Disputes over
land ownership became an increasing source of conflict
between the crown and the upper nobility and clergy. Land
ownership was important because the crown's main source of
revenue was taxes from the great estates and tithes from
lands owned directly by the king. But in medieval Portugal,
hereditary title to land did not exist in any developed
legal form. As the original grants of land were obscured by
passing years, many of the upper nobility and clergy of the
church came to believe that they held their land by
hereditary right. Thus, each time a new king ascended the
throne, the crown had to review land grants and titles in
order to assert its authority and reclaim land removed from
the king's patrimony. The first king to
confront this problem was Afonso II, who discovered when he
ascended the throne in 1211 that his father, Sancho I, had
willed much of the royal patrimony to the church. In 1216,
after a lengthy legal battle between the crown and the Holy
See over various provisions of Sancho's will, the pope
recognized Afonso II's right to maintain the royal patrimony
intact. From 1216 until 1221, the Portuguese crown asserted
this general right by requiring those who had received
donations from previous kings to apply for letters of
confirmation. The crown thus created the power to review
grants to nobles and ecclesiastical bodies. The process of
confirmation was carried a step further when the king
appointed royal commissions authorized to investigate land
ownership, especially in the north where much of the feudal
land tenure predated the creation of the monarchy. These
inquiries, as they were called, gathered evidence from the
oldest, most experienced residents in each locale without
consulting local nobles or church officials. They revealed a
large number of abuses and improper extensions of
boundaries, as well as conspiracies to defraud the crown of
income. The first inquiry found that the church was the
biggest expropriator of royal property. The archbishop of
Braga, angered by the activities of the commissions,
excommunicated Afonso II in 1219. The king responded by
seizing church property and forcing the archbishop to flee
Portugal for Rome. In 1220 the pope confirmed the king's
excommunication and relieved him of his oath of fealty to
the Holy See. This dispute between church and crown ended
temporarily when the excommunicated king died in 1223 and
his chancellor arranged an ecclesiastical burial in exchange
for the return of the seized church property and the promise
that future inquiries would respect canon law. The conflict
between the church and crown concerning property was finally
resolved during the reign of King Dinis (r.1279-1325). In
1284 Dinis launched a new round of inquiries and in the
following year promulgated deamortization laws, which
prohibited the church and religious orders from buying
property and required that they sell all property purchased
since the beginning of his reign. For this action against
the church, Dinis, like his father and grandfather, was
excommunicated. This time, however, the king refused to
pledge obedience to the pope and established once and for
all the power of the Portuguese crown to regulate and
control the royal patrimony. This power
allowed Dinis to nationalize the most powerful and wealthy
of the military-religious orders. The Calatravans, founded
in Castile, had in effect become Portuguese when the town of
Avis was bestowed upon them by Afonso and they became known
as the Order of Avis. In 1288 the Knights of Saint James,
also of Castilian origin, became Portuguese when the order
elected its own master. In 1312, as the result of an
investigation into the activities of the Templars, Pope
Clement V suppressed this order and transferred their vast
properties in Portugal to the Hospitallers. Dinis was able
to prevail upon the pope to give this wealth to a newly
founded Portuguese military-religious order called the Order
of Christ, which was initially situated at Castro Marim but
was later moved to Tomar. After nationalization, most of
these orders became chivalric bodies of quasi-celibate
landowners. The Order of Avis, however, remained on a war
footing and contributed significantly to Portugal's
independence from Castile. The Order of Christ also remained
a military-religious order, and its wealth was later used by
Prince Henry the Navigator to pay for the voyages of
discovery. Political
and Social Organization
<<< Contents
>>> Development
of the Realm
Library of Congress Country StudyControl of the
Royal Patrimony
Library of Congress Country Study
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