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'''''Laudabiliter''''' was a [[papal bull]] purported to have been issued by [[Pope Adrian IV]], the only Englishman who ever sat in the chair of St. Peter, claiming to give the [[Angevin]] [[Henry II of England|King Henry II]] of [[England]] the right to assume control over [[Ireland]]. It was from the [[Chair of Saint Peter|Chair of St. Peter]], then, that the sovereigns of England from Henry II to Henry VIII derived the title ''Lord of Ireland'', the only title they used with reference to Ireland, and later Henry VIII, the first English king that styled himself ''King of Ireland''. Whether this donation is genuine or not, Edmund Curtis says, is one of "''the great questions of history''."
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==Papal bull==
'''''Laudabiliter''''' was a [[papal bull]] issued in 1155 by the English [[Pope Adrian IV]] purporting to give the [[Angevin]] [[Henry II of England|King Henry II]] of [[England]] lordship over [[Ireland]].
[[File:papal.bull.JPG|thumb|right|200px|A [[Papal bull]] of [[Pope Urban VIII]], 1637, sealed with a leaden [[bulla (seal)|bulla]].]]
A [[Papal bull|bull]] is a [[Pope|Papal]] [[Letter (message)|letter]] takes its name from the [[bubble]]-shaped, [[Lead|leaden]] seal which it bears. The letters written in the [[12th century|twelfth century]] relating to [[Ireland]] were probably never sealed with any seal according to [[Laurence Ginnell]], and are, therefore, not correctly called bulls. However, that the name ''bull'' has become so well known in connection with them, even if genuine, that the use of it cannot be misunderstood. In the twelfth century, he says, they were called ''privilegia'' or [[privileges]].<ref name="Ginnell 1899 1">{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=1}}</ref>


The original [[Bulla (seal)|''bulla'']] was a lump of clay molded around a cord and stamped with a seal. When dry, the container cannot be violated without visible damage to the bulla, thereby ensuring the contents remain [[tamper-proof]] until they reach their destination. Stephen J. McCormick, in his preface to ''The Pope and Ireland'', notes that it is was well known that the [[forgery]] of both Papal and other documents was fairly common in the [[twelfth century]]. Citing [[Bernard Jungmann|Professor Jungmann]], who in the appendix to his ''Dissertationes Historiœ Ecclesiasticœ'', in the fifth volume says, "it is well known from history that everywhere towards the close of the [[twelfth century]] there were forged or corrupted Papal Letters or [[Diplomas]]. That such was the case ''frequently in England'' is inferred from the Letters of John Sarisbiensis and of others." <ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=Preface}}</ref><!-- are the italics in the original? -->
==Terms==


==The Bull Laudabiliter==
The bull purported to grant Henry, who requested it from English Pope Adrian, the right to invade Ireland in order to "reform" [[Celtic Church|Church]] practices in Ireland, which up until that point had not been fully aligned with Rome in some matters, for example with regard to liturgy and clergy.


[[File:Pope Hadrian IV.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Pope Adrian IV]](c. 1100&ndash;[[1 September]], 1159)]]
The [[incipit]] of the bull, ''Laudabiliter'', means literally "laudably', "in a praiseworthy manner"; it is the opening word of the Latin text, referring to Henry's "laudable" intention "to extend the borders of the Church, to teach the truths of the Christian faith to a rude and unlettered people, and to root out the weeds of vice from the field of the Lord; ..."


In 1155, according to Edmund Curtis it is said, Pope Adrian IV granted, only three years after the [[Synod of Kells]], the so-called bull 'Laudabiliter', which commissioned King Henry II of England to invade Ireland to reform its Church and people.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=39-40|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>
The actual wording which was asserted as giving authority to Henry to take possession of Ireland is as follows:
{{cquote|You have signified to us, our well-beloved son in Christ, that you propose to enter the island of Ireland in order to subdue the people and make them obedient to laws, and to root out from among them the weeds of sin; and that you are willing to yield and pay yearly from every house the pension of one penny to St Peter, and to keep and preserve the rights of the churches in that land whole and inviolate.


The proximity of Ireland to England according to [[John Lingard|Dr. John Lingard]], and the "''inferiority of the natives in the art of war''," had suggested to both [[William the conqueror]], and [[Henry I of England|Henry I]] the idea of conquest. However to justify the invasion of a "''free and unoffending''" people by Henry II Dr. Lingard says, Henry had "discovered" that the civilization of the people and reform of their clergy were needed and the benefits of this the Irish would cheerfully purchase with the loss of their independence. As every Christian island was claimed as the property of the holy see, Henry did not wish to make the attempt without the advice and consent of the Pope. Therefore a few months after his coronation Dr. Lingard writes, [[John of Salisbury]], a learned monk, was dispatched to solicit the support of Pope Adrian IV. John was to assure his holiness that Henry's principal object was to provide instruction to an ignorant people, to remove vice from the Lord's vineyard, and to extend to Ireland the payment of [[Peter's Pence]].The pontiff according to Dr. Lingard "must have smiled at the hypocrisy of this address" but expressed his satisfaction and agreed to the kings request, reminding him to always keep in mind the conditions on which that assent had been granted.<ref>{{cite book|last=Lingard|first=Rev. John|title=A History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans to the Accession of Henry VIII|publisher=J.Mawman|location=London|date=1819|volume=Vol II|pages=101-102}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell & Sons LTD|location=London|date=1922|pages=150-151}}</ref>
We, therefore, regarding your pious and laudable design with due favour, and graciously assenting to your petition, do hereby declare our will and pleasure, that, for the purpose of enlarging the borders of the Church, setting bounds to the progress of wickedness, reforming evil manners, planting virtue, and increasing the Christian religion, you do enter and take possession of that island, and execute therein whatsoever shall be for God's honour and the welfare of the same.


It was at a royal council at [[Winchester]] that Curtis said talk of carrying out this invasion had been had, but that Henry's mother, the [[Empress Matilda]], had protested against it. In Ireland however, nothing seems to have been known of it, and no provision had been made against English aggression.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=38-39|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref> J. Duncan Mackie, in his ''Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay 1907'' gives the date as September 29, [[1155]] for this meenting for conquering Ireland and giving it to Henry's brother William. <ref>{{cite book|last=Mackie|first=J. Duncan|title=Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay|publisher=B. H. Blackwell|location=Oxford|date=1907|pages=113}}</ref>
And, further, we do also strictly charge and require that the people of that land shall accept you with all honour, and dutifully obey you, as their liege lord, saving only the rights of the churches, which we will have inviolably preserved; ...}}


[[Laurence Ginnell]] citing the Very Rev. Dr. Malone as saying of the 'Laudabiliter': "''there does not appear to be in the domain of history a better authenticated fact than the privilege of Adrian IV to Henry II''."<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=6}}</ref> As with many Church documents, the original document is no longer in existence.<ref name="Ginnell 1899 1"/><ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>
==Norman invasion 1167-72==


[[Cardinal Gasquet]] writes that historians of this time were ignorant of the existence of bull 'Laudabiliter', that during the residence of the [[pontifical Court]] at [[Avignon]] two ''Lives of Pope Adrian IV'' were written. One was composed in [[1331]], and the second in [[1356]], and in neither is there any mention of this important act of the Pope, although the authors find a place for many less important documents.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=163-164}}</ref>
A [[Norman invasion of Ireland]] took place in 1167, with the main body of nobles arriving in 1169. The incursion was in theory in aid of, and at the personal request of, an Irish provincial king, [[Diarmait Mac Murchada]], [[King of Leinster]], and led by [[Richard de Clare, 2nd Earl of Pembroke]] (''Strongbow''), a [[Cambro-Norman]] [[knight]] assisted by [[Wales|Welsh]] and [[Flanders|Flemish]] forces. The invaders took control of large areas, though by no means all of, the country.


==Evidence for the bull==
Henry II followed in 1171, fearing that the Cambro-Norman warlords would seize control in his absence and, using the papal bull, claimed sovereignty over the whole island. He arrived with a large army, took [[Dublin]] by storm, and then gave hospitality to, and accepted fealty from, the Gaelic kings in the feudal manner. The [[Treaty of Windsor (1175)|Treaty of Windsor]] followed in 1175, with the [[High King of Ireland|Irish High King]], [[Ruaidrí Ua Conchobair]], keeping lands outside of [[Leinster]], which had passed through Strongbow to Henry on the unexpected death of both Diarmait and Strongbow, [[Waterford]], the [[beachhead]] for the invasion, and [[Meath (province)|Meath]], the mediaeval [[Seat (legal entity)|seat]] of Ireland, and lordship over all Gaelic Irish. Leinster and Meath then comprised two of Ireland's five provinces.


[[Image:GeraldofWales.jpg|right|150px|thumb|[[Giraldus Cambrensis]]]]
Ruaidrí lost authority in his three provinces by 1186, and the old title of High King of Ireland became ineffective. Claiming to want to avoid anarchy, Henry purported to award all of Ireland to his younger son [[John of England|John]] with the title ''Dominus Hiberniae'' (''[[Lord of Ireland]]'') in 1185. When John unexpectedly succeeded his brother as [[King of England]], the [[Lordship of Ireland]] fell directly under the English Crown, the titles of ''Lord of Ireland'' and ''King of England'' falling into [[personal union]].


That an actual bull was sent according to Ernest F. Henderson is doubted by many,<ref name=avalon>[http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/bullad.asp Avalon Project, Yale]</ref> and its authenticity has been questioned without success according to P. S. O'Hegarty who suggests that the question now is purely an academic one.<ref>{{cite book|last=O’Hegarty|first=P. S. |title=The Indestructible Nation|publisher=Maunsel & Company, Ltd|location=Dublin & London |date=1918|volume=1|pages=3|chapter=1}}</ref> According to Edmund Curtis great controversy has raged, with some writers saying its a pure forgery, others that it as a touched-up version of a genuine document, while others believing in its authenticity. <ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>
Henry's invasion was met with jubilation in [[Holy See|Rome]], and [[Pope Alexander III]] declared that when he heard that Henry, "instigated by divine inspiration," had successfully brought the Irish people within the control of the Roman Church, he had "returned thanks to [God] who had conferred so great a victory." Alexander's legate, Vivianus, at the synod of Dublin in 1172 "made a public declaration of the right of the king of England to Ireland" and threatened excommunication against all "who presumed to forfeit their allegiance."


