Jurisdictional Struggles Between Bishop and Grand Master in Malta in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century
Abstract
:1. Introduction
An exemption from a legal obligation (munus) imposed on a person or his property by law, custom, or the order of a superior. This exemption is a privilege and follows the same rules. In ecclesiastical terminology, immunities are exemptions established by law in favour of sacred places and sacred things, church property and persons.
2. The Application of the Tridentine Decrees in Malta
Pro Curia
Die VIII dicti mensis Februarii die Cinerum seu Quadragesime, fuerunt presentes Constitutiones publicatae infra sollemnia Missae congregato populo ad divina audienda per Reverendum Dominum cl(ericum) Joannem Bernardinum de Silva, Sacrae Theologiae Doctorem, conventus Sancti Francisci Ordinis Minorum. U(nde):
Cum nihil in Ecclesia Dei disciplina partum laudabilius sit, quod divinum cultum augeat et fideles humiles ac devotos reddat, vel ecclesiasticos qui eadem ut aliis exemplo sint pietate, moribus ac honestate, eo ordine quo instituta est observantes, profitentur eam praesertim quae in reformatorum decretis, Sacro San(cti) Oecumenici Concilii Ttridentini tradita est; et ex regione perturbatione detestabilius nihil est, quod animos fidelium a Dei laudibus avertat atque pessumdet, idcirco, cum initio huius nostri muneris considerantes iam, tum ob divini cultus defectum ac ministrorum, tum etiam alias ob causas nos impellentes evangelica admonitione omnes fere clericos in Domino prevenire quo maiori cum reverentia divinus cultus exhibeatur, videntes haud praeter animi dolorem hanc ipsam disciplinam nedum hactenus minime obsedrvatam iri, sed etiam in contemptum haberi, statuimus per publica edicta sub poenis in iisdem contentis, ut saltem quod pietas et spiritus lenitatis non movent, virga coerceat in vim suam (adiuvante Deo) quatenus opus sit redigere […].10
Clericos coniugatos qui unicam et virginem duxerunt uxorem, et in habitu ac tonsura incidunt, et al[ieni] Ecclesiae de mandato Episcopi inserviunt; deberi utique fori privilegio gaudere.18
E ben vero che per rispetto delli pesi di far la guardia, e di mantener cavalli per difesa dell’Isola li chierici coniugati non possono pretendere esentione alcuna; anzi che conformo la più vera opinione de Dottori possono esser astretti dal Principe a sopportare li sudetti pesi, facendo esecutione de pegni sopra la loro beni. Sin tanto che s’inducono all’obbedienza, ma non già carcerandoli, o in altro modo toccando la loro persona, la quale per haver il Privilegio del Canoni, non possono da Giudici secolari esser ritenuto, ne punite di pena corporale.21
3. Local Immunity
Si fece estrarre con quella decenza che ordina la bolla …, et ritenendoli nelle Carceri della Curia Ecclesiastica, dia avviso quà delli delitti, de quelli vengono imputati, acciò se le possa rescrivere quello dovrà esse pure.30
4. Real Immunity
5. Personal Immunity
Con l’occasione di reiterate istanze del Gran Maestro della Religione Gerosolimatana, hanno ordinato questi Eminentissimi Signori sopra le Controversie giurisdizionali; che nell’ordinar clerici non lasci Vostra Signoria di osservare la precisa dispositione del Sacro Concilio di Trento nel c. Xi, ec.13, sess 23 de reform, acciò non seguono inconvenienti, che diano occasione di nuovo ricorso.34
Col quale si prefiggeva termine di nove giorni à ciscuno Clerico per tre monitioni canoniche di portar l’habito e servire la Chiesa sotto pena di privation del Privilegio del foro.
