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COUNCILS .)—[ED.J
Cassino (See also:Victor III., 1086-1087), whom he nominated as his successor, was well known for his moderation. It was no longer a question of continuing the policy of See also:Gregory VII., but of saving the See also:work of See also:Hildebrand. (L. D.*)
II.—Period from 1087 to 1305.
Gregory VII. had clearly revealed to the See also:world the broad lines of the religious and See also:political See also:programme of the See also:medieval papacy, and had begun to put it into See also:execution. The Work To reform the See also: Period from See also:Urban II. to See also:Calixtus II. (1087-1124).-Gregory VII.'s immediate successors accomplished the most pressing work by liberating the Church from feudal
subjection, either by force or by See also:diplomacy. This 1088Urba-1n n099,
.
was, indeed, the indispensable See also:condition of its internal
and external progress. The See also:great figure of this period is unquestionably the See also:French Cluniac Urban II., who led the Hildebrandine See also:reformation with more vehemence than Gregory himself and was the originator of the See also:crusades. Never through-out the See also:middle ages was See also:pope more energetic, impetuous or uncompromising. His inflexible will informed the See also:movement directed against the enemy within, against the simoniacal See also:prelate and the princely usurper of the rights of the Church, and pre-scribed the movement against the enemy without, against the infidel who held the See also:Holy See also:Sepulchre. Urban set his See also:hand to reforms from which his predecessor Gregory had recoiled. He simultaneously excommunicated several sovereigns and mercilessly persecuted the archbishops and bishops who were hostile to reform. He took no pains to See also:temper the zeal of his legates, but incited them to the struggle, and, not content with prohibiting lay See also:investiture and See also:simony, expressly forbade prelates and even priests to pay See also:homage to the See also:civil power. Distrusting the See also:secular See also:clergy, who were wholly sunk in the See also:form of
world, he looked to the See also:regular clergy for support, the church. and thus led the papacy into that course which it
continued to pursue after his See also:death. Henceforth the See also: Urban was the first to proclaim with emphasis the See also:necessity of a close association of the Curia with the religious orders, and this he made the essential basis of the theocratic See also:government. As the originator of the first crusade, Urban is entitled to the See also:honour of the idea and its execution. There is no doubt that he wished to satisfy the complaints that emanated The First from the Christians dwelling in See also:Jerusalem and Crusade. from the pilgrims to the Holy Sepulchre, but it is no less certain that he was disturbed by the fears aroused throughout the Latin world by the recrudescence of Mussulman invasions, and particularly by the victory won by the See also:Almoravides over the Christian See also:army at Zalaca (ro86). The progress of these See also:African Mussulmans. into See also:Spain and their incessant piracies in Italy were perhaps the occasional cause that determined Urban II. to work upon the See also:imagination of the infidels by an expedition into See also:Syria. The papacy of that See also:time believed in the political unity of See also:Islam, in a solidarity —which did not exist—among the Mussulmans of Asia See also:Minor, Syria, See also:Egypt and the See also:Barbary coasts; and if it waited until the See also:year 1095 to carry out this project, it was because the conflict with the Germanic Empire prevented the earlier realization of its See also:dream. The essential See also:reason of Urban II.'s See also:action, and consequently the true cause of the crusade, was the ambition of the pope to unite with Rome and the Roman Church the Churches of Jerusalem, See also:Antioch, See also:Alexandria and even See also:Constantinople, which the See also:Greek See also:schism had rendered See also:independent. This thought had already crossed the minds of See also:Leo IX. and Gregory VII., but circumstances had never allowed them to put it into execution. Armed by the reformation with a moral authority which made it possible to concentrate the forces of the See also:West under the supreme direction of the Church and its leaders, Urban II. addressed himself with his customary decision to the execution of this enormous enterprise. With him, as with all his successors, the idea of a collective expedition of Europe for the recovery of the Holy Places was always associated with the sanguine See also:hope of extinguishing the schism at Constantinople, its very centre, by the substitution of a Latin for a Byzantine domination. Of these two See also:objects, he was only to realize the former; but the crusade may well be said to have been his own work. He created it and preached it; he organized it, dominated it, and constantly supervised it. He was ever ready to See also:act, either personally or through his delegates, and never ceased to be the effective leader of all the feudal soldiers he enrolled under the banner of the Holy See. He corresponded regularly with his legates and with the military leaders, who kept him accurately informed of the position of the troops and the progress of the operations. He acted as intermediary between the soldiers of See also:Christ and their See also:brothers who remained in Europe, announcing successes, organizing fresh expeditions, and spurring the laggards to take the road to Jerusalem.
