CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
!1' THE JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY VOLUME THIRTY-THREE 1982 CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE LONDON NEW YORK MELBOURNE NEW SYDNEY 2z13s- ROCHELLE Published by the Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge Cß2 IRP 32 East 57th Street, New York, NY 10022, USA Q Cambridge PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN University AT THE Press 1982 UNIVERSITY MOIVUMENTA GERMANIAE NiSTO: iGA Bibliothek PRESS, CAMBRIDGE Journal of Euluiastical History, Pol.33, July 1982 3, -A'0- , The `Imperial Church System' of the Ottonian and Salian Rulers: a Reconsideration by TIA-iOTHY REUTER is a general consensus among historians that there was something quite special about the church policy of the O.ttonian and Salian rulers of Germany from Henry z to Henry in. The There normal reliance of the medieval king on his prelates was here turned into a deliberate and systematic exploitation of the potential of the Church as an instrument of government. These rulers used bishops and abbots, whom they appointed, as a counterweight to a turbulent and unreliable lay nobility. Many historians have, so to speak, followed them in this, have turned from the Ottonians' and Salians' complex and seemingly unsatisfactory relations with their aristocracy to their church policy. Here they have seen plan, system and harmony, so much so that the Church has come to be regarded as the principal instrument of government available to these rulers. Our picture of the Ottonian and Salian `imperial church system', the Reichskirchen}'steht of German historians, has been much refined by recent scholarship, ' but the essential outlines have not greatly altered since the time of Waitz and Giesebrecht. The purpose of what follows is to re-examine these outlines. The qualifications, doubts and re-interpretations * Much of the initial work for this paper was done while I was working in Germany on a scholarship from the Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst. My thanks are due to them and also to Christopher Holdsworth, Karl Leyser and Janet Nelson, who were kind enough to comment on an earlier draft. 1 Notably by J. Fleckenstein, Die Hofkapelle der ottonisch-salischenReichskirche. (Schriften der M. G. H. xvi. 2,1966); L. Auer, 'Der Kriegsdienst der Klerus unter den sächsischen Kaisern', i, hfitteilungen des Instituts fur österreichischeGeschichtsforschung(hereafter cited as df. LO. G. ), lxxix (1971), 316-407, and it, tf. 1. O. G., lxxx (1972), 48-70; C. Brühl, Fordrum, , Gistum, Serritium Regis, 2 vols., Cologne 1968; H: P. Wchlt, Reichsabtei and König, dargestellt am Beispiel der Abtei Lorsch mit Ausblicken auf Hersfeld, Stablo and Fulda (Veröffentlichungen des Max-Planck-Instituts lür Geschichte, xxviii, 1970). For further bibliography see L. Santifaller, 'Zur Geschichte des ottonisch-salischen Reichskirchensystems', Sitzungsberichteder österreichischeAkademie der Il'issenschaflen, phil. Klasse, (Vienna, i ccxxix, 1964) -hist. Ein Forschungsbericht', in Adel and and 0. Köhler, 'Das ottonische Rcichskirchcnsystem. Kirche. Festschrift fir Gad Tdlazbach, Freiburg im Breisgau 1968,141-204. '3 ECU 347 33 TIMOTHY REUTER least hinted been have at at expressed or many new; all not offered are been fully have 2 But literature. they articulated, and never in the existing Reichskirchensystem looking the as a whole to ask at it seems worth again functions have it did fact the in usually far performed could how or focus The it far how it, system. was a of to also ask to and attributed (and lesser bishoprics German be inevitably to the a , on attention will Contest, but it be Investiture before will also the extent the royal abbeys) in Europe look this at period, the elsewhere position to at necessary because an appearance of uniqueness and system has been fostered by Reich in isolation. in the considering conditions is it The broad outlines of the Reichskirchensystem as usually presented are kept hold Salians Ottonians The known. tight a on and well enough local bishoprics rejecting candiabbeys, often to royal and appointments dates and putting in their own men, and endowed these institutions with land and rights, which were expected to be used on the king's behalf And in his service. This control enabled the kings both to exploit the wealth fund in Church Church the trust to which wealth and and use as a of the Provided be deposited. that there was control over safely rights could farmed being be fisc in the out without effect could appointments, into laymen disappear land Grants to the might and rights of alienated. hereditary property; this was not the case with grants to of general mass bishops did Salian Ottonian and abbots not usually and ecclesiastics. breed, and when they did their children did not benefit from their father's increasingly became duke 3 Thus, the of or count offices while positions. difficult to control or to rely on, the Ottonians' and Salians' control of the Church meant that the whole of their Reich was still covered by a network fell fairly royal control and which under vacant of posts which remained frequently: the average length of an episcopate in this period was about fifteen years, and in about two-thirds of all years two or more bishoprics fell vacant; the figures for royal monasteries are more difficult to calculate, but a fair estimate would be that in a normal year about six to ten lost their prelates. nunneries monasteries and It is an essential feature of the Reiclukirchensystem as it is generally it indeed it deliberate that the that a system; was result a was or conceived ' It is of purposes. not supposed that this a number served policy which developed form its fully Henry in began under i; two periods in policy have increase in to a seen substantial supposed royal reliance are particular The first is last decades Otto Church. the two the i's reign, when of on 2 Seefor example below, pp. 349 n. 5,352 n. 26,356 n. 51,365 n. 1o6. In general the has been literature more cautious than general works. specialist a A. Hauck, KirchengeschichteDeutschlands, 5th cdn, Leipzig 1925, iii. 566-7, gives a few incelibate bishops. of examples ° See typically 0. Köhler, Das Bild des geistlichen Fürsten in den Viten des 1o-rt. und t:. Jahrhunderts (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, lxxvii, 1935), g: `The bishops were to become the basis of royal power... tools of the royal will... supporters of ' ducal Reich tendencies. idea against a of the 348 ý THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' he is held ta have turned to the episcopate as an alternative to the failed strategy of rule through dukes drawn from his own family. ' The second is the reign of Henry u, when royal control over church appointments was greatly increased and was accompanied by a more intensive exploitation of the Church than earlier rulers had practised. " The policy had important corollaries. First, it is supposed to have given the Ottonians and Salians an additional reason for wishing to control the papacy and Italy. Although few tenth- and eleventh-century popes enjoyed high personal prestige, the papacy remained an authority generally acknowledged by the German episcopate. It was vital to control the papacy in order to be able to short-circuit this potentially dangerous outside influence.? Second, it was as a part and a consequence of the Reichskirchensystemthat the Ottonians and Salians came to take on the attributes of a rex et sacerdos, of priestly kingship. " At the great Church feasts of Christmas, Easter and Whitsun and on other important occasions, the ruler appeared in splendour as the vicarius Christi. His special and direct relationship with God was depicted in an occasionally bizarre iconography and was stressed liturgically? All this is supposed to have quietened uneasy consciences among churchmen. In a famous passage in his Chronicon,Bishop Thietmar of Merseburg said: Our kings and emperors, set in the stead of the highest ruler in this earthly pilgrimage, dispose of this matter [the appointment of bishops] alone, and are deservedly set over their other prelates. For it is quite unfitting that those whom Christ made princes of the earth in his image should be under the rule of any except those who, like the Lord, exceed all mortals in the glory of unction and coronation. '° e Auer, `Kriegsdienst, t', 322,335; J. Fleckenstein, `Das Reich der Ottonen im to. Jahrhundert', in B. Gebhardt, Handbuch derDeutschenGeschichte,9th edn by H. Grundmann, Stuttgart 1970, i. 245-6. For dissent from this communis opinio sec K. J. Leyser, Rule and Conflict in an Early Medieval Society. 0ttonian Saxony, London E. Otto, Die 1979,27; Entwicklung der deutschenKirchenvoglei im ro. Jahrhundert (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, lxxii, 1933), 151-2: `One cannot say that [Otto t] wanted to subordinate the lay princes with the help of the Church. Nothing could be done with the help of the Church as a power; the basis of its strength was small and dwindling. ' 8 T. Schieffer, `Heinrich it. und Konrad it. Die Umprägung des Geschichtsbildes durch die Kirchenreform des 11. Jahrhunderts', DeutschesArchiv für Erforschung desMittelalters, viii (1951), 394-5; Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 220. 7 K. Bosl, `Deutschlands staatlich-politisches Gewicht im Zeitalter der Ottonen und ersten Salier', in Gebhardt, Handbuch,i. 764; Santifaller, `Reichskirschensystem', 408 See below, p. 372 and nn. 143-4- ' Both the liturgical/ceremonial and the iconographical aspects of kingship have been the subject of intensive study, following the pioneering work of P. E. Schramm' and E. H. Kantorowicz. The premises and results of much of this work, which began as a reaction against an excessive positivism in medieval political history, have now become somewhat rarified; for acute observations on how these aspects of kingship related to other more earthy ones see Leyser, Rule and Conflict, 75-108. 10 ThietmarofMMerseburg, Chronicon,i. 26, ed. R. Holtzmann (M. G. H. Scriptores rerum Germanicarum (hereafter cited as SRG), nova series, ix, 1935), 33" 349 13-2 TIMOTHY REUTER Third, the concentration of resources on the Reichskirchensysieniis said to have had fatal consequences for Salian rulership when the quasi-divine king the and royal appointments to ecclesiastical office came status of The in fire the the movement. course of eleventh-century reform under Ottonians and Salians, it is held, had put too many eggs in one basket; Gregory vii and Urban II cut through the handle and the eggs were smashed. " This, then, is what Karl Leyser has called `the schematic Ottonian it, historical 1.12 In we may examining parlance church system of common begin by looking more closely at the way in which men became bishops in Liege died kind When Nithard 1042 the the they of men were. of and Wazo him to Henry iii with the episcopal staff and wanted sent chapter The king letters, election. considered the matter with of presumably and his court. Many said that the election had been made without royal approval; that bishops should be promoted from the ranks of the chaplains; and that Wazo had not sweated at the royal court to earn his promotion. Henry was at first inclined to agree with this, but was persuaded otherwise by Bruno of Würzburg and Herimann of Cologne, and agreed to Wazo's election. 13This story illustrates the `constitutional' for the elements in the Reichskirchensystem : royal need as generally conceived approval of elections and the importance of membership of the capella. It also hints at other things which are less frequently mentioned by historians, though they are referred to often enough in the Vitae and Gestaof Ottonian and Salian bishops: the fierce scramble for bishoprics when they fell vacant, and the need in the scramble to have powerful and influential backers. The need for royal approval of elections was clearly something felt throughout the tenth and early eleventh centuries, but it is quite hard to pin down what it meant and what the legal basis for it was. The `older' bishoprics - those not founded by the Ottonians themselves had the right of free election, which meant in particular not having an outsider thrust upon them against their will. This right might be guaranteed by a royal privilege, but this was not necessary. 