Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
Gregori VII Registrum, ed. Erich Caspar, MGH Epist. sel. (Berlin, 1920–23), 2/1: 1. 46. English tr. in The Register of Pope Gregory VII, 1073–85, tr. H. E. J. Cowdrey (Oxford, 2002), 1. 46.
144
The Franks Recreate Empire
postponed by September 1074, with Gregory assuring Count William VI of Poitou
(d. 1086) that the ‘Christians have thus far repelled the savagery of the pagans’, the
plan was back on, though slightly modified, by December 1074. Now the pope
himself would lead an army of 50,000 strong to the East and against the enemies of
God, pushing even as far as the Holy Sepulcher. Care for the ecclesia would remain
in the hands of Emperor Henry IV.51 The optimism did not last and Gregory’s plan
had fizzled by January 1075.52
Gregory’s ideas about this expedition to the East seem to have evolved through-
out 1074. His first call early in the year seems to have simply been for soldiers to aid
the Byzantine empire. His three letters of general summons followed the same
contours and dwelt upon the audience’s duty to aid their fellow Christians. By the
end of 1074 though, the pope had decided to take charge of the expedition himself,
to march at its head ‘against the enemies of God and go as far as the sepulchre of the
Lord’. He would personally lead this army to the East, to help their Christian
brothers and return them to the bosom of Rome.53 To this end, he referred to
Eastern Christians as the West’s fratres,54 as part of the gens christiana,55 and as
subject to a more universal Christian imperium.56
This was provocative language, going back to the ninth century. The gens (or
populus) christianus were those over whom Frankish rulers once watched and those
who would, according to Adso Dervensis, be subject to universal imperium chris-
tianum under the Last Emperor. These stark, apocalyptic terms were matched by
Gregory’s language towards his enemies. Initially, they were Saraceni or a gens
paganorum57 but towards the end of 1074, as his proposed expedition was taking
shape, the enemies had become inimicos Dei and membra diaboli.58 Gregory,
however, did not sustain this language and the apocalyptic urgency of the situation
in the East seems to have eased (in his mind) by early 1075.59 Gregory, for instance,
was more anodyne in his letters referencing Southern Italian Muslims and was
positively nice when he wrote to the North African Emir an-Nasir in late 1076.60
51 Gregori VII Registrum, ed. Caspar, 2/1: 1. 49; 1. 72; and 2. 3, 2. 31, 2. 37; respectively. See also, Pope Gregory VII, Epistolae Vagantes, ed. H. E. J. Cowdrey (Oxford, 1972), no. 5.
52 Gregori VII Registrum, ed. Caspar, 2/1: 2. 49 where Gregory is lamenting the state of affairs to
Abbot Hugh of Cluny. See also the analysis in H. E. J. Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, 1073–85 (Oxford,
1998), 485.
53 Gregory was likely thinking of leading the milites sancti Petri. See Erdmann, Origin of the Idea of Crusade, esp. chs. 5–7; Delaruelle, ‘Essai sur la formation’, 79–96; I. S. Robinson, ‘Gregory VII and the Soldiers of Christ’, History, 58 (1973), 161–92; Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, esp. ch. 5; and Flori,
Guerre sainte, esp. chs. 6–7; among many others.
54 Gregori VII Registrum, ed. Caspar, 2/1: 1. 49, 2. 31, and 2. 37.
55 Ibid. 2. 31; and 1. 46, 1. 49, 2. 3, and 2. 31.
56 Ibid. 1. 49.
57 Ibid. 1. 46; and 1. 49, 2. 3, 2. 31; respectively.
58 Ibid. 2. 31; and 2. 37, 2. 49; respectively.
59 See H. E. J. Cowdrey, ‘Pope Gregory VII’s “Crusading” Plans of 1074’, in B. Z. Kedar, H. E.
Mayer and R. C. Smail (eds.), Outremer: Studies in the History of the Crusading Kingdom of Jerusalem
(Jerusalem, 1982), 38–40; and Paul Magdalino, ‘Prophecies on the Fall of Constantinople’, in Angeliki
E. Laiou (ed.), Urbs Capta: The Fourth Crusade and its Consequences (Paris, 2005), 41–53.
60 Cowdrey thought Gregory VII reserved his incendiary language for the Seljuks in Asia Minor.
See Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, 489–94. I don’t agree. See below.
The Franks Return to the Holy Land
145
Why these sudden shifts? A staid military expedition became a cosmic battle
between good and evil, which then became, well, nothing. But perhaps there was no
shift. Perhaps he had not changed; the enemy had. Gregory displaced his incendiary
language, moving it from East to West. As a man who saw the devil constantly at
work in the world around him, he believed his pontificate was witnessing a moment
of cosmic struggle against the forces of evil. But the devil worked in two ways, killing
Christians through his agents and creating new allies by pulling men from the true
faith. This latter movement, closer to home, began to consume Gregory’s thoughts
beginning in 1075–6. The partisans of Henry IV, these ‘false Christians’, were now a
more pressing threat––newly revealed membra antichristi who tormented the ecclesia
(the community of all Christians) from within.61
Although a military adventure to the East may have been at the center of Gregory
VII’s priorities in 1074, the campaign quickly lost steam. Part of the reason must
have had to do with Gregory warming to the Normans and so backing away from his
relationship with the emperors Henry IV and Michael VII (1071–8).62 As he passed
through 1075, Gregory was torn ‘between a world that was about to end with Rome,
Constantinople and Jerusalem united in a single, united res publica, and a world that
could not end until they were reunited under the authority of St. Peter’.63 But first
things first. Constantinople and the plight of the Eastern Christians retreated to the
background as a new, more dangerous enemy, emerged closer to home.
