Introduction
The appointment of bishops is a fruitful topic for someone studying the early development of cathedral chapters. This is especially true with regard to the period from the mid-tenth to the early thirteenth century, which is not a period of mere legal transition or clarification but one in which legal and organizational matters underwent decisive changes. The impetus for this process was first and foremost the harsh debates over papal power, lay influence, and ecclesiastical freedom and reform that ravaged Latin Christendom in the eleventh century. Of crucial importance to all contestants involved was the question of episcopal appointments. Not only did the legal, ecclesiastical, and political turmoil over the episcopal office involve key figures like Pope Gregory VII (d. 1085) and the German Emperor Henry IV (d. 1106); local churches and societies throughout Europe were also affected.Footnote 1
This article takes as its point of departure the phrase per clerum et populum (“by clergy and people”), which was traditionally used to describe how an episcopal election had been or should be undertaken. Had a bishop been elected per clerum et populum, then his appointment had been properly undertaken and was to be considered canonical and valid. In the course of the twelfth century, this changed. In order to comprehend the legal transformation and its impact, one must bear in mind that no codified and universally valid procedure for episcopal appointments had previously existed. From the beginning of the twelfth century onward, however, ecclesiastical legislation was revised, altered, and codified step by step, the driving force being the urge for libertas ecclesiae, ecclesiastical freedom, and the desire to prompt measures directed toward this end. The aim of the reformers was to safeguard the autonomy of the Church and reduce what they considered to be improper lay influence.Footnote 2
My purposes are, first, to examine legal terminology in the context of episcopal appointments from 1059 to 1215 with special reference to the formula per clerum et populum; second, to examine how episcopal appointments were actually undertaken and what terminology was used in the kingdom of Denmark until circa 1225; and, third, to share some conclusions about the development of canon law in the context of “cathedral culture,” a concept I will explain further below.
As for the temporal limits of this study, the reason for choosing the year 1059 as the starting point of my examination is that this is the year when King Sven Estridson (d. 1074) reorganized the Danish church and established a diocesan organization that lasted throughout the Middle Ages.Footnote 3 I have chosen the year 1225 as the closing year because just before then (1224) we have documentation that shows the immediate effects on Danish practice of the relevant decrees from the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215, which at the time were the closest thing to a codified universal ecclesiastical law, that is, before the Decretals of Pope Gregory IX, known as the Liber Extra, were published in 1234.Footnote 4 Clearly, this was not the last stage in the development of legislation concerning episcopal elections.Footnote 5 At the same time, however, it seems to be the end of the ideal of episcopal appointments and elections per clerum et populum in Denmark.
Episcopal Appointments and Ecclesiastical Law before 1215
The Bishop
Already in the early Church, episcopal appointments drew the attention of legal authorities and were regulated in the nascent legal corpus of the Church, that is, in passages from Scripture and the Church Fathers, in the canons of local and provincial synods, and in episcopal and papal letters.Footnote 6 The attention that was afforded this question is not to be wondered at, since bishops were regarded as representatives of Christ himself, wielding both spiritual and temporal authority over the faithful.
The local bishop became one of the most prominent persons in the medieval Church and society. His primary functions were to be the spiritual head of his diocese, a shepherd, and a judge; gradually, however, more functions were added: as a secular ruler, the bishop played a decisive role in society as landlord and member of the local government; thanks to his position and, usually, his bonds of kinship, he belonged to the elite of society and was included in the most significant social networks; and, thanks to his office, he might exert influence as royal counselor, diplomat, or even military commander. In the church he was a bond of unity, connecting the parish to the diocese and the diocese to the universal Church. From the point of view of Rome, he was a symbol of the unity and catholicity of the Church, a unity that extended even to geographically remote areas. To the king, he was an indispensable ally and, furthermore, an authority able to legitimize royal power. To ordinary people, he was a physical link with the universal Church and an august pastor who confirmed their children, consecrated their churches, and was the guardian of true doctrine and right discipline.Footnote 7 Thus, it was vital to the interests of many that the right person was, so to speak, contracted for the job.
Episcopal Appointments, Ecclesiastical Law, and Legal Proceedings until 1123
How, then, were these prominent men to be appointed — and by whom? As was stated above, there existed no codified universal law dealing with these questions until the end of the period at issue. The significance of the outcome, however, prompted action and some degree of regulation already in the early days.Footnote 8 One of the earliest indications of lay influence on episcopal elections is found in connection with St. Cyprian (d. 258), who himself was appointed bishop of Carthage thanks to lay interference.Footnote 9 With reference to the arguments and sources provided by François Hallier, who presented a wide range of citations, from the Acts of the Apostles to local synodal decrees from the fourth and fifth centuries, the distinguished legal historian Richard H. Helmholz states that:
The best attested and perhaps also the oldest rule of the church held that the choice of bishops should be made per clerum et populum. … It was, and remains, far from clear what this venerable formula, requiring some combination of assent from the clergy and people actually meant in the earliest days. … It may be that they regarded the real choice as belonging to God, the voice of the clergy and people being simply the way in which God's selection was ordinarily made manifest.Footnote 10
As Helmholz and, before him, Robert L. Benson and others have pointed out, it seems that there was no need to define the electoral body in detail at this point; “by clergy and people” was enough.Footnote 11 Also, from the preserved sources it is hard to draw any substantial conclusions about how to identify either “clergy” or “people.” As regards the definition, Willibald M. Plöchl has suggested that in the early Church, “clergy” (“clerus”) should be understood as anyone belonging to the ranks of ordained men whereas “people” (“populus”) were those who did not so belong and had no liturgical functions, but were members of the local community. This observation is supported by, for example, Michael Buckley, who argues that the instruction for episcopal appointments in the Didache (ca. 100) “addresses all of those who participate in the Eucharist.”Footnote 12 According to Plöchl, one should not exaggerate or overinterpret a state of opposition between the two groups in the early days.Footnote 13 According to Francine Cardman, “The concepts of ‘laity’ and ‘clergy’ had no place in the earliest churches founded by the apostles and other missionary preachers.” Instead, she says, “the rapid elaboration of ecclesiastical structures and hierarchy,” and especially from the reign of Constantine and onwards, prompted “distinctions between ‘laity’ and ‘clergy.’”Footnote 14 This indicates that lay influence on the electoral procedure was not only accepted but, at this point, even regarded as a token of a canonical and thus valid process. The mutual and unanimous election of a candidate, not the formulation of a precise definition of the electoral body and its composition, was imperative.Footnote 15
A somewhat different impression is given by the formulation in a decree of the First Council of Nicaea (325) that Hallier's exposé omits. In can. 4, the Conciliar Fathers declared that “a bishop should be appointed by all the bishops of the province”; if it is not possible for them all to gather and perform the election, “all bishops shall have taken part in the vote and given their written consent.”Footnote 16 It is not clear whether the bishops were meant to form an electoral body; perhaps their role was just to approve and ordain a previously elected candidate. Nevertheless, the authoritative powers of the Church in 325 seem to have tried to safeguard that those in the highest ranks of the Church, and not clerics in general, should wield decisive influence over episcopal appointments.Footnote 17 Even so, we do not know exactly how elections were conducted and what role laymen may have played in them. Helmholz summarizes these tensions by admitting that “there has been a long scholarly controversy about the respective roles accorded to the opinions of the neighboring bishops, the clergy of the diocese, monastic leaders, and the people to be governed by the man elected.”Footnote 18
