Investiture Controversy

Investiture Controversy
Struggle between the papacy and the secular rulers of Europe over the latter's presentation of the symbols of office to churchmen.

Pope Gregory VII condemned lay investiture in 1078 as an unjustified assertion of secular authority over the church; the issue was pivotal in his dispute with King Henry IV and in the larger struggle over Henry's refusal to obey papal commands. Henry successfully drove Gregory from Rome and installed an antipope, but it would be Gregory's rejection of lay investiture that would ultimately prevail. Henry I of England renounced lay investiture (1106) in return for the guarantee that homage would be paid to the king before consecration, and the Concordat of Worms (1122) forged a similar compromise between Henry V and Calixtus II.

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Introduction

      conflict during the late 11th and the early 12th century involving the monarchies of what would later be called the Holy Roman Empire (the union of Germany, Burgundy, and much of Italy; see Researcher's Note), France, and England on the one hand and the revitalized papacy on the other. At issue was the customary prerogative of rulers to invest and install bishops and abbots with the symbols of their office. The controversy began about 1078 and was concluded by the Concordat of Worms (Worms, Concordat of) in 1122.

Background
      After the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD, significant changes took place within the churches (church and state) of the Germanic successor states, which generally ceased to look to the pope in Rome or to ecumenical councils for guidance. Instead, nobles and, especially, anointed kings assumed numerous Christian duties, including the protection and foundation of churches and abbeys, which they had often built and endowed. Although the canon law declaring that bishops were to be elected by the clergy and people of their future diocese was never abrogated, it was ignored. Bishops and abbots were nominated and installed by rulers in a ceremony known since the second half of the 11th century as investiture. The consecration of the newly minted bishop by his ecclesiastical superior then usually followed.

      When investing a bishop, the king presented him with a crosier (staff) and, since the reign of Emperor Henry III (1039–56), with a ring, saying “receive the church.” By church was meant not only the episcopal office (spiritualia) but also the pertinent rights and properties (regalia). In return the prelate swore fealty to the ruler, an action described since the late 11th century as homage (homage and fealty) (hominium or homagium). Homage obliged the bishop or abbot to assist the ruler both spiritually and materially by fulfilling the requirements of “service to the king” (servitium regis), including the payment of fees, distribution of ecclesiastical fiefs (benefices) to royal supporters at the king's request, hospitality, military support, and court attendance as an adviser and collaborator.

      As early as the 10th century, the interdependence of rulers and ecclesiastics had become particularly pronounced in the Ottonian empire. The chapters of royal collegiate churches formed something of a training ground for bishops, and the kings themselves became honorary canons at the most important cathedrals of their realms. Especially favoured churchmen were even entrusted with the office of count as well as with the rights and properties pertaining to the counties they administered. Investiture was the outward symbol of their authority. The ceremony drew the bishops closer to the emperor and made them a more reliable instrument of government than the ambitious nobles who frequently revolted against the monarchy.

Events
      Until the Gregorian Reform of the 11th century, these arrangements worked most often to the benefit of all concerned and were accepted by everyone, including the popes. By midcentury, however, nominations of bishops by temporal rulers, especially those for Italian dioceses, became controversial. In large part this was due to the revival of ancient canon law and the emphasis on its universal and contemporary applicability by the resurgent papacy. Cardinal Humbert of Silva Candida (died 1061) sharply criticized the contemporary method of episcopal and abbatial elections in 1058, pointing out that it completely reversed the order envisioned by the Church Fathers, which involved notification of the emperor at the end of the process. Pope Gregory VII (Gregory VII, Saint) (1073–85), however, still accepted lay investiture at the start of his papacy, but his increasing estrangement from King Henry IV (1056–1105/6) over the sovereign's refusal to obey papal commands eventually disrupted the traditional harmony between the two offices. In January 1076, at the assembly in Worms, Henry IV and the German and northern Italian bishops renounced their obedience to the pope and called on him to abdicate. As a result, Gregory deposed the king and excommunicated him and the bishops in February 1076. Despite a reconciliation in January 1077 at Canossa, where Henry appeared as a penitent sinner seeking the pope's forgiveness, tensions continued, and Henry was deposed and excommunicated again in 1080.

