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Decretum Gratiani

The Decretum Gratiani, also known as the Concordia discordantium canonum or Concordantia discordantium canonum or simply as the Decretum, is a collection of canon law compiled and written in the 12th century as a legal textbook by the jurist known as Gratian. It forms the first part of the collection of six legal texts, which together became known as the Corpus Juris Canonici. It was used as the main source of law by canonists of the Roman Catholic Church until the Decretals, promulgated by Pope Gregory IX in 1234, obtained legal force, after which it was the cornerstone of the Corpus Juris Canonici, in force until 1917.[1]

Page from medieval manuscript of the Decretum Gratiani.

Overview

In the first half of the 12th century Gratian, clusinus episcopus,[2] probably a jurist of the ecclesiastical forum and a teacher, rubricator at the monastery of Saints Nabor and Felix (according to the Bolognese Odofredus Denariis [13th century]) and starting from the 18th century believed to have been a Camaldolese monk,[3] composed the work he called Concordia discordantium canonum, and others titled Nova collectio, Decreta, Corpus juris canonici, or the more commonly accepted name, Decretum Gratiani, a living text, characterized by multiple editorial stages. He did this to obviate the difficulties which beset the study and the forensic application of practical, external theology (theologia practica externa), i.e., the study and the forensic use of canon law. In spite of its great reputation and wide diffusion, the Decretum has never been recognized by the Church as an official collection.[4]

The so-called vulgata or vulgate version (an advanced editorial stage) of the Decretum is divided into three parts (ministeria, negotia, sacramenta).

  • The first part is divided into 101 distinctions (distinctiones), the first 20 of which form an introduction to the general principles of canon law (tractatus decretalium); the remainder constitutes a tractatus ordinandorum, relative to ecclesiastical persons and function.
  • The second part contains 36 causes (causæ), divided into questions (quæstiones), and treat of ecclesiastical administration, procedural issues and marriage. Quaestio 3 of Causa 33 on penance (De penitentia) is treated separately and subdivided into 7 distinctions.
  • The third part De consecratione deals with sacramental and liturgical law and contains 5 distinctions.

Each distinction or question contains dicta Gratiani, or maxims of Gratian, and canones. Gratian himself raises questions and brings forward difficulties, which he answers by quoting auctoritates, i. e. canons of councils, decretals of the popes, texts of the Scripture or of the Fathers. These are the canones; the entire remaining portion, even the summaries of the canons and the chronological indications, are called the maxims or dicta Gratiani.

Many auctoritates have been inserted in the Decretum by authors of a later date. These are the Paleae, so called from Paucapalea, the name of the principal commentator on the Decretum. The Roman revisers of the 16th century (1566–1582) corrected the text of the "Decree" and added many critical notes designated by the words Correctores Romani.

Citing the Decretum

The Decretum is cited by referring to the larger units of the distinction or the cause and question, and then the specific canon or dictum. For clarity, the distinctions of Causa 33, quaestio 3 of the second part are referred to as De penitentia (or De pen.), while the distinctions of the third part are referred to as De consecratione (or De cons.). The Part is usually not included, as the citation form is different for each.

Citation styles for the Decretum have changed over time and can generally be categorised under the modern, obsolescent, and obsolete forms.[5]

Modern form

This form, common since the twentieth century, cites all units in Arabic numerals, from largest unit to smallest unit.

Distinctions are referenced by an uppercase "D.", Causes by an uppercase "C.", questions by a lowercase "q.", and canons by a lowercase "c.". Gratian's dicta are referred to with a lowercase "d. a. c." (dictum ante canonem, for commentary preceding the canon) or "d. p. c." (dictum post canonem, for commentary following the canon).

Examples:

  • [Part I] D. 23 c.7
  • [Part II] C. 15 q. 2 c. 4
  • [Part II] C. 23 q. 8 d. p. c. 25
  • [Part II, De penitentia] D. 3 de pen. c. 24
  • [Part III] D. 2 de cons. c. 82

Obsolescent form

Commonly used between the seventeenth and early twentieth centuries, this form generally begins with a reference to the smallest unit in Arabic numerals, followed by the Distinction or Cause in Roman numerals and (if required) the question in Arabic numerals, e.g. "c. 5, C.3 q.1".

Obsolete form

This is the form used by medieval and early modern writers, falling out of use after the eighteenth century. Major divisions (Distinctio, Causa, quaestio) were cited with (usually Roman) numerals. Since the numbering of the Decretum's capitula only became standard in the sixteenth century, canons were cited by their opening word(s). Two or more canons beginning with the same word/phrase might be distinguished with numbers, e.g. In Christo ii.

Examples (using the same references as above):

  • xxiii dist. episcopus
  • xv q. ii felix
  • xxiii q. viii § hinc datur
  • iii de pen[itentia] totam
  • ii de cons. In Christo ii

Early commentators might also refer to the first few canons by number (e.g. cap. iij for the third canon of a distinction), or to the last few canons as cap. antepenult. ("capitulum antepenultimum", that is, third to last), cap. penult. (or pen. or pe., second to last), and cap. fin. ("capitulum finale") or cap. ult. (last).

Author

 
Gratian

Gratian (Medieval Latin: Gratianus) was a canon lawyer from Etruria, probably operating in the former feudal state of Matilda of Tuscany (mainly in Tuscany and Emilia region) as well as in Reims (1131), Rome, Bologna, Venice (1143) and Chiusi. He flourished in the second quarter of the twelfth century. He died on 10 August around the middle of the 12th century as bishop of Chiusi in Tuscany. Little else is known about him.

He is sometimes incorrectly referred to as Franciscus Gratianus,[6] Johannes Gratian,[3] or Giovanni Graziano. For a long time he was believed to have been born around 1100, at Ficulle in Umbria, based on a chronicle of illustrious men of the 14th century attributed to an exponent of the powerful Colonna family, who had possessions in Ficulle. He was said to have become a monk at Camaldoli and then taught at the monastery of St. Felix in Bologna and devoted his life to studying theology and canon law,[7] but contemporary scholars do not attach credibility to these traditions.

