Pope
St. Gregory VII
(HILDEBRAND).
One of the greatest of the Roman pontiffs and one of the most remarkable men of all
times; b. between the years 1020 and 1025, at Soana, or Ravacum, in Tuscany; d. 25 May,
1085, at Salerno. The early years of his life are involved in considerable obscurity. His
name, Hildebrand (Hellebrand)--signifying to those of his contemporaries that loved him
"a bright flame", to those that hated him "a brand of hell"--would
indicate some Lombard connection of his family, though at a later time, it probably also
suggested the fabled descent from the noble family of the Aldobrandini. That he was of
humble origin--vir de plebe, as he is styled in the letter of a contemporary abbot--can
scarcely be doubted. His father Bonizo is said by some chroniclers to have been a
carpenter, by others a peasant, the evidence in either case being very slender; the name
of his mother is unrecorded. At a tender age he came to Rome to be educated in the
monastery of Santa Maria on the Aventine Hill, over which his maternal uncle Laurentius
presided as abbot. The austere spirit of Cluny pervaded this Roman cloister, and it is not
unlikely that here the youthful Hildebrand first imbibed those lofty principles of Church
reform of which he was afterwards to become the most fearless exponent. Early in life he
made his religious profession as a Benedictine monk at Rome (not in Cluny); the house of
his profession, however, and the year of his entrance into the order, both remain
undetermined. As a cleric in minor orders he entered the service of John Gratian,
Archpriest of San Giovanni by the Latin Gate, and on Gratian's elevation to the papacy as
Gregory VI, became his chaplain. In 1046 he followed his papal patron across the Alps into
exile, remaining with Gregory at Cologne until the death of the deposed pontiff in 1047,
when he withdrew to Cluny. Here he resided for more than a year.
At Besancon, in January, 1049, he met Bruno, Bishop of Toul, the pontiff-elect recently
chosen at Worms under the title of Leo IX, and returned with him to Rome, though not
before Bruno, who had been nominated merely by the emperor, had expressed the intention of
submitting to the formal choice of the Roman clergy and people. Created a
cardinal-sub-deacon, shortly after Leo's accession, and appointed administrator of the
Patrimony of St. Peter's, Hildebrand at once gave evidence of that extraordinary faculty
for administration which later characterized his government of the Church Universal. Under
his energetic and capable direction the property of the Church, which latterly had been
diverted into the hands of the Roman nobility and the Normans, was largely recovered, and
the revenues of the Holy See, whose treasury had been depleted, speedily augmented. By Leo
IX he was also appointed propositus or promisor (not abbot) of the monastery of St. Paul
extra Mucros. The unchecked violence of the lawless bands of the Champagne had brought
great destitution upon this venerable establishment. Monastic discipline was so impaired
that the monks were attended in their refectory by women; and the sacred edifices were so
neglected that the sheep and cattle freely roamed in and out through the broken doors. By
rigorous reforms and a wise administration Hildebrand succeeded in restoring the ancient
rule of the abbey with the austere observance of earlier times; and he continued
throughout life to manifest the deepest attachment for the famous house which his energy
had reclaimed from ruin and decay. In 1054 he was sent to France as papal legate to
examine the cause of Berengarius. While still in Tours he learned of the death of Leo IX,
and on hastening back to Rome he found that the clergy and people were eager to elect him,
the most trusted friend and counsellor of Leo, as the successor. This proposal of the
Romans was, however, resisted by Hildebrand, who set out for Germany at the head of an
embassy to implore a nomination from the emperor. The negotiations, which lasted about
eleven months, ultimately resulted in the selection of Hildebrand's candidate, Gebhard,
Bishop of Eichstadt, who was consecrated at Rome, 13 April, 1055, under the name of Victor
II. During the reign of this pontiff, the cardinal-subdeacon steadily maintained, and even
increased the ascendancy which by his commanding genius he had acquired during the
pontificate of Leo IX. Near the close of the year 1057 he went once more to Germany to
reconcile the Empress-regent Agnes and her court to the (merely) canonical election of
Pope Stephen X (1057-1058). His mission was not yet accomplished when Stephen died at
Florence, and although the dying pope had forbidden the people to appoint a successor
before Hildebrand returned, the Tusculan faction seized the opportunity to set up a member
of the Crescentian family, John Mincius, Bishop of Velletri, under the title of Benedict
X. With masterly skill Hildebrand succeeded in defeating the schemes of the hostile party,
and secured the election of Gerard, Bishop of Florence, a Burgundian by birth, who assumed
the name of Nicholas II (1059-1061).
