Read An Empire of Memory Online
Authors: Matthew Gabriele
Tags: #History, #Medieval, #Social History, #Religion
Church at the turn of each season and intended to thank God for the gifts of nature,
the celebration of the Ember Days had been first regularized by Pope Gregory VII
(1073–85). Pope Urban II, however, moved the summer celebration away from the
second week of June to around the time of Pentecost.69
In the early twentieth century, Léon Levillain offered the more precise date of
c.1080 for the composition of the Descriptio qualiter. In his study of the festival of
Lendit, Levillain concluded that the text was composed in the wake of King Philip
I’s visit to the house of canons at Saint-Corneille of Compiègne in March 1079. At
that time, the king presided over the translation of Saint-Corneille’s relic of the
Holy Shroud to a new reliquary, which had been given to the canons by Queen
Matilda of England.70 Levillain asserts that the Descriptio qualiter was written at
Saint-Denis shortly after this event, as the abbey attempted to bolster its status in
the face of a challenge to its prestige (and its festival) by Saint-Corneille.
Levillain was, I think, quite right in linking the composition of the Descriptio
qualiter to the relic translation at Saint-Corneille in 1079. Founded in 877 by
Charles the Bald and modeled on the palace chapel of St Mary’s at Aachen, the
house of canons at Saint-Corneille remained a significant center for the western
Franks through the late Carolingian era. But Saint-Corneille was a shadow of its
former self by the beginning of Philip I’s reign. Philip I renewed royal interest in
that religious house, probably because the town stood on the frontier of royal
power, a base for incursions into the Vexin and Vermandois early in Philip’s reign
and a bulwark against the Norman dukes.71
For example, in 1092, Philip I, once again intervening in Norman affairs, offered
a diploma to the canons of Saint-Corneille, giving them the right to oppose the
building of any tower or fortification in their territory and also commemorating the
translation of the Holy Shroud thirteen years before. This last part of the diploma is
Sumner McKnight Crosby and Pamela Z. Blum, The Royal Abbey of Saint-Denis from its Beginnings to
the Death of Suger, 475–1151 (New Haven, Conn., 1987), 101. There are, however, outliers to this
consensus. Joseph Bédier dated the text to 1100–20. Rolf Grosse has more recently dated it to 1053–4.
See Joseph Bédier, Légendes épiques: Recherches sur la formation des chansons de geste, 4 vols. (Paris, 1921), iv. 125–7; and Rolf Grosse, ‘Reliques du Christ et foires de Saint-Denis au XIe siècle’, Revue
d’Histoire de l’Église de France, 87 (2001), 357–75. The discussion that follows relies heavily on
Gabriele, ‘Provenance of the Descriptio qualiter’, 93–117.
68 Descriptio qualiter, ed. Rauschen, 120. Lendit comes from l’endit, and ultimately from indictum,
which was generally used to mean ‘public fair’ by the 12th cent. It was, however, the specific name
given in the later Middle Ages to the festival held at Saint-Denis in honor of their christological relics. It took place during the second week of June and was legendarily begun by Charles the Bald to celebrate
the relics of the Passion he gave to Saint-Denis––an attribution that rests entirely on the Descriptio qualiter. L. Levillain, ‘Essai sur les origines du Lendit’, Revue Historique, 155 (1927), 241.
69 See Paris, Histoire poétique, 56; Bédier, Légendes épiques, iv. 126.
70 Levillain, ‘Essai’, 261–2; and May Vieillard-Troïekouroff, ‘La Chapelle du palais de Charles le
Chauve à Compiègne’, Cahiers Archéologiques, 21 (1971), 102. The Queen Matilda in question was the
wife of King William I the Conqueror, daughter of Count Baldwin V of Flanders (d. 1067), and niece
of King Philip I.
71 Vieillard-Troïekouroff, ‘La Chapelle du palais’, 98–102; and Augustin Fliche, Le Règne de
Philippe I er, roi de France (1060–1108) (Paris, 1912), 154. My thanks to Geoffrey Koziol for
conversations on this topic.
Charlemagne’s Journey to the East
59
the most interesting for us, since it provides an almost certain terminus ante quem
for dating the Descriptio qualiter. In this diploma, Philip noted that the relic had
been given to the canonry by Charles the Bald and established an annual fair to be
held on the fourth Sunday of Lent (Carême––hence, the fair was subsequently
called Le Mi-Karesme).72 In doing all this, Philip was in effect honoring the
Descriptio qualiter, the sole justificatory source for Saint-Corneille’s relic. And yet
the diploma from 1092 seems to be recognizing, not creating, a tradition. The fair
at Saint-Corneille may have been new in 1092 but the tradition that Charles the
Bald gave the house of canons its relic was not. That tradition, and the likely date of
composition of the Descriptio qualiter, can be traced to c.1080, around the time of
the translation of the Holy Shroud in 1079 and shortly after the spectacular
decision made by Count (later Saint) Simon of Crépy (d. 1081) in 1077.
