; episcopal
government
in,
213; under rule of the Ottos, 213 sq.
213; under rule of the Ottos, 213 sq.
Cambridge Medieval History - v5 - Contest of Empire and the Papacy
Argentan, 486, 490, 526, 543, 550, 564;
vicomte of, see Robert of Bellême
Argyrus, son of Melo, catapan, revolts
against Byzantines, 171; deserts Nor-
mans, ib. ; defeated by Normans, 29;
relations with Leo IX, 173
Ariald, deacon, reforms of, at Milan, 40 sqq. ;
excommunicated by the archbishop, 41;
goes to Rome, 41; attacks local usages at
Milan, 47; leaves Milan, 48; murdered, ib.
Ariano, counts of, take Normans into their
pay, 169; assises of, 204
Aribert, archbishop of Milan, leads capitanei
in war against vavassors, 17, 217 sq. ; in-
vents the carroccio, 218; driven out, 18,
219; reinstated, 20; 39
Aribo, archbishop of Mayence, 16, 18, 45
Arimanni, 217; their management of com-
mon lands, 211 note
Aristotle, Chap. XXIII passim ; early medieval
knowledge of, 331, 789 sq. ; the “new”
Aristotle of the thirteenth century, 811
sqq. ; medieval translations of, 331 sq. ,
Arles, Hadrian IV at, 415; commune of,
629, 635, 616, 650; kingdom of, 626; see
also Burgundy
Arlette, mother of William I, the Conqueror,
492; married to Herluin of Conteville, 496
Armenia, bishopric founded in, 326 ; 252,
260
Armenia Minor (Little), 287, 313, 473
Armenians, 252, 260, 412; alliance of cru-
saders with, 286 sq.
Arno of Salzburg, at the court of Charles the
Great, 772, 774
Arnold, archbishop of Cologne, his embassy
to Italy, 379 sq. ; crowns Frederick I, 382;
Arnold of Lübeck, chronicler, on the fall of
Henry the Lion, 407; on Celestine III,
463 note
Arnulf, bishop of Lisieux, and Henry II,
557 sq. ; sent as envoy to France, 614
Arnulf, son of Roger of Montgomery, 525;
banished by Henry I, 530
Arnulf, Milanese chronicler, 42, 64
Arpajon, castle, 596
'Arqah (Arca), castle of, 252; besieged by
crusaders, 295
Arques, town, 486, 490, 550, 609; vicomté,
485, 491; count of, 485, 493 sq.
Arras, Louis VII and, 599 sqq. ; gild at,
637
Arrouaise, monastery, 679, 681, 683
Arslān al-Basāsiri, Turkish emir, 259
Arslān, Qilij, see Qilij-Arslān
Arsūſ, captured by Baldwin I, 304, 329;
Saladin defeated at, 311; captured by
Baibars, 317
Artāh, 259, 261
Arthur of Brittany, nephew of Richard I,
201
Artois, 498
Arundel, castle, 530, 545; honour of, 548;
earl of, 314, and see Albini
Asad-ad-Daulah “Atiyah, see Atiyah ibn
Salih
Ascalon, victory of crusaders at, 296 sq. ;
county of, 302; captured by Baldwin III,
308; 311
Asclettin, Norman adventurer, 169, 173
Asclettin, chancellor of William I of Sicily,
192
Ash'arī, Arab philosopher, 817
Ashridge, canons of, 683
Asseburg, count oi, Henry the Lion and,
101
Assises, of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, 303
sq. ; of Ariano, 204
Assize of Arms, 572
Assize of Clarendon, 584 sqq.
Assize of Northampton, 584 sqq.
Assize of Windsor (Grand Assize), 587
Asti, rising against bishop, 40; consuls at,
220; geographical position of, 229; her
chief foes, ib. ; destroyed by Frederick I,
417
Atenolf II, duke of Gaeta, grants privileges
812 sqq.
419
to city, 216
## p. 952 (#998) ############################################
952
Index
250 sq. ; first treaty with Greeks, 251;
renewed war with Greeks, 251 sq. ; his
death, 252
Azo, the glossator, 737; his influence on
Bracton, 758 sq.
Azo, an Italian marquess, lays claim to the
county of Maine, 517
Azzo, grandfather of Boniface of Tuscany,
23
Azzo, bishop of Acqui, envoy of Calixtus II
to Henry V, 107
Azzo, marquess of Este, marries the Welf
heiress Cunegunda, 129 note, 337 note,
386
Azzo, dean of Magdeburg, 392
Atenolf, abbot of Monte Cassino, takes Nor-
mans into his pay, 169
Atenolf, brother of the Prince of Benevento,
leader against Byzantines, 171
Athalaric, king of the Ostrogoths, and
schools of rhetoric, 766
Athārib, boundary between Greeks and
Muslims, 247
Ather, Guiscard dies at promontory of, 182
‘Atiyah ibn $āliḥ, Asad-ad-Daulah, emir of
Aleppo, 259 sq.
At-siz ibn Abaq, emir of Damascus, 262 sq.
Atto, elected archbishop of Milan by Patar-
ines, 48; confirmed by Pope, 49; opposed
by imperial nominees, 49, 65
Auberea, repudiated wife of Robert Guiscard,
174
Augsburg, council of (952), 9, 14; 28, 35;
diet of (1062), declares for Alexander II,
44, 115; proposed council at, to judge
Henry IV, 68 sq. , 136; sack of, by
Lothar III, 340; 337, 346, 400, 456 sq. ,
462 note
Augustine, St, 1, 12, 53, 57; Rule of, 661,
678 sqq. ; see also Austin canons
Aumâle, 495, 569
Ausonius, the rhetor, 766
Austin canons, 678 sqq. , 683; supported by
Urban II, 89; new constitutions of (1339),
689
Austrasia, 12
Austria, creation of duchy of, 385; 475;
margraves and dukes of, see Henry Jaso-
mirgott, Leopold, Liutpold
Autun, 94
Auvergne, 598, 614; count of, 598, 615
Auvrai, son of Tancred de Hauteville, 170
Avellino, Roger II meets Anacletus at,
364
Avencebrol, philosophy of, 817
Averroes (Ibn Rushd), Arabian philosopher,
331, 811 sq. , 817, 821 sq.
Aversa, establishment of Normans under
Rainulf at, 169 sq. , 491; 462; captured
by Henry VI, 464
Avicenna (Ibn Sinā), Arabian philosopher,
331, 816 sq.
Avignon, reforming synod at, 39; commune
of, 644 sq. , 650; 679
Avon, river, 500
Avranches, cathedral of, 491; Henry II
absolved at, 566 sq. ; viscounts of, see
Chester, earls of
Avranchin, the, 483, 491, 523, 550
Axholme, Isle of, 570
Axuch, Byzantine Grand Domestic, 194
Aymard, abbot of Cluny, 663
Aymon Vaire-Vache, and Louis VI, 598
Ayyüb, Sultan of Egypt, allies with Khwā.
razmians, 315
Ayyūb, son of Tamim, Zairid, defeated by
Normans, 177
'Azāz, Greek army forced to retreat at, 256
‘Aziz, Fátimite Caliph, secures control of
Damascus, 249; dealings with Aleppo,
Baalbek, 252, 255
Babenbergs, Agnes, daughter of Henry IV,
ancestress of, 154; see Austria, Bavaria,
Henry Jasomirgott, Leopold, Liutpold
Bacon, Roger, and the translation of Aris-
totle, 813 sq. ; his downfall, 824 sq. ; his
philosophy, 825 sq.
Badr-al-jamāli, governor of Acre and Sidon,
262; occupies Cairo and rules Egypt, ib. ;
defeats Turks, 262; receives allegiance of
Acre, Tyre, Sidon, and Jubail, 264
Bâgé, 616
Baghi Siyān, see Yaghi Bassān
Baghrās, Greek garrison at, 247
Bagnara, occupied by Richard I, 201
Bahrain, power of Qarmatians in, 244
Baibars Bunduqdāri, Mamluk Sultan, defeats
Franks at Gaza, 315; becomes Sultan,
317; captures Antioch and Jaffa, ib. ; makes
a truce with Edward I, 317
Baisān, Greek army at, 249
Bakjūr, emir of Aleppo, attacks Aleppo,
250; his career, 250 sq.
