|
1265. Id. April. Perugia. (f. 6.) |
Translation of Reginald, bishop of Down, to the see of Cloyne, since Master Matthew, archdeacon of the same, who was postulated, could not be made bishop. |
Ibid. |
Concurrent letters to the dean and chapter, to the clergy and people of the city and diocese, and to the archbishop of Cashel. [Theiner, 95.] |
7 Kal. May. Perugia. (f. 6d.) |
Mandate to the archbishop of Cashel to receive the resignation of Maurice, bishop of Ross, who, it appears, before his promotion, made a vow to enter the order of Friars Minors, his promotion itself having been made the occasion of scandals and homicides; in addition to which, his lack of knowledge and weakness of body unfit him to be a bishop, which office he has begged to resign. [Theiner, 95.] |
4 Kal. May. Perugia. (f. 7.) |
Absolution of John de Alneto, a Friar Minor, living in Ireland, from the provision and mandate of pope Urban, by whom he was appointed to the see of Raphoe, an incurable infirmity unfitting him for that office. [Theiner, 96.] |
6 Kal. May. Perugia. (f. 7.) |
Faculty to the bishop of Aberdeen to make provision to fit persons of certain canonries and prebends, churches, and benefices of his diocese, in his gift, which have devolved to the apostolic see by long voidance. [Theiner, 96.] |
2 Kal. May. Perugia. (f. 7d.) |
Confirmation to Reginald, bishop of Cloyne, of the collations to benefices made by him when bishop of Down, during a suit between him and Thomas Lidel, clerk, who said that he had been canonically elected bishop of that see. [Theiner, 96.] |
4 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 8d.) |
Mandate to Ottobon, cardinal of St. Adrian's, papal legate, to fulfil that office in England, to which the present pope, before his elevation, had been appointed by Urban IV., when disturbances were arising, in which the safety of the king and realm was threatened. Clement, being now no less anxious to give some help to England, instructs the cardinal legate to continue the mission begun by himself, and to be a messenger of peace in that realm, and in Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, and will cause any sentences which he pronounces, to be observed. [Theiner, 96.] |
4 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 9.) |
Monition and mandate to archbishops, bishops, abbots, deans, and all prelates in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales, to receive and obey the legate, and obey his advice and orders. |
5 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 9d.) |
To Lewis IX., announcing the mission of the cardinal legate in England to the king and queen, and their sons Edward and Eadmund, and desiring him to assist the legate in whatever way he can, so that the king and his house being restored, ecclesiastical liberty may be preserved and peace return to the kingdom. |
6 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 9d.) |
The like to the queen of France, begging her to use her influence with her husband. |
Non. May. Perugia. (f. 9d.) |
To Henry III., stating that the chief object of sending the legate is that the king and his house may be restored to their former position and the kingdon quieted. He desires the king to receive the legate favourably, and follow his advice. |
Ibid. (f. 10.) |
The like to the queen of England. |
3 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 10.) |
Faculty to Ottobon, cardinal of St. Adrian's, papal legate, to relax oaths taken by the king and queen, their sons Edward and Eadmund, and any persons ecclesiastical or lay, and especially the oath said to have been taken by the queen and her sons, with regard to their return to the realm. |
4 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 10.) |
Faculty to the same to relax sentences of suspension, excommunication, and interdict; to remit injuries done to the Roman church, and to admit those who have committed them to the favour of the apostolic see; to collect troops, and march against those who oppose his mission, and to apply such ecclesiastical censures as he shall see fit against them. |
3 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 10.) |
Mandate to the same to compel prelates, nobles, and all other clergy and laymen of the realm, under pain of suspension and deprivation, to give up to the king all his cities, fortresses, lands, towns, castles, goods, and rights; and to deprive, as he shall see fit, the clerks, brothers, sons, and nephews of those who resist him of their benefices and honours, any grants or conventions to the contrary notwithstanding, by which he is to declare, if expedient, that the king, queen, and their sons are not bound. |
Ibid. (f. 10d.) |
Faculty to the same to cite persons of his legation to appear before him, even though he be beyond the sea. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to apply, by himself or a deputy, such ecclesiastical censures against prelates, convents, nobles, and all persons and bodies of the realm as he shall see fit. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to punish archbishops, bishops, heads of religious houses, exempt or not, convents, chapters, or colleges, and all ecclesiastical persons, who do not obey him in regard to his mission, by suspension, citation to Rome, and deprivation. |
6 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 10d.) |
Power to the same to deprive secular clerks who are disobedient to him in all matters concerning his mission, of all papal favours granted to them, compelling by ecclesiastical censure the executors of the papal letters not to carry out their provisions. |
