The Cambridge medieval history 5 Contest of empire and papacy
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a The Cambridge medieval history |n 5 |p Contest of empire and papacy |c planned by J. B. Bury. Ed. by H. M. Gwatkin, J. R. Tanner, C. W. Previté-Orton, Z. N. Brooke |
250 | |a Repr. | ||
264 | 1 | |a Cambridge |b Univ. Press |c 1968 | |
300 | |a XLIV, 1005 S. |b Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Literaturverz. S. 831 - 939 | ||
650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Middle Ages | |
651 | 4 | |a Holy Roman Empire |x History |y Franconian House, 1024-1125 | |
700 | 1 | |a Bury, John B. |d 1861-1927 |e Sonstige |0 (DE-588)11717937X |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Gwatkin, Henry Melvill |d 1844-1916 |e Sonstige |0 (DE-588)120181924 |4 oth | |
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adam_text | xxiv
TABLE OF
CONTENTS.
INTRODUCTION.
PAGE
By Z.
N.
ВдоокЕ,
Litt.D., F.B.A.,
Fellow of Gonville and
Caius College, Cambridge
......
vii
CHAPTER I.
THE REFORM OF THE CHURCH.
By the late J. P. Whitney,
D.D.,
Dixie Professor of Ecclesiastical
History, Cambridge.
Decadence of the Church
·....... 1
Nilus;
Romuald
of Ravenna
. .......
ib.
Richard of St
Vannes
;
Ratherins
....... 2
Symptoms of reform
......... 3
Instances of corruption;
Jaromír
of Prague, Farfa
, , 4
Episcopal elections
····..... 6
Parishes
........... 7
Early stages of lay patronage
....... 8
Royal encroachments on the Church
...... 9
Evils in the episcopate
.........
ю
Simony
............
to.
Clerical marriage, and celibacy
.......
ц
Secular canons
.......... 13
Rome
............ 14
Benedict
VIII.......... 15
The Emperor Henry JI
......... ig
Benedict IX
........... 17
The Emperor Conrad
H
.......
is
Sylvester III and Gregory VI
....... 19
The Emperor Henry III
........ 20
The Synod of Sutri
. ....... 21
Clement II
........... 22
Damasus II
........... 23
Leo IX
............ 24
The Council of Rheims
......... 26
The work
oí
Leo s pontificate
....... 27
Victor II
........... 31
Stephen IX
........... 32
St Peter
Damian
.......... 33
Contested succession to the Papacy
...... 35
Nicholas II
........... 36
Election decree of
1059......... 37
Simoniacal ordinations
.»·*···., 88
Contents
xxv
Events in Milan .
Alexander
II and Honor
ius
II
Conciliar
legislation .
.
Alexander
II
and Milan
The commune at
Milan . .
PAGE
39
43
46
47
48
CHAPTER II.
GREGORY
VII
AND THE FIRST CONTEST BETWEEN EMPIRE
AND PAPACY.
By Z.
N.
Brooke,
LitŁD.,
F.
В.
A.
Election and early life of Pope Gregory
VII
.
His position under Alexander II
His temperament and character
.....
The Petrine authority
.......
The supremacy of the spiritual power
....
The situation in
1073 .......
Reconciliation with Henry IV
.....
Contest with the German episcopate
....
The first decree against lay investiture
....
The events of the autumn of
1075 .....
The Council of Worms
.......
Excommunication of Henry IV
.....
His journey to Canossa
......
Election of Rudolf as anti-king
.....
The Pope s neutrality
.......
Papal legislation,
1078—1079.....
Deposition of Henry IV,
1080 .....
Council of Brixen. The anti-Pope Guibert
Alliance of the Pope with Robert Guiscard
Siege of Rome by Henry IV
......
Sack of Rome by the Normans
.....
Death of Pope Gregory
VII
.
Gregory s relations with France, England, and other States
Pope Victor III
. . . . .
#
Election of Urban II
.......
Extension of the work of Gregory
VII
....
The organisation of the Church
.....
Papal victory in North Italy
.....
Little headway in Germany
......
The question of schismatic ordinations
....
Urban
Iľs
progress through North Italy and France
His last years and death
......
Pope Paschal II
........
His character
........
The end of the schism
.......
Lay investiture; settlements in France and England
.
The attitude of Henry V
......
Unsuccessful negotiations between Pope and King
·
The events of
1111.......
61
63
ib.
65
68
ib.
60
61
64
65
06
67
69
71
72
73
74
75
77
78
79
80
81
8b
87
88
89
91
92
93
94
95
ib.
96
98
99
100
101
102
xxvi Contents
PAGE
The Pope forced to retract his concession to Henry
... 103
Henry as heir to the Countess Matilda
. . . . . . 104
Deaths of Paschal II and Gelasius II
...... 105
Pope Calixtus II
..........
ib.
The Concordat of Worms
........ 107
The enhanced position of the Papacy
...... 109
CHAPTER III.
GERMANY UNDER HENRY IV AND HENRY V.
By Z.
N.
Brooke, Litt.D., F.B.A.
