Popes and Jews, 1095-1291

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186 Popes and Jews, 1095–1291


So like his predecessor Gregory IX, Innocent Iv had an extensive knowledge of


papal decretals concerning Jews. According to the Apparatus super quinque libris


decretalium, although infidels were not part of Christ’s Church, they were never-


theless part of Christ’s flock and so subject to the pope, Christ’s vicar.146 The pope


therefore had the power to judge the Jews if they appealled to the old Testament


as a source for moral teachings.147 As we shall see, both Gregory IX and Innocent


Iv used this idea to justify ordering the burning of copies of the Talmud and their


decrees that those who taught or followed its heretical teachings should be


punished.148


HoSTIEnSIS, PAPAl DECrETAlS, AnD JEWS


one further legal commentary especially important for confirming the papacy’s


insistence on the servile but protected status of Jews in Christian Europe was the


Summa aurea, the work of Henry of Segusio, cardinal bishop of ostia, otherwise


known as Hostiensis (c.1200–1271), which survives in two versions of which the


earlier was completed in 1250–1251 after the First Council of lyons.149 Comprising


one and a quarter million words it was published in 1253 and became a definitive


text, commenting on the Liber extra but also interpolating new titles where existing


ones were inappropriate.150 Although no simple rubric of the Summa aurea was


concerned solely with Jews, while by contrast certain rubrics concentrated solely


on Muslims and heretics, the work nevertheless contained material pertinent to


their status. Thus one rubric of Book 3, De conversione coniugatorum, commented


on the status of marriage and religious life,151 and included discussion of how


spouses could be converted and reconverted to Christianity.152 Another, De conver-


sione infidelium, considered who should be deemed an infidel, and how infidels


and their offspring might be converted to Christianity.153


Book 5 contained the rubric De Iudaeis, Saracenis et eorum servis, a detailed


discussion of the correct status of Jews which Hostiensis summarized under the


following headings:


1: Who are called Jews and why they are so called; 2: And in what things they are to
be tolerated; 3: And in what things they are to be penalized; 4: Whether the Church
sins when she allows the Jews to perform their rites; 6: Whether a blasphemer of
Christ can exercise power over Christians; 7: Whether Jews should be compelled to

146 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 34, cap. 8, p.176r.
147 Also if their own rabbis did not punish them when necessary and if these rabbis found heresies
in their interpretation of Jewish law; Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 34, cap. 8, p.176r.
148 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 34, cap. 8, p.176r.
149 Brundage, Medieval Canon Law, p.214; Brundage, Medieval Canon Law and the Crusader,
pp.99–105.
150 Clarence-Smith, Medieval Law Teachers and Writers, pp.46–7.
151 Hostiensis, Summa aurea, Book 3, cols 1115–23.
152 Hostiensis, Summa aurea, Book 3, cols 1116–17.
153 Hostiensis, Summa aurea, Book 3, cols 1123–5.

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