      Gregory VII eventually banned completely the investiture of ecclesiastics by all laymen, including kings. The prohibition was first promulgated in September 1077 in France by the papal legate Hugh of Die at the Council of Autun. At a council in Rome in November 1078 Gregory himself announced that clerics were not to accept lay investiture and extended and formalized the prohibition in March 1080. The renunciation of this customary prerogative was problematic for all rulers but especially for Henry IV. He now found himself opposed by an alliance of papal supporters and German princes bent on his removal from office. Civil war resulted, along with the princes' election of an antiking, Rudolf of Rheinfelden (Rudolf), and Henry's elevation of the antipope Clement III (Clement (III)). Gregory was driven from Rome and died in exile in Salerno under the protection of his Norman vassal Robert Guiscard.

Settlement
      The prohibition of investiture, however, was maintained and even extended under Gregory's successors. In fact, the controversy became a struggle for supremacy between the institutions of the church (sacerdotium) and monarchy (regnum). Finally, under Pope Paschal II (1099–1118) the differentiation between the spiritual and the temporal-secular (regalia) aspects of the episcopal office, first adumbrated in the 1090s by the famous canon lawyer Bishop Ivo of Chartres (Ivo of Chartres, Saint), enabled the opposing parties to reach a compromise. For France, this was informally agreed upon in 1107; in the same year, King Henry I of England (1100–35) formally agreed to abandon the practice of investiture but was allowed to retain the right to homage from ecclesiastics for the temporalities (regalia) of a bishopric or abbey.

      The dramatic capture of Paschal II by King Henry V of Germany in 1111, after negotiations over investiture failed, delayed a truce for the empire. The dispute over the procedures for the election, installation, and ordination of bishops there was not effectively ended until the pontificate of Calixtus II (1119–24), when the papacy and empire reached agreement at Worms in September 1122. According to this “concordat,” which was reluctantly ratified by the first Lateran Council in 1123, Emperor Henry V renounced investiture with ring and crosier and agreed to the free election of bishops and imperial abbots. Pope Calixtus II in turn permitted these elections of German prelates to take place in the presence of the king. In this compromise ceremony, the king, using a sceptre as a symbol, would invest the prospective bishops and abbots with the temporalities of their future sees prior to their consecration. Burgundian and Italian bishops were to be invested in this manner after their consecration. In Germany the constitutional consequences of the Concordat of Worms were far-reaching. The authoritative influence of secular and ecclesiastical princes dominated the future development of the much-weakened monarchy.

Uta-Renate Blumenthal

Additional Reading

The Investiture Controversy
Robert L. Benson, The Bishop-Elect: A Study in Medieval Ecclesiastical Office (1968), is a sophisticated analysis of the various elements involved in making a bishop. Uta-Renate Blumenthal (trans.), The Investiture Controversy: Church and Monarchy from the Ninth to the Twelfth Century (1988, reissued 1991; originally published in German, 1982), is a clear explanatory narrative of the historical evolution underlying the events and personalities and includes a detailed topical bibliography. Norman F. Cantor, Church, Kingship, and Lay Investiture in England, 1089–1135 (1958, reissued 1969), provides an analysis of English events with an emphasis on the contributions of Anselm of Canterbury. I.S. Robinson, Authority and Resistance in the Investiture Contest: The Polemical Literature of the Late Eleventh Century (1978), is an excellent study of the political and ecclesiological ideas expressed in the surprisingly vast literature produced in response to the investiture struggle. Gerd Tellenbach, Church, State, and Christian Society at the Time of the Investiture Contest, trans. by R.F. Bennett (1959, reissued 1991; originally published in German, 1936), is the classic study of the differing concepts of the idea of liberty and of hierarchy in church and state.

The monarchy
I.S. Robinson, Henry IV of Germany, 1056–1106 (1999), is a very useful biography. Stefan Weinfurter, The Salian Century: Main Currents in an Age of Transition (1999; originally published in German, 1991), is a very readable description of the social, economic, and political background of the Salian monarchy.

The papacy
H.E.J. Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, 1073–1085 (1998), is an admirable biography, based on contemporary written sources that have survived the centuries, of the pope who lent his name to the Gregorian Reform. Gerd Tellenbach, The Church in Western Europe from the Tenth to the Early Twelfth Century (1993; originally published in German, 1988), is important both for its history of the church and monarchy and for recent historiography.Uta-Renate Blumenthal

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Universalium. 2010.

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