3 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 10d.) |
Faculty to the same to exercise ecclesiastical censures against any who in any way injure him or his household unless they make amends; and against places where such injury is done, unless the lords of those places, being laymen, make amends. |
Ibid. (f. 11.) |
Faculty to the same to deprive religious of any order of their indults and privileges if they refuse to obey him. |
Ibid. |
Licence to the same, if obliged to leave England, to return as often as the circumstances of his mission may require it, and to exercise his office even when not in England. |
Ibid. |
Declaration that the legate's special commissions are not to interfere with the general object of his mission, which he is to prosecute fully and freely. |
Ibid. |
Licence to the same to exercise his office, even if he be hindered from entering the realm. |
Id. May. Perugia. (f. 11.) |
Mandate to the same to warn and induce all prelates and nobles of the realm, and other clergy and laymen, to keep their oaths of fealty to the king, and to dissolve and abjure all conspiracies and confederations made by them, keeping none of their statutes, even though they, the king, queen, and their sons, have sworn to do so; also to compel the said prelates by sentence of suspension, and laymen, by depriving them of their fiefs and other goods which they withold from certain churches of the realm and others, and to use any other spiritual or temporal coercion. Prelates so suspended are to be summoned to appear before the pope to receive a further sentence. |
4 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 11.) |
Mandate and faculty to the same to preach a crusade in England, Scotland, Denmark, Norway, Wales, Ireland, Gascony, Brittany, Normandy, Flanders, Picardy, Poitou, Saintonge, Almain, and other parts of the empire, the lands of the counts
of Poitou, Toulouse, Provence, and Anjou excepted, against those who rebel against the king or the legate, granting to those penitents who directly or indirectly assist such crusade, the same pardon of sins that is granted by the general council to those who go to the help of the Holy Land, with faculty to commute vows, except those for the kingdom of Sicily, and of religion, even those for Jerusalem, for this object. |
Ibid. |
Power to the same to compel Teutonic knights and other who have helped the English rebels to desist, under pain of excommunication and interdict. |
2 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 11d.) |
Faculty to the same to grant to those who preach the crusade against the rebels power to grant a relaxation of forty days of enjoined penance to penitents who come to hear them. |
3 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 11d.) |
Licence to the same to grant a relaxation of a hundred days of enjoined penance to those penitents who come to hear him preach the word of God. |
Ibid. (f. 12.) |
Licence to the same to grant a relaxation of a year and forty days of enjoined penance to those penitents who attend the conferences, congregations, solemn feasts and masses, and translations of saints held and celebrated within and without the limits of his legation. |
Ibid. |
Licence to the same to grant a relaxation of forty days of enjoined penance to those penitents who assist in building churches. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to compel by ecclesiastical censures Friars Preachers and Friars Minors, and other religious, to do whatever he thinks will assist his mission. |
Ibid. |
Licence to the same to grant dispensations to religious persons of his legation of any order who committed simony during his mission. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to grant licences to noble women, with a suitable company of women, to enter monasteries of any order, once a year, during his legation, for purposes of devotion, provided that they do not spend the night therein. |
2 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 12.) |
Faculty to the same to grant dispensations to four noble persons, related in the fourth degree of kindred, to intermarry. |
4 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 12.) |
Faculty to the same to absolve those prelates and monks who have incurred excommunication by disobeying statutes made for their monasteries by pope Gregory, and to dispense with them on account of irregularity contracted by joining in divine offices while under such sentence, a penance being enjoined them. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to grant dispensations to, by himself or others, and enjoin penance to ecclesiastics, regular or secular, on those ecclesiastics, regular or secular, on account of any irregularity which they have during his legation, incurred by
receiving orders or ministering when under sentence of excommunication, suspension, or interdict. |
Non. May. Perugia. (f. 12d.) |
Faculty to the same to absolve those who have been excommunicated by judges, delegated by the pope, some of whom have died and have not been succeeded, others are not accessible and the jurisdiction of others has expired; satisfaction being first made by the persons concerned. |
5 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 12d.) |
Mandate to the same to cause to be collected a tenth of all church revenues in all parts of the realm, in Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, and in Norway, the only exemptions allowed being the monasteries of Cistercians, Carthusians, Templars, Hospitallers, St. Mary's Teutonic knights, and the order of St. Clare; the proceeds to be applied to the purposes of his mission. [Theiner, 98.] |
