THE CAMBRIDGE MEDIEVAL HISTORY
By EDWIN H. HOLTHOUSE
THE reign of Henry III is the summit of the older German imperialism.
The path uphill had been made by the persevering energy of the Saxon kings and
Emperors; under Henry's successors the Empire rushed, though with glory, into
ruin. Henry himself, sane, just, and religious, has the approval of reason, but
could never have raised the white-hot zeal, and the fiercer hatred, which
burned round the Hohenstaufen.
His father and mother were among those rare men and women who wrest from
circumstances their utmost profit. Conrad, trained by adversity, attempting
nothing vaguely or rashly, almost invariably attained his object, and left the
"East-Frankish" Empire stronger within and without than ever before.
His education of his son in state-craft was thorough and strenuous: very early
he made him a sharer in his power, and then showed
neither mistrust nor jealousy, even when faced by markedly independent action.
Henry, for his part, though he judged adversely some of his father's conduct, honored
him and kept his memory in affection.
Henry's mother Gisela (of the blood of Charlemagne, of the royal house
of Burgundy, and heiress of Swabia) used fortune as Conrad used adversity. To
power and wealth she added great beauty, force of character, and mind. Her
influence is seen in the furtherance of learning and of the writing of
chronicles. It was to her that Henry owed his love of books, and she made of
her son "the most learned of kings". Gisela's share in public affairs
during her husband's reign was considerable, even taking into account the
important part habitually assigned to the Emperor's consort. Under Henry III
the part of the Empress, Mother or Consort, in the Empire begins to dwindle,
and there are indications of misunderstandings later between her and Henry. The
chronicler Herman of Reichenau speaks of Gisela dying "disappointed by the
sayings of soothsayers, who had foretold that she should survive her son."
Conspicuous in Henry's early circle was his Burgundian tutor, Wipo, the
biographer of Conrad and the staunch admirer of Gisela. According to Wipo, a
king's first business is to keep the law. Among the influences which were
brought to bear upon Henry in his youth, that of Wipo cannot be overlooked.
Boyhood of
Henry III
Henry was a boy of seven when at Kempen, in
1024, Conrad was elected king. In 1026, Conrad, before setting out on his
coronation expedition into Italy, named Henry as his successor and gave him in
charge to an acute and experienced statesman, Bishop Bruno of Augsburg, brother
of the late Emperor and cousin to the Empress Gisela. The energy with which
Bruno held views different from those of his brother had, in the last reign,
led him into conspiracy and exile. With the same independence in church
matters, he, alone in the Mayence province, had taken no part in the collective
action of the bishops against Benedict VIII. From such a guardian Henry was
bound to receive a real political education. Under his care, Henry attended his
father's coronation in Rome. Three months later, Conrad, in accordance with his
policy of the absorption of the old national duchies, gave to Henry the Duchy
of Bavaria, vacated by the death of Henry of Luxemburg. Then, on Easter Day,
1028, in the old royal Frankish city of Aix-la-Chapelle, Henry, after unanimous
election by the princes and acclamation by clergy and people, was, at the age
of eleven, crowned king by Pilgrim of Cologne.
In the inscription "Spes imperii" on a leaden seal of Henry's in 1028 Steindorff sees an indication that this election at Aix
implied the election to the Empire. He draws attention also to the title
"King" used of Henry before his imperial coronation in the Acts
emanating from the imperial Chancery in Italy, as well as in those purely
German; and to the fact that Henry was never re-crowned as King of Italy. He
argues therefore that contemporaries regarded the act of Aix-la-Chapelle as
binding the whole of Conrad's dominions, and as a matter of fact this cannot be
doubted.
On the death of Bishop Bruno in April 1029, Henry, whose place as its
duke was in Bavaria, was placed in charge of a Bavarian, Bishop Egilbert of Freising. Egilbert had in the early years of Henry II's reign taken
active part in public affairs, but of late he had devoted himself chiefly to
provincial and ecclesiastical duties. Under him Henry played his first part as
independent ruler, basing his actions on motives of justice rather than on
those of policy. Conrad in 1030 had led an unsuccessful expedition into
Hungary; he was planning a new expedition when Henry, "still a
child," taking counsel with the Bavarian princes but not with his father,
received the envoys of St Stephen and granted peace, "acting with wisdom and
justice", says Wipo, "towards a king who, though unjustly attacked,
was the first to seek reconciliation."
In 1031 Henry was present with his father in the decisive campaign
against the Poles. In 1032 Rodolph of Burgundy died, after a long and feeble
rule. Conrad, though he snatched a coronation, had still to fight for his new
kingdom against the nationalist and Romance party supporting Odo II (Eudes) of Champagne, and throughout 1032 the imperial
diplomas point to Henry's presence with his father, in company with the Empress
and Bishop Egilbert. In the following years, Henry
was deputed to act against the Slavs of the North-East and against Bratislav of
Bohemia. In these, his first independent campaigns, he succeeded in restoring
order. In August 1034, Conrad was fully recognized as king by the Burgundian
magnates, and in this recognition the younger king was included. Henry had
already in the previous year come fully of age, the
guardianship of Bishop Egilbert being brought to an
end with grants of land in recognition of his services.
The deposition in 1035 of Duke Adalbero of
Carinthia led to a curious scene between father and son. In the South the
deposition was regarded as an autocratic act (Herman of Reichenau curtly notes
that Adalbero "having lost the imperial favor,
was deprived likewise of his duchy"); and Bishop Egilbert won a promise from his late ward that he would not consent to any act of
injustice against the duke. The princes accordingly refused to agree to the
deposition without Henry's consent, which Henry withheld in spite of prayers
and threats from Conrad. The Emperor was overcome and finally borne unconscious
from the hall; on his recovery, he knelt before Henry and begged him to
withdraw his refusal. Henry of course yielded, and the brunt of the imperial
anger fell on Bishop Egilbert.
In 1036, at Nimeguen, Henry wedded Kunigunda,
or Gunnhild, daughter of Knut, a wedding which secured to Denmark, for over
eight hundred years, the Kiel district of Schleswig. The bride was delicate and
still a child, grateful for sweets as for kindness. In England songs were long
sung of her and of the gifts showered on her by the English people. Her bridal
festivities were held in June in Charlemagne's palace at Nimeguen, and on the
feast of SS. Peter and Paul (June p29) she was crowned queen. Conrad was soon
after called to Italy by the rising of the vavassors against the great lords. Henry was summoned to help, and with him went Kunigunda and Gisela. In August 1038, on the march of the
Germans homeward, camp and court were pitched near the shores of the Adriatic.
Here a great sickness attacked the host; among the victims was Queen Kunigunda, whose death "on the threshold of life"
roused pity throughout the Empire. Her only daughter Beatrice was later made by
her father abbess of the royal abbey of Quedlinburg near Goslar.
Another victim of the pestilence was Henry's half-brother Herman,
Gisela's second son. His duchy of Swabia devolved on Henry, already Duke of
Bavaria. To these two duchies and his German kingship was added, in 1038, the
kingship of Burgundy. Then in the spring of 1039 Conrad died at Utrecht.