Odo, later Pope Urban II (1088–99), was born c.1035 not far from Châtillon-sur-
Marne, in the archdiocese of Reims and the county of Champagne, possibly to the
family of the lords of Lagéry. He studied at Reims under Bruno of Cologne, later
founder of Chartreuse, and became an archdeacon at Reims c.1050. He remained
an archdeacon until c.1067, when he entered the monastery of Cluny, eventually
rising to the rank of prior. Around 1080, he was sent to Rome and ended up
remaining there. Gregory VII elevated Odo to the cardinal-bishopric of Ostia
shortly thereafter and he remained in that position until 1088, when he was elected
to the papacy after the death of Victor III (1086–88).64
During 1095–6, roughly eighty-five years after Sergius IV put out his call and
twenty years after Gregory VII, more than 100,000 people from across Europe
(Figure 5.1), from all classes of society, left hearth and home in waves to walk
61 See Gregori VII Registrum, ed. Caspar, 2/1: 4. 1, 4. 2, etc. In 1082, Gregory sketched out the war
being fought between good and evil. Ibid. 2/2: 9. 21; and Gregory VII, Epistolae Vagantes, ed.
Cowdrey, no. 54. See also, Karl Josef Benz, ‘Eschatologie und Politik bei Gregor VII’, Studi
Gregoriani, 14 (1991), 1–20; H. E. J. Cowdrey, ‘The Gregorian Papacy, Byzantium, and the First
Crusade’, Byzantinische Forschungen, 13 (1988), 155–6; and idem, Pope Gregory VII, 531–4.
62 For an overview of the shifting diplomacy in this period involving the papacy, Normans, and
Byzantium, see Jonathan Harris, Byzantium and the Crusades (London, 2003), 46–7; and Cowdrey,
Pope Gregory VII, 483–6.
63 Paul Magdalino, ‘Church, Empire and Christendom in c.600 and c.1075: The View from the
Registers of Popes Gregory I and Gregory VII’, in Cristianita d’Occidente e cristianita d’Oriente (secoli VI–XI): 24–30 aprile 2003 (Spoleto, 2004), 28–30, quotation at 30.
64 The essential discussion of Odo’s biography is Alfons Becker, Papst Urban II. (1088–99), 2 vols.
(Stuttgart, 1964–88), i. 24–90.
London
494
445
1655–6
R.Rhine
275
228
1335–7
293 271 287
246
677
597 319–20 50
536 273 191 1393
Boulogne
4534
596
24 396
260
4535
4532–3
139 141–2
167
317
168 302 4533
395
26?
Cologne
144 590
839
509 Lille
557–8
Aachen64–5
2078
380–1
325
282
237, 322
Liège
592
1250
61
221
405
340
527–8
649 497
223? 5332
546
423
508
184
185
224
531–2
470
517
572
574
54–5
420–2
31
R.
217 449
443
311
154 482
137
Mainz
Main
58
Rouen
233
Bouillon 426
85–6
560
797?
230, 369
145
513
483
310
121
113
810–11
R.Seine
402
464
4950
390
646
124
94–5
147
418
495
316
229
425
268
30
213 214
280
189
Rheims150
4355
4158
348
2355
372
437
643
108
630
259
Paris
545
579
238
239 556
283–4 645
455 433
432
456
93
498
171 3828
212
220
23
549
652?
3442
473–5
465?
5362
631–2
40
22
134
406-7
3296–7
290
202–3
361
Chartres
195
135
480
157–8
383
581
3901 126
4783
205–6
3326
442
Le Mans 460
1654
208235
3824
413
R.
384
373
411–2
Rhine
155
5249 160
567? 4787
Moselle
604
3812
R.
ube
366
301
5360 4722–3
5400
434
367
4315
2529 3583
448 414
Troyes
3471
234
R. Dan
540
1652
219
575 3850
193 1559
204
267 218
4716
89
4326
Angers 537 278
3485
91
4717
R. Loire
525
491
173
416–7
4792
3484
634
5039
635?
172
553–5
3761
Tours
174–5
1649
3795
1653
4812
1650
583–4
3663
362
1651
4803
398?
559
351–5
4788
151
5032
4559
538
4560
4826–7
415?
33
5498
266
Dijon
419
42
3891
5001
4647
Besancon
245
392
4639
3782
R.
R.
4558
Loire
178
3951
Poitiers
4795
Cher
104
3948
5499
N
389 522
R.
326
3933
115
485
4636
Allier
201
444
3953–4
R.
1566
Saône
3638
R.
4782
562–3
Creuse
100–1
5049
633? 1501?
613
Cluny
564
3940
3926
4609 1543
62
606
3941 3949
1532
1474
127
131
3912–3 1502
105–6
1476
3897
3908
2641
Limoges
438
4620
1490
379
2219
102
435
1502–5
573
Clermont
1482–3
1500
5358
103
577
1538
209
244
3944–5
3701489
587 1521
3747–8
279?
3865
1475
2221–2
236
1472
1529–31
3875 3870
2223
Lyons
1528
496?
2224
188
3867
1658–9
377
Bordeaux
394
194
461
3873
375
1662–3
74
215
263–4 72
77
566
R.
387
Dordogne
4420
Le Puy
76
2653
28, 73
Milan
75 78
2217
341
382 2654
71 114
34
568–9
4655
817
2656
111–2
385 169
2668