The two most important transactions of this pontificate--the celebrated decree of
election, by which the power of choosing the pope was vested in the college of cardinals,
and the alliance with the Normans, secured by the Treaty of Meifi, 1059--were in large
measure the achievement of Hildebrand, whose power and influence had now become supreme in
Rome. It was perhaps inevitable that the issues raised by the new decree of election
should not be decided without a conflict, and with the passing away of Nicholas II in
1061, that conflict came. But when it was ended, after a schism enduring for some years,
the imperial party with its Antipope Cadalous had been discomfited, and Anselm of Baggio,
the candidate of Hildebrand and the reform party, successfully enthroned in the Lateran
Palace as Alexander II. By Nicholas II, in 1059, Hildebrand had been raised to the dignity
and office of Archdeacon of the Holy Roman Church, and Alexander II now made him
Chancellor of the Apostolic See. On 21 April, 1073, Alexander II died. The time at length
had come when Hildebrand, who for more than twenty years had been the most prominent
figure in the Church, who had been chiefly instrumental in the selection of her rulers,
who had inspired and given purpose to her policy, and who had been steadily developing and
realizing, by successive acts, her sovereignty and purity, should assume in his own person
the majesty and responsibility of that exalted power which his genius had so long
directed.
On the day following the death of Alexander II, as the obsequies of the deceased
pontiff were being performed in the Lateran basilica, there arose, of a sudden, a loud
outcry from the whole multitude of clergy and people: "Let Hildebrand be pope!"
"Blessed Peter has chosen Hildebrand the Archdeacon!" All remonstrances on the
part of the archdeacon were vain, his protestations fruitless. Later, on the same day,
Hildebrand was conducted to the church of San Pietro in Vincoli, and there elected in
legal form by the assembled cardinals, with the due consent of the Roman clergy and amid
the repeated acclamations of the people. That this extraordinary outburst on the part of
the clergy and people in favour of Hildebrand could have been the result of some
preconcerted arrangements, as is sometimes alleged, does not appear likely. Hildebrand was
clearly the man of the hour, his austere virue commanded respect, his genius admiration;
and the prompitude and unanimity with which he was chosen would indicate, rather, a
general recognition of his fitness for the high office. In the decree of election those
who had chosen him as pontiff proclaimed him "a devout man, a man mighty in human and
divine knowledge, a distinguished lover of equity and justice, a man firm in adversity and
temperate in prosperity, a man, according to the saying of the Apostle, of good behaviour,
blameless, modest, sober, chaste, given to hospitality, and one that ruleth well his own
house; a man from his childhood generously brought up in the bosom of this Mother Church,
and for the merit of his life already raised to the archidiaconal dignity". "We
choose then", they said to the people, "our Archdeacon Hildebrand to be pope and
successor to the Apostle, and to bear henceforward and forever the name of Gregory"
(22 April, 1073), Mansi, "Conciliorum Collectio", XX, 60.
The decree of Nicholas II having expressly, if vaguely acknowledged the right of the
emperor to have some voice in papal elections, Hildebrand deferred the ceremony of his
consecration until he had received the royal sanction. In sending the formal announcement
of his elevation to Henry IV of Germany, he took occasion to indicate frankly the
attitude, which, as sovereign pontiff, he was prepared to assume in dealing with the
Christian princes, and, with a note of grave personal warning besought the king not to
bestow his approval. The German bishops, apprehensive of the severity with which such a
man as Hildebrand would carry out the decrees of reform, endeavoured to prevent the king
from assenting to the election; but upon the favourable report of Count Eberhard of
Nettenburg, who had been dispatched to Rome to assert the rights of the crown, Henry gave
his approval (it proved to be the last instance in history of a papal election being
ratified by an emperor), and the new pope, in the meanwhile ordained to the priesthood,
was solemnly consecrated on the Feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, 29 June, 1073. In assuming
the name of Gregory VII, Hildebrand not only honoured the memory and character of his
earliest patron, Gregory VI, but also proclaimed to the world the legitimacy of that
pontiff's title.
