READING HALLDOORS OF WISDOM |
A HISTORY OF THE POPES FROM THE GREAT SCHISM TO THE SACK OF ROMEBOOK III
THE COUNCIL OF BASEL
CHAPTER I.
MARTIN V AND ITALIAN AFFAIRS.
1418-1425.
ON leaving Constance Martin V felt himself for the
first time free. He had been taught by the events of the last four years that
freedom was only possible for a Pope in Italy, in spite of all the temporary
inconveniences which might arise from Italian politics. But much as he might
desire to find himself in his native city, and revive the glories of the Papacy
in its old historic seat, he could not immediately proceed to Rome. John XXIII
had abandoned Rome, and had been driven even to flee from Bologna, owing to his
political helplessness and the power of his opponent Ladislas. The death of
Ladislas and the abeyance of the Papacy had only plunged Italian affairs into
deeper confusion, and Martin V had to pause a while and consider how he
could best return to Italy.
Through the Swiss cantons Martin made a triumphal progress,
and had no reason to complain of want of respect or lack of generosity. On June
11 he takes up reached Geneva, and in the city of the prince bishop he stayed
for three months; there he had the satisfaction of receiving the allegiance of
the citizens of Avignon. He seems to have wished to display himself as much as
possible, and exert the prestige of the restored Papacy to secure his position.
At the end of September he moved slowly from Geneva through Savoy to Turin, and
thence through Pavia to Milan, where he was received with great honor by
Filippo Maria Visconti on October 12. So great was the popular curiosity to see
the Pope that when he went to consecrate a new altar in the cathedral several
people were trampled to death in the throng. At Milan Martin showed his desire
for the pacification of Italy by making terms between Filippo Maria and
Pandolfo Malatesta, who had seized on Brescia. There too, he received
ambassadors from the Florentines, who in their capacity of peacemakers, were
anxious to arrange matters so as to enable the Pope to return quietly to Rome.
They offered him a refuge in their city and also their service as mediators. On
October 19 Martin left Milan for Brescia and on October 25 he entered Mantua.
There he stayed till the end of the year seeking for some means to make the
Papal influence a real power in Italian affairs. At length he resolved to
accept the services of the Florentines, and set out for their city, avoiding on
his way the rebellious Bologna, which had cast off the Papal rule. On
February 26, 1419, he entered Florence, where he was honorably received,
and took up his abode in the monastery of Santa Maria Novella.
The condition of Italy was indeed sufficiently
disturbed to need all the efforts of the Pope and of Florence to reduce it to
order and peace. In Lombardy, Filippo Maria, Duke of Milan, was bent on winning
back the lands of his father Giangaleazzo, which had fallen into the hands of
petty tyrants. Southern Italy was thrown into confusion by the death of Ladislas,
who was succeeded in the kingdom of Naples by his sister Giovanna II, a woman
with none of the qualities of a ruler, who used her position solely as a means
of personal gratification. The death of Louis of Anjou gave every hope of a
peaceful reign to the distracted Neapolitan kingdom; but Giovanna’s
ungovernable passions soon made it a sphere of personal intrigue. At first the
Queen, a widow of forty-seven years old, was under the control of a lover,
Pandolfello Alapo, whom she made Chamberlain and covered with her favors. To
maintain his position against the discontented barons, Alapo formed an alliance
with Sforza, who was made Grand Constable of Naples. But the barons insisted
that the Queen should marry, and in 1415 she chose for her husband Jacques de Bourbon,
Count of La Marche. The barons sided with the Count of La Marche, who, by their
help, imprisoned Sforza, put Alapo to death, and exercised the power of King.
The favor, however, which he showed to his own countrymen the French disgusted
the Neapolitan nobles, and in 1416 Giovanna was able again to assert her own
power. By this time she had a new favorite to direct her, Giovanni Caraccioli,
who drove the King to leave Naples, and thought it wise also to find an
occupation for Sforza which would keep him at a distance. For this purpose he
sent him on an expedition against Braccio, who had attacked the States of the
Church and had advanced against Rome.
Andrea Braccio, of the family of the Counts of
Montone, was a noble Perugian who, in his youth, had been driven by party
struggles to leave his native city, had embraced the calling of a condottiere
under Alberigo da Barbiano. He served on many sides in the Italian wars, and
finally was in the pay of Ladislas, who played him false in an attack upon Perugia;
whereon Braccio joined the side of John XXIII, who left him governor of Bologna
when he set out for Constance. Braccio was possessed with a desire to make
himself master of his native city of Perugia, and in 1416 sold the Bolognese
their liberty and hired soldiers on every side. He defeated Carlo
Malatesta, whom the Perugians called to their aid, and in July, 1416, made
himself master of the city. Soon, desirous of enlarging his territory, he
advanced into the States of the Church. Todi, Rieti, and Narni soon fell before
him, and he pressed on to the neighborhood of Rome. But Braccio, to win
Perugia, had drawn to his side the condottiere general Tartaglia, who
stipulated, in return for his services, that Braccio should not oppose him
in attacking the dominions of Sforza. From that time Sforza conceived a deadly
hatred against Braccio, and for the next few years the history of Italy is an
account of the desperate rivalry of these two rival condottieri.
Rome during the abeyance of the Papacy was left in an anomalous
condition. The Castle of S. Angelo, which had been taken by Ladislas, was still
held by a Neapolitan governor. John XXIII on departing for Constance had
appointed Cardinal Isolani his legate in Rome; and he was assisted, or
hindered, by the presence of the Cardinal of S. Angelo, Pietro degli
Stefanacci, who found Rome preferable to Constance. The legate Isolani managed
to retain considerable influence over the Romans, and induced them to carry on
the government of the city according to the constitution established before the
interference of Ladislas. But Rome was in no condition to offer resistance to
Braccio when he advanced against it, and on June 9, 1417, took up his position
by S. Agnese. In vain the legate tried to negotiate for his departure. Braccio
harried the adjacent country, and reduced the Romans to capitulate through
hunger. He had an ally in the Cardinal Stefanacci, who welcomed him on his
triumphal entry on June 16 and helped him to form a new magistracy. The legate
fled into the Castle of S. Angelo, and begged for help from Naples. His
entreaties were heard, as Sforza was burning for revenge against Braccio, and
Giovanna's new favorite, Caraccioli, was looking about for some means of
getting rid of Sforza, whose manly frame might soon prove too attractive to the
susceptible Queen. Braccio was engaged in besieging the Castle of S. Angelo
when the arrival of Sforza on August 10 warned him of his danger. Sforza,
seeing how matters stood, went to Ostia, and crossed the Tiber without hindrance.
When Braccio heard that he was advancing against him he judged it unwise to
risk the loss of his newly-won possessions, and on August 26 withdrew to
Perugia. Sforza entered Rome in triumph with the banners of Naples and of the
Church. He restored the legate Isolani to power, appointed new magistrates, and
imprisoned the traitorous Cardinal of S. Angelo, who died soon afterwards.
Such was the condition of affairs which Martin V had
to face on his election. It was natural that his first movement should be
towards alliance with Giovanna II of Naples, seeing that the Neapolitan
influence seemed most powerful in Rome. He welcomed Giovanna's ambassadors and
sent a cardinal to arrange matters with the Queen as early as May, 1418.
Giovanna agreed to restore all the possessions of the Church and make a
perpetual alliance with the Pope, who was to crown her Queen of Naples. She
gave a pledge of her sincerity by the usual means of enriching the Pope’s
relations. Martin's brother, Giordano Colonna, was made Duke of Amalfi and
Venosa, his nephew Antonio was made Grand Chamberlain of Naples; and, on August
21, appeared with a Bull announcing the Pope's alliance with Giovanna. Antonio
at first attached himself to the favorite Caraccioli; but before the end of the
year Sforza was strong enough to organize a popular rising against the
favorite, who was forced to leave Naples, and was sent as ambassador to Martin
V at Mantua. There the surrender of the fortresses which the Neapolitans
occupied in the States of the Church and the coronation of Giovanna were
finally arranged. Early in 1419 a Papal Legate was sent to Naples to perform
the coronation.
Thus matters stood when Martin took refuge in
Florence. He could do nothing better than await the course of events in Naples
and the results of the Florentine mediation. Return to Rome with Braccio
hostile was impossible. If Braccio were to be overthrown, it could only be by
the arms of Sforza; but the Pope’s first steps had been to ally with Giovanna
and Caraccioli, with whom Sforza was now at enmity. At Florence Martin’s
prestige was increased by the arrival of four of Benedict XIII's cardinals, who
were solemnly received on March 17. So far as Italy was concerned, Martin V had
nothing to fear from Peter de Luna. But the deposed Baldassare Cossa was still
an object of his dread, for Braccio had threatened to espouse Cossa’s
cause, and might again raise him to the position of a dangerous rival.
Accordingly, Martin was very anxious to get Cossa into his hands, and the
Florentines, in the interests of peace, were desirous that this matter should
be arranged. John XXIII, when legate of Bologna, had always been on good terms
with the Florentines, and had stood in friendly relations with several of the
richest citizens, amongst whom were Giovanni dei Medici and Niccolò da Uzzano,
who were now ready to interfere on his behalf. They procured from Martin V a
promise that he would deal gently with his deposed predecessor, and advanced
the sum of 38,500 Rhenish ducats to buy the release of Cossa from Lewis of
Bavaria, in whose custody he was. On his way to Florence Cossa was escorted by
the Bishop of Lubeck, who was charged by Martin V to keep a sharp eye upon him.
At Parma he lodged with an old friend, who alarmed him with rumours that
Martin V meant to have him imprisoned for life at Mantua. He fled by night to
Genoa, where he found protection from the Doge, Tommaso di Campo Fregoso.
Friends quickly gathered round him, urging him once more to try his fortunes
and assert his claims to the Papacy. For a brief space there was a thrill of
horror lest the miseries of the Schism should again begin. But the
wise counsels of Giovanni dei Medici and his Florentine friends seem to
have prevailed with Cossa; they assured him of his safety, and urged him to fulfill
his promise. John XXIII no longer possessed his former vigour or felt his old
confidence in himself and his fortunes. The helplessness which had overtaken
him at Constance still haunted him, and though the old spirit might rekindle
for a moment, it was soon chilled by doubt and hesitation. He judged it wisest
to trust his friends, proceed to Florence, and submit to the mercy of Martin V.
On June 14 he entered Florence, and was received with respectful pity by the
entire body of the citizens. The sight of one who had fallen from a high degree
kindled their sympathy, and Cossa’s poor apparel and miserable look impressed
more vividly the sense of his changed fortunes. On June 27 he appeared before
Martin in full consistory, and kneeling before him made his submission. “I
alone”, he said, “assembled the Council; I always labored for the good of
the Church; you know the truth. I come to your Holiness and rejoice
as much as I can at your elevation and my own freedom”. Here his voice was
broken with passion; his haughty nature could ill brook his humiliation. Martin
received him graciously, and placed on his head the cardinal’s hat.
But Cossa did not long live under the shadow of his successor. He died in the
same year on December 23, and his Florentine friends were faithful to his
memory. In the stately Baptistery of Florence the Medici erected to him a
splendid tomb. The recumbent figure cast in bronze was the work of Donatello,
and the marble pedestal which supports it was wrought by Michelozzo. It bears the
simple inscription, Johannes quondam Papa XXIII obiit Florentiae.
Martin V’s attention was meanwhile directed to the
kingdom of Naples and he urged on Giovanna II the duty of restoring to his
obedience the States of the Church. Giovanna was not sorry to rid herself of
Sforza, for she longed to recall her favorite Caraccioli. Sforza was despatched
to war against Braccio, but on June 20 was defeated at Montefiasone, near
Viterbo. But Martin was enabled to detach Tartaglia from Braccio’s side, and
Sforza could again set an army in the field in the name of Naples and the Pope.
He was not, however, supported from Naples; for Giovanna had recalled
Caraccioli, and the favorite thought it better to leave Sforza to his fate.
Martin saw that nothing was to be gained from a further alliance with Giovanna
II and Caraccioli. Moreover the question of the Neapolitan succession was again
imminent, for Giovanna was over fifty years of age, and was childless. Louis
III of Anjou had already begged Martin to procure from Giovanna II a formal
recognition of his claim, and the Pope judged that the opportunity was
favorable for action. Sforza was weary of the selfish policy of Caraccioli, and
the Neapolitan barons resented the rule of the insolent favorite. The
Florentines offered Martin V their aid to mediate between him and Braccio. The
Pope saw an opportunity of making himself the central figure in the politics of
Southern Italy. At peace with Braccio, and allied with Sforza, he might settle
the succession to Naples in favour of Louis of Anjou, and end the Neapolitan
difficulty which had so long harassed his predecessors.
In January, 1420, Sforza paid Martin V a visit in
Florence, and the Pope broached his views, to which, with some reluctance,
Sforza gave his adhesion. Scarcely had Sforza departed before Braccio, at the
end of February, made a triumphal entry into Florence, there to celebrate his
reconciliation with the Pope. With a splendid escort of four hundred horsemen
and forty foot, with deputies from the various cities under his rule, Braccio
entered the city in grandeur that awoke the enthusiastic acclamations of the
Florentines. In the middle of the bands of horsemen, gleaming in gold and
silver armour, mounted on splendid steeds richly caparisoned, rode Braccio,
clad in purple and gold, on a steed whose trappings were of gold. He was a man
rather above the middle height, with an oval face that seemed too full of
blood, yet with a look of dignity and power that, in spite of his limbs maimed
with wounds, marked him as a ruler of men. Amid the shouts of the thronging
citizens Braccio visited the Pope, and paid him haughty reverence. After a few
days spent in negotiations, an alliance was made between Martin V and Braccio,
by which Braccio was left in possession of Perugia, Assisi, and other towns
which he had won, on condition of reducing Bologna to obedience to the Pope.