14 Increasingly, however, the Ottonians and Salians came to regard such a right as implying merely the right to propose a candidate. Particularly under Henry ii, the king often refused to accept such a proposal and instead insisted on a candidate of his own. 15 The forms of electio canonica were preserved by the chapter's 11 H. Mitteis, The Slate in the Middle Ages, trans. H. F. Orton, Amsterdam 1975,109, 192. 12 K. J. Leyser, review of Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, E. H. R., lxxxv (1970), 115. 13 Anselm of Liege, Gesta episcoporum Tungrensium, Traiectensium et Leodiensium, c. 50, M. G. H. Scriptorum tomus (hereafter cited as SS), vii. 219-20. 14 G. Weise, Königtum und Bischofswahl im fränkischen und deutschenReich vor dem Investiturstreit, Berlin 1912,57-63,95-715 Hauck, Kirchengeschichte Deutschlands, iii. 28-33,397-407; 208-11. 350 Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, THE GERMAN 'IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' giving its `free election' subsequently, a procedure now also extended to the newer Ottonian foundations, and there was some attempt to tidy up episcopal privileges, either by leaving out any reference to the right of election or by inserting a reservation: aequoconsensuregis, though this was not followed through with any great consistency. 1e It might seem, then, as if rulers acquired an ever tighter control over episcopal appointments, but this would be an over-simplification. There was considerable resistance to royal designation of outsiders; perhaps in consequence, Henry it's successorsshowed themselves less willing than he had been to override the chapter. Most chapters at least tried to elect, even if they could not carry it through, and often the unsuccessful candidate would be promised a later bishopric. '' Moreover, there is a danger of over-systematisation. Where we know anything about the circumstances of an election, it is generally true that the court was involved. 18 But it does not follow that where we know nothing about the election the king probably had a hand in it. Schlesinger's statement that `just as the lord of the church appointed the priest of his Eigenkirche, so the king appointed the bishops of Merseburg, Meissen and Zeitz', 19is at leastforMeissen and Zeitz largely hypothesis. Quite apart from the question of whether the royal power to nominate really was a proprietary one, 20 we do not even know the precise dates of office of some of these bishops, and it does not follow from the fact that some had been capellani that they were the king's nominees. 21 Royal influence over episcopal elections seems to have been more intense in Ostfalia and in the Rhine and Main valleys than elsewhere. These were the areas where kings were frequently present and had more concentrated is 22 in fiscal lands there that through respect their and rights, and power 16 The clauses are found in all renewals of episcopal privileges of election after 1002 henceforth here DHu (royal diplomata for Halberstadt, are referred that and 13 except initial of ruler's name; regnal number; to in the conventional way: D[D] for Diploma[ta]; number of the diploma in the NIGH edition). But there were very few of these renewals, and they did not coincide with episcopal elections, where such privileges seem normally to have played little part. For an example of simple omission of the right of free election from a confirmation of a privilege by Henry it, see H. Bannasch, Das Bistum Paderborn unter On developments den Bischöfen Re her and dleinwerk (983-1o36), Paderborn 1972,46-7. under Henry u see Weise, Königtum, 117f . Schieffer, `Heinrich it. and Konrad u. ', 394-7" Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 208. 17 Hauck, KirchengeschichteDeutschlands, iii. 29,400-3; 18 C. Brühl, `Die Sozialstruktur des deutschen Episkopats im I I. and 12.Jahrhundert', in Le Istituzioni ecclesiastiche della `societaschristiana' dei secoliXI--XII: diocesi,pievi eparrochie (Atti della Sesta Settimana Internazionale di Studio [Mendola], Milano, 1-7 settembre 1974, Milan 1977), 5119 W. Schlesinger, Kirchengeschichte im Mittelalter, Cologne 1962, i. 269. Sachsens 20 Probably it was not. See P. Classen, 'Das Wormser Konkordat in der deutschen Verfassungsgeschichte' inJ. Fleckenstein (ed. ), Investiturstreit and Reichsverfassung(Vorträge Gcand Forschungen herausgegeben vom Konstanzer Arbeitskreis für mittelalterliche schichte, xvii, 1973), 453-4, commenting on the controversy on this subject between 21 See below, p. 355 and n. 43. Julius Ficker and George Waitz. 22 For the royal filer,see below, pp. 364-6; there is a good map of the Salian demesne Verlag, SchulbuchinJ. Engel (ed.), GrosserHistorischerWeltatlasherausgegeben von:Bayerischen II: Mittelalter, Munich 1970,78-9. 351 TIMOTHY REUTER Otto between be difference west i and a an supposed as might not so much Frankish count controlling his local bishopric. Not until the eleventh become Swabia24 in Bavaria23 did and royal control over elections century is The it more abbeys case of royal was never complete. general, and being `freedom' libera The of the signified grant of electio straightforward. founder from freedom the into the or of claims taken royal protection, founders, and privileges granting it could simultaneously describe the do Not king. by been having 1073 we the until chosen as abbot current find a privilege specifically excluding royal nomination. 25 Even so, royal in have been by the even to universal, no means choice of abbots seems 2s eleventh century. As far as the men who were chosen are concerned, historians have drawn attention to two overlapping groups: members of the royal chapel and men importance The house. by blood of the the to royal or marriage related in became, By becoming is effect, a clerical a capellanus one chapel obvious. 27 A in king. take the of capellanus could part such central government vassal Ottonians letters Salians indulged in: in the the and and of writing as charters (though this was menial work, less well rewarded with promotion than that done by other capellani); in embassies; in acting as the king's by Josef The in fine book been has a representative. capella studied Fleckenstein, a sequel to an earlier study of the Carolingian origins of the institution. 28 And yet Fleckenstein's own work shows very well that the capella was not a homogeneous body of men. An Ottonian capellanusmight be anything from an insignificant notary to a well-heeled aristocrat holding several benefices and perhaps with patrimony of his own. Those bottom the probably had little contact with those at the top, and it is at Not interests. that they all capellani had kept in unlikely shared common become had Wazo Liege, the contact with ruler who close a capellanus of under Conrad ii, had not done so.29 The evidence that men were or had been capellani is so tenuous or speculative in many cases that it hardly suggests that their links with the court were close ones.30 There is some 23 S. Hirsch and H. Pabst, Jahrbücherdesdeutschen ReichesunterHeinrich II, Leipzig 1878, i. 84-7; Auer, 'Kriegsdienst, I', 406-7. Sigmaringen 1978,153-So: even when the dukes 24 H. Maurer, Der HerzogvonSchwaben, did not appoint to the bishoprics of Chur, Constance, Augsburg and Strassburg, the bishoprics were part of the duke's sphere of ecclesiasticalinfluence (p. 159); so were many (pp. 161-81). of the Reichsklöster 25 T. Mayer, Fürstenand Staat, Weimar 1950,25. For early privileges see for example DD 01 34 and 192 for Lorsch. DH Iv 26o for Einsiedeln runs: `Cumque abbatem constituendum tempus poposcerit, non quilibet regis potestate cis praeponatur, sed quern fratrum electio idoneum iudicaverit, regis tam petitione quam constitutione huius nominis onus subire cogatur. ' 26 Wehlt, Reichsableiand König, 317,323-4,374-6. 27 Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 177- 28 Ibid.; the earlier work is Die Hofkapelle der deutschen Klinige, 1: Grundlegung. Die karolingische Hofkapelle (Schriften der M. G. H., xvi, 1,959). 28 Anselm of Liege, C. 43, pp. 2 15-16. 30 Of the eight bishops of Würzburg from Poppo 1(941-61) to Adalbero (1045-9o), only Bruno before See Poppo their the were certainly members elections. 1 and of capella two, 352 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' evidence from the reign of Conrad It and Henry III for the capellani acting and feeling as a group; but it was a group more like a trade union than an officers' mess, resenting the outsiders who were still getting the jobs to which it felt its members were entitled: a Bardo of Mainz or a Wazo of Liege. " Even in the period from Otto HI's majority to Henry u's final illness (994-1021), over a third of all bishoprics went to men outside the capella, and the normal proportion, even under Henry in, was much higher, usually more than half. Moreover, chapel-appointments were not spread evenly over the forty-odd sees: Speyer, Verden and Metz had no ex-capellanusas bishop between 919 and 1056; Worms, Würzburg and, in the eleventh century, Cologne, Augsburg and Bamberg were occupied almost continuously by capellani 32 Those men who did pass through the capella to the episcopate were not of a different type from those who did not, either in their relations with the king or socially. Capellani were not all equally close to the king, as we have seen, and some men who undoubtedly to were close were appointed bishoprics without going through the capella - Gundechar of Eiehstätt and Warmann of Constance, for example 33 One or two - Anno of Cologne and . Durand of Liege - were of modest or even unfree origin 31 but the They might well have overwhelming majority were high aristocrats. in any case. The bishopric of Worms illustrates expected promotion this but the five bishops from nicely. It was certainly a chapel-bishopric; Franco to Arnold (ggg to 1o65) seem to have belonged to the Hessian same kin-group, (979-88), as perhaps did their predecessor Hildebald also a 35 capellanus. Other bishoprics were also held for long periods by members Metz by the Luxemburger, Verden by the Billungs. 3B No of a kindred: bis the review of the evidence in A. Wcndehorst, Das Bistum Würzburg,I: Die Bischofsreihe 124 (Germania Sacra, neue Folge i, 1962), 61,63-4,67-8.70-1,75-6,89,101-3. Fleckenstein, Hofkapeilt, makes all eight bishops cx-capellani,expressing doubts only about Meinhard (pp. 212,226) and Bcrnward (pp. 79,81 n. 131). Here and elsewhere Fleckenstein has deduced membership of the capellafrom other known contacts with the court or by making plausible identifications. No doubt many of these deductions are correct, but the cumulative effect of a presumption in favour of capella-membershipmust be to exaggerate its importance. Si For Wazo's case,seeabove, p. 350 and n. 13; for Bardo, see Vita Bardonismaior,c. 15, M. G. H. SS, xi. 329-3032 These figures are taken from the lists in Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 52-3,75,114-15, (but for Würzburg, see above, 11.32). 211-12,224-6,289-90 33 Anonymus Hascrensis, c. 25, M. G. H. SS, vii. 260; Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle,225. 34 D. Lück, 'Erzbischof Anno it. von Köln, Standesverhältnisse, verwandsehaftliche Beziehungen and Werdegang bis zur Bischofsw"cihe',AnnalendeshistorischenVereins für den (1970), 9-31, hasshown that Anno's origins, though modest, were lesslowly Wiederrhein, cxii . than had been supposed; for Durand, see Ansclm of Liege, C. 36, p. 2og. Brühl, 'Sozialstruktur', 48, points to a number of other caseswhere a former presumption of low or servile birth has had to be abandoned. 35 W. Metz, 'Zur Herkunft and Vcrwandschaft Bischof Burchards 1. von Worms', Jahrbuchfür Landesgeschichit, Hessisches xxvi (1976), 31-42. 3' H. Renn, Das erst LuxemburgerGraf nhaus r 124; 13-1136), Bonn 1941,9,44ff, H. J. Freytag, Die Herrschaft der Billunger in Sachsen(Studien and Vorarbeiten zum historischen Atlas Niedersachsen, xxiv, 1931), 46 and genealogical table. 