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Pope Alexander II

Pope Alexander II (1010/1015 – 21 April 1073), born Anselm of Baggio,[1] was the head of the Roman Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 1061 to his death in 1073. Born in Milan, Anselm was deeply involved in the Pataria reform movement. Elected according to the terms of his predecessor's bull, In nomine Domini, Anselm's was the first election by the cardinals without the participation of the people and minor clergy of Rome. He also authorized the Norman Conquest of England in 1066.

Pope

Alexander II
Bishop of Rome
ChurchCatholic Church
Elected30 September 1061
Papacy began1 October 1061
Papacy ended21 April 1073
PredecessorNicholas II
SuccessorGregory VII
Other post(s)Bishop of Lucca
Personal details
Born
Anselmo da Baggio

1010/1015
Died(1073-04-21)21 April 1073
Rome, Papal State

Early life and work

Anselm was born in the parish of Cesano Boscone in the town of Corsico some 7 km (5 mi) from Milan of a noble family. The family took its name from Baggio, a suburb of Milan, where the family held the office of "captain".[2] According to the Liber pontificalis,[3] his father's name was Anselmus or Ardericus.

Contemporary sources do not provide any information on where Anselm might have obtained his education.[4] It was traditionally believed that Anselm de Baggio studied under Lanfranc at Bec Abbey. However, modern historiography rejects the assertion.[5] He became a member of the clergy of the cathedral of Milan,[6] and was ordained a priest by Archbishop Wido (Guido) of Milan.[7]

He was one of the founders of the Pataria,[8] a movement in the Archdiocese of Milan, aimed at reforming the clergy and ecclesiastic government in the province, and supportive of Papal sanctions against simony and clerical marriage.[9] They contested the ancient rights of the cathedral clergy of Milan and supported the Gregorian reforms. Anselm was one of four "upright and honest" priests suggested to succeed Ariberto da Intimiano as prince bishop of Milan.[dubious ] When the Emperor Henry III chose instead the more worldly Guido da Velate, protests followed. In order to silence a vocal critic, Bishop Guido sent Anselm to the Imperial Court.[10]

The emperor instead named Anselm Bishop of Lucca in 1056 or 1057.[11] The earliest testimony of his activity as bishop is on 23 March 1057.[6] On 20 August 1057, he was with the imperial court at Trebur, and on 27 December at Pöhlde.[12] As bishop, he was an energetic associate of Hildebrand of Sovana in endeavouring to suppress simony and enforce clerical celibacy.[13] So bad was the state of things at Milan, that benefices were openly bought and sold, and the clergy publicly married the women with whom they lived. With the increased prestige of his office, he reappeared twice in Milan as legate of the Holy See, in 1057 in the company of Hildebrand, and in 1059 with Peter Damian.[9]

Bishop Anselm attended the Roman council of Pope Nicholas II in the first half of April 1059, and another synod of uncertain date.[14] He was in Rome again in April 1060, for a synod in the Lateran palace, when he subscribed two papal bulls dated 14 April 1060.[15]

Election as pope

Pope Nicholas II died on 27 July 1061. The cardinals met, and sent a representative, the former monk of Cluny, Cardinal Stephen, to seek the permission of the imperial court to conduct an election. After a five-day wait during which he was not received in audience, the Cardinal returned to Italy, without having received the congé d'élire.[16] The cardinal bishops then proceeded to an election, having forced their way into the city of Rome with the aid of Prince Richard I of Capua and his Norman troops. On 1 October 1061, they chose Bishop Anselmo de Baggio of Lucca, one of the leaders of the reform party, who took the name Pope Alexander II.[9]

Unlike previous papal elections, the assent of the Holy Roman Emperor to the election was not sought,[disputed ][17] and cardinal bishops were the sole electors of the pope for the first time in the history of the Catholic Church; in accordance with Nicholas II's bull, In Nomine Domini.[18] The bull effectively removed the control held by the Roman metropolitan church over the election of the pontiff, unilaterally abrogating the rights of the emperor, the nobles of Rome, the clergy, and the people of Rome.

The new Pope Alexander II was crowned at nightfall on 1 October 1061 in the Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli, because opposition to the election on the part of the Romans and German sympathizers made a coronation in St. Peter's Basilica impossible.[17] The German court nominated another candidate, Cadalus, bishop of Parma, who was proclaimed Pope at a council held at Basel under the name of Honorius II. He marched to Rome and for a long time threatened his rival's position.

At length, due to a coup-d-état in the German court which replaced Empress Agnes with Archbishop Anno II of Cologne, Honorius was forsaken by the German court and deposed by a council held at Mantua on 31 May and 1 June 1064.;[13][19] Alexander II's position continued to be challenged by Honorius until the latter's death in 1072. The next sixty years exhibited one schism after another.[20]

The Normans of south Italy

As early as 1063, the Normans. taking advantage of the schism, successfully expanded their empire by attacking and seizing the city of Gaeta, an important port leading into the southern part of the Roman campagna. In 1066, Richard of Capua, who had helped Alexander enter Rome and secure a coronation in October 1061, suddenly changed sides. With the Germans abandoning Cadalo and embracing Alexander, the Normans were no longer the mainstay and support of the papacy, and were faced with a competitor which had designs on the same territories as the Normans. The barons of the Roman campagna, too, saw an advantage to be gained (or at least revenge to be extracted) by joining the Normans against Alexander and the reform party of Hildebrand, which had robbed them of their rights in papal elections and the civil government of the Church. Moving north, Prince Richard seized Ceprano, devastated Lazio, and encamped outside Rome, from which he demanded the title of Patricius.[21]

In the meantime, the frantic Cardinal Hildebrand repeatedly called upon Marquis Godfrey of Tuscany, who was with King Henry in Germany, to come to the aid of Rome.[22] In spring 1067, he collected an army, lifted the siege of Rome, and caused Prince Richard to withdraw to Capua. Richard left his son Jordanus in charge of the army in the plain below Aquino, to bar the way of the forces of Godfrey. But it was a shortage of supplies, sickness, and bribery on the part of the Normans, that brought Godfrey to negotiate with Jordanus, and finally to return north. A new treaty between the papacy and the Normans was negotiated, and, at the synod held at Melfi by Pope Alexander on 1 August 1067, Prince Richard returned to his allegiance and was confirmed as Duke of Apulia and Calabria.[23]

Policies

In the second half of April 1063, Pope Alexander held a synod at the Lateran Basilica in Rome, attended by more than a hundred bishops. During the synod, he excommunicated Honorius II (Bishop Cadalo). The pope and bishops also decreed: that no mercy was to be shown to simoniacs by preserving their dignity; that those who had been ordained by simoniacs were to be retained in their orders; in the case of a knowing consecration of a simoniac, both simoniac and consecrator were to be deprived of their offices; that a priest who has a wife or mistress should not say Mass; that no cleric should receive a church from a layman whether gratis or for pay; that no priest should hold two churches; that no one should be made a monk on the understanding that he would become abbot; and that a layman who becomes a cleric should change his costume.[24]