The position of public affairs at Henry's accession to sole rule was
roughly this. There had been added to the Empire a kingdom, Burgundy, for the
most part non-German, geographically distinct, yet most useful if the German
king was to retain his hold upon Italy. The imperial power in Italy had been
made a reality, and an important first step had been taken here towards
incorporating the hitherto elusive South, and towards absorbing the newcomers, the
Normans. On the north-eastern frontiers of the Empire both March and Mission
were suffering from long neglect. Poland had been divided and weakened, and
turned from aggression to an equally dangerous anarchy: Bohemia had recently
slipped into hostility: Hungary was tranquil, but scarcely friendly. In the
North the Danish alliance tended to stability. In the duchies of Germany
itself, Lorraine was indeed growing over-powerful, but Bavaria, Swabia and (a
few months later) Carinthia were held by the Crown; Saxony was quiescent,
though scarcely loyal; in Germany as a whole the people and the mass of
fighting landowners looked to the Crown for protection and security. The
Church, as under Henry II, was a State-department, and the main support of the
throne.
Over this realm, Henry, in the summer of 1039, assumed full sway, as
German, Italian, and Burgundian king, Duke of Swabia and of Bavaria, and
"Imperator in Spe." The Salian policy of
concentrating the tribal duchies in the hands of the sovereign was at its height.
In his father's funeral train, bearing the coffin in city after city,
from church-porch to altar, and finally at Spires, from the altar to the tomb,
Henry the Pious inaugurated his reign. A young man in his twenty-second or
twenty-third year, head and shoulders taller than his subjects, the temper of
his mind is seen in his sending away cold and empty the jugglers and jesters
who swarmed to Ingelheim for the wedding festivities of his second bride, Agnes
of Poitou, and in his words to Abbot Hugh of Cluny, that only in solitude and
far from the business of the world could men really commune with God.
The re-establishment of the German kingship, after the disintegration
caused by the attacks of Northmen and Magyars, had been a gradual and difficult
process. For the molding of a real unity, not even yet attained, there was need
of the king's repeated presence and direct action in all parts of the realm.
What Norman and Plantagenet rulers were to do later in England by means of
their royal commissioners, judges and justices, the German king had to do in
person.
Following in this the policy of his predecessors, Henry opened his reign
with a systematic progress throughout his realm, a visitation accompanied by
unceasing administrative activity. He had already, before leaving the
Netherlands, received the homage of Gozelo, Duke of
both Lorraines; of Gerard, the royalist-minded and
most energetic bishop of Cambray; and of a deputation of Burgundian magnates
who had been waiting on Conrad in Utrecht when death overcame him. He had
passed with the funeral procession through Cologne, Mayence, Worms, and Spires.
Immediately after the conclusion of the obsequies he returned to Lower
Lorraine, to Aix-la-Chapelle and Maestricht, where he
remained some eight or nine days, dealing justice to the many who demanded it.
Thence he went to Cologne, the city which competed with Mayence for precedence
in Germany; it was already governed by Henry's life-long and most trusted
adviser, Archbishop Herman, whose noble birth and strenuous activity contrast
strongly with the comparative obscurity and the mildness of Bardo of Mayence.
The royal
progress
In the first days of September, accompanied by the Empress Gisela and
Archbishop Herman, Henry made his first visit as sole ruler to Saxony, of all
the German lands the least readily bound to his throne and destined to play so
fatal a part in the downfall of his heir. This weakness in the national bond
Henry seems to have tried to remedy by personal ties. The obscure township of
Goslar was to be transformed by his favor into a courtly city. Here in the wild
district of the Harz was Botfeld, where, now and
throughout his life, Henry gave himself up at times to hunting, his only
pleasure and relaxation from the toils of state. Near at hand was the Abbey of
Quedlinburg, whose then Abbess, the royal Adelaide, he distinguished as his
"spiritual mother" ; while her successors in turn were Henry's own
two daughters, his eldest, Beatrice, niece of the Confessor, and his youngest,
Adelaide.
Disquieting news reached Henry in Saxony of events in Bohemia, whose
Duke Bratislav had, late in August, returned triumphantly to Prague after a
whirlwind campaign throughout the length and breadth of Poland, a land recently
made vassal to the Empire, the prince of which, Casimir,
an exile in Germany, was the nephew of Herman of Cologne. From Saxony Henry
passed through Thuringia towards Bohemia, and there consulted with Eckhard of Meissen, guardian of the Marches against
Bohemia, a veteran of staunchest loyalty, in whose wise counsels Henry placed
unfailing confidence in spite of his unsuccess in
war. There can be no doubt that Henry in Thuringia was at the head of an armed
force, and that he meant war with Bohemia; but an embassy with hostages from
Bratislav, together, doubtless, with the need for completing the visitation of
the German duchies, determined him for the time to peace. So he dismissed his
forces, and turned south to Bavaria.
From Bavaria, at the beginning of the new year, 1040, he moved to his
mother's native duchy of Swabia; while after his departure Peter of Hungary,
ally of Bratislav, sent his Magyars raiding over the Bavarian borders. In
Swabia, Henry visited, among other places, the famous monastery of Reichenau,
the chief and most brilliant centre of learning in Germany, the home of Herman,
the noble cripple, whose genius was extolled throughout Germany, and to whose
pen we owe a very large, if not the chief part, of our knowledge both of his
times and of Henry himself, a knowledge but little tinged with enthusiasm or
sympathy for the king. As he passed through Constance, Henry shows for a moment
a touch of human sympathy, as he visited, in the Church of Saint Mary, the tomb
of his unfortunate eldest brother, Ernest of Swabia.
At Ulm he summoned his first "Furstentag,"
the assembly of princes, bishops, and abbots from all parts of the realm. Here
came among others Gunther, the German hermit of the Böhmer Wald, no less notable than any of the great princes,
and soon to render a signal service to his king and countrymen in distress. To
Ulm there came also the first formal embassy from Italy to the new ruler.
From Ulm Henry passed to the Rhine. He spent April at his palace at
Ingelheim, where he received both a formal embassy from his Burgundian kingdom,
and more important still, Archbishop Aribert of
Milan, his father's stubborn opponent in Italy. Henry had never approved of
Conrad's proceedings against him; and the siege of Milan, carried on by Italian
princes at Conrad's command, had ceased automatically with Henry's accession.
By receiving the explanations and the homage of the archbishop, Henry healed an
open wound in the Empire. Thus auspiciously, with an act of justice and
reconciliation, he opened the period of his lordship in Italy; thus too closed
his inaugural progress through the realm.
During its course had died Henry's cousins, Conrad, Duke, and Adalbero, ex-Duke of Carinthia, after whom, as next heir,
he succeeded automatically to the duchy. He was now therefore Duke of Swabia,
Bavaria, and Carinthia; of the five great duchies, only Lorraine and Saxony
remained apart from the Crown.
