian ; 
neither may any one receive his gifts, or kiss him, or join with 
him in prayer, or salute him/'' It has been supposed that the 
new terrors of this sentence were borrowed from the practice of 
the Druids,y with a view to controlling the rude converts who 
would have disregarded a purely spiritual penalty. The power of 
wielding it must doubtless have added greatly to the influence of 
the clergy, although this effect did not yet appear so fully as at 
a later period. 

(9.) The trial of guilt or innocence by means of a solemn appeal 
to heaven had been practised among many heathen nations, m- 
eluding those of the north.* The Mosaic law had sanctioned it 
in certain cases ;^ it fell in with the popular appetite for miracles,^ 
and the Church now for a time took the management of such trials 
into her own hands. The Ordeal^ or Judgment of God,*' was 
not to be resorted to where the guilt of an accused person was 
clear, but in cases of suspicion, where evidence was wanting or 
insufficient The appeal was conducted with great solemnity. 
The accuser swore to the truth of his charge ; the accused (who 

' A.D. 813, C. 38. ■ ^**"' *' «Toq*ot KOi i^vUftovt alptiv X*P^''* 

* Giesel. II. i. 168. On the evil of «t.^ sophoel. Antig.'iM-l, 
the Penitentials, Bee Martincau, 234-5 ; For other instanceB see Grimm, Rechts- 
on the good which they were able to alterthiimer, 933 ; Augusti, x. 254-8. 
effect in snch ages, there is an eloquent • As in the trial of jealousy, Numb, 
passage in Milman, i. 380-1. t. ; and in the casting of lots. Josh. 

* Bingham, xix. ii. 5-6 ; Rettb. ii. vii. "* Planck, iii. 640. 

738. ^ Ord^l is the same with the modem 

■ Planck, ii. 316. German UrtheiU judgment, Auffosti, 

* A.D. 766, c. 9 (Pertz, i. 26). x. 248 ; see Ducange, s. v. Judicium 
y Mosheim, ii. 135. Dei, 



240 ORDEALS. Book III. 

for three days bad been preparing himself by fasting and prayer) 
asserted his innocence in the same manner ; and he was adjured 
in the most awful terms not to approach the Lord's table if he 
were conscious of any guilt in the matter which was to be sub- 
mitted to the Divine judgment Both parties then communicated ; 
and after this, the clergy anointed the instruments with which the 
trial was to be made.^ 

The ordeal was of various kinds. That by Judicial combat or 
tvager of battle ® was introduced into the Burgundian law by the 
Arian king Gundobald, the contemporary of Clovis, against the 
remonstrances of Avitus, bishop of Vienne/ It was not uncommon 
among the Franks, but appears to have been unknown in England 
until after the Norman conquest/ Persons who were disqualified 
for undergoing this ordeal by age, sex, bodily weakness, or by the 
monastic or clerical profession, were allowed to fight by champions, 
who were usually hired, and were regarded as a disreputable class.** 
In the trial by hot iron^ the accused walked barefoot over heated 
ploughshares,^ or (which was the more usual form), he carried a 
piece of glowing iron in his hand nine times the length of his foot. 
The foot or the hand (as the case might be) was then bound up 
and sealed until the third day, when it was examined, and accord- 
ing to its appearance the guilt or innocence of the party was 
decided*^ The trial of ?u)t water consisted in plimging the arm 

^ A collection of forms used in the men only, and is not a sure test in any 

ordeal is given in Baluze's edition of case. (De Pressuris Eccles. Patrol, 

the Capitularies, and is reprinted by cxxxiv. 68, 61.) In later times, the 

Bouquet, v. 595-609, and in the Patro- priyilege of exemption from the combat 

logia, Ixxxvii. 929, seqq. See too Mar- was often granted by emperors or other 

tene, ii. 332; Patrol, cxxxviii. 1127, soyerei^ns to the inhabitants of parti- 

seqq. The fullest code is that in Athel- cular cities or districts. In Scotland, 

stane's laws (which may be found* in the burgesses of royal burghs might 

Thorpe), Planck, iii. 540. claim the combat against those of burghs 

* See Ducange, s. y. Duellum^ Grimm, dependent on subjects, but could not in 

927. their turn be obliged to grant them the 

' Agobard ady. Legem Gundobaldi, combat (Leges IV. Burgarum, c. 14, in 

c. 13; ady.Judicium Dei, c. 5; Datt, 4. Acts of Pari, of Scotland, i. 23). 

For this there is no ritual in the church- ** Knights and tree tenants might do 

books. Augusti, x. 298. battle by proxy, but those of foul kin 

9 Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 136 ; Phillips, were obliged to fight in person." Innes, 

ii. 127. For the Anglo-Norman laws 185. 

on this subject, see the *Tractatu8 de • Ducange, s. v. Towjerw ; Grimm, 914. 

Legibus et Ck)nsuetudinibus Anglise,' ^ Grimm, 915 ; Lingard, ii. 136. 

1. li. c. 3, in Phillips' Appendix. For There is a question how this trial could 

the early Scottish laws as to the combat ever haye been successfully borne. Mr. 

and other ordeals, see Innes, Scotland in Soames supposes that the nand was for- 

the Middle Ages, 185 seqq. tified against the heat by some sort of 

'^ Ducange, s. y. Campiones. Atto, preparation, and tliat this, with the 
bishop of Vercelli, in the tenth century, shortness of the distance, and the inter- 
complains that clergymen and monks yal of three days before the inspection, 
were obliged to fight by proxy. The might be enough to account fo^it (A.S.C. 
judicial combat, he says, belongs to lay- 293). Mr. Hallam, although less con- 



Chap. IX. 



ORDEALS. 



241 



into a boiling cauldron, and taking out a stone, a ring, or a piece 
of iron, which was hung at a greater or less depth in proportion 
to the gravity of the offence in question."* That of cold water was 
performed by throwing the accused into a pond with a cord attached 
to him, by which he might be drawn out. If he were laden with 
weights, sinking was a proof of guilt ; if not, it was held to prove 
his innocence." In the ordeal of the crass (which, notwithstanding 
the name which it acquired, was probably of heathen origin),® the 
accused or his proxy held up the right arm, or both arms ; psalms 
were sung during the trial, and the sinking or trembling of the 
arms was evidence of guilt.^ Among other kinds of ordeal were 
— holding the hand in fire ; walking in a thin garment between 
two burning piles ;^ eating a cake, which in England was called 
the corsned;' and receiving the holy eucharist* 

Some of these practices were condemned after a time. Louis 
the Pious, after having in 816 prescribed the trial of the cross as 
a means of deciding between contradictory witnesses,' abolished 

fidently, suggests a like explanation 
(M. A. ii. 359), and ancient receipts for 
enabling the hand to bear fire exist 
(Dacange, s.w. Ferrum Candens; Miin- 
ter, ii. 229 ; Eaumer, t. 284). Grimm, 
(91 1) and Rettberg (ii. 753) say that the 
trial was very rarely made, and only in 
the case of persons against whom the 
popular feeling would be strong if they 
faiied. Freemen might clear themseWes 
by their own oath, or by that of com- 
purgators (Ducange, s.v. Juramentum; 
Grimm, 911; Kemble, i. 210), so that 
the ordeal would be left to slaves (Mar- 
tene, ii. 331) and to such women as 
could DOt find a champion. This expla- 
nation, however, does not at all account 
for the instances of success ; and, more- 
over, cases are recorded in which the 
trial of hot iron was endured by monks 
and other freemen (Ducange s.v. Fer- 
rum Candens ; Maratori, in Patrol. 
Ixxxvii. 962-4). Planck says (iii. 543-6) 
that in all recorded instances the issue 
of these ordeals was favourable, and sup- 
poses that the clergy employed a pious 
fraud to save the lives of innocent per- 
sons. See Augusti, x. 273. 

" Ducange, s.vv. Aqua ferventis Judi- 
cium ; Grimm, 919 ; Lingard, A. S. C. 
ii. 135. 

° Ducange, s.vv. Aqua frigida Judi^ 
cium ; Murat. in Patrol. Ixxxvii. 959 ; 
Augusti, X. 289 ; Grimm, 523. Hinc- 
mar combats the objection raised by the 
opponents of ordeals, that (when there 
were no weights) the guiltj ought to 
sink, and the innocent to swim (i. 605), 



as is said to have happened in a case 
recorded by Gregory of fours, De Gloria 
Martyrum, i. 69. 

» Grimm, 926. See Ducange, s.w. 
Cruets Judicium, 

P Capit. A.D. 779, c. 10 ; Pagi, xiii. 
112. 

<i Grimm, 912. Of this we shall meet 
with instances hereafter. 

' Laws of Cnut, c. 5 (Thorpe, 155); 
Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 132 ; Augusti, x. 
299. Some writers (as Ducange, s.v.) 
derive this word from corse (curse), and 
snaed (a piece or mouthful) ; but Grimm 
and Mr. Thorpe (Glossary to Ancient 
Laws) prefer a derivation from cor, 
trial. 

* Grimm, 932. This trial was espe- 
cially used for ecclesiastics, who were 
not allowed to swear (Ducange, 8.v.) 
Ettcharistia^'p, 115). A council at Worms, 
in 868, prescribes that, for discovery of 
theft in a monastery, all the monks should 
communicate (c 15), but this was after- 
wards forbidden as improper (Hard. n. 
in loc.). Froumund, a monk of Te- 
gemsee, in the earlier part of the 
eleventh century, by way of clearing 
himself from the suspicion of having 
stolen a book, prays that, if he had 
been anyhow concerned in the theft, the 
Eucharist may turn to his condemna-- 
tion. Ep. 2 (Patrol, cxli.). 

» This was by way of alternative, if 
they were not strong enough to fight 
with clubs and shields. The loser was 
to forfeit his right hand. Capit. a.d. 
816, c.i. 

K 



242 ORDEALS. Book UI. 

it in the following year, '* lest that which hath been glorified by 
the passion of Christ should through any man's rashness be brought 
to contempt"" Under the same emperor, the ordeal of cold water 
was forbidden in 829,^^ although in 824 it had been sanctioned by 
Eugenius II. — the only pope who ever countenanced the system of 
ordeals/ Agobard, archbishop of Lyons, a strenuous opponent of 
popular superstitions, addressed to Louis two tracts against the 
judicial combat/ He reflects on the heresy of the Burgundian 
king who had sanctioned it/ He denounces such duels as un- 
christian, and as involving a breach of charity more important than 
any good which could be expected from them/ He argues that, 
if truth might be thus ascertained, all judges are superfluous ;^ 
that the system holds out a premium to brute strength and to 
perjury ; that the idea of its efficacy is contrary to Scripture, ance 
we are there taught to despise the success of this world — since 
God suffers his saints to be slain, and has allowed believing 
nations to be overcome by unbelievers and heretics;^ and he 
appeals to instances in which the vanity of such trials had been 
manifested/ The ordeal, however, continued to be supported by 
the popular feeling, and the cause which Agobard had opposed 
soon after found a powerful champion in Hincmar/ 

(10.) The privilege of Asylum in the Germanic kingdoms dif- 

* Caplt. A.D. S17, c. 27. popes agunst the system, and exhorts 
> Capit. Wormat. c. 12. Hildebert by no means to ooimtenanoe 
7 MabiU. Analecta. 161 ; Aagusti, x. it (Ep. 74 ; cf. £p. 205, Patrol, dxii.). 

251. A few years later, however, we find 

» Adv. Legem Gandob. ; Adv. Judic. Gille, bishop of Limerick, in a tract 

Dei (Opera, t. iA intended to inculcate Roman usages on 

* Adv. Jud. Dei, 5. his coontrvmen, speaking of the priest 
b Adv. Leg. Gond. init.; Adv. Jud. as entitled to bless the water or the 

Dei, 6-11. bread in ordeals, and of the bishop as 

' Adv. Jud. Dei, 5. blessioe the ** judicial iron " (ib. clix. 

«» Adv. Leg. Guud. 9. Mb. 14. 1000-2). Alan of Ryssel, in the end of 

' See below, BooklV.cii. The third the twelfth century, says that an oath 

council of Valence, a.d. 855, ordered is the only lawful purgation, *'cum 

that persons who slew or hurt others alise purgationes ab ecclesia sint pro- 

in judicial combats should be put to hibits, ut judicium aqusD frigids, et 

penance as robbera and murderers ; and ferri candentis, et ignis ; hoc enim modo 

that those slain in such combats should se purgare, est Deum tentare" (contra 

be excluded from the sacrifice of the Hsereticos, ii. 19, Patrol, ccx.). The 

mass and from Christian burial (c 12). Fourth Ck>uncil of Lateran, in 1215, for- 

It also condemned the custom of admit- bade the clergy to take part in ordeals 

ting oontradictory oaths (c. 1 1). There (c. 18;. But although popes and kings 

is a letter of Ivo, bishop of Chartres, endeavoured to suppress the practice of 

A.D. 1099, to Hildebert, bishop of Le judicial combat (Ducange, s. v. ZHie/Zum, 

Mans (and afterwards archbishop of p. 593 ; Gratian, Deer. II. ii. 5, 

Tours), who had been required by Patrol, clxxxvii.), it continued to 

William Rufus to clear himself, by the flourish, and, as is well known, it was 

ordeal of hot iron, from the charge of sanctioned by £Inglish law down to the 

having been concerned in the surrender present century, when it was abolished 

of Le Mans to Elie de la Fl^he (see b^ 59 Geo. III. c. 46 (Keri^sBlackstone, 

Lappenb. ii. 204). Ivo cites several iii. 359-362). 



Chap. IX. ASYLUM. 243 

fered considerably from that which had existed under the Roman 
empire. It arose out of the ancient national usages ; the object 
of it was not to bestow impunity on the criminal, but to protect 
him against hasty and irregular vengeance, to secure for him a 
legal trial, to afford the clergy an opportunity of interceding for 
him, and, if possible, of mitigating his punishment^ The opera- 
tion of this institution was aided by the ^stem of pecuniary com- 
position for wrongs. The clergy were usually able to stipulate 
for the safety of the offender's life and limle on condition that he 
should pay a suitable fine, or perhaps that he should submit to a 
course of penance.** Charlemagne in 779 limited the right of 
sanctuary by enacting that murderers or other capital offenders 
should not be allowed to take refuge in churches, and that, if they 
gained admittance, no food should be given to them.* According 
to the Roman idea of asylum, the denial of food would have been 
an impiety sufficient to draw down some judgment from the patron 
saint of. a church ; but it was not inconsistent with the German 
view.'' The clergy, however, soon discovered a way of evading 
this law, by construing it as applicable to impenitent criminals 
only — L e. to such as should refuse to confess to the priest, and to 
undergo ecclesiastical penance — a refusal which was not likely to 
be frequent, where it involved the choice between starvation and 
loss of sanctuary." The prohibition of food does not appear in 
later enactments of the reign." 

The church could not fail to derive popularity from the power 
of offering shelter within its precincts against the lawlessness of 
which the world was then so full.® With a- view of investing it 
with such popularity among his new subjects, Charlemagne 
ordered, in his capitulary for Saxony (a.d. 785), that any person 
who should take sanctuary should, for the honour of God and His 
church, be safe in life and limb, and should be unmolested until 
the next court-day, when he was to be sentenced to make suitable 
amends for his offence.^ In legislating for the country after it 
had been reduced to a more settled state, this privilege was with- 

K Planck, ii. 256 ; Grimm, Rechtsal- 259-260. 

terthtimer, 886 ; Rettb. ii. 745 ; Ozanam, " E. g. the additions to the Salic law, 

139. A.D. 803, c. 3 (Pertz, i. 113); Cone. 

*» Schr6ckh,xix.47l ; Planck, ii. 257 ; Mogunt. ad. 813, c. 39. It is, how- 

Rettb. ii. 746-7. ever, in Alfred's laws, c. 5. (Thorpe, 

' C. 8. This is the Lombard form, 29.) 

which is clearer than the Prankish. « Planck, ii. 261 ; Hallam, M. A. ii. 

See boUi in Perta, i. 36. 366. 



k Rettb. ii. 747. " C 2. 

Schrockh, xix. 471 ; Planck, ii. 



R 2 



244 SLAVERy. Book UL 

drawn, and the church was required to surrender up persons con- 
victed of capital crimes."^ 

Among the Anglo-Saxons, the earliest law on the subject of 
asylum was that of Ina, in 696, which ordered that fugitives guilty 
of capital crimes should have their life protected by the church, 
but should be bound to make legal satisfaction ; and that delin- 
quents who had " put their hide in peril " — L e. who had incurred 
the penalty of whipping — should be forgiven/ But the shelter of 
the church was only to be granted for a certain time. The laws of 
Alfred (a.d. 877) limit it in some monasteries to three days ;• it 
was, however, afterwards extended ; and even in the same laws a 
longer term is allowed to other places.' Persons guilty of murder, 
treason, or crimes against religion, might ordinarily be dragged 
even from the altar ; but some churches of especial sanctity, among 
•which that of Croyland enjoyed the most extensive immunities, 
had the right of protecting all fugitives whatever." The effect of 
such a privilege was probably felt as a serious hindrance to the 
execution of justice ; for when Croyland, after having been laid 
waste by the Danes, was restored in the reign of Edred by his 
chancellor TurketuI, the aged statesman declined to accept a 
renewal of its ancient rights of sanctuary.* 

VI. Slavery, 

Instead of absolutely condemning slavery as an unlawful insti- 
tution — a course which would probably have introduced anarchy 
into society, and would have raised a serious hindrance to the 
progress of the Gospel — the New Testament had been content to 
prepare the way for its gradual abolition by exhorting both roaster 
and slave to the performance of their mutual duties on the ground 
of their common brotherhood in Christ. And as yet the church 
aimed only at a mitigation, not at an extinction, of slavery. 

Servitude was of two kinds — that of slaves properly so called, 
and that of the coloni. The slaves were individually liable to 

< Rettb. ii. 412, 748. In Alcuin's Epp. 118-9, 195. 

eorrespondence, there is much about a ' O. 5. Wilkins, i. 59 ; Thorpe, 46. 

dispute between him and Theodulf of • C. 2. Thorpe, 28. 

Orleans, on the subject of a convicted * 0. 5. See Thorpe, 27-9 ; Lingard^ 

clerk, who esci^ed from Orleans and A. S. C. i. 275. 

took refuge in St. Martin's abbey at * Lingard, A. S. C. i. 276. See as to 

Tours. The monks and the mob of Hexham, Ric. Hagustald. ap. Twysden, 

Tours rose in his defence, and Alcuin 292. 

incurred the displeasure of Charlemagne * Ingulf, ap. Fell, Rer. Brit. Script, 

by supporting his brethren, who seem to 40, Oxf. 1684. 
ha?e been altogether in the wrong. 



Chap. IX. SLAVERY. 245 

removal and sale ; th^y were incapable, under the Roman empire, 
of contracting a legitimate marriage/ and their property belonged 
to their master. The coloni were regarded as freebom, so that, 
unlike slaves, they might become soldiers; they were attached 
to the land, so that they could not be separated from it, nor could 
it be sold without them. They were capable of marriage and of 
possessing property ; for the land which they cultivated, they paid 
a fixed rent, generally in kind, and they were subject to the 
land-tax and to a poll-tax.* It would, however, seem diflScult to 
distinguish thoroughly between these classes in the canons which 
relate to the subject. 

Theodore of Canterbury notes it as a point of difference between 
the eastern and the western monks, that, while the Latins have 
slaves, the Greeks have none.* The oriental monks themselves 
performed the labour which was elsewhere devolved on slaves ; it 
was usual for persons entering on the monastic life to emancipate 
their slaves ; ^ and some teachers, as Isidore of Pelusium in the 
fifth century ^ and Theodore the Studite in the ninth, altogether 
questioned, or even denied, the lawfulness of having such property.** 
In the west there are occasional appearances of a like kind. 
Thus Wilfrid, on getting possession of the Isle of Selsey, eman- 
cipated all the serfs who were attached to the soil ; * and Benedict 
of Aniane, whose ideas were chiefly drawn from the eastern monastic 
rules, on receiving gifts of land for his monasteries, refused to 
accept the serfs with it.' Somewhat in the same spirit was the 
enactment of the council of Chalchythe, in 816, that a bishop at 
his death should liberate such of his English slaves as had been 

f In the East, the marriage of slayes of the institution is unknown (Sa- 

was only concubinage, till Basil the vigny, 145. See Guizot, 133). Prince 

Macedonian (a.d. 867-886) altered the A. de Broglie quotes Wallon, * De VEs- 

law ; and that emperor's edict was not clavage/ as having shown that they 

observed in practice (Biot, De I'Aboli- were originally small landholders who 

tion de rKsclavage en Occident, Paris, in bad times placed themselves in the 

1840, p. 213; Milman, i. 339). The condition here described for the sake of 

barbarian codes, however, recognise it as protection, &c., ii. 275-9. 

propermarriage(Milman, i. 363). There • PoBnit. 8 (Patrol, xcix.). 

are many regulations as to marriages ^ See e. g. Theodor. Studit. Laudatio 

between parties of various conditions, as Platonis, 8 (Patrol. Gr. xcix.;. 

to the efif<gcts of separation by sale, &c. ; <^ Kp. i. 142. 

e. g. Cone. Tolet. IX. a.d. 655, c. 13 ; ^ Theodore, in his wiU (p. 66, ed. 

Theodor. Capit. 1 7 ; Egbert. Excerpt. Sirmond), forbids the abbot of his mo- 

126 ; Cone. Vermer. a.d. 753, c. 6 ; Cone, nastery to have slaves, since the use of 

Compend. a.d. 756, c. 5 ; Cone. Cabil. them, as of marriage, is allowed to 

III. A.D. 813, c. 30. secular persons only. But the reason 

« Guizot, iii. 125-133; Savigny, on which he gives — that they are men, 

the Roman Coloni, in Philolog. Museum, made in God's image — would hold 

ii. 117-146 ; Thierry, Essai sur le Tiers equally against all slavery whatever. 

Etat, c. I. The coloni appear only in • Beda, iv. 13. 

the later times of Kome, and the origin ' Vita, c 14, ap. Mabill. v. 197. 



246 



SLAVKKY. Book UL 



reduced to bondage in his own time/ But the usual practice of 
the west was different In donations of land to the church, the 
serfs passed with the soil, as in other transfers.^ Bishops were 
restrained by a regard for the property of their churches from 
emancipating the serfs who belonged to these ; the fourth council 
of Toledo (a.d. G33) declared such emancipation to be a robbery 
of the church ; it enacted that the next bishop should assert his 
right over any persons whom his predecessor had thus wrongfully 
liberated, and that any bishop wishing to emancipate a slave 
should indemnify the church by providing another in his stead.* 
An earlier council — that of Agde, in 506 — had restrained the 
power of bishops to alienate slaves; and, in a spirit curiously 
opposed to the oriental principles, it forbade monks to manumit 
their slaves, "lest they should keep holiday while the monks 
work." ^ 

Yet with all this the church did very much to abate the evils 
of slavery."* It insisted on the natural equality of men, and on the 
brotherhood of Christians, as motives to kindness towards slaves ; 
and in the treatment of its own dependents it held out an example 
to lay masters." It threw open its sanctuaries to those who fled 
from cruelty ; it secured their pardon before surrendering them to 
their owners ; it denounced excommunication against any master 
who should break a promise made to a fugitive slave.** It placed 
the killing of a slave without judicial authority on the same footing 
of guilt as the killing of a freeman.^ It endeavoured to restrain 
the sale of slaves, by limiting the power which parents among the 
heathen nations exercised over their own ofispring,** and by pro- 
hibiting that any should be sold to Jews or heathens.' It declared 

I C. 10; comp. the will of iElfric, who sell their children (PoBnU.iy. 26. p. 

archbishop of Canterbury, a.d. 1006, in 381), — a seeming inconsistency, which is 

the Abingdon Chronicle, i. 419. explained by suppoeinff the excomniu- 

^ Planok, ii. 348-350. nication to apply to me case of bojs 

* Cc. 67-8. over seven years of age. Kemble, i. 

^ C. 56. 199-200. 

» Churton, 149-152; Kemble, i. 208-9; ' E. g. Cod. Theod. III. i. 5: Cod. 

Rettb. ii. 735. Just. I. lii. 56. 3 ; I. x. ; Gregor. Epp. i. 

» Lingard, Hist. Enff. i. 418; Rettb, 10; ix. 36, and elsewhere ; Cone. Cabil. 

ii. 736 ; Montalemb. i. Tntrod. 214. a.d. 650, c. 9 ; Cone. Tolet. x. a.d. ( 56, 

o See Neander, v. 138, who quotes a c. 7 ; Laws of Ina, a.d. ^6, c. 1 1 

horrible story from Gregory of Tours, (Thorpe, 48) ; Capit. Mantuan. c. 7 

y. 13. (Pertz, i. 41). Constantius had for- 

p Planck, ii. 350. bidden the sale of even a heathen slave 

<i Theodore of Canterbury (PoDnit to a Jew, lest his conversion should be 

28) and Egbert of York (Posnit. i. 27 ; hindered (Biot, 138). Gregory III. 

Thorpe, 354) recognise the right of a charges Boniface to prevent Christians 

fiither, in cases of need, to sell his son from selling slaves to pagans for aocrt- 

under the age of seven, but not above fee (Ep. i. 8 ; Patrol. Ixxxix.). There 

that age, except with the son's consent, is a remarkable letter of Adrian I. to 

Egbert elsewhere excommunicates those Charlemagne, who had been told that 



cbap.ix. slavery. 247 

the enfranchisement of slaves to be a work conducive to salvation," 
and it was through the influence of the church that innumerable 
masters directed by their wills that their slaves should be set free 
" for the deliverance of their own souls." ^ The liberation was 
often, as under the Roman law, visibly associated with religion 
by being performed in church : the master at the altar resigned 
his slave to the church, with which the freedman was thenceforth 
connected by a peculiar tie — he and his descendants paying some 
slight acknowledgment to it, while, in the failure of posterity, the 
church was heir to his property." 

There was also another way by which the church signally con- 
tributed to raise the estimation of the servile classes. As the 
freemen of the conquering nations were prevented from becoming 
clergy or monks without the sovereign's leave, in order that he 
might not lose their military service, the bishops were obliged to 
recruit the ranks of their clergy chiefly from the classes which 
were below the obligation to such service.* The fourth council 
of Toledo requires that serfs ordained to be clergy should be 
emancipated ;y but it was not until the year 817, in the reign of 
Louis the Pious, that a similar law was established in France,* 
although before that time the clergy of servile race had been 
exempted from servile duties.* The serf, when ordained, became 
capable of rising to honour and power ; when promoted beyond the 
minor orders, he was assessed at a wehr corresponding to that of 
high secular rank ; and this rose with each step to which he was 
advanced in the hierarchy.^ The clergy who had thus been raised 
from a servile condition to dignity and influence felt themselves 
bound (apart from all religious motives) to labour for the benefit 
of the class to which they had originally belonged, and a general 
elevation of that class was the result.^ 

the Romans had sold slaves to the Benevento, a.d. 771, to the monastery 

Saracens, apparentl j with the pope's of Monte Cassino. 

sanction. Adrian, with much indignant ' Planck, ii. 352; Neand. y. 135. For 

langaage, endeavoars to clear himself of the laws as to ordination of slaves, see 

the imputation, and throws the blame Gratian, Dist. 54 (Patrol, clxxxvii.). 

on Greeks and Lombards, whom, he ^ a.d. 633. C. 74. Jostinian had for- 

says, he had attempted to check, bat in bidden that slaves should be ordained, 

vain, as he had not ships to enforce his even with the leave of their masters ; be- 

wishes (Bouquet, v. 557). On the sale cause these» by freeing them, could open 

of slaves to the Saracens, which was the lawful path to ordination (Cod. Just, 

chiefly carried on by the Venetians, see I. iii. 37) ; but afterwards ordination 

Leo, Gesch. V. Italien, i. 223-6. itself emancipated. See the notes, 1. c, 

• See Marculf, ii. 32 (Patrol. Ixxxvii.). and comp. Novell, cxxiii. 17; Leo, 

• Planck, ii. 360-1; Turner, Hist. Const. 9, 11. 

Anglos, iii. 480 ; Kemble, ii. 212. « Capit. Generale, c. 6 ; Planck, ii. 

• Cone. Tolet. iv. a.d. 633, cc. 70-1 ; 355. The form then used is in Bouquet, 
Planck, ii. 360 : Kemble, i. 224 ; Rettb. vi. 447. 

ii. 736. See in Chron. Casin. i. 10 (Per^i, • Planck, ii. 354-6. »» See p. 207. 
vii.), the donation made by a citizen of ^ Planck, ii. 356*8 ; Guizot, ii. 32. 



248 SLAVERY. Book UI. 

The advancement of persons servilely born to high ecclesiastical 
station was not, however, unattended by a mixture of bad eflTects. 
Thegan, the biographer of Louis the Pious, gives a very unfa- 
vourable representation of such clergy. He tells us that, when 
they have attained to offices of dignity, the gentleness of their 
former manners is exchanged for insolence, quarrelsomeness, 
domineering, and assumption ; that they emancipate their relations, 
and either provide for them by church-preferment or marry them 
into noble families ; and that these upstarts are insufierably insolent 
to the old nobility.** The picture is no doubt coloured both by 
Thegan's prejudices as a man of high birth, and by his indignation 
at the behaviour of some ecclesiastics towards his unfortunate* 
sovereign ; but the parallels both of history and of our own 
experience may assure us of its substantial truth. 

* Vita Hludov. 20. (Perto. ii.) On France, see Thierry, sur le Ti^rs Etot, 
the gradual disappearance of slavery in 10, seqq. 



( 249 ) 



BOOK IV. 

FROM THE DEATH OF CHAELEMAGNE TO THE DEPOSITION 
OF POPE GREGORY VI., a.d. 814-1046. 



CHAPTEB I. 

LOUIS THE PIOUS (a.d. 814-840) — END OF THE CONTROVERSY AS TO 
IMAGES (A.D. 813-842)— THE FALSE DECRETALS. 

I. The great defect of Charlemagne's system was, that it required 
a succession of such men as himself to carry it on. His actual 
successors were sadly unequal to sustain the mighty burden of the 
empire. 

Feeling the approach of his end, Charlemagne, after obtaining 
the concurrence of the national diet, summoned his only 
surviving legitimate son, Louis, fix)m Aquitaine to Aix- 
la-Chapelle, where, in the presence of a vast assemblage, he de- 
clared him his colleague and successor.* He exhorted the prince 
as to the duties of sovereignty, and received from him a promise of 
obedience to his precepts. He then desired Louis to advance to 
the high altar, on which an imperial crown was placed, to take the 
crown, and with his own hands to place it on his head ^ — an act 
by which the emperor intended to assert that he and his posterity 
derived their title neither from coronation by the pope nor from 
the acclamations of the Romans, but immediately from God.® 
After this inauguration, Louis returned to the government of 
Aquitaine, but was soon again summoned to Aix-la-Chapelle, in 
consequence of his father's death, which took place in January 814.** 

* The chief authorities for the reign and then omitted. In like manner CMc 

of Louis are the lives by Thegan, a snf- tacfiar became Lothair. Sismondi, ii. 442. 

fragan of Treves, and b j an unknown »» Eiuhard, Vita Kar. 30 ; Thegan, 6 ; 

writer, who, from his mention of con- Astrou. 20 ; Funck's * Ludwig der 

versations which he held with the Em- Fromme,' 41-5, Frankf. a. M. 1832. 

peror on astronomical subjects (c. 58), ^ See Fleury, xlvi. 7 ; Gibbon, iv. 

IS styled the Astronomer. Both are in 507 ; Luden, v. 227. 

Pertz, ii., in Bouquet, vi., and in the «* Thegan, 8. Charlemafl;ne was heati- 

* Patrologia,' civ., cvi. The name Ludwig fied by the antipope Paschal III., in 1 165, 

or Ixmis is the same with ChhdouAg, the at the instance of the emperor Frederick 

harsh aspirate having been first softened, I. Altars are dedicated to him at Aiz- 



250 LOUIS THE PIOUS. Book IV. 

Louis, at the time of his accession to the empire, was thirty-six 
years of age. In his infancy, he had been crowned by Pope 
Adrian as king of his native province, Aquitaine.® He had 
for many years governed that country, and had earned a high 
character for the justice and the ability of his administration. He 
was brave, learned, and accomplished ; kindhearted, gentle, and 
deeply religious/ But when from a subordinate royalty he was 
raised to the head of the empire, defects before unobserved began 
to appear in his character. His piety was largely tinctured with 
superstition; he had already thought it his duty to abjure the 
study of classic literature for such as was purely religious,8 and, 
but for his father's prohibition, he would have become a monk like 
his great-uncle Cailoman.** He was without resolution or energy, 
wanting in knowledge of men, and ready to become the victim of 
intrigues.* 

In Aquitaine Louis had been surrounded by a court of his own, 
and his old advisers continued to retain their authority with him> 
The chief of Xhese was Benedict of Aniane, whose rigid virtue 
could not fail to be scandalised by the licentiousness which, after 
Charlemagne*s example, had increased in the imperial household 
during the last years of the late reign. This Louis at once pro- 
ceeded to reform by banishing from the court his sisters and their 
paramours, with other persons of notoriously light reputation.™ 
Nor were the statesmen who had been associated with Charle- 
magne spared. Among these the most important were three 
brothers, related to the royal family — Adelhard, Wala, and 
Bernard." Adelhard had in his youth left the court of Charle- 
magne in disgust at the divorce of the Lombard queen,** and had 
entered the monastery of Corbie, of which he became abbot In 
later years he had acquired a powerful influence over the great 
emperor ; he had been the principal counsellor of his son Pipin, 
in the government of Italy, and, in conjunction with Wala, he had 

la-Chapelle, Frankfort, and Zurich (Boh- ' Astron. ID; Sismondi, ii. 424-6; 

mer, Reg. Karol. 27). His name is not Palgrave, Norm, and England, i. 178. 
in the Roman calendar, but the local f Thegan, 19. "^ Astron. 19. 

veneration of him is regarded by canon- > Luden, v. 231; Palgrave, Norm. 

isU as legalised, inasmuch as the sen- and Eng. i. 187-8; Funck, 39. 
tence of the antipope has not been dis- ^ Thegan, 20. 
allowed by any legitimate pope. (Haron. "* Astronom. 21-3. 
814. 63; Butler's Lives of the Saints, " The lives of Adelhard and Wala 

Jan. 28 ; Pagi, xix. 271; Pbtrol. zcviii. ([* Epitaphium Arsenii ') were written 

1357). Some churches, however, as that in the form of dialogue by Paschasins 

of Metz, still have (or had in the last Radbert, whose work on the Eucharist 

century) a yearly office for the repose will be mentioned in the next chapter, 

of his soul (Fleury, xlvi. 9.)' Both are in Mabillon, v., and in Patrol. 

• Easter, 781 ; Astron. 4 ; Funck» 7. cxx. • P. 130 ; Vita Adelh. 7-8. 



Chap.L A.D.8M-6. TRANSACTIONS WITH THE POPES. 251 

advised Charlemagne to name Pipin's son Bernard as heir of the 
empire, in preference to Louis.^ Adelhard and the youngest 
brother were banished ; Count Wala was compelled to become a 
monk in the abbey from which Adelhard was removed ; and thus 
was laid the foundation of a lasting enmity between the men of the 
old and those of the new reign.** 

Leo III., dissatisfied (as it would seem) at the manner in which 
Louis had received the crown, omitted to congratulate him on his 
accession, and did not exact from the Romans the usual oath of 
fidelity to the emperor.' The feuds which had once before endan- 
gered this pope's life broke out afresh shortly after the 
death of his protector. There were serious disorders 
and much bloodshed at Rome ; and Leo took it on himself 
to punish some of his enemies with death — an act which Louis 
regarded as an invasion of his own sovereignty. He therefore 
sent his nephew Bernard, king of Italy, to inquire into the matter 
on the spot ; but the pope disarmed his indignation by submitting 
to give an explanation of his conduct* L^o died in 816.' The 
wealth which he had at his disposal appears to have been enor- 
mous, and the papal librarian Anastasius fills many pages with an 
enumeration of the splendid gifts which it enabled him to bestow 
on his church. 

The Romans hastily chose as his successor Stephen IV., who was 
consecrated without any application for the emperor's 
consent." Stephen felt the necessity of apolo^sing for 
this irregularity, which he ascribed to the emergency of the time, 
when popular tumults were to be apprehended. He published a 
decree by which it was enacted that the consecration of future 
popes should be performed in the presence of imperial commis- 
sioners;* and, after having made the citizens of Rome swear 
allegiance to Louis, he himself went into France for the purpose 
of explanation and excuse,— perhaps, also, to secure himself from 
the violence of the Roman faction?.'^ But the devout emperor did 
not wait for his submission. He met him at the distance of a 
mile from Rheims ; each dismounted from his horse, ^ 
and Louis thrice prostrated himself at the pope's feet 
before venturing to embrace him.' On the following Sunday, the 

p Vita Adelh. c. 16 ; Vita Walse, " Einhard, a.d. 816. 

eil. Mabill., pp. 453, seqq. ; Funck, 42. ' Gratian. Deer. Pars I. d. Ixiii. 28. 

•i Vita Adelh. 32-5 j Vita Walse, i. 2, (See notes in Patrol, cxix. 795; dxxxvii. 

11 ; Funck, 48. ' Funck, 55. 337 ; Jafl^d, 221.) 

• Einhard, a.d. 815 ; Aatron. 25 ; ^ Thegan, 16 ; Milman, ii. 248. 

Baron. 815. I ; Funck. 55. » Thegan, 16 ; Astron. 26 ; Flodoard, 

» Pagi, xiii. 568. ii. 19 (Patrol, exxix.). 



252 REFORM OF CLERGY AND MONKS. Book IV. 

pontiff placed on the head of Louis a splendid crown which he 
had brought with him, and anointed both him and his empress 
Ermengarde.* Anastasius tells us that the honour paid to the 
pope almost exceeded the power of language to describe ; that he 
obtained from the emperor whatever he desired ; that, after our 
Lord's example of forgiveness, he pardoned all who in the time of 
Leo had been obliged to seek a refuge in France on account of 
offences against the church, and that they accompanied him on 
his return to Rorae.^ On the death of Stephen, in the beginning 
of the following year (817), Paschal was immediately chosen and 
consecrated as his successor. The new pope sent a legation to 
assure the emperor that he "had been forced rather than had 
leapt into " his see, and his apology was accepted.^ 

Louis was bent on effecting a reformation both in the church 
and in the state. By means of his missi he redressed many 
grievances which had grown up under his father's government/ 
and in councils held at Aix in 816 and 817, he passed a great 
number of regulations for the reform of the clergy, and of the 
religious societies.* The secular business in which bishops had 
been much employed by Charlemagne had not been without an 
effect on their character and on that of the inferior clergy, so that 
the condition of the church towards the end of the late reign had 
retrograded.' The canons now passed testify to the existence of 
many abuses. Their general tone is strict ; they aim at securing 
influence and respect for the clergy by cutting off their worldly 
pomp, and enforcing attention to their spiritual duties. The 
canonical life is regulated by a code enlarged from that of 
Chrodegang.*^ The acquisition of wealth by improper means is 
checked by an order that no bequest shall be accepted by churches 
or monasteries to the disinheriting of the testator's kindred, and 
that no one shall be tonsured either as a monk or as a clergyman 
for the sake of obtaining his property.** We find, however, com- 
plaints of the evils against which this canon was directed as well 
after its enactment as before.* Another important canon ordered 
that every parish priest should have a mansusj or glebe ; that 

■ Thegan, 17. Luden observes that Charlemagne. Stephen, i. 112. 

the bio^pber does not, until after this * See Pertz, Leges, i, 201, seqq. 

coronation, give Louis the title of em- ' EUendorf, ii. 51-2. 

peror. v. 579. f See p. 213. 

»» Anastas. 213 ; Astron. 26. *» Capit. a.d. 817, c. 7. 

e Astron. 27. * EUendorf, ii. 58-62, gives quota- 

^ Thegan, 13 ; Sismondi, ii. 432. The tions from Paschasius, Wettin,&c. The 

scheme of administration by missi had evil had been noted by the council of 

been very imperfectly carried out under ChAlons in 813, c. 6-7. 



Chap. 1. a.d. 816-7. SUCCESSION TO THE EMPIRE. 253 

both the glebe and his other property should be discharged from 
all but ecclesiastical service ; ^ and that, when this provision should 
have been fulfilled, every parish, where there was a sufficient 
maintenance, should have a priest of its own.™ Benedict of 
Aniane was president of the assembly which was charged with the 
monastic reform. He recovered to their proper use many monas- 
teries which had been alienated either to laymen or to secular 
clergy ; and he obtained relief for many from the burdens of gifts 
to the crown and of military service, — burdens which had pressed 
so heavily on some of them that the remaining income had been 
insufficient even for food and clothing." The rule of St. Benedict 
was taken as the basis of the new reforms ; but the canons are 
marked by a punctilious minuteness very unlike its original 
spirit.** 

These reforms were the work of the independent Frankish 
church, and were sanctioned by the supreme authority of the 
emperor, who exercised the same prerogative as his father in 
matters concerning religion.^ 

In the holy week of 817, as Louis and his household were 
passing along a gallery which led from the palace to the cathedral 
of Aix, the wooden pillars on which it rested gave way. The 
emperor suffered little hurt ; but the accident suggested to his 
counsellors the possibility of his death, and the expediency of pro- 
viding for that event."^ By their advice he proposed the subject to 
the national assembly, and obtained its consent to the association 
of his eldest son, Lothair, as his colleague in the empire ; ^ but 
this measure, which was intended for the preservation of peace, 
became the source of fatal divisions. The younger brothers, Pipin 
and Louis, who held respectively a delegated sovereignty over 
Aquitaine and Germany,* were discontented at finding themselves 
placed in a new relation of inferiority towards their sefiwTy^ to 
whom they were bound to pay " gifts," and without whose eonsent 
they were not at liberty to make war or peace, to receive ambas- 

^ C. 10. The Astronomer says that a became emperor.* Martin, ii. 373. 

male and a female serf were also attached ■ Pa(?i» ^iii. ^39- 

to each livine. 28. >" C. 1 1 . ' This word, from meaning the eldest 

» Vita S. Ben. Anian. (Mabill. v.), or head of a family, had, come, as early 

50, 54 ; Astron. 28. as the time of Gregory of Tours, to bear 

° Guizot, ii. 317. the sense of lord or mfuter, which its de- 

p Guizot, ii. 318; Milman, ii. 249. rivatives have in the Romance languages, 

Barouius, however, ventures to assert and from the eighth century was used 

the contrary. 819. 11. to denote a king or other superior in re- 

•» Astron. 28. lation to his dependent homines (Perry, 

' Funck, G2-3. It was not by primo- 400). Hincmar seems to object to this 

geniture but by election that Ix>thair use of it as novel and improper, ii. 835. 



254 DEATH OF BERNARD. Book IV. 

sadors, or to marry." But the elevation of Lothair was still more 
ofiensive to Bernard, son of the emperor's elder brother Pipin by 
a concubine. Bernard had been appointed by Charlemagne to 
succeed his father in the kingdom of Italy. The defect of his birth 
was not regarded by the Franks as a bar to inheritance ; as it had 
not prevented his receiving an inferior royalty, it did not disqualify 
him for succeeding his grandfather in the empire ;* and, as it was 
chiefly on the ground of maturer age that I^uis, the younger son 
of Charlemagne, had been preferred to the representative of the 
elder son, Bernard might have now expected on the same ground 
to be preferred to the children of Louis.^ The king of Italy had 
hitherto endeavoured, by a ready submission and compliance with 
his uncle's wishes in all things, to disarm the jealousy which the 
empress Ermengarde continually strove to instil into her husband's 
mind.* But he now yielded to the influence of the discontented 
party, of which Theodulf of Orleans, a Goth or Lombard by birth, 
and the bishops of Milan and Cremona, were the most active 
members, while Wala from his monastery zealously aided them 
by liis counsels. The pope himself. Paschal, is said to have been 
implicated in their schemes.*^ But the emperor and his partisans 
made demonstrations, which showed that any attempt to subvert 
the government would be hopeless. Bernard repaired to Chalons 
on the Saone — decoyed, according to some writers,^ by the empress, 
under a promise of forgiveness and safety. He confessed to his 
uncle his guilty designs, and, after a trial, was sentenced to death. 
The sentence was compassionately changed by Louis to the loss of 
eyesight ; but, whether from the cruelty with which the operation 
was performed, or from grief and despair, the unhappy Bernard 
died within three days.*' Theodulf was deprived of his see, without 
any regard to his plea that, as having received the pall, he was 
subject to no jurisdiction except the pope's.** Louis, now rendered 
suspicious of all his kindred, compelled three of his illegitimate 

« Divisio Imperii, cc. 7, 8, 13. (Pertz, « Both reasons are given. Ermen- 

Leses, i. 199.) garde is said to have instigated the 

*^ See Funck, 42, 240, 243. cruelty. See Thegan, 22-3 ; Murat IV. 

7 Michelet, ii. 93; Luden, v. 262-3. iL 304 (citing Andrew, as ahove); Sis- 

* Sismondi, ii. 436. mondi, ii. 443-5 ; Funck, 60 ; PalgraTe» 

* EHendorf, ii. 90. i. 231. The Astronomer seems to mean 
^ Sismondi, ii. 443-6 ; Funck, 65. that Bernard and another committed 

Dean Milman (ii. 252) questions this, suicide — *' Dum impatientius oculorum 
which he supposes to have no authority ablationem tulerunt, mortis sibi con- 
but that of Funck; but it is also said sciverunt acerbitatem '* (30). See the 
bpr Muratori (IV. iii. 302) on the autho- various accounts in Luden, v. 268, and 
nty of an ancient chronicler, Andrew, note. 

in Mencken's collection. Luden thinks * Theodulph. Carm. iv. 5 (Patrol, 

it uncertain, but not unlikely, v. 265-6. cv.) ; Funck, 68. 



Chap. 1. a.d. 8iT-8as. LOUIS THE PIOUS. 255 

brothers — of whom Drogo was afterwards creditably known as 
bishop of Metz — to be tonsured.® 

The empress Ermengarde, whose zeal for the interest of her sons 
had been a principal cause of the late troubles, died shortly after. 
Louis in his sorrow was disposed to resign his crown and becom'fe 
a monk. But the ecclesiastics whom he consulted dissuaded hira ; 
the daughters of his nobles were assembled for his inspec- 
tion, and he chose Judith, daughter of Welf, count of ^'^' 
Bavaria, to be the partner of his throne/ The new empress is 
described as not only beautiful, but possessed of learning and 
accomplishments unusual in the ladies of that age ; and her power 
over her husband was absolute.^ 

In 821, on the marriage of Lothair, Theodulf, Wala, Adelhard, 
and the other accomplices of Bemanl were forgiven^ — an act of 
grace which has been traced to the removal of Benedict by death 
from the emperor's councils.* But Louis was still disturbed by 
the remembrance of the severities which had been exercised in 
his name ; the alarms of his conscience were increased by some 
reverses, by earthquakes, and other portents ;^ and at the diet of 
Attigny, in the following year, he appeared in the dress 
of a penitent. He lamented his own sins and the sins 
of his father. He expressed remorse for the death of Bernard 
— an act in which his only share had been that mitigation of 
the sentence which had been so unhappily frustrated in the ex- 
ecutioa He entreated the forgiveness of Wala and Adelhard, 
who were present. He professed sorrow for his behaviour to 
Drogo and his brothers, and bestowed high ecclesiastical dignities 
on them by way of compensation. He gave large alms to monks, 
and entreated their prayers ; and he issued a capitulary acknow- 
ledging his neglect of duty towards the church, and promising 
amendment of abuses." Wala was sent into Italy, to act as 

' Thegan, 24 ; Sismondi, ii. 445-6. xcviii. 579.) Pagi's candour in this 

To this time belongs the pretended date matter is distressing to a later annotator 

of a document known from its first words on Baronius (xiii. 625), and to the Abb^ 

by the name of Ego Ludovicus (Pertz, Rohrbacher, xi. 404. 

Leges, ii. Append. 6), in which the em- ' Astron. 32 ; Thegan, 26 ; Einhard, 

peror is represented as giving up a large a.d. 819. ' Michelet, ii. 96-7. 

part of Italy to the pope, and as order- ^ Vita Adelh. 46 ; Astron. 34 ; Einb. 

ing that no Frank, Lombard, or other a.d. 821 ; Pagi, xiv. 20-3. Theodulf 

person shall interfere in the appoint- died the same year. Pagi, 23. 

ment of popes. Sir F. Palgrave seems * Funck, 71, 241 ; Gfrorer, iii. 727. 

to regard it as genuine. (Norm, and ^ Luden, v. 278. 

England, i. 262, 727.) But it is ge- " Capit. Attiniac. (Pertx, Leges, i. 

nerally considered a clumsy forgery. 231): Astron. 35; ViU Adelh. 51 ; Si*- 

(See Pagi, xiii. 691 ; Schrockh, xxii. mondi, ii. 453-5 ; Palgrave, i. 249. On 

44 ; Planck, ii. 779 ; Perta, p. 9 ; Patrol, this aasembly, see Hefele, iv. 31. 



256 LOTHAIR AT ROME. Book IV. 

adviser to Lothair, who had obtained that kingdom on the death 
of Bernard." 

On Easter-day, 823, Lothair, who had gone to Rome on the 
invitation of Paschal,** was there crowned by the pope as emperor, 
lie had already been crowned by his father, at the time of his 
elevation to a share in the empire; but Paschal, by persuading 
him to accept this second coronation, as an ecclesiastical sanction 
of his authority, carried on a chain of policy which resulted in 
persuading the world that sovereignty was derived from the suc- 
cessors of St Peter. 

Soon after Lothair's departure from the city, two high officers 
of the church, who were among the chief of the emperor s Roman 
partisans, were decoyed into the Lateran palace, where — in punish- 
ment, as was believed, of their attachment to the Frank interest — 
they were blinded and afterwards beheaded.^ Louis, on hearing 
of thi^ affistir, sent a count and an abbot to investigate it The 
pope appeared before the commissioners, and, with thirty-four 
bishops and five other clergymen, swore that he had no share in 
the death of the victims. But he maintained that they had 
deserved it as traitors ; and he reftised to give up the murderers, 
on the ground that they had sought the protection of St Peter, 
and belonged to the Apostle's family. The commissioners, having 
no authority to use force, reported the circumstances to their 
master, and Paschal at the same time sent some envoys to offer 
explanations. The emperor did not pursue the matter further; 
but he resolved to place his relations with Rome on a more satis- 
factory footing.** 

An opportunity was soon fiirnished in consequence of Paschal's 
death, which took place in May, 824.' A severe contest arose 
for the papacy. Lothair went to Rome, and asserted the Prankish 
sovereignty by acknowledging Eugenius IL, the candidate who 
was supported by Wala*s influence,* as the rightful successor of 
St Peter.' The young emperor complained of the late murder of 

° Vita Walse, i. 25. Eogenius ordered the body to be in- 

Astron. 36 ; Einhard, a.d. i. 823. terred in a place which Paschal had 
Paschasius untruly says that Louis sent prepared. (Thegan, 30.) Funck sup- 
his son to be crowned at Rome. See poses that by popuius Tbegan here means 
Ellendorf, ii. 26. the nobility of Home. 78, 251. 

p Astron. 37 ; Einh. A.D. 823. See • Vita Walse, i. 28. He was the candi- 
Luden, v. 293. date of the party opposed to Louis. 

1 Einh. A.D. 823 ; Astron. 37-8 ; Luden, v. 295. 

Funck, 76-7 ; Sismondi, ii. 458-9. * Baron. 824. 12. Pagi (xiii. 60, 93) 

r Paschal was so detested by the Ro- points out that Lothair acted as sove- 

mans that they would not allow him to reign, not as protector of the church, 
be buried with his predecessors; but 



Chap. I. a.d. 823 9. INTRIGUES AGAINST LOUIS. 257 

his adherents. He inquired why the popes and the Roman judges 
were continually spoken against. He discovered that many pieces 
of land had been wrongfully seized by the popes (perhaps under 
the pi-etence that they were legacies to the church), and caused 
great joy by restoring them to the rightful owners. He settled 
that, " according to ancient custom," imperial commissioners should 
visit Rome at certain times, for the general administration of 
justice." He exacted of the Romans individually an oath of 
fealty to the empire, saving their faith to the pope. He enacted 
that no person should interfere with their right of electing a 
bishop; but he bound them by an engagement that they would 
not allow any one to be consecrated as pope, until he should have 
sworn allegiance to the emperor in the presence of an imperial 
commissioner.* Although this engagement was in the sequel 
sometimes neglected or evaded, the report of Lothair's proceedings 
is evidence of the ideas which were then entertained as to the relar 
tions of the papacy and the empire. It was considered that the 
emperor was entitled to investigate elections to the Roman see, 
and to decide between the pretensions of candidates ; and, while 
the pope was the immediate lord of Rome, his power was held 
under the emperor, to whom the supreme control of the adminis- 
tration belonged.'^ 

After four years of childless marriage, Judith in 823 gave birth 
to a son, Charles, afterwards known as *' the Bald." The jealousy 
of the emperor's sons by Ermengarde was excited ; they declared 
Charles to be the oflFspring of adultery, and charged Judith with 
bewitching their father.* The empress, on her part, was bent on 
securing for her son an inheritance like that of his elder brothers, 
and in 829 he was created duke of Germany — probably in the 
vain hope that such a title would give less offence than the title 
of king.* Louis, under the influence of his wife, laboured to buy 
partisans for Charles by profuse gifts from the hereditary domains 
of his family and from the property of the church.^ On this 
account he had been bitterly attacked by Wala, at a diet held in 
828 ;^ and when his elder sons now broke out into rebellion, they 
were aided by a powerful party of the hierarchy, headed by Wala 
(who in 826 had succeeded Adelhard in the abbacy of Corbie),** 
with the archchaplain Hilduin, abbot of St Denys, Jesse, bishop of 

<* EiDh. A.D. 824 ; Astron. 38. * Sismondi, ii. 467. 

* Peru, L^es, i. 240; Milman, ii. • Funck, 101. •» Funck, 98-9. 

256. * Vita Wal. ii. 2-3. 

r Murat IV. ii. 330-2 ; Laden, v. 298 ; «» Pagi, xiv. 118. 
Funck, 81. 



258 DIET OF NIMEGUEN. Book IV. 

Amiens, and Elissachar, abbot of CentuUes (St. Riquier).* Of the 
motives of these ecclesiastics it is difficult to judge. They may 
have honestly felt the dangers which threatened the empire from 
the system of partition which had been introduced;' they may 
have been galled by the imperial control of ecclesiastical affairs, 
as well as by the invasions of church property. But the preten- 
fflons to superiority over the crown which now began to be asserted 
iu their councils are startling,^ and the conduct by which they 
followed up their theories was utterly indefensibla 

Judith was caught by the insurgents at Laon, and was pursued 
by the curses of the people into a convent at Poitiers, 
where she was compelled to take the veil.** She was 
also forced to engage that she would use her influence over her 
husband to persuade him to enter a monastery. But the indina- 
tion which Louis had formerly felt towards the monastic life was 
now mastered by his love for Judith and Charles. He asked time 
for consideration ;* in spite of all opposition he contrived that 
the next national assembly should not be held in Gaul, where the 
population were generally disaffected to the Prankish rulers, but 
at Nimeguen, where he might hope to be supported by the kindred 
and friendly Germans;*' and the event answered his expectation. 
At Nimeguen the emperor found himself restored to power. 
Hilduin, who had ventured to transgress an order that the 
members of the diet and their followers should appear unarmed, 
was banished ; and a like sentence was passed on Wala, with 
others of his party." Lothair (who had rebelled after having 
sworn to maintain Charles in his dukedom), with characteristic 
meanness, made his submission, abandoned his accomplices, and 
joined in giving judgment against them.*^ Judith was brought 
forth from her convent, the pope having declared that her forced 
profession was null." She undertook to prove by ordeal her 
innocence of the witchcraft and adultery unputed to her, but, 
as no accuser appeared, she was allowed to purge herself by 
oath ; and Bernard, count of Septimania, her supposed paramour, 
on offering to clear himself by the wager of battle, found no 

one to accept his challenga^ Some of those who had been most 

• 

• Thegan, 36 ; EUendorf, ii. 105. Parisian Council, or in Pertz, 346. 

' Vita Wal. ii. 10. ^ Sismondi, iii. 6-7. 

r In 829, councils were held at Paris, . i Astron. 44 : Funck, 109. 
Mentz, Lyons, and Toulouse (Hard. iv. k Sismondi, lii. 9-10 ; Stephen, ii. 1 17. 
12791 and their decrees were consoli- » Funck, 113. » Astron. 45. 

dated by a fifth assembly at Worms <> Thegan, 37. 