Balātunus, castle, 257
Baldric of Dol, his report of Urban II's
speech at Clermont, 265
Baldus of the Ubaldi, the jurist, 740
Baldwin I, King of Jerusalem, brother of
Godfrey of Bouillon, and First Crusade,
274; resigns claim to Cilicia, 287; estab-
lishes county of Edessa, 287, 301; his
rivalry with Tancred, 288; extends his
conquests, 295; gives Edessa to Baldwin
du Bourg, 301; his rule in Jerusalem,
304; 184
Baldwin II du Bourg, King of Jerusalem,
made count of Edessa, 301; gives Edessa
to Joscelin of Courtenay, 301; assumes
government of Antioch, 301; his rule over
Jerusalem, 304 sq.
Baldwin III, King of Jerusalem, 308
Baldwin IV, King of Jerusalem, 309
Baldwin V, King of Jerusalem, 309
Baldwin V, count of Flanders, 599
Baldwin VI, count of Flanders, 599
Baldwin IV, count of Hainault, claims
Flanders, 599
Baldwin V, count of Hainault, bis relations
with Frederick I, 409 sqq.
## p. 953 (#999) ############################################
Index
953
Baldwin, a general of William II of Sicily,
199
Balearic Isles, conquered by Pisans, 226
Balian of Ibelin, 310
Balian of Sidon, on laws of the kingdom
of Jerusalem, 303
Balliol, Gilbert de, 577
Balliol, Joscelin de, 563
Balsamon, Theodore, commentator on Greek
canon law, 708, 719 sq.
Baltic lands, archbishop Adalbert of Bremen
and, 22, 29; trade in, 400
Bamberg, 15, 28; diets at, 108, 163, 340 sq. ,
345; 141; death of Conrad III at, 358;
165, 338, 346
Bamburgh, 544, 556, 570
Bandinelli, Roland, see Alexander III,
Pope
Bani Kalb, Arab tribe, 255
Bani Kilāb, Arab tribe, 255, 259, 261 sq.
Banias, district of kingdom of Jerusalem,
301
Banjūtakin, see Manjūtakin
Barbo, Lodovico, abbot of Santa Giustina,
693
Bardas Phocas, Byzantine general, 250
Bardney, abbey, 686, 690
Bardo, archbishop of Mayence, papal legate
under Leo IX, 27
Bardowiek, occupied by Albert the Bear, 347;
lations with Lübeck, 400; destroyed by
Henry the Lion, 460
Barétous, 655
Barfleur, 530
Barhebraeus, historian, 257 note
Bari, siege and capture of, by Normans, 177;
destroyed by William I, 192 ; council of
(1098), St Anselm at, 95; early commune
at, 216; submits to Lothar III, 187, 367;
diet at (1195), 471, 473; 173, 180, 191,
274, 280, 668
Barjuwān, and Basil II, 252 note
Barking, William I holds a court at, 502
Barnstaple, 504
Barre, Richard, 567
Bartholomeus Brixiensis, the canonist, 742
Bartholomew, bishop of Laon, and Norbert,
680
Bartholomew Salicetus, the jurist, 740
Bartolus of Sassoferrato, the commentator,
740
Barzūyah, 249
Basil I, Eastern Emperor, his codification of
law, 718
Basil II, Eastern Emperor, his reconquest of
Italy, 167; invasion of Syria, 251 sq. ;
second campaign in Syria, 252
Basilicata, the, 688
Basilics, the, 718 sq.
Basle, Henry IV invests Cadalus at, 42;
council of, 690, 695
Basset, Ralph, justiciar, 534, 575
Basset, Richard, capitalis justiciarius, 534,
575
Bassetlaw, wapentake, 570
Bath, 553, 565
Battle, Chronicle of, on the Justiciar, 577
Battle, abbot of, 578
Bauco, 416
Baudouin, the jurist, 752
Baume, monastery of, and Cluny, 661 sq.
Bautzen, ceded to Vladislav II of Bohemia,
389
Bavaria, duchy of, rights of nobles in, 118 sq. ;
given to Otto of Nordheim, 114; given to
Welf IV, 129; independence of Welfs in,
163; given to Babenbergs, 346, 349 sq. ;
given to Henry the Lion, 383 sqq. ; Austria
detached from, 385; given to Otto of
Wittelsbach, 405; Styria detached from,
ib. ; trade in, 400 sq. ; 112 sq. , 140 sq. ,
145 sqq. , 149 sq. , 157, 162, 335 sqq. , 339,
347 sq. , 357; dukes of, see Henry, Leopold,
Otto, Welf; count-palatine of, see Otto
Bayeux, 491, 498, 516; burnt by Henry I,
530; 545, 569
Bayonne, commune of, 629, 631; local
customs of, 643; charter of, 646
Bazas, local customs of, 643
Béarn, viscount of, 655
Beatrice, marries Boniface of Tuscany, 23;
marries Godfrey the Bearded, 31; saves
life of Alexander II at Mantua, 45; asked
by Gregory VII for aid, 59; 64, 112, 146
Beatrice, third wife of Roger II of Sicily,
191 note
Beatrix, daughter of Rainald of Burgundy,
389; marries Frederick I, 390; 422
Beauce, 594
Beauchamp, Miles de, and Stephen, 544
Beaugency, 597; council at, 609
Beaumanoir, Philip de Rémy, lord of, and
Roman Law, 751
Beaumont, 491, 517; influence of the charter
of, 649, 651
Beaumont, family, fiefs of, 511, 537 sq. ,
544 sq.
66
Beaumont, Henry of, earl of Warwick, 528
Beaumont, Robert of, Bossu," earl of
Leicester, and Henry II, 555; and Becket,
559, 562; 575 sqq. ; his death, 573
Beaumont, Robert of, “Blanchesmaines,"
earl of Leicester, rebels against Henry II,
567, 569; captured, 570
Beaumont, Robert of, count of Meulan, 528
Beaumont, Roger of, supports William II,
522
Beaumont, Waleran of, count of Meulan,
and Henry I, 536, 519 sq.
Beauvais, 519; commune of, 629, 634, 646,
649 sq. ; council of (1114), 595; see of,
621
Beauvaisis, the, 612
Bec, monastery of, foundation of, 491, 516,
526, 532; see also Lanfranc
Becket, Thomas, archbishop of Canterbury,
made Chancellor, 555; his position, 557;
made archbishop, ib. ; his claims as arch-
bishop, 558 sq. ; and the Constitutions of
Clarendon, 559 sqq. ; renewed quarrel with
## p. 954 (#1000) ###########################################
954
Index
Henry II, 561; defies Henry and flees,
562; excommunicates his enemies, 562 sq. ;
reconciled with Henry, 563 sq. ; murdered,
564; his miracles, ib.
Becquet, 653
Bede, his collection of penitentials, 710
Bedford, castle of, 544
Bedfordshire, 544
Béla I, King of Hungary, 113
Béla II, King of Hungary, 345
Bellême, lords of, 488, 603; see Robert of
Bellême, William Talvas
Bellevaux, Cistercian abbey, 676
Belvoir, 534
Benedict VIII, Pope (Theophylact), election
of, 15; crowns Henry II and Cunegunda,
15; policy of, 15 sqq. ; and war against
Muslims, 268
Benedict IX, Pope (Theophylact), character
of, 17; pa pacy of, 17 sqq. ; deposition
of, 22; returns to Rome on death of
Clement II, 23; expelled, 23; 29, 35,
50
Benedict X, anti-Pope, see John Mincius
Benedict XII, Pope, his attempt at monastic
reform, 688 sq. , 695
Benedict, St, Leo IX's regard for, 24; the
Rule of, 658; reforms based on, 659 sq. ;
see also Benedictine Order
Benedict, St, abbot of Aniane, and the reform
of monastic life, 659 sq. ; his death, 659;
775
“Benedict of Peterborough," on Ranulf de
Glanville, 578
Benedict the Christian, founder of the Pier-
leoni, 19, 363 note
Benedictine Order, in England in the thir-
teenth century, 685; reform of, 686; Con-
stitutions of (1336), 689; congregation in
Spain, 695; see also Benedict, St
Benedictus Levita, 710
Benevento, embassy from, to Leo IX, 27;
given to Papacy, 28, 172; early communeat,
216; synod at (1108), decrees against lay
investiture, 101; treaty of (1156), between
Papacy and Normans, 193; rebels against
Anacletus II, 365; besieged by William I of
Sicily, 416 ; 23, 29, 34, 167, 179 sq. , 186, 198
Benzo, bishop of Alba, on “Roman Senate,"
35; on Leo de Benedicto Christiano, 43;
sent as ambassador to Rome, 43; attacks
Rome again, but fails, 44; escapes to
Parma, 44; fails at Mantua, 45
Berengar II, King of Italy, 2
Berengar of Tours, heresy of, 3, 28, 52;
at Rome, 37; compelled to recant, 73;
leniently treated, ib. ; his De Caena
Domini, 791 sq.
