Jean Cholet

Jean Cholet (died August 2, 1293) was a French cardinal, Doctor utriusque iure (Doctor of Civil and Canon Law) of the University of Paris.[1]

Early life

Cholet was born in the Chateau of Nointel, in the diocese of Beauvais. In contemporary documents (including those of the Chambre des Comptes in Paris) he is called the Joannes de Noentel or Jehan de Noentel.[2] He had two brothers, Eudes, who became Abbot of S. Lucien de Beauvais,[3] and Jean, who became Canon of the Cathedral of S. Gervais de Soissons.[4] He initially followed a military career, like his father, but eventually opted for the religious life. He began his career as a Canon of the Collegiate Church of Notre Dame du Châtel in Beauvais. He was then made a Canon of the Cathedral of S. Pierre in Beauvais, one of twenty-seven Canons, at some moment before 1267. He was named Archdeacon of Caux (Minoris-Caleti) in the diocese of Rouen; documents indicate that he possessed that dignity around the year 1240 (?).[5] Archbishop Eudes Rigaud of Rouen (1248-1275) made Jean Cholet his Grand Vicar.[6] On 31 March 1267, as Canon of Beauvais, he was a scrutator in the election of a new Bishop of Beauvais, and when the Dean of the Chapter was elected, Jean de Nointel made the formal announcement.[7] He was a cleric of the Royal Chapel of King Philip III in 1274.[8]

Cardinal Cholet

In a Consistory that was held at Orvieto on 23 March (or 12 April), 1281, Jean Cholet was one of seven prelates raised to the dignity of cardinal by Pope Martin IV (Simon de Brion). He was assigned the Church of S. Cecilia in Trastevere as his titulus, the same church that his friend Simon de Brion had possessed as a cardinal.[9] As a new Cardinal in the Roman Curia, he had his share of arbitration cases. One in particular was the litgation between Prior Adam of the monastery of Saint-Vincent de Senlis and the Prior, Sub-prior, and other members of the community.[10]

Sicilian Vespers

Charles I of Sicily
Peter III of Aragon

In 1282 the situation of the Papacy with regard to southern Italy changed dramatically. On 7 May, the famous Sicilian Vespers began in Palermo, resulting in the loss of the island, a papal fief, to King Charles I. The King of Aragon, Pedro III, took advantage of the revolt by invading and occupying the island of Sicily. He began to style himself "King", which infuriated both King Charles and Pope Martin IV. King Charles and King Pedro challenged each other to trial by single combat (duel), which greatly annoyed the Pope, who believed that the decision as to legitimacy was his. On 5 June the Pope appointed a Legate in the Kingdom of Sicily, Cardinal Gerardo Bianchi, and ordered him to get King Charles to abandon the plan of trial by combat.[11] Bianchi was unsuccessful.[12] On 18 November 1282, therefore, Pope Martin IV opened proceedings against King Pedro of Aragon, because he had invaded the territory of Sicily and was usurping the crown.[13] The proceedings were concluded by 21 March 1283, when Pope Martin publicly deposed King Pedro and released all of his subjects from allegiance to him.[14] The duel was still in prospect, however, and the Pope also tried to get the King of France and the King of England to intervene.[15] In his letter to King Edward I, Pope Martin recommended to him the services of Cardinal Joannes of S. Cecilia (Jean Cholet), a statement which is often interpreted as the appointment of Cardinal Cholet to an Embassy to England.[16] The details of the letter itself, however, make it obvious that the Pope expects King Edward and Cholet to work through intermediaries (suos nuntios vel litteras) and the King's agents (vicarios et officiales tuos). In 1283 Cholet already had an all-consuming taskorganizing a crusade for the conquest of Aragon. In 1282 and 1283 King Edward, too, was fully engaged in the full-scale conquest and subjugation of Wales; it was not until 11 December 1283 that Llywelyn was killed at the Battle of Orewyn Bridge. Edward did have time, however, to order his agents in Aquitaine not to permit the two combatants to engage in their duel in Bordeaux (which had been the proposed site), or anywhere else in his realm. His decision not to intervene in the dynastic problems of France and Aragon was probably sufficient for the Pope's purposes.[17]