In a letter of 15 May 1063, Pope Alexander ordered the archbishops of Reims, Sens, Tours, Bourges, and Bordeaux to obey his legate Cardinal Peter Damiani, Bishop of Ostia, "who is our own eye and the immoveable foundation of the apostolic see."[25] He also forbade Gervase, Archbishop of Reims, from consecrating Jocelyn as bishop of Soissons, on the grounds that he was a simoniac.[26]

On 6 May 1065, Pope Alexander held a council in Rome, attended by at least eight cardinals and forty-three bishops. It is known that the privileges of the monastery of Saint Denis in Paris were confirmed, and it was granted the privilege of being exempt from the jurisdiction of the bishop of Paris.[27] In 1067, he made a tour of the southern cities of the Papal States and of the Kingdom of Naples, holding a synod in Melfi in October and then later in the year at Siponto.[28] In this council held at Siponto, Pope Alexander deposed Bishop Lando of Nucerino, Landolf of Tortiboli, and Benedict of Biccari, all on accusations of simony.[29]

Reforms

In an attempt to curtail simony (the buying and selling of sacred things or positions within the church), Alexander II sent out many legates and archbishops across Europe to enforce reform among local synods. Any clergy suspected of simony were then investigated. Any clergy who was invested in his office by a lay person were required to undergo a new investiture by a papal legate. A well-known victim of these campaigns included the bishop of Constance, who was removed from office for simony.[30]

On 30 March 1068, Alexander held a synod in Rome, in which he absolved the bishop of Tortosa of a charge of homicide, but deposed the bishop of Florence on the grounds of simony; a charge of simony was laid against the bishop of Chiusi, who begged for absolution. The pope also ordered that churches not be held by lay persons and that ecclesiastical goods not be transmitted from parents to children as though they were subject to the laws of inheritance.[31]

By 1071, the future Emperor Henry IV, though only 21 (and still only German King and Roman Patrician), was vigorously at work recovering the powers, privileges and properties which had been allowed to slip away from imperial control during his regencies. He crushed a riot in Saxony in 1069 and overcame the rebellion of the Saxon aristocrat Otto of Nordheim in 1071. But in 1071, the reforming activities of Pope Alexander's resulted in an open rupture with the King. Archbishop Guido of Milan recently died so Henry IV appointed Godfrey (Goffredo) de Castiglione as successor to Guido. However, Alexander II declared this investiture void, and appointed a Milanese priest named Attone (Atto), who had already been elected archbishop on 6 January 1072, in an electoral meeting sanctioned by Pope Alexander.[32] In February 1072, he held a synod in Rome, in which he anathematized Goffredo, and confirmed Atto as archbishop. He wrote a letter to Henry IV, informing him of the papal actions.[33] Henry IV sent five men to Rome to discuss the issue, but Alexander rejected and subsequently excommunicated them. This led to increased pressure between Henry IV and the popes.[30]

On 1 October 1071, Pope Alexander consecrated the high altar of the new basilica dedicated to Saint Benedict at the monastery of Montecassino. He was assisted by Cardinal Hildebrand and other cardinals, by ten archbishops, and forty-four bishops, as well as abbots, clergy, nobles, and people.[34] He had already, perhaps at the beginning of his reign, granted Abbot Desiderius personally the lordship over Terracina.[35]

Pope Alexander also reformed the administration of the church of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme in Rome and of the Lateran Basilica, by replacing the monks of the Order of Montecassino with Canons Regular of the Congregation of S. Frediano of Lucca.[36]

In liturgical matters, Alexander II ended the practice of singing or reciting the "Alleluia" during the Latin Church's observance of Lent.[37] This reform was permanent.[38]

Position on Jews

In 1065, Pope Alexander II wrote to Béranger, Viscount of Narbonne, and to Guifred, bishop of the city, praising them for having prevented the massacre of the Jews in their district, and reminding them that God does not approve of the shedding of innocent blood. On 11 June in that same year, he wrote a letter, admonishing Landulf VI of Benevento "that the conversion of Jews is not to be obtained by force."[39] He was warm in his praise for Spanish bishops, who protected the Jews against those who came to Spain crusading against the Moors.[40]

Crusade against the Moors

Also in the same year, Alexander called for the Crusade of Barbastro against the Moors in Spain.[41][42] Alexander II issued orders to the Bishops of Narbonne, instructing crusaders en route "that you protect the Jews who live among you, so that they may not be killed by those who are setting out for Spain against the Saracens ... for the situation of the Jews is greatly different from that of the Saracens. One may justly fight against those [the Saracens] who persecute Christians and drive them from their towns and their own homes."[43]

England and William the Conqueror

 
The Bayeux Tapestry: William the Conqueror holds a papal gonfalon with a golden cross, a gift from Pope Alexander II.

In 1066, Pope Alexander received an embassy from William, Duke of Normandy, after his successful invasion of Brittany. The embassy had been sent to obtain his blessing for William's prospective invasion of Anglo-Saxon England. Alexander gave it, along with a papal ring, a banner,[44] and an edict to the autonomous Old English clergy guiding them to submit to the new regime. These favors were instrumental in the submission of the English church following the Battle of Hastings. Count Eustace carried his papal insignia, a gonfanon with three tails charged with a cross, which William of Poitiers says was given to William I to signify the pope's blessing of his invasion to secure submission to Rome.[45]

William's successes in England brought the native English church into much greater control from Rome. William even agreed to Alexander's request to restore the payment of the Peter's Pence, which had lapsed in the time of Edward the Confessor. At the same time, William requested that the pope send him legates, to carry out a ceremonial crowning of the king. Alexander therefore sent Bishop Ermenfried of Sion (Sitten in Switzerland) and two "clerici cardinales" to England, who, at Eastertide 1070, presided at the coronation at Winchester.[46]

The archbishop of Canterbury, Stigand, however, even though he made his peace with William, was a problem for Pope Alexander. Stigand had helped to drive the legitimate archbishop, Robert of Jumièges, from his see, and usurped the archbishopric for himself; he even dared to wear Archbishop Robert's pallium.[47] Additionally, he continued to hold the diocese of Winchester, of which he was the legitimate incumbent, along with the archbishopric of Canterbury.[48] Five successive popes, Leo, Victor, Stephanus, Nicholas, and Alexander himself, had sent legates to England, who excommunicated Stigand. Stigand was therefore not able to crown William king, as was the right of the archbishop of Canterbury.[49] Nonetheless, Stigand and William remained on good terms, until, during a visit of William to the continent in 1067, the Normans in England behaved with particular brutality. Stigand switched sides, and with Edgar the Atheling fled to safety in the camp of refuge in Ely. They were besieged by the Conqueror, and Stigand was captured.[50] Pope Alexander's legates, as instructed, demanded the deposition of Stigand, and at a general council held at Winchester after King William's coronation, the deposition was duly voted.[51]

