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Pope Innocent III and the Annulment of Magna Carta

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 June 2017

RICHARD HELMHOLZ*
Affiliation:
University of Chicago Law School, 1111 East 60th Street, Chicago, Il 60637, USA; e-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Historians have offered a variety of explanations for Pope Innocent III's release of King John from the promise that he made to observe the clauses of Magna Carta. None has won general acceptance. This article proposes an alternative by examining the tenets of the canon law as it was understood in 1215. That examination shows that the law of oaths (De iureiurando) played a central role in canonistic thought of the time. It contained the juristic resources that made it possible for Innocent to release John from the oath that he had taken at Runnymeade.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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References

1 The text is given in Chartes des libertés anglaises (1100–1305), ed. Bémont, Charles, Paris 1892, 41–4Google Scholar, and Selected letters of Pope Innocent III concerning England (1198–1216), ed. Cheney, C. R. and Semple, W. H., London 1953, no. 82 at pp. 212–16Google Scholar. For an English translation see Magraw, D., Martinez, A. and Brownell, R. (eds), Magna Carta and the rule of law, New York 2014, 401–3.Google Scholar

2 See, for example, X 1.6.34 (Venerabilem); X 2.1.13 (Novit ille); X 4.17.13 (Per venerabilem).

3 This article takes no position on the disputed question of whether Innocent had himself undertaken a study of the canon law; on this question see Pennington, Kenneth, ‘The legal education of Pope Innocent iii ’, Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law iv (1974), 70–7Google Scholar; Moore, John, ‘Lotario dei Conti di Segni (Pope Innocent iii) in the 1180s’, Archivum historiae pontificiae xix (1991), 255–8Google Scholar; and Kay, Richard, ‘Innocent iii as canonist and theologian’, in Moore, John C. (ed.), Pope Innocent III and his world, Aldershot 1999, 3549 Google Scholar.

4 Selected letters, introduction at p. xxiv; Duggan, Anne, ‘Master of the Decretals: a reassessment of Alexander iii’s contribution to canon law’, in Clarke, Peter and Duggan, Anne (eds), Pope Alexander III (1159–81): the art of survival, Farnham–Burlington, Vt 2012, 365–417 at pp. 370–1Google Scholar.

5 This was not then impossible. See Brundage, James, ‘The managerial revolution in the English Church’, in Loengard, Janet (ed.), Magna Carta and the England of King John, Woodbridge 2010, 8398 Google Scholar.

6 Magraw, Martinez and Brownell, Magna Carta and the rule of law, 55; Baumann, Daniel, Stephen Langton: Erzbishof von Canterbury im England der Magna Carta (1207–1228), Leiden–Boston, Ma 2009, 149–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Drew, Katherine Fischer, Magna Carta, Westport, Ct 2004, 49 Google Scholar; Fryde, Natalie, Why Magna Carta: Angevin England revisited, Münster 2001, 24 Google Scholar; Bartlett, Robert, England under the Norman and Angevin kings, Oxford 2000, 180–1Google Scholar; Warren, W. L., King John, London 1961, 245–6Google Scholar; Hudson, John, Oxford history of the laws of England, I: 871–1216, Oxford 2012, 852–3CrossRefGoogle Scholar: Thompson, Faith, The first century of Magna Carta: why it persisted as a document (1925), Minneapolis, Mn 1967, 4 Google Scholar.

7 For example, Carpenter, D. A., ‘The Plantagenet kings’, in Abulafia, David (ed.), New Cambridge medieval history, V: c. 1190–c. 1300, Cambridge 1999, 314–57 at p. 327CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

8 For example, Lee, Simon, ‘The cardinal rule of religion and the rule of law: a musing on Magna Carta’, in Griffith-Jones, Robin and Hill, Mark (eds), Magna Carta, religion and the rule of law, Cambridge 2015, 314–18CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

9 X 2.29.1 (Comp. ii. 2.20.1); X 1.19.10 (Comp. i. 1.29.5). For fuller discussion of the privilege see Brundage, James, Medieval canon law and the crusader, Madison, Wi 1969, 159–90Google Scholar.

10 Authors who have laid stress upon the feudal tie in explaining the pope's right to annul Magna Carta include McKechnie, William, Magna Carta: a commentary on the Great Charter of King John, 2nd edn, Glasgow 1914, 46 Google Scholar; Swindler, William, Magna Carta: legend and legacy, Indianapolis, In 1965, 100–1Google Scholar; and Arlidge, Anthony and Judge, Igor, Magna Carta uncovered, Oxford–Portland, Or 2014, 32–3Google Scholar.