From the letters which Gregory addressed to his friends shortly after his election,
imploring their intercession with heaven in his behalf, and begging their sympathy and
support, it is abundantly evident that he assumed the burden of the pontificate, which had
been thrust on him, only with the strongest reluctance, and not without a great struggle
of mind. To Desiderius, Abbot of Monte Cassino, he speaks of his elevation in terms of
terror, giving utterance to the words of the Psalmist: "I am come into deep waters,
so that the floods run over me"; "Fearlessness and trembling are come upon me,
and darkness hath covered me." And in view of the appalling nature of the task that
lay before him (of its difficulties no one indeed had a clearer perception than he), it
cannot appear strange that even his intrepid spirit was for the moment overwhelmed. For at
the time of Gregory's elevation to the papacy the Christian world was in a deplorable
condition. During the desolating era of transition--that terrible period of warfare and
rapine, violence, and corruption in high places, which followed immediately upon the
dissolution of the Carlovingian Empire, a period when society in Europe and all existing
institutions seemed doomed to utter destruction and ruin--the Church had not been able to
escape from the general debasement. The tenth century, the saddest, perhaps, in Christian
annals, is characterized by the vivid remark of Baronius that Christ was as if asleep in
the vessel of the Church. At the time of Leo IX's election in 1049, according to the
testimony of St. Bruno, Bishop of Sengi, the whole world lay in wickedness, holiness had
disappeared, justice had perished and truth had been buried; Simon Magus lording it over
the Church, whose bishops and priests were given to luxury and fornication" (Vita S.
Leonis PP. IX in Watterich, Pont. Roman, Vitae, I, 96). St. Peter Damian, the fiercest
censor of his age, unrolls a frightful picture of the decay of clerical morality in the
lurid pages of his "Liber Gomorrhianus" (Book of Gomorrha). Though allowance
must no doubt be made for the writer's exaggerated and rhetorical style--a style common to
all moral censors-- yet the evidence derived from other sources justifies us in believing
that the corruption was widespread. In writing to his venerated friend, Abbot Hugh of
Cluny (Jan., 1075), Gregory himself laments the unhappy state of the Church in the
following terms: "The Eastern Church has fallen away from the Faith and is now
assailed on every side by infidels. Wherever I turn my eyes- -to the west, to the north,
or to the south--I find everywhere bishops who have obtained their office in an irregular
way, whose lives and conversation are strangely at variance with their sacred calling; who
go through their duties not for the love of Christ but from motives of worldly gain. There
are no longer princes who set God's honour before their own selfish ends, or who allow
justice to stand in the way of their ambition. . . .And those among whom I live--Romans,
Lombards, and Normans--are, as I have often told them, worse than Jews or Pagans"
(Greg. VII, Registr., 1.II, ep. xlix).
But whatever the personal feelings and anxieties of Gregory may have been in taking up
the burden of the papacy at a time when scandals and abuses were everywhere pressing into
view, the fearless pontiff felt not a moment's hesitation as to the performance of his
duty in carrying out the work of reform already begun by his predecessors. Once securely
established on the Apostolic throne, Gregory made every effort to stamp out of the Church
the two comsuming evils of the age, simony and clerical incontinency, and, with
characteristic energy and vigor, laboured unceasingly for the assertion of those lofty
principles with which he firmly believed the welfare of Christ's Church and the
regeneration of society itself to be inseparably bound up. His first care, naturally, was
to secure his own position in Rome. For this purpose he made a journey into Southern
Italy, a few months after his election, and concluded treaties with Landolfo of Benevento,
Richard of Capun, and Gisolfo of Salerno, by which these princes engaged themselves to
defend the person of the pope and the property of the Holy See, and never to invest anyone
with a church benefice without the papal sanction. The Norman leader, Robert Guiscard,
however, maintained a suspicious attitude towards the pope, and at the Lenten Synod (1075)
Gregory solemnly excommunicated him for his sacrilegious invasion of the territory of the
Holy See (Capun and Benevento). During the year 1074 the pope's mind was also greatly
occupied by the project of an expedition to the East for the deliverance of the Oriental
Christians from the oppression of the Seljuk Turks. To promote the cause of a crusade, and
to effect, if possible, a reunion between the Eastern and the Western Church--hopes of
which had been held out by the Emperor Michael VIII in his letter to Gregory in 1073--the
pontiff sent the Patriarch of Venice to Constantinople as his envoy. He wrote to the
Christian princes, urging them to rally the hosts of Western Christendom for the defense
of the Christian East; and in March, 1074, addressed a circular letter to all the
faithful, exhorting them to come to the rescue of their Eastern brethren. But the project
met with much indifference and even opposition; and as Gregory himself soon became
involved in complications elsewhere, which demanded all his energies, he was prevented
from giving effect to his intentions, and the expedition came to naught. With the youthful
monarch of Germany Gregory's relations in the beginning of his pontificate were of a
pacific nature. Henry, who was at the time hard pressed by the Saxons, had written to the
pope (Sept., 1073) in a tone of humble deference, acknowledging his past misconduct, and
expressing regret for his numerous misdeeds--his invasion of the property of the Church,
his simoniacal promotions of unworthy persons, his negligence in punishing offenders; he
promised amendment for the future, professed submission to the Roman See in language more
gentle and lowly than had ever been used by any of his predecessors to the pontiffs of
Rome, and expressed the hope that the royal power and the sacerdotal, bound together by
the necessity of mutual assistance, might henceforth remain indissolubly united. But the
passionate and headstrong king did not long abide by these sentiments.
