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Of Locustae and Dangerous Men: Peter Damian, the Vallombrosans, and Eleventh-century Reform1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Extract
In a letter to the people of Florence in the early part of 1067, the ardent reformer, Peter Damian, denounced a group of monks as locustae. These unnamed monks—whom it has long been accepted were the Vallombrosans—had been waging a campaign against their bishop, Peter Mezzabarba of Florence, whom they accused of obtaining his office by simony. Although Damian, who had been cardinalbishop of Ostia as well as prior of the eremitical community at Fonte Avellana, readily acknowledged that Mezzabarba might have a case to answer at Pope Alexander II's forthcoming council in Rome, he condemned their intrusion into matters of ecclesiastical politics that were none of their business. Yet it was clearly more than a matter of inappropriate activities. For he went on to dismiss in the bitterest of terms the dangerous pretensions of these monks to a superior holiness. Referring to their sanctity as odiosa, Damian concluded by saying that if monks like the Vallombrosans wanted to be holy they should not flaunt a spiritual arrogance in the face of weaker brethren. For Damian, the duty of monks was strictly defined by function: their calling was to weep for sins, not to announce them.
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References
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15. Andreas of Strumi, Vita sancti lohannis Gualberti (as in n. 14; hereafter Andreas, Vita G.); Vita lohannis Gualberti auctore discipulo eius anonymo (as in n. 14; hereafter Anon., Vita G.). Andreas's Life is extant in only one contemporary manuscript, Florence, Archivio di Stato, Conventi soppressi 260, n. 259. It is in a late-eleventh-or early-twelfth-century hand and is missing folios 1, 2, 7, 9, and 16, which are rewritten probably in a sixteenth-century hand. The text is supplemented, as in the MGH edition, by the twelfth-century Life by Atto of Pistoia, which will not be considered here. The letter to Alexander II from the Florentines, included as c. 75, had a much wider diffusion: see Miccoli, G., “La lettera dei fiorentini ad Alessandro II e la sua tradizione manoscritta,” in Miccoli, Pietro Igneo: Studi sull'età gregoriana (Rome: Nella sede dell' instituto, 1960), 139–57Google Scholar. The anonymous Life also is extant in just one contemporary manuscript, Florence, Biblioteca Nazionale, Conventi sopressi, C. 4.1791, written in a twelfth-century hand at fols. 178–84v.
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17. Andreas, , Vita G., 8, 1081Google Scholar. Cf. Anon., Vita G., 1, 1105Google Scholar. The Anonymous then goes on to justify this man's unusual existence as a city-dwelling hermit: “quamvis in civitate manerat plena populo, tamen, quia nullus locus est remotus compunctae menti, separatus erat a populo et ad Dei servitium solus manebat in cella ieiuniis, vigiliis et orationibus vacans.”
18. Andreas, , Vita G., 8, 1082: “sub simoniaco patre vivere timeo valde.”Google Scholar
19. Ibid., 8, 1082: “Qui eius [Teuzo] monita complens, ad forum dies, quo sciebat omnes adesse, veniens episcopum et abbatem appellavit simoniacos.” Cf. Anon., Vita G., 1, 1105: “Quern cum venerabilis Iohannis pro certo comperisset per pecuniam prelationis arripuisse dignitatem, detestabilem perhorrescens heresem meditari cepit, qualiter hanc vitando posset effugere.” Here, Teuzo's role is subdued, and there is no mention of a public denunciation. While both hagiographers described the simoniacal election of Ubertus as John's motive for leaving, it is clear that there was some real problem at St. Miniato around 1035–37, as a number of other monks seem also to have left the monastery: see Spinelli, G. and Rossi, G., Alle origini di Vallombrosa: Giovanni Gualberto nella società dell'XI secolo (Novara: Europa, 1984), 36.Google Scholar
20. Andreas, , Vita G., 10, 1082Google Scholar. There is no mention of John's peregrinations or the sojourn at Camaldoli in the anonymous Life, which gives the impression that John went straight to Vallombrosa after leaving Florence.