11 See the account, with full citation of sources, in Cheney, C. R., Pope Innocent III and England, Stuttgart 1976, 332–7Google Scholar.

12 For example, Kate Norgate asserts that chapter 61 in Carta, Magnawas itself in feudal law null and void from the beginning’: John Lackland, London 1902, 245–6Google Scholar.

13 It asserted that judgement in the dispute belonged to the pope ‘by reason of our lordship’.

14 The principal article that successfully attacked the ‘feudal’ explanation was Adams, G. B., ‘Innocent iii and the Great Charter’, in Malden, H. E. (ed.), Magna Carta commemoration essays, London 1917, 2645 Google Scholar.

15 See Annales de Dunstaplia, s.d. 1214’, in Annales monastici, iii, ed. Luard, Henry R. (Rolls Series xxxvi, 1866), 43 Google Scholar. The Charter as ‘quasi per coactionem et metum a rege extortam’.

16 X 1.40.1–7.

17 See Anson's law of contract 18th edn, ed. Beatson, J., Oxford 2002, 276–82Google Scholar.

18 Holt, J. C., Magna Carta, 3rd edn, Cambridge 2015, 228 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

19 Jones, Dan, Magna Carta: The making and legacy of the Great Charter, London 2015, 93 Google Scholar; Carpenter, David, Magna Carta, London 2015, 400 Google Scholar; Turner, Ralph V., Magna Carta through the ages, Harlow 2003, 77–9Google Scholar; Harper–Bill, Christopher, ‘John and the Church of Rome’, in Church, S. D. (ed.), King John: new interpretations, Woodbridge 1999, 289315 at p. 312Google Scholar; Thorne, S. E., ‘What Magna Carta was’, in The Great Charter: four essays on Magna Carta, New York 1965, 117 at p. 16Google Scholar; Thompson, First century of Magna Carta, 6; Richardson, H. G. and Sayles, G. O., The governance of mediaeval England from the Conquest to Magna Carta, Edinburgh 1963, 392 Google Scholar.

20 Cheney, Innocent III and England, 382.

21 Ibid. 386. For a similar understanding of Innocent iii’s motivation see Duffy, Eamon, Ten popes who shook the world, New Haven, Ct–London 2011, 71–9Google Scholar, and Fryde, Natalie, ‘Innocent iii, England and the modernization of European international politics’, in Sommerlechner, Andrea (ed.), Innocenzo III: urbs et orbis, Rome 2003, ii. 971–84Google Scholar.

22 Taken from the Oxford English dictionary, 2nd edn, Oxford 1989, x. 631 Google ScholarPubMed.

23 See, for example, Thomas Aquinas, Summa theologiae, 2a2ae, qu. 89, art. 4, Blackfriars edn, New York–London 1964, 212–13. Aquinas states that an oath necessarily constitutes a religious and worshipful act.

24 Recent years have witnessed what might be called a mini-revival of interest in the oath, particularly in German scholarship. See, for example, Kreusch, Irina Maria, Der Eid zwischen Schwurverbot Jesu und kirchlichem Recht, Berlin 2005 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Esders, Stefan and Scharff, Thomas (eds), Eid und Wahrheitssuche: Studien zu rechtlichen Befragunspraktiken im Mittelalter und frühe Neuzeit, Frankfurt 1999 Google Scholar; Prodi, Paolo, Il sacramento del potere: il giuramento politico nella storia costituzionale dell'Occidente, Bologna 1992 Google Scholar; and Gray, Jonathan, Oaths and the English Reformation, Cambridge 2012 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

25 So described in Lea, Henry C., Superstition and force, 2nd edn revised, New York 1870 Google Scholar, repr. 1971, 73.

26 For example, C. 22 q. 5 c. 3, approving application of penalties for swearing falsely even under compulsion, because the oath taker ‘plus corpus quam animam dilexit’.

27 Taken from the Oxford English dictionary, 2nd edn, x. 631.

28 C. 22 q. 1.

29 d.p. C. 11 q. 1 c. 16.