With admirable discernment, Gregory began his great work of purifying the Church by a
reformation of the clergy. At his first Lenten Synod (March, 1074) he enacted the
following decrees:
- That clerics who had obtained any grade or office of sacred orders by payment should
cease to minister in the Church.
- That no one who had purchased any church should retain it, and that no one for the
future should be permitted to buy or sell ecclesiastical rights.
- That all who were guilty of incontinence should cease to exercise their sacred ministry.
- That the people should reject the ministrations of clerics who failed to obey these
injunctions.
Similar decrees had indeed been passed by previous popes and councils. Clement II, Leo
IX, Nicholas II, and Alexander II had renewed the ancient laws of discipline, and made
determined efforts to have them enforced. But they met with vigorous resistance, and were
but partially successful. The promulgation of Gregory's measures now, however, called
forth a most violent storm of opposition throughout Italy, Germany, and France. And the
reason for this opposition on the part of the vast throng of immoral and simoniacal
clerics is not far to seek. Much of the reform thus far accomplished had been brought
about mainly through the efforts of Gregory; all countries had felt the force of his will,
the power of his dominant personality. His character, therefore, was a sufficient
guarantee that his legislation would not be suffered to remain a dead letter. In Germany,
particularly, the enactments of Gregory aroused a feeling of intense indignation. The
whole body of the married clergy offered the most resolute resistance, and declared that
the canon enjoining celibacy was wholly unwarranted in Scripture. In support of their
position they appealed to the words of the Apostle Paul, I Cor., vii,2, and 9: "It is
better to marry than to be burnt"; and I Tim., iii, 2: "It behooveth therefore a
bishop to be blameless, the husband of one wife." They cited the words of Christ,
Matt., xix, 11: "All men take not this word, but they to whom it is given"; and,
recurred to the address of the Egyptian Bishop Paphnutius at the Council of Nice. At
Nuremberg they informed the papal legate that they would rather renounce their priesthood
than their wives, and that he for whom men were not good enough might go seek angels to
preside over the Churches. Siegfried, Archbishop of Mainz and Primate of Germany, when
forced to promulgate the decrees, attempted to temporize, and allowed his clergy six
months of delay for consideration. The order, of course, remained ineffectual after the
lapse of that period, and at a synod held at Erfurt in October, 1074, he could accomplish
nothing. Altmann, the energetic Bishop of Passau, nearly lost his life in publishing the
measures, but adhered firmly to the instructions of the pontiff. The greater number of
bishops received their instructions with manifest indifference, and some openly defied the
pope. Otto of Constance, who had before tolerated the marriage of his clergy, now formally
sanctioned it. In France the excitement was scarcely less vehement than in Germany. A
council at Paris, in 1074, condemned the Roman decrees, as implying that the validity of
the sacraments depended on the sanctity of the minister, and declared them intolerable and
irrational. John, Archbishop of Rouen, while endeavouring to enforce the canon of celibacy
at a provincial synod, was stoned and had to flee for his life. Walter, Abbot of Pontoise,
who attempted to defend the papal enactments, was imprisoned and threatened with death. At
the Council of Burgos, in Spain, the papal legate was insulted and his dignity outraged.
But the zeal of Gregory knew no abatement. He followed up his decrees by sending legates
into all quarters, fully empowered to depose immoral and simoniacal ecclesiastics.