21. Andreas, , Vita G., 10, 1083Google Scholar: “et ut stabilitatem daret, renuit quia eius fervor nonnisi in cenobitali vita erat, ut beati Benedicti regula indicat.” In the anonymous Life (3, 1105), a quasi-role for Gualbertus's settling at Vallombrosa is given to Abbot Guarinus of Settimo, whose prominence in the text is probably due to the anonymous author's having been a monk there at one time. The author is careful, however, to emphasize that two monks from Settimo who were living at the site were not living “together” in a community, and thus that John truly was the founder of a community at Vallombrosa. On the foundation charter, see Boesch-Gajano, , “Storia e tradizione vallombrosane,” 167–68, n.l.Google Scholar
22. Andreas, , Vita G., 15–21, 1084–86Google Scholar (for “rule” and new converts); cf. Anon., Vita G., 3, 1106Google Scholar. John, however, often mitigated corporal mortifications after numerous fasts and vigils ended in severely debilitating his own health: 17, 1084. A miraculous example of the Vallombrosan antipathy for wealth is seen in the case of the Vallombrosan dependency, St. Peter in Moscheta, founded ca. 1050 and headed by one of John's most important disciples Rudolf, who would succeed him as head of the Congregation. St. Peter's was miraculously destroyed on two occasions, apparently on account of its wealth and ostentatious buildings: see Andreas, , Vita G., 43–44, 1089Google Scholar. This wealth, however, was apparently no impediment to Rudolf's promotion. Cf. Boesch-Gajano, 101 ff.
23. Andreas, , Vita G., 19, 1085Google Scholar: “quod aliquando a monachis regi deberent; canonicorum, non monachorum hoc esse officium dicebat.”
24. Ibid., 21, 1085–86 (conversi); 14–15, 1083 (manual labor). For instance, one of John's early disciples, Peter, who was the first abbot of St. Michael in Passignano, then abbot of St. Salvatore in Fuecchio, and later Cardinal-bishop of Albano, was the cowherd at Vallombrosa. The conversi followed almost as strict a regime as the monks, though they were exempted from the vow of silence and were permitted to wear linen in the summer.
25. See Boesch-Gajano, 171–73; Jestice, , Wayward Monks, 231–34Google Scholar. Cf. Cushing, K. G., Reform and the Papacy in the Eleventh Century, 130–33.Google Scholar
26. Bonizo of Sutri, Liber ad amicum, 5 (MGH, Libelli de Lite, 1:568–620), 589:Google Scholar “Haec synodus gladium in viscera mersit inimici. Nam non solum Romae incontinentes sacerdotes et levitae ab altaris prohibeantur officio, sed etiam per vicinas circumquaque regiones et per omnem Tusciam, adiuvantibus monachis, viris religiosis et verbo praedicationis insudantibus.” Cf. Boesch-Gajano, 115 ff. See also Jestice, , Wayward Monks, 217–18.Google Scholar
27. Between 1040 and 1046, at the request of Count William Bulgarellus, John reluctantly undertook to reform St. Salvatore in Settimo, even though he was loathe to undertake existing houses because of the difficulties of imposing a new observance: 33, 1088: “Erat nimis inflexibilis ad sumenda vetera sub suo regimine monasteria, sed accepta constans nimis ad retinenda erat, etiamsi dura acciderent adversa.” Other early foundations included: St. Salvi (1048), St. Peter in Moscheta (ca.1050), St. Paul in Razzuolo (1047), and St. Cassian in Montescalari (1040). John also assumed headship of the existing houses of St. Michael in Passignano and St. Reparata in Marradi. Cf. Milo, Y., “Dissonance Between Papal and Local Reform Interests,” 69–86.Google Scholar
28. See Golinelli, , “Indiscreta sanctitas: Sull'uso polemico della santità,” 186–91Google Scholar. For Beatrice's apparent personal regard for Gualbertus, see Andreas, , Vita G., 38, 1088.Google Scholar
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30. Die Briefe des Petrus Damiani, 146, 3.533 ff. Damian of course had taken the Augustinian position (against Humbert) in his Liber gratissitnus (40, 1.384–509), arguing that sacraments freely received were valid for an untainted recipient. See below.