On 4 May 1283, Cardinal Cholet, papal Legate to France, was issued a mandate to correct certain statutes enacted by Archbishop Jean de Montsoreau of Tours (1271-1285) in his provincial council of 1282.[18]

The Aragonese Crusade

Cardinal Cholet was commissioned by his long-time friend, Pope Martin IV, to preach the Aragonese Crusade in 1283. The date on his commission as Legate in France is 9 April 1283.[19] On 27 August 1283, he was granted the faculty of transferring the "vacant" throne of Aragon and the County of Barcelona to one of the sons of King Philip of France.[20] On 3 September 1283, Pope Martin ordered all of the ecclesiastical persons in France to give 10% of their income for three years to the King of France for the Crusade against Pedro of Aragon. He ordered Cardinal Cholet to see to it that these contributions were paid, even by the monastic orders, Templars and Hospitallers.[21] On 10 January 1284, the Pope prodded him to get on with the business:[22] Prince Charles was finally chosen, after long negotiations with Cardinal Cholet, and Pope Martin IV confirmed his appointment as King of Aragon and Count of Barcelona on 5 May 1284.[23] On 4 June 1284, Cardinal Bernard de Languissel, Bishop of Porto, was ordered to preach the crusade against former King Pedro of Aragon throughout his legation in northern Italy, and Cardinal Gerardo Bianchi, Bishop of Sabina, to do the same in south Italy. The Pope even enlisted the Dominicans and Franciscans in Sardinia and Corsica to preach the crusade.[24]

Cardinal Jean Cholet was also given legatine authority over the orders of friars, both generally at his appointment as Legate in the Kingdom of France,[25] and as part of his commission to preach the plenary indulgence to all those who fought alongside Charles of Valois for the Crown of Aragon against Peter III.

By 5 May 1284, Cardinal Cholet had accumulated the following 'provinces' in his Legatine commission: France, Navarre, Aragon, Valencia, the Kingdom of Majorca, Lyon, Besançon, Vienne, Tarentaise, Ebrudun, Liège, Metz, Verdun, and Tulle.[26] In mid-August, 1284, the Cardinal presided over a Council meeting in Paris; a maxima multitude praelatorum attended.[27] In 1284, when the aldermen of Lille attacked a troupe of Dominicans trying to preach the Aragonese Crusade in their town, Cholet fined them 4,000 livres de Paris and used the money to finance the crusade. In 1285, Cholet himself accompanied Charles into Aragon. The chronicle of S. Paul de Narbonne informs us that on 15 March 1285, the Cardinal accompanied King Philip the Hardi and his two sons, Philip and Charles, in their entry into Narbonne. From there they proceeded into Roussilon and entered Catalonia.[28] On 28 April 1285 at Girona,[29] Cholet placed his galero on Charles' head and pronounced him king. This act earned Charles the satirical nickname roi du chapeau or Cárles, rey del Xapeu ('king of the hat'), implying that he was no properly crowned king, merely a creature of the Papacy.[30] It was at that moment that Cardinal Cholet made the famous remark,[31]

If any man die there, which may God forbid, then will he in shining whiteness ascend into the presence of God, for God will not in any wise permit that his soul be sent to purgatory.

The Pope's grant of a plenary indulgence was being applied.