The progress through the German lands completed, Henry was free to turn
to the Bohemian campaign, the necessity of which had been clearly shown by the
raids of Bratislav’s Hungarian ally. Two months more
Henry spent, apparently peacefully and piously, after his own heart, in both
the Lorraines and in Alsace, at the ancient royal
palaces of Nimeguen and Utrecht, at Liege, Metz, Nancy and Moyen-Vic;
giving grants to churches; showing marked favour to
the reforming ascetic monasteries; attending, especially, the consecration of
the new Minster at Stablo, under Poppo,
the pioneer and leader of monastic reform in Germany. Probably it was from Stablo, a scene of peaceful and pious magnificence, that
Henry issued the summons for the army to assemble against Bohemia. In July,
1040, at Goslar he again met Eckhard of Meissen, to
formulate the plan of campaign. At Ratisbon he joined his forces and proceeded
to Cham at the entrance to the Bohemian pass, by which he meant to attack; and
on 13 August he broke camp for Bohemia.
The expedition failed speedily and disastrously; his troops were
ambushed, their leaders slain. The mediation of the hermit Gunther,
and the promise to restore the Bohemian hostages, including Bratislav’s son, alone rescued hundreds of German captives. Bratislav was left exultant
master of the situation.
Submission
of Bohemia
Henry, silent and as it were dismissing Bohemia from his mind, retraced
his steps through Bavaria. On 8 September he filled up the newly-vacant see of
Bamberg by appointing Suidger, a Saxon, who was a few
years later, as Clement II, the first of the reforming German popes. Going
north, he held an open court, dealing justice, at Aldstedt;
and received there envoys from Yaroslav, Prince of
Kiev. Then at Munster he met the princes, laid before them the Bohemian
situation, and dismissed the Bohemian hostage-prince to his own country. This
year nature conspired with fortune against Germany The rain fell, the rivers
rose, destructive floods swept the country-side, many lost their lives. To
crown all, "grapes were scarce and the wine sour."
But Henry's calm attention to other matters by no means meant submission
to defeat. At Seligenstadt, in the April of 1041, the
princes again met to discuss active measures, and overtures from Bohemia were
rejected. Fortune was veering, for Bratislav was now deprived of his Hungarian
ally Peter, who lost his throne by a sudden insurrection and only saved his
liberty by flight to Germany, where Henry received him kindly, "forgetting
for the sake of God the wrong towards himself." Bohemia, however, he did
not forget, but pressed forward his preparations. At Aix, in June 1041, he met
the princes and bishops of the West, Gozelo and
Godfrey of Lorraine, Herman of Cologne, Poppo of
Treves, Nithard of Liege. At Goslar and at Tilleda, the royal seat in Thuringia, he concerted final
measures with Eckhard of Meissen; and on 15 August,
the anniversary of his previous expedition, he crossed the Bohemian frontier.
By Michaelmas he was back in Germany a victor.
A fortnight later Bratislav followed him to Ratisbon, and there did public
homage and underwent public humiliation. Probably Peter also appeared there as
a suppliant before Henry. Henceforth Peter was Henry's client and Bratislav
Henry's friend. Great was the joy in Germany at this Bohemian victory. With it
we can undoubtedly connect the "Tetralogus"
of Henry's tutor Wipo, a chant of praise and exhortation to the
"fame-crowned King," who "after Christ rules the world,"
the lover of justice, the giver of peace. It is in the midst of the turmoils and rejoicings of 1041 that the Augsburg Annals
record "by his (Henry's) aid and diligence very many excelled in the arts,
in building, in all manner of learning."
But in this same year misfortune after misfortune fell upon the land.
There were storms and floods. Everywhere the harvest failed and famine reigned.
Nor could Henry rest on his oars. The fall and flight of Peter of Hungary had
increased, rather than removed, the Hungarian menace, even if it opened new
vistas of extended power; while Burgundy, newly in peace, clamoured for attention lest this young peace should die. And although to the great
Christmas gathering of princes round Henry at Strasbourg (1041) there came
envoys from Obo of Hungary to know "whether might he expect certain enmity
or stable peace," it was to Burgundy that Henry first gave his attention.
Since his appearance as Burgundian king in 1031 he had not again visited the
country.
Burgundy
He kept Christmas (1041) at Strasbourg amid a brilliant gathering of
princes; and when immediately afterwards he entered Burgundy, it was at the
head of armed vassals. We are told by Herman of Reichenau that the Burgundian
nobles made submission, that many were brought to justice, that Henry entered
Burgundy, ruled with vigour and justice, and safeguarded the public peace;
finally Wipo tells us that "he ruled Burgundy with magnificence."
Some notion of the state of the land before Henry's arrival may be gathered
by the history of the archdiocese of Lyons. Here Archbishop Burchard,
characterized by Herman of Reichenau as "tyrannus et sacrilegus, aecclesiarum depraedator, adulterque incestuosus", and moreover strongly anti-German, had been cast into prison and chains by
Conrad in 1036. The city was then seized upon by a Count Gerard, who, desirous
it would appear of playing at Lyons the part played by the
"Patrician" at Rome, thrust into the see of
Lyons his son, a mere boy. This boy later secretly fled, and since then Lyons
had contentedly lacked a bishop.
The filling of the see thus left vacant was one of Henry's first cares
in Burgundy: at the recommendation of the Cluniac Halinard of Dijon, who refused the sacred office for himself, it was given to a pious
and learned French secular priest, Odulric (Ulric),
Archdeacon of Langres. That the peace and order
enforced under Henry were after all but comparative may be judged from the
murder of Odulric himself only a few years later.
There was much to attract Henry in Burgundy; for side by side with its
lawlessness and violence were the strivings for peace and holiness embodied in
the "Treuga Dei" and in the austerity of
Cluny and its monasteries. Henry's approbation of Cluniac ideals is evident,
and throughout his whole life he shows real ardor, almost a passion in his
striving to realize throughout the Empire that peace founded on religion, upon
which the Treuga Dei, if in somewhat other fashion,
strove to insist locally.
After some six weeks in Burgundy, he must have heard at Basle on his way
back of the havoc played among the Bavarians on the frontier, a week earlier,
by the new King Obo of Hungary and his raiders. Henry, himself the absentee
duke of the unfortunate duchy, at once handed it over (without waiting, as it
would seem, for the formality of an election, as right was, by the Bavarians)
to Count Henry of Luxemburg, who was akin to the last Duke Henry of Bavaria,
and nephew to the Empress Kunigunda, wife of Henry
II. Trusting to the vigour of the new duke to protect Bavaria for the time
being, Henry next, a few weeks later, summoned all the princes, including of
course Eckhard of Meissen, to Cologne, there to
decide upon further steps to be taken with regard to Hungary. They unanimously
declared for war.
Hungary
Some four or five months elapsed before the expedition was launched.
From Wurzburg, at Whitsuntide, Henry strengthened his hold on his Burgundian
realm by dispatching Bishop Bruno to woo for him Agnes of Poitou. A few months
he spent in comparative quiet, probably with his mother, in Thuringia and
Saxony; then later, in August 104, he entered Bavaria and started, early in
September, on the Hungarian expedition.
