Bertrand de Déaulx

Cardinal
Bertrand de Déaulx
Cardinal-Bishop
Church San Marco (1338-1348)
Diocese Embrun (1323-1338)
Sabina (1348-1355)
Orders
Created Cardinal 18 December 1338
by Pope Benedict XII
Personal details
Born ca. 1290
Castrum de Blandiaco ?
Déaulx?
Died 21 October 1355
Avignon FR
Nationality French
Occupation lawyer, diplomat
Profession bishop

Bertrand de Déaulx (or Deaulx, or Deux; Lat. Bertrandus de Deucio) was a French bishop, diplomat and Cardinal. He was born, perhaps around 1290, in Castrum de Blandiaco in the diocese of Uzès;[1] or in Déaulx.[2] He died in Avignon in 1355. Trained as a lawyer and teacher of law, he practiced in the papal courts, and became an arbitrator and diplomat for the Papacy. He had several assignments in Italy and one in Catalonia. He was responsible for the reorganization of the University of Montpellier and the granting of revised charters.

Biography

As a young scholar Bertrand possessed the parish church of S. Marcel de Carretret, but he received a dispensation from his bishop, allowing him to be absent for seven years for the purpose of continuing his studies, with the condition that he be ordained a subdeacon within a year. On 16 September 1312 he was granted a further extension of seven years by Pope Clement V, at the request of Bertrand's uncle, Guillaume de Mandagot, Archbishop of Aix (1311-1313), who became a Cardinal in December 1312. The extension came with the requirement that he be ordained to the priesthood at the end of the seven year interval.[3] The fourteen years is not surprising, considering that the study for a doctorate in law required some ten years. Bertrand received his legal education at Montpellier, and took his degree Doctor legum on 7 September 1316.[4] He is said to have taught Law at the University of Toulouse.[5]

Benefices

On 12 June 1318 Bertrand de Déaulx, Papal chaplain, was granted a canonry in the Cathedral of Narbonne, with the expectation of a non-sacerdotal prebend. On 13 June, upon the resignation of the incumbent, Pope John XXII appointed him Archdeacon of Corberiensis (Corbières) in the Church of Narbonne.[6] By 10 September 1318 he was Papal Chaplain, Canon of the Cathedral of Embrun, Canon of the Collegiate Church of Fenolheddesio in the diocese of Alet (Electensis), and he possessed the rural church of S. Saturnino in the diocese of Embrun. He was granted a prebend and the office of Provost of the Church of Embrun, and was allowed to keep his other benefices, except for the Archdeaconry of Narbonne and the expectation of a benefice in the diocese of Amiens, which he had to relinquish.[7] On 22 June 1322 he is mentioned in the positions of Auditor litterarum contradictarum of the Apostolic Palace (judge),[8] Provost of Embrun, and Archdeacon of Paris.[9] In more than one of these transactions it is evident that Bertrand's uncle is the moving force.

Archbishop

On 26 August 1323 he was appointed Archbishop of Embrun.[10]

On 9 December 1327, Archbishop de Déaulx, working in Avignon and still functioning as Auditor, published a lengthy regulation concerning the functions and behavior of procurators representing clients in the court of the Auditor litterarum contradictarum.[11] He supplemented this with another decree on 26 January 1333, requiring that all mandates issued by the Auditor during a case should be recorded in the quaterno, and should have force until cancelled by the Notary of the Audientia after the conclusion of the case.[12]

Italy

The long papal absence in Avignon had allowed individual lords to expand their interests and make war against one another and against the independent city-states. This situation was due in part by the opposition of Pope John XXII to Louis the Bavarian as claimant to the Empire. On 31 March 1317, he announced that the Pope was the lawful Vicar of the Empire while the throne was vacant, and that all vassals should swear allegiance to him. This they refused to do. In Italy in 1325 Pope John arranged an alliance with Robert of Lucca and the Guelfs of Italy against Louis.[13] In 1327 Louis marched on Italy and was crowned King of Italy in Milan. The Romans demanded the return of the Pope to Rome. Pope John received their delegation on 7 July 1327, and told them only that he would send a reply by nuncios. Rome renounced Robert of Sicily's protection as Papal Vicar for all of Italy, refused his Vicar John permission to enter Rome, and received King Louis instead.[14] Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, the Papal Legate in Tuscany,[15] was ordered to hasten to Rome and assist the Nuncios and the Papal Vicar to do what they could to restore the situation. In 1333 Archbishop Bertrand was sent to Italy to arbitrate disagreements between Cardinal Bertrand du Pouget and some Italian lords.[16] He was also to receive the homage of King Robert of Sicily to the Church. This he did on 25 June 1333.[17] Pope John XXII died on Sunday, December 4, 1334.