Martin V’s pride was sorely hurt by the avowed
preference which the Florentines showed to the condottiere over the Pope. The
Florentine boys expressed the common feeling by a doggerel rhyme which they
sang in the streets, and which soon reached the ears of the sensitive Pope:
Braccio the Great
Conquers every state :
Poor Pope Martin
Is not worth a farthing.
He was glad to see Braccio leave Florence, and hoped
that the task of reducing Bologna would occupy him long enough to enable Sforza
to make his attack on Giovanna unimpeded by Braccio’s hostility. Braccio,
however, rapidly gathered his forces, and conducted matters with
such skill that on July 22 the Pope’s legate took possession of Bologna.
Meanwhile Sforza hastened the preparations against
Giovanna II. On June 18 he suddenly raised the standard of the Duke of Anjou,
and began to make war against Naples: on August 19 ten Angevin galleys made
their appearance off the Neapolitan coast. Louis of Anjou eagerly caught at
Martin V's offer of protection; he did not scruple to leave France in the hands
of the English, and abandon his land of Provence to the hostile attacks of the
Duke of Savoy, that he might pursue the phantom kingdom of Naples, which had
proved disastrous to his father and his grandfather alike. Giovanna II, seeing
herself thus threatened, cast about on Alliance of her part also for allies.
She sent an ambassador to the Pope whose hostility was not yet declared; but
the subtle Neapolitan easily saw through the Pope's equivocal answers to his
demands. There was in Florence at the Papal Court an ambassador of Alfonso V of
Aragon. To him in his strait the Neapolitan turned. He reminded him that the House
of Aragon had as good a claim to Naples as the House of Anjou. Giovanna II was
childless, and could dispose of her kingdom as she chose; if Alfonso succored
her in her strait, he might count upon her gratitude. This proposal was very
acceptable to Alfonso V, a young and ambitious king. By the death of Martin of
Sicily without children in 1409 the kingdom of Sicily had been attached to that
of Aragon, and Alfonso was keenly alive to the advantage of annexing Naples
also. At the time that Giovanna's offer reached him he was engaged in
prosecuting against the Genoese his claims on the island of Corsica, where,
after a long siege, the desperate efforts of the Genoese threatened to render
his undertaking hopeless. His ambassador at Florence was endeavoring to obtain
from Martin V a recognition of Alfonso’s claim to Corsica; but Alfonso V at
once saw the policy of abandoning a doubtful attempt upon a barren island for
the more alluring prize of the Neapolitan kingdom. He despatched from Corsica
to the relief of Giovanna II fifteen galleys, which arrived off Naples on
September 6, and Giovanna II showed her gratitude by adopting him as her son.
War was now let loose upon Naples. Alfonso and
Giovanna sought to strengthen themselves by an alliance with Braccio. Martin
V’s policy had succeeded in providing occupation for all whom he had most to
dread. He was now in a position to take advantage of the general confusion, and
amid the weakness of all parties raise once more the prestige of the Papal
name. He had gained all that was to be gained from a stay in Florence, and
might now with safety venture to Rome. Moreover Martin V was not over-satisfied
with the impression which he had produced on the Florentines. The common-sense
of the quick-witted commercial city was not taken in by high-sounding claims or
magnificent ecclesiastical processions. The Florentines had shown for Braccio
an admiration which they refused to Martin V. However much Martin might wrap
himself in his dignity, and affect to despise popular opinion, he yet felt that
in Florence nothing succeeded like success, and that a fortunate freebooter
ranked above a landless Pope. The bustling, pushing spirit of a prosperous
commercial city was alien to the Papacy, which could only flourish amongst the
traditions and aspirations of the past. A few days before his departure from
Rome Martin V could not refrain from showing his wounded pride to Leonardo
Bruni, who was present in the library of S. Maria Novella. For some time Martin
V walked gloomily up and down the room, gazing out of the window upon the
garden below. At last he stopped before Leonardo, and in a voice quivering with
scorn repeated the doggerel of the Florentine mob, “Poor Pope Martin isn’t
worth a farthing”. Leonardo tried to appease him by saying that such trifles
were not worthy of notice; but the Pope again repeated the lines in the same
tone. Anxious for the fair fame of Florence, Leonardo at once undertook its
defense, and pointed out to the Pope the practical advantages which he had
derived from his stay the recovery of some of the States of the Church, and
especially of Bologna, the submission of John XXIII, the reconciliation with
Braccio. Where else, he asked, could such advantages have been so easily
obtained? The Pope’s gloomy brow grew clearer before the words of the
Florentine secretary. Martin departed with goodwill from Florence; thanked its
magistrates for their kind offices, and marked his gratitude to the city by
erecting the bishopric of Florence to the dignity of an archbishopric.
On September 9 Martin V journeyed from Florence with
due respect from the citizens. On September 20 he was honorably received in
Siena, and used his opportunity to borrow 15,000 florins, for which he gave
Spoleto as a pledge. From Siena he proceeded through Viterbo to Rome, which he
entered on September 28, and took up his abode by S. Maria del Popolo. Next day
he was escorted to the Vatican by the city magistrates and the people, bearing
lighted torches and clamorous with joy. The Romans had indeed occasion to hail
any change that might restore their shattered fortunes. Everything that had
happened in late years had tended to plunge them deeper and deeper in misery
and ruin. The havoc wrought by the invasions of Ladislas, of Sforza, and of
Braccio, the absence of the Pope, and consequent loss of traffic, the want of
all authority in the Papal States, the pillage that wasted up to the walls of
Rome all these combined to reduce the city to wretchedness and desolation.
Martin V found Rome so devastated that it hardly looked like a city. Houses
were in decay, churches in ruins, the streets were empty, filth and dirt were
everywhere, food was so scarce and dear that men could barely keep themselves
alive. Civilization seemed almost extinct. The Romans looked like the scum of
the earth. Martin V had a hard task before him to bring back order and decency
into the ruined city. It was his great merit that he set himself diligently to
put matters straight, and that he succeeded in reclaiming its capital for the
restored Papacy. His first care was to provide for the administration of
justice, and put down the robbers who infested Rome and its neighborhood, for
the purpose of pillaging the pious pilgrims who visited the tombs of the
Apostles. But much had to be done to repair the ravages of preceding years, and
new disasters rendered the task more difficult. In November, 1422, the town was
overwhelmed by a flood in the Tiber, occasioned by Braccio’s destruction of the
wall of the Lago di Pie di Luco, the old Veline Lake. The water rose to the
height of the high altar in the Pantheon, and as it subsided carried away the
flocks from the fields and caused great destruction of property.
In Naples little was done worthy of the great efforts
which were made. Alfonso's reinforcements checked the victorious career of
Louis of Anjou and Sforza, till in June, 1421, Braccio brought his forces to
Giovanna's aid, Alfonso himself arrived in Naples, and the Pope despatched
Tartaglia to the aid of Louis. Alfonso and Braccio engaged in a fruitless siege
of Acerra. Nothing serious was done, as the condottieri generals were engaged
in a series of intrigues against one another. Sforza accused Tartaglia of
treachery, seized him, and put him to death. Tartaglia’s soldiers,
indignant at the treatment of their leader, joined Braccio, who was anxious
only to secure his own principality of Capua. Martin V was weary of finding
supplies, and was embarrassed by Alfonso’s threats that he would again
recognize Benedict XIII.
Caraccioli was afraid of Alfonso’s resolute character,
and sowed discord between him and Giovanna: Alfonso on his part was perplexed
by the Queen’s doubtful attitude towards him. As everyone had his own reasons
for desiring peace, the Pope's mediation was accepted for that purpose in March,
1422. Aversa and Castellamare, the only two places which Louis held, were
surrendered to the Papal Legate, who soon afterwards gave them over to the
Queen. Braccio and Sforza were outwardly reconciled, and Sforza joined the side
of Giovanna, only with the purpose of favoring more surely the party of Louis.
Louis himself withdrew to Rome, where he lived for two years at the Pope’s
expense, awaiting the results of Sforza’s machinations. But this peace and its
reconciliations were alike hollow. The mutual suspicions of Alfonso and
Giovanna II went on increasing till in May, 1423, Alfonso determined on a
decisive blow. He suddenly imprisoned Caraccioli, and made a dash to obtain the
person of the Queen, who was in the Castel Capuano at Naples. The attempt to surprise
the Queen failed, and Alfonso besieged the Castle. But Sforza hastened to the
Queen’s aid, and, though his army was smaller than Alfonso’s, he gave his men
fresh courage by pointing to the splendid equipments of the Aragonese; raising
the battle-cry, “Fine clothes and good horses”, he led his men to the
charge. His inducement proved to be sufficiently strong; he won the day, and
Alfonso in his turn was besieged in the Castel Nuovo. After this failure the
fortunes of Louis of Anjou began to revive. Caraccioli was ransomed from
prison, and he and Sforza urged Giovanna to cancel the adoption of the
ungrateful Alfonso and accept Louis as her successor. At the end of June Louis
arrived in Naples, and his adoption as Giovanna’s heir was formally accomplished
with the Pope’s sanction.
Alfonso’s hopes now rested on the prompt aid of
Braccio; but Braccio entered the Neapolitan kingdom through the Abruzzi, and
set himself to besiege the wealthy city of Aquila that he might obtain booty
for his soldiers. The defence was obstinate, and the siege slowly dragged on.
In vain Alfonso besought Braccio to quit it; the stubborn condottiere refused.
Meanwhile Filippo Maria Visconti who had by this time secured his possessions
in Lombardy, and had moreover made himself master of Genoa offered help to
Giovanna. He did not wish that an active King like Alfonso should establish
himself in Naples and urge troublesome claims to the Genoese possessions.
Alfonso was afraid lest he might lose his command of the sea before the attack
of the Genoese galleys; he also received disquieting news from Aragon. Weary
with waiting for Braccio, who never came, he sailed away on October 15, and
revenged himself on Louis by sacking Marseilles on his homeward voyage.
The departure of Alfonso relieved Martin V of a
troublesome enemy; but his attention in this year, 1423, had to be directed to
an equally troublesome matter. It was now five years since the dissolution of the
Council of Constance, and the period for holding the next Council had arrived.
Already in 1422 the University of Paris sent ambassadors to urge Martin V to
fulfill his promise. Among the envoys of the University was a learned
Dominican, John Stoikovic, a native of Ragusa in Dalmatia, who stayed at
Rome to watch Martin’s proceedings, and be ready for the Council as soon as it
was summoned. Pavia had been fixed at Constance for its place of meeting; but
in his letters of summons Martin V was careful to express his fervour in
behalf of the Council by saying that if Pavia was found unsuitable, he was
resolved to call it to a more convenient place rather than it should dissolve.
The transalpine prelates were not inspirited by this kindly assurance; they
felt that a Council in an Italian city was as good as useless. Martin V had
taken no steps in the way of reforming the abuses of the Church. The state of
Christendom was not favorable for a Council. In England Henry V was dead, and
the minority of Henry VI had already begun to open up intrigues and jealousies.
France was exhausted by its war with England. In Germany Sigismund was engaged
in war with the Hussites in Bohemia, and had no time to spend in talk. There
was nothing to encourage men to undertake the costly journey to Italy, where
Martin V was likely to employ them on the barren subject of a proposed union
between the Eastern and Western Churches.
When the Council was opened, on April 23, by the four
prelates whom the Pope had nominated as presidents it was not largely attended.
Few came from beyond the Alps, and the absence of Italians showed that the
pope's influence was used against the Council from the beginning. Scarcely were
the opening formalities at an end when the outbreak of the plague gave a reason
for removing elsewhere, and the Council decided to go to Siena, where, on July
2, it resumed its labours.
The first step of the Council was to organize itself
according to nations, and to determine who should have the right of voting. All
prelates, abbots, graduates of universities who were in orders, rectors,
ambassadors of kings, barons, and universities were to be admitted freely:
other ecclesiastics were to be judged of by the nation to which they belonged.
Each nation was to have a president elected every month, who, together with
chosen deputies, was to prepare the business to be discussed by the nation
according to the wishes of the majority. While making these arrangements the
Council repeatedly sent to the Pope urging him to come to Siena, and their
request was confirmed by the city magistrates, who showed themselves amenable
to the Pope's will by granting a safe-conduct in the terms which he demanded.
But when the safe-conduct was known at Siena, the
Fathers saw their liberty directly menaced by it. All magistrates and officials
in the Sienese territory were to take oath of allegiance to the Pope, a
proceeding which left the Council entirely at the Pope’s mercy. Moreover, the
members of the Council were to be subject to the jurisdiction of the
Pope’s officers. The whole tenor of the articles of agreement was insulting to the
Council, and gave manifest signs of the Pope’s ill-will. In its formal language
the officials of the Curia were named before the members of the Council. The
energy of the Council was forthwith turned to negotiate with the Sienese for a
safe-conduct which would give them greater security from the Pope. Meanwhile
Martin V showed himself more decidedly hostile, and his presidents used all
efforts to weaken the Conciliar party. Letters from Rome poured in to Siena;
tempting promises of promotion were held out to those who showed signs of
wavering.
The reforming party felt that something must be done.
They settled the matter of the safe-conduct, and agreed to pass some decrees on
which there could be no difference of opinion. On November 6 a session of the
Council was held, which declared that the work of reform must begin from the
foundation of the faith, and consequently condemned the errors of Wycliffe and
Huss, denounced the partisans of Peter de Luna, approved of negotiations for
union with the Greek Church, and exhorted all Christian men to root out heresy
wherever they found it. After this the reforming party urged that the work left
unachieved at Constance should be resumed, and the French nation put forward a
memorandum sketching a plan of reform according to the lines laid down at
Constance. The Curial party resolved on resistance, and the small numbers
present at Siena rendered personal pressure tolerably easy. John of Ragusa,
though wishing to make the Council seem as numerous as possible, can only count
two cardinals and twenty-five mitred prelates, as representatives of the higher
clergy, at the session on November 6. The Curial party thought it best to throw
the machinery of the nations into confusion. They managed to cause disputed
elections to the office of president both in the French and in the Italian
nation in the month of January, 1424. The Papal legates offered their services
to the French to judge in this dispute. The French answered that, on matters
concerning a nation in the Council, no one, not even the Pope, could judge but
the Council itself: they asked the presidents to summon a congregation for the
purpose. The presidents refused, whereupon the French called the other nations
together on January 10, and afterwards drew up their grievances in the shape of
a protest, which they lodged with the legates. Meanwhile the legates were
busily engaged in strengthening their party within each nation, so as to
prevent any possibility of unanimity. While thus the nations were divided, the
legates steadily pursued the dissolution of the Council, and, as a first step
towards this, urged the appointment of deputies to fix the meeting place of the
next Council. This question in itself aroused antagonism. The French wished the
future Council to be held in France. This excited the national jealousy of the
Germans and English. The Curial party openly avowed that they never wished to
see another Council at all, and opposed the decrees of Constance.