"^ z, Legef • 



(Peru, Le^, I. 332, seqq.) ; their views p Thegan, 38. Against Bernard, see 
as to the right of controlling the sove- the Life of Wala, ii. 7. 
reign may be seen in book ii. of the 



Chap. I. a.d. 830-3. GREGORY IV. IN FRANCE. 259 

hostile to Louis in his distress were condemned to death ; but, 
with his usual gentleness, he allowed them to escape with slighter 
punishments.^ 

Again and again Judith's eagerness for the interest of her own 
son, and the jealousy of the elder brothers, brought trouble on the 
unhappy Louis, who seems to have fallen into a premature decay. 
A fresh insurrection took place in 832, in consequence of Charles' 
advancement to the kingdom of Aquitaine ; the pope, Gregory IV., 
who partly owed his dignity to the influence of Wala and 
Hilduin, crossed the Alps, and appeared in the camp of 
the rebels, where Wala and the other ecclesiastical chiefs of the 
party waited on him. Louis was supported by many bishops, who, 
on a report that the pope meant to excommunicate them and the 
emperor, declared that, if he had come with such intentions, he him- 
self should be deposed and excommunicated.' An answer which 
Gregory issued, and which was probably written by Paschasius,' one 
of Wala's monks, had no effect ; and he began to show uneasiness 
and discontent with the part which he had undertaken, when Wala 
and Paschasius reassured him by producing a collection of canons 
and decretals, which were intended to prove- that the pope had the 
right to judge all causes, and could himself be judged by no man.^ 
It seems to have been at this time" that Agobard, archbishop 
of Lyons, sent forth two tracts — ^the one, a comparison between 
hierarchical and secular authority ; the other, a defence of the 
rebel princes. In the first of these, he insists on the superiority 
of the ecclesiastical power ; he utters many reproaches against the 
emperor, and exhorts him to submit to the pope. *'If, indeed, 
pope Gregory had come without reason, and for the purpose of 
fighting, he would deserve to be opposed and driven back ;^ but 
if he came for peace, he ought to be obeyed." In the other 
pamphlet, Agobard charges Judith with gross and notorious pro- 
fligacy ; he justifies the proceedings of the emperor's sons ; and, 
as a precedent for the part taken by himself and his brethren, he 
alleges the opposition which the priests and prophets of Israel 

<i AstroD. 46. that these most have been someihing 

' A8troD.48; Vita Wake, ii. 16 ; Greg, unknown at Rome — the elements of the 

Ep. ad Episcopos, ap. Bonquet, vi. 353. forged Decretals, which soon af^er ap- 

The genuineness of this letter has been peared. (See Uie last part of this 

questioned. Bouquet (252) considers chapter.) 

that it is established bv De Marca (I. iv. " Funck, 132 ; Ellendorf, ii. 115. 

ell). Luden is against it. v. 608. "**Certe si nunc Gregorius papa 

* This letter also Is questioned. See irrationabiliter et ad pugnandum venit, 

JafF<^, 227, who dates it July 8, after the merito et pugnatns et repulsus recedet." 

" Field of Lies.'* De Compar. utriusque regiminis, 6. 

< Vita Wals, ii. 16. Laden (t. 610) (Agob. C^ra, t. ii.) 
and Gfrorer (Karolinger, i. 81) argue 

s 2 



260 THE FIELD OF LIES. Book IV. 

oflFered to Jezebel and Athaliah/ He tells the emperor that 
Samson, for his love to an unchaste and unbelieving woman, lost 
his eyes and his judgeship ; he exhorts him, since he has thus far 
been like Samson in the loss of his power, to study that, like him, 
he may escape the forfeit of his eternal portion by humbly and 
penitently submitting to his lot.* 

On St. John Baptist's day, the two armies encamped opposite 
June 24, to cach Other near Colmar. Gregory .paid a visit to 
^^^' the emperor, who received him without the usual marks 
of respect ; • but they afterwards exchanged presents, and the pope 
continued to pass from the one camp to the other. Arguments, 
threats, money, and other inducements were employed to influence 
the adherents of Louis ; and, on the morning of St. Peter and 
St Paul's day, he found that all but a handful of his men 
had deserted him during the night. On discovering his 
forlorn condition, he professed himself unwilling to be the cause of 
bloodshed ; he advised those of his followers who could expect no 
mercy from the rebels to save themselves by flight, desired the 
others to follow the example of the majority, and gave himself 
up as a prisoner to his sons.^ The pope is said to have returned 
to Italy in deep grief and shame on account of his share in these 
transactions,^ while the popular feeling with respect to them was 
shown by tlie name given to the scene where they took place — 
Liigmfeld, " the Field of Lies." ^ 

Judith, for whose safety in life and limb the successful rebels 
had pledged themselves by oath, was sent across the Alps to 
Tortona,^ while Charles was shut up in the abbey of Priim, and 
Louis was led about as a captive by his eldest son. But Lothair 
and his advisers soon became aware that a general feeling of pity 
was rising in favour of the unfortunate emperor ; ' and they re- 
solved to defeat it by an act which was intended to disqualify him 
for reigning. At a diet held at Compiegne, a bishop (probably 
Agobard)^ begged Lothair's permission that a representation 
should be made to Louis of the misdeeds by which he had lowered 
the empire of the great Charles. There was little show of opposi- 
tion to the proposal ;** Louis in his captivity was importuned to 
become a monk by a number of bishops, among whom Thegan 

y Lib. Apolog. pro filiis Ludovici, 11. «* Palgrave, Norm, and Eng. i. 290*1.' 

« Cc. 12-3. « Thegan, 42. 

• Astron. 48 ; Vita Walae, ii. 17. ' Afitron. 49. 

»» Thegan, 42 ; Astron. 48. 9 Funck, 156. 

"^ Astron. .48; Nithardin Patrol, cxvi. *» Astron. 49. 
48. 



Chap. I. a.d. 833. DEPOSITION OF LOUIS. 261 

tells US that the most active were some of servile or barbaric birth, 
and, above all " shameless and most cruel," the emperor's foster- 
brother, Ebbo of Rheims, who had turned against him at the 
Field of Lies ; and, as their solicitations were in vain, they resolved 
to proceed by other means.* In an indictment of eight heads, 
drawn up with much iteration, and partly relating to offences for 
which he had already done penance at Attigny, he was charged 
with acts of violence towards his kinsmen — the death of Bernard, 
the tonsuring of Drogo and his brothers ; with frequent breach of 
oaths, especially as to the partition of the empire ; with having 
violated the rest of holy seasons by military expeditions and by 
holding courts or diets ; with outrages and injustice against many 
of his subjects ; with having caused waste of life, and an infinite 
amount of misery, through the calamities of war> ITie bishops 
assumed the right of judging the emperor. They condemned him 
in his absence, declared him to be deprived of earthly power, and, 
in order to prevent the loss of his soul, they sentenced him to do 
penance before the relics of St. Medard and St Sabinian at 
Soissons." He was strictly guarded in a cell, until the day 
appointed for the ceremony, when he was led forth, not 
as a sovereign, but as a sinful Christian desirous of show- 
ing penitence for his offences. Lothair was present, with a large 
body of bishops and clergy, and the cathedral was filled by a crowd 
of spectators." The emperor, clothed in sackcloth, prostrated him- 
self before the altar ; he acknowledged that he had been guilty of 
nilsgovemraent, offensive to God, scandalous to the church, and 
disa.strous to his people ; and he professed a wish to do penance, 
that he might obtain absolution for his misdeeds. The bishops 
told him that a sincere confession would be followed by forgiveness, 
and exhorted him that he should not, as on the former occasion, 
attempt to hide any part of his sin. The list of charges against 
him was put into his hands ; with a profusion of tears he owned 
himself guilty of all ; and he gave up the document, to be placed 
on the altar as a record of his repentance. He then laid down 
his sword and his military belt ; he was stripped of the secular 
dress, which he had worn under his sackcloth ; and after these 
acts it was pretended that, according to the ancient canons, he 
was incapable of returning to the exercise of arms or of 
sovereign power.** Every bishop who had been concerned in 

* Thegan, 43-4. See Laden, v. 363-4. ° Acta, ap. Bouquet, 244. 

^ Acta Exauctorationis, Bouquet, ▼. ** Sismondi, iii. iW. " Coutrarium est 

'J43-6, or Pertz, Leges, i. 366. oninino ecclesiastic! s regulis post pcBoi- 

*" Bouquet, 244 ; Astron. 49. tenti« actionem redire ad militiam sscu- 



262 RESTORATION AND Book IV. 

the afikir drew up a memoir of it, which he gare into the hands 
of Lothair.P 

But the projectors of this humiliation were mistaken in their 
hopes. Compassion for the emperor, and indignation against those 
who had outraged him under the pretence of religion^ were almost 
universal. His younger sons, Pipin and Louis, took his part, and 
Lothair, alarmed by the tokens of the general feeling, hastily with- 
drew from St. Denys, leaving his father at liberty. Friends speedily 
gathered around Louis; he was advised to resume his military 
ornaments, but refused to do so unless with the formal sanction 
of the church. He was therefore solemnly reconciled in the abbey 
of St. Denys ; his belt and sword were restored to him by some of 
the same bishops who had been concerned in his degradation ; it 
was declared that a penitent who had laid down his belt might 
resume it on the expiration of his penance ; and the popular joy 
at the emperor's restoration drew encouragement from a sudden 
change of the weather, which had long been boisterous and 
ungenial.^ 

In February, 835, a council was held at ThionviUe, where eight 
archbishops and thirty-three bishops condemned their brethren 
who had shared in the proceedings at Compiegne and SoissonsL 
Among these delinquents the most noted was Ebbo, a man of 
servile birth, who had been foster-brother of Louis, and, like other 
low-bom clerks, had been promoted by him with a view of counter- 
balancing the aristocratic prelates who aimed at independence of 
the crown.' Ebbo was a man of learning, and had laboured as a 
missionary among the northern tribes ; ■ but his behaviour towards 
his benefactor had been conspicuously ungrateful.^ His treason 
had been rewarded by Lothair with a rich abbey, and, when the 
cause of Louis again became triumphant, he had fled, with all the 
wealth that he could collect, in the hope of finding a refnge among 
the Northmen." He was, however, overtaken, and, after having 
for some time been detained in the monastery of Fulda, he was 

larem, cum apostolos dicat, nemo milUans noble family, who bad been nominated 

Deo implicat se scecidaribw negotiis (II Tim. to the see, but was foond unable to read. 

ii. 4)." Decret Leonig M. c. 24, ap. Dion. Hist Litt. v. 100. 

Exig. (Patrol. Ixvii. 290). Cf. Cone, • See below, chap. iv. 

Tolet. XII. A.D. 681, c. 2. » He is the especial object of Thegan's 

p Acta, ap. Bouquet, v. 246. Affo- abhorrence. See above, p. 248. In re- 
bard's paper is given there, and in his lating the penance at Soissons, the bio- 
Vt^orks, ii. 73. grapher apostrophises Ebbo, and re- 

4 Thcgan, 45-8 ; Astron. 51 ; Annal. proaches him witn clothing in sackdoUi 

Bertin. a.d. 834 ; Funck, 143-150. the prince who had clothed Atin in purple, 

' Flodoard, Hist Kem. ii. 19 (Patrol. &c. c. 44. 
czzxv.); Milman, ii. 261. Ebbo was " Flodoard, ii. 20. 
promoted instead of Giselmar, a man of 



Chap. I. a.d. 834-840. DEATH OF LOUIS. 263 

compelled to ascend the pulpit of a church at Metz, where, in the 
presence of Louis, and of the assembled bishops, clergy, and laity, 
he acknowledged that all the late proceedings against the emperor 
were unjust and sinful. At Thionville, he wrote and subscribed a 
profession of his own unworthiness ; he was deposed from his see, 
and remained in monastic custody, or in exile, until the death of 
Louis. Other bishops were gently treated, on confessing their 
guilt, while Agobard, who did not appear, was condemned for his 
contumacy.* 

Lothair was deprived of the imperial title, and was confined to 
the kingdom of Italy.'' But Judith afterwards found it expedient 
to make overtures to him, and a partition — the last of the parti- 
tions which attest the difiiculties and the weakness of Louis — was 
made in 839, by which Pipin, the emperor's grandson, was to be 
excluded from inheriting his father's kingdom of Aquitaine ; and, 
with the exception of Bavaria, which was left to the younger Louis, 
the whole empire was to be shared between Lothair and Charles.* 
To the last the unhappy reign of Louis was distracted by the 
enmities of his sons, who had alike cast away all filial and all 
brotherly regards. He died on the 20ih of June, 840, in an island 
of the Rhine opposite Ingelheim, when engaged in an expedition 
against his son Louis of Germany. On his deathbed he received 
the consolations of religion from his illegitimate brother Drogo, 
bishop of Metz. His last words, *' Out ! Out I " were interpreted 
as an adjuration commanding the evil spirit to depart.*^ 

During the earlier years of this reign, the fame of Charlemagne 
continued to invest the empire with dignity in the eyes of foreign 
nations, and Louis himself carried on successful war in various 
directions.^ But the dissensions of the Franks afterwards exposed 
them to enemies from without The Northmen, whose first appear- 
ances on the coast had filled the mind of Charlemagne with 
gloomy forebodings,*^ advanced up the Scheld in 820."* In 835, 
they burnt the great trading city of Dorstadt, with its fifty-four 
churches ; " and their ravages were felt on the banks of the Loire 
and elsewhere. To the south, the Saracens were a no less formi- 

" Annal. Bertin. a.d. 835 ; Clerici Re- (v. 400) 8ui)poses the meaning to be £s 

menses (Patrol, cxvi. 18) ; Flodoard,.ii. ist cnu, ** It is over." Loais the German 

20 ; Hincmar, i. 324-7 ; Thegan, 66 ; had, in 874, a Yision, in which hisfother 

Astron. 54. begged him, in Latin, to obtain his re- 

T Sismondi, iii. 36. lease from purgatory. Annal. Fnld. 

« Astron. (Patrol, civ. 973) ; Pruden- (Pertz. i. 387.) 

tins, A.D. 839 (ib. cxv. 1387); Palgrave, »» Funck, 66-9. 

i. 306. ' Monach. Sangallen. ii. 14. 

• Iltu, htiz, equivalent to the modem *■ Sismondi, ii. 449. 

German Aus. ^Astron. 63-4). Luden ' Palgrare, i. 297. 



264 LEO THE ARMENIAN. Book IV. 

dable foe ; in 838 they plundered Marseilles, and carried off its 
monks and clergy as prisoners.' And on the east^ the Slavonic 
nations bad taken advantage of the Frankish contests to make 
inroads on the imperial territory. The dangers which thus 
threatened the empire on various sides became yet more serious 
under the successors of I^uis. 

II. Although the decision of the second Nicene council had 
been established as law in the eastern empire, the conformity to 
it which was enforced was in many cases insincere. A consider- 
able party among the bishops and clergy was opposed to the 
worship of images ; and in the army, the enthusiasm with which 
the memory of the martial iconoclastic emperors was cherished 
was usually accompanied by an attachment to their opinions.^ 

Leo v., "the Armenian," who in 813 became emperor by the 
deposition of Michael Rhangabe, was, by the influence both of his 
early training and of his military associations, opposed to the 
worship of images.** His enemies speak of him by the name of 
CJiameleoUy^ on account of the insincere and changeable character 
which they impute to him ; but even they allow that he was a man 
of unusual energy, and of abilities which fitted him to sustain 
the declining empire.'^ The patriarch Nicephorus — not (it would 
seem) from suspicion, but merely in compliance with custom — 
required him on his elevation to subscribe a profession of faith ; 
but Leo desired that the matter should be deferred until after his 
coronation, and, when the application was then renewed, he 
refused.™ 

Like other adventurers who rose to the possession of empire 
(and probably like a far greater number in whom the promise was 
not fulfilled), Leo had in early life been told that he was destined 
to become emperor. Hence he derived an inclination to believe 
in prophecies ; and a monk, who, by a rare exception to 
* the feeling of his class, was adverse to the cause of 
images, now assured him of a long and glorious reign if he would 
suppress the worship of them, while he threatened him with calamity 

' Sismondi, iii. 41-2. Niceph. .32-3; Walch, x. G67 ; Finlay, 

s Schlosser, 405 ; Neand. v\. 263. ii. 134. Auct. Incert, says that he pro- 

^ Schlosser, 393. mised to make no inuoTatious as to re- 

* Auctor Incertus (i. e. an anonymous ligion (431). It is said that when the 

continuator of Theophanes) in vol. ix. patriarch at the coronation touched the 

of the Byzantine historians, ed. Paris, head of Leo, his hands were wounded 

p. 439. Vita Nicephori, 3a (Patrol. Gr. by the emperor's hair, which felt like 

c.) ; Georgius Monachus, de Leone, i. 3. thorns or thistles — an awful omen of 

^ Cedren. 49i). what was to follow. Const. Porph. i. 18. 

"» Const. Porphyrog. i. 17 ; Vita 



Chap.L A.D. 813-4. DISCUSSION AS TO IMAGES. 265 

in case of his acting otherwise." The words produced their effect 
on Leo ; and he was further influenced by a comparison between 
the prosperous reigns of the iconoclastic emperors and the mis- 
fortunes of those who had followed an opposite policy.** He 
resolved to take the Isaurian Leo and his son for his examples ; 
but, before proceeding to action, he wished to assure himself as to 
the grounds of his causa He therefore desired Antony, bishop of 
Sylaeum in Pamphylia, John " the Grammarian," and other eccle- 
siastics, to abridge for his information the acts of Constantine's 
iconoclastic synod,^ and to collect authorities from the fathers 
against the adoration of images.** He then opened the matter to 
Nicephorus, urging that the disasters of the empire were popu- 
larly ascribed to the worship of images — an assertion which ought 
perhaps to be taken as representing the feeling of the soldiery 
alone ; and he proposed that such as were placed low ' and within 
reach should be removed." The patriarch refused his consent ; on 
which the emperor asked him to produce any scriptural warrant in 
favour of images.' Nicephorus replied that the worship of these, 
like many other unwritten things, was matter of apostolical tradi- 
tion, and had been taught to the church by the Holy Ghost ; that 
it would be as reasonable to ask for scriptural proof in favour of 
reverencing the cross or the gospels. And, on being desired to 
argue the question with Antony and John, or to refute the autho- 
rities which they had produced against his views, he declined, on 
the ground that he must have nothing to do with heretics." 

Nicephorus and his partisans — clergy, monks, and laity — now 
held nightly meetings in the cathedral, where they engaged in 
prayer for the frustration of the emperor's designs, and bound 
themselves to stand by the cause of images even to the death.* 
On hearing of these assemblies, Leo in the dead of night sent for 
the patriarch, and the question was discussed at great length.^ 
Nicephorus repeated his declaration as to the unlawfulness of 

" Const. Porph. i. 15-6 ; Cedren, 486- had been accustomed to evade these; 

9 ; Hard. iv. 1045 ; Walch, x. 593 ; but that be asked for a New Testament 

Schlosser, 405-6. The accounts of these precept, x. 696. 

prophecies vary greatly. Walch is in- » Auct. Inc. 437 ; Schlosser, 407. 

clined to reject the whole story, x. 624, Nicephorus wrote a chronicle which has 

662-4. often been cited in the preceding pages. 

° Auct. Inc. 415. His Life and remains (which include 

p See p. 98. discourses of great length in &vour of 

^ Auct. Inc. 436 ; Schlosser, 406-7. images) are in the Patrol. Gr., vol. c. 

' tA xaM'?^«k. See Neand. vi. 265. See also vol. i. of the * Spicilegium Soles- 

• Auct. Inc. 437. mense.' 

» Walch remarks that Leo did not * Auct Inc. 439 ; Walch, x. 672-3. 

take his stand on the Old Testament y Auct. Inc. 438 ; Vita Niceph. 37-53. 
prohibitions, as the partisans of images 



266 THEODORE THE STUDITE. Bom IV. 

holding conference with heretics/ and, after a time, asked leave to 
introduce his friends, who had accompanied him to the palace, 
and, during his conference with the emperor, had been waiting 
without the gates/ Of these the most prominent was Theodore, 
a priest, and abbot of a monastery in the capital, which had been 
founded by Studius, a noble Roman, and was better known by a name 
derived from his than by that of its patron, St. John the Baptist^ 
Theodore was a nephew of the abbot Plato, who had excom- 
municated Constantino VI. on account of his second marriage,^ 
and had vehemently opposed Tarasius for his compliance with tiie 
emperor's will in that affair. Theodore himself had taken part 
with his uncle ; he had endured exile and other severities 
* in punishment of his contumacy, and had incurred tresH 
penalties under the reign of Nicephorus, when some questions 
connected with Constantine's marriage were revived.** 
Under his care, the Studite community had increased 
the number of its members from about twelve to nearly a thousand ; 
the strictness of its discipline had acquired for it an eminence above 
all other Greek monasteries ; ® and the abbot's character and suffer- 
ings had won for him an influence which made him important even 
in the eyes of the sovereign. Theodore took up the cause of 
images with all his characteristic zeal. There were, indeed, 
among its partisans some extravagances so violent that he felt 
himself obliged to reject and censure them ;^ but he himself went so 
far as to eulogise a high official for employing an image as sponsor 
for a child." He held that images were not for the unlearned 
only, but were necessary for the most advanced Christian ; *> that a 

« See BaroD. 814. 9 ; Neand. v. 268-9. 808-9 : Walch, x. 659. 

• Vita Niceph. 54-5. • Vita, 14," 28, seqq. 

^ For Theodore the Studite, see ' Thus, one of his letters (i, 15) is 

Schrbckh, xxiii. 105. His remains, with addressed to a stylite who had painted 

a Life by his disciple Michael, form the angels crucified, and the Saviour and 

yth volume of Sirmond's ' Opera Varia,' angels as in old age. He finds it neces- 

Venet. 1728, and are more fully given sary to lay down repeatedl^r that the 

in the Patrol. Gr. vol. xcix. worship to be paid to images is not pro- 

e Vita Theod. c. 20. See pp. 158-9. perly /a^ret/^ic, but re/aWre(<rx«Tijc^), and 

G. Hamartolus says that Theoaote, the that any other is idohitrous (Epp. ii. 85, 

second wife of Constantine, was related 151, 161, 167, 212); and he ends his 

to Theodore (cclvii. 14). There is a curi- first dialogue (Antirrheticus, i. p. 83) by 

ous letter bv Theodore, written towards declaring, ** If any one, carrying to ex- 

the end of his life, in which he explains cess the reverence of Christ's image, say 

why Constantine might be stigmatised that he does not approach it, and would 

as a Herod, on account of his marriage, get no benefit from it, unless he were 

and yet might be commemorated as an first cleansed from all sin, he is without 

orthodox emperor. £p. ii. 218. reason" (Axoyof— a variation from the 

* Vita, 22, 43-5 ; Theod. Laudatio preceding denunciations, of which each 
Platonis, 31 , 35 ; Ep. i. 21, 28 ; Narratio ends—" he is a heretic "). 

de Schismate Studitarum (Patrol. Gr. r Ep. i. 17. 
xcix.); Cedren. 477-8; Baron. 795-6, »» Ep. ii. 171. 



Chap. I. aj). 814. CONFERENCE ON IMAGES. 267 

reverence for them was necessary ip order to a right faith in the 
Incarnation. If images were suppressed, he said, *' our preaching 
is vain, and your faith is also vain."^ 

On being admitted into the emperors presence, Theodore 
entered on the subject of images with great vehemence^ He 
reproached Leo for innovating in matters of religion, and re- 
minded him of the fate which had befallen emperors who had ' 
been enemies of the faith. The Old Testament prohibitions of 
images, he said, are abolished by the Incarnation : if the law of 
Moses were to be regarded, how is it we worship the cross, which 
the law speaks of as accursed? — and he urged the other usual 
topics of his party. The emperor told him that his insolence was 
notorious, but that, if he wished for the glory of martyrdom, he 
would be disappointed." Theodore rejoined that the imperial 
power was limited to external matters; that, according to St 
Paul, God had '^ set in the church first apostles, then prophets, 
and afterwards teachers," but that nothing was said of emperors ; 
that the emperor was bound to obey in matters of religion, and not 
to usurp the office of others." " Do you exclude me from the 
church ? " asked Leo. " It is not I," the monk replied, " but the 
Apostle ; nay rather, it is you who by your deeds have excluded 
yourself." The emperor desired that Antony of Sylaeum might 
be released from the excommunication which Nicephorus had pro- 
nounced against him ; but this was refrised, and at length Leo in 
anger dismissed the patriarch and his party. On leaving the palace 
Theodore was enthusiastically kissed by his companions, and was 
greeted with demonstrations of the warmest admiration on account 
of the stand which he had made.** 

Leo now desired the friends of images to pve up their meet- 
ings, to remain quietly at home, and to refrain from discussing the 
subjects which were in question ; and he required them to bind 
themselves by a written promise of obedience. Some complied ; 
but, before Nicephorus had signified his intentions, Theodore sent 
forth a violent circular addressed to all the monks of the empire,^ 
censuring the patriarch for his neglect to take more decided mea- 
sures against the emperor, and threatening with eternal punishment 
all who should desert the cause of images. He kept up a lively 
agitation by means of letters, visits, and conversations,^ and vehe- 
mently asserted the cause of images, in verse as well as in prose. 

' Vita, 64 (1 Cor. xv. 14). ° lb. 74 ; G. Hamart cclxii. 9. 

^ His speech is in the Life, 65-72. •» Vita, 75. p Ep. ii. 2. 

"' Vita, 73. •» Vita, 76; Schlosser, 411-2. 



268 DEPRIVATION OF NICEPHORUS. Book IV. 

The chief of his productions are three tracts which bear the title 
of " Antirrhetics '* — the first two in the form of dialogue between 
an orthodox man and a heretic ; the third, consisting of the icono- 
clastic objections with a triumpliant answer to each of them. 

The emperor's opposition to images was not extreme. He did 
not wish to destroy them, or even to remove such as might be 
retained without superstition ; nor did he desire to disturb the 
convictions of those who were attached to them, if they would 
consent to extend a like toleration to others.' But the vehemence 
of Theodore and his party, who regarded the worship of images as 
an inseparable consequence of a right faith in the Incarnation, 
provoked Leo to measures of great severity. The soldiery, without 
waiting for a legal warrant (yet perhaps incited by the emperor, 
. as his enemies asserted), broke out into tumult, and 
rushed to the brazen gate, where the image of ** the 
Surety,"' so famous in an earlier stage of the controverisy,* had 
Ixjen reinstated by Irene. They uttered much abusive language, 
and pelted the figure with dirt and stones ; whereupon the 
emperor removed it, under the pretence of rescuing it from such 
indignities, and issued a commission for taking down images in 
general, wherever it could be done with safety.^ Images were 
broken, burnt, or bedaubed with clay and filth." Many refractory 
bishops, abbots, and others, were ejected and banished ; among 
the sufiFerers was the chronicler Theophanes, who died in the 
island of Samothrace.* 

At Christmas 814, the emperor went in state to St. Sophia's, 
having previously satisfied Nicephorus that no disorder was to 
be apprehended by drawing a picture from his bosom and kissing 
it. He advanced to the altar, and kissed the altar-cloth, which 
was embroidered with a representation of the Nativity.'' But 
when, in the course of the service, a denunciation of idolatry was 
read from Isaiah,* one of the clergy stept forth, and, addressing 
the emperor, told him that God, by the prophet's words, com- 
manded him to proceed firmly in his measures for the suppression 
of image-worship.' 

' Walch, X. 694 ; NeaAd. v. 270-5 ; had done it out of custom, and refrained 

Finlay, ii. 139. on finding that his act was misconstrued. 

• See p. 90. x. 675. « C xl. 18, seqq. 

» Auct. Incert. 438 ; Schlosser, 412. • See the various accounts in Walch, 

K X*? '^^*^- 77. X. 665. Cedrenus (490) places the scene 

o 1.1 ^®"* '*®^' Baron. 816. 1-4; in the patriarchate of Theodotus ; some 

Schlosser, 411. gay tliat Theodotus was himself the 

y Auct. Incert. 439 ; Schlosser, 412-3. speaker (as Const. Porph. i. 20) ; others 

He omitted this when he next attended name John the Grammarian. Walch, x. 

the cathedral. Walch supposes that he 618,628. 



Chap. I. a.d. 814-820. THKOrX)KE IN BANISHMENT. 269 

Nicephorus fell seriously ill, and it was hoped that his death 
would spare the emperor the necessity of proceeding against him. 
But he recovered, and, as all attempts to treat with him were 
fruitless, he was deprived, and was shut up in a monastery, where 
he lived fourteen years longer.^ John the Grammarian was pro- 
posed as his successor, but was rejected as wanting in birth and in 
age ;° and the patriarchate was bestowed on Theodotus 
Cassiteras, a layman connected with the family of the ^" * 
Isaurian emperors, and the supposed prompter of the monk by 
whose prophecies Leo had been induced to attempt the suppression 
of image-worship.'* Theodotus, who is described by his opponents 
as " a man without reason, more dumb than the fishes, and ignorant 
of everything but impiety,''® gave great offence to the monastic 
party by his free and secular habits of life.' He assembled a 
synod, which confirmed the judgments of the iconoclastic council of 
754, and annulled those of the second Nicene council.^ The most 
eminent abbots had been summoned to take part in the assembly ; 
but Theodore in their name sent a refusal in his usual vehement 
strain, condenming all who should attend, and declaring that he 
would not share in or regard any measures which might be taken 
without the consent of the lawful patriarch Nicephorus.** In defi- 
ance of the imperial order against the public exhibition of images, 
he caused his monks on Palm Sunday to carry in solemn procession 
all those which belonged to the monastery, and to chant a hymn 
which began with the words, " We adore thine undefiled image."* 

The emperor, greatly provoked by this daring contumacy, sent 
Theodore into banishment, where he remained for seven years.*' 
He was removed from one place to another ; he was often cruelly 
scourged, even to the danger of his life ; his wounds were undressed, 
nor, when he fell seriousJy ill, could he obtain any attendance or 
relief;" he suffered from want of food; he was imprisoned for 
three years in a loathsome subterranean dungeon, and was often 
threatened with death." But his resolution rose with the severity 
of his treatment. He declared that he would bear whatever might 
be inflicted on him, but that nothing should reduce him to silence.** 
He found means of writing and of circulating letters which sus- 

»> Vita Niceph. 59, seqq. ; Anct. * Sym. Magist. de Leone, 6 ; G. Ha- 

Incert. 440-1 ; Schlosser, 414-5. It is mart, clxii. 2. 

uncertwn whether his deprivation was ' Vita Niceph. 73; Auct. Incert. 441 ; 

sanctioned by a council. Walch, x. Schrockh, xxiii. 362-3. 

679, 686. ' Vita Nic. 73 ; Walch, x. 691-3. 

«= Auct. Incert. 441. ^ Vita Theod. 79-80. 

•* Symeon Magist. de Leone, 3; Walch, » lb. 78. ^ lb. 81-102. 

X. 655. " lb. 93. » lb. 90-3. « lb. 83. 



270 MURDER OF LEO. Book IV. 

tained the determination of his party ; he denounced the emperor 
as a Pharaoh and a Nebuchadnezzar, an enemy of the Saviour 
and of His vii^n mother ; and the increased punishment which he 
drew on himself by each offence served only to stimulate him to 
greater violence.'^ He wrote to the bishop of Rome, to the three 
eastern patriarchs, and to the heads of some important monasteries, 
representing the oppressions of the church in the most moving 
terms, and earnestly praying for sympathy.^ 

Paschal, who had just been raised to the papacy, refused to 
admit the imperial envoys into Rome, sent legates to inter- 
cede with Leo for the fHends of images, and, in token of 
the interest which he took in them, built a monastery for Greek 
refugees, to whom he assigned the new church of St. Praxedis for 
the performance of service in their own language.'^ The clergy 
of the party sought ordination in Italy ; the liuty, instigated l^ 
Theodore's teaching, refused religious offices at the hands of the 
iconoclastic clergy .' Leo was more and more exasperated. The 
worshippers of images were scourged, banished, mutilated, blinded, 
or put to death ; it was ordered that all pictures should be white- 
wa^iied, or taken down and burnt ; spies were employed to discover 
all who possessed either images or books in defence of them, all 
who should venture to shelter a fugitive or to relieve a prisoner of 
the party. All hymns in honour of images were expunged from 
the liturgy, and care was taken to instil, an abhorrence of images 
into children by means of their school-books.^ 

Michael *' the Stammerer," a general to whom Leo had been 
indebted for hb throne, at length became discontented, and was 
convicted, by his own confession, of treasonable designs, on the 
eve of Christmas, 820. He was condemned to death, and Leo 
would have ordered the execution of the sentence to take place 
immediately, but for the intercession of his empress, who entreated 
him to defer it until after the festival. The emperor agreed, but, 
with a melancholy foreboding, told her that her pious scruples 
would cost her and her children dear." Michael was confined in 
the palace, and Leo, anxious to assure himself, went in the middle 
of the night to look whether the prisoner were safe. He found 

p Epp. passim; Schloeser, 418-428. " Const. Porph. i. 21. It is said that 

• 4 Epp. ii. 12-17. Ijeo was about to throw him into the 

' Auastas. 215; Baron. 818. 14-17; fiimace used for heating the baths of 

Schlosser, 421-3. the palace (Sym. Mag. de Leone, 7 ; 

• Epp. ii. 215, p. 583 ; Neand. ▼. 276. Cedrenus, 492)— " a tale," says Mr. 

* Sym. Mag. de Leone, C; Vita Ni- Finlay, ^'fitter for the legends of the 
ccph. 79 ; Schlosser, 423 ; Schrockh, saints than for Uie history of the em- 
xxiiL 364 ; Neand. v. 278-9. pire." ii. 148. 



Chap. I. a.d. 820-1. MICHAEL THE STAMMERER. 271 

both him and the officer who guarded him asleep ; but the keeper 
had resigned his bed to the criminal, and was lying on the floor. 
A slave, who was in the rodm unobserved, had recognised the 
emperor by his purple buskins, and, on his withdrawsJ, aroused 
the sleepers. Tlie officer, knowing that the indulgence which he 
had shown to his prisoner must render himself suspected as an 
accomplice, concerted with Michael a plan for instant action. 
Under pretence that a confessor was required, he introduced into 
the palace one of Michael's partisans, who, on going out, commu- 
nicated with others. It was the custom to celebrate the earliest 
service of Christmas-day at three o'clock in the morning; the 
" ivory gate " of the palace was opened to admit the clergy and 
singers, and among them a band of disguised conspirators entered. 
These attacked the chief chaplain, supposing him to be the 
emperor, who usually led the psalmody on such occasions ; but 
the priest escaped by uncovering his tonsured head. They then 
fell on Leo, who for a time defended himself by swinging the chain 
of a censer, and then, seizing a large cross from the altar, dealt 
heavy blows around him, until a conspirator of gigantic size dis- 
abled him by a stroke which cut off his right hand. On this, the 
emperor was immediately despatched ; his head was cut off, and 
his body was dragged into the circus. Michael, before a smith 
could be found to release him from his chains, was hastily enthroned, 
and, on the same day, was crowned in the cathedral'^ 

The friends of images now flattered themselves that Leo's policy 
would be reversed. The deposed patriarch Nicephorus wrote to 
request that the emperor would restore the images ; ^ while 
Theodore the Studite warmly congratulated Michael on his acces- 
sion,' and celebrated the murder of Leo with ferocious exultation. 
** It was right," he said, '^ that the apostate should thus end his 
life. It was fitting that in the night death should overtake the son 
of darkness. It was fitting that he who had desolated the temples 
of God should see swords bared against himself in God's temple. 
It was fitting that he should find no shelter from the altar who 
had destroyed the altar itself, and that that hand should be cut off 
which had been stretched forth against the holy things. It was 
fitting that a sword should pierce through the throat which had 
vomited forth blasphemies." After exercbing his rhetoric in this 
style through other points of congruity, Theodore adds, in words 

« Const. Porph. i. 24-5 ; ii. 2 ; Cedren. ^ Const. Porph. ii. S ; Walch, x. 706. 
494-6 ; Gibbon, iv. 41S ; Schlosser, 427- ■ Ep. ii. 74. 
431. 



272 MICHAEL THE STAMMERER. B«w IV. 

which it is possible that he may have himself believed—" I do not 
mock at the manner of his death, as rejoicing in the fate of the 
impious man, but I speak in sorrow and with tears. It is because, 
as He hath said who cannot lie, that wicked man hath been 
miserably destroyed;"^ and he goes on to express* his hope that a 
new Josiah or Jovian may arise for the restoration of images and 
of religion.** 

Michael recalled those who had been banished for their attach- 
ment to images, and the return of Theodore was celebrated by a 
sort of public triumph.*^ But the hopes which had been rashly 
entertained were soon disappointed. The emperor, a Phrygian by 
birth, was a rude soldier; it is said that he could hardly read. 
His enemies assert that his highest accomplishments consisted in a 
knowledge of horses, asses, and pigs ; and to this it is added, that 
in early life he had been connected with a strange sect which mixed 
up Jewish tenets with those of the Athingani or Paulicians — that 
he still retained its errors, that he denied our Lord's resmrection 
and the existence of the devil.<* The joy of the monastic party 
was effectually checked when the noted iconomachlst Antony of 
Sylaeum was raised in 821 to the patriarchate of Constantinople.* 
Michael declared that he himself had never worshipped any 
image ; ' he forbade all changes in religion, and all preaching on 
either side of the question. Both the friends and the opponents 
of images were to enjoy full liberty of opinion ; but no public 
worship of images was to be allowed in the capital.* Thus 
Theodore and his friends found that, instead of the ascendency 
which they had expected, they were only to enjoy toleration — 
and that of a kind which was equal only in name, inasmuch as, 
while the opposite party lost nothing, the devotees of images 
were restrained from the open exercise of the worship which they 
regarded as^ essential. They once more refused to confer with 
their opponents, on the ground that it was unlawful to do so.*" 
Theodore repeated to Michael the declaration which he had made 
to Leo, that earthly princes have no right to intermeddle with 
matters of religion. He desired the emperor to restore Nicephorus 
to the patriarchal throne, or, if he felt any doubt or distrust, to 

• Matth. xxi. 41. 496-9. See Fleury, xliv. 44 ; Walch. x. 

^ Ep. ii. 73. There are other scanda- 629, 706 ; Schrockh, xxiii. 381 ; Neand. 

loos passages of the same kind in Epp. vi. 280. 

77 and 80 ; and an extraordinary ac- * Schlosser, 4C0. 

cumulation of epithets against Leo in ' VitaTheodor. 118. 

Ep. 75. » Const. Porph. ii. 8 ; Ctdren. 499 ; 

« Vita, 102, 115. Schlosser, 433, 458. 

<• Const. Porph. ii. 3-4, 8 ; Cedren. *» Theod. Ep. ii. 8(5. 



Chap. I. a.d. 831-9. DEATH OF THEODORE. 273 

follow the tradition of the fathers by referring the matter to the 
bishop of Rome, as the inheritor of the Saviour's promise to 
St Peter.* He met Michael's endeavours at a reconciliation 
between the parties by labouring to separate the church from the 
state.^ He wrote to Marina, the divorced wife of Constantine VI., 
whose daughter Michael had taken from a convent to become his 
second wife," charging her to leave the palace and her daughter's 
company, because the sword spoken of in the Gospel was now come 
to set the nearest kindred at variance among themselves.'^ Michael 
was provoked by the intractable behaviour of Theodore 
and his followers to abandon his principle of toleration, 
and to employ harsh measures agahist them. The Studite was once 
more banished, and died in exile at the age of sixty-nine.** 

As the adherents of images relied much on the support of Rome, 
the emperor in 824 sent a legation to pope Paschal, with a viiew 
of endeavouring to dissuade him from harbouring refugees of the 
party. At the same time, he sent ambassadors to Louis the Pious, 
with a letter in which he announced his accession, and his late 
victory over a rival, named Thomas, who had pretended to be the 
deposed Constantine, and for three years had contested the posses^ 
sion of the empire.^ In this letter Michael clears his faith and 
his conduct in ecclesiastical matters from misrepresentations which 
had reached the west, and entreats the Frank emperor to aid him 
by the influence which, as lord of Rome, he could exercise over the 
pope,"* and in justification of his proceedings he gives some cui ious 
statements of the excess to which the superstition as to images 
was carried. The cross was turned out of churches, and images 
were substituted for it ; lights and incense were offered to them, 
hymns and prayers were addressed to them. They were employed 
as sponsors for children ; and novices entering into the monastic 
state, instead of asking religious persons to receive their hair when 
cut off, allowed it to fall into the lap of images. Some of the 
clergy, in contempt of the public churches, celebrated the Eucharist 
in houses, using pictures for altars. Some scraped off the colours 
of images, mixed them with the sacramental elements, and admi- 
nistered the mixture to communicants; while others placed the 

» Ibid. ; Schrockh, xxiii. 382. « Ep. ii. 121 ; Pagi, xiv. 31 ; 

^ Schlosser, 469. Schrockh, xxiii. 382-5. 

" Const. Porph. ii. 24. p Const. Porph. ii. 10 ; Schlosser, 

» (Matth. X. 34-6). Ep. ii. 181. Bare- 461-3. 

nins supposes the letter addressed to ^ The letter is in Goldast, ' Imperialia 

the mother-in-law of Leo (816. 23). Decreta/ 611, seqq. ; and in Bu-onius, 

But Pagi corrects him, and shows that 824. 18, seqq. 
it was not written until 824. xiii. 561. 



274 GREEK EMBASSY TO THE WEST. Bo« IV. 

consecrated bread in the hands of the images, and firom these the 
communicants received it' The effect of this embassy fell short of 
Michael's expectation ; but we shall see that it was not unimportant 
in the history of the western church. 

Michael was succeeded in 829 by his son Theophilus. The 
young emperor had been carefully educated under John the 
Grammarian. He was a friend of literature, arts, and science ; he 
composed hymns and church-music, and himself led the choir in 
Divine service.* He prided himself on a strict administration of 
justice, which sometimes became an absurd or cruel pedantry ; and 
his attempts in war against the Saracens resulted in fruitless displays 
of courage and waste of blood, which gained for him the epithet of 
" the Unlucky." * From the lessons of John he had derived a strong 
abhorrence of images, and he carried out his views with relentless 
determination.^ 

The first measure of Theophilus against images was an order, 
issued on the occasion of a general taxation, that the^ opinions of 
every person on the question should be ascertained.^ He then, in 
882, commanded that images should not be reverenced in any way, 
and that they should not be styled holy, forasmuch as God alone is 
holy.'^ In the same year, on the death of Antony, he bestowed the 
patriarchate on his tutor, John,* who soon after held a synod at 
which the decrees of the second Nicenc council were condemned* 
The emperor then ordered that pictures of animals and 
other common subjects should be substituted in churches 
for those of a religious kind ; and he proceeded, with great severity, 
to enforce obedience. A general burning of religious pictures and 
statues took place. Many of the image party were imprisoned or 
banished. Monasteries were to be applied to secular uses ; monks 
were forbidden to wear their habit ; such of them as had lived in 
rural monasteries were not to be admitted into towns ; and those 
who painted images were especially prohibited to exercise their art^ 
The zealous party among the monks, on their side, were as resolute 

' Mich. ap. Baron. 824. 16. ing by means of a bason (for which prac- 

* Cedren. 522 ; Schlosser, 469. tice see Hippolytos adT. Haeres. iv. 35). 

» Const. Porph. iii. 2-4, 37, 41 ; G. He is also called by the name of the 

Hamart. cclxiv. 6 ; Cedren. 513-4 ; Egyptian magician Jannes. (2 Tim. iii. 

Gibbon, iv. 420; Finlay, ii. 170-3. 8.) G. Hamart. cclxiv. 15-17; Const. 

■ Cedren. 536 ; Schlosser, 617. Porph. iii. 26 ; iv. 7, 8. Sym. Mag. de 

« Baron. 830. 2. Theoph. 12; de Michaele, 2; Cedren. 

y Cedren. 518; Schlo9ser,519. These 536. The frequent mention of divina- 

orders had before been given by Leo tion by the Byzantine historians is re- 

and Michael. Const. Porph. iii. 10. markable. 



Pagi, xiv. 175, 214. John is styled * Schlosser, 519. 
aySficunts by the opposite par " " "" 

account of an alleged practice of 



\tKay6fiayTts by the opposite party, on *• Const. Porph. iii. 10; Cedren. 518. 

*nivin- 



Chap. L a.o. 829 833. THEOPHILUS^ 275 

as the emperor. Many of them went to him, and told him to his 
face that he was accursed for interfering with a worship which was 
derived from St. Luke, from the Apostles, and from the Saviour him- 
self.^ A monastic artist, named Lazarus, persisted in painting, not- 
withstanding repeated admonitions. He was cruelly beaten ; but, 
as soon as he had recovered in some degree, he boldly resumed his 
occupation. For this defiance of the law, he was again arrested ; 
by way of disabling him, his hands were seared with hot plates of 
iron ; and it was with difficulty that his life was saved through the 
intercession of the empress Theodora. Yet no suffering or danger 
could subdue the zealous painter, who, on being set at liberty, took 
refuge in a church of St John the Baptist, and there produced a 
picture which speedily acquired the reputation of miraculous power.** 
Two other monks, the poet l^heophanes and his brother Theodore, 
were summoned to the emperor's presence. Theophilus, who was 
fond of displaying his learning and ability in disputation, was pro- 
voked at finding that the monks did not yield with the same facility 
to which he had been accustomed in his courtiers. He ordered 
that each of them should receive two hundred lashes, and should 
afterwards be branded on the forehead with twelve iambic verses 
of the emperor's own composition ;* *' If the lines are bad," he said, 
"they deserve no better." Yet, notwithstanding these and many 
other severities, it does not appear that any persons suffered death 
in this reign on account of an attachment to images/ 

But within the emperor's immediate circle the worship of 
images was secretly practised. In the beginning of his reign, his 
stepmother, Euphrosyne, the daughter of Constantino VI. by his 
Armenian empress,^ had caused the noblest maidens of the empire 
to be assembled in order that Theophilus might select a consort 
from among them. Struck with the beauty of Icasia, he was about 
to bestow on her the golden apple, which was the symbol of his 
choice, when he paused for a moment, and said, as if unconsciously 
uttering his thought — " Of how much evil have women been the 
cause 1 " Icasia at once answered the reference to Eve with an 

« Const. Porph. iii. 11 ; Cedren. 519. is certain. 

«» Cedren, 520; Baron. 832. 5. ' GieseL II. i. 11. Schlosser (517, 

• G. Hamart. cclxvi. ; Const Porph. 524), Mr. Finlay (ii. 178), and Dean 

iii. 14. Sym. Mag. de Theoph. 22; Milman (ii. 136) agree in denying that 

Cedren. 520*1 ; Baron. 835. 35. It does there is any authority for Gibbon's 

not seem impossible (as some writers statement (iv. 494) as to the extreme 

have supposed) to find room for the cruelty of the punishments inflicted by 

verses ou the tonsured heads of the Theophilus. 

monks, if a small letter were used. This ' Theophilus afterwards sent Eu- 

difficnlt)r is not raised by the ancient phrosyne oack to her nunnery . Cedren. 

authorities; and, at least, the branding 514. 

T 2 



276 THEOPHILUS. Book IV 

allusion to the Redemption — " Yes ; and of how much greater 
good ! " But the emperor took alarm at this excessive readiness 
of repartee ; he gave the apple to Theodora, a candidate of less 
brilliant and more domestic character ; and Icasia sought consola- 
tion in founding a monastery, where she lived for the cultivation 
of learning.** Theodora had been brought up in the worship of 
images. Her mother,^ who was devoted to them, secretly kept 
a number of them, and, when the emperor's children visited her, 
she used to bring forth the images, and offer them to be kissed. 
Theophilus, by questioning the children, discovered that their 
grandmother was in the habit of amusing them with what they 
styled dolls. He strictly forbade them to visit her again, and she 
had difficulty in escaping punishment, although she continued to 
reprove the emperor very freely for his measures.^ Theodora her- 
self was detected in paying reverence to images by a dwarf, who 
was kept about the court as a jester. On hearing liis tale, 
Theophilus rushed in a fury to the empress's apartment; but the 
images were not to be found, and the dwarf was silenced for the 
future by a whipping." 

Theophilus died in January, 842. Fearing, in his last sick- 
ness, for the empire which he was about to leave to women and 
young children, he endeavoured to secure it by the death of his 
brother-in-law, Theophobus, a descendant of the Persian kings, 
who had distinguished himself by military services. The head of 
Theophobus was cut oflF in prison, and was carried to the emperor ; 
and, with his hand on it, he expired." 

It is said that Theophilus, with a view to the continuance of his 
ecclesiastical policy, had bound Tlieodora and the senate by oath to 
make no change as to religion.® The guardians of his son Michael, 
however, were either favourable to images or capable of being 
gained to the cause.^ The only seeming exception was Manuel, 
uncle of the empress. But in a dangerous sickness he was visited 
by some Studite monks, who promised him life if he would swear 
to undertake the restoration of images;*^ and Manuel, on his 
recovery, joined with the other ministers in laying the subject 

*> 0. Ilamart. cclxiv. 2 ; Sym. MagUt. Const. Porph. iii. 19-20. The writer 

de Theophil. i. ; Zonaras, ap. 13aron. cited under that name (iii. 38) and Ced- 

t. xiv. 1.51 ; Gibbon, iv. 421. reuus (533) say that, according to some, 

1 See Const. Porph. iii. 5 ; Cedren. he was put to death by an officer with- 

545 ; Walch, x. 520. out orders. 

^ Const. Porph. iii. 5 ; Cedren. 515-6. ° Cedren. 528, 533 ; Walch, x. 720. 

" Const. Porph. i. 6 ; Sym. Mag. de p Schlosser, 544-5. 
Theoph. 7; Cedren. 516. i Const. Porph. iv. I. See Walch, 

■ tor the history of Theophobus, see x. 7G'J. 



Chap. I. a. d. 833-843. FINAL ESTABLISHMENT OF IMAGES. 277 

before Theodora, who said that her own wishes had long been in 
the same direction, but that she had felt herself restrained by her 
engagements to Theophilus.' The revolution was speedily begun. 
The patriarch John was ejected, not without personal violence," 
and Methodius, who had, been a confessor under the last reign,* 
was put into his place. A synod, to which those who were known 
as resolute iconomachists were not invited, pronounced in favour 
of images ; but the empress still hesitated, and entreated the 
assembled clergy to intercede for the for^veness of her husband's 
sins. Methodius replied that they could only intercede for those 
who were yet on earth ; that, if Theophilus had died in his error, 
his case was beyond the power of the church. Thus urged, 
Theodora ventured on the fiction (which she is said to have even 
confirmed with an oath) that the emperor, before his death, had 
expressed repentance for his measures; that he had asked for 
some images, and had kissed them with ardent devotion ; where- 
upon the patriarch assured her that, if it were so, he would 
answer for her husband's salvation." There was now no ftuiher 
hindrance to the restoration of images. Those of the capital were 
re-established with great solemnity on the first Sunday in Lent* — 
a day which was styled the Feast of Orthodoxy, and has ever since 
been celebrated by the Greeks under that name, although with 
a wider application of the term.^ The bodies of Nicephorus, 
Theodore the Studite, and other eminent friends of images, who 
had died in exile, were translated to the capital.* The sees were 
filled with members of the triumphant party, and among them was 
the branded monk Theophanes, who obtained the bishoprick of 
Nicaea.* The empress, at a banquet, expressed to him her regret 
for the cruelty with which her husband had treated him. ** Yes," 
said Theophanes, "for this I will call him to account at the 

' Cedren. 535 ; Walch, x. 787, 790. rally placed in 842 ; but, as in that 

■ For the tricks imputed to John — year Theophilus died on Jan. 20, and 

woundine himself, and pretending that the first Sunday of Lent was Feb. 20, 

his enemies had assaulted him, &c.» see Walch says that the solemnity must be 

Const. Porph. iv. 3 ; Cedren. 535 ; put off to 843. x. 743. See Fagi, xiv. 

Walch, X. 771. Symeon says that, in 267. 

the monastery where he was shut up y Const. Porph. iv. 10 ; Walch, x. 

after his deposition, he put out the eyes 804-8. 

of an image, and that the empress, on ■ Walch, x. 780, 

being informed of this, ordered his own • Symeon Magister tells us that some 

eyes to be put out. De Mich. 4. objected to him as being a Syrian, and 

» Syni. Mag. de Theoph. 24; Vita without any warrant of his orthodoxy ; 

Method. 7-9 (Patrol. Gr. c.) ; Cedren. butihat Methodius, pointing to the vcrseg 

521-2. on his forehead, said, *' I could wish for 

» Const. Porph. iv. 6 ; Schlosser, no better warrant than this." De 

548-552. Theoph. 23. 

« Const. Porph. iv. 6. This is gene- 



278 IMAGES IN THE PRANKISH CHURCH. Book IV. 

righteous judgment^seat of God!" Theodora was struck with 
horror ; but the patriarch Methodius reassured her by blaming the 
vehemence of his brother, and by repeating his declaration that 
Theophilus was safe.^ 

The worship of images — although only in the form of painting, 
not of sculpture^ — has ever since been retained by the Greeks. 
The opposition to it had not proceeded from the people, but from 
the will of the emperors ; and when the imperial authority was 
steadily exerted in favour of images, the iconomachist party be- 
came, not indeed immediately,** but within no long time, extinct.* 

III. The opinion of the Frankish church as to images had con- 
tinued in accordance with the council of Frankfort, when the 
embassy from the Greek emperor Michael,' in 824, led to a fresh 
examination of the question. Louis had such confidence in the 
correctness of the Frankish view as to hope that, if care were taken 
to avoid all cause of irritation, even the pope himself might be 
brought to agree in it. He therefore, after having received the 
Greek ambassadors, sent some envoys of his own to Rome in their 
company, with a request that Eugenius, who had just succeeded 
Paschal, would allow the clergy of Gaul to collect the opinions of 
the fathers on the subject.^ Having, by this show of deference to 
the pope, guarded against offence in the outset, Louis summoned 
an assembly which met at Paris in 825.^ The bishops drew up 
a collection of authorities, which they forwarded to the emperor, 
with a letter in which they censure both the extreme parties 
among the Greeks. They distinguish, as the Caroline Books had 
done, between paying reverence to the cross and to images,* and 

*> Const. Porph. iv. 11; Cedren. 539. and to his own commissioners are in 

There is a similar story as to the re- Hardouin, but Mansi is the only editor 

sentment of the painter Lazaras. Const, of the Councils who includes this. Most 

Porph. iii. 13. of the documents are given by Baronius 

« The Greeks have a saying that it (824-5), and the whole by Goldast (626, 

b unlawful to worship any image whose seqq.) : as also in the ' Patrologia,' xcviii. 

nose may be laid hold of with two 1293, seqa.; civ. 1317, seqq. On the 

' fingers. (Ansaldus, * De sacro et publico attempts of Romanists to suppress them, 

pictanun tabularum cultu,' 10, Venet. or to deny their genuineness, see Walch, 

1753). Some Romanists attack the in- xi. 96; Schrockb, xxiii. 406. Baronius 

consistency of the Greeks even more contents himself with abusing the anony- 

than the entire opposition of Protes- mous first edkor — " Arguendus est iste 

tants. Schrockh, xxiii. 394. SeeAugusti, filius esse tenebrarum, qui tenebricosnm 

xii. 234. opus, perpetuis tenebris dignum a majo- 

' See below, c. iii. ; Walch, x. 818. ribus habitum, et abditum, obscuritate 

* Giesel. II. i. 12; Neand. vi. 287; nominis, et loci unde prodierit, totum 

Milman, ii. 139. den?a eflfusum caligine in odium et in- 

' See p. 273. vidiam Catholici nominis sparserit," &c. 

t Kinhard, a.d. 824; Baron. 824. 31. 825. 2. 

^ The letters of Louis to Eugenius ^ Goldast, 683. 



Chap. I. a.d. 834-5. IMAGES IN THE PRANKISH CHURC^^. 279 

declare the opinion of the &thers to be, that images are not to be 
worshipped or adored, but are to be used for loving remembrance 
of the originals. They strongly censure Pope Adrian's manner 
of answering the Caroline Books ; but they charitably suggest that 
his reference to his predecessor Gregory the Great, in behalf of 
opinions widely difl'erent from those which that father really held, 
proves his error to have been not wilful, but committed in 
ignorance.'' They congratulate Louis on the prospect which the 
Greek application affords him of being able to mediate between 
the opposite parties, to convince the pope himself, and to bring 
both to an agreement in the truth.™ They send him a sketch of 
a letter to the pope, drawn up with an extreme anxiety to avoid all 
risk of a collision. In this document the emperor is made to extol 
the position and authority of the " supreme pontiff," the " universal 
pope," as having the means of reconciling the intolerant feu^tionsof 
the Greeks ; ° he will not presume to dictate, but only, ventures on 
suggestions ; he speaks of the assembly of Paris as not a synod, 
but merely a conference of his friends, the children of the apostolic 
father.® The bishops even go so far as to draw up a letter which 
the pope himself might subscribe and send to Constantinople — 
forbidding all superstitions as to images on the one hand, and all 
acts of contempt or outrage against them on the other.^ 

Two bishops, Jeremy of Sens and Jonas of Orleans, were sent 
by Louis to Rome, with a letter entirely different from the draft; 
which the council had supplied.*^ The emperor requests Eugenius 
to mediate between the friends and the enemies of images, and 
offers that his own envoys may accompany those whom the pope 
should send to Constantinople. The instructions given to Jeremy 
and Jonas ' direct them to deal very carefully with the pope. They 
are not to show him any parts of the documents drawn up at Paris 
which might be distasteful to him ; they are to avoid everything 
which might possibly jar on the characteristic obstinacy of the 
Romans,* and thus might provoke him to some irrevocable act ; 
they are to present the matter to him in such a way that, instead 
of supposing the truth to be forced on him, and thence conceiving 
a prejudice against it, he may imagine it to be his own discovery. 