353 TIMOTHY REUTER doubt the king usually confirmed these appointments; he may even have did he but kin-group; from the not among eligible members of a chosen The do highly aristocratic nature of the that. than more necessarily has feature Reicltskirchettsystetn the which another of episcopate explains been misinterpreted: the large number of bishops related to the royal house. 37 As the Ottonian ruling elite consisted of a small number of interrelated kindreds, this was inevitable.: " Relationship to the royal house is simply a special case of interrelatedness among Ottonian and Salian prelates. Pairs of brothers were not uncommon; 39references to cognatio are so common that it is exceptional to find a bishop about whom anything 40 beyond has is known the name who no episcopal relatives . The at all same is probably true of abbots. It does not follow automatically from the fact that a bishop or abbot was the king's cognatus that he owed his appointment to cognatio,or even that he stood especially close to the king: a good example is Gebhard of Regensburg, who was Conrad it's halfbrother, but is known not to have had a particularly close relationship with Conrad. 41The `royal' bishops cannot be treated as a group any more than the `chapel' bishops. Chapters might often themselves seek to elect men in either category, because of the influence they had at court or just because they thought them suitable: the initial choice ofBruno in 953 came from Cologne, and Ohtric, Magdeburg's rejected candidate in 981, was a capellanus,though not of long standing. 42 What has been said so far may have cast some doubt on the conventional view of the Ottonians and Salians filling vacancies with men whom they had carefully chosen as suitable members of a system. Even where the king did definitely appoint or confirm the appointment, others had a say. When 31 H. Schnitger, Die deutschenBischöfe aus den Königssippen von Otto I. bis Heinrich l., Munich 1938, provides a convenient guide to these: some 5o bishops elected between 936 and 1106 were related to the ruling house, and a further 20 probably were (p. 94). See also Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 55. 38 See R. Schölkopf, Die sächsischenGrafen, gig-1024 (Studien und Vorarbeiten zum historischen Atlas Niedersachsens, xxii, 1957) and the comments by K. Schmid, 'Bemerkungen zu einer Prosopographie des frühen Mittelalters', Zeitschrift für württembergische , Landesgeschichte,xxiii (1964), 215-27; Leyser, Rule and Conflict, part i: `Otto 1 and his Saxon enemies', passim. 38 Heribert of Cologne and Henry of Würzburg: Vita Heriberti archiepiscopiColoniensis auctoreLantberto,c. 4, M. G.H. SS, V. 742; Heribert and Gozmann of Eichstätt: Anonymus Haserensis,cc. 32-3, M. G. H. SS, vii. 263 (they were also related to Heribert of Cologne, c. 27, p. 261); Franco and Burchard t of Worms: Vita Burchardiepiscopii1'ormatiensis,c. 3, M. G. H. SS, iv. 833; Wlrarmann and Eppo of Constance: Annales Hildcshcimenses, s.a. G. G. H. SRG, 1878), p. 38. Waitz (M. ed. 1034, introduction to Thietmar, pp. vii-xv, shows how numerous Thietmar's relatives were; the number is larger than in most other cases only because we are informed Thietmar's family. See the observations by K. J. Leyser, about well exceptionally `Debate: Maternal kin in early medieval Germany', Past and Present, xlix (1970), 13441 Schnitger, Bischöfe aus den Königssippen, 67. 40 R. Holtzmann's 42 Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 31 (Bruno), 42 (Ohtric). Bruno's election was naturally welcome to Otto i, but Fleckenstein seemsto press the sources too far when he says that the election was `directly arranged by the king'. 354 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' Rothard of Cambrai died in 995, Notker of Liege urged his archdeacon, Erluin, to hurry to Mathilda of Quedlinburg, Otto iii's aunt, whose familiaris Erluin was, so that he might be appointed through her influence. Otto ill's sister, Sophia, also had a candidate, Azelin, the son of Baldwin persuaded Flanders; it Otto that to and of was only after a struggle was appoint Erluin. 43Here we can see promotion-hungry ecclesiastics grouping themselves around members of the royal house, just as the lay aristocracy did. 44 We can also see the importance of bishops who tried to get their proteges appointed, as indeed we have already seen it in the account of the election of Wazo of Liege. Some, like Gerald of Cambrai, merely designated their own successors.45 Others spread their nets more widely. Otto i's brother, Bruno of Cologne; Notker of Liege; Willigis of Mainz; Anno of Cologne; Bruno of Würzburg: 411these and others took pains to `place' their relatives and clerical followers in good posts, and these connections and the ties of cognalio were as important in giving the Ottonian and Salian episcopate a sense of corporate identity as the ties with the court through the chapel which Fleckenstein has stressed. The king played a vital part in many elections, but he did not have a free hand or the opportunity to impose a `policy'. Rather, he selected from among candidates for the bestowal of patronage; he was, in effect, the means by which not only he but others - queens, bishops and nobles - could advance their kinsmen and proteges. Though the king was thus not the only patron, the system hinged on him, and his ability to give high church office 47 for his Reich; families leading the was crucial relations with the of noble he could please not only the recipient of office, but also the petitioner. Bishoprics could be given to win back a disaffected kindred, as when Otto i gave Halberstadt to Hildiward, saying `here is the wergeld for your father'. 48They could be held back ifa family's loyalty was suspect, as Otto i tried to do to Gero when he was elected to Cologne in 969.40 Bishoprics went surprisingly often to members of local kindreds. The appointment of Camtracrnsium, 43 Gestaepiscoporum c. t to, S.G. H. SS, vii. 4.18.Azelin again tried to buy the bishopric on Erluin's death (c. 122, p. 454)41 Leyser, Rule and Conflict, 14-22,27,43- 45 GestaLietbcrtiepiscopi, c. 12, M. G. H. SS,vii. 469. Secin general Leyser, RuleandConflict, 3341 Bruno: RuotgeriVita Brunonis,c. 37, cd. I. Ott (M. G. H. SRG, nova series, x, 1951), 38-9. Notker: Anselm of Liege, C. 29, p. 205. \Villigis: Vita Burchardiepiscopi11'ormaticnsis, Hildcsheinunsis c. 2, M. G. H. SS,iv. 833; VitaBernuardi episcopi auctoreThangumro,e. 2, M. G. H. SS, iv. 759 (see c. I p. 758 for Bcrnward's other episcopal relatives and connections); Thietmar, vi. 35, p. 316 (for the promotion of Mcingaud of Trier). Willigis was himself a protege of Folcold, capellan and tutor to Otto a and bishop of llcissen 969-92 (Thicunar, iv. 6, pp. 136-8). Bruno: Wcndchorst, Bistum It'ürzburg, 95. Anno: Lück, 'Anno', 31-5941 Cf. E. N. Johnson, The SecularActirities of the GermanEpiscopate, gig-1024 (University Studies of the University ofNcbraska, xxx-xxxi, 1932), 98; ' They [the bishops] represented the same family interests [as the lay aristocracy] and often enough were awarded their bishoprics as a specific means of placating family interests'. 48 Thietmar, ii. 21, p. 62; sec Lcyscr, Rule and Conflict,33-4, on the background to this. 41 Thietmar, ü. 24, p. 68; on the background, sec Lcyscr, Rule and Coriflid, 24, and Fleckenstein, Hoßapelle, 42 n. 165, who points to chronological difficulties in the story. 355 TIMOTHY REUTER it but from -10 was other stems - was certainly practised, men foreign into king loyal the to not necessarily a means of putting a man it did in far been has mean that so as suggested, and sometimes parts, as it also meant that the king had to defend and protect the bishop, rather from 51 kindred It benefit the which could also than the other way round. kindred by for both the within reducing competition the candidate came, its hereditary resources and by opening up new areas to its influence: when Liemar went north to the archbishopric of Bremen in 1072, he took some is 52 he him, family his there though no reason and was a ministerialis with of to suppose that aristocrats did not behave in the same way. If the king's control over elections and candidates was something less than total, his- control over bishops once elected was much the same as that over the lay nobility, and it was exercised in the same way - the bestowing or withdrawing of the royal gratia. If there was a difference it king's bishops the that needed goodwill and protection more perhaps was than the lay nobility did; they were certainly more naked and exposed when they lost it. Bishops lobbied the king for favours and collected large sums of money to buy back the king's goodwill. 53 Bishops who had been too closely associated with rebellions might be briefly sent into exile; even cruder methods were possible in the early period, though the blinding of a Herold of Salzburg remained a rather shocking exception. 54They could not be deposed, and this alone should make us doubtful about thinking of them as a kind of civil service. Hauck was already aware of this problem; and the way in which he tried to dispose of it is characteristic of the way in which a `system' has been built up by generalisation from a few examples. He argued that since it was certainly possible for the Ottonians and Salians to depose Italian bishops it must have been equally possible for them to depose German ones,55 and he cited a threat of deposition alleged to have been made by Henry II against Gundechar I of Eichstätt for refusing to consent to the handing over of a part of his diocese to the newly erected bishopric of Bamberg. Gundechar did indeed give in, which `foreigners' 50 The frequent installation of Saxons in Lotharingian bishoprics is noted by Auer, 'Kriegsdienst, t'. 32451 Auer, 'Kriegsdienst, u'. 67; T. Schiefier, `Gerald I. von Cambrai (1012-1051). Ein deutscher Bischof des II. Jahrhunderts', DeutschesArchiv, i (1937) 359. , 52 A. Heinrichsen, 'Süddeutsche Adelsgeschlechter in Niedersachsen im I t. and 12. NiedersächsischesJahrbuch für Landesgeschichte, xxvi (1954), 24-I I2, at Jahrhundert', Lück, 'Anno', also 31-59see 46-7; pp. 53 Wolbodo of Liege collected money to buy back Henry ii's favour, but then gave it away to the poor, an action which Henry approved (Anselm of Liege, c. 34, M. G. H. SS, vii. 208). See also the case of Wazo of Liege (c. 66, p. 229). For purchase of gratia by the lay aristocracy see Leyser, Rule and Conflict,38-42. 14 For the case of Rothad of Strassburg and Frederick of Mainz in 939, see R. Köpke deutschenReichesunter Kaiser Otto den: Grossen, Leipzig 1876, des Jahrbücher Dümmler, E. and in 974 and Henry of Augsburg in 978, see K. Uhlirz, Freising for Abraham of 93-4; For the blinding and Jahrbücher des deutschenReiches unter Otto 11., Leipzig 1902,54,92. deposition of Herold of Salzburg by Henry of Bavaria, see Köpke and Dümmler, 248. 55 Hauck, KirchengeschichteDeutschlands, iii. 408-9. 356 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' explains the hostility of his local chronicler, who regarded the exchange eventually accepted by Gundechar as iniquitous. But the chronicler also makes Henry ii say that he expected compliance because Gundechar was of humble origins; his predecessor had not been, and could not therefore be bullied in this way. 56 Irremovability is confirmed by the survival in office of those bishops, who were quite numerous, who flirted with or joined rebellions .51 The Eichstätt affair illustrates another important point about Ottonian and -Salian bishops. Whatever they may have been before they became bishops, they succeeded to an office which they had to uphold, and they had a chapter to remind them of it 58 This forget. they applied should equally to the new bishoprics: read Thietmar of Merseburg on his efforts to restore the lands of Merseburg, a see only forty years old when he succeeded to it, and amalgamated with Magdeburg for half that period. 