DECREE OF
THE EMPEROR HENRY IV. CONCERNING A TRUCE OF GOD (1085 A.D.).
(Doeberl,
“ Monumenta Germaniae Selecta,” Bd. 3, p. 49).
Whereas in
our times the holy church has been afflicted beyond measure by
tribulations through having to join in suffering so many oppressions
and dangers, we have so striven to aid it, with God's help, that
the peace which we could not make lasting by reason of our sins,
we should to some extent make binding by at least exempting certain
days. In the year of the Lord's incarnation, 1085, in the 8th
indiction, it was decreed by God's mediation, the clergy and people
unanimously agreeing : that from the first day of the Advent of
our Lord until the end of the day of the Epiphany, and from the
beginning of Septuagesima until the 8th day after Pentecost, and
throughout that whole day, and on every Thursday, Friday, Saturday,
and Sunday, until sunrise on Monday, and on the day of the fast
of the four seasons, and on the eve and the day itself of each
of the apostles - moreover on every day canonically set apart,
or in future to be set apart, for fasting or for celebrating,
- this decree of peace shall be observed. The purpose of it is
that those who travel and those who remain at home may enjoy the
greatest possible security, so that no one shall commit murder
or arson, robbery or assault, no man shall injure another with
a whip or a sword or any kind of weapon, and that no one, no matter
on account of what wrong he shall be at feud, shall, from the
Advent of our Lord to the 8th day after Epiphany, and from Septuagesima
until the 8th day after Pentecost, presume to bear as weapons
a shield, sword, or lance - or, in fact, the burden of any armour.
Likewise on the other days - namely, on Sundays, Thursdays, Fridays,
Saturdays, and on the eve and day of each of the apostles, and
on every day canonically fixed, or to be fixed, for fasting or
celebrating, - it is unlawful, except for those going a long distance,
to carry arms; and even then under the condition that they injure
no one in any way. If, during the space for which the peace has
been declared, it shall be necessary for any one to go to another
place where that peace is not observed, he may bear arms ; provided,
nevertheless, that he harm no one unless he is attacked and has
to defend himself. Moreover, when he returns, he shall lay aside
his weapons again. If it shall happen that a castle is being besieged,
the besiegers shall cease from the attack during the days included
in the peace, unless they are attacked by the besieged, and are
obliged to beat them back.
And lest
this statute of peace be violated with impunity by any person,
the following sentence was decreed by all present: If a freeman
or a noble shall have violated it - that is, if he shall have
committed murder, or shall have transgressed it in any other way,
- he shall, without any payments or any friends being allowed
to intervene, be expelled from within his boundaries, and his
heirs may take his whole estate; and if he hold a fief, the lord
to whom it belongs shall take it. But if, after his expulsion,
his heirs shall be found to have given him any aid or support,
and shall be convicted of it, the estate shall be taken from them
and shall fall to the portion of the king. But if he wish to clear
himself of the charges against him, he shall swear with 12 who
are equally noble and free. If a slave kill a man he shall be
beheaded; if he wound him he shall have his right hand cut off;
if be have transgressed in any other way - by striking with his
fist, or a stone, or a whip, or any thing else - he shall be flogged
and shorn. But if the accused (slave) wish to prove his innocence,
he shall purge himself by the ordeal of cold water: in such wise,
however, that he himself, and no one in his place, be sent to
the water. But if, fearing the sentence that has been passed against
him, he shall have fled, - he shall be forever under the bane.
And wherever he is heard to be, letters shall be sent there announcing
that he is under the bann, and that no one may hold intercourse
with him. The hands may not be cut off of boys who have not yet
completed their 12th year; if boys, then, shall transgress this
peace, they shall be punished with whipping only. It is not an
infringement of the peace if any one order a delinquent slave,
or a scholar, or any one who is subject to him in any way, to
be beaten with rods or with whips. It is an exception also to
this statute of peace, if the emperor shall publicly order an
expedition to be made to seek the enemies of the realm, or shall
be pleased to hold a council to judge the enemies of justice.
The peace is not violated if, while it continues, the duke, or
other counts, or bailiffs, or their substitutes hold courts, and
lawfully exercise judgment over thieves and robbers, and other
harmful persons. This imperial peace has been decreed chiefly
for the security of all those who are at feud; but not to the
end that, after the peace is over, they may dare to rob and plunder
throughout the villages and homes. For the law and judgment that
was in force against them before this peace was decreed shall
be most diligently observed, so that they be restrained from iniquity;
- for robbers and plunderers are excepted from this divine peace,
and, in fact, from every peace. If any one strive to oppose this
pious decree, so that he will neither promise the peace to God
nor observe it, no priest shall presume to sing a mass for him
or to give heed to his salvation; if he be ill, no Christian shall
presume to visit him, and, unless he come to his senses, he shall
do without the Eucharist even at the end. If any one, either at
the present time or among our posterity forever, shall presume
to violate it, he is banned by us irrevocably. We decree that
it rests not more in the power of the counts or centenars, or
any official, than in that of the whole people in common, to inflict
the above mentioned punishments on the violators of the holy peace.
And let them most diligently be on their guard lest, in punishing,
they show friendship or hatred, or do anything contrary to justice;
let them not conceal the crimes of any one, but rather make them
public. No one shall accept money for the redemption of those
who shall have been found transgressing. Merchants on the road
where they do business, rustics while labouring at rustic work
- at ploughing, digging, reaping, and other similar occupations,
- shall have peace every day. Women, moreover, and all those ordained
to sacred orders, shall enjoy continual peace. In the churches,
moreover, and in the cemeteries of the churches, let honour and
reverence be paid to God; so that if a robber or thief flee thither
he shall not at all be siezed, but shall be besieged there until,
induced by hunger, he shall be compelled to surrender. If any
one shall presume to furnish the culprit with means of defence,
arms, victuals, or opportunity for flight, he shall be punished
with the same penalty as the guilty man. We forbid under our bann,
moreover, that any one in sacred orders, convicted of transgressing
this peace, be punished with the punishments of laymen - he shall,
instead, be handed over to the bishop. Where laymen are decapitated,
clerks shall be degraded; where laymen are mutilated, clerks shall
be suspended from their positions; and, by the consent of the
laity, they, shall be afflicted with frequent fasts and flagellations
until they shall have atoned. Amen.