^ Har. 825. 8. » lb. 11. «» Hard. iv. 1259. ' lb. 1260. 

" Goldast, 720-1. ' *' Pertiuacia Romana." Baronias 

o lb. 722. This distinction (which, contends that in that age pertinacia was 

after all, does not appear in the letter equivalent to constantm. Very possibly ; 

actually sent) is absurdly dwelt on as but only with those who were guilty of 

important by Barouius (825. 1) and it, not with those who charged it on 

other Romanists. See Walch, xi. 135. others. The words are directly opposed 

p Goldast, 723, seqq. See' Walch, xi. to each other by St. Augustine, C. Julian. 

128. iv. 20. 



280 ^ AGOBARD ON IMAGES. Book IV. 

The result of this mission is but imperfectly known. It did not 
induce the Romans to abandon their former views ; yet Eugenius 
made no such demonstration against Louis as his predecessors 
had made against the eastern emperors ; nor did he ercn attempt 
to answer him, as Adrian had answered Charlemagne.^ The 
envoys whom Louis sent to the east were well received there, and, 
as Michael was himself no violent iconoclast, it seems probable 
tliat the two imperial courts agreed as to the question of images." 
But the Franks were soon after engrossed by domestic troubles, 
which may sufficiently account for the absence of any later commu- 
nication with the Greeks on the subject of this controversy. 

There were, however, some members of the Frankish church, 
who carried their opposition to images beyond the views which had 
been sanctioned by the councils of Frankfort and Paris.* Agobard, 
archbishop of Lyons, whose share in the political movements of his 
time has been noticed in the earlier part of this chapter, distin- 
guished himself more creditably by his opposition to prevailing 
superstitions — as to ordeals,^ to the expectation of miraculous 
cures,* to the excess of reverence la^shcd on the tombs* of saints, 
to the belief that storms, diseases of cattle, and other rural troubles 
were caused by magical art.^ Among his tracts is one ' On the 
Images of Saints,' in which — provoked, as it would seem, by the 
eastern emperor's report as to the extravagant superstition of the 
Greeks'^ — he appears altogether to disallow the use of such repre- 
sentations.^ He quotes largely from older writers, especially from 
St. Augustine, and shows thiit the early church had employed 
images for remembrance only, and not for any religious purpose.® 
In answer to a plea frequently advanced by the advocates of 
images, he maintains that visible things, even although good in 
themselves, instead of aiding towards the contemplation of things 
unseen and spiritual, often act as a hindrance to it.' An iniiige, 
he says, represents the body only ; if men were to be worshi])ped 
at all, such honour ought rather to be paid to them while alive, 
and complete in the union of body and soul.^ He who adores a 
picture or an image pays his worship not to God, to «ang(*ls, or to 
f^aints, but to the image itself ; to think otherwise is to yield to a 

« Walch, xi. 138. * " De Grandine." 

» lb. 132. « Mabill. IV. xxvi. 

« See Mabill. IV. xx.-xxi. ** Harouius is much displeased with 

y See p. 242. Agobard. 825. 63. 

» "Ad Bartholomwum." • C. 32. ' C. 15. 
• ** Meiiioria?." See Ualuze, n. on *' De » C. 28. This was also said by Clau- 

Itna^iuibiis," c. 17; Ducange, 8.v. dius of Turin. 



CHAP. L A.i>. 814 826. CLAUDIUS OF TURIN. 281 

delusion of the devil, who aims at the restoration of idolatry.** 
Nor is it less absurd to expect good from religious pictures than it 
would be to think of recruiting an army by painted soldiers, or to 
look for the fruits of the earth from a picture of the harvest or of 
the vintage.* 

It does not appear that Agobard incurred any censure on 
account of his opinions as to images ; but one of his contempora- 
ries, Claudius of Turin (who, indeed, took up the subject somewhat 
earlier), by a more thorough and more active opposition to the 
prevailing religion, occasioned much agitation in the Frankish 
church.'' Claudius was by birth a Spaniard, and is said to have 
been a pupil of Felix of tJrgel," although he does not appear to 
have been a follower of the Adoptionist doctrines. He was a 
diligent student of St Augustine, but spoke contemptuously of the 
other fathers in general ; ° and it would seem that from the 
doctrines of the great African teacher as to the nothingness of 
human merit he derived a strong dislike of the current opinions 
as to the means of attaining sanctity.® He had gained reputation 
by commentaries on Scripture, of which some are still extant.^ 
He had been attached to the court of Loui? in Aquitaine,*i and, 
in the first year of his patron's reign as emperor, was 
appointed by him to the see of Turin,' in the hope that 
he might be able to efiect a reform among his clergy and in the 
neighbouring district The emperor, however, could hardly have 
been prepared for reforms so extensive as those which Claudius 
attempted. Finding that the churches of his diocese were full of 
images and votive offerings," he at once unceremoniously ejected 
all such ornaments. No distinction was made in favour of histo- 
rical pictures; and relics and crosses — objects which the eastern 
iconoclasts had spared — shared the same fate.* To worship the 
images of saints, he said, is merely a renewal of the worship of 

^ C. 31. * C. 33. other remains of Claadius are in the Pa- 

^ There is, as Gieseler (II. i. 106) re- trologia, t. civ. 

marks, much verbal agrecmeut between *» l*ra)f. ad Comm. in Galat. Patrol. 

A pohard and Claudius. Our knowledge civ. 841. 

of Claudius is mostly derived from the ' Gfrorer places his promotion in 818. 

treatises of Jonas and Dung;il against iii. 7^2. 

him— especially from their quotations. ' ** Inveni omncs basiliciis sordibus 

They are both in the IJibl. Patrum, Lngd., auathematum et imaginibus plenas." 

t. xiv., where also the chief passages of (Claud, ap. Jon. 170.) Jonas confounds 

Claudius are collected, pp. 107-9. anithemita (votive offerings) with atuf 

"" Jonas, p. 168. Neander without t'>i/n<it<i (curses or cursed things), as if 

any ground questions this. vi. 120. Claudius had applied the latter term to 

■» Jonas, 171, b.c; Dungal, 204, f . ; the images. Neand. vi. 123. (See on 

VValch, xi. 181. the distinction of the words, EUicott, n. 

o Giesel. II. i. 190. on Galat. i. 8.) 

p Jonas, P«jf. and p. 168. These and » Jonas, 168, 170, 174. 



282 THEODEMIR. 

demons under other names ;" to worship the cross is to join with 
the heathen in dwelling on the shame of the Saidour's history, to 
the exclusion of his glorious resurrection;* and he followed out 
this by arguing, in a somewhat ribald style, that, if the cross were 
to be reverenced on account of its conpexion with the Saviour, the 
same reason would enforce the veneration of all other objects which 
are mentioned as having been connected with Him/ He opposed 
the worship of saints, supplications for their intercession, and the 
practice of dedicating churches to their honour.* He also objected 
to the practice of pilgrimages ; it was, he said, a mistake to expect 
benefit from visiting the shrine of St Peter, inasmuch as the power 
of forgiving sins, which was bestowed on the apostles, belonged to 
them only during their lifetime, and on their death passed to 
otheri:. On being pressed, however, he said that he did not abso- 
lutely either condemn or approve pilgrimages, because their effects 
were various in different persons.* The proceedings of Claudius 
occasioned much excitement Pope Paschal, on hearing of them, 
expressed his displeasure, although he did not venture to take any 
active steps against a bishop who had been so lately promoted by 
the emperor's personal favour ; but ('laudius made light of the 
papal censure— declaring that the title of Apostolical belongs not 
to him who occupies an apostle's seat, but to one who does an 
apostle's work.^ 

Theodemir, an abbot,*^ who had been a friend and admirer of 
Claudius, on receiving one of his works which was inscribed to 
himself, took alarm and wrote against him. Claudius defended 
himself in a scornful and contemptuous tone. He met the charge 
of impiety by taxing his opponents with superstition and idolatry ; 
and, in answer to Theodemir's statement that he had founded a 
sect which had spread into Gaul and Spain, he declared that he 
had nothing to do with sects, but was devoted to the cause of 
unity.** The controversy was carried further. The Frankish 
clergy in general, who had at first been disposed to countenance 
Claudius, now took offence. Some 6f them requested Louis to 
examine into the bishop's opinions, and the emperor, with the advice 

* Claud, ap. Jon. 1 74. etymologist — ** Apostolicus dicitur/* says 
« lb. \H\c. T lb. 178. he, ** qusai Apostoli cusios** I (ibid.) The 
■ Jon. 174. writing in question was later than the 

• Claud, ap. Jon. 188, 190; Dungal, Parisian synod of 825. Pagi, xiv. 72. 
214. See Walch, xi. 160, 214. « Probably of a monastery called 

*• Claud, ap. Jon. 19.5, g. Jonas an- Psaimodu, near Nismes. Hist. Litt. iv. 

swcrs this in a way which draws from 490; Walch, xi. 184. See Patrol, civ. 

the editors the marginal note "Caute 1030. 

lege." Claudius was not happy as an ' Claud, ap. Jon. 169-70. 



Chap.L aj>. 826-839. DUNG A L — JONAS. 283 

of his counsellors,^ pronounced against him. A synod of bishops 
was then held ; but Claudius, who had been cited, refused to appear 
before it, and is said to have spoken of it as an assembly of asses.^ 

Dungal, a deacon of Scottish or Irish birth, who had been 
established by Charlemagne as a teacher at Pavia,^ wrote against 
Claudius in 827, with a great display of learning, but without 
much critical judgment ; he speaks, for example, of images as 
having been used in the church from the very beginning — " about 
eight hundred and twenty years or more " — although he produces 
no instance earlier than Paulinus of Nola, about the year 400.^ 
Jonas, bishop of Orleans, one of the commissioners who had been 
sent to Rome after the synod of Paris, also undertook a refutation 
of Claudius at the request of Louis.* Before this was finished, 
both Claudius^ and the emperor died, and Jonas had abandoned 
the work, when he was induced to resume and to complete it by 
finding that the errors of Claudius continued to be spread by 
means of his writings and of his pupils." The treatise is dedicated 
to Charles the B^ild : the first book is in defence of images ; the 
second, of the cross; the third of pilgrimages. But, although 
Jonas is vehement in his opposition to Claudius (whom he chai'ges 
with having left writings of an Arian tendency"), he preserves on 
the subject of images the medium characteristic of the Prankish 
church, whereas Dungal had approximated to the Nicene view;® 
and he denounces in strong terms the superstitious doctrines and 
practices of the Greeks.? As a lesser matter, it may be mentioned 
that he frequently remarks on the iterance of Latin style, and 
even of grammar, which the bishop of Turin had displayed.*^ 

Claudius died in possession of his see. It has been erroneously 
said that he went to the length of separating his church from the 
communion of Rome, and the hostility to Roman peculiarities 
which was afterwards cherished in the Alpine valleys has been 
traced to him, either as its originator, or as a link in a chain 
begun by Vigilantius, or earlier ; but, although it may be reason- 
ably supposed that his writings, like those of others who more or 



« *'Palatii sui prndeDtissimis viris." * Jon. Pnef. 

Jonas, rnrf. ^ Claudius died in 839. 

' Dungal, 223, g. " Jon. Pi-apf. 

K See Walch, xi. 186. Mabillon and « lb. See Walch, xi. 222-4. 

the authors of the Hist. Littcraire (iv. » Mabill. IV. xxi xxiii. 

493) wrongW suppose him a monk of p " Sceleratissimus error." See Jon. 

St. Denys. Mausi, not. in Baron, xiv. p. 1G8, g. h.; Walch, xi. 209. 

244. See Lanigan, iii. 256, seqq. *> ^'. .</• that he had used destnii, as a 

^ Patrol, cv. 4G9. See Walch, xi. 161, deponent (171, a), and that he had made 

219 ; Schrockh, xxiii. 414-6. futujor govern an accosatiTe. 195, g. 



284 FORGED DECRETALS. Book 17. 

less strongly opposed the prevailing system of religion, had some 
effect in maintaining the spirit of such opposition, the idea of a 
succession of connected ''witnesses" against the Roman church 
appears to be altogether groundless/ In Claudius, as in many 
other reformers, the intemperance of his zeal marred the goodness 
of his designs. 

Notwithstanding the difference on a subject which had elsewhere 
occasioned so many anathemas, the Frankish church remained in 
uninterrupted communion with Rome. It continued until nearly 
the end of the century to adhere to its distinctive view ; but about 
that time a change becomes visible, which gradually assimilated its 
doctrines on the question of images to those which were sanctioned 
by the papal authority.* 

IV. About the time which we have now reached, the law of the 
church received an extraordinary addition, which in the sequel 
produced eflFects of vast importance. The collection of canons and 
decretals made by Dionysius Exiguus* had been generally used 
throughout the west. But from the seventh century another 
collection, which (whether rightly or otherwise) bore the name of 
Isidore of Seville, had been current in Spain ; and, as it contained 
some pieces which were not in the compilation of Dionysius, it also 
found its way into France." The same venerated name was now 
employed to introduce another set of documents, distinguished by 
some new and very remarkable features.* 

In the older collections, the Decretal Epistles *had begun with 
tliat addressed by pope Siricius to Himerius, in 385.^ But the 
writer who styled himself Isidore produced nearly a hundred 
letters written in the names of earlier bishops of Rome, from 
Clement and Anaclctus, the contemporaries of the Apostles, with 

' See for various views, AUix on the doubtful ;— i. <•. between 633 and 636. 

Churches of Piedmont, c. ix. ; Walch, See Arevalo, 'Isidoriana/ iii. 91 (Patrol, 

xi. 143; Schrookh, xxiii. 420; Huhn, Ixxxi.); Gonzales, ib. Ixxxiv. 11-14; 

ii. 28, 57; Ampbre, iii. 88; Milman, ii. Santander, ib. 877-888; Planck, ii. 801- 

271. 6; Walter, 171 ; Bahr, 596-7; Gfrorer's 

• Fleury, xlvii. 5 ; Mabillon, IV. xvi., * Karolinger,* i. 96. 

xxviii. ; ragi, xiv. 71 ; Schrockh, xxiii. * The pretended compiler is made in 

247-8. * See vol. i. p. 547. some M&. to style himself " Isidorus 

■ This collection was first edited by Mercator** (See Hard. i. 4.) But it is 

GonzaK's, Madrid 1808-1821, and is re- generally agreed that the bishop ofS^ 

f>rinted in vol. Ixxxiv. of the * Patro- ville was meant, and mercator is sup- 

ogia.' It is supposed to have been posed to be the mistake of a copyist for 

formed between the date of the fourth pcccator — a term which bishops by way 

council of Toledo (which is the latest of humility sometimes attached to their 

council included in the original form of names. (See Uincmar, ii. 793, quoted 

the code) and the death of Isidore, by by Santander, Patrol. Ixxxiv. 893). 

whom it was used, although his per- Schrockh, xxii. 30-1; Gieseler, II. i. 

sonal share in the formation of it is 1 73. y See vol. i. p. 304. 



Chap. I. FORGED DECRETALS. 285 

some letters from supposed correspondents of the popes, and the 
acts of some hitherto unknown councils.* The spuriousness of 
these pieces is established by gross anachronisms, and by other 
instances of ignorance and clumsiness ;* as, that persons who lived 
centuries apart are represented as corresponding with each other ;** 
that the early bishops of Rome quote the Scriptures according to 
St. Jerome's version ; and that some of them who lived while 
Rome was yet heathen, complain of the invasion of church-property 
by laymen in terms which evidently betray a writer of the Caro- 
lingian period.*^ Some of the forgeries included in the work — 
among them, the Donation of Constantino — were of earlier manu- 
facture ; ** a great part of the other materials has been traced to 
various sources — to Scripture, to the Latin fathers, to the service- 
books of the church, to genuine canons and decretals, and to the 
Pontifical Books (a set of legendary lives of Roman bishops, which 
was continued by Anastasius " the Librarian," and is usually cited 
under his name). The work of the forger consisted chiefly in 
connecting these materials together, and in giving them the 
appearance of a binding authority.* 

The date of the composition must be placed between the sixth 
council of Paris, in 829, from which the forger has borrowed, and 
that of Quiercy, in 857, where the decretals were cited as authori- 
tative by Charles the Bald.' That they were of Prankish origin 
is proved by certain peculiarities of language ; ^ and Mentz is now 

* There were also some forgeries in lated from the Decretals. But they are 

the names of writers later than Siricius now more ^eneraUy regarded as spurious, 

(see vol. i. p. 547, n.®). The earlier and as derived from the Decretals. (Wal- 

letters are in Uardouin, i. ; the whole ter,212; Btlhr, 302; Rettb. i. .^Ol-O, 652; 

collection, in vol. cxxx. of the * Pa- Giesel. II. i. 183.) The first reference to 

trologia.' them is by Hincmar of Laon, about 870. 

» Gfrbrer's Karolinger, i. 72. • Plauck, ii. 810; Walter, 195-6; 

^ Thus Victor (a.d. 190-202) writes Gfrorer, Karolinger, i. 90. 

to Theophilus of Alexandria (a.d. 400). ' Car. Calv. ap. Pertz, Leges, i. 453 ; 

Hard. i. lo3. Gieseler, II. i. 181 ; Gfrorer, KaroL i. 

c J'J.g. Pius (a.d. 142-157), Ep. ii. 82. It has been said that the Decretals 

col. 97 ; Urban, (a.d. 223-230), col. 115. are also indebted to the council of Aix- 

(Giesel. II. i. 174-5.) la-Chapelle, a.d. 836 (Walter, i. 191-2); 

•* See Walter, 184 ; Gfrorer's Karol. but this is questioned. (Gfrorer, 81.) 

i. 80. There has been much discussion Prof. Deuzinger fiods in them allusions 

about a set of capitularies said to have to the council of Thionvilie, a.d. 835, 

been presented by Angilram, of Metz, and places them between that date and 

to Adrian (or by the pope to the bishop), the treaty of Verdun, a.d. 843. (Patrol, 

in 785, which have much in common cxxx. Prolegg. ix-x.) Gfrorer's opinion 

with the forged Decretals. (Hard. iii. that Wala used the elements of the for- 

20G 1-2072.) Gfrorer (Karol. i. 77-80) gery at the Field of Lies, in 833, has 

and Deiiziuger (Patrol, cxxx. Proleg. already been cited, p. 259. 

vi.) hold with Wassersehleben, who, in f Gfrorer, Karol. i. 91. (Denzinger, 

his * Gesch. d. Vorgratianischen liechts- viii., from Knust, ' De Fontibus et Con- 

quelleu' (1839), maintains that they are silio Pseudoisidorianae Collect.' Got- 

genoine, and were afterwards interpo- ting. 1832.) 



286 ORIGIN AND PURPORT B«w IV. 

commonly supposed to have been the place of the fabrication. 
HIncmar says that the collection was brought from Spain by Riculf^ 
who held that see from 787 to 814 — a statement which is probably 
founded on Riculf s having obtained from Spsun a copy of the older 
Isidorian collection, of which the forger availed himself.^ And 
Benedict, a " Levite " (or deacon) of Mentz, who between 840 
and 847 added to the capitularies of Charlemagne and Louis 
three books of spurious collections, which have much in common 
with the decretals, states that he chiefly derived his materials from 
the archives of his cathedral, where they had been deposited by 
Riculf and had been discovered by the existing archbishop, Autcar 
or Otgar.* This Benedict is generally regarded as the forger of 
the decretals also> 

In these decretals, the privileges of the clergy m general, and 
especially of the bishops, are set very high ; and the power of the 
pope is extended beyond anything that had as yet been known. 
He appears as the supreme head, lawgiver, and judge of the 
church, the one bishop of the whole. All causes may be carried 
to him by appeal ; he alone is entitled to decide all weighty or 
difficult causes ;™ without his leave, not even provincial councils 
may be called, nor have their judgments any validity.** A very 
large proportion of the decretals relates to accusations against 
bishops ; indeed almost every one of the popes who are personated 
has something to say on this subject. Bishops are declared to be 
exempt from all secular judgment f evil bishops are to be borne as 
an infliction of Providence, which will redound to the eternal benefit 
of those who submit to it ;P the judgment of them is to be left to 
God.** If, however, charges should be brought against a bishop, 

^ Hincm. Opera, ii. 476 ; Santasder, Wenilo of Sens and Rothad of Soissons 

in Patrol. Ixxxiv. 892-901 ; Walter, 187; (personages with whom the next chap- 

Giesel. II. i. 182 ; Denzinger, viii. ter will make us acquainted) were parties 

* Bened. Levit. ap. Pertz, Leges, II. to it. (Karolinger, i. 112.) Phillips 
App. 39. The older genuine collection (from whose * Kirchenrecht * the section 
ox capitularies, by Ansegis, is in Pertx, on the Decretals is translated in the 
Leges, L 257, seqq. ; those of Benedict Patrologia, cxxx.) supposes the author- 
are in the 2nd volume, with a disserta- ship wholly Neustrian, and that Rothad 
lion by Knust, in which they are traced was concerned in it. xxiii.-iv. 
to their sources. " Anacletus iii. 4 (Hard. i. col. 74) ; 

k Planck says that the internal ev'i- Sixtus,i. (c.80), ii. (c. 90); Eleutherius, 

dence proves both the forgeries to have ii. (c. 102); Zephyrinus, c. 106 ; Fabian, 

been carried on at the same time (iL 311- iiL 5 (c 129); Melchiades, i. (c. 244); 

4); but Walter (192), Knust (ap. Pertz, Julius, i. 1-2 (c. 558) ; ii. 2-4 (c. 568}, 

ii. 34), and Gieseler (II. i. 181) place &c. ; Planck, ii. 815-6; Gieseler, IL i. 

the Decretals first. Gfrorer thinks that 176. 

Benedict was concerned in the original ■ Pncf. col. 5; Giesel. IL i. 180-1. 
authorship, but that the forgery was « Pontianus, i. (c. 117). 
probably elaborated in Neustria — the p Zephyrinus, c. 107. 
Kingdom of Charles the Bald — where it <i Pius, ii. (c. 96). 
first made any noise ; and, if to, that 



Chap. I. OF THE FORGED DECRETALS. 287 

care is taken, by the rigour of the conditions which are laid down 
as necessary, to render the prosecution of such charges almost 
ifhpossible/ No layman may accuse a bishop, or even a clerk ; 
for the disciple is not above his master, nor must the sheep accuse 
their shepherd.' A clerk who would accuse his bishop is infamous, 
as a son taking arms against his father ; and therefore he is not to 
be heard.^ In order to prove a bishop guilty, seventy-two witnesses 
are required ;^ and the qualifications of witnesses are defined with 
a strictness which seems intended rather to shut out evidence than 
to secure its trustworthuiess. 

There was, however, one grade in the hierarchy on which the 
decretals bore hardly — the metropolitans. In the Frankish system, 
the trial of a bishop had belonged to his metropolitan, from whom 
the last appeal lay to the sovereign ; * but by the decretals the 
metropolitan was powerless without the concurrence of his suflra- 
gans ; he could not even assemble these except by the pope's per- 
mission, and all decisive judgment in such matters belonged to 
the pope alone.^ And now a broad distinction was drawn between 
ordinary metropolitans and the higher grade of primates^ who were 
distinguished by the commission of vicars under the pope.* 

It is matter of conjecture in what interest this forgery was origi- 
nally made* — whether in that of the pope, to whom it assigned a 
supremacy so awful in its alleged origin and unlimited in its extent ; 
or of the bishops, whom it emancipated not only from all secular 
control, but also from that of metropolitans and provincial synods, 
while it referred their causes to the more distant tribunal of the 
pope, as the only judge competent to decide them ; or whether, 
without any definite purpose as to the mutual relations of different 
classes in the hierarchy, it was merely intended to assert the pri- 
vileges of tlie clergy against the oppressions which they suffered in 
the troubled reigns of Charlemagne's successors, and to claim for 
them a position independent of the temporal power. The opinion 
of the most judicious inquirers appears to point to a combination 
of the second and third of these motives— that the decretals were 

' Anaclet ii. (c. 69) ; Fabian, ii. 2 on through the lower grades, 

(oc. 12G-7); Stepban. ii. 11 (c. 564); ' See p. 149, and the case of Theo- 

Julius, ii. 11 (c. 145); Felix, c. 7.55; dulf, p. 254. 

Damasus, c. 765, &c. SeePUnck, ii.821. ^ Hyginus, ii. fc. 94); Lucios, iv. 

• Anaclet. ii. 9 (c. 69-70) ; Marcellin. (c. 138); Giesel. II. i. 13S; EUendorf, 
ii. 3 (c. 215); Giesel. II. i. 175-6. *Karolinger/ ii. 161-3. 

* Telesphor. iv. (c. 92); Stephan. ii. ■ Anaclet. ii. (c. 71); Anicet ii.-iii. 
9 (c. 144); Julius, li. 10 ic. 564). (c. 99) ; Stephan. ii. 6 (c. 144); Julius, 

« Zephyrin. c. 105; SyWester, iii. ii. 12, 14 (c. 564); Walter, 197; Giesel. 
(cc. 291-2), who also says that there II. i. 178. 
must be 44 against a presbyter— and to * See Schrockh, xzii. 28-9. 



288 



OBJECT OF 



nr. 



fabricated for the benefit of the clergy, and more especially of the 
bishops ; that they were designed to protect the property of the 
church against invasion, and to fix the privileges of the hierarchy 
on a basis independent of secular authority ; that the metropo- 
litans were especially assailed because they had been the chief 
instruments by which the Carolingian princes had been able to 
govern the bishops, to depose such of these as were obnoxious, 
and to sway the decisions of sjTiods. The popes were eventually 
the principal gainers by the forgery ; but this appears to have 
been a result beyond the contemplation of those who planned or 
who executed it^ 

That the author's design was, as he himself professes,*^ to 
supply a* digest of the existing ecclesiastical laws — to promote the 
advancement of religion and morality — will hardly be believed on 
his own authority, calthough in our own time the assertion has found 
champions whose ability is more evident than their sincerity.* 
Yet we may do well not to judge him too severely for his imposture, 
but are bound to remember the vicious principles which his age had 



* See Schmidt, i. C76-8; Planck, ii. 
818-824; Guizot, ii. 341; Gicsel. II. 
i. 174-5; Gfrorer, KaroHng. i. 83-8, 
92-4; Elleudorf, ii. 1G7; IX'iizinger, 
viii.-ix. ; Milman, ii. 305. The forgery 
of both the Capitularies and the Decre- 
tals seems to have been especially in- 
tended to serve the interest of the arch- 
bishoprick of Mentz. Other sees had in 
late times gained various advantages 
OTer it ; Cologne and Salzburg had be- 
come metropolitan, and Otgar had reason 
to fear the dismemberment of his pro- 
vince and the loss of his position in the 
German hierarchy. Hence the distinc- 
tion between metropolitans and the 
higher dignity of primates — among 
whom, as successor of St. Boniface, he 
might reasonably hope to gain a place. 
(Blasco, cited by Gieseler, II. i. 1 78 ; 
Knust, ap. Pertz, Leges, ii. App. 38 ; 
Gfrorer, Karol. i. 98-102.) In like 
manner Prof. Gfrorer would account for 
the part which he supnoHea Wenilo, 
another metropolitan, to have taken as 
to the Decretals by fcuppohing that he 
aimed at acquiring tho degn^tj of nri- 
mate, which was afierwardi bt^towwl on 
Ansegis, one of his successors in i\w aivh- 
bishoprick of Sens. (I. 4«a.) l*iti!t'*i*or 
Denziuger, who styles Otgar th« ♦♦ moral 
author of the forger}*, tmofn tlif de- 
preciation of synods to the fact thai htf 
himself had been one of the luMliopswho 
suffered by the synod of Thiouvilltf. 
ix.-x. 



c Prsf, 4 £. 

* As Walter (195) and Mohler (* Frag- 
mente aus und fiber Pseudoisiaor,' in 
vol. i. of his 'Aufsatze'). Mohler 
maintams that the writer's object was to 
combat Arian and other heresy (287) — 
to supply a manual of orthodoxy, prac- 
tical religion, morality, and pastoral 
care (288, 308). He speaks of him as a 
poet or novelist (Dichter), and of his 
work as dieses Poim (297-8). He sup- 
poses him to have been a sincerely 
pious man, who had no intention of de- 
ceiving (305), but adopted the form of 
a fiction because he used the labours of 
others (308) ; and that he was obliged 
to suit himself to the circumstances of 
his own time by representing popes as 
having been from the beginning the 
general oracles of Christendom (294). 
It is a pity that the ingenious author of 
this theory was unable to illustrate it by 
the history of Solomon Spaulding's ro- 
mance, which, in other bands, l^caroe 
the book of the Mormon revelation. El- 
lendorf answers Mohler at some length 
(ii. 175-18G). That the moral and reli- 
gious lessons were merely the frame- 
work, appears, he says, from the fiict 
that they are but a third of the whole 
(175-G.) Luden, in the tone which he 
usually affects in speaking of the me- 
diaeval church, goes far to extenuate the 
imposture, (v. 472-6!) Denzincer, al- 
though a Romanist, gives up Mohler's 
theory, x. 



<3hap. I. THE FORGED DECRETALS. 289 

inherited from several centuries which preceded it as to the lawful- 
ness of using falsehood for purposes which were supposed to be 
good : nor, although he differed from other forgers in tfie greatness 
of the scale on which he wrought, and although his forgery has 
exceeded all others in the importance of the results, would it be 
easy to show any essential moral difference between his act and the 
acts of others who had fabricated documents of less extent, or of 
the innumerable legendary writers who imposed on the world 
fictions as to the lives and miracles of saints. 

It has been argued in the Roman interest, that the Decretals 
made no change in the actual system of the church.® The only 
considerable new claim, it is said, which they advanced in behalf 
of the pope, was that which regarded provincial councils ; and this, 
it is added, never actually took effect^ To such arguments it has 
been answered that the system of the Decretals was a direct reversal 
of that which immediately preceded them in the government of the 
Prankish church ;* but the answer, although true, is even narrower 
than the proposition which it is intended to meet. To rest such a 
proposition on an analysis of the Decretals is, however, obviously 
a fallacy. Although it may be shown in detail that this or that 
portion of them was older — that what was now laid down uni- 
versally had before been said with a more limited application — 
that claims had been made, that jurisdiction had been exercised ; 
although, in truth, the main outline of the papacy had been marked 
out four centuries earlier by Leo the Great; — the consolidation of 
the scattered fragments into one body, the representation of the 
later papal claims as having come down by unbroken tradition 
in the character of acknowledged rights from the apostolic times, 
could not but produce a vast effect, and the difference between the 
earlier and the following history abundantly proves their influence. 

The history of the introduction of these documents in France 
and at Rome will be given in the next chapter. Published in an 
uncritical age, they bespoke a favourable reception by holding out 
to various classes redress of their grievances and increase of their 
privileges; even those who were galled by them in one respect 
were glad, like Hincmar of Rheims, to make use of them where it 
was convenient to do so. They were therefore admitted without 
any expressed doubt of their genuineness, although some questions 
were raised as to their application or obligatory power. In the 

« DoUinger, ii. 41-3; Walter, 196, ' Walter, 201. The orders that a lay- 
seqq. ; DeDzinger, xiv.-ZY. ; Phillipe, man should not accuse a clerk were also 
xix.-xxi. Rohrnacheris worthy of him- imperat'iTe. Phillips, six. 
self on this point, xvi. v Ellendorf, ii. 86. 

U 



290 THE FORGED DECRETALS. Book IV. 

next century, they were cited in a collection of canons by Re^o, 
abbot of Priim ;^ and they continued to be used by the compilers 
of similar works, until, in the thirteenth century, Gratian made 
them the foundation of his * Decretum,' the great lawbook of the 
church during the middle ages, and accommodated to their prin- 
ciples all the more genuine matter which he admitted.^ Although 
sometimes called in question during the long interval before the 
Reformation,^ they yet maintained their public credit ; and, while 
the foundation has long been given up, even by the extremest 
writers of the Boman church, the superstructure yet remains.™ 

^ Baluz. Prsf. ad Begin. (Patrol, spurioiu, bat the first attempt at critical 

czxxii. 1 79). For other ooUectors who proof of their spariousness was in the 

uaed them, see Walter, § 100. Atto of Magdeburg " Ceiitarie&" Torres, a 

Yercelli, a contemporary of Regino, cites Jesuit^ replied ; but Blondel answered 

them largely in his tract ' De Pressoris him in a manner which eren soch 

Ecclesiasticis.' (P^troL cxxxiv.) sealous Romanists as Walter (190) and 

> Schrockh, xxit 22. Phillips (xxii.) admit to be conclasiTe. 

^ lb. 34 ; Giesel. II. i. 18S. - As to the later history of the Deci«tids, 

■> Erasmns and CalTin declared them see Robins, 22S-234. 



Chap.U. A.D. 840-843. ( 291 ) 



CHAPTER II. 

THE FIJANKISH CHURCH AND THE PAPACY, FROM THE DEATH OF LOUIS 
THE PIOUS TO THE DEPOSITION OF CHARLES THE FAT. 

A.D. 840-887. 

The history of the Carolingians after the death of Louis the 
Pious is marked by a continuance of those scandalous enmities 
between the nearest kinsmen which had given so unhappy a cha- 
racter to his reign/ Sometimes these enmities were carried out 
into actual war ; but after the battle of Fontenailles, in 841, 
where the loss is said to have amounted to 40,000 on one ade, 
and on the other to 25,000 or 30,000,** they more commonly took 
the form of intrigues, of insincere aUiances, and selfish breaches of 
treaties. 

Charlemagne had found great difficulty in keeping together the 
very various elements of which his vast empire consisted. As often 
as he led his troops into any quarter, for the purpose of conquest 
or of suppressing rebellion, an insurrection usually broke out behind 
him.^ In order to conciliate the nationalities which were united 
under his sceptre, he appointed kings to govern them, as in Aqui- 
taine and in Italy. By his system, which was continued under 
Louis, these kings were to be subordinate to the *' senior *' or head 
of the family ; the whole empire was to be regarded as one, subject 
to the chief.*^ But in the beginning of the period now before us, 
this system is broken up ; the delegated government by kings is 
found to have been the means of organising the di£Perent nations 
for resistance to the idea of unity, and for asserting their indepen- 
dence of each other.® Language played an important part in the 
dissolution of the empire.' From the time of the Frank conquest 
of Gaul, Latin had been tbe language of the church and of the 
state, while German had be^n that of the army. The king and 
the chiefs were familiar with both ; but in the south the Latin — 
(or rather the "rustic Roman," which diflTered from the more 

* See Nithard, De DiBieosiombiiB rated. Laden, t. 416. 
Filiorum LadoT. in Perti, iii. • Lehneroa, Institat M^hnr. et Carol. 

t> Martin, ii. 414. Some hare made ii. 558-9. 
the total slaaghter 100,000 (Marat. ' Gfrorer, i. 64. 
Annali, V. i. 3). Bat these namberf • Lehaeroa, ii. 557. 
are beyond the tnith, and perhaps the ' See Goizot, ii. 285-890. 
effects of the battle have been exagge- 

u 2 



292 PARTITION OP THE EMPIRE. Book IT. 

correct oflBcial Latin) — waa native, and the German was acquired 
by learning, while the reverse was the case in the northern and 
eastern territories.' The populations which used these different 
languages as their mother-tongues now became separate. At Hie 
treaty of Strasburg, in 842, Louis of Bavaria took an oath in 
Grerman, and Oiarles of Neustria in the Romance dialect,^ and 
they addressed their subjects in the same tongues respectively. 
The Romance oath is the oldest monument of French ; the other 
is the oldest specimen of German after the baptismal^ renunciation 
of St Boniface's time.* A like scene was enacted at Coblentz, 
in 860, when, in pledging themselves to the observance of certain 
articles, Louis and the younger Lothair employed the German 
language, and Charles the Romance.^ 

The treaty of Verdun, by which the empu« was divided in 843 
between the three sons of Louis, established each of them in entire 
independence. The portion of the second brother, Louis, may be 
broadly spoken of as Germany; Charles the Bald's share may 
with a like latitude be styled France ; ™ while Lothair, the emperor, 
had a territory lying between the two — long and for the most part 
narrow, reaching from the mouths of the Weser and the Scheldt to 
the frontier of the duchy of Benevento, and including the two 
imperial cities — Rome, the ancient capital of the world, and Aix, 
the chief seat of Charlemagne's sovereignty. The Rhine served 
for a considerable part of its course as the eastern boundary of 
this territory ; but a deviation was made from it, in order that 
Louis might include within his dominions Mentz, the see of 
Boniface and ecclesiastical metropolis of Germany, with the 
suffragan dioceses of Worms and Spires ; while this cession was 
compensated to Lothair by s, tract to the east of the river in the 
lower part of its course." Lothair's kingdom, not being marked 
out by any older boundaries of population or language, was called 
from him Lotharingia.^ By a later partition, the portion 
of it north of the Alps was divided between Louis and 
Charles the Bald, when Louis added to his dominions the countries 

r Sitmondiy iii. 59-60 ; Gf^rer, i. 34. Sisinondi, lii. 9-10. 

^ They are given by Nithard, iii. 5, » Gfrorer, i. 21-2, 54, 58. See the 

in Pertz, ii. 665-6, with notes by J. secomd map of Germany in Sproner's 

Grimm. admirable Atlas, pt ii. 

* See p. 110, note '; Bahr, 62. » Gfrorer, i. 57. Hence the name of 

k Peru, Leges, i. 473. Lorraine^ afterwards given to a part of 

■ The GaiuEi, anwilling to renounce it Some writers have supposed that 

the glory of three centuries and a half, Lotharingia was called after the younger 

now styled themselves Franks, and their Lothair, son of the emperor ; but see 

country Frxmcia, whUe the eastern Bouquet, vii. 188. 
Franks began to be called Germans, 



Cbat.IL Ajk. 840-887. THE NORTHMEN. 293 

of the German and Belgic tongues, and Charles acquired those in 
which the Romance prevailed.^ 

The feeling of nationality also showed itself in the rebellion of 
the Bretons under Nomenoe, who compelled Charles to acknow- 
ledge him as king, and established a new hierarchy under the 
archbishop of Dol, independent of the Roman connexion;*^ in 
the revolts of the Saxons, who killed or drove out their governors, 
and resumed the profession of paganism;' and in the subdivision 
of France towards the end of the century into a great number 
of petty principalities, although other causes also contributed to 
this result.* 

Charlemagne had endeavoured to provide a defence agsdnst the 
northern pirates by fortifying the mouths of rivers ; but this policy 
was now neglected.^ No longer content with ravaging the coasts, 
the fierce barbarians of the north made their way in their 
"serpent"" barks up every river whose opening invited them, 
from the Elbe to the Adour. They repeatedly plundered the more 
exposed cities, such as Hamburg, Dorstadt, and Bordeaux ; they 
ascended the Rhine to Mentz, and even to Worms ; the Moselle 
to Treves; the Somme to Amiens; the Seine to Rouen and to 
Paris, once the Merovingian capital, and still the chief city of 
Neustria, rich in churches and in treasures, and with the royal 
monastery of St Denys in its immediate neighbourhood. From 
Paris, they made their way up the Mame to Meaux and Chalons, 
up the Yonne to Sens and Auxerre.* The Loire gave them a 
•passage to Tours,^ the city of St Martin, and to Orleans ;" the 
Vienne, to Limoges ; the Charente, to Saintes and Angouleme ; 
the Garonne, to Toulouse.* They sailed on to the Spanish penin- 
sula, plundered Lisbon, passed the strait of Gibraltar, and success- 
fully encountered the Arabs of Andalusia;^ even the coast of 
Italy felt their fury.** Everywhere they pillaged, burnt, slew> 
outraged women, and carried oflF captives.** After a time, grovring 

p Pertz, Leges, L 517 ; PalgraTe, Dotes. 

Norm, and Ed^. i. 370. ■ Sismondi, iii. 85-7. For a list of 

1 SismoDdi, lii. 90 ; Wiltsch, i. 471 ; places plundered by the Northmen, see 

Phillips, i. 34. For documents relating Palgrave, ' Normandy and England,' i. 

to Dol, see Martene, Thes. iii. 857, 419-20, 582; for further details, Dep- 

seqq. ' Sism. iii. 74. ping* * Exp^tions Maritimes des Nor- 

* See Guizot, ii. 280 ; Stephen, i. mands,' Paris, 1826. 

112. * Hist, de Languedoc, i. 751. 

* Einhard, a.d. 800, 811; Michelet, ^ Depping. i. 134-5. 

ii. 136. « lb. 165-9. See the story of their 

B Snekkar, drakar. Depping, i. 71-2; plundering tiie ancient Etruscan city of 

Snorro Stnrleson, by Laing, i. 441. Luna, mdo, in Patrol. cxlL 622-4 ; 

* Aug. Sax. Chron. a.d. 887. Guil. Gemet. i. 10 (ib. cxliz.). 
^ Baron. 845. 29, seqq., and Pagi's ' Dudo, 622. 



294 BAVAQES OF THE 9amW, 

bolder through impunity, they would leaye their TesBels cm Ae 
greater rivers, and strike across the unreasting oountry to pOIage 
inland places of noted wealth — such as Ghent, BeauYaia, diartres, 
Bourges, Rheims, Laon, and Charlemagne's own city of Aix, 
where they stabled their horses in the imperial palace.* Hiej 
established permanent camps, often on islands in the great riTen, 
and ravaged in a wide circle around them/ Many of these pirates 
were exiles or adventurers who had fled from other countries to the 
regions of the north ;' many were men, or the o&pring of men, 
who had sufiered from the forcible means employed by Charlemagne 
for the conversion of the pagans. Their enmity against Chris- 
tianity was therefore fierce and unsparing; there was reUgious 
hatred, as well as the lust of spoil, in the rage which selected 
churches and monasteries as its especial objects. Wherevor the 
approach of the Northmen was reported, the monks deserted their 
abodes, and fled, if possible, leaving their wealth to the invaders, 
and anxious only to rescue the relics of their patron saints.^ The 
misery caused by these ravage was extreme. From dread of 
them, husbandry was neglected, and frequent famines ensued;' 
even wolves were allowed to prey and to multiply without any 
check."^ The condition to which Aqiiitaine was reduced may be 
inferred from the fact, that a bishop was translated from Bordeaux 
to Bourges, on the ground that his former diocese was rendered 
utterly desert by the pagans." Many monks who had been 
driven from their cells threw off the religious habit, and betook 
themselves to a vagabond life." And a striking proof of die terror* 
inspired by the invaders is found in the insertion of a petition in 
the Gallican liturgies for deliverance "From the fiiry of the 
Northmen." ^ 

However divided by dissensions among themselves, the Northmen 
always acted in concert as to the course which their expeditions 
should take. They kept a watch on the movements of the 
Carolingian princes, and were ready to take advantage in every 
quarter of their discords and of their weakness.^ Sometimes, it 
would seem, they were not only attracted by the hope of booty, 

* Adam. Bremens. i. 40. ^^ Sismondi, iii. 79. 

' Sismondi, iii. 120 ; PhiUip*, i. 20. » Tbid. 119. 

f Thug, one of the Hastingses (for of ^ Palgrave, i. 432. 

that name there were three fomoas sea- " Job. VIII. Epp. 1, 4, 5, 12, ap. 

kings) is said to have been a native of Hard. vi. 

the diocese of Troves, of servile birth. " Cone. Duziac. a.d. 8G0, c. 5. 

Itadulph. Glaber, i. 5, ap. Bouquet, x. * Palgrave, i. 4tiO. 

9. Cf. Depping, i. 121-3; Palgrave, i. p Luden, vi. 14; F^grave, i. 320, 

490. • 425-8. 



Chat. IL a.d. 840-887. NORTHMEN AND SARACENS. 295 

but were bribed by one of Charlemagne's descendants to attack 
the territories of another.** 

The martial spirit of the Franks had been exhausted by the 
slaughter of Fontenailles.' Many of the free landholders — the 
body on which the old Prankish system mainly relied for national 
defence— sought a refuge fix)m the miseries of the time by be- 
coming serfs to abbots or nobles who were strong enough to protect 
them ; and thus their military service was lost' The Franks 
were distracted by faction, and, instead of combining to resist the 
common enemy, each party and each class was intent on seeming 
its own selfish interests. The nobles in general stood aloof, and 
looked on without dissatisfaction while the Northmen pillaged towns 
or estates which belonged to the crown or to the church.* In a 
few cases, the invaders met with a vigorous resistance — as from 
Robert " the Strong," the ancestor of the Capetian line,'* and from 
his son Odo or Eudes, who, with the bishop, Gauzelin, valiantly 
defended Paris in 885.' But a more usual course was that of 
paying them a large sum as an inducement to depart for a time — 
an expedient which pressed heavily on the people, who were taxed 
for the payment, while it ensured the return of the enemy after a 
short respite. A better, although not uniform, success attended 
the attempt to appease the northern chiefs with grants of land. 
They settled on these estates ; they and their followers were bap- 
tised, and took wives of the country, by means of whom the northern 
language was soon extinguished among their ofispring ; they became 
accustomed to their new homes, and gradually laid aside their 
barbarian ferocity.^ 

To the east, the Slave populations pressed on the German 
portions of the empire, and engaged its sovereigns in frequent 
wars ; ' and on the south of Prance, as well as in Italy, the Saracens 
were a foe not less terrible than the Northmen on the other coasts 

1 Luden, vi. 171. This is much in- Gemet. i. 1 (Patrol, cxlix.) ; Sismondi, 

sisted on by Gfrcirer (e. g. Karol. i. 20, iii. 865. 

135, 158, 411), and perhaps Dean Mil- * Sismondi, iii. 168; Hallam, M. A. 

man may have gone too far in alto- i. 16. The change took place chiefly 

gether setting aside his Tiews on the between 830 and 860. G^orer, i. 390 ; 

subject (ii. 356), although Dr. GfVorer's comp. Leo, Gesch. v. Italien, i. 216. 

constant straining after originality, and * Luden, vi. 182 ; Gfrorer, i. 274, 

parade of a paradoxical acuteness, in- 281-2. " Palgrave, i. 486. 

terfere very seriously with the respect * Aunal. Vedast. (rertz, i. .'>22-3) ; 

which his knowledge and abilities might Abbo de Bello Parisiaco (ib. ii.)* Dep- 

claim ; while his frequent changes of ping, ii. 2, seqq. ; Palgrave, i. 685, 

opiuion — beginning in Rationalism, and seqq. 

resulting for tlie present in Komanism r Sismondi, iii. 114, 184-6; Palgrave, 

—destroy all confidence in his judg^ i. 503 ; Michelet, ii. 134-7. 

ment. " Laden, vi. 35; Palgrave, i. 410, 

' Kegino, a.d. 842 (Perti, i.) ; GuiL seqq. 



296 THE SARACENS* 



(IT. 



of the empire. Ad expedition from Spmn bad made them maaten 
of Crete in 823. * Four years later they landed in Sidlj, and, by 
degrees, they got possession of the whole island, althoogfa it was 
not until after half a century (a.d. 876) that Syracuse fell into 
their hands.^ They seized on Cyprus and Corsica, devastated the 
Mediterranean coast of France,^ sailed up the Tiber, carried off 
the altar which covered the remidns of St Peter, and committed 
atrocious acts of rapine, lust, and cruelty.'' The terror inspired 
by these adventurers — ^the oflbcourings of their race, which in Spain 
and in the East had become more civilised, and had b^un to 
cultivate science and literature^ — drove the inhabitants of the 
defenceless towns to seek a refuge in forests and among mountains.* 
Some of the popes showed much energy in providing the'means of 
protection against them. Gregory IV. rebuilt and fortified Osda, 
to which he gave the name of Gregoriopolis.^ Leo IV., who was 
hastily raised to the papal chair on an emergency when the Saracens 
threatened Rome, took very vigorous measures. He fortified 
Portus, in which he planted a colony of Corsican refugees ; drew 
a chain across the mouth of the Tiber, and repaired the walls of 
llome. With tlie approbation of the emperor Lothair, who contri- 
buted largely to the expense, he enclosed within a wall 
the Transtiberine district which contained. the church of 
St. Peter and die English Burg ;^ and to this new quarter he gave 
tlio name of the " Leonine Qty." ^ Nicolas I. also contributed to 
the defence of Rome by strengthening the fortifications and the 
garrison of Ostia.* But in the south of Italy the Saracens were 
triumphant. They established a sultan at Bari,"' although after a 
time that city was recovered from them by the united 
forces of the emperors Louis II. and Basil the Mace- 
donian.'" Naples, Amalfi, Salerno, and other cities, finding 
resistance impossible, entered into alliance with them, and joined 
them in plundering. But for dissensions among themselves, the 
Moslems would probably have become masters of the whole 
|)euinsula." 

• Const. Porpliyrog. ii. 21-7 ; Cedren. « Anastas. 244. 

608, 512 ; Gibbon, v. 200-9 ; Famin, • In- ' lb. 226. « Sec p. 236. 

vasions des Sarrazius en Italic,' i. 140, ^ Anastas. 240-3 ; Gibbon, v. 209- 

146, 347, 395 (Paris, 1843). 210. 

^ Marseilles, which had suffered from * Anastas. 260. 

them in 838, was again plundered b^ ^ Chron. Casin. 8. 

Greek pirates ten years later. Sismondi, "» Const Porphyrog. v. 55; Famin, 

lii. 92. i. 298. Muratori, however, denies that 

c A.I). 846. Chron. Casin. ap. Pertz, the Greeks shared in the capture (Annali, 

iii. 225-230, or Patrol, clxxiii.; Sis- V. ii. 115). 

nionili, iii. 89. , " Erchempert. a.p. 876 (PerU, iii.) ; 

«< SidMiondi, Kcp. Ital. 1. 27. Gibbon, y. 209. 



CKurrLL A.i>. 840-887. STATE OF FRANCE. 297 

The royal power in France was greatly impaired by the changes 
of this period Among the earlier Franks, there had been no class 
of nobility, properly so called, but consideration had depended on 
wealth and power alone ; ^ nor had the counts originally been land- 
holders, but officers of the sovereign, invested with a dignity which 
was only personal and temporary. But from the time of Uie civil 
wars between Louis the Pious and his sons, the Frankish princes 
found themselves obliged to pay those on whom they depended for 
support by a diminution of their own prerogatives and property.'* 
The system was continued ; at the diet of Quiercy, in 877, Charles 
the Bald, with a view of securing the consent of his chiefs to his 
projected expedition into Italy, granted that their lands should 
descend by inheritance, and only reserved to the sovereign the 
choice of a successor in cases where the tenant should die without 
male issue ;*^ nay, as we shall see hereafter, in his eagerness to 
gain aid towards the extension of his dominions, he even consented 
that his crown should be regarded as elective.' The nobles, thus 
erected into a hereditary order, became more independent ; they 
took advantage of the weakness of the sovereign ; and, by the end 
of the century, the dismemberment of the empire had been so 
much imitated on a smaller scale that France was broken up into 
no fewer than twenty-nine independent states." 

The Frankish clergy suffered severely in their property during 
the troubles of the time. Not only did Louis and his sons habi- 
tually employ the old resource of rewarding partisans with gifts 
of ecclesiastical benefices, but they even carried it further than 
before, by extending it to religious houses which had hitherto 
been regarded as exempt from this kind of danger. The abbey 
of St. Martin's itself — the most revered, as well as the richest, of 
all the sanctuaries of Gaul — was granted by Charles in benefice 
to Robert the Strong.* Almost every council has its piteous com- 
plaint that the property of the church is invaded in a manner 
more fitting for pagan enemies than for her own sons ; that the 
poor, the strangers, the pilgrims, the captives are deprived of the 
endowments founded for their relief; that hospitals, especially 
those of the Scots,** are diverted from their object, so that not only 

o Perry, 416. althoagh in words it was granted to sncli 

p Planck, iii. 18; SisinoDdi,iii. 221-2 ; only as should take part in the Italian 

Fuuck, 184. expedition. 

«> Pertz, Leges, i. 539, c 9. See ' Sismondi, iii. 223 ; Ofrorer, ii. 280. 

Ducange, s. y. Comes, p. 451 ; Sis- * Giiizot, ii. 280. 

mondi, iii. 218; Stephen, i. 126; and * Palgrave, i. 466, 468. 

Gfnircr, ii. 149, who shows that the « Walafrid Strabo says of the Scots 

etlect of this concession was general, (Irish), " QoiboB consuetudo peregri- 



298 THE FRENCH HIERARCHT. Book IT. 

are guests not entertuned, but those who had dwelt in them finom 
infEincy are turned out to beg from door to door ; that some lands 
are alienated in such a way as to cut o£P all hope of recoveiy ; that 
the sovereigns grossly abuse their patronage by bestowing' spiritual 
oflSces on laymen.' The only weapon which the church oould 
wield against the rapacious laity was excommunication ; but neither 
spiritual terrors nor tales of frequent judicial miracles were suffi- 
cient to check the evil.^ Another frequent complaint relates to 
the decay of letters among the Franks.' Charles the Bald was a 
patron of learned men, and took pleasure in their society ;* but, 
while literature enjoyed this courtly and superficial encouragement, 
the institutions by which Charlemagne had endeavoured to provide 
for the general instruction of his subjects were allowed to fall into 
neglect** 

But in other respects the clergy gained greatly. The sixth 
council of Paris, in 829, had asserted for them a right to judge 
kings.^ This power had been exercised against Loms by the 
rebellious bishops at Compiegne, and his restoration had not been 
accomplished without a formal act of the church.^ Charles the 
Bald admitted it, as against himself, at the council of Savon- 
nieres, in 859 ;* and in all the disagreements of the Carolingiansi 
each prince carried his grievances to the pope — thus constituting 
the Roman see a general court of appeal, and weakening the 
rights of all sovereigns by such submission. Ecclesiastical judg- 
ments were popularly regarded as the judgments of God.' Bishops 
asserted for themselves an exclusive right to judge all matters 
relating to the clergy,« and, by the superintendence which they 
exercised over morals, they were able to turn every scandal of the 

nandi jam pene in naturam coDTersa speaks of Greece as deserted by her 

est" Vita S. Galli, ii. 47 (Patrol, scholars that they might flock to the 

czivO* Prankish court, and describes Ireland 

'Cone. Aquisgr. a.d. 836, iii. 19; as"penetotamcmn^regephilo8ophoruin 

Cone Theod-vill. a.d. 844, c. 3 (Pertz, ad httora nostra migrantem." Patrol. 

Leges, i. 381); Cone. Vem. II. a.d. cxxiv. 1133. 

844, cc. 12, &c. (ib. 3835) ; Cone. »» Gfrorer, Karol. iL 16G-7. Many 

Spamac. a.d. 846 (ib. 389-90); Cone, cathedral and monastic schools, however. 

Meld. a.d. 845, cc. 40, 41, 75, &c. ; continued to flourish. See Hist. Litt It. 

Cone. Carisiac. a.d. 858, Ep. ad Ludov. 224, seqq. ; Bahr, 39-45. 

(Hard. v. 466, seqq.) ; Cone. Spamac. ^ Lib. iii. 8, citing a speech ascribed 

A.D. 8r)9, c. 14; Cone. Duziac. II. a.d. by Kufinus to Constantine (Hist. Ec^I. 

874 (Hard. vi. 148-9) ; Cone. Trecass. i. 2). The substance of this council is 

II. A.D. 878, c. 3, &c. identical with a treatise * D« Institutione 

y Sismoiidi, iii. 126, 150. Regia,' by Jonas, bishop of Orleans 

* E. g. Cone. Valent. IV. a.d. 855, c. (Patrol, cvi. 279, seqq.). 
18 ; Cone. TuU. ad Saponarias, a.d. 859, ^ See p. 

vi. 10 (Hard. v. 499). • C. 3 (PerU, Leges, i. 462). Gnixot, 

* Ih'Hc of Auxerre, in his dedication ii. 326. 

of the Life of St German to Charles, ' Planck, iii. 23. s Ib. 22. 



Chap.U. aj). 840-887. HINCMAR. 299 

royal house to the advantage of the church.** They became more 
and more active in politics ; * they claimed the power of bestovring 
the crown, and Charles appears to have acknowledged the claim.^ 
Yet, although they endeavoured to gain for themselves an exemp- 
tion from all secular control, that prince still kept a hold on them 
by means of his missi.^ 

Tiie most prominent among the French ecclesiastics was 
Hincmar, a man of strong, lofty, and resolute character, of a 
mind at once subtle and eminently practical, of learning which, 
although uncritical and indifferently digested, raised him above 
almost all his contemporaries, and of great political talent." 
Uincmar was born in 806, of a noble family in Neustria, and at 
an early age entered the monastery of St Denys, where he became 
a monk under Hilduia^ He took an active part in restoring the 
discipline of the house, and to the end of his days he observed the 
monastic severity of life.? His attachment to his abbot was shown 
by becoming the companion of his exile in 830;^ but notwith- 
standing this, and although his own feelings were no doubt in favour 
of the unity of the empire, he withstood all Hilduin's attempts to 
draw him into rebellion, and to the last preserved the favour of 
Louis, by means of which he was able to effect his superior's 
recall.' In 845 he was promoted to the archbishoprick of Rheims, 
which had not been regularly filled since the deposition of Ebbo, 
ten years before. He accepted the dignity on condition that the 
property which had been alienated from it to laymen during the 
vacancy should be restored," and he held it for thirty-nine years. 
His province, and even his diocese, were partly in Neustria and 
partly in Lotharingia* — a circumstance which brought him into 
connexion witK the sovereigns of both countries. To him, as the 
successor of St. Remigius, it belonged to crown kings, and to take 
the chief part in state solemnities ;" and he gave ftdl effect to his 
position. His political influence was immense ; he steadily upheld 
the cause of the church against both the king and the nobles, and 
in its behalf often opposed the princes to whose interests in other 
respects he was zealously devoted.* But most especially he was 

•^ Schrockh, xxii. 443 ; Sismondi, iii. * Opera, ii. 304. 