King William determined that he would not have his brother, Bishop Odo of Bayeux, as his new archbishop, nor would he promote his chaplain and chancellor, Herfast. He assembled a council of bishops, abbots and other notables, in order to discuss a suitable candidate for the vacant archbishopric. After this consultation, William offered the archbishopric to Lanfranc, the Abbot of the royal monastery of St. Stephen at Caen, to whom he had once offered the archbishopric of Rouen, which Lanfranc had refused. When Lanfranc also refused the see of Canterbury, the determined king sent his queen, Matilda, and his son Robert (a former pupil of Lanfranc), accompanied by a contingent of Norman nobles, to persuade him, to no avail. Abbot Herluin of Bec was called upon to exert his influence, again without result. William then ordered the papal legates to go to Normandy, and convene a council of bishops, abbots, and nobles, to prevail upon Lanfranc to accept the king's offer. Reluctantly, Lanfranc crossed to England, where he engaged in intense talks with William, who only persuaded him by invoking the recommendation which had been expressed by Pope Alexander.[52] Lanfranc was finally elected by a council on 15 August 1070, the Feast of the Assumption, and consecrated on 29 August, the Feast of St. John the Baptist.[53]

When Lanfranc wrote to Pope Alexander and to the Archdeacon Hildebrand that they defend him against the pretensions of the archbishop of York, and that they send him the pallium as his symbol of primacy, Hildebrand wrote a letter in reply, claiming that it was not the custom to send the pallium, but that the recipient come to Rome to have it bestowed; and besides, he and the pope wanted to confer personally with Lanfranc about pressing matters. In 1071, therefore, Lanfranc and Archbishop Thomas of York travelled to Rome to receive their pallia.[54]

Subsequently, Pope Alexander wrote to Archbishop Lanfranc, ordering him to see to the state of the monastery of Winchester, and expressing annoyance that he had not yet procured the release of the bishop (Stigand), perhaps out of negligence, perhaps out of disobedience, perhaps fearing punishment by King William.[55]

In 1068, German King Henry IV attempted to divorce Bertha of Savoy. The Papal legate Peter Damian hinted that any further attempt at a divorce would lead the Pope to refuse to perform his coronation. Henry obeyed, and his wife, who had retired to Lorsch Abbey returned to Court.[9]

Poland

In 1072 Alexander commanded[citation needed] the reluctant Canon of the cathedral of Kraków, Stanislaus of Szczepanów, who had been elected unanimously by the cathedral chapter, to accept appointment as the ninth Bishop of Kraków in succession to Bishop Lampert.[56] Stanislaus became one of the earliest native Polish bishops. This turned out to be a significant decision for the Polish Church. Once appointed, Stanislaus was a highly assertive bishop who got into conflict with Polish king Bolesław II the Bold, pro suis actibus sceleratis ('because of his wicked deeds'). Bolesław and his nobles assassinated Bishop Stanislaus in the church of St. Michael in Rupella on 11 April 1079, and cut up his corpse into seventy-two pieces. Poland was laid under the interdict for four years, and the see of Kraków remained vacant. In 1088, the body of Bishop Stanislaus was transferred to his cathedral in Kraków, and eventually, he was venerated as a saint.[57]

Bohemia

A series of disputes broke out between the bishop Gerhard (Iaromirus, Jaromi) of Prague and the bishop John (Brewnow) of Olmouc in Bohemia. Duke Wratislaus of Bohemia drew this to the attention of Pope Alexander II when he happened to be at the papal court in 1073. Alexander sent nuntii to Prague to sort the matter out, but they were captured, mutilated, and then murdered. Shocked at the enormity of the offence, Pope Alexander sent Cardinal Rudolph to Prague. When Gerhard refused to cooperate with the cardinal, he was deposed and Prague was laid under the interdict; when the situation quieted down, he restored the bishop and lifted the interdict, but ordered both bishops to present themselves before the papal court. When they appeared, Pope Alexander confirmed the deposition of the bishop of Prague, though he restored him once again at the pleading of Countess Mathilda of Tuscany.[58]