5s When the needs of their see clashed it king demands the the was of with often the latter who had to give way. It took Otto i many years and a good deal of effort to establish an archbishopric at Magdeburg, and he had to wait for the archbishop of Mainz and the bishop of Halberstadt to die before he could do so.60 Henry II's foundation of Bamberg went through more quickly, but it aroused just as much opposition, and Henry of Würzburg, at least, could not be easily reconciled to it. 61 The claims of the bishopric also explain some, if not all, of the involvements of bishops in rebellions. They could not afford to sacrifice the economic and political base of their sees. This helps to explain the Henry episcopal support which the Quarrelsome had, 62 and the way in which the episcopate divided between the various candidates for the succession in 1002,63 as well as ss Anonymus Haserensis, c. 25, M. G. H. SS, vii. 26o-t; for the details see E. Freiherr Regeslen der Bischöfe con Bamberg (go2-ro23) (Veröffentlichungen der v. Guttenberg, Gesellschaft fur fränkische Geschichte, vi. Reihe, 1932), no. 131. According to Rupert of Deutz, when Heribert of Cologne refused to assist Henry t1 in the siege of Hammerstein in 1020 Henry came to Cologne, `hoc proposito habens, ut cum pontificatu amoveret, aut fieri non posset, quolibet modo iniuriose ilium et indigne certe, si hoc rationabiliter tractaret' (quoted by H. Muller, Heribal, Kanzler 0tlos III. and Erzbischof von Köln, Cologne 1977,188). The wording suggests that deposition could be threatened but hardly carried out; withdrawal ofgratia was the real means of disciplining bishops. 57 See above, p. 356, and below, p. 358" 58 On the development of cathedral - chapters, see now R. Schieffer, Die Entstehung von Domkapitelnin Deutschland(Bonner Historische Forschungen, xliii, 1976). 51 H. Lippelt, Thietmar con Morseburg.Reichsbischofund Chronist (Mitteldeutsche Forschungen, lxxii, 1973), 89-115" D. Claude, Geschichte desErzbistumsMagdeburgbis in das12.Jahrhundert(Mitteldeutsche Forschungen, lxvii, 1972), i. 66-85. 61 Wendehorst, Bistum 11'ürzburg, 79-80; E. von Guttenberg, Das "'Bistum ' Bamberg (Germania Sacra, ii, 1,1937), 2911: For another objector sec 'above, pp. 356-7. ' 62 K. Uhlirz, Jahrbücher Ottos II., 54,92; M. Uhlirz, Jahrbücher des deutschenReiches unter Otto III., Leipzig 1954,12-16. 63 Arnulf of Halberstadt and Bernward of Hildesheim were for Ekkehard of Meissen (Thietmar, V. 4, p. 224). Hermann it Swabia had considerable support outside Swabia, of but inside it the bishops of Constance and Chur supported him `non tantum ex animo 357 TIMOTHY REUTER Mainz in Frederick by like to tacit of the things support given rebellion in Halberstadt Hezilo Hildesheim Burchard the of and of 952-3 and 10705.64 Monasteries were more amenable to royal pressure; abbots could. be deposed or transferred, and this distinguished even the largest and richest intervention Yet here from bishoprics. was very too royal royal monasteries deposed Stavelot, like had houses, large Some their abbots rarely varied. lay house by though the the on the edge of the ruler, even or nominated large fiscal complex around Aachen and was thus immediately accessible to royal influence. 61Other houses, like Corvey or Fulda, experienced more frequent royal interference. The fact that they sometimes tried to resist this in king having the that rights such was not regarded as unlimited shows invariably Henry in like though ii a almost practice ruler matters, even had his way. 66Here, too, evesee bodies with traditions and interests of their king be by the or his overridden either own, which could not simply nominee. In particular, any attempt to transfer a monastery to the potestas bishop of a was likely to be resisted. 67 So far we have, examined bishops and abbots the view that German resembled officials of the state in the manner in which they were appointed to be removed from office. We may now turn to the and in their liability that the prelates in the view that they were expected to act as officials; Reichskirchensystem were instruments At first sight it of royal government. if not has drawn up impressive may seem absurd to do this. Santifaller immunity, ban, fiscal wholly accurate lists68 of royal privileges granting quantum in civitatis contiguo' (Thietmar, v. 13, p. 236), having noted the fate of the bishop of Strassburg, who had not supported Hermann and had had his city burnt and plundered in consequence(Thietmar, v. 12, p. 234). See Maurer, HerzogvonSchwaben,156,159. On the episcopate as a whole in 1002 see Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 158; `initially mostly undecided'. 61 Frederick of Mainz: H. Beumann, `Die Mainzer Erzbischöfe Friedrich und Wilhelm in Festschrift für Johannes Bärmann, Wiesbaden und das Papsttum des to. Jahrhunderts', 1966, i. 12-13. Burchard and Hezilo: C. Erdmann, Studien zur Briefliteratur Deutschlands im rr. Jahrhundert (Schriften der M. G. H., i. 1938), 123,130; W. Heinemann, Das Bistum Hildesheim im Kräftespiel der Reichs- und Territorialpolitik (Quellen und Darstellungen zur Geschichte Niedersachsens, lxxii, 1968), 43-6. Sec also Johnson, Secular Activities, 29-39, 97, too, on bishops and rebellions. 65 Wehlt, Reichsabtei und König, 375,377; D. Flach, Untersuchungen zur Verfassung und Verwaltung des Aachener Reichsgutes von der Karolingerzeit bis zur Mille des 14. Jahrhunderts des Max-Planck-Instituts für Geschichte, xlvi, 176), especially pp. (Veröffentlichungen 87-90 on the servilia sent by Stavelot to the palace at Aachen. 66 H. H. Kaminsky, Studien zur Reichsabtei Convey in der Salierzeit (Abhandlungen zur Corveyer Geschichtsschreibung, iv, 1971), 47-58; M. Sandmann, `Die Folge der Abte', in K. Schmid (ed. ), Die Klostergemeinschaft von Fulda (Münsterer Mittelalterschriften, viii, 1978), i. 19467 For the case of Lorsch in Otto it's reign see Wehlt, Reichsabtei und König, 45-6; for Malmedy's. struggle with Cologne under Henry iv, see the Triumphus S. Remacli de Malmundariensi Coenobio, c. 9, M. G. H. SS, Xi-. 453; Lampert of Hersfeld, s.a. to63,1071, In ' Reichskirchensystem', 89,125-6.1,11 78-115. pp. 358 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' rights and even counties to abbeys and especially to bishoprics, and these may suggest a policy of delegating rights to reliable men. Yet, once again, the reality was rather different. Bishops and abbots performed considerable services for their rulers - we shall see later what these services were - and in return for this they expected rewards. One of Henry n's diplomats said that more could be asked of those to whom more was given; 69 but for ecclesiastics the causal connection was reversed. Now there is a definite shift discernible in the way in which the Ottonians and Salians rewarded their churchmen. From the late tenth century gifts of land and men, which had predominated under Henry I and Otto i, gave way to gifts of governmental rights. Gifts of land and men continued, but they became much smaller in size and negligible as a proportion of what bishops and abbots already held, leaving aside obvious exceptions like the new bishopric of Bamberg which was endowed on a very lavish scale. 70 One of the reasons why gifts of rights came to predominate was simply that these were cheaper to make. If a ruler handed over a mansusor a curtis, he was a mansus or a curtis the poorer; true, it remained in a sense the property of the Reich, and services were due for it, but the king, whatever his rights in theory, would not normally take it back from a bishopric except to grant it to another church, though monasteries might be rather more roughly treated. 71Only the king could give permission to hold a market or to mint coins, but by giving such permission he did not necessarily impoverish himself in the slightest. He was not always himself in a position to exercise such rights, but by allowing others to do so he could reap a return: such privileges were often paid for, 742and the church they enriched could be expected to render larger servitia. Of course, not all governmental rights like this. In so far as the Ottonian count still actually handed over were to the fisc the king's portion of the fredus or bannus (fines imposed for breaches of the peace or of royal commands), the grant of a county or immunity with ban did actually reduce royal wealth. But such grants did not greatly affect royal power, as we shall see; their main importance was often a financial one, and once again servitia, which were not normally exactable from the lay nobility, will have compensated for the loss.73 69 DH 11433, quoted by Brühl, Fodrum, 127; the reference is to Luke xii. 48. 70 Guttenberg, Bistum Bamberg, 33-6,52-3; Mayer, Fürsten and Staat, 248-75. ' 71 St Maximin's, Trier, claimed to have lost over 6, ooo mansi through forced enfeoffments under Henry u. See E. \Visplinghoff, Untersuchungenzurfrühen Geschichteder Abtei S. Maximin bei Trier von den Anfängen bis etwa 1150 (Quellen and Abhandlungen zur mittelrheinischen Kirchengeschichte, xii, 1970), 36,82ff; the figure is absurd, but the story is not, especially as Henry u is also known to have carried out `secularisation' at Corvey and Hersfeld. For grants of whole monasteries in beneßcio,see Maurer, Herzog von Schwaben, 178, and H. Schwarzmaier, Königtum, Adel and Klöster im Gebiet zwischen oberer Iller and Lech (Studien zur Geschichte des bayerischen Schwabens, vii, 1961), 136f . 72 H. Bresslau, Handbuch der Urkundenlehre, 2nd edn, Berlin 1931, i. 382-3, referring to chancery changes, a portion of which must have come to the ruler. For an example of large-scale payment to the ruler see below, p. 361 and n. 81. 73 The importance of ban and immunity for the development of territories is so obvious that their financial side, probably more important in this early period when jurisdiction 359 TIMOTHY REUTER Grants of rights, then, were not normally delegations by the ruler of This does directly. have he not exclude exercised would otherwise powers fact but is in this not very probable. the possibility of conscious policy, Rulers acted consciously, but the initiative did not usually come from being diplomata too the Collections are often read as of royal them. surviving records of governmental action and policy; they are also, and much more, the surviving records of occasions when rulers - pestered, Just followers. bribed to their as clerical cajoled and - made concessions lay nobles sought to increase and consolidate the wealth and prestige of their families, so bishops and abbots sought to increase the wealth and lay Recent the to their the work on care. committed churches prestige of importance Salian Reich has Ottonian the the emphasised and nobility of lay fortunes. It king, in Königsnähe, the to establishing was no closeness of for prelates; few Ottonian and Salian Vitae omit a less important 74 king. Prelates the to the needed prelate's relations with reference governmental rights especially. The late tenth and eleventh centuries in Germany saw the beginnings of the territorialisation by lordship the of secular nobility: the amalgamation of scattered rights, property and (i. e. ingovernmental powers - delegated, usurped or `autochthonous' herent in the birth or status of their holder) - into territorial units of 75 If bishops and abbots were to hold on to what they had, government. they too needed such rights, and exemptions from the rights of others. There is still room for argument about whether the lay nobility in fact had autochthonous rights, 76but clearly ecclesiastical institutions did not. Nor could they easily usurp such rights. Ecclesiastics were not always the innocent parties in the disputes of the period, but they were too dependent on local dynasts for the exercise of their powers to be able to make much independent headway against them. Consequently, ecclesiastics turned to the king for grants of immunity and other rights. Just what was involved in practice can be seen by looking at one of the most spectacular features of the Reichskirchensystem,the granting of whole bishoprics to counties and bishops 77 There are three main points to be first is The that when we can uncover something of the circumstances made. is often overlooked. See e.g. DO in 66 for meant fining rather than punishment, Gandersheim with the comments of R. Scheyhing, Eide, Amtsgewalt und Bannleihe (ForOn deutschen Rechtsgeschichte, ii, lay defacto V6. 