Giovanni Amarelli cingendo soada, nè volendo portar l’habito e servire alla Chiesa, fù dal vicario cancellato dal Rolo dei Chierici ascritti, e fù ordinato non se gli dia più la Bolletta della francligia della Gabella.42
Ut clerici etiam non habentes requisita c. 6 sess. 23 de reformatione, licet ipsi tanquam contravenientes ordinationi Sacri Concili non possint per se allegare privilegium fori, nihilominus subsint iurisdictioni episcoporum, seu ordinariorum, et illorum cognitioni, nedum in causis, in quibus iidem episcopi, seu ordinarii provenerunt, verum etiam in quibus non provenerunt. Sed illos e manibus iudicis laici repetunt, quando iidem clerici adhuc clerici permanent, videlicet, si neque a iure neque ab homine per declarationem servato servandis factam privilegiis clericalibus denudati, seu privati sunt.45
6. Broader Implications of Jurisdictional Struggles
Episcopus conqueritur nullum fere esse in ea civitate qui, sub praetextu familiaritatis equitum Hierosolymitanorum, ecclesiam non subterfugiat. Unde gravissima scelera in dies atque horas impune committuntur.
Adulteria, concubinatus, stupra, eiusque carnibus temporibus perpetrata, contemptus excommunicationum aliarumque censurarum, et maxima sacramentorum confusio. Hinc etiam nascitur magnum ecclesiasticis rebus detrimentum, et ecclesiasticae dignitatis, libertatis, ac immunitatis contemptus.46
Quando si tratta se il contratto, o patto sia usurario, e la controversia est iuris, la cognitione sempre spetta al foro Ecclesiastico, ma quando si tratta circa il fatto, o circa il castigo, come causa mixti fori, s’attende la preventione, et la cognitione e del Tribunale, che previene.47
Nelle differenze giurisdizionali, che Vostra Signoria suppone esser nati con Mons. Gran Maestro, ella dovrà con l’assistenza di Mons. Inquisitore proteggere con ogni prudente intrepidezza le raggioni della sua Chiesa, servandosi anco di qui mezzi che le permettono li Sacri Canoni, et le costituzione Apostoliche; benchè difficilmente mi possa indurre à credere, che il detto Mons. Gran Maestro vogli, con violare le giurisdizione Ecclesiastica, incorrere in censure comminati da medesimi canoni, et constitutioni Apostoliche, et in questo modo illaqueare l’anima sua, et il governo di cotesto suo magistero, non lasciando di dire a Vostra Signoria, che sopra li casi occorrenti formi, et mandi sempre processi giustificati, acciò si possi pigliare quella deliberazione che sarà di ragione[…]50
7. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The Corpus Iuris Canonici refers to six major compilations of canon law used in the Latin Church from the early 16th century until 1917: the Decretum Gratiani, the Decretals of Gregory IX, the Liber Sextus of Boniface VIII, the Clementinae, the Extravagantes Ioannis XXII, and the Extravagantes Communes. The term was popularised following Pope Gregory XIII’s brief Cum pro munere pastorali (1580), which authorised a Roman edition based on earlier printed collections edited by Jean Chappuis and Vitalis de Thebes (1499–1502). Among the most important scholarly editions are those by Iustus Henning Böhmer (Böhmer 1747), Aemilius Ludwig Richter (Richter 1839), and especially Emil Friedberg’s Corpus Iuris Canonici (Friedberg 1876–1881), which remains the standard critical reference. |
2 | “The Church of Christ is a perfect society, complete in itself, and thus possesses within itself the means sufficient to attain its end”. |
3 | Ottaviani (1958) offers a foundational account of the Church as a societas iuridice perfecta, endowed with all necessary means to fulfil its spiritual mission. Emphasizing that Church–State relations are not merely political but also jurisdictional, Ottaviani analyses the progressive encroachment of secular courts into areas formerly under ecclesiastical competence. His work remains a key reference for understanding issues of competing jurisdictions and the need for a clear delineation of authority to safeguard the Church’s autonomy (Erdő 2008). |
4 | Council of Trent. Session XXIII: Decree on the Sacrament of Holy Orders, 15 July 1563. In The Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent; Schroeder, H.J., Trans.; TAN Books: Rockford, IL, USA, 1978; pp. 172–180. This session focused on the sacrament of Holy Orders and the responsibilities of the clergy, reaffirming ecclesiastical immunity by asserting that clerics should be exempt from secular jurisdiction, particularly in legal matters. Bishops were charged with ensuring that clergy fulfilled their spiritual and moral duties while safeguarding their rights, including the privilege of being tried in ecclesiastical courts. At the same time, the Council warned against abuses of these privileges and mandated that bishops enforce clerical discipline, ensuring that serious offenses were appropriately addressed within the Church’s own legal framework. |