There were hopes, however, of renewed concord when, on
February 12, the Archbishop of Rouen and the ambassadors of the University of
Paris arrived at Siena. They interposed to heal the dissension among the
French, and the Archbishop of Rouen was by a compromise elected to the office
of president of the French nation. The compromise was, however, fatal. The
Archbishop of Rouen had been already won over by the legates, and the
ambassadors of the University had a greater desire to go to Rome and seek
favors for themselves than stay at Siena and watch over the reformation of the
Church. On February 19 deputies from all the nations agreed in choosing Basel
as the meeting place for the next Council to be held in seven years.
The dissolution of the Council was now felt to be
imminent. Only a few zealous reformers had hopes of further business, and they
were aided by the citizens of Siena, who did not see why they should not enjoy
the same luck as Constance and reap a golden harvest for some years to come.
But Martin V knew how to address rebellious citizens. He sternly bade them “not
to put their sickle into another’s sheaves, nor think that General Councils
were held or dissolved to please them or fill their pockets”. Still the Sienese
were resolved to make a last attempt, and on February 20 laid the Pope’s
letters before the nations, and shut their gates to prevent the desertions
which were thinning the Council's ranks. But the reformers were not strong
enough to accept the citizens' help; the Council sent to request the gates to
be opened.
Meanwhile the legates were ready to dissolve the
Council, the reformers were anxious to continue their work. At last, on March
7, the legates, taking advantage of the solitude produced by the festivities of
the Carnival, posted on the door of the cathedral decree of the dissolution of
the Council, which had been secretly drawn up on February 26, and prohibited
all from attempting to continue it. On the same day they hastily left Siena for
Florence. Those who remained were too few to hope to accomplish anything.
Thomas, Abbot of Paisley, who was a member of the French nation, published an
energetic protest against the dissolution, which was joined by a few other
zealous reformers. Then on March 8 they held a meeting in which they decided
that, to avoid scandal to the Church, and danger to themselves on account of
the nearness of the Papal power, it was better to depart quietly. The Council
of Siena came rapidly to an end, and Martin V could plead the smallness of its
numbers, its seditious conduct with the Sienese burghers, and its own internal
disorders, as reasons for its dissolution. Really the Council of Siena followed
too soon upon that of Constance. The position of affairs had not materially
changed. The Pope had not yet recovered his normal position in Italy, and those
who had been at Constance were not prepared to undertake the labors of a second
Council, when they had nothing to give them any hopes of success. What was
impossible with the help of Sigismund was not likely to be more possible in the
face of Martin V's determined resistance.
Martin V judged it wise, however, to make some
promises of reform. As the Council had been too full of disturbance to admit of
any progress in the matter, he promised to undertake a reform of the Curia, and
nominated two Cardinals as commissioners to gather evidence. The results of
Martin V’s deliberations were embodied in a constitution, published on May 16,
1425. It reads as though it were the Pope's retaliation on the attempt made at
Constance to constitute the Cardinals as an official aristocracy which was to
direct the Pope’s actions. Martin V provided for decorous and good living on
the part of the Cardinals, forbade them to exercise the position of protectors
of the interests of kings or princes at the Papal Court, or to receive money as
protectors for monastic orders; they were not to appear in the streets with a
larger retinue than twenty attendants; they were, if possible, to live near the
churches whence they took their titles, and were to restore the dilapidated
buildings and see to the proper performance of divine service. Similarly the
duties of the protonotaries and abbreviators of the Papal chancery were defined
and regulated. Archbishops, bishops, and abbots were ordered to keep strict
residence, and hold provincial synods three times each year for the redress of
abuses; all oppressive exactions on the part of ordinaries were forbidden, and
propriety of life was enjoined. Finally the Pope withdrew many of his rights of
reservation as a favor to the ordinaries as patrons.
Martin considered that he had now amply fulfilled
all that reformers could require at his hands, and could look around him with
greater assurance. He was free for seven years from the troubles of a Council,
and could turn his attention to the object he had most at heart, the recovery
of the States of the Church, which Alfonso’s withdrawal from Naples had
rendered a practicable measure. Fortune favoured him in this respect beyond his
hopes. The desperate resistance which Aquila continued to offer to Braccio
encouraged Sforza to march to its relief. On his way there, in January, 1424,
finding some difficulty in crossing the river Pescara, which was swollen by the
wind and tide, he rode into the water to encourage his men. Seeing one of his
squires swept off his horse, Sforza hastened to his assistance; but, losing his
balance in attempting to save the drowning man, he was weighed down by his
heavy armour: twice his hands were seen to wave above the flood, then he
disappeared. His body was swept out to sea, and was never found. Thus died
Sforza at the age of fifty-four, one of the most notable men in Italian
history. His death tells us the secret of his power. He died in the performance
of an act of chivalrous generosity to a comrade. However tortuous he might be
in political relations, to his soldiers he was frank and genial; they loved
him, and knew that their lives and fortunes were as dear to Sforza as his own.
Nor did the more accomplished Braccio long survive his
sturdy rival. In spite of the withdrawal of Sforza’s troops after their
leader’s death, Aquila still held out. As its possession was regarded as the
key to the possession of Naples, Martin V was eager to raise troops for its
relief. He found it as easy to arouse the jealousy of the Duke of Milan against
Braccio as against Alfonso; and in May a joint army of Naples, Milan, and Pope
advanced to the relief of Aquila. Braccio scorned to take advantage of his
enemies as they crossed the mountain ridge that led to the town; though their
forces were superior to his own, he preferred to meet them in the open field.
An unexpected sortie of the Aquilans threw Braccio’s army into confusion. As he
rode around exhorting his men to form afresh and renew the fight, a Perugian
exile forced his way through the throng, and with the cry, “Down with the
oppressor of his country!” wounded Braccio in the throat. On the fall of
their leader the soldiers of Braccio gave way, and the siege of Aquila was
raised, June 2. Braccio’s haughty spirit would not survive defeat; for three
days he lay without eating or speaking till he died. Unlike Sforza, he had no
grown-up son to inherit his glory. His shattered army rapidly dispersed upon
his death. His body was carried to Rome, and was buried as that of an
excommunicated man in unconsecrated ground before the Church of S. Lorenzo.
Martin V reaped the full benefit of Braccio’s death.
On July 29 Perugia opened its gates to the Pope, and the other cities in
Braccio’s dominions soon followed its example. Martin found himself in
undisputed possession of the Papal States. This was a great point to have
gained, and Martin had won his triumph by his astute and cautious, if
unscrupulous, policy. He had not hesitated to plunge Naples into war, and had
trusted to his own acuteness to fish in troubled waters. Fortune had favoured
him beyond what he could expect, and the only further difficulty that beset him
was a rising of Bologna in 1429, which was put down, though not without a
stubborn struggle, by Carlo Malatesta. From that time he set himself with
renewed zeal and statesmanlike care to organize the restoration of law and
order in the Roman territory and the rest of the Papal possessions.
When we look back upon the wild confusion that he
found at his accession we must recognize in Martin V’s pontificate traces
of energy and administrative capacity which have been left unrecorded by the
annals of the time. The slow and steady enforcement of order and justice is
passed by unnoticed, while discord and anarchy are rarely without a chronicler.
It is the great merit of Martin V that he won back from confusion,
and reduced to obedience and order, the disorganized States of the Church.
The policy of Martin V was to bring under one
jurisdiction separate communities, with their existing rights and privileges,
and so to establish a central monarchy on which they all peaceably
depended. It was the misfortune of Martin that his work was thrown away by
the wrongheadedness of his successor, and so left no lasting results. Still,
Martin V deserves high praise as a successful statesman, though even here he
displayed the spirit of a Roman noble rather than of the Head of the Church.
The elevation of the Colonna family was his constant aim, and he left to his
successors a conspicuous example of nepotism. His brothers and sisters were enriched
at the expense of the Church, and their aggrandizement had the disastrous
result that it intensified the long-standing feud between the Colonna and the
Orsini, and led to a reaction upon Martin's death. So far did Martin V identify
himself with his family that, in defiance of the traditions of his office, he
took up his abode in the Colonna Palace by the Church of SS. Apostoli,
regarding himself as more secure amongst the retainers of his house.
The same year that saw the deaths of Sforza and
Braccio freed Martin V from another enemy. In November 1424 died Benedict XIII,
worn out by extreme old age. In his retirement at Peñiscola he had been
powerless either for good or ill. Yet the existence of an anti-Pope was hurtful
to the Papal dignity, and Alfonso’s hostility to Martin V threatened to
give him troublesome importance. Benedict’s death might seem to end the Schism,
but one of the last acts of the obstinate old man was the creation of four new
cardinals. For a time his death was kept secret till Alfonso’s desires were
known; at length in June, 1425, three of Benedict’s cardinals elected a new
Pope, Gil de Munion, canon of Barcelona, who took the title of Clement VIII.
But schism when once it begins is contagious. Another of Benedict’s
cardinals, a Frenchman, Jean Carrer, who was absent at the time and received no
notice, elected for himself another Pope, who took the title of Benedict XIV.
Martin was desirous of getting rid of these pretenders, and sent one of his
cardinals, brother of the Count de Foix, to negotiate with Alfonso. But Alfonso
refused him entrance into his kingdom, and ordered Clement VIII to be
crowned in Peñiscola. Martin summoned Alfonso to Rome to answer for his
conduct. Alfonso saw that nothing was to be gained by isolation from the rest
of Europe. Time mollified his wrath at the loss of Naples, and in his hopes for
the future it was better to have the Pope for his friend than for his foe. The
Cardinal de Foix carried on his negotiations with wise moderation, and was
helped by one of the King’s counsellors, Alfonso Borgia. In the autumn of 1427
Alfonso V received the Pope’s legate, agreed to recognise Martin, and accept
his good offices to settle disputes between himself and Giovanna II. In July,
1429, Munion laid aside his papal trappings, submitted to Martin, and received
the melancholy post of Bishop of Majorca. The good offices of Alfonso Borgia
were warmly recognized both by Alfonso V and Martin V, and this ending of the
Schism had for its abiding consequence in the future the introduction of the
Borgia family to the Papal Court, where they were destined to play an important
part. The Pope of Jean Carrer was of course a ridiculous phantom, and in 1432
the Count of Armagnac ordered Carrer, who was still obstinate, to be made prisoner
and handed over to Martin V.
CHAPTER II.
MARTIN V AND THE PAPAL RESTORATION. BEGINNINGS OF
EUGENIUS IV.
1425-1432.
As Martin V felt more sure of his position in Italy,
and saw the traces of the Schism disappear in the outward organization of the Church,
he was anxious also to wipe away the anti-papal legislation which in France and
England had followed on the confusion caused by the Schism of the Papacy.
In France Martin V easily succeeded in overthrowing
the attempt to establish the liberties of the national Church on the basis of
royal edicts. Charles VI had issued in 1418 ordinances forbidding money to be
exported from the kingdom for the payment of annates or other demands of the
Court of Rome, and had confirmed the ancient liberties of the Gallican Church
as regarded freedom of election to ecclesiastical offices. In February, 1422,
he had further forbidden appeals to Rome in contempt of the ordinances. But
before the end of the year Charles VI was dead, and the confusion in France was
still further increased by the English claims to the succession. The youthful
Charles VII was hard pressed, and wished to gain the Pope's support. In
February, 1425, he issued a decree re-establishing the Papal power, as regarded
the collation to benefices and all exercise of jurisdiction, on the same
footing as it had been in the days of Clement VII and Benedict XIII. The
Parliament, it is true, protested and refused to register the decree. The Pope,
on his part, granted an indemnity for what had been done in the past. All the
reforming efforts of the University of Paris and its followers were for the
time undone.
In England Martin V was not so successful. In 1421 he
wrote to Henry V and exhorted him to lose no time in abolishing the
prohibitions of his predecessors (the Statutes of Provisors and Praemunire) on
the due exercise of the Papal rights. Next year, on the accession of King Henry
VI, he wrote still more pressingly to the Council of Regency. When nothing was
done, he directed his anger against Henry Chichele, the Archbishop of
Canterbury. Chichele in 1423 proclaimed indulgences to all who in that year
made pilgrimage to Canterbury. Martin indignantly forbade this assumption of
Papal rights by a subordinate; as the fallen angels wished to set up in the
earth their seat against the Creator, so have these presumptuous men endeavored
to raise a false tabernacle of salvation against the apostolic seat and the
authority of the Roman Pontiff, to whom only has God granted this power. It was
long since an English archbishop had heard such language from a Pope; but
Chichele was not a man of sufficient courage to remonstrate. He withdrew his
proclamation, and Martin V had struck a decided blow against the independence
of the English episcopate.
