A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

customary taxes while granting them the right to “appoint as sheriff from themselves


whomsoever they may choose, and [they] shall appoint from among themselves as


justice whomsoever they choose to look after the pleas of my crown.”^3 The king’s


law still stood, but it was to be carried out by the Londoners’ officials.


Church Reform and its Aftermath


Disillusioned citizens at Milan denounced their archbishop not only for his tyranny


but also for his impurity; they wanted their pastors to be untainted by sex and by


money. In this they were supported by a new-style papacy, keen on reform in the


church and society. The “Gregorian Reform,” as this movement came to be called,


broke up clerical marriages, unleashed civil war in Germany, changed the procedure


for episcopal elections, and transformed the papacy into a monarchy. It began as a


way to free the church from the world; but in the end the church was deeply


involved in the new world it had helped to create.


THE COMING OF REFORM


Free the church from the world: what could it mean? In 910 the duke and duchess of


Aquitaine founded the monastery of Cluny with some unusual stipulations. They


endowed the monastery with property (normal and essential if it were to survive), but


then they gave it and its worldly possessions to Saints Peter and Paul. In this way


they put control of the monastery into the hands of the two most powerful heavenly


saints. They designated the pope, as the successor of Saint Peter, to be the


monastery’s worldly protector if anyone should bother or threaten it. But even the


pope had no right to infringe on its freedom: “From this day,” the duke wrote,


those same monks there congregated shall be subject neither to our


yoke, nor to that of our relatives, nor to the sway of any earthly power.


And, through God and all his saints, and by the awful day of judgment, I


warn and abjure that no one of the secular princes, no count, no bishop


whatever, not the pontiff of the aforesaid Roman see, shall invade the


property of these servants of God, or alienate it, or diminish it, or


exchange it, or give it as a benefice to any one, or constitute any prelate


over them against their will.^4

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