Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-tn8tq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-27T03:12:52.741Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Turin Collection in Seven Books: A Poitevin Canonical Collection

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 July 2016

Roger E. Reynolds*
Affiliation:
Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Institute of Medieval Canon Law Bulletin For 1969
Copyright
Copyright © Fordham University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Le Bras, G., ‘L'activité canonique à Poitiers pendant la réforme grégorienne (1049–1099),’ Mélanges René Crozet 1 (Poitiers 1966) 237–9.Google Scholar

2 Cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.230–5. For this note both MS Lat. 675 (olim G 528) of the Bibliothèque municipale in Reims and MS lat. Phill. 1778 of the Deutsche Staatsbibliothek in Berlin have been consulted. Hereford Cathedral Library MS 0.2.VII has not been consulted. Cf. Brooke, Z. N., The English Church and the Papacy from the Conquest to the Reign of John (Cambridge 1931) 238f.; and Fournier, P., ‘Note sur les anciennes collections canoniques conservées en Angleterre,’ RHD4 12 (1933) 129f.Google Scholar

3 Cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.2407. Vat. lat. 6093 has been consulted.Google Scholar

4 Cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.24750. Bordeaux Bibl. mun. MS Lat. 11.Google Scholar

5 Cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.2519. MS lat. Savigny 3 of the Staatsbibliothek der Stiftung Preussischer Kulturbesitz in Berlin has been consulted.Google Scholar

6 Cat. Pasini 239 (Mazzatinti 507). This MS has been consulted in Turin. The author wishes to thank the IMCL for lending him its microfilm of this MS. This collection has been extensively treated in Fournier-Le Bras, Histoire 2.163–7, and Fournier, P., ‘De quelques collections canoniques issues du Décret de Burchard,’ Mélanges Paul Fabre (Paris 1902) 208–13.Google Scholar

7 Mansi 20.498.Google Scholar

8 PL 126.132. Turin MS D. IV. 33, fol. 87r f.Google Scholar

9 The letter of Hincmar is found, e.g., in the Collection of MS M 11, fol. 51r, of the Archivio Capitolare of the Basilica di S. Ambrogio in Milan. On this collection, cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.222–4; and Foffano, V., ‘Descrizione paleografica del Cod. M 11 dell'Archivio della Basilica di S. Ambrogio di Milano: “Decretales de Sacerdotio”,’ La vita comune del clero nei secoli XI e XII 2 (Milan 1962) 4865.Google Scholar

10 Fournier - Le Bras, Histoire 2.167. In his article in the Mélanges Paul Fabre, 207 n. 3, P. Fournier states that the Turin Collection ‘ne semble nullement poitevine.’ The reason for his opinion seems to be that several texts from the Collectio canonum of Deusdedit and Italian councils of the late eleventh century are found in the Collection. Although it is true that the Collectio canonum of Deusdedit primarily influenced Italian collections, traces are certainly found in the Collectio Caesaraugustana (ca. 1110–1120) and perhaps in the Collection of Ste.-Geneviève (Paris Bibl. Ste.-Geneviève MS lat. 166) and the Collection of St.-Germain-des-Prés (Wolfenbüttel Gud. lat. 212). Cf. Lefebvre, Ch., ‘Deusdedit,’ DDC 4 (Paris 1949) 1189. Moreover, canons from the councils of Melfi and Piacenza are occasionally found in French collections. Cf. Gossman, F. J., Pope Urban II and Canon Law (The Catholic University of America Canon Law Studies 403; Washington 1960) 104–6. It seems especially significant that c. 1 of the Council of Benevento (1091) (Mansi 20.738), which is listed on fol. 135v of the Coll VIIL as a canon of the Council of Melfi, is confined almost exclusively to French canonical collections from 1091 until the appearance of Gratian's Decretum. Cf. Gossman, , loc. cit. 106. The only purely Italian collection with the canon which Bishop Gossman lists is the Italian Collection in Nine Books of Vat. Bibl. S. Petri C 118, fol. 14v. On examining the occurrence of the Beneventan decree in this MS, it appears that it was added by a later hand and did not belong to the original collection. To be added to Bishop Gossman's list are: Ivo's Tripartita, Paris BN 3858B, fol. 151r; Haimo's Abridgment of the Collection in Ten Parts, Clm 2594, fol. 13r; the Sententiae Magistri A, Vat. lat. 4361, fol. 123v; and the Sententiae Sidonenses, Vat. lat. 1345, fol. 141r (written perhaps after Gratian's Decretum).Google Scholar

11 Le Bras, Fournier, Histoire 2.1646.Google Scholar

12 The eleventh-century Italian collections listed by Fournier-Le Bras which use substantial amounts of both Burchard's Decretum and the Collection in 74 Titles are the Collectio canonum of Anselm of Lucca and the so-called Collection in Two Books (Vat. lat. 3832) (and its early twelfth-century dependent, the Collection of Assisi BC 227).Google Scholar

