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Papal Regesta

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Regesta, PAPAL, are the copies, generally entered in special registry volumes, of the papal letters and official documents that are kept in the papal archives; the name, further, is also used to indicate the modern publications containing such documents in chronological order with careful summaries of their essential contents. The beginnings of the papal Regesta probably antedate Constantine. There is, it is true, no direct proof of the making and preservation of copies of the official documents of the Roman Church in this period. The growth of the correspondence of the papal see, however, is evident even by the end of the second century, from the controversy over the celebration of Easter, and is also shown about the middle of the third century by the disorders of the Decian persecution, by the dispute concerning heretical baptism, and by other occasions. Moreover, it was of importance for the officials of the Roman Church to have the opportunity to inspect its earlier correspondence and to be able to use it for similar cases. For these reasons there is hardly any doubt that from a very early date a copy was made of papal documents before their dispatch, and that the collection of these documents was preserved at the seat of the central administration of the Roman Church. This theory can all the more readily be accepted, as the highest officials of the Roman state administration, the imperial chancery, the Senate, the consuls, he provincial governments, had all official documents entered in such volumes and preserved in the archives. The books in which these documents were entered were called commentarii, regesta, the latter word from regerere, to inscribe. The existence of such papal Regesta can be positively proved for the fourth century and the succeeding era. In his polemic with Rufinus (“Apolog. adv. Rufinum”, III, xx) St. Jerome refers to the archive (chartarium) of the Roman Church, where the letter of Pope Anastasius I (399-401) on the controversy over the doctrines of Origen was preserved. There are also notices concerning the registration of papal letters in the documents of several popes of the fifth century. Thus Pope Zosimus in his letter of September 22, 417, to the bishops of Africa refers to the fact that all the earlier negotiations with Coelestius had been examined at Rome (Constant, “Epist. Rom. Pontif.”, 955). Consequently copies of the documents in question must have existed. From this time onwards it remained the fixed custom of the papal chancery to copy the official papers issued by it in registers.

From the centuries previous to the pontificate of Innocent III (1199-1216) there remain only fragments of the registry volumes of the papal chancery and these in large part merely in later copies. Nearly all the volumes of the papal Regesta up to the end of the twelfth century have disappeared. The frequent local warfare in Rome and the conflagrations from which the city suffered explain sufficiently the loss of the oldest records. The most important fragments of this period that have been preserved are the following: nearly 850 letters, in three groups, of the Regesta of Pope Gregory I (590-604). An investigation proved that the original Regesta consisted of fourteen papyrus volumes, corresponding to the number of years of the pontificate, which were arranged according to indictions; that each of these volumes was divided into twelve parts, before each of which the name of the corresponding month was written. In this way information is attained as to the plan of the earliest volumes of the papal Regesta. A manuscript of the Vatican archives contains letters of John VIII (872-82), which begin with September, 876, and extend to the end of the pontificate. This is not an original register, but a copy of the eleventh century. Separate letters, fifty-five in number, belonging to the first four years of the pontificate of this pope, exist in a collection contained in a manuscript of the twelfth century in the British Museum, London (MSS. Add. 8874). The manuscript contains letters of Gelasius I (492-96), Pelagius I (556-61), Leo IV (847-55), John VIII (872-82), Stephen V (885-91), Alexander II (1061-73), and Urban II (1088-99). The study of the manuscript by Ewald [“Neues Archiv”, V (1880), 275 sqq. 503 sqq.] led to important conclusions concerning the volumes of the Regesta. Another manuscript at Cambridge contains some seventy letters from the Regesta of Adrian IV (1154-59), Alexander III (1159-81), and Lucius III (1181-85) [see Lowenfeld in “Neues Archiv”, X (1885), 586 sqq.]. Again, large parts of the Regesta of Gregory VII (1073-85), namely 381 letters, are contained in a manuscript in the Vatican Archives. This collection also is only an extract of the original Regesta. In it the letters are no longer arranged according to indictions, but according to the year of the pontificate. A fragment of the Regesta of the antipope Anacletus II (1130-38), containing thirty-eight letters of various contents, has been preserved in a manuscript of Monte Cassino (Ewald in “Neues Archiv”, III, 164 sqq.). Besides these collections of letters which have preserved fragments of the earliest papal Regesta, rich material is also to be found in the canonical collections of the Middle Ages. In part these collections go back directly or indirectly to the volumes of the Regesta of the papal archives, from which the authors of these collections, as Anselm of Lucca, and above all Deus-dedit, gathered the greater part of their material. From Innocent III onwards the manuscript volumes of the papal Regesta still exist in the Vatican Archives.