In 1335 the new Pope, Benedict XII, named Archbishop Bertrand Apostolic Nuncio in the Patrimony of St. Peter in central Italy, with the mission of bringing order to the territories of the Church in Italy. His commission is dated 6 May 1335.[18] He arrived in Naples in September 1335, and then made a visit to Benevento. In Rome, where the people appointed him Syndic and defender of the people, he took up the problem of the perpetual war between the Orsini and the Colonna, and imposed a peace on them on 13 January 1336; meeting in the Aracoeli, both sides swore to observe the truce for two years.[19] During his time in Italy, the Archbishop also undertook to revise the statutes that regulated the temporal government in his area of competence.[20] His work resulted in the Statutes of the March of Ancona.[21] He also had his critics, among them Gentile di Camerino, who wrote directly to the Pope in complaint.[22] Archbishop Bertrand's letter of recall is dated 8 April 1337. King Louis entered into an alliance with Edward III of England against King Philip VI of France and his pope, Benedict XII.[23]

Cardinal

In his only Consistory for the creation of cardinals, on 18 December 1338, Pope Benedict XII named six prelates to the honor.[24] Bertrand de Deaulx was named a Cardinal Priest, and assigned the titulus of San Marco.[25]

On 9 March 1339, Pope Benedict XII issued a bull granting Cardinal Bertrand de Déaulx the task and powers of modifying and reforming the Statutes of the University of Montpellier.[26] This was the perfect task for a lawyer, judge, and alumnus. On 20 July 1339, Cardinal Bertrand issued the new Statutes for the Faculty of Law of the University of Montpellier.[27] His work was not without its critics. The Bishop of Maguelonne, who had traditional rights over the University as diocesan Ordinary, protested and obstructed wherever he could. On one occasion he created a Doctor of Laws of Montpellier, without reference to the Faculty of Law.[28]

Pope Benedict XII died on April 25, 1342. The Conclave to elect his successor took place in the Apostolic Palace in Avignon, and began on Sunday, May 5, 1342, with eighteen cardinals in attendance, Bertrand de Déaulx among them. The Conclave ended on the morning of Tuesday, May 7, with the election of Cardinal Pierre Roger of Limoges, who had been Chancellor of King Philip VI (1334-1338). He took the name Clement VI. Bertrand is not recorded as having done anything remarkable during the Conclave. Clement VI was crowned on Pentecost Sunday, May 19, 1342.[29]

Bertrand de Déaulx was named Apostolic Legate in Catalonia, departing Avignon on 2 June 1344. His purpose was to broker a peace between Peter IV of Aragon and James III of Majorca, who had been driven out of his kingdom in a brief war (1343-1344). Instead of granting a peace, Peder IV seized the Kingdom of Majorca and incorporated it into the Kingdom of Aragon. Papal intervention was fruitless.[30]

Due to the crisis produced in southern Italy by the murder, on 19 September 1345, of Andreas of Hungary, the husband of Joanna I of Naples, Cardinal Bertrand was appointed Apostolic Legate by Pope Clement VI on 4 March 1346; on 30 March he was named Vicar General of temporalities in the States of the Church.[31] Naples was a papal fief, and the Pope had a major interest in who the next ruler might be. There were several bad possibilities. Cardinal Bertrand set out for Naples as Apostolic Legate on 26 August 1346 and arrived on 20 November.[32] Andrew had produced a posthumous son on 25 December. Clement VI ordered Cardinal Bertrand to return to Avignon on 15 September 1347, and again on 12 October. Cardinal Bertrand returned on 17 November 1348.[33] After the uprising of Cola di Rienzo, he was ordered to Rome by Pope Clement VI to restore the senatorial regime under papal authority.

Having returned to Avignon, Bertrand de Déaulx was promoted to the Order of Cardinal Bishops on 4 November 1348, and granted the suburbicarian See of Sabina.[34]

Pope Clement VI died in the Apostolic Palace in Avignon on 6 December 1352, the Feast of St. Nicholas. Twenty-six cardinals attended the Conclave to elect his successor including Cardinal Bertrand. The Conclave opened on Sunday, 16 December. It reached a successful conclusion[35] on Tuesday, 18 December, with the election of Cardinal Étienne Aubert of Limoges, the Cardinal Bishop of Ostia. He was crowned as Pope Innocent VI on Sunday, 30 December 1352.[36]

Bertrand de Déaulx died on 21 October 1355, and was interred in the Collegial Church of Saint-Didier in Avignon, which he had endowed.[37] In 1362 his executors received permission from the King of France to create two Chaplains, one in the Cathedral of Nîmes, the other in the Church of S. Maria Nova de Utecia (Uzès).[38]