13 Le Bras, , loc. cit. 239; and Kuttner, S., Harmony from Dissonance: An Interpretation of Medieval Canon Law (Wimmer Lecture 10; Latrobe 1960) 23.Google Scholar

14 Professor Fransen has reported, in the proceedings of the Congrès de Droit Canonique Médiéval (Louvain 1959) 102, another MS of the Liber Tarraconensis unknown to P. Fournier when he wrote his article, ‘Le Liber Tarraconensis: Étude sur une collection canonique du xie siècle,’ Mélanges Julien Havet (Paris 1895) 261f. The new MS, Tarragona Bibl. Prov. 26, is a short version of the Liber Tarraconensis much like Milan Amb. D 59 Sup. (As long ago as 1929, Valls Taberner reported the Tarragona MS as containing the Collection in 74T. Cf. Le Bras, G., ‘Notes pour servir à l'histoire des collections canoniques,’ RHD4 10 [1931] 131 n. 1.) Since the long and short recensions of the Liber Tarraconensis come from different types of texts, the collection as a whole will bear further study. Until that time it cannot be stated with certainty that the Liber Tarraconensis is a Poitevin collection.Google Scholar

15 Le Bras, Fournier, Histoire 2.239.Google Scholar

16 5.58; Vat. Lat. 6093, fol. 91r_v. Also cf. Bordeaux MS 11, fol. 74r .Google Scholar

17 Fol. 77r_v. Cf. Mansi 20.524.Google Scholar

18 Fornasari, M., ‘Collectio Canonum Barberiniana,’ Apollinaris 36 (1963) 289f.Google Scholar

19 Liber Tarraconensis 5.82; Vat. Lat. 6093, fol. 94r. Coll VIIL 6.96; Turin MS D. IV. 33, fol. 122v. And cf. Fournier, P., ‘Le Liber Tarraconensis’ 266 and 271. This episcopal oath is found in the Ordo Romanus XXXV B, where the incipit is ‘Beatissimo papae A….’ Andrieu, M., Les Ordines Romani du haut moyen âge 4 (Louvain 1956) 100. The oath with this incipit appears only in Ordo XXXV B, found in Rome Bibl. Aless. MS 173, and can be dated ca. 975–1000. The ‘A’ probably refers to either Pope Anastasius III (911–913) or Pope Agapetus II (946–955). The form of the oath which appears in the Turin and Tarragona Collections is also found in the Pontificale Romanum s. XII, 10.3. Andrieu, M., Le Pontifical romain du moyen âge 1 (Studi e Testi 86; Vatican City 1938) 139.Google Scholar

20 6.192–200; Turin MS D. IV. 33, fol. 134v–135r .Google Scholar

21 6.83; Vat. lat. 6093, fol. 106v–107r .Google Scholar

22 11.1; Berlin Savigny 3, fol. 134r_v. In the list of capitula on fol. 132v the rubrics for the canons of Poitiers are listed simply as ‘Diversa capitula.’ The rubric on fol. 134r reads ‘Decrevit sancta synodus’ with no reference to Poitiers.Google Scholar

23 Le Bras, Fournier, Histoire 2.251.Google Scholar

24 Bordeaux MS 11, fol. 156v–157r. The canons appear immediately before L. II.Google Scholar

25 Cf. Tardif, E. J., ‘Une collection canonique poitevine,’ Nouv. rev. hist. dr. fr. étr. 21 (1897) 149216.Google Scholar

26 Cf. Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.164; Fournier, P., ‘Un groupe de recueils canoniques inédits du Xe siècle,’ Annales de l'Université de Grenoble 11 (1899) 394; Morin, G., ‘L'auteur de l'Admonition synodale sur les devoirs du clergé,’ Revue bénéd. 9 (1892) 99–108; and now Amiet, R., ‘Une “Admonitio synodalis” de l'époque carolingienne : Étude critique et édition,’ Mediaeval Studies 26 (1964) 12–82, who argues that the sermon is from a provincial or regional synod of the early ninth century.Google Scholar

27 Fol. 158v–159v .Google Scholar

28 Bordeaux MS 11, fol. 179r .Google Scholar

29 4.31.2; Paris BN MS lat. 10743, pp. 232–5. Cf. Berlin MS Phill. 1746, fol. 74r sq.Google Scholar

30 1.1; Turin MS D. IV. 33, fol. 19r. The sermon is also found in the early twelfth-century Italian collection in Vat. lat. 1350, a collection based primarily on Burchard's Decretum. Cf. Fournier, P., Mélanges Paul Fabre (n. 6 supra) 197. R. Amiet loc. cit. lists two pre-twelfth-century canonical MSS in which the sermon appears: Munich lat. 6241, fol. 97r–100r (a canonical MS of the late tenth century); and Lucca Bibl. cap. 124, fol. 193v–194v (an eleventh-century MS containing the Decretum of Burchard). Among the pre-Gratianic twelfth-century canonical MSS which Amiet lists are: Vat. Barb. lat. 535, fol. 7r–8v (a MS with the Collectio canonum of Anselm of Lucca); Wolfenbüttel Gud. lat. 212, fol. 47r_v (the Collection of Saint-Germain-des-Prés); Vat. lat. 1355, fol. 310r–311v (a Burchard MS of unknown provenance); and Bordeaux Bibl. mun. 11, fol. 76v–77r, 179rv .Google Scholar