The following summary of the evidence cited by McCormick in favour of the authenticity of Pope Adrian's letter, appeared he says in the ''Irishman'' newspaper and was compiled by J. C. O Callaghan, who was editor of the ''Macariae Excidium'', and author of a number of works on Irish history. This list also appears in Alfread H. Tarleton's ''Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope'', with the additional evidence of the Norman Chronicles that testify to the fact he suggests that the bull and the ring were deposited at Winchester.
==Papal letter of 1311 and the Bruce kingship 1315-1318==
However within a century-and-a-half, Norman misrule in Ireland became so apparent that ''Laudabiliter'' was to be invoked again, this time in aid of the rights of the Gaelic Irish clans. In 1315-18, in alliance with the Scottish (and the Welsh), who were also fighting the Normans, they proclaimed [[Edward Bruce]] as King of Ireland. [[Pope John XXII]] writing to [[Edward II of England]] in 1311 had reminded him of the responsibility that ''Laudabiliter'' put upon England to execute government in Ireland for the welfare of the Irish. He warned Edward II that:


Firstly the testimony of [[John of Salisbury]], Secretary to the [[Archbishop of Canterbury]], who relates his having been the envoy from Henry to Adrian, in 1155, to ask for a grant of Ireland.
{{cquote|... the kings of England ... have in direct violation of [''Laudabiliter''], for a long period past kept down that people [of Ireland] in a state of intolerable bondage, accompanied with unheard-of hardships and grievances. Nor was there found during all that time, any person to redress the grievances they endured or be moved with a pitiful compassion for their distress; although recourse was had to you ... and the loud cry of the oppressed fell, at times at least, upon your own ear. In consequence whereof, unable to support such a state of things any longer, they have been compelled to withdraw themselves from your jurisdiction and to invite another to come and be ruler over them ...}}
Secondly, the grant or Bull of Adrian, ''in extenso'', in the works of [[Giraldus Cambrensis]], and his contemporary [[Radulfus de Diceto]], Dean of London, and those of Roger de Wendover and [[Mathew Paris]].<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=29}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Tarleton's |first=Alfread H. |title=Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope|publisher=Arthur L. Humphreys|location=London|date=1896|pages=168-169}}</ref>
Thirdly, the Bulls of Adrian s successor, [[Pope Alexander III]].
Fourthly, the recorded public reading of the Bulls of Adrian and Alexander, at a meeting of Bishops in [[Waterford]] in 1175.
Fifthly, after the liberation of [[Scotland]] from [[England]] at [[Bannockburn]], the Bull of Adrian was ''pre fixed'' to the remonstrance, which the Irish presented to [[Pope John XXII]]. against the English and a copy was sent back by the Pope to [[Edward II]]. of England.
Sixthly, from [[Caesar Baronius]], in his work, the ''Annales Ecclesiastici'', under Adrian IV. contains a copy of this grant of Ireland in full, or, ''excodice Vaticano, diploma datum ad Henricum, Anglorum, Regem''. Finally, a copy of the Bull was contained in the ''Bidlarium Romanum'', as printed in [[Rome]] in 1739.<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=29}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Tarleton's |first=Alfread H. |title=Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope|publisher=Arthur L. Humphreys|location=London|date=1896|pages=168-169}}</ref>


The Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke O.P., in his ''English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude'', puts forward a number of arguments against both the Bull of Adrian and the letters of his successor, Pope Alexander III. The Rev Burke questions the date on the 'Laudabiliter', in addition to the terms contained in it and how it was obtained, questioning also the date in which it was first produced by Henry and why. <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27-32|chapter=1}}</ref> While Laurence Ginnell, Stephen J. McCormick, Cardinal Gasquet examine the character of Giraldus Cambrenis and the account of John of Salisbury, Oliver J Thatcher focuses on the bull itself and the wording used in ''Studies concerning Adrian IV''.<ref>''The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated'', Laurence Ginnell, Fallon & Co, Dublin (1899), ''The Pope and Ireland'', Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889), ''Monastic Life in the Middle Ages'', Cardinal Gasquet, G. Bell and Sons, LTD, London (1922).</ref> McCormick's ''The Pope and Ireland'' is very much a challange to [[James G. Maguire|James G. Maguire's]] ''Ireland and the Pope: A Breif History of Papal Intrigue Against Irish Liberty from Adrian IV. to Leo XIII.''<ref>''The Pope and Ireland'', Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889)</ref> Likewise ''Cambrensis Eversus'' by Dr. John Lynch is in responce to the works of Giraldus Cambrensis. <ref>{{cite book|last=Lynch|first=John|title=Cambrensis Eversus: The History of Ireland Vindicated|editor=Matthew Kelly|publisher=The Celtic Society|location=Dublin|date=1848|pages=iii}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Owen|first=Henry|title=Gerald the Welshman|publisher=Whiting & Co|location=London|date=1889|pages=39}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Tarleton's |first=Alfread H. |title=Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope|publisher=Arthur L. Humphreys|location=London|date=1896|pages=168-169}}</ref>
==The Crown of Ireland Act 1542==


It was only in the year [[1872]] that the first indictment of the evidence upon which the Bull had been accepted as genuine, was drawn up by [[Cardinal Moran|Dr. Moran]], and published in the pages of the ''Irish Ecclesiastical Record''. To the arguments against the grant in that article, the editor of the ''Analecta Juris Pontificii'' added fresh and according to [[Cardinal Gasquet]] "''almost conclusive evidence of the forgery''."<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=171}}</ref>
The Bruce invasion failed, and Ireland remained in English control, in part using the authority claimed to derive from ''Laudabiliter'', until 1542, when [[Henry VIII of England|Henry VIII]]'s split from the Catholic Church (1529–1535) had, incidentally, put England's authority in Ireland, insofar as it was based on ''Laudabiliter'', in legal jeopardy. To rectify this King Henry's English Parliament, using authority delegated to it in 1494 by the Irish Parliament ([[Poyning's Law]]), passed the [[Crown of Ireland Act 1542|Crown of Ireland Act]], which declared that the proper title of ''Lord of Ireland'' should really be that of ''[[King of Ireland]]'', owing to the authority it commanded in Ireland being as great as that of a [[king]]:


==Divided significance==
{{cquote|Forasmuch as the ... Kings of England, have bin Lords of this land of Ireland, having all manner kingly jurisdiction, power, pre-eminences, and authoritie royall, belonging or appertayning to the royall estate and majestie of a King, by the name of ''Lords of Ireland'', where the King's majestie and his most noble progenitors justly and rightfully were, and of right ought to be, ''Kings of Ireland'' according to their said true and just title, stile, and name therein, ...}}
[[Image:BritLibRoyal14CVIIFol006rMattParisSelfPort.jpg|thumb|200px|Self portrait of Matthew Paris from the original manuscript of his ''Historia Anglorum'' (London, British Library, MS Royal 14.C.VII, folio 6r).]]


Ginnell has written that those who accept that the letters are authentic can be equally divided on their significance. Some he says use them with the special object of exposing the Papacy’s venality, corruption, and “ingratitude towards mankind in general, and towards faithful Ireland in particular” while others use them as proof that no Pope ever erred in political matters, and suggest that Ireland has always been the object of the “Pope's special paternal care.” <ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=4-5}}</ref>
Thus the Henrician Parliament had established the principle that the Crown of Ireland was in personal union with the Crown of England. Though this declaration was not recognised by the Papacy nor by the Catholic countries of Europe, it transpired that Henry's Catholic daughter, [[Queen Mary I of England|Mary]], would become [[Queen of England]] in 1553, thus becoming [[Queen of Ireland]] in both English and Irish law. In response to this development, at Mary's request, [[Pope Paul IV]] issued a [[papal bull]] in 1555 declaring Mary and her [[King consort|consort]], Philip, [[Prince of the Asturias]] (who was shortly to become [[Philip II of Spain|King Philip II of Spain]]), to be the joint monarchs of Ireland. <ref>[http://www.heraldica.org/topics/national/ireland_docs.htm#bull1555 Documents on Ireland, Heraldica website]</ref>


On the Pope's infallibility, another argument, again assuming the authenticity of these letters, is that it would be tantamount to the Pope having made a shockingly bad choice of an instrument in Henry II for reducing Ireland to law and order. He suggests this objection is at best feeble, seeing what the character of [[Henry II of England|Henry II]] was, and that the English "''in the seven hundred years that, have elapsed since that time have failed to accomplish the task assigned them''." Ginnell suggests that it would not have constituted a greater Papal mistake than when conferring the title of ''Defender of the Faith'' on [[Henry VIII]]. This he say is a valid case of the Pope choosing a especially unworthy instrument for a purpose as was the subject-matter of these letters. That the subsequent use of this title by English Sovereigns illustrates he says, how willing they are "''to cling to any honour or advantage derived from the Catholic Church''," even when they have ceased to belong to it. <ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=4-5}}</ref>
Philip made no claim to the Crown of Ireland on Mary's death in November 1558. Between 1559 and 1561 the New Parliament of the new Protestant Queen of England, Elizabeth I, repealed all English and Irish legislation that had restored the ecclesiastical union with Rome and re-established the Churches of England and of Ireland with Queen Elizabeth as their "Supreme Governor". The English Parliament ignored then and has ever since continued to ignore as irrelevant all Papal acts, bulls or other decrees since the English Reformation had begun.


In the [[seventeenth century]] the authenticity of the letters were recognised in Ireland by [[James Ussher]], [[Protestant Archbishop of Armagh]], [[Peter Lombard]], [[Catholic Archbishop of Armagh]] and [[David Rothe]], [[Bishop of Ossory]]. In the [[nineteenth century]] the authenticity of the letters were recognised by the ecclesiastical historian, Dr. Lanigan, the Editor of the ''Macarice Excidium'', the Editor of ''Cambrensis Eversus'', and the Very Rev. Sylvester Malone, D.D., [[Vicar General]] of [[Killaloe]], writing in the ''[[Dublin Review (Catholic periodical)|Dublin Review]]'' for April, [[1884]], and in the ''[[Irish Ecclesiastical Record]]'' for October, [[1891]]. However the latter author who according to Ginnell was the most strenuous upholder of all the letters was obliged to abandon most of his earlier arguments without securing any new ones.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=3}}</ref> However English historians according to [[Cardinal Gasquet]] have universally taken the genuineness of the document for granted.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell & Sons LTD|location=London|date=1922|pages=153}}</ref>
In 1570 relations between England, Ireland and the Catholic Church were in turmoil following the publication on 25 February of Pope Pius V’s Bull ‘[[Regnans in Excelsis]]’. This Bull had declared Queen Elizabeth to be illegitimate and a usurper and thus incapable of having legitimately inherited her English crown. It also proclaimed her to be a heretic, declared her deposed and strictly forbade all Catholics anywhere to obey her or her laws or to acknowledge, respect or obey any persons in authority appointed by her. It made no mention at all of her “pretending” to the Throne of Ireland, which significant omission appeared to infer that the Bull of 1555 had, in accordance with ''Laudabiliter'', granted the Crown of Ireland only to Queen Mary and her legitimate heirs and it thus appeared to endorse the English view that Philip of Spain’s mention in the Bull of 1555 had been merely as a mention of his then status as Queen Mary’s Consort and not as an intentional conferral of the status of King of Ireland in his own right.


