The Council of Piacenza is among the most important moments of the Reform that was sweeping through the Western Church at the end of the eleventh century. It is often regarded as a launching pad for the First Crusade, though the matter is obscure and serves only to hide the assembly's true significance as a turning point in the papal schism between Popes Gregory VII/Urban II and the so-called anti-pope Clement III. The canons promulgated at Piacenza became landmarks not only for the eleventh- and twelfth-century Reform, but more broadly for the Church of the High Middle Ages and even beyond.
Robert Somerville situates Piacenza in historical context, discusses the sources, the attendance, and the need for a new edition of the legislation. The official canons are lost, but several dozen twelfth-century manuscripts were consulted for a new edition of these provisions. The account finishes with a commentary on Piacenza's legislation and a discussion of the subsequent legislation of Urban II's synods. Somerville completes the picture of what can be known about the papal synods of one of the most influential Roman pontiffs of the Middle Ages.
Bibliography
Preface
1. Pope Urban II's Council of Piacenza: Introduction
2. Enactment, Circulation, and Survival of the Canons of Piacenza
Appendix I: English Translation of Bernold of Constance's description of the Council of Piacenza
Appendix II: Vagrant Canons
3. The Historiography of the Canons of Piacenza
4. The Transmission of the Canons of Piacenza (with an edition)
5. Commentary on the Canons
6. Legislation from the Councils of Urban II between Piacenza and Rome (April, 1099)
Postscript
Splendid study... Somerville's careful scholarship is even more impressive. He has meticulously edited the canons of Clermont, Melfi, and Piacenza. Unless new manuscripts are discovered, his work will definitive for a very long time. --
The Catholic Historical ReviewRls*