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Religious and Intellectual Developments1000-1300
Henry IV of GermanyPope Gregory VII
Changes in the churchPapacy: dominant organizational force in western
ChristianityPope Leo IX a reformer, appointed by his cousin,
German Emperor Henry III Outlawed Simony: buying church offices Tried to enforce priestly celibacy (in the year 1000,
majority of parish priests were married)1059 Pope Nicholas II papal decree—only Cardinals
could elect the Pope Middle ages—neither Kings nor Popes could imagine a
separation of powers of church and state Decree of 1059 raised concerns about the nature of
cooperation between church leaders and state leaders Both Kings and Popes were corrupt by today’s standards
Changes in the Church
Pope LEO IX Pope Nicholas II
Pope Gregory VII (1073-1085)Election violently supported by a mob of RomansViolated terms of Papal decree of 1059 Caused friction between Pope and Henry IV
Could a lay person appoint Bishops or Abbots?Gregory VII prohibited all clerics from accepting church offices
from a layman even if the layman was a kingHenry IV refused to accept this and appointed a new archbishop in
MilanGregory reminded Henry that Gregory was the successor to St.
Peter and Henry owed Gregory the same obedienceGregory renounced his obedience to Gregory reminding Gregory
that his election as Pope violated the decree of 1059Gregory excommunicated Henry and called on his subjects to rebelSaxon Nobility renewed their civil warHenry must humble himself at Canossa
Investiture Conflict
Concordat of Worms Henry forbidden to invest Bishops or Abbots with the
symbols of their religious office (staff and ring)Henry was permitted to invest Bishops and Abbots with
the symbols of their secular office (lance)Monastery lands owed rents to the KingMonastery’s were required to support the King in times of
war or rebellionKings permitted to be present at investiture of Bishops
(to mediate over disputes)Papal victory
Strengthened the Papal claim to supremacy over the clergyPopulation rejected Bishops, Priests and Abbots who had
purchased their officePopulation rejected married Priests
Increase in number of parish churchesMarried Priests had to leave wives or leave
the churchEstablishment of cannon courts in which
litigants could appeal to the Pope (outside the jurisdiction of the Kings)
Parish Churches
Cluny freed itself from obligation to noble families by placing itself under the direct protection of the pope.
Benefactor of Cluny relinquished control over Cluny property.
Cluny benefactor and family granted special spiritual privileges including guarantee of heaven.
Monastic Reformation & Cluny
Became Pope at 37Goal: bring all of Christendom under Papal
hegemony and to recover Jerusalem from the Muslims
Believed that Pope had the right to discipline Kings who sinned
Engineered the accession of Frederick II to power as Emperor of Germany
Increased church lands in Northern Italy of which Pope was the secular PrinceVatican City
Power to tax parishes
Innocent III (1198-1216)
Heresy is the assertion of a controversial or novel change to the established dogma of a religion
Pope Innocent III supported the Medieval Inquisition to stamp out Christian heresyCatharsWaldensiansEpiscopal InquisitionMedieval Inquisition
Torture permitted after 1252Could not result in bloodshed, births, mutilation or deathCould only be used onceFull Confessions
Heresy and Inquisition
The Strappado & Symbols of Heresy
13th century Popes acted more like Kings and less like Christ’s Representative on Earth
Failure of the CrusadesInquisitionsConflict with Frederick II involved the church in
purely political controversy over who had secular control over territories in Italy
Pope Boniface III (1294-1303)National monarchies had gained more loyalty than
papal powerClerical taxationConflict with King Philip IV of France
Decline of the Church
Increased emphasis on differences between Christians and non-Christians
Distinctive badges identified Jews, Muslims and Heretics in most Western Kingdoms
Expulsion of JewsEngland 1290France 1306
Distinctions between Christians and Non-Christians
Philip IV of France levied taxes on French Clergy up to ½ of income from Church property
Pope Boniface III issued decree forbidding clergy from transferring any property to the French crown
Philip called a meeting of Bishops, Aristocrats and merchants to condemn the PopeBoniface arrested and held in FranceBoniface died (1303), Benedict XI died in 1304.