Regency of Agnes the Empress-mother
..... 112
Anno s coup
ď
état
at Kaiserswerth
. . , . . . 115
Short regency of Adalbert of Bremen
......
ib.
The royal office
.......... 117
Princes of the Kingdom
........ 118
The countryside and the towns
. . . . . . . 119
Alliance of the towns with the king1
...... 120
The growth of feudalism
. . . . , . . . 121
The royal domain
.......... 122
Alliance with the Episcopate
. . . . . . . 123
The complication of Italy
........ 124
Henry IVs policy
......... 125
His character
.......... 126
The peculiar position of Saxony
. . . . . . . 127
The revolt of Duke Otto of Bavaria
. . . . . . 129
The Saxon revolt of
1073........ 131
Henry s victory on the Unstrut,
1075 ...... 133
His challenge to the Pope
. . . . . . . . 134
His excommunication and its results
...... 135
The Diet of Tribur
......... 136
Canossa
...........
I37
Election of Rudolf as anti-king
....... 138
The division of Germany
........
I39
Henry s successful diplomacy
. . . . - . . 140
His final breach with the Pope
. . . . . . . 141
Death of Rudolf. Herman of Salm as anti-king
. . . 142
The end of the Saxon revolt
........
I44
The climax of Henry s power,
1088—1090.....
I45
His disastrous expedition to Italy,
1090—1097 .... 146
The First Crusade
. .......
I47
Peace in Germany
.........
I43
The revolt of Henry V
......... 149
Last days and death of Henry IV
....... 151
Causes of his failure
.........
fa
The rise of new noble families in Germany
..... 152
The character of Henry V
........
I54
His forced reliance on the nobles
. . . . . .
л
155
Henry s first expedition to Italy
;
victory over the Pope
. , 156
Archbishop Adalbert of Mayence
.......
Contents xxvii
РЛОВ
The revolts of
1113
and
1115.......159
Henry s second expedition to Italy
Ecclesiastical opposition in Germany
The Diet of
Würzburg1 .
The Concordat of Worms
Independence of the duchies
.
Last years and death of Henry V
.
The election of his successor
.
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
CHAPTER IV.
(A)
THE CONQUEST OF SOUTH ITALY AND SICILY
BY THE NORMANS.
By the late
Ferdinand Chalandon, Archiviste Paléographe.
Condition of Byzantine Italy
. . . » . . . . 167
Arrival of the Normans v
. . . . . . . 169
Defeat of the Byzantines
........ 171
Robert Guiscard
.......... 172
Defeat of Pope Leo IX
......... 173
Reconciliation with the Papacy
. . . . . . . 174
Treaty of Melfi
.......... 175
Capture of
Bari
.......... 176
Conquest of Sicily
......... 177
Estrangement from the Papacy
....... 178
Discord among the Normans
. . . . . . . . 179
Alliance with the Papacy
. . . . . . . . 180
Eastern ambitions of Guiscard
....... 181
Capture of Rome
;
death of Guiscard
. . . . . . 182
Weakness of Guiscard
β
son
....·... 183
(B)
THE NORMAN KINGDOM OF SICILY.
By the late Ferdinand Chalandon.
Roger II of Sicily
......... 184
Creation of the kingdom of Sicily
....... 186
Defeat of Pope Innocent II.
. . . . . . . 187
East and West allied against Roger
...... 188
Norman conquests in Africa
. . . . . . . . 189
Death of Roger II
......... 190
Early difficulties of William I
....... 191
His victory
........... 192
Treaty of Benevento
......... 193
Alliance with the Papacy against the Empire
. . . . 194
Revolt of Norman nobles
. . . . . . . . 195
Death of William I
......... 196
Minority of William II
......... 197
Marriage-alliance with the Hohenstaufen
..... 198
xxviii Contents
PAGH
Eastern schemes of William II.
. . . . . . 199
Death of William II
......... 200
Tancred and Henry VI
......... 201
Victory of Henry VI
......... 202
Organisation of the Norman Kingdom
...... 203
Admixture of East and West
....... 206
Decay of the royal house
........ 207
CHAPTER V.
THE ITALIAN CITIES TILL o.
1200.
By
С
W.
Previté-Orton,
Litt.D., F.B.A., Professor of Medieval
History and Fellow of St John s College, Cambridge.
The medieval town
......... 208
The towns in non-Lombard Italy
....... 209
The towns in Lombard Italy
........ 210
Ecclesiastical institutions
........
ib.
Development under the Carolingian Empire
..... 212
Fortification of the cities
;
episcopal government
.... 213
Growth of collective action
........ 214
Proto-communes in the South
....... 216
Classes in the northern cities
....... 217
Lanzo
and Erlembald of Milan
. . . . . . . 219
Foundation of the Communes
....... 220
Cultural and political influences
....... 222
Supersession of feudal and state authorities
..... 223
Conquest of the
Contado
........ 224
The rural communes
......... 225
Development of commerce
. . . . . . . .
ib.