Bergamo, ally of Pavia, 230
Berkhampstead, William I at, 501; honour
and castle of, 558, 561
Berkshire, 501, 577, 580
Bermondsey, 555
Bernai, monastery of, 484 sqq.
Bernard, St, abbot of Clairvaux, his position
in Christendom, xx sq. ; his teaching on
the Papacy, xxi; 110 sq. ; declares for
Innocent II, 363; opposes Lothar III's
attempt to re-open investiture question,
364; obtains his support for Innocent,
342; visits Milan in support of Innocent,
366; his comment on the new kingdom of
Sicily, 186; visits Roger II, 368; recon-
ciles Conrad III and monks of St Maximin
at diet of Spires, 351; urges Conrad to
aid Eugenius III, 371; Louis VII and,
606 sq. ; preaches Second Crusade, 307,
353, 373 sq. , 608; his guardianship of
church interests, 392; and the Cistercian
Order, 672, 674, 676 sq. ; first abbot of
Clairvaux, 672; Cluny and, 666; and
Norbert, 680; and Abelard, 680, 798;
death of, 392, 677; 189, 463
Bernard, cardinal, legate to Milan, 48; ex-
communicates Henry IV, 140
Bernard, bishop of Hildesheim, removed by
Frederick I, 394
Bernard of Pisa, see Eugenius III, Pope
Bernard of Anhalt, duke of Saxony, younger
son of Albert the Bear, 153; defeats
Henry the Lion, 403; defeated by Henry,
406; made duke of Saxony, 405; his
weakness, 407; 460, 465
Bernard Billung, duke of Saxony, death of,
114
Bernard of Abbeville, founds the congrega-
tion of Thiron, 670, 675
Bernard of Botone, the canonist, 742
Bernard of Neufmarché, in Wales, 525
Bernard of Pavia, the canonist, 742
Bernard of Plötzke, a supporter of Albert
the Bear, 347
Bernard of Ratzeburg, 460
Bernard of Wölpe, 460
Bernard, author of Ordo Cluniacensis, 664
Bernicia, 503; earls of, see Gospatric, Robert
of Commines
Berno, first abbot of Cluny, 661 sq.
Bernold of Constance, Abelard and, 800
Bernold of St Blaise, chronicler, on incep-
tion of the First Crusade, 272
Bernward, bishop of Hildesheim, 3
Berry, 598
Bertha of Turin, marries Henry IV, 116 sq. ;
crowned Empress, 79; 34, 69, 127; dies,
145
Bertha of Sulzbach, sister-in-law of Con.
rad III, marries the Emperor Manuel,
356
Berthold I of Zähringen, duke of Carinthia,
joins enry IV against the Saxons, 133 sq. ;
revolts, 135; death of, 140; 113, 122,
139 sq.
Berthold II of Zähringen, marries Agnes,
daughter of anti-king Rudolf, 140; defeats
Henry's forces on the Neckar, 140; succeeds
Berthold, son of Rudolf, 147; proclaimed
temporal head of Swabia, 92, 147; does
homage to Pope, ib. ; given title of duke,
148; 149
## p. 955 (#1001) ###########################################
Index
955
Berthold IV of Zähringen, and Conrad III,
357; and Burgundy, 389 sq. ; receives
privilege of investiture to three bishoprics,
390, 399 note
Berthold of Künsberg, German general,
470
Berthold of Rheinfelden, son of anti-king
Rudolf, 140; death of, 146
Bertrada of Montfort, 596
Bertram, son of Raymond of St Gilles,
becomes count of Tripolis, 302
Berwick, 570 sq.
Besançon, city, diet of, 390 sq. , 423 sqq. ;
618
Bessin, the, 491, 493, 497, 544
Bethar, the scholasticus, 766
Beverley, charter to, 539; church of St John
at, 544; canons of, 678
Beyrout, 248 sq. , 255, 301 ; captured by
Baldwin I, 304; 313; final loss of, 319
Béziers, 639; serfdom at, 642
Biandrate, commune at, 225; counts of, 225,
429, 442
Biddlesden, monks of, 576
Bigod, Hugh, rebels against Stephen, 543;
made earl of Norfolk, 546; rebels against
Henry II, 568
Bigod, Roger, his revolt against William II,
521
Bikisrāyil, castle, 257
Billungs, family of, ducal office in Saxony
hereditary in, 114, 127; hostility to Adal.
bert of Bremen, 114, 116; their position
in Saxony, 118, 164; coalition against,
129 sq. ; in Saxon revolt, 131 ; reconciled
with Henry IV, 141; extinction of male
line in, 152, 334; 401; see Bernard,
Herman, Magnus, Ordulf
Bingen, 150
Biota, wife of Walter, count of Mantes, 495
Biset, Manasser, 580
Blanche of Castile, Queen of France, 112
Blanchelande, peace of, 518
Blois, commune of, 628 sq. ; serfdom at,
642
Blois, county of, 604
Blois, house of, 540; see Eustace, Henry,
Stephen, Theobald, William
Blund, William, the usher, and Henry II,
567
Boccaccio, and the commentators, 739 sq.
“Boccaporco," nickname of Sergius IV, 15
Böckelheim, Henry IV imprisoned at, 150
Boethius, 766; John the Scot and, 788; his
translations of Aristotle, 789
Bogislavof Pomerania, defeated by Canute VI,
407
Bohemia, disorders in Church in, 3 sq. ,
60 sq. ; supports Emperor Henry IV, 113;
Henry V and, 155, 165; Lothar III in.
vades, 336 sq. ; Conrad III and, 352 sq. ;
Frederick I and, 388 sq. ; 150, 345; dukes
and kings of, see Bořivoi, Bratislav,
Frederick, Soběslav, Svatopluk, Vladislav,
Vratislav
Bohemond I, prince of Antioch, son of
Guiscard, 174; captures Avlona, 181;
conducts war against Byzantium, 182 ;
opposes Roger Borsa, 183; in First
Crusade, 274 ; his relations with Alexius,
279, 282, 285; chosen supreme leader of
the crusaders at Antioch, 292 sq. ; becomes
prince of Antioch, 294; his charter to
Genoese, 295 note; his rule in Antioch,
301; 86
Bohemond II, prince of Antioch, deprived
of Apulia by Roger II, 185; his rule in
Antioch, 301 ; marries daughter of
Baldwin II, ib. ; 302
Bohemond III, prince of Antioch, 313
Bohemond IV, prince of Antioch, 313
Bohun, Humphrey de, 536, 569
Boioannes, catapan, defeats Normans, 169;
founds city of Troia, ib. , 216
Boiscourt-sur-Mer, 652
Boizenburg, battle at, 465
Boleslav III, duke of Poland, responsible
for conversion of Pomerania, 165; sup-
ports Boris' claim to Hungary, 345; does
homage to Lothar III, 345; death of,
351
Boleslav IV, duke of Poland, drives out his
brother Vladislav II, 351, 388; relations
with Frederick I, 388 sq.
Bolingbroke, honour of, 544
Bologna, geographical position of, 208;
consuls at, 220; her greatness and ambi-
tion, 230; bishop and government of,
232; ministrales contratarum at, 233;
takes oath of fealty to Frederick I, 426;
law-school at, 734 sqq.