Death

Pope Alexander II died at the Lateran Palace on 21 April 1073, and was buried in the Lateran Basilica.[59]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Modern scholars sometimes refer to Bishop Anselm as Anselm the Elder or Anselm I to distinguish him from his nephew St Anselm who succeeded to his office as Bishop of Lucca.
  2. ^ Violante, "Alessandro II.". Schwartz, p. 212.
  3. ^ Liber Pontificalis (ed. by Louis Duchesne) (Paris: Thorin 1892), Volume II, part 1, p. 281.
  4. ^ Vaughn 1987, p. 34.
  5. ^ Vaughn 1987, p. 33.
  6. ^ a b Schwartz, p. 212.
  7. ^ Landulfus de S. Paulo, senior, Historia Mediolanensis III, in: Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum Tomus VIII (Hannover: Hahn 1848), p. 77.
  8. ^ Hugo Paech (1872). Die Pataria in Mailand: 1056 – 1077 (in German). Sondershausen: Eupel.
  9. ^ a b c d "Loughlin, James. "Pope Alexander II." Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 1 Aug. 2014".
  10. ^ Landulfus appears to state that Archbishop Guido actually took Anselm to the imperial court under threat of a prosecution: Ataque ut Guido his malia finem imponeret, trans montes ad regen ducens Anselmum, ut ipse huius causa negotii discrete iudicaret, tetendit.... lite ab Anselmo iurejurando dimisso.... Landulfus de S. Paulo, senior, Historia Mediolanensis III.5, in: Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum Tomus VIII (Hannover: Hahn 1848), p. 76.
  11. ^ Bishop Giovanni was still alive on 27 May 1056. Cappelletti, Le chiese d'Italia XV, p. 511.
  12. ^ Schwartz, p. 213.
  13. ^ a b   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alexander (popes)". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  14. ^ J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XIX (Venice: A. Zatta 1766), pp. 911–912; 919.
  15. ^ Cappelletti XV, p. 513.
  16. ^ Gregorovius, p. 129, derived from Peter Damiani, "Disceptatio synodalis" Monumenta Germaniae historica: Libelli de lite imperatorum et pontificum saeculis XI. et XII. conscripti (in German and Latin). Vol. I. Hannover: Hahn. 1891. pp. 87–88.: Sed ut totam inauditae calamitatis nostrae percurramus historiam, Stephanus cardinalis presbiter apostolicae sedis, vir videlicet tantae gravitatis et honestatis nitore conspicuus, tantis denique, sicut non obscutum est, virtutum floribus insignitus, cum apostolicis litteris ad aulam regiam missus, ab aulicis amministratoribus non est admissus, sed per quinque fere dies ad beati Petri et apostolicae sedis iniuriam pro foribus mansit exclusus. Quod ille, utpote vir gravis et patiens, aequanimiter tulit, legati tamen officium, quo fungebatur, implere non potuit.
  17. ^ a b Levillain, Philippe. 2002. The Papacy: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-92228-3.
  18. ^ Miranda, Salvator. 1998. "Papal elections of the 11th Century (1061–1099)." 7 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  19. ^ Karl Joseph von Hefele (1871). Histoire des conciles d'après les documents originaux (in French). Vol. Tome IV: 870–1085. Paris: A. Le Clère. p. 427.
  20. ^ Wibert-Clement III (1080—1100); Theoderic (1100); Albertus (1102); Maginulf-Sylvester IV (1105—1111); Burdinus-Gregory VIII (1118—1121); Anacletus II (1130—1138); Gregory-Victor IV (1138). Jaffé, p. xxxi.
  21. ^ Gregorovius IV. 1, pp. 150–151.
  22. ^ Bonizo of Sutri, "ad amicum", in: Monumenta Germaniae Historica. Libelli de Lite I, p. 599.
  23. ^ Gregorovius, p. 151. Luigi Tosti, Storia della Badia di Monte-cassino, Tomo I (Napoli: F. Cirelli 1842), p. 319.
  24. ^ Philippus Jaffé (1885). Regesta pontificum Romanorum ab condita Ecclesia ad annum post Christum natum MCXCVIII (in Latin). Vol. Tomus primus (second ed.). Leipzig: Veit. pp. 570–571.
  25. ^ Jaffe, p. 517, no. 4516.
  26. ^ Jaffé, pp. 518, no. 4517.
  27. ^ Jaffé, p. 575. J. D. Mansi (ed.), Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio, editio novissima, Tomus XIX (Florence: A. Zatta 1766), p. 1037. Karl Joseph von Hefele (1911). Histoire des conciles d'après les documents originaux (in French). 2nd edition. Tome IV.2: 870–1085. Paris: A. Letouzey. p. 1252.
  28. ^ Jaffé, pp. 581–582.
  29. ^ Paul Fridolin Kehr (1925), Italia pontificia Vol. VIII (Berlin: Weidmann 1925), p. 14, no. 24. (in Latin)
  30. ^ a b Matthews, Rupert (2013). The Popes: Every Question Answered. New York: Metro Books. p. 137. ISBN 978-1-4351-4571-9.
  31. ^ Jaffé, p. 583, and no. 4657.
  32. ^ Bonizo of Sutri, ad amicum, VI (p. 653 Jaffé.
  33. ^ Jaffé, p. 587.
  34. ^ Tosti, Storia della Badia di Monte-cassino I, pp. 337–341; 403–411. Leo Marsicanus, "Chronica Monasterii Cassinensis", Book III, in: Monumenta Germaniae Historia Scriptorum Tomus VII (Hannover: Hahn 1846), pp. 719–722.
  35. ^ Paul Fridolin Kehr (1925), Italia pontificia Vol. VIII (Berlin: Weidmann 1925), p. 146. (in Latin)
  36. ^ GabrielePennotti (1624). Generalis totius Ordinis Clericorum Canonicrum historia tripartita (in Latin). Rome: Camera Apostolica. p. 445.
  37. ^ Cabrol, p. 46.
  38. ^ "Chapter II: The Structure Of The Mass, Its Elements, And Its Parts". General Instruction Of The Roman Missal. usccb.org. Retrieved 23 March 2017.
  39. ^ Simonsohn, pp. 35–37.
  40. ^ Horace Kinder Mann (1910). The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages. Vol. VI. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner. pp. 327–328.
  41. ^ Jonathan P. Phillips, The Second Crusade: Extending the Frontiers of Christendom, St. Edmundsbury Press Ltd., 2007, p. 246.
  42. ^ Jonathan P. Phillips, The Second Crusade: Walking to Santiago de Compostela, Penn State University Press, 1996, p. 101.
  43. ^ O'Callaghan, Joseph (2003). Reconquest and crusade in medieval Spain. Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-8122-3696-5.
  44. ^ Houts, Elisabeth M. C. Van, The Normans in Europe, (Manchester University Press, 2000), 105.
  45. ^ "Flags in the Bayeux Tapestry". Encyclopædia Romana.
  46. ^ Mann VI, p. 332-333. Ralph de Diceto, Abbreviationes Chronicorum, in The Historical Works of Master Ralph de Diceto I, ed. William Stubbs (London: Longmans 1876), p. 201, names them as the cardinal priests John and Peter. The latter was probably Cardinal Peter Damiani, who had been serving as legate in Germany in 1069, and then as legate in France.
  47. ^ Walter Farquhar Hook (1882). Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury. Vol. I: Anglo-Saxon period (4th ed.). London: R. Bentley. pp. 505–506.
  48. ^ This charge, as Hook I, p. 529, points out, is hypocritical, since Archbishop Dunstan had done the same, and Pope Alexander II was currently holding both Lucca and Rome.
  49. ^ Mann VI, p. 335, with note 1.
  50. ^ Hook I, pp. 521–524.
  51. ^ Mann VI, pp. 334–335.
  52. ^ William of Malmsbury, "De gestis pontificum Anglorum libri quinque" [Migne, Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CLXXIX, p. 1460], states: "Anno Dominicae Incarnationis millesimo septuagesimo intravit Anglicam terram Lanfrancus Cadomensis coenobii abbas, moventibus et praecipientibus Willielmo glorioso rege Anglorum, et felicis memoriae Alexandro totius sanctae ecclesiae summo pontifice."
  53. ^ Walter Farquhar Hook (1879). Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury. Vol. II (fourth ed.). London: R. Bentley. pp. 112–115, 121.
  54. ^ Mann VI, p. 337, with note 1. Migne, Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CXLVIII (in Latin) (Paris 1853), pp. 733–734. Hildebrand was either ignorant of the tradition of the sending of the pallium, or (more likely) attempting to initiate a new policy which brought archbishops into closer dependence upon Rome. There are examples of both archbishops of Canterbury and York being sent the pallium before Lanfranc.
  55. ^ Jaffé, p. 592, no. 4762.
  56. ^ Joannes Dlugosh (1711). Cracoviensis historiae Polonicae libri XII (in Latin). Vol. I. Leipzig: sumptibus Ioannis Ludovici Gleditschii. p. 269.
  57. ^ Monumenta Poloniae historica: Pomniki dziejowe Polski (in Polish and Latin). Vol. Tom III. Lwow: Nakładem Akademii umiejetności. 1878. pp. 342–345.
  58. ^ Dlugosh, pp. 272–273.
  59. ^ Jaffé I, p. 592. Alexis Artaud de Montor (1847). Histoire des souverains pontifes romains (in French). Vol. Tome II. Paris: J. Lecoffre. p. 159.