Against their authenticity, Ginnell writes that we must notice the entire absence of written [[Gaelic]] recognition. Against their authenticity in the [[seventeenth century]] he lists [[Stephen White (Jesuit)|Stephen White]], S.J., and by the author of ''Cambrensis Eversus'' Dr. Lynch; their repudiation in the nineteenth century by [[Cardinal Moran]] in the ''Irish Ecclesiastical Record'' for November, [[1872]], and by Rev. W.B. Morris in his book, ''Ireland and St. Patrick''.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=3}}</ref>
The Irish Archbishop of Cashel acted as envoy for some Irish nobles who proposed to rectify this omission by offering the Kingship of Ireland to King Philip directly. The project was communicated to Pope Pius V through Cardinal Francesco Alciati (who enjoyed the curious status of "Protector of Spain and Ireland before the Holy See"), who wrote to the Archbishop of Cashel (9 June, 1570):


Among the Irish historians who have accepted John of Salisbury's account of 'Laudabiliter' considered that Adrian was deceived purposely as to the state of the Ireland and the necessity therefore of the English interference by the king, and have regarded the "Bull" as a document granted in error as to the real circumstances of the case.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell & Sons LTD|location=London|date=1922|pages=153}}</ref>
<blockquote>“His Holiness was astonished that anything of the kind should be attempted without his authority since it was easy to remember that the Kingdom of Ireland belonged to the dominion of the Church, was held as a fief under it, and could not therefore, unless by the Pope, be subjected to any new ruler. And the Pope, that the right of the Church may be preserved as it should be, says he will not give the letters you ask for the King of Spain. But if the King of Spain himself were to ask for the fief of that Kingdom in my opinion the Pope would not refuse.” — Spicil. Ossor., ed. Card. Moran, I, 69</blockquote>


According to [[Herbert Paul]], author of ''[[James Anthony Froude|The Life of Froude]]'', the Rev. Burke "''boldly denied that it'' [the bull] ''had ever existed at all''"<ref>{{cite book|last=Paul|first=Herbert|title=The Life of Froude|publisher=Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd|location=1 Amen Corner, E.C London|date=1905|pages=217}}</ref> however in ''English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude'', the Rev. Burke outlines the anomalies of the letter and states that it had been examined by Reimer an acceptable authority amongst English historians. The Rev Burke dose say though that "''there is a lie on the face of it''." <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 27"/>
No further official reference to the Bull of 1555 nor to ''Laudabiliter'' was ever made again — neither by the Papacy nor by the Governments of England, Ireland nor Spain. It must be presumed that the low-level Papal diplomatic recognition of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1914 and the establishment of full diplomatic relations between the Holy See and the Irish Free State in 1922 both entailed the implicit final consignment of ''Laudabiliter'' to the archives.


==Authenticity debate==
==Authenticity debate==
According to Curtis for the text of the 'Laudabiliter' we only have [[Giraldus Cambrensis]]' ''Conquest of Ireland'' written around [[1188]], though in it his dating is not accurate, he says he must of had some such "''genuine document before him''." He suggests that better evidence for the grant of Ireland can be found in [[John of Salisbury]]'s, ''Metalogicus'', written about 1159.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>


===John of Salisbury===
Evidence for the bull came from [[John of Salisbury]], who was sent to Rome as an envoy to request it<ref>''ad preces mea'' writes John in ''Metalogicus'', noted by Kate Norgate, "The Bull Laudabiliter", ''The English Historical Review'' '''8'''.29 (January 1893, pp. 18-52) p. 29.</ref> and by [[Geraldus Cambrensis]]<ref>''Expugnatio Hibernica'' (1188), also noted by Norgate 1898:18.</ref>, a Cambro-Norman chronicler, and the authenticity of its text became the subject of academic dispute in the nineteenth century.<ref>With the publication in 1849 of an ''Apologia pro Hibernia adversus Cambri calumnias'' written about 1615 by an otherwise unknown [[Jesuit]], Steven White. John Lynch, writing as "Gratianus Lucius", followed up the argument with ''Cambrensis Eversus''. The nineteenth-century scholars who followed these leads were refuted in detail by Norgate.</ref> As with many Church documents, the original document is no longer in existence.<ref>Compare ''[[Unam sanctam]]''.</ref> When [[Baronius|Cardinal Baronius]] published it as ''ex codice Vaticano'' the codex in question was a transcription of the chronicle of [[Matthew Paris]],<ref>[[Augustin Theiner]], ''Vetera Monumenta Hibernorum Historiae'', noted in Norgate 1898:20.</ref> an [[English historians in the Middle Ages|English chronicler]], and it is noted that "in form and wording it differs from other papal bulls of the time."<ref>Henderson, 1896</ref> But there is no record that the bull's authenticity was questioned at the time.{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}
Henry according to [[Cardinal Gasquet]] at the beginning of his reign, send ambassadors to Adrian IV, who was then at the close of his pontificate.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=155-156}}</ref> This mission was given to three bishops and an abbot he says, they were Rotrodus, [[Bishop of Evreux]], Arnold, [[Bishop of Lisieux]], the [[Bishop of Mans]] and Robert of Gorham, Abbot of [[St. Albans]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=155-156}}</ref> <ref>{{cite book|last=Tarleton |first=Alfread H. |title=Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope|publisher=Arthur L. Humphreys|location=London|date=1896|pages=131}}</ref> The date of this mission is the same as that claimed by Salisbury for his visit, 1155.<ref>Alfread H Tarleton gives the date of October 9, St. Dionysius's day, when the ambassadors set out in ''Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope'', pg.130. L. F. Rushbrook Williams also gives October 9 1155 in ''History of the Abbey of St. Alban'', Longman's Green & Co. London 1917, pg.70-71. While both mention Robert assisting in some royal business and being a part of deputation including three bishops selected by Henry neither mention John of Salisbury.</ref> It is most unlikely notes Gasquet that the Henry would have sent two different embassies at the same time. If John of Salisbury were with this embassy he says, he could not have played the important part he claims, and would have gone in the capacity of a simple clerical retainer. The biography of Salisbury makes it very improbable he says that he was ever entrusted with such a mission.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=155-156}}</ref> According to L. F. Rushbrook Williams, Abbot Robert evidently saw with the elevation of Adrian IV presented an opportunity of acquiring privileges for St. Albans with the ostensible object of assisting in the settlement of some royal business which was in progress at the curia.<ref>{{cite book|last=Williams|first=L. F. Rushbrook|title=History of the Abbey of St. Alban |publisher=Longman's Green & Co.|location=London|date=1917|pages=70-71}}</ref>Alfread H Tarleton suggests that some modern historians have stated that John of Salisbury accompanied this mission but this is a mistake, based he says on a confusion of the fact that John had many interviews with the Pope at Beneventum. The mistake may be due to the fact that the King, hearing John intended to visit the Pope, sent messages and letters through him in addition to employing a regular messenger, in the person of Robert the Abbot.<ref>{{cite book|last=Tarleton |first=Alfread H. |title=Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope|publisher=Arthur L. Humphreys|location=London|date=1896|pages=133-134}}</ref>


John of Salisbury left England in [[1137]], to be educated on Continent, and only returned for a very short time in [[1149]]. He then returned almost immediately to the Continent, where he became occupied in teaching at [[Paris]]. According to Gasquet it is hard to believe that Henry would have made the choice of sending an unknown and untried man to conduct so important and difficult a piece of diplomacy as negotiating with the Pope about the expedition to Ireland.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=155}}</ref><ref>Laurence Ginnell in ''The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated'', page23 says John was born at Old Sarum (Salisbury) between 1115 and 1120. In his youth he say, before 1130, he went to Paris to study, and he did not return to England until 1150.</ref>
Adrian's successor, [[Pope Alexander III]], in any case reconfirmed the purported "grant" of Ireland to Henry in 1172, and the Irish bishops at the Synod of [[Cashel, County Tipperary|Cashel]], in the same year, accepted that bull, though at no time in that period was the "grant" accepted by the Irish High King or the collective provincial kings and lords. However, the Irish kings did submit to Henry in Dublin in November 1171, and later agreed to the Treaty of Windsor. The problem was that the Norman and Irish definitions of what a submission amounted to were very different. {{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}


Gasquet suggests that there is almost conclusively evedience, that while a request of the nature described by Salisbury was made about this time to the Pope, Salisbury was not the envoy sent to make it.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=153}}</ref> John of Salisbury, he notes, claims to have been the ambassador for Henry II and obtained 'Laudabiliter' for him and gives the year [[1155]] as the date when it was granted. However when Salisbury finished his work called ''Polycraticus'', he dedicated it to Thomas, afterwards [[St. Thomas a Becket]], then [[Chancellor of England]], who at this time was with Henry at the [[siege of Toulouse]]. This was in [[1159]]; and in that year, Salisbury was presented to Henry apparently for the first time, by St. Thomas. From this fact Cardinal Gasquet concludes, Salisbury had to have been up to this time unknown to the king, and that it is most unlikely that four years before Henry had entrusted him with so private and confidential a mission to Rome.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=155, 157}}</ref>
In [[1317]], during the [[Edward_Bruce#The_invasion_of_Ireland|Bruce invasion]], some of the remaining [[Gaelic Ireland|Gaelic]] kings, following decades of English rule, tried to have the bull recast or replaced, as a basis for a new kingship for Ireland, with Edward Bruce as their preferred candidate. They issued a remonstrance to [[Pope John XXII]] requesting that ''Laudabiliter'' should be revoked, but this was refused. This action may suggest that the kings saw Laudabiliter as the legal basis for their continuing problems at that time.<ref>[http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T310000-001/index.html Text of 1317 Remonstrance]</ref>.


===''Metalogicus''and ''Polycraticus''===
That an actual bull was sent according to Ernest F. Henderson is doubted by many. <ref name=avalon>[http://avalon.law.yale.edu/medieval/bullad.asp Avalon Project, Yale]</ref> The authenticity of that Bull has
been questioned without success according to P. S. O'Hegarty and suggests that the question now is purely an academic one.<ref>{{cite book|last=O’Hegarty|first=P. S. |title=The Indestructible Nation|publisher=Maunsel & Company, Ltd|location=Dublin & London |date=1918|volume=1|pages=3|chapter=1}}</ref>


It was, according to the Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke in the year 1174 that King Henry produced a letter which he said he got from Pope Adrian IV. permitting him to go to Ireland. The Rev. Burke asks, if he had the letter, when he came to Ireland, why did he not produce it, as this was his only warrant for coming to Ireland? When news of Pope Adrian's election had arrived in England, he says, John of Salisbury was sent by Henry to congratulate him, and get this letter in a "''hugger-mugger way''," from the Pope. The date he writes that was on the letter was 1154, therefore it was consequently twenty years old. During this twenty year period nobody ever heard of this letter except Henry, it was said that Henry kept this letter a secret, because his mother, the Empress Matilda, did not want Henry to act on it.<ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27-28|chapter=1}}</ref>
According to the Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke O.P., when news of Pope Adrian's election had arrived in England, John of Salisbury was sent by Henry to congratulate him, and get this letter [the bull] in a "''hugger-mugger way''," from the Pope. <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27-28|chapter=1}}</ref> The letter, according to the Rev. Burke, has been examined by a better authority than his own and by one "''who has brought to bear upon it all the acumen of his great knowledge''." The date according to Reimer, he says "''the most acceptable authority amongst English historians''," was [[1154]]. However Pope Adrian was elected on the 3d of December, 1154 and the Rev. Burke suggests that it must having taken at least a month in those days before news of the election would have arrived in England, and at least another before John of Salisbury arrived in Rome making his arrival there around March 1155. The date being found inconvenient Reimer under who’s authority is uncertain, changed the date to [[1155]]. <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 27">{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27|chapter=1}}</ref>