The vast conflict aroused by the Hildebrandine reformation, and particularly the investiture See also:quarrel, continued under the See also:settlement three successors of Urban IL; but with them it of the assumed a different See also:character, and a tendency arose Investiture to terminate it by other means. The violence and Quarrel. disorders provoked by the struggle brought about a reaction, which was organized by certain prelates who advocated a policy of conciliation, such as the Frenchman Ivo, See also:bishop of See also:Chartres (c. ro4o-1116). These conciliatory prelates were sincere supporters of the reformation, and combated simony, the See also:marriage or See also:concubinage of priests, and the immorality of sovereigns with the same conviction as the most ardent followers of Gregory VII. and Urban II.; but they held that the intimate See also:union of Church and See also:State was indispensable to the social order, and that the rights of See also:kings should be respected as well as the rights of priests. The See also:text they preached was See also:harmony between the priesthood and the state. Dividing what the irreconcilables of the Hildebrandine party considered as an indissoluble whole, they made a See also:sharp distinction between the See also:property of the Church and the Church itself, between the political and territorial power of the bishops and their religious authority,and between the feudal investiture which confers lands and See also:jurisdiction and the spiritual investiture which confers ecclesiastical rights. This See also:doctrine gradually rallied all moderate minds, and finally inspired the See also:directors of Christendom in Rome itself. It explains the new attitude of See also:Paschal II. and Calixtus II., who were both sincere reformers, but who sought in a policy of See also:compromise the See also:solution of the difficult problem of the relations of Church and State.
See also:History has not done sufficient See also:justice to the See also:Italian monk Paschal II., who was the equal of Urban in private virtues, See also:personal disinterestedness, and religious conviction, but was surpassed by him in ardour and rigidity y /099-/t/8. of conduct. Altered circumstances and tendencies of See also:opinion called for a policy of conciliation. In See also:France, Paschal granted See also:absolution to See also: The pope could be under no delusion as to the value of this See also:oath, which indeed was not kept; he merely regularized formally a state of affairs which the intractable Urban II. himself had never been able to prevent, As for the French question of the investitures, it was settled apparently without any treaty being expressly See also:drawn up between the parties. The kings of France contemporary with Paschal II. ceased to practice spiritual investiture, or even to receive feudal homage from the bishops. They did not, however, renounce all intervention or all profit in the nominations to prelacies, but their intervention was no longer exhibited under the forms which the Hildebrandine party held to be illegal. In See also:England, Paschal II. put an end to the See also:long quarrel between the royal government and See also:Anselm of See also:Canterbury by accepting the See also:Concordat of See also:London (1107). The See also:crown in England also abandoned investiture by the See also:pastoral See also:staff and See also:ring, but, more fortunate than in France, retained the right of receiving feudal homage from the episcopate. As for See also:Germany, the See also:Emperor See also: He refused to retain See also:Hugo, bishop of See also:Die (d. 1106), as See also:legate; like Urban and Gregory, he gave or confirmed monastic privileges without the See also:protection he granted to the monks assuming a character of hostility towards the episcopate; and, finally, he gave an impulse to the reformation of the chapters, and, unlike Urban II., maintained the rights of the canons against the claims of the abbots. See also:Guy, the See also:archbishop of See also:Vienne, who had been one of the Alliance with France. keenest to disavow the policy of Paschal II., was obliged to continue it when he assumed the See also:tiara under the name of Calixtus II. By the Concordat of Worms, which he Calla-Ns 71., signed with the Emperor Henry V. in 1122, the 1119-1124. investiture was divided between the ecclesiastical and the lay See also:powers, the emperor investing with the See also:sceptre, the pope with the pastoral staff and ring. The work did honour to the' perseverance and ability of Calixtus, but it was merely the application of the ideas of Paschal II. and No of Chartres. The understanding, however, between the two contracting parties was very far from being clear and See also:complete, as each party still sought to attain its own aim by spreading in the Christian world divergent interpretations of the concordat and widely-differing plans for reducing it to its final form. And, again, if this transaction settled the investiture question, it did not solve the problem of the reconciliation of the universal power of the popes with the claims of the emperors to the government of Europe; and the conflict subsisted—slumbering, it is true, but ever ready to awake under other forms. Nevertheless, the two great Christian agitations directed by the papacy at the end of the 1th century and the beginning of the 12th—the reformation and the crusade—were of See also:capital importance for the See also:foundation of the immense religious See also:monarchy that had its centre in Rome; and it is from this period that the papal monarchy actually See also:dates. The entry of the Christians into Jerusalem produced an extraordinary effect upon the faithful of the West. In it they Effect of the saw the most See also:manifest. :sign of the divine protection Latin and of the supernatural power of the pope, the See also:conquest of supreme director of the