The Canons Regular of the Lateran (CRL, Canonici Regulares Lateranenses), formally titled the Canons Regular of St. Augustine of the Congregation of the Most Holy Savior at the Lateran, is an international congregation of canons regular, comprising priests and lay brothers, in the Catholic Church. They received their present name from Pope Eugene IV in 1446.
The canons regular trace their origins to the 4th century reforms of the clergy by Martin of Tours in France and Eusebius of Vercelli in Italy. They and other bishops sought to shape the accepted lifestyles of their clergy on a domestic model, based on the communal pattern followed by the first Christians as depicted in the Acts of the Apostles. The premier example of this effort was the life and work of Augustine of Hippo, who himself lived as a monk before being called to take up the office of bishop for his North African city. He later wrote a short monastic rule to guide a community of women who wanted to live the monastic ideal. This document became the official guide for the earliest of the religious communities to emerge in the church in later centuries, in parallel to that of the Rule of St. Benedict. From this comes the title "regular", meaning one following a "rule" (Latin: regula).
Under the guidance of Cardinal Hildebrand of Sovana (later to become Pope Gregory VII), the Lateran Synod of 1059 organized and recognized these developing communities and recommended them as the preferred pattern of clerical life, at a time when mandatory celibacy was being made a universal requirement for the clergy of the Roman Church. [1]
Among notable canons was Abbot Giuseppe Ricciotti (1890–1964), who wrote on Scripture and ancient history.
The canons' distinctive habit comprises a totally white cassock, sash, shoulder cape (mozzetta) and skull cap (zucchetto), identical to what the Pope wears as his daily attire.
The congregation is based near the ancient Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli (St. Peter in Chains), where the current Abbot General lives with the General Curia of the Congregation, the current Abbot General Rt Rev. Edoardo Parisotto CRL was elected on 26th June 2024. Provinces exist in Argentina, Belgium, Italy, Poland, the Netherlands, France, Spain, and the United States. It is a member of the Confederation of Canons regular. [2]
In 1482 and 1483, King Louis XI of France donated the revenue from several southern French domains to the Canons Regular of the Lateran, including properties of the Clairac Abbey in Clairac, Guyenne, to help finance reconstruction works of St. John's Basilica which had suffered fires in the 14th century and had been left in disrepair during the Avignon Papacy. The corresponding payments lapsed after 1507.
In 1604, the Canons claimed that revenue was due to them from the abbey under Louis XI's donation. Instead of accepting this claim, King Henry IV of France, following a suggestion from Cardinal Arnaud d'Ossat, gave the abbey itself to the Roman Canons, as a token of his and France's Catholic goodwill following the turmoil of the French Wars of Religion. Pope Paul V confirmed the abbey's union with the Canons Regular in a bull of October 1605, in turn ratified by Henry on 4 February 1606. [3] As a consequence, half of the Clairac Abbey's income was reserved for St. John Lateran, while the other half went to the Bishopric of Agen. The bull stipulated that the Cardinal Vicar would give an annual mass in St John's Basilica for France's happiness and prosperity (pro felici ac prospero statu Galliae), every year on Henry's birthdate on December 13, known in French as the messe pour la prospérité de la France - a distinction that has not been granted to any other nation. [4] Moreover, Henry and his successors would become "First and Only Honorary Canon" of the Canons Regular's congregation.
In 1606, the Canons also heeded a suggestion by French ambassador Charles de Neufville , overcoming objections from pro-Spanish ultra-catholics who resented Henry's earlier Protestant allegiances, and commissioned a heroic statue of Henry IV from sculptor Nicolas Cordier, which was erected in August 1609 under the Basilica's side portico. [5] Clairac Abbey, however, was nationalized in 1792 and sold in 1799. The resulting financial dispute between the Vatican and the French state went through various arrangements [6] and was finally settled in 1927.
With some ups and downs since Henry IV, the Vatican has maintained the tradition of making French heads of state honorary canons of St. John Lateran, upon their visit to Rome. After many decades of neglect, the tradition was revived by President René Coty in 1957 and upheld by his successors Charles de Gaulle, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, Jacques Chirac and Nicolas Sarkozy. Even presidents who did not formally receive the title in Rome, namely Georges Pompidou, François Mitterrand and François Hollande, accepted it - "by tradition", as Hollande put it despite being himself an atheist. [7] Emmanuel Macron was the latest French President to receive the title of honorary canon on a visit to Rome and Pope Francis, on 26 June 2018. [8]
Abbot is an ecclesiastical title given to the head of an independent monastery for men in various Western Christian traditions. The name is derived from abba, the Syriac form of the Hebrew ab, and means "father". The female equivalent is abbess.
The First Council of the Lateran was the 9th ecumenical council recognised by the Catholic Church. It was convoked by Pope Callixtus II in December 1122, immediately after the Concordat of Worms. The council sought to bring an end to the practice of the conferring of ecclesiastical benefices by people who were laymen, free the election of bishops and abbots from secular influence, clarify the separation of spiritual and temporal affairs, re-establish the principle that spiritual authority resides solely in the Church and abolish the claim of the Holy Roman Emperor to influence papal elections.