Bolsover, 568
Bonaventura, St, on Hugh of St Victor,
800; and Aquinas, 822
Boniface, St, and celibacy, 12
Boniface VIII, Pope, issues the Liber Sextus
Decretalium, 714; and the Celestines,
688
Boniface IX, Pope, approves Order of Corpus
Christi, 692
Boniface, marquess of Tuscany, marries
Beatrice of Lorraine, 23; murder of, 31
Bonifilius, a Pavese lawyer, 733
Bonizo, bishop of Sutri, on Benedict IX,
19; on Guido of Milan, 39; on inde-
pendence of Milan, 42; on Cadalus, ib.
Bonizo, father of Pope Gregory VII, 51
Bonshommes, the, Austin canons, 683
Bordeaux, commune of, 629, 631, 634, 636,
643, 647 sq. , 650; serfdom at, 642; local
customs of, 643
Boris, his claim to throne of Hungary, 345,
352
Bořivoi, duke of Bohemia, supports Henry
IV, 150; expelled, 165
Bosa, archbishop of York, 771
Bosham, 497
Botaniates, Nicephorus, see Nicephorus
Botaniates
Botfeld, Emperor Henry III dies at, 31
## p. 956 (#1002) ###########################################
956
Inder
Bouchard le Veautre, 622
Bouillon, counts of, effects of crusades on,
328; see Godfrey
Boulogne, commune of, 645
Boulogne, county of, 494, 537, 541 ; counts
of, see Eustac Matthew, Stephen,
King of England, William
Boulogne, honour of (in England), 537, 541
Bouras, monastery of, 673
Bourbon, Louis VI and the lordship of, 598;
lord of, see Archambaud
Bourdin, Maurice, archbishop of Braga
(anti-Pope Gregory VIII), 105; excom-
municated by Gelasius II, ib. ; captured
by Calixtus II, 107; 162
Bourges, synod of (1031), 9, 14; 598, 605,
607; commune of, 631; law-school at,
752
Boutillier, Jehan, his Somme Rural, 751
Boves, 595
Brabant, 410
Bracton, the jurist, influence of Azo on,
758 sq.
Braiose, William of, in Wales, 525
Brancaleone, podestà, 238
Brandenburg, missions in, 343; acquired by
Albert the Bear, 344, 357; margrave of.
see Otto
Bratislav, duke of Bohemia, founds see at
Olmütz, 4; ecclesiastical policy of, ib.
Bray-sur-Seine, 596 sq. , 614
Breakspear, Nicholas, see Hadrian IV, Pope
Brecknock, battle near, 525
Brede (Rameslie), 499
Bredingen, 133
Breitenwang, Lothar III dies at, 345
Bremen, archbishop Adalbert expelled from,
116; 401
Brémule, battle of, 539, 602 sq.
Brescia, joins league against Frederick I,
194, 427 sq. , 435; consuls at, 220; ally of
Milan, 230
Breteuil, 539, 554, 603
Bréthencourt, castle of, 596
Brethren of the Common Life, the, 694
Breviarium Alaricianum, the (Lex Romana
Visigothorum), 721 sq. , 744 sq.
Bridget, St, Swedish princess, and the
Order of the Saviour, 694
Bridgnorth, castle of, 530, 555
Bridlington, abbey, 684
Brindisi, 175 sq. , 192, 283, 464
Brionne, comté, 485; count of, 488, 493
Brioude, canons of, 615
Bristol, 208; 537, 545; castle, Stephen im-
prisoned in, 547; 549, 551
Brittany, 602, 611, 613; count of, 598
Brixen, Gregory VII deposed at council of
(1080), 75 sq. , 141
Brixworth, Peter of, 581
Brogne, Gerard of, see Gerard of Brogne
Brough-under-Stainmoor, castle, 570
Brucourt, pastures of, 652
Bruges, 208; échevins at, 632; 338, 598 sqq.
Brünn, Johannes von, German lawyer, 754
Bruno, St, and the Carthusian Order, 669
Bruno I, archbishop of Cologne, 2
Bruno III, archbishop of Cologne, 466
Bruno, archbishop of Trèves, heads embassy
to Paschal II, 101
Bruno, bishop of Toul, see Leo IX, Pope
Bruno, chronicler, 137 note
Brunswick, 145, 358, 402, 406 sq. , 410, 460
sq. , 469; county of, 129, 146; counts of,
see Ekbert
Buckingham, borough, 538; earl of, 528
Buckinghamshire, 580
Buildwas, abbey, 553
Builth, lordship of, 525
Bulgaria, crusaders in, 275, 411
Bulgarus, the glossator, 737
Bulle, 597
Bulunyās, castle of, 250, 301
Bundicia, Guiscard at, 182
Bungay, 568, 571
Buondelmonti, the, migrate to Florence,
224
Burchard, bishop of Eichstädt, removed by
Frederick I, 394
Burchard, bishop of Halberstadt, his dis-
loyalty to Henry IV, 61, 114; leads revolt
against Henry IV, 129 sqq. ; revolts again,
135; murder of, 144
Burchard, bishop of Lausanne, Italian
chancellor, 141 note
Burchard, bishop of Worms, 3, 16; his
collection of canons, 14, 712
Burchard of Loccum, murder of, 339
Burgundians, laws of the, 722, 725 sq.
Burgundio, the jurist, 737
Burgundy, kingdom of (Arelate, Arles),
church reform in, 2, 18; authority of
German Kings in, 10, 124, 389 sq. , 469;
Concordat of Worms and, 107 sq. , 163;
dukes of Zähringen rectors of, 337, 384,
389 sq. , 469; Richard I enfeoffed with,
469, 472; pro-French feeling in, 616; 28,
103, 105, 143; see also Burgundy, county
of
Burgundy, county of (Franche Comté), 337,
389; Frederick I marries the heiress, 390,
422; monasticism in, 676; counts of, see
Beatrix, Rainald, William
Burgundy (French duchy), duke of, 616,
619, 644; communities in, 630, 639, 641,
650; see also Eudes, Hugh
Bursfeld, monastery, 694 sq.
Bury St Edmunds, monastery of, 509; abbot
of, 502, 530; borough of, 538 sq. , 551,
553, 569 sq.
Busch, Johann, 694
Butera, 183, 192
Butrinto, Guiscard at, 182
Buzā'ah, 262
Byblus, see Jubail
Byzantine Empire, its relations with
Southern Italy, Chap. IV; and the Cru.
sades, xiii sq. , Chap. vir; wars in Syria,
Chap. VI
Byzantium, see Constantinople
## p. 957 (#1003) ###########################################
Index
957
Cabuabbas, Cistercian monastery, 677
Cadalus, bishop of Parma (anti-Pope
Honorius II), his election as Pope, 42;
conflict with Alexander II, 43 sqq. , 114 sq. ;
retires to Parma, 44 sq. ; death of, 49
Cadouin, reformed monastery, 673
Cadurc, candidate for the archbishopric of
Bruges, 605
Caen, 486, 490, 493, 516, 523, 525 sq. , 530,
533, 545; monasteries at, 496
Caerleon, 525
Caesarea, in Palestine, captured by Baldwin I,
304, 329; captured by Baibars, 317
Cahors, 612; commune at, 639
Calabria, Byzantine province, 1, 167; Guis.
card conquers, 172; famine in, and revolt,
173 sq. ; created duchy for Guiscard by the
Pope, 175; Roger I in, 173 sq. , 177, 183;
179 sqq. , 186, 193, 362, 471; monasteries
in, 688
Calais, commune of, 645
Calatrava, Order of, 333, 682 sq.
Calixtus II, Pope (Guy, archbishop of
Vienne), opposes Paschal II's surrender,
103; elected Pope, 105,666; his character,
105 sq. ; negotiations with Henry V, 106,
161; rupture with Henry V, 106; and
Concordat of Worms, 107 sqq. , 162 sq. ,
360; his relations with Kings of England
and France, 106, 603; 110, 341 note,
672
Calixtus III (anti-Pope), see John of Struma
Caltabellotta, castle of, 203, 471
Camaldoli, Order of, 667 sq. , 695
Cambrai, 2; communal movement in, 120
note, 148 sq. , 635, 643
Cambridge, castle of, 503; 583; monks at,
689 sq. ; county of, 567
Camerino, given to Pope Victor II by Henry
III, 31
Camp, Cistercian abbey, 676
Campo, and monastery of Farfa, 5
Campo Grasso, Frederick I at, 419
Cannae, Normans defeated at (1018), 169
Canon Law, see Law, Canon
Canons regular, 13, 89, 678 sqq.