Charles' elevation was approved by the Pope on 5 May 1284.[32] But, in an ironic twist, Charles' father, Philip III, died of dysentery in Perpignan, the capital of his ally James II of Majorca, on 5 October 1285. His skin was removed and interred in the Cathedral of Narbonne. His body was carried back to Paris by the many members of the French Court who had accompanied him in the Crusade against Aragon. When the cortege reached Paris, the Dominicans, who had been highly favored by the late King, wished to have a share of the relics. They employed the Confessor of the new king, Philip IV, to persuade the king to give them Philip III's heartwhich he most imprudently agreed to do. There was an immediate protest at this violation of custom and ceremonial. The Benedictine monks of Saint Denis ought to have received all the remains. Both heart and bones were separately buried in the Basilica. Cardinal Cholet and the principal lords of the French Court supported the monks of S. Denis, and some members of the University of Paris even put in their opinion, that the King should not have given the heart, the monks of S. Denis should not have surrendered it, and the Dominican friars should not have kept it, without a specific dispensation from the Pope. No one was pleased, but the Dominicans had and kept possession.[33] Elsewhere, the late King's uncle, Charles of Anjou, King of Sicily, also died in 1285, on 7 January, and King Pedro III of Aragon died on 11 November 1285, one month after his great antagonist, Philip III.

On 6 January 1286, the Cardinal Legate was present at the Coronation of Philip IV.[34] In accordance with a bull of Honorius IV, he settled the differences between the scholars of the University and the Chancellor of Paris.[35] In 1286 he gave the Royal Abbey of S. Lucien de Beauvais funds to purchase the land and seigneurie of Foulangues. At some point he also funded the acquisition of the fief of Maulers.[36]

But Cardinal Cholet was still preaching the pope's crusades against his secular opponents in 1286. Pedro III may have died, but Sicily was still not back in papal hands. A legitimate king was needed to swear fealty to the Papacy. On 30 April 1286, Pope Honorius IV granted an indulgence to all Italian clergy who paid in one year the tithe which had been levied for three years. In May he ordered Cholet to use the indulgence sparingly.

Conclave: absent

Cardinal Cholet did not attend the Conclave of 1287-1288, being still Legate in France. The Conclave began in April, in the papal palace at Santa Sabina on the Aventine Hill, where Pope Honorius IV (Giacomo Savelli) had died. But Rome was infested with pestilence that year, and six of the cardinals died. Nearly all of them scattered to their own private residences, trying to recover or trying to avoid being afflicted. Only one cardinal stayed on in the papal palace, and when winter caused the pestilence to abate, the surviving cardinals returned Latino Malabranca, Bentivenga de Bentivengis, Girolamo Masci, Bernard de Languissel, Matteo Rosso Orsini, Giacomo Colonna, and Benedetto Caetani. On 22 February 1288, they happily elected the cardinal who had stayed at his station, Girolamo Masci d' Ascoli, O.Min., Suburbicarian Bishop of Palestrina, who took the name Nichols IV.[37] He wrote on 5 March to Cardinal John of S. Cecilia, directing him to assist Master Galienus de Pisis in finding a quiet place of retirement at Villa Sancti Marcelli, near Paris.[38]

In the Curia. Conclave

fresco in S. Cecilia, by Pietro Cavallini, commissioned by Cardinal Cholet
fresco in S. Cecilia, Cavallini

Cardinal Cholet's long Legateship in France came to an end in the summer of 1290. On 16 September 1290, he was back in Italy, at Orvieto, in the Roman Curia, sitting on a committee of episcopal examiners.[39] He continued working at the Roman Curia during 1291 and 1292. On 29 February 1292, he was present at a Consistory that took place in Rome at Santa Maria Maggiore to sign a bull granting privileges to the Hospital of Macadura in the diocese of Piacenza.[40] On 23 March, he is mentioned as a member of a committee of cardinals who investigated the election of Bishop Gerard of Soissons.[41] It was perhaps around this time that Cardinal Cholet commissioned a series of frescoes for his titular church of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere from Pietro Cavallini (1259 – c. 1330), who was also working on the mosaics at S. Maria Transtiberim. The "Last Judgment" is regarded by some as his masterpiece.[42]

