- Humbert of Mourmoutiers
Humbert of Mourmoutiers (c.1015 –
5 May 1061 ) was a French prelate,Roman Catholic cardinal andBenedictine oblate, donated by his parents to the monastery of Mourmoutiers in Lorraine. He was invited toRome in 1049 by the reformerPope Leo IX , who made himarchbishop of Sicily in 1050 (though the Normans prevented his landing there) and thencardinal-bishop of Silva Candida .Under Leo, he became the principal papal secretary and on a trip through
Apulia in 1053, he received fromJohn, Bishop of Trani the letter fromLeo, Archbishop of Ochrid , criticising Western rites and practice. He translated the Greek letter into Latin and gave it to the pope, who ordered a response drawn up. This exchange led to Humbert being sent at the head of a legatine mission with Frederick of Lorraine, laterPope Stephen IX , and Peter,archbishop of Amalfi , toConstantinople to confront PatriarchMichael Cerularius . He was cordially welcomed by the EmperorConstantine IX , but spurned by the patriarch. Eventually, on16 July 1054 , despite the fact that Leo had died and the excommunication was invalid, he laid theexcommunication on the high altar of the church of theHagia Sophia during the celebration of the liturgy. This caused theGreat Schism and marked the official separation of the Catholic and Orthodox churches.In his later years, he was made librarian of the
Roman Curia by Stephen IX, his former legatine companion, and he penned the reform treatise "Lib tres adversus Simoniacos" ('Three Books Against the Simoniacs') (1057), which helped initiate theGregorian Reform movement. He is also credited as the brains behind the electoral decree of 1059, which stated that popes would henceforth be elected by theCollege of Cardinals .ources
*Norwich, John Julius (1967). "The Normans in the South 1016–1130". London: Longman.
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