The date that ''Metalogicus'' was written is fixed according to the author himself according to Stephen J. McCormick pointing to the fact that John of Salisbury immediately before he tells us that the news of Pope Adrian's death had reached him his own patron, [[Theobald of Bec|Theobald]], [[Archbishop of Canterbury]] though still living, was "weighed down by many infirmities." Pope Adrian died in 1159 he says and the death of Archbishop, [[Theobald of Bec]] occurred in 1161. However Gile and other editors of John of Salisbury's works, without a dissentient voice, according to McCormick refer the ''Metalogicus'' to the year 1159.<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=29}}</ref> Curtis also gives the date of publication of 1159 and suggests that whether 'Laudabiliter' is genuine or not, he says, it is one of "''the great questions of history''." <ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=39|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>
The letter according to Rev. Burke has been examined by a better authority than his own he says and by one "''who has brought to bear upon it all the acumen of his great knowledge''." The date according to Reimer, he says "''the most acceptable authority amongst English historians''," according to Rev. Burke authenticated this the date of 1154. However Pope Adrian was elected on the 3d of December, 1154. Rev Burke suggests that it must having taken at least a month in those days before news of the election would have arrived in England, and at least another before John of Salisbury arrived in Rome making his arrival there around March 1155. The date being found inconvenient Reimer under who’s authority is uncertain, changed the date to 1155. <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 27">{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27|chapter=1}}</ref>


The testimony of John of Salisbury, who, in his ''Metalogicus'' (lib. iv., cap. 42.) writes, that being in an official capacity at the [[Papal Court]], in [[1155]], Pope Adrian IV., then granted the investure of Ireland Henry II. of England. However John of Salisbury also kept a diary which was later published which is entitled ''Polycraticus'' and had a detailed account of the various incidents of his embassy to Pope Adrian, yet in it he makes no mention of the Bull, or of the gold ring and its fine emerald, mentioned in ''Metalogicus'' or of the grant of Ireland, all of which would have been so important for his narrative in ''Metalogicus''. <ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=29}}</ref> If Adrian granted this Bull to Henry at the solicitation of John of Salisbury in 1155 there is but one explanation for the silence in ''Polycraticus'', according to McCormick and that this secrecy was required by the English monarch. If this were the case, he says how then can we be asked to admit as genuine this passage of the ''Metalogicus'', if John still continuing to discharge offices of the highest trust in the Court, would proclaim to the world as early as the year 1159, that Pope Adrian had made this formal grant of Ireland to his royal master.<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=30}}</ref>
According to Herbert Paul, author of ''The Life of Froude'', the Rev Burke "''boldly denied that it'' [the letter] ''had ever existed at all''"<ref>{{cite book|last=Paul|first=Herbert|title=The Life of Froude|publisher=Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd|location=1 Amen Corner, E.C London|date=1905|pages=217}}</ref> however in ''English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude'', the Rev Burke outlines the anomalies of the letter and states that it had been examined by Reimer an acceptable authority amongst English historians. The Rev Burke dose say though that "''there is a lie on the face of it''." <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 27"/>


J. Duncan Mackie writes that those who desire to do away altogether with Adrian's grant of Ireland, find in the last chapter of the sixth book of the ''Metalogicus'', an account of the transaction between John and Pope Adrian and in this passage is an almost insurmountable difficulty. It become necessary he says to assume that it is an interpolation, and this can only be done "in the face of all probability." In the first place, he says the ''Metalogicus'' was only finished in 1159, and there is still extant a manuscript of date earlier than 1200, in which there is no sign that the chapter was a late insertion.<ref>{{cite book|last=Mackie|first=J. Duncan|title=Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay|publisher=B. H. Blackwell|location=Oxford|date=1907|pages=114-115}}</ref>
Paul says that Froude maintained that the existence of the letter and its nature were proved by later Bulls of succeeding Popes in a challenge to the Rev Burke, <ref>{{cite book|last=Paul|first=Herbert|title=The Life of Froude|publisher=Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd|location=1 Amen Corner, E.C London|date=1905|pages=218}}</ref> but as the Rev Burke states, there were many learned men who support the genuineness of both Adrian's and Alexander's rescripts but there was also an equally large number who deny it . The Rev Burke said that like the latter he preferred to believe with them that it was a forgery. He based this view he said on the authority of Dr. Lynch, author of "''Cambrensis Eversus''," in addition to both the Abbé McGeoghegan, who he says was "''one of the greatest Irish scholars, and one of the best archaeologists''" and Dr. Moran, the learned bishop of Ossory "''that Alexander's letter was a forgery, as well as that of Adrian IV''." <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28">{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=28|chapter=1}}</ref>


===Giraldus Cambrensis===
This was in reply to Mr. Froude suggestion that Alexander III., Adrian's successor, had mentioned that rescript or document in a letter. Froude also said there was a copy of this letter in the archives at Rome and how would the Rev Burke "''get over that''"? The Rev Burke in responce pointed out that the copy had no date at all on it and that Baronius, the historian, along with the learned Dr. Mansuerius declare that a rescript or document "''that has no date, the day it was executed, the seal and the year, is invalid''" and was therefore "''just so much paper''". The result of this being "''that even if Adrian gave it, it was worth nothing''." The Rev Burke continued that the "''learned authorities tell us that the existence of a document in the archives does not prove the authenticity of that document''" and that it "''may be kept there as a mere record''."<ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28"/>
John of Salisbury, speaking of the existence of the Papal grant in the last chapter of the ''Metalogicus'' does not give its text and it was at least thirty years after Adrian's death that the "Bull" itself first appeared in the ''Expugnatio Hibernica'' of Giraldus Cambrensis or Gerald Barry as he is often called.<ref>{{cite book|last=Thatcher |first=Oliver Joseph|title=Studies Concerning Adrian IV|publisher=The Decennial Publications|location=Chicago|date=1903 |pages=4}}</ref>


===The date the Bull was produced===
The Rev Burke pointed out that Alexander's letter carried the date 1172 and asked was is it likely that a Pope would have given a letter to Henry, who he knew well, asking Henry to take care of the Church and put everything in order? The Rev Burke notes that Adrian did not know Henry, but Alexander knew him well. Henry, he say in 1159, supported the anti-Pope, Octavianus, against Alexander and again in 1166, supported the anti-Pope, Guido, against him. Citing Mathew of Westminster, he says that "''Henry obliged every man in England, from the boy of twelve years up to the old man, to renounce their allegiance to the true Pope, and go over to an anti-Pope''" and asks was it likely then, that the Pope would give him a letter to settle ecclesiastical matters in Ireland? Citing then Alexander himself who wrote to Henry, saying to him, instead of referring to a document giving him permission to settle Church matters in Ireland ;<ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28"/>
[[File:Henry II of England.jpg|thumb|[[Henry II of England]]([[5 March]] [[1133]] &ndash; [[6 July]] [[1189]])]]

It was, according to the Rev. Burke, in the year [[1174]] that King Henry produced this letter which he said he got from Pope Adrian IV. permitting him to go to Ireland. The Rev. Burke asks, if he had the letter, when he came to Ireland, why did he not produce it, as this was his only warrant for coming to Ireland? <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27-28|chapter=1}}</ref> For twenty years, according to McCormick that is from 1155 to [[1175]], there was no mention of the gift of Adrian. Henry did not refer to it when authorizing his vassals to join Diarmaid in [[1167]], or when he himself set out for Ireland to receive the homage of the Irish princes and not even after he assumed his new title and accomplished the purpose of his expedition.<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=30}}</ref> Curtis however while accepting that it is true that the letter was not published by Henry when in Ireland, that can be explained by his being alienated from [[Catholic Church|Rome]] over the murder of [[Thomas Becket]], in addition to the Empress Matilda, having protested against this invasion of Ireland.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref> The date Rev. Burke writes, that was on the letter was [[1154]], therefore it was consequently twenty years old. During this twenty year period nobody ever heard of this letter except Henry, and it was said that Henry kept this letter a secret, because his mother, the Empress Matilda, did not want Henry to act on it. <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=27-28|chapter=1}}</ref>

The [[Synod of Cashel|Council of Cashel]] in [[1172]] McCormick notes was the first Episcopal assembly after Henry’s arrival in Ireland. The [[Papal Legate]] was present and had Adrian’s Bull exist it should necessarily have engaged the attention of the assembled Fathers. However "''not a whisper''" as to Adrian's grant he says was to be heard at that Council. Even the learned editor of ''Cambrensis Eversus'' while asserting the genuineness of Adrian s Bull, admits "''there is not any, even the slightest authority, for asserting that its existence was known in Ireland before the year 1172, or for three years later''." <ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=30}}</ref>

McCormick says that it is extremely difficult, in any hypothesis, to explain in a satisfactory way this silence, nor is it easy to understand how a fact so important, to the interests of Ireland could remain so many years concealed including from those in the Irish Church. Throughout this period he says, Ireland numbered among its Bishops one who held the important office of Legate of the [[Holy See]], and that the Church had had constant intercourse with England and the continent through St. [[Lorcán Ua Tuathail|St Laurence O'Toole]] and a hundred other distinguished [[Prelates]], who enjoyed in the fullest manner the confidence of Rome.<ref>{{cite book|last=McCormick|first=Stephen J.|title=The Pope and Ireland|publisher=A. Waldteufel|location=San Francisco|date=1889|pages=30}}</ref>

On the question of the date when the letter was first made known, most of those who deny the authenticity of the letters believe that they were first made known about 1180 according to Ginnell. Citing Dr. Kelly he suggests that the only authority for holding that it was made known in Ireland as early as 1175 is that of Giraldus Cambrensis.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ginnell|first=Laurence|title=The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated|publisher=Fallon & Co|location=Dublin|date=1899|pages=7}}</ref>

===Pope Alexander III letters===
[[File:B-Alexander III1.jpg|thumb|100px[[Pope Alexander III]]]]

In addition to the 'Bull' of Adrian, there is also the letters by [[Pope Alexander III]] which were published on the conclusion of the [[Synod of Cashel]] according to Edmund Curtis. Henry was at this time in May 1172 reconciled with the Papacy according to Curtis and had sent envoys to Alexander, asking for a papal privilege for Ireland.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref> Whatever we may think of the so-called 'Bull' of Adrian, says Curtis, there can be no doubt that the letters and privilege of a later Pope conferred the lordship of Ireland upon Henry II.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=48|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>
Paul says that [[James Anthony Froude]] also maintained that the existence of the bull and its nature were proved by later bulls of succeeding Popes in a challenge to the Rev. Burke, <ref>{{cite book|last=Paul|first=Herbert|title=The Life of Froude|publisher=Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd|location=1 Amen Corner, E.C London|date=1905|pages=218}}</ref> but, as the Rev. Burke states, there were many learned men who support the genuineness of both Adrian's and [[Pope Alexander III]] rescripts but there was also an equally large number who deny it. The Rev. Burke said that like the latter he preferred to believe with them that it was a forgery. He based this view he said on the authority of Dr. Lynch, author of "''Cambrensis Eversus''," in addition to both the [[Abbé McGeoghegan]], who he says was "''one of the greatest Irish scholars, and one of the best archaeologists''" and Dr. Moran, the learned [[Bishop of Ossory]] "''that Alexander's letter was a forgery, as well as that of Adrian IV''." <ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28">{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=28|chapter=1}}</ref>