The restored Papacy owed a debt of gratitude to Henry
of Winchester for his good offices as mediator at Constance, and immediately
after his election, Martin V nominated him Cardinal. Chichele protested against
this step as likely to lead to inconveniences; and Henry V, declaring that he
would rather see his uncle invested with the crown than with a cardinal’s hat,
forbade his acceptance of the proffered dignity. When the strong hand of
Henry V was gone, Beaufort was again nominated Cardinal on May 24, 1426,
no longer from motives of gratitude, but because the Pope needed his help. In
February, 1427, he was further appointed Papal legate for the purpose of
carrying on war against the Hussites. But the Pope still pursued his main
object, and in a letter to the Bishop of Winchester denounced still more
strongly the execrable statute of Praemunire by which the King of England
disposed of the affairs of the Church as though himself, and not the Pope, were
the divinely appointed Vicar of Christ. He bade him remember the glorious
example of S. Thomas of Canterbury, who did not hesitate to offer himself as a
sacrifice on behalf of the liberties of the Church. He bade him urge the
abolition of this statute on the Council, on Parliament, and on the clergy,
that they may preach about it to the people; and he asked to be informed what
steps were taken in compliance with his commands. He wrote also in the same
strain to the University of Oxford. Indeed, so deeply did Martin V resent the
ecclesiastical attitude of England that he said in a consistory, “Amongst
Christians no States have made ordinances contrary to the liberties of the
Church save England and Venice”. Martin’s instincts taught him truly, and he
did his utmost to blunt the edge of the weapon that a century later was to
sever the connection between the English Church and the Papacy.
Again Martin V wrote haughtily to Chichele, bidding
him and the Archbishop of York set aside the Statutes of Provisors and
recognize the Papal right to dispose benefices in England. Chichele humbly
replied 1427-28 that he was the only person in England who was willing to
broach the subject; and it was hard that he should be specially visited by the
Pope’s displeasure for what he could not help. Martin V retorted by issuing
letters to suspend Chichele from his office as legate—a blow against the
privileges and independence of the Archbishops of Canterbury, who since the
days of Stephen Langton had been recognized as the Pope’s ordinary legate (legatus
natus) in England. Chichele so far roused himself as to appeal to a future
Council against this encroachment. The Pope’s letters were seized by royal
authority, and the suspension did not take effect. But Chichele was a timid
man, and the condition of affairs in England made him shrink from a breach with
the Pope. The Lollards were suppressed but not subdued, and a strong
antihierarchical feeling simmered amongst the people. In the distracted state
of the kingdom, little help was to be gained from the royal power, and Chichele
feared the consequences of an interdict. He called to his help the bishops, the
University of Oxford, and several temporal lords, who addressed letters to the
Pope, bearing testimony to Chichele’s zeal for the Church, and begging the Pope
to be reconciled to him. To Chichele’s letters pleading his excuses, the Pope
still answered that the only excuse that he could make was active resistance to
the obnoxious statutes. At length Chichele, in 1428, appeared before the
Commons, accompanied by the Archbishop of York and other bishops, and with
tears in his eyes pointed out the dangers in which the Church and kingdom were
placed by their opposition to the Pope’s demands. Parliament was unmoved either
by Martin’s letters or by Chichele’s half-hearted pleadings. They only
petitioned the Pope to restore the Archbishop to his favor. The King wrote in
the same sense, and the matter was allowed to drop. Martin V might console
himself with the reflection that, if he had failed to carry his point and
abolish the hateful statutes, he had at least succeeded in humiliating the
English episcopate by treating them as creatures of his own.
In September, 1428, Beaufort made his first appearance
in England since his elevation to the Cardinalate, and a protest in the King's
name was issued against his exercise of any legatine authority within the
realm. Next year the question was raised whether Beaufort, being a Cardinal,
was justified in officiating as Bishop of Winchester and prelate of the Order
of the Garter: the King’s council advised Beaufort to waive his right. Meanwhile
Beaufort was allowed to gather troops for a crusade against the Hussites. But
the English statesman and the Papal councillor came into collision; and the
troops which Beaufort had gathered for a crusade in Bohemia were turned against
France. Beaufort pleaded to the Pope the lame excuse that he had not ventured
to disobey the King’s commands in this matter; nor would the soldiers have
obeyed him if he had done so. Though treacherous, the action of Beaufort was
popular. He was allowed, though a Cardinal, to take his seat at the King’s
council, except only when matters were under discussion which concerned the
Church of Rome. Really, Beaufort was too much absorbed in deadly personal
rivalry with Gloucester to be of any service to the Pope in furthering his attempt
to overthrow the liberties of the English Church.
But the Papacy has never in its history gained so much
by definite victories as it has by steady persistency. It was always prepared
to take advantage of the internal weakness of any kingdom, and to advance
pretensions at times when they were not likely to be resolutely disavowed. In
time they might be heard of again, and when reasserted could at least claim the
prestige of some antiquity. By his treatment of Archbishop Chichele, and by his
grant of legatine powers to Beaufort, Martin V exercised a more direct
authority over the machinery of the English Church than had been permitted to
any Pope since the days of Innocent III. The Church was weak in its hold on the
affections of the people, and when the kingly office was in abeyance, the
Church, robbed of its protector, was too feeble to offer any serious resistance
to the Papacy. Martin V used his opportunity dexterously, and his
successors had no reason to complain of the independent spirit of English
bishops.
But besides being an ecclesiastic, Martin V had the
sentiments of a Roman noble. He wished to restore his native city to some part
of her old glory, and labored so assiduously at the work of restoration that a
grateful people hailed him as “Father of his country”. He rebuilt the tottering
portico of S. Peter’s and proceeded to adorn and repair the ruined basilicas of
the city. In the Church of S. John Lateran, which had been destroyed by fire in
1308, and was slowly rising from its ruins, he laid down the mosaic pavement
which still exists, and built up the roof. He restored the Basilica of the SS.
Apostoli. His example told upon the Cardinals, and he urged on them to
undertake the care of the churches from which they took their titles. His pontificate
marks the beginning of an era of architectural adornment of the City of
Rome.
The only part of the work of the reformation of the
Church which Martin V showed any wish to carry into effect was that concerning
the Cardinals. The Papal absolutism over all bishops, which Martin V desired to
establish, aimed at the reduction of the power of the ecclesiastical
aristocracy which surrounded the Pope’s person, and the rules for the conduct
of the Cardinals issued in 1424 were not meant to be mere waste paper. Martin V
succeeded in reducing the power of the Cardinals; he paid little heed to their
advice, and they were so afraid of him that they stammered like awkward
children in his presence. Sometimes he even excluded them altogether. In 1429
he retired from Rome to Ferentino before a pestilence, and forbade any of the
Cardinals to follow him.
Yet all Martin V’s injunctions could not purge the
Curia from the charge of corruption. Money was necessary for the Pope; and
Martin, if he laid aside the grosser forms of extortion, still demanded money
on all fair pretexts. The ambassadors at the Papal Court found it necessary for
the conduct of the business to propitiate the Pope by handsome presents on the
great festivals of the Church. If any business was to be done, the attention of
the Pope and his officials had to be arrested by some valuable gift. Yet Martin
showed a care in making ecclesiastical appointments which had not been seen in
the Popes for the last half-century. He did not make his appointments rashly, but
inquired about the capacities of the different candidates and the special needs
of the districts which they aspired to serve. Even so, Martin V was not always
to be trusted. He seemed to delight in humbling bishops before him. He deposed
Bishop Anselm of Augsburg simply because the civic authorities quarreled with
him. In England he conferred on a nephew of his own, aged fourteen, the rich
archdeaconry of Canterbury. Yet Martin was never weary of uttering noble
sentiments to the Cardinals and those around him: no word was so often on his
lips as “justice”. He would often exclaim to his Cardinals, “Love justice, ye
who judge the earth”.
In these peaceful works of internal reform and
organization Martin V passed his last years, disturbed only by the thought that
the time was drawing near for summoning the promised Council at Basel.
Moreover, there was little hope of avoiding it, for the religious conflict in
Bohemia had waxed so fierce that it had long been the subject of greatest
interest in the politics of Europe. Army after army of the orthodox had been
routed by the Bohemian heretics. Papal legates had in vain raised troops and
conducted them to battle. Germany was hopelessly exhausted, and when force had
failed, men looked anxiously to see if deliberation could again avail. Martin V
ordered the legate in Bohemia, Giuliano Cesarini, to convoke a Council at Basel
in 1431. But he was not to see its beginning: he was suddenly struck by
apoplexy, and died on February 20, 1431. He was buried in the Church of S. John
Lateran, where his recumbent effigy in brass still adorns his tomb.
Martin V was a wise, cautious, and prudent Pope. He
received the Papacy discredited and homeless: he succeeded in establishing it
firmly in its old capital, recovering its lost possessions, and restoring some
of its old prestige in Europe. This he did by moderation and common sense,
combined with a genuine administrative capacity. He was not a brilliant man,
but the times did not require brilliancy. He was not personally popular, for he
did not much care for the regard or sympathy of those around him, but kept his
own counsel and went his own way. He was reserved, and had great self-command.
When the news of a brother’s unexpected death was brought to him early one
morning, he composed himself and said mass as usual. He did not care for men’s
good opinion, but devoted himself energetically to the details of business. He
did not care to do anything splendid, so much as to do all things securely. Yet
he rescued the Papacy from its fallen condition and laid the foundations for
its future power. His strong-willed and arbitrary dealings with other bishops
did much to break down the strength of national feeling in ecclesiastical
matters which had been displayed at Constance. He was resolved to make the
bishops feel their impotence before the Pope; and the political weakness of
European States enabled him to go far in breaking down the machinery of
the national Churches, and asserting for the Papacy a supreme control in
all ecclesiastical matters.
In this way he may be regarded as the founder of the
theory of Papal omnipotence which is embodied in modern Ultramontanism. Yet
Martin V succeeded rather through the weakness of Europe than through his own
strength. He did not awaken suspicion by large schemes, but pursued a quiet
policy which was dictated by the existing needs of the Papacy, and was capable
of great extension in the future. Without being a great man, he was an
extremely sagacious statesman. He had none of the noble and heroic qualities which
would have enabled him to set up the Papacy once more as the exponent of the
religious aspirations of Europe; but he brought it into accordance with the
politics of his time and made it again powerful and respected.
There were two opinions in his own days respecting the
character of Martin V. Those who had waited anxiously for a thorough
reformation of the Church looked sadly on Martin’s shortcomings and accused him
of avarice and self-seeking. Those who regarded his career as a temporal ruler,
extolled him for his practical virtues, and the epitaph on his tomb called him
with some truth, “Temporum suorum felicitas”, “the happiness of his times”. At
the present day we may be permitted to combine these two opposite judgments,
and may praise him for what he did while regretting that he lacked the
elevation of mind necessary to enable him to seize the splendid opportunity
offered him of doing more.
After the funeral of Martin V, the fourteen Cardinals
who were in Rome lost no time in entering into conclave in the Church of S.
Maria sopra Minerva. They were still smarting at the recollection of the hard
yoke of Martin V, and their one desire was to give themselves an easy master
and escape the indignities which they had so long endured. To secure this end
they had recourse to the method, which the Schism had introduced, of drawing up
rules for the conduct of the future Pope, which every Cardinal signed before
proceeding to the election. Each promised, if he were elected Pope, to issue a
Bull within three days of his coronation, declaring that he would reform the
Roman Curia, would further the work of the approaching Council, would appoint
Cardinals according to the decrees of Constance, would allow his Cardinals
freedom of speech, and would respect their advice, give them their accustomed
revenues, abstain from seizing their goods at death, and consult them about the
disposal of the government of the Papal States. We see from these provisions
how the Cardinals resented the insignificance to which Martin V had consigned
them. To reverse his treatment of themselves they were willing to reverse his
entire policy and bind the future Pope to accept in some form the Council and
the cause of ecclesiastical reform. They entered the Conclave on March 1, and
spent the next day in drawing up this instrument for their own protection. On
March 3 they proceeded to vote, and on the first scrutiny Gabriel Condulmier, a
Venetian, was unanimously elected. Others had been mentioned, such as Giuliano
Cesarini, the energetic legate in Bohemia, and Antonio Casino, Bishop of Siena.
But in their prevailing temper, the Cardinals determined that it was best to
have a harmless nonentity, and all were unanimous that Condulmier answered best
to that description.
Gabriel Condulmier, who took the name of Eugenius IV,
was a Venetian, sprung from a wealthy but not noble family. His father died
when he was young. And Gabriel, seized with religious enthusiasm, distributed
his wealth, 20,000 ducats, among the poor, and resolved to seek his riches in another
world. So great was his ardor that he infected with it his cousin, Antonio
Correr, and both entered the monastery of S. Giorgio d'Alga in Venice. There
the two friends remained simple brothers of the order, till Antonio’s uncle was
unexpectedly elected Pope Gregory XII. As usual, the Papal uncle wished to
promote his nephew; but Antonio refused to leave his monastery unless he were
accompanied by his friend Condulmier. Gregory XII made his nephew Bishop of
Bologna, and Condulmier Bishop of Siena. He afterwards prepared the way for his
own downfall by insisting on elevating both to the dignity of Cardinals. But
the diminution of Gregory’s obedience gave them small scope for their activity;
they both went to Constance and were ranked among the Cardinals of the united
Church. Their long friendship was at last interrupted by jealousy. Correr could
not endure his friend’s elevation to the Papacy; he left him, and at the
Council of Basel was one of his bitterest opponents. Martin V appointed
Condulmier to be legate in Bologna, where he showed his capacity by putting
down a rebellion of the city. When elected to the Papacy at the early age of
forty-seven he was regarded as a man of high religious character, without much
knowledge of the world or political capacity. The Cardinals considered him to
be an excellent appointment for their purpose. Tall and of a commanding figure
and pleasant face, he would be admirably suited for public appearances. His
reputation for piety would satisfy the reforming party; his known liberality to
the poor would make him popular in Rome; his assumed lack of strong character
and of personal ambition would assure to the Cardinals the freedom and
consideration after which they pined. He was in no way a distinguished
man, and in an age when learning was becoming more and more respected, he was
singularly uncultivated.
