- Burchard of Worms
Burchard of Worms (c.950 –
August 20 1025 ) was theRoman Catholic bishop of Worms in theHoly Roman Empire , and author of a Canon law collection in twenty books, the "Collectarium canonum" or "Decretum".Life
Burchard was educated in
Coblenz . He was ordained as adeacon byArchbishop Willigis of Mainz , and was eventually elevated to primate ofMainz . EmperorOtto III appointed Burchard as the bishop of Worms, an elevation confirmed by Willigis within days. In a biography written shortly after Burchard's death, it was claimed that two priests who had been appointed to the position before Burchard both died within days. The same account also indicates that Worms was in disrepair, and regularly attacked by bothwolves and robbersref|Life.Burchard oversaw the rebuilding of the walls of Worms, the creation of many monasteries and churches, and took part in the destruction of the fortifications of Duke Otto of Carinthia. Duke Otto was believed to be housing criminals, and was an enemy of Burchard's. According to Burchard's biographer "many limbs were hacked off and many murders occurred on both sides"ref label|Life|1|a of the conflict. Burchard adopted a child from the enemy household, who would grow up to become Emperor
Conrad II . After gaining the aid of King Henry II ofBavaria and engaging in negotiations, Duke Otto's castle was dismantled and rebuilt to become a monastery in honour of St. Paul. In 1016 Burchard rebuilt the town's Cathedral of St. Peter. Burchard also spent time educating students in the cathedral's school.Burchard died in 1025, leaving to his sister a
hair shirt and an iron chain as a "memento mori ".Authorship
Burchard is best known as the author of a twenty-book collection of canon law. Begun in 1008, the materials took him four years to compile. Burchard wrote it while living in a small structure on top of a hill in the forest outside Worms, after his defeat of Duke Otto and while raising his adopted child. The collection, which he called the "Collectarium canonum" or "Decretum", became the primary source for canon law. It came to be referred to as the "Brocardus" (Latin for 'Burchard'), from which the legal term '
brocard ' originates.Along with numerous documents from a variety of sources, including the
Old Testament andAugustine of Hippo , Burchard included theCanon Episcopi in this collection, under the belief that it dated from a bishop's "Council of Anquira" in 314, but no other evidence of this council existsref|Lea. Because of this inclusion, Burchard has been described as something of a rationalistref|Russell. As the source of canon law, Burchard's "Decretum" was supplanted around 1150 by the "Decretum Gratiani ", a much larger collection that further attempted to reconcile contradictory canon law.Burchard spent the years 1023 to 1025 promulgating "Leges et Statuta familiae S. Petri Wormatiensis", a collection of religious laws he endorsed as fair and hoped to see adopted with official approval.
Notes and references
# note label|Life|1|a cite web | title=The Life of Burchard of Worms, 1025 | url=http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1025burchard-vita.html | accessdate=October 16 | accessyear=2005
# cite web | title=Book 8, Chapter 9, A History of the Spanish Inquisition, vol. 4 | url=http://libro.uca.edu/lea4/8lea9.htm | accessdate=October 15 | accessyear=2005
# cite book | first=Jeffrey | last=Russell | authorlink=Jeffrey Burton Russell | title=Witchcraft in the Middle Ages | publisher =Cornell University Press | year=1984 | id=0801492890External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03064a.htm Biography in the Catholic Encyclopedia]
* [http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1025burchard-vita.html Translation of The Life of Burchard of Worms]
* [http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~jfec/cal/papacy/document/doc_206a.htm Burchard's sources for the Decretum]
* [http://www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu/30_10_1000-1025-_Burchardus_Wortatiensis_Episcopus.html Opera Omnia by Migne Patrologia Latina with analytical indexes]
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