expedition. At its inception Jerusalem. the Latin kingdom of the Holy See also:Land was within a little of becoming an ecclesiastical principality, ruled by a See also:patriarch under the authority of the pope. Daimbert, the first patriarch of Jerusalem, was convinced that the Roman Church alone could be See also:sovereign of the new state, and attempted to compel See also:Godfrey of See also:Bouillon to hand over to him by a See also:solemn agreement the See also:town and citadel of Jerusalem, and also Jaffa. The clergy, indeed, received a large See also:share; but the government of the Latin principality remained lay and military, the only form of government possible for a See also:colony surrounded by perils and camped in a hostile See also:country. Not only was the result of the crusade extremely favourable to the See also:extension of the Roman power, but throughout the middle ages the papacy never ceased to derive almost incalculable political and See also:financial advantages from the agitation produced by the preachers and the crusading expeditions. The See also:mere fact of the crusaders being placed under the See also:special protection of the Church and the pope, and loaded with privileges, freed them from the jurisdiction, and even, up to a certain point, from the lordship of their natural masters, to become the almost direct subjects of the papacy; and the See also:common See also:law was then practically suspended for the benefit of the Church and the leader who represented it. As for the reformation, which under Urban II. and his immediate successors was aimed not only at the episcopate suhordma. but also at the See also:capitulary bodies and monastic tlon of the clergy, it, too, could but tend to a consider-Episcopate able extension of the authority of the successors of to the Papal St Peter, for it struck an irremediable See also:blow at Monarchy. the See also:ancient Christian See also:hierarchy. The first manifest result of the See also:change was the weakening of the metropolitans. The visible symptom of this decadence of the archiepiscopal power was the growing frequency during the Hildebrandine conflict of episcopal confirmations and consecrations made by the popes themselves or their legates. From an active instrument of the religious society, the archiepiscopate degenerated into a purely formal power; while the episcopate itself, which the sincere reformers wished to liberate and purge in order to strengthen it, emerged from the crisis sensibly weakened as well as ameliorated. The episcopate, while it gained in intelligence and morality, lost a part of its independence. It was raised above, See also:feudalism only to be abased before the two directing forces of the reformation, the papacy and the religious orders. To place itself in a better posture for combating the simoniacal and concubinary prelates, the court of Rome had had to multiply exemptions and accelerate the movement which impelled the monks to make themselves independent of the bishops. Even in the cities, the seats of the episcopal power, the reformation encouraged the attempts at revolt or See also:autonomy which tended everywhere to diminish that power. The See also:cathedral chapters took See also:advantage of this situation to oppose their jurisdiction to that of the bishops, and to encroach on their prerogatives. When See also:war was declared on the schismatic prelates, the reforming popes supported the canons, and, unconsciously or not, helped them to form themselves into privileged bodies living their own lives and affecting to recognize the court of Rome as their only See also:superior authority. Other adversaries of the episcopate, the burgesses and the See also:petty nobles dwelling in the See also:city, also profited by these frequent changes of bishops, and the disorders that ensued. It was the monarchy of the bishops of Rome that naturally benefited by these attacks on the aristocratic principle represented by the high prelacies in the Church. By See also:drawing to their See also:side all the forces of the ecclesiastical See also:body to combat feudalism, Urban II. and his successors, with their monks and legates, changed the constitution of that body, and changed it to their own advantage. The new situation of these popes and the growth of their authority were also manifested in the material organization of their See also:administration and See also:chancery. Under Urban II. the formulary of the papal bulls began to crystallize, and the letters amassed in the papal offices were differentiated clearly into great and little bulls, according to their See also:style, arrangement and signs of validation. Under Paschal II. the type of the leaden See also:seal affixed to the bulls (representing the heads of the apostles Peter and See also:Paul) was fixed, and the use of Roman minuscule finally substituted for that of the Lombard script. 2. Period from See also:Honorius II. to See also:Celestine III. (1124–1198).--After the reformation and the crusade the papal monarchy existed, and the next step was to consolidate and extend it. This task See also:fell to the popes of the 12th century. Two of them in particular—the two who had the longest reigns—viz. See also:Innocent II. and See also: When the schism of 1130 See also:broke out he endeavoured to procure the cancellation of the clauses of the Concordat of Worms and to recover lay investiture by way of See also:compensation for the support he had given to Innocent II., one of the competing popes. This scheme, however, was frustrated by the firmness of Innocent and St See also:Bernard, and Lothair had to resign himself to the zealous conservation of the privileges granted to the Empire by the terms of the concordat. The ardour he had displayed in securing the recognition of Innocent and defending him against his enemies, particularly the See also:anti-pope
Adrian Iv., lutely sustained the struggle, the latter for nearly
1154-1159.
