Pope
Callistus II
Date of birth unknown; died 13 December, 1124. His reign, beginning 1 February, 1119,
is signalized by the termination of the Investiture controversy which, begun in the time
of Gregory VII, had raged with almost unabated bitterness during the last quarter of the
eleventh century and the opening years of the twelfth. Guido, as he was called before his
elevation to the papacy, was the son of Count William of Burgundy, and both by his
father's and mother's side was closely connected with nearly all the royal houses of
Europe. His brother Hugh had been appointed Archbishop of Besancon, and he himself was
named Archbishop of Vienne (1088), and afterwards appointed papal legate in France by
Paschal II. During Guido's tenure in this office, Paschal II, yielding to the threats of
Henry V, was induced to issue the "Privilegium" (1111) by which he yielded up
much of what had been claimed by Gregory VII, but these concessions were received with
violent opposition and nowhere more so than in France, where the opposition was led by
Guido, the papal legate. The latter was present at the Lateran Synod (1112), and on his
return to France convoked an assembly of the French and Burgundian bishops at Vienne
(1112), where the investiture of the clergy was denounced as heretical, and sentence of
excommunication pronounced against Henry V because he had dared to extort from the pope by
violence an agreement opposed to the interests of the Church. These decrees were sent to
Paschal II with a request for confirmation, which they received in general terms, 20
October, 1112 (Hardouin, VI, 2, 1916).
Guido was later, apparently, created cardinal by Pope Paschal, though the latter does
not seem to have been quite pleased with his zeal in his attacks upon Henry V. On the
death of Paschal II (21 Jan., 1118), Gelasius II was elected pope, but he was immediately
seized by the Italian allies of Henry V, and on his liberation by the populace fled to
Gaeta, where he was solemnly crowned. Henry V demanded the confirmation of the
"Privilegium", but, receiving no satisfactory reply, set up as antipope under
the name of Gregory VIII, the Archbishop of Braga, Burdinus, who had already been deposed
and excommunicated for having crowned Henry at Rome with the imperial crown (1117).
Gelasius promptly excommunicated both the antipope and the emperor, but was himself
obliged to flee, and took refuge in the monastery of Cluny, where he died (January, 1119).
On the fourth day after the death of Gelasius (1 February), owing mainly to the exertions
of Cardinal Cuno, Guido was elected pope, and assumed the title of Callistus II. He was
crowned at Vienne (9 February, 1119).
His election was everywhere received with approbation. On account of his close
connection with the royal families of Germany, France, England, and Denmark, it was hoped
that he would be able to effect a favourable settlement of the controversy which had so
long distracted the Church. Even Henry V received the papal embassy at Strasburg, and
showed clearly that he was not unwilling to sue for peace, and at the same time he
withdrew his support from the antipope. It was even agreed that pope and emperor should
meet at Mousson. In 1119 (8 June) Callistus held a synod at Toulouse mainly to promote
disciplinary reforms in the French Church, and in October of the same year he opened the
council at Reims which had been contemplated in the preliminary arrangements made between
the emperor and the papal ambassadors at Strasburg. Louis VI and most of the barons of
France attended the council, which was composed of more than four hundred bishops and
abbots. It had been arranged that during the council the pope and emperor were to have a
personal conference at Mousson, and in compliance with this agreement Henry V arrived at
Mousson, not alone, as had been anticipated, but with an army of over thirty thousand men.
Callistus II left Reims to attend the conference at Mousson, but on learning of the
warlike preparations made by the emperor, and fearing that force was likely to be used to
extract from him prejudicial concessions, he hastily returned to Reims. Here the council
busied itself mainly with disciplinary regulations, especially with decrees against
investiture, simony, and concubinage of the clergy. In the end, as there was no hope of a
favourable compromise with Henry, it was determined that the emperor and the antipope
should be solemnly excommunicated in the presence of the assembled fathers and the
representatives of the secular authority (30 October, 1119). Before leaving France
Callistus tried to effect a settlement between Henry I of England and his brother Robert,
but his efforts in this direction were without result.
