Presbyters Uniwersytet Warszawski
ID
ER 353
Canon 20 of the Third Council of Toledo (Iberian Peninsula, AD 589) forbids bishops from oppressing their clerics with taxes.
[Titulus in recensione Iuliana] XX Vt episcopus angarias uel indictiones in diocese non imponat.
[Titulus in recensione Vulgata] XX Quod sacerdotes moderanter agere debeant per parrocias.
 
Canon 20
 
Multorum querella hanc constitutionem exegit, quia cognouimus episcopos per parrocias suas non sacerdotaliter sed crudeliter desaeuire, et dum scriptum sit: ''Forma estote gregi neque dominantes in clero'', exactiones diocesi suae uel damna infligunt. Ideoque excepto quod ueterum constitutiones a parrociis habere iubent episcopos, alia quae hucusque praesumpta sunt denegentur, hoc est neque in angariis presbyteres aut diacones neque in aliquibus fatigent indictionibus, ne uideamur in ecclesia Dei exactores potius quam Dei pontifices nominari. Ii uero clerici, tam locales quam diocesani, qui se ab episcopo grauari cognouerint, querellas suas ad metropolitanum deferre non differant; qui metropolitanus non moretur eiusmodi praesumptiones districte coercere.
 
The summary of the canon in the latter part of the concilar acts, so-called Edictum regis:
 
[20] Quod sacerdotes moderanter agere debeant per parrocias.
 
(eds. Martinez Diez, Rodriguez 1992: 104, 107, 127-129, 137)
 
 
 
 
 
 
[Title in the recension Iuliana] XX That no bishop impose taxes on his diocese.
[Title in the recension Vulgata] XX That bishops (sacerdotes) shall moderately govern their dioceses.
 
Canon 20
 
This constitution is an effect of a complaint by many people. For we have learnt that bishops in their dioceses rage brutally rather than act priestly, and although it is written: "You shall be examples to the flock and not the lords over God's heritage" (dominantes in clero, 1 Peter 5:3), they impose taxes and penalties on their dioceses. Therefore, any payments imposed, other than those that the ancient canons order bishops to have from their dioceses are, from now abolished. The presbyters and deacons cannot be forced to give services or harass with taxes so that bishops will not appear so much as God's exactors as God's pontiffs. And if clerics, whether they are from the city or from the diocese, consider themselves oppressed by their bishop, they shall not delay in bringing their complaint to the metropolitan bishop, who without delay will strictly contain activities of this sort.
 
The summary of the canon in the latter part of the concilar acts, so-called Edictum regis:
 
[20] That priests shall administer with moderateness in their dioceses.
 
(trans. M. Szada)

Discussion:

For the use of scriptural quotation (1 Peter 5:3) in reference to the power of a bishop see Canon 12 of the Second Council in Braga in 572, record [329]).
 
The ancient canons to which the synodal fathers make reference may be Canon 8 of the council of Tarragona (which allows bishops to take one third from the diocese) and Canon 15 (11 according to Hispana) of the council of Orleans.
 

Place of event:

Region
  • Iberian Peninsula
City
  • Toledo

About the source:

Title: Third Council of Toledo (589), Concilium III Toletanum, III Concilium Toletanum a. 589
Origin: Toledo (Iberian Peninsula)
Denomination: Catholic/Nicene/Chalcedonian
The Third Council of Toledo in 589 is a pivotal event that changed the religious allegiance of the Visigothic kingdom. The ruling elites of the Visigothic kingdom of Toulouse (418-507), and later in the Visigothic kingdom in the Iberian Peninsula adhered to the Arian (Homoian) Christianity, whereas the Roman population were dominantly Catholic (though the frontiers between the denominations were not impenetrable, as we know Goths who converted to the Nicene Christianity and Romans who were Homoian). In 587 King Reccared converted to Catholicism. This was followed by the decision to eliminate the religious division in the kingdom. The Third Council of Toledo in 589 assembled in May to confirm the conversion of all the Gothic leaders and Arian clergy to the Catholicism.
The literature on the conversion of the Visigoths and the Third Council in Toledo is voluminous - only a few seminal books and papers are signalised in the bibliography section below.
 
The acts of the Third Council of Toledo are transmitted in the 7th-century canonical collection from Spain, so-called Hispana. Its authorship has been atrributed to Isidore of Seville (it is still accepted by Martinez Diez 1966; other scholars reject this attribution: Munier 1966; Gaudemet 1967: 122-124; Schaferdiek 1967: 144-148; Landau 1968: 406-418). The collection has several recensions: primitive one, so-called Isidoriana, lost today; the Juliana recension edited after 681 and attributed to Julian of Toledo, that adds to the previous recension the acts and canons of the councils from the fifth council of Toledo do the twelfth (in 681); the Vulgata recension edited between 694-702 that adds the acts and canons of the councils from the the thirteenth council of Toledo up to the seventeenth held in 694, this recension was the most widespread during the Middle Ages (more bibliography see Kéry 1999: 61-67). The two recensions Iuliana and Vulgata give different titles to the canons of the Third Council of Toledo (Martinez Diez 1992: 17-20).
Edition:
G. Martínez Díez, F. Rodríguez eds., La colección canónica Hispana, Monumenta Hispaniae sacra. Serie canónica 5, Madrid 1992.
J. Vives ed., Concilios visigóticos e hispano-romanos, Barcelona-Madrid 1963.
 
Bibliography:
El Concilio III de Toledo. XIV Centenario, ed. R. Gonzalvez, Toledo 1991.
R. Collins, Visigothic Spain, 409-711, Oxford, OX, UK; Malden, MA, USA 2004.
J. Gaudemet, review of: "G. Martinez Diez, La coleccion canonica Hispana 1", Revue historique de droit français et étranger 4e ser.  45 (1967), 122-124.
J.N. Hillgarth, "La conversión de los Visigodos. Notas criticas", Analecta Sacra Tarraconensia 34/1 (1961), 21-46.
L. Kéry, Canonical collections of the early Middle Ages (ca. 400-1140): a bibliographical guide to the manuscripts and literature, Washington, D.C 1999.
M. Koch, Ethnische Identität im Entstehungsprozess des spanischen Westgotenreiches, Berlin; New York 2012.
P. Landau, review of: "G. Martinez Diez, La coleccion canonica Hispana 1", Zeitschrift der Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte Kanonistische Abteilung 54 (1968), 406-414.
G. Martínez Díez, La Colección canónica Hispana, vol. 1 Estudio, Madrid 1966.
C. Munier, "Saint Isidore de Séville est-il l’auteur de I’Hispana chronologique?", Sacris Erudiri 17 (1966), 230-241.
K. Schaferdiek, review of: "G. Martinez Diez, La coleccion canonica Hispana 1", Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte 78 (1967), 144-148.
E.A. Thompson, "The Conversion of the Visigoths to Catholicism", Nottingham Medieval Studies 4 (1960), 4-35.  

Categories:

Functions within the Church - Parish presbyter
    Functions within the Church - Rural presbyter
      Functions within the Church - Urban presbyter
        Described by a title - Presbyter/πρεσβύτερος
          Described by a title - Clericus
            Public law - Ecclesiastical
              Economic status and activity - Indication of poverty
                Relation with - Bishop/Monastic superior
                  Economic status and activity
                    Please quote this record referring to its author, database name, number, and, if possible, stable URL: M. Szada, Presbyters in the Late Antique West, ER353, http://presbytersproject.ihuw.pl/index.php?id=6&SourceID=353