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  • Mann, Horace Kinder (1910). The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages. Vol. VI: 1049—1073. London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner. pp. 261–369.
  • Morton, C. (1975). "Pope Alexander II and the Norman Conquest." Latomus 34, 1975, pp. 362–382.
  • Schwartz, Gerhard (1907). Die Besetzung der Bistümer Reichsitaliens unter den sächsischen und salischen Kaisern: mit den Listen der Bischöfe, 951–1122. (in German). Leipzig: B.G. Teubner. pp. 212–213.
  • Simonsohn, Shlomo. The Apostolic See and the Jews, Documents: 492–1404.[full citation needed]
  • Vaughn, Sally N. (1987). Anselm of Bec and Robert of Meulan: The Innocence of the Dove and the Wisdom of the Serpent. Oakland, CA: University of California Press.
  • Watterich, I. M. (1862). Pontificum Romanorum qui fuerunt inde ab exeunte saeculo IX usque ad finem saeculi XIII vitae (in Latin). Vol. Tom. I. Leipzig: Engelmann. pp. 235–290. [sources]

External links

  • Cinzio Violante (2000). "ALESSANDRO II." Enciclopedia dei Papi (Treccani: 2000). (in Italian)
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by Pope
1061–73
Succeeded by

pope, alexander, coptic, patriarch, alexandria, anselm, baggio, redirects, here, nephew, succeeded, bishop, lucca, anselm, lucca, 1010, 1015, april, 1073, born, anselm, baggio, head, roman, catholic, church, ruler, papal, states, from, 1061, death, 1073, born,. For the Coptic patriarch see Pope Alexander II of Alexandria Anselm of Baggio redirects here For his nephew who succeeded him as bishop of Lucca see Anselm of Lucca Pope Alexander II 1010 1015 21 April 1073 born Anselm of Baggio 1 was the head of the Roman Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 1061 to his death in 1073 Born in Milan Anselm was deeply involved in the Pataria reform movement Elected according to the terms of his predecessor s bull In nomine Domini Anselm s was the first election by the cardinals without the participation of the people and minor clergy of Rome He also authorized the Norman Conquest of England in 1066 PopeAlexander IIBishop of RomeChurchCatholic ChurchElected30 September 1061Papacy began1 October 1061Papacy ended21 April 1073PredecessorNicholas IISuccessorGregory VIIOther post s Bishop of LuccaPersonal detailsBornAnselmo da Baggio1010 1015Milan Holy Roman EmpireDied 1073 04 21 21 April 1073Rome Papal State Contents 1 Early life and work 2 Election as pope 3 The Normans of south Italy 4 Policies 4 1 Reforms 4 2 Position on Jews 4 3 Crusade against the Moors 5 England and William the Conqueror 6 Poland 7 Bohemia 8 Death 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life and work EditAnselm was born in the parish of Cesano Boscone in the town of Corsico some 7 km 5 mi from Milan of a noble family The family took its name from Baggio a suburb of Milan where the family held the office of captain 2 According to the Liber pontificalis 3 his father s name was Anselmus or Ardericus Contemporary sources do not provide any information on where Anselm might have obtained his education 4 It was traditionally believed that Anselm de Baggio studied under Lanfranc at Bec Abbey However modern historiography rejects the assertion 5 He became a member of the clergy of the cathedral of Milan 6 and was ordained a priest by Archbishop Wido Guido of Milan 7 He was one of the founders of the Pataria 8 a movement in the Archdiocese of Milan aimed at reforming the clergy and ecclesiastic government in the province and supportive of Papal sanctions against simony and clerical marriage 9 They contested the ancient rights of the cathedral clergy of Milan and supported the Gregorian reforms Anselm was one of four upright and honest priests suggested to succeed Ariberto da Intimiano as prince bishop of Milan dubious discuss When the Emperor Henry III chose instead the more worldly Guido da Velate protests followed In order to silence a vocal critic Bishop Guido sent Anselm to the Imperial Court 10 The emperor instead named Anselm Bishop of Lucca in 1056 or 1057 11 The earliest testimony of his activity as bishop is on 23 March 1057 6 On 20 August 1057 he was with the imperial court at Trebur and on 27 December at Pohlde 12 As bishop he was an energetic associate of Hildebrand of Sovana in endeavouring to suppress simony and enforce clerical celibacy 13 So bad was the state of things at Milan that benefices were openly bought and sold and the clergy publicly married the women with whom they lived With the increased prestige of his office he reappeared twice in Milan as legate of the Holy See in 1057 in the company of Hildebrand and in 1059 with Peter Damian 9 Bishop Anselm attended the Roman council of Pope Nicholas II in the first half of April 1059 and another synod of uncertain date 14 He was in Rome again in April 1060 for a synod in the Lateran palace when he subscribed two papal bulls dated 14 April 1060 15 Election as pope EditPope Nicholas II died on 27 July 1061 The cardinals met and sent a representative the former monk of Cluny Cardinal Stephen to seek the permission of the imperial court to conduct an election After a five day wait during which he was not received in audience the Cardinal returned to Italy without having received the conge d elire 16 The cardinal bishops then proceeded to an election having forced their way into the city of Rome with the aid of Prince Richard I of Capua and his Norman troops On 1 October 1061 they chose Bishop Anselmo de Baggio of Lucca one of the leaders of the reform party who took the name Pope Alexander II 9 Unlike previous papal elections the assent of the Holy Roman Emperor to the election was not sought disputed discuss 17 and cardinal bishops were the sole electors of the pope for the first time in the history of the Catholic Church in accordance with Nicholas II s bull In Nomine Domini 18 The bull effectively removed the control held by the Roman metropolitan church over the election of the pontiff unilaterally abrogating the rights of the emperor the nobles of Rome the clergy and the people of Rome The new Pope Alexander II was crowned at nightfall on 1 October 1061 in the Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli because opposition to the election on the part of the Romans and German sympathizers made a coronation in St Peter s Basilica impossible 17 The German court nominated another candidate Cadalus bishop of Parma who was proclaimed Pope at a council held at Basel under the name of Honorius II He marched to Rome and for a long time threatened his rival s position At length due to a coup d etat in the German court which replaced Empress Agnes with Archbishop Anno II of Cologne Honorius was forsaken by the German court and deposed by a council held at Mantua on 31 May and 1 June 1064 13 19 Alexander II s position continued to be challenged by Honorius until the latter s death in 1072 The next sixty years exhibited one schism after another 20 The Normans of south Italy EditAs early as 1063 the Normans taking advantage of the schism successfully expanded their empire by attacking and seizing the city of Gaeta an important port leading into the southern part of the Roman campagna In 1066 Richard of Capua who had helped Alexander enter Rome and secure a coronation in October 1061 suddenly changed sides With the Germans abandoning Cadalo and embracing Alexander the Normans were no longer the mainstay and support of the papacy and were faced with a competitor which had designs on the same territories as the Normans The barons of the Roman campagna too saw an advantage to be gained or at least revenge to be extracted by joining the Normans against