The Peace of God or Pax Dei was a proclamation of the local clergy that granted immunity from violence to noncombatants who could not defend themselves, starting with the peasants (agricolae) and the clergy. The Synod of
Charroux decreed a limited
Pax Dei in 989, and the practice spread to most of Western Europe over the next century, surviving in some form until at least the thirteenth century. Under the Peace of God are included: • consecrated persons — clerics, monks, virgins, and cloistered widows; • consecrated places — churches, monasteries, and cemeteries, with their dependencies; • consecrated times — Sundays, and ferial days, all under the special protection of the Church, which punishes transgressors with excommunication. At an early date the councils extended the Peace of God to the Church's protégés, the poor, pilgrims, crusaders, and even merchants on a journey. The peace of the sanctuary gave rise to the right of asylum. Three canons promulgated at Charroux, under the leadership of
Gombald Archbishop of
Bordeaux and
Gascony, were signed by the bishops of Poitiers, Limoges, Périgueux, Saintes and Angoulême, all in the west of France beyond the limited jurisdiction of King
Hugh Capet.
Excommunication would be the punishment for attacking or robbing a church, for robbing peasants or the poor of farm animals – among which the donkey is mentioned, but not the horse (an item beyond the reach of a peasant) – and for robbing, striking or seizing a priest or any man of the clergy "who is not bearing arms". Making compensation or reparations could circumvent the anathema of the Church. Children and women (virgins and widows) were added to the early protections. The
Pax Dei prohibited nobles from invading churches, from beating the defenceless, from burning houses, and so on. A
synod of 1033 added merchants and their goods to the protected list. Significantly, the Peace of God movement began in
Aquitaine,
Burgundy and
Languedoc, areas where central authority had most completely fragmented. The participation of large, enthusiastic crowds marked the phenomenon of Pax Dei as one of the first popular religious movements of the Middle Ages. In the initial phase, the mixture of relics, crowds and enthusiasm characterized the movement with an exceptionally popular character. After a lull in the first two decades of the eleventh century, the movement spread to the north of France with the support of king
Robert II of France (reigned 996–1031). There, the high nobility sponsored Peace assemblies throughout Flanders, Burgundy, Champagne, Normandy,
the Amiénois, and Berry. The oaths to keep the peace sworn by nobles spread in time to the villagers themselves; heads of households meeting communally would ritually swear to uphold the common peace. The tenth-century foundation of the
Cluny Abbey in
Burgundy aided the development of the Peace of God. Cluny was independent of any secular authority, subject to the Papacy alone, and while all church territory was inviolate, Cluny's territory extended far beyond its own boundaries. A piece of land 30 km in diameter was considered to be part of Cluny itself, and any smaller monastery that allied itself with Cluny was granted the same protection from violence. A Peace of God council gave this grant in
Anse in 994. The monastery was also immune from
excommunications,
interdicts, and
anathemas, which would normally affect an entire region.
Fleury Abbey was granted similar protection. Many Cluniac monks came from the same knightly class whose violence they were trying to stop. The movement was not very effective. However it set a precedent that would be followed by other successful popular movements to control nobles' violence such as
medieval communes. The phrase "Peace of God" also occurs as a general term meaning "under the protection of the Church" and was used in various contexts in medieval society. Pilgrims traveling on crusades, for example, did so under the "peace of God," that is, under the protection of the Church. This general use of the term does not always refer to the "Peace and Truce of God" movement.
Georges Duby summarised the widening social repercussions of
Pax Dei:
The Limousin Peace of God A subset of the movement is known as the Limousin Peace of God (994–1032/3). The most important source documenting the Limousin movement is the contemporary writer Ademar of Chabannes (989–1034). Ademar is a monk of Saint-Eparchius of Angoulême, who spent time at Saint-Martial in Limoges and was a historian, liturgist, grammarian, and artist. The Limousin Peace of God movement is generally regarded as largely fictitious, for Ademar seems to have created a fiction about the actual development of the Peace of God in Aquitaine. One of the points that Richard Landes and other historians have established is that there was a Peace of God movement in Aquitaine, as Rodulphus Glaber, writing about the peace councils in Francia in 1033, stated that the movement began in Aquitaine. One of the most important points in Landes' historiographical study of the early councils of Limoges is the fact that ecclesiastical authorities encouraged cultural and religious enthusiasm within council activities in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries. Landes, known for his work on apocalyptic currents of thought around the year 1000, argues that conciliar activities in Limoges and other areas of Aquitaine are crucial to understanding the role of the God's Peace movement as a whole because of the combination of apocalyptic attitudes toward the end of the tenth century and the popularity of penitential practices for natural and man-made disasters. In the case of Limoges, there was a major outbreak of a "'plague of plagues,' probably
ergotism" and "the abbot and the bishop (brothers of the viscount), in consultation with the duke of Aquitaine, called for a three-day fast, during which relics from all over the world would come to Limoges."
The Cult of Saints and the Importance of Relics In general, one of the reasons for the large popular participation in the Peace of God movement throughout Europe was the popularity of relics and the penitential practices associated with the cult of saints. In the case of Limoges, the cult of
Saint Martial is prominent, as miracles were attested to his shrine during the Peace Council of 994. The narrative from the Vita prolixior s. Martialis is directly related to the ideals of peace: Relics and the cults of saints were also important in the Peace of God movement in
Hainaut. During the rebellion of
Godfrey III against
Holy Roman Emperor Henry III (1047–56),
Lobbes Abbey was ravaged and had to be rebuilt, so the abbot decided to take the relics of the abbey's founder,
Saint Ursmar, on a tour (
delatio) through Flanders, starting in 1060, in order to convince
Count Baldwin V to restore the abbey's Flemish estates (and possibly to collect gifts from the faithful along the way). Performing many supposed miracles along the way, and ending feuds between many different types of people, this tour helped
Pope Urban II's declaration of the Truce of God in 1095 become implemented in
Flanders and its surrounding area more quickly. ==Truce of God==