Inter-city wars
.......... 226
The Tuscan communes
......... 227
Florence
........... 228
Umbria
............ ib.
Lombardy
........... 229
Milan
............ 230
Emilia
............ ib.
The
Trevisan
March
. . . . . . . . ib.
The regalia , imperial diplomas
....... 231
Counts, viscounts, and bishops
....... 232
The consuls and other officials
....... 233
The Councils. Growth of city law
...... 234
The
milites
and consorzerie
........ 235
The pedites and gilds
......... 236
Internal strife
.......... 237
The
Podesta
........... 238
Commerce and banking·
........ 239
Corporate life. The blood-feud
....... 240
Contrasts in the communes
.······· 241
Contents
XXIX
CHAPTER VL
ISLAM IN SYRIA AND EGYPT,
760—1100.
By William B. Stevenson, D.Litt., Professor of Semitic
Languages in the University of Glasgow.
Disintegration of the Caliphate
Shi
ite
dynasties
....
Saif-ad-Daulah of Aleppo
Greek attacks on Syria
. . .
The
Faţimites
conquer Egypt
The
Qarmaţians iu
Syria
. .
The Caliphate and the Empire
History of Aleppo
....
The Emperor Basil II
. . .
Caliphate of
ţlâkim
Ruin of the Holy Sepulchre
.
Egypt and Syria
....
The Greeks in Syria
. . .
Caliphate of
Mustanşir
. . .
Emergence of the Turks
Turkish conquest of Syria
Recognition of the Abbasid Caliphs
The Turks in Palestine
.
Turkish dissensions
. . .
Eve of the First Crusade
PA
Q B
242
φ
· ·
244
* .4
245
» · ·
246
. · *
247
. .
ι
248
. * 1
249
» ·
I
250
џ
щ
251
• . ·
253
. · *
254
■ » *
265
2Ő6
258
• *
259
260
• ·
261
262
263
264
CHAPTER
VII.
THE FIRST CRUSADE.
By Professor William B. Stevenson, D.Litt.
Muslim attack on Europe
Africa, Italy, and Sicily
. .
Leadership of the Pope
.
Pilgrimages to Jerusalem
. .
Peril of the Eastern Empire
. .
Purpose of the First Crusade
·
Pope Urban IPs appeal
. . «
Leaders of the Crusade
.
First arrivals in Constantinople
Disaster in Asia Minor
. . .
Persecution of Jews on the Rhine
.
Pictorial numbers
....
Policy of the Emperor Alexius
Latins as allies of the Eastern Empire
Godfrey of Bouillon
Bohemond
of
Taranto
.
Robert of
Flandere
»
265
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
275
276
277
¿6.
279
280
ib.
282
ib.
xxx
Contents
PAGE
Raymond
of
Toulouse ......... 283
Robert of
Normandy
.........
to.
Treaty with Alexius
.........
ib.
Siege of Nicaea
.......... 285
March through Asia Minor
........ 280
Alliance with the Armenians
....... 287
Inter-national rivalries
......... 288
Siege of Antioch
.......... 289
Battle with
Karböghá
......... 293
Bohemond,
Prince of Antioch
....... 294
March to Jerusalem
......... 295
Godfrey, Prince of Jerusalem
....... 296
Numbers of the Crusaders
........ 297
Peter the Hermit
.... ..... 299
CHAPTER
VIII.
THE KINGDOM OF JERUSALEM,
1099—1291.
By the late
Charles Lethbridge Kingsford,
M.A., F.B.A., sometime
Scholar of St John s College, Oxford.
Establishment of the Kingdom
....... 300
Its limits
........... 301
The great fiefs
..........
ib.
The
Assises
of Jerusalem
........ 303
Baldwin I and Baldwin II
........ 304
Fulk
............ 305
The Military Orders
.........
to.
The Second Crusade
......... 307
Nûr-ad-Dïn
and Amaury I
........ 308
Factions among the Franks
........ 309
The fall of Jerusalem
......... 310
The Third Crusade
......... 311
The Franks in Syria
......... 312
The ecclesiastical hierarchy
........ 313
John
de
Brienne and Frederick II
. . . . . . 314
Dissensions among the Muslims
....... 315
St Louis in Palestine
......... 316
Last days of the Kingdom
........
317
The fall of Acre
.......... 318
End of the Latin Kingdom
........ 319
CHAPTER IX.
THE EFFECTS OF THE CRUSADES UPON WESTERN EUROPE.
By E. J. Passant,
Μ. Α.,
Fellow of Sidney Sussex College,
Cambridge.
The Papacy and the Crusades
....... 320
Extension of Papal influence
....... 322
Crusades as a source of revenue
:
indulgences and clerical tithes
. 323
Peaceful crusaders: missionary work
...... 325
Contents xxxi
ΡΑΟβ
Increase of geographical knowledge
...... 326
The Crusades and economic life
....... 327
Development of the towns
........ 328
The conquests of Venice, Genoa, and Pisa
..... 329
Nationality and the Crusades
....... 330
Revived, study of Greek
........ 331
Military results: check to Turkish advance
..... 332
The Teutonic Knights
......... 333
CHAPTER X.