5 | Archivum Archiepiscopale Melitae (AAM), Brevia et Constitutiones (BC), vol. 1, f. 7, 17 July 1553. |
6 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 531, 18 May 1630: Inquisitor Nicolò Herrera was approaching the end of his office in Malta and, while Bishop Cagliares’ health was deteriorating, Ludovico Serristori (1600–56), was appointed inquisitor general in Malta on 29 May 1630. Serristori arrived in Malta in October 1630. He presided over a general chapter of the Order of Malta and headed the diocese of Malta after Bishop Cagliares was declared unfit for office due to ill health. Author’s translation: “[by appeal] to the resolutions and decrees previously made in similar cases”. The correspondence of Cagliares with Rome, cited here, unfortunately does not enter into detail as to what these four issues of disputed jurisdiction amounted to (all translations are my own). |
7 | Bishop Domingo Cubelles. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 10 December 2024, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bcubels.html. |
8 | Bishop Martín Rojas de Portalrubio. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 10 December 2024, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/brojp.html. |
9 | AAM, PV1, 1570, Bartolo. |
10 | AAM, Monitoria, 1569–72, v.3, 45v.–46v: Author’s translation: “For the Curia/On the eighth day of the month of February, on Ash Wednesday or the beginning of Lent, the Constitutions were published during the solemn celebration of Mass, in the presence of the congregation gathered to hear divine worship, by the Reverend Cleric Joannes Bernardinus de Silva, Doctor of Sacred Theology, of the Convent of St Francis of the Order of Friars Minor./Since nothing in the discipline of the Church of God is more praiseworthy than that which enhances divine worship and makes the faithful humble and devout, nor the ecclesiastics who, as an example to others, profess the same piety, morals, and honesty in that order in which it was instituted, particularly the discipline handed down in the reforming decrees of the Sacred and Holy Ecumenical Council of Trent, and conversely, nothing is more detestable than the disorder which diverts the faithful from the praises of God and leads them astray. Therefore, considering at the beginning of our office that both the defect of divine worship and the conduct of the ministers, as well as other causes urging us, impelled by the evangelical admonition to go before all clerics in the Lord so that divine worship might be offered with greater reverence, we have seen, not without deep sorrow, that this very discipline has not only been neglected up to this point but also treated with contempt. Thus, we have decreed, through public edicts and under the penalties contained therein, that at least what piety and the spirit of leniency cannot achieve, the rod may compel to its effect (with God’s help) insofar as it is necessary to restore [discipline …]”. |
11 | AAM, Monitoria, 1569–72, v.3, ff. 45v.-46v. |
12 | AAM, Monitoria, 1569–72, v.3, f. 79r. |
13 | Martín Rojas de Portalrubio. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 28 January 2025, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/brojp.html. |
14 | AAM, BC, v. 1, ff. 21–8, 24 November 1576, Directives issued by Card. M. Antonius; Card. Nicholas; Card. Jul. Antonius Sanetorius; Card. Felix Perettus; Card. Vincentius. To Bishop Royas and Grand Master La Cassière. |
15 | AAM, BC, v.1, ff. 43–5, 7 April 1595. |
16 | Tomás Gargallo. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 28 January 2025, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bgargal.html. |
17 | Cardinal Girolomo Mattei. Catholic-Hierarchy, accessed on 25 January 2025, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bmatteigi.html. |
18 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 39, 15 April 1595. Author’s translation: “Married clerics who have taken a single and virgin wife, and who conform to clerical dress and tonsure, and serve another church by mandate of the bishop, are indeed to enjoy the privilege of the clerical forum”. |
19 | Cardinal Orazio Lancellotto. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 10 December 2024, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/blanceo.html |
20 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 237, 18 December 1619. |