31. It is difficult to be precise about the chronology of these events, especially as to whether the burning of St. Salvi took place before or after Damian's visit and letter, though likely before. Andreas, for obvious reasons, ignores Damian's legation. The Anonymous's use of “locustae” in his account of the Council of 1067 might suggest that he, at least, knew of Damian's letter to the Florentines: Anon., Vita G., 5, 1106–7Google Scholar: “‘domine pater, isti sunt locustae quae depascuntur viriditatem sanctae ecclesiae’”; Cf. Die Briefe des Petrus Damiani, 146, 3.332, on the dating of the letter.
32. The place of Settimo in the Vallombrosan congregation is unclear. It appears to have been only temporarily affiliated during John's lifetime as the later charter of Urban II (April 6, 1090) does not include it as being among the Congregation: see Italia Pontificia sine Repertorium privilegiorum et litterarum a Romanis pontificibus ante annum 1197, ed. Kehr, P. (Berlin: Apud Weidmannos, 1908), 3:88, n. 6.Google Scholar
33. Jestice, , Wayward Monks, 238–42.Google Scholar
34. See Andreas, , Vita G., 42, 1089Google Scholar; 57, 1091; 84, 1102, where witnesses are noted, though this was a common hagiographical topos.
35. This may be a reflection of Andreas's desire to depict Gualbertus as a simple holy man, whom on one occasion he described as inscius litterarum et quasi idiota before illness constrained the saint to bed where he had an opportunity to read holy books, thereby becoming peritissimus: 32, 1087.
36. Andreas, , Vita G., 28, 1087Google Scholar. For other feeding miracles: 27, 1086–87; 36–37, 1088; 53, 1091. Occasionally, there is an interesting social element to these feeding miracles: on one occasion (52, 1091), John's presence caused cows in the field to drop dead, thereby providing for the poor, until the owners requested that he return and stay inside the monastery. On another, a bear eating the cows of the poor was miraculously killed by John's order: 55, 1091.
37. Anon., Vita G., 6, 1107Google Scholar: “quia non est michi nunc intentio proprias eius narrare virtutes, sed locis communionibus laudare defunctum.”
38. For example, Andreas, , Vita G., 17, 1084Google Scholar; 22, 1086: “Erat Iohannes pater tantae austeritatis et increpationis contra delinquentes, ut, cui irascebatur, sibi irasci terra et celum, immo ipse Deus videretur. Sed post paululum tanta benignitate et tanta tranquillitate ad increpatum et correptum convertebatur, ut non nisi materna habere videretur viscera”; and 26, 1086: “Quae vero corrigenda erant, sollicite corriebat, et quae ordinanda, caute et provide ordinabat.”
39. Ibid., 8–9, 1081–82.
40. Ibid., 24, 1086.
41. Ibid., 66–67, 1093–94; here 67, 1093: “Unde oportet vestram vigilare sollicitudinem”; 1094: “Taliter enim episcopo faciente populus cum clero apud Deum salvabitur et idem eiscopus a Deo renumerabitur. Si autem contra haec fecerit vel pecuniam requisierit symoniacus hereticus iudicabitur atque dampnabitur.”
42. Ibid., 78, 1100: “Venerunt clerici catholici per idem tempus et fideles laici de civitate Mediolanensi ad senem parrem, illius terrae referentes miseriam, scilicet per multos retros annos innumerabilis multitudo tam virorum quam mulierem illius civitatis pro timore symonicae heresis nee penitentiam nee communionem ab aliqua sumpserat persona mortali. A quibus se profitebantur esse missos ad pietatem senis patris, ut pro caritate, qua isdem in ceteris flagrabat, animabus eorum auxilium pro posse impenderet.” Andreas is the only source for this. Cf. Jestice, , Wayward Monks, 244–45.Google Scholar
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44. Ibid., 2, 1105.