Alexander and the reform party of Hildebrand which had robbed them of their rights in papal elections and the civil government of the Church Moving north Prince Richard seized Ceprano devastated Lazio and encamped outside Rome from which he demanded the title of Patricius 21 In the meantime the frantic Cardinal Hildebrand repeatedly called upon Marquis Godfrey of Tuscany who was with King Henry in Germany to come to the aid of Rome 22 In spring 1067 he collected an army lifted the siege of Rome and caused Prince Richard to withdraw to Capua Richard left his son Jordanus in charge of the army in the plain below Aquino to bar the way of the forces of Godfrey But it was a shortage of supplies sickness and bribery on the part of the Normans that brought Godfrey to negotiate with Jordanus and finally to return north A new treaty between the papacy and the Normans was negotiated and at the synod held at Melfi by Pope Alexander on 1 August 1067 Prince Richard returned to his allegiance and was confirmed as Duke of Apulia and Calabria 23 Policies EditIn the second half of April 1063 Pope Alexander held a synod at the Lateran Basilica in Rome attended by more than a hundred bishops During the synod he excommunicated Honorius II Bishop Cadalo The pope and bishops also decreed that no mercy was to be shown to simoniacs by preserving their dignity that those who had been ordained by simoniacs were to be retained in their orders in the case of a knowing consecration of a simoniac both simoniac and consecrator were to be deprived of their offices that a priest who has a wife or mistress should not say Mass that no cleric should receive a church from a layman whether gratis or for pay that no priest should hold two churches that no one should be made a monk on the understanding that he would become abbot and that a layman who becomes a cleric should change his costume 24 In a letter of 15 May 1063 Pope Alexander ordered the archbishops of Reims Sens Tours Bourges and Bordeaux to obey his legate Cardinal Peter Damiani Bishop of Ostia who is our own eye and the immoveable foundation of the apostolic see 25 He also forbade Gervase Archbishop of Reims from consecrating Jocelyn as bishop of Soissons on the grounds that he was a simoniac 26 On 6 May 1065 Pope Alexander held a council in Rome attended by at least eight cardinals and forty three bishops It is known that the privileges of the monastery of Saint Denis in Paris were confirmed and it was granted the privilege of being exempt from the jurisdiction of the bishop of Paris 27 In 1067 he made a tour of the southern cities of the Papal States and of the Kingdom of Naples holding a synod in Melfi in October and then later in the year at Siponto 28 In this council held at Siponto Pope Alexander deposed Bishop Lando of Nucerino Landolf of Tortiboli and Benedict of Biccari all on accusations of simony 29 Reforms Edit In an attempt to curtail simony the buying and selling of sacred things or positions within the church Alexander II sent out many legates and archbishops across Europe to enforce reform among local synods Any clergy suspected of simony were then investigated Any clergy who was invested in his office by a lay person were required to undergo a new investiture by a papal legate A well known victim of these campaigns included the bishop of Constance who was removed from office for simony 30 On 30 March 1068 Alexander held a synod in Rome in which he absolved the bishop of Tortosa of a charge of homicide but deposed the bishop of Florence on the grounds of simony a charge of simony was laid against the bishop of Chiusi who begged for absolution The pope also ordered that churches not be held by lay persons and that ecclesiastical goods not be transmitted from parents to children as though they were subject to the laws of inheritance 31 By 1071 the future Emperor Henry IV though only 21 and still only German King and Roman Patrician was vigorously at work recovering the powers privileges and properties which had been allowed to slip away from imperial control during his regencies He crushed a riot in Saxony in 1069 and overcame the rebellion of the Saxon aristocrat Otto of Nordheim in 1071 But in 1071 the reforming activities of Pope Alexander s resulted in an open rupture with the King Archbishop Guido of Milan recently died so Henry IV appointed Godfrey Goffredo de Castiglione as successor to Guido However Alexander II declared this investiture void and appointed a Milanese priest named Attone Atto who had already been elected archbishop on 6 January 1072 in an electoral meeting sanctioned by Pope Alexander 32 In February 1072 he held a synod in Rome in which he anathematized Goffredo and confirmed Atto as archbishop He wrote a letter to Henry IV informing him of the papal actions 33 Henry IV sent five men to Rome to discuss the issue but Alexander rejected and subsequently excommunicated them This led to increased pressure between Henry IV and the popes 30 On 1 October 1071 Pope Alexander consecrated the high altar of the new basilica dedicated to Saint Benedict at the monastery of Montecassino He was assisted by Cardinal Hildebrand and other cardinals by ten archbishops and forty four bishops as well as abbots clergy nobles and people 34 He had already perhaps at the beginning of his reign granted Abbot Desiderius personally the lordship over Terracina 35 Pope Alexander also reformed the administration of the church of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme in Rome and of the Lateran Basilica by replacing the monks of the Order of Montecassino with Canons Regular of the Congregation of S Frediano of Lucca 36 In liturgical matters Alexander II ended the practice of singing or reciting the Alleluia during the Latin Church s observance of Lent 37 This reform was permanent 38 Position on Jews Edit In 1065 Pope Alexander II wrote to Beranger Viscount of Narbonne and to Guifred bishop of the city praising them for having prevented the massacre of the Jews in their district and reminding them that God does not approve of the shedding of innocent blood On 11 June in that same year he wrote a letter admonishing Landulf VI of Benevento that the conversion of Jews is not to be obtained by force 39 He was warm in his praise for Spanish bishops who protected the Jews against those who came to Spain crusading against the Moors 40 Crusade against the Moors Edit Also in the same year Alexander called for the Crusade of Barbastro against the Moors in Spain 41 42 Alexander II issued orders to the Bishops of Narbonne instructing crusaders en route that you protect the Jews who live among you so that they may not be killed by those who are setting out for Spain against the Saracens for the situation of the Jews is greatly different from that of the Saracens One may justly fight against those the Saracens who persecute Christians and drive them from their towns and their own homes 43 England and William the Conqueror Edit The Bayeux Tapestry William the Conqueror holds a papal gonfalon with a golden cross a gift from Pope Alexander II In 1066 Pope Alexander received an embassy from William Duke of Normandy after his successful invasion of Brittany The embassy had been sent to obtain his blessing for William s prospective invasion of Anglo Saxon England Alexander gave it along with a papal ring a banner 44 and an edict to the autonomous Old English clergy guiding them to submit to the new regime These favors were instrumental in the submission of the English church following the Battle of Hastings Count Eustace carried his papal insignia a gonfanon with three tails charged with a cross which William of Poitiers says was given to William