It is evident that episcopal appointments throughout history often became a source of conflict — either within the ranks of the Church itself or between ecclesiastical and secular authorities. In order to preserve the unity of the Church, such conflicts had to be legally settled. There are legal sources pointing toward a development where, on the one hand, the method of “election” was kept in order to safeguard the canonicity of the procedure, but, on the other hand, the process came to involve new agents as the circle of electors was in one respect widened and in another respect narrowed: at times, “the people” came to be represented by the secular ruler alone. According to Helmholz, there are indications of such developments in papal letters from the days of Pope Celestine I (d. 432) and Pope Leo I (d. 461). Helmholz suggests that by writing “No bishop is to be given to the unwilling” Celestine I provided a scope for princely consent, whereas Leo I acknowledged an active lay participation in the process by writing “Let him who is to rule over all be elected by all.”Footnote 19 The political situation in the Roman Empire was unstable. Soon lay influence and intervention came to characterize the process of episcopal appointments, first in the East and later in the West. In the East, the form of government known as caesaropapism even presupposed that the emperor was both spiritual and temporal ruler and therefore was entitled to appoint bishops.Footnote 20 In the West, however, the situation was different, not least as a result of the lack of secure and stable secular government. Accordingly, there was an impulse for further definitions and restrictions, which tended to vary in relation to geographical areas and regional needs. In the Iberian Peninsula, for example, royal influence over episcopal appointments seems to have been considered both natural and desirable. One of the decrees of the Twelfth Council of Toledo (681) refers to “the prince's free choice” (“libera principis election”) and declares that the archbishop should approve of “whomever the royal power chooses” (“quoscumque regalis potestas elegerit”).Footnote 21
A similar development is found in those new dynasties that arose in the West at about the same time, that is, the Merovingian and Carolingian kingdoms.Footnote 22 Here, the formula “by clergy and people” was indeed considered to be the unassailable principle of canonical, that is, valid, elections.Footnote 23 As a consequence of the specific ecclesiastical organization that prospered there, known as the Eigenkirchen-system, lay influence on the process was gradually increased, recognized, and codified as consensus civium. In addition, with the “quasi-priestly position” (“quasi-priestliche Stellung”) of the Merovingian and Frankish kings, the “people” — with the ruler in the front line — gained more and more influence, and its participation in the election came to be a prerequisite of ecclesiastical appointments.Footnote 24 However, no ecclesiastical criticism seems to have been leveled at Charlemagne (d. 814), who was accustomed not only to approve of the electus but also to exert great influence on the outcome of the electoral process. This “local” Western tradition was bequeathed to his Ottonian and Salian successors, who exerted more or less full control over episcopal appointments.Footnote 25
The matter was also on the agenda in the East: the Fourth Council of Constantinople (869–870) laid down that the “nomination and consecration of bishops … as a result of the power and intrigues of the civil authorities” was forbidden (can. 12) and that “the promotion and consecration of bishops should be done by means of an election and decision of the college of bishops” (can. 22).Footnote 26 This was undoubtedly a reaction to the fact that the ecclesiastical authorities considered secular powers to have violated their rights, especially since secular rulers not only saw themselves as entitled to approve of the episcopal candidates but more and more frequently appointed and installed bishops themselves.
From the mid-eleventh century, not least due to problems regarding the appointment of bishops as manifested in the so-called Investiture Controversy, the claim for “ecclesiastical freedom” came to the fore. In numerous synods and councils, the mode of election and appointment was emphasized and the requirements of fit candidates were fervently discussed, together with the concept of “canonical.” According to the reformers, the custom of investiture, the existence of simony, violence, or threats, and long-term vacancies laid bare the inappropriateness of lay influence and the detrimental effects of unfit candidates.Footnote 27 The agents in these processes were many: on the one hand, there were the resilient popes, who prompted ecclesiastical reform, aspired to gain control over the Church and centralized the settlement of vital ecclesiastical issues, among them episcopal appointments; on the other hand, there were powerful and influential princes like the German rulers, who wished to select their own candidates for episcopal office in their realm and, at times, also for the papal office.Footnote 28 Altogether, there was a strong wish to reduce inappropriate lay intervention in the act of election or appointment but certainly not to exclude lay influence itself. Instead, the formula per clerum et populum had a revival. In the Gregorian reform — or “the Papal Revolution” — the reformers insisted that the bishop should be elected “by clergy and people.” They argued that this was in line with ecclesiastical tradition, and, as long as none of the parties exceeded its authority, there should be no problem about canonicity, which seems to have been the fundamental purpose. Yet, in the eyes of the reformers, the arguments for “free elections” grew stronger.
The initial and renewed emphasis on elections “by clergy and people” should, according to Benson, be considered as “a conservative reaction against the misuse of princely power in ecclesiastical elections.”Footnote 29 But in fact no universal solution for how to perform a “free” election existed at this point. Indeed, in some places the cathedral clergy alone were entitled to perform the election. Both these perspectives are still found in the 1140s in Gratian's Decretum.Footnote 30 Helmholz writes: “In 1140, no procedure or papal bureaucracy existed that would have been capable of selecting men in far-off sees whenever an incumbent died.”Footnote 31
Benson sums up the ecclesiastical developments and legal proceedings up to the settlement of the Investiture Controversy as follows:
In the eleventh century, “election by clergy and people” became a slogan of the reformers. At first the program behind this slogan implied no necessary attack on princely and lay rights, for it was originally a simple demand that clergy and people should be consulted in the selection of a bishop, and at least allowed to register their approval. During the third quarter of the century, however, reformers began to insist that the clergy should have the initiative in electing the bishop, and therewith the reformers’ program was aiming toward the exclusion of all direct lay participation in ecclesiastical elections. Yet, to most people during the eleventh and early twelfth centuries, canonical election by the “clergy and people” implied the election or at least the consent of all concerned: canons of the cathedral chapter, cathedral and monastic clergy, nobility, ministeriales, and citizens.Footnote 32
In 1122, the Worms Concordat between Pope Calixtus II (d. 1124) and the German Emperor Henry V (d. 1225) settled part of the conflict. According to the concordat, the emperor renounced the privilege of confirming the election through spiritual investiture (“spiritualia”), that is, the crozier and the ring, which was reserved for the archbishop/pope; but he was granted the power to confer lay investiture (“regalia”) through the scepter. In addition, the prince should obey the bishop in spiritual matters. The status of the Worms Concordat is much debated, and nothing explicit is said in it about the electoral procedure itself except that elections should be performed canonically, without simony, violence, or exactions and that consecrations should be free.Footnote 33 We hear of no electoral body. Even if the concordat had no universal legitimacy, it was widely recognized, not least because it delineated the power relations between pope and prince in the context of ecclesiastical appointments.Footnote 34 But a universal solution remained a strong desideratum.