4 Kal. June. Perugia. (f. 12d.) |
Faculty to the same to grant dispensations to fifty clerks of illegitimate birth in England, and as many in Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, that they may minister in orders received and be promoted to higher orders, provided they are not sons of an adulterous, incestuous, or religious parent. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to grant dispensations to ten such persons in England, and as many in Scotland, Wales, and Ireland, that they may hold benefices with cure of souls, ordination and residence being required. |
3 Non. May. Perugia. (f. 12d.) |
Faculty to the same to make provision to his clerks of canonries and prebends. |
6 Id. May. Perugia. (f. 13.) |
Faculty to the same to make provision to five fit persons, of benefices, prebends, or dignities, in cathedral, or other churches of his legation; any papal indult or statute to the contrary notwithstanding. |
Ibid. |
Faculty to the same to confer, by himself or others, on fit persons the benefices with or without cure of souls and dignities, and parsonages, void by the death or resignation during his absence from Rome of clerks in his retinue or service as legate, any statute or indult to the contrary notwithstanding. |
Ibid. |
Indult to the same that clerks, in his service, may receive the fruits of their benefices and dignities, daily distributions excepted, any custom or statute to the contrary notwithstanding. If any of them have not kept their first residence this must be done after they leave his service. |
4 Non. July. Perugia. (f. 23.) |
Licence to the same to deprive the sons of noblemen and nephews of prelates in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, who foster the disturbance therein, of all their ecclesiastical dignities and benefices, and render them ineligible to obtain others, unless within a given time, after formal monition, the said prelates and nobles, and their accomplices, obey the orders of the legate. |
Kal.July. Perugia. (f.23d.) |
To the same, inhibiting all inhabitants of the realm to oppose his entrance under pain of interdict, notwithstanding the indult granted to the king that the realm cannot be put under an interdict without full mention thereof. |
Ibid. |
Mandate to the same, if the English will not admit him, to publicly inhibit in France the contraction of marriages with the rebels, and every commerce with England, or the receipt of messengers or letters thence without his order, on pain of excommunication. |
Ibid. |
Mandate to the same to inhibit all prelates, chapters, convents, and colleges to proceed to any election, provision, or collation, before they have obeyed the legate's mandates; all such elections, collations, and provisions being hereby reserved to the pope. |
Ibid. |
Mandate to the same to publicly announce to the rebels in France or elsewhere that unless they obey the legate's mandates within fixed time, their persons and goods may be seized and held by any who will and can take them. |
6 Non. July. Perugin. (f. 23d.) |
Mandate to all bishops and prelates to publish sentences of excommunication,suspension, and interdict issued by the legate against the rebels, when requested by him. |
Ibid. (f. 24.) |
Faculty to the cardinal legate to pledge the tenth, ordered as above, and all proceeds and oblations, to the king of France on his assuming the said business in his own person or that of his eldest son Philip. |
2 Non. July. Perugin. (f.24.) |
Mandate to the same to publish in France the sentence of excommunication against certain barons of England and their accomplices, and the inhabitants of the Cinque Ports for contumacy, unless they cease, within one month, to follow and have anything to do with Simon, earl of Leicester. |
14 Kal. June. Perugia. (f. 31d.) |
Indult to Master Thomas de Lidel, rector of Rathlonge, in the diocese of Connor, in regard to the cause between him and the bishop of Cloyne, then bishop of Down. about the latter see, to which Thomas was elected, and of which the bishop said that provision was made to him by the metropolitan, but after long litigation at the papal court, resigned his right, and was thereupon appointed by the pope, bishop of Cloyne. The pope, therefore, declares that the objections of the bishop of Cloyne are not to the prejudice of Thomas: the rights of the clergy of Down, even of those who opposed him, being preserved. [Theiner, 98.] |
3 Kal. Oct. Perugia. (f. 37d.) |
Mandate to Ottobon, cardinal of St. Adrian's, papal legate, to provide the bishop of Norwich with a coadjutor on account of his age and weakness. |
13 Kal. Aug. Perugia. (f.37d.) |
Mandate to Master John, papal chaplain, canon of Anagni, in England, and James de Portu, canon of Syracuse, now in France, to make provision to Peter de Ferentino, papal chaplain, rector of St. Michael's York, of a benefice in the gift of the abbot and
convent of St. Mary's, York, value 30 marks, they having been ordered by pope Urban to do this, the value of the benefices in their gift hitherto held by the said chaplain amounting to no more than 8 marks. |
8 Kal. Dec. Perugia. (f. 41.) |
Provision of Bonaventure, minister general of the Friars Minors, as archbishop of York, that see being void by the death of the late archbishop, and the election made by the dean and chapter annulled by the pope. |
Ibid. (f. 41d.) |
Concurrent letters to the dean and chapter, to the clergy, to the suffragans and to all vassals of the see. |