Since the 11th century, some cities of central-northern Italy such as Arezzo, Pisa, Bologna had been the centre of the study of Roman law, after the Corpus Juris Civilis was rediscovered in western Europe. In the second half of the 11th century and at the beginning of the 12th century Roman law was generally studied and applied only in the cities (seat of the diocese) in which there was an imperial Prefecture, where imperial and ecclesiastical jurists (and courts) coexisted (such as Pisa and Bologna), with mutual interference. However, from the first editorial stages of the Decretum it is clear that Gratian had little knowledge of Roman law and that he had a great sense of depth in the disputes dealt with in the ecclesiastical seats, especially in the appeal judgments dealt with in the Roman curia. Therefore, some scholars today exclude that he was trained in Justinian Roman law and that (at the beginning of his career) he worked mainly in certain cities (such as Arezzo, Pisa or Bologna) where Roman law was known and applied for years, it being plausible that he came from an episcopal city in which all jurisdiction, both civil and ecclesiastical, was dealt with by the only court present: the ecclesiastical one. Perhaps also for this reason he feels the need to create a legal work to be applied only in ecclesial courts and only for cases relating to canon law, putting an end to the mixture between civil and ecclesiastical jurisdictions. It is no coincidence that Dante Alighieri writes that he helped "one and the other forum", that is, he separated the canonical jurisdiction from the civil one.[8] Gratian's work was an attempt, using early scholastic method, to reconcile seemingly contradictory canons from previous centuries. Gratian quoted a great number of authorities, including the Bible, papal and conciliar legislation, church fathers such as Augustine of Hippo, and secular law in his efforts to reconcile the canons. Gratian found a place in Dante's Paradise among the doctors of the Church:[9]

This next flamelet issues from Gratian's smile, he who gave such help to the ecclesiastical and civil spheres as is acceptable in Paradise.[10]

He has long been acclaimed as Pater Juris Canonici (Latin: "Father of Canon Law"), a title he shares with his successor St. Raymond of Penyafort. Gratian was the father and the first teacher of the scientia nova which he himself coined: the new canon law or ius novum. Many of his disciples have become highly renowned canonists.

Textual history

The vulgate version of Gratian's collection was completed at some point after the Second Council of the Lateran of 1139, which it quotes. Research by Anders Winroth established that some manuscripts of an early version of Gratian's text, which differs considerably from the mainstream textual tradition, have survived.[11] With later commentaries and supplements, the work was incorporated into the Corpus Juris Canonici. The Decretum quickly became the standard textbook for students of canon law throughout Europe, but it never received any formal, official recognition by the papacy. Only the Codex Juris Canonici of 1917 put it out of use.[12]

As late as 1997, scholars commonly set the date of completion at 1140, but this accuracy in dating is not possible after Anders Winroth's groundbreaking scholarship.[13] Winroth's research shows that the Decretum existed in two published recensions.[14] The first dates to sometime after 1139, while the second dates to 1150 at the latest. There are several major differences between the two recensions:

  • The first recension is a more coherent and analytical work.
  • The second recension places a much greater emphasis on papal primacy and power.
  • The second recension includes Roman law extracts taken directly from the Corpus Juris Civilis, whereas the first recension does not demonstrate substantial familiarity with Roman jurisprudence.

These differences led Winroth to conclude that Roman law was not as far developed by 1140 as scholars had previously thought. He has also argued that the second recension was due not to the original author of the first recension (whom he calls Gratian 1), but rather another jurist versed in Roman law.[15] However, Winroth's thesis of two Gratians remains controversial.[16]

 
An illustration from a 13th-century manuscript of the work, illustrating the kinds of blood relatives and common ancestry which made marriage impossible and contracted marriages null. It has since then been changed so third cousins can now marry.

This field of inquiry is hampered by ignorance of the compiler's identity and the existence of manuscripts with abbreviated versions of the text or variant versions not represented by Winroth's two recensions. One of these is the manuscript St. Gall, Stiftsbibliothek, 673 (=Sg),[further explanation needed] which some have argued contains the earliest known draft (Larrainzar's borrador) of the Decretum,[17] but which other scholars have argued contains an abbreviation of the first recension expanded with texts taken from the second recension.[18]

Criticism

During the reformation, individuals such as Martin Luther strongly criticized the claims of papal primacy within the Decretum.[19] One of Luther's chief concerns surrounded Distinctio 40 (Chapter "Si papa") which reads:

If the pope fails, and neglects fraternal salvation, if he is found useless, and remiss in his works, and moreover silent from good, which offends him more, and nevertheless leads countless peoples with him as the first slave of hell, with himself to be scourged with many plagues for eternity. No mortal may presume to rebuke the sins of this man, because he himself is to judge all.[20][21][22][23]

Additional concerns[24][25][26] about papal primacy in the context of 2 Thessalonians 2:4 were raised regarding Distinctio 96 chapter 7 which reads:

It is quite clearly shown that the pontiff cannot be bound by the secular power, which is evidently called a god by the pious prince Constantine, since it is clear that even God cannot be judged by men.[27][28]

Sources

Gratian's sources were Roman law, the Bible, the writings of (or attributed to) the Church Fathers, papal decretals, the acts of church councils and synods. In most cases, Gratian obtained the material not from a direct reading of the sources but rather through intermediate collections. Thanks to the research of modern scholars (in particular Charles Munier, Titus Lenherr, and Peter Landau) it is now known that Gratian made use of a relatively-small number of collections in the composition of most of the Decretum:

  • Anselm (II) of Lucca's canonical collection, originally compiled around 1083 and existing in four main recensions: A, B, Bb, and C. Peter Landau suggests that Gratian probably employed a manuscript containing an expanded form of recension A which he calls recension A’;
  • the Collectio tripartita attributed to Ivo of Chartres, usually thought to date to 1095;
  • the Panormia of Ivo of Chartres, also usually dated to 1095, although several scholars have argued for a later date and some even question Ivo's authorship;
  • Gregory of St. Grisogono's Polycarpus, completed some time after 1111;
  • the Collectio canonum trium librorum (Collection in Three Books), inspired by the doctrines of Paschal II and the reform of the Church, composed in Italy (probably in Pistoia, Tuscany, by an anonymous Roman canonist) between 1111 and 1123[29] or 1124;[30]
  • the Lex Romana Visigothorum;
  • secular texts such as Plato (Greek version – there was still no Latin translation);
  • the Glossa ordinaria to the Bible.