21 | AAM, BC, v. 1, ff. 537–8, 14 October 1630. Author’s translation: “It is indeed true that, with regard to the burdens of performing guard duties and maintaining horses for the defense of the island, married clerics cannot claim any exemption. On the contrary, according to the most authoritative opinion of legal scholars, they may be compelled by the Prince to bear such burdens, even through the enforcement of pledges on their property, until they comply with their obligations. However, they cannot be imprisoned or subjected to any other form of personal punishment, as their clerical status grants them the privilege of the canons, which protects them from being detained or subjected to corporal punishment by secular judges”. |
22 | AAM, BC, v.15, ff. 439r–v. |
23 | NLM, Libr. 13, p. 555; AAM, Edicta, v. 10, ff. 180r–1v. |
24 | Bartolomé Rull. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 28 January 2025, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/brull.html. |
25 | AAM, BC, v. 14, ff. 528r–9v. |
26 | AAM, Edicta, v.10, ff. 221r–2r. |
27 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 201, 2 July 1619. |
28 | AAM, BC, v.1, f.221, undated. |
29 | In 1591, Gregory XIV promulgated the apostolic constitution Cogit nos, which reaffirmed and defended the immunity of the clergy and Church property from secular authority. This decree was particularly aimed at addressing disputes and conflicts regarding the secular interference in ecclesiastical affairs, emphasising the Church’s autonomy in managing its own affairs and protecting clergy from legal or punitive actions by secular courts. It was consistent with the broader Counter-Reformation efforts to solidify the Church’s authority and independence in the face of challenges from both Protestant reformers and increasingly assertive secular powers. |
30 | AAM, BC, v.1, ff. 405–6, 22 June 1627. |
31 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 9, 2 April 1555. |
32 | AAM, BC, v. 1, ff. 13–14, 7 September 1561: Injunction of Bishop Cubelles against the secular courts. |
33 | AAM, BC, v. 1, ff. 17–18, 16–8 August 1575. |
34 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 531, 2 July 1630. Author’s translation: “On the occasion of repeated requests by the grand master of the Order of the Knights of St John of Jerusalem, these Most Eminent Lords, overseeing jurisdictional disputes, have ordered that in the ordination of clerics, Your Excellency must not fail to observe the precise provision of the Sacred Council of Trent in chapter XI, canon 13, session 23 De Reformatione, so that inconveniences do not arise, which would lead to further appeals”. The cited reference is from the Council of Trent, Session 23 (15 July 1563), which dealt with the reform of the clergy and ecclesiastical discipline. Card. Berlinghiero Gessi (1563–1639) is specifically citing Chapter XI, Canon 13 of De Reformatione in Session 23 that pertains to the standards and qualifications required for the ordination of clerics, emphasizing adherence to canonical norms to avoid irregularities and abuses. This decree aimed to ensure the proper selection and ordination of candidates for the priesthood, stressing qualities such as moral character, education, and suitability for ecclesiastical ministry, while addressing abuses such as nepotism and the ordination of unqualified individuals. |
35 | Filippo Cardinal Boncompagni. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 28 January 2025, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bboncof.html. |
36 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 33, 6 September 1578. |
37 | AAM, BC, v. 1, f. 34, 2 December 1578. |
38 | Cardinal Filippo Guastavillani. Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 10 December 2024, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bguasta.html. |
39 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 35–36, 21 June 1581. |
40 | Antonio Maria Cardinal Gallo, Catholic Hierarchy, accessed on 10 December 2024, https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bgalliam.html. |
41 | AAM, BC, v.1, f.157, 15 December 1617. |
42 | AAM, BC, v.1, f.587: A term of nine days was set for each cleric, with three canonical warnings, to wear the habit and serve the Church under penalty of losing the privilege of the forum. Giovanni Amarelli, refusing to comply by donning the habit or serving the Church, was removed from the register of enrolled clerics by the vicar and was ordered to be no longer issued the exemption pass for tax purposes. |