twenty years. Victims of the communal claims at Rome, they constituted themselves the champions of similar claims in See also:northern Italy, and their alliance with the Lombard communes ultimately led to success. In his See also:duel with Barba-Alexan- rossa, Alexander III., one of the greatest of medieval der III., popes, displayed extraordinary courage, address and 11594181. perseverance. Although it must be admitted that the tenacity of the Lombard republics contributed powerfully to the pope's victory, and that the See also:triumph of the Milanese at See also:Legnano (1176) was the determining cause of See also:Frederick's submission at See also:Venice, yet we must not exaggerate the importance of the solemn act by which See also:Barbarossa, kneeling before his conqueror, recognized the spiritual supremacy of the Holy See, and swore fidelity and respect to it. In its final form, the truce of Venice was not only not unfavourable secularly to the Empire, but even granted it very extensive advantages. Nor must it be forgotten that,' in the eyes of contemporaries, the See also:scene at Venice had none of that humiliating character which later historians have attributed to it.
This was not the only success gained by Alexander III. over lay sovereigns. The conflict of the priesthood with the kingdoms Alexander and nations that were tending to aggrandize them-/11. and selves by transcending the religious limits of the Henry H. medieval See also:theocracy took place on another See also:theatre. of England. The affair of See also: Alexander's See also:diplomatic skill and moral authority, reinforced by the Capetian alliance and the revulsion of feeling caused by the See also:murder of Becket, enabled him to force the despotic Henry to yield, and even to do See also:penance at the See also:tomb of the See also:martyr. The See also:Plantagenet abjured the Constitutions of See also:Clarendon, recognized the rights of the pope over the Church of England, and augmented the privileges and domains of the archbishopric of Canterbury. Although Becket was a See also:man of narrow sympathies and by no means of liberal views, he had died for the liberties of his See also:caste, and the aureolethat surrounded him enhanced the See also:prestige and ascendancy of the papacy.
Unfortunately for the papacy, the successors of Alexander III. lacked vigour, and their pontificates were too brief to allow them to pursue a strong policy against the Germanic The papacy imperialism. Never were the leaders of the Church and the
in such See also:jeopardy as during the reign of Barbarossa's Emperor son, Henry VI. This vigorous See also:despot, whose ambi- Henry vf. tions were not all chimerical, had succeeded where his predecessors, including Frederick, had failed. His marriage with the heiress of the old See also:Norman kings had made him master of See also:Sicily and the duchy of See also:Apulia and See also:Calabria, and he succeeded in conquering and retaining almost all the See also:remainder of the See also:peninsula. Under Celestine III. the papal state was surrounded on every side by German soldiers, and but for the premature death of the emperor, whom See also: (1128) and Innocent II.