[[File:Laurence Ginnell.jpg|thumb|[[Laurence Ginnell]] (1854–1923)]]

The letters were first published in [[1728]] by Hearne in the ''Liber Niger Scaccarii'' the ''Black-Book of the Exchequer'' and are addressed to the Irish Bishops, to the English king, and to the Irish princes. They all bear the same date of the 20 September, are written from [[Tusculum]], and are attributed to the year [[1170]]. Although the author of the article in the ''Analecta'' does not agree with Dr. Moran as to the authentic character of these documents, he admits that they, at least, form some very powerful arguments against the genuineness of Pope Adrian's.<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=163-164}}</ref>

On the letters Cardinal Gasquet notes the editor of the ''Analecta'' that they completely ignore the existence of Adrian’s bull and that this proves that the grant of Adrian was unknown in Rome as completely as it was in England and Ireland. Such a deduction is confirmed he says by the action of [[Pope John XXII]] with the Ambassadors of [[Edward II]] at the beginning of the [[fourteenth century]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Gasquet|first=Cardinal|title=Monastic Life in the Middle Ages|publisher=G. Bell and Sons, LTD.|location=London|date=1922|pages=163-164}}</ref>

The Rev. Burke pointed out that Alexander's letter carried the date [[1172]] and asked was is it likely that a Pope would have given a letter to Henry, who he knew well, asking Henry to take care of the Church and put everything in order? The Rev. Burke notes that Adrian did not know Henry, but Alexander knew him well. Henry, he say in 1159, supported the anti-Pope, [[Antipope Victor IV (1159–1164)|Octavianus]], against Alexander and again in 1166, this time supporting the anti-Pope, [[Antipope Paschal III|Guido]], against him. Citing Mathew of Westminster, he says that "''Henry obliged every man in England, from the boy of twelve years up to the old man, to renounce their allegiance to the true Pope, and go over to an anti-Pope''" and asks was it likely then, that the Pope would give him a letter to settle ecclesiastical matters in Ireland? Citing then Alexander himself who wrote to Henry, saying to him, instead of referring to a document giving him permission to settle Church matters in Ireland said;<ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28"/>
{{cquote|Instead of remedying the disorders caused by your predecessors, you have oppressed the Church, and you have endeavored to destroy the canons of apostolic men.}}
{{cquote|Instead of remedying the disorders caused by your predecessors, you have oppressed the Church, and you have endeavored to destroy the canons of apostolic men.}}


[[File:James Anthony Froude by Sir George Reid.jpg|thumb|[[James Anthony Froude]]]]
The Rev Burke then asks "''is this the man that Alexander would send to Ireland to settle affairs, and make the Irish good children of the Pope?''" Responding again to Mr. Froude, who then said that "''the Irish never loved the Pope till the Normans taught them''" Rev Burke notes that until "''the accursed Normans came to Ireland''," the Papal Legate could always come and go as he pleased and that no Irish king obstructed him and that no Irishman's hand was ever raised against a Bishop, "''much less against the Papal Legate''." However the very first Legate that came to Ireland, after the Norman Invasion, the Rev Burke writes that in passing through England, Henry "''took him by the throat, and imposed upon him an oath that, when he went to Ireland, he would not do anything that would be against the interest of the King''". It was unheard of that a Bishop, Archbishop, or Cardinal should be persecuted, the Rev Burke says until the Anglo-Normans brought with them "''their accursed feudal system, and concentration of power in the hands of the king...''" <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=29-30|chapter=1}}</ref>

The Rev. Burke then asks "''is this the man that Alexander would send to Ireland to settle affairs, and make the Irish good children of the Pope?''" Responding again to Mr. Froude, who then said that "''the Irish never loved the Pope till the [[Normans]] taught them''" The Rev. Burke notes that until "''the accursed Normans came to Ireland''," the [[Papal Legate]] could always come and go as he pleased and that no Irish king obstructed him and that no Irishman's hand was ever raised against a Bishop, "''much less against the Papal Legate''." However the very first Legate that came to Ireland, after the Norman Invasion, the Rev. Burke writes that in passing through England, Henry "''took him by the throat, and imposed upon him an oath that, when he went to Ireland, he would not do anything that would be against the interest of the King''". It was unheard of that a Bishop, Archbishop, or Cardinal should be persecuted, the Rev. Burke says until the [[Anglo-Normans]] brought with them "''their accursed [[feudal system]], and concentration of power in the hands of the king...''" <ref>{{cite book|last=Burke, O.P.|first=Very Rev. Thomas N.|title=English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude|publisher=Lynch, Cole & Meehan |location=New York|date=1873|volume=1|pages=29-30|chapter=1}}</ref>

===Papal copy of 'Laudabiliter'===
Froude also said there was a copy of this letter [''Laudabiliter''] in the archives at Rome and how would the Rev. Burke "''get over that''"? The Rev Burke in response pointed out that the copy had no date at all on it and that [[Caesar Baronius]], the historian, along with the learned Dr. Mansuerius declare that a rescript or document "''that has no date, the day it was executed, the seal and the year, is invalid''" and was therefore "''just so much paper''". The result of this being "''that even if Adrian gave it, it was worth nothing''." The Rev Burke continued that the "''learned authorities tell us that the existence of a document in the archives does not prove the authenticity of that document''" and that it "''may be kept there as a mere record''."<ref name="Burke, O.P. 1873 28"/> However Curtis in his ''A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922'' states that there is no original or copy of 'Laudabiliter' in the papal archieves.<ref>{{cite book|last=Curtis|first=Edmund|title=A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922|publisher=Routledge|location=New York|date=2002|pages=49|isbn=0 415 27949 6}}</ref>While accepting that there is no copy of 'Laudabiliter' in the papal archieves Mackie suggests that this proves nothing, for there is at Rome no document dealing with the affairs of Ireland before the year [[1215]].<ref>{{cite book|last=Mackie|first=J. Duncan|title=Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay|publisher=B. H. Blackwell|location=Oxford|date=1907|pages=110}}</ref>

===Terms of 'Laudabiliter'===

===Papal letter of 1311 and the Bruce kingship 1315-1318===

[[File:John22.jpg|thumb|200px|[[Pope John XXII]]]]

However within a century-and-a-half, Norman misrule in Ireland became so apparent that ''Laudabiliter'' was to be invoked again, this time in aid of the rights of the Gaelic Irish clans. In 1315-18, in alliance with the Scottish (and the Welsh), who were also fighting the Normans, they proclaimed [[Edward Bruce]] as King of Ireland. [[Pope John XXII]] writing to [[Edward II of England]] in 1311 had reminded him of the responsibility that ''Laudabiliter'' put upon England to execute government in Ireland for the welfare of the Irish. He warned Edward II that:

{{cquote|... the kings of England ... have in direct violation of [''Laudabiliter''], for a long period past kept down that people [of Ireland] in a state of intolerable bondage, accompanied with unheard-of hardships and grievances. Nor was there found during all that time, any person to redress the grievances they endured or be moved with a pitiful compassion for their distress; although recourse was had to you ... and the loud cry of the oppressed fell, at times at least, upon your own ear. In consequence whereof, unable to support such a state of things any longer, they have been compelled to withdraw themselves from your jurisdiction and to invite another to come and be ruler over them ...}}

In [[1317]], during the [[Edward_Bruce#The_invasion_of_Ireland|Bruce invasion]], some of the remaining [[Gaelic Ireland|Gaelic]] kings, following decades of English rule, tried to have the bull recast or replaced, as a basis for a new kingship for Ireland, with Edward Bruce as their preferred candidate. They issued a remonstrance to [[Pope John XXII]] requesting that ''Laudabiliter'' should be revoked, but this was refused. This action may suggest that the kings saw Laudabiliter as the legal basis for their continuing problems at that time.<ref>[http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/T310000-001/index.html Text of 1317 Remonstrance]</ref>.

===The Crown of Ireland Act 1542===


==Notes==
==Notes==
Line 82: Line 133:


==References==
==References==
*''The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated'', [[Laurence Ginnell]], Fallon & Co, Dublin (1899).
* ''Selected Documents in Irish History'', edited by Josef Lewis Altholz, M.E. Sharpe, Inc. 2000
*''The Pope and Ireland'', Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889).
* [http://members.foothills.net/ricefile/bull_of_pope_adrian_iv.htm Lyttleton, ''Life of Henry II.,'' vol. v p. 371]: text of ''Laudabiliter'' asa reprinted in Ernest F. Henderson, ''Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages'' (London : George Bell and Sons) 1896 with Henderson's note: "That a papal bull was dispatched to England about this time and concerning this matter is certain. That this was the actual bull sent is doubted by many".
*''A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922'', Edmund Curtis, Routledge New York (2002), ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
*''The Indestructible Nation'', P. S. O’Hegarty, Maunsel & Company, Ltd Dublin & London (1918).
*''English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to [[James Anthony Froude|J. A Froude]]'', Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke, O.P., Lynch, Cole & Meehan New York (1873).
*''The Life of Froude'', Herbert Paul, Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons E.C London (1905).
*''[[Pope Adrian IV]]. The Lothian Essay 1907'', J. Duncan Mackie, B. H. Blackwell Oxford (1907)
*''Ireland and the Pope: A Brief History of Papel Intrigues Against Irish Liberty from Adrian IV. to Leo XIII'', James G. Maguire, James H. Barry (San Francisco (1890), Third Edition.
*''The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis'', Edited by Thomas Wright, George Bell & Sons (London 1905).
*''Monastic Life in the Middle Ages'', Cardinal Gasquet, G. Bell and Sons, LTD, London (1922)
*''Gerald the Welshman'', Henry Owen, Whiting & Co, London (1889).
*''Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope'', Alfread H. Tarleton,, Arthur L. Humphreys, London (1896).
*''History of the Abbey of St. Alban'', L. F. Rushbrook Williams, Longman's Green & Co. London (1917).
*''Selected Documents in Irish History'', edited by Josef Lewis Altholz, M.E. Sharpe, Inc. 2000

==External links==
{{wikisource}}
{{wikisource|Privilege of Pope Alexander III to Henry II}}
* [http://www.libraryireland.com/HullHistory/Appendix1a.php "Pope Adrians's bull ''Laudabiliter'' and note upon it"] from Eleanor Hull, 1931, ''A History of Ireland'', Volume One, Appendix I
* [http://www.libraryireland.com/HullHistory/Appendix1a.php "Pope Adrians's bull ''Laudabiliter'' and note upon it"] from Eleanor Hull, 1931, ''A History of Ireland'', Volume One, Appendix I
* [http://members.foothills.net/ricefile/bull_of_pope_adrian_iv.htm Lyttleton, ''Life of Henry II.,'' vol. v p. 371]: text of ''Laudabiliter'' asa reprinted in Ernest F. Henderson, ''Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages'' (London : George Bell and Sons) 1896 with Henderson's note: "That a papal bull was dispatched to England about this time and concerning this matter is certain. That this was the actual bull sent is doubted by many".


