Benzo of Alba

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Benzo of Alba (died c. 1089) was an Italian bishop. He was an opponent of

Gregorian reform who supported Henry IV of Germany in the Investiture Controversy
.

Benzo's date of birth is unknown but he was probably born in northern Italy.[1] Benzo began his career in the imperial chapel, and was probably raised to the see of Alba by Henry III, Holy Roman Emperor.[2] During the Cadalan Schism (1061–1064), Benzo supported the imperial candidate, Bishop Cadalus of Parma, against the reform candidate, Pope Alexander II.[3] Benzo later opposed Pope Gregory VII.[4]

He was driven from his see by members of the Pataria around 1076 or 1077, and probably returned to the imperial court during 1081–1084.[5] Around 1085–1086, he wrote his only extant work: Ad Heinricum IV imperatorem libri VII (Seven Books To Emperor Henry IV): this polemical text was dedicated to Henry IV of Germany.[6]

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Seyffert, ‘Einleitung’, pp. 2ff., 26f.; Miccoli, ‘Benzone’, p. 726.
  2. ^ Seyffert, ‘Einleitung,’ pp. 5f.
  3. ^ Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, pp. 50f.
  4. ^ Cowdrey, Pope Gregory VII, p. 65.
  5. ^ Robinson, Authority and resistance, pp. 71ff.
  6. ^ Benzo of Alba, Ad Heinricum imperatorem libri VII, accessible online at: Monumenta Germaniae Historica.

Bibliography