43 | The Sacra Congregatio super controversiis iurisdictionibus (Sacred Congregation for Jurisdictional Disputes) was established in 1622 by Pope Gregory XV. Its primary function was to address disputes between ecclesiastical and secular authorities regarding jurisdictional matters. This congregation played a key role in the complex interplay between the Church and States, particularly in contexts where overlapping powers created tensions. |
44 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 399, 30 May 1627. |
45 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 541, 12 November 1630. Author’s translation: “Thus, even clerics who do not meet the requirements of Chapter 6, Session 23 of the Decree on Reformation, although they themselves, as violators of the ordinance of the Sacred Council, cannot invoke the privilege of the forum on their own, are nonetheless subject to the jurisdiction of bishops or ordinaries and to their judgement, not only in cases where those same bishops or ordinaries have already intervened, but also in cases where they have not. However, they are reclaimed from the hands of the secular judge when those same clerics remain clerics, namely, if they have not been stripped of or deprived of clerical privileges by law or by any declaration made in accordance with the proper formalities (servato servandis)”. |
46 | AAM, BC, v.1, f.279r, undated. Author’s translation: “The bishop laments that hardly anyone in the city refrains from evading the Church’s authority under the pretext of their association with the knights of St John. As a result, the gravest crimes are committed with impunity day after day, hour after hour. Adulteries, concubinage, fornication, and other carnal sins frequently committed during those times, along with the disdain for excommunication and other censures, and the resulting great confusion regarding the sacraments, led to significant harm to ecclesiastical affairs. These offenses also gave rise to a profound disregard for the dignity, liberty, and immunity of the Church”. |
47 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 527, 7 May 1630. Author’s translation: “When it concerns whether the contract or agreement is usurious, and the controversy pertains to law, the jurisdiction always belongs to the ecclesiastical court. However, when it pertains to the fact itself or to punishment, as a matter of mixed jurisdiction, the tribunal that has prior claim handles the case, and the cognizance belongs to the court that first assumes authority”. |
48 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 363., 24 August 1626. |
49 | https://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bbarbn.html (accessed on 15 March 2025). |
50 | AAM, BC, v.1, f. 363, 24 August 1626. Author’s translation: “In matters of jurisdictional disputes, which Your Lordship supposes to have arisen with His Excellency the Grand Master, you must, with the assistance of Monsignor Inquisitor, diligently and prudently defend the rights of your Church, availing yourself of those means permitted by the Sacred Canons and Apostolic Constitutions. However, I find it difficult to believe that the afore-mentioned grand master would, by violating ecclesiastical jurisdiction, willingly incur the censures prescribed by these same canons and Apostolic Constitutions, thereby endangering his own soul and the governance of his magisterium. Nevertheless, I must insist that Your Lordship, in every arising case, prepare and send well-documented proceedings so that the appropriate deliberation may be undertaken in accordance with justice”. |
51 | AAM, BC, v.1, ff. 369–71, 31 October 1626. |
52 | AAM, BC, v.1, ff. 511–13, 9 January 1630. |
53 | AAM, BC, v.1, ff. 585–6, (undated c.1634). |
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Doublet, N.J. Jurisdictional Struggles Between Bishop and Grand Master in Malta in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century. Religions 2025, 16, 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040484
Doublet NJ. Jurisdictional Struggles Between Bishop and Grand Master in Malta in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century. Religions. 2025; 16(4):484. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040484
Chicago/Turabian StyleDoublet, Nicholas Joseph. 2025. "Jurisdictional Struggles Between Bishop and Grand Master in Malta in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century" Religions 16, no. 4: 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040484
APA StyleDoublet, N. J. (2025). Jurisdictional Struggles Between Bishop and Grand Master in Malta in the First Half of the Seventeenth Century. Religions, 16(4), 484. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040484