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Although at each new turn the reforms were presented to contemporaries as a return to the old ways, they are often seen by modern historians as the first European Revolution. The powers that the Gregorian papacy arrogated to itself were summed up in a list called ''''. The Gregorial revolution depended in new ways and to a new degree on the collections of Canon Law that were being assembled, in order to buttress the papal position, during the same period. Part of the legacy of the Gregorian Reform was the new figure of the papal legist, exemplified a century later by Pope Innocent III .

The reforms of the Church, both within it, and in relation to the , described the coexistence of church and state as a divine ordinance, and emphasized the necessity of union between the ''sacerdotium'' and the ''imperium''. But at no period would he have dreamed of putting the two powers on an equal footing; the superiority of church to state was to him a fact which admitted of no discussion and which he had never doubted.

He wished to see all important matters of dispute referred to Rome; appeals were to be addressed to himself; the centralization of ecclesiastical government in Rome naturally involved a curtailment of the powers of bishops. Since these refused to submit voluntarily and tried to assert their traditional independence, his papacy is full of struggles against the higher ranks of the clergy.

This battle for the foundation of papal supremacy is connected with his championship of compulsory Celibacy Among The Clergy and his attack on Simony . Gregory VII did not introduce the celibacy of the priesthood into the Church, but he took up the struggle with greater energy than his predecessors. In 1074 he published an Encyclical , absolving the people from their obedience to bishops who allowed married priests. The next year he enjoined them to take action against married priests, and deprived these clerics of their revenues. Both the campaign against priestly marriage and that against simony provoked widespread resistance.

The Pope was to be the absolute head of the church. This was a unique, universalist idea of the church. He was to be judged by no one, and the Roman Church had never been and would never be wrong. The Pope was given authority to depose Emperors. It is also closely linked with the Investiture Controversy .

The reform of the Calendar , decreed on 24 February 1582 by Pope Gregory XIII , for whom it was named the " Gregorian Calendar , bears no connection to these Gregorian reforms.


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