'Rainald of Dassel' (c.
1120 –
August 14,
1167 near
Rome) was
archbishop of
Cologne from
1159 to
1167 and
archchancellor of
Italy. He was preceded as archbishop by
Friedrich II of Berg and succeeded by
Philip I von Heinsberg.
A younger son of a rich
Saxon count,
Reinold I of Dassel, and destined as such to be an ecclesiastic, he was sent to the cathedral school at
Hildesheim in 1146, where he started working as
subdeacon. At a later date he probably went to
Paris. As early as 1130 he is said to have had a high reputation for classical learning, and to have been a member of the cathedral chapter of Hildesheim. According to documentary evidence he was provost in 1148, and in 1154 received the
provostship of Petersberg at
Goslar and of St. Moritz at Hildesheim. Soon after 1154 he was also provost of the cathedral chapter at
Münster but declined the
See of Hildesheim.
As a member of the embassy sent by
Frederick I in 1153 to
Pope Eugene III at
Rome he first revealed his political ability, and in
1156 the emperor appointed him chancellor of the empire. The
Diet of
Besançon (October
1157) left no doubt as to the drift of his policy. He inaugurated a
German policy which insisted upon the rights and the power of the German kings, the strengthening of the
Catholic Church in the German Empire, the lordship of
Italy, and the humiliation of the
papacy. Full of life, at times rough and blunt and again careful and calculating, Rainald, who, in spite of his ecclesiastical dignities, knew how to wield the sword, henceforth influenced the policy of his imperial masters.
Though he did not wish to separate Germany entirely from Rome and still held the medieval respect for the Church, his temperament carried Barbarossa much further than the latter desired, or then was advantageous in the circumstances. When Frederick finally submitted, it was Rainald who prevented him from making concessions which might have proved of advantage. The struggle with the ''
curia'' began at the Diet of Besançon, where Rainald vigorously rejected the use of the word ''beneficium'', which might mean
fief as well as benefit. In the expression used, that the pope would have been glad to grant the emperor even greater ''beneficia'' (or benefits), it was thought that the old desire of the ''curia'' for the mastery of the world was to be found.
In 1158 Rainald undertook a diplomatic journey into Italy to prepare the way for the emperor. In 1159 he was appointed
Archbishop of Cologne in absence, and during the
schism between
Pope Alexander III and
Antipope Victor IV supported the imperial pope. In 1160 he was the ambassador of the emperor to the courts of the
French and
English kings, whom he endeavoured to win to the side of the
antipope, but he did not succeed.
In January 1159 the imperial envoy Rainald entered the city of
Milan, which had been peacefully conquered in 1158, and he was expelled and almost murdered by the inhabitants. Then the emperor Barbarossa began the second siege of Milan, which would end with the destruction of the city in 1162. Rainald was also employed in diplomatic negotiations with
Genoa,
Pisa, and
Louis VII; these, however, failed.
In 1163 Alexander III excommunicated Rainald, who had loudly proclaimed in these negotiations the right of the emperor to dispose of the
papal see. Basing his action on the Roncalian decrees issued at the Diet of Roncaglia, near
Piacenza, in 1158, Rainald was once more successfully employed in Italy in the affairs of the emperor. When Victor IV died, Rainald, of his own volition and without waiting for the consent of the emperor, elected at
Lucca a new antipope,
Paschal III. Frederick would hardly have continued the schism. Rainald knew this and therefore wished to force the emperor to continue the struggle for imperial supremacy. In 1164 he was again in Germany, and brought the bones of the
Three Magi with him back to Cologne as loot from Milan and as a gift of emperor Frederick Barbarossa; today they are still in the
Cologne cathedral. In the meantime the number of the adherents against the lawful pope increased in Germany. Rainald won the consent of the King of England to common ecclesiastico-political action in behalf of Paschal and once more took up arms in defence of his one ambition, which he hoped the proposed canonization of
Charlemagne at
Aachen in 1165 would advance. In 1167 he was again in Italy, actively engaged in preparing the way for the emperor. Together with
Christian I of Buch,
archbishop of Mainz, and under Rainald's guidance an army won a victory over a much larger force of Roman troops at the
Battle of Monte Porzio in
May 29,
1167. His death was likely of
malaria; he was buried in the Lady Chapel of the Cathedral at Cologne.
References
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External links
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Biography of Rainald von Dassel
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Die Reliquien der Heiligen Drei Könige im Kölner Dom
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William of Newburgh: Of the destruction of Milan; and of the relics of the magi
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Medieval genealogies: Rainald von Dassel