GERMANY,
1125—1152.
By Austin Lane Poole, M.A., Fellow of St John s College,
Oxford, late Lecturer of Selwyn College, Cambridge.
Election of
Lothar
of Supplinburg
...... 334
Campaign in Bohemia
......... 336
Possessions of the house of
Welf
....... 337
War with the Hohenstaufen
........ 338
Destruction of Augsburg and
Ulm ...... 340
Ecclesiastical policy
......... 341
Lothar
and the papal schism
........ 342
Civilising of the Wendish country
...... 343
Relations with Denmark
........ 344
Death of
Lothar
III
......... 345
Election of Conrad III
......... 346
Hohenstaufen versus
Welf
........ 347
Siege of
Weinsberg ......... 348
Settlement of Frankfort,
1142....... 349
Difficulties in Lorraine
. . . . . . . . . 350
Relations with Poland and Bohemia
. . . . . . 351
Relations with Hungary
........ 352
The Second
Crusade ......... 353
The Wendish Crusade
......... 354
Growth of the power of Henry the Lion
..... 355
Alliance with the Byzantine Empire
...... 356
Last activities and death of Conrad
...... 357
Failure of the reign
......... 358
CHAPTER XL
ITALY,
1125—1152.
By the late Count
Ugo Balzani,
Member of the R.
Accademia
dei Lincei.
Transformation in Italy
......·· 360
Difficulties of the Papacy
........ 362
The disputed election of
1130 . . . . . . . 363
Lothar
HI and the schism
........ 364
Lothar
at Rome
.....····· 365
C.
SÍED.H.
VOL.V.
2
xxxii Contents
PAGB
Lotliar s
second expedition
........ 366
Alliance with Innocent II against the Normans
. . . . 867
Success of Roger II
......... 868
Communal rising at Rome
........ 369
Victory of the Commune
........ 870
Papal appeal to Germany
........ 871
Arnold of Brescia
.........
ib.
Proclamation of the Second Crusade
...... 873
The hesitations of the Pope
........ 874
Reaction of the Crusade on Italy
....... 375
Diplomacy of the Emperor Manuel I
...... 376
The Pope and Roger II
........ 377
The attitude of Conrad III
........ 378
Preparations for his Italian expedition
...... 379
Death of Conrad HI
......... 880
CHAPTER
XII.
FREDERICK
BARBAROSSA
AND GERMANY.
By Austin Lane Poole, M.A.
Frederick
Barbarossa ......... 381
His character
.......... 882
Landfrieden ........... 383
Relations with Henry the Lion
....... 384
Settlement of the duchy of Bavaria
...... 385
The Danish civil war
......... 386
Disturbances in the diocese of Mayence
..... 387
Feuds among the German princes
...... 388
Relations with Bohemia, Poland, and Hungary
....
ib.
Frederick s marriage with Beatrix of Burgundy
.... 390
Diet of
Besançon
.......... ib.
Ecclesiastical policy
......... 392
Frederick s claims
......... 393
The German clergy and the Schism
...... 394
Success of Frederick s ecclesiastical policy
..... 395
Rainald
of
Dassel.......... 396
Foreign relations
.......... 397
Subjection of the Wends
........
ib.
Progress of Christianity among the Wends
..... 399
Foundation and prosperity of
Lübeck ...... 400
Oppressive rule of Henry the Lion
...... 401
Breach between Frederick and Duke Henry
..... 402
The meeting at Chiavenna
........ 403
Proceedings against Henry the Lion
...... 404
Dismemberment of the duchies of Saxony and Bavaria
. . . 405
Submission and banishment of Henry
...... 406
The Diet of Mayence
......... 407
Quarrel with Pope Urban III
....... 408
Rebellion of Archbishop Philip of Cologne
..... 409
The Third Crusade
......... 410
Death of Frederick
Barbarossa »#····· 412
Contents xxxiii
CHAPTER
XIII.
FREDERICK BARBAROSSA
AND THE LOMBARD LEAGUE.
Ђу
the late Count
Ugo Balzani.
PAGI
Barbarossa
s
early relations with the Papacy
.... 413
Pope Hadrian IV
.......... 415
Rome and Sicily
..........
41β
Frederick and the Lombards
....... 417
Execution of Arnold of Brescia
....... 418
Meeting of King and Pope
........ 419
Advance to Rome
.......... 420
Imperial coronation
......... 421
Fighting at Rome
.........
ib.