143. P Flodoard, iii. I (Patrol, cxxxv.). 

' Sism. iii. 133. *i lb. ; Prichard's Life of Hincmar, 

^ Michelel, ii. 126-7. 97 (Littlemore, 1849). 

" E. g. Convent. Sparnac a.d. 846 ' Flodoard, 1. c. 

(Pertz, Leges, i. 389; ; Capit Mersen. ■ Flodoard, iii. 4 ; Prichard, 96-9. 

A.D. 847 (ib. 394), c. 3 ; Convent. Silvan. * Opera, ii. 310, 694. 

A.D. 853 (ib. 423-6). • Hist Litt v. 546 ; Quizot, ii. 352. 

° Hist. Litt. V. 587, 590 ; Planck, iii. » Hbt Litt. v. 588 ; Guizot, ii. 364-6. 
103; Sismondi, iii. 147-8. 



300 THE PAPACY. BDOKIY. 

the champion of the national church and of the rights of his 
sovereign against the growing claims of the papacy/ 

The popes endeavoured to take advantage of the weakness of 
Charlemagne's descendants in order to shake off the golden chains 
with which the great emperor had bound them, and in this endea- 
vour they were greatly aided by the effect of the partition of the 
empire ; inasmuch as they were thenceforth in no way subject to 
any prince except the one who held the imperial title and the 
kingdom of Italy, while they were yet brought into relation with 
all the Carolingian sovereigns, and became general arbiters between 
them.* 

On the death of Gregory IV. in 844, Sergius U., after some 
tumultuary opposition from a rival named John,^ was consecrated 
without waiting for the imperial confirmation. Lothair, indignant 
at the slight thus shown to his authority, sent his son Louis to call 
the new pope to account The prince was accompanied by Drogo, 
bishop of Metz, with a numerous train of prelates and counts, and 
was at the head of a large army, which is said, in. its advance 
towards Rome, to have committed much wanton slaughter and devas- 
tation, and to have lost many of its soldiers, who, in punishment of 
their misdeeds, were slain by lightning. Sergius received Louis 
with the usual honours, but would not permit his troops to enter 
the city ; nor would he allow the doors of St. Peter's to be opened 
to him, until, in answer to a solemn adjuration, the prince had 
professed that he came without any evil intention, for the good 
of Rome and of the church. The pope crowned him as king of 
the Lombards, but resisted a proposal that the Romans should be 
required to swear allegiance to him, on the ground that such oaths 
were due to the emperor alone. He consented, however, that a 
fresh oath should be taken to the emperor.** Drogo returned to 

y Sismondi says that in his contests authors of the * Histoire Litt^raire * are 
with Nicolas I. Hincmar seemed to be also unfayourable to him, chiefly on 
restrained by the feeling that his ap- account of his behaviour to Gottschalk, 
pointment was open to question (iii. whose cause they, as Augustinians, es- 
148). But it was investigiated, and it ponse. 
wonld appear that he had really nothing ' Planck, iii. 26-8, 31. 
to fear in this respect, so that we most * Anastas. 227. 
rather suppose him to have been re- ^ lb. 227-9. Schrbckh qnestions this 
strained by political considerations. M. writer's account of the affair as too 
Guizot well describes him as a mix- favourable to the pope (xxii. 68). 
ture of the logician with the man of Luden thinks that Sergius outwitted 
business, the practical part of his cha- Louis (vi. 9). Muratori takes occasion 
racter controlling the other ; and points to obsenre that the practice of con- 
to Bossuet as a parallel (ii. 358-9). M. ferring tbe kingdom of Italy by the 
Ampi!re, whose estimate of Hincmar is iron crown at Monza, Milan, or Pavia, 



unfisivourable, says that in his character was not yet introduced. Annali, V. 
**il y a de Tdvdque de Meaux ct un ;*om * ~" 
dc r^tyue cTAutun*' (iii. 168). The 



Chap. II. a.d. 840-855. THE PAPACY. 301 

France with a commission^ appointing him primate and papal 
vicar, and conferring on him in that character large privileges and 
jurisdiction ; but, on finding that some question was raised as to 
the reception of this instrument by a synod to which he exhibited 
it, he refrained from urging his pretensions.*^ 

Sergius died after a pontificate of three years, and Leo IV. was 
chosen by general acclamation. The Romans were in 
great perplexity ; the imminent danger in which they ^'^' 
were from the Saracens required them to proceed to an immediate 
consecration, while they were afraid to repeat their late offence 
against the Frank empire. They therefore fell on the expedient 
of consecrating Leo with an express reservation of the imperial 
rights, and it would seem that this course was allowed to pass 
without objection.® Towards the end of Leo's pontificate, Lothair, 
having been informed that a high Roman officer had expressed 
himself against the Frankish connexion, and had proposed a revolt to 
the Greek empire, went to Rome, and held an inquiry into the case. 
The librarian Anastasius tells us that the charge was proved to be 
imaginary, and that the accuser was given up to the accused, from 
whom the emperor begged him.' But the pope was required, 
probably in consequence of this afiair, to promise obedience to the 
emperor and his commissioners.^ A remarkable innovation was in- 
troduced by Leo in his correspondence with sovereigns, by setting his 
own name before that of the prince to whom he wrote, and omitting 
the word Domino in the address — a change which intimated that 
St Peter's successors no longer owned any earthly master.** 

Benedict UI. was elected as the successor of Leo ; but he met 
with a very serious opposition from Anastasius, — probably the same 

^ Hard. iv. U63-6. that the Byzantine church '* eunu- 

<* Cone. Vem. II. c. II (Pertz, Leges, chos passim promovendo fceminam in 

i. 385) ; Hincmar, it. 737 ; De Marca, sede pontificum saoram sublimasset ali- 

VI. xxix. 3. quando." (Hard. vi. 940.) The first 

* Anastas. 231 ; Marat. Annali, V. i. writers, unsuspected of forgery or in- 

31. The misstatements of Baronius as terpoladon, in whom it is found, are 

to this are exposed by Pagi, xiv. 348, Stephen de Borbone and Mart. Polonus 

seqq. — both of the thirteenth century. Its 

< Anast. 246. Gfrorer thinks that origin is stiU matter of question, but is 

Anastasius does not tell the truth, and most commonly referred to the degrada- 

that there was a real conspiracy (i. tion of the papacy under female in- 

287). fluence, which fbllowed soon after this 

s Giesel. II. i. 49. time. See Baron. 853. 56-69 ; Ciacon. 

»» lb. 48 ; see Gamier, in Patrol, cv. i. 626-640 ; Pagi, xiv. 424 : Schrockh. 

119-130. The fabulous female pope, xxii. 75-110; Bayle, art Papesse and 

Joan, is inserted between Leo and Polonus; Gibbon, iv. 512-3; Giesel. II. 

Benedict. Had such a story been known i. 29-32; Guericke, ii. 113. Luden 

at Rome in the middle of the eleventh is inclined to favour the tale (vi. 513- 

century, Leo IX. would not have ven- 7). Gfrorer very confidently proposes 

tured, in writing to the patriarch of some wild conjectures on the subject, i. 

Constantinople, to mention a mmoor 289. 



302 NICOLAS I. Book IV. 

with a cardinal of that name who under the last pontificate had 
been deposed, chiefly for his attachment to the Frankish 
interest.* Anastasius got possession of St Peter's and of 
St John Lateran, and (perhaps in the hope of recommending 
himself to the Franks, whom he may have possibly supposed to be 
iconoclasts) he is said to have broken and burnt the images which 
adorned the churches> He was aided by Frankish soldiers, and 
gained over the envoys who were sent to ask the imperial con- 
firmation of his rivaFs election ; he stripped Benedict of his robes, 
insulted him, and beat him. But the clergy and people of Rome 
adhered to Benedict, and their demonstrations prevailed on the 
emperor's commissioners to sanction his consecration.™ 

Benedict was succeeded by Nicolas I., who, according to a 

contemporary annalist, owed his elevation rather to the presence' 

and favour of Louis II., Lothair's successor in the empire, than to 

the choice of the Roman clergy." At his consecration 

A D 858 

was introduced the new ceremony of coronation — a cere- 
mony which probably had its origin in the fable that a golden crown 
had been bestowed on Sylvester by Constantine,** and which was 
intended to assert for the pope the majesty of an earthly sovereign, 
in addition to that higher and more venerable dignity which 
claimed not only precedence but control over all earthly power.P 
And when, soon after, Nicolas visited the camp of Louis, the 
emperor, after the pretended example of the first Christian emperor, 
did him reverence by holding his bridle, and by walking at his 
side as he rode.^ Nicolas was one of those popes who stand forth 
in history as having most signally contributed to the advancement 
of their see. The idea entertained of him shortly after his death 
is remarkably expressed by Regino, of Priim, who speaks of him 
as surpassing all his predecessors since the great Gregory ; as 
giving commands to kings and tyrants, and ruling over them as if 
lord of the whole world ; as full of meekness and gentleness in his 
dealings with bishops and clergy who were worthy of their calling, 
but terrible and austere towards the careless and the refiractory ; 
as another Elias "in spirit and in power."' He was learned, 
skilful in the management of afiairs, sincerely zealous for the 

» Leo IV. Epp. 7, 13 (PatroL cxv.); • See p. 187. 

Anast. 224 ; BaroD. 853. 3-5 ; Gfi*orer, p Anastas. 253 ; Schrockh, xxii. 118. 

i. 288. <i Anast. 253. In the * Donation ' 

^ Anast 247-8; Gfrorer, i. 293-4. Constantine is made to say, **Tenente8 

** Anast. 249 ; Milman, ii. 275. frienum ipsios [Sylvestri] pro rererentia 

" Annales Bertiniani (in this part B. Petri stratoris officiom illi exhibui- 

written by Prudentins, bishop of Troyes), mus." Patrol. clxxxvU. 464. 

Peru, i. 452. ' Begino, a.d. 868 (Peru, i. 579). 



Chap UL aj>. 855-86t. EUCHABISTIC CONTROVERSY. 303 

enforcement of discipline in the church, filled with a sense of the 
importance of his position, ambitious, active, and resolute in main- 
taining and advancing it He took advantage of the faults or 
vices of the Frank princes — their ambition, their lust, or their 
hatred — to interpose in their affairs, and with great ability he 
played them against each other. His interposition was usually in 
the interest of justice, or in the defence of weakness ; it was 
backed by the approbation of the great body of the people, who 
learnt to see in him the representative of heaven, ready everywhere 
to assert the right, and able to restrain the wicked who were 
above the reach of earthly law;' and doubtless he was able to 
conceal from himself all but what was good in his motives. But 
those of his acts which in themselves were praiseworthy, were yet 
parts of a system which in other cases appeared without any such 
creditable veil — a scheme of vast ambition for rendering all secular 
power subject to the church, and all national churches subject to 
Rome.^ 

Of the controversies or disputes of this time — ^which must be 
treated severally, since it is a less evil to sacrifice the display of 
their correspondent progress than for its sake to throw the narra- 
tive into hopeless confusion — two related to important points of 
doctrine — the Eucharbtic Presence, and Predestination. 

I. We have already seen that, with respect to the Eucharist, 
there had been a gradual increase of mystical language ; and that 
expressions were at first used rhetorically and in a figurative sense, 
which, if literally construed, would have given an incorrect idea of 
the current doctrine.'' In the west the authority of St. Augustine, 
had generally acted as a safeguard against materialising views of 
the Eucharistic presence ;' but an important step toward the esta- 

• Giesel. II. i. 196 ; Gfrdrer, i. 297-8. tas. 254-6 ; Baron. 861. 57-64; Milman, 

* One of this pope's smaller triumphs ii. 289-90. 

may be mentioned in a note. John, * i. 569 ; it 226. 

archbishop of Bavenna — a see which * Ebrard, i. 309, se^q. ; Giesel. I. ii. 

had often before given trouble to the 117. Villiers, the editor of Falbeiifs 

popes — set up high pretensions to inde- works, finding in them a quotation 

pendence. But he was disappointed in where it is said that our Lord's words 

his hopes of support from Louis II., and, as to eating His body are a figwre^ 

being excommunicated bv Nicolais, he inserted ** dicet hsereticns ; " but, being 

was reduced to a very abject state. In informed that the quotation was from 

order to obtain absolution, he bound St Augustine, he coolly put his own 

himself to repair to Rome once a-vear, interpolation into the table of errata, 

and submitted to a limitation of his with the note, *' Interpretatio est mvs- 

power over his own suCfragajis, whom tica.'* (Patrol, dxi. 333 ; Schrockh, 

he was not to consecrate without the xxiii. 506.) For Fulbert see below, Book 

pope's permission (a.d. 6i61-2). Anaft- V. c. iii. 



304 PASCHASIUS RADBERT. Book IV. 

blishxnent of such views was now made by Paschasius Radbert, 
abbot of Corbie. Paschasius had been brought up in that monas- 
tery under Adelhard and Wala, whose biographer he afterwards 
became. He had been master of the monastic school, and had 
laboured as a commentator on the Scriptures. In 844, he was 
elected abbot ; but the disquietudes which were brought on him 
by that dignity induced him to resign it in 851, and he lived as a 
private monk until his death in 865.^ 

In 831, Paschasius, at the request of his old pupil Warin, who 
had become abbot of the daughter monastery of New Corbey,* in 
Saxony, drew up a treatise on the Eucharist for the instruction of 
the younger monks of that society.* Soon after his appointment 
tt) the abbacy of his own house, in 844, he presented an improved 
edition of the work to Charles the Bald, who had requested a copy 
of it In this treatise^ the rhetoric of earlier writers is turned into 
unequivocally material definitions. Paschasius lays it down, that, 
although, after the consecration, the appearance of bread and wine 
remain, yet we must not believe anything else to be really present 
than the body and blood of the Saviour — the same flesh which was . 
bom of the Blessed Virgin — the same in which He suffered on the 
cross and rose from the grave.*^ This doctrine is rested on the 
almighty power of Go.d ; the miracles of Scripture are said to have 
been wrought in order to prepare the way for it and to confirm it ; 
that the elements remain unchanged in appearance and in taste, 
is intended, according to Paschasius, as an exercise of our faith."^ 
The miraculous production of the Saviour's body is paralleled 
,with his conception as man.* Tales are adduced of miracles by 
which the reality hidden under the appearance of the elements 
was visibly revealed.' The doctrine afterwards known as Transub- 
Btautiation appears to be broadly expressed ; but, contrary to the 
later practice of Rome, Paschasius insists on the necessity of 
receiving the cup as well as the eucharistic bread.''^ 

y Hist Litt V. 289 ; Pagi, xiv. 390. ancient authority for it (VI. Praf. xxiv.- 

« See Patrol, civ. 1128-31.- xxxii.). 

• Pagi, xiv. 173 ; Mabill. VI. viii.-x. •» C 1. • C. 4. ' C. 14. 

** De Corp. et Sanguine Domini ' (in r C. 19. On the slight differences 

ffibL Patr. Lugd. xiv. or Patrol, cxx.). between the doctrine of Paschasius and 

« Cc 1, 10. It seems to be chiefly in that afterwards sanctioned, see Basnage, 

thus maintaining the identity of the body, 910. Bishop Cosin, after having, in tne 

that Paschasius goes beyond John of draft of his work on Transubstantiation, 

Damascus. See p. 226 j Joh. Dam. de given the usual view of Paschasius's 

Fid. Orthod. iv. 13 (t. i. 169); Dupin, opinions, maintained in the treatise, 

vii. 65. Mabillon attempts to show when published, that he did not teach 

that it was only at the expression of transubstantiation (Works, ed. Aug. 

this idea that the contemporaries of Cath. Lib. iv. 79-81) ; and in our own 

Paschasius were offended, and argues dav Ebrard has argued that he taught 

Tery unsuccessfully that there was only a tpiriiual presence, by power or 



Chap. n. a.d. 844-863. RATRAMN. 305 

Paschasius had professed to lay down his doctrine as being that 
which was established in the church ; but protests were imme- 
diately raised against it.** Raban Maur,* Walafrid Strabo,'' 
Florus,"* and Christian Druthmar," all of them among the most 
learned men of the age, objected to the idea of any other than a 
spiritual change in the Eucharist, and denounced it as a novelty. 
Even among his own community, the views of Paschasius excited 
alarm and opposition. One of his monks named Frudegard 
expressed uneasiness on account of the abbot's apparent contra- 
diction to St Augustine, so that Paschasius found it necessary to 
defend himself by the authority of earlier writers, among whom he 
especially relied on St. Ambrose.** And the chief opponent of the 
doctrine was another monk of Corbie, Ratramn, who examined the 
abbot's book at the request of Charles the Bald,^ and answered it, 
although, in consideration of his relation to Paschasius, he did not 
name the author. Ratramn divides the question into two heads : 
(I) Whether the body and blood of Christ be present in figure or 
ill truth ; (2) Whether it be the same body which was bom of the 
Virgin, suflFered, rose again, and ascended. He defines figure to 
mean that the reality is veiled under something else, as where our 
Lord styles himself a vine ; and truth to mean, that the reality is 
openly displayed. Although, he says, the elements remain out- 
wardly the same as before consecration, the body and blood of 

virtual effect (i. 410-412). But the very * De TnstitatioDe Clericoram, i. 31 ; 

chapter in which the word potentialiter iii. 13 (Patrol, cvii.) ; FoBnitentiale, Sd 

occurs (c 4) fLoes on to language and (ib. ex.) ; compare Ep. 3 (lb. cxii.)— a 

illustrations which seem clearly to show piece which Mabillon found with the 

that the representation usually given title 'Dicta cujusdam sapientis/ and 

of the writer, both by friends and by identified with a letter which RalMui 

opponents, is correct To the same speaks of himself as having written to 

purpose are the stories of miracles (c. Eigil on the doctrine of Paschasius 

44), which Bishop Cosin is obliged to (Posnit. 1. c). Mabillon' s conjecture, 

dispose of by supposing them inter- however, has been questioned. See 

polated (p. 81). The utmost that Pro- Gieseler, II. i. 120. 
fessor Ebrard appears to establish is an •* De Kebus Eccles. 16-17 (ib. cxiv.). 
vuonsisteticy in the doctrine of Pascha- "Adv. Amalar. 9 (ib. cxix.). 
sius (411-416). » In Matth. xxvi. 26 (ib. cvi. 1476). 

[Since this volume was first published, Druthmar was distinguished as a com- 

Mr. Freeman has also denied that Pas- mentator, who, contrary to the usual 

chasius taught the doctrine which is com- practice of his time, followed the literal 

inouly ascribed to him (Principles of and historical explanation of Scripture 

Divine Service, ii. 35-40). But see the fSchrockh, xxiii. 269; Hist Litt. v.). 

masterly reply in Bishop Thirlwall's For the history of the manner in which 

Charge for 1857, Appendix B, where Romish writers have dealt with this 

cc. 12, 13, 16, are especially brought writer's testimony, see Maitland, Catal. 

forward in evidence.] of Early Printed Books in Lambeth 

*• This fact is enough to disprove the Library, 368-372. 
argument of Mabillon (VI. xv.) and of ® Ad Frudeg., Bibl. Patrum, xiv. 754, 

Pagi (xiv. 173), that so learned a man seqq. 

could not have mistaken the Church's ' Ratramn. de Corp. et Sang. Domini, 

doctrine. Oxon. 1838, or Patrol, cxxi., c. 1. 



306 RATRAMN. BookIY. 

Christ are presented in them, not to the bodily senses, but to the 
fiEuthful soul.'^ And this must be in a figurative way ; for other- 
wise there would be nothing for faith, ^^ the evidence of things not 
seen," to work on ; the sacrament would not be a mystery, suioe 
in order to a mystery there must be something beyond what is 
seen.' The change is not material, but spiritual ;' the elements, 
while in one respect they continue bread and wine, are in another 
respect, by spirit and potency, the body and blood of Christ,* even 
as the element of water is endued with a spiritual power in order 
to the sacrament of baptism.'* That which is visible and corruptible 
in them feeds the body ; that which is matter of belief is itself 
immortal, sanctifies the soul, and feeds it unto everlasting life.* 
The body of Christ must be incorruptible ; tlierefore that which 
is corruptible in the sacrament li but the figure of the reality.^ 
Ratramn clears the interpretation of the passages which had been 
quoted from St. Ambrose in favour of the opposite view.* He 
cites St Augustine and St. Isidore of Seville as agreeing in his 
own doctrine;* and argues from the Liturgy, that the Saviour's 
presence must be spiritual and figurative, since the sacrament is 
there spoken of as a pledge, an image^ and a likeTteasy 

John Scotus, who will be more particularly mentioned hereafter, 
is said to have also written on the question, at the desire of Charles 
the Bald ; but if so, his book is Iost.° His other works contain 

«» Cc. 9-10. » C. 11. sense (xii. 85-7). See Mosheim, ii. 233: 

• C. 12. « Cc 13-16. Schrockh, xxiii. 479. Amid these con- 

• Cc. 17-18. » Cc. 19, 49. flicting views, the English charoh may 
y Cc. 86-7. ■ Cc. 51-69. fairly claim Ratramn as an ally, since 

• Cc. 33-6, 41-5, 77-8, 93-6. Bishop Ridley was converted by this 
^ Cc. 84-6.^ Ratramn's book was book from a belief in transubstantiation, 

first published in 1532, and in that and and it served as a model for the doc- 
other editions he is called Bertram, trine of our Reformation. Ridley, ed. 
Some Romanists declared it to be a Park. Soc. 159. 

forgenr of the Reformers, and it was * It appears that the early quotations 

classed by the Council of Trent among which profess to be from Scotus on the 

forbidden books. An attempt was after- Eucharist are realljr from Ratramn's 

wards made by some divines of Louvain book, and that mediseval writers who 

and Douay to show that it was toler- speak of a book by the one do not name 

able ; but the use made of it by the the other ; and to this Gieseler would 

reformed stood in the way of this trace the notion of Scotus having written 

opinion. It is excluded from the Lyons on the subject (II. i. 123-4). But^ as 

Kibliotheca (t. xv.), where other works Neander olwerves (vi. 217-8), the con- 

of Ratramn are given, under the prtrtext fusion between the books is hardly 

that it had been corrupted by heretics, enough to warrant us in supposing that 

Mabillon (VI. 1. scqq.), Boileau (Patrol. Scotus did not write at all. De Marca 

cxxi.), the authors of the * Hist. Litt^- (ap. D'Acfaer. Spicil. iii. 852) had sup- 

raire ' (iv. 260 ; v. 39 7"), and others, posed Ratramn's book to be really the 



have, iiowever, attempted to show that work of Scotus, but was confuted by 

the treatise is identical in doctrine with Mabillon, VI. xliv.-vii. See Dupin, vii. 

that of Paschasius — an opinion which ^7-8; Bilhr, 474. Gieseler*s opinion 

the Abbe liohrbacher maintains with has been supported by Laufsj against 

his usual amount of modesty and good it see Gfrorer, Kirchengesch. lii. 921-2. 



c«^- ^' PREDESTINATION. 307 

grounds for thinking that he regarded the Eucharist as a merely 
commemorative rite, and that on this, as on other points, he was 
regarded as heterodox.** While the most learned divines of the 
age in general opposed Paschasius, his doctrine appears to have 
been supported by the important authority of Hincmar,® although 
it is doubtful whether the archbishop really meant to assert it in 
its fiill extent, or is to be understood as speaking rhetorically ; and 
Haymo, bishop of Halberstadt, a commentator of great reputation, 
lays it down as strongly as the abbot of Corbie himself The 
controversy lasted for some time ; but the doctrine of Paschasius, 
which was recommended by its appearance of piety, and by its 
agreement with the prevailing love of the miraculous, gained the 
ascendancy within the following century/ 

II. Throughout the west St. Augustine was revered as the 
greatest of all the ancient fathers, and the chief teacher of ortho- 
doxy ; yet his system was not in general thoroughly held. The 
councils which had been assembled on account of the Pelagian 
doctrines had occupied themselves with the subject of Grace, and 
had not given any judgment as to Predestination ; and the followers 
of Augustine had endeavoured to mitigate the asperities of his 
tenets on this question. The prevailing doctrine was of a milder 
tone ; in many cases it was not far from Semipelagianism,^ and 

Dr. Floss thinks that Scotos did not write sages in his work * De Divisione Na- 

a special treatise on the Eucharist, but turse/ it would seem that his Ticw of 

that his oijinions on that subject were the sacrament was connected with a 

contained in his commentary on St. belief that the Saviour's body was 

John (Patrol, cxzii. Prtef. xzi.)* Dr. changed after the resurrection into a 

Christlieb supposes that Scotos may have " reasonable soul " which is everywhere 

been asked by Charles the Bald to^ve present (In Evang. Joh. Fragm. i., Pa- 

an opinion on the question ; that he trol. cxxii. 312 ; De Div. Nat. v. 20, ib. 

wrote a short letter on it, in opposition 894 ; 38, ib. 992 ; Floss, Prsef. ix.). 

to the views of Paschasius, and that " Spiritualiter enm immolamus, et intel- 

hence Batramn's book, which at first lectnaliter, mente non dente, comedi- 

appeared anonymously, may have been mus" (col. 311 b). The commentary 

ascribed to Scotus. Leben nnd Lehre unfortunately breaks o£f before enter- 

(les Joh. Scotus Erigena (Gotha, 1860), ing on the critical part of chapter vi., 

pp. 70, 78-9. perhaps, as Dr. Floss supposes (p. x.), 

•* Mabill. vi. Praef. bdv. ; Schrockh, because the transcriber was unwiUing 

xxiv. 482 ; Neand. vi. 217-8. Uincmar to reproduce the suspected doctrines of 

says of Pmdentius and Scotus that, Scotus on the Eucharist In his 'Ex- 

among other errors, they held '* quod positions on Dionysius the Areopagite ' 

sacramenta altaris non verum corpus et cib. 140), Scotus, although decidedly 

verus sanguis sint Domini, sed tantum against Paschasius, speaks also against 

niemoria veri corporis et sanguinis ejus " those who hold ** visibilem eucharis- 

(De Prsedest. 31, t. i. p. 232). A little tiam nil aliud significare prater se 

additional light has been thrown on ipsam." See Floss, note ib., 141. 

John's eucharistic doctrine by an impwr- • Hiiicm. ii. 99-100. 

feet commentary on St John, which ' De Corp. et Sang. I>om., Patrol. 

was first published by M. Ravaisson in cxviii. 815-8. 

1849, and appears to be truly ascribed s Schrockh, xxiii. 487-8; Gieael. II. 

to him. From this, as from some paa- i. 126-7. ^ See vol. i. p. 537. 

X 2 



308 GOTTSCHALK. Book IV. 

even where it could not be so described, it fell so far short of the 
rigid Augustinianism tliat a theologian who strictly adhered to this 
might have fairly charged his brethren with unfaithfulness to the 
teaching of the great African doctor.* 

Gottschalk,*' the son of a Saxon count, was in boyhood placed 
by his father in the monastery of Fulda. On attaining to man's 
estate, however, he felt a strong distaste for the life of a monk, 
and in 829 he applied for a release from his vows to a synod held 
at Mentz under Archbishop Otgar. His petition was granted, on 
the ground that he had been devoted to the monastic profession 
before he could exercise any will of his own. But the abbot of 
Fulda, Raban Maur, the pupil of Alcuin, and himself the greatest 
teacher of his time,™ appealed to Louis the Pious, arguing that 
persons offered by their parents, although without their own choice^ 
were bound by the monastic obligations ; and the emperor over- 
ruled the synod's decision." 

Although compelled to remain a monk, Gottschalk was allowed 
to remove from Fulda, where his relation to Raban would have 
been inconvenient, to Orbais, in the diocese of Soissons. Here he 
gave himself up to the study of Augustine and his followers ; he 
embraced their peculiarities with enthusiasm, and such was his 
especial love for the works of Fulgentius that his friends usually 
called him by the name of that writer.** It is a characteristic 
circumstance tliat one of the most eminent among these friends, 
Servatus Lupus, abbot of Ferriferes, in a letter of this period, 
charges him with an immoderate fondness for speculation, and 

* Schriickh, xxiv. 119-121 ; Neand. by the Council of Mentz. in 813 (c. 23), 

▼i. 178; Giesel. II. i. 128. which is against compelling persons to 

^ Sckdlk, in old German, signified a be monks or clergy ; but Mabillon ar- 

$eroant, although its meaning has under- gues (VI. cvi.) that it did not intend to 

gone the same change as that of our forbid the oblation of boys. The capi- 

own word knave. Qottschalk^ therefore, tulary for monks enacted at Aix-la- 

= aertant of God. The Epistle to Titus ChapelJe in 817 (see p. 253) orders that 

begins in the Gothic version '* Paulus, boys offered by their parents shall con- 

skalks Guths." Patrol, xviii. 857. firm the obligation ** tempore inteili- 

■ Neand. vi. 156. He was, perhaps, gibili" (c. 36); but it is not said that 

bom in 786, and he died in 856 (Kunst- they may decline the monastic life. The 

mann, ' Hrabauus Magnentius Maurns,' rule of Cluny afterwards ordered that 

14, 159, Mainz, 1844). The oame of the benediction of boys should not take 

Maurus was given to him by Alcuin in place under the age of fifteen ; and in 

remembrance of St. Maur, the disciple this, other orders, popes, and at length the 

of St. Benedict lb. 37 ; Mabill. vi. 20. Council of Trent, agreed. Mabill. VI., 

» Schrockh, xxiv. 5-6 ; Kunstraann, cvi.-cvii. See Petr. Venerab. Statuta, c. 

70. Raban's tract * De Oblatione Puer- 36 (Patrol, clxxxix.) ; Hugonis Slatura, 

orum, contra eos qui repugnant institu- c. 6 (ib. ccix.), where the age is twenty ; 

tis B. Patris Benedicti (^Patrol, cvii.), Ducange, s. v. Oblaii; Mabill. Analecta, 

really belongs to this time, although 157, seqq. ; Nat. Alex. xiii. 374. 
Migiie has erroneously dated it in 819. <> He is so styled by Walafrid Strabo, 

(Hefelc, iv. 125.) Gottschalk's claim in a poem (Patrol, cxiv. 1115). 
might seem to have been countenanced 



Chap. II. ad. 829-846. GOTTSCHALK. 309 

exhorts him to turn from it to matters of a more practical kind.^ 
Hincmar, on the report of the abbot of Orbais, describes him while 
there as restless, changeable, bent on perversities, addicted to 
argument, and apt to misrepresent what was said by others in 
conversation with him ; as scorning to be a disciple of the truth, 
and preferring to be a roaster of error ; as eager to gain an influ- 
ence, by correspondence and otherwise, over persons who were 
inclined to novelty and desired notoriety at any price.'i With a 
view, no doubt, to qualify himself for preaching his doctrines, 
Gottschalk procured ordination as a priest from a chorepiscopus of 
Rheims, during the. vacancy of that see after the deposition of 
Ebbo. This act appears to have been a token of disaffection to 
the episcopal body, with which the chorepiscopi were then on very 
unfriendly terms ;' it was censured as irregular, inasmuch as 
Gottschalk belonged to the diocese of Soissons, and as the cho^ 
repiscopus had no authority from any superior to confer the priestly 
ordination at all." 

Tlie doctrine on which Gottschalk especially took his stand was 
that of Predestination. The usual language in the church had 
been, that the righteous are predestinate^ and that the wicked are 
foreknoum, while the rigid Augustinianism spoke of the wicked as 
reprobate;^ but Gottschalk applied the term predestinate to both 
classes." There is, he said, a twofold predestination — a term for 
which he cited the authority of Isidore of Seville.* In both cases 
predestination is to good ; but good is twofold, including not only 
the benefits of grace but the judgments of justice. As life is 
predestined to the good, and they to it, so evil is predestined 1o 
the wicked, and they to it7 His opponents usually charged him 
with maintaining that the wicked were irresistibly and irrevocably 
doomed to sin, as well as to its consequences. But it would seem, 
even by Hincmar s own avowal,* that Gottschalk did not admit 
this representation of his opinions ; he maintained only that, as the 
perseverance in evil of the devil, his angels, and wicked men was 
foreknown, they were predestinated to righteous punishment* He 

p Serv. Lup. Ep. xxx. (Patrol, cxix.). * Conf. brevior, ap. Usser. 212 (Isid. • 

1 Hincm. I)e Pncdeat. c. 2 (Opera, i. Sentent. ii. 6, Patrol. Ixxxiii.) ; Cf. 

20) ; Ep. ad Nicol. Pap. t. ii. 262 ; ii. Hincm. de Prsed. c. 9, p. 33. 

264, 295. y Conf. prolix. 214. 

' See p. 1 95, and below, Ch. VIII. i. 2. « De Prsed. c. 15, p. 63, where he treats 

■ Hiucm. i. 21 ; ii^ 262. Gottschalk's distinction as only nominal, 

» Neand. xi. 180-2. **cum non nisi per peccatum perveniri 

" Confessio prolixior, ap. Usser. valeat ad intentum." See Kunstm. 

*Hist. Gotteschalci/ Dubl. 1631, pp. 135. 

215-7. On the controversy raised by • Conf. brev. 211; Conf. prolix. 219, 

Gottschalk, see alsoPetav. de Incamat. 222 ; Usser. 44 ; Giesel. II. i. 12). 

I.xiii. cc. 8, seqq. 



310 SYNODS OF Book IT. 

denied that Christ died for any but the elect, and explained the 
texts which speak of God's willing all men to be saved as applicable 
to those only who actually are saved. And, unlike AugustinCy he 
held that even the first human^ pair were subject to a predestina- 
tion.^ The view which his adversaries took of his opinion may be 
in some degree excused by the violence with which he insisted on 
his difference from them, and by his zeal in condemning them — 
circumstances which could not but lead them to suppose the differ- 
ence far greater than it appears to have really been. 

Gottschalk was returning from a visit to Rome, in 847, when at 
the house of Ebcrhard, count of Friuli, a son-in-law of Liouis the 
Pious,^ he met Notting, who had been lately nominated to the see 
of Verona. He propounded his doctrine of twofold predestination, 
at which Notting was greatly startled. The bishop soon after 
mentioned it to Raban Maur, whom he found at the court of Louis 
of Germany ; and Uaban, who had lately become archbishop of 
Mentz, wrote both to Notting and to Eberhard, in strong condem- 
nation of Gottschalk*s opinion, which he declared to be no doctrine 
of St Augustine. Predestination, he said, could only be a prepa- 
ration for grace; God foreknows evil, but does not predestinate 
to it ; all who yield their corrupt will to the guidance of Divine 
grace may be saved.** Count Eberhard, on receiving the arch- 
bishop's letter, dismissed his dangerous visitor, who then travelled 
slowly homeward through Southern Germany ;* and it would seem 
to have been on account of his proceedings in these already Christian 
lands that Hincniar speaks of him as having visited barbarous and 
pagan nations for the purpose of infecting them with his errors.' In 
848 Gottschalk apj)cared before a synod held by Raban at Mentz in 
the presence of King Louis. His attendance was probably volun- 
tary,*^ and, as if prepared for a disputation, he carried with him 
an answer to Raban's objections, in which he charged the arch- 
bishop with following the heresy of Gennadius and Cassian, and 
reasserted the doctrine of a double predestinatioa** llis opinions, 

^ Gottesch. ap. Hincm. de Prsedest. cc. r Schrockh, xxiv. 13-15 ; Gfrorer j 

25, 27, 29 (t. i. 147, 211, 226) ; Neand. 214-5. From the words in the Aiinaies 

▼'• ISl* Bertiniani (a.d. 849)— "episcopal i con- 

« Eberhard was father of Berengar, cWh^ detcctHs atque convictus" — Kunct- 

who was crowned as empe:or in 916. maim (wrongly, as it appears to me) 

Murat. Annali, V. i. 35. infei-s that he was dragged fi-om a 

«• Kab. Epp. 6, 6' (Patrol, cxii.) ; hiding place. [In. this I find myself 

Kanstm. 120, seqq. agreeing with Ikfcle, iv. 131.] 

• Annal. 13ertiu. a.d. 849; Kanstm. ^ Fragments of this are preserved 

127. in *De I'rodestiuatioue.' See Patrol. 

' Hincm. ii. 262 ; Remig. in Patrol, cxxt. 305. 
cxxi. 987. 



Chap.il A.D.8i7-849. MENTZ AND QUIERCY. 811 

as might have been expected, were condemned by the synod ; he 
was obliged to swear that he would never again enter the dominions 
of Louis;* and he was sent to his own metropolitan, Hincmar, 
with a letter in which Raban styled him a vagabond,*' and recom- 
mended that, as bemg incorrigible, he should be confined." 

In the following year, Hincmar brought Gottschalk before a 
synod at Quiercy ° on the Oise, where, according to the 
archbishop, he behaved like a possessed person, and, 
instead of answering the questions which were put tohun, broke 
out into violent personal attacks. He was flogged severely, in the 
presence of King Charles, — ^a punishment for which the rule of 
St Benedict and the canons of Agde were quoted as a warrant, 
not without some straining of their application.® When exhausted 
with this cruel usage, he was required to throw his book into 
the fire, and had hardly strength enough to do so.^ Hincmar 
long after told Pope Nicolas that he had been obliged to take the 
matter into his own hands because the bishop of Soissons, Bothad, 
was himself infected with novelties;*^ and for the same reason 
Gottschalk, who was condemned by the synod to perpetual silence, 
was removed to the monastery of Hautvilliers, within the diocese 
of Rheims.' 

His zeal was rather quickened than daunted by his imprison- 
ment. He refused to subscribe a declaration sent to him by 
Hincmar, which would have had the efiect of releasing him on 
condition of his admitting that there might be divine foresight 
without predestination.' He denounced the opposite party under 
the name of Rabanists ;^ and, in one of two confessions which he 
sent forth, he speaks of them as heretics whom it was his bounden 
duty to avoid." In these confessions he lays down his doctrine of 
a twofold predestination — predestination of good angels and men, 
freely, to bliss ; of the evil to punishment, justly, on foreknowledge 
of their guilt. In the longer of the two, which (probably in imita- 
tion of St. Augustine) is composed in the form of an address to God, 
he breaks out into a prayer that an opportunity might be granted 
him of testifying the truth of his opinions, in the presence of the 

i Anual. Fuld. 848 (Pertz, i. 365). p Remigiiu de Tribus Epistolis, 25 

^ **GyroTagai.'* He would seem to (Patrol, cxxi.). 

have left Orbais without leave from the i Hincm. ii. 262. 

abbot. Kunstm. 120, 132. ' Hard. v. 20. 

« Rab. Ep. 8 (Patrol, cxii.). Hefele • Flodoard, iii. 28 (Patrol, cxxxt. 

questiuus the genuineness of these acts. 259). Comp. Schrockh, xxiv. 43. 

iv. 1.38. Comp. Schrockh, xxiv. 15-19. * " Rhabauicos. "Amnio ad Gottescb 

» Hard. v. 17. Patrol, cxvi. 95. 

o Hiucm. de Pncdest. 2. t. i. 21, 443. « Conf. prolix, ap. Uaser. 232. 
See Schrockh, xxiv. 40. 



312 GOTTSCHALK'S CONFESSIONS. Book I?. 

king, of bishops, clergy, monks, and laity, by plunging* sucoessiTdj 
into four casks of boiling water, oil, fat,"" and pitch ; and lastly 
by walking through a blazing pile. This wish has been variouslj 
traced to humility and to hypocrisy y— qualities which seem to haw 
been alike foreign to Gottschalk's character. It would accord 
better with the rest of his history, if we were to seek the motive 
in a proud and self-important but sincere fanaticism. 

The doctrines for which Gottschalk was suffering now found 
champions of name and influence^ although these varied somewhat 
among themselves, while all (like Gottschalk himself) disavowed 
the opinion of an irresistible predestination to sin. Among them 
were — Prudentius, a Spaniard by birth, bishop of Troyes;" Ser- 
vatus Lupus, abbot of Ferriferes, an old pupil of Raban, who had 
great weight in the French church, and was highly esteemed by 
Charles the Bald ;* and Ratramn, who in this controversy, as in 
that on the Eucharistic Presence, wrote at the king's request and 
for his information.^ Hincmar found it necessary to seek for 
assistance against these writers. Raban, to whom he applied, 
excused himself, chiefly on the plea of age and infirmity, and 
added that in many points he agreed with Gottschalk, although 
he thought him mistaken as to the predestination of the wicked.* 
But Hincmar found allies in Amalarius, an ecclesiastic of Metz, 
who was distinguished as a ritualist,** and in Amulo, archbishop of 
Lyons, the pupil and successor of Agobard.* 

The most remarkable work in opposition to Gottschalk*s views, 
however, was that of John Scotus, whose name has already been 
mentioned in connexion with the eucharistic question. The cir- 
cumstances of this celebrated man's life are enveloped in great 
obscurity. The name Scotus, like that of Erigena, which was 
given to him at a later time, indicates that he was a native of 

« " Oleo, pingui " (ib. 233). These »». Ratr. de Praedest. Dei, Patrol, cxxi. 

words are usually priuted without a 13. 

comma between them, as if pingui were « Raban. ad Hincm., Patrol, cxii. 

an epithet. Hut it must betaken as a Ep. 4; Kunstm. 138. Compare a later 

substantive, in order to make up the letter of Raban in Kunstm. Append, v. 

number of barrels. Gfrorer (altogether improbably and un- 

T See Schroekh, xxiv. 48. justly, as it seems to roe) supposes that 

» Prudentius (whose works are in the liaban lent himself to Louis of Ger- 

* Patrologia,' vol. cxv.) wrote part of the many's dislike of Hincmar, by first 

* Aunales Bertiniaui,' which were con- drawing him into controversy and then 
tinued by Hincmar. Hincmar, in the deserting him ! (i. 262-3.) 

opening of his part, says that his prede- * Some, however, have supposed this 

cessor, after having opposed Gottschalk, Amalarius to have been a diftercut per- 

took up his cause out of private enmity sou from the rituulist. See Hist. Litt. 

to some bishops. Pertz, i. 46."). iv. .535. 

• Patrol, cxix. ; Hist. Litt. v. 25G-7 ; * Amulo is in the Patrol, t. cxvi. 
Schroekh, xxiv. 56, seqq. 



Chap. II. aj>. 849-852. 



JOHN SCOTUS ERIGENA. 



313 



Ireland, a country which furnished many others of tlie learned 
men who enjoyed the patronage of Qiarles the Bald/ From his 
knowledge of Greek (in which language he even wrote verses, 
although with an utter disdain of prosody ^) it has been supposed 
that he had travelled in the east ; but the supposition is needless, 
as Greek was then an ordinary branch of education in his native 
country and in Britain.** That he was acquainted with Hebrew 
has often been said, but without sufficient proof.* Like the 
scholars of his time in general, John appears to have been a priest, 
or, at least, to have belonged to some order of the clergy.^ He 
had for some years found a home in the court of Charles,™ and had 
restored the reputation of the Palatine School," which had sunk 
during the distractions of the preceding reign;® while, among 
other literary labours, he had executed a translation of the works 
ascribed to Dionysius the Areopagite, which had been sent as a 
present by the Greek emperor Michael to Louis the Pious.^ 
Scotus was better versed in Greek than in Latin theology, so that 
even as to the question of the Holy Spirit's procession he inclined 
to the oriental side.*^ But, in truth, he had a far greater affinity 



' See above, p. 298. Prudentius says 
that Ireland sent John to Gaal, and 
speaks of his ** Celtic eloquence." (De 
Praedesr. 14, Patrol, cxv. 1194.) In- 
stead of Eritjctuit the word in the oldest 
MSS. is lenigerMy which Dr. Floss be- 
lieves to be formed after a supposed ana- 
logy with Orajtigena and to be com- 
pounded of hpov {sc, v4i<Tov) and gcna 
(Patrol, czxii., Prsef. xix). Although 
the false concord would not perhaps 
have shocked the middle ages, I can- 
not follow this derivation so unre- 
servedly as Dr. Christlieb, who has cer- 
tainly not strengthened his case by 
ascribing to John the formation of Qra- 
jtdjena as well as of lerugena (Joh. Scot. 
Erig. 16-7). For other views as to 
John's country, see Patrol, cxxii. 6, 95. 

8 See ib. 1237. 

»» Christlieb, 22. 

* Kilter, vii. 206-7. See an anony- 
mous Life, published at Bonn in 1835, 
and reprinted in the ' Patrologia,' cxxii. 
10 ; also Christlieb, 59. 

^ This has been denied, as in the 
Itonn Life (col. 44) ; but Staudenmaier, 
Kitter (vii. 207), and ChrisUieb C54-.5), 
maintain it. The argument on the other 
side seems chiefly to rest on the fact 
that he is not distinguished by any 
clerical title. 

■» Christlieb dates his appearance there 
between 840 and 846. p. 24. 



» See p. 143. o Guizot, ii. 371. 

p It was not, as has been commonly 
said, the embassy on the question of 
images (see p. 273^ but a later one, in 
827, that couveyea this present (Pagi, 
xiv. 134V Louis, after his reconcilia- 
tion witn the church at St. Denys, in 
836, desired Hilduin to collect materials 
for the Life of the Areopagite, who from 
that time was identifiea with the patron 
of the monastery and of France, al- 
though it appears that some persons still 
denial the identity. (See the letters 
prefixed to the Life, Patrol, cvi. ; Hinc- 
mar, ib. cxxvi. 154; Innoc. lU. a.u. 
1215, ib.ccxvii. 241 ; Baron, 824. 30; 834. 
4, seqq. ; Fleury, xlvii. 50 ; Schrockh, 
xxiii. 113-7.) Hilduin is not, however, 
to be regarded as the author of this opi- 
nion, but only as having given it estab- 
lishment and popularity, for traces of it 
are found earlier (e. g. Venant. For- 
tunat in Patrol. Ixxxviii. 580), and it 
is indeed implied in the selection of the 
abbot of St. Denys as the biographer of 
the Areopagite. (See Hist. Litt. iv. 
611-2; Giesel. II. i. 162-4.) The most 
celebrated passage of Hilduin*s work is 
in c. 32 — ** Se cadaver erexit, sanctaque 
mann caput ... coepit vectitare." Comp. 
the Lessons in the lloman Breviary for 
Oct. 9. 

4 See Floss, XX ii. ; Christl. 179. He 
seems to have extended his Greek sym- 



314 PREDESTINARIAN CONTROVERST. Book If. 

with the ancient philosophers — especially the Neoplatonists — ^than 
with the theologians of his own age. His bold and rationalisiiig 
mind plunged into questionable, or evidently heretical, specula- 
tions ; he startled his contemporaries by denying the litersJ sense 
of some parts of the Scripture narrative/ and there are passages in 
his works which indicate an almost undisguised pantheism.* Of 
his latter years nothing is known, except that Pope Nicolas, od 
the ground that his orthodoxy was suspected, requested Chdrles 
to send him to Rome, or, at least, to prevent his longer residence at 
Paris, where his teaching might do mischief.' It would seem tliat, 
notwithstanding this denunciation, Charles continued to protect 
Scotus, and that the philosopher ended his days in France ; although 
many writers have supposed that, after the death of his patron, he 
removed into England, and aided the great Alfred in his labours 
for the education of his people." 

The controversy thus far had differed from those of the earlier 
ages in appealing exclusively to authority. Augustine and the 
other fathers had exercised their original thought in the definition 
of doctrine ; but hitherto the question as to predestination did not 
relate to the truth of Christian doctrine, bnt to the manner in 
which that doctrine had been determined by St Augustine.* 
Scotus, however, took a diflPerent course from the theologians who 
had preceded him on either side.^ Like them, indeed, he professed 
to ajipeal to Scripture and the fathers — especially to the great teacher 
on whom the opposite party chiefly relied ; * but both Scripture and 

pathies so far as to prefer Constant!- Litt. v. 419 ; Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 246; 
nople to Kome. See the verses at the Murdock, n. on Mosheim, ii. 213; Hal- 
cud of his translation of Dionysius, col. lam, Suppl. Notes, 391; Lanigau, iii. 
1194; Christl. 27-8. 301 ; Hardy, n. on W. Malmesb. 188; 
' See Christl. 299-305, 346. GfriJrcr, iii. 938 ; Floss, xxiv. Biihr 

• Se« Guizot, ii. 38 .'3-7 ; Neand. vi. (485),andChristlieb(43), whilethey dis- 
163-9; Uitter, vii. 235; Ampdre, iii. tinguish between the two Johns, think 
137-146; Christl. 129-132, 199. John's it likely that Scotus, finding his posi- 
work * De Divisioue Naturse ' was con- tion uneasy, may have left France and 
demned to the flames by Houorius III., have repaired to Alfred's court. Mr. 
in 1225 (Patrol, cxzii. 439), and, on its Soames, in that anti-historical spirit 
publication by Gale (Oxford, 1681), was against which I have often felt it neces- 
put into the Koman Index of forbid- sary to protest, denounces the distinction 
den books. (^Ib. Pncf. i.) between the Johns as an attempt in the 

* lb. 1025 ; the date is uncertain. lioman interest to clear Alfred from the 
" The idea of his removal into Eng- charge of having patronised an oppo- 

land has chiefly arisen out of a confu- nent of Transubstantiation ! N. in Mos- 

siou between Scotus and another John, heim, loc. cit. 

a learned monk of Old Saxony. They « Guizot, ii. 361, 369. 

are identified by Daronius (878. 62); 7 * De Divina Prsedestinatione Liber.' 

Fuller (i. 180-2) ; Spelman and his editor (Opera, 355-440.) 

llearne (^Life of Alfred, 133-5); Ware * E. g. C. xi. 2, 4. Many of his quo- 

(Writers of Ireland, 61) ; Collier (i. tations are taken from the treatise * De 

388). Against the identity, see Pagi, libera Arbitrio,* an early work written 

xv. 337 ; llarris, n. on Ware, 1. c. ; Ilist. by Augustine against the Maniclucaus, 



Chap. IL aj>. 851. SCOTUS ON PREDESTINATION. 315 

fathers (he said) had condescended to the weakness of their readers, 
and much of their language was to be figuratively understood. Thus 
a principle was laid down by which their most positive expressions 
might be set aside, and anything which seemed to disagree with the 
philosopher's own speculations might be explained away.*^ 

Scotus wrote at the request of Hincmar, and inscribed his book 
to him and to his associate in the cause, Pardulus, bishop of 
Laon.^ He sets out with a parado of philosophical method, and 
declares that true philosophy and true theology are identical.® He 
treats Gottschalk as a heretic — a tool of the " old enemy " — and 
traces his errors to a want of liberal culture, especially to igno- 
rance of the Greek language and theology.^ It is, he says, an 
impropriety to speak of predcstmaitiQn or /w^knowledge in God, 
since to Him all time is present ; but, admitting the use of such 
words, he holds that predestination is eternal, and is as much a 
part of God Himself as any other of his attributes.® It can, 
therefore, only be one ; we can no more suppose two predestina- 
tions in God than two wisdoms or two knowledges.' He disallows 
Gottschalk s distinction of one twofold predestination ; the Divme 
predestination must be truly one, and must be to good only ; and 
such (he maintains) is the use of the term, not only in Scripture, 
but in Augustine's own writings, if rightly understood.* Yet the 
number both of those who shall be delivered by Christ and of 
those who are to be left to their wickedness is known, and may be 
said to be predestined ; God has circumscribed the wicked by his 
law, which brings out their wickedness, while it acts in an opposite 
manner on the good.^ Scotus strongly asserts the freedom of the 
will to choose not only evil (to which Lupus had limited it),* but 
good ; free-will (he says) is a gift with which our nature is endowed 
by God — a good gift, although it may be employed for evil;* 
whereas Gottschalk, by referring all virtue and vice to predestina- 
tion, denies both the freedom of the will and the assistance of grace, 
and thus falls at once into the errors of the Pelagians and of their 
extreme opponents.™ Predestination and foreknowledge in God 

at a time when his opinions on Predes- * Cc. i. 2-4; xviii. 1-4. 

tination had not been developed by the • C. ix. 1, 5-7; xv. 5 ; xvii. 2. 

Pelagian controversy. Scotus also re- ' C. ii. 6. 

lies m part on a spurious work, the « C. xviii. 8; Epilog. 2. 

* Hypoffnosticon * or * Hypomnesticon,' *» Cc. iii.-iv. ; xi. 3-7; xii. 4-5; xiii.- 

which IS printed in the Appendix to vol. liv. 

X. of Augustine (xiv. 4). * Lup. Ep. 128 (Bibl. Patr. xv. 42, c) ; 

• Cc. ix. ; xi. 6 ; Hist. Litt v. 420-1 ; De Tribus Qusestionibus, ib. 45, f. 

Ritter, vii. 212-5. J* Cc. iv. 4 ; v. ; vi. 1 ; vii. 1-2; viii. 

»» l>e Div Pra>d. Praf. 7-U. 

«^ C. I ; Ritter, vii. 211. ■ C. iv. 1-4. 



310 SCOTUS ON PREDESTINATION. Bo«IT 

aro Olio, and relate only to good ; for God can only foresee tlut 
which has a Inking, whereas sin and punishment are not." Sin is, 
an Auii^uatinc had taught, only the defect of righteousness ; punish- 
ment \» hut the defect of bliss.^ If the soul has the capacity for 
hlesiMMlness, the longing for bliss without the power of attaining it 
i8 the keenei>t possible torment ; thus the true punishment is that 
which sin inflicts on itself, secretly in the present life, and opoily 
in that which is to come, when those things which now appear to be 
the pleasures of sin will become the instruments of torment That 
which is punished is not our nature (which is God*8 work), but the 
cornii)tion of our nature ; ^ nor is God properly the author of 
punishments ; lie is only so spoken of inasmuch as Hfe is the 
cn»ator of tlio universe in which they are ; ^ the wicked will be 
tormented by their own envy ; the righteous will be crowned by 
their own love/ The fire (*' whether it be corporeal, as Augustine 
thinks, or incorporeal, according to Gregory ") is not needed for 
the j)uni8hment of the wicked — even of the evil, whose pride would 
suffice for its own chastisement; it is one of the four elements 
which form the Imlance and completeness of the universe. It is 
in itself good j the blessed will dwell in it as well as the wicked, 
and it will affect each kind according to their capacities, even as 
light produces different effects on sound and on ailing eyes." " For- 
asnnich as there is no bliss but eternal life, and life eternal is the 
knowledge of the truth, therefore there is no other bliss than the 
knowledge of the truth. ... So, if there be.no misery but eternal 
death, and eternal death is the ignorance of the truth, there is 
consequently no misery except ignorance of the truth." ^ 

If llincmar, in inviting Scotus to take part in the controversy, 
aimed at counteracting the influence of Lupus and Ratramn over 
Charles the Bald, he was in so far successful ; for from that time 
the king was steadily on his side." But in other respects he found 
the philosopher a very dangerous and embarrassing ally, so that 
he even felt himself obliged to disavow him.* 

The excitement raised by the novelties of Scotus was very great 
Wenilo, archbishop of Sens, whom Hincmar had studiously, and 
hitherto suca^ssfully, endeavoured to conciliate,^ now sent a 

" Cc. X 3 ; xi.-xii. ; xv. 3-5. hoc dicimus quasi nuHa poena sit octema, 

» C. X. 4-5 (Aug. Dc Civ. Dei, xii. 7). duni unusquisque sua conscientia sive 

p C. xvi. •» C. xvii. 1. beatificabitur sive damnabitur in scter- 

»" C. xviii. fin. num, sed solummodo agimus quod nulla 

• C. xvii. 8-9 ; xix. natura in ullo punietur." 

« C. xvii. 9. Compare a passage in "^ Guizot, ii. 376 ; Gfrorer, i. 321. 

the Commentary on Dion, de Hierar- « Hincm. de Pncd. c, 31, p. 232. 

chia Coelesti, col. 205. ** Non autem y Gfrorer, i. 217, 232. 



Chap. II. aj). 851 3. PREDESTINARIAN CONTROVERSY. 317 

number of propositions, extracted from the book, to Prudentius, 
with a request that he would examine, and, if necessary, refute 
them.* The bishop of Troyes thereupon wrote against Scotus 
with great asperity, and he was followed by Florus, a deacon and 
master of the cathedral school at Lyons.* These writers charge 
Scotus with Pelagianism, to which Prudentius adds accusations of 
Origenism and CoUyridianism.*' They complain of him for 
imputing imaginary errors to his opponents ; they censure him 
for substituting philosophy for theology, and sophistical subtleties 
for arguments from Scripture and ancient authorities. Hincmar 
and Pardulus entreated Amnio of Lyons again to assist them ; but 
he died in 852, and his successor, Remigius, answered the appli- 
ca.tion by writing, in the name of his church, a book on the 
opposite side — taking up the case of Gottschalk more expressly 
than those who had preceded him, censuring the cruelty with 
which he had been treated,^ and defending the impugned opinions, 
with the exception of that which limited the exercise of free will 
since the Fall to the choice of evil.** 

Finding that the literary contest was turning against him, Hinc- 
mar resolved to fortify himself with the authority of a council, and 
at Quiercy, in 853, four decrees on the subject of the controversy 
were passed.® It is laid down that man fell by the abuse of his 
free will ; that God, by his foreknowledge, chose some whom by 
his grace He predestinated to life, and life to them : but as for 
those whom He, by righteous judgment, left in their lost estate. 
He did not predestine them to perish, but predestined punishment 
to their sin. " And hereby," it is said, '* we speak of only one 
predestination of God, which relates either to the gift of grace or 
to the retribution of justice."^ It is defined that our free will was 
lost by the Fall, but was recovered through Christ ; that we have a 
free will to good, prevented and aided by grace, as well as a free 
will to evil, deserted by grace ;'^ that God would have all men to 
be saved, and that Christ suffered for all ; that the ruin of those 
who perish is to be ascribed to their own desert.** 

Prudentius, who was present when these decrees were passed, 
subscribed them, but afterwards put forth four propositions against 

* Usser. 115-125. beld this. lb. 21. 