1g6o), nobles' zur exemption schungen from servitia, see Brühl, Fodrum, 178-9. 14 Köhler, Bild desgeistlichenFürsten,22. 05 The classic discussion of this is still W. Schlesinger, Die Entstehung der Landesherrschaft, i (all Quellen, published), Dresden 1941vorwiegend nach mitteldeutschen 76 The theory was first developed by O. v. Dungern and widely adopted (see Schles`Formen adeliger inger, Landesherrschaft, 144ff); but see the criticisms by M. Mitterauer, Österreich. Zur Frag der "autogenen im hochmittelalterlichen HoHerrschaftsbildung M. LÖ. G., lxxx (1972), 265-318, especially pp. 266-9. heitsrechte"', 77 See Santifaller, `Reichskirchensystem', 105-15, for a list of such grants; Mayer, FürstenundStaat, 257-70. Unless otherwise noted, the following discussion excludes grants of comital or quasi-comital rights over episcopal cities alone. 360 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' of such grants, it seems to have been the bishops who demanded them rather than the rulers who simply handed them over or delegated them. Paderborn, for example, was well endowed with counties by the end of Henry II's reign. The first of these grants was made in the reign of Otto I or ii. It was an act of compensation for the loss Paderborn had sustained through the acquisition of tithes by the abbey of Corvey. 78The others were all given in the time of Bishop Meinwerk (1009-36). Meinwerk was a former capellanusand a distant relative in Henry thus a good ii, and was of position to ask for favours. In spite of this, he had to wait until the lay holders of the counties died, and often experienced delay and trouble in making the grants good against their surviving relatives. Moreover, it is clear that Meinwerk pestered Henry until the gifts were made, even on one occasion going so far as to get Benedict viii to intervene. 79At Worms, Hildibald and Burchard I used their contacts at court in order to secure control of counties and of their city, and Hildibald also resorted to forgery further indication that prelates could not automatically count -a on such grants from the king. 80We know from other sources that bishops sought after counties: Adam of Bremen describes the lengths to which Archbishop Adalbert was prepared to go to get hold of them. 81 Clearly the Ottonians and Salians had no objection in principle to such grants, but it does not follow from the mere fact of the grants that a positive policy lay behind them. This is confirmed when we look at the distribution of such grants. Many bishoprics, including some of the richest and most important, received few or none. Those which did get them did not all get them for the same reasons. There might, for instance, seem to be an obvious reason why the Alpine bishoprics of Chur, Brixen and Trent should have received counties: the need to keep the Alpine passes to Italy open and in friendly hands. Yet none of these bishoprics was under close royal control, and in the case of Chur, at least, it is likely that the bishop was able to secure comital rights so easily and so early because Hungarian and Saracen raids had left no important lay powers in the area, 82just as the bishops of Aosta, Grenoble and Tarentaise were able to take over their counties in the '8 Bannasch, Bistum Paderborn, 31- 79 Ibid., 308-13; Benedict vin's intervention is recorded in DH 11440- Burchard i's struggle to gain control over the episcopal city is graphically described in the Vita Burchardi episcopi il'ormatiensis, cc. 7, g, M. G. H. SS, iv. 835-7" See A. Seiler, Das Hochstift Worms im Alitklalter, Giessen 1936,3t-8; J. Lechner, `Die älteren Königsurkunden für Worms und die Begründung der bischöflichen Fürstenmacht', ALI. D. G.; xxii (1901), 361-419,529-748' fiesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiaePont jcum, iii. 46,3rd edn by B. Schmeidler (M. G. H. SRG, 1917), 188-go; he offered large sums to Henry in and Henry iv and pensions to some of the holders of the counties. 82 No local power at least: Chur was in the tenth century very much under the influence The grants for Chur of the dukes of Swabia (Maurer, Herzog von Schwaben, 156-7,191,207). are DD 01 139 (fiscal rights of county; intervention by the duke-of Swabia), -148 (toll), 191 (royal half of city and rights of toll and mint), 209 (comital rights, in Graubünden). " 361 TIMOTHY REUTER 83 kingdom Burgundy the tenth the century. of at end of neighbouring Elsewhere there is little sign before 1056 that bishops were given counties be that they a more effective counterweight to a powerful secular could so German be Such in to the two a policy ought south visible nobility. duchies, if at all; yet no Bavarian bishop got one except Brixen and, Chur. 85 84 Swabian bishop In Freising, and no got one except probably, Saxony the bishop of Paderborn was able to acquire a large number of the counties in his diocese because they were mainly held by families who were, in the words of the most recent study of the subject, `insignificant in national politics'. 86 Only in Franconia, where the bishops of Mainz, Worms and Würzburg were well endowed, 87 and in Lower Lotharingia, does the granting of counties seem to have conformed to the traditional conception, and even here it was uneven: the important see of Cologne, for example, had only one. 88 In practice, almost all the counties given to bishops continued to be by laymen, who simply held from the bishop instead run of the king. The exceptional provision in one of Henry ti's grants to Paderborn89 that Meinwerk should administer the county through a ministerialis of the bishopric confirms the normal practice. The effect of the extensive grants made to Hildesheim in lost was not that Azelin of Hildesheim became a powerful magnate overnight, but simply that the Brunonids, who had held the county from the king, now held it from Azelin and his successors. so It has been claimed that `a loyal bishop could exercise far stricter control over his vassals through his continuous presence than the king, who was often absent for long periods', "' but this is optimistic; bishops were also absent from their diocese for long periods, often on royal service. Nor is it clear what `control' would have ban and comital meant. Immunity, rights might keep ecclesiastical dependants from being sucked into the orbit of local magnates; they did not confer jurisdiction over the magnates themselves. Control certainly did not mean supervision of comital administration. The Carolingians had made some attempt to do this through capitularies and missi dominici, but even then it was almost unknown for a count to be deposed for maladministration, and this is a fortiori true of the Ottonian Reich, which had neither capitularies nor missi dominici. It is, in any case, not clear how far the Carolingians succeeded east of the 83 R. Poupardin, Le Rojaume de Bourgogne (888-1038), Paris 1907,254 n. 3,321-2. 84 Brixen: DKu 103; Freising: D 0118o, which is interpolated but in this respect credible (cf. Santifaller, 'Reichskirchensystem', io6). 85 Strassburg received a grant from Henry iv in 1077. For Chur seeabove, p. 361 n. 82. 86 Bannasch, Bistum Paderborn,311. 87 Mainz: M. Stimming, Die Entstehung des weltlichen Territoriums des Erzbistums Afainz (Quellen and Forschungen zur Hessischen Geschichte, iii, 1915), 22-3; Worms; (and see also above, P. 361 n. 8o); Würzburg; DHn D0 to 366 (but see 226,227 Wendehorst, Bistum Würzburg, 82, for doubts about how far this grant was carried out), DHu268. 86 Santifaller, 'Reichskirchensystem', DH 11440. 107 no. 7.89 90 Heinemann, Bistum Hildesheim, 41-2.91 Ibid., 68. 362 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' Rhine in establishing a comital system as it is usually conceived, with the count acting as the king's representative in a defined area. 92Control, then, will have meant at most preventing political disloyalty, and Ottonian and Salian bishops could normally only do this when they had local family connections or the king behind them; they could not usually act on their own. Thus, Meinwerk of Paderborn was able to make something of his grants by using his relatives, well established in the region; but the bishopric-of Worms, occupied continuously from 979 by outsiders whose family lay further afield, could not. 93 Grants of immunity, with or without ban, were commoner and more evenly distributed than counties, but here too we must beware of thinking that the grant put large areas under the control of a reliable official. Immunity developed in the course of the tenth century to mean not simply exemption from the acts of supposedly public officials like counts but positive rights ofjurisdiction and command as well. The immunist became, more or less, his own count. At the same time he had to have an advocate, Carolingian increasingly a layman, to run his immunity, the and arrangement, whereby such men were appointed, often ad hoc, by the immunist, was being replaced by one where the immunist had one advocate who controlled his immunity permanently. The simultaneous transformation ofimmunity from an essentially financial into an essentially institution politico judicial tended to benefit advocates rather than immunists. 94Bishoprics suffered less and later from this development than did monasteries, but it had already gained considerable ground by the early eleventh century. In theory the advocate's exercise of the right of ban was subject to royal approval and he had to be invested with it by the king. But the choice was limited, and to deprive a man of his advocacy, if this could be done at all, was a significant political act. It is also worth noting that ecclesiastics depended on the king to control their advocate, not the other way round. The difficulties have been neatly summed up by Hans Joachim Freytag in his study of the Billungs: `Many privileges [of immunity] should be considered more as expressions of wishes than as descriptions of fact, and it should also not be forgotten that the advocacies 92 The thesis of a network of counties covering the Reich has been undermined by work on Saxony. See Freytag, Billunger, 23-7; Schälkopf, SächsischeGrafen, 16-17; K. -H. Lange, Der Herrschaftsbereich der Grafen von Xorlheim, ggo bis tr¢¢ (Studien und Vorarbeiten zum historischen Atlas Niedersachsens, xxiv, 1969), 5-6. Recently the traditional view has been powerfully restated by H. K. Schulze, Die Grafschaftsverfassung der Karolingerzeil in den Gebieten östlich des Rheines (Schriften zur Verfassungsgeschichte, xix, 1973). The issue remains undecided, but it is clear in any case that some areas remained outside the comical system, notably forests: see H. Kaspers, Comilatus nemoris, Duren- 1957,39f, 229-30, and, on the importance of forest and forest ban for territorial development, Mayer, Fürstenund Staat, 266-70. 93 Bannasch, Bistum Paderborn, 313-14; Seiler, Hochstift Worms, 38114On the following developments see E. E. Stengel, Die Immunität in Deutschland bis zum Ende des n. Jahrhunderts, Innsbruck igio, i (all published), 588-98; Otto, Kirchenvogtei, 8o-129,141-2; Mayer, Fürsten und Staat, 1-49; Scheyhing, Bannleihe, s02-3,313-17- 363 I TIMOTHY REUTER held Church blood, immunities, the were to since of shed was not allowed by the dynasts, who were also the counts. The creation of immunities often and as count scarcely affected their power, since they functioned broken '95 [only] judicial district itself, the up. the comitatuswas advocate... The last statement can be questioned, 96 but it is certainly true that more in immunity than on existed parchment practice. rights of To say that Ottonian and Salian ecclesiastics did not act as agents of local for for is did them their to rulers government not nothing say that they at all. On the contrary, they did a great deal. The field armies of the period would have been smaller without the episcopal and abbatial contingents. Just how much smaller is hard to say. We do have a document - the Indiculus Loricatorum -which lists the number of troops to be provided for an Italian expedition by various lay and ecclesiastical magnates, but we cannot be certain whether it refers to an initial army or to reinforcements .9 In any case it has obvious omissions Saxony, for example it is likely - and that lay contingents played a larger role in Ottonian and Salian armies than it and other sources might suggest. But clearly ecclesiastical. troops were important, and not only in Italy: Saxon bishops had to take their turn in garrisoning the fortified stronghold at Meissen, and Lotharingian bishops helped to defend the western frontier of the Reich. 