Canossa, castle, owned by Azzo, 23; 55;
absolution of Henry IV at, 60, 69 sq. , 72,
98, 126, 137, 179, 454
Canterbury, 501, 538, 562 sqq. , 566, 568;
see of, 511, 522, 526, 531, 545, 558, 561;
claims of see to primacy over York, 83,
106, 516; abbeys at, 509; archdeacon of,
558, 577
Canute, son of Eric, King of Denmark, his
rule in Schleswig, 344; murder of, ib. ;
386
Canute V, King of Denmark, son of Magnus,
disputes the throne with Svein III, 386;
killed, 387
Canute VI, King of Denmark, marries Henry
the Lion's daughter, 387; his attacks on
northern Germany, 407; 465, 468
Canute, see Knut
Capella, Martianus, 765, 788
Capitanei, doble class in Italian cities, 217
899.
Capua, 87, 167 sqq. , 180; capture of, 90 ;
462, 479; princes of, see Jordan, Pandulf,
Richard, Robert
Caracalla, Edict of, 701
Carcassonne, commune of, 628, 648, 650
Cardigan, 525, 546, 556
Cardinals, college of, viii, 37
Carinthia, duchy of, given to Berthold of
Zähringen, 113; his weakness in, 113 sq. ;
given to Liutold of Eppenstein, 140; 139
Carlisle, William II builds castle at, 524;
Henry I creates diocese of, 535; 544, 549;
castle, 556; 567 sq. , 570 sq. ; Austin
canons of, 679
Carmarthen, 525, 556
Carolus of Tocco, the jurist, 737
Carroccio, invention of, by Aribert, 218; in
the battle of Legnano, 446
Carthage, councils of, 11
Carthusian Order, the, 669 sq.
Cashel, 566
Cassel, 403, 599
Cassinese congregation, the, 693
Cassiodorus, and schools of rhetoric, 766
Cassiope, Normans defeated by Venetians
near, 182
Casteggio, 445
Castel, reformed monastery, 693
Castile, laws of, 747 sq. ; monasticism in,
677; military orders in, 682 sq.
Castrogiovanni, 176 sq.
Catalonia, feudal code of, 729 note; monasti.
cism in, 677
Catania, 177, 471
Catmere, 580
Catton, manor of, 499
Cauterets, 655
Caux, 609
Cedrenus, historian, on restoration of church
of Holy Sepulchre, 256 note; chronology of,
257 note, 258 note
Cefalù, church of, 206
Celestine Order, the, 688
Celestine II, Pope, pontificate of, 370; rela-
tions with Roger II, 188; and Louis VII,
607
Celestine III, Pope (Hyacinth), pontificate
of, 463 sqq. ; crowns Henry VI, 202, 464;
negotiations with Henry VI, 474, 476 sqq. ;
and indulgences, 323; 467
Celestine V, Pope, see Peter Morrone
Cencius, Roman noble, and Cadalus, 44;
imprisons Gregory VII, 66 sq. ; offers to
make Guiscard emperor, 179
Cephalonia, attacked by Normans, 182
Ceprano, Gregory VII meets Robert Guiscard
at, 77, 86, 180 sq. ; 416, 464
Cerigo, island, seized by Roger II, 376
Cerisy, abbey of St Vigor at, 491
Cerularius, Michael, see Michael Cerularius
Cesarea, see Alessandria
Chablis, commune of, suppressed, 652
Chalcedon, council of, 26
## p. 958 (#1004) ###########################################
958
Index
Chalcidius, his commentary on the Timaeus,
789 sq.
Chalon, count of, 615
Châlons, 101
Champagne, 410, 498, 604, 606 sq. , 618;
communes in, 639, 649; serfdom in, 641;
counts of, see Henry, Theobald
Chancellor, office of, in Henry II's reign, 579
Channel, the English, 497 sq. , 505, 520 sq. ,
530, 533, 536, 539, 543, 545, 551, 561, 610
Charles the Bald, Western Emperor, King
of France, and private churches, 8; 784
Charles the Great (Charlemagne), Western
Emperor, and private ownership of
churches, 8; and clerical celibacy, 12;
Frederick I causes him to be canonised,
394; and the reform of monasteries, 659;
and schools, 772 sqq. ; and the Carolingian
renaissance, 784 ; 20, 101, 382, 384
Charles, bishop of Constance, deposed for
simony, 45, 125
Charles the Good, count of Flanders, invited
to stand for election on the death of
Henry V, 335; murder of, 338, 598
Charlieu, near Lyons, 664
Charter of Charity, the, 672
Chartres, town, 593 sq. , 603; schools at,
778, 805; county of, 604; bishop of, 594;
count of, see Theobald
Châteaufort, castle, 593, 596 sq.
Chaumont-sur-Loire, 612
Chelles, nunnery, 671
Cherbourg, 498 note, 524
Cheshire, 504, 507 sq.
Chester, 537 sq. , 556, 568; earldom of, 507,
524; see of, 509, 511; earls of, 314, and
see Hugh, Ranuli
Chevreuse, castle, 593, 596
Chézal-Benoît, reformed monastery, 696
Chiaravalle, Cistercian abbey, 677
Chiavenna, meeting of Frederick I and
Henry the Lion at, 402 sq. , 446
Chichester, 538; see of, 511
Chieri, castello, destroyed by Frederick I,
417
Chindaswinth, King, and Visigothic law,
726, 744 sq.
Chinon, 556, 567
Chioggia, 449 sq.
Chirmirus, a schoolmaster, 771
Chiusa, abbey, 668
Christian, archbishop of Mayence, 198, 388,
393, 395, 407, 441, 455
Christian, count of Oldenburg, and Henry
the Lion, 398, 401
Chrodegang, St, bishop of Metz, his reforms,
13, 660, 772
Chrysostom, St John, 53
Chur, 157 note
Cibotus, crusaders defeated at, 276
Cilicia, Emperor Basil in, 252; crusaders'
victories in, 286 sqq. ; see also Armenia
Minor
Cino of Pistoia, jurist and poet, 740
Cirencester, abbey, 684
Cistercian Order, the, 672 sqq. ; its expan-
sion, ib. ; the Charter of Charity, 673; its
constitution, 674; lay-brothers, 675; rapid
growth of, 676; in England, ib. ; its
position in 1151, 677; reforms in the
15th century, 695
Citeaux, abbey, foundation of, 672; 553
Cities, Italian, Chaps. V, XIII; effect of
Lombard conquest on, 209 sq. ; ecclesias-
tical institutions, 210 sq. ; development
under Carolingian empire, 212; fortifica-
tion of, 212 sq.
; episcopal government in,
213; under rule of the Ottos, 213 sq. ;
growth of collective action, 214; the
castelli, 215; the boni homines, ib. ; early
communes in the South, 215 sq. ; difference
between these and northern towns, 216;
classes in northern cities, 217 sq. ; rise of
popolani, 218 sq. ; class war a factor in
growth of communes, 220; establishment
of consuls in, 220; cultural and political
influences on, 222 sq. ; supersession of
feudal and state authorities, xix, 223;
valuable aid of bishops in growth of, ib. ;
exterior expansion of, 223 sqq. ; rural com-
munes, 224 sq. ; position towards close
of 12th century, 225 sq. ; inter-city wars,
226, 228; development of commerce, 226
sq. ; intricate rivalries among, 227 sqq. ;
usurpation of regalia, 231 sq. ; imperial
diplomas to, ib. ; relations with counts,
viscounts, and bishops, 232; the arengo,
215, 219 sqq. , 232 sq. ; consuls and other
officials, 220 sqq. , 233; the Council, 233
sq. ; law of, 234 sq. ; constitution of army
in, 235 sq. ; milites and pedites, 235 sq. ;
gilds, 236 sq. ; internal strife, 237; the
podestà, 237 sq. ; commerce and banking
in, 239 sqq. ; corporate life in, 240; blood
feuds among nobles of, 240; general
character of, xix sq. , 241; effects of
Crusades on, 328 sq. ; 361, 646; see also
Lombard League
Civita Castellana, Guibert dies at, 96;
Hadrian IV at, 419; Alexander III dies
at, 455
Civitate, battle of (1053), 28, 173, 494
Clairvaux, abbey of, 563, 666, 672 sqg.