Just two years before Philip’s translation of the Holy Shroud, between March
and May 1077, Simon of Crépy, only 25 years old but holding seven counties,
receiving homage from seven more, and acting as advocate for five major mon-
asteries, dramatically retired to the monastery of Saint-Arnoul. This set off shock-
waves throughout Europe. Other magnates, such as Duke Hugh of Burgundy and
Count Guy of Mâcon, along with two of Guy’s sons, followed Simon’s example,
left the world, and joined monastic houses. Pope Gregory VII personally sum-
moned Simon to Rome, in order for him to serve as a papal advocate. The nobility
of northern Francia carved up what was left of Simon’s lands.73
Both Simon and his father, Ralph IV of Valois (d. 1074), were often present at
Philip’s court and Simon remained close to Philip until his death in 1081. Indeed,
Saint-Corneille’s translation of the Holy Shroud can be dated so precisely to March
1079 because Simon himself was present, sent from his monastery of Saint-Arnoul
by Abbot Hugh of Cluny (d. 1109). Simon then moved on to Normandy in order
to help reconcile Robert Curthose (d. 1134) with his father, William I the
Conqueror (1066–87), later that same year.74 So, it is perhaps no surprise that
Philip I and those close to his court profited immensely from Simon’s retirement.
The bishops of Amiens, frequent visitors to Philip’s court, gained comital rights.75
Count Herbert IV of Vermandois, whose daughter would soon marry Philip’s
72 In 1091–2, Philip was helping Robert Curthose against William Rufus. Fliche, Le Règne de
Philippe I er, 294–8. Every extant diploma Philip issued in 1092 had to do with this Norman adventure.
Three were for Compiègne and two confirmed donations to religious houses by Robert of Bellême (a
powerful Norman lord and ally of Robert Curthose). See Recueil des actes de Philipe I er, ed. Prou, nos.
124–6, 128–9. Analysis of the diploma for Saint-Corneille in Louis Carolus-Barré, ‘Le Mi-Karesme,
foire de Compiègne (1092–1792)’, in Études et documents sur L’Île-de-France et la Picardie au Moyen
Age, 2 vols. (Compiègne, 1994), i. 229–30. The diploma can be found in both Cartulaire de Saint-
Corneille de Compiègne, ed. E.-E. Morel, 3 vols. (Montdidier, 1904), i, no. 22; and Recueil des actes de Philipe I er, ed. Prou, no. 126.
73 The conversion and its aftermath are discussed at length in H. E. J. Cowdrey, ‘Count Simon of
Crepy’s Monastic Conversion’, in P. Guichard, M.-T. Lorchin, J.-M. Poisson, and M. Rubellin (eds.),
Papauté, Monachisme et Théories politiques: Études d’histoire médiévale offertes à Marcel Pacaut, 2 vols.
(Lyon, 1994), i. 253–66.
74 Vita beati Simoni comitis Crespeiensis, PL 156: 1219.
75 They appear numerous times in Philip’s diplomas. See Recueil des actes de Philipe Ier, ed. Prou,
nos. 18, 19, 21–3, 25, 27, 30, 32, 60, 61, 65, 81, 84, 93, 110, 117, 124, 175.
60
The Franks Remember Empire
brother Hugh, received Valois and Montdidier from Simon. Philip himself
acquired the Vexin, as well as the advocacies for both Corbie and Saint-Denis.76
The Merovingians and Carolingians had patronized Saint-Denis generously.77
But the special relationship between monarchy and abbey waned under the
Capetians, most likely because they were alienated from the monastery, as its
advocacy eventually became the special purview of the counts of the Vexin.
Then, in late 1077, Philip I became the first West Frankish king since the late
Carolingians to claim the advocacy of Saint-Denis.78 At Saint-Corneille in 1079, he
presided over the translation of the Holy Shroud, supposedly given to the house of
canons by Charles the Bald. Sometime around the time of Simon’s retirement and
Saint-Corneille’s translation of its relic would seem to have been an opportune time
to commemorate the Frankish kings’ ‘historical’ connection to, and patronage of,
both of those religious houses. Thus, linking the Descriptio qualiter to Philip’s
acquisition of the advocacy of Saint-Denis and the translation of the Holy Shroud
at Saint-Corneille in 1079 suggests a close connection between the text, Philip I,
Saint-Corneille, and Saint-Denis.
