|
See also: half of the 1 zth century
.
Practically nothing is known of his origin or early See also: life
.
He may have been one of those hermits who at that See also: time swarmed in the forests of western See also: Europe, and particularly in See also: France, always surrounded by popular veneration, and sometimes the founders of monasteries or religious orders, such as those of Premontre or Fontevrault
.
If St See also: Bernard's reproach (Ep
.
241) be well founded, See also: Henry was an apostate monk—a " black
See also: monk " (
See also: Benedictine) according to the chronicler Alberic de Trois Fontaines
.
The information we possess as to his degree of instruction is scarcely more precise or less conflicting
.
When he arrived at Le Mans in 11os, his See also: terminus a quo was probably See also: Lausanne
.
At that moment See also: Hildebert, the See also: bishop of Le Mans, was absent from his episcopal See also: town, and this is one of the reasons why Henry was granted permission to preach (See also: March to
See also: July Isoi), a See also: function jealously guarded by the See also: regular See also: clergy
.
Whether by his See also: prestige as a See also: hermit and ascetic or by his See also: personal charm, he soon acquired enormous influence over the See also: people
.
His See also: doctrine at that date appears to have been very vague; he seemingly rejected the invocation of See also: saints and also second marriages, and preached penitence
.
See also: Women, inflamed by his words, gave up their jewels and luxurious apparel, and See also: young men married courtesans in the hope of reclaiming them
.
Henry was peculiarly fitted for a popular preacher
.
In See also: person he was tall and had a long See also: beard; his See also: voice was sonorous, and his eyes flashed fire
.
He went See also: bare-footed, preceded by a See also: man carrying a staff surmounted with an iron See also: cross; he slept on the bare ground, and lived by See also: alms
.
At his instigation the inhabitants of Le Mans soon began, to slight the clergy of their town and to reject all ecclesiastical authority
.
On his return from See also: Rome, Hildebert had a public disputation with Henry, in which, according to the bishop's Acta episcoporum Cenomannensium, Henry was shown to be less guilty of See also: heresy than of ignorance
.
He, however, was forced to leave Le Mans, and went probably to See also: Poitiers and afterwards to See also: Bordeaux
.
Later we find him in the diocese of See also: Arles, where the archbishop arrested him and had his See also: case referred to the tribunal of the See also: pope
.
In 1134 Henry appeared before Pope Innocent III. at the council of See also: Pisa, where he was compelled
to abjure his errors and was sentenced to imprisonment
.
It 1876
.
As a commentator on Virgil Henry will always deserve appears that St Bernard offered him an See also: asylum at See also: Clairvaux;
but it is not known if he reached Clairvaux, nor do we know ' when or in what circumstances he resumed his activities
.
Towards 1139, however, See also: Peter the Venerable, See also: abbot of
See also: Cluny, wrote a See also: treatise called Epistola seu tractatus adversus Petrobrusianos (See also: Migne, Pate
.
See also: Lat. clxxxix.) against the disciples of Peter of Bruys and Henry of Lausanne, whom he calls Henry of Bruys, and whom, at the moment of writing, he accuses of preaching, in all the dioceses in the See also: south of France, errors which he had inherited from Peter of Bruys
.
According to Peter the Venerable, Henry's teaching is summed up as follows: rejection of the doctrinal and disciplinary authority of the See also: church; recognition of the Gospel freely interpreted as the
See also: sole See also: rule of faith; condemnation of the See also: baptism of infants, of the eucharist, of the sacrifice of the mass, of the communion of saints, and of prayers for the dead; and refusal to recognize any See also: form of worship or See also: liturgy
.
The success of this teaching spread very rapidly in the south of France . Speaking of this region, St Bernard (Ep . 241) says: " The churches are without flocks, the flocks without priests, the priests without honour; in a word, nothing remains save Christians without Christ." On several occasions St Bernard was begged to fight the innovator on the scene of his exploits, and in 1145, at the instance of theSee also: legate Alberic, See also: cardinal bishop of See also: Ostia, he set out, passing through the diocese of Angouleme and See also: Limoges, sojourning for some time at Bordeaux, and finally reaching the heretical towns of See also: Bergerac, Perigueux, See also: Sarlat, See also: Cahors and Toulouse
.
At Bernard's approach Henry quitted Toulouse, leaving there many adherents, both of See also: noble and humble See also: birth, and especially among the weavers
.
But Bernard's eloquence and miracles made many converts, and Toulouse and See also: Albi were quickly restored to orthodoxy
.
After inviting Henry to a disputation, which he refused to attend, St Bernard returned to Clairvaux
.
Soon afterwards the heresiarch was arrested, brought before the bishop of Toulouse, and probably imprisoned for life
.
In a letter to the people of Toulouse, undoubtedly written at the end of 1146, St Bernard calls upon them to extirpate the last remnants of the heresy
.
In 1151, however, some Henricians still remained in See also: Languedoc, for See also: Matthew See also: Paris relates (Chron. maj., at date 1151) that a young girl, who gave herself out to be miraculously inspired by the Virgin Mary, was reputed to have converted a See also: great number of the disciples of Henry of Lausanne
.
It is impossible to designate definitely as Henricians one of the two sects discovered at Cologne and described by Everwin, provost of Steinfeld, in his letter to St Bernard (Migne, Patr
.
Lat., clxxxii
.
676–68o), or the heretics of See also: Perigord mentioned by a certain monk Heribert (See also: Martin Bouquet, Recueil
See also: des historiens des Gaules et de la France, Xii
.
550-551) . See " See also: Les Origines de l'heresie albigeoise," by Vacandard in the Revue des questions historiques (Paris, 1894, pp
.
67-83)
.
(P
.
|
|
|
[back] HENRY OF HUNTINGDON |
[next] HENRY OF LORRAINE |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.