Other sources are known to have been used in the composition of particular sections of the Decretum:

  • Isidore of Seville's Etymologies for DD. 1-9 (the so-called Treatise on Laws);
  • Alger of Liège's Liber de misericordia et iustitia for C. 1;
  • the Sententiae magistri A. for the De penitentia and some other sections.

Influence

 
Thirteenth century modest copy of the famous manuscript Decretum Gratiani. Preserved in the Ghent University Library.[31]

Gratian himself named his work Concordia Discordantium Canonum – "Concord of Discordant Canons". The name is fitting: Gratian tried to harmonize apparently contradictory canons with each other, by discussing different interpretations and deciding on a solution, as a judge in a case. This dialectical approach allowed for other law professors to work with the Decretum and to develop their own solutions and commentaries. These legists are known as the decretists.

... the Concordance of Discordant Canons or Decretum served the function of giving the canonists a text like that of the Corpus Iuris Civilis for the civilians or the bible for the theologians.[32]

These commentaries were called glosses. Editions printed in the 15th, 16th or 17th century frequently included the glosses along with the text. Collections of glosses were called "gloss apparatus" or Lectura in Decretum (see also glossator). Systematic commentaries were called Summae. Some of these Summae were soon in circulation as well and obtained the same level of fame as the Decretum itself. Early commentators included Paucapalea and Magister Rolandus. The most important commentators were probably Rufin of Bologna (died before 1192) and Huguccio (died 1210). Less well-known was the commentary of Simon of Bisignano, which consisted of the Glosses on the Decretum and the Summa Simonis.

Peter Lombard borrowed and adapted from the Decretum when discussing penance in his Sentences (c. 1150).[33]

Importance in Western law

The Decretum served as a model for 12th-century jurists in the formation of Western law, based on rational rules and evidence to replace barbaric laws which often involved trial by ordeal or battle.[34]

The Decretum has been called "the first comprehensive and systematic legal treatise in the history of the West, and perhaps in the history of mankind – if by 'comprehensive' is meant the attempt to embrace virtually the entire law of a given polity, and if by 'systematic' is meant the express effort to codify that law as a single body, in which all parts are viewed as interacting to form a whole." The Decretum made a direct contribution to the development of Western law in areas that it dealt with such as marriage, property and inheritance. Specific concepts included consent for marriage, and wrongful intent in determining whether a certain act constituted a crime.[34]