Frederick s return to Germany
. . . . . 422
Divisions among the cardinals
....... 423
Papal peace with Sicily
........ 424
The quarrel over
beneficia
........ 425
Frederick s second expedition to Italy
...... 426
The Diet of Roncaglia,
1158........ 427
Revolt of Milan
.......... 428
Renewed disputes between Pope and Emperor
.... 429
Death of Pope Hadrian IV
........ 430
The papal schism
.......... 431
The standpoint of Alexander III
. . . . , . . 432
The Synod of Pavia
......... 433
Capture and destruction of Milan
....... 434
Alexander III takes refuge in France
...... 435
Failure of Frederick s negotiations with Louis
VII
. . . 436
Difficulties in Italy
......... 437
Beginnings of the Lombard League
...... 438
Return of Alexander III to Rome
...... 439
Frederick s fourth expedition to Italy
...... 440
Siege of Rome
.......... 441
Frederick s army destroyed by pestilence
..... 442
Growing strength of Alexander III
...... 443
Failure of negotiations
......... 444
Frederick s fifth expedition to Italy
...... 445
The battle of
Legnano,
1176........ 446
Acceptance of defeat by Frederick
...... 447
Treaty of Anagni
..........
ib.
End of the Schism
......... 448
Attitude of the Lombards
........ 449
The Treaty of Venice,
1177........ 450
The Third
Lateran
Council
........ 451
Death of Alexander III and election of Lucius III
...
ib.
The Peace of Constance,
1183....... 452
New causes of disagreement
..,...·· 453
2—2
XXXIV
Contents
CHAPTER
XIV.
THE EMPEROR HENRY VI.
By Austin Lane Poole, M.A.
PAOB
The Emperor Henry VI
........ 45-4
Results of the Peace of Venice
....... 455
Policy of Pope Lucius III
........
ib.
Marriage of Henry and Constance
...... 457
Urban Ill s hostile attitude towards the Emperor
.... 458
Gregory
VIII
and Clement III
....... 459
Rebellion
oí
Henry the Lion
....... 460
Election of Tancred of
Lecce
to the Siciliau crown
. . . 461
Situation in Sicily and South Italy
...... 462
Demolition of Tusculum
........ 463
Failure of Henry VI s first campaign in South Italy
. . . 464
Disturbances in Germany
........ 465
Disputed election to the see of
Liège
...... 466
Insurrection against the Emperor
...... 467
Imprisonment and release of Richard I
. . . . . . 468
Closing years and death of Henry the Lion
..... 469
Conquest of the Sicilian kingdom
....... 470
Extent of Henry s Empire
........ 472
Relations with the Eastern Empire
...... 473
Preparations for the Crusade
....... 474
Plan for making the kingship hereditary
..... 475
Negotiations with
Pope Celestine
III
...... 476
Proposed concessions to the Papacy
...... 477
Failure of the negotiations
........ 478
Rebellion against the Emperor
:
his death
..... 479
Judgment of contemporaries
....... 480
CHAPTER XV.
THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE DUCHY OF NORMANDY AND
THE NORMAN CONQUEST OF ENGLAND.
By the late William John Corbett, M.A., Fellow of King s
College, Cambridge.
Coronation of Earl Harold
1
φ «
481
Normandy and England compared
r
» ·
t
483
Normandy in the tenth century
.
» 4
•
484
Duke Richard II
. . . .
•
•
I
• · ib.
The duke s officers
....
Џ
1
I
· 1
485
The ducal revenue
. . .
■
Џ
џ 9
48β
The secular clergy
....
Џ
1
1*4
• ib.
The lay baronies
. . . . ,
ft
»
Џ Ш
(
487
A typical Norman fief
....
488
The system of knight s fees
· .
■
• 1
489
Contents xxxv
PAOB
The peasantry
.......... 490
Death of Richard
11.........
ib.
Normandy under Robert I
........ 491
The minority of William the Bastard
...... 492
Feudal plots
;
battle of Val-des-Dunes
...... 493
William and his kinsmen
;
his marriage
..... 494
The acquisition of the county of Maine
...... 495
The Norman Church under William
...... 496
William prepares to invade England
...... 497
The strength of the Norman army
...... 498
Defeat of Harold Hardrada
........ 499
Battle of Hastings,
1066........ 500
The Normans advance on London
....... 501
William crowned
.......... 502
Siege of Exeter
.......... 503
Revolt of Edwin and Morkere
.......
ib.
The harrying of the North
........ 504
Revolt of Here ward
. . . . . . . . .
ib.
The Conqueror re-allots the soil of England
..... 505
The evidence of Domesday Book
....... 506
The rental of England in
1086....... 507
The Crown lands
.......... 508
The ecclesiastical fiefs
......... 509
The lay fiefs
........... 510
Classification and tenure of the fiefs
. . . . . . 511
The quotas of military service
....... 512
The under-tenants and the peasantry
...... 513
William s anti-feudal measures
........ 514
The King s Court
.......... 515
Reform of the Church
.........
ib.
Archbishop Lanfranc
......... 516
William and the Papacy
........
ib.
Invasion of Scotland
......... 517
Revolt of Maine
..........
ib.
Peace with
Anjou
.......... 518
The rising of the Earls
......... ¿6.
Robert Curthose
..........
to.
Arrest of Bishop
Odo
......... 519
The oath of Salisbury
......... 520
The Conqueror s death
.........
ib.
CHAPTER
XVI.
ENGLAND,
1087—1154.
By the late William John Corbett, M.A.
Accession of William
Ruf
us
........ 521
Revolt of
Odo
of Bayeux
........
ib.