30 Dig. 12.2.5.2.

31 X 2.24.8 (Comp. i. 2.17.4).

32 X 2.24.1, 6, 30 (Comp. ii. 2.16.4; Comp. i. 2.17.2; Comp. iv. 2.9.3).

33 X 2.24.7, 11 (Comp. i. 2.17.3; Comp. ii. 2.16.2).

34 X 2.24.18 (Comp. iii. 2.15.4).

35 X 2.24.29 (Comp. iv. 2.19.2).

36 X 2.24.16, 23 (Comp. iii. 2.15.1; Comp. iii. 2.12.9).

37 X 2.24.3, 8, 15 (Comp. i. 2.17.10; Comp. i. 2.17.4).

38 See gl. ord. ad X 2.24.2, s.v. pervenit. See also gl. ord. ad C. 15 q. 6 c. 2, s.v. fidelitatis.

39 Gl. ord. ad X 2.24.7, s.v. ad restituendum.

40 The evidence on this point is given in Helmholz, R. H., ‘Assumpsit and fidei laesio’, Law Quarterly Review xc (1976), 406–32Google Scholar.

41 ‘Et est ratio, quia perjurium directe concernit Dei irreverentiam, quae proprie est religioni Christianae contraria’: William Lyndwood, Provinciale (seu Constitutiones Angliae), Oxford 169, 315. See also gl. ord. ad. C. 22 q. 2 c. 17, s.v. distantiam: ‘plus operatur sacramentum quam simplex promissio’.

42 Sext 2.11.2.

43 X 4.1.2 (Comp. i. 4.1.11).

44 Ibid. ‘ne forte deterius inde contingat’. This apparent substance of this decision was contradicted by a later decision by Alexander iii (X 4.1.10), but the former became the communis opinio among the canonists.

45 X 4.1.13–15. See Sangmeister, J., Force and fear as precluding matrimonial consent: a historical synopsis and commentary, Washington, DC 1932, 5664 Google Scholar.

46 See Schutte, Anne Jacobson, By force and fear: taking and breaking monastic vows in early modern Europe, Ithaca, NY 2011 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

47 X 1.40.4 (Comp. iii. 1.23.1).

48 X 1.40.2 (Comp. i. 1.30.2).

49 Gl. ord. ad idem, s.v. coactus; it surveyed the various understandings and possibilities to be found within the text.

50 Gl. ord. ad X 2.24 8, s.v. proprium iuramentum: ‘[C]ommunior est opinio et verior quod iuramentum metu extortum [est] obligatiorium quia voluntarium’, also citing C. 15 q. 1 c. 1 in support.

51 For example, X 2.24.16, but it was understood to hold only that if the oath taker did not fulfill an oath taken under duress, he would be less severely punished for perjury than he would have been if he had taken it willingly.

52 Another example is found at X 1.40.3, where a cleric had renounced his election because of the fear induced by lay threats against him. His renunciation was treated as invalid ‘unless it had been confirmed by the interposition of an oath’.

53 X 2.24.6: ‘Si vero de ipsarum solutione iuraverunt cogendi sunt domino reddere iuramentum.’

54 Compare gl. ord. ad idem, s.v. cogi non debet: ‘iuramentum super hoc factum est servandum’ with gl. ord. ad idem, s.v. cogendi sunt: ‘Sed videtur quod non sunt cogendi nam debitor habet actionem ad repetendum usuras.’

55 See Caffiero, Marina, Forced baptisms: history of Jews, Christians and converts in papal Rome, trans. Cochrane, Lydia, Berkeley–Los Angeles 2012 Google Scholar.

56 See Levy, Ian, ‘Liberty of conscience and freedom of religion in the medieval canonists’, in Shah, Timothy and Hertzke, Allen (eds), Christianity and freedom: historical perspectives, Cambridge 2016, 150–4Google Scholar.

57 Dig. 4.2.21.5.

58 X 2.24.27 (Comp. iii. 1.1.3).

59 See gl. ord. ad X 2.24.16 (Comp. iii. 2.25.1) s.v. veniens: ‘Item iuramentum contrarium alio iuramento licite facto servandum non est.’ But see X 2.24.11 (Comp. ii. 2.16.2), in which it was held that the second prevailed because it was supported by the decrees of one of the Lateran Councils.

60 X 2.24.3.

61 C. 22 q. 1 c. 8; X 5.12.4 (Comp. i. 5.10.6).

62 C.22 q. 4. cc. 1–23.

63 C. 22 q. 4 c. 8.

64 Gl. ord. ad idem, s.v. quod ebrius and saltantium.

65 X 2.24.12 §1 (Comp. i. 2.17.11).

66 Gl. ord. ad idem, s.v. absolvendi.

67 X 2.24.24.

68 X 2.24.27 (Comp. III. 1.1.3).

69 My understanding accords most closely with the reading of these events given by Vincent, Nicholas in Magna Carta: origins and legacy, Oxford 2015, 71–2Google Scholar.