References

  1. ^ "Decretals of Gregory IX". Code of Canon Law - IntraText. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  2. ^ Reali, Francesco (ed.), Graziano da Chiusi e la sua opera, 2009, pp. 63-73 and p. 244 has found and re-evaluated a Kalendarium of the Sienese Church owned by the Library of the Intronati of Siena (Ms FI2, f. 5v) in which, in Carolina minuscule writing with a date that at most can be placed in the mid-12th century, reads the following (after Augusti IIII idus Obiit ...): et gratianus clusinus episcopus; Reali observes that the text conforms to another reliable source of the 12th century, in which the author of the Decretum (who drafted the work in 1130) is referred to as "Gratianus clusinus episcopus" (Robertus de Monte, Cronica, Bethman [ed.], MGH Scriptores VI, Hanover 1844, p. 490) and that other sources of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries also speak of Gratian as bishop or as bishop of Chiusi.
  3. ^ a b Van Hove, Alphonse (1909). "Johannes Gratian". Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 6. New York: Robert Appleton Co. Retrieved 19 September 2014.
  4. ^ Kuttner, Stephan (23–27 July 1984). "Research on Gratian: Acta and Agenda". In Linehan, Peter (ed.). Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Medieval Canon Law, Cambridge. Monumenta Iuris Canonici. Series C: Subsidia. Vatican City: Vatican Library (published 1988). pp. 3–26. ISBN 8821005704.
  5. ^ Brundage, James (2014). Medieval Canon Law. London and New York: Taylor & Francis. pp. 192–3.
  6. ^ Baynes, T. S.; Smith, W. R., eds. (1880). "Franciscus Gratianus" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. XI (9th ed.). New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. p. 60.
  7. ^ Noonan, John T. (1979). "Gratian Slept Here: The Changing Identity of the Father of the Systematic Study of Canon Law". Traditio. 35: 145–172. doi:10.1017/S0362152900015038. S2CID 148787058.
  8. ^ Reali, Francesco, "Alle origini del diritto civile europeo", in Studia Gratiana 30 (2020), 27–114
  9. ^ "4. Sun". Dante's Paradiso (lecture notes). University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
  10. ^ Dante, Paradiso, Canto X, accessed 25 June 2013
  11. ^ Winroth (Cambridge 2004), 138
  12. ^ Crompton (2006):174
  13. ^ Hartmann & Pennington, History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period, pg. 7.
  14. ^ Winroth, (Cambridge, 2004), 3
  15. ^ Winroth, (Cambridge, 2004), 146–174
  16. ^ See most recently Atria Larson, Master of Penance: Gratian and the Development of Penitential Thought and Law, ca. 1120-1215, Washington, DC: Catholic University Press, 2013, arguing for even greater complexity in the addition and adaptation of the text of the Decretum.
  17. ^ Larrainzar, Carlos (1999). "El borrador de la 'Concordia' de Graciano: Sankt Gallen, Stiftsbibliothek MS 673 (=Sg)". Ius Ecclesiae: Rivista internazionale di diritto canonico (in Spanish) (11): 593–666.
  18. ^ Lehnherr, Titus, Titus "Ist die Handschrift 673 der St. Galler Stiftsbibliothek (Sg) der Entwurf zu Gratians Dekret?: Versuch einer Antwort aus Beobachtungen an D.31 und D.32" (unpublished paper) 2012-04-02 at the Wayback Machine; Anders Winroth, "Recent Work on the Making of Gratian's Decretum", Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law, n.s. 26 (2004–2006): 1–29; John Wei, "A Reconsideration of St. Gall, Stiftsbibliothek 673 (Sg) in light of the Sources of Distinctions 5–7 of the De penitentia", Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law, n.s. 27 (2007): 141–180.
  19. ^ Luther, Martin (1659). Lauterbach, Antonius; Aurifaber, John (eds.). Dris Martini Lutheri Colloquia Mensalia. Translated by Bell, Henrie. William Du-Gard. p. 409.
  20. ^ Gratien (1582). Decretum Gratiani emendatum et notationibus illustratum, unà cum glossis, Gregorii XIII, pont. max. jussu editum (in Latin). In aedibus populi romani. p. 259.
  21. ^ Gratian (1512). "Digitale Bibliothek - Münchener Digitalisierungszentrum". daten.digitale-sammlungen.de (in Latin). Basil. p. Folio 41. Retrieved 2023-02-03.
  22. ^ Gratian. Decretum Gratiani cum Glossa ordinaria Bartholomaei Brixiensis et glossulis. Vatican. p. 33v.
  23. ^ Davenant, John; Allport, Josiah (1831). An Exposition of the Epistle of St. Paul to the Colossians. Hamilton, Adams and Company. p. 285.
  24. ^ The Gospel and the great Apostasy; or, Popery contrasted with pure Christianity, in the light of history and scripture. Religious Tract Society. 1799. p. 111.
  25. ^ The Workes of the Right Reverend Father in God Gervase Babington, Late Bishop of Worcester. 1615. p. 237.
  26. ^ Clarke, T. (1621). The Popes Deadly Wound: Tending to Resolue All Men, in the Chiefe and Principall Points Now in Controuersie Betweene the Papists and Vs. Thomas Snodham. p. 3.
  27. ^ "Digitale Bibliothek - Münchener Digitalisierungszentrum". daten.digitale-sammlungen.de. Retrieved 2022-12-04.
  28. ^ Gratien (1582). Decretum Gratiani emendatum et notationibus illustratum, unà cum glossis , Gregorii XIII, pont. max. jussu editum (in Latin). in aedibus populi romani. p. 619.
  29. ^ Wei, John C. (2016). Gratian the Theologian. Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-8132-2803-7.
  30. ^ Jaser, Christian (2013). Ecclesia maledicens. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. p. 279. ISBN 978-3-16-151927-7.
  31. ^ "Decretum Gratiani". lib.ugent.be. Retrieved 2020-08-26.
  32. ^ Donahue, Jr., A Crisis of Law?, pg. 16.
  33. ^ See Appendix B in Larson, Master of Penance.
  34. ^ a b Woods, Thomas E. (2005). How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization. Washington, DC: Regency. ISBN 0-89526-038-7.

Bibliography

  • Brundage, James. Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe. University of Chicago Press, 1990.
  • Brundage, James. The Medieval Origins of the Legal Profession. University of Chicago Press, 2008.
  • Donahue, Charles, Jr. A Crisis of Law? Reflections on the Church and the Law Over the Centuries in The Jurist 65 (2005) I-30.
  • Hartmann, Wilfried, and Kenneth Pennington, edited. The History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period, 1140-1234: From Gratian to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX (Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2008).
  • Kuttner, Stephan. Research on Gratian: Acta and Agenda, in Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Medieval Canon Law, Cambridge, 23-27 July 1984, Linehan, Peter edited (Monumenta Iuris Canonici. Series C: Subsidia), Vatican City 1988, 3-26.
  • Landau, Peter. "Gratians Arbeitsplan." In Iuri canonico promovendo: Festschrift für Heribert Schmitz zum 65. Geburtstag. Regensburg: F. Pustet, 1994. pp. 691–707.
  • Landau, Peter. "Neue Forschungen zu vorgratianischen Kanonessammlungen und den Quellen des gratianischen Dekrets." Ius Commune 11 (1984): 1-29. Reprinted in idem. Kanones und Dekretalen. pp. 177*-205*
  • Landau, Peter. "Quellen und Bedeutung des gratianischen Dekrets," Studia et Documenta Historiae et Juris 52 (1986): 218–235. Reprinted in idem. Kanones und Dekretalen. pp. 207*-224*.
  • Larsen, Atria A. Master of Penance: Gratian and the Development of Penitential Thought and Law in the Twelfth Century, Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press 2014.
  • Larson, Atria A. Gratian's Tractatus de penitentia: A New Latin Edition with English Translation Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2016.
  • Lenherr, Titus. Die Exkommunikations- und Depositionsgewalt der Häretiker bei Gratian und den Dekretisten bis zur Glossa ordinaria des Johannes Teutonicus. St. Ottilien: EOS Verlag, 1987.
  • Munier, Charles. Les sources patristiques du droit de l’église du VIIIe au XIIIe siècle. Mulhouse 1957.
  • Noonan, John T. "Gratian slept here: the changing identity of the father of the systematic study of canon law." Traditio 35 (1979), 145–172.
  • Wei, John C. Gratian the Theologian. Washington D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2016.
  • Werckmeister, Jean. Le mariage. Décret de Gratien (causes 27 à 36). Paris: Cerf, 2011.
  • Winroth, Anders. The Making of Gratian's Decretum. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
  • Winroth, Anders. "Recent Work on the Making of Gratian's Decretum," Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law 26 (2008).