Rmnulf
Flambard
.......... 622
liowbray s rebellion
........· 523
Rnfus invades Normandy
........
té.
Rufos
and Scotland
:
annexation of Cumberland
.... ¿24
xxxvi Contents
PAGH
Conquest of South Wales: the marcher lordships
. . · · 625
Anselm
made primate
......... 626
The Council of Rockingham
........
tö.
Normandy mortgaged to Rufus
....... 627
His death. Accession of Henry I
.......
ib.
The coronation charter
......... 628
Henry s marriage
.......... 629
Duke Robert invades England
.......
ib.
Banishment of Robert of
Belieme
and William of Mortain
. . 630
Battle of Tinchebrai
......... 631
Anselm
opposes Henry
.........
ib.
The Investiture compromise
....... 632
Death of
Anselm
.......... ib.
Robert of Salisbury organises the Exchequer
. . . . 633
The itinerant justices
......... 634
The
Laga Eadwardi
restated
........ 635
Henry and the baronage
........
to.
The ports and portmen
........ 637
The boroughs in
1086,
and under Henry I
. . . . . 638
The battle of
Brémule
......... 539
The succession problem
........ 640
Death of Henry I
:
Stephen claims the throne
« 641
Stephen crowned: recognised by the Pope
..... 642
The opposition to Stephen
........ 643
Stephen in Normandy
.........
ib.
Outbreak of civil war
......... 644
Battle of the Standard
.........
ib.
Arrest of the bishops
......... 645
Matilda in England
.........
ib.
Stephen creates earls
......... 646
Stephen captured
.......... 647
Matilda driven from London
.......
ib.
Mandeville holds the balance
....... 648
Matilda leaves England
........ 649
Stephen and
Eugenius
III
........ 650
Geoffrey conquers Normandy
.......
ib.
Geoffrey succeeded by Henry of
Anjou
...... 651
Stephen makes peace with Henry
....... 652
Stephen s death
.......···
ib.
Character of his reign
.........
ib,
CHAPTER
XVII.
ENGLAND: HENRY II.
By Mrs Doris M. Stenton, Lecturer in History at University
College, Reading.
The kingdom secured
. ·
Wales and Scotland
Becket as Chancellor
.
Becket as Archbishop
.
The Constitutions of Clarendon
654
556
667
tò.
659
Contents
xxxvii
1Ъе
quarrel renewed
·.···
Beckeťe
flight
The reconciliation
.
Beckeťs
murder
Ireland
...........
Terme
of Henry s absolution
....
Reasons for the rebellion of
1173—74
Balance of parties
.....
First summer of rebellion
Second summer of rebellion
Its suppression
Henry s death
......
Twofold division of the reign
.....
The Exchequer and the Barons of the Exchequer
The
justiciar
......
Chancellor, Treasurer, and
curiales
The Sherifis
...........
Local
justiciare
......
Judicial experiments
.....
Centralisation of justice
....
The Grand Assize
.....
Procedure
...........
The Possessory Assizes and Final Concords
The
Gatta
of
1166
Conclusion
.......
PAOH
561
¿62
563
564
566
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
tò.
579
580
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
ib*
CHAPTER
XVIII.
FRANCE: LOUIS VI AND LOUIS
VII
(1108—1180).
By
Louis Halphen,
Professor in the University of Paris.
Louis VI
...... ....
Anarchy in the royal domain
.......
Struggle of Louis VI with the lesser barons
.....
Subjugation of Thomas of Marie
.......
Order re-established in the royal domain
.....
Louis VI and the great fiefs
........
The king s intervention in the
Bourbonnais
and
Auvergne
. .
The question of the succession to Flanders
.....
Louie VI and the Anglo-Norman kingdom
.....
Struggle with Henry I of England
......
Negotiations for peace
.........
Death of Louis VI
.........
The early years of Louis
VII
.......
Struggle with Count Theobald of Champagne
....
Conquest of Normandy by the Count of
Anjou
. . . .
Louis
VII
on crusade
......., .
Eleanor s divorce and re-marriage
......
Henry
Plantagenet
becomes King of England
....
Louis
VII
betroths his daughter to Henry the Younger
. ,
Henry II of England occupies the Norman Vexin
. . . .
Louis
VII
protects
Bocket........
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
601
602
603
604
60S
606
607
ih.
609
610
611
612
613
xxxviii Contents
PAGE
Further progress of Henry II
....... 614
Increase of royal power under Louis
VII
Louis
VII
supports Pope Alexander III
The interview at St Jean-de-Losne
Failure of negotiations with the Emperor
Organisation of the central government
Suger,
Abbot of St Denis
. . .
CHAPTER
XIX.
615
617
618
619
620
622
THE COMMUNAL MOVEMENT, ESPECIALLY IN FRANCE.
By the late Miss Eleanor Constance Lodge, D.Litt., Lady Margaret
Hall, Oxford, Principal of Westneld College in the University
of London.