Of more direct legal significance were the four subsequent Lateran councils whose decrees were later incorporated into official collections of decretals, the formally valid canon law of that time.Footnote 35 Much was achieved at these councils, both with regard to the codification of canon law and with respect to the creation of a legal procedure for episcopal elections.Footnote 36
Still, in the decrees of the First Lateran Council in 1123, which was an immediate response to the Worms Concordat, no novelties were promulgated. Nothing was said about to whom the right to carry out the election pertained but only that the bishop must be “canonically elected.”Footnote 37
Episcopal Appointments, Ecclesiastical Law, and Legal Proceedings 1123–1215
In 1139, at the time of the Second Lateran Council, which had been convoked by Pope Innocent II (d. 1143), a more elaborate model was decreed.Footnote 38 Even so, out of thirty canons only one referred to the election of bishops. In can. 28 it is established that the election should be held within three months of the beginning of the vacancy and that “the canons of the episcopal see” are strictly forbidden “to exclude religious men [“viri religiosi”] from the election.” Instead, they should elect “a virtuous and suitable person as bishop” with the advice of these men; if these religious men are excluded without their own assent, the election is null and void. Here we find serious attempts to define an electoral body and a certain disregard for the possible participation of laymen in the election process. In addition, at this point it seems to have been taken for granted that the cathedral clergy — referred to as canons — played a primary role in episcopal elections, making this one of the oldest references to the cathedral clergy as an electoral body. Perhaps this should be considered as a clarification of the brief formulation in can. 3 of the First Lateran Council.Footnote 39
The Third Lateran Council in 1179, summoned by Pope Alexander III (d. 1181), introduced even more technical details, for example about the age and character of the candidate. On the topic of electoral procedure, we read in can. 3 about appointments to ecclesiastical offices: “and let these appointments be made by the chapter, or by the metropolitan, if the chapter cannot agree.” The exclusion of lay participants is explicit, and the existence of a chapter is again more or less taken for granted. But nothing is said about the electoral body in episcopal elections nor about how the election of a bishop should be confirmed.Footnote 40
Finally, when Innocent III (d. 1216) convoked the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215, he may have had an idea of what impact this council would have, not least on pastoral care.Footnote 41 The council is definitely the most renowned of all. It is also more explicit about almost everything, including episcopal elections, a subject that is brought up for discussion in cans. 23–26. In can. 23 it is stated “that a cathedral church or a church of the regular clergy is not to remain without a prelate for more than three months.” If this limit is not observed, “those who ought to have made the election are to lose the power to elect for that time and it is to devolve upon the person who is recognized as the immediate superior.” He shall, however, provide “the widowed church, with the advice of his chapter and of other prudent men, with a suitable person from the same church, or from another if a worthy candidate cannot be found in the former.”Footnote 42 In can. 24 it is established that a canonically valid election can be achieved through different modes of procedure, namely, by balloting (later recognized as per scrutinium, whereby the person who receives the vote of all or of the greater or sounder part of the gathered congregation — uel maior uel sanior pars capituli consentit — is elected), by delegating the choice to confidential persons (later recognized as per compromissum), or “as if by divine inspiration [‘per inspirationem’].”Footnote 43 It is also established in can. 25 that “being elected through abuse of the secular power” is “against canonical freedom.”Footnote 44 In can. 26 it is laid down that a proper confirmation of the election is required.Footnote 45 For the first time, it is explicitly said that a chapter should be involved in the election of a bishop. At the same time, the formulation “those who ought to have made the election” may still involve a wider circle than just the local chapter. Secular interference, however, is explicitly prohibited.Footnote 46
The concept of “canonical” was evidently important to the Conciliar Fathers, but its meaning is not always clear. An election undertaken by clergy and people, per clerum et populum, was certainly regarded as canonical for a long time, but then this concept fades from view. When did it cease to matter? And how should one identify the men behind the terms “clergy” and “people” respectively? The content and reach of these words seems to change over time.
Scholars sometimes use the concept of “canonical” to refer exclusively to elections performed “without lay interference.” In view of what has been discussed above, such a usage must be regarded as deceptive since it applies only from the mid-twelfth century onwards. Of course, bishops were canonically elected and appointed before this time, too. In order to avoid anachronism, “canonical” in the context of episcopal elections should be interpreted simply as “in accordance with the then ecclesiastical legislation.”Footnote 47
According to Bernhard Schimmelpfennig, “from the 1130s onwards the way was prepared, at least in legal theory, for the limitation of the electorate to the cathedral chapter and an increased importance for the sanior pars.”Footnote 48 Indeed, the conciliar decrees presuppose the existence of cathedral chapters already in the late 1130s even though not all cathedrals may have had an organized chapter. It is true that cathedral chapters, meaning corporate bodies each with its own regulations and leader, did exist from as early as the fifth century, albeit with great geographical variations.Footnote 49 In the Carolingian Empire the institution became relatively permanent at the cathedral churches, and the Rule of Aachen was established in 816 as its general rule.Footnote 50 But there are no indications that a cathedral had to have a regulated chapter. Also worth noting is the fact that no legal obligations devolved upon these early capitular institutions. Their main functions were to provide for the cathedral liturgy and to manage the cathedral school, functions that were retained throughout the Middle Ages but to which others were gradually added. Playing a primary role in the election of bishops was such an added duty.Footnote 51 The decrees of the Second Lateran Council reveal that already in 1139 a new understanding of the nature and functions of cathedral chapters was presupposed. With the conciliar decrees from 1123 to 1215, a certain standard was achieved. This standard was meant to apply also to the younger ecclesiastical provinces, such as the Danish church and its bishops. To the question of whether it did so in fact, and not merely in theory, we now turn.Footnote 52
Episcopal appointments in Denmark until 1225
The Danish Setting
Until 1103/4, the kingdom of Denmark was ecclesiastically subject to the archdiocese of Hamburg-Bremen and its archbishops. With few exceptions, it was also the German archbishops that provided the Danish kingdom with its bishops.
In his article from 2004, “Elusive Bishops,” Michael H. Gelting presents both the traditional view and his own hypotheses on how the Danish episcopate formed from the time of the Christianization of Denmark in the late tenth century until circa 1059. Gelting argues, mainly on the basis of Adam of Bremen's chronicle Gesta Hammaburgensis ecclesiae pontificum, that the period was characterized primarily by three things: first, a college of bishops that was controlled (ecclesiastically, not politically) from Germany, many of whom did not even reside in Denmark;Footnote 53 second, the conflicts of loyalty to which this mostly foreign college often led; and, third, a continuous and more or less explicit royal ambition to establish an independent ecclesiastical province in the kingdom of Denmark, an ambition that had been evident since the very beginning of the eleventh century.Footnote 54 According to Gelting, a decisive step was taken when King Sven Estridson reorganized three Danish episcopal sees into nine. To the bishoprics Ribe, Slesvig (both in Jutland), and Odense (in Funen) that were all established in the tenth century, he added Aarhus, Viborg, Børglum (Jutland), Roskilde (Sealand), Lund, and Dalby (Scania). By doing so, he fulfilled the endeavors of his predecessors and especially his grandfather Cnut the Great (d. 1016). An apt ecclesiastical organization was a prerequisite for obtaining the final goal: the creation of a Danish ecclesiastical province independent of the power-seeking archbishops of Hamburg-Bremen and subject to Rome alone.Footnote 55 From then on, the number of bishops appointed by the Danes and their king increased.Footnote 56 In 1103/4, thirty years after Sven's death, his goals were accomplished: an ecclesiastical province was established in Denmark, and Lund became its archiepiscopal see.
