ABSTRACT

Never before had France had a church council so large: almost 1000 churchmen assembled at Bourges on 29 November 1225 to authorize a tax on their incomes in support of the Second Albigensian Crusade. About one third of the participants were representatives sent by corporate bodies, in accordance with a new provision of canon law that insisted, for the first time ever, that there should be no taxation without representation. Basing himself on the rich surviving records, Professor Kay paints a skilful portrait of this council: the political manoeuvering by the papal legate to ensure the tax went through, and his use of this highly public occasion to humiliate members of the University of Paris; and, on the other hand, his failure to win a permanent endowment to support the papal bureaucracy, the bishops' effective protests against the pope's threat to diminish their jurisdiction over monasteries, and a subsequent 'taxpayers' revolt' that challenged the validity of the tax. The book also draws out the importance and implications of what took place, highlighting the council's place at the fountainhead of European representative democracy, the impact of the decisions made on the course of the Albigensian Crusade, the reform of monasticism, and the funding of the papal government which was left to rely on stop-gap expedients, such as the sale of indulgences. In addition, the author suggests that the corpus of texts, newly edited from the original manuscripts and with English translation, could be seen as a model for the revision of the conciliar corpus, most of which still remains based on 18th-century scholarship.

chapter Chapter 1|37 pages

The Second Albigensian Crusade Before 1225

chapter Chapter 2|37 pages

Cardinal Romanus and his Legation to France 1225

chapter Chapter 3|38 pages

Organization of the Council

chapter Chapter 4|32 pages

Granting the Albigensian Tenth

chapter Chapter 5|29 pages

Collecting the Albigensian Tenth

chapter Chapter 6|25 pages

A Proposal for Financing Papal Government

chapter Chapter 7|31 pages

The Rejection of Fiscal Reform

chapter Chapter 8|21 pages

Monastic Reform And Repentant Masters

chapter |5 pages

Afterword

part |1 pages

Documents

chapter |2 pages

List of Documents

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to the Documents

chapter Section One|55 pages

Narrative Accounts of the Council

chapter Section Two|73 pages

Franco-Papal Negotiations Preliminary to the Crusade

chapter Section Three|57 pages

Collection of the Tenth for the Crusade

chapter Section Four|61 pages

Proposals for Financing Papal Government

chapter Section Five|17 pages

Monastic Provincial Chapters

chapter Section Six|29 pages

Miscellaneous