I to signify the pope s blessing of his invasion to secure submission to Rome 45 William s successes in England brought the native English church into much greater control from Rome William even agreed to Alexander s request to restore the payment of the Peter s Pence which had lapsed in the time of Edward the Confessor At the same time William requested that the pope send him legates to carry out a ceremonial crowning of the king Alexander therefore sent Bishop Ermenfried of Sion Sitten in Switzerland and two clerici cardinales to England who at Eastertide 1070 presided at the coronation at Winchester 46 The archbishop of Canterbury Stigand however even though he made his peace with William was a problem for Pope Alexander Stigand had helped to drive the legitimate archbishop Robert of Jumieges from his see and usurped the archbishopric for himself he even dared to wear Archbishop Robert s pallium 47 Additionally he continued to hold the diocese of Winchester of which he was the legitimate incumbent along with the archbishopric of Canterbury 48 Five successive popes Leo Victor Stephanus Nicholas and Alexander himself had sent legates to England who excommunicated Stigand Stigand was therefore not able to crown William king as was the right of the archbishop of Canterbury 49 Nonetheless Stigand and William remained on good terms until during a visit of William to the continent in 1067 the Normans in England behaved with particular brutality Stigand switched sides and with Edgar the Atheling fled to safety in the camp of refuge in Ely They were besieged by the Conqueror and Stigand was captured 50 Pope Alexander s legates as instructed demanded the deposition of Stigand and at a general council held at Winchester after King William s coronation the deposition was duly voted 51 King William determined that he would not have his brother Bishop Odo of Bayeux as his new archbishop nor would he promote his chaplain and chancellor Herfast He assembled a council of bishops abbots and other notables in order to discuss a suitable candidate for the vacant archbishopric After this consultation William offered the archbishopric to Lanfranc the Abbot of the royal monastery of St Stephen at Caen to whom he had once offered the archbishopric of Rouen which Lanfranc had refused When Lanfranc also refused the see of Canterbury the determined king sent his queen Matilda and his son Robert a former pupil of Lanfranc accompanied by a contingent of Norman nobles to persuade him to no avail Abbot Herluin of Bec was called upon to exert his influence again without result William then ordered the papal legates to go to Normandy and convene a council of bishops abbots and nobles to prevail upon Lanfranc to accept the king s offer Reluctantly Lanfranc crossed to England where he engaged in intense talks with William who only persuaded him by invoking the recommendation which had been expressed by Pope Alexander 52 Lanfranc was finally elected by a council on 15 August 1070 the Feast of the Assumption and consecrated on 29 August the Feast of St John the Baptist 53 When Lanfranc wrote to Pope Alexander and to the Archdeacon Hildebrand that they defend him against the pretensions of the archbishop of York and that they send him the pallium as his symbol of primacy Hildebrand wrote a letter in reply claiming that it was not the custom to send the pallium but that the recipient come to Rome to have it bestowed and besides he and the pope wanted to confer personally with Lanfranc about pressing matters In 1071 therefore Lanfranc and Archbishop Thomas of York travelled to Rome to receive their pallia 54 Subsequently Pope Alexander wrote to Archbishop Lanfranc ordering him to see to the state of the monastery of Winchester and expressing annoyance that he had not yet procured the release of the bishop Stigand perhaps out of negligence perhaps out of disobedience perhaps fearing punishment by King William 55 In 1068 German King Henry IV attempted to divorce Bertha of Savoy The Papal legate Peter Damian hinted that any further attempt at a divorce would lead the Pope to refuse to perform his coronation Henry obeyed and his wife who had retired to Lorsch Abbey returned to Court 9 Poland EditIn 1072 Alexander commanded citation needed the reluctant Canon of the cathedral of Krakow Stanislaus of Szczepanow who had been elected unanimously by the cathedral chapter to accept appointment as the ninth Bishop of Krakow in succession to Bishop Lampert 56 Stanislaus became one of the earliest native Polish bishops This turned out to be a significant decision for the Polish Church Once appointed Stanislaus was a highly assertive bishop who got into conflict with Polish king Boleslaw II the Bold pro suis actibus sceleratis because of his wicked deeds Boleslaw and his nobles assassinated Bishop Stanislaus in the church of St Michael in Rupella on 11 April 1079 and cut up his corpse into seventy two pieces Poland was laid under the interdict for four years and the see of Krakow remained vacant In 1088 the body of Bishop Stanislaus was transferred to his cathedral in Krakow and eventually he was venerated as a saint 57 Bohemia EditA series of disputes broke out between the bishop Gerhard Iaromirus Jaromi of Prague and the bishop John Brewnow of Olmouc in Bohemia Duke Wratislaus of Bohemia drew this to the attention of Pope Alexander II when he happened to be at the papal court in 1073 Alexander sent nuntii to Prague to sort the matter out but they were captured mutilated and then murdered Shocked at the enormity of the offence Pope Alexander sent Cardinal Rudolph to Prague When Gerhard refused to cooperate with the cardinal he was deposed and Prague was laid under the interdict when the situation quieted down he restored the bishop and lifted the interdict but ordered both bishops to present themselves before the papal court When they appeared Pope Alexander confirmed the deposition of the bishop of Prague though he restored him once again at the pleading of Countess Mathilda of Tuscany 58 Death EditPope Alexander II died at the Lateran Palace on 21 April 1073 and was buried in the Lateran Basilica 59 See also Edit Biography portal Christianity portal History portalList of Catholic saints List of papal elections List of popesNotes Edit Modern scholars sometimes refer to Bishop Anselm as Anselm the Elder or Anselm I to distinguish him from his nephew St Anselm who succeeded to his office as Bishop of Lucca Violante Alessandro II Schwartz p 212 Liber Pontificalis ed by Louis Duchesne Paris Thorin 1892 Volume II part 1 p 281 Vaughn 1987 p 34 Vaughn 1987 p 33 a b Schwartz p 212 Landulfus de S Paulo senior Historia Mediolanensis III in Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum Tomus VIII Hannover Hahn 1848 p 77 Hugo Paech 1872 Die Pataria in Mailand 1056 1077 in German Sondershausen Eupel a b c d Loughlin James Pope Alexander II Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 1 New York Robert Appleton Company 1907 1 Aug 2014 Landulfus appears to state that Archbishop Guido actually took Anselm to the imperial court under threat of a prosecution Ataque ut Guido his malia finem imponeret trans montes ad regen ducens Anselmum ut ipse huius causa negotii discrete iudicaret tetendit lite ab Anselmo iurejurando dimisso Landulfus de S Paulo senior Historia Mediolanensis III 5 in Monumenta Germaniae Historica Scriptorum Tomus VIII Hannover Hahn 1848 p 76 Bishop Giovanni was still alive on 27 May 1056 Cappelletti Le chiese d Italia XV p 511 Schwartz p 213 a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alexander popes Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XIX Venice A Zatta 1766 pp 911 912 919 