Clare, family, head of, created earl of
Hertford, 548
Clare, Gilbert of, created earl of Pembroke
by Stephen, 546; nicknamed Strongbow,
565
Clare, Richard of, 511
Clare, Richard Fitz Gilbert de, see Strongbow
Clare, Roger de, earl of Hertford, and
Becket, 558
Clarebold of Vendeuil, a leader of Crusades,
277
Clarendon, 561, 577
Clarendon, Assize of, 584 sqq.
Clarendon, Constitutions of, 100, 559 sqq. ,
566
Clement II, Pope (Suidger, bishop of Bam-
berg), 22 sq. , 26
## p. 959 (#1005) ###########################################
Index
959
Clement III, anti-Pope, see Guibert, arch-
bishop of Ravenna
Clement III, Pope, and Frederick I, 409,
459; supports Tancred of Lecce, 461;
death of, 202, 463
Clement IV, Pope, and Roger Bacon, 826
Clement V, Pope, issues Clementine Decretals,
714
Clement the Scot, and Charles the Great,
772 sq.
649 sq. ;
XXI
Clementia, daughter of Conrad of Zähringen,
marries Henry the Lion, 357
Cleobury Mortimer, 555
Clermont, council of (1095), 88 sg. , 94 sq. ,
99, 265, 271 sqq. ; 598; canons of,
615
Clifford, Walter, 556
Clinton, Geoffrey de, 534
Cluniacs, favoured by Pilgrim of Cologne, 2;
influence in Burgundy, 18; extension of
influence under Urban II, 89; 515
Cluny, monastery of, 2, 4, 15, 34, 484, 528,
615, 661 sqq. ; Urban II prior of, 87; death
of Gelasius II at, 105; its dependent houses,
663; under Odilo, 664; under Hugh, 665;
its influence, 666; St Bernard and, ib. ;
abbots of, see Aymard, Berno, Hugh,
Mayeul, Odilo, Odo, Peter, Pons
Coblenz, Conrad III elected king at, 346
Codification of Justinian, Chap.
632; royal influence, 633 sq. ; ecclesiastical
influence, 634 sqq. ; Peace of God and, 635
sq. ; the Crusades and, 636; influence of
commerce, 637; growth through struggle,
637 sqq. ; peaceful advance of, 639 sq. ;
economic development, 640 sq. ; serfdom
and, 641; exactions of lords and, 642;
influence of geography, 643; and of in-
creasing wealth, 644; independent growth
of, 646 sq. ; double towns, 648; affiliation
of communes, 648 sq. ; regional grouping,
rural communes, 650 sqq. ;
common property, rights and duties, 652
sq. ; general conclusions as to, 656 sq. ;
international character of the movement,
645 sq. ; in England, 645; in Germany,
xix, 119 sq. , 646; in Italy, see Cities,
Italian
Comneni, end of the, 473; see also Alexius,
Andronicus, Isaac, John, Manuel
Como, an early rival of Milan, 220; conquered
by Milan, 230; 426 sq. , 445
Compiègne, 649
Conan, a citizen of Rouen, helps William II,
523
Conan, earl of Richmond, and the writ of
right, 586
Conches, monastery at, 493; forest of, 653
Concordia Regularum, 660
Coniuratio, sworn league of citizens in Italy,
216
Connaught, 565
Cono, see Cuno
Conrad II, Western Emperor, 9 sq. , 17 sqq. ,
23 sq. , 31, 119, 127, 138 note, 169 sq.
Conrad III of Hohenstaufen, King of the
Romans, Chaps. X, xi passim; 153 sq. ;
made duke, 160; his against
Lothar III, 338; elected anti-king, and
proceeds to Italy, ib. ; his diplomas to
Italian cities, 231; crowned at Monza,
339, 363; returns to Germany, 339; sub-
mits to Lothar III, 341, 366; his election
as king, 346, 367; relations with Henry
the Proud, 346; and the Second Crusade,
307, 353 sqq. , 374; alliance with Manuel,
188 sq. , 356, 376; faces rebellion of Welf VI
in Swabia, 348 sq. ; his victory and its
effects, 349; his settlement of civil wars at
Frankfort, 349; ecclesiastical difficulties
over abbey of St Maximin, 350 sq. ; his
family connexions, 351; relations with
Poland and Bohemia, 351 sq. ; relations
with Hungary, 352; reconciles Henry
Jasomirgott and the bishop of Ratisbon,
352; last activities of, 357 sq. , 378 sq. ;
failure of attack on Brunswick, 358; his
death and character, 358 sq. , 380; power
of Curia in reign of, 391 note; 164, 334 sq. ,
passim
Coder Gregorianus, 704, 721
Codex Hermogenianus, 704, 721
Codex Regularum, 660
Coder Theodosianus, see Theodosian Code
Colchester, 527, 538, 518
Coldres, 653
Cologne, 2; decay of common life among
cathedral clergy at, 13; 115; rising against
Anno at, 120, 132; second marriage of
Henry IV at, 145; its loyalty to Henry IV,
and consequent punishment by Henry V,
150 sq. ; its attitude to Henry V, 157;
revolts against Henry V, 159; 160; sides
with Henry V and expels archbishop
Frederick, 161; Peter the Hermit at,
275; persecution of Jews by crusaders at,
277
Colon na, family of, first appearance in
history, 96
Colon na, Peter, defeated by Paschal II, 96
Colswegen of Lincoln, 508
Commentators, the, on the Civil Law, 738
s99.
Commerce, development of, in Italian cities,
226 sq. ; trade routes of Lombardy, 229;
effect of Crusades on, 328 sqq. ; effect of,
on French communes, 643 sq.
Communes, xix sq. ; in France, Chap. xix;
definition of a commune in France, 625;
communes jurées, 626; consulates, 627 sq. ;
villes de bourgeoisie, 628 sq. ; bastides and
villes neuves, 629 sq. ; rural communities,
630; causes of their rise, 630 sq. ; Roman
influence, 631 sq. ; Germanic influence,
381 sq. , 384, 396, 410
Conrad, King, son of Henry IV, accepted as
his successor at Goslar, 135; made duke
of Lower Lorraine, ib. ; crowned King
of Germany, 145; revolt against Henry IV,
91 sq. , 146; crowned king of Italy, 91; does
war
## p. 960 (#1006) ###########################################
960
Index
negotiations with Leo IX, 257; establishes
law-school, 719
Constantinople (Byzantium), Chap. VI;
Norman influence at, 171; trade of, 239,
329; William II attacks, 199; and Second
Crusade, 353, 356 sq. ; Barbarossa and,
411; capture of, by Fourth Crusade, 314;
28 sq. , 31 sq. , 396, 473, 479, 716
Consuetudines Carthusienses, 669
Consulates, in South France, Chap. XIX;
627 sq.
fealty to Urban II, 94; marries daughter
of Roger of Sicily, ib. , 183; his failure
and death, 94
Conrad of Montſerrat, King of Jerusalem,
relations with Guy de Lusignan, 310 sq. ;
marries Isabella, sister of Baldwin IV,
311; secures succession to the throne of
Jerusalem, ib. ; death of, ib.
Conrad, archbishop of Magdeburg, supports
Henry the Lion, 348
Conrad I, archbishop of Salzburg, revolts
against Henry V, 104; his reforming zeal,
110; opposes Henry V's ecclesiastical
policy, 156; supports Innocent II, 342;
341, 352, 404 note
Conrad II, archbishop of Salzburg, his ex-
pulsion by Frederick I and death, 395
Conrad, archbishop of Trèves, murdered,
116
Conrad of Wittelsbach, made archbishop of
Mayence by Frederick I, but removed, 388,
440; 441, 457
Conrad, bishop of Worms, his embassy to
Alexander III, 395
Conrad, duke of Zähringen, his alliance with
Lothar III, 337; does homage to Conrad
III, 346; the Wends and, 355; opposes
Conrad III, 357; his efforts to subdue
Burgundy, 389; his death, ib.