External links

  •   Media related to Decretum Gratiani at Wikimedia Commons
  • Quaglioni, Diego (2002). "GRAZIANO". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Volume 59: Graziano–Grossi Gondi (in Italian). Rome: Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana. ISBN 978-8-81200032-6.
  • Full Latin text from the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Decretum magistri Gratiani. Editio Lipsiensis secunda, post Aemilii Ludovici Richteri curas, ad librorum manu scriptorum et editionis Romanae fidem recognovit et adnotatione critica instruxit Aemilius Friedberg. Leipzig, B. Tauchnitz, 1879. (Corpus iuris canonici ; 1)
  • Critical edition in progress, currently only of parts of the shorter first recension of the Decretum, edited by Anders Winroth
  • Otto Vervaart's introduction to Canon Law
  • Domus Gratiani
  • The Stephan Kuttner Institute of Medieval Canon Law in Munich

decretum, gratiani, also, known, concordia, discordantium, canonum, concordantia, discordantium, canonum, simply, decretum, collection, canon, compiled, written, 12th, century, legal, textbook, jurist, known, gratian, forms, first, part, collection, legal, tex. The Decretum Gratiani also known as the Concordia discordantium canonum or Concordantia discordantium canonum or simply as the Decretum is a collection of canon law compiled and written in the 12th century as a legal textbook by the jurist known as Gratian It forms the first part of the collection of six legal texts which together became known as the Corpus Juris Canonici It was used as the main source of law by canonists of the Roman Catholic Church until the Decretals promulgated by Pope Gregory IX in 1234 obtained legal force after which it was the cornerstone of the Corpus Juris Canonici in force until 1917 1 Page from medieval manuscript of the Decretum Gratiani Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Citing the Decretum 1 1 1 Modern form 1 1 2 Obsolescent form 1 1 3 Obsolete form 2 Author 3 Textual history 4 Criticism 5 Sources 6 Influence 6 1 Importance in Western law 7 References 7 1 Bibliography 8 External linksOverview EditIn the first half of the 12th century Gratian clusinus episcopus 2 probably a jurist of the ecclesiastical forum and a teacher rubricator at the monastery of Saints Nabor and Felix according to the Bolognese Odofredus Denariis 13th century and starting from the 18th century believed to have been a Camaldolese monk 3 composed the work he called Concordia discordantium canonum and others titled Nova collectio Decreta Corpus juris canonici or the more commonly accepted name Decretum Gratiani a living text characterized by multiple editorial stages He did this to obviate the difficulties which beset the study and the forensic application of practical external theology theologia practica externa i e the study and the forensic use of canon law In spite of its great reputation and wide diffusion the Decretum has never been recognized by the Church as an official collection 4 The so called vulgata or vulgate version an advanced editorial stage of the Decretum is divided into three parts ministeria negotia sacramenta The first part is divided into 101 distinctions distinctiones the first 20 of which form an introduction to the general principles of canon law tractatus decretalium the remainder constitutes a tractatus ordinandorum relative to ecclesiastical persons and function The second part contains 36 causes causae divided into questions quaestiones and treat of ecclesiastical administration procedural issues and marriage Quaestio 3 of Causa 33 on penance De penitentia is treated separately and subdivided into 7 distinctions The third part De consecratione deals with sacramental and liturgical law and contains 5 distinctions Each distinction or question contains dicta Gratiani or maxims of Gratian and canones Gratian himself raises questions and brings forward difficulties which he answers by quoting auctoritates i e canons of councils decretals of the popes texts of the Scripture or of the Fathers These are the canones the entire remaining portion even the summaries of the canons and the chronological indications are called the maxims or dicta Gratiani Many auctoritates have been inserted in the Decretum by authors of a later date These are the Paleae so called from Paucapalea the name of the principal commentator on the Decretum The Roman revisers of the 16th century 1566 1582 corrected the text of the Decree and added many critical notes designated by the words Correctores Romani Citing the Decretum Edit The Decretum is cited by referring to the larger units of the distinction or the cause and question and then the specific canon or dictum For clarity the distinctions of Causa 33 quaestio 3 of the second part are referred to as De penitentia or De pen while the distinctions of the third part are referred to as De consecratione or De cons The Part is usually not included as the citation form is different for each Citation styles for the Decretum have changed over time and can generally be categorised under the modern obsolescent and obsolete forms 5 Modern form Edit This form common since the twentieth century cites all units in Arabic numerals from largest unit to smallest unit Distinctions are referenced by an uppercase D Causes by an uppercase C questions by a lowercase q and canons by a lowercase c Gratian s dicta are referred to with a lowercase d a c dictum ante canonem for commentary preceding the canon or d p c dictum post canonem for commentary following the canon Examples Part I D 23 c 7 Part II C 15 q 2 c 4 Part II C 23 q 8 d p c 25 Part II De penitentia D 3 de pen c 24 Part III D 2 de cons c 82Obsolescent form Edit Commonly used between the seventeenth and early twentieth centuries this form generally begins with a reference to the smallest unit in Arabic numerals followed by the Distinction or Cause in Roman numerals and if required the question in Arabic numerals e g c 5 C 3 q 1 Obsolete form Edit This is the form used by medieval and early modern writers falling out of use after the eighteenth century Major divisions Distinctio Causa quaestio were cited with usually Roman numerals Since the numbering of the Decretum s capitula only became standard in the sixteenth century canons were cited by their opening word s Two or more canons beginning with the same word phrase might be distinguished with numbers e g In Christo ii Examples using the same references as above xxiii dist episcopus xv q ii felix xxiii q viii hinc datur iii de pen itentia totam ii de cons In Christo iiEarly commentators