Maurice de Sully

Bishop of Paris, b. of humble parent at Sully-sur-Loire (Soliacum), near Orléans, the beginning of the twelfth century; d. at Paris, 11 Sept., 1196. He came to Paris towards 1140 and studied for the ecclesiastical state. He soon became known as an able professor of theology and an eloquent preacher. It has been frequently asserted, but without sufficient proof that he was canon of Bourzee. In 1159 he appears as archdeacon of Paris, and in 12 Oct., 1160, largely through the influence of Louis VII, he was elected to succeed Peter Lombard in the episcopal see of that city. The present Cathedral of Notre-Dame stands as a monument to his episcopal administration. Its construction was begun and almost entirely completed under him. Alexander III, in 1163, laid the cornerstone of the magnificent edifice, and in 1185 the Patriach of Jerusalem, Heraclius, officiated in the completed sanctuary. Maurice de Sully also rebuilt the episcopal palace in which the nobility and clergy met in 1179 for the coronation of Philip Augustus as joint ruler with his father Louis VII. He enjoyed in a high degree of confidence of both rulers, accompanied Louis to his meeting with Frederick Barbarossa at Saint-Jean-de-Losne in 1162, and was one of the guardians of the royal treasury during the crusade (1190).

In the controversy between Thomas Becket and King Henry II he energetically defended the former and, in three letters still extant, pleaded his cause with Alexander III. He forbade the celebration of the feast of the Immaculate Conception in his diocese, but is said to have strongly supported by appeals to the Holy Writ (Job 19:25-27) the doctrine of the resurrection of bodies, against some skeptical noblemen. Although he retained the administration of his diocese, he retired, late in life, to the monastery of Saint-Victor, where he died. Maurice de Sully is the author of a treatise on the Canon of the Mass, preserved in manuscript at Bourges. Numerous sermons, some in Latin, others in vernacular, are also attributed to him. Those written in Latin tongue were not directly destined for the people, but rather for the use and study of the clergy. The French sermons do not seem to be in their present form the original work of Maurice de Sully; they are more commonly considered as reproductions made by ecclesiastics from his Latin collection. No critical edition s of these sermons has yet been published: his three letters to Alexander III are printed in P.L., CC, 1419-22, as are also some of his official documents (CCV, 897-914).

BAUNARD, Maurice de Sully (Orleans, 1862); MORTET, Maurice de Sully, évêque de Paris 1160-96(Paris, 1890); MEYER, Les manuscrits des sermons français de Maurice de Sully in Romania. XXIII (1894); HIATT, Notre-Dame de Paris (London 1902).