(1130) to wrest Apulia and Calabria from See also: The strength of classical See also:reminiscence and the See also:instinct of See also:liberty were See also:rein-forced by the support given to communal aspirations by the popular agitator and dangerous See also:tribune, See also:Arnold of Arnold of See also:Brescia (q.v.), whose theories arrived at an opportune Brescia. moment to encourage the revolted See also:commons. He denied the power of clerks to possess fiefs, and allowed them only religious authority and See also:tithes. The successors of Innocent II. were even less successful in maintaining their supremacy in Anacletus and the kingdom of the Two Sicilies, involved him in a course which was not precisely favourable to the imperial rights. Innocent II. was the virtual master of this //30Inao-nI14d43. monarch, whose championship of the papacy brought not the smallest advantage, not even that of being crowned emperor with the habitual ceremonial at the place consecrated by tradition. It may even be maintained that his See also:elevation was due solely to his personal claims. This was a victory for Rome, and it was repeated in the See also:case of the first See also:Hohenstaufen, See also:Conrad III., who owed his elevation (1138) mainly to the princes of the Church and the legate of Innocent II., by whom he was crowned. He also had to submit to the consequences of his origin on the occasion of a See also:double election not foreseen by the Concordat of Worms, when he was forced to admit the necessity of appeal to Rome and to acknowledge the supremacy of the papal decision. The situation changed See also:Eugenics in 1152, under Eugenius III., when Frederick 111., Barbarossa was elected German king. He notified u45-1153• his election to the pope, but did not seek the pope's approval. None the less, Eugenius III. felicitated the new sovereign on his election, and even signed the treaty of See also:Constance with him (r153). The pope had need of Frederick to defend him against the revolted See also:Romans and to help him to recover his temporal power, which had been gravely compromised. See also:Anastasius IV. pursued the same policy, and Anasta- summoned the German to Rome (1154). Frederick, sins Iv., however, was determined to keep the seat of the 1153-1154• Empire for himself, to dispute Italy with the pope, and to oppose the divine right of kings to the divine right of priests. When he had taken See also:Lombardy (1158) and had had the principles of the imperial supremacy See also:pro-claimed by his jurists at the See also:diet of Roncaglia, the court of Rome realized that war was inevitable, and two energetic popes, Adrian V. and Alexander III., reso-
Rome. See also:Lucius II., when called upon to renounce all his regalian rights, fell mortally wounded in an See also:attempt to drive the autonomists by force from the Capitol (1145). Under Eugenius III. the Romans sacked and destroyed the houses of the clerks and cardinals, besieged St Peter's and the Lateran, and massacred the pilgrims. The pope was forced to See also:fly with the Sacred See also:College, to See also:escape the necessity of recognizing the commune, and thus See also:left the See also: The populace of the See also:Tiber welcomed and expelled him with equal See also:enthusiasm, and when his body was brought back from See also:exile, the See also:mob went before the cortege and threw mud and stones upon the funeral See also:litter. All obeyed the pontiff of Rome—save Rome itself. Lucius III., who was pope for four years (1181–1185), remained in Rome four months, while Urban III. and Gregory VIII. never entered the city. At length the two parties See also:grew weary of this state of revolution, and a regime of conciliation, the See also:fruit of mutual concessions, was established under See also:Clement III. By the act of 1188, the fundamental See also:charter of the Roman commune, the See also:people recognized the supremacy of the pope over the senate and the town, while the pope on his part sanctioned the legal existence of the commune and of its government and assemblies. Inasmuch as Clement was compelled to make terms with this new power which had established itself against him in the very centre of his dominion, the victory may fairly be said to have rested with the commune. Although, among other obstacles, the popes of the 12th century had experienced some difficulty in subduing the inhabitants Develop- of the city, which was the seat and centre of the ment of the Christian world, their monarchy did not cease to Centralized gain in authority, solidity and prestige, and the work organiza- of centralization, which was gradually making them tlon. masters of the whole ecclesiastical organism, was accomplished steadily and without serious interruption. If Rome expelled them, they always found a sure refuge in France, where Alexander III. carried on his government for several years; and the whole of Europe acknowledged their immense power. Under Honorius II. the See also:custom prevailed of substituting legates a latere, See also:simple priests or deacons of the Curia, for the regionary delegates, who had grown too independent; and that excellent instrument of See also:rule, the Roman legate, carried the papal will into the remotest courts of Europe. The episcopate and the great monastic prelacies continued to lose their independence, as was shown by Honorius II. deputing a See also:cardinal to See also:Monte Cassino to elect an abbot of his choosing. The progress of the Roman power was especially manifested under Innocent II., who had triumphed over