PAPAL CHAPLAIN AND SUBDEACON EGIDIUS.
JUDGE DELEGATE AND LEGATE IN HUNGARY
AT THE SAME TIME?
PAPAL CHAPLAIN AND SUBDEACON EGIDIUS.
JUDGE DELEGATE AND LEGATE IN HUNGARY
AT THE SAME TIME?
Author(s): Gábor BarabásSubject(s): History of Church(es), Social history, 13th to 14th Centuries
Published by: Филозофски факултет, Универзитет у Новом Саду
Keywords: Medieval church history; Hungarian-papal relations; papal chaplain and subdeacon; papal delegate; papal representatives; legate; judge delegate; nuncio
Summary/Abstract: The present paper gives a short summary about the course of life of Egidius, a papal chaplain and subdeacon, who spent ca. three years in the Medieval Kingdom of Hungary in the late 1220’s as a judge delegate. The investigation focuses not on the litigations handled by the papal chaplain, but on one particular task of his, the establishment of the bishopric of Syrmia (Srem) and in connection with that on one main question: what kind of authority Egidius received from Pope Gregory IX for the planned measure. While analysing certain historical situations it is of great importance to establish whether a papal envoy was entrusted as a legate with full power or if he had to fulfil his obligation as a nuncio, with limited authorization. In the Hungarian historiography Egidius is handled traditionally as a legate, but his entire mission in Hungary seems to be of a more complex nature, therefore the question itself requires a new analysis.
Journal: Истраживања
- Issue Year: 2017
- Issue No: 28
- Page Range: 69-85
- Page Count: 17
- Language: English