Online Encyclopedia

MISSI DOMINICI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 583 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MISSI DOMINICI  , the name given to the officials commissioned by the Frankish

kings and emperors to supervise the administration of their dominions . Their institution
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dates from Charles Martel and Pippin the Short, who sent out officials to see their orders executed . When Pippin became king in 754 he sent out missi in a desultory fashion; but Charlemagne made them a
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regular
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part of his administration, and a capitulary issued about 8o2 gives a detailed account of their duties . They were to execute justice, to enforce respect for the royal rights, to control the administration of the
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counts, to receive the oath of allegiance, and to supervise the conduct and
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work of the clergy . They were to call together the officials of the
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district and explain to them their duties, and to remind the
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people of their
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civil and religious` obligations . In short they were the
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direct representatives of the king or emperor . The inhabitants of the district they administered had to provide for their subsistence, and at times they led the
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host to
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battle . In addition
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special instructions were given to various missi, and many of these have been preserved . The districts placed under the missi, which it was their duty to visit four times a
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year, were called missatici or legationes . They were not permanent officials, but were generally selected from among persons at the court, and during the reign of Charlemagne personages of high
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standing undertook this work . They were sent out in twos, an ecclesiastic and a layman, and were generally
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complete strangers to the district which they administered . In addition there were extraordinary missi who represented the emperor on special occasions, and at times beyond the limits of his dominions .

Even under the strong

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rule of Charlemagne it was difficult to find men to discharge these duties impartially, and after his
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death in 814 it became almost impossible . Under the emperor Louis I. the nobles interfered in the appointment of the missi, who, selected from the district in which their duties
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lay, were soon found watching their own interests rather than those of the central power . Their duties became merged in the ordinary work of the bishops and counts, and under the emperor Charles the Bald they took control of associations 1 The
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history of the practice of elevating the host seems to have arisen out of the custom of holding up the oblations, as mentioned in the Ordo
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Romanus (see above) . The
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elevation of the host, as at
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present practised, was first enjoined by Pope Honorius III . The use of the handbell at the elevation is still later, and was first made general by Gregory XI . 2 The benediction is omitted in masses for the' dead . The
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reading of the passage from John on days which had not a proper gospel was first enjoined by
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Pius V.for the preservation of the peace . About the end of the 9th century they disappeared from France and Germany, and during the loth century from Italy . It is possible that the itinerant justices of the
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English kings Henry I. and Henry II., the itinerant baillis of Philip Augustus king of France, or the royal enqueteurs of St Louis originated from this source . See G . Waitz, Deutsche Verfassungsgeschichte (
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Kiel, 1844) ; E . Bourgeois, Le Capitulaire de Kiersy-sur-
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Oise (Paris, 1885) ; V .

Krause, Geschichte
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des Institutes der missi dominici in the Mittheilungen des Instituts far osterreichische Geschichtsforschung,
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Band XI . (
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Innsbruck, 188o) . Dobbert, Uber das Wesen and den Geschditskreis der missi dominici (
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Heidelberg, 1861); N . D . Fustel de Coulanges, Histoire des institutions politiques de l'ancienne France (Paris, 1889–189o) ; L . Beauchet, Histoire de l'organization judiciaire en France, epoque franque (Paris, 1865) .

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