It was a success. Henry overcame, not Obo himself, who retired to
inaccessible fastnesses, but at least the Western Magyars. He set up a new
king, not Peter, but an unnamed cousin of his, and then returned fairly well
satisfied to Germany. Directly his back was turned, Obo emerged from his
fastness, and the reign of Henry's candidate came to an abrupt end. Yet a
lesson against raiding had undoubtedly been given to "the over-daring
Kinglet."
The king spent the Christmas of 1042 at Goslar; whither in January came
envoys from the princes of the northern peoples. Bratislav of Bohemia came in
person, bearing and receiving gifts. The Russians, though they bore back to
their distant lord far more magnificent presents than they could have offered,
departed in chagrin, for Henry had rejected their offer of a Russian bride. Casimir of Poland also sent his envoys; they were not
received, since he himself did not come in person. Lastly Obo too, who had just
ejected his second rival king, sent to propose peace. His messengers received
an answer ominously evasive.
Early in the following month, at Goslar, the Empress-Mother died. That
there had been some measure of alienation between Henry and Gisela is suggested
by Wipo's exhortation to Henry to "remember the
sweetness of a mother's name," and by his recording in his Tetralogus the many benefits conferred by Gisela on her
son; as well as by Herman of Reichenau's acid
comment. Yet there is no evidence that the alienation was serious. Henry's
grants and charters on his mother's petition are numerous. In all probability
he spent with her the only long interval of comparative leisure (1042) that he
had enjoyed since his accession; she died whilst with him at Goslar.
Soon after the funeral ceremonies were over, Henry had his first meeting
with the King of France, Henry I. Its place and object are obscure; but
probably it was on the frontier at Ivois, and it may
very well have been in connection with Henry's approaching marriage with Agnes
of Poitou.
The king's mind was now bent on the preparations for yet another
Hungarian expedition. Twice Obo sought to evade the conflict. Obo did not, it
is true, show much tact, if indeed he really desired peace; for in his second
embassy he demanded that Henry should himself swear to any terms agreed upon,
instead of merely giving the oath in kingly fashion by proxy ; this request was
deemed an insult. The blow when it came
was effective. Henry in the space of four weeks brought Obo to a promise of
humble satisfaction, a satisfaction never made effectual, because the promises
of Obo were not fulfilled.
Far more important and of solid and lasting advantage to Germany, was
the restitution by Hungary of that territory on the Danube ceded to St Stephen
"pro causes amicitiae"
in 1031. Since the frontier won by Henry remained until 1919 the frontier
between German Austria and Hungary, it is worth while considering it in detail. The land ceded, or rather restored, was
"ex una parte Danubii inter Fiscaha et Litacha, ex altera autem inter Strachtin et ostia Fiscaha usque in Maraha." South of the Danube, that is to
say, the Leitha replaced the Fischa as boundary as far south as the Carinthian March.
North of the river, the old frontier line seems to have run from opposite the
confluence of the Fischa with the Danube to a
fortress on the Moravian border, Strachtin or Trachtin. This artificial frontier was now replaced by the
river March. Thus among other things was secured permanently for Germany the
famous "Wiener Wald."
The realm was now at peace: Burgundy in order, Italy contented (in
contrast to the early days of Conrad) with German overlordship,
not one of the great princes or duchies of Germany a danger to the realm. The
fame or the arms of the king had induced the princes on its borders to seek his
friendship and acknowledge his superiority. Nothing remained to mar the public
peace save private enmities. To private enemies the
king might, without danger to the commonwealth, offer reconciliation. On the
"Day of Indulgence" at Constance, in late October 1043, Henry from
the pulpit announced to the assembled princes and bishops and to the whole of
Germany, that he renounced all idea of vengeance on any who had injured him,
and exhorted all his princes, nobles and people in their turn to forget all
private offences. The appeal of the king was ordered to be made known
throughout the whole land, and this day at Constance became known as the
"Day of Indulgence" or "Day of Pardon."
The object was to abolish violence and private war, and so far the
attempt bears a strong resemblance to the contemporary Franco-Burgundian
institution, the "Truce of God," with which, however, it cannot be
confounded, since although the ends were the same, the means were only
superficially alike. Since however the "Indulgence" has sometimes
been confused with, sometimes considered as deliberately rivaling, this "Treuga Dei," it is worthwhile to consider some
relations and dissimilarities between the two movements.
Peace and
Truce of God
The "Truce of God" endeavored to mitigate and limit violence
by an appeal to Christian sentiment rather than to Christian principle. The
Christian, under heavy church penalties, was to reverence certain days and
times regarded as sacred by abstaining on them from all violence not only in
aggression but even under provocation. This "Truce" was created in
France, the country where private feuds were most general and fiercest, and
where therefore there was greatest need of it. Its birth place was Aquitaine,
in the year of Henry's accession; and nowhere was it more eagerly adopted than
in Burgundy, where religious zeal burnt whitest and private feuds were most
universal and devastating.
Now this "Truce of God" was an addition made to the original
proclamation of a Peace of God (c. 980), which forbade private violence against
non-combatants, by oath and for a fixed time, as contrary to Christian precept.
Like most medieval legislation, both "Peace" and "Truce"
were largely failures. Henry's "Indulgence" struck at the root of the
evil as they had not. The Indulgence, it is true, was not so sweeping as would
have been the "Peace of God," because no provision was made for the
protection of non-combatants, in case private war did arrive. The
"Indulgence," being a pardon of actual enemies, could by its nature
refer only to the present and the actual without a word as to the future,
although Henry no doubt hoped that the one must entail the other.
Another distinction between the "Treuga Dei" and the "Indulgence" consists in the ecclesiastical
character of the former. The "Truce" was conceived by the Church,
proclaimed by the Church, its breach punished by heavy ecclesiastical
penalties. The "Indulgence" was an example and exhortation from a
Christian king to his subjects, compliance being in appearance voluntary,
though royal displeasure might threaten him who refused it. But the distinction
does not, as some have thought, imply any sort of opposition. Henry approved of
the "Truce" as churchmen approved of the "Indulgence." One
adversary of the Truce opposed it, indeed, on the ground that by it the Church
usurped a royal function. But this was the ultra-royalist Gerard of Cambray,
one of the few bishops who did not enjoy Henry's favor. On the other hand, the
chief supporters of the Truce in Burgundy were the bishops, firm imperialists.
Only a year before Henry's visit to Burgundy the Bishops and Archbishops of
Arles, Avignon, Nice, Vienne and Besancon, had met Pope Benedict IX at
Marseilles and had in all probability obtained his approval for the measure
promulgated by the Burgundian synod at Montriond in
1041, extending the time of the Truce to the whole of Lent and Advent. Cluny,
whose ideal the king revered as the highest ideal of all monasticism, had,
through Abbot Odilo, appealed on behalf of the Treuga Dei to all France and Italy. Within the French part
of the Empire, in the diocese of Verdun, Henry's friend the Abbot Richard of St Vannes was a promoter and zealous supporter of the
Truce.