98 Ecclesiastics also maintained the royal household in a number of ways. The Ottonians and - Salians had no fixed centre of government, though a favoured residence (Aachen under Otto in or Merseburg under Henry ii) might at times seem like one. They moved about the country, and they and their entourages needed to be fed and housed. Bishops could provide hospitality (gistum) in their palaces, which were often shared with the king or, had a special quarter reserved for him. Bishops and abbots also sent servitia, large renders of food and drink, to the royal court when it was not quartered on them. 89Most of the evidence for these practices comes from royal abbeys rather than bishoprics, but bishops were afflicted with them as well, at least in the eleventh century, and occasionally expressed their resentment at both gistum and servitia.too Kings also held canonries in some cathedral 95 Freytag, Billunger, 25, and see ibid., 17ff for good observations on the episcopal counties and immunities. 96 See the review of Otto, Kirchenvogtei by K. H. Ganahl in M. I. O. G., 1 (1935), 212-13; E. Klebel, ' Eigenklösterrechte and Vogteien in Bayern and Deutschösterreich', AI. I. O. G., Ergänzungsband, xiv (1939), 179-80. Klebel's conclusions - that advocacies were neither hereditary nor normally held by counts in Bavaria before about I050-have been undermined by W. Stürmer, Früher Adel (Monographien zur Geschichte des Mittelalters, vi, 1973) ii. 424-56, who produces numerous counter-examples. 91 M. G. H., Constitutiones et acta publica, ed. L. Weiland, Hanover 1893, i. 632 no. 436. For the problems of dating - 980 or reinforcements in 981,982 or 983 - see Auer, im deut' Kriegsdienst, I', 372-9; K. F. Werner, 'Heeresorganization and Kriegsführung des in Jahrhunderts', in Ordinamenli Königreich to. and 11. occidentenell'alto militari schen Spoleto, xv, 1968), ii. 823-6. (Settimane... medioevo 911Auer, 'Kriegsdienst, I', 336,344,402-6.81 Brühl, Fodrum, 16o-i. 100Ibid., 197-213; Wehlt, Reichsabteiand König, 74-7. U. Schmitt, Villa regalis Ulni and in Alemannien(9.-12. Kloster Reichenau.Untersuchungen zur Pfalzfunktion desReichsklostergutes 364 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' chapters, a custom which can be traced back to Henry ii and, in a sense, to his predecessor Otto III. 101It seems to have had less to do with the king's desire or need to be seen as rex et sacerdos,for which it would have been a highly inappropriate vehicle, than with his need to be able to exploit the revenues of the chapter as well as those of the bishop; separate provision for the chapter was becoming common practice just at this time. 102 It also had a non-economic side: the king, and sometimes his queen, became participants in the prayers and other spiritual benefits of the religious communities they joined, just as they did when they had themselves commemorated in the great royal monasteries. Canonries may also have helped to support capellani while at court; 103the king could thus reward his clerical followers without personal expense. These things were important, but they were by no means systematic. The ways in which the king exploited the resources of the church changed over the period and, more importantly, the demands made on particular churches varied greatly. Auer has shown that only the Franconian bishoprics were heavily used for military service throughout the period. The province of Trier was important only in the tenth century, while the Bavarian bishoprics seem to have become 104 in the eleventh. significant only The bishops of Saxony and Lotharingia had to be spared whenever there was danger on the eastern or western border, and it is not certain that the suffragans of Hamburg-Bremen had a militia at all. 105The use of bishoprics and abbeys to support the royal iter was equally varied. Bishoprics seem to have been in heavily for the eleventh this used more than in the tenth century, and they were not used evenly. Paderborn and Merseburg, for example, seem to have been frequently far more visited during the reign of Henry ii than at any other time before or after, though this may reflect the fortuitous survival of evidence and the fact that Merseburg seems to have been Bavarian the the of part of patrimony Liudolfings. 106What Ave do know is that kings stuck to a small number Jahrhundert)(Veröffentlichungendes Max-Planck-Instituts für Geschichte,xlii, 1974), 32-56, givesa good accountof how sersitiafunctionedin the caseof an institution rarely visited by the king. For opposition,seeBrühl, Fodrum,126-7 (interpreting Thietmar, vii. 3o as an indirect criticism of Henry II; for an alternative view seebelow, p. 372 n. 140, where the passageis quoted), 157,207; Heinemann,BistumHildesheim, 39-40. 101 Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 151-5; J. Fleckenstein, `Rex canonicus. Über Entstehung Königskanonikates', in P. Classen and P. Schubert and Bedeutung des mittelalterlichen (eds), Festschrift Percy Ernst Schramm, Wiesbaden 1964, i. 57-71, with references to earlier literature. Otto In was certainly a canon at Aachen; whether he was a canon at Hildesheim depends on a passage in D0m 390 for Hildesheim: 'pari sententia episcopo et fratribus nostris in Deo carissimis... ' Fleckenstein interprets this to mean that Otto iii must have been a canon there; Heinemann, Bistum Hildesheim, 28 n. 122, challenges this, I think , 102 Schieffer, Domkapitel, 255-63,280f1. rightly. 103Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 120-34; Leyser, in his review, pp. 115-16, raises doubts as to how common this practice was. 104Auer, 'Kriegsdienst, 1', 67. 105Ibid., 342,370,399-400.. "1 106Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle,134-45,218-19,227-8,278-80, gives lists of the places most frequently visited by different rulers; seealso Brühl, Fodrum, 117-39 and maps 111and iv. For Merseburg, see Leyser, Rule and Conflict, 18-19. 365 TIMOTHY REUTER in they were when emergencies or on occasions except of main roads leading armies to or beyond the borders of the Reich. Not all bishoprics lay within this network, and not all those which did were actually on the by if bishoprics The visited that ever rarely were some result was roads. 107 Servitia Bremen being Trier Hildesheim, and notable examples. a ruler be burden, but helped have this conjecture. the to can only out even may Nor was the exploitation of the Church through canonries even or Hildesheim in began It with a small number of churches, systematic. in bishoprics, but it took all never particular, and was gradually extended; by being Henry load by the new taken the the reign of in some of was and 108 Goslar Kaiserswerth. foundations at and royal More intangible benefits were also provided. As the Ottonians consolidated successful war-leadership into European hegemony, they followed the usual pattern for medieval nouveaux riches: they sought to surround themselves with literati and intellectuals. Otto i's following could already boast a Rather of Verona and a Liutprand of Cremona, and his younger brother Bruno of Cologne deliberately built up a household of literati who could be promoted to bishoprics. 109By the time of Otto III the court, if not an intellectual centre, was at least a place where intellectuals could be found. The artistic and literary productions associated with the Ottonian and Salian court could not have been paralleled anywhere else in western Europe. Wealth of this sort was valued as highly as land or relics, but it had no narrower political function. One should not assume that the Ottonians and Salians needed ecclesiastics, because of their literacy, to run their government. 110The sort of rule which needs writing was even less important in Ottonian Germany than it had been in Carolingian Francia; it is significant that among the capellani the notaries seem generally to have occupied the lowest rank. As Erdmann long ago pointed out, '1' it vas intellectuals, not politicians and civil servants, who used most ink in the eleventh century. If we compare the position of bishops and abbots in the Reich with that of their counterparts elsewhere in Europe, what seems striking is the similarities, not the differences. Moreover, the differences had their origins in royal policy but in the ways in which the different kingdoms had not developed and were organised. A good example is the exercise of rights of mint and market. In the Reich, these were normally acquired by royal grant, though such grants may sometimes only have confirmed an already existing mint or market. In France, royal privileges granting these rights Charles Bald's but bishops frequently the after reign, rare abbots were and in did Anglo-Saxon England, here them they nevertheless, as also exercised 101 Brühl, Fodrum, 209.108 101 Vita Brunonis, c. 37, pp. 38-9.110 111 C. Erdmann, `Die Anfänge der staatlichen (1936), 506. Zeitschrift, oliv rische , 366 Fleckenstein, Hofkapelle, 277-8,282-7PaceJohnson, Secular Activities, 99. Propaganda im Invcstiturstreit', Histo- THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' as a rule with royal permission. I"2 The common factor was the desire of prelates to develop their lands economically. Whether they went to the king for a grant or set up in business depended their on whether on own a royal diploma was worth having. In France it was not. 13 The development of the immunity in the Reich from a negative one (keeping out public officials) to a positive one (exercise of jurisdiction by or on behalf of the immunist) is paralleled in France. "" Bishops sought to acquire comital powers or their equivalent over their towns in France, England, Burgundy and Italy. "-' Again, there but differences, these were the were result of differing political structures. In Italy, the bishops were not so much territorial lords in themselves as the means through which lordship was shared among and exercised by the clans from which they came. "' In Anglo-Saxon England it was, for historical reasons, the monasteries not the bishoprics which were rich and desirable, and it was these which were most favoured with grants of governmental rights, though bishops often owned their burghs wholly or in part. I17 It was unusual for these rights to extend beyond the episcopal or abbatial town, but so it was in the Reich, where only a small number of prelates controlled rural counties. "s Nor was the king's relationship with the churches under his control different. Other kings besides the Ottonians and Salians had a capella. The word was hardly used in Anglo-Saxon England, but the thing was known, and the fact that half the bishops in office in 1050 and i o66 had previously been king's priests suggests that it functioned in the same way as did that of the Reich, though it had fewer chancery functions to perform. The rulers of Wessex appointed to bishoprics and royal monasteries - often in spite of privileges of free election - with probably less opposition than their 112 R. Kaiser, `Münzprivilegien in Frankreich, Münzprägung bischöfliche und Deutschland Viertejahresschrift für Sozial- und Wirtund Burgund im 9. -12. Jarhundert', schaftsgeschichte,lxiii (1976), 289-338; F. M. Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, 3rd edn, Oxford F. Barlow, The English Church, rooo-ro66,2nd edn, London 1979,160,218. 1970,535-6; 113 K. F. Werner, `Kingdom and principality in twelfth-century France', in T. Reuter (ed. ), The Afedieral Nobility. Studies in the ruling classesof France and Germanyfrom the sixth to the twelfth centuries (Europe in the Middle Ages: Selected Studies, xiv, Amsterdam 1979), 244=5"' J. -F. Lemarignier in F. Lot and R. Fawner (eds), Histoire des institutions franfaises au mgyen age. III. Institutions ecclfs astiques, Paris 1962,36. 