General definition of Commune
....... 624
Communes
jurée*
.......... 626
Consulates
........... 627
Villes de
bourgeoisie
....... . 628
Bastides
and
Villes-neuves
........ 629
Rural communities
......... 630
Roman influence
.......... 631
Germanic influence
......... 632
Royal influence
.......... 633
Ecclesiastical influence
......... 634
The Crusades
.......... 636
Commercial influence
......... 637
Growth through struggle
........ 638
Peaceful development
......... 639
Economic progress
....... . 640
Serfdom and the towns
......... 641
The lords and the towns
........ 642
The influence of geography
........ 643
The influence of wealth and prosperity
...... 644
International character of the movement
..... 645
German and Italian towns
........ 646
Independent growth of the communes
...... 647
Affiliation of communes
........ 648
Communal groups
......... 649
Rural communes
.......... 650
Common property as a bond of union
...... 652
Common rights and duties
........ 653
The colonges of Alsace
.........
ib.
Valley communes of the Pyrenees
......
6Д4
General conclusions
......... . 656
Contents xxxix
CHAPTER XX.
THE MONASTIC ORDERS.
By Alexander Hamilton Thompson, M.A., Hon. D.Litt., F.B.
Α.,
F.S.A., Hon. Fellow of St John s College, Cambridge, Professor
of History in the University of Leeds.
PAGE
The Rule of St Benedict
.... .... 658
St Benedict of Aniane
. ........ 659
The Council of
Aix-la-Chapelle,
817...... 660
Carolingian monasticism
........ 661
Foundation of Cluny
.........
ib.
Odo
of Cluny
.......... 662
The Cltmiac and kindred movements
...... 663
Odilo
of Cluny
.......... 664
Cluny and the Papacy
......... 665
Influence of Cluny on monasticism
......
66β
The Order of Camaldoli
........ 667
La Cava,
Vallombrosa, and
Grandmont
...... 668
St Bruno and the Grande-Chartreuse
...... 669
The Carthusian Order
,......... 670
Fontevrault
.......... 671
Foundation of the Cistercian Order
...... 672
The Charter of Charity
......... 673
The Cistercian Constitution
........ 674
Cistercian lay-brothers
......... 675
Growth of Cistercianism
........ 676
Canons regular
.......... 678
Augustinián
Canons
......... 679
The Premonstratensian Order
....... 680
Double monasteries
......... 681
The Order of Sempringham
........ 682
Military Orders and Orders of canons
......
ib.
Orders and Congregations
........ 683
The Fourth
Lateran
Council,
1215.....„ 685
Monaeticism in the thirteenth century
......
iô.
Causes
of the decline of discipline
...... 687
Later Orders in Italy
. ......, 688
The Benedictine Constitutions,
1336
and
1339 ....
to.
State of learning in monasteries
....... 689
Evidence of visitation documents
....... 691
The later days of monasticism
....... 692
Development of the congregational system
..... 693
The Congregation of
Windesheim ....... 694
Fifteenth century attempts at reform
···.«, 695
The Reformation and monasticism
«····· 696
xl Contents
CHAPTER
XXI.
ROMAN AND CANON
LAW IN THE MIDDLE AGES.
By Harold Dexter Hazeltine, L.itt.D., F.B.A., Downing
Professor of the Laws of England, Cambridge.
PAGB
Origins in antiquity
......... 697
Periods of Roman legal history
....... 698
lus
civile and
lus
gentium
........ 700
Spread of Roman Law in ancient times
...... 701
Survival of non-Roman laws
.......
t
702
Legal characteristics of the Middle Ages
..... 703
Diffusion of Roman legal texts
....... 704
Differences between Civil and Canon Law
..... 705
Eastern and Western Canon Law
.......
ib.
lus antiquum
and
lus
novum ........ 706
Eastern collections of canons
....... 708
Western collections of canons
....... 709
The False Decretals
......... 710
Canonical collections before Gratian
...... 712
Gratian s Decretum
......... 713
The Corpus
turis
canonici .
. . . . . . . 714
Eastern and Western legal history
...... 715
Roman and Canon Law in the East
. . . . . · 716
Juristic studies
.......... 717
The
Έκ ογη
........... ib.
The
Basilics
........... 718
Graeco-Roman Law
......... 719
Greek Canon Law
.......... 720
Leges romanae and leges
barbarorum
...... 721
Alaric s Breviary
..........
to.
Lex
Romana
Burgundionum
. . . . . . . . 722
Edictum Theoderici
......... 723
Lex
Romana canonice
compta
........ 724
The Germanic codes
......... 726
Burgundián
and Visigothic codes
....... 726
The Frankish Capitularies
........ 727
German and Roman legal foundations
...... 728
Roman Law in Italy
......... 729
Roman influence on Lombard Law
...... 730
Ecclesiastical influence on secular law
...... 731
Legal studies in the West
........ 732
The Italian law-schools
......... 733
Rise of the
Bolognese
school
........ 734
Manuscripts of Justinian s law-books
...... 736
The
Glossatore
.......... 736
The Commentators
......... 738
Bartolus of Sassoferrato
........ 740
Influence of humanism on legal studies
...... 741
Study and teaching of Canon Law
....... 742
Roman and Canon Law in Spain
. ...... 743
Contents
xli
Roman and Canon Law in France
.