From the mid-eleventh century onwards — that is, as soon as the Danish bishops became permanently resident — the institution of cathedral chapters began to evolve in Denmark. Chapters with prebends were established in Roskilde in the 1070s, in Lund and Odense in the 1080s, and in Ribe in the 1140s at the latest. The last Danish cathedral chapter to receive a firm organization with prebends was that of Aarhus in the late twelfth century. In the beginning of the period here at issue, the main function of the capitular institution was liturgical. Along the way more functions were added, and, by the end of the first quarter of the thirteenth century, one of their main functions was legal, namely, to act as electoral body at episcopal elections.Footnote 57 In the context of the aforementioned legal developments, it is interesting to examine whether and to what extent the universal legal achievements with regard to episcopal appointments affected (or did not affect) an ecclesiastical province on the periphery of the Roman Church.
Sources
What sources can provide us with information about episcopal appointments in Denmark during this period of almost 200 years? And what can be established about such appointments in a period of legal transition?
The sources I have found most relevant for my purpose are: the customary of the cathedral chapter in Lund, called the Consuetudines Lundenses, from circa 1120; sections from three indigenous chronicles that were composed soon after the events they describe: the Roskilde Chronicle, the Gesta Danorum by Saxo Grammaticus, and the Ribe Chronicle; and a few papal letters from the period 1176/77–1225.Footnote 58
Consuetudines Lundenses
Of particular interest are the Consuetudines Lundenses, which constitute the customary used by the cathedral chapter at St. Lawrence's in Lund from 1123 at the latest.Footnote 59 In 1908, the Danish scholar Ellen Jørgensen identified the sources of the customary: it was modeled on sources from Cluny and, in particular, on the so-called Consuetudines Marbacenses from the Augustinian monastery in Marbach, Alsace. Both places were renowned as centers of reform in the Gregorian reform movement. By establishing the provenance of the original source, it was also possible for her to specify what parts of the younger redaction in Lund derived from other sources or were compiled in order to meet local needs and conditions.Footnote 60 For more than a century, Scandinavian scholars have tried to date the Consuetudines Lundenses and establish when it was brought to Lund, edited, and made ready for use. A recent redating of the Consuetudines Marbacenses has made likely a transmission to and usage in Lund earlier than had previously been suggested.Footnote 61
For the purpose of this article, it is significant to comment briefly on the Sitz im Leben of the model text and to share some observations on which parts were modified or added in order to serve the clerical community in Lund. The Augustinian monastery in Alsace was founded in 1089/90 in a place that was under the sway of the then-ongoing reform movement. The immediate contact with reformist centers like, for example, the congregations in St. Ruf in Avignon, St. Victor in Paris, and Cluny, certainly played a decisive part in the design of the Consuetudines Marbacenses and its later redactions. Yet the Marbach community belonged to the older Augustinian reformist tradition, ordo antiquus, rather than the younger ordo novus, which gained papal approval in the course of the twelfth century.Footnote 62 According to Erik Buus, who in 1978 published a critical edition of the Consuetudines Lundenses, the different conditions in Alsace and Lund affect both the composition and the understanding of the text: only the first 147 paragraphs out of the original 359 of the Marbach text were incorporated into the Consuetudines Lundenses; the name of St. Augustine is consistently left out in Lund since the canons at St. Lawrence's had another basic regula or rule, namely, the Rule of Aachen.Footnote 63 Of major significance are the instructions for episcopal elections given in the Consuetudines Lundenses, chapter 16. This chapter corresponds to the chapter on the election of a provost in the Consuetudines Marbacenses, whereas in Lund the appointment of a provost is described in the following chapter.Footnote 64
What, then, are the instructions for episcopal elections provided by the Consuetudines Lundenses, chapter 16?
[§81] When the Lord Bishop has died, we convoke the prelates from all our congregations and by their common counsel apply ourselves to the election. When they have gathered it behooves us all to fast for three days, so that we may receive right counsel from the Lord concerning the election. Thereafter we lay the charge of election upon twelve men of good sense [“sanioris consilii”] and agree among ourselves that, whomever these will choose, all of us will approve without debate. These twelve then spend the night before the election without sleep, devoting themselves to psalms and prayers. When the day dawns they are to have mass celebrated for them and are to enter the capitol with the others. There the lesson of Paul the Apostle to Timothy, If a man desire the office of a bishop [cf. 1 Tim. 3:1], is to be read.
[§ 82] After this it is once again asked whether anyone objects to the choice of these men. When all have answered no, the twelve go out to deliberate while the remainder stay in the capitol devoutly singing the Psalm, Give ear, you who rule Israel [cf. Ps. 80:1]. Returning quickly they announce their choice, and rejoicing and singing Te deum laudamus they take hold of the elect and lead him without delay, willingly or unwillingly, into the church.
[§ 83] There he is to be dressed in a cloak before the altar, but the pontificalia — I mean the ring and staff — he must himself take from the altar, after which he is placed on the episcopal throne. Then the abbots and provosts shall approach him and first bend their knees; then, one by one, they shall kiss him and place their hands in his and promise obedience.Footnote 65
What observations can be made with respect to this electoral procedure? A first observation is that we are dealing with a clearly defined electoral body (§81): at the death of the bishop, the chapter shall summon the prelates of their confraternal congregations, and together with them appoint twelve men who must be accepted by all, who will choose a candidate.Footnote 66 It is further intimated that the candidate elected by the twelve has been approved of in advance, “whomever these will choose,” and that the electus should accept the choice “willingly or unwillingly.” A second observation concerns the electoral process itself: after having made their choice, the electors are assumed, or even implored, to return quickly (mox) to announce their choice. It seems as if no negotiation is required as long as all fulfill their respective duties; altogether, we here find a description of a quick and efficient procedure (§§81–82). A third observation concerns the “confirmation of the election and the liturgical setting” (§83): first, the newly elected shall be led “without delay, willingly or unwillingly, into the church,” where he shall be dressed but “must himself take from the altar” the ring and the staff, which is the spiritual or pontifical investiture (pontificalia);Footnote 67 second, and apparently still in the church, the abbots and provosts should welcome their new bishop and “promise him obedience.” It is not clear how the rest of the gathered clergy should act or how the official (ecclesiastical) confirmation of the elections was to be performed or by whom.Footnote 68 A fourth and final observation is that there is no reference to any lay influence at any stage of the process. We hear of no lay investiture (regalia) and not even the presence of a king or other lay persons.Footnote 69
What do we know about the actual use of the Consuetudines Lundenses and the implementation of these surprisingly radical instructions? The answer must be: almost nothing. Although religious and legal regulations or instructions are formulated in order that they should be respected, it is often impossible to say to what extent they were, if at all. In addition, whereas some regulations concern regular actions, such as attending chapter or singing the canonical hours, episcopal elections were rare, making them seem like exceptional situations and thus more vulnerable to transgression. In fact, and as will be seen below, only two successions on the cathedra of Lund were made in the course of the twelfth century, namely in 1137/38 and in 1177.