115 In France the bishops of Rheims, Langres, Beauvais and Chalons-sur-Marne, among others, had such rights: sec Lemarignier, 12; Poupardin, Bourgogne, 445-51. Burgundy: Poupardin, Bourgogne, 43o-57; H: E. Mayer, `Die Alpen und das Königreich Burgund', in T. Mayer (ed. ), Die Alpen in der europäischenGeschichte(Vorträge und Forschungen... X, 1965), 74, with a not very plausible interpretation ofsome of these grants as a 'pass policy' of the kings of Burgundy. 116 E. Duprd-Theseider, `Vescovi e cittä nell'Italia in Vescovie diocesi precommunale', in Italia nel medioevo(sec. IX-XII). Aui del II Conuegnodi Storia della Chiesa in Italia, Roma 5-9 H. Keller, `Die Entstehung der italienischen settembre 196r, Padua 1964,73-82,91-101; Stadtkommunen als sozialgeschichtliches Problem', Frühmittelalterliche Studien, x (1976), Barlow, English Church; 165-71. 16g-78, especially p. 176.11 ua Santifaller, `Reichskirchensystem', 105-10. 367 TIMOTHY REUTER Ottonian and Salian counterparts. 119The later Carolingian and early Capetian rulers ofFrance found that many bishoprics and royal monasteries became mediatised and escaped their control. Those that were left to them fluctuated. influence their they though could, they controlled as tightly as They put in their owri candidates and were even prepared to depose bishops, something the Ottonians and Salians did not attempt in Germany, in kings 120 Italy, In have though role played a significant seen. as we local bishops men, and their power were usually confirming appointments, did not depend on the king; indeed, it was the bishops who could make Reich, kingdoms, including In 121 break the extent the these all rulers. and kingship depend did theoretical the of on nature not of the ruler's control but on practical considerations: did he dispose of sufficient power and influence in the area to make his wishes felt? Was it worthwhile for the listen Royal bishoprics local to to them? the and magnates chapter and kinds for did those the their same services rulers as of performed abbeys in the Reich: they advised the king, rendered gistum and servitia and furnished contingents of troops. Indeed, the rulers of England, France, Burgundy and pre-Ottonian Italy probably depended more heavily on their prelates for armies than the Ottonians and Salians did. 122The use of churches for hospitality was certainly less in Italy, perhaps also in France, than in the Reich, but this was largely because the churches were less well-ofd 123 Twelfth- and thirteenth-century German bishops and abbots struck their contemporaries in England and France as being a different kind of prelate from those found in the West more militaristic, far more like secular princes. These differences would not have been discernible in the tenth and eleventh centuries, though many German bishoprics and abbeys would have seemed fabulously wealthy and powerful by French or English standards 123 Had the Reichskirchensystemreally been different in kind from other national Churches, one would expect it to have had a different kind of organisation. It did not. There was no Reichskirchein the sense of a special or separate organisation; there were only those churches which belonged 11sBarlow, EnglishChurch, 99-I to, 119-37. Ito W. M. Newman, LeDomaineroyýalsouslespremierscapftiens(987-. rt8o), Paris 1937,67-8, 210-24; P. Imbart de la Tour, Les Elections episcopalesdons l'lglise de France du Lie au XIIe Etude sur la decadence Paris Lemarignier, du llectif, principe 1891,438,443,447; 43-4" silcles. Lemarignier saw the French rulers as having something like a Reichskirchensystem,only with less system and uniformity than in the Reich; as we have seen, this is an illusory comparison. 121 S. Pivano, Stato e chiesa da Berengario I ad Arduino (888-1o15), Turin 1908,35-III `Vescovi e cittä', 67-70. Dupre-Theseider, 122 The importance of ecclesiastical troops in England emerges quite clearly from the Chronicle, I Anglo-Saxon in 992(C), s. a. 1001(x), the ioi6(c); owe this'last references reference to Karl Leyser. For France and Italy see E. Lesne, Histoire de la propriitl ecclisiastique en France, 2: la propriitl ecclisiastique et les droits rlgaliens a l'epoque carolingienne, fast. ii, Lille 1926,456ff, 472ff; fasc. iii, Lille 1928,62; G. Tabacco, 'Il regno italico nei ii. in Ordinamenti ix-xi', 779-80,784,786. militari..., seeoli 123Brühl, Fodrum,231-40 (France), 430-1 (Italy). For Burgundy seeThietmar, vii. 30, Brühl, below, 'Sozialstruktur', 44-5. 372 n. 140.121 p. quoted 368 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' by right to the kingdom, as the Concordat of Worms put it, and over and above that the king's wider duty of protection towards all churches ex lure suscefiti regni.125Churchmen in Germany met in synods and were bound together by ties of confraternity, as well as by the links of cognatio and patronage we have already examined. But in these respects their practice was no different from that of any other national Church in tenth- and eleventh-century Europe. Synods did discuss matters ofgeneral importance as well as the internal organisation and discipline of the Church, but they did so under the king's direction, and often under his presidency. 126Had the Reichskirche been a quite distinct element in Ottonian and Salian rulership it should have been capable of functioning collectively at moments of danger for the crown, of making declarations of solidarity, as some of the west Frankish episcopate had done for Charles the Bald in 858 and some of the east Frankish episcopate did for Conrad i at Hohenaltheim in 916.127 But the German Church did not appear collectively in the great crises of the Ottonian Reich, the rebellions of 939,951-4 and the g7os128 and the succession-crises of 983-5,1002 and 1024. At these moments bishops and abbots looked to save themselves and their foundations, not the crown, as they were again to do in the reign of Henry Iv. The Reichskirchewas, like any other national Church, a part of the Catholic Church. If it had a head, it was the pope, and it has been argued that the Ottonians and Salians needed to control the papacy in order to preserve their hold on their own churchmen. 129This, too, needs qualification. The often-quoted statistic130 that between 962 and 1056 twelve out of the twenty-five popes were appointed by the Ottonians and Salians, and five deposed, is deceptive. Deposition could only be done on the spot -a lesson which was apparently lost on Henry Iv and only Henry III , 125DH to 18, quoted by J. Fleckenstein, `Zum Begriff der ottonisch-salischen Reichskirche', in E. Hassinger and others (eds), Geschichte, Wirtschaft, Gesellschaft,Festschriftfür ClemensBauerzum75. Geburtstag, Berlin 1974,69; the whole article is an important discussion of the nature of the Reichskirche. 126 M. Boye, `Die Synoden Deutschlands und Reichsitaliens von 922-1059. Eine kirchenverfassungsgeschichtliche Untersuchung', Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, kanonistische Abteilung, xviii (1929), 131-284, especially pp. 241-55127 M. G. H. Capitularia regum francorum, ed. A. Boretius and V. Krause, Hanover 1897, ii. 427ff, no. 297. See on this, E. Dümmler, Geschichtedes ostfränkischen Reiches, and edn, Leipzig 1887, i. 435-40; j. Devisse, Hincmar, archevequede Reims, 845-882, Geneva 1975, i. 306-27. Even though by no means all the west Frankish bishops took part, and indeed it was aimed especially at those who did not, it was still a specifically ecclesiastical demonstration in favour of Charles the Bald. On Hohenaltheim see M. Hellmann, `Die Synode von Hohenaltheim (916). Bemerkungen über das Verhältnis von Königtum und Kirche im ostfränkischen Reich zu Beginn des to. Jahrhunderts', in H. Kämpf (ed. ) Die Entstehung des deutschenReiches (Wege der Forschung, i, 3rd edn, 1971), 289-312. -I'' . 121Henry the Quarrelsome was excommunicated by the episcopate in 976, but this was a responsenot only to his rebellion but also to his attacks on'the bishopric of Regensburg. See K. Uhlirz, JahrbücherOttosIL, 79 and n. 15Santifaller, ' Reichskirchensystem', 172. 129See above, p. 349 and n. 7.130 369 TIMOTHY REUTER Except for Otto from distance. m's two appointments, to a appoint managed Gregory v and Sylvester II, the other appointments before 1046 were little in fact, 131 There local need was, choices. of confirmations essentially for control. To suppose that the inner logic of the Reichskirchensystem back is the post-Gregorian papacy required a subservient papacy to project did before At time 1 056 any into the tenth and early eleventh centuries. no imperial directions if he to the episcopate look to give about were as pope Nor did have the episcopate of members resented. might ruler which a for help. William of Mainz wrote querulously the to turn papacy naturally having Metz Dietrich in written Agapetus of of was accused 955; II to 132 These Sergius Henry letters to were minor Iv. ii about complaining incidents which left no ripples and no tradition. It was otherwise in west Francia. Here popes mediated between kings and their subjects and dealt Ottonian 133 But did bishoprics. disputes this strength not reflect over with least; for Not Carolingian there were opportunities alone at weakness. and in the crises of the Reich for the popes to intervene, had they wished to do so. They did not, because it was not their style. In west Francia they in do had the ninth this tradition to already grown up so, and were asked few in Francia there were occasions when the pope concerned century; east himself or was asked to concern himself with the internal politics of the kingdom. 134Nor could the papacy easily be used to control the German in issued by John The xii xiii not privileges and were episcopate. themselves enough to enable Otto i to set up an archbishopric at Magdeburg. 135At most a pope could legitimise expostfacto what had been done, as with Herold of Salzburg. 136If one were to explain the Ottonians' and Salians' relations with the papacy in terms of calculated policy one '3' The popes Leo viii, John xrn, Benedict vii, John xiv and Benedict viii. See J. F. Böhmer, Regesta Imperii. n. SächsischesHaus, 919-1024,5. Papsiregesten911-1024, ed. H. Zimmermann, Vienna 1969 (hereafter cited asB. Z. and no. ), nos. 329,386,527,62 1,1075. 132 B. Z. nos. 249,1065. 'aa Papal warnings and excommunications of the king's enemies: B. Z. nos. 26 (926 to Herbert ii of Vermandois), 161,162 (942, ordering the recognition of Louis iv), 209 (947 to Hugh the Great). For election disputes at Rheims seeB.Z. nos. 208,213,218; 691-3, 696,7o6,708,710,718,727,756,795-6. 134 In 867 Nicholas i wrote to the sons of Louis the German reminding them of their duty to their father: Annales Fuldenses,ed. F. Kurze (M. G. H. SRG, 1881), 66 (the letter has not survived). In 885 Charles in wanted Pope Marinus to legitimise his son Bernard bishops, depose Annales Fuldenses, p. 103 (on the background to this see certain to and E. Hlawitschka, Lothringen and das Reich an der Schwelle der deutschenGeschichte,Schriften der In goo Hatto of Mainz wrote to the pope about the M. G. H., xxi, 1968,27-8). recent election of Louis the Child, but, as in 885, probably because an imperial coronation was anticipated: see H. Beumann, `Die Einheit des ostfränkischen Reiches and der Kaisergedanke bei der Königserhebung Ludwigs des Kindes', Archie für Diplomatik, xxiii (1977), 142-63. The difference between east and west Frankish attitudes to the papacy has been demonstrated for the lay nobility by J. Fried, 'Laienadel and Papst in der Frühzeit der französischen and deutschen Geschichte', in H. Beumann and W. Schröder (eds), Aspekte ii, 1978), 367-406. der Nationenbildung im Mittelalter (Nationes ... 'as See above, p. 357 n. 6o. Papal approval for the creation of new dioceses was of course 136 B Z. it but not sufficient. was nos. 302,420. necessary, . 