Callistus determined to visit Italy and Rome. In the latter city Gregory VIII,
supported by the German forces and the Italian allies of the emperor, had taken up his
residence, but on the approach of Callistus, who was everywhere received with
demonstrations of welcome, the antipope was obliged to flee to the fortress of Sutri, and
Callistus entered Rome amid the universal rejoicings of the populace. He went south to
secure the aid of the Normans of Southern Italy in his struggle against Henry V and
Gregory VIII. The negotiations were entirely satisfactory. Gregory was taken prisoner and
escorted to Rome (1121), where he was with difficulty saved from the wrath of the people,
and lodged in a prison near Salerno and afterwards in the fortress of Fumo. By the aid of
the princes of Southern Italy Callistus broke the power of the Italian allies of the
emperor in Italy, notably of Cencio Frangipani, who had already given so much trouble to
Gelasius II and to Callistus himself (1121).
Having thus established his power in Italy, he once more resolved to open negotiations
with Henry V on the question of investiture. The latter had already shown that he was
anxious to put an end to a controversy which had alienated from him his best friends, and
which threatened to endanger the peace of the empire. An embassy consisting of three
cardinals was sent by Callistus to Germany, and negotiations for a permanent settlement of
the investiture struggle were begun at Wurzburg (October, 1121). Here it was agreed that a
general truce should be proclaimed between the emperor and his rebellious subjects; that
the Church should have free use of her possessions; that the lands of those in rebellion
should be restored, and peace with the Church permanently established with the least
possible delay. These decrees were communicated to Callistus II, who despatched Cardinal
Lambert of Ostia as his legate to assist at the synod that had been convoked at Worms. The
synod began at Worms, 8 September, 1122, and 23 September the concordat known as the
Concordat of Worms (or Pactum Calixtinum) between the pope and the emperor was
concluded. On his side the emperor abandoned his claim to investiture with ring and
crosier and granted freedom of election to episcopal sees; on the other hand, it was
conceded that the bishops should receive investiture with the sceptre, that the episcopal
elections should be held in the presence of the emperor or his representatives, that in
case of disputed elections the emperor should, after the decision of the metropolitan and
the suffragan bishops, confirm the rightfully elected candidate, and lastly, that the
imperial investiture of the temporalities of the sees should take place in Germany before
the consecration, in Burgundy and in Italy after this ceremony, while in the Papal States
the pope alone had the right of investiture, without any interference on the part of the
emperor. As a result of this Concordat, the emperor still retained in his hands the
controlling influence in the election of the bishops in Germany, though he had abandoned
much in regard to episcopal elections in Italy and Burgundy.
To secure the confirmation of this Concordat of Worms, Calistus II convoked the First
Lateran Council (18 March, 1123). The council was most representative, nearly three
hundred bishops and six hundred abbots from every part of Catholic Europe being present.
The council solemnly confirmed the agreement that had been arrived at with Henry V with
regard to episcopal elections, and passed several disciplinary decrees directed against
existing abuses, such as simony and concubinage among the clergy. Decrees were also passed
against violators of the Truce of God, church-robbers, and forgers of ecclesiastical
documents. The indulgences already granted to the crusaders were renewed, and the
jurisdiction of the bishops over the clergy, both secular and regular, was more clearly
defined.
In the last few years of his life, Callistus II endeavoured to secure for the Church
the restoration in its entirety of the Patrimony of St. Peter, which had been greatly
diminished by the constant wars and rebellions; to break the power of the nobles in the
Campagna, and restore peace and order to the city of Rome itself, which had suffered much
since the time of Gregory VII. He also devoted much of his time to the interests of the
Church of France and to combating the errors and abuses which made their appearance in
that country in his time. In the Synod of Toulouse (1119) he condemned the teaching of
Peter de Bruis and his followers (Hardouin, VI, 2, 1977-84). He established the Church of
Vienne as the metropolitan church of the adjoining ecclesiastical provinces (1120),
thereby ending in favour of the former (that he still held as pope) the ancient
controversy between Vienne and Arles. For the privileges in favour of Vienne forged during
the reign of Guido, see Gundlach, "Streit der Bisthumer Arles und Vienne"
(1890). Duchesne maintains ("Fastes Eccl.", I, 145 sqq.) that only the more
recent of them date from the time of Guido (cf. Robert, "Calixte II", Paris,
1891). He settled several disputes between bishops and abbots in France, dispatched Gerard
of Angouleme as papal legate to Brittany, and finally confirmed the primatial rights of
Lyons over the Church of Sens. He demanded of Henry I of England the release of his
brother, Robert of Normandy, as well as the acknowldgment of Thurstan, whom he himself had
consecrated at Reims, as Archbishop of York. Henry at first refused, but on the threat of
excommunication he consented to admit Thurstan as Archbishop of York, and to acknowledge
the latter see's independence of Canterbury. In Spain he transferred the metropolitan
rights from the old see of Merida (Emerita) to Santiago de Compostella, to the
patron saint of which Callistus seems to have had a special devotion. He showed his
attention to Germany by the canonization of Conrad of Constance at the Lateran Synod
(1123) and by dispatching Otto of Bamberg as papal legate to regulate the Churches of
Pomerania. In Rome he devoted much attention to beautifying and improving the city, but
especially the church of St. Peter. He suppressed the suburban See of Santa Rufina by
uniting this diocese with Porto, so that thenceforth there were only six cardinal-bishops
instead of seven as had formerly been the case.