The Regesta of the thirteenth century are beautifully written parchment volumes. Yet the most of these in their present form have been made from older volumes. How these older volumes, the real original Regesta, were planned cannot be positively decided. From the fourteenth century onwards registry volumes of paper were used for the entering of the copies. However, when the popes returned from Avignon to Rome, these papers Regesta were left at Avignon and copies of them were made in parchment registry volumes that were brought to Rome. At a later era the original Regesta were also brought to the Vatican Archives, so that there are two series in existence for the Avignon epoch of the fourteenth century. From the end of the fourteenth century onwards the volumes of the Regesta were generally made of paper. Numerous investigations have been made by various scholars as to the arrangement of the volumes of the Regesta, the rules or customs observed in the entering of the separate pieces, as to the question whether the draft or the finished letter was copied, and as to many other matters in diplomatics, without reaching very certain results. In the thirteenth century the letters were divided into “Litteree communes” and “Lit—term de curia” or “Curiales”, the latter dealing mostly with affairs of general importance. At a later date other headings (litterce secretae, litterce de beneficiis) were also introduced. Besides the regular Regesta of the papal letters made in the papal chancery, there were similar Regesta of the papal letters executed since the fourteenth century in the Apostolic Camera. From about the middle of the fourteenth century the registers of petitions were also preserved, in which were entered not the papal documents, but the memorials to the pope, in reply to which the papal documents were issued.

As collections of the official documents of the papal chancery, the Regesta are a very important historical authority. For convenience in historical investigation various scholars have published in chronological order all known papal documents of large periods, with brief summaries of the contents of the letters. The three great collections of this kind are: Jaffe, “Regesta Pontificum Romanorum ab condita ecclesia ad annum p. Chr. n. 1198”; 2nd ed. by S. Lowenfeld, F. Kaltenbrunner, P. Ewald (2 vols. Leipzig, 1888). P. F. Kehr has undertaken a new edition of the Regesta for this period in topographical and at the same time chronological order: “Regesta Pontif. Roman. Italia Pontificia” (Berlin, 1906-); “Germania Pontificia” (Berlin, 1910); with the cooperation of other scholars he is still carrying on his great undertaking. Jaffe’s work was supplemented by Potthast, “Regesta Pontificum Romanorum inde ab an. p. Chr. n. 1198 ad an. 1304” (2 vols. Berlin, 1874-75). Letters of several popes taken from the volumes of the Regesta have been published by: Lowenfeld, “Epistolae Pontificum Romanorum ineditae” (Leipzig, 1885), taken from the manuscript at Cambridge; Rodenberg, “Epistolae saec. XIII e Regestis Rom. Pont. selectee” (Berlin, 1883-), in “Mon. Germ. Hist.” The Regesta of the letters of Gregory I were edited again by Ewald and Hartmann, “Gregorii I. Registrum epistolarum” in “Mon. Germ. Hist.” (Berlin, 1891-). The letters of Gregory VII were edited by Jaffe, “Monuments Gregoriana” in “Bibliotheca rerum Germanicarum” (2 vols. Berlin, 1868). As early as 1591 the records of John VIII were published from the manuscript in the Vatican. Of the popes of the thirteenth century, Pressuti edited (Rome, 1888-96) the Regesta of Honorius III (1216-27) from the volumes of the Regesta in the Vatican Archives; the Regesta of the succeeding popes to Boniface VIII (d. 1303) were edited by the members of the Ecole Francaise of Rome, the publication of the Regesta of all these popes being yet incomplete; after a group of Benedictines had issued the Regesta of Clement V (1305-14), the members of the Ecole Française began again with John XXII (1316-34), with the intention of publishing the Regesta of the Avignon popes to Gregory XI (1370-78). In this latter series, besides the documents of general interest, they kept in view particularly those documents that bore on the history of France. For the later eras only the first numbers were published of the Regesta of Leo X (1513-21), edited by Cardinal Hergenrother (see under the different popes). In addition a number of works have been issued or are in course of publication that contain Regesta from the Vatican Regesta of the fourteenth century, bearing on special questions or on the history of various countries and dioceses, e.g., Werunsky, “Excerpta ex registris Clementis VI et Innocentii VI” (Innsbruck, 1885); Ruezler, “Vatikansiche Akten zur deutschen Geschichte in der Zeit Ludwigs des Bayern” (Munich, 1890).

J. P. KIRSCH


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