370 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' but ofimperial coronations would have to talk, not ofthe Reichskirchensystem, and the growing commitment of these rulers to Church reform. But it is probably better to say that they simply carried out the duty of protection established by the Carolingians, if in a rather heavy-handed way. If the Reichskirchensystem by control over the papacy, was not guaranteed it was also not underpinned by any coherent ideology. Ruotger's Vita Brunonis comes nearest to a justification of the type of ecclesiastical prince found in the Reich, and it is curiously defensive in tone. 137Later writers, like Sigebert of Gembloux in his Life of Dietrich I of Metz, might look back with nostalgia to the good old days when prelates served God and Caesar in harmony, 138but most Ottonian and Salian ecclesiastics would probably have felt uncomfortable when confronted with the implications of `nemo militans Deo implicet se saecularibus negotiis'. Ruotger offered a defence in the need to uphold, and to help the ruler uphold, that Augustinian pax and tranquillitas without which the Church could not do its work. A less theologically grounded justification could be found in the duty to defend the status of the see or abbey and of the saint to whom it belonged. But few offered- any justification. Nor did they like to look too closely at the basis for royal control of appointments. The passage from Thietmar of Merseburg near the beginning of this article has often been quoted as if it were a coherent theoretical statement about the rightness of kings' Thietmar follow bishoprics. But in says appointing to the sentences which that he has heard that elsewhere in Europe bishoprics are controlled by dukes and even by counts; I39 and this is the main point. Thietmar knew but bishop for implied: loss the what such control the not only of status of. the wealth and power of the bishopric. Kings were there to protect bishops from this, and it was a matter for complaint when they could not do so, as often happened. '40 Gerald of Cambrai also thought that it was 131 On it see F. Lotter, Die Pita Brummis des Ruolger. Ihre historiographische und ideenge`Politik Hoffmann, ix, H. Stellung Historische Forschungen, (Bonner und 1958); schichtliche im ottonischen Rcichskirchensystem. der Vita Brunonis des Kultur Zur Interpretation Ruotger', Rheinische Viertejahrsblätter, xxii (1957), 31-55; F. Prinz, Klerus und Krieg im frühen ii, (Monographien Mittelalter Geschichte des Mittelalters, 1971), 175-200; and zur 0. Köhler, Das Bild des geistlichen Fürsten in den Viten des , o., ti. und 12. Jahrhunderts (Abhandlungen zur mittleren und neueren Geschichte, lxxvii, 1935),. especially pp. 21ff. All these writers assume that Bruno was either typical or ideal-typical of the Reichskirchensystem; in fact, as the only legitimate son of a king to hold a bishopric during this period, he could scarcely have been less typical, and his viceregal position in Lotharingia owed far more to his royal blood than to a new kind of church policy. 138 Vita Deoderici I. episcopi dfettensis, c. 7, M. G. H. SS, iv. 467: 'lure felicia dixerim Ottonis tempora, cum claris praesulibus et sapientibus viris res publica sit reformata, pax aecclesiarum restaurata, honestas religionis redintegrata. ' 131 Thietmar, i. 26, p. 331°3 See the long complaint of injuries done to him and his fellow-bishops, Thietmar viii. 19-27, pp. 514-24, especially the bitter comment in viii. 23, p. 520: `Episcopatus in hiis partibus constituti ab eorum potentia [that is, of the local counts] sunt nimium depressi; et nos eorum procuratores, si contra Deum et iusticiam eius voluntati eorum in cunctis et sicut satisfacimus, honorem et aliquam utilitatem habemus; sin autem, contempnimur, 371 TIMOTHY REUTER the king's duty to protect the bishop, not the other way round. 141Thietmar Church in the over control royal order to exclude other and worse wanted forms of control. He did not suppose that it was right in itself: he was unhappy about his own promotion and about the way in which Henry ii treated several elections in his metropolitan see of Magdeburg; and he feared for Otto is salvation after his many sins, including the deposition l42 lawfully elected pope. of a The `sacerdotal' or `theocratic' elements143 in Ottonian and Salian rulership did not really underpin the system either. They may have had their functions in helping to distance the rulers from their subjects and in helping to end rebellions peacefully. 144But they could not and did not for kings' a strict case appointing to bishoprics and abbeys. If supportHenry iv and Henry v seem to have fought for so long in defence of them, this was because giving up `sacerdotalism' affected their view of themselves and their status - and also because they were fighting internal enemies who could not easily be pacified. The resistance to royal appointments which began in the late zo6os, though it coincided with attacks in polemical literature, stemmed from more practical considerations. Previously, chapters expected to benefit by having a man close to the king who could secure for his institution the benefits of royal favour. A court subject to coupsd'etat no longer inspired confidence, and the advantages of having a man in the king's favour no longer seemed to offset the disadvantages of not being able to make a local appointment. 145Once confidence was nobis nullus aut regnet aut imperet dominus depredamur. ' The same idea lies behind his scathing comments on Rudolf m of Burgundy (vii. 30, p. 434), a man who in Thietmar's view only took from his bishops without being able to protect them: `ad suam vero utilitatem pauca tenens ex inpensis antistitum vivit et hos vel alios in aliquo extrinsecus laborantes eriperi nequit. Unde hii manibus complicatis cunctis primatibus velut regi suo serviunt et sic pace fruuntur. ' 141He objected to joining a treuga Dei, saying that peace-keeping was the ruler's responsibility: seeSchieffer, `Gerald 1.', 344-5,347-8; H. Hoffmann, Gottesfriede and Treuga Dei (Schriften der M. G. H., xx, 1964), 57-64142 Thietmar, ii. 45, p. 94; ii. 28, pp, 72-4; vi- 43, PP- 326-8; and, on his concern with episcopal elections, Lippelt, Thietmar von Merseburg, 127-9143 The literature on this is now enormous. See F. Kern, Kingship and Law in the Middle Ages, trans. S. B. Chrimes, Oxford 1939 (for the full scholarly apparatus one must consult the German version: Gottesgnadentum and 11riderstandsrecht,2nd edn, by R. Buchner, The King's Two Bodies. A study in medieval political Darmstadt 1954); E. H. Kantorowicz, theology, Princeton 1957. For recent sceptical comments sec K. F. Morrison, Tradition and Authority in the Western Church,300-1140, Princeton 1969,373-89J. T. Nelson, `Royal saints and early medieval kingship', Studies in Church History, x, Cambridge 1973,43. In so far as these elements did exist, they were not confined to the Reich: see J. T. Rosenthal, `Edward the Confessor and Robert the Pious: eleventh-century kingship and biography', Mediaeval Studies, xxxiii (1971), 7-20, with a somewhat exaggerated thesis of a new 'hagiological' type of ruler; R. Dehsmann, 'Christus rex and magi reges: kingship and theology in Ottonian and Anglo-Saxon art', Frühmittelalterliche Studien, x (1976), 367-405141 Leyser, Rule and Conflict, 92-107145 Two articles by J. Fleckenstein, `Heinrich iv and der deutsche Episkopat in den in Adel and Kirche. Festschrift fur Gerd Tellenbach, Freiburg Anfängen des Investiturstreites', 372 THE GERMAN `IMPERIAL CHURCH SYSTEM' restored, as it was to some extent under Henry v and Lothar III, and still more under Frederick I, outsiders appointed by the king became acceptable once more. Neither the constitutional changes brought about by the Concordat of Worms nor the supposed `desacralisation' of kingship made much difference to this. 146 We may now sum up and point some conclusions. Ottonian and Salian bishops influence and the of choice rulers exercised considerable over degree, in differed however, influence, This abbots of royal monasteries. not in kind, from that exercised by their contemporaries and predecessors important fill in Europe. Where it it to elsewhere was used, was used not offices with reliable officials, but in a spirit of patronage, to reward and punish individuals and kin-groups. It was one of the means which the Ottonians and Salians had at their disposal to keep their greedy and feuding aristocratic followings loyal to them. Neither did the serviceswhich German ecclesiasticsperformed for their rulers differ greatly from those found elsewhere in Europe. Parallels can also be found for the exercise of ban immunity If by seem and governmental rights ecclesiastics. grants of because been have German important for this to was more ecclesiastics, jurisdiction differences in local in were the and of government ways which different because in Germany Europe, in of a the rest of not organised and kind of royal policy. This can be clearly seen in the Ottonians' and Salians' own dealings with Italian bishops: here the emphasis was not on had lands but which and rights governmental rights on powers to repossess been alienated, especially through leasehold tenure. 147In each case the recipients got the kind of grant they most needed and wanted, and these transactions should be seen as favours to the recipients rather than delegations of power. Bishops and abbots in the Ottonian and Salian Reich, as elsewhere,got far more protection from the king than they gave him. One should also stress- as recent specialist studies have increasingly done148- the variety of royal influence over and interest in the Church. im Breisgau 1968,221-36, and 'Hofkapelle and Reichsepiskopat unter Heinrich iv. ', in J. Fleckenstein (ed. ), Investiturstreitand Reichsverfassung(Vorträge and Forschungen heraus117-40, Geschichte, Konstanzer Arbeitskreis fir 1972), xvii, vom gegeben mittelalterliche in how Henry lost the early years of gradually episcopal control over appointments show Recently R. Schieffer, Die Entstehung des päpstlichen Investiturverbots fur den his majority. has shown deutschenKönig (Schriften der M. G. H., xxviii, 1981), especially 7-47,95-107, that investiture, and hence royal involvement as such in elections, did not become an issue found no contemporary until the late 1070s; the attacks by Humbert in AdversusSimoniacos resonance. lac D. Schäfer, 'Zur Beurteilung des Wormser Konkordats', Abhandlungen der königlichpreussischen Akademie der Wissenschaft, phil. -hist. Klasse, Berlin 1905, i. 8-37; G. Wolfram, Friedrich I. and das lVormser Concordat, Marburg 1883; R. Jordan, Die Stellung des deutschen Episkopats im Kampf um die Universalmacht unter Friedrich I. bis zum Frieden von Venedig (1197), Würzburg 1939,120-8; R. L. Benson, The Bishop-Elect. A study in medieval ecclesiasticaloffice, Princeton 1968,251ff. der Ottonen', M. LÖ. G., xlviii (1984), 147 M. Uhlirz, `Die italienische Kirchenpolitik See above, PP- 351-2,365-6. 229,240,288-9.188 373 TIMOTHY REUTER It was by no means consistent or systematic; there were considerable local is, This conclusion of course, entirely in keeping with the thrust variations. German last the two of generations of medieval scholarship, which has been in the direction of local and regional studies and has tended to difficulties to the overstress of making valid genestress - perhaps even in institutions Germany 149 The as a about whole. concept of ralisations first developed by Reichskirchensystem was an earlier generation a of scholars, for whom such generalisations were not only possible but the main purpose of their work: the powerful attractiveness of Verfassungsgeschichtelay precisely in the way in which it offered a means of ordering the mass of the discrete and the particular. The concept has survived even though the framework in which it was embedded has been discarded, and it is time it too was discarded. 149 W. Schlesinger, `Verfassungsgeschichte und Landesgeschichte', in Beiträge zur deut1963,9-41, schen Verfassungsgeschichtedes Mittelalters. it. Städte und Territorien, Göttingen Stand und Aufgaben der 254-61; T. Mayer, `Der Wandel unseres Bild vom Mittelalter. Geschichtsforschung', Blätterfür deutsche Landesgeschichte, xciv (1958), mittelalterlichen 1-87. 374