Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 1623
Canon 2 of the Council of Bordeaux (Gaul, AD 662/675) decrees that clerics cannot have lay patrons or belong to someone`s household without their bishop`s permission.
Canon 2
 
Similiter presbyteri, diaconi aut quicumque ex clero seculari mundeburdo, uel familiare est, nisi cum conuenientia episcopi, cum caritatem, dilectionem, absque contumatia episcopi ausus fuerit ordine temerario habere, simili sententia subiaceat.
 
(ed. de Clercq 1963: 312)
Canon 2
 
Likewise, [if] presbyters, deacons, or anyone from the clergy, having their office in disdain, dare to have a lay patron, or belong to someone's household (familiare), unless having permission from the bishop, and with esteem and love, and no defiance towards the bishop, they should receive similar sentence.
 
(trans. J. Szafranowski)

Place of event:

Region
  • Gaul
City
  • Bordeaux
  • Modogarnomum

About the source:

Title: Council of Bordeaux, Concilium Modogarnomense seu Burdegalense anno 662/675
Origin: Bordeaux (Gaul)Modogarnomum (Gaul),
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
The Council of Bordeaux was convoked by King Childeric II, hence, it was held somewhere between 662, when he ascended to the throne of Austrasia, and 675, when he died (the last two years ruling over all of the Frankish lands). The king was represented by dux Lupus. The gathering took place in the castle of Modogarnomum (or Garnomum), probably near present-day Langoiran (some 25 km south-east of Bordeaux) or at Saint-Pierre-de-Granon, near Marmande (some 75 km south-east of Bordeaux), both located on the banks of Garonne river (see Griffe 1964). The synod was attended by three metropolitan bishops (from Bourges, who presided, Bordeaux, and Eauze), thirteen other bishops from these ecclesiastical provinces, and two abbots representing their absent bishops. Apart from Poitiers in the province of Bordeaux, and Dax and Bigorre in the province of Eauze, all the bishops from those two provinces were present. Bourges is represented by its metropolitan, who came with the bishop of Cahors and two representatives from the bishops of Albi and Limoges. From the preface to the acts of the council, we learn that the synod was called, among others, because clerics defied the orders of their bishops.
Edition:
C. de Clercq ed., Concilia Galliae a. 511-a. 695, Corpus Christianorum. Series Latina 148 A, Turnhout 1963.
 
Translation:
J. Gaudemet, B. Basdevant, Les canons des conciles mérovingiens VIe-VIIe siècles, Sources chrétiennes 353, Paris 1989.
Bibliography:
É. Griffe, Où localiser le concile aquitain tenu vers 674 "in castro Garnomo", in: Bulletin de littérature ecclésiastique 65 (1964), pp. 49-52.

Categories:

Described by a title - Presbyter/πρεσβύτερος
    Public law - Ecclesiastical
      Patronage/Investiture
        Conflict
          Relation with - Bishop/Monastic superior
            Relation with - Noble
              Administration of justice - Ecclesiastical
                Functions within the Church - Presbyter in a lay foundation
                  Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: J. Szafranowski, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER1623, http://www.presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=1623