the schism, and was supported by the Empire and by Bernard of See also:Clairvaux, the first moral authority of his time. He suspended an archbishop of See also:Sens (1136) who had neglected to take into See also:consideration the appeal to Rome, summoned an archbishop of See also:Milan to Rome to receive the See also:pallium from the pope's hands, lavished exemptions, and extended the right of appeal to such abnormal lengths that a Byzantine See also:ambassador is reported to have exclaimed to Lothair III.," Your Pope Innocent is not a bishop, but an emperor." When the universal Church assembled at the second Lateran Council (1139), this leader of See also:religion declared to the bishops that he was the absolute master of Christendom. " Ye know," he said, "that Rome is the capital of the world, that ye hold your dignities of the Roman pontiff as a See also:vassal holds his fiefs of his sovereign, and that ye cannot retain them without his assent." Under Eugenius III., a Cistercian monk who was scarcely equal to his task, the papal See also:absolutism grew sensibly weaker, and if we may See also:credit the testimony of the usually well-informed German chronicler, See also:Otto of See also:Freising, there arose in the college of cardinals a See also:kind of • See also:fermentation which was exceedingly disquieting for the personal power of the leader of the Church. In the case of a difference of opinion between Eugenius and the Sacred College, Otto relates that the cardinals addressed to the pope this astounding protest: " See also:Thou must know that it is by us thou hast been raised to the supreme dignity. We are the hinges (cardines) upon which the universal Church rests and moves. It is through us that from a private See also:person thou hast become the See also:father of all Christians. It is, then, no longer to thyself but rather to us that thou belongest hence-forth. Thou must not See also:sacrifice to private and See also:recent friendships the traditional affections of the papacy. Perforce thou must consult before everything the See also:general See also:interest of Christendom, and must consider it an See also:obligation of thine See also:office to respect the opinions of the highest dignitaries of the court of Rome." If we admit that the cardinals of Eugenius III. succeeded in restricting the omnipotence of their master for their own ends, it must invariably have been the Curia that dictated its wishes to the Church and to Europe. The papacy, however, recovered its ascendancy during the pontificate of Alexander III., and seemed more powerful than ever. The recently created royalties sought from the papacy the conservation of their titles and the See also:benediction of their crowns, and placed themselves voluntarily in its vassalage. The practice of the nomination of bishops by the Curia and of papal recommendation to prebends and benefices of every kind grew daily more general, and the number of appeals to Rome and exemptions granted to abbeys and even to simple churches increased continually. The third Lateran Council (1179) was a triumph for the leader of the Church. At that council See also:wise and urgent See also:measures were taken against the abuses that discredited the priesthood, but the principle of appeals and exemptions and the question of the increasing abuse of the power wielded by the Roman legates remained untouched. The See also:treatise on See also:canon law known as the Decrelum Gratiani, which was compiled towards the middle of the See also:lath century and had an enduring and far-reaching effect (see CANON LAW), merely gave theoretical See also:sanction to the existing situation in the Church. It propagated doctrines in favour of the power of the Holy See, established the superiority of the popes over the councils, and gave legal force to their See also:decretals. According to its author, " they (the popes) are above all the See also:laws of the Church, and can use them according to their wish; they alone See also:judge and cannot be judged." It was by its constant reliance en monachism that the papacy of the lath century had attained this result, and the popes of that period were especially fortunate in having for their See also:champion the monk St Bernard, whose fnflaenceof admirable qualities enabled him to dominate public Bernard of Clairvaux. opinion. St Bernard completed the reformation, combated See also:heresy, and by his immense moral ascendancy gained victories by which Rome benefited. As instances of his more direct services, he put an end to the schism of 1130 and attached Italy and the world to the side of Innocent III. Although he had saved the papal institution from one of the gravest perils it had ever encountered, the cardinals, the court of Rome and Innocent himself could not easily See also:pardon him for being what he had become—a private person more powerful in the Church than the pope and the bishops, and holding that power by his personal prestige. He incurred their special reproaches by his condemnation of the irresistible evolution which impelled Rome to See also:desire exclusive dominion over See also:Catholic Europe and to devote her See also:attention to earthly things. He did not condemn the temporal power of the popes in See also:plain terms, but both his writings and his conduct proved that that power was in his opinion difficult to reconcile with the spiritual See also:mission of the papacy, and was, moreover, a menace to the future of the institution. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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