Conrad, half-brother of Frederick I, made
count-palatine of the Rhine, 387, 469
Conrad of Wettin, margrave of Meissen,
appointed by Lothar III, 164; turbulence
of, 339; 386
Conrad, count of Luxemburg, 142
Conrad of Lützelinhard, German general,
470, 472
Conrad of Nordheim, murdered, 152
Conrad of Urslingen, made vicegerent of
Sicily, 472
Conradin of Hohenstaufen, as King of
Jerusalem, 316 sq.
Consorzeria, or family group, in Italian
cities, 236, 240 sq.
Constance, synod of (1094), 92; treaty of
(1153), 190, 384, 394, 396; Peace of (1183),
198, 452; 20, 390, 408, 693
Constance, Empress, daughter of Roger II
of Sicily, 191, 200; marries Henry VI, 198,
408, 453, 457; receives oath of allegiance
from Sicilian nobles, 461; captured by
Normans, 202, 464; liberated and escapes
to Germany, 465; becomes mother of
Frederick II, 456, 472; 471
Constance, daughter of Bohemond II of
Antioch, marries Raymond of Poitou, 302;
marries Reginald of Chatillon, 308
Constance, sister of Louis VII, betrothed to
Stephen's eldest son, 546; 616
Constantine I, the Great, Emperor, 7, 20,
80, 715 sqq.
Constantine VII, Eastern Emperor, 718
Constantine VIII, Eastern Emperor, his
treaty with the Fātimites, 256
Constantine IX, Eastern Emperor, 28 sq. ;
Consuls, their establishment in Italian cities,
220 sqq. , 233; origin of title, 222; 209
Conterati, local bands in South Italy, 168
Conway, river, 525
Corbeil, castle of, 593, 596
Corbie, commune of, 635, 649; abbey, 652
Corfù, captured by Guiscard, 181; captured
by Roger II, 189, 375
Corinth, sacked by Roger II, 376
Cormeilles, monastery of, 497
Corméry, monastery, 659
Cornwall, 497, 503, 508, 545; earldom of,
created by Matilda, 547; earls of, see
Reginald, Richard
Corpus Christi, Order of, 692
Corsi, the, Paschal II and, 96
Corsica, authority over, claimed by Gregory
VII, 85; and by Urban II, 90; Pisa, Genoa
and, 226 sq. , 266
Cosimo, grand-duke of Tuscany, annexes
Siena, 226
Cotentin, the, 491, 493; Henry I and, 523,
529; 550
Cotta, family at Milan, 40
Couci, castle of, 593, 595 sq.
Coucy-sur-Loire, Alexander III at, 437
Couesnon, river, 488
Counts-palatine, their position, 118 sq. , 121
note
Coutances, 493; diocese of, 497
Coxon, see Geuksun
Cracow, destruction of, 351
Craswell, monastery, 669
Crécy-en-Brie, castle, 596 sq.
Crécy-sur-Serre, 595
Crema, natural ally of Milan, 230; with-
stands siege by Lothar III, 364; besieged
and destroyed by Frederick I, 397, 428 sq. ;
rebuilt, 458
Cremona, 94; geographical position of, 208;
bishop made count of, 214; Otto III's
grant to, ib. ; a rival of Milan, 230; a rival
of Piacenza and Reggio, 230; besieged by
Frederick I, 458
Crescentii, the, Roman family, 14 sq. , 19,
35
Crescentius, John, patrician of Rome, death
of, 15
Crowhurst, 500
Crusades, Chaps. VII, VIII, IX; character of,
xiii sq. ; effects of, upon Western Europe,
Chap. ix; importance of the movement,
320; and the Papacy, 320 sqq. ; causes of
enthusiasm for, in Europe, 321 sq. ; papal
## p. 961 (#1007) ###########################################
961
Daimbert, archbishop of Sens, protests
against primacy of Lyons, 89
Dalmatia, 113
Dalon, monastery, 678
Damascus, captured by Fățimites, 248;
governors nominated by Fāțimites, 249;
position of during caliphate of Hākim,
253 sq. ; and Turkish invasion, 260;
captured by Turks, 262; under Tūtush,
263 sq. ; 290, 293, 306; vainly besieged in
Second Crusade, 307, 436, 608; conquered
by Nur-ad-Din, 307 sq. ; annexed by
Saladin, 309; 315
Damasus II, Pope (Poppo, bishop of Brixen),
10, 23
Damian, St Peter, see Peter Damian
Dammartin, lord of, 597
Danegeld, William II and, 523; changes by
Henry I, 538; Stephen and, 553; 583
Danelaw, the, 507, 509
Dante Aligbieri, and the commentators, 739,
740; his De Monarchia, 827
Dantzig, captured by Teutonic Knights, 333
Danube, river, 338, 353
Darrein presentment, writ of, 589
Dā’ūd Qilij-Arslān, see Qilij-Arslān
Dauphiné, 616
David, King of Scotland, given the honour
of Huntingdon by Henry I, 536; attacks
Stephen, 543; invades England again, but
is defeated, 544; makes peace, 544; death
of, 556
David of Scotland, earl of Huntingdon, and
Henry II, 570
David, bishop of Bangor, official historian
to Henry V, 154 sq.
Dax, commune of, 643, 647
De Goeje, on Qarmațian schism, 248
De ordinando pontifice auctor Gallicus, tract,
22
Decius, Philip, the jurist, 740
Decretum, see Gratian
Deheubarth, South Welsh principality, 525,
556 sq. ; princes of, see Rhys
Demmin, besieged by crusaders against
Wends, 355; besieged by Henry the Lion,
398, 403
Denmark, and Gregory VII, 85; relations
with Lothar III, 344 sq. ; rule of Niel and
Magnus in, 344; civil war between Svein
and Canute in, 386 sq. ; danger to, from
Slavs, 397; Henry the Lion and, 406 sq. ;
monasticism in, 677; 355; Kings of, see
Canute VI, Eric I, II, III, Knut, Svein,
Waldemar
Derby, borough, 555; earldom of, created by
Stephen, 546; earls of, see Ferrers
Derbyshire, 568
Dermot Mac Murrough, King of Leinster,
and Henry II, 565 sq.
Derwent, river, 499
Desiderius, abbot of Monte Cassino, see
Victor III, Pope
Devon, Devonshire, 481, 500, 503, 525, 532,
543; earldom of, 547; earls of, see Redvers
Index
misuse of, 322 sq. ; and ecclesiastical
taxation, 323 sq. ; and missionary work,
325; effect on geographical knowledge,
326 sq. ; effect on economic and social life,
327 sq. ; on commerce, 328 sqq. ; effect
on Italian cities, 329 sq. ; effect on learn-
ing, 331 sq. ; military results of, on the
West, 332; permanent influence of, 333;
Henry VI's projected crusade, 473 sq. ,
478 sq. ; Frederick II's crusade, 314; Theo-
bald of Navarre's crusade, 315; Louis IX's
first crusade, 315 sq. ; Louis IX's second
crusade, 317
Crusade, First, Chap. VII; Urban II and,
94 sq. , 147 sq. , 272 sq. ; its aims and
ideals, 265; diverging views of Greeks and
Latins as to, 270 sq. ; its leaders and their
rivalries, 273 sq. ; routes to Constantinople,
274; probable number of crusaders, 277
sqq. , 297 sq. ; policy of Alexius, 279 sq. ;
Latin treaty with Alexius, 283 sq. ; Latin
hatred of Greeks, 284 sq. ; rivalry of
Tancred and Baldwin, 287 sq. ; capture
of Antioch, 292; capture of Jerusalem,
295 sq. ; rôle of Peter the Hermit in, 299
Crusade, Second, Eugenius III and, 353;
St Bernard preaches the crusade, ib. ;
Conrad III and, 353 sqq. , 410; its dis-
astrous results, 307; 188 sq. , 347, 351
Crusade, Third, William II of Sicily and,
200; 310 sqq. ; dissensions among its
leaders, 311; its results, 311 sq. ; Frede-
rick I and, 410 sqq. ; hostility of Isaac
Angelus, ib. ; capture of Iconium, 412;
death of Frederick I, ib. ; 409, 460, 467
Crusade, Fourth, 314, 329, 332, 411
Crusade, Fifth, 314
Crusades against Christians, 323
Crusades against the Wends, 355 sq.