might also refer to the first few canons by number e g cap iij for the third canon of a distinction or to the last few canons as cap antepenult capitulum antepenultimum that is third to last cap penult or pen or pe second to last and cap fin capitulum finale or cap ult last Author Edit Gratian Gratian Medieval Latin Gratianus was a canon lawyer from Etruria probably operating in the former feudal state of Matilda of Tuscany mainly in Tuscany and Emilia region as well as in Reims 1131 Rome Bologna Venice 1143 and Chiusi He flourished in the second quarter of the twelfth century He died on 10 August around the middle of the 12th century as bishop of Chiusi in Tuscany Little else is known about him He is sometimes incorrectly referred to as Franciscus Gratianus 6 Johannes Gratian 3 or Giovanni Graziano For a long time he was believed to have been born around 1100 at Ficulle in Umbria based on a chronicle of illustrious men of the 14th century attributed to an exponent of the powerful Colonna family who had possessions in Ficulle He was said to have become a monk at Camaldoli and then taught at the monastery of St Felix in Bologna and devoted his life to studying theology and canon law 7 but contemporary scholars do not attach credibility to these traditions Since the 11th century some cities of central northern Italy such as Arezzo Pisa Bologna had been the centre of the study of Roman law after the Corpus Juris Civilis was rediscovered in western Europe In the second half of the 11th century and at the beginning of the 12th century Roman law was generally studied and applied only in the cities seat of the diocese in which there was an imperial Prefecture where imperial and ecclesiastical jurists and courts coexisted such as Pisa and Bologna with mutual interference However from the first editorial stages of the Decretum it is clear that Gratian had little knowledge of Roman law and that he had a great sense of depth in the disputes dealt with in the ecclesiastical seats especially in the appeal judgments dealt with in the Roman curia Therefore some scholars today exclude that he was trained in Justinian Roman law and that at the beginning of his career he worked mainly in certain cities such as Arezzo Pisa or Bologna where Roman law was known and applied for years it being plausible that he came from an episcopal city in which all jurisdiction both civil and ecclesiastical was dealt with by the only court present the ecclesiastical one Perhaps also for this reason he feels the need to create a legal work to be applied only in ecclesial courts and only for cases relating to canon law putting an end to the mixture between civil and ecclesiastical jurisdictions It is no coincidence that Dante Alighieri writes that he helped one and the other forum that is he separated the canonical jurisdiction from the civil one 8 Gratian s work was an attempt using early scholastic method to reconcile seemingly contradictory canons from previous centuries Gratian quoted a great number of authorities including the Bible papal and conciliar legislation church fathers such as Augustine of Hippo and secular law in his efforts to reconcile the canons Gratian found a place in Dante s Paradise among the doctors of the Church 9 This next flamelet issues from Gratian s smile he who gave such help to the ecclesiastical and civil spheres as is acceptable in Paradise 10 He has long been acclaimed as Pater Juris Canonici Latin Father of Canon Law a title he shares with his successor St Raymond of Penyafort Gratian was the father and the first teacher of the scientia nova which he himself coined the new canon law or ius novum Many of his disciples have become highly renowned canonists Textual history EditThe vulgate version of Gratian s collection was completed at some point after the Second Council of the Lateran of 1139 which it quotes Research by Anders Winroth established that some manuscripts of an early version of Gratian s text which differs considerably from the mainstream textual tradition have survived 11 With later commentaries and supplements the work was incorporated into the Corpus Juris Canonici The Decretum quickly became the standard textbook for students of canon law throughout Europe but it never received any formal official recognition by the papacy Only the Codex Juris Canonici of 1917 put it out of use 12 As late as 1997 scholars commonly set the date of completion at 1140 but this accuracy in dating is not possible after Anders Winroth s groundbreaking scholarship 13 Winroth s research shows that the Decretum existed in two published recensions 14 The first dates to sometime after 1139 while the second dates to 1150 at the latest There are several major differences between the two recensions The first recension is a more coherent and analytical work The second recension places a much greater emphasis on papal primacy and power The second recension includes Roman law extracts taken directly from the Corpus Juris Civilis whereas the first recension does not demonstrate substantial familiarity with Roman jurisprudence These differences led Winroth to conclude that Roman law was not as far developed by 1140 as scholars had previously thought He has also argued that the second recension was due not to the original author of the first recension whom he calls Gratian 1 but rather another jurist versed in Roman law 15 However Winroth s thesis of two Gratians remains controversial 16 An illustration from a 13th century manuscript of the work illustrating the kinds of blood relatives and common ancestry which made marriage impossible and contracted marriages null It has since then been changed so third cousins can now marry This field of inquiry is hampered by ignorance of the compiler s identity and the existence of manuscripts with abbreviated versions of the text or variant versions not represented by Winroth s two recensions One of these is the manuscript St Gall Stiftsbibliothek 673 Sg further explanation needed which some have argued contains the earliest known draft Larrainzar s borrador of the Decretum 17 but which other scholars have argued contains an abbreviation of the first recension expanded with texts taken from the second recension 18 Criticism EditDuring the reformation individuals such as Martin Luther strongly criticized the claims of papal primacy within the Decretum 19 One of Luther s chief concerns surrounded Distinctio 40 Chapter Si papa which reads If the pope fails and neglects fraternal salvation if he is found useless and remiss in his works and moreover silent from good which offends him more