Pope Alexander II, born Anselm of Baggio, was the head of the Roman Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 1061 to his death in 1073. Born in Milan, Anselm was deeply involved in the Pataria reform movement. Elected according to the terms of his predecessor's bull, In nomine Domini, Anselm's was the first election by the cardinals without the participation of the people and minor clergy of Rome. He also authorized the Norman Conquest of England in 1066.
Pope Stephen IX was the Bishop of Rome and ruler of the Papal States from 3 August 1057 to his death on 29 March 1058. He was a member of the Ardenne-Verdun family, who ruled the Duchy of Lorraine, and started his ecclesiastical career as a canon in Liège. He was invited to Rome by Pope Leo IX, who made him chancellor in 1051 and one of three legates to Constantinople in 1054. The failure of their negotiations with Patriarch Michael I Cerularius of Constantinople and Archbishop Leo of Ohrid led to the permanent East–West Schism. He continued as chancellor to the next pope, Victor II, and was elected abbot of the Benedictine monastery of Montecassino.
Pope Paschal II, born Ranierius, was head of the Catholic Church and ruler of the Papal States from 13 August 1099 to his death in 1118. A monk of the Abbey of Cluny, he was created the cardinal-priest of San Clemente by Pope Gregory VII (1073–85) in 1073. He was consecrated as pope in succession to Pope Urban II (1088–99) on 19 August 1099. His reign of almost twenty years was exceptionally long for a medieval pope.
Canon is a Christian title usually used to refer to a member of certain bodies in subject to an ecclesiastical rule.
The Lateran Palace, formally the Apostolic Palace of the Lateran, is an ancient palace of the Roman Empire and later the main papal residence in southeast Rome.
The Canons Regular of St. Augustine are priests who live in community under a rule and are generally organised into religious orders, differing from both secular canons and other forms of religious life, such as clerics regular, designated by a partly similar terminology. As religious communities, they have laybrothers as part of the community.
The mozzetta is a short elbow-length sartorial vestment, a cape that covers the shoulders and is buttoned over the frontal breast area. It is worn over the rochet or cotta as part of choir dress by some of the clergy of the Catholic Church, among them the pope, cardinals, bishops, abbots, canons and religious superiors. There used to be a small hood on the back of the mozzetta of bishops and cardinals, but this was discontinued by Pope Paul VI. The hood, however, was retained in the mozzette of certain canons and abbots, and in that of the popes, often trimmed in satin, silk or ermine material.
Cardinal Vicar is a title commonly given to the vicar general of the Diocese of Rome for the portion of the diocese within Italy. The official title, as given in the Annuario Pontificio, is Vicar General of His Holiness.
Hyacinthe Sigismond Gerdil, CRSP was an Italian theologian, bishop and cardinal, who was a significant figure in the response of the papacy to the assault on the Catholic Church by the upheavals caused by the French Revolution.
Giovanni Boccamazza was an Italian Cardinal. He was from the Roman nobility, and was a nephew of Cardinal Giacomo Savelli, who had been an important figure in the Roman Curia since his creation as cardinal in 1261.
Étienne de Bar, sometimes Stephen of Bar, was a French cardinal and nephew of Pope Calixtus II.
Alain (II) de Coëtivy was a prelate from a Breton noble family. He was bishop of Avignon, Uzès, Nîmes and of Dol, titular cardinal of Santa Prassede, then cardinal-bishop of Palestrina and cardinal-bishop of Sabina. Many sources mention him as the Cardinal of Avignon.
Angel de Grimoard, also recorded as Angelic or Anglic, was a French canon regular and a Cardinal. He was the younger brother of Pope Urban V.
The Abbey of Saint Genevieve was a monastery in Paris. Reportedly built by Clovis, King of the Franks in 502, it became a centre of religious scholarship in the Middle Ages. It was suppressed at the time of the French Revolution.
Oderisio di Sangro was an Italian Benedictine monk and cardinal, the son of Count Rinaldo of the family of the conti di Sangro in the Marsi.
The 1099 papal election following the death of Pope Urban II took place on 13 August 1099. Before his death, Urban had designated Cardinal Rainerius da Bieda as his successor. The cardinal-electors, with the consent of the lower Roman clergy, chose Rainerius, who, after a flight and over his considerable objections, accepted and took the name Paschal II. He was consecrated a bishop and crowned pope on the next day.
The Abbey of St. Vincent, otherwise the Royal Abbey of St. Vincent, was a former monastery of canons regular in Senlis, Oise, which was dissolved during the French Revolution. Late in their history, they became part of a new congregation of canons regular with the motherhouse at the Royal Abbey of St Genevieve in Paris, known as the Genofévains, widely respected for their institutions of learning.
Giuseppe Maria Feroni was a Cardinal in the Roman Catholic church, and camerlengo from 1760–1761.