Gregory of St. Grisogono

Gregory of St. Grisogono

Gregory of St. Grisogono (Gregory, cardinal presbyter of San Crisogono, Gregorius de sancto Grisogono, Gregorio di San Crisogono) (died 1114) was a cardinal and author on canon law. He is known for his work Polycarpus, i.e.. "Canonum collectio "Polycarpus".

According to R. A. Fletcher [http://libro.uca.edu/sjc/sjc5.htm]

Up-to-date the Polycarpus certainly was. Gregory drew heavily upon the compilation of Anselm of Lucca and the "Collection in 74 Titles", the two most authoritative collections of the recent past, and he included pronouncements of Gregory VII, Urban II and Paschal II, and conciliar material from as late as Piacenza (1095). The scope of his book was comprehensive and its orderly arrangement made for ease of reference. While seven of the eight books into which the work was divided were generally conservative in tone — they owed much to the "Decretum" of Burchard of Worms — the first book, which was devoted to the primacy and special rights of the see of Rome, was strongly papalist.

The work was dedicated to Diego Gelmírez, whom Gregory had met as archdeacon of Lucca.

References

*cite book |last=Horst |first=Uwe |year=1980 |title=Die Kanonessammlung Polycarpus des Gregor von S. Grisogono |isbn=978-3-921575-98-7 |publisher=Monumenta Germaniae Historica |location=München |oclc=185920948 7364575 7671830 |language=German

External links

* [http://faculty.cua.edu/pennington/Canon%20Law/polycarpus/polycarpus.htm Latin text online]


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