References

  1. according to his funeral inscription in Saint-Didier: Gallia christiana III, p. 1086. The inscription, however, is not contemporary, and contains large errors, claiming, for example, that he was Vice-Chancellor of the Church. Cardinal Pierre Desprès, however, was Vice-Chancellor from 1325 to 1361, during the entire time of Bertrand de Déaulx' cardinalate.
  2. Mollat (1968), p. 393. Lützelschwab, p. 438. The modern village, west of Uzès, spells its name Deaux.
  3. Mollat (1968), p. 393. Lützelschwab, p. 438. Regestum Clementis V Vol. 7, p. 234, no. 8587: litterarum insistens studio.
  4. Mollat (1968), p. 393. Lützelschwab, p. 438.
  5. H. Kantorowicz, review of E. M. Meijers, Responsa Doctorum Tholosanorum. in: The English Historical Review 54 (1939), p. 713. This may be a mistake on the part of Kantorowicz; Bertrand is connected with the reform of Montpellier, where his uncle the Cardinal Mandagot had been professor, not Toulouse.
  6. G. Mollat, Jean XXII, Lettres communes Tome II (Paris 1905), p. 184, no. 7464; p. 186, no. 7483.
  7. G. Mollat, Jean XXII, Lettres communes Tome II (Paris 1905), p. 279, no. 8406. Cf. Gallia christiana Vol. 3 (Paris 1725), p. 1101.
  8. Weakland, John E. (1968). "Administrative and Fiscal Centralization under Pope John XXII, 1316-1334". The Catholic Historical Review. 54 (1): 39–54, at pp. 52–54. JSTOR 25018107. (Registration required (help)).
  9. G. Mollat, Jean XXII, Lettres communes Tome IV (Paris 1906), p. 113, no. 15626.
  10. Gallia christiana Vol. 3, pp. 1085-1086.
  11. Josef Teige (1897). Beiträge zur geschichte der Audientia litterarum contradictarum (in German). Prag: H. Dominicus. pp. VI–XI. Mollat (1968), p. 396).
  12. Teige, XI-XII. Mollat (1968), p. 396.
  13. Gregorovius, VI. 1, p. 108-109 (Book XI, chapter 3), pp. 129-131.
  14. Gregorovius, p. 137.
  15. Blake R. Beattie (2007). Angelus Pacis: The Legation of Cardinal Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, 1326-1334. Brill. pp. 28–36. ISBN 90-04-15393-4. He died in Avignon on August 27, 1335.
  16. Gregorovius, pp. 185-189. Lisetta Ciaccio, Il Cardinal Legato Bertrando del Poggetto in Bologna (1327-1334) (Bologna 1906), pp. 141, 145-151.
  17. Mollat (1968), p. 394.
  18. Aloisi, p. 414 and 418-419.
  19. Gregorovius, pp. 194-195.
  20. Mollat (1968), p. 395-397.
  21. Raffaele Foglietti (1886). Opuscoli di storia del diritto: Le costitutiones Marchæ Anconitanæ. Cenni storici sull'università di Macerata da prima del 1290 all 1620. Cenni storici sul tribunale superiore di Macerata. Il catasto di Macerata del 1268 (in Italian). Macerata: Bianchini. pp. 7–9.
  22. Aloisi, pp. 432-435.
  23. Aloisi, p. 414 and 437-438.
  24. A seventh had been named, Raymond Montfort, but he died before he could be notified of his appointment.
  25. Eubel, p. 17 and p. 44.
  26. Fournier, Histoire, pp. 358-372.
  27. Fournier, II, pp. 42-65, nos. 946-947.
  28. Fournier, Statuts II, pp. 65-66, no 947 ter.
  29. J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante 1342. Retrieved: 2016-06-25.
  30. David Abulafia (2002). A Mediterranean Emporium: The Catalan Kingdom of Majorca. Cambridge University Press. pp. 201–202. ISBN 978-0-521-89405-0. Michael A. Vargas (2011). Taming a Brood of Vipers: Conflict and Change in Fourteenth-Century Dominican Convents. Leiden-New York: Brill. pp. 91–92. ISBN 90-04-20315-X.
  31. Du Chesne, Preuves, p. 324. His full title was Apostolicae Sedis Legatus terrarum ac provinciarum Romanae Ecclesiae in partibus Italiae consistentium Reformator et Vicarius Generalis.
  32. Mollat (1968), p. 395.
  33. Eubel, p. 17, n. 9.
  34. Eubel, p. 38.
  35. There is a story, now completely discredited, of the election and refusal of Dom Jean Birel, the Superior General of the Carthusians. Norman P. Zacour, "A Note on the Papal Election of 1352: The Candidacy of Jean Birel," Traditio 13 ( 1957) 456-462.
  36. J. P. Adams, Sede Vacante 1352. Retrieved: 2016-06-25.
  37. J.-B.-M. Joudou (1842). Avignon, son histoire, ses papes, ses monumens et ses environs (in French). Avignon: L. Aubanel. p. 408.
  38. Du Chesne, Preuves, p. 324.

Bibliography

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