French Cardinals narrowly elected Clement V
and moved the seat of the Papacy to Avignon in France
Avignon Papacy
Academic Achievements
Scholasticism: a method of reconciling the claims of competing authorities by applying Aristotle’s principles of logic to themSome early scholastics called this method
“dialectic”Dialectic= thesis + antithesis = synthesis
Abelard The Story of My CalamitiesSic et Nom (Yes and No)
Peter LombardBook of Sentences theological questions,
apparently contradictory answers from the Bible and Christian teachings; synthesis in answers
Academic Changes
Here there arises a question. For it has been said … and completely fortified by authorities, that the Will of God,… and (which) is called His “Good Pleasure”, cannot be cancelled, because by that Will … He has done in Heaven and on Earth: Which, according to the testimony of the Apostle, nothing resists.
Therefore, it is asked, in what manner is what the Apostles says of the Lord, “Who wills that all men to come to be saved,” is to be accepted? For since not all come to be saved, but more are damned, it seems, … what God wills to be done, a human will impeding the Will of God…. The Gospel says: How often I willed to gather thy children together, just as the hen gathers her chicks under (her) wings, and thou wouldst not! Thus these are said, as if God’s Will has been overcome by the will of men, and (as if) … the Most Powerful One could not do, what He wanted. Where is, therefore, that omnipotence, by which, according to the Prophet, all whatsoever He has willed, He has done in Heaven and on Earth? Lombard, Peter. The Four Books of Sentences. Ad Claras Aquas, 1882, Vol. 1, pp. 814-818. http://www.franciscan-archive.org/lombardus/opera/ls1-46.html. (Accessed 11/6/2011).
Thomas AquinasSumma Theologica
God created the world
Study of the natural world can lead to knowledge of God
Reason supports faith
Dante Alighieri (1265-1321)
La Divina Commedia di Dante (Dante and the Divine Comedy). 1465 fresco, in the dome of the FlorenceCathedral.
Describes Dante’s journey through hell, purgatory and earthGuides: Roman poet Virgil and Dante’s
deceased love, BeatriceVirgil represents reason and classical learning
Guides Dante through hell and purgatoryBeatrice represents Christian wisdom and
blessednessGuides Dante through Paradise
The Divine Comedy
1st Circle: Limbo
2nd Circle: Lust
"... But to that second circle of sad hell,Where ‘mid the gust, the whirlwind, and the flawOf rain and hail-stones, lovers need not tellTheir sorrows. Pale were the sweet lips I saw,Pale were the lips I kiss’d, and fair the formI floated with, about that melancholy storm."
3rd Circle: Gluttony
4th Circle: Avarice
"… I saw multitudesto every side of me; their howls were loudwhile, wheeling weights, they used their chests to push.They struck against each other; at that point,each turned around and, wheeling back those weights,cried out: Why do you hoard? Why do you squander?' "
5th Circle: Anger
Lower Hell: Violence and Fraud
"From these two, art and nature, it is fitting,if you recall how Genesis begins,for men to make their way, to gain their living;and since the usurer prefers anotherpathway, he scorns both nature in herselfand art her follower; his hope is elsewhere."
Of every malice gaining the hatred of Heaven, injustice is the goal; and every such goal injures someone either with force or fraud.
6th Circle of Hell: Heresy
7th Circle of Hell: Violence
Violent against peopleAnd property.Submerged in boiling River guarded byCentaurs. AlexanderThe Great is buried up To his chin.
7th Circle of Hell: Suicides
7th Circle of Hell: Blasphemers
8th Circle of Hell: Fraud
Flatterers Upside down in excrement
9th Circle: Treachery
Glowing Souls in Heaven
Art & Architecture
Chartres Cathedral
Height
Cologne Cathedral France
Light
Upper Chapel at Saint Chappelle Cathedral, France
Majesty
Façade intended to demonstrate to Approaching worshippers, both the Might of God and the Might of the institution.Western Façade of the Cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris
Gargolyes
Gargoyle PurposeCarry water away from the wallsDivide the flow of rainwater away from the
roofAdopted from ancient Egyptians and GreeksUsed by the Church as a representation of
evilFrighten worshippersRemind them that the end is nearAssured worshippers that evil is kept outside
the churchLions most used imageChimeras: combination of animal body parts to
create new creatures. Chimeras remind the people not to underestimate
the devil
Illuminated Manuscripts
Drogo’s Sacramentary
Vernacular LiteratureVirile and unpolished warrior society
BloodyHeroic warfareHonor LoyaltyWomen subordinate to men
Song of Roland (French)Song of the Nibelungs (German)Poem of the Cid (Spanish)
Not merely revival of classical learningAdapted classical ideas to new, Christian
culture
12th Century Renaissance