While it can safely be assumed that the Consuetudines Lundenses were compiled and put to use by 1123 at the latest, it is harder to draw any firm conclusions about how long they were observed. Some scholars have argued that the secularization of the chapter and thus its abandonment of a common, regular life in accordance with the Rule of Aachen and the Consuetudines Lundenses can be related to the inauguration of the cathedral church in 1145.Footnote 70 Others have come to a similar conclusion by disregarding local conditions and referring to general developments in Europe at the time, namely, the fact that many older capitular foundations were made secular in the course of the twelfth century while new foundations in the latter part of the century were normally established as secular chapters.Footnote 71 In my opinion, these arguments ex silentio carry little weight. There are reasons to suppose that the cathedral chapter in Lund remained regular at least until 1177, when Eskil (d. 1181/82) resigned as archbishop of Lund. He was renowned for being a reformist bishop of Roskilde and archbishop of Lund and an assiduous founder of monasteries throughout his province. Through his many personal contacts abroad, he was constantly updated on ecclesiastical and legal developments. I find it improbable that the regular cathedral chapter at St. Lawrence's was transformed into a secular one during his pontificate.Footnote 72 It is true that a later martyrology and obituary known as the Liber daticus Lundensis vetustior was acquired by the canons in the early 1140s and that this contains no rule or customary. But both codices may have been concurrently in use for a time, or a separate codex with rules for the community may have existed.Footnote 73
Danish Chronicles
Evidence from three indigenous chronicles will be used below. Together these mention several episcopal elections, and all three were composed so soon after the events they relate that their descriptions of the elections are unlikely to be colored by subsequent legal developments.
The oldest one is the Roskilde Chronicle, Chronicon Roskildense, from circa 1137/38, the earliest Danish historical chronicle. Its anonymous author was probably a member of the clergy at the episcopal see of Roskilde. With regard to his knowledge of the local history there, it has been assumed that he was a canon of the cathedral chapter, having access to the capitular archives. The main source for the period until the 1070s is Adam of Bremen's Gesta, whereas the history thereafter has been considered “the main narrative source for Danish history until it ends in 1138.” According to Gelting, the chronicle was written in immediate proximity to the events taking place after the death of archbishop Ascer of Lund in 1137, with the purpose of promoting bishop Eskil of Roskilde as his legitimate successor.Footnote 74 Even so, the content of the chronicle does not only include the history of the Roskilde church and its bishops and chapter; it is a history of Denmark, although with specific attention to the situation in Roskilde. Given the author's affiliation with the local cathedral chapter, it is a bit odd that there is almost no information about that chapter's formation and undertakings.
The second chronicle is Saxo Grammaticus's history of the Danes, Gesta Danorum, finished about 1208. The author regularly uses the first person singular of himself but does not reveal his name in the text. Even so, he has been identified as Saxo, the secretary (“clericus”) of one of the most powerful Danish archbishops, namely, Absalon (d. 1201). He was likely born in the 1160s and served as canon of the cathedral chapter at St. Lawrence's in Lund. His magnum opus was, according to Saxo himself, commissioned by Absalon, his employer and patron, and composed from the 1190s to some time around 1208. It consists of sixteen libri, and, according to the editor Karsten Friis-Jensen, Saxo wrote the Gesta Danorum drawing from a wide range of sources, both in Latin (antique and medieval sources) and in the vernacular (Old Norse material), and
following a careful compositional model: the sixteen books are structured in halves and quarters in accordance with categories belonging to universal history, Books I–IV covering the heathen period before the birth of Christ, Books V–VIII the heathen period before the advent of Christianity to Scandinavia, Books IX–XII the missionary period and the period in which Christian Denmark belonged to the archdiocese of Hamburg-Bremen, and finally Books XIII–XVI covering the years of the independent Danish archdiocese of Lund.Footnote 75
The work is unique in a Scandinavian setting, both with regard to volume and content. Still, Saxo's eloquence along with a close affiliation to his master and the then-political situation mean that we should be cautious when it comes to using him as a reliable historical source.
The youngest of the three narrative sources from medieval Denmark here referred to is the Ribe Chronicle, the Cronica ecclesiæ Ripensis. It was probably composed in the pontificate of Bishop Tue of Ribe, circa 1225–30, by an anonymous author, perhaps a canon of the local chapter. Like the aforementioned sources, the Ribe Chronicle begins in the missionary era with the first foundation of a church there and St. Ansgar's mission in the ninth century. Unlike both the older chronicles, however, this is quite appropriate since Ribe was established as one of the first bishoprics in the kingdom of Denmark, and, in contrast to the others, the author “adheres strictly to matters of direct concern to the history of the see.” Gelting writes: “From the foundation of the cathedral chapter in 1145 the chronicle becomes highly informative. This part of the chronicle seems to build mainly or even exclusively on documents in the capitular archives, most of them now lost.”Footnote 76
Papal Letters
The papal letters here referred to were sent to Danish bishops during the period 1176/77–1224. The oldest one is from Pope Alexander III to archbishop Eskil of Lund in connection with his resignation in 1177. The original letter is not preserved, but part of Eskil's petition for resignation as well as the response of Alexander III was later incorporated in the Liber Extra as a case or exemplum.Footnote 77 A second letter is ascribed to Pope Lucius III (d. 1185). It has not been preserved but is referenced in the Ribe Chronicle.Footnote 78 From the hand of Pope Honorius III (d. 1227), five letters from the period 1217–24 are referenced. The first one is from 1217 and deals with the episcopal see of Roskilde, whereas there are four letters from 1224 in relation to the capitular election of Peder Sakseson in Lund.Footnote 79 The letters of popes Alexander III and Honorius III are of special interest as they indicate an immediate intervention in connection with episcopal appointments; in addition, these letters both refer to the then-ecclesiastical legislation and intimate a papal self-consciousness in the legal area.
Examples: Episcopal appointments in Denmark until 1225
At the time of Sven Estridson's reorganization of the Danish church circa 1059, there were already bishops appointed for the three oldest sees, namely, Odense, Ribe, and Schleswig. According to Gelting, however, most of the bishops for these sees had been titular bishops, meaning that they had had the title and dignity of bishop but had never resided in their respective dioceses.Footnote 80 Bishop Henry of Lund, though, may have resided there since (probably) the mid-1040s.Footnote 81 The majority of Danish bishops in this period were of German or English origin, for example, Vilhelm of Roskilde (d. 1073) and Egino of Dalby (d. 1072) from Germany, and Henry of Lund (d. 1066) from England. Some of them had been sent to Denmark by ecclesiastical leaders abroad while others were appointed by the king.
Royal appointment
Most episcopal appointments in the early part of the period under study seem to have been royal appointments.Footnote 82 Thus, in 1073, King Sven substituted (subrogavit) his own chaplain, Sven the Norwegian, for the deceased Vilhelm as bishop of Roskilde.Footnote 83 In 1124, King Niels likewise substituted (subrogavit) his son's chaplain, Peter, for the deceased Arnold as bishop of Roskilde.Footnote 84 Our source, the Chronicon Roskildense, in both cases uses the verb subrogare, meaning to substitute for or “to cause to be chosen in place of another.”