[[Category:History of Catholicism in Ireland]]
[[Category:History of Catholicism in Ireland]]

Revision as of 18:55, 5 August 2009

Laudabiliter was a papal bull purported to have been issued by Pope Adrian IV, the only Englishman who ever sat in the chair of St. Peter, claiming to give the Angevin King Henry II of England the right to assume control over Ireland. It was from the Chair of St. Peter, then, that the sovereigns of England from Henry II to Henry VIII derived the title Lord of Ireland, the only title they used with reference to Ireland, and later Henry VIII, the first English king that styled himself King of Ireland. Whether this donation is genuine or not, Edmund Curtis says, is one of "the great questions of history."

Papal bull

A Papal bull of Pope Urban VIII, 1637, sealed with a leaden bulla.

A bull is a Papal letter takes its name from the bubble-shaped, leaden seal which it bears. The letters written in the twelfth century relating to Ireland were probably never sealed with any seal according to Laurence Ginnell, and are, therefore, not correctly called bulls. However, that the name bull has become so well known in connection with them, even if genuine, that the use of it cannot be misunderstood. In the twelfth century, he says, they were called privilegia or privileges.[1]

The original bulla was a lump of clay molded around a cord and stamped with a seal. When dry, the container cannot be violated without visible damage to the bulla, thereby ensuring the contents remain tamper-proof until they reach their destination. Stephen J. McCormick, in his preface to The Pope and Ireland, notes that it is was well known that the forgery of both Papal and other documents was fairly common in the twelfth century. Citing Professor Jungmann, who in the appendix to his Dissertationes Historiœ Ecclesiasticœ, in the fifth volume says, "it is well known from history that everywhere towards the close of the twelfth century there were forged or corrupted Papal Letters or Diplomas. That such was the case frequently in England is inferred from the Letters of John Sarisbiensis and of others." [2]

The Bull Laudabiliter

Pope Adrian IV(c. 1100–1 September, 1159)

In 1155, according to Edmund Curtis it is said, Pope Adrian IV granted, only three years after the Synod of Kells, the so-called bull 'Laudabiliter', which commissioned King Henry II of England to invade Ireland to reform its Church and people.[3]

The proximity of Ireland to England according to Dr. John Lingard, and the "inferiority of the natives in the art of war," had suggested to both William the conqueror, and Henry I the idea of conquest. However to justify the invasion of a "free and unoffending" people by Henry II Dr. Lingard says, Henry had "discovered" that the civilization of the people and reform of their clergy were needed and the benefits of this the Irish would cheerfully purchase with the loss of their independence. As every Christian island was claimed as the property of the holy see, Henry did not wish to make the attempt without the advice and consent of the Pope. Therefore a few months after his coronation Dr. Lingard writes, John of Salisbury, a learned monk, was dispatched to solicit the support of Pope Adrian IV. John was to assure his holiness that Henry's principal object was to provide instruction to an ignorant people, to remove vice from the Lord's vineyard, and to extend to Ireland the payment of Peter's Pence.The pontiff according to Dr. Lingard "must have smiled at the hypocrisy of this address" but expressed his satisfaction and agreed to the kings request, reminding him to always keep in mind the conditions on which that assent had been granted.[4][5]

It was at a royal council at Winchester that Curtis said talk of carrying out this invasion had been had, but that Henry's mother, the Empress Matilda, had protested against it. In Ireland however, nothing seems to have been known of it, and no provision had been made against English aggression.[6] J. Duncan Mackie, in his Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay 1907 gives the date as September 29, 1155 for this meenting for conquering Ireland and giving it to Henry's brother William. [7]

Laurence Ginnell citing the Very Rev. Dr. Malone as saying of the 'Laudabiliter': "there does not appear to be in the domain of history a better authenticated fact than the privilege of Adrian IV to Henry II."[8] As with many Church documents, the original document is no longer in existence.[1][9]

Cardinal Gasquet writes that historians of this time were ignorant of the existence of bull 'Laudabiliter', that during the residence of the pontifical Court at Avignon two Lives of Pope Adrian IV were written. One was composed in 1331, and the second in 1356, and in neither is there any mention of this important act of the Pope, although the authors find a place for many less important documents.[10]

Evidence for the bull

File:GeraldofWales.jpg
Giraldus Cambrensis

That an actual bull was sent according to Ernest F. Henderson is doubted by many,[11] and its authenticity has been questioned without success according to P. S. O'Hegarty who suggests that the question now is purely an academic one.[12] According to Edmund Curtis great controversy has raged, with some writers saying its a pure forgery, others that it as a touched-up version of a genuine document, while others believing in its authenticity. [13]

The following summary of the evidence cited by McCormick in favour of the authenticity of Pope Adrian's letter, appeared he says in the Irishman newspaper and was compiled by J. C. O Callaghan, who was editor of the Macariae Excidium, and author of a number of works on Irish history. This list also appears in Alfread H. Tarleton's Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope, with the additional evidence of the Norman Chronicles that testify to the fact he suggests that the bull and the ring were deposited at Winchester.

Firstly the testimony of John of Salisbury, Secretary to the Archbishop of Canterbury, who relates his having been the envoy from Henry to Adrian, in 1155, to ask for a grant of Ireland. Secondly, the grant or Bull of Adrian, in extenso, in the works of Giraldus Cambrensis, and his contemporary Radulfus de Diceto, Dean of London, and those of Roger de Wendover and Mathew Paris.[14][15] Thirdly, the Bulls of Adrian s successor, Pope Alexander III. Fourthly, the recorded public reading of the Bulls of Adrian and Alexander, at a meeting of Bishops in Waterford in 1175. Fifthly, after the liberation of Scotland from England at Bannockburn, the Bull of Adrian was pre fixed to the remonstrance, which the Irish presented to Pope John XXII. against the English and a copy was sent back by the Pope to Edward II. of England. Sixthly, from Caesar Baronius, in his work, the Annales Ecclesiastici, under Adrian IV. contains a copy of this grant of Ireland in full, or, excodice Vaticano, diploma datum ad Henricum, Anglorum, Regem. Finally, a copy of the Bull was contained in the Bidlarium Romanum, as printed in Rome in 1739.[16][17]

The Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke O.P., in his English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude, puts forward a number of arguments against both the Bull of Adrian and the letters of his successor, Pope Alexander III. The Rev Burke questions the date on the 'Laudabiliter', in addition to the terms contained in it and how it was obtained, questioning also the date in which it was first produced by Henry and why. [18] While Laurence Ginnell, Stephen J. McCormick, Cardinal Gasquet examine the character of Giraldus Cambrenis and the account of John of Salisbury, Oliver J Thatcher focuses on the bull itself and the wording used in Studies concerning Adrian IV.[19] McCormick's The Pope and Ireland is very much a challange to James G. Maguire's Ireland and the Pope: A Breif History of Papal Intrigue Against Irish Liberty from Adrian IV. to Leo XIII.[20] Likewise Cambrensis Eversus by Dr. John Lynch is in responce to the works of Giraldus Cambrensis. [21][22][23]

It was only in the year 1872 that the first indictment of the evidence upon which the Bull had been accepted as genuine, was drawn up by Dr. Moran, and published in the pages of the Irish Ecclesiastical Record. To the arguments against the grant in that article, the editor of the Analecta Juris Pontificii added fresh and according to Cardinal Gasquet "almost conclusive evidence of the forgery."[24]

Divided significance

Self portrait of Matthew Paris from the original manuscript of his Historia Anglorum (London, British Library, MS Royal 14.C.VII, folio 6r).

Ginnell has written that those who accept that the letters are authentic can be equally divided on their significance. Some he says use them with the special object of exposing the Papacy’s venality, corruption, and “ingratitude towards mankind in general, and towards faithful Ireland in particular” while others use them as proof that no Pope ever erred in political matters, and suggest that Ireland has always been the object of the “Pope's special paternal care.” [25]

On the Pope's infallibility, another argument, again assuming the authenticity of these letters, is that it would be tantamount to the Pope having made a shockingly bad choice of an instrument in Henry II for reducing Ireland to law and order. He suggests this objection is at best feeble, seeing what the character of Henry II was, and that the English "in the seven hundred years that, have elapsed since that time have failed to accomplish the task assigned them." Ginnell suggests that it would not have constituted a greater Papal mistake than when conferring the title of Defender of the Faith on Henry VIII. This he say is a valid case of the Pope choosing a especially unworthy instrument for a purpose as was the subject-matter of these letters. That the subsequent use of this title by English Sovereigns illustrates he says, how willing they are "to cling to any honour or advantage derived from the Catholic Church," even when they have ceased to belong to it. [26]

In the seventeenth century the authenticity of the letters were recognised in Ireland by James Ussher, Protestant Archbishop of Armagh, Peter Lombard, Catholic Archbishop of Armagh and David Rothe, Bishop of Ossory. In the nineteenth century the authenticity of the letters were recognised by the ecclesiastical historian, Dr. Lanigan, the Editor of the Macarice Excidium, the Editor of Cambrensis Eversus, and the Very Rev. Sylvester Malone, D.D., Vicar General of Killaloe, writing in the Dublin Review for April, 1884, and in the Irish Ecclesiastical Record for October, 1891. However the latter author who according to Ginnell was the most strenuous upholder of all the letters was obliged to abandon most of his earlier arguments without securing any new ones.[27] However English historians according to Cardinal Gasquet have universally taken the genuineness of the document for granted.[28]

Against their authenticity, Ginnell writes that we must notice the entire absence of written Gaelic recognition. Against their authenticity in the seventeenth century he lists Stephen White, S.J., and by the author of Cambrensis Eversus Dr. Lynch; their repudiation in the nineteenth century by Cardinal Moran in the Irish Ecclesiastical Record for November, 1872, and by Rev. W.B. Morris in his book, Ireland and St. Patrick.[29]

Among the Irish historians who have accepted John of Salisbury's account of 'Laudabiliter' considered that Adrian was deceived purposely as to the state of the Ireland and the necessity therefore of the English interference by the king, and have regarded the "Bull" as a document granted in error as to the real circumstances of the case.[30]

According to Herbert Paul, author of The Life of Froude, the Rev. Burke "boldly denied that it [the bull] had ever existed at all"[31] however in English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude, the Rev. Burke outlines the anomalies of the letter and states that it had been examined by Reimer an acceptable authority amongst English historians. The Rev Burke dose say though that "there is a lie on the face of it." [32]