T H E RE L A T I O N S H I P A M O N G T H E S O U R C E S
Due to the similarities in their subjects and the fact that both Charroux’s Historia
and the Descriptio qualiter were most likely composed within roughly a decade of
one another, one must wonder about the connections between the two.79 As Amy
Remensnyder has demonstrated in connection with Charroux, Charlemagne as the
source of the abbey’s powerful christological relics ‘tacitly asserts that the abbey was
a royal foundation; through the gift of relics, the abbey claims the king, who, like
the saint, becomes its patron’.80 Indeed, Charroux’s cartulary reads like a litany of
imperial/royal/papal gifts to the abbey. King Philip I gave two diplomas for
Charroux, one enacted at the abbey itself. In the latter, Abbot Fulcrad seems to
have sought King Philip I out at Compiègne in 1085 in order for him to confirm
76 All of Herbert’s lands went to Hugh upon Herbert’s death in 1080, giving the Capetians an
important foothold in Picardy. Very little has been written on the career of Hugh ‘Magnus’ but see
Marcus Bull, ‘The Capetian Monarchy and the Early Crusade Movement: Hugh of Vermandois and
Louis VII’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 50 (1996), 25–46. On Philip’s gains, see Cowdrey, ‘Simon of
Crepy’, 264–5.
77 Gabrielle Spiegel, The Chronicle Tradition of Saint-Denis: A Survey (Brookline, Mass., 1978), 11–29.
78 Rolf Grosse, Saint-Denis zwischen Adel und König: Die Zeit vor Suger (1055–1122) (Stuttgart,
2002), 30–7, 84–5. On the movement of Saint-Denis away from the Carolingians, esp. the contest
over Saint-Denis between Charles the Simple and Robert of Neustria, see Geoffrey Koziol, ‘Charles the
Simple, Robert of Neustria and the Vexilla of Saint-Denis’, Early Medieval Europe, 14 (2006), 371–90.
79 Explicit connection between the sources suggested in Abbé Georges Chapeau, ‘Fondation de
l’Abbaye de Charroux: Étude sur les textes’, Bulletin de La Société des Antiquaires de l’Ouest, 3rd ser. 7
(1926), 484; Schwering-Illert, Abteikirche, 31; and Remensnyder, Remembering, 173–4. Remensnyder
believes that Charroux borrowed certain elements from the Descriptio qualiter but only to augment its own tradition concerning the Holy Virtue. This seems possible if we accept a c.1080 date for the Descriptio qualiter, a 1085 visit to Philip I’s court by monks of Charroux, and a c.1095 date for their Historia.
80 Remensnyder, Remembering, 78.
Charlemagne’s Journey to the East
61
Robert of Péronne’s donation to the monastery.81 In both diplomas, Philip was not
donating land or conceding rights to Charroux, but rather acting as the abbey’s (at
least theoretical) advocate. Philip was acting like a Carolingian, replicating what no
king––and significantly no Capetian king––had done since Charles the Bald. His
sudden interest in Charroux in the late 1070s seems all the more noteworthy then.
Just as with the relic translation at Compiègne in 1079, Philip reinserted himself
into an explicitly Carolingian legacy at a site of Carolingian memory. Abbot
Fulcrad’s attendance at Philip’s court in 1085 and the abbey’s later Historia were
both attempts by Charroux to assert itself as a royal, Frankish monastery.
The Descriptio qualiter’s connection to Philip seems more murky. Scholars are
almost universally agreed that the Descriptio qualiter originated at Saint-Denis.82
Yet, there are significant problems with this conclusion. Perhaps most damning in
this regard is that there is no evidence Saint-Denis knew of the text before the
abbacy of Odo of Deuil (abbot, 1151–62).83 In the later Middle Ages, Saint-Denis
developed a reputation for promoting a special legendary relationship with Charle-
magne but before Odo’s abbacy, its devotion most often fell to Dagobert I (608–
38/9) and Charles the Bald.84 Indeed, even after becoming advocate for the abbey,
81 There are three documents (out of twenty-four) in the Liber de Constitutione authored by people
other than kings/emperors or popes. Even among these three, one is (purportedly) written by Roger of
Limoges and is tied closely to the foundation legends of the monastery, and hence to Charlemagne (so,
2/24 = 8%). Other diplomas from the period covered by the cartulary (c.800–c.1100) did survive,