Pope Nicholas IV died in Rome at his residence at Santa Maria Maggiore on Holy Saturday, April 4, 1292.[43] At the time of his death, there were twelve living cardinals, according to the Subdeacon of the Holy Roman Church, Giacopo Caetani Stefaneschi, who was present at the events.[44] One of them was Cardinal Jean Cholet. The Conclave, however, lasted for two years and three months, during which Cardinal Cholet died. Only eleven cardinals signed the electoral decree of Pope Celestine V on Monday, 5 July 1294.[45]    

   

Testament, Death, Burial

In 1292, Cholet drew up his Last Will and Testament.[46] His first legacy was of 2000 livres Tournois to the Benedictine monstery of S. Lucien de Beauvais, which he had chosen as his burial place. He left 200 livres to the monastery of S. Maria de Britolio (Bretteuil) near Beauvais for the purchase of properties, the income of which was to be used for Masses for the repose of his soul; similarly to the monastery of S. Geremario Flavigniacensis (S. Germer-de-Fly) in the diocese of Autun,[47] and lesser amounts to many other religious houses for remembrances and distributions to the poor. Various legacies within the diocese of Rouen were calculated as having amounted to 33,041 livres in silver.[48] He left 6,000 livres Tournois to the "matter of Aragon", that is, to the war chest of Charles de Valois, the brother of Philip IV, who had been crowned with the galero, on the condition that Charles make a further expedition into Aragon. Otherwise the money was to be distributed to a long list of monasteries and religious houses, and to the poor. His books, individually named, were bequeathed to various clerics.

Cardinal Jean Cholet died on 2 August 1293, according to an obituary of S. Lucien de Beauvais.[49] He died on 3 August 1293,[50] according to the Martyrology of the Church of Beauvais. But, according to the Martyrology of the Church of S. Gervais at Soissons, he died in September, 1292, on the Saturday after the Feast of S. Michael (which is celebrated on September 29). He also died on 9 May, at the Saint Chapelle in Paris, though at S. Genevieve in Paris he died on 13 August. At Amiens, the date of his decease was 11 August. He was buried in the Church of S. Lucien in Beauvais, in the sanctuary on the gospel-side. His funeral inscription is given by Duchesne.[51]

