4.3 emperor against pope -T-

AGE 4: The Time of cities and states
4.3  Emperor against Pope
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AGE 4: The Time of cities and states
4.3  Emperor against Pope

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

people in this lesson
Gregory VII
pope
Rome
Henry IV
king, later emperor
Germany
Clement III
anti pope
Rome

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

What you can explain /  do after this lesson
  • why the Church wanted to appoint bishops
  • why secular rulers wanted to appoint bishops
  • explain the difference between spiritual and secular rulers

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

Important dates in this lesson:


1077: King Henry IV goes to Canossa
1084: Henry has himself crowned emperor by an antipope
1122: End of the Investiture Controversy





Slide 4 - Tekstslide

Word Duty






Spiritual: to do with religion or feelings
Secular: to do with worldly non-spiritual matters
Hereditary: when something is passed on from father to son
Diocese: a number of churches in a region joined together, led by a bishop
Investiture: the appointment of a bishop by a pope
Investiture Controversy: conflict between secular and spiritual rulers about an investiture
Reformers: people who wanted to reform (= change to make better) the rules of the Church
lay(person): anyone who is not a cleric (anyone who does not work for/ belong to the Church)
Papal bull: formal letter issued by the Pope
Excommunicated: when you are no longer member of the Church and cannot go to heaven
Antipope: someone who claims to be the Pope besides the regularly elected Pope
KEY WORDS

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

In this lesson:

  • The difference between secular power and spiritual power.

  • The king wanted to appoint bishops as vassals. The pope did not agree.
  • A conflict started between pope Gregory and king Henry: The Investiture Controversy.

  • Henry was excommunicated by the pope. 
  • Only after Henry travelled to the pope and beg forgiveness, the pope lifted the excommunication.
  • Later, Henry marched on Rome and appointed a new pope: an anti-pope.
  • The anti pope crowned Henry as emperor.

  • Eventually the conflict was settled.








Slide 6 - Tekstslide

  • In the Middle Ages people believed that all power came from God.
  •  They believed emperors, kings and popes were appointed by Him to rule the earth. 

  • This power was divided by christ: 
  • The pope received spiritual power, the power to rule over the Church and its followers. 
  • The emperor received secular power, the power to rule over countries and people. 
4.3.0
Charles V crowned as Holy Roman Emperor
by Pope Clement VII at Bologna
ca. 1630
4.3.1
Secular and spiritual power divided by Christ. Miniature from the 13th century.

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

Kings want to increase their power

  • Landlords become really powerful locally > they rented lands from their kings as vassals
  • They had to give it back to the king after their death
  • However, the lands often became hereditary: when the vassal died, the land passed to his sons. 

How could kings prevent their countries from falling apart?
  •  Bishops were not allowed to have children > Some kings therefore decided to turn bishops into their vassals. 
  • They even started to appoint bishops they could trust without asking the pope for permission.
4.3.2
 German emperor appoints a bishop. Image on a bronze door of a cathedral in Poland, made around 1175.

Slide 8 - Tekstslide

Organization of the Church

  • The Church spread Christianity throughout Europe.
  • By 1000 nearly every town or village had a church and a priest.
  • Churches in a region were joined together to form a diocese > The diocese was led by a bishop. 
  • He was chosen by the people and priests of his diocese and then appointed by the pope. 
  • Only the pope can appoint a bishop > investiture; the bishop receives a ring, mitre and staff from the pope.
4.3.3
schematic overview of the hierarchy of the Catholic church today.
The use of capital letters for offices, titles and positions in English is different from that in Dutch. When a title or position is followed by a name, the English use two capital letters. For example: Pope Gregory, King Henry or President Nixon. A capital letter is also used when only the title is mentioned to substitute the name, e.g. ‘the King’ is used to refer to King Henry. These extra capital letters are not used in Dutch.

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

The Investiture Controversy

Some bishops became very rich and powerful as vassals > Church reformers did not like this.
  • They believed that bishops should only concentrate on spiritual matters. Bishops should not live in wealth and hold secular powers.
  • They also disliked that kings and emperors started to appoint their own bishop > only the pope can do that! 

Did the emperors stop? NO

This difference of opinion between secular rulers and the Church is called the Investiture Controversy
4.3.4
Kings are crowned by a bishop. Image from the 13th century.
4.3.5
Pope Gregory VII banning lay Investitures in 1078.

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Gregory VII versus Henry IV

  • The Investiture Controversy reached a peak after Pope Gregory VII declared that he had more authority than the emperor. 
  • The German King Henry IV (1050-1106) and his German bishops protested > They stated that Gregory was no longer pope. 
  • When Henry appointed a bishop in Milan, which was part of his empire at that time, Gregory excommunicated him > He banished him from the Church and would not go to heaven. 
  • It also meant that his authority was taken from him. 


4.3.7
Power claims from the Dictatus Papae in 1075.
4.3.6
King Henry IV requests mediation from Matilda of Tuscany and the abbot of Cluny. Miniature from the Vita Mathildis, 1114.

Slide 11 - Tekstslide


  • People were not allowed to talk to someone who was excommunicated.
  • Henry begged Gregory for forgiveness to have the excommunication undone. 
  • The Pope made Henry beg at the castle gates for three days, barefoot and only wearing a cloth, before he finally forgave him.

Did he stop appointing bishops? NO
  • He marched on Rome with an army > Pope Gregory had to flee and Henry installed a pope of his own choice: Clement III (r. 1080-1100). 
  • This second pope was called an antipope. Henry had himself crowned emperor in 1084 by this antipope.
4.3.9
Emperor Henry IV (dressed as a beggar) is finally received by pope Gregory VII. 19th century painting
King Henry IV had to cross the Alps barefoot to reach Canossa. Nowadays ‘to go to Canossa’ is an expression that means ‘submitting your will to someone’.
4.3.8
Henry IV and his entourage at the gate, 19th century depiction

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

The struggle is ended

  • In 1122, an agreement was signed between Pope Calixtus II and Emperor Henry V to end the power struggle:
  • Bishops had both spiritual and secular tasks. 
  • Emperors could give bishops a sceptre as a sign of secular power.
  • The investiture was done by the pope.
4.3.10
Henry IV (left) and his antipope: Clement III (sitting next to him). Image from the Codex Jenensis Bose, 1157.
Antipopes such as Clement III were not an exception in the Middle Ages. Between the third and fifteenth century, there were often two or even three popes at the same time.

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

congratulations

Slide 14 - Tekstslide