It was clear that the causes of the simony and of the incontinence amongst the clergy
were closely allied, and that the spread of the latter could be effectually checked only
by the eradication of the former. Henry IV had failed to translate into action the
promises made in his penitent letter to the new pontiff. On the subjugation of the Saxons
and Thuringians, he deposed the Saxon bishops, and replaced them by his own creatures. In
1075 a synod held at Rome excommunicated "any person, even if he were emperor or
king, who should confer an investiture in connection with any ecclesiastical office",
and Gregory recognizing the futility of milder measures, deposed the simoniacal prelates
appointed by Henry, anathematized several of the imperial counsellors, and cited the
emperor himself to appear at Rome in 1076 to answer for his conduct before a council. To
this Henry retorted by convening a meeting of his supporters at Worms on 23 January 1076.
This diet naturally defended Henry against all the papal charges, accused the pontiff of
most heinous crimes, and declared him deposed. Theses decisions were approved a few weeks
later by two synods of Lombard bishops at Piacenza and Pavia respectively, and a
messenger, bearing a most offensive personal letter from Henry, was dispatched with this
reply to the pope. Gregory hesitated no longer: recognizing that the Christian Faith must
be preserved and the flood of immorality stemmed at all costs, and seeing that the
conflict was forced upon him by the emperor's schism and the violation of his solemn
promises, he excommunicated Henry and all his ecclesiastical supporters, and released his
subjects from their oath of allegiance in accordance with the usual political procedures
of the age.
Henry's position was now precarious. At first he was encouraged by his creatures to
resist, but his friends, including his abettors among the episcopate, began to abandon
him, and the Saxons revolted once more, demanding a new king. At a meeting of the German
lords, spiritual and temporal, held at Tibur in October, 1076, the election of a new
emperor was canvassed. Onlearning through the papal legate of Gregory's desire that the
crown should be reserved for Henry if possible, the assembly contented itself with calling
upon the emperor to abstain for the time being from all administration of public affairs
and avoid the company of those who had been excommunicated, but declared his crown
forfeited if he were not reconciled with the pope within a year. It was further agreed to
invite Gregory to a council at Augsburg in the following February, at which Henry was
summoned to present himself. Abandoned by his own partisans and fearing for his throne,
Henry fled secretly with his wife and child and a single servant to Gregory to tender his
submission. He crossed the Alps in the depth of one of the severest winters on record. On
reaching Italy, the Italians flocked around him promising aid and assistance in his
quarrel with the pope, but Henry spurned their offers. Gregory was already on his way to
Augsburg, and , fearing treachery, retired to the castle of Canossa. Thither Henry
followed him, but the pontiff, mindful of his former faithlessness, treated him with
extreme severity. Stript of his royal robes, and clad as a penitent, Henry had to come
barefooted mid ice and snow, and crave for admission to the presence of the pope. All day
he remained at the door of the citadel, fasting and exposed to the inclemency of the
wintry weather, but was refused admission. A second and a third day he thus humiliated and
disciplined himself, and finally on 28 January, 1077, he was received by the pontiff and
absolved from censure, but only on condition that he would appear at the proposed council
and submit himself to its decision.
Henry then returned to Germany, but his severe lesson failed to effect any radical
improvement in his conduct. Disgusted by his inconsistencies and dishonesty, the German
princes on 15 March, 1077, elected Rudolph of Swabia to succeed him. Gregory wished to
remain neutral, and even strove to effect a compromise between the opposing parties. Both,
however, were dissatisified, and prevented the proposed council from being held. Henry's
conduct toward the pope was meanwhile characterized by the greatest duplicity, and, when
he went so far as to threaten to set up an antipope, Gregory renewed in 1080 the sentence
of excommunication against him. At Brixen in June, 1080, the king and his feudatory
bishops, supported by the Lombards, carried their threat into effect, and selected
Gilbert, the excommunicated simoniacal Archbishop of Ravenna, as pope under the title of
Clement III. Rudolph of Swabia having fallen mortally wounded at the battle of Mersburg in
1080. Henry could concentrate all his forces against Gregory. In 1081 he marched on Rome,
but failed to force his way into the city, which he finally accomplished only in 1084.
Gregory thereupon retired into the exile of Sant' Angelo, and refused to entertain Henry's
overtures, although the latter promised to hand over Guibert as a prisoner, if the
sovereign pontiff would only consent to crown him emperor. Gregory, however, insisted as a
necessary preliminary that Henry should appear before a council and do penance. The
emperor, while pretending to submit to these terms, tried hard to prevent the meeting of
the bishops. A small number however assembled, and, in accordance with their wishes,
Gregory again excommunicated Henry. The latter on receipt of this news again entered Rome
on 21 March, 1084. Guibert was consecrated pope, and then crowned Henry emperor. However,
Robert Guiscard, Duke of Normandy, with whom Gregory had formed an alliance, was already
marching on the city, and Henry, learning of his advance, fled towards Citta Castellana.