To sum up: Henry knew the working of the "Truce": its friends
were his friends, its aim was his aim. In the same spirit and with the same
object he took a different method, neither identical with, nor antagonistic to,
the sister-movement in the neighbouring Latin kingdoms, but worked
independently, side by side with it, in sympathy and harmony, although their
provisions were different. Henry was not given to ardors, enthusiasms and
dreams. His endeavors to found a public peace on the free forgiveness of
enemies shows a real belief in the practicability of basing public order on
religion and self-restraint rather than on force. As little can Henry's
"Indulgence" be confused with the Landfrieden of a later date, which were in the nature of laws, sanctioned by penalties; not
a free forgiveness like Henry's "Pardon."
Empress
Agnes of Poitou
This year, 1043, which had witnessed in its opening months the homage of
the North, in the summer the defeat of Hungary, in the autumn the proclamation
of peace between Germans, saw at its close the consummation of the policy by
which Henry sought to link the South more closely with the Empire.
His first marriage had allied him with the northern power, whose
friendship from that time on had been, and during Henry's lifetime continued to
be, of great value to the Empire. His second marriage should strengthen his
bond with Italy and Burgundy, and, some have thought, prepare his way in
France. From Constance the king journeyed to Besancon, and there, amid a
brilliant gathering of loyal or subdued Burgundian nobles, wedded Agnes of
Poitou.
Agnes, that "cause of tears to Germany," was a girl of about
eighteen, dainty and intelligent, the descendant of Burgundian and Italian
kings, daughter to one of the very greatest of the French king's vassals, and
step-daughter to another. Her life so far had been spent at the court, first of
Aquitaine, during the lifetime of her father Duke William the Pious; then of
Anjou, after the marriage of her mother Agnes with Geoffrey the Hammer
(Martel). The learning and piety of the one home she exchanged for the
superstition and violence of the other. For Geoffrey was certainly
superstitious, most certainly violent, and constantly engaged in endeavours, generally successful, to increase his territory
and his power at the expense of his neighbors, or of his suzerain, the French
king. He and William of Normandy were by far the strongest of the French
princes contemporary with Henry, so much the strongest, that a great German
historian has seen in the alliance by marriage of Henry with the House of Anjou
a possible preparation for the undermining of the French throne and the
addition of France to the Empire'.
The marriage was held in strong disapproval by some of the stricter
churchmen on account of the relationship between Henry and Agnes, which,
although distant, fell within the degrees of kinship which, by church law,
barred marriage (Agnes and Henry were great-grandchildren respectively of two
step-sisters, Alberada and Matilda, granddaughters of
Henry the Fowler. They were descended also respectively from Otto the Great and
his sister Gerberga.). Abbot Siegfried of the
reformed monastery at Gorze wrote very shortly before
to his friend Abbot Poppo of Stablo,
who possessed the confidence and respect of Henry, urging him even at the
eleventh hour, and at risk of a possible loss of the king's favour,
to do all that he possibly could to prevent it. Neither Poppo,
nor Bishop Bruno of Toul (later Pope Leo IX), to whom
Siegfried addresses still more severe reproaches, nor Henry himself, paid much
heed to these representations. The marriage plans went on without let or
hindrance; twenty-eight bishops were present at the ceremony at Besancon.
Not only the consanguinity of Agnes with the king, but also her
nationality, aroused misgivings in the mind of this German monk. He cannot
suppress his anxiety lest the old-time German sobriety shown in dress, arms,
and horse-trappings should now disappear. Even now, says he, the honest customs
of German forefathers are despised by men who imitate those whom they know to
be enemies. We do not know how Agnes
viewed the alleged follies and fripperies of her nation, thus inveighed against
by this somewhat acid German saint. She was pious, sharing to the full and
encouraging her husband's devotion to Cluny; she favoured learned men; her character does not however emerge clearly until after Henry's
death. Then, in circumstances certainly of great difficulty, she was to show
some unwisdom, failing either to govern the realm or
to educate her son. After the coronation
at Mayence and the wedding festivities at Ingelheim, Henry brought Agnes to
spend Christmas in the ancient palace at Utrecht, where he now proclaimed for
the North the "Indul-gence" already
proclaimed in the South. So with a peace "unheard of for many ages" a
new year opened. But in the West a tiny cloud was rising, which would
overshadow the rest of the king's reign. For, in April 1044, old Duke Gozelo of Lorraine died.
Godfrey of
Lorraine
Gozelo had eventually
been staunch and faithful, and had done good service to Henry's house; but his
duchy was over-great and the danger that might arise from this fact had been
made manifest by his hesitation in accepting, certainly the election of Conrad,
and also, possibly, the undisputed succession of his son. The union of the two
duchies of Upper and Lower Lorraine had been wrung by him from the necessities
of the kings; Henry now determined to take this occasion again to separate
them. Of Gozelo's five sons the eldest, Godfrey, had
already during his father's lifetime been duke in Upper Lorraine, and had
deserved well of the Empire. He now expected to succeed his father in the Lower
Duchy. But Henry bestowed Lower Lorraine on the younger Gozelo,
"The Coward," alleging a dying wish of the old duke's that his
younger son might obtain part of the duchy. Godfrey thenceforth was a rebel
(sometimes secretly, more often openly), imprisoned, set at liberty, deprived
of his duchy, re-installed, humbled to submission, but again revolting, always
at heart a justified rebel. If, in spite of its seeming successes, Henry's
reign must be pronounced a failure, to no one is the failure more due than to
Godfrey of Lorraine.
The beginning of the Lorraine trouble coincided with the recrudescence
of that with Hungary. Obo, perhaps prevented by nationalist opposition, had not
carried out his promises of satisfaction; there was also growing up in Hungary
a party strongly opposed to him and favoring Germanisation and German intervention. Preparations for another campaign had been going on
strenuously in Germany; by the summer of 1044 they were complete. After a hasty
visit to Nimeguen, whither he had summoned Godfrey, and a fruitless attempt to
reconcile the two brothers, Henry with Peter in his train set out for Hungary.
With Hungarian refugees to guide him, he was, by 6 July, on the further
bank of the Raab. There the small German army
confronted a vast Hungarian host, among whom, however, disaffection was at
work. In a battle where few Germans fell, this host was scattered; and Hungary
was subordinated to Germany. By twos and threes, or by crowds, came Hungarian
peasants and nobles, offering faith and subjection. At Stühlweissenburg Peter was restored to his throne, a client-king; and Henry, leaving a German
garrison in the country, returned home. On the battlefield the king had led a
thanksgiving to Heaven, and his German warriors, at his inspiration, had freely
and exultingly forgiven their enemies; on his return, in the churches of
Bavaria, Henry, barefoot and in humble garment, again and again returned thanks
for a victory which seemed nothing short of a miracle.
It was now that Henry gave to the Hungarians, at the petition of the
victorious party amongst them, the gift of "Bavarian Law," a Germanisation all to the good. But Hungary was not being
Germanized merely and alone by these subtle influences, by the inclination of
its kings and the German party towards things German, nor by the adoption in
Hungary of an ancient code of German law. After the battle of the Raab, Hungary was definitely and formally in the position
of vassal to Germany; not only its king, but its nobles too, swore fealty to
Henry and his heirs; Peter formally accepted the crown as a grant for his
lifetime; and Hungary was thenceforth to pay a regular yearly tribute. Obo had
been captured in flight and beheaded by his rival. The victory over Hungary
seemed even more complete than the victory over Bohemia; the difference in the
duration of their effects was partly due to a fundamental difference in the
character of the two vassal princes. While Bratislav, a strong man, held
Bohemia firmly, and, giving his fealty to Henry, gave with it the fealty of
Bohemia; Peter, subservient and cringing to his benefactor, let Hungary slip
through his fingers. Within two years he was a blinded captive in his
twice-lost kingdom; and Hungary, freed from him, was freed too from vassalage.