Cappelletti XV p 513 Gregorovius p 129 derived from Peter Damiani Disceptatio synodalis Monumenta Germaniae historica Libelli de lite imperatorum et pontificum saeculis XI et XII conscripti in German and Latin Vol I Hannover Hahn 1891 pp 87 88 Sed ut totam inauditae calamitatis nostrae percurramus historiam Stephanus cardinalis presbiter apostolicae sedis vir videlicet tantae gravitatis et honestatis nitore conspicuus tantis denique sicut non obscutum est virtutum floribus insignitus cum apostolicis litteris ad aulam regiam missus ab aulicis amministratoribus non est admissus sed per quinque fere dies ad beati Petri et apostolicae sedis iniuriam pro foribus mansit exclusus Quod ille utpote vir gravis et patiens aequanimiter tulit legati tamen officium quo fungebatur implere non potuit a b Levillain Philippe 2002 The Papacy An Encyclopedia Routledge ISBN 0 415 92228 3 Miranda Salvator 1998 Papal elections of the 11th Century 1061 1099 Archived 7 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Karl Joseph von Hefele 1871 Histoire des conciles d apres les documents originaux in French Vol Tome IV 870 1085 Paris A Le Clere p 427 Wibert Clement III 1080 1100 Theoderic 1100 Albertus 1102 Maginulf Sylvester IV 1105 1111 Burdinus Gregory VIII 1118 1121 Anacletus II 1130 1138 Gregory Victor IV 1138 Jaffe p xxxi Gregorovius IV 1 pp 150 151 Bonizo of Sutri ad amicum in Monumenta Germaniae Historica Libelli de Lite I p 599 Gregorovius p 151 Luigi Tosti Storia della Badia di Monte cassino Tomo I Napoli F Cirelli 1842 p 319 Philippus Jaffe 1885 Regesta pontificum Romanorum ab condita Ecclesia ad annum post Christum natum MCXCVIII in Latin Vol Tomus primus second ed Leipzig Veit pp 570 571 Jaffe p 517 no 4516 Jaffe pp 518 no 4517 Jaffe p 575 J D Mansi ed Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio editio novissima Tomus XIX Florence A Zatta 1766 p 1037 Karl Joseph von Hefele 1911 Histoire des conciles d apres les documents originaux in French 2nd edition Tome IV 2 870 1085 Paris A Letouzey p 1252 Jaffe pp 581 582 Paul Fridolin Kehr 1925 Italia pontificia Vol VIII Berlin Weidmann 1925 p 14 no 24 in Latin a b Matthews Rupert 2013 The Popes Every Question Answered New York Metro Books p 137 ISBN 978 1 4351 4571 9 Jaffe p 583 and no 4657 Bonizo of Sutri ad amicum VI p 653 Jaffe Jaffe p 587 Tosti Storia della Badia di Monte cassino I pp 337 341 403 411 Leo Marsicanus Chronica Monasterii Cassinensis Book III in Monumenta Germaniae Historia Scriptorum Tomus VII Hannover Hahn 1846 pp 719 722 Paul Fridolin Kehr 1925 Italia pontificia Vol VIII Berlin Weidmann 1925 p 146 in Latin GabrielePennotti 1624 Generalis totius Ordinis Clericorum Canonicrum historia tripartita in Latin Rome Camera Apostolica p 445 Cabrol p 46 Chapter II The Structure Of The Mass Its Elements And Its Parts General Instruction Of The Roman Missal usccb org Retrieved 23 March 2017 Simonsohn pp 35 37 Horace Kinder Mann 1910 The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages Vol VI London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner pp 327 328 Jonathan P Phillips The Second Crusade Extending the Frontiers of Christendom St Edmundsbury Press Ltd 2007 p 246 Jonathan P Phillips The Second Crusade Walking to Santiago de Compostela Penn State University Press 1996 p 101 O Callaghan Joseph 2003 Reconquest and crusade in medieval Spain Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 8122 3696 5 Houts Elisabeth M C Van The Normans in Europe Manchester University Press 2000 105 Flags in the Bayeux Tapestry Encyclopaedia Romana Mann VI p 332 333 Ralph de Diceto Abbreviationes Chronicorum in The Historical Works of Master Ralph de Diceto I ed William Stubbs London Longmans 1876 p 201 names them as the cardinal priests John and Peter The latter was probably Cardinal Peter Damiani who had been serving as legate in Germany in 1069 and then as legate in France Walter Farquhar Hook 1882 Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury Vol I Anglo Saxon period 4th ed London R Bentley pp 505 506 This charge as Hook I p 529 points out is hypocritical since Archbishop Dunstan had done the same and Pope Alexander II was currently holding both Lucca and Rome Mann VI p 335 with note 1 Hook I pp 521 524 Mann VI pp 334 335 William of Malmsbury De gestis pontificum Anglorum libri quinque Migne Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CLXXIX p 1460 states Anno Dominicae Incarnationis millesimo septuagesimo intravit Anglicam terram Lanfrancus Cadomensis coenobii abbas moventibus et praecipientibus Willielmo glorioso rege Anglorum et felicis memoriae Alexandro totius sanctae ecclesiae summo pontifice Walter Farquhar Hook 1879 Lives of the Archbishops of Canterbury Vol II fourth ed London R Bentley pp 112 115 121 Mann VI p 337 with note 1 Migne Patrologiae Latinae Tomus CXLVIII in Latin Paris 1853 pp 733 734 Hildebrand was either ignorant of the tradition of the sending of the pallium or more likely attempting to initiate a new policy which brought archbishops into closer dependence upon Rome There are examples of both archbishops of Canterbury and York being sent the pallium before Lanfranc Jaffe p 592 no 4762 Joannes Dlugosh 1711 Cracoviensis historiae Polonicae libri XII in Latin Vol I Leipzig sumptibus Ioannis Ludovici Gleditschii p 269 Monumenta Poloniae historica Pomniki dziejowe Polski in Polish and Latin Vol Tom III Lwow Nakladem Akademii umiejetnosci 1878 pp 342 345 Dlugosh pp 272 273 Jaffe I p 592 Alexis Artaud de Montor 1847 Histoire des souverains pontifes romains in French Vol Tome II Paris J Lecoffre p 159 Bibliography Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Alexander II Agnelli C M 1986 L episcopato lucchese di Anselmo I da Baggio l amministrazione delle finanze e del patrimonio della Chiesa Actum Luce Rivista di Studi Lucchesi 15 1986 pp 95 117 in Italian Artaud de Montor Alexis 1910 The Lives and Times of the Popes Vol III New York Catholic publication society of America pp 25 30 Cabrol Fernand 2003 Liturgical Prayer Its History and Spirit p 46 reprint of Burns Oates and Washbourne Limited 1925 Giuseppe Cappelletti 1859 Le chiese d Italia dalla loro origine sino ai nostri giorni in Italian Vol 15 Venice G Antonelli pp 511 513 Cushing Kathleen G 1992 Anselm of Lucca Reform and the Canon Law C 1046 1086 The Beginnings of Systematization University of Oxford 1992 Gregorovius Ferdinand 1896 History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages Vol IV Part I London G Bell amp sons Mann Horace Kinder 1910 The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages Vol VI 1049 1073 London Kegan Paul Trench Trubner pp 261 369 Morton C 1975 Pope Alexander II and the Norman Conquest Latomus 34 1975 pp 362 382 Schwartz Gerhard 1907 Die Besetzung der Bistumer Reichsitaliens unter den sachsischen und salischen Kaisern mit den Listen der Bischofe 951 1122 in German Leipzig B G Teubner pp 212 213 Simonsohn Shlomo The Apostolic See and the Jews Documents 492 1404 full citation needed Vaughn Sally N 1987 Anselm of Bec and Robert of Meulan The Innocence of the Dove and the Wisdom of the Serpent Oakland CA University of California Press Watterich I M 1862 Pontificum Romanorum qui fuerunt inde ab exeunte saeculo IX usque ad finem saeculi XIII vitae in Latin Vol Tom I Leipzig Engelmann pp 235 290 sources External links EditCinzio Violante 2000 ALESSANDRO II Enciclopedia dei Papi Treccani 2000 in Italian Catholic Church titlesPreceded byNicholas II Pope1061 73 Succeeded byGregory VII Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pope Alexander II amp oldid 1151000516, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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