Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- Introduction: Pope Gregory IX (1227–1241)
- 1 ‘Our Lord Hugo’: Gregory IX Before the Pontificate
- 2 Gregory IX and the ‘Lombard Question’
- 3 Gregory IX and the Search for an Anglo-French Peace, 1227–1241
- 4 Gregory IX and the Crusades
- 5 Gregory IX and the Greek East
- 6 Gregory IX and Denmark
- 7 Gregory IX and Spain
- 8 Gregory IX and Mission
- 9 Penitet eum satis?: Gregory IX, Inquisitors, and Heresy as Seen in Contemporary Historiography
- 10 The Third Quadriga: Gregory IX, Joachim of Fiore and the Florensian Order
- 11 Gregory IX and the Liber Extra
- 12 Gregory IX and Rome: Artistic Patronage, Ceremonies and Ritual Space
- Index
Introduction: Pope Gregory IX (1227–1241)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- Introduction: Pope Gregory IX (1227–1241)
- 1 ‘Our Lord Hugo’: Gregory IX Before the Pontificate
- 2 Gregory IX and the ‘Lombard Question’
- 3 Gregory IX and the Search for an Anglo-French Peace, 1227–1241
- 4 Gregory IX and the Crusades
- 5 Gregory IX and the Greek East
- 6 Gregory IX and Denmark
- 7 Gregory IX and Spain
- 8 Gregory IX and Mission
- 9 Penitet eum satis?: Gregory IX, Inquisitors, and Heresy as Seen in Contemporary Historiography
- 10 The Third Quadriga: Gregory IX, Joachim of Fiore and the Florensian Order
- 11 Gregory IX and the Liber Extra
- 12 Gregory IX and Rome: Artistic Patronage, Ceremonies and Ritual Space
- Index
Summary
For sheer drama, very few of the notable set pieces in the long history of the papacy have matched that of February 1240. With the formidable Emperor Frederick II and his army having first entered the valley of Spoleto, then taken the cities of Viterbo and Montefiascone, as well as various castles of the Church, and now threatening the invasion of Rome itself, backed by the increasingly vociferous support of the ever-fickle Romans (‘Let the emperor come. Let him come and receive the City!’), Gregory IX, in extremis, his cause apparently lost, played the final desperate weapon in his depleted armoury:
Behold the relics through whom your city is venerated; I cannot do more than another man!
Taking the crown from his own head he placed it upon the skull of St Peter and then upon the skull of St Paul and called out:
Defend Rome, you saints! If the men of Rome refuse to do so!
Then, taking with him not only the skulls of the saints but the relic of the True Cross, moving in solemn procession to the church of Saint Peter, Gregory there preached to the people:
This is the church and these are the relics of the Romans, which you must protect unto death, and which we commit to God's protection and to yours. Yet I shall not flee but rather I shall await here the mercy of God.
Offering them the general indulgence of the Apostolic See, Gregory thus successfully rallied the Romans to his cause, with many of them taking up the sign of the Cross in defence of the Church, while Frederick, realizing he could achieve nothing more, withdrew to Apulia.
This is Gregory IX – masterful, energetic, courageous, unyielding. This is Gregory IX – confrontational, obsessed, ‘a hate-filled stubborn old man’, as Kantorowicz delicately described him.
Nobody (except the man himself) has ever questioned the zeal of Gregory's faith. Even though ‘the Inquisition’ had a long pre-history, certainly stretching back to Lucius III's Ad abolendam, the formal beginnings of the institution are most associated with Gregory. It was he who issued the bull Excommunicamus of February 1231 and there provided the penalties, including the ultimate punishment, for the various groups defined as heretics – Cathars, Patarenes, the Poor of Lyons and many more (all of them tied together by their tails) – as well as their defenders and supporters.
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- Pope Gregory IX (1227-1241) , pp. 15 - 22Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2023