Pope Eugene III is installed at Vetralla,…
December 1145 CE
Pope Eugene III is installed at Vetralla, apart from the violence and party strife of Rome.
Pilgrims from the east have brought news of the fall of Edessa to Europe throughout 1145, and embassies from the Principality of Antioch, the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and the Kingdom of Armenia soon arrive directly at the papal court at Viterbo.
Hugh, Bishop of Jabala, one of the dioceses of Jerusalem, is among those who delivers the news.
Hugh also tells the Pope of an eastern Christian king, who, it is hoped, will bring relief to the crusader states: this is the first documented mention of Prester John.
From Vetralla, Eugene issues his bull Quantum praedecessores, calling for the Second Crusade, the first papal bull issued with a crusade as its subject.
As with most papal bulls, it has no specific title, and has come to be known by its opening words; in Latin the first sentence read "Quantum praedecessores nostri Romani pontifices pro liberatione Orientalis Ecclesiae laboraverunt, antiquorum relatione didicimus, et in gestis eorum scriptum reperimus" – in English, "How much our predecessors the Roman pontiffs did labour for the deliverance of the oriental church, we have learned from the accounts of the ancients and have found it written in their acts."
Briefly recounting the acts of the First Crusade, and lamenting the loss of Edessa, one of the oldest Christian cities, the first of the Crusader states to have been founded during the First Crusade and the first to fall, the bull is addressed directly to Louis VII of France and his subjects.
Its precisely worded provisions, reflecting contemporary advances in canon law, promise the remission of sins for all those who take the cross, as well as ecclesiastical protection for their families and possessions, just as Pope Urban II had done before the First Crusade.
Those who complete the crusade, or die along the way, are offered full absolution, including forgiveness of any debts owed to a Jew.