The pontiff was liberated, but, the people becoming incensed by the excesses of his Norman
allies, he was compelled to leave Rome. Disappointed and sorrowing he withdrew to Monte
Cassino, and later to the castle of Salerno by the sea, where he died in the following
year. Three days before his death he withdrew all the censures of excommunication that he
had pronounced, except those against the two chief offenders--Henry and Guibert. His last
words were: "I have loved justice and hated iniquity, therefore I die in exile."
His body was interred in the church of Saint Matthew at Salerno. He was beatified by
Gregory XIII in 1584, and canonized in 1728 by Benedict XIII. His writings treat mainly of
the principles and practice of Church government. They may be found under the title
"Gregorii VII registri sive epistolarum libri" in Mansi, "Sacrorum
Conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio" (Florence, 1759) and "S. Gregorii VII
epistolae et diplomata" by Horoy (Paris, 1877).
ALZOG, Universal Church History, tr., II (Dublin, 1900), 321, 343-67; HASS, History of
the Popes (Tubingen, 1792); IDEM, Vindication of Gregory VII (Pressburg, 1786); BARRY, The
Papal Monarchy (New York, 1902), 190-232; BOWDEN, Life and Pontificate of Gregory VII
(London, 1840); VOIGT, Hildebrand, als Papst Gregorius VII., und sein Zeitalter, aus den
Quellen bearbeitet (Weimar, 1846), French tr. (Paris, 1854); LILLY, Work of Gregory VII,
the turning-point of the Middle Ages in Contemporary Review (1882), XLII, 46,237;
MONTALEMBERT, St. Gregoire VII, moine et pape in La Correspondant (1874), B, LXIII, 641,
861, 1081, tr. in The Month (1875), C, V, 370, 502 sqq., VI, 104, 235, 379 sqq.; ROCQUAIN,
La puissance pontificate sous Gregoire VII in Cpte. rendu acad. scien. mor.-polit. (1881),
F,XV, 315-50; DE VIDAILLON, Vie de Gregoire VII (Paris, 1837); DAVIN, St. Gregoire VII
(Tournai, 1861); DULARC, Gregoire VII et la reforme de l'Eglise au Xie siecle (Paris,
1889); GFORORER, Papst Gregorius VII, und sein Zeitalter (Schaffhausen, 1859-61); Acta
SS., May, VI, 102-13, VII, 850; MABILLON, Acta SS. O.S.B. (1701), VI, ii, 403-6; MANSI,
Sacrorum conciliorum nova et amplissima collectio (Florence, 1759-1798), XX, 60-391;
BRISCHAR in Kirchenlexicon, s. v. Gregor VII.; CASOLI, La vita di papa Sn Gregorio VII
(Bologna, 1885); Anal. Boll. (1892), XI, 324-6; WATTERICH, Pontificum Roman, vitoe exeunte
soeculo IX ad finem soeculi XIII. ab oequalibus conscriptoe (Braunsberg, 1864); HEFELE,
Gregor VII. und Heinrich IV. zu Canossa in Theolog. Quartalschr. (Tubingen, 1861).,XLIII,
3- 36; IDEM, Hist. concil., V, 1-166; JAFFE, Bibl. rer. German., II (1865), 1-9, 520;
IDEM, Reg. pont. Roman, (1851), 379, 384, 389, 402-43, 949; Centenario di papa S. Gregorio
VII in Civilta cattolica (1873), H, X, 428-45;Centenary of Gregory VII at Canossa in
Dublin Review, LXXXIII (London, 1878), 107; GIRAUD, Gregoire VII et son temps in Revue des
deux mondes, CIV, 437-57, 613-45; CV, 141-74; Gregory VII and Sylvester II in Dublin
Review, VI (London, 1839), 289. See also HERGENROTHER-KIRSCH, Kirchengeschichte; and
GORINI, Defense de l'eglise contre les erreurs historiques de MM. Guizot, Aug. et Am.
Thierry, Michelet, Ampere, etc., III (Lyons, 1872), 177-307.
THOMAS OESTREICH
Transcribed by Janet van Heyst
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume VI
Copyright © 1909 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, September 1, 1909. Remy Lafort, Censor
Imprimatur. +John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York
|