• Hist. Litt. V. 214. « Sirmond, followed by Archbp. 
^ Prud. de Prajdest. Pr»f. (Patrol. Ussher (c. vi.) and others, wrongly re- 

cxv. 1011); Florus adv. Scotum, 4, 8 fers these to the coancil of the same 

(ib. cxix. 132, 152). See Pagi, xiv. 400. place in 849. Giesel. II. i. 134. 

« De Tribus Epistolis, 25 (Patrol. ' Cone. Carblac. II. a.d. 853 ; c. 1. 
cxxi.). ' C. 2. 

•• He questioned whether Gottschalk * Cc. 3-4. 



318 COUNCILS. BmIt 

them ; * and Remigiua, who, as a subject of Tx>thair, felt himself 
independent of the hifluence of Charles the Bald, wrote, m tbe 
name of his (.liurch, a bpok against the articles of Quiercy-' W 
Scotus the archbishop says that he is ignorant of the Teiy wads 
of Scri])turc, and that, instead of being consulted on points of 
faith, he ought either to be pitied as a man out of his right mind, 
or to be anathematised as a heretic.™ Remigius, however, main- 
tains the necxjssity of free will, in order to responsibility.'' Against 
the authority of the council of Quiercy was set one which met under 
the presidency of Remigius in 855 at Valence, in Lotharingia.** 
This assembly cx)ndemned nineteen propositions extracted from 
Scotus, which, by a phrase borrowed from St Jerome's attack m 
Ccclestius, it characterised as " porridge of the Scots.*' ^ It laid 
down moderate definitions as to free will and the extent of tbe 
benefits of the Redeemer's death.** But it censured the four 
articles of Quiercy as useless, or even noxious and erroneous ; and 
it forbade, in the name of the Holy Spirit, any teaching contrary to 
its own/ The decrees of Valence were confirmed by a council held 
near Langres in 859," although, at the instance of Remigius, the 
ofl'ensive expressions against the articles of Quiercy were omitted/ 
A gn»ater council, to which that of Langres was preliminary, met 
a fortnight later at Savonnieres, a suburb of Toul. Here again 
the subject was entertained ; Remigius acted in a spirit of con- 
ciliation, and the decision was adjourned to a future synod." 

In the mean time Gottschalk was not inactive in his seclusion. 
Hincinar had altered an ancient hymn of unknown authorship,* in 
which the ai)plication of the word trine to the Godhead seemed 
to suggest a threefold difference in the nature of the Divine 
IVrHons/ But Ratramn defended the term, and Gottschalk — eager, 
it would seem, to provoke his powerfid enemy in all ways — put forth 

' Prud. Kp. ad Guunilon. (Patrol. 184. i Cc. 2-4, 

cxv. l.'J()5-8) ; Gfrorer, i. 241-4 ; Ilefcle, ' Hiucmar complains of this (i. 65), 

iv. 180-1. and in cc. 16, seqq., ofhis treatiste on 

^ * I)e tenenda Scripturro veritate.' Predestination, defends the articles of 

The awthorship has been questioned, but Quiercy by quotations from the fathers, 

without reason. See Schri»ckh, xxiv. • Hard. v. 498. 

1)8.9, who. however, is wrong in apply- * Giesel. IT. i. 137. 

ing to Ilincmar some expressions (c. 2) " Cone. TuU. I. apud Saponarias, a.d. 

which clearly relate to Gottschalk. 859, c. 10 of Introduction; also pt. vi. 

" Eccl. Lugd. ap. Usser. 185. cc. 1-6 ; Hincm. i. 2. 

« C. 10; Schrockh, xxiv. 100-2. « Opera, i. 413, 438. 

" Hard. v. 87, seqq. r "Te, trinaDeitasunaque, poscimus.** 

p C. 6. S<»e vol. i. p. 412. The ar- Hincmar argued that Dcitfts meant the 

tides of Valence are supposed to have nniwr of God, and altered tn'na into 

been drawn up by Ebl)o, bishop of Gre- s'nnnm, — » De una et non trina Deitate/ 

noble, nepbewofthe deprived archbishop Opera, i. 413-556 ; Giesel. II. i. 137. 
of liheims. Ussher, 185; Uefele, iv. 



CnAP.II. A.D. 863-859. "TRINA DEITAS." 319 

in its behalf a tract in which he charged Hincmar with Sabel- 
lianism/ The archbishop replied in a work of which the substance 
was shown to Gottschalk, in the hope of converting him, although 
it was not completed until after his death.* He meets the charge 
of Sabellianism with one of Arianism ; ^ he exhorts monks to keep 
clear of novelties in a style which seems to intimate that his 
opponent had many adherents among that class ; and he gives 
very significant hints of the bodily and spiritual punishments to 
which an imitation of Gottschalk would render them liable.* 
Hincmar was not further molested about this affair ; but the word 
to which he had objected, although his objection was supported by 
the authority of Raban,^ kept its place in the Gallican service. 

In 859, a monk of Hautvilliers named Guntbert, whom Gott- 
schalk had gained, privately left the monastery, and carried an 
appeal from the prisoner to Rome.** It appeared as if the new 
pope, Nicolas, were disposed to take up the matter.' Hincmar 
wrote to him, professing his willingness to act as he should direct — 
to release Gottschalk, to transfer him to other custody, or even to 
send him to Rome (although he spoke of the two synods which 
had condemned the prisoner as a bar to this course) ; but he 
refiised to appear with him before the pope's legates at Metz in 
863, on an occasion which will be related hereafter.* From a 
letter written by Hincnar to Egilo, archbishop of Sens, who was 
about to set out for Rome, we learn some details as to Gottschalk's 
condition. It is said that in respect of food, drink, and fuel, he 
was as well treated as any of the monks among whom he lived ; 
that clothes were supplied, if he would receive them ; but that, 
ever since he was placed at Hautvilliers, he had refused to wash 
not only his body, but even his face and hands.^ From another 
writing of Hincmar, it appears that the unfortunate man had 
become subject to strange delusions, and had visions in which the 
imagery of the Apocalypse was applied to foreshow the ruin of his 
chief enemy. His long confinement and sufferings, acting on his 

" Schedala Gotteschalci, ap. Hincm. a *' Catholic " decision on the points in 

i. 415-7. question — i.e. a decision agreeable to 

• Hincm. i. 552. the writer's own views. But Hincmar, 
*» P. 418. referring to this, says that he had never 

• Pp. 436-444. heard or read the statement elsewhere; 
<* Kab. ap. Kunstm. Append, vi. and he commissions Egilo, archbishop 
« Hincmar diescribes Guntbert as hav« of Sens, when going to Rome, to beg 

ing often before incurred punishment for that the pope would discountenance 

faults, and charges him with having such misrepresentations, (ii. 292.) See 

stolen horses, books, and vestments Hefele, iv. 199. 

when he left the Abbey, ii. 290. f See below, p. 324 ; Hincm. ii. 264 ; 

' Prudentius ^ys, in Annal. Bertin. Usser. 202; Schrockh, xxiv. 117. 

A.D. 859 (Pertz, i. 464), that Nicolas gave ^ Hincm. IL 292. 



320 DEATH OF GOTTSCHALK. Bom IT. 

vain, obstinate, and enthusiastic temper, had partially oyertbrown 
his reason.* 

The synodal discussion of the predostinarian controversy,, to 
which the council of Savonnieres had looked forward, was never 
held. But a council at Toucy, near Toul, in October 860, which 
was attended by Charles the Bald, Lothair II., and Charles of Ph>- 
veiice, by twelve metropolitans, and by bishops from fburteeo 
provinces, adopted a letter drawn up by Hincmar, which is in part 
a general statement of doctrine, and in part is directed against 
the invasion of ecclesiastical property. In this letter the freedom 
of man's will, the will of God that all men should be saved, the 
necessity of grace in order to salvation, tlie Divine mercy in 
choosing and calling men from out of the " mass of perdition,** 
and the death of Christ " for all who were debtors unto death," 
are distinctly stated, but in such a manner as rather to conciliate 
than to repel those who in some respects had been the archbishop's 
opponents,^ Hincmar, at the desire of Charles the Bald," employed 
himself at intervals, from 859 to 863, in composing a work of 
great length on predestination and the kindred subjects,** chiefly 
in defence of the articles of Quiercy, which he had before main- 
tained in a book of which the preface only is extant** He labours to 
bring the theology of Augustine, Fulgentius, and others into accord- 
ance with his own opinions, which are rather those of the time 
before the Pelagian controversy arose. He quotes very profusely ; 
but most of the passages which he relies on as St. Augustine's are 
from a work falsely ascribed to that father, which had already been 
employed by Scotus, and declared by Remigius to be spurious.'* 
He admits the expression of one twofold predestination,** but differs 
from Gottschalk in saying that, while the righteous are predestined 
to life, and it to them, punishment is predestined to the reprobate, 
but they are not predestined to it ; that God did not predestinate 
them, but forsook them.' With this work the controversy ceased. 

Gottschalk remained in captivity twenty years. In 869, the 
monks of Hautvilliers perceived that his end was approaching, 
and sent Hincmar notice of the fact, with an inquiry whether 
they should allow him to receive the last sacraments. It was 
replied that they might do so, if he would sign a confession 

» De una et non trina Deit. (Opera, i. <» a.d. 857 ; Fleuryi xlix. 33. 

550) ; Giesel. II. i. 137. p See above, p. 314, n. ■ ; Rcmig. de 

^ Hincm. Ep. 21 (Patrol, cxxvi.). See III. Epistolis, 35 ; de tenenda Script. 

Ilefele, iv. 206-9. Verit. 9. 

" Ep. ad liegem, Opera, i. 1. q C. 19, p. 110. 

" It fills 410 folio pages. ' Epilog. 3, p. 373. 



Chap. n. a.d. 855-T. DEATH OF LOTHAIR I. 321 

embodying the archbishop's views as to Predestination and the 
Trinity.* But Gottschalk was still unbending, and refused with 
much vehemence of behaviour and language. In consequence of 
this refusal, he died without the sacraments and under the ban of 
the church ; he was buried in unhallowed earth, and was excluded 
from prayers for the repose of his soul.^ 

On the question of Gottschalk's orthodoxy or heterodoxy, very 
opposite opinions have been pronounced — a result rather of the 
opposite positions of those who have judged him than of any 
differences between them as to the facts of the case.^ As to these 
facts, however, there is room for an important question — whether 
his two confessions embody the whole of his doctrine on the subject 
of predestination, or whether he also held that opinion of an irre- 
sistible doom to sin, as well as to punishment^ which his adversaries 
usually imputed to him. A moral judgment of the case is easier. 
Gottschalk's sincerity and resolute boldness were marred by his 
thoroughly sectarian spirit ; but the harshness with which he was 
treated has left on the memory of Hincmar a stain which is not 
to be effaced by any allowances for the character of the age, since 
even among his own contemporaries it drew forth warm and 
indignant remonstrances. 

From controversies of doctrine we proceed to some remarkable 
cases in which questions of other kinds brought the popes into 
correspondence with the Frankish church. 

I. In 855 the emperor Lothair resigned his crown, and entered 
the monastei^y of Priim, where he died six days after his arrival.* 
While his eldest son, Louis II., succeeded him in the imperial 
title and in the kingdom of Italy, the small kingdom of Aries or 
Provence fell to his youngest son, Charles, and the other territory 
north of the Alps, to which the name of Lotharingia was now 
limited, became the portion of his second son, Lothair II. 

Lothair II. in 856 married Theutberga, daughter of the duke or 
viceroy of Burgundy, and sister of Humbert or Hucbert, abbot of St 
Maurice. He separated from his wife in the following year, but 

■ This answer was in accordance with tinian Romanists (as the anthors of the 

Rabaa's opinion. See Kunstmann, Ap- Hist. Litt iv. 262), with Protestant 

peod. p. 218. writers in general, are &Toarable to his 

*■ Hincm. De una et non trin. Deit. (i. orthodoxy, and suppose that his opinions 

r)r)2-5); ad monach. Altayill. (ii. 314); were misanderstooa. Giesel. II. i. 138. 
Flodoard, iii. 28 (Patrol, cxxxv. 259). « Annal. Fold. (Perti, i. 369); Laden, 

" The Jesuits are strong in condemna- ▼!. 44. 
tion of him ; the Jansenists and Aogoa- 



322 MARRUQES OF LOTHAIR If. Boos IT. 

Humbert, who was more a soldier than a monk, compelled him bj 
a threat of war to take her bacL Id 859 Tlieutbeiga was sum- 
moned before a secular tribunal, on a chai^ of worse than m- 
cestuous connexion with her brother before her marriage ; and the 
abbot's profession was not enough to disprove this chai^ge, as the 
laxity of his morals was notorious/ 

It now appeared that, in desiring to get rid of his wife, Lothair 
was influenced by love for a lady named Waldrada, with whom 
he had formerly been intimate." Two archbishops — Gunflier, of 
Cologne, archchaplain of the court, and Theutgtuid, of Trevesy a 
man who is described as too simple and too ignorant to understand 
the case* — had been gained to the king's side,^ and insisted that 
Theutberga should purge herself by the ordeal of boiling water; 
but, when she had successfully undergone this trial by proxy, 
Lothair declared it to be worthless. In the following* year the 
subject came before two synods at Aix-la-Chapelle,* in which 
Wenilo, archbishop of Sens,* and another Neustrian prelate were 
associated with the I^tharingian bishops. Theutberga — ^no doubt 
influenced by ill usage, although she professed that she 
acted without compulsion — acknowledged the truth of 
the charges against her, while she declared that she had not con- 
sented to the sin ; whereupon the bishops gave judgment for a 
divorce, and, in compliance with the unhappy queen's own petition, 
sentenced her to lifelong penance in a nunnery.* A third synod, 
held at Aix in April 862, after hearing Lothair's representation of 
his case — that he had been contracted to Waldrada, that his father 
had compelled him to marry Theutberga, and that his youth and 
passions rendered a single life insupportable to him — gave its 
sanction to his marrying again ;' and, on the strength of this per- 
mission, his nuptials with Waldrada were celebrated, and were 
followed by her coronation.^ Gunther's services were rewarded 
by the nomination of his brother Hilduin to the see of Cambray ; 

T Prudent. Annal. 860 (Pertz, i. 454) ; ferent person from Waldrada. 

Hincm. i. 575. Hincmar notes ander ^ Hincm. ap. Pertz, i. 465. 

the year 864 that "Hugbertus, clericus * It has been supposed, more or less 

conjugatus/' was killed by Louis II.'s confidently, that from the conduct of 

soldiers. this prelate came the name Ganelon (the 

« Regino, a.d. 864 (Pertz, i. 571). same with Wenilo or Gu€n\h\ giyen to 

* Ibid. the traitor of Carol ingian romance. See 

*» I agree with Dean Milman (ii. 364) Baron. 859. 30 ; Ducauge, s. v. Gimehn; 

in doubting the story that they were British Ma^zine, xxiii. 260 ; Palgraye, 

nearly related to Waldrada. Regino Norm, and Eng. i. 166. 

fin Peru, i. 571-2) says that Gunther • Pertz, lieges, i. 467 ; Hincmar, i. 

was won to take part against Theutberga 569, 574-7 ; Pagi, riv. 564. 

by a promise that his niece should be ' Hard. ▼. 539, seqq. 

queen ; but this niece was clearly a dif- ' Hincm. Annal. 862 (Pertz, i. 453). 



CHAP. n. AD. 857-863. WITH THEUTBERGA AND WALDRADA. 323 

but Ilincmar refused to consecrate the new bishop, and pope Nicolas 
eventually declared the appointment to be null and void.** 

The partisans of Lothair had represented Hincmar as favourable 
to the divorce ; but in reality he had steadfastly resisted all their 
solicitations.* A body of clergy and laity now proposed to him a 
number of questions on the subject,^ and in answer he gave his 
judgment very fully." There were, he said, only two valid grounds 
for the dissolution of a marriage— where either both parties desire 
to embrace a monastic life, or one of them can be proved guilty of 
adultery ; but in the second case, the innocent party may not enter 
into another mairiage during the lifetime of the culprit." Among 
other matters, he discusses the efficacy of the ordeal, which some 
of Theutberga's enemies had ridiculcfd as worthless, while others 
explained the fact that her proxy had escaped unhurt,® bj supposing 
cither that she had made a secret confession, or that, in declaring 
herself clear of any guilt with her brother, she had mentally 
intended another brother instead of the abbot of St Maurice.^ 
Hincmar defends the system of such trials, and says that the 
artifice imputed to her, far from aiding her to escape, would have 
increased her guilt, and so would have ensured her ruin.^ With 
respect to a popular opinion that Lothair was bewitched by 
Waldrada, the archbishop avows his belief in the power of charms 
to produce the extremes of love or hatred between man and wife, 
and otherwise to interfere with their relations to each other ;' and 
he gives instances of magical practices as having occurred within 
his own knowledge. He strongly denies the doctrine which some 
had propounded, that Lothair, as a king, was exempt from all 
human judgment ;" for, he said, the ecclesiastical power is higher 
than the secular, and when a king fails to rule himself and his 
dominions according to the law of God, he forfeits his immunity 
from earthly law.* He says that the question of the marriage, as 
it is one of universal concern, cannot be settled within Lothair's 
dominions ; and, as it was objected that no one but the pope was 

•» Nic. Epp. 63-8 ; Gfrorer, i. 353. been carried still further by a synod 

* Hincm. i. 568, 583 ; Gfrorer, i. 350. held at Constantinople in the reign of 

^ Hincm. i. 565, 683. Nicephonu, vhich, with reference to 

" ' De Divortio Lotharii et Tet- the diYorce and second marriage of Con- 

bergsc.' Opera, i. 561-705. stantine VI., declared that the Emperor 

« Pp. 580, 588, G70, 681. was above law, and was not bound by 

" " Incoctus." P P. 499. rules which bound other men. Theod. 

4 P. 613. There is also a letter on Stud. £p. i. 33 (p. 239 D); cf. £p. i. 

the Ordeal, ii. 676. 36. 

' Pp. 653, seqq. * ** Rex a regendo dicitur," &c. (674- 

■ This was a pretension derived from * 6), a fkvonrite sentence in councils, &c., 

Justinian. (GfWirer, i. 396.) It had of the time. 

Y 2 



324 COUNCIL OF METZ. BcmIV. 

of higher authority than those who had already g'lTen judgment od 
it, ho proposes a general synod, to be assembled from all the 
Frankisl) kingdoms, as the fittest tribunal for deciding it.^ 

l^heutlHTga had escaped from the place of her confinement, and 
had found a refuge with Charles the Bald, who, in espousing her 
cause, would seem to have been guided less by any regard for its 
justice than by the ho|X} of turning his nephew's misconduct to his 
own advantage.^ She now appealed to the pope, whose interventkin 
was also solicited by others, and at last by Lothair himself in his 
annoyance at the opiiosition of Hincmar and the Neustrian bishops.' 
In answer to these applications, Nicolas declared that, even if the 
8t()ri(>s against Theutberga were true, her immoralities would not 
warrant the second marriage of her husband ; he ordered that a 
syn(Kl should be assembled, not only from such parts of the 
Frankish dominions as I^thair might hope to influence, but from 
all ; and he sent two legates to assist at it,' with a charge to excom- 
municate the king, if he should refuse to appear or to obey them. 

Tlio synod wns held at Metz, in S(}3, but no bishops except 
those of I-iotharingia attended." The legates had been bribed by 
I^thair ; one of them, Rodoald, bishop of Portus, had already dis- 
played his corruptness in negotiations with the Byzantine church.*^ 
Without any citation of Theutberga, or any fresh investigation of 
the case, the acts of the synod of Aix.were confirmed. Nicolas 
represents the tone of the bishops as very violent against himself, 
and says that when one bishop, in signing the acts, had made a 
reservation of the papal judgment, Gunther and Theutgaud erased 
all but his name.° These two prelates set ofl^ to report the decision 
to the pope — believing probably, from what they had seen of Rodoald, 
that at Rome money would efibct all that they or their sovereign 
might desire.^ But in this they found themselves greatly mistaken. 
Nicolas, in a synod which appears to have been held in the ordinary 
course,*' annulled the decision of Metz, classing the council with 
the notorious Latrocinium of Ephesus,' and ordering that, on 
account of the fa^vour which it had shown to adulterers, it should 

" Pp. 683-7. him with the intention of turning his 

« Gfrorer, i. 352-3. notorious Tenality to account. Hefele 

y Planck, iii. 41. says with greater probability that the 

■ Nic. Kpp. 17, 18, 19, 22, 23. In- pope was not fully informed of Kodoald's 

Btructions to the legates, Hard. v. 31 9-20. misconduct until later, iy. 251 . 

• Gfrurer thinks that Louis of Ger- ^ Hard. t. 292. 

many persuaded Charles the Bald and ^ Hincm. Annal. 863 (Pertz, i. 460) ; 

Charles of Provence not to send their Planck, iii. 51-2; Gfrorer, i. 361-3. 

bihhops. i. 360. « Cone. Rom. a.d. 863 ; Planck, iii. 

b See the next chapter. Gfrorer (i. 55. 

363) thinks that Nicolas made use of ' See vol. i. pp. 463-5. 



Chap. II. ad. 8e2-4. . LOUIS IL AT ROME. 325 

not be called a synod but a brothel.' He deposed Gunther and 
Theutgaud, and declared that, if they should attempt to perfonn 
any episcopal act, they must not hope for restoration.^ He 
threatened the other Lotharingian bishops with a like sentence in 
case of their making any resistance ;* and he announced his judg- 
ment to the Frankish sovereigns and archbishops in letters which 
strongly denounced the conduct of King Lothair — if (it was said) 
he may be properly styled a king who gives himself up to the 
government of his passions.^ Rodoald was about to be brought to 
trial for his corruption, when he escaped from Rome by night,™ It 
was evident from the manner of the pope's proceedings that the 
indignation which he sincerely felt on account of Theutberga's 
wrongs was not the only motive which animated him ; that he was 
bent on taking advantage of the case to establish his power over 
kings and foreign churches.'^ 

Gunther and Theutgaud, in extreme surprise and anger, repaired 
to the emperor Louis II., who was then at Beneventum, and repre- 
sented to him that the treatment which they had received was an 
insult not only to their master, but to the whole Frankish church, 
and to all princes — especially to himself, under whose safe-conduct 
they had come to Rome.** On this Louis immediately advanced 
against Rome, and, without attempting any previous nego- 
tiation with the pope, entered the city. Nicolas set on 
foot solemn prayers, with fasting, for the change of the emperor's 
heart. Penitents moved about the streets in solemn procession, and 
offered up their supplications in the churches ; but as one of these 
penitential trains was about to ascend the steps of St Peter's, it 
was violently assaulted by some of the imperial soldiers. Crosses 
and banners were broken in the fray ; one large cross of especial 
sanctity, which was believed to be the gift of the empress Heleni^ 
to St. Peter's see, and to contain a piece of the wood on which the 
Redeemer suffered, was thrown down and trodden in the mire, 
from which the fragments were picked up by some English pilgrims. 
Nicolas, in fear lest he should be seized, left the Lateran palace, 
crossed the river in a boat, and took refuge in St Peter s, where 
for two days and nights he remained without food.? But in the 
mean while signs which seemed to declare the wrath of heaven 

f " Prostibulum." Hard. ▼. 573, c. ■ Hiucm. Annal. ap. Pertz, i. 460. 

I ; Pertz, i. 375-6; Anastag. 257-8. •» Planck, in. 57-60. 

k C. 2. ' C. 3. » Hincm. a.d. 864, ap. Pertz, i. 462, 

k Kp. ad Archiep. Germ. (Pertz, i. Regino, a.d. 865, ib. 573. 

375) ; Hincm. Annal. fib. 460) ; Nic. £p. ' Hincm. ap. Pertz, i. 463. See Marat. 

ad Carol, et Ludov. (Hard. ▼. 244). Annali, V. i. 84-6. 



320 GUNTHER AND THEUTOAUO. Book If. 

bej^an to appear. The soldier who had broken the predcNis cm 
diocL I^uis himself was seized with a ferer, and in alarm sent 
his empress to mediate with the pope. A reoonctliation was thoB 
eflfected, and, after having committed many acts of violence, the 
troops withdrew from Romc."^ The emperor ordered Gunther and 
Theiit^ud to leave his camp and to return home, and it would i 
that Nicolas had stipulated for freedom of action in his 
as to the case of Lothair.' 

(xunther liad drawn up, in his own name and in that of his 
brother arctibishop, a protest against their deposition, conceived in 
tenns which Hincmar de8cri))es as diabolical and altogether unpre* 
Cixlented.' In this document Nicolas is charged with madness 
and tyrannic fury, with extravagant pride and assumption, with 
fraud and cunning, with outrageous violation of all the forms of 
justice and ecclesiastical laws ; the archbishops declare that they 
spurn and defy his accursed sentence — that they are resolved not 
to admit him into their communion, ^^ being content witli the com- 
nuuiion and brotherly society of the whole church ; " and they 
cu>ncUide by asserting that Waldrada was not a concubine but a 
wife, inasmuch as she had been contracted to Lothair before his 
union with Thcutberga.*^ With this paper Ghmther now sent his 
brother Ililduin to the pope, charging him, if it were refused, to 
lay it on the high altar of St Peter's. Hilduin executed the com- 
mission, forcing his way into St. Peter's with a party of Gunther's 
adlicrents, wlio beat the guardians of the cliurch and killed one of 
tlieni who ri^nistcd." Gunther also circulated the protest among 
tlie (iennan bishops, and sent a copy of it to Photius, of Constan- 
tinople, with whom Nicolas was by this time seriously embroiled.* 
Tht^ other Lotharingian bishops, however, were terrified by the 
po|K)*H throats, or were gained by his promises, and made sub- 
minrtion to him in very abject terms.-^ 

(lunther had hurrieil from Rome to Cologne ; in defiance of the 
j)oiK»'8 sonteiiO(» lie had iHJrformed episcopal functions ; and he had 
made a comixict with his canons, by which, at a great sacrifice both 
of power and of revenue, he drew them into concurrence in his 
pro(»^Hling8.* The pusillanimous Lothair — partly influenced by 
the demonstrations of his uncles against him — now abandoned 

1 llincm. np. IVrtx, 403-4. without the prcfiice. 

' Planck, ill. 70. * Hincm. ap. Pertz. i. 464. 

• lliiicmar's oxprcssionB, however, ■ Plauck, iii. 74-5. 

arc notliing to those of Itoronius, 803. r See the leiters of Adventius of 

31. Metz, and others relating to him, iii 

« The protest in ffivcn by irmcm. An- Hard. v. 321-5. 

nal. 8(i4 ; al80 in tiie Ann. Fuldens. but ■ Hincm. ap. Pertx, i. 4G5. 



Chap. II. a.d. 864-6. MISSION OF ARSENIUS. 327 

the cause of the deposed metropolitans. He gave up Gunther 
altogether, and expressed horror at his acts, while he entreated 
that Theutgaud, in consideration of his simple character, and of his 
obedience to the pope's judgment, might be more^ leniently dealt 
with. As for himself, he professed himself willing to go to Rome, 
and to obey the pope " like one of the meanest of men."* Gunther, 
indignant at finding himself thus sacrificed, declared an intention 
of exposing all the king's proceedings, and set out for Rome, 
carrying with him as much of the treasures of his see as he could 
lay hands on, in the hope that by such means he might be able to 
propitiate the pope. But he was again disappointed ; Nicolas in a 
synod renewed the condemnation which had been passed both on 
him and on Theutgaud.^ In the mean time Lothair bestowed the 
archbishoprick of Cologne on Hugh abbot of St. Bertin's, whom 
Hincmar describes as a subdeacon, but of habits which would have 
been discreditable to a layman. The preferment was probably a 
reward for the exertion of the abbot's influence with Charles the 
Bald, to whom he was maternally related.® 

The meanness of Lothair's behaviour served only to increase the 
contempt and disgust with which Nicolas had before 
regarded him. The pope wrote to the other Frankish 
princes, desiring them not to interfere in the matter, as it was for his 
own judgment alone ; and it is remarked by Hincmar that in these 
letters he made no use of such terms of courtesy as had been usual 
in the letters of Roman bishops to sovereigns.** He sent Arsenius, 
bis?hop of Orba, as his legate, with orders to visit Louis of Germany 
and Charles ; but it was declared that, unless Lothair would give 
up Waldrada, the legate must hold no communication with him, 
nor would the king be admitted to an audience if he should 
repair to Rome. Arsenius received Theutberga from the hands of 
Charles, and delivered her to Lothair, who, in terror at the pope's 
threats of excommunication, swore on the Gospels and Aug. 13, 
a fragment of the true cross, that he would always treat ®^^- 
her with the honour due to a queen, imprecating on himself the 
most fearful judgments, both in this world and in the next, if he 
should fail. Twelve of his nobles joined in the oath, and the 
reunion of the royal pair was sealed by a new coronation.^ 
Waldrada was committed to the care of the legate ; but in the 

• Ep. ad Nicol. ap. Hard. v. 336. « Hincm. 1. c; Gfrorer, i. 369, 370. 

Letters of Nicolas as to the two arch- •* Ap. Pertz, i. 468. See Planck, iii. 

bishops, No6. 56, 58, in Hard. 84 ; Hefele, iv. -^93. 

•» Hincm. ap. Peru, i. 465 ; Gfirorer, • Hincm. a.d. 805, pp. 468-9. 
i. 397. 



328 DEATH OF NICOLAS. Book FT. 

course of his return to Rome both she and another royal lady of 
light character, Ingeltrude/ wife of count Boso, contrired to make 
their escape from him, and Waldrada rejoined Lothair, by whom 
her escape had been planned.^ The king had cast aside all regard 
for his oath almost immediately after having sworn it. His sub- 
missiveness towards the pope was forgotten. He ejected Hugh 
from Cologne, confirmed GuntheWs arrangement with the canons, 
and put Hilduin into the see as nominal archbishop, while both the 
power and the revenues were really in the hands of Guntho*.^ 

Theutberga now again escaped from her husband, and, worn 
out by the miseries to which she had been subjected, petitioned the 
pope for a dissolution of the marriage. She went so far as even 
to own Waldrada to be the rightful wife of Lothair, and she 
requested leave to repcur to Rome and tell all her story. But 
Nicolas was firm in asserting the rights which the unhappy queen 
had been wrought on to abandon. He solemnly excommunicated 
Waldrada, and charged the Frankish bishops to hold Lothair 
separate from the church until he should repent of his misdeeds. 
He told Theutberga that he could not comply with a request 
which was evidently made under constraint; that, if Lothair's 
marriage were to be dissolved, the precedent would enable any 
man to get rid of his wife by ill usage ; that she must consider 
herself as under the protection of the Apostolic see ; that, instead 
of travelling to Rome, she should persuade Lothair to send Wal- 
drada thither for trial : and in all his letters he insisted on celibacy 
on Lothair's part as a necessary condition of any separation.* 
Lothair again attempted to pacify the pope by flattery ; he assured 
him that he had not cohabited with Waldrada, or even seen her, 
since her return from Italy;* but Nicolas was unmoved, and 
appeared to be on the point of pronouncing a sentence of excom- 
munication against the king, when he was arrested by death in 
May, 867."* 

The increase of the papal power under this pontiflT was immense. 
He had gained such a control over princes as was before unknown. 
He had taken the unexampled steps of deposing foreign metropo- 
litans, and of annulling the decisions of a Frankish national council 
by the vote of a Roman synod. He had neglected all the old 
canonical formalities which stood in the way of his exercising an 

' See Baron. 802. 33 ; 865. 63. i. 574-5 ; Nic. Epp. 48-51. 

f Auual. Fuld. 867 (Pertz, t. i.) ; Re- ^ Patrol, cxxi. 374. 

gino, ib. p. 574; Hard. y. 270, 274,279. » Planck, iii. 90-2; Gfrorer, i. 425. 

^ Hincm. Annal. 866, p. 471. See Ilefele, iv. 294-5. 
' Anual. Fuld. 867 ; Regino, ap. Pertz, 



Gbap.U. AJ>.mi. ADRIAN II. 329 

immediate jurisdiction throughout the western church. And in all 
this he had been supported by the public feeling of indignation 
against Lothair and his subservient clergy, which caused men to 
overlook the novelty and the usurping character of the pope's 
measures. The other Frank princes had encouraged him in his 
proceedings against Lothair. The great prelates of Lotharingia, 
strong in position and in family interest, had rendered themselves 
powerless before the bishop of Rome by espousing a discreditable 
and unpopular cause." The pope appeared not as an invader of 
the rights, of sovereigns and of churches, but as the champion of 
justice and innocence against the oppressors of the earth. 

Adrian II., the successor of Nicolas, had abeady twice declined 
the papacy, and was seventy-five years of age at the time of his 
electioa The partisans of the late pope apprehended a change 
of policy, by which the recent acquisitions might be lost.® But in 
this they were mistaken. Adrian appears to have been urged on 
by a feeling that he was expected to show want of energy, and by 
a wish to falsify the expectation. He soon cast aside the air of 
humility and of deference towards the emperor which he had at 
first displayed. The losses which the papacy suffered under him 
arose, not from a reversal of his predecessor's policy, but from the 
attempt to carry it on in an exaggerated form, without the skill of 
Nicolas, without understanding the change of circumstances, or 
the manner of adapting his measures to it.*^ 

The be^nning of Adrian's pontificate was marked by a tragedy 
^ among his own nearest connexions. The pope, himself the son of 
a bishop,^ had been married — a circumstance which contributed to 
the alarm felt at his election, as Nicplas, like other chief agents in 
the exaltation of the papacy, had been strenuous for the celibacy 
of the clergy.' Adrian's wife and a daughter, the offspring of 
their marriage, were still alive ; but, within a few days after his 
election, the daughter, who had been betrothed to a nobleman, 
was carried off by Eleutherius, a son of Arsenius of Orba, who, on 
being pursued, killed both her and her mother, but was himself 
taken prisoner. Arsenius, with whose intrigues this affair was 
connected, did not long survive. It is said that on his deathbed 

» Planck, iii. 94; Gfrorer, i. 365; •« Vita, 261. 

Milman, ii. 293. ' This appears from the letter of 

** Anast. Bibl. Ep. ad Adon. VienneDS. Anastasius to Ado, where it is said that 

ap. Hard. v. 390; Vita Adriani, an- all whom Nicolas had rebuked *' pro di- 

nexed to Anastasius, ap. Murator. iii. verso adulterii genere," or for other 

263. causes, were bent on overthrowing his 

p Planck, iii. 149 ; Giescl. II. i. 198 ; work. See above, note •. 
Gfrorer, ii. 3. 



330 LOTHAIR II. IN ITALY. taff 

he was heard to discooree with fienda, and that be deputed «!&• 
out receiving the Eucharist At the instanoe of Adrian, tk 
emperor appointed commiflsionerB for the trial of Eleutherho^ wb 

was put to death by their sentence.* 

Lothair conceived fresh hopes from the change of popei^ and 
wrote to Adrian in terms expressive of high regard for his pnde- 
cessor, while he complained that Nicolas had wronged Um faf 
listening to idle rumours.^ At his request, Adrian releaaed Wal* 
drada from her excommunication, and the king MmaoTf was invited 
to llomc. ^' Rome," the pope wrote, *^ is never onjust, and is alwaji 
willing to receive the penitent If you are conscious of innocenoe, 
come for a blessing ; if guilty, come for the remedy of a suitable 
repentance/' ° Theutberga was persuaded by I^thair to renew 
her application for a divorce. She went to Rome in peraon, and, 
in addition to tlie old grounds, alleged that she had aihnenti 
which rendered it impossible for h^ to perform the duties of i 
wife. But Adrian, like Nicolas, refused her request, on the ground 
that she was acting under constraint, and desired her to retun 
home/ 

The absolution of Waldrada had included the condition that 
she should not keep company with Lothair/ By artfully aflecting 
to olx^y this order, she goaded his passion to madness, so that be 
resolved at all risks — even leaving his territories open to the reet- 
less ambition of his uncle Charles — to sue in person to the pope 
for a dissolution of his union with Theutberga. He was 
made to pay heavily for the mwins of approach to the 
pontiff, who, by the intervention of Ingilberga, wife of the emperor 
I^)uis, was prevailed on to meet him at Monte Cassino, where it 
was supposed that Adrian might be more tractable than w^hen 
surrounded by the ])artisans of Nicolas at Rome. Adrian refused 
to dissolve the marriage, but, in consideration of a large sum of 
money, iigreed to administer the Eucharist to the king — a favour 
which I-.othair desired in order to dissipate the popular opinion, 
which regarded him as virtually excommunicate. " I^" said the 
|M)pe at tlie solonuiity, " thou hast observed the charge of Nicolas, 
and art firmly resolved never to have intercourse with Waldrada, 
draw near, and receive unto salvation ; but if thy conscience accuse 
thee, or if thou puqmse to return to wallow in thine uncleamiess, 

■ Ilincm. Annal. 808; Murat. Anna!. * Hincm. Aimal.867y p. 476; Schrokh 

V. i. 101. xxii. 163. 

* Tlu> Iftter is iu Rcgino, Annal. 868 ^ Hiucm. Aunal. p. 477 ; Hard ▼. 

(Pert/, i. fwU). 704-5. 

" Kogiiiu, ib. 



Cbaf.IL AJ>.8e-T». DEATH OF LOTHAIR II. 831 

refraiD, lest that which, is ordained as a remedy for the faithfu 
should turn to thy damage." Lothair, in surprise and agitation, 
received the consecrated symbols. His nobles, after being adjured 
as to their consent or privity to any breach of his oath, communi- 
cated after him ; and Gunther, the survivor of the deposed arch- 
bishops, who had once more repaired to Italy in the hope of 
obtaining a release,* was admitted to communicate as a layman, on 
presenting a written profession of submission, and swearing never 
again to exercise any spiritual o£Bce unless the pope should be 
pleased to relieve him from his disability.* 

The king followed Adrian to Rome, but a change had come 
over the pope's disposition towards him. Instead of being received 
with the honours usually paid to sovereigns, he found no one of the 
clergy to meet him when he presented himself at St. Peter's, and 
he was obliged to approach the Apostle's tomb unattended. On 
retiring to his lodging in the papal palace, he found it unfurnished, 
and even unswept; and when, on the following day, which was 
Sunday, he agmn repaired to the church, no priest appeared to say 
mass for him. Next day, however, by sending presents to the 
pope, he obtained an invitation to dinner ; Adrian presented him 
with gifts in return, and they parted on friendly terms.^ 

The pope resolved to examine the case of the divorce in a 
council which was to be held at Rome in the following year. With 
a view to this investigation, he summoned the bishops of the three 
Frankish kingdoms to send representatives to the council ; and he 
was about to send commissioners across the Alps for the purpose 
of inquiry, when he received tidings of Lothiur's death.*^ The 
king had left Rome in the middle of July. At Lucca a fatal 
sickness broke out among his attendants. He himself died at 
Piacenza, on the 8th of August ; and it is said that before the end 
of the year all who had partaken of the communion at Monte 
Cassino were dead, while the few who had abstained from it sur- 
vived."^ Theutberga entered a monastery, and bestowed large 

• Hincm. Annal. 867. Theutgaud, *> Hincm. Annal. p. 482. 
on acknowledgiDg the consecration of ^ l\y\^, . Gfrurer, ii. 18. 

Adrian, had been admitted to commu- * Hincm. Ann. p. 482 ; Regino, p. 

nion. Baron. 867. 147. 581 ; Sigeb. Gembl. ap. Bouquet, vii. 

* Hincm. Annal. 869, p. 481 : Regino, 251. Perhaps the circumstances of the 
pp. 581-3. Hincmar (1. c), Gfrorer (ii. mortality may have been accommodated 
18), Jaff6 (257), and Hefele (iv. 299), by popular belief to the expectation of 
place this scene at Monte Cassino ; a judgment on perjury. But there seems 
Fleury (Ii. 23), Pagi (xv. ] 54^, Schrockh to be no ground whatever for the sus- 
(xxii. 167), and Sismondi (iii. 155-8% picion of Sismondi, who says that the 
after the pope's return to Kome. Re- clergy, regarding the communion as an 
gino says nothing of the visit to Monte ord^l, and expecting a miracle, did not 
Cassino. care whcU they gate the k»tg, iii. 156. 



'M2 AFFAIB or 

Hums for the wmiI rif the himfaaiid wiio had. bo cmelhr 
WaldnMla a\m Ufok refuge in a ddster.* 

II. In the qiieHtion of Lotbair^s divoroe, Nicolas and 
were li*d hy the eommon interests of justice and moralitr to act in 
hiirniotiy with each other. But in other cases, where the daimsof 
llifrne ronfliet«?d with the archbishop^s attachment either to ik 
Hoverri^n or to the national church of France, the popes fgond in 
him A (h*rided and fonnidable opponent 

( )iH* of \\ivm raw*H arose out of the conduct of Ebbo, who, as ve 
havi* M4M*ti/ liad IxMsn deprived of the see of Rbeima for his acts of 
rrbrllioti aKftitist l^^uis the Pious. During the contests between 
tliiit (nn|M*ror'M hoiih, Kheims for a time fell into the poasesdoo of 
till* einfMTor Lothair, with whom Ebbo had ingratiated 
hiinm*lf. 1lie archbishop returned to his see, canring 
witli liini, ill luldition to the imjierial mandate for his restoratioii, 
thn fnvourabh! judgment of a synod held at Ingelheim,' under 
l«(»thiiir'M iiifliiencu*, iiiid under the presidency of Drogo of Metz, 
who hiid alwi pnmided at his deposition. His penitential profes- 
nIoiim at Thioiiville'' were now explained away, by the assertion that, 
ill d(*elariii^ himself unworthy of his see, he had meant nothing 
more than what was signified by the game word in the ordinaij 
Htyle of bishops ;' he had humbled himself (he said), and therefore 
had now rimrn in greater strength than l)eforc.^ 

After tlu; battle of Fontenailles, Ebbo fled from Rheims in iiear 
of (liarlim tlie Bald. He in vain attempted to obtain restitution by 
iiuuiiiH of ScTgiuH II. ; but the pope, overruling the ancient canons 
a^aiimt the traiiHlation of bishops, sanctioned his appointment to 
IlihU'Mlu'iin, on the nomination of Louis the German, in 844.™ 

Ilineinar, soon after his promotion to the archbishoprick of 
llheiniH, in 845, found that some clerks, of whom one Wulfad was 
the most prominent, had been ordained by Ebbo during his second 
occupation of the sec." He denied the validity of orders conferred 
by one whom he regarded as an intruder, and, on the application 
of the clerks to a synod held at >Sois&ons, in 853, the case was 
inv(»HtigaU;d by a conunission of bishops, who declared Ebbo's 
restoration to have been uncanouical, and the orders which he had 

• Muratori, Aniiali, V. ii. 107. episcopas.'* 

' P. aii.'l. ^ Hard. iv. 1447-1552. 

IT Juno, 841); Pertz, U'guB, i. 374. " Floiloard, ii, 20; Anna]. Hildesh 

w S*f p. JOa. in Patrol, cxli. 1241 ; Hard. v. 49 .' 

I DtHMiiiicntH i)t)t uncuiumoul}' began Hincm. ii. 305. ' 

or wiTc »ub§crilK'd " Kgo N. indiguus ■ Hincm. ii. 306. 



Chap. II. a.d 841-866. EBBO'S ORDINATIONS. 333 

given to be void. Wulfad and his brethren would have been 
excluded even from lay communion, on the ground that, by 
charging some members of the synod with having received their 
consecration from Ebbo, they had incurred the sentence denounced 
by the council of Elvira against those who should slander bishops;® 
but at the request of Charles the Bald they were released from 
this penalty.^ Hincmar, as being a party in the case, and as the 
regularity of his own appointment had been impugned, desired 
that the synod's judgment might be fortified by the highest 
authority, and requested Leo IV. to confirm it. The pope refused, 
on the ground (among other things) that the clerks had appealed 
to Rome ; but Lothair, hitherto the archbishop's enemy, interceded 
for him, and Leo sent him the pall by which 'he was constituted 
primate of Neustria.^ Benedict TIL, on Hincmar^s appli- 
cation, confirmed the privileges thus bestowed on him, 
and declared that there should be no appeal from his judgment, 
saving the rights of the apostolic see ; he also confirmed the 
deposition of Wulfad and his companions, provided (as he ex- 
pressly said) that the facts of the case were as they had been 
represented to him.*" And Nicolas, in 863, renewed both the 
grant to Hincmar and the judgment as to the clerks, with the 
same condition which had been stated by his predecessor.' 

But three years later this pope professed to have discovered 
great unfairness in the statements on which the applica- 
tions to Benedict and to himself had been grounded, and 
ordered that Hincmar should either restore the clerks, or should 
submit the matter to a council, with leave for them, if its judgment 
should be unfavourable, to appeal to the apostolic see.^ A second 
* synod was accordingly held at Soissons. Hincmar handed in four 
tracts," in justification ofEbbo's deposition, of his own appointment, 
and of the proceedings against the clerks — to whose restoration, 
however, he professed himself willing to consent, provided that it 
could be granted without prejudice to the laws of the church. The 
council decided that the deposition had been right in point of 
justice, but that it might be reversed by the higher law of mercy, 
according to the precedent of the Nicene judgment as to the 
Novationists,* and to the provisions of the African church for the 

• Cone. llUber. a.d. 305? c. 75. ' Ep. 1 (Patrol, cxv.) ; Hiocm. ii. 

P Peru, Leges, i. 416 ; Hard. v. 48-52. 310, 855. 

1 Leo, Ep. 22 (Patrol, cxv.) ; Flo- • Hard. v. 326. 
doard, iii. 2 (ib. cxxxv.). Gfrorer, i. « Nic. ad. Hiocm. ap. Hard. ▼. 601-2. 
238-240, who, of course, has his theory ■ Opera, ii. 265, scqq. 
as to the reason of Lothair^s conduct. * See yol. i. p. 121. 



3»4 QCEsnox OP Boi«nr. 

reconciliation of tbc Donatisfts.' But Nicolas, instead of onh 
finninf;^ the acts, stronjfrly centred the council far having omitted 
to cancel the judgment of that which had been held in 853 ; be 
hlamed it for having sanctioned the promotion of Wul&d It 
Cliarles the Bald to the see of Bourgea,' without requesting tbe 
papal consent ; he told the bbhops that they ought to have sent 
him all the documents relating to £hbo, and that they must mm 
do so ; and, in letters to them, to Charles, and to Hiocmar, he 
charged the archbishop with falsehood, fraud, cunning, and in- 
justice.' At the same time he wTOte to Wul&d and hia brethreo, 
exhorting them to pay due reverence to Hincmar> 

The deposition of Ebbo and the appointment of bis snocessor 
ngain aime into question before a council assembled from ax 
pr(»vinces at Troyes in October 867.*" The dedsion was in ftfoor 
of IlincHiar ; but the council did an important service to the papal 
int4*rest by requesting Nicolas to decree that no archbishop or 
bishop should be dejiosed without the consent of the apostolic see.' 
Ilinrmar and Nicolas were at last brought nearer to each other on 
this question by their respective dangers from other quarters. The 
archbishop was afraid of the influence which Wul&d had acquired 
over (Jharles the Bald, while the pope, who was now engaged in a 
formidable struggle with the patriarch Photius and the easton 
church, was unwilling to tempt the P>anks to side with his oppo- 
nents. On receiving the envoys whom Hincmar had sent to Rem 
after the synod of Troyes, Nicolas expressed approbation of his 
proceedings, and wrote to request that he and other learned men 
of France would assist in the controversy with the Greeks.* With 
this request the archbishop complied ; and Nicolas was soon after 
succeeded by Adrian, who confirmed Wulfad in the see of Bourges* 
and bestowed the pall on him, but at the same time behaved with 
great respect to Hincmar.^ 

Thus the dispute ended peacefully. But in the course of it much 
had been done to infringe on the independence of tlie Prankish 

J Vol. i. p. 406 ; Ilard. v. 626 ; IliDcm. had granted him permission to use the 

nal. 866, p. 472. pall daily, profesbing that he never hid 

* Sec Iiincm. Annal. p. 472. given, or would give, the like priyilege 

• Nic. Ep. ad Synod, ap. Hard. v. to any other person, iii. 10. 
633-40 ; a<l Iiincm. ih. 640; ad Carol. »» Hard. ▼. 649. 

ib. 648; Gfrorer, i. 495-6. He also re- ^ lb. 679, seqq.; Hincm. Annal. p. 

proached him for using the pall at other 475. 

than the times allowed by tn» Apostolic ^ Hard. y. 675, 681. 

see ; to which the archbishop replied that ' Nic. Ep. 70, ap. Hard. t. 307, seqq. ; 

he hardly used it at all, except at Christ- Hincm. Annal. 867, pp. 475-6 ; Schrockh, 

mas and Easter, and speaks of it with xxii. 142. 

something like indifierence. (Hard. ' Hard. y. 691 ; Gfrorer, i. 493-503 ; 

V. 647, 667.) Flodoard says that Leo ii. 1-3. 



Chxf. IL a.d. 866-7. EBBO'S ORDINATIONS. 335 

church. Nicolas claimed that the Frankish synods should be 
called by order of the pope ; that the parties in a cause might 
appeal from such syuods to Rome either before or after judgment ; 
that the synods should report to the pope before pronouncing their 
sentence ; that the bishops who acted as judges should be com- 
pelled to go to Rome for the purpose of justifying their decision ; 
that the pope should have the power of annulling all their acts, so 
that it should be necessary to begin the process anew.* Hincmar 
and his party, while they had the ancient laws of the church in 
their favour, felt themselves unable. to struggle against the compli- 
cation of political interests ; the archbishop found himself obliged 
to concede the principle of an appeal to Rome, according to the 
canon of Sardica, although Charlemagne had excluded that canon 
from his collection, and it owed its insertion among the Frank 
capitularies to the forger Benedict the Levite.** And the petition 
of the council of Troyes — suggested, no doubt, by the punishments 
to which Ebbo and others had been subjected on account of their 
acts against Louis the Pious — shows how, under the idea of 
securing themselves against other powers, the Frankish prelates 
contributed to aggrandise Rome by investing it with universal 
control in the character of general protector of the church.* 

III. At the same time with the affair as to Ebbo's ordinations 
another controversy was going on between Nicolas and Hincmar, 
which exhibited in a yet more striking manner the nature of the 
new claims set up in behalf of the papacy. 

Rothad, bishop of Soissons, in the province of Rheims, had 
occupied his see thirty years, and had long been on unfriendly 
terras with the archbishop.'' The accounts which we have of the 
differences between the bishop and his metropolitan must be 
received with caution, as they come for the most part from Rothad, 
or from the Lotharingian bishops, who were hostile to Hincmar on 
account of his proceedings in the case of Theutbferga ; while they 
are in part directly contradicted by Hincmar himself." 

Rothad, according to his own report, with the consent of thirty- 
three bishops, deposed a presbyter who had been caught in the act 
of unchastity. The man carried his complaint to Hincmar, who, 
after having imposed on him a penance of three years, restored 

» Schrcickh, xxii. 143. » Planck, iii. 143-7 ; Giesel. II. i. 197. 

•» Bened. Capitul. ii. 64 ; iii. 133, 412 ^ Schrockh, xxii. 135. 

(Patrol, xcvii.) ; Giesel. 11. i. 63. See - lb. 145. 
above, pp. 149, 2S6. 



336 CASE OF ROTHAD, BkwIT. 

him to his benefice, excommunicated and imprisoned the dark 
whom Rothad had put into it, and persecuted the bishop himself 
for his share in the affair.*" Even by this account, it would seem 
that Rothad had ventured to invade the rights of his metropolitaD 
by holding a synod independently of him.® But in addition to 
this, Hincmar, while disclaiming all personal malice against the 
bishop of Soissons, charges him with long insubordination, with 
notorious laxity of life, and with dilapidating, selling, or pledging 
the property of his sce.^ However their disagreement may have 
arisen, Ilincmar in 861 suspei^ded Rothad from his office until he 
should become obedient, and tlireatened him with deposition; 
whereupon the bishop appealed to Rome.*^ 

In the following year, Rothad appeared at a synod held at 
Pistres,^ as if no censure had been passed against him. 
His presence was objected to, on which he again ap- 
pealed to the pope, and asked leave to go to Rome, which Charles 
the Bald at first granted. But the case was afterwards, with the 
concurrence of Charles, examined by a synod at Soissons, in the 
end of the same year, when Rothad, who had been imprisoned for 
his contumacy in refusing to appear, was sentenced to deposition, 
while an abbey was assigned to him for his maintenance, and 
another person was appointed to* his see.' According to Hincmar, 
he was content with this arrangement, until some Lotbaringian 
bishops, wishing to use him as a tool against the great opponent of 
their sovereign's divorce, persuaded him to resume his appeal to 
the pope.* Rothad's own statement is, that Hincmar, having got 
possession of a letter in which he requested a continuance of 
support from some bishops who had befriended him at Pistres, 
wrongly represented this as an abandonment of his appeal, and a 
reference of his cause to those Prankish bishops.^ 

Hincmar and the prelates who had met at Soissons, by way of 
obviating the pope's objections to their proceedings, requested 
Nicolas to confirm their acts, while, in excuse for their disregard 
of Rothad's api)eal, they alleged that the old imperial laws forbade 
such cases to be carried out of the kingdom. But Nicolas had 

B Rothad. ap. Hard. ▼. 581 ; Nic. Ep. pose the sentence to have been passed 

29, ib. 249. by a synod at Senlis, in 863 ; but this 

** Gfrorer, i. 464. arises from a mistake of Siivatwctmsit 

p Opera, ii. 248, 251-3. for Sucssioniensis in the heading of Nic. 

1 Schrockh, xxiL 144; Planck, lii. Ep. 32. Hefele, iv. 247. 

103. * Opera, ii. 249. 

Near Pont de I'Arche, on the Seine, " Rothad. Libellus, ap. Hard. v. 580. 

* Hincm. Annal. 862-3, Opera, ii. See Planck, iii. 104. 
249. Gfrorer (ii. 465) and others sup- 



Chap. II. a.d. Ml-4. BISHOP OF SOISSONS. 337 

received representations of the affair from the bishops of Lotha- 
ringia, and replied by censuring the synod very strongly for the 
insult which it had offered to St Peter by presuming to judge a 
matter in which an appeal had been made to Rome.* In conse- 
quence of that appeal, he declared its judgment to be null. 
Temporal laws, he said, are good against heretics and tyrants, but 
are of no force when they clash with the rights of the church.^ 
He tells the members of the assembly that they must either restore 
Rothad to his see, or within thirty days send deputies to assert 
their cause against him before the apostolical tribunal.' With his 
usual skill, he assumes the character of a general guardian of the 
church by remarking that the same evil which had happened to 
Rothad might befall any one of themselves, and he points out the 
chair of St Peter as the refuge for bishops oppressed by their metro- 
politans.^ At the same time Nicolas wrote to Hincmar in terms 
of severe censure.^ He tells him that, if Rothad had not appealed, 
he must himself have inquired into the matter — a claim of right to 
interfere which had not before been advanced by Rome.*' He asked 
with what consistency Hincmar could apply for a confirmation of 
his privileges as metropolitan to the Roman see, or how he could 
attach any value to privileges derived from Rome, while he did 
all that he could to lessen its authority ; and, as the first letter 
received no answer, the pope wrote again, telling the archbishop 
that within thirty days he must either reinstate Rothad or send him 
and some representatives of his accusers to Rome, on pain of being 
interdicted from the celebration of the Eucharist until he should 
comply .** He also wrote to Rothad, encouraging him to persevere 
in his appeal unless he were conscious of having a bad cause;* 
and, notwithstanding the importunities of Charles and his queen, 
who entreated him to let the matter rest, he desired the king to 
send Rothad to Rome.' The second letter to Hincmar, and two 
which followed it, remained unanswered ; and Nicolas then wrote 
a fifth, but in a milder tone, as he was afraid to drive the arch- 
bishop to extremities, lest he should join the party of Gunther.* 

In the be^nning of 864, Rothad obtained permission to go to 
Rome. Hincmar also sent two envoys — not, he said, as accusers, but 
in order to justify his own proceedings.** They carried with them a 

* Ep. 32, ap. Hard. ▼. 254, seqq. ^ Planck, iii. 114-7. 

r lb. 256, a. *• Ep. 29. 

« lb. 257-8. * Epp. 33-4. 

■ Compare the letters to Charles and ' Epp. 30, 35. 

Hincmar, Hard. ▼. 248, 257. k Gftorer, i. 471. 

^ Ep. 28. ^ Opera, ii. 247. 