Legal growth in Germany
. ,
Switzerland and the Netherlands
.
Roman and Canon Law in England
Conclusion
.....
PAGE
748
752
765
756
7C2
CHAPTER
XXII.
MEDIEVAL SCHOOLS TO o.
1300.
By Miss Margaret Deanesly, M.A., Bishop
Fraser
Lecturer in
History in the University of Manchester, late Mary Bateson
Fellow, Newnham College, Cambridge.
Schools of rhetoric
Clerkship and the tonsure
Child
lectore
.
Episcopal schools
.
The Dark Ages
.
Early Frankish schools
.
Early monastic schools
.
Charlemagne s palace school
.
Alenin
......
Theodulf of Orleans
Poet-Carolingian episcopal schools
Chartres
.....
External monastic schools
765
767
768
769
770
771
772
773
774
ib.
776
778
779
CHAPTER
XXIII.
PHILOSOPHY IN THE MIDDLE AGES.
By W. H. V. Reade, M.A., Sub-Warden and Tutor of
Keble
College, Oxford.
Character of Ancient Philosophy
. ,
|
» «
ą
780
Philosophy and Theology
.
(
781
The medieval problems
.
I
782
The Latin world
......
«
783
The Carolinian Renaissance
і
784
John the Scot
......
4
.
ib.
Character of Christendom
1
t
788
Medieval knowledge of Plato and Aristotle
789
The influence of Macrobius
.
■
790
Importance of dialectic
. ,
»
t
ι
t
·
ib.
The tenth century
ι
*
Ρ
ι
ft t
I
791
Lanfranc
....
t »
I
•
і
t
Џ
792
Peter
Damian
. . ,
•
Ą
I
џ
ą
t
ib.
The work of
Anselm
t
■ *
t
4
t
4
ι
ib.
Realism and Nominalism
ft
í
Џ
4
794
Boecelm
· ,
» «
щ
796
Contents
РАО В
The position of
Abelard .....··. 796
Hugh of
St
Victor
......... 800
Peter the Lombard
... ..... 803
John of Damascus
.........
80Ő
John of Salisbury
..........
ib.
The new Aristotelian logic
........ 808
The School of
Chartres
......... 809
Intellectual progress in the twelfth century
. . . . . 810
The new Aristotle at Paris
. . . . . . . . 811
Translations from Greek and from Arabic
.....
ib.
Roger Bacon
.......... 813
Muslim influence
....... ...814
Fãrãbi
and Avicenna
......... 816
Algaze^ Averroes, Avencebrol
....... 817
Aristotelianism and the University of
Paria
..... ib.
Albertus
Magnus, Aquinas, and Averroism
..... 818
Siger of Brabant
.......... 821
Opposition to Thomism
....... 822
Philosophy and the Church
........ 823
The relation of reason to faith
....... 824
Roger Bacon s philosophy
........ 825
The final aim of medieval philosophy
...... 827
Duns Scotus
. .........
to.
The coming revolutions in thought
...... 829
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geographic | Holy Roman Empire History Franconian House, 1024-1125 |
geographic_facet | Holy Roman Empire History Franconian House, 1024-1125 |
id | DE-604.BV003753333 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-12-23T11:04:09Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0521045371 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-002381209 |
oclc_num | 489937975 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 DE-Di1 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-703 DE-824 DE-83 |
owner_facet | DE-384 DE-Di1 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-29 DE-703 DE-824 DE-83 |
physical | XLIV, 1005 S. Kt. |
publishDate | 1968 |
publishDateSearch | 1968 |
publishDateSort | 1968 |
publisher | Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spellingShingle | The Cambridge medieval history Geschichte Middle Ages |
title | The Cambridge medieval history |
title_auth | The Cambridge medieval history |
title_exact_search | The Cambridge medieval history |
title_full | The Cambridge medieval history 5 Contest of empire and papacy planned by J. B. Bury. Ed. by H. M. Gwatkin, J. R. Tanner, C. W. Previté-Orton, Z. N. Brooke |
title_fullStr | The Cambridge medieval history 5 Contest of empire and papacy planned by J. B. Bury. Ed. by H. M. Gwatkin, J. R. Tanner, C. W. Previté-Orton, Z. N. Brooke |
title_full_unstemmed | The Cambridge medieval history 5 Contest of empire and papacy planned by J. B. Bury. Ed. by H. M. Gwatkin, J. R. Tanner, C. W. Previté-Orton, Z. N. Brooke |
title_short | The Cambridge medieval history |
title_sort | the cambridge medieval history contest of empire and papacy |
topic | Geschichte Middle Ages |
topic_facet | Geschichte Middle Ages Holy Roman Empire History Franconian House, 1024-1125 |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002381209&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV003753328 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT buryjohnb thecambridgemedievalhistory5 AT gwatkinhenrymelvill thecambridgemedievalhistory5 |