His early years were spent in the performance of
formal acts of piety, and his one literary achievement was that he wrote with
his own hand a breviary, which he always continued to use when he became Pope,
the absence of any decided qualities in Eugenius IV seems to have been so
marked that miraculous agency was called in to explain his unexpected
elevation. A story, which he himself was fond of telling in later years, found ready
credence. When he was a simple monk at Venice, he took his turn to act as
porter at the monastery gate. One day a hermit came and was kindly welcomed by
Condulmier, who accompanied him into the church and joined in his devotions. As
they returned, the hermit said, “You will be made Cardinal, and then Pope; in
your pontificate you will suffer much adversity”, Then he departed, and was
seen no more.
Eugenius IV was faithful to his promise before
election, and on the day of his coronation, March 11, confirmed the document
which he had signed in conclave. He also showed signs of a desire to reform the
abuses of the Papal Court. His first act was to cut off a source of exaction.
The customary letters announcing his election were given for transmission to the
ambassadors of the various states, instead of being sent by Papal nuncios, who
expected large donations for their service.
But the first steps of Eugenius IV in the conduct of
affairs showed an absence of wisdom and an unreasoning ferocity. Martin V had been
careful to secure the interests of his own relatives. His brother Lorenzo had
been made Count of Alba and Celano in the Abruzzi, and his brother Giordano
Duke of Amalfi and Venosa, Prince of Salerno. Both of them died before the
Pope, but their places were taken by the sons of Lorenzo—Antonio, who became
Prince of Salerno; Odoardo, who inherited Celano and Marsi; and Prospero, who
was Cardinal at the early age of twenty-two. Martin V had lived by the Church
of SS. Apostoli in a house of moderate pretensions, as the Vatican was too
ruinous for occupation; his nephews had a palace hard by. It was natural for a
new Pope to look with some suspicion on the favorites of his predecessor. But
at first all went well between the Colonna and Eugenius IV. The Castle of S.
Angelo was given up to the Pope and a considerable amount of treasure which
Martin V had left behind him. But Eugenius IV soon became suspicious. The towns
in the Papal States grew rebellious when they felt that Martin V’s strong hand
was relaxed, and Eugenius needed money and soldiers to reduce them to
obedience. He suspected that the Papal nephews had vast stores of treasure
secreted, and resolved by a bold stroke to seize it for himself. Stefano
Colonna, head of the Palestrina branch of the family and at variance with the
elder branch, was sent to seize the Bishop of Tivoli, Martin’s
Vice-Chamberlain, whom he dragged ignominiously through the streets. Eugenius
IV angrily rebuked him for his unnecessary violence, and so alienated his
wavering loyalty. At the same time Eugenius demanded of Antonio Colonna that he
should give up all the possessions in the Papal States with which his uncle had
endowed him, Genazano, Soriano, S. Marino, and other fortresses were Eugenius
imagined that the Papal treasures lay hid. Antonio loudly declared that this
was a plot of the Orsini in their hereditary hatred of the Colonna; he
denounced the Pope as lending himself to their schemes, and left Rome hastily
to raise forces. He was soon followed by Stefano Colonna, by the Cardinal
Prospero, and the other adherents of the family. Gathering their troops, the
Colonna attacked the possessions of the Orsini and laid waste the country up to
the walls of Rome.
Eugenius IV, like Urban VI, had been unexpectedly
raised to a position for which his narrowness and inexperience rendered him
unfit. Trusting to the general excellence of his intentions and exulting in the
plenitude of his new authority, he acted on the first impulse, and only grew
more determined when he met with opposition. He tortured the luckless Bishop of
Tivoli almost to death in his prison. He ordered the partisans of the Colonna
in Rome to be arrested, and over two hundred Roman citizens were put to death
on various charges. Stefano Colonna advanced against Rome, seized the Porta
Appia, on April 23, and fought his way through the streets as far as the Piazza
of S. Marco. But the people did not rise on his side as he had expected; the
Pope’s troops were still strong enough to drive back their assailants. Stefano
Colonna could not succeed in getting hold of the city; but he kept the Appian
gate, laid waste the Campagna, and threatened the city with famine. Eugenius IV
retaliated by ordering the destruction of the Colonna palaces, even that of
Martin V, and the houses of their adherents, and on May 18 issued a decree
depriving them of all their possessions. The old times of savage warfare
between the Roman nobles were again brought back.
The contest might long have raged, to the destruction
of the new-born prosperity of the Roman city, had not Florence, Venice, and
Naples sent troops to aid the Pope. But the Neapolitan forces under
Caldora proved a feeble help, for they took money from Antonio Colonna,
and assumed an ambiguous attitude. In Rome the confession of a conspiracy to
seize the Castle of S. Angelo and expel the Pope was extorted from a luckless
friar, and gave rise to fresh prosecutions and imprisonments. Amid these
agitations Eugenius IV was stricken by paralysis, which was put down to the
results of poison administered in the interests of the Colonna. Sickness
brought reflection; and the Colonnesi on their side saw that the chances of war
were going against them, since Venice and Florence were determined to support
Eugenius, whose help they needed against the growing power of the Duke of
Milan. Accordingly, on September 22 peace was made between the Pope and Antonio
Colonna, who paid 75,000 ducats and resigned the castles which he held in the
Papal States. Giovanna of Naples deprived him also of his principality of
Salerno. The relatives of Martin V fell back to their former position. But
Eugenius had gained by violence, disorder, bloodshed, and persecution an end
which might have been reached equally well by a little patience and tact.
The disturbances in the States of the Church gradually
settled down, and Eugenius in September was anxiously awaiting the coming of
Sigismund to Italy for the purpose of assuming the Imperial crown. On his
dealings with Sigismund depended his chance of freeing himself from the Council,
which had begun to assemble at Basel, and whose proceedings were such as to
cause him some anxiety.
CHAPTER III.
BOHEMIA AND THE HUSSITE WARS
1418- 1431
The fortunes of Sigismund had not been prosperous
since his departure from Constance. The glories of the revived empire which had
floated before his eyes soon began to fade away. Troubles in his ancestral
states occupied all his attention, and prevented him from aspiring to be the
arbiter of the affairs of Europe. His dignified position at Constance as
Protector of the Council that was to regulate the future of the Church entailed
on him nothing but disappointment. It was easy for the Council to burn Hus and
to condemn his doctrines; but the Bohemian people were not convinced by either
of these proceedings, and cherished a bitter feeling of Sigismund’s perfidy. He
had invited Hus to the Council, and then had abandoned him; he had inflicted a
disgrace on their national honor which the Bohemians could never forgive. The
decrees of the Council found little respect in Bohemia, and a league was formed
among the Bohemian nobles to maintain freedom of preaching. The teaching of
Jakubek of Mies, concerning the necessity of receiving the communion under both
kinds, give an outward symbol to the new beliefs, and the chalice became the
distinctive badge of the Bohemian reformers. The Council in vain summoned
Wenzel to answer for his neglect of its monitions; in vain it called on
Sigismund to give effect to its decrees by force of arms. Sigismund knew the
difficulties of such an attempt, and as heir to the Bohemian kingdom did not
choose to draw upon himself any further hatred from the Bohemian people.
Before the election of a new Pope, the Bohemians could
still denounce the arbitrary proceedings of the Council, and hope for fairer
hearing in the future. But the election of Oddo Colonna, who as Papal
commissioner had condemned Hus in 1411, dashed all further hopes to the ground.
Martin V accepted ail that the Council had done towards the Bohemian
heretics, and urged Sigismund to interpose. He threatened to proclaim a crusade
against Bohemia, which would then be conquered by some faithful prince, who
might not be willing to hand it over to Sigismund. The threat alarmed
Sigismund, who wrote urgently to his brother Wenzel; and the indolent Wenzel,
who had allowed dim notions of impossible toleration to float before his eyes,
at last roused himself to see the hopelessness of his attempt neither to favor
nor discourage the new movement. At the end of 1418 he ordered that all the
churches in Prague should be given up to the Catholics, who hastened to return
and wreak their wrath on the heretics. Two churches only were left to the
Utraquists, as the reformed party was now called, from its administration of
the communion under both kinds. But the multitudes began to meet in the open
air, on hill-tops, which they loved to call by Biblical names: Tabor and Horeb
and the like. Peacefully these assemblies met and separated; but this condition
of suppressed revolt could not long continue. On July 22, 1419, Wenzel’s wrath
was kindled by hearing of a vast meeting of 40,000 worshippers, who had
received the communion under both kinds, and had given it even to the
children of their company.
These meetings at once awakened the enthusiasm of the
Utraquists, and gave them confidence in their strength. On Sunday, July 30, a
procession, headed by a former monk, John of Sulau, who had preached a fiery
sermon to a large congregation, marched through the streets of Prague, and took
possession of the church of S. Stephen, where they celebrated their own rites.
Thence they proceeded to the Town Hall of the Neustadt, and clamored that the
magistrates should release some who had been made prisoners on religious
grounds. The magistrates were the nominees of Wenzel to carry out his new
policy; they barred the doors, and looked from the windows upon the crowd.
Foremost in it stood the priest, John of Sulau, holding aloft the chalice.
Someone from the windows threw a stone, and knocked it from his hands. The fury
of the crowd blazed out in a moment. Headed by John Zizka, of Trocnow, a
nobleman of Wenzel’s court, they burst open the doors, slew the burgomaster,
and flung out of the windows all who did not succeed in making their escape. It
was the beginning of a religious war more savage and more bloody than Europe
had yet seen.
Wenzel’s rage was great when he heard of these
proceedings. He threatened death to all the Hussites, and particularly the
priests. But his helplessness obliged him to listen to proposals for
reconciliation. The rebels humbled themselves, the King appointed new
magistrates. Wenzel’s perplexities, however, were soon to end; on August 16 he
was struck with apoplexy, and died with a great shout and roar as of a lion. He
was buried secretly at night, for Prague was in an uproar at the news of his
death. Wenzel’s faults as a ruler are obvious enough. He was devoid of wisdom
and energy; he was arbitrary and capricious; he was alternately sunk in sloth,
and a prey to fits of wild fury. He had none of the qualities of a statesman;
yet with all his faults he was felt by the Bohemians to have a love for his
people, to whom he was always kindly and familiar, and to whom in his way he
strove to do justice. His own ambiguous position towards his brother Sigismund
and European politics corresponded in some measure with the ambiguous attitude
of Bohemia towards the Church, and for a time he was no unfitting
representative of the land which he ruled. Just as events had reached the point
when decision was rendered inevitable, Wenzel’s death handed over to Sigismund
the responsibility of dealing with the future of Bohemia.
Sigismund did not judge it expedient to turn his
attention immediately to Bohemia. His Hungarian subjects clamored for his aid
against the Turks, who were pressing up the Danube valley. He was bound to help
them first, and obtain their help against Bohemia. He trusted that conciliatory
measures would disarm the Bohemian rebels, whom he would afterwards be able to
deal with at leisure. Accordingly he appointed the widowed queen, Sophia, as
regent in Bohemia, and round her gathered the nobles in the interests of public
order. At the head of the Government stood Cenek of Wartenberg, who was leader
of the Hussite league, and who strove to check excesses by a policy of
toleration. But men needed guarantees for the future. The Diet which met in
September, 1419, and in which the Hussites had a majority, demanded of
Sigismund that he should grant full liberty for the Utraquist preaching and
ceremonies, and should confer office in the State on the Czechs only.
Sigismund returned the ambiguous answer that he hoped soon to come in person,
and would govern according to the old customs of his father, Charles IV. No
doubt the answer was pleasant to the patriotic aspirations which their request
contained; but men significantly observed that there were no Hussites in
Charles IV’s days.
Queen Sophia was obliged to write repeatedly to
Sigismund, begging him to be more explicit; but only drew from him a
proclamation recommending order and quiet, and promising to examine into the
Utraquist question when he arrived. Sigismund hoped to gain time till he had an
army ready; he hoped to win over the Hussite nobles by a display of confidence
meanwhile, and slowly gather round himself all the moderate party.
But Sigismund did not know the strength nor the
political sagacity of the leaders of the extreme party, which had been slowly
but surely forming itself since the death of Hus. The moderate party were men
of the same views as Hus, who were faithful to an ideal of the Church, repelled
the charge of heresy, and still hoped for tolerance, at least in time, for
their own opinions. With men such as these Sigismund could easily deal. But the
extreme party, who were called Taborites from their open-air meetings,
recognized that the breach with Rome was irreparable, and were prepared to
carry their opinions into all questions, religious, political, and social
alike. Their position was one of open revolt against authority both in Church
and State; they rested on the assertion of the rights of the individual, and
appealed to the national sentiment of the masses of the people. At the head of
this party stood two men of remarkable ability, Nicolas of Hus and John Zizka,
both sprung from the smaller nobility, and both trained in affairs at Wenzel’s
court. Of these, Nicolas had the eye of a statesman; Zizka the eloquence, the
enthusiasm, and the generalship needed for a leader of men. Nicolas of Hus saw
from the first the real bearing of the situation; he saw that if the extreme
party of the reformers did not prepare for the inevitable conflict they would
gradually be isolated, and would be crushed by main force. Zizka set himself to
the task of organizing the enthusiasm of the Bohemian peasants into the stuff
which would form a disciplined army. Like Cromwell in a later day, he used the
seriousness that comes of deep religious convictions as the basis of a strong
military organization, against which the chivalry of Germany should break
itself in vain. While Sigismund was delaying, Zizka was drilling. On October 25
he seized the Wyssehrad, a fortress on the hill commanding the Neustadt of
Prague, and began a struggle to obtain entire possession of the city. But the
excesses of the Taborites, and the fair promises, of the Queen-regent,
confirmed the party of order. Prague was not yet ready for the Taborites, and
on November 11 Zizka and his troops fell back from the city.
In this state of things Sigismund advanced from
Hungary into Moravia, and in December held a Diet at Brünn. Thither went Queen
Sophia and the chief of the Bohemian nobles; thither, too, went the ambassadors
of the city of Prague, to seek confirmation for their promised freedom of
religion. Sigismund’s attitude was still ambiguous; he received them
graciously, did not forbid them to celebrate the communion in their own fashion
in their own houses, but ordered them to keep peace in their city, submit to
the royal authority, lay aside their arms, and he would treat them gently. The
burghers of Prague submitted, and destroyed the fortifications which menaced
the royal castle. Sigismund could view the results of his policy with
satisfaction. The submission of Prague spread terror on all sides; the power of
Sigismund impressed men’s imagination; the Catholics began to rejoice in
anticipation of a speedy triumph.