338 CASE OF ROTHAD, Book IV. 

letter of great length,^ in which, with profuse expressions of humility 
and reverence towards the apostolic see, he admits the right of 
appeal as sanctioned by the Sardican canon, but says that, accord- 
ing to the African canons and to Gregory the Great, Rothad, by 
referring the case to judges of his own choosing, had foregone the 
right of carrying it to any other tribunal^ He tells the pope that 
Rothad had for many years been unruly and had treated all re- 
monstrances with contempt, so that he himself had incurred much 
obloquy for allowing a man so notoriously unfit and incorrigible to 
retain the episcopal office." He dwells much on the necessity that 
bishops should obey their metropolitans, and endeavours very 
earnestly to obtain the pope's confirmation of his past proceedings, 
assuring him that Rothad shall be well provided for.° 

Hincmar's envoys were detained on the way by the emperor 
Louis, but the letter was sent onwards and reached the pope.* 
Rothad was allowed to proceed to Rome, and, six months after his 
arrival, presented a statement of his case.^ On Christmas-eve, 
three months later, Nicolas ascended the pulpit of St. Mary Major, 
and made a speech on the subject Even if Hincmar's story were 
true, he said, it was no longer in the power of Rothad, after he 
had appealed to the apostolic see, to transfer his cause to an 
inferior tribunal ; since Rothad professed himself willing to meet 
all charges, and since no accuser had appeared against him, the 
Jan. 21, iw)pe declared him to be worthy of restoration;^ and, 
^^^' after having waited until the feast of St Agnes, he 
publicly invested the bishop with pontifical robes, and desired him 
to officiate at mass before him.^ 

As Rothad maintained that he had never abandoned his appeal, 
and as his accusers had sufiered judgment to go by default, the 
proceedings of Nicolas thus far might have been justified by the 
Sardican canon, which suspended the execution of sentence against 
a bishop until the pope should have submitted the cause to a fresh 
examination ; and Hincmar had failed in the observance of that 
canon by appointing another bishop to Soissons." But, in letters 
which he wrote on the occasion, the pope gave vent to some start- 
ling novelties — ^that the decretals of his predecessors had been 

1 Opera, ii. 244, seqq. Hincmar says <* Hincm. Annal. 864, ap. Pertz. i. 

that tne pope appears to be troubled by 465. 

his multiloquium; but he goes on to al- i> Hard. v. 579. 

lege St. Augustine on behalf of it (247), «« lb. 583-4. 

and he certainly does not correct it. ' Anastas. 322. 

^ lb. 248, 251. • Planck, iii. 122-5; Gieseler, II. i. 

« lb. 248. 196. 

» lb. 258-9; Planck, iii. 117-120. 



Chap. II. a.d. 864-6. BISHOP OF SOISSONS. 339 

violated ; that the deposition of Rothad was invalid, because the 
council which had pronounced it was held without the apostolic 
permission, and, further, because the deposition of a bishop was one 
of those " greater judgments" which belong to the apostolic chair 
alone/ He required Hincmar, on pain of perpetual deposition, 
either at once to restore Rothad unconditionally, or to remstate 
him for the time, and to appear at Rome for the further trial of 
the question." 

Nicolas had originally stood on the Sardican canon, but he now 
took very different ground ; and the change was the more striking, 
because the new principles which he advanced were really unne- 
cessary to his cause.* These principles were derived from the pre- 
tended decretals of Isidore, which are for the first time mentioned 
as being known at Rome in the letter of Nicolas to the French 
bishops.^ In 860, Lupus of Ferrieres, at the instigation of Wenilo, 
archbishop of Sens,' had written a letter in which he hinted a re- 
ference to them by saying that pope Melchiades, the contemporary 
of Constantino, was reported to have Imd down that no Ushop could 
be deposed without the pope's consent ; and the abbot had requested 
that Nicolas would send a copy of the decretal as preserved at 
Rome.* From the pope's silence as to this point in his answer,** it 
is inferred that he then knew nothing of the forged collection ; and 
the same was the case in 863, when he spoke of the decretals of 
Siricius as the oldest that were known.® But now — only one year 
later — ^he is found citing those of the Isidorian collection : and when 
some of the French bishops expressed a doubt respecting them, on 
the ground that they were not in the code of Dionyaius Exiguus, he 
answered that on the same ground they might suspect the decretals 
of Gregory and other popes later than Dionysius, and even the 
canonical Scriptures ; that there were genuine decretals preserved 
elsewhere ; that, as Innocent had ordered all the canonical books 
to be received, so had Leo ordered the reception of all papal 
decretals ; that th^y themselves were in the habit of using these 
epistles when favourable to their own interest, and questioned 
them only when the object was to injure the rights of the apos- 

* Ad Cler. et Fleb. Eccl. Bom. ap. reason, contends that the decretals on 

Hard. V. 5S4 ; ad Carol. Calv. ib. 585 ; which Nicolas relied were not the forged 

ad Hiocmar. ib. 588 ; ad Uniyertos but the genuine ones. See Pagi in toe., 

Episcopos Gallis, ib. 590, 593 ; Planck, and Planck, iii. 135-7. 

iii. 127-8. ■ See p. 286. 

" Hard. v. 588-590. • £p. 130 (Patrol, cxiz.). Manti dates 

> Planck, iii. 130. the letter in 858. 

y Schrockh, xxii. 152-4; Gfrorer, i. »» Ep. 1, Patrol, cxix. 

478-9. Baronios (865. 7), against all <" Ep. 82, ib. ; Gfrorer, i. 462-3. 

Z 2 



340 NICOLAS ON THE FALSE DECRETALS. Book IT. 

tolical see."* It would seem, therefore, that Nicolas had been 
made acquainted with the forged decretals during Rothad*s stay 
at Rome— most probably by Rothad himself. Tliat the bishop of 
Soissons was privy to tbe forgery, appears likely from the hcta 
that he was already a bishop when it was executed, and that he 
was connected with the party from which it emanated.* But we 
need not suppose that Nicolas knowingly adopted an imposture. 
The principles of the decretals had been floating in the mind of 
the age ; on receiving the forgeries, the pope recognised in them 
his own ideal of ecclesiastical polity, and he welcomed them as 
affording a historical foundation for it. We may therefore, in 
charity, at least, acquit him of conscious fraud in this matter, 
although something of criminality will still attach to the care with 
which he seems to have avoided all examination of their genuine- 
ness,' and to the eagerness with which he welcomed these pretended 
antiquities, coming from a foreign country, in disregard of the 
obvious consideration that, if genuine, they must have all along^ 
been known in his own city. 

Ilincmar made no further active opposition, bat acquiesced in 
the restitution of Rothad, although in his chronicle of the time he 
speaks of it as eflected by might in defiance of rule,* and argues 
that it was inconsistent with the Sardican canon. The act was 
performed by Arsenius, during the mission which has been men- 
tioned in connexion with the history of Lothair's marriages,^ and 
Rothad appears to have died soon after, in the beginning of Adrian's 
pontificate.* 

IV. If even Nicolas had found Hincmar a dangerous antagonist, 
Adrian was altogether unequal to contend with him. 

On the death of Lothair in 869, Charles the Bald immediately 
seized his dominions. Adrian felt that, after the part which his 
predecessor and he himself had taken to make the world regard 
the papal see as the general vindicator of justice, he was bound to 
interfere in behalf of the nearer heirs — the emperor Louis, and 
his uncle the king of Germany.^ He therefore wrote in terms 

* Hard. y. 592-3; Planck, Hi. 132-4 ; by French bishops, or eyenthat he never 
G A-orer, i. 479-4S0. of himself referred to them ; and Den- 

• Gfrbrer, i. 483-5. dinger's attempt to vindicate the pope 
' See Planck, iii. 135-7 ; Giesel. II. i. TPatrol. cxxx., Praef. xii.) seems also a 

185 ; Gfrurer, i. 483-4 ; and Dean Mil- failure. 

man, ii. 308, who seems to think the ' ** Non regulariter sed potentialiter." 

pope's share in the matter eyen worse Hiucm. Anniu. 865, p. 468. 

than that of the tbrger. I do not see ^ P. 327. 

that Walter (187) improves the case by ' Anast 259; Gfrorer, i. 485. 

saying that Nicolas knew the decretals ^ Schrockh, xxii. 169 ; Planck, iii. 

only through extracts presented to him 153. 



CuAP. 11. A.D. 869. CHARLES IN J.OTHARINGU. 341 

of strong remonstrance to Charles, to the nobles of Lotharingia, 
and to the Neustrian bishops;"* he sent envoys who, during the 
performance of Divine service at St. Denys, threatened the wrath 
of St Peter against the king ; he wrote to Hincmar, blaming him 
for his supineness, desiring him to oppose his sovereign's ambitious 
projects, and charging him, if Charles should persist in them, to 
avoid his communion ;" and, as his letters received no answer, he 
wrote again, threatening, apparently in imitation of Gregory IV., 
to go into France in person for the redress of the wrong whidi had 
been attempted.® 

In the mean time Hincmar had placed the crown of Lotharingia 
on the head of Charles,^ who by the partition of Mersen sept. 9, 
had made an accommodation with Louis of Germany, and ®^^- 
consequently felt himself independent of the pope. The archbishop 
took no notice of Adrian's first communication ; but he returned a 
remarkable answer to the second.^ He disclaimed all judgment 
of the political question as to inheritance ; his king, he says, had 
required his obedience, and he had felt himself bound to obey. 
He complains of it as a novel hardship that he should be required 
to avoid the communion of Charles : for the Lotharingian bishops* 
had not been obliged to break off communion with their late 
sovereign, although he lived in adultery ; the popes themselves 
had not broken off communion with princes who were guilty of 
crimes, or even of heresy ; and Charles had not been convicted of 
any breach of faith which could warrant his bishops in refusing to 
communicate with him.' 

But the most striking part of the letter was where Hincmar 
professed to report the language held by the nobles of Lotharingia 
— a significant hint of his own opinion, and of the reception which 
the pope might expect if he were to carry out the line of conduct 
which he had commenced. He tells Adrian that they contrast 
his tone towards Charles with the submissiveness of former popes 
towards Pipin and Charlemagne ; they recall to mind the 
indignities which Gregory IV. had brought on himself by his 
interference in Frankish affairs ; they loudly blame the pope for 
meddling with politics, and pretending to impose a sovereign on 
them ; they wish him to keep to his own affairs as his predecessors 

» Hard. v. 707, seqq. the chrism sent fh>m heayeo for the 

B Hadr. Ep. 21; Hiucm. Opera, ii. 690. baptism of Clovis, as used in the onc- 

° Kp. 22 ad Proceres Regni ; Gfrorer, tion of Frank sovereigus. See vol. i. 

ii. 30, .35. p. 497. 

p See Uincm. Annal. 869, pp. 483-5 ; •» Opera, ii. 689, seqq. See Baron 

and Peru, Leges, i. 512-5. It is on this 870. 21, seqq. 

occasion tliat Uie first mention occurs of ' Pp. 691, 694. 



342 HINCMAR AND ADBIAN IL Book IT. 

bad done, and to defend them by his prayers and by the prayera of 
the clergy from the Normans and their other enemies ; they dedare 
that a bishop who utters unjust exQommunicatioDSy instead of 
excluding the objects of them from eternal life, only forfeits his 
own power of binding." 

The pope was greatly incensed. He countenanced a rebellioD 
raised against Charles by one of his sons, Carloman, who bad been 
ordained a deacon ; he forbade the French bishops to excommu- 
nicate the rebel prince when their sovereign required them to do 
so.^ But Hincmar and his brethren, in despite of this, pronounced 
sentence of degradation and excommunication against Carloman," 
who, on being taken, was condemned to death, but escaped with 
the loss of his eyes, and received the abbey of Eptemaeh from 
the charity of Louis the German.* And Adrian, after having 
committed himself by threats and denunciations in a style ex- 
aggerated from that of Nicolas, found himself obliged to let these 
acts of defiance pass without taking any further measures against 
those who were concerned in them. 

. V. A yet more remarkable collision arose out of the conduct of 
Hincmar, bishop of Laon. The archbishop of Rheims had in 858 
obtained the see of Laon for his nephew and namesake, who is 
described as entirely dependent on him for the means of sub- 
sistence ;^ but he soon found reason to repent of this step, which 
appears, from the younger Hincmar's character, to have been 
prompted by family or political considerations rather than by a 
regard for the benefit of the church.* The bishop of Laon received 
from Charles the Bald a distant abbey and an ofiice at court. 
For these preferments he neglected his diocese ; he made himself 
odious both to clergy and to laity by his exactions ; and he treated 
his uncle's authority as metropolitan with contempt* In conse- 
quence of a disagreement with the king, he was tried before a 
secular court in 868 ; he was deprived of his civil office, and the 
income of his see was confiscated.^ On this occasion, the elder 
Hincmar, considering that the cause of the church was involved, 
forgot his private grounds for dissatisfaction with his kinsman's 

• Pp. 694-6. the canonical age (Hist. Litt. v. 622). 
' Hadr. Epp. 25-7 ; Planck, iii. 170. Hincmar attempts to clear himself fi-om 
" Hincm. ii. 353-4 ; Flodoard, iii. 18. a charge of nepotism (Opera, ii. 538). 
' Regino, Ann. 870 (Pertz, i. 583) ; Baronius, in his dislike of the uncle, 

Planck, iii. 1 73. even ventures to justify the nephew, 

y Pagi, xiv. 210; Hard. v. 1306; 871. 90-1 ; 878. 29. 
Hist. Litt. V. .^2. • Hincm. ii. 398-5, 584, 697-8. 

* The nephew was probably under *> Hincm. Annal. 868, p. 480. 



Chap. n. aj>. 858-e«9. HINCMAR OF LACK. 343 

conduct, and came to the bishop's support In a letter to Charles'' 
(in which, among other authorities, he cites some of the forged 
decretals),^ he declared that bishops were amenable to no otfier 
judgment than that of their own order ; that the trial of a bishop 
by a secular tribunal was contrary to the ancient laws of the church, 
to those of the Roman emperors, and to the example of the king's 
predecessors ; that it was a sign that the end of the world was at 
hand ; that royalty is dependent on the episcopal unction, and is 
forfeited by violation of the engagements contracted at receiving 
it° At the diet of Pistres, in 868, the archbishop maintained his 
nephew's interest, and the younger Hincmar, on entreating the 
king's forgiveness, recovered the revenues of his see/ 

But fresh disagreements very soon broke out between the kins- 
men,^ and the bishop of Laon involved himself in further troubles 
by the violence which he used in ejecting a nobleman who was one 
of the tenants of his church.** The king, after citing hhn to 
appear, and receiving a refusal, ordered him to be arrested, 
whereupon he took refuge in a church and placed himself beside 
the altar.* In April 869 he appeared before a synod at Verberie ; 
but he declined its judgment, appealed to the pope, and desired 
leave to proceed to Rome for the prosecution of his appeal. The 
permission was refused, and he was committed to prison. Before 
setting out for Verberie, he had charged his clergy, in case of his 
detention, to suspend the performance of all divine offices, including 
even baptism, penance, the viaticum of the dying, and the rites of 
burial, until he should return, or the pope should release them 
from the injunction^ The clergy, in great perplexity and distress, 
now applied to the archbishop of Rheims for direction in the 
matter. Hincmar by letter desired his nephew to recall the 
interdict; on his refusal, he cancelled it by his own authority 
as metropolitan, and produced ancient authorities to assure the 
clergy that, as their bishop's "excommunication" was irregular 
and groundless, they were not bound to obey it"* 

About the time of Charles's coronation in Lotharin^a, the bishop 
of Laon was set at liberty, his case being referred to a future 
synod. He forthwith renewed his assaults on his uncle, whom he 
denounced as the author of his late imprisonment ;** he espoused 

«= Opera, ii. 216-233. •» lb. 601-3. 

d P. 227. * Hincm. Ann. 869, p. 480. 

« Pp. 221-3. * Hincim ii. 510-4. 

' Hincm. Annal. 868; Gfrorer.Karol. " lb. 501, 507, 599; Hard. ▼. 1361, 

ii. 67. Beqq., 1377. 
» Iliucm. ii. 334. ■ Gfrorer, ii. 71. 



344 HINCMAK OF LAON. Book IT. 

the cuuse of the rebel Carloman ; and he sent finrth a letter in 
wliicb he tisserted for all bishops a right of aiipealing to Rome— 
not against a sentence of their brethren (whidi was the only kind 
of appeal hitherto claimed), but in bar of the jurisdictioo of local 
synods.® For this claim he alleged the authority of the forged 
decretals. The archbishop replied, not by denying the genuine- 
ness of these documents — which, however he may have suspected 
it,i* he was not, after his own use of them, at lib^y to impugn — 
but by maintaining that, as they had been issued on particular 
occasions, their application was limited to the circumstances whidi 
called them forth ; that they were only valid in so far as they 
were agreeable to the ecclesiastical canons, and that some of them 
had been superseded by the determinations of councils later than 
their professed date.*^ Such a view of the decretals was evidently 
even more prejudicial to the new Roman claims than an assertion 
of their spuriousness would have been. 

While Charles was engrossed by the afiairs of Lotharingia, the 
case of the younger Iliucmar was postponed. But he was brought 
before synods at Gondreville and Attigny in 870, and pamphlets 
were exchanged between him and his uncle — one, by the archbishop, 
extending to great length, and divided into fifty-five chapters.' 
At Attigny the bishop of Laon submitted to swear obedience to 
the authority of his sovereign and of his metropolitan ; and, after 
having in vain renewed his request for leave to go to Rome, he 
asked for a trial by secular judges, lyho pronounced a decision in 
his favour.' The elder Uincmar was indignant, both because his 
nephew had abandoned the clerical privileges, in submitting to a 
lay tribunal, and on account of the result of the trial 

The bishop was again brought before a synod which met at 
Doucy, near Mousson, on the Maas,' in August 871, when fresh 
misdemeanours were laid to his charge— that he had made away 
with the proi)erty of his see, that he had sided with Carloman, had 
refused to sign the excommunication uttered against the rebel, and 
had slandered Charles to the pope. It was not until after the third 
summons that the accused condescended to api)ear." He charged 
the kiug with having invaded his dignity ; the archbishop of 
Rheims with having caused his imprisonment : and on these grounds 
he refused to Ihj judged by them. Charles repelled the charges 

<" The letter is in Ilincin. ii. 604. p. 4S7. On these matters, see De Marca, 

p That he did so is clear from ii. 477. Vll. 22, seqq. 

1 Opera, ii. 419, 451-2, 482 ; Giesel. « A different place from Toucy, men- 

II. i. 18G-8. ' Opera, ii. 383-595. tioned at p. 320. See Hefele, It. 477. 

• Opera, ii. 410 ; Ilincm. Anual. 870, • Hard. y. 1301. 



Chap. U. aj). 869-871. COUNCIL OF DOUCY. 345 

against himself, and joined with the nobles who were present in 
swearing that the imputation agamst the archbishop was false.^ In 
reply to his claim of a right -to appeal to Rome, the bishop was 
reminded of the canons which ordered that every cause should be 
terminated in the country where it arose, and was told that he 
could not appeal until after a trial by the bishops of his own 
province. Notwithstanding his persistence in refusing to answer, 
the synod proceeded to examine the matter ;• and the elder Hinc- 
mar, after collecting the opinions of the members, pronounced 
sentence of deposition against his nephew, reserving only such a 
power of appeal as was sanctioned by the council of Sardica.^ The 
synod then wrote to the pope, stating the grounds of their judgment, 
and expressing a hope that, in consideration of the bishop's in- 
corrigible misconduct, he would confirm the sentence. They limit 
the right of appealing agreeably to the Sardican canon, and desire 
that, if the pope should entertain the appeal which had been made 
to him, he would commit the further trial of the cause to bishops 
of their own neighbourhood, or would send envoys to sit with the 
local 'bishops for the purpose ; and they beg that in any case he 
would not restore Hincmar to his see without a provincial inquiry, 
but would proceed according to the canons.* 

Adrian replied in a very lofty tone. He censured the synod for 
having ventured to depose the accused without regard to his appeal, 
and ordered them to send him to Rome, with some of their own 
number, in order to a fresh inquiry.* The answer of the Frankish 
bishops was firm and decided. They professed that they could only 
account for Adrian's letter by supposing that, in the multiplicity of his 
engagements, he had been unable to read the whole of the docu- 
ments which they had sent to him ; they justified their proceedings, 
and declared that, if the pope should persist in the course which he 
had indicated, they were resolved to stand on the rights of their 
national church.** 

Adrian's letter to the synod had been accompanied by one in a 
like strain addressed to Charles, who was greatly provoked by it, 
and employed the elder Hincmar to reply. The archbishop executed 
his task with hearty zeaL« Charles, in whose name the letter was 
written, is made to tell the pope that the language which he had 
held was improper to be used towards a king, and unbecoming the 
modesty of a bishop, and desires him to content himself with writing 

« Hard. v. 1308. • Ep. 28. 

y Hard. V. 1311-7. Fop the Sardican *» Hard. v. 1218-20; Gfrorer, Karol 

canon, see vol. i. p. 304. ii. 85. 

' Hard. y. 1318-1323. « Hincm. ii. 701, leqq. 



346 CORRGSPONDENCE AS TO HmdiAR OF LACK. BotmH. 

as his predecessors had written to former sovereigfos of Fraooe.^ 
For a pope to speak of >^ ordering '* a king is said to be a nev and 
unexampled audacity.* It is denied that Adrian was entitled to efoke 
the case of the younger Ilincmar to Rome for trial. The prin- 
leges of St Peter depend on the exercise of justice ; the king will 
not Tiolate the principles of Scripture and of the diurch by inter- 
posing to defeat justice in a case where the offences of the accused 
are so many and so clear/ He declines with indignation the 
office which the pope would impose on him by desiring him to 
guard the property of the see of Laon ; the kings of the Franks 
had hitherto been reckoned lords of the earth — not deputies' or 
bailiflPt) of bishops. He threatens, if the matter cannot be ended at 
home, to go to Rome and maintain the rightfulness of his proceed- 
ings.** The pope had spoken of decrees ; but any decree which 
would affect to bind a sovereign must have been vomited forth 
from hell.* The letter concludes by declaring the king's willingness 
to abide by the known rules of Scripture, tradition, and the canons, 
while he is determined to reject *' anything which may have been 
compiled or forged to the contrary by any person '* — the plainest 
iutimation that had as yet been given of Hincmar's opinion as to the 
Isidorian decretals.** 

Adrian again felt that he had committed a mistake in advancing 
pretensions which were thus contested ; and a league which had 
just been concluded between Louis the German and his nephew the 
emiMjror contributed to alarm the pope as to the consequences which 
might follow from a breach with the king of Neustria." He therefore 
wrote again to Charles, exchanging his imperious tone for one of 
soothing and flattery." After some slight allusions to the style of 
the king's letter, he proceeds (as he says) " to pour in the oil of 
consolation and the ointment of holy love." He begs that he may 
not be held accountable for any expressions which might have 
seemed harsh in his former letters ;" and, knowing the intensity of 
the king's desire for additional territory and power, he volunteers 
an assurance that, if he should live to see a vacancy in the empire, 
no other candidate than Charles shall with his consent be raised 
to it. The case of the bishop of Laon is treated as of inferior 
moment ; the pope still desires that he may be sent to Rome, but 

* Pp. 702-4. Rome, but the context is against such 

» Pp 706-7. an interpretation. 
' Pp. 709-714. ' P. 709. " P. 716. 

» " Vicodomini." See p.* 200. » Gfrorer, ii. 87. 

»• P. 71.5. Gfrorer (ii. 87) regards " Ep. 3a ; Hard. v. 7i6. 
this as a threat of leading an army to *" lb. 727. 



Chap.il AJ>. 871-6. JOHN yUI.- CHARLES EMPEBOR. 347 

promises that he shall not be restored unless a full inquiry shall 
have shown the justice of his cause, and that this inquiry shall be 
held in France.^ Adrian did not live to receive an answer to 
this letter ; and Hincmar the younger was kept in prison until, 
by taking part in fresh intrigues, he exposed himself to a severer 
punishment.^ 

Adrian's conduct in this affair had been alike imprudent and un- 
fortunate. The French bishops had set aside the false decretals; 
they had insisted on confining the papal right as to appeals within 
the limits which had been defined by the council of Sardica ; they 
had denied that the examination of all weightier causes belonged 
to the pope alone ; they had denied that he had the right of evoking 
a cause to Rome before it had been submitted to the judgment of a 
national synod, and would only allow him the power of remitting 
it, after such judgment, to be again examined by the bishops of the 
country in which it arose ; and his lofty pretensions had ended in 
a humiliating concession.' Yet the Roman see had gained some- 
thing. Hincmar, in all his opposition to the Roman claims, carefully 
mixes up professions of high reverence for the authority of the apos- 
tolic chair ; his objections to the Isidorian principles, being addressed 
to his nephew, were not likely to become much known at Rome, 
while, as he had not openly questioned the genuineness of the 
decretals, the popes might henceforth cite them with greater con- 
fidence ; and a feeling that the power of the papacy was useful to 
the church restrained him in the midst of his opposition to it 
Both bishops and princes now saw in the papacy something which 
they might use to their advantage; and the real benefit of all 
applications to Rome for aid was sure to redound to the Roman see 
itself.' 

The circumstances of John VIIL's election as the successor of 
Adrian are unknown ; but he appears to have belonged 
to the Frankish party among the Roman clergy, and 
there is no reason to doubt that the emperor consented to his 
appointment.^ In 875 the death of the emperor Louis II. without 
issue opened up to Charles the Bald the great object of his ambition ; 
and the time was now come for the pope to assume the power of 
disposing of the empire — an assumption countenanced by the fact 
that his predecessors had long acted as arbiters in the dissensions 
of the Carolingian princes." Setting aside the stronger hereditary 

p lb. 720. • Planck, iii. 199-203. 

1 Gfrorer, ii. 88-9. « Gfrorer, ii. 90. 

' Planck, ill. 192-4. " Schrockh, xxil. 196-7. 



348 CHARLES THE BALD EMPEROR. Boo«nr. 

claims of Louis tlie Gkrman, John invited Charles to Rome, and on 
Christmas-day— seventy-five years after the coronation of Charie- 
magne— placed the imperial crown on his head. Although the pope 
afterwards declared that this was done in obedience to a revelation 
which bad been made to his predecessor Nicolas,' it would appear 
that influences of a less exalted kind had also contributed to the 
act. Tlie annalist of Fulda, whose tone towards the *' tyrant'* of 
France is generally very bitter, tells us that, in order to obtain the 
empire, Charles had made a prodigal use of bribery among the 
senators, ''after the fashion of Jugurtha;"^ nor did the pope 
himself fail to benefit on the occasion. A writer of later date* 
is undoubtedly wrong in saying that Charles ceded to him certain 
territories which are known to have then belonged to the Greek 
empire ; but there is reason to believe that he gave up the 
control of elections to the papacy, released the pope from the 
duty of doing homage, and withdrew his resident commissioners 
from Rome, leaving the government in the hands of the pope, 
while the title of Defender still served to connect the emperor with 
the city, and entitled the Romans and their bishops to look to him 
for aid.* 

Cliarles now professed that he owed the empire to John, and 
during the remainder of his days he was solicitous to serve the 
author of his dignity.^ Proceeding northwards, he was crowned 
as king of Italy at Pa via, in February 876, when the estates declared 
that, as God, through the vicar of St. Peter and St. Paul, had called 
him to be emperor, so they chase him king.*' The acts of Pavia were 
confirmed in an assembly held some months later at Pontyon, when 
the Neustrian clergy and nobles professed that they chose him for 
their sovereign, as he had been chosen by the pope and by the Lom- 
bards.'* Tliis change of title firom a hereditary to an elective royalty 
appeared to hold out to the pope a hope of being able to interfere 
in the future disposal of the Neustrian and Italian kingdoms ; but 
an attempt which was mado in his behalf at Pontyon, although 

* Hard. vi. 182. alienate the property of the crown be- 

y Annal. Fuld. 875, ap. Pertz, I 389. yond their own lifetime. Pertx, Leges 

Cf. Regino, ib. 587-9. li. App. 261. ' 

« First published by Flaccius lllyri- ■ See the various views of De Marca, 

cus, in an appendix to Eutropius. By Pagi, and Mansi in Baron, xv. 278-281 ; 

some he has been placed in the tenth also Schrockh, xxii. 1 94 ; Planck, iii| 

century, but the best authorities refer 218 ; Gfrorer, ii. 124-5. 

him to the eleventh (see Schrockh, xxii. •» Schrockh, xxii. 198-201; Planck, 

194, seqq. ; Planck, iii. 210). Even if iii. 218-9. 

the grant were genuine, it would have « Pertz, Leges, i. 529. 

expired with Charles, as the German <* Ib. 533. 

kings and emperors had no power to 



Chap.H. i.d. 875-6. COUNCIL OF PONTYON. 349 

zealously supported by the emperor, met with a strenuous opposi- 
tion from the Frankish clergy. The papal legate, John, bishop of 
Tusculum, read a letter by which Ansegis, archbishop of Sens, was 
constituted vicar apostolic and primate of Gaul and Germany, with 
power to assemble synods, to execute the papal orders by the 
agency of bishops, and to bring all important matters to Rome for 
decision.* Hincmar and his brethren requested leave to examine the 
document ; 4o which the emperor replied by asking them whether 
they would obey the pope, and telling them that he, as the pope's 
viear in the council, was resolved to enforce obedience. He ordered 
a chair to be set for Ansegis beside the legate ; and the archbishop 
of Sens, at his invitation, walked past the metropolitans who had 
held precedence of him, and took his seat in the place of dignity. 
But Hincmar and the other bishops behaved with unshaken firmness. 
They repeated their request that they might be allowed to see the 
letter and to take a copy of it They protested against the eleva- 
tion of Ansegis as uncanonical — as infringing on the primacy granted 
to the see of Rheims in the person of Remigius, and on the privileges 
bestowed on Hincmar by Benedict, Nicolas, and Adrian ; nor could 
they be brought to promise obedience to the pope, except such 
as was agreeable to the canons, and to the example of their 
predecessors. One bishop only, Frotarius, was disposed to comply, 
in the hope of obtaining a translation from the diocese of Bordeaux, 
which had been desolated by the Northmen, to that of Bourges/ 
but his brethren objected to the translation as contrary to the laws 
of the church.* The emperor, provoked by Hincmar's opposition, 
required him to take a new oath of fealty in the presence of the 
assembly, as if his loyalty were suspected — an unworthy return 
for the archbishop's long, able, and zealous exertions for the rights 
of the crown and of the national church.** The council broke up 
without coming to any satisfactory determination, and Hincmar soon 
after produced a strong defence* of the rights of metropolitans 
against the new principles on which the commission to Ansegis 
was grounded. Charles was induced by political reasons to act 
in a spirit of conciliation,*^ and the pope got over the difficulty 
as to Ansegis by conferring the primacy of Gaul on the see of 
Aries, to which it had been attached before the Frankish conquest 

« Joh. Ep. 134, ap. Hard. vi. 105. 499, seqq. ; Pertz, Leges, i. 533 ; Hard 

The dignity was to be personal, not at- 'vi. UiC ; Planck, iii. 233. 

tached to the see of Sens. Thomassin, ^ Hincm. ii. 834 ; Hard. y\. 177. 

I. i. 33-4. 1 Opera, ii. 719, seqq. 

' See p. 294. ^ Gfriirer, ii. 130. 

B Hincm. ii. 732-5 ; Annal. 876, pp. 



350 TROUBLES OF ITALY. BocwIV. 

But amid the commotions of the time this arrangement had no 
practical effect." 

In the mean time the pope was greatly disquieted at home by 
the factions of his city, by the petty princes and nobles of the 
neighbourhood, and by the Saracens, who, since the death of 
Louis II., carried on their ravages without any effectual check." 
Sometimes the nobles made alliance with the enemies of Christen- 
dom. Naples, Gaeta, Amalfi, and Sorrento, after having suffered 
much at their hands, entered into a league with them, and united 
with them in the work of devastation and plunder.® Sergius, duke 
of Naples, made frequent incursions into the papal territory, and 
John, after having in vain employed gentler means, uttered an 
anathema against him.^ On this, the duke's brother, Atbanasius, 
bishop of Naples, took on himself the execution of the 
sentence, seized Sergius, put out his eyes, and sent him 
to the pope, who requited the bishop with a profusion of thanks 
and commendations — quoting the texts of Scripture which enjoin 
a preference of the Saviour over the dearest natural affections.*) 
Athanasius now annexed the dukedom to his spiritual office. But 
he soon discovered that he was unable to cope with the Saracens, 
whereupon he allied himself with them, harassed the pope after 
the same fashion as his brother, and obliged John to buy him off 
with a large sum of money, in consideration of which he promised 
to break off his connexion with the infidels. But the promise was 
not fulfilled, and the pope with a Roman synod, in 881, uttered an 
anathema against the duke-bishop.'* Beset and continually annoyed 
as he was by such enemies, John implored the emperor to come to 
his assistance, and Charles was disposed to comply witb the entreaty ; 
but the unwillingness of the Frank chiefs to consent to such an 
expedition may be inferred from the heavy price which the emperor 
paid for their concurrence, by allowing the office of his counts to be 
converted into an hereditary dignity at the council of Quiercy in 
877.* The pope, on being informed of his protector's 
approach, set out to meet him, and on the way held a 
council at Ravenna, where he passed some canons by which, in accord- 

» Hard. vi. 80-2 ; De Marca, VL xxix. ' Joh. VIIL Epp. 101-3, 187-8, 191 ; 

5 ; Planck, iii. 233-40. Frchempert ap. rertz, iii. 254-5 ; Ghron. 

» Baron. 876. 33; Milman, ii. 322-6. Salern. ib. .536, seqq. ; Baron. 881. 1-4. 

*» Gfrorer, ii. 139. • See Joh. VII I. He afterwards absoWed Athanasius, 

Epp. 187-8, 279 (Patrol, cxxvi.). provided that he had separated from the 

p Chron. Casin. i. 40, ap. Pertz, vii. infidels, and had taken or slain their 

1 Ep. 96 (Patrol, cxxti.) ; Baron. 877. chiefs, a.d. 881-2. (Ep. 352.) Athanasius 

3. The cardinal's justification of the is supposed by Muratori to have liTed 

pope for praising this " indecens epi- to the year 900. Annali, V. i. 326. 
scope factum " is curious. " C. 9. See above, p. 297. 



Cmap. 11. A.D. 8Y6-8. DEATH OF CHARLES THE BALD. 351 

ance with the peeudoisidorian principles, the power of bishops was 
exalted, while that of metropolitans was depressed.* He met the 
emperor at Vercelli, and proceeded in his company to Tortona, 
where Eichildis, the wife of Charles, was crowned as empress.'* But 
the emperor, instead of prosecuting his expedition, retired before 
the advancing force of Carloman, the son and successor of Louis 
the German ; and he died in a hut on the pass of Mont Cenia^ 
The concessions which this prince had made both to Rome and to 
his nobles had greatly weakened the power of the Frankish crown, 
and the policy which he had lately followed in ecclesiastical afiairs 
was very dangerous to the rights of tlie national church. Yet 
although, for the sake of his private* objects, he had in his latter 
days behaved with much obsequiousness to the pope, it is clear 
that he had no intention of allowing the principles of the decretals 
to be established in their fullness within his dominions north of 
the Alps.^ 

After the death of Charles, the empire was vacant until 884. 
The pope, fmding himself continually annoyed by Lambert, marquis 
of Spoleto, and other partisans of the German Carolingians,' 
declared his intention of seeking aid in France,' and, after some 
forcible detention, which he avenged by anathemas against Lambert 
and Adalbert of Tuscany,^ he embarked on board ship, 
and landed at Genoa.® The reception which he at first 
met with in France was not encouraging. He had offended the 
clergy by his attempts against the national church, and especially 
by the commission to Ansegis ; while all classes were irritated on 
account of the costly and fruitless expedition which he had induced 
their late sovereign to undertake.** John wrote letters to all the 
Frankish princes,® urgently summoning them and their bishops to 
attend a council at Troyes ; but the bishops of Gaul only appeareti, 
and the only sovereign present was the king of France, 
Louis the Stammerer, who was crowned anew by the ^ * 
pope, although, in consequence of an irregularity in his marriage, 
he was unable to obtain that the queen should be included in the 
coronation.^ At Troyes, as at Ravenna, John proposed and passed 
some canons which raised the episcopal privileges to a height before 

« Hard. vi. I85,8eqq. ^ lb. 29. 

■ Hincm. Ann. 877, p. 503. « Baron. 878. 14. 

* lb. p. 504 ; Reffiuo, p. 589. * Gfrorer, ii. 185. 

f See Giesel. II. i. 207-8. » Hard. vi. 36, seqq. 

* Ep. ad Lud. Bav. regis filiom. ' Hincm. Annal. pp. 506-7 ; Gone 
Hard. vi. 27. Tricass. II. ap. Hard. vi. 191, seqq. 

* Ad Lud. Balbum, ib. 25. 



352 COUNCIL OF TROTE& 

unknown, and he dealt about anathemas with bis usual jraliiaoL' 
The bishops joined with him in condemning' Adalbert, laaboi 
and his other Italian enemies, and in return obtained fitmluBa 
^ntence against the invaders of their own property.^ But Aey 
resolutely stood out for their national rigfats, ifHwgritig od die 
Sardican canon which limited the power of the Koman see » to 
appeals, and on those ancient laws of the church which fartmk 
translations such as that of Frotariua.' And when the pope 
produced a grant of Charles the Bald, bestowing the abbev J 
St. Denys on the Roman see, they met him with a poeiti^-e daH 
that the king could alienate the possessions of the crown."^ 

John was greatly provoked by Hincmar*s steady resistance to 
the pretensions of Rome ; and some of the archbishop's enemies 
now took advantage of this feeling to annoy him by bringing for- 
ward his nephew, who, after having been imprisoned and bamshcd, 
liad at last been blinded by order of Charles on account of his 
connexion with an invasion from the side of Germany." The 
unfortunate man was led into the place of assembly, and petitioned 
for a restoration to his see. But the pope, besides that he mav 
have been afraid to venture on a step so offensive to the metropolitao 
of Rheims, was restrained by the circumstance that he bad con- 
firmed the deposition of the younger IIincmar,and had consecrated 
his successor, Ilildenulf " He therefore only in so far favoured 
the petition as to give the deposed bishop leave to sing mass, and 
to assign him a pension out of the revenues of Laon, while he refused 
to accept the resignation of Hildenulf, who alleged that his healdi 
disqualified him for the performance of his duties. The enemies 
of the elder Hincmar, however, were resolved to make the most of 
the matter as a triumph over him ; they arrayed the blind man in 
episcopal robes, and, after having with great ceremony presented 
him to the pope, led him into the cathedral, where he bestowed his 
benediction on the people.** It does not appear what answer the 
pope obtained to his request for assistance ; but it is certain that no 
assistance was sent.^ 

John had conceived the idea of carrying his claim to the power 
of bestowing the empire yet further by choosing a person whose 

elevation should be manifestly due to the papal favour alone 

Boso, viceroy of Provence, who had gained his friendship on 

V See as to his fondness for this, ■" Gfrorer, ii. 189. 

Schmidt, i. 683-4 ; Milman, ii. 328. " Schrockh, xxii. 190. 

I* Hincm. Annal. pp. 5<)6-7. ** Hincm. Aniial. p. 508. 

» lb. 507. ^ lb. 508. p Gfrbrer. ii. 187. 



1 



Chap. 1L a.d. 878-882. DEATHS OF JOHN VIII. AND HINCMAR. 353 

occasion of his visit to France. The project, however, was found 
impossible, nor was the pope more successfiil in an attempt to 
secure the kingdom of Italy for his candidate."* But, on the death 
of Louis the Stammerer, Boso was chosen by a party of bishops and 
nobles as king of Provence, which was then revived as a 
distinct sovereignty ; and it would seem that a belief of 
the pope's support contributed to his election, although John soon 
after wrote to the archbishop of Vienne, reproving him for having 
used the authority of Rome in behalf of Boso, whom the pope 
denounces as a disturber of the kingdom.' John died in December 
882 ; it is said that some of his own relations administered poison 
to him, and, finding that it did not work speedily, knocked out his 
brains with a mallet." 

In the same month died the great champion of the Frankish 
church. Towards the end of his life Hincmar bad had a serious 
dispute with Louis III. as to the appointment of a bishop to 
Beauvais.* In answer to the king's profession of contempt for a 
subject who attempted to interfere with his honour, the archbishop 
used very strong language as to the relations of the episcopal and 
the royal powers. He tells him that bishops may ordain kings, but 
kings cannot consecrate bishops ; and that the successors of the 
Apostles must not be spoken of as subjects. " As the Lord said, 
* Ye have not chosen me, but I have chosen you,' so may I say in 
my degree, • You have not chosen me to the prelacy of the church, 
but I, with my colleagues and the other faithful ones of God, 
have chosen you to be governor of the kingdom, under the con- 
dition of duly keeping the laws.' " " Hincmar was at length com- 
pelled to leave his city by the approach of a devastating force of 
Northmen. He set out in a litter, carrying with him the relics 
of St. Remigius,* and died at Epemay, on the 21st of December. 
The Annals of St. Bertin, which are the most valuable record of 
the period, are supposed to have been written by him from the year 
861 to within a month of his death.^ 

The first and second successors of John in the papacy, Marinus 
(a.d. 882) and Adrian III. (a.d. 884), appear to have been chosen 
without the imperial licence, and by means of the German interest." 

«» Marat. Ann. V. i. 185-6 ; Sismondi, ■ Opera, ii. 198-9. 

ill. 238-9. ' Hincm. Aunal. p. 515 ; Flodoard, 

' Joh. Ep. 306 (Patrol, cxxvi.) ; Pertz, iii. 30. 

Leges, i. 547; Hefele, iv. 521. , ' Pertz, i. 420-1 ; Gfrorer, i. 243-4. 

• Annal. Fold. a.d. 882 ; Milman, ii. * Schrockb, xxii. 221-2 ; Gfrorer, ii. 
333. 252. On a story that Adrian obtained 

* See his excommunication of the the remoTal of the imperial control in 
king's nominee, Opera, ii. 81 1. elections to the papacy, and an engage- 

2 A 



354 CHARLES THE FAT. DwIT. 

On the death of Adrian, which took place as he was on Iiis wmj to 
Germany in 885,* Stephen V. was consecrated without any a^Ji- 
cation for the consent of the emperor, Charles the Fat ; but Charles 
expressed great indignation at the omission, and had already taken 
measures for deposing the pope, when a Roman legate arrived at 
the imperial court, and succeeded in appeasing him by exhibiting 
a long list of bishops, clergy, and nobles who had taken part in the 
election,** 

Charles the Fat, a younger son of Louis the German, had 
received the imperial crown fix)m John VIII. in 881,* and, by the 
deaths of other princes, had gradually become master of the whole 
Carolingian empire. But his reign was disastrous; in 887 he 
was deposed by Amulf, an illegitimate son of his brother Carloman; 
and, after having been supported for some months by alms, he 
died in the following year — whether of disease or by violence \s 
uncertain.** The popular feeling as to this unfortunate prince, 
the last legitimate descendant of Charlemagne, may be inferred 
from the tone in which he is spoken of by the annalists of the 
time. They tenderly dwell on his virtues and amiable qualities; 
they express a trust that the sufferings which he patiently bore in 
this world may be found to have prepared his way to a better 
inheritance ; it is even said that at his death heaven was seen to 
open, and to receive his soul.® 

ment that no one but an Italian should Marat Ann. V. i. 199-201. 

thenceforth be king of Italy, see ^ See Annal. Vedast. 887» ap. Perts, 

Schrockh, 222; Gfrorer, ii. 271-2. i. 525; Pagi, in Baron, xt. 534 : Mansi. 

• Annal. Fuld. 885, ap. Pertz, i. 402. ib. ^^ 

»» Ibid. * Annal. Fuld. ap. Pertx, i. 405 ; An- 

« Herm. Contract, ap. Pertz, v. 108 ; nal. Vedast. ib. 526 ; Regino, ib. 597-8. 



Chap. HI. a.d. 842-856. ( 355 ) 



CHAPTER III. 

THE GREEK CHURCH— PHOTl US. 
A.D. 842-898. 

Michael III., the son of Theophilus and Theodora, grew up 
under evil influences. His maternal uncle Bardas founded schemes 
of ambition on the corruption of the young prince's character. He 
removed one of the msJe guardians by death, and another by 
compelling him to retire into a monastery ; and by means of a 
worthless tutor, as well as by his own discourse, he instilled into 
the emperor a jealous impatience of the control of his mother 
and sister.* At the age of eighteen Michael threw off this yoke. 
Theodora called together the senate, showed them the treasures 
which her economy had amassed,^ in order that she might not be 
afterwards suspected of having left her son without ample provi- 
sion, resigned her share in the regency, and withdrew from the 
palace.® 

Michael now gave the loose to his depraved tastes and appetites. 
His chosen associates were athletes, charioteers, musicians, buffoons, 
and dancing-girls. He himself entered the lists in the public 
chariot races, and insisted on receiving his prizes from the hand of 
a consecrated image. He joined in the feasts and drinking bouts 
of his companions ; he became sponsor for their children, and on 
such occasions bestowed lavish presents; he rewarded acts of 
disgusting buffoonery with costly gifts, and even encouraged his 
vile favourites to practise their gross and brutal jests on his mother. 
The wealth which he had inherited was soon dissipated ; and after 
having endeavoured to supply his necessities by plundering churches 
of their ornaments, he was reduced to melt down his plate, and 
even the golden tissues of the imperial robes.^ 

The most outrageous of Michael's extravagances was his profane 
mimicry of religion. He organised a mock hierarchy, of which one 
Theophilus, who was known by the name of Gryllus,* was the chief. 

• Schlosser, 5^5, 568-71. 642-4. 

^ Constant. Porphyrog. v. 27. Mr. «* Const Porph. iv. 21, v. 20-27 ; 

Finlay reckons them at 4,250»000/. ii. Cedren. 544, 552-4 ; Seblosser, 574-7. 

203. * Fp^AAor, or y^XoSf a sucking-pig. 

' Const Porph. iv. 20 ; Cedrenns, 

2 A 2 



356 DIFFERENCES OF GREEKS AND LATINS. BocwIT. 

Under this patriarch were twelve metropolitans, the emperor him- 
self being one of the number. They went through a fercical ordi- 
nation ; they were arrayed in costly robes imitated from those of 
the church ; they sang obscene songs to music composed in ridicule 
of the ecclesiastical chant ; they burlesqued the trials, condemna- 
tions, and depositions of bishops ; they had jewelled altar-vessels, 
with which tlicy administered an eucharist of mustard and vinegar/ 
On one occasion this ribald crew encountered the venerable patri- 
arch Ignatius at the head of a solemn procession, when Gryllus, 
who was mounted on an ass, rudely jostled him, and the attendant 
mummers twanged their harps in derision, insulted the patriarch 
with filthy language, and beat the clergy of his train." After the 
death of their patron, some of the wretches who had shared in 
these abominations were called to account before the great council 
of 869, when they pletided that they had acted through fear of the 
emperor, and expressed contrition for their offences.** 

During the course of ages, a change had come over the cha- 
racters which had formerly distinguished the Greek and the Latin 
churches respectively. Among the Greeks the fondness for specu- 
lation had been succeeded by a settled formalism, while the 
rigidity of the Latins had yielded to the new life infused by the 
accession of the barbarian nations to the church.* But, although 
different from that of earlier times, a marked distinction still existed. 
The influence of Augustine, which had so largely moulded the 
western mind, and had given prominence to the doctrines of grace 
above all others, had not extended to the east From the time of 
the Trullan council, the churches had been divided by a difference of 
usages, especially as to the marriage of the clergy ; and, although 
the question as to the procession of the Holy Ghost had been laid 
to rest in the days of Charlemagne, it still remained as a doctrinal 
centre around which other causes of discord might array themselves. 
The see of Rome had gradually risen to a height far above its 
ancient rival; and, while Constantinople could not but be dis- 
satisfied with this change, there was on the Roman side a wish to 
make the superiority felt Political jealousies also contributed to 
feed the smouldering ill-feeling which any accident might fan into 
a flame.^ And now a personal question produced a rupture 
which tended far towards the eventual separation of the churches. 

' Cone. Cpol. IV. ap. Hard. v. 893, »> Hard. v. 893, 905-6. 
906; Vital gnatii.ib. 973; Const. Porph. « Neand. vi. 293; Giesel. II. i. 139- 

iv. 38, V. 21 ; Cedren. 553-4. 140; DoUincer, i. 380. 

« Const. Porph. iv. 38, V. 22 ; Cedren. J' Schrockh, xxiv. 127; Neand. vi.' 

554. 294. 



Chap. III. a.d. 846-857. IGNATIUS OF CONSTANTINOPLE. 357 

Nicetas, a son of Michael Rhangabe, had, on his father's depo- 
sition, been thrust into a cloister at the age of fourteen." He 
assumed the name of Ignatius, became a priest, and, having acquired 
a high character for piety; was, in 846, promoted by Theodora to 
the see of Constantinople, on the recommendation of a famous 
hermit^ The late patriarch, Methodius, had been engaged in 
differences with Gregory bishop of Syracuse, who usually lived at 
Constantinople, and bad uttered an anathema against him. In 
Ignatius the feeling of religious antagonism could hardly fail to be 
stimulated by the fact that Gregory was a son of Leo the Armenian, 
by whom his own father, Michael, had been dethroned.** He refused 
Gregory's assistance at his consecration ; in 851 he deposed and 
excommunicated him for having uncanonically ordained a person 
of another diocese ; and at the patriarch's request the sentence was 
confirmed by a Roman synod under Benedict HI."' The inhabitants 
of the capital were divided between Ignatius and Gregory ; but, 
although the opposition to the patriarch was strong, he earned high 
and deserved credit by his conduct as a pastor.*^ 

His conscientious zeal for the duties of his office induced him to 
remonstrate with Bardas on the subject of a scandalous imputation 
— that the minister, after having divorced his wife on some trivial 
pretext, lived in an incestuous intercourse with the widow of his 
son ; and finding remonstrance ineffectual, the patriarch proceeded 
so far as to refuse the holy eucharist to him at Epiphany 857/ 
Bardas, whose influence over his nephew was continually increasing, 
resolved on vengeance. He persuaded Michael that, in order to 
the security of his power, it would be expedient to compel Theodora 
and her daughters to become nuns, and Ifipiatius was summoned to 
officiate at their profession. The patriarch refused, on the ground 
that it would be a violation of his duty towards the empress and 
one of her daugliters, who had been appointed regents by the will 
of Theophilus. On this Bardas accused him of treason, adding a 
charge of connexion with the interest of a crazy pretender to the 
throne, named Gebon ; and Ignatius was banished to the island of 
Tercbinthus.* 

•» Vita Ignatii by Nicetas David, in p Vita Ign. 961 ; Nicol. Ep. vii. col. 

llardooin, v. 945; Const. Porph. i. 10. 139; Baron. 854. 7, and the notes; 

On this part of the history there is moch Dowling in Brit. Mag. xvii. 604-5. See, 

valuable information in some papers however, Hefele, iv. 222-4, who does 

contributed to the British Magazine by not think that the pope went so far. 

the Hev. J. G. Dowling, but unfortu- •» Brit. Mag. xvii. 605. 

uately left incomplete at his death. ' Const. Porph. iv. 30; G. Hamart. 

" Vita, 949-953; Cedren. 651 ; Pagi, Contin. p. 735 ; Vita Ign. 956 ; SchW^kh, 

xiv. 357. xxiv. 129. 

" Finlay, ii. 208. • Ignat. Ep. ad Nicol. ap. Hard. v. 



358 PHOTIUS. Boob IT. 

Bardas resolved to fill the vacaDt throne with a man wbcee 
brilliant reputation might overpower the murmurs excited by the 
deprivation of Ignatius. Photius was a member of a distinguished 
Byzantine family, a great-nephew of the patriarch Tarasius, and 
connected with the imperial house by the marriage of his node to 
a sister of Theodora, lie had lived in the enjoyment of wealth 
and splendour, he had been ambassador to the caliph of Bagdad, 
and was now secretary of state and captain of the guards ; and io 
the midst of his occupations he had acquired an amount of leamiii; 
so far surpassing that of his contemporaries that his enemies even 
referred it to unhallowed sources.^ He had been accustomed to 
carry on a part of his studies in company with his brother Tarasius^ 
and, on taking leave of him when about to set out on the embassy 
to Bagdad, presented him with another companion, in the shape df 
a summary of books which Photius had read by himself" This woit 
— the Myriobiblmi or Bibliotheca — contains notices of two hundred 
and eighty books in classical and ecclesiastical literature, with 
abridgments, extracts, and comments ; and, in addition to its value 
as a treasury of much which would otherwise have perished, it is 
remarkable in the history of literature as the prototype of our 
modern critical reviews.* Among his other writings are a 
Dictionary ; a book of discussions on questions from Scripture ; a 
considerable number of letters;. and a collection of ecclesiastical 
laws.y 

With the exception of such information as may be gathered from 
his own works, our knowledge of Photius comes almost exclusively 
from his adversaries.* The enmity of these in his own time was 
bitter ; and his name has since been pursued by writers in the 

1013; Vita, ib. 956-7; Anastas. ad he hastily dictated the * Bibliotheca * to 

Hadrian, ib. 770 ; Pagi, xiv. 490 ; an amanuensis amidst the hustle of pre- 

Schlosser, 606. Schlosser, Neander, and paration for his departure — taxes our 

Mr. Finlay (ii. 207) place the affair as to belief very severely. It seems more 

Theodora before the quarrel with Bar- probable that the notes were before 

das ; but I have followed Mr. Dowling, made, and only required arrangement ; 

Brit. Mag. xvii. 606. (Hefele has the or perhaps the whole account of the 

same order, iv. 219.) origin of the book may be merely an 

* Vita Tgnat. 960 ; Const. Porph. iv. example of a common literary artifice. 

22 ; Sym. Magister de Michaele, 31, 34 ; * Schrockh, xxi. 196; Fabric. Bibl. 

Cedren. 545. Gr. xi. 679. 

» Bibliotheca, p. 1, ed. Hoeschel, y Schrockh, xxi. 196-8. The first at- 

Rothoma^. 1653. Mr. Dowling (Brit tempt at a collected edition of Photius' 

Ma^. xvii. 267) exposes the mistake of works is that in the Patrol. Gr. ci.-cir. 

Dupin (vii. 103) and Gibbon (v. 267), In this the letters are re-arranged, with 

who suppose the work to have been additions to those published by Bp. 

written during the embassy, and marvel Mountagu (London, 1651). But my 

how Photius could, in such circum« references in geuend apply to the old 

stances, have procured the books. But edition, 

the story told by Photius himself— that ■ Dowling in B. M. xvii. 9. 



Chap. IIL ajk 8«». . PHOTIUS PATRIARCH. 359 

papal interest with a rancour which can perhaps only be paralleled 
by their treatment of the Protestant reformers. The biographer of 
Ignatius tells us that the intruding patriarch took part in Michael's 
drinking bouts, and made no scruple of associating with Gryllus 
and his gang ;* and another Greek writer states that on one occa- 
sion, when the emperor was- overcome by fifty cups, Photius drank 
sixty without any appearance of intoxication.*^ The second of these 
charges, however, is accompanied by fables so gross as altogether 
to destroy the credit of the author's evidence against Photius ;® and 
such tales are utterly inconsistent with the admission of his enemies, 
that he had succeeded (although, as they think, undeservedly) in 
gaining a character for sanctity.* Nor was his orthodoxy as yet 
impeached, although he was afterwards called in question for 
having taught that man has a reasonable and also a spiritual soul 
— an opinion countenanced by the authority of many among the 
earlier fathers.® Like Ignatius, he was a supporter of the cause of 
images, for which he states that his parents had suffered in the 
times of persecution,*^ 

Attempts were made to induce Ignatius to resign his dignity ; 
but, as such a step would have involved an acknowledgment of 
guilt, he steadfastly withstood both entreaties and severities.^ At 
length, however, he was drawn into something which the court 
could regard as a compliance ; and Photius, after having been 
ordained by Gregory of Syracuse through all the degrees of the 
ministry on six successive days, was enthroned as patriarch on 
Christmas- day.** lie repeatedly declares, even in letters to Bardas 

■ Hard. y. 976. in which he answers an objection made 
*> Sym. Magist. 19. b^ the iconomachists of his time—that, 
^ £. g. cc. 29, SO, 33, 34, 36. See smce every nation had a different repre- 
Dowling, xTii. 261. sentation of. the Saviour, there could be 
^ This is admitted in the encyclical no genuine one. Photius replies that it 
letter of the Council which condemned might as well be argued from the variety 
him (Hard. v. 1108). See Dow ling, of translations that there was no origi- 
xvii. 607. nal Gospel ; or from the different repre- 
* Svid! Mag. 38 ; Anast. Bibl. in sentations of the cross, that there was 
Patrol, cxxix. 14; Schlosser, 608: no true cross ; 9r, from ritual and litur- 
Nea'nder, vi. 301. It was condemned gical varieties, an objection might be 
by the Council of 869-70. Can. 10 in taken to the Eucharist altogether ; or, 
the Greek, or 1 1 in the L<atin. Hard. v. as every nation supposed the Saviour to 
903, 1101. have been incarnate in its own likeness, 
' It has been siud that he speaks of the story of the Incarnation might be 
his parents as having been martyrs for rejected. Thus, as Neander remarks 
the sake of images ; but this seems to ^vi. 288), he did not believe in the ex- 
have arisen from a confusion of two pas- istence of any authentic original like- 
sages, in one of which he speaks of ness, but regarded the unity of ideal 
their sufferings in that cause (£p. 113), which lay under the various representa- 
while in the other he savs that they died tions. 

early, and were adorned with '*the mar- « Vita, 957; Schlosser, 594. 
tyr's crown of patience" (Ep. 234, p. •» Vita Ign. 961 ; Dowling, xvii. 606. 
349). There is a remarkable letter (t 4) 



300 PHOTIUS AND IGNATIUS. BwkIV 

himself, that the promotion was forced on him, and tells the pope 
that he was imprisoned before he would accept it.* Nor need we 
8up])ose his reluctance insincere ; for even an ambitious man (as 
l^hotius certainly was) might well have- hesitated to encounter the 
difficulties of a position which was to be held to the exclusioD 
of such a prelate as Ignatius, and by the fevour of such patrons 
as Bardas and Michael ; while, in mitigation of the unseemlinesB 
of intruding into the place of a patriarch who was still alive, and 
whose resignation was only constructive, it is to be considered 
that Photius had belonged to the party of Gregory, and there- 
fore could have had little personal scruple as to the rights of 
Ignatius.'' 