Authenticity debate

According to Curtis for the text of the 'Laudabiliter' we only have Giraldus Cambrensis' Conquest of Ireland written around 1188, though in it his dating is not accurate, he says he must of had some such "genuine document before him." He suggests that better evidence for the grant of Ireland can be found in John of Salisbury's, Metalogicus, written about 1159.[33]

John of Salisbury

Henry according to Cardinal Gasquet at the beginning of his reign, send ambassadors to Adrian IV, who was then at the close of his pontificate.[34] This mission was given to three bishops and an abbot he says, they were Rotrodus, Bishop of Evreux, Arnold, Bishop of Lisieux, the Bishop of Mans and Robert of Gorham, Abbot of St. Albans.[35] [36] The date of this mission is the same as that claimed by Salisbury for his visit, 1155.[37] It is most unlikely notes Gasquet that the Henry would have sent two different embassies at the same time. If John of Salisbury were with this embassy he says, he could not have played the important part he claims, and would have gone in the capacity of a simple clerical retainer. The biography of Salisbury makes it very improbable he says that he was ever entrusted with such a mission.[38] According to L. F. Rushbrook Williams, Abbot Robert evidently saw with the elevation of Adrian IV presented an opportunity of acquiring privileges for St. Albans with the ostensible object of assisting in the settlement of some royal business which was in progress at the curia.[39]Alfread H Tarleton suggests that some modern historians have stated that John of Salisbury accompanied this mission but this is a mistake, based he says on a confusion of the fact that John had many interviews with the Pope at Beneventum. The mistake may be due to the fact that the King, hearing John intended to visit the Pope, sent messages and letters through him in addition to employing a regular messenger, in the person of Robert the Abbot.[40]

John of Salisbury left England in 1137, to be educated on Continent, and only returned for a very short time in 1149. He then returned almost immediately to the Continent, where he became occupied in teaching at Paris. According to Gasquet it is hard to believe that Henry would have made the choice of sending an unknown and untried man to conduct so important and difficult a piece of diplomacy as negotiating with the Pope about the expedition to Ireland.[41][42]

Gasquet suggests that there is almost conclusively evedience, that while a request of the nature described by Salisbury was made about this time to the Pope, Salisbury was not the envoy sent to make it.[43] John of Salisbury, he notes, claims to have been the ambassador for Henry II and obtained 'Laudabiliter' for him and gives the year 1155 as the date when it was granted. However when Salisbury finished his work called Polycraticus, he dedicated it to Thomas, afterwards St. Thomas a Becket, then Chancellor of England, who at this time was with Henry at the siege of Toulouse. This was in 1159; and in that year, Salisbury was presented to Henry apparently for the first time, by St. Thomas. From this fact Cardinal Gasquet concludes, Salisbury had to have been up to this time unknown to the king, and that it is most unlikely that four years before Henry had entrusted him with so private and confidential a mission to Rome.[44]

Metalogicusand Polycraticus

According to the Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke O.P., when news of Pope Adrian's election had arrived in England, John of Salisbury was sent by Henry to congratulate him, and get this letter [the bull] in a "hugger-mugger way," from the Pope. [45] The letter, according to the Rev. Burke, has been examined by a better authority than his own and by one "who has brought to bear upon it all the acumen of his great knowledge." The date according to Reimer, he says "the most acceptable authority amongst English historians," was 1154. However Pope Adrian was elected on the 3d of December, 1154 and the Rev. Burke suggests that it must having taken at least a month in those days before news of the election would have arrived in England, and at least another before John of Salisbury arrived in Rome making his arrival there around March 1155. The date being found inconvenient Reimer under who’s authority is uncertain, changed the date to 1155. [32]

The date that Metalogicus was written is fixed according to the author himself according to Stephen J. McCormick pointing to the fact that John of Salisbury immediately before he tells us that the news of Pope Adrian's death had reached him his own patron, Theobald, Archbishop of Canterbury though still living, was "weighed down by many infirmities." Pope Adrian died in 1159 he says and the death of Archbishop, Theobald of Bec occurred in 1161. However Gile and other editors of John of Salisbury's works, without a dissentient voice, according to McCormick refer the Metalogicus to the year 1159.[46] Curtis also gives the date of publication of 1159 and suggests that whether 'Laudabiliter' is genuine or not, he says, it is one of "the great questions of history." [47]

The testimony of John of Salisbury, who, in his Metalogicus (lib. iv., cap. 42.) writes, that being in an official capacity at the Papal Court, in 1155, Pope Adrian IV., then granted the investure of Ireland Henry II. of England. However John of Salisbury also kept a diary which was later published which is entitled Polycraticus and had a detailed account of the various incidents of his embassy to Pope Adrian, yet in it he makes no mention of the Bull, or of the gold ring and its fine emerald, mentioned in Metalogicus or of the grant of Ireland, all of which would have been so important for his narrative in Metalogicus. [48] If Adrian granted this Bull to Henry at the solicitation of John of Salisbury in 1155 there is but one explanation for the silence in Polycraticus, according to McCormick and that this secrecy was required by the English monarch. If this were the case, he says how then can we be asked to admit as genuine this passage of the Metalogicus, if John still continuing to discharge offices of the highest trust in the Court, would proclaim to the world as early as the year 1159, that Pope Adrian had made this formal grant of Ireland to his royal master.[49]

J. Duncan Mackie writes that those who desire to do away altogether with Adrian's grant of Ireland, find in the last chapter of the sixth book of the Metalogicus, an account of the transaction between John and Pope Adrian and in this passage is an almost insurmountable difficulty. It become necessary he says to assume that it is an interpolation, and this can only be done "in the face of all probability." In the first place, he says the Metalogicus was only finished in 1159, and there is still extant a manuscript of date earlier than 1200, in which there is no sign that the chapter was a late insertion.[50]

Giraldus Cambrensis

John of Salisbury, speaking of the existence of the Papal grant in the last chapter of the Metalogicus does not give its text and it was at least thirty years after Adrian's death that the "Bull" itself first appeared in the Expugnatio Hibernica of Giraldus Cambrensis or Gerald Barry as he is often called.[51]

The date the Bull was produced

Henry II of England(5 March 11336 July 1189)

It was, according to the Rev. Burke, in the year 1174 that King Henry produced this letter which he said he got from Pope Adrian IV. permitting him to go to Ireland. The Rev. Burke asks, if he had the letter, when he came to Ireland, why did he not produce it, as this was his only warrant for coming to Ireland? [52] For twenty years, according to McCormick that is from 1155 to 1175, there was no mention of the gift of Adrian. Henry did not refer to it when authorizing his vassals to join Diarmaid in 1167, or when he himself set out for Ireland to receive the homage of the Irish princes and not even after he assumed his new title and accomplished the purpose of his expedition.[53] Curtis however while accepting that it is true that the letter was not published by Henry when in Ireland, that can be explained by his being alienated from Rome over the murder of Thomas Becket, in addition to the Empress Matilda, having protested against this invasion of Ireland.[54] The date Rev. Burke writes, that was on the letter was 1154, therefore it was consequently twenty years old. During this twenty year period nobody ever heard of this letter except Henry, and it was said that Henry kept this letter a secret, because his mother, the Empress Matilda, did not want Henry to act on it. [55]

The Council of Cashel in 1172 McCormick notes was the first Episcopal assembly after Henry’s arrival in Ireland. The Papal Legate was present and had Adrian’s Bull exist it should necessarily have engaged the attention of the assembled Fathers. However "not a whisper" as to Adrian's grant he says was to be heard at that Council. Even the learned editor of Cambrensis Eversus while asserting the genuineness of Adrian s Bull, admits "there is not any, even the slightest authority, for asserting that its existence was known in Ireland before the year 1172, or for three years later." [56]

McCormick says that it is extremely difficult, in any hypothesis, to explain in a satisfactory way this silence, nor is it easy to understand how a fact so important, to the interests of Ireland could remain so many years concealed including from those in the Irish Church. Throughout this period he says, Ireland numbered among its Bishops one who held the important office of Legate of the Holy See, and that the Church had had constant intercourse with England and the continent through St. St Laurence O'Toole and a hundred other distinguished Prelates, who enjoyed in the fullest manner the confidence of Rome.[57]

On the question of the date when the letter was first made known, most of those who deny the authenticity of the letters believe that they were first made known about 1180 according to Ginnell. Citing Dr. Kelly he suggests that the only authority for holding that it was made known in Ireland as early as 1175 is that of Giraldus Cambrensis.[58]

Pope Alexander III letters

100pxPope Alexander III

In addition to the 'Bull' of Adrian, there is also the letters by Pope Alexander III which were published on the conclusion of the Synod of Cashel according to Edmund Curtis. Henry was at this time in May 1172 reconciled with the Papacy according to Curtis and had sent envoys to Alexander, asking for a papal privilege for Ireland.[59] Whatever we may think of the so-called 'Bull' of Adrian, says Curtis, there can be no doubt that the letters and privilege of a later Pope conferred the lordship of Ireland upon Henry II.[60]

Paul says that James Anthony Froude also maintained that the existence of the bull and its nature were proved by later bulls of succeeding Popes in a challenge to the Rev. Burke, [61] but, as the Rev. Burke states, there were many learned men who support the genuineness of both Adrian's and Pope Alexander III rescripts but there was also an equally large number who deny it. The Rev. Burke said that like the latter he preferred to believe with them that it was a forgery. He based this view he said on the authority of Dr. Lynch, author of "Cambrensis Eversus," in addition to both the Abbé McGeoghegan, who he says was "one of the greatest Irish scholars, and one of the best archaeologists" and Dr. Moran, the learned Bishop of Ossory "that Alexander's letter was a forgery, as well as that of Adrian IV." [62]

Laurence Ginnell (1854–1923)

The letters were first published in 1728 by Hearne in the Liber Niger Scaccarii the Black-Book of the Exchequer and are addressed to the Irish Bishops, to the English king, and to the Irish princes. They all bear the same date of the 20 September, are written from Tusculum, and are attributed to the year 1170. Although the author of the article in the Analecta does not agree with Dr. Moran as to the authentic character of these documents, he admits that they, at least, form some very powerful arguments against the genuineness of Pope Adrian's.[63]

On the letters Cardinal Gasquet notes the editor of the Analecta that they completely ignore the existence of Adrian’s bull and that this proves that the grant of Adrian was unknown in Rome as completely as it was in England and Ireland. Such a deduction is confirmed he says by the action of Pope John XXII with the Ambassadors of Edward II at the beginning of the fourteenth century.[64]

The Rev. Burke pointed out that Alexander's letter carried the date 1172 and asked was is it likely that a Pope would have given a letter to Henry, who he knew well, asking Henry to take care of the Church and put everything in order? The Rev. Burke notes that Adrian did not know Henry, but Alexander knew him well. Henry, he say in 1159, supported the anti-Pope, Octavianus, against Alexander and again in 1166, this time supporting the anti-Pope, Guido, against him. Citing Mathew of Westminster, he says that "Henry obliged every man in England, from the boy of twelve years up to the old man, to renounce their allegiance to the true Pope, and go over to an anti-Pope" and asks was it likely then, that the Pope would give him a letter to settle ecclesiastical matters in Ireland? Citing then Alexander himself who wrote to Henry, saying to him, instead of referring to a document giving him permission to settle Church matters in Ireland said;[62]

Instead of remedying the disorders caused by your predecessors, you have oppressed the Church, and you have endeavored to destroy the canons of apostolic men.