References

  1. César du Boulay, Historia Universitatis Parisiensis III (Paris 1666), p. 696.
  2. Duchesne, Cardinaux françois Tome II, Preuves, p. 223.
  3. He is granted the right to use a mitre, ring, and pastoral staff by Pope Martin IV, on 13 April 1283: Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 135 no. 316. Pope Martin calls him germanus of Cardinal Jean of S. Cecilia.
  4. Duchesne, I, p. 293.
  5. Jean François Pommeraye, Histoire de l'église cathédrale de Rouen, métropolitaine et primatiale de Normandie (Rouen: par les imprimeurs ordinaires de l'archevéché, 1686), p. 398. The date of the documents is suspect. Simon de Brion had also been an archdeacon of Rouen. Cholet is mentioned as a former Archdeacon of Rouen in the list of benefactors of the monastery of Corneville: Arthurus du Monstier, Neustria pia, seu de omnibus et singulis abbatiis et prioratibus totius Normanie (Rouen 1663), p. 877.
  6. Jean François Pommeraye, Histoire de l' Eglise de Rouen, metropole et primatiale de Normande (Rouen 1686), pp. 208-209.
  7. Duchesne, Cardinaux françois, I, p. 292; and II, Preuves, p. 222 (Martyrology of the Cathedral of S. Pierre de Beauvais). Charles Delettre, Doyen du Chapitre, Histoire du diocèse de Beauvais II (Beauvais 1823), pp. 328-330. Eugène Müller, "Le cardinal Jean Cholet," Mémoires de la Société académique d’archéologie, sciences et arts du département de l’Oise, XI. 3 (Beauvais: 1882), p. 792. He was never Bishop-elect or Bishop of Beauvais, as some sources assertbut without proof.
  8. Louis Archon, Histoire De La Chapelle Des Rois De France Tome second (Paris 1711), p. 182.
  9. Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi Tomus I, editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p. 10. August Potthast, Regesta Pontificum Romanorum II (Berlin 1875), p. 1758.
  10. Müller, pp. 796-797. It may be noted that Martin IV and his Curia never actually visited Rome. The city was in the hands of the Ghibbelines and did not welcome the presence of a pope, even when he begged.
  11. Potthast, no. 21912. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 101-105, nos. 270-270jj; p. 185 no. 449 (28 March 1283).
  12. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 126, no. 302: letter of Martin IV to Charles I (6 February 1283).
  13. Potthast, no. 21947. Cf. no. 21962 (without date) in which Cardinal Jean Cholet is notified of the usurpation of Pedro, once king of Aragon.
  14. Potthast, no. 21998.
  15. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 188-189, no. 452 (5 April 1283). "et nichilominus dilectum filium nostrum Johannem, tituli Sancte Cecilie presbyterum cardinalem, virum utique grandi scientia preditum, prudentia et morum honestate decorum, quem tsue probitatis obtentu grandi affection prosequimur, cujus consiliis te in his acquiescere rogamus et petimus, ad id inter cetera destinamus, ut tam te quam predictos vicarios et officiales tuos per se, si facultas affuerit, suos nuntios vel litteras efficaciter moneat et inducat ad parendum premissis apostolicis monitionibus, inhibitionibus et mandatis...."
  16. See Müller, pp.798-800.
  17. See Martin IV's letter to Edward I, Potthast, no. 2205 (5 April 1283); Thomas Rymer, Foedera, Conventiones, Literae et cujusque generis Acta Publica, II (London: Churchill 1705), pp. 242-244; and Edward's letter to King Charles of Sicily, Rymer, pp. 238-240.
  18. Potthast, no. 22017.
  19. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 185-188, no. 451-451s. Each power and privilege is stated in a separate document.
  20. Potthast, no. 22061. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 190, no. 455.
  21. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), pp. 188-190, nos. 457-458. This grant was extended for an additional four years on 13 May 1284: Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 300-301, no. 584-586.
  22. Potthast, no. 22092.
  23. Potthast, no. 22130-22132.
  24. Potthast, no. 22149-22150, 22153.
  25. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), p. 185-188, no. 451d, 451h, 451p, 451q.
  26. Potthast, no. 12847. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), pp. 287-288, nos. 576.
  27. J.-D. Mansi, Sacrorum Conciliorum nova et amplissima Collectio Tomus 24 (Venice 1780), p. 519.
  28. Duchesne, I, p. 292.
  29. Müller, pp. 805-807.
