Politics Richard was intimately involved in the quarrel of investitures between the
papacy and the Emperor of the
Holy Roman Empire between 1075 and 1122. He supported the
anti-pope Clement III unto 1083 and was therefore deposited by
Pope Gregory VII. when Richard repented, the new Pope reinstalled him. He was a legate under Pope Gregory VII in Spain in 1078. However, Richard fell into disgrace again under Pope
Victor III however he was reinstated by Pope
Urban II, on February 20, 1089, Richard in office. In 1104, acting at the request of Pope
Paschal II, he chaired a council in Troyes for absolving King
Philip I of France and marking the alliance between the
kingdom of France and the
papacy against the
empire. In 1110 when he was 27, he presided over a council at Clermont and one in
Toulouse convened at his request, to suppress damage to the
abbey of Mauriac. When his brother died he was given the Abbotship of the Abbey of St Victor. When Richards maternal uncle
Aicard,
Archbishop of Arles, took the side of the pope, He was placed as head of
Montmajour Abbey by
Pope Gregory VII with the
Bull of 18 April 1081.
Reform Richard becomes the great promoter of the Episcopal reform movement in
Provence and
Languedoc relying on his powers as Cardinal and Legate. In the early 1080s, Richard succeeds in installing the monks of his monastery on bishoprics beginning with the dioceses closest to the abbey: Marseille and Aix-en-Provence. [8] In Aix, he is a member of the Viscount's family Marseille he has earned the Gregorian cause, in Marseille, a monk of modest origin. Richard also plays an important role in the implementation of the Victorine monks of Marseille in Narbonne city, despite the canonical opposition. Despite his support for the Gregorian reform, Richard constantly appears as a faithful representative of his family Millau-Gévaudan. Using his role of leader of the reform movement and its proximity to the abbey of St. Victor, it encourages "out of his family reduced its mountain" and close to accession to important positions power in Provence and Languedoc, to the detriment of other aristocratic families. Thus, in 1073 [ref. required] play a role, it seems, decisive in the marriage of his nephew Gilbert Gevaudan with Gerberge, the Countess of Provence. In 1112, aside from the estate of the same county, rival local families by intervening to the Counts of Barcelona. It also promotes, against the interests of the family of Narbonne, another of his nephews, Arnaud de Lévézou for his own succession to the Archbishop of Narbonne in 1121. Finally, many indications that this is another nephew, Atton Bruniquel, Richard up in 1115 in the diocese of Arles after the complicated episode of archiépiscopats Aicard and Gibelin. The action of Richard Millau therefore shows that around the year 1100, the diffusion of ideas in the Gregorian Midi mingles closely with rivalries and local vicomtales comtales families.
Building At the
Abbey of Saint-Victor he continued the construction on the Grand
cartulary of the abbey, which had been begun under his brother Bernat in the 1070s. The work was completed before 1100AD under his direction. According to
Joseph Vaissète, he participated in the appointment of his nephew Atton, of the family of viscounts of Millau – as he and the Countess of Provence Douce – the Archbishopric of Arles in 1115. He died February 15, 1121, and his nephew Arnaud de Lévézou succeeded as
Archbishop of Narbonne 16 April of the same year. == References ==