Callistus died in 1124, and after some dipute Honorius II was selected as his
successor. As to the great influence of the reign of Callistus II on the policy of the
Church there can be no dispute. Owing mainly to him the concessions so weakly made by
Paschal II were recalled, and on his own accession to the papal throne, his firmness and
strength of character secured a settlement of the controversy between Church and State
which, though not entirely satisfactory, was at least sufficient to assure a much needed
peace. Through his exertions he put an end to the wholesale bestowal of ecclesiastical
offices by laymen; he re-established the freedom of canonical elections and secured
recognition of the principle that ecclesiastical jurisdiction can come only from the
Church, while on the other hand he conceded to the secular authorities the influence to
which they were rightly entitled in the election of prelates who were at the same time the
most powerful and richest subjects of the State. On the other hand, he was blamed at the
time, principally by Archbishop Conrad of Salzburg, for not insisting upon the withdrawal
of the oath of homage which every bishop was required to make to the emperor or his feudal
lord, but it should be remembered that Callistus II well understood that unless something
were conceded peace was impossible, and that the oath of homage, however improper the
ceremony might seem, was not an unnatural demand on the part of the emperor in regard to
subjects who wielded such an enormous political power as did the bishops of the German
Empire.
Callistus II was not very remarkable for his literary productions; yet a few works have
come down to us which are ascribed to his pen. They are: "De Miraculis Sancti Jacobi
Apostoli", "De obitu et Vita Sanctorum", "Vita Caroli Magni
Imperatoris". Many letters attributed to him are preserved. These, together with his
other writings, may be found in Migne, P.L., CLXIII (1073-1383). Besides this edition,
thirty-six of his letters are contained in Hardouin's "Concilia" (VI, 2,
1949-1976). These same letters, with two additional, are published by Mansi (XXI,
190-218); some others are given by D'Achery [Spicilegium (Paris, 1723), II, 964; III, 478,
479]; some additional ones are to be found in "Magn. Bull. Rom. Continuat.",
III, ed. Luxembourg, 1730, 12. See INVESTITURES; VIENNE.
Biographies of Callistus II have been written by PANDULPHUS ALETRINUS, ARAGONIUS, and
BERNARDUS GUIDONIS (MURATORI, Script. Rer. Ital., III, 1, 418). Cf. WATTERICH, Vitae
Rom. Pontif., II, 115; MIGNE, P.L., CLXIII, 1071; ROBERT, Bullaire du pape Calixte
II (Paris, 1891); MAURER, Papst Calixtus II, in 2 parts (Munich, 1886, 1889).
For the Synod of Vienne, see MANSI, XXI, 175, and HARDOUIN, VI, 2, 1752. For the Synod of
Reims, MANSI, XXI, 187, and HEFELE, Conciliengesch., V, 344; HALLER, Die
Verhandlungen zu Mouzon (1119), etc. in Heidelberger Jahrbucher, 1892. For
Concordat of Worms, see MANSI, XXI, 273, 287, and JAFFE, Bibl. Rer. Germ., V, 383,
also MUNCH, Vollstandige Sammlung aller Concordate, I (Leipzig, 1830), and NUSSI, Conventiones
de Rebus Eccles. (Mainz, 1870); BERNHEIM, Zur Geschichte des Wormser Konkordates
(Leipzig, 1878); BRESLAU, Die kaiserliche Ausfertigung des Wormser Konkordates in Mitteil.
des Instituts fur Oesterreich. Gesch., 1885.
JAMES MACCAFFREY
Transcribed by Benjamin F. Hull
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume III
Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight
Nihil Obstat, November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York
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