  30. Antonio de Bofarull (editor), Cronica catalana de Ramon Muntaner (Barcelona: Imprenta de Jaime Jepús, 1860), pp. 195-196. Andres Avelino Pi y Arimon, Barcelona; antiqua y moderne: ó descripción é historia de esta ciudad desde su fundación hasta nuestros dias Volume 2 (Barcelona: Imprenta y Librería Politécnica de T. Gorchs, 1854), p. 517. Compare the version of the story given by Bernard D'Esclot in his Cronica del Rey En Pere, chapter 136, in J.-A.-C. Buchon (editor), Chroniques étrangères relatives aux expeditions françaises pendant le XIIIe siècle (Paris 1875), pp. 680-682. The remark was apparently a bon mot of Prince Philippe le Bel.
  31. "E yo, de part de Deu e del senyor apostoli, dich a tots cells qui yran ne aportaran armes contra Pere d'Arago quels seran tots sos peccats perdonnats; e si negu n'l mor, co que Deus no vulla! que s'en purara tot dellivre e florit denant Deu; que sol ne leix la sua anima ne venra a porgatori. E l'altra porfir sus axi, de part de la sgleya de Roma, ajuda temporal en aquest fet, co es assaber....
  32. Les Registres de Martin IV (Paris 1901), pp. 295-297, no. 581-582.
  33. Étienne Oroux, Histoire ecclesiastique de la Cour de France Tome premier (Paris 1776), pp. 365-366.
  34. Müller, pp. 808-809, quoting the chronicle of Saint-Catherine du Mont of Rouen. E. Chéruel, Normanniae nova chronica (Cadomi 1850), p. 29: cui [Philippo III] successit ejusdem filius Philippus, qui coronatus est eodem anno, in festo Epiphaniae, praesente domino Johanne tholet, sedis apostolicae cardinali legato.
  35. H. Denifle, Chartularium Universitatis Parisiensis I (Paris 1889), no. 528, pp. 639-642 (February 1, 1286); M. Prou, Registres d' Honorius IV (Paris 1888), no. 267.
  36. L.-E. Deladreue et Mathon, Histoire de l'Abbaye royale de S. Lucien, in Mémoires de la Société académique d’archéologie, sciences et arts du département de l’Oise, VIII. 3 (Beauvais: 1873), p. 698 and 701.
  37. Sede Vacante and Conclave of 1287--1288 (Dr. J.P. Adams).
  38. Ernest Langlois, Les Registres de Nicolas IV I (Paris 1905), p. 3-4 no. 6
  39. Ernest Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV Tome premier (Paris 1905), p. 521, no. 3273. The Pope and Curia had settled in Orvieto at the beginning of June, 1290, and remained there until February, 1292.
  40. Ernest Langlois, Les Registres de Nicolas IV III fasc. 7 (Paris 1892), p. 917 no. 6862. A total of eleven cardinals signed the bull, along with Pope Nicholas IV.
  41. Ernest Langlois, Les Registres de Nicolas IV III (Paris 1892), p. 928, no. 6941.
  42. John T. Paoletti and Gary M. Radke, Art in Renaissance Italy third edition (London: Laurence King Publishing, 2005), pp. 62-63. Paul Hetherington, "Pietro Cavallini: Artistic Style and Patronage in Late Medieval Rome," Burlington Magazine 114 (1972), 4-10. Alessandro Tomei, Pietro Cavallini. Pictor de Roma (Milano: Silvana, 2000), Chapter 3, pp. 52 ff. F. Hermanin, "Gli affreschi di Pietro Cavallini a Santa Cecilia in Trastevere," Le Gallerie Nazionali Italiane 5 (1902), 61-115.
  43. Augustinus Theiner (editor), Caesaris S.R.E. Cardinalis Baronii Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus 23 (Bar-le-Duc 1871) under the year 1292, § 17, p. 123.
  44. Ludovico Antonio Muratori, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores Tomus Tertius (Milan 1723), p. 615.
  45. Augustinus Theiner (editor), Caesaris S.R.E. Cardinalis Baronii Annales Ecclesiastici Tomus 23 (Bar-le-Duc 1871) under the year 1294, § 6, p. 131.
  46. Duchesne, Cardinaux françois Tome II, Preuves, pp. 222-225. He had earlier, on 6 February 1290, been granted the privilege of making a Will by Pope Nicholas IV; see Ernest Langlois (editor), Les registres de Nicolas IV Tome premier (Paris 1905), p. 341, no. 1887. Complications in carrying out its terms are discussed by Pope Boniface VIII in a letter of 12 July 1298: Registres de Boniface VIII Vol. 2, pp. 156-158 no. 2625.
  47. S. Germer-de-Fly. A. Besnard, L'Eglise de Saint-Germer-de-Fly et sa Collégiale (Paris, 1913).
  48. Pommeraye, Histoire de l'Eglise de Rouen, p. 209.
  49. L.-E. Deladreue et Mathon, Histoire de l'Abbaye royale de S. Lucien, in Mémoires de la Société académique d’archéologie, sciences et arts du département de l’Oise, VIII. 3 (Beauvais: 1873), p. 671.
  50. Conradus Eubel, Hierarchia catholica medii aevi, I editio altera (Monasterii 1913), p.40, correcting his date of 1292 given at p. 8.
  51. Duchesne, Cardinaux françois Tome II, Preuves, p. 225.

Sources

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