James Anthony Froude

The Rev. Burke then asks "is this the man that Alexander would send to Ireland to settle affairs, and make the Irish good children of the Pope?" Responding again to Mr. Froude, who then said that "the Irish never loved the Pope till the Normans taught them" The Rev. Burke notes that until "the accursed Normans came to Ireland," the Papal Legate could always come and go as he pleased and that no Irish king obstructed him and that no Irishman's hand was ever raised against a Bishop, "much less against the Papal Legate." However the very first Legate that came to Ireland, after the Norman Invasion, the Rev. Burke writes that in passing through England, Henry "took him by the throat, and imposed upon him an oath that, when he went to Ireland, he would not do anything that would be against the interest of the King". It was unheard of that a Bishop, Archbishop, or Cardinal should be persecuted, the Rev. Burke says until the Anglo-Normans brought with them "their accursed feudal system, and concentration of power in the hands of the king..." [65]

Papal copy of 'Laudabiliter'

Froude also said there was a copy of this letter [Laudabiliter] in the archives at Rome and how would the Rev. Burke "get over that"? The Rev Burke in response pointed out that the copy had no date at all on it and that Caesar Baronius, the historian, along with the learned Dr. Mansuerius declare that a rescript or document "that has no date, the day it was executed, the seal and the year, is invalid" and was therefore "just so much paper". The result of this being "that even if Adrian gave it, it was worth nothing." The Rev Burke continued that the "learned authorities tell us that the existence of a document in the archives does not prove the authenticity of that document" and that it "may be kept there as a mere record."[62] However Curtis in his A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922 states that there is no original or copy of 'Laudabiliter' in the papal archieves.[66]While accepting that there is no copy of 'Laudabiliter' in the papal archieves Mackie suggests that this proves nothing, for there is at Rome no document dealing with the affairs of Ireland before the year 1215.[67]

Terms of 'Laudabiliter'

Papal letter of 1311 and the Bruce kingship 1315-1318

Pope John XXII

However within a century-and-a-half, Norman misrule in Ireland became so apparent that Laudabiliter was to be invoked again, this time in aid of the rights of the Gaelic Irish clans. In 1315-18, in alliance with the Scottish (and the Welsh), who were also fighting the Normans, they proclaimed Edward Bruce as King of Ireland. Pope John XXII writing to Edward II of England in 1311 had reminded him of the responsibility that Laudabiliter put upon England to execute government in Ireland for the welfare of the Irish. He warned Edward II that:

... the kings of England ... have in direct violation of [Laudabiliter], for a long period past kept down that people [of Ireland] in a state of intolerable bondage, accompanied with unheard-of hardships and grievances. Nor was there found during all that time, any person to redress the grievances they endured or be moved with a pitiful compassion for their distress; although recourse was had to you ... and the loud cry of the oppressed fell, at times at least, upon your own ear. In consequence whereof, unable to support such a state of things any longer, they have been compelled to withdraw themselves from your jurisdiction and to invite another to come and be ruler over them ...

In 1317, during the Bruce invasion, some of the remaining Gaelic kings, following decades of English rule, tried to have the bull recast or replaced, as a basis for a new kingship for Ireland, with Edward Bruce as their preferred candidate. They issued a remonstrance to Pope John XXII requesting that Laudabiliter should be revoked, but this was refused. This action may suggest that the kings saw Laudabiliter as the legal basis for their continuing problems at that time.[68].

The Crown of Ireland Act 1542

Notes

  1. ^ a b Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. p. 1.
  2. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. pp. Preface.
  3. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. pp. 39–40. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  4. ^ Lingard, Rev. John (1819). A History of England from the First Invasion by the Romans to the Accession of Henry VIII. Vol. Vol II. London: J.Mawman. pp. 101–102. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  5. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell & Sons LTD. pp. 150–151.
  6. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. pp. 38–39. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  7. ^ Mackie, J. Duncan (1907). Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay. Oxford: B. H. Blackwell. p. 113.
  8. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. p. 6.
  9. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  10. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 163–164.
  11. ^ Avalon Project, Yale
  12. ^ O’Hegarty, P. S. (1918). "1". The Indestructible Nation. Vol. 1. Dublin & London: Maunsel & Company, Ltd. p. 3.
  13. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  14. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 29.
  15. ^ Tarleton's, Alfread H. (1896). Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope. London: Arthur L. Humphreys. pp. 168–169.
  16. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 29.
  17. ^ Tarleton's, Alfread H. (1896). Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope. London: Arthur L. Humphreys. pp. 168–169.
  18. ^ Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. pp. 27–32.
  19. ^ The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated, Laurence Ginnell, Fallon & Co, Dublin (1899), The Pope and Ireland, Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889), Monastic Life in the Middle Ages, Cardinal Gasquet, G. Bell and Sons, LTD, London (1922).
  20. ^ The Pope and Ireland, Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889)
  21. ^ Lynch, John (1848). Matthew Kelly (ed.). Cambrensis Eversus: The History of Ireland Vindicated. Dublin: The Celtic Society. pp. iii.
  22. ^ Owen, Henry (1889). Gerald the Welshman. London: Whiting & Co. p. 39.
  23. ^ Tarleton's, Alfread H. (1896). Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope. London: Arthur L. Humphreys. pp. 168–169.
  24. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. p. 171.
  25. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. pp. 4–5.
  26. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. pp. 4–5.
  27. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. p. 3.
  28. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell & Sons LTD. p. 153.
  29. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. p. 3.
  30. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell & Sons LTD. p. 153.
  31. ^ Paul, Herbert (1905). The Life of Froude. 1 Amen Corner, E.C London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd. p. 217.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  32. ^ a b Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. p. 27.
  33. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  34. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 155–156.
  35. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 155–156.
  36. ^ Tarleton, Alfread H. (1896). Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope. London: Arthur L. Humphreys. p. 131.
  37. ^ Alfread H Tarleton gives the date of October 9, St. Dionysius's day, when the ambassadors set out in Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope, pg.130. L. F. Rushbrook Williams also gives October 9 1155 in History of the Abbey of St. Alban, Longman's Green & Co. London 1917, pg.70-71. While both mention Robert assisting in some royal business and being a part of deputation including three bishops selected by Henry neither mention John of Salisbury.
  38. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 155–156.
  39. ^ Williams, L. F. Rushbrook (1917). History of the Abbey of St. Alban. London: Longman's Green & Co. pp. 70–71.
  40. ^ Tarleton, Alfread H. (1896). Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope. London: Arthur L. Humphreys. pp. 133–134.
  41. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. p. 155.
  42. ^ Laurence Ginnell in The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated, page23 says John was born at Old Sarum (Salisbury) between 1115 and 1120. In his youth he say, before 1130, he went to Paris to study, and he did not return to England until 1150.
  43. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. p. 153.
  44. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 155, 157.
  45. ^ Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. pp. 27–28.
  46. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 29.
  47. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 39. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  48. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 29.
  49. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 30.
  50. ^ Mackie, J. Duncan (1907). Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay. Oxford: B. H. Blackwell. pp. 114–115.
  51. ^ Thatcher, Oliver Joseph (1903). Studies Concerning Adrian IV. Chicago: The Decennial Publications. p. 4.
  52. ^ Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. pp. 27–28.
  53. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 30.
  54. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  55. ^ Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. pp. 27–28.
  56. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 30.
  57. ^ McCormick, Stephen J. (1889). The Pope and Ireland. San Francisco: A. Waldteufel. p. 30.
  58. ^ Ginnell, Laurence (1899). The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV. To King Henry Investigated. Dublin: Fallon & Co. p. 7.
  59. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  60. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 48. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  61. ^ Paul, Herbert (1905). The Life of Froude. 1 Amen Corner, E.C London: Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons, Ltd. p. 218.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  62. ^ a b c Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. p. 28.
  63. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 163–164.
  64. ^ Gasquet, Cardinal (1922). Monastic Life in the Middle Ages. London: G. Bell and Sons, LTD. pp. 163–164.
  65. ^ Burke, O.P., Very Rev. Thomas N. (1873). "1". English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude. Vol. 1. New York: Lynch, Cole & Meehan. pp. 29–30.
  66. ^ Curtis, Edmund (2002). A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922. New York: Routledge. p. 49. ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  67. ^ Mackie, J. Duncan (1907). Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay. Oxford: B. H. Blackwell. p. 110.
  68. ^ Text of 1317 Remonstrance

References

  • The Doubtful Grant of Ireland By Pope Adrian IV to King Henry Investigated, Laurence Ginnell, Fallon & Co, Dublin (1899).
  • The Pope and Ireland, Stephen J. McCormick, A. Waldteufel, San Francisco (1889).
  • A History of Ireland from Earliest Times to 1922, Edmund Curtis, Routledge New York (2002), ISBN 0 415 27949 6.
  • The Indestructible Nation, P. S. O’Hegarty, Maunsel & Company, Ltd Dublin & London (1918).
  • English Misrule in Ireland: A Course of Lectures in Reply to J. A Froude, Very Rev. Thomas N. Burke, O.P., Lynch, Cole & Meehan New York (1873).
  • The Life of Froude, Herbert Paul, Sir Isaac Pitman & Sons E.C London (1905).
  • Pope Adrian IV. The Lothian Essay 1907, J. Duncan Mackie, B. H. Blackwell Oxford (1907)
  • Ireland and the Pope: A Brief History of Papel Intrigues Against Irish Liberty from Adrian IV. to Leo XIII, James G. Maguire, James H. Barry (San Francisco (1890), Third Edition.
  • The Historical Works of Giraldus Cambrensis, Edited by Thomas Wright, George Bell & Sons (London 1905).
  • Monastic Life in the Middle Ages, Cardinal Gasquet, G. Bell and Sons, LTD, London (1922)
  • Gerald the Welshman, Henry Owen, Whiting & Co, London (1889).
  • Nicholas Breakspear (Adrian IV.) Englishman and Pope, Alfread H. Tarleton,, Arthur L. Humphreys, London (1896).
  • History of the Abbey of St. Alban, L. F. Rushbrook Williams, Longman's Green & Co. London (1917).
  • Selected Documents in Irish History, edited by Josef Lewis Altholz, M.E. Sharpe, Inc. 2000

External links

  • "Pope Adrians's bull Laudabiliter and note upon it" from Eleanor Hull, 1931, A History of Ireland, Volume One, Appendix I
  • Lyttleton, Life of Henry II., vol. v p. 371: text of Laudabiliter asa reprinted in Ernest F. Henderson, Select Historical Documents of the Middle Ages (London : George Bell and Sons) 1896 with Henderson's note: "That a papal bull was dispatched to England about this time and concerning this matter is certain. That this was the actual bull sent is doubted by many".