In 1134, civil war ravaged the kingdom. All of society was affected, including the Church, most of whose bishops were related to one of the rival parties. Three of the bishops — Peter of Roskilde, Thore of Ribe, and Ketil of Vestervig (Børglum) — were killed in the Battle of Fodevig, and Adelbjørn of Schleswig was mortally injured there.Footnote 85 According to the Roskilde chronicler, Eskil (Roskilde), Nothold (Ribe), Self (Vestervig), and Iluge (Aarhus) were subsequently made bishops (efficitur episcopus) in the town of Schleswig, presumably by King Erik Emune (d. 1137) himself and without any involvement of the local clergy and people or any of the cathedral chapters concerned. His own chaplain Rike was made (constituitur) bishop of Schleswig as replacement for Adelbjørn.Footnote 86
We do not know how the appointment of the bishops of Ribe — Thore (d. 1134), Ascer (d. ca. 1142), and the ill-famed Radulph (d. 1171) — were undertaken, but again it may have been by royal appointment alone.Footnote 87
Election “by clergy and people”?
In three cases, we hear of something that could be understood as episcopal appointments undertaken by or with the involvement of “clergy and people.” According to the Roskilde chronicler, “together with all the clergy of Sealand [“cum omni clero Selandensis”], King Olav Hunger (d. 1095) enthroned Arnold as bishop.”Footnote 88
A more delicate matter was the election or appointment of archbishop Ascer's successor in 1137. Both the Roskilde chronicler and Saxo vividly describe the course of events, the lay interventions and the competitors, bishop Eskil of Roskilde and bishops Rike of Schleswig (d. 1139). According to the Roskilde chronicler, Rike “had been elected by the clergy and people of Scania [“electus a Scaniensi clero et populo”]” as archbishop of Lund, but through the interference of a lay person in Sealand, a certain Peder Bodilson, bishop Eskil was promoted and finally seized that position, whereas Rike agreed to accept the see of Roskilde. The Roskilde chronicler recalls how Rike took charge of Roskilde “despite the protests of the clergy and people [there]” (“clericis et laicis reclamantibus”).Footnote 89 A somewhat different story is told by Saxo Grammaticus at least half a century later. Saxo recalls how “when it came to [Ascer's] replacement by a new archbishop of Lund, the king and people [of Scania] were divided in their support,” and “the Scanians gave their approbation to Eskil” (“Scanienses Eskyllum suffragiis amplectuntur”). Still, they kept it to themselves out of fear for the king, Erik Emune (d. ?), who had long been an antagonist of Eskil (and Peder Bodilson) and thus preferred Rike.Footnote 90 The king died shortly after, and his successor, Erik Lam (d. 1146), aimed at bringing the matter to an end by installing Rike as archbishop in Lund. At this point, however, the people of Scania were willing to take up arms against the king, causing him to retreat: “Giving Eskil permission, therefore, to change his see, he appointed Rike bishop of Sealand, conditional on the clergy's support [“mediantibus cleri suffragiis”].”Footnote 91
A third occasion where the influence of the people seems to have mattered in the context of an episcopal appointment is when Rike's successor in Schleswig was to be chosen in 1139. According to a document ascribed to King Erik Lam, a certain Hermann, canon in Lund and royal chancellor, had been “deprived of his episcopal see,” that is, Schleswig, “due to turmoil and upheaval among the people there.” Apparently, Hermann was preferred both by the king himself and by Archbishop Eskil. But instead a certain Occo was appointed and consecrated by Adalbero, the archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen, as a consequence of a brief suspension of Lund's archidiocesan status.Footnote 92 The Danes, however, recognized Hermann as the legitimate electus; he is recalled as Hermann, bishop of Schleswig, in several documents from that period.Footnote 93
Papal intervention
In four cases, we hear of episcopal appointment by papal intervention. The first one again involves archbishop Eskil of Lund, who, as we have seen, seized the archiepiscopal office in 1137 under circumstances that are far from clear. In 1177, after almost four decades as Danish bishop and archbishop and after two decades in conflict with the Danish king, Valdemar I (d. 1182), Eskil resigned his office and took the monastic habit in Clairvaux. According to the ecclesiastical law then in force, however, he was not allowed to resign from episcopal office. Eskil had petitioned Pope Alexander III for his resignation in 1176/77, and in his response the pope reprimands the aging Eskil for violating ecclesiastical law but permits his resignation under certain conditions, namely, that Eskil should instigate a process “with the counsel and consent of other religious and qualified men” in order to find a successor.Footnote 94 According to Saxo, Eskil told King Valdemar of his plans in private, upon which the king immediately referred to the canonical regulations that both prohibited and disqualified him, a lay person, from intervening. Eskil then referred to the papal letter and his duty of finding his own successor and reminded the king that he, Eskil, was a papal legate. At the time of Eskil's resignation in the cathedral of St. Lawrence in Lund, the elderly archbishop, according to Saxo:
stated that he was transferring the power which the favor of Rome had conferred on him to those who had traditionally held the right of election; he preferred to yield up his own privilege spontaneously rather than trespass on that of others, and did not wish to give the appearance of stealing from the Church the freedom to exercise its customary prerogative, seeing that he had always been on the alert to preserve its sovereignty.Footnote 95
Both king and clergy, however, the latter claiming to speak for the people (plebs), demanded to hear from Eskil his opinion as to who should succeed him. Finally, says Saxo, Eskil named Absalon (d. 1201), then bishop of Roskilde, and there was an outbreak of joyful turmoil in the cathedral.Footnote 96
In the context of the topic at hand, some points in this account are of special interest: first, Eskil's resignation is approved, albeit conditionally, and he is allowed to appoint his own successor, provided that he first consult and receive the consent of other qualified persons; second, by mentioning “other religious and qualified men,” the pope seems to require participation of a wider circle of men, perhaps even lay persons, in finding a candidate; third, according to Saxo, Eskil is well aware of “who had traditionally held the right of election.” But who were these? A wider circle of viri religiosi as described in the Consuetudines Lundenses as well as the decrees of the Second Lateran Council and the papal letter to Eskil — or the local chapter alone? Considering the current state of development of the legislation about episcopal elections and Saxo's words about the active involvement of king, clergy, and (indirectly) plebs, we must presume that Eskil (at least in the mind of Saxo) was referring to the traditional formula of clerus et populus, whereby clerus at this time would mean primarily the cathedral chapter but also other religious, and populus would mean influential laymen whose opinion was known to, and taken into consideration by, both king and chapter, the primary spokesmen on this occasion.
A second case is when Pope Lucius III confirmed the translation of bishop Omer of Børglum to Ribe. The chronicler claims that this happened in the year 1186, but that must be a mistake as Lucius III died in 1185.Footnote 97 This may be seen as an early case of direct papal intervention in an episcopal appointment.Footnote 98
A third intervention occurred in 1217, when Pope Honorius III granted a prolongation, originally given by Innocent III, of archbishop Anders Suneson's (d. 1228, bishop 1202–23/24) authority over the diocese of Roskilde, enabling the latter to appoint his nephew, a certain “magister .P.[eder Jakobson],” as bishop of Roskilde.Footnote 99 In distinction to Saxo Grammaticus's account of Eskil's final speech and reference to “those who had traditionally held the right of election,” we hear of no involvement of the powerful cathedral chapter of St. Trinitatis in Roskilde. Again, this may be seen as an example of how papal intervention increasingly could override established customs and regulations.