and nevertheless leads countless peoples with him as the first slave of hell with himself to be scourged with many plagues for eternity No mortal may presume to rebuke the sins of this man because he himself is to judge all 20 21 22 23 Additional concerns 24 25 26 about papal primacy in the context of 2 Thessalonians 2 4 were raised regarding Distinctio 96 chapter 7 which reads It is quite clearly shown that the pontiff cannot be bound by the secular power which is evidently called a god by the pious prince Constantine since it is clear that even God cannot be judged by men 27 28 Sources EditGratian s sources were Roman law the Bible the writings of or attributed to the Church Fathers papal decretals the acts of church councils and synods In most cases Gratian obtained the material not from a direct reading of the sources but rather through intermediate collections Thanks to the research of modern scholars in particular Charles Munier Titus Lenherr and Peter Landau it is now known that Gratian made use of a relatively small number of collections in the composition of most of the Decretum Anselm II of Lucca s canonical collection originally compiled around 1083 and existing in four main recensions A B Bb and C Peter Landau suggests that Gratian probably employed a manuscript containing an expanded form of recension A which he calls recension A the Collectio tripartita attributed to Ivo of Chartres usually thought to date to 1095 the Panormia of Ivo of Chartres also usually dated to 1095 although several scholars have argued for a later date and some even question Ivo s authorship Gregory of St Grisogono s Polycarpus completed some time after 1111 the Collectio canonum trium librorum Collection in Three Books inspired by the doctrines of Paschal II and the reform of the Church composed in Italy probably in Pistoia Tuscany by an anonymous Roman canonist between 1111 and 1123 29 or 1124 30 the Lex Romana Visigothorum secular texts such as Plato Greek version there was still no Latin translation the Glossa ordinaria to the Bible Other sources are known to have been used in the composition of particular sections of the Decretum Isidore of Seville s Etymologies for DD 1 9 the so called Treatise on Laws Alger of Liege s Liber de misericordia et iustitia for C 1 the Sententiae magistri A for the De penitentia and some other sections Influence Edit Thirteenth century modest copy of the famous manuscript Decretum Gratiani Preserved in the Ghent University Library 31 Gratian himself named his work Concordia Discordantium Canonum Concord of Discordant Canons The name is fitting Gratian tried to harmonize apparently contradictory canons with each other by discussing different interpretations and deciding on a solution as a judge in a case This dialectical approach allowed for other law professors to work with the Decretum and to develop their own solutions and commentaries These legists are known as the decretists the Concordance of Discordant Canons or Decretum served the function of giving the canonists a text like that of the Corpus Iuris Civilis for the civilians or the bible for the theologians 32 These commentaries were called glosses Editions printed in the 15th 16th or 17th century frequently included the glosses along with the text Collections of glosses were called gloss apparatus or Lectura in Decretum see also glossator Systematic commentaries were called Summae Some of these Summae were soon in circulation as well and obtained the same level of fame as the Decretum itself Early commentators included Paucapalea and Magister Rolandus The most important commentators were probably Rufin of Bologna died before 1192 and Huguccio died 1210 Less well known was the commentary of Simon of Bisignano which consisted of the Glosses on the Decretum and the Summa Simonis Peter Lombard borrowed and adapted from the Decretum when discussing penance in his Sentences c 1150 33 Importance in Western law Edit The Decretum served as a model for 12th century jurists in the formation of Western law based on rational rules and evidence to replace barbaric laws which often involved trial by ordeal or battle 34 The Decretum has been called the first comprehensive and systematic legal treatise in the history of the West and perhaps in the history of mankind if by comprehensive is meant the attempt to embrace virtually the entire law of a given polity and if by systematic is meant the express effort to codify that law as a single body in which all parts are viewed as interacting to form a whole The Decretum made a direct contribution to the development of Western law in areas that it dealt with such as marriage property and inheritance Specific concepts included consent for marriage and wrongful intent in determining whether a certain act constituted a crime 34 References Edit Decretals of Gregory IX Code of Canon Law IntraText Retrieved 24 May 2020 Reali Francesco ed Graziano da Chiusi e la sua opera 2009 pp 63 73 and p 244 has found and re evaluated a Kalendarium of the Sienese Church owned by the Library of the Intronati of Siena Ms FI2 f 5v in which in Carolina minuscule writing with a date that at most can be placed in the mid 12th century reads the following after Augusti IIII idus Obiit et gratianus clusinus episcopus Reali observes that the text conforms to another reliable source of the 12th century in which the author of the Decretum who drafted the work in 1130 is referred to as Gratianus clusinus episcopus Robertus de Monte Cronica Bethman ed MGH Scriptores VI Hanover 1844 p 490 and that other sources of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries also speak of Gratian as bishop or as bishop of Chiusi a b Van Hove Alphonse 1909 Johannes Gratian Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 6 New York Robert Appleton Co Retrieved 19 September 2014 Kuttner Stephan 23 27 July 1984 Research on Gratian Acta and Agenda In Linehan Peter ed Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Medieval Canon Law Cambridge Monumenta Iuris Canonici Series C Subsidia Vatican City Vatican Library published 1988 pp 3 26 ISBN 8821005704 Brundage James 2014 Medieval Canon Law London and New York Taylor amp Francis pp 192 3 Baynes T S Smith W R eds 1880 Franciscus Gratianus Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol XI 9th ed New York Charles Scribner s Sons p 60 Noonan John T 1979 Gratian Slept Here The Changing Identity of the Father of the Systematic Study of Canon Law Traditio 35 145 172 doi 10 1017 S0362152900015038 S2CID 148787058 Reali Francesco Alle origini del diritto civile europeo in Studia