45. Ibid., 5, 1107. Cf. Boesch-Gajano, , “Storia e tradizione,” 175–76.Google Scholar
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50. Ibid., 71, 1095. Andreas conveniently fails to note that no monk died in the attack.
51. Ibid., 72, 1095: “Felicem se quisque credebat, si aliquem monachorum videre valebat vel ex eorum sacro sanguine ex terra, lapidibus et lignis suis pannis possent extergere, volentes ilium pro magnis reliquiis habere.”
52. Ibid., 73, 1095: “‘Nunc vere monachi estis; sed cur sine me haec perferre voluisris?’ Valde enim doluit, quod praefatae persecution! defuit, in qua tamen ipse martiri obtinuit bravium.”
53. Ibid., 75, 1096–99.
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58. Die Briefe des Petrus Damiani, 40, 1.418: “Aliud namque ex vitae meritis sanctum esse, aliud ex ministerio conditionis dici.”
59. Die Briefe, 44, 2.21: “quae sane vita satis utilius ad aedificationem vivis operibus praedicat.” Eng. trans. Blum, O. J., The Letters of Peter Damian, 5 vols. (Washington, D.C.: The Fathers of the Church, Medieval Continuation, 1989–2004), 2.231.Google Scholar
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63. Vita Romualdi, 35, 75: “Inter caeteros, autem, precipue seculares clericos qui per pecuniam ordinati fuerant, durissima severitate corripiebat, et eos, nisi ordinem sponte desererent, omnino damnabiles et hereticos asserebat. Qui novam rem audientes, occidere ilium moliti sunt.” Damian was, however, forced to concede Romuald's failure with bishops, grudgingly admitting that it would have been easier to convert a Jew to the faith than a simonist bishop: 35, 76.
64. Ibid., 50, 92. Having been accused of sodomy by a disciple at Sitria, Romuald had freely submitted to the penance of not saying mass for some six months until, by divine order, he put away such indiscreet simplicitas. Cf. P. Golinelli, “Indiscreta sanctitas: Sull'uso polemico della santità nel contesto del movimento riformatore,” in Indiscreta sanctitas (as n. 7), 157–91.
65. For example, Damian, ca.1065/66 to Rodulf, Vital, Ariald, and Erlembald in Milan, encouraging action: Die Briefe, 129, 3.431–34. These were of course clerics and laymen rather than monks.
66. Anon, Vita G., 4, 1107Google Scholar: “Domne pater isti sunt locustae quae depascuntur viriditatem sanctae ecclesiae.” Compare with Alexander's more moderate response: “quia boni homines sunt, et ea quae dicunt, simpliciter et bona intentione locuntur.”
67. Die Briefe, 40, 1.441: “non denique locustarum laesura fruges pestis aliqua remaneret.”
68. Die Briefe, 78, 2.394–95.
69. Ibid., 395; trans, from Blum, 3.178.
70. Urban II would curtly order them in 1091 back into the cloister: see Kehr, , Italia Pontificia, 3.1, 35Google Scholar, and Vedovato, G., Camaldoli e la sua congregazione, 3.3, 178–80.Google Scholar
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72. Dialogi de miraculis s. Benedicti, 3.4, 1146–47.
73. See Miller, M. C., “Masculinity, Reform and Clerical Culture: Narratives of Episcopal Holiness in the Gregorian Era,” Church History 72:1 (2003): 25–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Cushing, K. G., “Events that Led to Sainthood: Sanctity and the Reformers in the Eleventh Century,” in Belief and Culture in the Middle Ages, ed. Gameson, R. and Leyser, H. (Oxford: Oxford University Pres, 2001), 187–96.Google Scholar
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