At the resignation of the frail Anders Suneson in 1223/24, the cathedral chapter of Lund elected its provost Peder Sakseson as bishop. Even if much was done according to protocol and in line with the decrees from the Lateran councils, especially the Fourth — the election was undertaken within three months and by the cathedral clergy or chapter of Lund — Pope Honorius III declared the election null and void. In a letter from January 1224, the pontiff recounted his reasons, namely, incorrect procedure (the different parts of the voting process were not properly separated) and incorrect protocol (the choice was notified prematurely to the elected candidate).Footnote 100 Peder Sakseson was instead appointed archbishop of Lund by papal provision, “in order that the Lord's flock should not lack the care of its shepherd for too long.”Footnote 101 This papal intervention should, in my opinion, be understood as in full accordance with the decrees of the Fourth Lateran Council, while again indicating a new state of affairs in which episcopal elections could no more be a local affair but were always subject to papal scrutiny and in which bishops were increasingly named by the pope himself.Footnote 102
Capitular elections
Somewhat surprisingly, the recorded number of purely capitular elections during the period is extremely small, despite the existence of the explicit and then very modern instructions of the Consuetudines Lundenses and despite the current trends in the development of ecclesiastical law. Even if we do not know about the exact electoral procedure, it is probable that the election of bishop Tue of Ribe in 1215 involved the local chapter. According to the Ribe chronicler, “the archdeacon Tue succeeded Olaf in 1215. He was the first to be elected from the chapter, but contrary to the king's will.”Footnote 103 Even so, the election of Tue seems to have been rather uncomplicated, whereas the aforementioned election of Peder Sakseson in 1224 caused papal intervention.
Reflections
The first part of this essay gave an overview of the development of episcopal appointments, primarily in the West, until 1215, with special reference to the formula “by clergy and people” (“per clerum et populum”). The second part was dedicated to episcopal appointments in the kingdom of Denmark (ca. 1059–ca. 1225) as described in some of the indigenous and contemporary sources. This final part aims at stating some conclusions, first, about the development of procedures for episcopal appointments in general and specifically in Denmark and, second, about the development of canon law in relation to what I call cathedral culture.
It is evident that the concept “by clergy and people” already in the early Church reflected a desire to legitimate and validate the process and candidate, the electus. Only a lawfully appointed person could fulfill the requirements of and demands on a bishop, who was the representative of Christ himself. Therefore, the appointment had to be “canonical,” that is, in accordance with ecclesiastical tradition and legislation. In the oldest sources, we hear of election “by clergy and people” as a method and practice that would reflect and fulfill these requirements. Representatives from the local Christian community, ordained and lay members alike, should be involved in the electoral process, but no precise information about the numbers or ranks of the participants is given. Other sources, like the decrees from the First Council of Nicaea (325), established the involvement of the college of bishops at a decisive moment in the process. This expresses a desire for the highest authority in the Church to wield influence over episcopal appointments even though lay participation may have been accepted at some point in the procedure. The decree of Nicaea was repeated later, at the Fourth Council of Constantinople (869–70). As regards elections “by clergy and people,” the formula seems to have worked well as long as no party exceeded their authority in the process. In fact, election “by clergy and people” seems to have been an abiding ideal at least until the first decades of the twelfth century. It is evident that the concept was in itself useful, since it permitted some variation. Certainly, the key figures varied: at times the initiative may have lain with representatives of the clergy, at other times with lay participants. As long as both parties were consulted and an electoral process was undertaken, however, and no violence was done, there seems to have been no reason to call the outcome of the process into question. In short, the legal language (“per clerum et populum”) and form (election) were upheld, but their practical application varied over time and from place to place. Until a certain point in time, “by clergy and people” was considered to be unassailable, the ideal.
The reformers of the eleventh century initially saw the benefits of preserving the concept in both language and form as it was established since time immemorial and had proved able to survive even in times of conflict over lay interference and what they considered as ecclesiastical decline. Gradually, however, “by clergy and people” became an obsolete ideal.Footnote 104 This does not imply that the reformers considered their predecessors to have been in error or previous elections and appointments to have been invalid. Neither does it entail that the then-prevalent situation as such, with controversies over lay influence and investiture, was the sole determining factor. In my opinion, there are strong indications that the abandonment of “by clergy and people” had more to do with the aspirations of the papacy, which became manifest not only in the demand for “free elections” but also with the summoning of councils and the universal codification of ecclesiastical law.
There is a clear connection between language, ecclesiastical lawmaking, and practice. In many cases — for example, the cult of saints or certain liturgical or theological concepts or doctrines within the Roman Church — one may get the impression that ecclesiastical lawmaking rather confirmed an established practice than invented something new: by officially confirming and ratifying an established practice, the ecclesiastical authorities made it “canonical,” meaning it was both approved of and valid. In ages of reform, however, it seems as if the language and the law anticipate the practice, for example, with regard to episcopal elections from the twelfth century and onwards. At the end of the period here examined, episcopal appointments undertaken or referred to by the formula per clerum et populum were no longer considered a guarantee of a canonical election but became, in legal terms, rather a reminiscence of the past. Despite a rather long period of transition before the new legal decrees were fully observed, not only was the legal procedure altered but so also was the concept of “canonical.” Richard H. Helmholz summarizes it thus:
It was in the classical canon law that these reforms took definitive shape. The law of episcopal elections that was developed was also new law for the most part. Though ancient building blocks were used, the edifice eventually constructed would have looked quite unfamiliar to earlier Christians. This is not an area of the law … where the Corpus iuris canonici simply enshrined, elaborated, and made binding rules that had been inherited from the earliest days of the church's history.Footnote 105
Clearly, it is extremely hard to pinpoint a date when new or, for that matter, revitalized legal procedures were fully implemented. Rather, it is evident that the legal impetus of reduced lay influence on ecclesiastical elections and appointments prospered simultaneously with, on the one hand, codification of ecclesiastical law and, on the other hand, the founding and formation of cathedral chapters as legal agents.Footnote 106
Turning to the situation in Denmark in this period, we can make the following observations: in the sources referred to, there are indications that the formula “by clergy and people” is in these contexts synonymous with “canonical” — even after the introduction of both new decrees and regulations, such as the Consuetudines Lundenses, and the establishment of local cathedral chapters. In the case of Arnold's election in the 1080s, the Roskilde chronicler may have used a formula known to him in order to validate the appointment, meaning to show that things were properly done in Denmark at this point, without knowing exactly how things were carried out almost fifty years before the time of writing. In my opinion, royal appointment is more probable for the 1080s than a proper election, even “by clergy and people.” The same author is probably better informed when he describes the wrangling over the archiepiscopal see of Lund in 1137. Even if he is alleged to be contemporary with the turmoil in those days, his description of the appointment(s) in 1137 is hard to comprehend: at the time, full-fledged cathedral chapters existed in both Roskilde and Lund, but the chronicler does not involve them in the process(es) — or even refer to them. Why? According to him, the “clergy and people” initially took an active part in the appointment of archbishop Ascer's successor in favor of Rike; the outcome, however, with Eskil of Roskilde as the next Danish archbishop, is credited to a single lay person: Peter Bodilson.Footnote 107 Saxo Grammaticus also describes a popular influence on the election, but in his description, “the clergy and people of Scania” gave their support to Eskil, not Rike. Neither mentions a process remotely resembling that laid down in the Consuetudines Lundenses. In sum, it is hard to draw any certain conclusions about the modes of episcopal appointment in Denmark in this period. Perhaps we would not have been told how a certain election was conducted or appointment made unless it was in the interest of the informant to account for it. With a few exceptions, namely, regarding the elections of 1137 and 1177 respectively, the authors were not interested in giving detailed descriptions of legal matters — that is, how the episcopal appointments were conducted or by whom; their primary focus seems to have been personal matters, namely, to account for the history of their own church and to establish its series episcoporum.