This summer saw the gathering of the western clouds. Godfrey of Lorraine
had himself taken part in Henry's former Hungarian campaign, but deeply
disappointed by the outcome of the meeting at Nimeguen, had held himself aloof
in stubborn disobedience from this last expedition. He now sent envoys to
Henry, who declared himself ready to forget the duke's contumacy should he at
the eleventh hour consent peaceably to the division of the duchies. But Godfrey
would submit to no "wrong," and having failed to move Henry, he began
actively and secretly to engage in treason. And here at once becomes evident
the peculiar danger to Germany of disaffection in Lorraine. For Lorraine was,
in truth, not German as the other German lands were German; and the first ally
made by Godfrey was "rex Carlingorum,"
Henry I of France. His other allies, the Burgundian nationalists of the
"Romance" party, were, like himself, of the oft disputed "Middle
Kingdom." In his own duchy he prepared for resistance by gaining from his
vassals an oath of unlimited fealty for the space of three years to aid him
against all men whatsoever.
As yet there had been no overt act of rebellion; but Henry had been
given proof of Godfrey's plots, and in the autumn summoned him before a great
assembly of the princes in Lower Lorraine itself, at Aix-la-Chapelle. Godfrey
could have defied the king and disobeyed the summons; but to do so would have
been to acknowledge his guilt. He must have hoped that there was no evidence
against him, or that the princes would sympathize with him in his wrongs. He
came, was convicted, and condemned to the loss of all the lands, including the
duchy of Upper Lorraine and the county of Verdun, which he held in fief from
the king. Godfrey now left Aix, and broke into fierce and open rebellion. Arms
were distributed to the cities and country people, cities were garrisoned; and
the duke fell with fire and sword upon all within reach who were faithful to
Henry.
So ended the year that had seen Hungary subdued. Henry, however, did not
yet foresee the stubborn nature of the danger that threatened from Lorraine. He
spent Christmas 1044 at Spires, "a place beloved by him." It is true
that he summoned the princes to consultation over Godfrey's revolt. Yet, after
the feast was over, it was only the forces of the neighborhood that he led
against the "tyrant " that threatened them. Even these forces he
could not maintain, because of the terrible famine in the land. He succeeded,
after a short siege and with the help of siege-engines, in taking and razing
Godfrey's castle at Bockelheim, near Kreuznach. The
seizure of other castles was entrusted to local nobles, while Henry himself,
leaving sufficient men to protect his people against Godfrey's raids, departed
to Burgundy.
Here Godfrey's efforts had borne fruit in feuds which had broken out in
the preceding year between Imperialist and Nationalist partisans. They ended in
victory for the former, for Count Louis of Montbeliard (who had married Henry's foster-sister) with a small force overcame Godfrey's
ally Prince Raynald, who was uncle of Henry's queen
and son of Count Otto-William, the former head of the anti-German party. When
Henry now approached Burgundy, Raynald along with the
chief of his partisans, Count Gerald of Geneva, personally made submission to
him. Thus died out the last flicker during Henry's life of Burgundian
opposition to union with the Empire.
Henry took Burgundy on his way to Augsburg, where he arrived in February
1045, and whither he had summoned the Lombard magnates to discuss with them the
affairs of Italy. He kept Easter at Goslar. Here, not wishing to set out for
the East without taking steps to protect the West from Godfrey, he handed over
to Otto, Count Palatine in Lower Lorraine, his mother's native duchy of Swabia,
which he himself had held since 1038.
Otto of
Swabia and his family
Otto's mother had been the sister of Otto III. His family was
wide-spread and illustrious. His aunt Abbess Adelaide of Quedlinburg and Gandersheim, and his brother Archbishop Herman of Cologne
(who won for that see the right to crown the king of the Romans at Aix) were
among Henry's truest friends. His sister, Richessa,
had been daughter-in-law of Boleslav the Mighty; his nephew, her son, was Casimir, Duke of the Poles. Another nephew, Henry,
succeeded Otto in the Palatinate, and within a year was regarded by some as a
fit successor to the Empire. Yet another nephew was Kuno,
whom the king first raised to the Bavarian dukedom and afterwards disgraced.
The youngest sister, Sophia, about this time succeeded her aunt as Abbess of
the important Abbey of Gandersheim; a niece,
Theophano, was Abbess of Essen.
Otto himself had been one of the chief of those in the disputed duchy
whose loyalty to Henry had drawn upon themselves the vengeance of Godfrey at
the beginning of the year. His appointment now to the duchy of Swabia, so long
left without a special guardian, and neighbor to Lorraine, recalls the
appointment, when trouble threatened from the Magyars, of a duke to Bavaria, neighbor
to Hungary. He ruled his new duchy, to which he was a stranger, with success
and satisfaction to its people; not, however, for long, for within two years he
was dead.
One more step Henry took for the protection of the West from Godfrey.
For such (viewed in the double light of Henry's general policy of strengthening
the local defence against Godfrey rather than leading the forces of the Empire
against him, and of Godfrey's policy of winning the neighbors of Lorraine to
his cause) must be considered the grant in this year of the March of Antwerp to
Baldwin, son of Count Baldwin V of Flanders. The grant of Antwerp, however,
instead of attaching Baldwin to the king's party, increased the power of a
future ally of Godfrey's.
Having thus spent the early months of 1045, from Christmas onwards, in
local measures against Godfrey and his allies, Henry after a short visit to
Saxony prepared to spend Pentecost with Peter of Hungary. On his way he
narrowly escaped death through the collapse of the floor of a banqueting room,
when his cousin Bishop Bruno of Wurzburg was killed. Henry, notwithstanding
this calamity, arrived punctually in Hungary, and on Whitsunday in Stühlweissenburg, in the banqueting-hall of the palace,
Peter surrendered the golden lance which was the symbol of the sovereignty of
Hungary. The kingdom was restored to him for his lifetime, on his taking an
oath of fidelity to Henry and to his heirs. This was confirmed by an oath of
fidelity in the very same terms taken by the Hungarian nobles present. After
the termination of the banquet, Peter presented to Henry a great weight of
gold, which the king immediately distributed to those knights who had shared
with him in the great victory of the preceding year.
How far was this scene spontaneous, and how far prepared? The oath taken
by the Hungarian nobles, without a dissentient, points to its being prepared;
and if prepared, then most certainly not without the co-operation, most
probably on the initiative, of Henry. This is what Wipo has in mind when he
says that Henry, having first conquered Hungary in a great and noble victory,
later, with exceeding wisdom, confirmed it to himself and his successors. But
Henry's victory, on which so much was grounded, was a success snatched by a
brilliant chance; it could furnish no stable foundations for foreign
sovereignty over a free nation.