31 6.209; Turin MS D. IV. 33, fol. 64v. Cf. Burchard's Decretum, 3.50; PL 140.681f. In a forthcoming study this author will examine the origins and early medieval recensions of the Epistula ad Leudefredum. Google Scholar

32 The only Italian canonical collections with the ‘Burchardian’ sequence known to this author are Bonizo's Liber de vita Christiana 5.71 (ed. Perels, E. [Berlin 1930] 201f.); the Collectio Barberiniana c. 75 (without bishop) (ed. Fornasari, , loc. cit. [n. 18 supra] 277f.); and the Collection in Five Books of Vat. lat. 1348, fol. xlviir–xlviiir (without psalmist and archdeacon).Google Scholar

33 3.40; Reims MS 675, fol. 36r. Presumably because this collection contains canons from seventeen or eighteen books of Burchard's Decretum (LL. VI and XX are missing and LL. XV and XVI are combined), Bras, Fournier-Le, Histoire 2.231, call this collection the Collection in Seventeen Books. (In his description in Mélanges Paul Fabre 205, Fournier, P. calls this collection the Collection of Saint Hilary of Poitiers and notes that the Berlin MS contains only sixteen books.) The tables of contents in more ‘modern’ hands in both the Reims and Berlin MSS suggest that there were formally only three books with other sections added. A close examination of the structure and rubrics of the Collection further suggests that the eleventh-century compiler actually did not view his Collection as one in seventeen books. In the Reims MS, e.g., the first three books are clearly labelled as books. Thereafter the ‘books’ are usually signalled by the words ‘incipit’ or ‘incipiunt.’ Of the books which Fournier-Le Bras list, LL. V, VII, VIII, XII, and XVI are books only in the vaguest sense. In the Reims MS ‘L. V’ has no ‘incipit’ and is found on fol. 48r_v. ‘L. VII’ (fol. 49v–55r [?]) has no ‘incipit’ and is a farrago of diverse canons. ‘L. VIII’ has no ‘incipit,’ is contained on fol. 55r–56r, and is hardly distinguishable from ‘L. VII.’ ‘L. XII’ has no ‘incipit’ and is found on fol. 61r_v. (The ‘modern’ table of contents, however, lists it as a distinct book.) ‘L. XV,’ although not having an ‘incipit,’ does appear to be a formal book (fol. 63r–69r). ‘L. XVI’ on penance does not begin with a rubric and appears only on fol. 69r–70v. On the peculiarities of the Hereford MS of this collection, cf. Fournier, P., ‘Note sur les anciennes collections’ 130; and Brooke loc. cit. (n. 2 supra).Google Scholar

34 3.25; Bordeaux MS 11, fol. 163r. As a canonical fragment the Epistula in a Burchardian recension appears on fol. 75r .Google Scholar

35 Berlin Savigny 3, fol. 127r: ‘Hii sunt vii gradus et opera eorum digna in sancta ecclesia catholica.’ In the Turin Coll VIIL 4.209, fol. 64v, the rubric for the Epistula ad Leudefredum reads ‘Ysidorus de eadem re.’ Google Scholar

36 Coll VIIL 4.208; fol. 64v: Coll XIIIL 10.220; fol. 126v–127r .Google Scholar

37 In forthcoming studies this author will examine the origins and early medieval recensions of the De distantia graduum or De officiis vii graduum and what he has called the Ordinals of Christ.Google Scholar

38 E.g. Collectio Hibernensis 8.1; ed. Wasserschleben, H., Die irische Kanonensammlung, 2nd ed. (Leipzig 1885) 26: and the Pseudo-Isidorian De vetere et novo testamento quaestiones c. 41; ed. McNally, R. E., ‘The Pseudo-Isidorian “De vetere et novo testamento quaestiones”,’ Traditio 19 (1963) 48.Google Scholar

39 Pontificale Romano-germanicum saeculi decimi 14.1–4; ed. Vogel, C. and Elze, R., Le Pontifical romano-germanique du X e siècle 1 (Studi e Testi 226; Vatican City 1963) 1213. Cf. Collectio Hibernensis 8.2; ed. Wasserschleben, , loc. cit. 26.Google Scholar

40 In the early twelfth-century Ordinal of Christ in the Liber de diversis ordinibus possibly belonging to Raimbaud of Liège (PL 213.81 If.), the sequence of the lower grades is that found in the De distantia graduum of the Turin and Berlin MSS.Google Scholar

41 Cf. supra, n. 14.Google Scholar