From Brünn Sigismund advanced into Silesia, where was
received with loyal enthusiasm, and many of the German nobles met him at
Breslau. Sigismund became convinced of his own power and importance and let
drop the mask too soon. At Breslau he put down the Utraquists, inquired
severely into a municipal revolt, which was insignificant compared to what had
happened in Prague, caused twenty-three citizens to be executed for rebellion,
and on March 17 allowed the Papal legate to proclaim a crusade against the
Hussites. The result of this false step was to lose at once the support of the
moderate party, and to alienate the national feeling of the Bohemians. The
people of Prague issued a manifesto calling all who loved the law of Christ and
their country’s liberties to join in resisting Sigismund’s crusade. The nobles,
headed by Cenek of Wartenberg, denounced Sigismund as their enemy and not their
king. The country was at once in arms, and the pent-up fanaticism was let
loose. Churches and monasteries were destroyed on every side. No country was so
rich in splendid buildings and treasures of ecclesiastical ornament as was
Bohemia; but a wave of ruthless devastation now swept across it which has left
only faint traces of the former splendor. Again excesses awoke alarm among the
modern nobles. Cenek of Wartenberg went back to Sigismund’s side; and the
burghers of Prague saw themselves consequently in a dangerous plight, as the
two castles between which their city lay, the Wyssehrad and the Hradschin,
again declared for Sigismund. As they could not defend their city, they again
turned to thoughts of submission, in return for an amnesty and permission to
celebrate the communion under both kinds. But Sigismund had now advanced into
Bohemia and proudly looked for a speedy triumph. He demanded that they should
lay aside their arms and submit. This harshness was a fatal error on
Sigismund’s part, as it drove the burghers of Prague into alliance with the
extreme party of Zizka.
As yet this alliance had not been made; as yet Prague
wished to proceed on the old constitutional lines. It wished to recognize the
legitimate king, and obtain from him tolerance for the new religious beliefs.
If this were impossible, there was nothing left save to throw in their lot with
those who wished to create a new constitution and a new society. Zizka had been
preparing for the contest. He remorselessly pursued a policy which would
deprive the Catholics of their resources, and would compel Bohemia
to follow the course in which it had engaged. Monasteries were everywhere
pillaged and destroyed; Church property was seized; the lands of the orthodox
party were ruthlessly devastated. Sigismund, if he entered Bohemia, would find
no resources to help him. Zizka so acted as to make the breach at once
irreparable; he wished to leave no chance of conciliation, except on condition
of recognizing all that he had done. Moreover, he established a center for his
authority. When he failed to seize Prague as a stronghold, he sought out a spot
which would form a capital for the revolution. A chance movement made him
master of the town of Austi, near which were the remains of an old fortified
place. Zizka’s eye at once recognized its splendid military situation, lying on
the top of a hill, which was formed into a peninsula by two rivers which flow
round its rocky base. Zizka set to work to build up the old walls, and
strengthen by art the strong natural position. The approach to the peninsula,
which was only thirty feet wide, was rendered secure by a triple wall and a
deep ditch. Towers and defenses crowned the whole line of the wall. It was not
a city, but a permanent camp, which Zizka succeeded in making, and to
which was given the characteristic name of Tabor. Henceforth the name of
Taborites was confined to Zizka’s followers.
Before the danger which threatened them with entire
destruction, as Sigismund’s army numbered at least 80,000 men from almost every
nation in Europe, all parties in Bohemia drew together. The troops of Zizka
entered Prague, and the burghers destroyed such parts of their city as were
most open to attack from the Wyssehrad and the Hradschin, which were held by
the Royalists. The hill of Witkow, on the north-east of the city, was still
held by the Hussites, and against that Sigismund directed an attack on July 14.
The attention of the enemy was distracted by assaults in different quarters,
and Sigismund’s soldiers pressed up the hill. But a tower, defended by
twenty-six Taborites, with two women and a girl who fought like heroes, kept
the troops at bay till a band of Zizka’s soldiers came to their aid, and
charged with such fury that the Germans fled in dismay. Sigismund learned with
shame and anger the powerlessness of his great host to contend against a people
actuated by national and religious zeal. Their repulse kindled in the Germans a
desire for vengeance, and they massacred the Bohemian inhabitants of the
neighboring towns and villages. When the Bohemian nobles of the King’s party
resented this display of hatred against the entire Bohemian race, Sigismund’s
unwieldy army began to break up. There was again a talk of negotiation, and the
people of Prague sent to Sigismund their demands, which are known as the Four
Articles of Prague, and formed the charter of the Hussite creed. They asked for
freedom of preaching, the communion under both kinds, the reduction of the
clergy to apostolic poverty, and the severe repression of all open sins. These
articles were a worthy exposition of the principles of the Reformation: the
first asserted the freedom of man to search the Scriptures for himself; the second
attacked one of the great outposts of sacerdotalism, the denial of the cup to
the laity; the third cut at the root of the abuses of the ecclesiastical
system; and the fourth claimed for Christianity the power to regenerate and
regulate society. There was some semblance of discussion on these points but
there could be no agreement between those who rested on the authority of the
Church and those who entirely disregarded it.
These negotiations, however, gave still further
pretext for many of Sigismund’s troops to leave his army. Resolving to do
something, Sigismund on July 28 had himself crowned King of Bohemia, a step
which gave greater appearance of legitimacy to his position. He strove to bind
to his interests the Bohemian nobles by gifts of the royal domains and of the
treasures of the churches. Meanwhile the Hussites besieged the Wyssehrad and
succeeded in cutting off its supplies. It was reduced to extremities when
Sigismund made an effort to relieve it. The chivalry of Moravia, Hungary, and
Bohemia were checked, in their fiery charge by the steady organization of the
Taborites, and more than four hundred of the bravest nobles were slaughtered by
the flails of the peasants as they struggled in the vineyards and marsh at the
bottom of the hill. Sigismund fled, and the Wyssehrad surrendered on November
1.
After this, Sigismund’s cause was lost, and he was
regarded as the murderer of the nobles who fell in the disastrous battle of the
Wyssehrad. The troops of Zizka overran Bohemia, and the Catholic inhabitants
fled before them. Town after town submitted, and in March, 1421, Sigismund left
Bohemia in despair. He had hopelessly mismanaged affairs. He had alternated
between a policy of conciliation and one of repression. He had alienated the
Bohemians through the cruelty of his German followers, and had lost the support
of the Germans through his anxiety to win the Bohemian nobles. Finally his hope
of overcoming the people by the help of the native nobles had ignominiously
failed and had covered Sigismund with disgrace.
The Utraquists were now masters of Bohemia, and the
whole land was banded together in resistance to the Catholicism and Sigismund.
The nobles joined with the people, and Prague was triumphant; even the
Archbishop Conrad accepted the Four Articles of Prague on April 21, 1421. The
movement spread into Moravia, which joined with Bohemia in its revolution. The
next step was the organization of the newly-won freedom. A Diet held at Caslau
in June accepted the Four Articles of Prague, declared Sigismund an enemy
of Bohemia and unworthy of the Crown, appointed a Committee of twenty
representatives of the different estates and parties to undertake the
government of the land until it had a king, and left the organization of
religious matters to a synod of clergy which was soon to be convoked.
Sigismund’s ambassadors offering toleration, scarcely obtained a hearing: the
offer came a year too late.
Although Bohemia was united in opposition to Sigismund
and Catholicism, it was but natural that the divergencies of opinion within
itself should grow wider as it felt itselt more free from danger. The division
between the Conservative and Radical party became more pronounced. The
Conservatives, who were called Calixtins or Utraquists from their ceremonial,
or Praguers from their chief seat, held by the position of Hus—a position of
orthodoxy in belief, with a reformation of ecclesiastical practice carried out
according to Scripture. They altered as little as possible in the old
ecclesiastical arrangements, retained the mass service with the communion under
both kinds, and observed the festivals of the Church. Against them were set the
Radicals, the Taborites, amongst whom there were several parties. The most
moderate, at the head of which stood Zizka, differed from the Praguers not so
much in belief as in the determined spirit with which they were prepared to
defend their opinions and carry them out in practice. The thorough Taborites
cast aside all ecclesiastical authority and asserted the sufficiency of
Scripture, for the right understanding of which the individual believer was
directly illuminated by the Holy Ghost. They rejected Transubstantiation, and
asserted that Christ was present in the elements only in a figurative way.
Besides these were various extreme sects, who held that the Millennium had
begun, that God existed only in the hearts of the believers, and the devil in
the hearts of the wicked. Most notorious amongst these was the small sect of
the Adamites, who took possession of a small island on the river Nezarka and
gave themselves up to a life of communism which degenerated into shameless
excesses. Against these extreme sectaries the Praguers and Zizka set up a
standard of orthodoxy, and proceeded to measures of repression. Fifty of both
sexes were burned by Zizka on the same day: they entered the flames with a
smile, saying, “Today will we reign with Christ”. The island of the Adamites
was stormed, and the entire body exterminated. Martinek Hauska, the chief
teacher who opposed Transubstantiation, was burned as a heretic in Prague.
It was indeed needful that Bohemia should retain the
appearance of unity if she were to succeed in maintaining her new religious
freedom. Sigismund was disheartened by the failure of his first attempt, and
was ready to wait and try the results of moderation. But the German electors
and the Pope were by no means willing to give up Bohemia as lost. The four
Rhenish Electors formed a league against the heretics: the Papal legate,
Cardinal Branda, journeyed through Germany to kindle the zeal of the faithful.
Sigismund was openly denounced as a favorer of heresy, and was compelled to
bestir himself. It was agreed that the Electors should lead an army from
Germany, and Sigismund should advance from Hungary through Moravia and unite with
them. In September Germany poured an army of 200,000 men into Bohemia; but
Sigismund tarried and deferred his coming. Loud accusations of treachery were
brought against him by the angry princes, and disputes sprang up among them.
The vast army wasted its energies in the siege of Saaz, and began gradually to
disperse; the news of Zizka’s advance turned it to shameful flight. It was said
ironically that such was the horror which the German princes felt against the
heretics, that they could not even endure to see them. When Sigismund had
finished his preparations, he also in December entered Bohemia with a
formidable army of 90,000 men, well-armed, trained in warfare, led by Pipo of
Florence, one of the most renowned generals of the age. Zizka put forth all his
powers of generalship to save Bohemia from the impending danger.
Zizka, who had been one-eyed for years, had lost his
remaining eye at the siege of the little castle of Rabi in August. He was now
entirely blind, but his blindness only gave greater clearness to his mental
vision, and he could direct the movements of a campaign with greater precision
than before. The very fact that he had to be dependent on others for
information led him to impress more forcibly his own spirit on those around
him, and so train up a school of great generals to succeed him. Under Zizka’s
guidance the democratic feeling of the Bohemians had been made the basis of a
new military organization which was now to try its strength against the
chivalry of the Middle Ages. Strict discipline prevailed amongst Zizka’s
troops, and he was able to meet the dash of the feudal forces with the coolness
of a trained army which could perform complicated manoeuvres with unerring
precision. He paid especial attention to artillery, and was the first great
general to realize its importance. Moreover, he adapted the old war chariots to
the purposes of defence. His line of march was protected on the flanks by
wagons fastened to one another by iron chains. These wagons readily formed the
fortifications of a camp or served as protection against an attack. In battle
the soldiers, when repulsed, could retire behind their cover, and form again
their scattered lines. The wagons were manned by the bravest troops, and their
drivers were trained to form them according to letters of the alphabet; so that
the Hussites, having the key, easily knew their way amongst the lines,
while the enemy, if they forced their way, were lost in an inextricable
labyrinth. At times the wagons, filled with heavy stones, were rolled downhill
on the enemy’s ranks; when once those ranks were broken, the wagons were
rapidly driven in, and cut in two the enemy’s line. It was a new kind of
warfare, which spread terror and helplessness among the crusading hosts.
This new organization was sorely tried when, on
December 21, Sigismund’s army advanced against Kuttenberg, and met Zizka’s
forces hard by its walls. The wagons of the Bohemians proved an impregnable
defence, and their artillery did great injury, against the Hungarians. But
treachery was at work in Kuttenberg, and opened the gates to Sigismund. Next
day the Bohemians found themselves shut in on all sides, and their foes
prepared to reduce them by hunger. But in the darkness of the night Zizka drew
his troops together, and with a charge of his wagons broke through the enemy’s
line and made good his retreat. Rapidly gathering reinforcements, Zizka
returned to Kuttenberg on January 6, 1422, and fell suddenly upon the centre of
the unsuspecting army. A panic seized the Germans; Sigismund fled
ignominiously, and his example was followed by all. Zizka followed, and, aided
by the wintry weather, inflicted severe losses on the invaders. More than
12,000 men are said to have perished. The second crusade against the Hussites
failed even more signally than the first.
Bohemia had now beaten back both Sigismund, who came
to assert his hereditary rights to the crown, and the German princes, who
viewed with alarm the dismemberment of the empire. There remained the more
difficult task of organizing its political position. The great statesman,
Nicolas of Hus, was dead, and Zizka had the talents of a general rather than a
politician. His own democratic ideas, were too strong for him to put himself at
the head of the State, and bring about the necessary union between the Praguers
and the Taborites. The Bohemian nobles and the Conservative party generally
desired to take the management of affairs out of the hands of the
Taborites, and reestablish a monarchy. Already they had offered the kingdom to
Ladislas, King of Poland, who shrank from incurring the charge of heresy, which
would hinder him in his constant warfare against the Teutonic Knights in
Prussia. But Witold, Grand Duke of Lithuania, a man of high political sagacity,
had before his eyes the possibility of a great Slavic confederacy which would
beat back all German aggression. He saw in the Hussite movement a means of
bridging over the religious differences between the Latin and Greek Churches,
which were an obstacle to the union of Prussia and Poland. These plans of
Witold created great alarm in Germany, and many efforts were made to thwart
them; but Witold took advantage of events, announced to the Pope that he wished
to restore order in Bohemia, and in May, 1422, sent the nephew of Ladislas of
Poland, Sigismund Korybut, with an army to Prague. Prague, torn with internal
dissensions, accepted Korybut as a deliverer. Zizka recognized him as ruler of
the land, and Korybut showed zeal and moderation in winning over all parties to
his side.