More than ever Henry appeared as an all-conquering king; and in the West
even Godfrey "despairing of rebellion" determined to submit. During
July, either at Cologne or at Aix-la-Chapelle or at Maastricht, he appeared
humbly before the king, and in spite of his submission was sent in captivity to Gibichenstein, the German "Tower," a
castle-fortress in the dreary land by Magdeburg beyond the Saale, very
different from his own homeland of Lorraine. "And so the realm for a short
time had quiet and peace.
Godfrey was perhaps taken to his prison in the train of Henry himself.
For while he had been schooling himself to the idea of peace, the further
Slavs, growing restive, had troubled the borders of these Saxon marches on the
Middle Elbe. Godfrey's submission perhaps decided theirs; and when Henry with
an armed force entered Saxony from Lorraine, they too sent envoys, and promised
the tribute which Conrad had imposed on them.
Henry spent the peaceful late summer and early autumn of 1045 in Saxony.
For October he had summoned the princes of the Empire to a colloquy at Tribur. The princes had begun to assemble, and Henry
himself had reached Frankfort, when he fell ill of one of those mysterious and
frequent illnesses which in the end proved fatal. As his weakness increased,
the anxiety of the princes concerning the succession to the Empire became
manifest. Henry of Bavaria and Otto of Swabia, with bishops and other nobles,
met together and agreed, in the event of the king's death, to elect as his
successor Otto's nephew Henry, who had followed Otto in the Lorraine
palatinate, and was likewise a nephew of the king's confidant, Archbishop
Herman, and a grandson of Otto II. The king recovered. Happily for the
schemers, he was not a Tudor; but the occurrence must have deepened his regret
when the child just at this time born to him proved to be another daughter.
This eldest daughter of Henry and Agnes, Matilda, died in her fifteenth year as
the bride of Rudolf of Swabia, the antagonist of her brother Henry IV.
Attempt at
settlement in the West
The year 1046 opened again, as so many before and after it, with misery
to the country people. In Saxony there was widespread disease and death. Among
others died the stout old Margrave Eckhard, who,
"wealthiest of margraves," made his kinsman the king his heir. The
king, after attending Eckhard's funeral, turned to
the Nether-lands, where Duke Godfrey's incapable younger brother, Gozelo Duke of Lower Lorraine, was dead; here too Count
Dietrich (Theodoric) of Holland was unlawfully laying hold on the land round
Flushing, belonging to the vacant duchy. At Utrecht, where he celebrated
Easter, Henry prepared one of his favorite river campaigns against Dietrich.
Its success was complete, both the lands and the count falling into Henry's
hands. Flushing was given in fief to the Bishop of Utrecht, and Henry, keeping
Pentecost at Aix-la-Chapelle, determined to settle once for all the affairs of
Lorraine. The means he used would appear to have been three: the conciliation
of Godfrey, the strengthening of the bishops, and the grant of Lower Lorraine
to a family powerful enough to hold it. At Aix Godfrey, released from Gibichenstein, threw himself at Henry's feet, was
"pitied," and restored to his dukedom of Upper Lorraine. This
transformation from landless captive to duke might have conciliated some; but
Henry did not know his man. Duke Godfrey's hereditary county of Verdun was not
restored, but granted to Richard, Bishop of the city. Lower Lorraine was given
to one of the hostile house of Luxemburg, Frederick, brother of Duke Henry of
Bavaria, whose uncle Dietrich had long held the Lorraine bishopric of Metz.
At the same assembly there took place an event of importance for the
North and in the history of Henry's own house, viz. the investiture of
Adalbert, Provost of Halberstadt, with the Archbishopric of Bremen, the
northern metropolis, which held ecclesiastical jurisdiction, not only in the
coast district of German Saxony, but in all the Scandinavian lands and over the
Slavs of the Baltic.
Adalbert of Bremen had all virtues and all gifts, save that he was of
doubtful humility, humble only to the servants of God, to the poor and to
pilgrims, but by no means so to princes nor to bishops; accusing one bishop of
luxury, another of avarice. Even as a young man he had been haughty and overbearing
in countenance and speech. His father, Count Frederick, was of a stock of
ancient nobility in Saxony and Franconia. His mother Agnes, of the rising house
of Weimar, had been brought up at Quedlinburg, and valued learning. Adalbert
quickly rivaled, or more than rivaled, Archbishop Herman of Cologne in the
councils and confidence of the king. He made many an expedition "with
Caesar" into Hungary, Italy, Slavonia, and Flanders. He might at Sutri have had from Henry the gift of the Papacy, but that
he saw greater possibilities in his northern see. His close connection with the
king caused him to be regarded with suspicion, indeed as a royal spy, by the
great semi-loyal Duke of the North, the Saxon Bernard II. It was Adalbert who
moved the bishop's seat from Bremen to Hamburg, "fertile mother of
nations," to recompense her long sorrows, exposed to the assaults of Pagan
Slays.
But Henry was not only looking northwards. To this same congress he
summoned to judgment one of the three great Italian prelates, Widger of Ravenna. He had, before his nomination by Henry
to the see, been a canon of Cologne, and although
unconsecrated, "had for two years inefficiently and cruelly wielded the
episcopal staff." Wazo, the stalwart Bishop of
Liege, famous as an early canonist, was one of the episcopal judges chosen, but
without pronouncing on Widger's guilt, he
significantly denied the right of Germans to try an Italian bishop, and
protested against the royal usurpation of papal jurisdiction. This trial is the
first sign either of clash between royal and ecclesiastical claims, or of
Henry's preoccupation with Italy, where, while these things were doing, church
corruption and reform were waging a louder and louder conflict. To Italy Henry
was now to pass. Before doing so he once more visited Saxony and the North. At
Quedlinburg he invested his little eight-year-old daughter Beatrice in place of
the dead Abbess Adelaide, and at Merseburg he held
court in June, receiving the visits and gifts of the princes of the North and East,
Bratislav of Bohemia, Casimir of Poland and Zemuzil of the Pomeranians.
By the festival of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin, 8 September 1046,
he was at Augsburg, whither he had summoned bishops, lords, and knights to
follow him to Italy. The news of the sudden downfall of Peter of Hungary
grieved, but did not deter, him. Crossing the Brenner Pass, he reviewed his
army before the city of Verona.
When Henry came to Italy (1046), he came to a realm where among the
cities of Romagna and the hills of Tuscany a new age was coming into life. He
had not visited Italy since he had accompanied his father in 1038, and now the
state of things was greatly changed, while his own policy was different from
his father's. Conrad had been at strife with Aribert,
the great Archbishop of Milan, but Henry before he left Germany made at
Ingelheim (1039), as the Milanese historian tells us, "a pact of peace
with the Archbishop, and was henceforth faithfully held in honor by him."
