POPE ALEXANDER III
171st Pope (1159-1181)
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Pope from
1159-81 (Orlando Bandinelli), born of a distinguished Sienese family; died 3
August, 1181. As professor in Bologna he acquired a great reputation as a
canonist, which he increased by the publication of his commentary on the
"Decretum" of Gratian, popularly known as "Summa Magistri
Rolandi." Called to Rome by Eugene III in the year 1150, his advancement
was rapid. He was created Cardinal Deacon, then Cardinal-Priest of the title
of St. Mark, and Papal Chancellor. He was the trusted adviser of Adrian IV and
was regarded as the soul of the party of independence among the cardinals,
which sought to escape the German yoke by alliance with the Normans of Naples.
For openly asserting before Barbarossa at the Diet of Besancon (1157) that the
imperial dignity was a papal beneficium (in the general sense of favour, not
feudal sense of fief), he incurred the wrath of the German princes, and would
have fallen on the spot under the battle-axe of his life-long foe, Otto of
Wittelsbach had Frederick not intervened. For the purpose of securing a
submissive pontiff at the next vacancy, the Emperor despatched into Italy two
able emissaries who were to work upon the weaknesses and fears of the
cardinals and the Romans, the aforesaid Otto and the Archbishop-elect of
Cologne, Rainald von Dassel, whose anti-Papal attitude was largely owing to
the fact that the Holy See refused to confirm his appointment. The fruits of
their activity became patent after the death of Pope Adrian IV (1 September,
1159). Of the twenty-two cardinals assembled, 7 September, to elect a
successor all but three voted for Orlando. The contention made later, that the
imperialist cardinals numbered nine, may be explained by the surmise that in
the earlier ballotings six of the faithful cardinals voted for a less
prominent and obnoxious candidate. In opposition to Cardinal Orlando, who took
the immortal name of Alexander III, the three imperialist members chose one of
their number, Cardinal Octavian, who assumed the title of Victor IV. A mob
hired by the Count of Wittelsbach broke up the conclave. Alexander retreated
towards the Norman south and was consecrated and crowned, 20 September, at the
little Volscian town of Nympha. Octavian's consecration took place 4 October,
at the monastery of Farfa. The Emperor now interposed to settle a disturbance
entirely caused by his own agents, and summoned both claimants before a packed
assembly at Pavia. He betrayed his animus by addressing Octavian as Victor IV
and the true Pope as Cardinal Orlando. Pope Alexander refused to submit his
clear right to this iniquitous tribunal, which, as was foreseen, declared for
the usurper (11 February, 1160). Alexander promptly responded, from the
ill-fated Anagni, by solemnly excommunicating the Emperor and releasing his
subjects from their oaths of allegiance. The ensuing schism, far more
disastrous to the Empire than to the Papacy, lasted for seventeen years and
ended after the battle of Legnano (1176) with the unconditional surrender of
the haughty Barbarossa in Venice, 1177. (See FREDERICK I.) The childish legend
that the Pope placed his foot on the neck of the prostrate Emperor has done
valiant service to Protestant tradition since the days of Luther. [See the
dissertation of George Remus, Nuremberg, 1625; Lyons, 1728; and Gosselin,
"The Power of the Pope during the Middle Ages "(tr. London, 1853)
II, 133.] Alexander's enforced exile (1162-65) in France contributed greatly
to enhance the dignity of the papacy, never so popular as when in distress. It
also brought him into direct contact with the most powerful monarch of the
West, Henry II of England. The cautious manner in which he defended the rights
of the Church during the quarrel between the two impetuous Normans, King Henry
and St. Thomas Becket, though many a time exciting the displeasure of both
contestants, and often since denounced as "shifty", was the strategy
of an able commander who, by marches and countermarches succeeds in keeping
the field against overwhelming odds. It is no disparagement of the Martyr of
Canterbury to say that the Pope equalled him in firmness and excelled him in
the arts of diplomacy. After Becket's murder the Pope succeeded, without
actual recourse to ban or interdict, in obtaining from the penitent monarch
every right for which the martyr had fought and bled.
To crown and seal the
triumph of religion, Alexander convoked and presided over the Third Lateran
Council (Eleventh Ecumenical), in 1179. Surrounded by over 300 bishops, the
much-tried Pontiff issued many salutary decrees, notably the ordinance which
vested the exclusive right of papal elections in a two-thirds vote of the
cardinals. Throughout all the vicissitudes of his chequered career Alexander
remained a canonist. A glance at the Decretals shows that, as an
ecclesiastical legislator, he was scarcely second to Innocent III. Worn out by
trials, he died at Civita Castellana. When we are told that "the
Romans" pursued his remains with curses and stones, the remembrance of a
similar scene at the burial of Pius IX teaches us what value to attach to such
a demonstration. In the estimation of Rome, Italy, and Christendom, Alexander
III's epitaph expresses the truth, when it calls him "the Light of the
Clergy, the Ornament of the Church, the Father of his City and of the
World." He was friendly to the new academical movement that led to the
establishment of the great medieval universities. His own reputation as a
teacher and a canonist has been greatly enhanced through the discovery by
Father Denifle in the public library of Nuremberg of the "Sententiae
Rolandi Bononiensis," edited (Freiburg, 1891) by Father Ambrosius Gietl.
The collection of his letters (Jaffé, Regesta RR. Pontif., Nos.
10,584-14,424) was enriched by Löwenfeld's publication of many hitherto
unknown (Epistolae Pontif. Rom. ineditae, Leipzig, 1885). Even Voltaire
regards him as the man who in medieval times deserved best from the human
race, for abolishing slavery, for overcoming the violence of the Emperor
Barbarossa, for compelling Henry II of England to ask pardon for the murder of
Thomas Becket, for restoring to men their rights, and giving splendour to many
cities.
JAMES F. LOUGHLIN
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