This union of Bohemia and Poland was a standing menace
to Germany, and a Diet held at Nurnberg in July appointed Frederick of
Brandenburg to lead a new expedition into Bohemia. Frederick was keenly alive
to the gravity of the situation, which indeed threatened himself in Brandenburg.
He endeavored to gather together both an army for a crusade and a permanent
army of occupation, which was to be left in Bohemia. But Germany’s internal
weakness and constant dissensions prevented Frederick from accomplishing
anything. He led a few soldiers into Bohemia, spent some time in negotiations,
and then returned Nor was Korybut’s position in Bohemia a strong one. He failed
in his military undertakings; his attempts at conciliation alienated the
extreme Taborites; Zizka maintained an attitude of neutrality towards him.
Meanwhile Martin V was untiring in his endeavors to break down the alliance
between Poland and Bohemia. He exhorted the Polish bishops to labor for that
purpose. He wrote to Ladislas and Witold, pointing out the political dangers
which beset them if they strayed from Catholicism. Sigismund, on his part, was
willing to purchase an alliance with Poland by abandoning the cause of the
Teutonic Knights. The combined efforts of Martin V and Sigismund were
successful. Witold wrote to the Bohemians that his desire had been to reconcile
them with the Roman Church; as they were obstinate, he was driven to abandon
them to their fate. Korybut was recalled, and left Prague on December 24. The
great idea of a Slavonic Empire and Church was at an end, and the future of
Poland was decided by its cowardice at this great crisis. Henceforth it was
condemned to the isolation which it had chosen through want of foresight.
The departure of Korybut and freedom from invasion
awakened amongst the Bohemians the differences which danger made them forget.
The Praguers and the Taborites stood in stronger opposition to one another. The
Praguers were more disposed to negotiation, and hoped that they might still
find room for their opinions under the shadow of the authority of the Church.
Zizka had grown more convinced of the futility of compromise, and a stern
spirit of resistance took possession of him and his followers. The year 1423 is
full of the records of civil war and devastation in Bohemia, and Zizka spread
fire and slaughter even in the neighboring lands of Moravia and Hungary. The
year 1424 is known in Bohemian annals as “Zizka’s bloody year”. He swept
like a storm over towns and villages of those who wished for compromise, and
inflicted a sore defeat on the forces of the Praguers who were following on his
track. The Praguers in dismay looked for a leader and found him in Korybut, who
in June, 1424, returned to Prague, no longer as the deputy of Witold and the
Governor of Bohemia, but as a personal adventurer at the head of the Moderate
party. Zizka advanced against Prague; and the capital of Bohemia, the seat of
Hus and his teaching, was in danger of a terrible siege. But moderate counsels
prevailed at the last moment to avert this crowning calamity. Zizka withdrew
and soon after died of the plague on October 11. His followers bewailed the
loss of one who was to them both leader and father; they took the name of
Orphans in sign of their bereavement.
Zizka was a man of profound, even fanatical, piety,
with great decision and energy, who clearly saw the issue that lay before the
Bohemians if they wished to maintain their religious freedom. But he was a man
of action rather than reflection. He had the qualities necessary to head a
party, but not those necessary to lead a people. He could solve the problem for
himself by a rigorous determination to be watchful and to persist; but his
range of ideas was not large enough to enable him to form any policy which
would organize the nation to keep what it had won. Amid Bohemian parties he
maintained a strong position, opposed to extremes but convinced of the
hopelessness of conciliation. As a general he is almost unrivalled, for he knew
how to train out of raw materials an invincible army, and he never lost a
battle. He could drive back hosts of invaders and could maintain order within
the limits of Bohemia; but he lacked the political sense that could bind a
people together. His position became more and more a purely personal one; his
resolute character degenerated into savagery; and his last energies were spent
in trying to impress upon all his own personal convictions without any
consideration of the exact issue to which they would lead. Without Zizka
Bohemia would never have made good her resistance to the Church and to
Sigismund. It was his misfortune rather than his fault that he had not also the
political genius to organize that resistance on a secure basis for the
future.
By Zizka’s death the party opposed to reconciliation
with Rome lost its chief strength. The Taborites divided into two—the Orphans,
who held by the opinions of Zizka, and were separated from the Praguers rather
on social and political than on religious grounds; and the extreme Taborites,
who denied Transubstantiation and were entirely opposed to the Church system.
But both these parties were feeble, and spent their energies in conflicts with
one another. The field was open for Korybut and the Praguers to continue
negotiations for peace and reconciliation. Bohemia was growing weary of
anarchy. The first fervor of religious zeal had worn away, the first enthusiasm
had been disillusioned. Men were beginning to count the cost of their political
isolation, of the devastation of their land by foes without and quarrels
within, of the ruin of their commerce. Against this they had little to set as a
counterpoise. The exactions of feudal lords were as easy to bear as the
exactions of a plundering army; the equality which they had hoped to find
through religion was not yet attained. Though victorious in the field, the
great mass of the Bohemian people longed for peace almost on any terms.
During the year 1425 Korybut pursued his negotiations,
engaged in paving the way for reconciliation with Rome. The people were not
unwilling, but the army still remained true to its faith. As they felt that
danger was menacing them, the Taborites again drew together, reasserted their
principles and prepared to wage war. Besides the danger from half-heartedness
at home, two active enemies harassed the Bohemian border. Albert of Austria
attacked Moravia, and Frederick of Meissen, whom Sigismund had made Elector of
Saxony, was winning back Silesia. A new leader arose to guide the renewed vigor
of the Taborites, Procopius, called the Great to distinguish him from others of
the same name. Procopius, like Zizka, was sprung from the lower nobility, and
was a priest at the time when he first attached himself to the party of Hus.
Without possessing the military genius of Zizka, he knew how to manage the army
which Zizka had created; and he had a larger mind and was capable of greater
plans than his predecessor. Procopius was averse from war, and as a priest
never bore arms nor took part in the battles which he directed. He wished for
peace, but an honorable and enduring peace, which would guarantee to Bohemia
her religious freedom. Peace, he saw, could only be won by arms; it was not
enough to repel the invaders, Bohemia must secure its borders by acting on the
offensive. He led his troops up the Elbe to the siege of Aussig. Frederick of Saxony
was absent at a Diet at Nurnberg, but his wife Catharine called for succors and
gathered an army of 70,000 men. The Bohemian troops, reinforced by Korybut,
amounted only to 25,000, On June 16, 1426, was fought the battle under the
walls of Aussig.
The Bohemians entrenched themselves behind their
wagons, and the furious onslaught of the German knights forced the first line.
But the artillery opened on their flank; the Bohemians from their wagons
dragged the knights from their horses with long lances, and dashed them to the
ground. TheGerman lines were broken, and the Bohemians rushed in and turned
them to flight. The slaughter that ensued was terrible; 10,000 Germans were
left dead upon the field. Procopius wished to lead his victorious army farther,
so as to teach the Germans a lesson; but the Moderates refused to follow, and
the campaign came to an end without any other results.
As usual, a victory united Germany and disunited Bohemia.
Korybut pursued his schemes for union with Rome, and wrote to Martin V asking
him to receive Bohemian envoys for this purpose. Martin V expressed his
willingness, provided they would abide by the decision of the Holy See, which
was, however, ready to receive information of their desires. Korybut hoped that
the Pope would abandon Sigismund and recognize himself as King of Bohemia in
return for his services to the Church. But Korybut was not yet firm enough in
his position to carry out his plan. The dissension between the Taborites and
the Praguers was not yet so profound that the Moderates as a body were willing
to submit unreservedly to Rome. Korybut’s plans were known in Prague, and a
party formed itself, which, while in favor of reconciliation, stood firm by the
Four Articles. On Maundy Thursday, April 17, 1427, an eloquent and popular
priest, John Rokycana, denounced in a sermon the treachery of Korybut. The
people flew to arms, drove out the Poles, and made Korybut a prisoner. His
plans had entirely failed, and the victory of the Moderate party over him
necessarily turned to the profit of Procopius and the Taborites.
Procopius was now ruler of Bohemia, and carried out
his policy of terrifying his opponents by destructive raids into Austria,
Lusatia, Moravia, and Silesia. Germany in alarm again began to raise forces;
and Martin V hoped to gain greater importance for the expedition by appointing
as Papal legate Henry Beaufort, Bishop of Winchester, whom he made Cardinal for
the purpose. Beaufort’s experience of affairs and high political position made
him a fit man to interest England and France in the cause of the Church. In
July, 1427, a strong army entered Bohemia and laid siege to Mies; but the
soldiers were undisciplined and the leaders were disunited. On the approach of
Procopius a panic seized the army, and it fled in wild confusion to Tachau.
There Henry of Winchester, who had stayed behind in Germany, met the fugitives.
He was the only man of courage and resolution in the army. He implored them to
stand and meet the foe; he unfolded the Papal banner and even set up a crucifix
to shame the fugitives. They stayed and formed in battle order, but the
appearance of the Bohemian troops again filled them with dread, and a second
time they fled in panic terror. In vain Henry of Winchester tried to rally
them. He seized the flag of the Empire, tore it in pieces and flung them before
the princes; but at last was himself driven to flee, lest he should fall into
the hands of the heretics.
This disgraceful retreat did not bring men’s minds
nearer to peace. Martin V urged a new expedition, and Sigismund was not sorry
to see the Electors in difficulties. In Bohemia the party of peace made a vain
effort to raise Prague in the name of Korybut; but the rising was put down
without the help of Procopius, and Korybut was sent back to Poland in
September, 1427. Procopius rallied round him the entire Hussite party, and,
true to his policy of extorting an honorable peace, signalized the year 1428 by
destructive raids into Austria, Bavaria, Silesia, and Saxony. After each
expedition he returned home and waited to see if proposals for peace were
likely to be made. In April, 1429, a conference was arranged between Sigismund
and some of the Hussite leaders, headed by Procopius, at Pressburg in Hungary.
Sigismund proposed a truce for two years till the assembling of the Council at
Basel, before which the religious differences might be laid. The Hussites
answered that their differences arose because the Church had departed from
the example of Christ and the Apostles: the Council of Constance had shown them
what they had to expect from Councils; they demanded an impartial judge between
the Council and themselves, and this judge was the Holy Scripture and writings
founded thereon. The proposal of Sigismund was referred to a Diet at Prague,
and answer was made that the Bohemians were ready to submit their case to a
Council, provided it contained representatives of the Greek and Armenian
Churches, which received the Communion under both kinds, and provided it
undertook to judge according to the Word of God, not the will of the Pope.
Their request was equitable but impracticable. It was clearly impossible for
them to submit to the decision of a Council composed entirely of their
opponents; yet they could have little hope that their proposal to construct an
impartial tribunal would be accepted.
The negotiations came to nothing. Indeed, Sigismund
was busy at the same time in summoning the forces of the Empire to advance
again Bohemia. Henry of Winchester had gathered a force of 5000 English
horsemen, and in July, 1429, landed in Flanders on his way to Germany. But
religious considerations were driven to give way to political. The unexpected
successes of Jeanne d’Arc, the raising of the siege of Orleans, the coronation
of Charles VII at Rheims, gave a sudden check to the English power in France.
Winchester’s soldiers were ordered to the relief of their countrymen; the
Cardinal’s influence could not persuade his men to prefer religious zeal
to patriotic sentiment. The Catholics in Germany broke into a wail of lamentation
when they saw the forces of the Papal legatediverted to a war with France.
Germany was feeble, and Bohemia was again agitated by
a struggle. The peace party in Prague had for its quarters the Old Town, and
the more pronounced Hussites the New Town. The two quarters of the city were on
the point of open hostility when Procopius again united Bohemia for a war of
invasion. The year 1430 was terrible in the annals of Germany, for the Hussite
army carried devastation into the most flourishing provinces of the Empire.
They advanced along the Elbe into Saxony, and penetrated as far as Meissen;
they invaded Franconia, and threatened with siege the stately town of Nurnberg.
Wherever they went the land was laid waste, and fire and slaughter were spread
on every side.
The policy of Procopius was beginning to have its
effect. The Hussite movement was the great question which attracted the
attention of Europe. Hussite manifestoes were circulated in every land; the new
opinions were discussed openly, and in many places met with considerable
sympathy. The Hussites complained that their opponents attacked them without
really knowing their beliefs, which were founded only on Holy Scripture;
they invited all men to acquaint themselves with their opinions; they appealed
to the success of their arms as a proof that God was on their side. The opinion
began to prevail that, after all, argument and not arms was the proper mode of
meeting heresy, particularly when arms had proved a failure. Martin V, who
hated the very name of a Council, was again haunted at the end of 1430 by the
face of John of Ragusa, who had been negotiating with Sigismund that he should
combine with the University of Paris to urge on the Pope a speedy summons of
the Council to Basel. Soon after John’s arrival in Rome, on the morning of
November 8, the day on which Martin V was to create three new Cardinals, a
document was found affixed to the door of the Papal palace which caused a great
sensation in Rome.
