A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

and secular halves, so too did it imply a new notion of kingship separate from the


priesthood. The Investiture Conflict did not produce the modern distinction between


church and state—that would develop only very slowly—but it set the wheels in


motion. At the time, its most important consequence was to shatter the delicate


balance among political and ecclesiastical powers in Germany and Italy. In Germany,


the princes consolidated their lands and powers at the expense of the king. In Italy,


the communes came closer to their goals: it was no accident that Milan gained its


independence in 1097. And everywhere the papacy gained new authority: it had


become a “papal monarchy.”


Papal influence was felt at every level. At the general level of canon law, papal


primacy was enhanced by the publication c.1140 of the Decretum, written by a


teacher of canon law named Gratian. Collecting nearly two thousand passages from


the decrees of popes and councils as well as the writings of the Church Fathers,


Gratian set out to demonstrate their essential agreement. In fact, the book’s original


title was Harmony of Discordant Canons. If he found any “discord” in his sources,


Gratian usually imposed the harmony himself by arguing that the conflicting passages


dealt with different situations. A bit later another legal scholar revised and expanded


the Decretum, adding Roman law to the mix. At a more local level, papal


denunciations of married clergy made inroads on family life. At Verona, for example,


“sons of priests” disappeared from the historical record in the twelfth century. At the


mundane level of administration, the papal claim to head the church helped turn the


curia at Rome into a kind of government, complete with its own bureaucracy,


collection agencies, and law courts. It was the teeming port of call for litigious


churchmen disputing appointments and for petitioners of every sort.


THE FIRST CRUSADE


On the military level, the papacy’s proclamations of holy wars led to bloody


slaughter, tragic loss, and tidy profit. We have already seen how Alexander II


encouraged the reconquista in Spain; it was in the wake of his call that the taifa


rulers implored the Almoravids for help. An oddly similar chain of events took place


at the other end of the Islamic world. Ostensibly responding to a request from the


Byzantine Emperor Alexius for mercenaries to help retake Anatolia from the Seljuks,


Pope Urban II (1088–1099) turned the enterprise into something new: a pious


pilgrimage to the Holy Land to be undertaken by an armed militia—one


commissioned like those of the Peace of God, but thousands of times larger—under


the leadership of the papacy.

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