But in 1045, when peace between the populace and nobles of Milan was hardly
restored, Aribert died. Henry rejected the candidate
put forward by the nobles and chose Guido supported by the democracy. Politics
were intertwined with Church affairs, and Henry's dealings with the Papacy were
the beginning of that church reform, which gave Rome a line of reforming German
Popes and led to the Pontificate of Gregory VII. The story of that progress
will come before us later, and this side of the history is therefore here left
out. But it was the evil state of Rome, where the Tusculan Benedict IX, the Crescentian Sylvester III, and the
reforming but simoniacal Gregory VI, had all lately contested the papal throne
and the situation was entangled, that chiefly called Henry into Italy. By the
end of October he was at Pavia, where he held a synod and dispensed justice to
the laymen. At Sutri (20 December 1046) he held a
second synod, in which the papal situation was dealt with and the papal throne
itself left vacant. Two days later he entered Rome, where a third synod was
held. No Roman priest was fit, we are told, to be made a Pope, and after
Adalbert of Bremen refused Henry chose on Christmas Eve the Saxon Suidger of Bamberg, who after "was elected by clergy
and people," and became Clement II.
On Christmas Day the new Pope was consecrated, and at once gave the
Imperial crown to Henry; Agnes was also crowned Empress at the same time. Then too the Roman people made him "Patrician": the
symbol of the Patriciate, a plain gold circlet, he
often wore, and the office, of undoubted but disputed importance, gave the
Emperor peculiar power in Rome and the right to control every papal election,
if not to nominate the Pope himself. The new Patrician was henceforth
officially responsible for order in the city; so it was fitting that, a week
after his coronation, he was at Frascati, the headquarters of the Counts of
Tusculum, and that, before leaving for the South, he seized the fortresses of
the Crescentii in the Campagna.
At Christmas-tide Clement II held his first synod at Rome, and it was
significant of the new era in church affairs that simoniacs were excommunicated, and those knowingly ordained by simoniacs,
although without themselves paying a price, sentenced to a penance of forty days;
a leniency favoured by Peter Damiani as against those who would have had them deprived. After this the Empress went
northwards to Ravenna, while the Emperor along with the Pope set out for the
South.
Germany
and France
At Capua he was received by Guaimar, recognised by Conrad as Prince of
Salerno and also of Capua, from which city Paldolf (Pandulf)
IV had been driven out. But Henry restored Paldolf, "a wily and wicked
prince" formerly expelled for his insolence and evil deeds. Conrad had
also recognized Guaimar as overlord of the Norman Counts of Aversa and of the
Norman de Hautevilles in Calabria and Apulia. Now Ranulf of Aversa and Drogo de Hauteville of Apulia, as they went plundering and
conquering from the Greeks, were recognized as holding directly from Henry
himself. So at Benevento the gates were shut in the Emperor's face and he had
to stay outside. Thence he went to join the Empress at Ravenna: early in May he
reached Verona and then left Italy. There was trouble in the South, but
otherwise he left Italy "in peace and obedience." In the middle of
May he was again home in Germany, which during his eight months' absence had
also been in quiet.
With Henry's return he steps upon a downward path: the greatness of his
reign is over; troubles are incessant and sporadic; successes scanty and small.
During his absence Henry I of France, with the approval of his great men and
perhaps at the instigation of Godfrey of Lorraine, made a move towards claiming
and seizing the duchies of Lorraine. When the unwonted calm was thus
threatened, Wazo of Liege wrote to the French king
appealing to the ancient friendship between the realms and urging the blame he
would incur if, almost like a thief, he came against unguarded lands. Henry I
called his bishops to Rheims, reproached them for letting a stranger advise him
better than his native pastors, and turned to a more fitting warfare along with
William of Normandy against the frequent rebel Geoffrey of Anjou. But in his
duchy of Upper Lorraine the pardoned Godfrey was nursing his wrongs: his son, a
hostage with Henry, was now dead, and he also heard that his name had not been
in the list of those with whom Henry at St Peter's in Rome had declared himself
reconciled. Godfrey found allies in the Netherlands, Baldwin of Flanders, his
son the Margrave of Antwerp, Dietrich, Count of Holland, and Herman, Count of
Mons, all united by kinship and each smarting under some private wrong.
Dietrich wished to recover from the Bishop of Utrecht the land round Flushing;
Godfrey to recover the county of Verdun from its bishop. It was almost a war of
lay nobles against the bishops so useful to Henry in the kingdom. At the moment
Henry was busied in negotiations with Hungary and in
giving a new duke to Carinthia: this was Welf, son of the Swabian Count Welf,
and as his mother was sister to Henry of Bavaria, related to the house of
Luxemburg. Now too Henry filled up a group of bishoprics. A Swabian, Humphrey,
formerly Chancellor for Italy, went as Archbishop to Ravenna; Guido, a relative
of the Empress's, to Piacenza; a royal chaplain, Dietrich (Theodoric), provost
of Basle, to Verdun; Herman, provost of Spires, to Strasbourg; another
chaplain, Dietrich (Theodoric), Chancellor of Germany, provost of Aix-la-Chapelle,
to Constance, where he had been a canon. Metz and Treves, two sees important
for Lorraine, were vacant: to the one Henry appointed Adalbero,
nephew of the late bishop, to the other Henry, a royal chaplain and a Swabian.
Henry, now at Metz (July 1047), was thus busy with ecclesiastical
matters and the Hungarian negotiations, when he was forced to notice the
machinations of Godfrey. Adalbert of Bremen had become suspicious of the Billung Duke Bernard, doubly related to both Godfrey and
Baldwin of Flanders. Much was at stake; so Henry quickly made terms with Andrew
of Hungary, summoned the army intended for use against him to meet in September
on the Lower Rhine, and then went northwards to visit Adalbert. Bernard had
always dreaded Adalbert and now, when the Emperor both visited him and enriched
him with lands in Frisia, formerly Godfrey's, his dread turned against Henry
too. Thietmar, Bernard's brother, was even accused by
one of his own vassals, Arnold, of a design to seize the Emperor, and killed in
single combat; the feud had begun. Henry's power was threatened, and the
succession was causing him further anxiety, so much so that his close friend
Herman of Cologne publicly prayed at Xanten, whither
Henry had come, for the birth of an heir (September 1047).
The Emperor had begun the campaign by a move towards Flushing, but a
disastrous attack from Hollanders, at home in the marshes, threw his army into
confusion, and then the rebels took the field. Their blows were mostly aimed at
the bishops, but one most tragic deed of damage was the destruction of
Charlemagne's palace at Nimeguen: Verdun they sacked and burnt, even the
churches perished. Wazo of Liege stood forth to
protect the poor and the churches; Godfrey, excommunicated and repentant, did
public penance and magnificently restored the wrecked cathedral. In his own
city, too, Wazo stood a siege; with the cross in his
unarmed hand he led his citizens against the enemy, who soon made terms.
On the return from the Flushing expedition Henry of Bavaria died: after
a vacancy of eighteen months his duchy was given to Kuno,
nephew of Herman of Cologne. Early in October 1047 Pope Clement II died. Then
in January 1048 Poppo, Abbot of Stablo,
passed away, the chief of monastic reformers in Germany, who had given other
reforming abbots to countless monasteries, including the famous houses of St
Gall and Hersfeld.
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