It is said that he was required by the metropolitans of his 
patriarchate to swear that he would honour the deprived patriarch 
as a father,"* and that he obtained from Bardas a promise that 
Ignatiu3 should be kindly treated." But he very soon had the 
mortification of finding that this promise was disregsoded. Ignatius, 
in the hope of forcing him to a more explicit resignation, was 
exposed to cold and nakedness, was scourged, chained in a gloomy 
dungeon, and deprived of the consolation which he might have 
received from the visits of his friends, while many of his partisans 
were beaten, imprisoned, and mutilated with the usual Byzantine 
cruelty ;^ and Photius had to bear the odium of outrages eonunitted 
in violation of the pledge which he had required, and in contempt 
of his earnest remonstrances and entreaties.^ 

The adherents of Ignatius were zealous and resolute. They 
held a synod, at which Photius was excommunicated ; whereupon 
the patriarch, who appears from the bitterness of his letters 
* to have been a man of very irritable temper, retaliated by 
assembling another synod, and uttering a like sentence against 
Ignatius.*' In order to strengthen his position, he now sent a notice 
of his consecration to Rome, with a request that the popq would 
depute legates to a council which was to be held at Constantinople for 
the suppression of the iconoclast party, which had again attempted 
to make head. His letter was accompanied by one from the emperor, 
with splendid gifts to the apostolic see. The application for aid 

' Epp. 3, 6, ad Bardam ; Ep. ad Nicol. ** I^n. ad Nicol. ap. Hard. v. 1013 • 

ap. Baron. 861. 36 ( = Ep. 2, cd. Migno) ; Vita, ib. 9C4. * 

Hard. vi. 253. See Sclirockh, xxi. 194; p Phot. Epp. 3, 6, ad Bardam. 

Dowliiig, xvii. f)09. «» Vita Igo. 964. The acts are lost, 

^ See Schrockh, xxiv. 1.32 ; Fleury, 1. but the sentence was probably rested on 

3 ; Neand. vi. 302 ; Dowling xvii. 609. the ground of uncanonical election and 

"' Vita Ign. 961. political offences. Schlosser, 603 ; Dow- 

» Brit. Mag. xvii. 609. ling, xviii. 243-6. 



Chap. HI. a.d. 855-861. CORRESPONDENCE WITH ROME. 361 

against the iconoclasts appears to have been merely a pretext' 
— the real object being to draw the pope into the interest of 
Photius, In the mean time renewed attempts were made to obtain 
the resignation of Ignatius, at first by an increase of severity 
against him and his party, and afterwards by allowing him to 
return to Constantinople, and oflfering the restoration of his 
property." 

Nicolas, who had just been raised to the papal chair, was no 
doubt better informed as to the late events at Constantinople than 
the patriarch or the emperor imagined ;* he saw in their application 
to him an opportunity of extending his influence, and 
affected to regard it as a reference of the case to his * * 
decision. He wrote to the emperor in the style of an independent 
sovereign, and, as a hint of the price which he set on his co-opera- 
tion," he insisted on the restoration of the provinces which had 
been withdrawn from his jurisdiction, atid of the patrimony of the 
church in Calabria and Sicily.* He expressed surprise that the case 
of Ignatius should have been decided without the concurrence of 
Rome, and on evidence of a kind which was forbidden by the laws 
of the church ; ^ nor did he fail to remark on the inconsistency, 
that, while Photius represented his predecessor as having resigned 
from age and infirmity,* the emperor spoke of him as having been 
deposed. Two bishops, Rodoald of Portus, and Zacharias of Anagni, 
were sent to Constantinople as legates, with instructions to inquire 
into the matter, and not to admit Photius to communion except as 
a layman.* They were charged with a short letter to the patriarch, 
in which the pope remarked on his hasty ordination, but told him 
that, if the legates should make it favourable report, he would 
gladly own him as a brother.** 

Michael, provoked by the tone of the pope's reply, received the 
legates with dishonour. They were detmned at Constantinople for 
months, and were plied with threats and with bribery, which did 

' The biographer of Ignatius speaks party might be cleared elsewhere. 
of it as such (964). Symeon Magister * Milman, ii. 280. 
(45) relates that the tombs of Ck>nstan- " Dowliug, xviii. 373. 
tine Cepronymus and John the Gram- * Ep. 2, ap. Hard. v. 339. 
marian were violated, and their bodies y The pope's objections might seem to 

burnt, by Michael's orders. Cf. G. be founded on the false decretals ; but, 

Ilamart. Gontiu. p. 746. as we have seen, it would appear that he 

* Vita, 964 ; Schlosser, 603-4. Mr. was as yet (a.d. 860) unacquainted with 

Dowling thinks that, as Ignatius was these, except by the hint in a letter of 

already deposed, the renew^ severities Servatus Lupus (p. 339}; and the quo- 

were not meant to extort a resignation, tations which he makes are from Coeles- 

but the withdrawal of his protest against tine and other popes later than Siricius. 
Photius (Brit. Mag. xviii. 243). But it ■ Vita Ign. 964. 
seems more likely that the resignation * Nic. Ep. 1. 
was desired in order that the opposite ** Ep. 3. 



362 " FIRST AND SECOND" OODNCIJL BokIT. 

not fail of their effccf" At length a Bynod, styled by the Greeb 
^'thc First and Second,"^ and conasting, like the Niceoe cuundl, 
of three hundred and eighteen bishops, met in 861. By im 
assembly Phutius was acknowledged as patriarch. The letter 
iroui the pope was read, but with the omission of such parts as 
were likely to give offence • — whether it wene that the legates 
had consented to the suppression, or that advantage was taken 
of their ignorance of Greek. Ignatius was brought before tbe 
assembly, and was required to subscribe his own condemnatioiL 
lie l)ehaved with inflexible spirit, desired the legates to remoTe 
the " adulterer," if they wished to appear as judges, and told them 
to their faces that they had been bribed.' Seventy-two witnesses 
— a few of them senators and patricians, but for the most part 
IH^rsons of low condition, farriers, ostlers, needle-makers, and the 
like, while some are described as heretics' — were brought forward 
to sign a pai)er asserting that he had been promoted by imperial 
favour, and without canonical election.** He was stripped of the 
patriarchal robes, in which, as the matter was left to his own 
judgment, he had thought it his duty to appear ;* he was beaten, 
and, at last, when exhausted by ill treatment for more than a 
fortnight, was made, by forcibly holding his hand, to sign with 
a cross a confession that he had obtained his office irregularly 
and had administered it tyrannically.^ It was then announced to 
him that he must read this document publicly at Whitsuntide, and 
threats of losing his eyes and his hands were uttered; but he 
contrived to esca|>e in the disguise of a slave, and found a refuge 
among the monks of the islands from the search which Bardas caused 
to be made for him." An earthquake was interpreted as a witness 
from heaven in his favour, while Photius, by offering another 
explanation of it, drew on himself a charge of impiety.** Bardas, in 
deference to the general feeling, now^ permitted the deposed patriarch 
to return to a monastery in the capital,** while Michael jested on the 
stiite of affiiirs by saying that Gryllus was his own patriarch, 

c Nic. Ep. .10. « Anastas. ap. Hard. v. 751 ; Schlosser 

"^ One explanation of the name is. GOO ; Duwliug, xviii. 874. ' 

tliat, having been obliged by an out- ' Hard. v. 1016; Vita, 965. 

break of the iconoelastb to break off its » Vita, 9il5 ; Hard. v. 891, 1096. 

sessions, it afterM-ards resumed them. i* His biographer says that he bad 

(Zonaras, ap. Haid. v. 119C ; Schrcickh, been duly chosen by the people and the 

xxiv. 13i).) Mr. Dowling prefers the bishops, and tliat the charge might more 

explanation proposed by Hody, that, fitly have been brought against Photius. 

having been employed on two distinct 9C8. 

subjects— the iconoclastic question, and * Vita, 905. ^ lb. 969. 

that Iwtween Photius and Ignatius — its " lb. 672 ; Schlosser, 607. 

proceedings were recorded iu two sepa- " Vita, 972 j Sym. Mag. de Mich. 35 • 

rate tomes, xviii. 376. Schlosser, 6o8. • Vita, 972! 



Chap.UL Aj)c8«i-3. PHOTIUS AND NICOLAS. 363 

Ignatius the patriarch of the Christians, and Photius the patriarch 
of Barda8.P 

The acts of the council were sent to Nicolas, with a request from 
the emperor that he would confirm them, and at the same time 
Photius addressed to the pope a letter which, by the skill displayed 
in its composition, has extorted the unwilling admiration of Baronius.** 
He professes to deplore in a pathetic strain the elevation which he 
represents as having been forced on him ; the pope, he says, ought 
rather to pity than to blame him for having exchanged a life of 
peace, content, and general^esteem, for a post of danger, anxiety, 
unpopularity, and envy/ As for the ecclesiastical laws which 
Nicolas had spoken of in his letters, they were not known at Con- 
stantinople.' The rule which forbade such ordinations as his was 
not binding, inasmuch as it had not been sanctioned by a general 
council ; he defends his ordination by the parallel cases of his 
predecessors Nicephorus and Tarasius, who had been promoted 
from among the laity, and by the stronger cases of Ambrose in the 
west and of Nectarius in the east, who had been chosen to the 
episcopate while yet unbaptised.* He had, he says, sanctioned in 
the late synod a canon against the elevation of a layman to 
a bishoprick except by regular degrees ; and he expresses a wish 
that the church of Constantinople had before observed the rule, as 
in that case he would have escaped the troubles which had come on 
him.° The patriarch's tone throughout, although respectful, is that 
of an equal. In conclusion he reflects with bitter irony on the morals 
of the Romans, and prays that Rome may no longer continue to 
be a harbour for worthless persons such as those whom it had 
lately received without letters of communion — adulterers, thieves, 
drunkards, oppressors, murderers, and votaries of all uncleanness, 
who had run away from Constantinople in fear of the punishment for 
their vices.* 13y this description were intended the refugees of the 
Ignatian party. 

But the Ignatians had also conveyed to the pope their version 
of the late events, and Nicolas wrote in a lofty strain both to the 
emperor and to the patriarch.y The Roman church, he says, is 
the head of all, and on it all depend.* He sets aside the parallels 
which Photius had alleged for his consecration, on the ground that 

p Vita, 973. decretals are meant, bat only that tbe 

1 861. 33, 55. He gives it in a trans- laws in question were western, 

lation, 34-54. The Greek is not in * §§ 42-47. 

Monntagu's edition, but is £p. 2 in « §§ 48-49. 

Migne's (Patrol. Gr. cii.). * § 54. 

' Bar. 861. 36-9. ' Epp. 5-6. 

• This need not imply that the false " Hard. v. 133. 



364 LETTERS OF MICHAEL AND NICOLAS. * Hoc* IT. 

the persons in question had not intruded into the room of wrongfully 
ejected orthodox bishops,*^ and tells Photius that, if he did not 
know the laws of the church, it was because they made against 
his cause.^ At a synod held in 863, the pope deposed and ex- 
communicated Zacharias for misconduct in his legation, reserring 
the case of Rodoald, who w^as then employed on a mission in 
France;*^ he declared Photius to be deprived of all spiritual oflfce 
and dignity, and threatened that, in case of his disobedience, he 
should be excommunicated without hope of restoration until on his 
deathbed ; he annulled all orders conferred by him, and threatened 
his consecrators and abettors with excommunication. All pro- 
ceedings against Ignatius were declared to be void, and it was 
required that he should be acknowledged as patriarch. The pope 
embodied the resolutions of this council in aletter to the emperor;* 
and he desired the patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem 
to make it known that the Roman church in no way consented to 
the usurpation of Photius.' 

Michael replied in violent indignation, that by his application to 
the pope he had not intended to acknowledge him as a judge, or to 
imply that his own clergy were not sufficient for the decision of the 
case ; he scoffed at Rome as antiquated, and at the Latin language 
as a barbarous jargon/ Nicolas, who was elated by his recent 
triumph over Lothair, met the emperor with no less haughtiness.* 
He taxes him with disrespect towards God's priests, and, as 
Michael had spoken of having " ordered " him to send legates to 
the council, he tells him that such language is not to be used to 
the successors of St. Peter.** To the reflections on the Latin 
tongue, he answers that such words, uttered in the "excess of 
madness," were injurious to Him who made all languages, and 
were ridiculous as coming from one who styled himself emperor of 
the Romans.* He insists at great length on the privileges of the 
Roman see, derived not from councils, but from the chief of the 
Apostles^ He utters many threats against all who shall take part 

• Hard. v. 130-1, 133, 135. canon of Chalcedon, which in earlier 
*» lb. 135. times had been regarded as an offenoe 
«^ Ep. 7 ; ib. 137. See p. 324. against Rome, is, by an extraordinary 
^ Ep. 7. interpretation, pressed into the Roman 

• Ep. 4. interest. The canon had directed that 
' Nicol. ap. Hard. v. 161. The em- a bishop or a clerk, having a complaint 

peror's own letter is lost. against his metropolitan, should apply 

If Epp. 8, 9 (iMay, 8ti5 ; Nov. 8G6). to the primate (^^ofixoi') of the diocese 

*» Hard. v. 147-8. or to the see of Constantinople. The 

' Ib. 148-9. appeal to the primate, says Nicolas, is 

^ Ib. 1G2-3. In one of the letters to the rule; the recourse to Constant!- 

Michael (Ep. 8, col. 159), the ninth nople is only allowed as secondary. 



Chap. IU. a.d. 863-«. . CONVERSION OF BULGARIA. 365 

against Ignatius.™ He proposes that the rival patriarchs, or their 
representatives, should appear at Rome for a trial of the cause." 
He warns the emperor to abstain from interfering with spiritual 
things,® and desires him to bum his late letter, threatening that 
otherwise he will himself suspend it to a stake, and, to the disgrace 
of the writer, will burn it in the sight of all the nations which are 
at Rome ;^ and he invokes curses on the person who is to read his 
letters to the emperor, if he should in any respect mutilate or 
mistranslate them.** He sent the acts of the Roman 
council to the clergy of Constantinople, with a long detail 
of the affair ; *" and at the same time wrote to Photius, Ignatius, 
Bardas, Theodora, and the empress Eudoxia. 

Michael, provoked by the opposition of Nicolas, and by the 
manner in which it was carried on, looked out for some means of 
annoying the pope. Although Charlemagne's imperial title had 
been acknowledged at Constantinople, it was as emperor of the 
Franks, not of Rome ; and his successors had not obtained from 
the east any higher title than that of king." Michael now offered 
to recognise Louis II. as emperor, on condition of his acknow- 
ledging the council which was so offensive to the pope ; and Louis 
appeared willing to accept the terms.* But events soon occurred 
which rendered this negotiation abortive. 

A new question arose to complicate the differences between the 
Greek and the Latin churchea The Bulgarians, who are sup- 
posed to have been a people of Asiatic origin, of the same stock 
with the Huns, and at one time seated near the sea of Azov, had, 
about the year 680, occupied a territory in Mcesia and Dardania, 
where, in consequence of intermarriages with the native Slaves, 
they had gradually exchanged their original language for a dialect 
of the Slavonic." They had been engaged in continual hostilities 
with the Byzantine empire ; Nicephorus had lost his life in war 
with them, and they had endangered the throne of Michael Rhan- 
gabe. In the early part of the ninth century, Christianity had been 
introduced among them by some captives, but with little effect 
During the regency of Theodora, however, circumstances occurred 

And by the primate of the diocese the «» lb. 182-4, 192-3. 

council could mean no other than the " lb. 168. ° lb. 171. 

\icar of the chief apostle : ** ipse est p lb. 193. 

enim primas, qui et primus habetur et i lb. 172. ' Ep. 10. 

summus." Gieseler, after quoting the • 'P^|, not BatriAfi^j. See Pagi, xiii. 

passage (II. i. 37 1), very reasonably adds 65 ; Gibbon, iv. 510. 

"(! I)." Nicolas had already turned » Vita Ign. 981 ; Schlosser, 614-5. 

this canon to use in a somewhat different ■ See Schrockh, xxi. 399; Gibbon, ▼. 

way. Kp. ad Car. Calv. ap. Hard. v. 290-1; Gfrorer, Karol. i. 430; Thierry, 

585. Hist. d'Attila, i. 304. 



366 BULGARIA. B«I^ 

which gave a new impulse to the progrese of the Gospel among the 
Bulgarians. A monk named Cupharas, in whom the empress took 
an interest, fell into the hands of their prince Bogoris ; and the 
empress proposed that he should be exchanged for a sister of 
Bogorisy who was then a captive at Constantinople. The Bulgarian 
princess, who had been converted to the Gospel during' her captiTity, 
zealously attempted, after returning to her own country, to cany 
on the work which Cupharas had begun. Bogoris himself held 
out, until, during a famine, after having in vain addressed himself 
to other deities, he had recourse to the Gk)d of the Christians ; the 
success of his prayer resulted in his conversion; and he was 
baptised by the patriarch of Constantinople, changing his name 
for that of the emperor Michael, who by proxy acted as his god- 
father.* The convert requested Michael to supply him with a 
painter for the decoration of his palace ; and a monk named 
Methodius (for art was then confined to the monasteries) was sent 
into Bulgaria. Bogoris employed him to paint a hall with terrible 
subjects, intending that these should be taken from the perils of 
hunting; whereupon the monk depicted the Last Judgment, as 
being the most terrible of all scenes. The representation of heD, 
which was explained as setting forth the future lot of the heathen, 
alarmed the prince into abandoning the idols which he had until 
then retained ; and many of his subjects were moved by the sight 
of the picture to seek admission into the church.^ A rebellion, 
which soon after broke out in consequence of the prince's conver- 
sion, was put down by liim with a cruelty which accorded ill with 
his new profession.' 

Pliotius was probably the patriarch who had gone into Bulgaria 
for the baptism of Bogoris ; and he had addressed to him a long 
letter, or rather treatise,* on Christian doctrine and practice, and 
particularly on the duties of a sovereign. But soon after this we 
find that the Bulgarian prince made an application to Nicolas, 
accompanied by valuable presents, for the purpose of obtaining the 
po])e's counsel and assistance towards the conversion of his people.** 
It would seem that he had been perplexed between the claims of 
rival forms of Christianity — Greek, Roman, and Armenian ;® and 

' Const. Porph. iv. 14 ; Cedrenus, empire, and, having been reduced to 

539-40. The date of the baptism is straits, offered to become Christian as a 

variously given — from 845 to 864 ; but condition of peace. Schlosser, 629. 

the later time appears to be the more ^ Const. Porph. iv. 15; Cedren. 540-1. 

correct. Pagi (xv. 53) and Gieseler * Nicol. Resp. ad Consolta Bolgar. c. 

(II. i. 372) place it in 861. See 17, ap. Hard. v. 

Schrockh, xxi. 404. According to • Phot. Ep. 1. ^ Anastas. 260. 

another account, Rogoris invaded the * Nic. Resp. c. 106. 



CHAP.m. A.D 861-7. ANSWER OF NICOLAS TO THE BULGARIANS. 367 

he may very naturally have wished for some instruction better 
adapted to the state of his knowledge than the somewhat too refined 
treatise which he had received from the patriarch of Constantinople.* 
But in addition to this, it is most likely that Bogoris was actuated 
by a jealous dread of the empire which bordered so closely on him, 
and by an apprehension of the consequences which might result 
from a religious connexion with his ancient enemies.* Nicolas 
replied by sending into Bulgaria two bishops, Paul of Populonia, 
and Formosus of Portus, with a letter in which the questions pro- 
posed to him were answered under 106 heads/ This document, 
while it displays the usual lofty pretendons of Rome, is in other 
respects highly creditable to the good sense and to the Christian 
feeling of the writer. He sets aside many frivolous questions, and 
answers others with a wise treatment of their indifference, and with 
care to abstain from laying down minutely rigid rules. He rebukes 
thp harshness which had been shown to a Greek who had pretended 
to the character of a priest ;*^ he censures the king for the cruelty 
which he had used in the suppression of the late rebellion, but 
tells him that, as he had acted in zeal for the faith, and had erred 
rather from ignorance than from wickedness, he may hope for for- 
pveness if he repent ;** and he exhorts him to refrain from the use 
of force against those who continue in their idolatry — to hold no 
communion with them, but to deal with them by the weapons of 
reason only.* He advises that torture should no longer be used to 
discover the guilt of criminals,^ and that such persons should be 
treated with a gentleness becoming the faith which the Bulgarians 
had adopted." The cross is to be substituted for the horse's tail 
which had hitherto been the national standard." Idolatrous 
practices, charms, and arts of divination are to be forsaken.^ 
Those who, as heathens, had married two wives must put away the 
second, and do penance — ^polygamy being no less contrary to the 
original condition of man than to tiie law of Christ.^ In answer to 
the request that a patriarch mi^ht be appointed for the country, 
the pope says that he must wait for the report of his envoys as to 
the number of Christians ; in the mean time he sends a bishop, 
and undertakes to send more if required ; and he promises that, 
when the church is organised, one with the titie of archbishop, if 

* Neand. ▼. 424. » Cc 41, 102. 

• Schrockh. xxiv. 149-151. ^ 0. 86. 

' Responsa ad Consolta Bulgaroram, ■" 0. 19-32. 

Hard. 353-386. (Aug. 866.) ■ C. 83. 

r Cc. 14-16. •» Cc. 35, 62, 67, 77, 79. 

k C. 17. » C.87. 



368 BULGARIA CLAIMED BY GREEKS AND BY LATINS. IVv.k IV. 

not of patriarch, shall be placed at its head.** There are, he says, 
properly only three patriarchal sees — those of Constantinople and 
Jerusalem, although so styled, being of inferior honour, because 
they were not of apostolical foundation;' and he concludes by 
exhorting the Bulgarians, amidst the claims of conflicting teachers, 
to cleave to the holy Roman church, which had always been without 
spot or wrinkle.' 

Bogoris liad also applied to Louis of Germany, who sent him a 
bishop; but it is said that this bishop, on arriving in Bulgaria, 
found the country sufficiently provided with clergy from Rome, 
and returned home without having attempted to aid or to disturb 
their labours.* 

But at Constantinople the pope's intervention aroused great 
indignation. Nicolas claimed Bulgaria on the ground that it had 
belonged to the Roman jurisdiction while it was a province of the 
empire — that the people had voluntarily placed themselves under 
bim, and that he had provided them with churches and clergy ; 
while Photius insisted on his own right as derived from tlie con- 
version of the nation." The patriarch summoned a council to 
meet at Constantinople, and, in a letter addressed to the patriarchs 
of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem,* denounced the invasion 
of Bulgaria. Within the last two years, he says, men from the 
west, the region of darkness, had intruded into this portion of his 
fold, corrupting the Gospel with pernicious novelties.^ They 
taught a diflerence of usages as to fasting ; they forbade the clergy 
to marry ; they denied the right of presbyters to confirm ; and 
their bishops, in opposition to apostles, fathers, and councils, 
administered a second unction to persons who had already been 
confirmed according to the Greek rite.* But above all, they 
adulterated the creed with spurious additions, affirming that the 
Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son. Photius reprobates this 

' C 72. thereupon left his retreat, made -war on 
' C. 92. his son, blinded and imprisoned him, 
■ C. 11)6. and bestowed the crown on a younger 
* Annal. Fuld. 867, ap. Pertz, i. 380. son, whom he threatened to treat in the 
The western writers in general speak as same manner if he should not be faith- 
if the conversion of Bulgaria had been fill to his duty. He then returned to 
entirely the work of the Latin church his cloister. 
(Schrockh, xxiv. 149-151). Regino * Schrockh, xxiv. 154. 
(Ann. 868, ap. Pertz, i. 580) relates that ' £p. 2. Baronius is very abusive in 
the king, after having for a time com- his comments on this epistle, some of 
bined the strictest asceticism in private which rest on the assumption that 
with the outward pomp of royalty, Photius was an eunuch (e.g. 867. 67; 
withdrew into a monastery ; that his 868. 45)-^which Pagi (xv. 149) and Fa- 
son, who succeeded to the throne, gave bricius (xi. 671-2) show to be untrue, 
himself up to profligacy, and attempted ^ P. 49. 
to restore paganbm ; that the old king * P. 50. 



Chap. III. a.d. 862-7. BASIL THE MACEDONIAN. 369 

doctrine with all his force, as a denial of the unity of principle in 
the Godhead, unheard of by Athanasius, Gregory, and Basil — as 
a blasphemy against the Holy Ghost, or rather against the whole 
Trinity, such as cannot be exceeded, and is deserving of ten 
thousand anathemas.'^ He denounces the Romans as apostate 
and servants of Antichrist ; ^ and he invites the oriental patriarchs 
to send envoys to Constantinople for the purpose of combining 
with him in resistance to them.^ Although Photius had great 
reason to complain both of the interference with bis converts, and 
of the manner in which the pope had set aside all but the Roman 
customs, he appears to be open to the charge of swelling his per- 
sonal quarrel with Rome into a schism between the churches;** 
and the tone in which he now enlarged on the difference of usages 
was very unlike that in which he had some years before adverted 
to them in his elaborate letter to Nicolas.* The synod summoned 
by Photius was held in 867. It replied to the Roman anathemas 
by pronouncing a like sentence against Nicolas himself ; and the 
patriarch, in the hope of drawing the western emperor into his 
interest, contrived that acclamations in honour of Louis H. and 
Ingilberga should be mixed with those in honour of the Byzantine 
rulers/ 

In the mean time important political changes were in progress. 
Bardas had gradually acquired a more and more complete ascend- 
ancy over bis nephew, while the emperor sank continually deeper 
into degrading pleasures.^ In 862 Bardas was advanced to the 
dignity of Caesar; and, although his rule was oppressive and 
unpopular, it is acknowledged that he exhibited much talent for 
government,** and that he exerted himself for the revival of learning, 
which had long been neglected at Constantinople.* But in no long 
time his influence was disturbed by that of a rival, Basil the 
Macedonian. Basil, although his pedigree was afterwards deduced 
by flatterers from the Persian Arsacid®, from Alexander the Great, 
and from Constantine,*^ was really of Slavonic race. His birth was 
humble, and his first appearance at Constantinople was as a needy 
adventurer, seeking shelter for a night in the porch of a monastery, 

• Pp. 50, 52-3, 56-7. A treatise by ' Schrockh, xx. 153; Hefele, iv. 

Photius, * De Spiritus Sancti Mystago- S42-3. » Cedren. 547. 

gia/ was published by Prof. Hergenro- •» Vita Ign. 955 ; Cedren. 550-1 ; Fin- 

ther, of Wiirzburg (Ratisbon, 1857), and lay, ii. 336. 

is reprinted in the Patrol. Gr. cii. * Cedren. 547. See the remarkable 

b F. 55. history of the philosopher Leo, bishop 

c p. 57. of Thessalouica, in Const. Porph. iv. 

^ Schrockh, xxiv. 160. 27-9 ; or Cedrenus, 548-550. 

« Phot. Ep. 2, ed. Migne ; or in Baron. ^ Const. Porph. v. 2-3 ; Cedren. 557. 

861. 42-4. See Gibbon, iv. 4:25 ; Finlay, ii. 272. 

2 B 



370 BASIL THE MACEDONIAN. Book IV. 

where the abbot, it is said, was tlirice warned in visions by the 
patron, St Diomede, to open the gate and admit him.™ Basil 
found employment as servant to a kinsman of the emperor, and 
after a time was introduced to the notice of Michael, who, in 
reiyard of his accomplishments as a wrestler, a jockey, and a 
toper," raised him to the dignity of the patriciate, and bestowed 
on him one of his own mistresses in marriage.® Bardas began 
to take alarm at the rapid rise of the new favourite ; but Michael 
and Basil gave him a solemn assurance of safety, signed by the 
emperor's own hand.** Soon after, however, the murder of the Caesar 
was concerted while he was engaged with the emperor on a military 
expedition. The assassins, to whom the signal was given by the 
sign of the cross, hesitated to strike him in the imperial presence ; 
but Basil gave the first blow from behind, and the victim was 
despatched while embracing the emperor's feet.** After a short 
interval, during which the vigour of Bardas was missed in the 
government, and complaints of the general discontent reached even 
the ears of Michael, Basil was nominated Caesar, and on Whitsunday 
867 was crowned by the emperor's hands with a diadem which had 
been blessed by Photius.' He immediately began to display talents 
of a difierent order from those which had won for him the imperial 
favour, and endeavoured to put some restraint on the increasing 
grossness of his patron's debaucheries ; but the attempt provoked 
Michael to such a degree that he is said in bis drunken frenzy to 
have given orders for the Caesar's death, and to have announced an 
intention of promoting a boatman in his room.' Basil felt that he 
must sacrifice the emperor's life or his own, and by his command 
Michael, after having stupefied himself with wine at supper, in the 
Caesar's company, was murdered on the 24th of September, 867.* 
The Greek historians can discover no other redeeming fact in the 
life of this wretched prince than that he bestowed a chalice and a 
splendid chandelier on the church of St. Sophia." Basil found an 
exhausted treasury, but exerted himself with vigour and success to 
replenish it and to restore the empire.^ 

" Const. Porph. v. 9 ; G. Hamartol. " Const. Porph. iv. 44, v. 24-6 ; Sjm. 

Contin. pp. 725-8 ; Cedren. 560. Mag. 47. 

n Const. Porph. v. 12 ; Cedren. 563-4. « G. Hamart. Contin. pp. 749, 750 ; 

" Const PoiT)h. V. 16; Sym. Magist. Const Porph. iv. 44, v. 27 ; Cedren. 567; 

de Mich. 40; Schloeser, 630-1. Pagi, xv. 115; Schlosser, 653-8; Fin- 

p Cedren. 566 ; Schlosser, 634-8. lay, ii 232. The continuator of Ha- 

1 Const. Porph. v. 18 ; Cedren. 555- martolus relates that all Basil's agents 

6 : Schlosser, 639. Baronius traces the in the murder came to bad ends. 752-3. 

fate of Bardas to his guilt in opposing " Const. Porph. iv. 45 ; Cedren. 557. 

the pope. 8r.7. 75, seqq. « Const Porph. v. 29, seqq. ; Cedren. 

' Const. Porph. iv. 43; Cedren. 567; 567-8, .'>70, 577-8. 
Schlosser. f*M. 



Chap.UI. A.D. 867-8. PHOTI US DEPOSED. -371 

Two days after the death of Michael, Photius was deposed/ He 
had formerly been on friendly terms with Basil, and contradictory 
accounts are given of the reason for his deposition. By some it is 
explained in a manner discreditable to him, while others say that he 
provoked the emperor by refiising the eucharist to him as a murderer 
and an usurper.* 

Nicolas had written to Hincmar, detailing the history of the 
Bulgarian affair, and requesting the assistance of the Frankish 
clergy, whose character stood highest for learning among the clergy 
of the west, to combat the attacks which had been made by the 
Greeks on the Christianity of the Latins.* In consequence of this 
invitation, Hincmar desired Odo bishop of Beauvais, and other 
divines, to collect materials for a general defence ;** and the result 
was the production of treatises by Odo, iEneas of Paris, and Ra- 
tramn.*^ Of these, the work of Ratraran is regarded as the most 
valuable.** The first three books of it are devoted to the question 
of the Holy Spirit's procession, while the fourth and last discusses 
the controversy as to rites and discipline. It is remarkable that, in 
opposition to the line usually taken by Nicolas, the monk of Corbie 
dwells on the sufficiency of uniting in faith, and censures the Greeks, 
not for varying from the Roman usages, but for insisting on their 
own as exclusively correct and necessary.* The Greek doctrine as 
to the Holy Spirit was also condemned by a synod of bishops from 
the dominions of Louis of Germany, which met at Worms in 868.' 

Basil reinstated Ignatius in the patriarchate with great pomp,' 
and sent a member of each party to Rome, accompanied by one of 
his own oflScers, for the purpose of representing the state of affwrs ; 

J' Vita IgD. 981. Mr. Finlay says as calumnious ivere not without fonnda- 

that he remained in office two years, li. tion in the practice of some among the 

274. Latins. See Giesel. II. i. 375. Dr. 

* G. Hamart. Contin. 754; Zonaras, Floss supposes that Scotns, as might 
ap. Baron. 867. 101 ; Schrockh, xxiv. have been expected from his general 
161-2. The refusal of communion seems character, took the Greek side in the 
hardly agreeable to the character of controversy between the churches, and 
Photius, who had not scrupled to asso- that this was the reason why Nicolas 
ciate with Michael and Bardas, notwith- endeavoured to procure his dismissal 
standing their vices (Neand. vi. 815). from the court of Charles the Bald. 
Nor is it probable that, if such a refusal (Patrol, cxxii. Praef. xxiii. ; see above, 
had been given, he would, in reminding p. 314.) But the date assigned to the 
Basil of their former friendship, have pope's letter, a.d. 861-2, seems hardly 
said in particular, " You have received consistent with this. 

at my hands the awful and immaculate ** Opera, ii. 610. 

mysteries" (Ep. 97, init.). Baronius ' Patrol, cxix. cxxi. See pp. 187, 

solves the question in his own way, by n. «, 334. 

saying that the patriarch was deposed in ^ Mabill. VI. Ixxxi. ; Schrockh, xxiv. 

consequence of the condemnation by 178-183; Neand. vi. 313. 

Nicolas. 867. 101. • Ratr. contra Graecorum Opposita, 

• Nic. Ep. 70; Hincm. ii. 809. Some iv. I. 'See Hefele, iv. 352. 
of the charges which the pope mentions « Vita Ign. 986. 

2 B 2 



372 EIGHTH GENERAL COUNCIL Book IV 

but the enroy of Photius was shipwrecked and died on the 
journey,** so that his cause was left without an advocate. The 
representative of Ignatius was charged with a letter from the 
patriarch, in which the authority of St. Peter's successors was 
acknowledged in terms such as had not been usual at Constantinople.* 
Adrian, who had now succeeded Nicolas, assembled a synod which 
renewed the former sentence against Photius.*^ It was ordered that 
the copy of the Byzantine synod's acts which had been transmitted 
to Rome should be burnt, and that those at Constantinople should 
share the same fate.™ 

A council, which is regarded in the Roman church as the eighth 
General Council," met at Constantinople in October 869. It was 
attended by two bishops and a deacon from Rome ; Antioch 
was represented by the metropolitan of Tyre, Jerusalem by a 
presbyter ;^ and to these a representative of the Alexandrian see 
was added at the ninth session.^ Some high civil officers were 
present, but the number of bishops was at first exceedingly 
small ;^ and, although afterwards gradually increased, it did not 
rise beyond 60 at the ninth session, and 102 or 109 at the tenth 
and lasf 

On the first day the sentence of the late Roman council against 
Photius was adopted, and all bishops who afterwards joined the 
assembly were required to sign it* The second, third, and fourth 
sessions were chiefly occupied in dealing with bishops and clergy 
who, after having been ordained by Ignatius or his predecessor, 
had submitted to Photius. These presented a confession of their 
ofiences, alleging that they had been forced or deceived into them ; 

^ Vitalgn. 985. Anastaaius the Li- 899, seqq.); in the Greek, only 14 (ib. 

brarian makes an edifying use of the 1097, seqq.) : the reason being, perhaps, 

shipwreck, — ** Qui navim Ohristi, hoc that the I«atins prepared the larger num- 

est ecdesiam, sciderat,^ navis sue scis- ber, while the Greeks inserted in their 

sionem non inconyenienter incurrit." report such onlj as related to the main 

Hard. v. 754. subject (Schrockh, xxiv. 170-1). Among 

' The letters of the emperor and of those which are found in Latin only are 

the patriarch are in Hard. ▼. 790-3. some which lay down pseudoisidorian 

k Hard. v. 862-871. " Ib. 874. doctrines as to the position of metropo- 

^ See Baron. 869. 61-4; Pagi, xv. litans, and the trial of bishops (cc. 17, 

180; Palmer on the Church, ii. 215. 26). One, directed against the icono- 

*> Hard. r. 764, 771. clasts, is found in both versions (c. 3 

p Hard. v. 884, 1092. There are two Or. ; c. 7 Lat.) ; and a Frank writer, 

reports of this council — the one in La- the continuator of Aimoin, speaks of 

tin, by Anastasius the Librarian, who this as contrary to the orthodox doctrine 

was then at Constantinople for the pur- of the fisithers. Giesel. li. i. 377. 

pose of negotiating a marriage between i Ib. 764-5; 1025-7. 

the families of Louis II. and Basil ' Held on the last day of February, 

(Hard. v. 755) ; the other Greek : and 870. See Pagi, xv. 163 ; Schrockh. 

they vary very considerably. In the xxiv. 1C4-5; Hefele, iv. 409. 

Latin acts there are 27 canons (Hard. v. • Hard. v. 773, 817. 



chap.ui. aj).869. of the latins. 373 

and they were admitted to communion on condition of perfonning 
some penitential exercises. At the fourth session there was a sharp 
discussion with a bishop named Theophilus, who was firm in his 
adherence to Photius.^ The patriarch himself was brought forward 
on the fifth day, and met the questions addressed to him by a 
dignified silence. When urged to speak, he replied that God 
would hear him although he said nothing. " You will not," said 
the Roman legates, " by your silence escape a greater condemna- 
tion." " Neither," he replied, " did Jesus by holding his peace 
escape condemnation ; " and he resumed his former silence." When 
the lay president of the council, Baanes, who treated him with a 
courtesy unlike the behaviour of the ecclesiastics, afterwards asked 
him what he could allege in his justification, Photius answered, 
" My justifications are not in this world." * 

The emperor appeared at the sixth session, and told the council 
that he had absented himself from its earlier meetings lest he should 
be supposed to influence its decision as to Photius. y But the afiair 
of the patriarch was not yet concluded. He was cited before the 
council on the seventh day, and entered leaning on a stafl^; — " Take 
away his stafi^," said the Roman legate Marinus, ^* it is an ensign 
of pastoral dignity." * The bishops of his party in vain appealed to 
the canons.* Anathemas were pronounced against Photius and his 
adherents, the most odious epithets being attached to their names ; ^ 
the writings and documents on his side were burnt ;*' and, in token 
of the exasperation by which the council was animated, it is said 
that the condemnation of the patriarch was subscribed in the wine 
of the eucharistic cup.** 

In the course of the council's proceedings, however, it appeared 
that the personal question as to the patriarchate was not the only 
subject of difference between Rome and Constantinople. The 
Romans complained that the pope's letter had been mutilated in the 
reading ; the Greeks told Ignatius that his church bad been made 
the servant of Rome ; and Ignatius himself was as resolute as 
Photius to assert the jurisdiction of his see over Bulgaria.* Some 
ambassadors from that country were at Constantinople, and their 

< Hard. y. 782, seqq. gently treated, and cites prodigies which 

" lb. 819, 1051. soon after happened in favour of this 

'lb. 822, 1054. opinion (988-9). In the subscriptions 

T lb. 835, 1064. to the acts of the council, the HUiman 

' lb. 839, 1065. legates stand first, while Basil and his 

* lb. 841. sons do not sign until after the represen- 

^ lb. 873. tatives of all the patriarchates. (Hard. 

« lb. 875, 1086. V. 922-3.) See Hefele, i. 25-7. 

•• Vita Ign. 988. The biographer, • Schrockh, zxiv. 1 73. 
however, thinks that Photius was too 



374 DISPUTES AS TO BULGARIA. ««« IV- 

master — by what influence is unknown — had been again induced 
to waver in his religious allegiance. The ambassadors, on being 
summoned into the emperor's presence, with Ignatius, the Roman 
legates, and the representatives of the eastern patriarchs, inquired 
to which church they must consider their country to belong. The 
orientals asked to which church it had belonged while a province of 
the empire, and whether the clergy at the time of the Bulgarian 
conquest had been Greeks or Latins. It was answered that the 
province had been subject to Constantinople, and that the clergy 
found in it were Greeks ; and on these grounds it was adjudged that 
Bulgaria ought to belong to the patriarchate of (Constantinople. 
The Roman legates, however, disputed the alleged facts, and 
handed to Ignatius a paper from the pope, charging him not to 
interfere, which the patriarch received in a respectful manner, but 
did not further regard. The emperor dismissed the legates w^ith 
coolness.' Ignatius in the same year consecrated an archbishop for 
Bulgaria, and within a short time all the Latin clergy were ejected 
from that country.^ 

John Vni. wrote to the Bulgarians, exhorting them to return to 
the communion of his church, which they had formerly 
chosen, and warning them as to the danger of a connexion 
with the Greeks, who, he said, were always in one heresy or another.** 
He wrote to Ignatius, telling him that, as he was indebted to the 
apostolic see for his dignity, so he should lose it if he kept possession 
of Bulgaria. The Greek clergy, who were already excommunicate 
for introducing their errors into a church planted by the holy see, 
must be withdrawn within thirty days ; and Ignatius is threatened 
with excommunication and deposition if he should neglect the 
onler.* Letters in a like tone were written to the Bulgarian king, 
and to the Greek clergy in that country;^ and a violent collision 
would probably have ensued, but for the death of Ignatius, which 
took place in 878. 

Photius, after his deprivation, had at first been treated with 
extreme severity. He complains in his letters that he is strictly 
guarded by soldiers ; that he is deprived of all intercourse with 
relations, friends, monks, and clergy ; that his property is confiscated, 
that he is allowed no attendance of servants, and in his sickness can 
obtain no medicines." He suffers from hunger, and yet more from 

' Vita Hadriani ap. Murator. v. 267- Paulicians. See p. 185. 
8 ; Schrockh, xxiv. 173-5. »« Hard. vi. 10, 19. 

f Vita Hadr. 344 ; Pagi, xv. 218. It » lb. 20. 
was to this archbishop that Peter of ^ lb. 22, 50, 56, 59, &c. 
Sicily addressed his account of the » Ep. 97, p. 137. 



Chap. Ui. a.d. 869-878. RESTORATION OF PHOTIUS. 375 

" a famine of the word of God ;" he is separated from all books — a 
cruelty unexampled in the persecutions of the orthodox by heretics 
or by pagans; and in the mean time his adherents are cruelly 
treated, churches are destroyed, holy things are profaned, the poor, 
whom he had tended for the benefit of his soul, are left friendless 
and helpless." He inveighs against the synod of 869 as having 
neglected all the forms of justice in its dealings with him — as 
worse than anything that had been known among the most lawless 
and savage heathens." 

But after a time he found means to recover the favour of Basil. 
According to the biographer of Ignatius, he drew up an imaginary 
pedigree, tracing the emperor's ancestry to the Persian kings ; this 
was written in antique letters on parchment of corresponding 
appearance ; it was bound in the cover of an old manuscript, and 
was introduced into the library of the palace by the keeper, who 
took an opportunity of showing it to Basil, and suggested that 
Photius was the only man capable of explaining it'^ A still more 
unlikely tale asserts that the emperor's love was won by charms 
administered in his food and drink.** But it would seem that in 
truth Basil, out of regard for the unequalled learning of Photius, and 
perhaps also from a wish to conciliate his partisans, whose constancy 
to the ejected patriarch may have raised some apprehensions, 
recalled him from banishment, and appointed him tutor to Leo, 
the heir apparent of the crown.' While thus employed, he was 
reconciled with Ignatius, and from that time lived on good terms with 
him, steadily refrising to become the head of a party in opposition to 
the aged patriarch." 

Photius was now raised to the see as successor of Ignatius, and 
announced his promotion to John VIII., with a request 

Oct 878 

that the pope would send legates to a new synod which 
was to be held at Constantinople.^ The chief object of this application 
was to secure the assistance of Rome for the purpose of quieting the 
Ignatian party ;" but John seized on it as an acknowledgment that 
the title of Photius to the patriarchal throne depended on the papal 

" Epp. 97, pp. 137-8; 174, pp. 240, • So Photius himself said in the synod 

247-8, 260. of 879. (Hard. vi. 256.) His oppo- 

« Epp. 117-8.- nents, however, teU a different story. 

p Vita Ign. 1004. Comp. Sym. Ma- See Hefele, iv. 430. 

gist de Basil. 7, and a story told by the * Hard. vi. 1152. Gregory of Syra- 

same writer as to the emperor Theophi- case, who had shared the misfortunes of 

lus and the patriarch Methodius. De Photius, now received the bishoprick of 

Theoph. 24. Nicsea, in which he died soon after. Vita 

*» Hard. V. 1149. Ign. 1008. 

' Const. Porph. v. 44 ; Schrockh, » Neander, vi. 322-3. 
xxiv. 186; Hefele, iv. 427. 



376 EIGHTH GENERAL COUNCIL OF THE GREEKS. Boc«lV. 

judgment, and supposed that the Byzantines would be willing to 
bear anything for the salce of obtaining his countenance. Two 
Aug. 16, bishops and a priest were sent as legates, with letters 

®^^* and instructions in which it was swd that Photius might 
be restored if he would make satisfaction for his oflTences and would 
ask mercy of the synod ; and it was insisted on that he should 
resign all pretensions to Bulgaria.* The ensigns of the patriarchal 
dignity were transmitted in the same manner which had been usual 
in bestowing the pall on metropolitans.^ 

The synod — the eighth General Council according to the Greek 
reckoning — was imposing as to numbers, consisting of 380 bishops 
from tlie empire, with the three Roman legates, and three deputies 
fix)ni the oriental patriarchs.* The precedent set by the second 
council of Nicffla, of having representatives from the oriental 
tliroues, had been followed in the council under Photius in 861, 
and in that under Ignatius in 869. But at the latter of these, 
tho rt>prt^^ntat\ves of the east had declared that the orientals who 
had taken (uirt in the synod under Photius were impostors, with 
fur^nl credentials.* Photius, however, asserted that those who 
made that declaration were themselves not only impostors, but 
agents of the Saracens;** and letters were now produced from 
Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, in which the patriarchs 
disavowed the persons who had acted in their names, and disowned 
all connexion with the proceedings against Photius.^ 

The Roman legates found that matters were conducted in a very 
diflTerent way from what the courteous behaviour of Photius had led 
them to expect. Instead of submitting himself to their judgment, 
he assumed the presidency of the council from the beginning, de- 
claring that both his first and his second elevation had been forced 
on him — that he had committed no wrong, and did not need any 
mercy.** The pope's letters were read, but with omissions of the 
more violent pretensions, and with insertions to the honour of the 
patriarch.® The demand of Bulgaria was, with great professions 

« Hard. v. 1165, 1185; vi. 207, 1085-9,1100. 

1168-9. ^ Ep. 116, p. 159. The explanation 

r Hard. vi. 228. See Neand. vi. 328. offered by the opposite party is, that the 

* Schrockh, xxiv. 188-9. The Greeks patriarch of Jerusalem, in order to avert 

disallowed the council of 869. the suspicions of the Saracens, had given 

■ The synod discovered the persons the envoys instructions to negotiate for 

who had taken on themselves the cha- the redemption of Saracen captives at 

racter of envoys. These said that, hav- Constantinople. Hard vi. 1 160 ; Hefele, 

ing come to Constantinople on other iv. 423. 

business, they had been induced by ^ Hard. vi. 300, 301, 325. 

Photius to appear in his synod, and on ^ lb. 253-7. 

this ground he was anathematised in * See Hard. ▼. 1165, seqq.; vi. 63-72, 

the 9th canon. Hard. v. 874-7, 901, or 231, seqq. ; 246, seqq.; 277, seqq.; 1152. 



Cnj>. m. A.D. 879-890. ROME AND CONSTANTINOPLE. 377 

of respect for Rome, evaded as being foreign to the question in 
hand/ The Greek bishops all supported the patriarch, and acted 
as if in entire independence of Rome ;^ yet the legates allowed all 
to pass without a protest, and joined in anathematising the council 
of 869, by which Photius had been deposed. 

It was only by degrees that John became acquainted with the 
result of the council. At first, he declared himself willing to confirm 
its restoration of Photius, if he should find that the legates had not 
disobeyed their instructions. Misconstruing the polite phrases of 
the Greeks, he supposed that Bulgaria had been given up to him, 
and wrote to thank the emperor for the concession ; while in a 
letter to Photius he expressed surprise that in some re- Aug. 13, 
spects his directions had not been followed by the council.** ^®^- 
When, however, he discovered the real state of the matter, his 
exasperation was unbounded. He ascended the pulpit of a church, 
and, holding the book of the Gospels in his hand, threatened to 
anathematise all who should not regard Photius as one condemned 
by God's judgment, according to the sentences of Nicolas and 
Adrian ;* and he sent Marinus, one of the legates who had attended 
the council under Ignatius, to insist that matters should be restored 
to the state which had been established by that council. But the 
legate was treated with indignity, was imprisoned for a month at 
Constantinople, and returned without any success.*^ On the death of 
John, Marinus was raised to the papacy ; and the sentence against 
Photius was renewed by him," by Adrian III., and by Stephen V., 

' Hard. vi. 252, 309. in the story told by the biographer of 

r lb. 312, seqq. ; Schrockh, zxiv. Ignatius, that Photius forged the acts of 

192; Hefele, iy. 462-3. Although this a synod against his rival, and sent them 

synod answers all the conditions usually to Louis 11. (see above, p. 365). Ba- 

laid down for a general council, the Ro- ronius says that the synod of 879 is 

inanists speak of it as a Photiau conven- ** una cum auctore in irois inferis obru- 

ticle, and censure John for consenting to enda" (879. 63). DoUio^r more rea- 

it in any degree. Baronius supposes souably contents himself with comparing 

the fable of Pope Joan to have taken its it to the ** Latrocinium"i>f Ephesus, with 

origin from the pope's weakness in yield- the exception that what was there done by 

ing to the wishes of Basil (879. 4-^— a violence was here done by craft (i. 396). 

supposition very inconsistent with the A marginal note on the council (Hard, 

general character of John. The same vi. 331) asserts that the sixth and seventh 

historian ventures to conjecture that the sessions were invented by Photius ; but 

acts of the council were forged by Hardouin regards this as the trick of 

Photius (879. 73) ; and the extravagant some "Gneculus/' in order to bespeak 

idea has been more confidenUy repeated credit for the earlier sessions I See 

by others, as by Rohrbacher, who speaks Hefele, iv. 463. 

in his index of the ** Fourbene de >" Ep. 108 ad Phot. ; Ep. 109 ad Im- 

Photius, peut-^tre unique dans This- peratores, Hard. vi. 

toire." (See also vol. xii. 237, and * Hard v. 1161 ; Baron. 880. 11. 

Schrockh, xxiv. 193-5 ; Giesel. 11. i. ^ Stephan. V. ap. Hard. vi. 367. 

380.) This charge may have originated " Baron. 882. 12. 



378 HOME AND CONST ANTINOPLK. "^-ok IV. 

who held an angry correspondence on the subject with Basil and 
his son Leo VL" 

Leo, formerly the pupil of Photius, on his accession in 886, de- 
posed the patriarch, confined him in a monastery, and filled the 
see with his own brother Stephen, a boy of sixteea® The reasons 
of this step are unknown ; the Greek writers in general trace it to 
a suspicion that Photius was implicated with a monk named Tlieo- 
dore Santabarenus, who is said to have gained an influence over 
the late emperor by ma^cal arts, and had endeavoured by a double 
treachery to alienate him from his son.^ An inquiry into the con- 
duct of Photius took place, and no evidence could be found against 
him ; yet he did not recover his see, and he died in exile in tlie 
year 891.** The two parties which had divided the church of 
Constantinople were reconciled within a few years ; but 
Pope John IX. made difficulties as to recognising the 
clergy who had been ordained by Photius/ At length, however, 
the churches resumed communion, and the name of Photius himself 
was among those of the patriarchs acknowledged by Rome.' But 
political jealousies, and the retention of Bulgaria by the Byzantine 
patriarchate,* together with the diflerence as to rites and doctrine, 
continued to keep up a coolness between the sees, until at a later 
time they again broke out into open discord. 

^ See Hard. v. IIIC, seqq.; vi. 365, up Stephen as an ecclesiastic. (Kircheng. 

seqq. ii). 301.) Symeon Magister describes 

** G. Ilamart. Contin. p. 762. Santabarenus as a Manichsean and a ma- 

P Const. Porph. v. lOl : vi. 2; G. gician. De Basil. 17-18, 21. 

Hamart. Contin. 768-770 ; Cedren. 593 ; *» Const Porph. vi. 5 ; Cedren. 594-5 ; 

Schrockh, xxiv. 198. The continuator Pagi, xv. 424. 

of Hamartolus says that when, in con- ' Hard. vi. 479 ; Baron. 905 9 ; Pagi, 
sequence of Theodore's charges, Basil xv. 539; Schrockh, xxiv. 198-207. 
was about to blind his son, Photius sue- * See Baron. 905. 1 1-12, and Pagi's 
cessfully interceded for Leo (763). An notes; Schrockh, xxiv. 201. 
unknown Greek writer, cited by Baro- * In 923, the Bulgarian king Symeon, 
nius (886. 1 6), ascribes the deposition to in dictating terms of peace to the em- 
the emperor's regard for the pope, peror Romanns I., required that the 
Gft'orer conjectures that Photius had a chief bishop of Bulgaiia should be ac- 
scheme for rendering the church inde- knowledged by Constantinople as an in- 
pendent, and that the emperor meant to dependent patriarch ; and this lasted 
defeat this by getting the patriarchate until John Tzimisces put an end to the 
into his own family — Basil having al- Bulgarian kingdom, a.d. 972. Finlay, 
ready shown a like intention by bringing ii. 81. 



cii^.iv. ( 379 ) 



CHAPTER IV. 

SPAIN — ENGLAND — MISSIONS OF THE NINTH CENTURIT. 

I. The Christians of Spain after the Mahometan conquest, who 
were known by the name of Mustaraba or Mozarabes^^ enjoyed the 
free exercise of their religion, although on condition of paying a 
heavy monthly poll-tax.^ They generally lived on friendly terms 
with their Mussulman masters ; many of them held office under the 
caliphs, and monks and clergy who understood both the Arabic 
and the Latin languages were employed in diplomatic corre- 
spondence.* 

But, notwithstanding these relations, the difference of religion 
was a continual source of trouble. The Mahometan mobs often 
abused Christians in the streets; they shouted out blasphemies 
against the Christian name, while all retaliation was forbidden by 
law under very severe penalties. If a marriage took place between 
persons professing the two religions, the general law against 
apostasy from Islam made it death for the Mahometan party to 
embrace Christianity ; and the questions which in such marriages 
naturally arose as to the religion of the issue produced very serious 
difficulties. Moreover, the hostility of the Mussulmans towards 
the Christians who dwelt .among them was excited by the per- 
severing efforts of those who in other parts of the peninsula carried 
on a war of independence ; while these efforts served also to raise 
among the Christians under the Mahometan rule a desire to do 
something for the more public assertion of their faith.^ 

The Christians were divided into two parties. The one of these 
was bent on preserving peace with their rulers, as far as possible, 
and enjoying the toleration which was allowed them. The other 
party regarded this acquiescence as unworthy ; they thought that 
their brethren had been corrupted by intercourse with the Moslems 
into a blameable laxity of opinions. They declared that the 
offices of Mahometan courts could not be held without compliances 

* The name does not mean (as has ^ Eologii Memoriale Sanctorum, in 

been mistakenly said) mixti Arabthua, Bibl. Pair. zv. 249, b. (or in Patrol. 

but Arabcs msititii — grafted on the stock cxv.). 

of the Arabtt Arabia or pure Arabs. ^ Neand. v. 462-^3. 

Giesel. I!, i. 147. ^ Gieael. II. i. 147. 