Cujas, on the commentators, 739; 752
Cumberland, conquered by William II, 524;
enfeoffed to Henry of Scotland, 543; sur-
rendered to Henry II, 556; 582
Cunegunda, Empress, wife of Henry II,
crowned by Benedict VIII, 15
Cunegunda (Cuniza), heiress of the Welfs,
wife of Azzo of Este, 129, 337 note, 386
Cunibert, bishop of Turin, 13 note
Cuno (Cono), cardinal-bishop of Palestrina,
excommunicates Henry V, 160; his
activity against Henry V, 103, 161; 595
Curia, Papal, viii
Curia Regis, in England, under William I,
515; under Henry I, 533 sqq. ; in Sicily,
205
Cyprus, conquered by Richard I, 310; dynasty
of Lusignans in, 314; Henry VI and, 473;
Kings of, see Amaury, Guy, Henry de
Lusignan, Hugh III
Dābiq, battle of, 260
Dagobert, abbot of Farfa, 5
Daimbert, archbishop of Pisa, Latin Patriarch
of Jerusalem, 92, 220; his claims as
Patriarch, 304, 313
C. MED. H. VOL. V.
61
## p. 962 (#1008) ###########################################
962
Index
Dialogus de Scaccario, 573
Diepold of Vohburg, German general, 464,
470, 472
Dieppe, tolls of, 486
Diether, chancellor of Henry VI, on Sicily,
462
Dietrich, count of Katlenburg, 152 note
Dietrich of Landsberg, bis accusations
against Henry the Lion, 404
Dietrich, bishop of Verdun, given territory
in Lorraine by Henry IV, 143
Dietrich of Wettin, 465
Dijon, 2, 437, 618 sq. , 649; monastery of
St Bénigne at, 659 sq. , 662 sq. ; 695
Dinant, échevins at, 632
Dionysius Exiguus, his collection of canons,
Dudley, 544
Dudo, dean of Saint-Quentin, on history of
Normandy, 484
Duffield, 568
Duisburg, 407
Dunois, county of, 653
Duns Scotus, his philosophy, 827 sqq.
Dunstable, 538
Dunstan, St, 3; his reform of English
monasteries, 663; Theodulf's capitulary
and, 775
Dunster, 544
Dunwich, 538
Duqāq, Shams-al-mulūk, ruler of Damascus,
Turkish leader, 264, 293
Durance, river, 664
Durand, bishop of Troarn, 3
Durandus (Wilhelmus Durantis), the canon.
ist, 742
Durazzo, captured by Normans, 181 sq. ; re-
taken, 182; 199, 280, 283
Durham, 504, 543 sq. ; castle of, 522; see
of, 511, 537; cathedral, 553; abbey, 689,
691
Dyfed, South Welsh principality, 525, 546
708 sq.
Dirghām, vizier of Egypt, defeated by
Amaury I, 308; deposed by Nūr-ad-Din,
ib.
Disceptatio Synodalis, treatise of St Peter
Damian, 44
Dives, river, 495, 499
Djidjelli, captured by Roger II, 189
Dmitri, King of Russia, and Gregory VII, 85
Dobin, Wendish fortress, 355, 397
Dol, in Brittany, 518, 536
Dole, in Franche Comté, 618
Domain, royal, in Germany, 122 sq. ; Henry
IV and domain in Saxony, 128; in Eng.
land, 508 sq. ; in France, 592 sqq.
Domesday Book, evidence to be drawn from,
505 sqq. ; crown lands, 508; church lands,
509 sq. ; lay fiefs, 510 sqq. ; secular clerks,
679
Domfront, seized by William I, 495; 527,
531
Dominic, St, 683
Donaldbane, elected King of Scotland, but
deposed by William II, 524
Donati, Corso, podestà, 238
Donation of Constantine, 711; Nicholas II
and, 175; Gregory VII makes use of,
85; Urban II uses, 85 note, 90, 175
Doneau, the jurist, 752
Donnelay, 654
Donzy, 615
Dorchester (on Thames), see of, 511, 516
Dorotheus, an Eastern jurist, 717
Dorset, 544, 549
Dorylaeum, crusaders defeat Turks at, 286
sq. ; Conrad III defeated at, 608
Douaren, the jurist, 752
Dover, 501, 503, 521, 567 sq.
Dreu of Mouchy, and Louis VII, 615
Dreux, 593; count of, 614; see Robert
Drogo, bishop of Macon, 34
Drogo, son of Tancred de Hauteville, goes
to Aversa, 170; wars against Byzantines,
171; recognised as leader of Apulian
Normans, 172; murder of, 173
Drogo of Nesle, a leader of crusades, 277
Druses, their belief as to Caliph Hākim,
253
Dublin, 504, 565 sq.
Eadmer, chronicler, on St Anselm, 97
Eadric the Wild, revolts against William I,
504
Eadwig, King of England, 663
Ealdgyth, Queen, wife of Harold, 497
Ealdred, archbishop of York, crowns
William I, 502; death of, 516
East Anglia, 481, 501 sq. , 504, 507, 522,
551, 568, 570, 578, 581; earl of, 518
Eberhard, archbishop of Salzburg, papal
sympathies of, 394; Frederick I's letter
to, 431; 395
Eberhard, archbishop of Trèves, made
primate of Gallia Belgica, 34
Eberhard, bishop of Bamberg, sent by
Frederick I on embassy to Rome, 382; tries
to reconcile Frederick I and Hadrian IV,
429; his attitude towards claims of
Frederick I, 394
Eberhard, count of Nellenburg, sent by
Henry IV on embassy to Italy, 65; sent to
garrison Lüneburg, 130; captured by
Saxons, 131
Eborard, bishop of Norwich, 553
Ę brach, Cistercian abbey, 676
Échauffour, barony of, 488 sq.
Échevins, in French communes,
Eden, river, 524
Edessa, Frankish county of, 301 sq. ; 304 sq. ;
Baldwin first count, 287; conquered by
Zangī, 307; effect of its fall on Europe,
307, 353, 373, 607; counts of, see Baldwin,
Joscelin
Edgar the Aetheling, set aside by Harold,
481; plan to raise him to the throne on
Harold's death, 501; submits to William,
502; taken to Normandy, 503; vain re-
bellions of, 503 sqq. ; sent by William II to
invade Scotland, 524; takes the Cross, 527
632 sq.
## p. 963 (#1009) ###########################################
Index
963
Edgar, son of Malcolm Canmore, King of
Scotland, 524
Edictum Rotharis, the, 723, 730 sq.
Edinburgh, castle of, 571
Edington, canons of, 683
Edith, Queen, widow of Edward the Con-
fessor, 508
Edith, Queen of Henry I, see Matilda
Edward the Confessor, King of England,
death of, 481
Edward I, King of England, and French
communes, 634; his crusade, 317
Edward III, King of England, 692
Edwin, earl of Mercia, acquiesces in Harold's
election, 482; defeated by Harold Hardrada,
499; retires to his estates after Hastings,
501 sq. ; submits to William, 502; rebels,
503; death of, 505
Egbert, archbishop of York, his collection of
penitentials, 710
Egilbert, archbishop of Trèves, 113 note
Egypt, Islām in, Chap. vi; Tūlūnite dynasty
in, 244 sq. ; rule of emirs from Baghdad, 245
sq. ; conquered byFātimite Caliphs, 247sqq. ;
position of, in second half of tenth century,
252 sq. ; under Caliph Hākim, ib. ; under
Caliph Mustanşir, 258 sqq. ; peace restored
by Badr-al-jamāli, 262; invaded by Turks,
262; Norman attacks on coasts of, 200;
relations with kingdom of Jerusalem, 308;
conquered for Nūr-ad-Din, 308 sq. ; Saladin,
Sultan of, 309; crusades against, 314 sqq. ;
Mamlūks of, conquer Latin States, 317 sq.
Eichstädt, 32
Eider, river, 344, 387, 399
Eike von Repkow, his Sachsenspiegel, 753
Eilica, daughter of duke Magnus Billung,
marries Otto of Ballenstadt, 152 sq.