Gratiana 30 2020 27 114 4 Sun Dante s Paradiso lecture notes University of Texas at Austin Retrieved 3 February 2023 Dante Paradiso Canto X accessed 25 June 2013 Winroth Cambridge 2004 138 Crompton 2006 174 Hartmann amp Pennington History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period pg 7 Winroth Cambridge 2004 3 Winroth Cambridge 2004 146 174 See most recently Atria Larson Master of Penance Gratian and the Development of Penitential Thought and Law ca 1120 1215 Washington DC Catholic University Press 2013 arguing for even greater complexity in the addition and adaptation of the text of the Decretum Larrainzar Carlos 1999 El borrador de la Concordia de Graciano Sankt Gallen Stiftsbibliothek MS 673 Sg Ius Ecclesiae Rivista internazionale di diritto canonico in Spanish 11 593 666 Lehnherr Titus Titus Ist die Handschrift 673 der St Galler Stiftsbibliothek Sg der Entwurf zu Gratians Dekret Versuch einer Antwort aus Beobachtungen an D 31 und D 32 unpublished paper Archived 2012 04 02 at the Wayback Machine Anders Winroth Recent Work on the Making of Gratian s Decretum Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law n s 26 2004 2006 1 29 John Wei A Reconsideration of St Gall Stiftsbibliothek 673 Sg in light of the Sources of Distinctions 5 7 of the De penitentia Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law n s 27 2007 141 180 Luther Martin 1659 Lauterbach Antonius Aurifaber John eds Dris Martini Lutheri Colloquia Mensalia Translated by Bell Henrie William Du Gard p 409 Gratien 1582 Decretum Gratiani emendatum et notationibus illustratum una cum glossis Gregorii XIII pont max jussu editum in Latin In aedibus populi romani p 259 Gratian 1512 Digitale Bibliothek Munchener Digitalisierungszentrum daten digitale sammlungen de in Latin Basil p Folio 41 Retrieved 2023 02 03 Gratian Decretum Gratiani cum Glossa ordinaria Bartholomaei Brixiensis et glossulis Vatican p 33v Davenant John Allport Josiah 1831 An Exposition of the Epistle of St Paul to the Colossians Hamilton Adams and Company p 285 The Gospel and the great Apostasy or Popery contrasted with pure Christianity in the light of history and scripture Religious Tract Society 1799 p 111 The Workes of the Right Reverend Father in God Gervase Babington Late Bishop of Worcester 1615 p 237 Clarke T 1621 The Popes Deadly Wound Tending to Resolue All Men in the Chiefe and Principall Points Now in Controuersie Betweene the Papists and Vs Thomas Snodham p 3 Digitale Bibliothek Munchener Digitalisierungszentrum daten digitale sammlungen de Retrieved 2022 12 04 Gratien 1582 Decretum Gratiani emendatum et notationibus illustratum una cum glossis Gregorii XIII pont max jussu editum in Latin in aedibus populi romani p 619 Wei John C 2016 Gratian the Theologian Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 8132 2803 7 Jaser Christian 2013 Ecclesia maledicens Tubingen Mohr Siebeck p 279 ISBN 978 3 16 151927 7 Decretum Gratiani lib ugent be Retrieved 2020 08 26 Donahue Jr A Crisis of Law pg 16 See Appendix B in Larson Master of Penance a b Woods Thomas E 2005 How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization Washington DC Regency ISBN 0 89526 038 7 Bibliography Edit Brundage James Law Sex and Christian Society in Medieval Europe University of Chicago Press 1990 Brundage James The Medieval Origins of the Legal Profession University of Chicago Press 2008 Donahue Charles Jr A Crisis of Law Reflections on the Church and the Law Over the Centuries in The Jurist 65 2005 I 30 Hartmann Wilfried and Kenneth Pennington edited The History of Medieval Canon Law in the Classical Period 1140 1234 From Gratian to the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press 2008 Kuttner Stephan Research on Gratian Acta and Agenda in Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Medieval Canon Law Cambridge 23 27 July 1984 Linehan Peter edited Monumenta Iuris Canonici Series C Subsidia Vatican City 1988 3 26 Landau Peter Gratians Arbeitsplan In Iuri canonico promovendo Festschrift fur Heribert Schmitz zum 65 Geburtstag Regensburg F Pustet 1994 pp 691 707 Landau Peter Neue Forschungen zu vorgratianischen Kanonessammlungen und den Quellen des gratianischen Dekrets Ius Commune 11 1984 1 29 Reprinted in idem Kanones und Dekretalen pp 177 205 Landau Peter Quellen und Bedeutung des gratianischen Dekrets Studia et Documenta Historiae et Juris 52 1986 218 235 Reprinted in idem Kanones und Dekretalen pp 207 224 Larsen Atria A Master of Penance Gratian and the Development of Penitential Thought and Law in the Twelfth Century Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press 2014 Larson Atria A Gratian s Tractatus de penitentia A New Latin Edition with English Translation Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press 2016 Lenherr Titus Die Exkommunikations und Depositionsgewalt der Haretiker bei Gratian und den Dekretisten bis zur Glossa ordinaria des Johannes Teutonicus St Ottilien EOS Verlag 1987 Munier Charles Les sources patristiques du droit de l eglise du VIIIe au XIIIe siecle Mulhouse 1957 Noonan John T Gratian slept here the changing identity of the father of the systematic study of canon law Traditio 35 1979 145 172 Wei John C Gratian the Theologian Washington D C The Catholic University of America Press 2016 Werckmeister Jean Le mariage Decret de Gratien causes 27 a 36 Paris Cerf 2011 Winroth Anders The Making of Gratian s Decretum New York Cambridge University Press 2004 Winroth Anders Recent Work on the Making of Gratian s Decretum Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law 26 2008 External links Edit Media related to Decretum Gratiani at Wikimedia Commons Quaglioni Diego 2002 GRAZIANO Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 59 Graziano Grossi Gondi in Italian Rome Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana ISBN 978 8 81200032 6 Full Latin text from the Bayerische Staatsbibliothek Decretum magistri Gratiani Editio Lipsiensis secunda post Aemilii Ludovici Richteri curas ad librorum manu scriptorum et editionis Romanae fidem recognovit et adnotatione critica instruxit Aemilius Friedberg Leipzig B Tauchnitz 1879 Corpus iuris canonici 1 Critical edition in progress currently only of parts of the shorter first recension of the Decretum edited by Anders Winroth Otto Vervaart s introduction to Canon Law Domus Gratiani The Stephan Kuttner Institute of Medieval Canon Law in Munich Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Decretum Gratiani amp oldid 1151267842 Author, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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