Popes and Jews, 1095-1291

(Frankie) #1

Papal Claims to Authority over Judaism 185


Christianity and separated from her husband.135 De conversione infidelium, rubric


33 of Book 3, commented on two capitula of Titulus 33 of Book 3 of the Liber extra


on intermarriage between Christians and infidels.136 The commentary on Capitulum


2 was particularly relevant to Jews because it discussed the legal status of the chil-


dren of infidel spouses who had separated.137


rubric 6 of Book 5, De Iudaeis et Saracenis et eorum servis, also commented on


twelve of the nineteen capitula of Titulus 6 of Book 5 of the Liber extra on the des-


ignated status of Jews, Muslims, and their servants.138 It consisted of twenty-eight


decretals and several summaries of Innocent Iv concerned with infidels and the


buying, selling, and freeing of slaves, and hence a number of decretals specifically


concerned with Jews. So, for example, Capitulum one contained the following


statement:


when a Jew buys a pagan [Muslim] through trade and within three months puts him
up for sale, and on account of illness he [the pagan] becomes a Christian, then the
Jew’s convenience must not prevent this.139

It summarized Capitulum one with the comment that ‘original slaves, or those


who are enrolled (as slaves) are (to be) free, but they are not permitted to (enter) the


ecclesiastical ranks’.140 Capitulum Seven, which again cited the decretal ‘Iudaei’,


was concerned with Jews and inheritance. It stated that where Jews have recon-


verted—in other words when they had been converted to Christianity but then


reconverted to Judaism—because of personal financial distress, the Church must


intervene in any matters concerned with inheritance and possessions.141 Chapter


Ten, the decretal ‘Sicut Iudaeis’, was Innocent Iv’s re-issue of the ‘Constitutio pro


Iudaeis’.142 In his summary of Chapter Ten Innocent Iv stated that Christians were


now not permitted to use foods of ‘pagans’ (Muslims) or Jews.143


By contrast, rubric 19 of Book 5 (De usuris) of the same work was concerned


with usury in general. It contained eighteen Capitula and a number of summaries


treating seventeen of the nineteen capitula of Titulus 19 of Book 5 of the Liber


extra.144 Among these was Capitula 11, on Capitulum 12, the extract of ‘Post


miserabilem’ which, as we have seen, referred to the particular problem of Jewish


money-lending.145


135 It is Capitulum 20 in the Liber extra. Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 32, cap. 21, p.176v.
136 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 33, caps 1–2, p.176v.
137 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 3, rubrica 33, cap. 2, p.176v.
138 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, caps 1–18, pp.208v–208r.
139 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, cap 1, p.208v: ‘cum Iudaeus paganum emit causa
mercimonii et intra tres menses venialis exponitur, et propter infirmitatem Christianus factus est: tunc
enim non debet Iudaei utilistas impediri’.
140 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, cap 1, p.208v (Summarium): ‘originarri, sive ascriptitii
liberi sunt, ad ordines tamen non promoventur.’ Capitulum Three, the decretal ‘Iudaei’, addressed to
papal legates, was also concerned specifically with Jews.
141 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, cap. 7, p.208r.
142 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, cap. 10, p.208r.
143 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 6, cap. 10, p.208r (Summarium).
144 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 19, pp.213v–14v, passim.
145 Innocent IV, Apparatus, Bk 5, rubrica 19, cap. 11, p.213r.

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