It seems as if most of the episcopal appointments in Denmark were performed by the king himself at least until the 1130s. It is true that royal support apparently was a necessary tool in safeguarding the new religion and its institutions. This may also be the reason why Rome and its reformers, despite their fervor, did not interfere in Denmark, even in cases of direct lay appointments. At the same time, the Danish setting seems to have been fully in step with the then-current political and legal developments: the codification of a universal ecclesiastical law and the growing strength of the papacy both affect Denmark in obvious ways. At the beginning of the period there is no strong papacy, no common ecclesiastical law, and local anchoring is vital; at the end of the period, the situation is totally different: ideas of reform have been introduced, and the papacy is both aware of and actively intervening in the Danish situation. The Consuetudines Lundenses of 1123, which lay down a procedure for “free” episcopal elections performed without lay interference, together with the conciliar decrees of the Lateran councils, are examples of how legal texts can be signals of something new and different, something the secular rulers eventually will have to respect. Still, according to the extant sources, only two episcopal elections were likely performed by cathedral chapters in the period under consideration, namely, the election of Tue of Ribe (1215) and the overturned but later ratified election of Peder Sakseson in Lund (1225) — elections that took place a century after the Consuetudines Lundenses had presented the ideal of such elections being governed by the chapter.
In another context, I have argued that the concept of cathedral culture would help us to bring into focus a phenomenon that was influential in the Middle Ages but has been rather neglected by modern scholarship.Footnote 108 The culture that evolved in and around the cathedral church was closely connected to the person of the diocesan bishop. This milieu was the center of another level of ecclesiastical organization that stabilized during the period under consideration here: the parochial organization. The power wielded at the cathedral church, the life lived there, and the rites performed served as an exemplar for the rest of the diocese. In addition, episcopal and cathedral culture played a decisive part in the consolidation of the newly Christianized societies in the north.
Cathedral culture has many components. Most are connected with the cathedral chapter, which performed the daily liturgy in the cathedral, assisted and advised the bishop, acted as guardians and executors of ecclesiastical law, educated the parochial clergy, undertook pastoral work in the diocese, and functioned as guardians of saints’ shrines and other holy objects. This created a culture centered on the cathedral that probably had a greater impact than monastic culture upon the laity. An important function of this culture was to transmit and adapt the universal traditions of the Church to the local context.
The adoption of the Consuetudines Lundenses in the 1120s indicates that the cathedral chapter in Lund was up-to-date with the reformists’ agenda and even anticipated ecclesiastical law with regard to episcopal appointments by election without lay interference. Yet, with a few exceptions, the narrative sources recall an older, traditional method of episcopal appointments where lay influence is taken for granted. In my opinion, the developments in Denmark correspond well with how ecclesiastical legislation and its implementation developed in general. If the prospect of flexibility with regard to episcopal appointments in Denmark was realistic until the beginning of the thirteenth century, the Danish church definitely kept up with ecclesiastical legislation after 1215, both in theory and in practice.
Cathedral chapters were established at all episcopal sees in Denmark by the 1190s and, with them, cathedral culture. In the early period, however, in Denmark as elsewhere, the primary function of these chapters was not to legislate or to exercise jurisdiction but to be in charge of and perform the liturgy of the cathedral and to train young men for the priesthood. In my opinion, it is rather obvious that even though the institution of cathedral chapters existed from an early date, long before there was a universal and codified legislation, there was a strong reciprocal relationship between the institution and legal developments in the eleventh and twelfth centuries: on the one hand, the reforming fathers seem to have relied on cathedral chapters as institutions able to support their aspirations for legal and moral reform; on the other hand, the character of the cathedral chapters was altered as their new, legal functions were gradually added and made more specific. Hence, cathedral culture seems to have both prompted and been nourished by ecclesiastical legislation and reform. And, as time passed, the cathedral clergy certainly became more and more the center of attention when the local leaders of a reformed church were to be appointed.
The concept of cathedral culture certainly facilitates our understanding of a situation where many cathedral chapters in the course of the twelfth century became secular. In fact, “secular” was by this time used to label those capitular institutions that did not follow a monastic way of life. Already at that time, people conceptualized some sort of dynamism between monastic culture and cathedral culture, albeit without recognizing that cathedral culture had a positive identity of its own. By considering cathedral culture and monastic culture as two distinct phenomena composed of several elements (liturgy, law, economy, education, etc.), it becomes possible to examine and describe the collaboration and tension between the two in a more unprejudiced and dynamic way than has hitherto been customary. In this article, however, my purpose is only to comment upon certain legal aspects of this relationship.
Initially, the Gregorian reform movement promoted a “monasticization” of clerical communities of various kinds, which gave rise to a movement of reformed canons, later recognized as Austin canons, and eventually manifested in the Premonstratensian and Augustinian orders. Around the year 1100, many communities of cathedral clergy were thus “monasticized.”Footnote 109 This occurred also in Lund and is observable in the customary, the Consuetudines Lundenses: on the one hand, the instructions in chapter 5 for the daily chapter gathering (§§28–30) show that non-monastic traditions were being preserved, as the proceedings follow the Rule of Chrodegang rather than the Consuetudines Marbacenses, which were meant for reformed canons and follow the monastic tradition;Footnote 110 on the other hand, the radical instructions for episcopal elections found in the Consuetudines Lundenses, chapter 16, originate from the Marbach text and its instructions for the election of a provost in a monastic community. These circumstances reflect how the reform movement at the beginning of the twelfth century aspired to reform the Church through ideals derived from monastic culture and life and thus how a mingling of cathedral and monastic culture took place.
In the course of the century, however, the reform work took another direction: the monastic ideal ceased to be an impetus for organizational change and was replaced by elaborated administrative and legal control structures.Footnote 111 The alterations in instructions for episcopal elections throughout the century are evidence of such development. As late as 1177, archbishop Eskil was enjoined by the pope to consult certain viri religiosi in the process of appointing his successor. But, at the same time, if not earlier, the Consuetudines Lundenses, with their instructions about gathering prelates from confraternal institutions for the election of a new bishop, became obsolete. As of the beginning of the thirteenth century, it seems as if the cathedral chapters alone performed episcopal elections, without the participation of viri religiosi. The process entailed a gradual “de-monasticization” of cathedral culture. The intervention by Pope Honorius III in connection with the election of Peder Sakseson in 1224 clearly demonstrates how the freedom and purity of the Church was no longer safeguarded by monastic ideals but instead through legal control and administrative measures. In this new milieu, the cathedral chapters were objects and instruments of control as well as agents in their own right.