380 PERSECUTION OF Book IV. 

unbecoming a Christian ; that those who occupied such offices 
were obliged to refrain from openly signing themselves with the 
cross, and from other outward manifestations of their faith ; that 
they were obliged to speak of the Saviour in such terms as might 
not be offensive to the unbelievers. They complained that the 
Christian youth preferred the cultivation of "Chaldean" to that 
of ecclesiastical literature; that they were more familiar with 
Arabic than with Latin.® 

About the middle of the ninth century a persecution of the 
Christians broke out at Cordova under the reign of 
Abderrahman II. The first sufferer was a monk named 
Perfectus, who, having fallen in with some Mahometans in the 
neighbourhood of the city, was questioned by them as to the opinion 
which Christians entertained of the Prophet He attempted to 
evade the question, on the ground that he was unwilling to offend 
them ; but, as they continued to urge him, and assured him that 
no offence would be taken, he said that Mahomet was regarded by 
Christians as one of the false prophets foretold in Scripture ; and he 
remarked on some parts of his history, as scandalous, and as prov- 
ing the falsehood of his pretensions. The Arabs, in consideration 
of the promise which they had given, restrained their anger for the 
time ; but when Perfectus next appeared in public, he was seized, 
was dragged before a judge, on a charge of blasphemy against the 
Prophet, and was executed.' The next victim was a merchant, 
who had given no provocation;' but the third, a young monk 
named Isaac, courted his fate. He went before the judge of the 
city, professing an inclination to embrace the religion of the Koran, 
and begging for some instruction in its doctrines; and when these 
were explained to him, he denounced their &lsehood with great 
vehemence.** The execution of Isaac was followed by an outburst 
of fanatical zeal. Clergymen, monks, nuns, and laity 
rushed to the Mahometan tribunals, reviling the Prophet 
as an impostor, an adulterer, a sorcerer, and declaring that his 
followers were in the way to perdition.* And, besides those who 
voluntarily thrust themselves on death, many children of mixed 
marriages were delated by their Mahometan relations as apostates, 
although they had probably been brought up from the first in the 
religion of the Cliristian parent.'' 

• Alvari Indicul. Luminocus, c 9, in * Fulog. Praef. 243 ; Alvar. 12. 

Flores, Espafta Sasjada, zi. Madr. 1792 * Eulog. ad Willesind. (BiU. Plttr. 

(or in Patrol, cxxi.)' »▼• '^H), c.) Details of the martyrdoms 

' Alvar. 3; Eulog. ii. 1. in Mem. SS. ii. 3, seqq. 

K Eulog. col. 24f>, f. ; AWar. 5. i* See Eulog. Mem. SS. ii. 8. 



CoAP. IV. A.D. 850-2. CHRISTIANS IN SPAIN. 381 

The wild zeal of the Christians naturally exasperated the 
Moslems. Public outrages against Christians increased ; any one 
who showed himself in the street was insulted, pelted with filth, or 
stoned : the Mahometans shrank from touching the very garments 
of Christians, as if it were pollution." The sound of church-bells 
excited them to a tempest of cursing and blasphemies ; and at 
funerals of Christians the populace followed the corpse with outcries, 
begging that God would have no mercy on the deceased." 

Abderrahman now enacted new laws, of increased severity. The 
bodies of those who were executed were to be burnt, lest their 
brethren should convert them into relics. Yet the caliph, wishing, 
impossible, to quell the excitement by peaceable means, requested 
the co-operation of the primate Recanfrid, archbishop of Toledo, 
who issued an order that no Christian should present himself before 
a Mahometan judge unless he were cited to do so. This order 
was received with indignation and defiance by the more zealous 
party, headed by Saul, bishop of Cordova; and Recanfrid, in 
pursuance of his policy, proceeded to imprison some refractory 
ecclesiastics — among them a monk and priest of Toledo named 
Eulogius, who had been very conspicuous in his opposition. From 
prison Eulogius wrote letters, intended to animate the resolution of 
his friends ; with the fervour of a TertuUian he exhorts all who 
have any worldly ties to cast them aside and boldly confess the 
faith, in the assurance of rejoining their martyred brethren in 
bliss.^ A couBcil was held under the archbishops of 
Toledo and Seville, and determined that no one ought 
voluntarily to provoke death by his religion.^ By those who 
agreed with the spirit of this council the evils which had happened 
were charged on Eulogius and his associates. They ascribed the 
conduct of the sufferers to pride, and questioned their right to the 
name of martyrs — citing against them texts of Scripture, with the 
canons and practice of the early church.** Some went so far as to 
declare that there was no opportunity of martyrdom at the hands 
of the Arabs, since these were not idolaters, but worshipped the 
one true God and acknowledged his laws.' 

Eulogius and Peter Alvar were the leading spirits of their party.* 

" Ealog. col. 249, d. 10. 

« Alvar. 6. i Alvar. 14 ; Eulog. Mem. SS. ii. 14; 

« Alvar. Vita Eulogii, 4-7 (Patrol, col. 248, c. 

cxY.) ; Ealog. ad Floram et Mariam ' Eulog. 288, d. 

(ib. 821, seqq.) ; Neand. v. 468-9. * Flores supposes Eulog^ius to have 

p Haid. V. 37-8, who calls it conciiia- uritten in 851, and Alvar in 854. Es- 

bulum, BaronioB is loud against it. 852. pa&a Sagrada, xi. 43. 



382 PERSECDTION OK CHRISTIANS IN SPAIN. Book IV. 

They both (and more especially Alvar, who was an ecclesiastic of 
Cordova) write in an exalted strain of enthusiasm. Eulogius sets 
aside the distinction which had been drawn between heathens and 
Mahometans by saying that the Mahometans deny the Son of God 
and persecute the faithful.* Alvar argues from the prophecies that 
Mahomet is the forerunner of Antichrist" The sufferings of the 
Christians, he says, had not been drawn down on them by the 
violence of zealots — for the first victims had done nothing to pro- 
voke their fete — but by the sins of the whole community.* He 
will allow no compliance with circumstances, no forbearance to 
force the Christian profession on the notice of the infidels.' He 
maintains that our Lord's charge to His disciples, " when perse- 
cuted in one city to flee into another," is inapplicable in the present 
case, since the object of the charge was that the disciples should 
spread the Gospel more widely — not that they should hide it,* 
He would have Christians to press the truth on the Moslems for 
the purpose of rendering them " debtors to the faith " — not (as it 
would seem) out of love for them, but in order to render their 
unbelief inexcusable.* 

Abderrahman was succeeded in 852 by his son Mohammed, 
who carried the proceedings against the Christians further.^ On 
the first day of his reign the new king dismissed all who held any 
offices about the court or in the public service.^ He ordered that 
all churches which had been lately built should be destroyed, and 
prohibited all display in the ritual or in the furniture of the older 
churches which were allowed to stand.* The persecution continued 
for many years. Eulogius himself, who had been elected to the see 
of Toledo, was arrested in 859 ® in consequence of having aided a 
young female convert, named Leocritia, to escape from her parents, 
who were bigoted Mahometans ; and, after having firmly resisted 
the importunities of some Arabs who, out of respect for his sanctity 
and learning, endeavoured to persuade him to save his life by slight 
concessions, he was put to death.*^ 

During this long persecution many of the more lukewarm 
Christians openly apostatised to the religion of Islam.*^ The heats 
on both sides at length died away, and the old relations of the 

» P. 288, ^. xiv. 396. 

» C. 21. «= Eulog. Mem. SS. ii. IG; iii. 1. 

« Cc. 3, 18. ^ lb. ill. 3. 

y Cc. 16, 17. « Vita. 10. 

« C. 2, p. 223. f lb. 13-16 ; Pagi, xiv. 498. Leocritia 

• C. 10, p. 234. See Noander, t. 474. ^as put to death four days after him. 

»• Enlog. Mem. SS. ii. 16 ; Pagi, r Gietel. 11. i. 151-2. 



Chap. IV. ENGLAND — THE DANES. 383 

parties were restored. A German abbot, who went on an embassy 
to Cordova in 954, represents the Christians as living peaceably 
with their masters, and as thankful for the toleration which they 
enjoyed ; nay, if the information which he received may be trusted, 
it would appear that they had carried their compliance so far as to 
submit to the rite of circumcision > 

n. England, like France, was harassed and desolated by the 
ravages of the Northmen. Their first appearance on the coasts 
was in the year 767 ;* the first descent which was severely felt was 
in 832 ; ^ and from that time their invasions were incessant Devon 
and Wales felt their fury as well as the eastern coasts ; when the 
attention of the English was concentrated on one point, a fresh 
baud of enemies appeared in an opposite quarter ; and they 
penetrated into the very heart of the country."* And here, as in 
France, the wealth and the defencelessness of the monasteries 
pointed these out as the chief objects of attack. The chronicles of 
the time abound in frightful details of their wasting with fire and 
sword the sanctuaries of Croyland, Medeshamstede (Peterborough), 
Bardsey, and Ely ; of Repton and Coldingham ; of Landisfame, 
from which a little band of monks carried off the relics of St. Cuthbert 
over the mountains of Northumbria, in continual fear of the ravagers 
by whom they were surrounded on every side.** At length, in 878, 
after the victory gained by Alfred over Guthrun at Ethandune, a 
large territory in the east of England, north of the Thames, was 
ceded to the Danes, on condition of their professing Christianity, 
and living under equal laws with the native inhabitants ; ° but the 
peace thus obtained was only for a time. 

Of the lustre of Alfred's reign it is needless to speak to readers 
who may be presumed to know in any degree the history of their 
country. Alfred succeeded his father in 871, at the age of twenty- 
two,^ and his reign lasted thirty years. His character may have 
been idealised in some respects, that it might fulfil the conception of 
a perfect sovereign ; and institutions have been ascribed to him which 
are in truth derived from other sources.*^ Yet historical reality 
exhibits to us this ** darling of the English " — '* Alfred the Truth- 

^ Vita Johannis Abbat Gorziensis, connt is given by Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 

cc. 123-4 (Peru. iv.). c. 12. 

' Chron. Ang.-Sax. a.d. 787. " Sjrm. Dunelm., Hi«t Danelm. ii. 6, 

k Lingard, Hist Eug. i. 171. 10. 

"» The Danish ravages are ver^ fully ° Spelman, Life of Alfred, ed. Heame, 

related, after the old chroniclers, in Mr. Oxon. 1709, pp. 65-7. p Xb. 44. 

M'Cabe's * Catholic History of Bag- "i Hallam, M. A. ii. 74-8 ; Lappenb. 

land/ vol. ii. A more condensed ac- i. 332. 



384 ALFKED. Book IV. 

teller " ' — as the deliverer, the lawgiver, and the wise ruler of his 
country, as a hero, and as a saint. It sets before us his efforts to 
revive the public spirit which had become all but extinct during the 
long calamities of the Danish invasions ; " his zealous and successful 
labours to repair in mature years the defects of his early education ; * 
his exertions for the restoration of learning among the clergy, 
which had fallen into melancholy decay, and for the general 
instruction of the people ; " his encouragement of learned men, 
whether natives, — as his' biographer Asser,* Plegmund, Werfirith, 
and Neot, — or foreigners whom he invited to impart to the English 
a culture which was not to be found at home — as Grimbald of 
Rheims, and John of Old Saxony ; ^ his care to enrich the vernacular 
literature by executing or encouraging versions and paraphrases of 
religious and instructive works — portions of Scripture, writings of 
Boethius, Gregory the Great, Orosius, and Bede.* It shows us 
that these labours were carried on under the continual tortures of 
disease,*^ and amidst the necessities of providing for the national 
defence ; it dwells on his habits of devotion, and on the compre- 
hensive interest in the afikirs of Christendom which induced him 
even to send a mission to the shrine of St. Thomas in India.^ Small 
as his kingdom was, he raised it to a high place among the nations ; 
and among great sovereigns no character shines brighter or purer 
than his. Alfred died in 900 or 901.^ 

III. The conversion of Bulgaria, which has been related in the 
history of the dissensions between the Greek and Latin churches, led 
to that of the Slavonic inhabitants of Greece and of the Mainotes.** 
The Croats were evangelised by missionaries from Rome ; while the 
victories of Basil, about the year 870, were followed by the labours 
of Greek missionaries in Servia.* 

Christianity had been introduced into Moravia by the arms of 
Charlemagne, who, in 801, according to his usual system, compelled 
the king to receive baptism.*^ Since that time, attempts had been 

» Asser (?) in Mod. Hist. Brit. 498. tions to Boethius, see Turner, ii. 22. 

* Asser, passim. * lb. 474, 486. Orosius has also innportant additions. 

« lb. 485-6, &c. ; Turner, Hist. Anglo- See the edition of Alf^ lately published 

Sax. ii. 144. by Dr. Bosworth and others. 

' Asser, 487. Against some doubts * Asser, 484-5, 492. 

which have been raised as to Asser, see *» Chron. Ang.-Sax. a.d. 883 ; Tomer, 

Lingard, A. S. C. ii. 420; Pauli, Konig ii. 145; Lappenb. i. 338. 

Aelfred, 4-14; Hardy, Pref. to Mou. « Spelman, 216. 

Hist. Brit. 80-1. •» Giesel. II. i. 399. 

y AMer. 486-7, 493. This John has • Hardwick, * Manual of Ch. Hist., 

been confounded by many writers with Middle Age* (Camb. 1853), 135-6. 

John Scotus. See above, p. 314. ' Conversio Bagoariorum, &c. (Patrol. 

' See Milman, ii. 368. For his addi- cxxiz. 1271) ; Schrockh, zxi. 406. 



Chap. IV. a.d. 801-863. MORAVIA. 385 

made to extend the knowledge of the Gospel among the Moravians 
under the auspices of the archbishops of Salzburg and the bishops of 
Passau, who employed a regionary bishop for the purpose.^ But 
these attempts had little effect ; the princes of the country had 
relapsed into heathenism, the Christians were few, and their 
religion was very rude.** A new and more effectual movement 
arose out of an embassy which Radislav, king of Moravia, sent 
into Bulgaria, for the purpose of obtaining aid against Louis of 
Germany. His nephew Swatopluk or Zwentibold, who was employed 
on this mission, became a convert to the new Seiith of the Bulgarians ; 
and on his return he was joined by the queen, who was herself a 
Christian, in urging it on her husband's attention.* An application* 
for Christian teachers was made to the emperor Michael ; and 
two missionaries, Constantine and his brother Methodius — per- 
haps the same whose skill as an artist had produced so great an 
effect at the Bulgarian court ^ — were sent from Constantinople into 
Moravia." 

Constantine — better known under the name of Cyril, which he 
is said to have assumed towards the end of his life, in obedience to a 
vision ° — was a priest and monk, and is designated as a philosopher. 
He was a native of Thessalonica, and, from the mixture of the 
Greek and Slave populations in his own country, had probably been 
acquainted from his early years with a dialect of the Slavonic.® 
He had preached among the Chazars of the Ukraine and the 
Crimea, who in 843 had applied for instructors from Constantinople, 
on the ground that they were distracted between the rival preten- 
sions of Judaism, Mahometanism, and Christianity^ — a mixture 
of religions which was found in the same regions by a Mussulman 
traveller seventy years later.** The success of his labours among 
the Chazars is described as complete, and the impression of them 
was strengthened by his refusal of all recompense except the release 

V Ginzel, 31. See a letter of Eu- been coUected, and for the appendix of 

fenios II., a.d. S26 (Patrol, cv. 641). documents; but the author's judgment 

affd includes this amon^ the genuine is strangely warped by his zealous Ro- 

epistles, and Rettberg (ii. 56) quotes it manism.) 

without suspicion; but Palacky (i. ^ Translatio S. Clementit, c. 10, ap. 

108) and Ginzel (31) regard it as Ginzel. 

spurious. ** lb. 1 ; Legenda Pannon. 5 ; Pa- 

I" Dollinger, i. 330-2; GieseL II. i. lacky^i. 119; Ginzel, 22. 

350-1 ; Gfrorer, Karol. i. 449. p Tjransl. S. Clement, 1 ; Schriickh, 

I Schrockh, xxi. 409. xzi. 400-1. It was in 848 that Cyril 

^ See p. 366 ; Neand. v. 423. went on his mission, according to Asse- 

*" Transl. S. Clementis, c. 7, in Gin- manni and others ; but Ginzel (25) 

zeVs Supplement (Ginzel's History of dates it in 861. 

Cyril and Methodius is valuable for the <i Gfrorer, Karol. i. 452. 

industry with which the materials have 



38« 



MORAVIA. 



Boos IF. 



of such Christians as were captives in the country ; ' but some of his 
biographers appear to regard as more important his discoTery of a 
body supposed to be that of St Clement of Rome, who was said to 
have been banished by Trajan to the Chersonese, and to have been 
there martyred.* Tiie fame of the mission to the Chazars had reached 
the Moravian king, who especially requested that Cyril might be 
sent to him;* and in 863" the brothers proceeded into Moravia, 
taking with them the relics of St Clement Their preaching was 
marked by a striking difference from the ordinary practice of the 
time — that, whereas the Greek and Latin missionaries usually 
introduced their own tongues as the ecclesiastical language among 
•barbarian nations, Cyril and Methodius mastered the language of 
the country, and not only used it in their addresses to the people, 
but translated the liturgy and portions of the Scriptures into it — 
Cyril, after the example of Ulfilas, having either invented a Slavonic 
alphabet, or improved that which before existed.* By this innova- 
tion tlie success of the mission was greatly forwarded. Badislav 



' Legenda Morav. 3. 

• Transl. S. Clem. 2-5 ; Giesel. II. i. 
353-4 See Tillemont, ii. 161. It need 
hardly be said that there were rival 
relics of St. Clement elsewhere. See 
e. g. Rostangnus, in Patrol, ccix. 905, 
seqq. ; Alban Uatler, Nov. 23. 

« Transl. 7. 

• Giniel, 38. 

' "Loci indigenae . . . valde gavisi 
sunt, quia et reliquias B. dementis se- 
cum ferre audierant, et evangelinm in 
eorum linguam a philosopho praedicto 
translatum." (Transl. S. Clem. 7; cf. 
Legend. Morav. 5 ; Leg. Bohem. 2.; Leg. 
Pannon. 5.) Ginzel infers that the 
translation of the " Evangeliura " had 
been made at Constantinople, before the 
missionaries set out, and that the word 
means those portions only of the Gospel 
which were read in the church-service 
(37). He supposes that the other Scrip- 
ture lessons, &c., were afterwards trans- 
lated by Cyril aud Methodius, and sa^^s 
that there was no complete Slavonic 
Bible until the fifteenth century (42-3). 
The statement of the Pannonian legend 
(15), that Methodius translated' all the 
Scriptures, except the books of the Mac- 
cabees, in six months, is evidently fa- 
bulous—the exception being probably 
adopted from the story as to Ulfilas and 
the books of Kings. (^See vol. i. p. 293.; 
Palacky says that the translations were 
in the Macedonian dialect of the Sla- 
vonic 'i. 45;, while Ginzel is for the 
Moravian dialect (153;. But if some 



part was executed before the misirionarict 
entered Moravia, could this part have 
been in the dialect of that coiuitry? 
(See other opinions stated in Ginzel, 
132.) As to the alphabet, there has 
been mneh controversy. Slavonic writers 
maintain that the other alphabet of their 
language, which is known by the name 
of Glagolitic (from giiMgol, a irorrf or /rt- 
ter, Ginzel, 124), was invented by the 
Illyrian St. Jerome, or, at least, was as 
old as his time; while the Germans, 
with some eminent exceptions, say that 
it was derived from that of Cyril. (See 
Schrockh, xxi. 411-3; GieseL II. i. 353; 
Schleicher, * Formenlehre der Kirchen- 
slawischen Spracbe,' 31-2, Bonn, 1852 ; 
Ginzel, 36.) Krasinski refers to Ko- 
pitar as having shown that the Glago- 
litic alphabet is at least as old as Cynl's 
( Lectures on the Religious Hist, of the 
Slavonic Nations, p. 23, Edinb. 1849). As 
the Glagolitic has more of a Latin, and 
the Cyrillian of a Greek character, 
Ginzel, in accordance with his &ncy 
that Cyril was from the first strictly 
subordinate to Rome, supposes that he 
was the inventor of the Glagolitic, and 
that the so-called Cyrillian was invented 
by his disciples who were afterwards 
driven into Bulgaria! (112, 129). The 
Glagolitic alphabet has long been dis* 
used, except for books of church-service, 
the latest of which is a Breviary printed 
in 1791 (Ginzel, 156-165); the Cj^ril- 
lian (which Schafarik, ii. 473, describes 
as ba$ed on the Greek, with additions 



Chap. IV. a.d. 8e3-8Y0. CYRIL AND METHODIUS. 387 

received baptism,^ his subjects were rapidly converted, churches 
were built for Christian worship, and the reverence in which the 
missionaries were held appears from the fact that in Moravia the 
clergy were styled by a name which signifies j^rm^e*. 

After a time a report of these proceedings reached pope 
Nicolas, who thereupon summoned Cyril and Methodius to appear 
before him.* The Moravians were now more closely connected 
with the west than with the east; in the difference between the 
churches of Rome and Constantinople, Cyril, who had formerly been 
an opponent of Photius,* was not inclined to side with the patriarch, 
whose deprivation probably took place about the time when the papal 
letter was written ; and a refusal of compliance would have thrown 
the pope on the side of the Germans, from whom Radislav was in 
imminent danger.^ The brethren, therefore, resolved to continue 
their work under such conditions as were possible, rather than to 
abandon it, and obeyed the summons to Rome, where they 
arrived shortly after the death of Nicolas. The body of 
St Clement, which is said to have wrought many miracles, pro- 
duced a great sensation among the Romans,*' and the orthodoxy of 
the missionaries was proved to the satisfaction of Adrian II., who 
gratified Radislav's desire for the independence of the Moravian 
church by consecrating Methodius as archbishop of the Moravians. 
Cyril is said to have been also consecrated to the episcopate, 
but died at Rome, where he was buried in the basilica of St 
Clement** 

Radislav, after a struggle of many years against Louis of 
Germany, was at length betrayed by his nephew Swatopluk into 
the hands of his enemy, by whom he was dethroned and blinded in 
870.* Swatopluk succeeded to the crown, and greatly extended the 

derived in part from the Armenian and papal approbation of it on their visit to 

other oriental characters) has, since the Kome ; and that the pope's citation was 

sixteenth century, been superseded in in answer to a letter in which they had 

Moravia by the Roman ; bat it is still reported themselves to him. 42-4. 

used in Servia and Bulgaria, and fW>m * This opposition related to the opinion 

it the Russian alphabet is chiefly formed which Photius is said to have held as to 

(see Schrockh and Gieseler, as above), the human soul (see p. 359). Anastaa. 

For the references to Schafarik and in Patrol, czzix. 14. 

Schleicher, I am indebted to my friend ^ Neand. v. 434 ; Giesel. II. i. 353 ; 

Dr. Rost, professor of Sanscrit in St. Gfrorer, Karol. i. 454 ; Ginzel, 44. 

Augustine's College, Canterbury. « Leo Ostiens. ap. Baron. 867. 132; 

y Leg. Morav. 5. Transl. 9. 

' Transl. S. Clem. 8. Giuzel very •» Transl. 9-12 ; Leg. Morav. 6 ; 

extravagantly femcies that the brothers Giesel. II. i. 353. On the contradic- 

from the first regarded themselves as tions between the biographers of Cyril 

subject to the pope and to the bishop of and Methodius, see Schrockh, xxi. 

Passau ; that, although they trans- 415-6. 

lated the liturgy, they did not venture * Palacky, i. 127-130. 
to use it until they had received the 

2 c 2 



388 



SLAVONIC LITURGY. 



BnoKlV. 



bounds of the Moravian kingdom, which now included a large portion 
of modern Austria and Hungary/ Over all this territory Metho- 
dius exercised authority, after some differences with Swatopluk, 
whom it is said that he once found it necessary to excommunicate ; * 
and, as his sphere extended, many Christians who had received the 
Gospel from the Latin church placed themselves under him. This 
excited the jealousy of the Germans,** who appear to have obtained 
in 873 a mandate from John VIII., forbidding him to employ, a 
barbarous tongue in the service of the church.' Methodius, however, 
persisted,*' and, in consequence of a renewed complaint, to which it 
was now added that he taught some erroneous doctrines, he was cited 
to Rome in 879. The pope in his letter forbade the use of the 
Slavonic in the liturgy, although he allowed that until further 
order it might be used in preaching, forasmuch as the Psalmist 
charges all people to praise the Lord, and that St. Paul says, '^ Let 
every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord." ™ 

Methodius repaired to Rome, where he succeeded in justifying 
his orthodoxy before a synod — perhaps not without some 
concession as to the points of difference between his native 



A.n. 880. 



' Schrockh, xxi. 418; Ginzel, 78. 

V Leg. Moray. 1 1 ; Schrockh, xxi. 
417. 

*» The 'ConTcrsio Bagoarionim/ 
vhich Oinzel supposes to haTe been 
drawn up about this time, in the inter- 
est of Salzburg (60), states that an arch- 
priost named Uihbald laboured effec- 
tually *' usque dum quidam Graecus, 
Methodius nomine, noviter inventis 
Sclavinis litteris, linguam Latinam doc- 
trinamqne Romanam, atque litteras 
auctorales Latinas philosophice super- 
ducens, vilescere fecit cuncto populo ex 
parte niissas et evangelium ecclesiasti- 
cumque officium illorum qui hoc Latiue 
celebraverunt " (ap. Ginzel, Anhang, 
55). Was the Slavonic liturgy a trans- 
lation from the Greek, or from the Ro- 
man? or was it a new composition? 
Ginzel, arguing on his assumption that 
Cyril and Methodius from the first re- 
garded themselves as clergy of the 
Latin church, supposes it to have been 
Roman ; and in behalf of this view it 
may be pleaded that the objection of 
John VIII. related to the language only 
(Giuz. 107-llu). But the pope ex- 
pressly allows of Greek as well as of 
Latin service (Ep. 239); nor bad the 
time yet come when Rome attempted to 
enforce liturgical uniformity every- 
where. On other grounds, too, it seems 
more probable that the Cyrillian litur- 
gy — whether translated, or in some de- 



5ree origmal— was of the Greek type, 
lud with this accords the fact which is 
stated by Dr. Ginzel himself (140;, that 
the extant fragments of the liturgy for- 
merly used in the Bohemian monastery 
of Sazawa (see below, Chap. VIL sect. 
vi.) are of the Greek rite. 

^ This is inferred from John's words 
in the letter of 879— "Jam litteris nos- 
tris per Paulum episcopum Anconita- 
num tibi directis prohibuimus *' (Ep. 
129, Patrol, cxxvi.) — the mission of 
Paul into Germany and Pannonia hav- 
ing been in 873 or 874. Joh. Ep. 6 ; 
Ginzel, 60. 

^ Ginzel supposes that he answered 
the pope's letter, and, being satisfied 
with his own arguments, thought him- 
self justified in continuing the use of 
the vernacular service (62), which the 
pope tacitly allowed (80). But the sur- 
prise expressed by John in his letters of 
879 to Swatopluk and Methodius (Epp. 
128-9) seems hardly consistent with 
this. 

*" Ep. 239. That the question of lan- 
guage had not occurred under Nicolas 
or Adrian II., see Schrockh, xxi. 416. 
A letter in the name of Adrian, giving 
the same sanction to the vernacular 
which was afterwards given by John, 
has been publisheil b^ Schafaiik in a 
Slavonic version, but is spurious. See 
Ginzel, 8, who gives it in a Latin re- 
translation, 44-5. 



Chap. IV. a.i>. 8Y0-880. MORAVIA AND BOHEMI.A. 389 

church and that of the west. And his arguments in favour of the 
Slavonic tongue were so successful that, on returning to Moravia, 
he bore a letter from John to Swatopluk, in which the pope approves 
of the alphabet invented by Cyril," and sanctions the use of the 
Slavonic liturgy, on the ground that the Scriptural command, 
" Praise the Lord, all ye nations," shows that the praises of God are 
not to be confined to three languages (Hebrew, Greek, and Latin),® 
but that He who formed these languages formed all others also, for 
His own glory. It is, however, ordered that, as a mark of greater 
honour, the Gospel shall be read in Latin before being read in 
the vernacular, and also that the king or any nobleman may, if he 
thmk fit, have the service of his private chapel in Latin.^ 

In Uie same letter it was stated that Methodius was confirmed in 
his archbishoprick, with exclusive jurisdiction over the Moravian 
church. The pope adds that he has consecrated as bishop an 
ecclesiastic named Wiching, who had been recommended to him 
by Swatopluk, and begs the king to send another presbyter who 
may be raised to the same degree, in order that the primate, 
having two bishops under him, may be able to perform his functions 
without external help. By this arrangement it was intended 
that the Moravian church should be rendered entirely independent 
of Germany.*^ 

From Moravia the Gospel was introduced among the neigh- 
bouring and kindred people of Bohemia. Fourteen Bohemian 
chiefs had appeared before Louis of Germany at Batisbon in 845, 
and had been baptised by their own desire.' But of this conver- 
sion, which was most likely a mere political artifice, no effects are 
recorded ; and Bohemia was heathen many years later, when the 
duke, Borziwoi, visited the Moravian court" Swatopluk received 
him with honour, but at dinner assigned him and his followers a 

■* " A Constantino quodam philoso- xxi. 420). But the grounds on which it 

pho." It has been argued that John is rested are quite general. " II y a," 

could not have spoken so vasuely of says M. Rohrbacher, '* des hommes qui 

CoDStautiue if he had supposed him to pensent que si le pape Jean Vlll. avait 

have been the brother of Methodius, tenu plus ferme k I'nsage du Latin dans 

and to have died at Kome not many la liturgie sacr^, il aurait rendu moins 

years before (Neand. t. 438). But Pagi facile le schisme et la perversion des 

(XV. 370) and Gieseler (II. i. 856) con- nations Slavonnes." xii. 354. 
jecture qiwndam, and so Ginzel reads. i Col. 86 ; Gfrorer, Karol. ii. 238. 
Anh. 61. ' Annales Fuldenses, a.d. 845, in 

• See above, p. 224. Freher, i. or Perlz, i. ; Palacky, i. 110. 

' Ep. 293. Some writers of the Bo- ■ This is placed in 894 b^ Asseman- 

man church have argued that the sane- ni (quoted by Schrockh, xxi. 429; and 

tion of the vernacular in this case was Pagi (xiv. 474); in 871, by Gieseler 

given merely out of special regard for (11. i. 360^, Palacky, and Perta (^ix. 39, ; 

Cyril and Methodius (see Bchrockh, in 878-9, by Ginzel, 18. 



390 MORAVIA AND BOHEMIA. Book IV. 

place on the floor, as being heathens.^ Methodius, who sat at the 
king's table, addressed Borziwoi, expressing r^ret that so powerful 
a prince should be obliged to feed like a swineherd. The duke 
asked what he might expect to gain by becoming a Christian ; and, 
on being told that the change would exalt him above all kings and 
princes, he was baptised with his thirty companions." His wife, 
Ludmilla, embraced the Gospel on worthier motives, and earned 
the title of saink' 

Methodius continued to be much annoyed by the Germans, who 
saw in the sanction of the Slavonic tongue an insuperable barrier 
against their influence in Moravia. It would seem also that 
Swatopluk became unfavourable to him,^ and that Wiching, who 
was a German by birth, and a man of intriguing character, instead 
of co-operating with the archbishop, and rendering him the 
obedience which had been enjoined in the pope's letter to the 
king, set up claims to independence of all but the papal authority.* 
The last certain notice of Methodius is a letter of the year 881, 
in which John VIII. encourages him, and assures him that he had 
given no such privileges as were pretended to Wiching (whose 
name, however, is not mentioned).* The death of Methodius has 
been said to have taken place at Rome, and has been variously 
dated, from 881 to 910 ; but it seems more probable that he died 
in Moravia about the year 885.^ 

Wiching, after the death of Methodius, persecuted the clergy 
who maintained the Slavonic liturgy, and, with the aid of 
Swatopluk's soldiery, compelled them in 886 to seek a refuge in 
Bulgaria, where it is presumed that they must have adhered to the 
Greek communion.^ On the death of Swatopluk, in 894, the 
kingdom was distracted by a war between his sons, while Amulf 
of Germany pressed on it from without Wiching had in 892 
gone over to Amulf, who appointed him his chancellor, and 
bestowed on him the bishoprick of Passau ; but from this dignity 
he was deposed on his patron's death.^ In 900, the German 

* See p. 141, for Inge's treatment of Ginzel, Anh. 38-40. 

heathcDS. • Ep. 31d (Patrol, cxxvi.). A letter 

• Vit SS. Cyrill. et Method, ap. Pagi, in which Stephen V. (a.d. 890) is made 
XY. 474; Ginzel, Anh. 18. Palacky to denounce Methodius, and utterly to 
(i. 137) and Ginzel (69) deny the truth disallow the Slavonic liturgy, alUiough 
of the story. admitted as genuine by Jaff^ (297), is 

« Milman, ii. 353. probably a forgery of Wiching. See 

7 The provision as to Latin service in Ginzel, 20, 87, and Anh. 63. 

the king's chapel seems to hint that he ^ Giesel. II. i. 357; Palacky, i. 139 ; 

had fallen under the German influence. Ginzel, 91. 

Ginzel, 84. <" Ginzel, 94. 

' Giesel. II. i. 356; Gfrorer, Karol. ^ Palacky, i. 150 ; Ginzel, 98. 

ii. 239. See the Bulgarian legend, 



Chap. IV. aj>. 879-908. DENMARK — EBBO. 391 

jealousy was provoked afresh by the lueasures which pope John IX. 
took for providing Moravia with a localised hierarchy in&tead of 
its former missionary establishment. Hatto, archbishop of Mentz, 
and Theotmar of Salzburg, with their suffragans, loudly remon- 
strated against the change ;* but the strife was ended by the fall 
of the Moravian kingdom in 908/ 

IV. The conquests of Charlemagne had brought the Franks 
into close neighbourhood with the northern nations, which were 
now so formidable to the more civilised inhabitants of other coun- 
tries. Charlemagne, it is said, refrained from placing his territory 
beyond the Elbe under any of the bishopricks which he erected, 
because he intended to establish in those parts an archiepiscopal 
see which should serve as a centre for the evangelisation of the 
north. He built a church at Hamburg, and committed it to a 
priest who was exempt from episcopal jurisdiction ; but the prose- 
cution of the scheme was broken oflF by the emperor's death.* The 
attention of his son, however, was soon drawn by other circum- 
stances towards Nordalbingia. Policy, as well as religion, recom- 
mended the conversion of the Northmen ; for, so long as the Saxons 
were only separated by the Elbe from those who adhered to the 
religion of their forefathers, there was a continual temptation for 
them to renounce the Christianity which had been forced on them, 
and with it the subjection of which it was the token.** 

Disputes as to the throne of Denmark between Harold and 
Godfrid led both parties to seek the countenance of Louis the 
Pious. The emperor was struck with the importance of using this 
circumstance as an opening for the introduction of Christianity 
among the Danes ; and Ebbo, archbishop of Rheims, was willing 
to withdraw for a time from the enjoyment of his dignity, that he 
might extend the faith among these barbarians.* With the consent 
of Louis, the archbishop went to Rome, where he obtained a com- 
mission from Paschal, authorising himself and Halitgar, afterwards 
bishop of Cambray, to preach the Gospel to the northern nations, 
and directing them to refer all difficult questions to the apostolic 
see.*^ The mission was resolved on by the diet of Attigny (the 

« Hard. vi. 482-6 ; Ginzel, 99. *» Miinter, i. 239. 

' Schrockh, xxi. 421 ; Oiesel. II. i. > Ermold. Nigell. ap. Pertx, ii. 502- 

357. 3 ; Flodoard. ii. 19 (Patrol, cxxxv. 131 J. 

V LudoY. Pius, in Patrol, cxviii. ^ Rimbert, 13. The letter, which is 

tu33; Rimbert, Vita S. Anskarii, 12, neither in Hardouin nor in the ' Patro- 

ap. Pertz, ii.; Adam. Bremens. i. 15, 17, logia,' is given in the original by Miin- 

ib. vii. ter, i. 244. 



392 ANSKAR. BoomlV. 

Bame diet which witnessed the penance of Louis)" in 822 ; and in 
that year Ebbo and his companions set out in company with some 
ambassadors of Harold," Welanao (now Miinschdorf, near Itzehoe) 
being assigned by the emperor for their head-quarters.® Little is 
known of their proceedings^ but it appears that they preached with 
much success,^ and that Ebbo represented the spiritual and the 
temporal benefits of Christianity to Harold so efiectually as to 
induce him to appear in 826 at Ingelheim, with his queen and a 
large train of attendants, and to express a desire for baptism, which 
they received in the church of St. Alban at Mentz. Louis was 
sponsor for Harold, Judith for the queen, Lpthair fw their son, 
and the members of their train found sponsors of suitable rank 
among the Franks.^ The emperor now resolved to send a fresh 
mission to the Danes ; but the barbarism of the Northmen, their 
strong hostility to Christianity, and the savage character of their 
paganism, with its sacrifices of human victims, deterred all from 
venturing on the hazards of such an expedition, until Wala of 
Corbie named Anskar, one of his monks, as a person suited for the 
work/ 

Anskar, " the Apostle of the North," was bom about the year 
801, and at an early age entered the monastery of Corbie, where 
he studied under Adelhard and Paschasius Radbert. He became 
himself a teacher in the monastery, and, after having for a time 
held a like office in the German Corbey, resumed his position in 
the parent society." From childhood he had been remarkable for 
a devout and enthusiastic character. He saw visions, and it is 
said by his biographer that all the important events of his life 
were foreshown to him either in this manner or by an inward 
illumination, so that he even waited for such direction as to the 
course which he should take.' The death of his mother, when he 

■ See p. 255. of coarser materials. ** I have been 

■ Mfinter, i. 248. washed here twenty times already," he 
o Rimbert, 1 3. said, ** and always got dresses of the best 
p Miinter, i. 256-8. and whitest stim ; but such a sack as 
«i Astron. 40 ; Einhard. Ann. 826 ; this is fit for a swineherd, not for a 

Thegan, 33 ; Ermold. Nigell. ap. Peru, warrior ; and were it not for the shame 

ii. 508. For Ermold's embellishments of going naked, 1 would leave your 

and inaccuracies, see Dahlmann, Gesch. dress and your Christ together." L. ii. 

V. Dannemarck, i. 29. In illustration of c. 19. 

the motives by which such converts ' The Life of St. Anskar, by his pupil 

were often actuated, the monk of St. and successor Rimbert and another, is 

€^1 relates that on one occasion, when in MabiUon, vi. ; Pertz, ii. ; and the 

the unusual number of candidates for * Patrologia,' cxviii. 

baptism had exhausted the supply of * Rimbert, 6 ; Dahlmann, n. on c. 7, 

the ordinary baptismal garments, a in Pertz. 

Northman neophyte openly expressed to » C. 36. It may l)c remarked that in 

Louis his iudiguatioii at receiving one the rccoixled vibiuus there is nothing of 



Chap. IV. aj>. 822-«. ANSKAR, 393 

was five years old, affected him deeply, and he was weaned from 
the love of childish sports by a vision in which she appeared in 
company with some bright female forms. He felt himself en- 
tangled in mire, and unable to reach them, when the chief of the 
band, whom he knew to be the Blessed Vir^n, asked him whether 
he wished to rejoin his mother, and told him that, if so, he must 
forsake such vanities as are offensive to the saints.'' His worldly 
affections were afterwards further subdued by the tidings of 
Charlemagne's death, which deeply impressed on him the in- 
stability of all earthly greatness.* In another vision, he fancied 
tliat his spirit was led out of the body by two venerable persons, 
whom he recognised as St Peter and St. John. They first 
plunged him into purgatory, where he remained for three days in 
misery which seemed to last a thousand years. He was then con- 
ducted into a region where the Divine glory, displayed in the east, 
streamed forth on multitudes of adoring saints in transcendant 
brightness, which was yet not dazzling but delightful to the eye ; 
and from the source of inaccessible majesty, in which he could, 
discern no shape, he heard a voice of blended power and sweetness 
— " Go, and thou shalt return to Me with the crown of martyr- 
dom."^ At a later time, the Saviour appeared to him, exhorted 
him to a full confession of his sins, and assured him that they were 
forgiven.* The assurance was afterwards repeated to him, and in 
answer to his inquiry, " Lord, what wouldest thou have me to do ? " 
he was told, " Go, and preach to the Gentiles the word of God."* 

When the northern mission was proposed to Anskar, he at once 
declared his readiness to undertake it. He adhered to his resolu- 
tion, although many endeavoured to dissuade him, while Wala 
disclaimed the intention of enforcing the task on him by his 
monastic obligation to obedience; and his behaviour while pre- 
paring himself for the work by retirement and devotion had such 
an effect on Autbert, a monk of noble birth and steward of the 
monastery, that he offered himself as a companion.** 

The missionaries could not prevail on any servant to attend 
them. On joining Harold they were treated with neglect by him 
and his companions, who, as Anskar's biographer says,^ did not 
yet know how the ministers of God ought to be honoured. But 
when they had sailed down the Rhine as far as Cologne, the bishop 
of that city, Hadebold, out of compassion, bestowed on them 

what would usually be cousidered a su- ' ib. 3. y lb. 

pcrnatural kiud. « Ib. 4. • Ib. 9. 

» Rimb. 2. ^ lb. 7. ^ C. 8. 



394 DENMARK AND SWEDEN. Bo.>k1V. 

veflsel with two cabins, and as Harold found it convenient to take 
possession of one of these, he was brought into closer intercourse 
with the missionaries, who soon succeeded in inspiring him with a 
new interest in their undertaking. They fixed the centre of their 
operations at Hadeby, on the opposite bank of the Schley to 
Sleswick,^ and laboured among both the Christians and the 
heathens of the Danish border. Anskar established a school for 
boys — the pupils being partly given to him, and partly bought for 
the purpose of training them up in the Christian faith. But 
Harold had offended many of his adherents by doing homage to 
Louis and by his change of religion ; they were further alienated 
when, in his zeal for the advancement of his new &ith, he de- 
stroyed temples and even resorted to persecution ; and the opposite 
party took advantage of the feeling. Harold was expelled, and 
retired to a county in Frisia which the emperor had 
bestowed on him ; and Anskar was obliged to leave 
Hadeby. Autbert had already been compelled by severe illness to 
relinquish the mission, and died at Corbie in 829.® 

A new opening soon presented itself to Anskar. It would appear 
that some knowledge of the Gospel had already reached Sweden — 
partly, it is said, by means of intercourse which the inhabitants of 
that remote country had carried on with the Byzantine empire.' 
In 829 the court of Louis was visited by ambassadors from Sweden, 
who, in addition to their secular business, stated that their country- 
men were favourably disposed towards Christianity, and requested 
the emperor to supply them with teachers. Louis bethought 
himself of Anskar, who agreed to undertake the work — regarding 
it as a fulfilment of his visions. His place with Harold was 
supplied by another; and Wala assigned him a monk named 
Witmar as a companion. The vessel in which the missionaries 
embarked was attacked by pirates, who plundered them of almost 
everything, including the presents designed by Louis for the 
Swedish king. But they were determined to persevere, and, 
after many hardships, made their way to the northern capital, 
Birka or Sigtuna, on the lake Malar.^ The king, Biom, received 
them graciously, and, with the consent of the national assembly, 
gave them permission to preach freely. Their ministrations were 
welcomed with delight by a numl»er of Christian captives, who had 

^ S«e Bosworth, note in Alfred's ' Schrockh, xxi. 320. Kruse, * St. 

Works, ii. 47-8. Anschar/ Anh. E., Altona, 1823. 

• Rimb. 8; Munter, i. 261. Harold « Rimb. 10; Miinter, i. 279. See 

afterwards apostatised. Dahlmann, i. Kruse, Auh. NN. Birka seems to mean 

44. a i'lmling'pUicc. 



Chap. IV. a.d. 826-837. ANSKAR. 395 

long been deprived of the offices of religion ; and among their 
converts was Herigar, governor of the district, who built a church 
on his estate.^ After having laboured for a year and a half, 
Anskar and his companion returned with a letter from Biom to 
Louis, who was greatly pleased with their success, and resolved 
to place the northern mission on a new footing, agreeably to his 
father's intentions. An archiepiscopal see was to be 
established at Hamburg, and Anskar was consecrated 
for it at Ingelheim by Drogo of Metz, with the assistance of 
Ebbo and many other bishops.^ He then repaired to Rome, 
where Gregory IV. bestowed on him the pall, with a bull autho- 
rising him to labour for the conversion of the northern nations, in 
conjunctioh with Ebbo, whose commission from Paschal was still in 
force.^ Louis conferred on him the monastery of Turholt (Thou- 
roult, between Bruges and Ypres), to serve at once as a source of 
maintenance and as a resting-place more secure than the northern 
archbishoprick.™ 

Ebbo, although diverted from missionary work by his other (and 
in part far less creditable) occupations, had continued to take an 
interest in the conversion of the north, and appears at this time to 
have made a second expedition to the scene of his old labours." 
But as neither he nor Anskar could give undivided attention to 
the Swedish mission, it was now agreed that this should be com- 
mitted to a relation of Ebbo named Gauzbert, who was con- 
secrated to the episcopate and assumed the name of Simon. To 
him Ebbo transferred the settlement at Welanao, with the intention 
that it should serve the same purposes for which Turholt had been 
given to Anskar.** 

Anskar entered with his usual zeal on the new sphere which 
had been assigned to him. He built at Hamburg a church, a 
monastery, and a college. According to the system which he had 
followed at Hadeby, he bought a number of boys with a view to 
educating them as Christians ; some of them were sent to Turholt, 
while others remained with him.P But after a time** Hamburg 

1^ Rimb. 11. * Rimb. 12. do not appear in the ' Patrologia/ cxviii. 

^ The document, as givelQ in Munter's 1035, or in the renewal of the grant 

Appendix, includes in Anskar's jurisdic^ by Sergius II.. a.d. 846 (ib. czzix. 997). 

tion Iceland and Greenland— the latter "■ Ludov. Praeceptum, Patrol, czviii. 

country then undiscovered, the former 1033; Rimb. 12. 

known only to the Irish. But these in- ■* Schrockh, xxi. 324-5. ^ Rimb. 14. 

terpolations, which have brought on it p Ib. 15 ; Miinter, i. 290. 

the (apparently uudi^served) suspicion of <> Dahlmann (n. on Rimb. c. 17) places 

forgery (see Dahlm. n. on Rimb. c. 13, ed. this in 837; Gfrbrer (Karol. i. 125-6), 

Pertz; Miinter,!. 282 ; Gfrorer, Karol. i. in 842; Schrockh (xxi. 325), Miinter 

124 ; Rafn, Antiquitates Americana, 13), {'i, 293), and Neander (v. 382), in 845. 



39G ARCHBJSHOPiUCK OF HAMBURG. Book IV. 

was attacked by a great force of Northmen, under Erie, king of 
Jutland. The archbishop exerted himself in encoura^g the 
inhabitants to hold out until relief should arrive ; but the assailants 
were too strong to be long resisted; the city was sacked and 
burnt, and Anskar was obliged to flee. He had lost his church, 
his monastery, and his library, among the treasures of which was 
a magnificent bible,'' the gift of the emperor ; some relics bestowed 
on the church by Ebbo were all that he was able to rescue. Yet, 
reduced as he was to necessity, he repeated Job's words of resigna- 
tion — " The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away ; blessed 
be the name of the Lord !" Leutbert bishop of Bremen, who had 
before looked on the new archbishoprick with jealousy, refused to 
entertain him, and he was indebted for a refuge to the charity of a 
widow named Ikia, of Ramsloh, where he gradually collected eome 
of his scattered followers." About the same time Gauzbert was 
expelled from Sweden by a popular rising, in which his nephew 
Notbert was killed.* 

To add to Anskar's distress, his monastery of Turholt, being 

within that portion of the empire which fell to Charles 

the Bald on the death of Louis, was bestowed by the 

new sovereign on a layman.'' His monks, finding no means of 

subsistence, were obliged to leave him;* but he found a patron 

in Louis of Germany, who founded a monastic establishment for 

him at Ramsloh, and resolved to bestow on him the bishoprick of 

Bremen, which fell vacant by the death of Leutbert.^ Anskar was 

himself unwilling to take any active part in the matter, lest he 

should be exposed to charges of rapacity,' and some canonical 

objections arose ; but these were overcome with the consent of the 

bishops who were interested. The union of the dioceses was 

sanctioned by the council of Mentz (the same at which Gottschalk 

was condemned) in 848 ; and, sixteen years after it had virtually 

taken effect, it was confirmed by Nicolas I., who renewed 

the ^ft of the pall to Anskar, and appointed him legate 

for the evangelisation of the Swedes, the Danes, the Slavons, and 

other nations of the north.* 

' ** Bibliotheca." For this scDse of ■ Riml>ert, 22. 

the word, sec Ducange. * Nic. J^. 62 (Patrol, cxix.) ; Rim- 

■ Rimb. 16 ; Miinter, i. 299. bert, 23. This was the first commission 

* Rimb. 17. in which absolute obedience to papal de- 

" Dahlmann, note on Rimb. crees was required (col. 879; Hard- 

' Rimb. 21. wick, 152). Mausi (in Baron, xir. 480) 

y Dahlmann (on Rimb. 22) places this and Jaffe (245) date it in 864 ; Miiuter 

in 847 ; Gfrorcr (KaroL i. 149) in 845- (i. 303) and others, in 8.58. 

6); MabUlon (vi. 95) in 849. 



ClUP.IV. A.D. 837-853. ANSKAR. 397 

In the mean time Anskar had been actively employed. Repeated 
political missions from Louis of Germany had made him known 
to the Danish king Horic or Eric, who had long been one of the 
most formidable chiefs of the northern devastators, and had led 
the force which burnt and plundered Hamburg. Anskar gained a 
powerful influence over the king, who, although it does ^.d. gis- 
not appear that he was himself baptised, granted the 853. 
missionaries leave to preach throughout his dominions, and to 
build a church at Sleswick.** The work of conversion went on 
rapidly. Danish traders who had received baptism at Hamburg 
or Dorstadt now openly professed Christianity, and Christian 
merchants from other countries ventured more freely into Denmark, 
so that Eric found the wealth of his kingdom increased by the 
toleration which he had granted. Many of the converts, however, 
put off their baptism until they felt the approach of death ; while 
it is said that some heathens, after their life had been despaired of, 
and after they had invoked their own gods in vain, on entreating 
the aid of Christ were restored to perfect health.® 

After the withdrawal of Gauzbert, Sweden remained for seven 
years without any Christian teacher, until Anskar sent into the 
country a priest and hermit named Ardgar, who preached with 
great effect — his efforts, it is said, being powerfully seconded by 
judgments which befell all who had been concerned in the expul- 
sion of Gauzbert.** Herigar had throughout remained faithful, 
notwithstanding all that he had to endure from his unbelieving 
countrymen; and on his deathbed he was comforted by the 
ministrations of Ardgar.® But Ardgar longed to return to his 
hermitage, and after a time relinquished the mission/ Gauzbert, 
now bishop of Osnaburg, whom Anskar requested to resume his 
labours in Sweden, declined, on the ground that another preacher 
would be more likely to make a fisivourable impression on the 
people, than one whom they had already ejected from their 
country. Anskar himself, therefore, resolved to undertake the 
work — being encouraged by a vision in which his old superior 
Adelhard appeared to him.* He was accompanied by envoys 
from Eric to king Olof, of Sweden, and bore a letter of warm re- 
commendation from the Danish king. But on landing in Sweden 
he found the state of things very unpromising. A short time 
before this a Swede had arisen in the national assembly, declaring 
that he was charged with a communication from the gods, who 

>> Rimh. 24; Schrockh, xxi. 328-333. « lb. 19. ' lb. 20. 

' Rimb. 24. «» lb. 17, 19. « lb. 25. 



398 ANSKAR'S SECOND VISIT TO SWEDEN. Book IV. 

had bidden him tell his eountrjmen that, if they wished to enjoy a 
continuance of prosperity, they must revive with increased zeal the 
ancient worship, and must exclude all other religions. "If,'* the 
celestial message graciously concluded, ''you are not content 
with us, and wish to have more gods, we all agree to admit your 
late king Eric into our number." A great effect had followed 
on this : a temple had been built to Eric, and was crowded with 
worshippers; and such was the excitement of the people that 
Anskar s fiiends advised him to desist from his enterprise, as it 
could not but be fruitless and might probably cost him his life. 
He was, however, resolved to persevere. He invited the king to 
dine with him, and, having propitiated him by gifts, requested 
permission to preach. Olof replied that, as some former preachers 
of Christianity had been forcibly driven out of the country, he could 
not give the required licence without consulting the gods and 
obtaining the sanction of the popular assembly ; " for," says 
Anskar's biographer, " in that nation public affairs are determined 
less by the king's power than by the general consent of the people."** 
A lot was cast in an open field, and was favourable to the admission 
of the Christian teachers. The assembly was swayed by the speech 
of an aged member, who said that the power of the Christians* 
God had often been experienced, especially in dangers at sea ; that- 
many of his countrymen had formerly been baptised at Dorstadt ; 
why then, he asked, should they refiise, now that it was brought 
to their own doors, that which they had before sought from a 
distance?* The assembly of another district also decided for the 
admission of Christianity ; and the feeling in favour of the new 
religion was strengthened by miracles performed on an expedition 
which Olof undertook to Courland. Converts flocked in, churches 
were built, and Anskar found himself at liberty to return to Den- 
mark, leaving Gumbert, a nephew of Gauzbert, at the head of the 
Swedish mission.^ 

During the archbishop's absence, Eric had fallen in a bloody 
battle with a pagan faction, which had used his encouragement of 
Christianity as a pretext for attacking him. The most powerfiil of 
Anskar's other friends had shared the fate of their king; the 
greater part of Denmark was now in the hands of the enemy ; and 
Eric IL, who had succeeded to a part of his father's territory, was 
under the influence of Hovi, earl of Jutland, who persuaded him 
that all the late misfortunes were due to the abandonment of the 

^ Rimb. 26. Cf. Ad. nrcm. Dtscr. ' Rimb. 27. 
Insul. Aquil. c. 22, ap. Pertz, yii. ^ lb. 28, 30. 



Chaf. IV. Aj). 864-866. LAST YEARS OF ANSKAR. 399 

old national religion. The church at Sleswick was shut up, its 
priest was expelled, and the Christians were cruelly persecuted.™ 
Anskar could only betake himself to prayer for a change from this 
unhappy state of things, when he unexpectedly received a letter 
from the young king, professing as warm an interest in the Gospel 
as that which his father had felt, and inviting the missionaries to 
resume their labours. Hovi had fallen into disgrace, and was 
banished. The progress of Christianity was now more rapid than 
ever. The church at Sleswick was for the first time allowed to 
have a bell ; another church was founded at Ripe, the second 
city of Denmark, on the coast opposite to Britain, and Rimbert, a 
native of the neighbourhood of Turholt, who had grown up under 
Anskar s tuition, was appointed its pastor." 

Anskar's labours were continued until the sixty-fourth year of 
his age, and the thirty-fourth of his episcopate. Although the 
progress of the Swedish mission was retarded by the death or the 
withdrawal of some who were employed in it, he was able to provide 
for its continuance, chiefly by means of clergy of Danish birth, 
whom he had trained up in the seminary at Ramsloh.® Amidst 
his trials and disappointments he frequently consoled himself by 
remembering the assurance which Ebbo, when bishop of Hildesheim, 
had expressed to him, that God would not fail in His own time to 
crown the work with success.^ The biographer Rimbert dwells with 
delight on his master's strict adherence to the monastic customs, 
which he maintained to the last ; on his mortifications, which he 
carried to an extreme in youth, until he became aware that such 
excesses were a temptation to vainglory, and how, when no longer 
able to bear them, he endeavoured to supply the defect by alms 
and prayers ; on his frequent and fervent devotion ; on his charitable 
labours, his building of hospitals, redemption of captives, and other 
works of mercy.*! Among the results of his exertions, it deserves 
to be remembered that in 856 he persuaded the leading men of 
Nordalbingia to give up the trade which they had carried on in 
slaves.' In addition to worKs of a devotional kind, he wrote a 
Life of Willehad, the first bishop of Bremen," and a journal of his 
own missions, which is known to have been sent to Rome in the 
thirteenth century, and, although often sought for in vain, may 
possibly still exist there.' He is said to have performed some 
miraculous cures, but to have shunned the publication of them, 

™ Rimb. 31 ; Miinter, i. 310-1. ' Munter, i. 315. 

n Kiiub. 32; Munter, i. 313-4. • Printed in Pcrtz, ii., and Patrol. 

« Rimb. 33. cxviii. 

p lb. M. 1 C 35. « Munter. i. 319. 



400 RIMBERT. »»« IV- 

except among his most intimate friends ; and when they were once 
spoken of in his hearing, he exclaimed, " If I were worthy in the 
sight of my Lord, I would ask Him to grant me one miracle — that 
He would make me a good man ! " " 

In his last illness Anskar was greatly distressed by the appre- 
hension that his sins bad frustrated the promise which had been 
made to him of the martyr's crown. Rimbert endeavoured to 
comfort him by saying that violent death is not the only kind of 
martyrdom ; by reminding him of his long and severe labours for 
the Gospel, and of the patience with which he had endured much 
sickness — especially the protracted sufferings of his deathbed. At 
length, as he was at mass, the archbishop, although fully awake, 
had a vision in which he was jeproved for having doubted, and 
was assured that all that had been promised should be fulfilled. 
His death took place on the festival of the Purification, in the 
year 865.* 

When asked to name a successor, Anskar declined to do so, on 
the ground that he was unwilling by preferring one before others 
to add to the offence which he might probably have given 
to many during his lifetini^' But on being questioned as to 
his opinion of Rimbert, he answered — " I am assured that he is 
more worthy to be an archbishop than I to be a subdeacon." ^ To 
Rimbert, therefore, the see of Hamburg was committed on Anskar's 
death ; and for nearly a quarter of a century he carried on the work 
in the spirit of his master, for the knowledge of whose life we are 
chiefly indebted to his reverential and affectionate biography. 
Rimbert died in 888.* 

* Vita, 39. y*Vita S. Rimberti, c. 10, ap. Pertz, ii. 

« lb. 40-1. « Miinter, i. .'Ml. 



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