“Whereas it is notorious to all Christendom, that
since the Council of Constance an untold number of Christians have wandered
from the faith by means of the Hussites, and members are daily being lopped off
from the body of the Church militant, nor is there any one of all the sons whom
she begat to help or console her; now, therefore, two most serene princes
direct to all Christian princes the following conclusions, approved by learned
doctors both of canon and of civil law, which they have undertaken to defend in
the Council to be celebrated according to the decree of Constance in March
next”. Then followed the conclusions, which set forth that the Catholic faith
must be preferred before man, whoever he be; that princes secular as well as
ecclesiastical are bound to defend the faith; that as former heresies, the
Novatian, Arian, Nestorian, and others, were extirpated by Councils, so must
that of the Hussites; that every Christian under pain of mortal sin must strive
for the celebration of a Council for this purpose; if Popes or Cardinals put
hindrances in the way they must be reckoned as favorers of heresy; if the Pope
does not summon the Council at the appointed time those present at it ought to
withdraw from his obedience, and proceed against those who try to hinder it as
against favorers of heresy. This startling document was currently supposed to
be authorized by Frederick of Brandenburg, Albert of Austria, and Lewis of
Brieg.
Several of the Cardinals, chief of whom was
Condulmier, future Pope, urged on Martin V to comply with the prevailing wish.
But Martin V wished again to try the chance of War, and awaited the results of
a diet which Sigismund had summoned to Nurnberg. On January 11, 1431, he
appointed a new legate for Germany, Giuliano Cesarini, whom he had just created
Cardinal. Cesarini was sprung from a poor but noble family in Rome, and his
talents attracted Martin V’s notice. He was a man of large mind, great personal
holiness, and deep learning. His appearance and manner were singularly
attractive, and all who came in contact with him were impressed by the
genuineness and nobility of his character. If any man could succeed in
awakening enthusiasm in Germany it was Cesarini.
Before Cesarini’s departure to Germany Martin V had
been brought with difficulty to recognize the necessity of the assembly of the
Council at Basel, and commissioned Cesarini to preside at its opening. The Bull
authorizing this was dated February 1, and conferred full powers on Cesarini to
change the place of the Council at his will, to confirm its decrees and do all
things necessary for the honor and peace of the Church. This Bull reached
Cesarini at Nurnberg, shortly after the news of Martin V’s death. The Diet of
Nurnberg voted an expedition into Bohemia, and Cesarini eagerly travelled
through Germany preaching the crusade. At the same time steps were taken to
open the Council at Basel. On the last day of February a Burgundian abbot read
before the assembled clergy of Basel the Bulls constituting the Council, and
then solemnly pronounced that he was ready for conciliar business. In April
representatives of the University of Paris and a few other prelates began to
arrive; but Cesarini sent to them John of Ragusa on April 30 to explain that
the Bohemian expedition was the object for which he had been primarily
commissioned by the Pope, and was the great means of extirpating heresy. He
besought them to send envoys to help him in his dealings with the
Bohemians, and meanwhile to use their best endeavors to assemble others to the
Council. The envoys of the Council, at the head of whom was John of Ragusa,
followed Sigismund to Eger, where he held a conference with the Hussites. The
conference was only meant to divert the attention of the Bohemians, and it was
speedily ended by a demand on the part of the envoys that the Bohemians should
submit their case unconditionally to the Council’s decision. Sigismund returned
to Nurnberg on May 22, and the German forces rapidly assembled. There were
complaints at the legate’s absence; Cesarini’s zeal had led him as far as Koln,
whence he hastened to Nurnberg on June 27. There he found a messenger from
Eugenius IV, urging the prosecution of the Council, and bidding him, if it
could be done without hindrance to the cause at heart, to leave the Bohemian
expedition and proceed at once to Basel. But Cesarini’s heart and soul were now
in the crusade. He determined to pursue his course, and on July 3 appointed
John of Palomar, an auditor of the Papal court, and John of Ragusa, to preside
over the Council as his deputies in his absence.
On July 5 Cesarini addressed an appeal to the
Bohemians, protesting his wish to bring peace rather than a sword. Were they
not all Christians? Why should they stray from their holy mother the Church?
Could a handful of men pretend to know better than all the doctors of
Christendom? Let them look upon their wasted land and the miseries they had
endured; he earnestly and affectionately besought them to return while it was
time to the bosom of the Church. The Bohemians were not slow to answer. They
asserted the truth of the Four Articles of Prague, which they were prepared to
prove by Scripture. They recounted the results of the conferences at Pressburg
and Eger, where they had professed themselves willing to appear before any
Council which would judge according to Scripture, and would work with them in
bringing about the reformation of the Church according to the Word of God. They
had been told that such limitations were contrary to the dignity of a General
Council, which was above all law. This they could not admit, and trusting in God’s
truth were prepared to resist to the utmost those who attacked them.
On July 7 Cesarini left Nurnberg with Frederick of
Brandenburg, who had been appointed commander of the Crusade. Cesarini had done
his utmost to pacify the German princes and unite them for this expedition. He
was full of hope when he set out from Nurnberg. But when he reached Weiden,
where the different contingents were to meet, his hopes were rudely dispelled.
Instead of soldiers he found excuses; he heard tales of nobles needing their
troops to war against one another rather than combine in defence of the Church.
“We are many fewer”, he wrote to Basel on July 16, “than was said in Nurnberg,
so that the leaders hesitate. Not only our victory but even our entry into
Bohemia is doubtful. We are not so few that, if there were any courage amongst
us, we need shrink from entering Bohemia. I am very anxious and above measure
sad. For if the army retreats without doing anything, the Christian religion in
these parts is undone; such terror would be felt by our side, and their
boldness would increase”. However, on August 1, an army of 40,000 horse and
90,000 foot crossed the Bohemian border, and advanced against Tachau. Cesarini
seeing it unprepared for attack urged an immediate onslaught: he was told that
the soldiers were tired with their march, and must wait till tomorrow. In the
night the inhabitants strengthened their walls and put their artillery into
position, so that a storm was hopeless. The crusading host passed on,
devastating and slaughtering with a ruthless cruelty that was a strange
contrast to the charitable utterances of Cesarini’s manifesto. But their
triumph was short-lived. On August 14 the Bohemian army advanced against them
at Tauss. Its approach was known, when it was yet some way off, by the noise of
the rolling wagons. Cesarini, with the Duke of Saxony, ascended a hill to see
the disposition of the army; there he saw with surprise the German wagons
retreating. He sent to ask Frederick of Brandenburg the meaning of this movement,
and was told that he had ordered the wagons to take up a secure position in the
rear. But the movement was misunderstood by the Germans. A cry was raised that
some were retreating. Panic seized the host, and in a few moments Cesarini saw
the crusaders in wild confusion making for the Bohemian Forest in their rear.
He was driven to join the fugitives, and all his efforts to rally them were
vain. Procopius, seeing the flight, charged the fugitives, seized all their
wagons and artillery, and inflicted upon them terrible slaughter. Cesarini
escaped with difficulty in disguise, and had to endure the threats and
reproaches of the Germans, who accused him as the author of all their
calamities.
Cesarini was humbled by his experience. He reproached
himself for his confidence in German arms; he had now seen enough, of the
cowardice and feebleness of Germany. He had seen, too, the growing importance
of the Hussite movement, and the force which their success was giving to the
spread of their convictions throughout Germany. When he returned to Nurnberg
Sigismund met him with due honor; the German princes gathered round him and
protested their readiness for another campaign next year. But Cesarini answered
that no other remedy remained for the check of the Hussite heresy than the
Council of Basel. He besought them to do their utmost to strengthen the
feeble and cheer the desponding in Germany, to exhort those whose faith was
wavering to hold out in hope of succor from the Council. With this advice he
hastened to Basel, where he arrived on September 9. To the Council were now
transferred all men’s expectations of a peaceable settlement of the formidable
difficulty which threatened Western Christendom.
CHAPTER IV.
FIRST ATTEMPT OF EUGENIUS IV TO DISSOLVE THE COUNCIL
OF BASEL, 1431—1434.
The ancient city of Basel was well fitted to be the
seat of a great assemblage. High above the rushing Rhine raised its stately
minster on a rocky hill which seemed to brave the river's force. Round the
river and the minster clusters the city. It was surrounded by a fertile plain,
was easily accessible from Germany, France, and Italy, and as a free Imperial
city was a place of security and dignity for the Council. To the eye of an
Italian, accustomed to marbles and frescoes, the interior of the cathedral
looked bald and colorless; but its painted windows and the emblazoned shields
of nobles hung round the wall gave it a staid richness of its own. The Italians
owned that it was a comfortable place, and that the houses of the merchants of
Basel equalled those of Florence. It was well ordered by its magistrates, who
administered strict justice and organized admirably the supplies of food. The
citizens of Basel were devout, but little given to literature; they were
luxurious and fond of wine, but were steadfast, truthful, sincere, and
honest in their dealings.
The Council was long in assembling. It was natural
that, while the President was absent in Bohemia, few should care to undertake
the journey. If the crusade ended in a victory, it was doubtful how
long the Council would sit. Cesarini’s deputies, John of Palomar and John
of Ragusa, opened the Council with due ceremonial on July 23. It was only
sparsely attended, and its first business was to increase its numbers, and
obtain some guarantees for its safety and freedom from the city magistrates and
from Sigismund. On August 29 came the news of the flight of the Crusaders from
Tauss. It produced a deep impression on the assembled fathers, and convinced
them of the seriousness and importance of the work which they had before them.
They felt that the chastisement which had befallen the Church was due to her
shortcomings, and that penitence and reformation alone could avert further
disaster.
To this feeling the arrival of Cesarini on September 9
gave further force. Deeply impressed with the importance of the crisis, he sent
forth letters urging on the prelates that they should lose no time in coming to
the Council. Only three bishops, seven abbots, and a few doctors were
assembled, as the roads were unsafe, owing to a war between the Dukes of
Austria and Burgundy. He wrote also to the Pope to express his own convictions
and the common opinion of the work which the Council might do: it might
extirpate heresy, promote peace throughout Christendom, restore the Church to
its pristine glory, humble its enemies, treat of union with the Greeks, and
finally set on foot a crusade for the recovery of the Holy Land. An envoy was
sent to the Pope to explain to him how matters stood, and to urge the need of
his presence at Basel. Meanwhile there were many discussions relative to the
constitution of the Council, who were to take part in it, and what was to be
the method of voting. There was a general agreement that, as the great object
of the Council was to arrange a union with the Bohemians and the Greeks, it was
desirable to admit men of learning, that is, doctors of canon or civil law, as
well as prelates. The question of the method of voting was left until
the Council became more numerous.
The Council, moreover, lost no time in trying to bring
about its chief object. On October 10 a letter was sent to the Bohemians,
begging them to join with the Council for the promotion of unity. Perhaps God
has allowed discord so long that experience might teach the evils of
dissension. Christ's disciples are bound to labour for unity and peace. The
desolation of Bohemia must naturally incline it to wish for peace, and where
can that be obtained more surely than in a Council assembled in the Holy Ghost?
At Basel everything will be done with diligence and with freedom; every one may
speak, and the Holy Ghost will lead men's hearts to the truth, if only they will
have faith. The Bohemians have often complained that they could not get a free
hearing; at Basel they may both speak and hear freely, and the prayers of the
faithful will help both sides. The most ample safe-conduct was offered to
their representatives, and the fullest appreciation given to their
motives. “Send, we beseech you, men in whom you trust that the Spirit of
the Lord rests, gentle, God-fearing, humble, desirous of peace, seeking not
their own, but the things of Christ, whom we pray to give to us and you and all
Christian people peace on earth, and in the world to come life everlasting”.
This letter, which breathes profound sincerity and true Christian charity, was,
no doubt, an expression of the views of Cesarini, and was most probably written
by him. The greatest care was taken to make no allusion to the past, and to
approach the matter entirely afresh. But it was impossible for the Bohemians to
forget all that had gone before. The difficulty experienced in sending the
letter to the Bohemians showed the existence of a state of things very
different from what the Council wished to recognize. There was no intercourse
between Bohemia and the rest of Christendom; the Bohemians were under the ban
of the Council of Siena as heretics. It was finally agreed to send three copies
by different ways, in hopes that one at least might arrive. One was sent to
Sigismund for transmission, another to the magistrates of Nurnberg, and a
third to the magistrates of Eger. All three copies arrived safely in Bohemia in
the beginning of December.
This activity on the part of the Council necessarily
aroused the suspicion of Eugenius IV. The zeal of Cesarini, which had been
kindled by his Bohemian experiences, went far beyond the limits of Papal
prudence. The Bohemian question did not seem so important at Rome as it did at
Basel. A Council which under the pressure of necessity opened negotiations with
heretics, might greatly imperil the faith of the Church, and might certainly be
expected to do many things contrary to the Papal headship. A democratic spirit
prevailed in Basel, which had shown itself in the admission of all doctors; and
the discussion about the organization of the Council showed that it would be
very slightly amenable to the influence of the Pope and the Curia. Eugenius IV
resolved, therefore, at once to rid himself of the Council. He thought it
wisest to overturn it at once, before it had time to strike its roots deeper.
Accordingly, on November 12, he wrote to Cesarini, empowering him to dissolve
the Council at Basel and proclaim another to be held at Bologna in a year and a
half. The reasons given were the small attendance of prelates at Basel, the
difficulties of access owing to the war between Austria and Burgundy, the
distracted state of men's minds in that quarter owing to the spread of Hussite
opinions; but especially the fact that negotiations were now pending with the
Greek Emperor, who had promised to come to a Council which was to unite the
Greek and Latin Churches on condition that the Pope paid the expenses of his
journey and held the Council in some Italian city. As it would be useless to
hold two Councils at the same time, the Pope thought it better that the Fathers
of Basel should reassemble at Bologna when their business was ready.
A Bull dissolving the Council on these grounds was
also secretly prepared, and was signed by ten Cardinals. The Council, in entire
ignorance of the blow that was being aimed at it, was engaged in
preparations for its first public session, which took place under the presidency
of Cesarini on December 14. The Council declared itself to be duly constituted,
and laid down three objects for its activity: the extirpation of heresy, the
purification of Christendom, and the reformation of morals. It appointed its
officials and guarded by decrees its safety and freedom. On December 23 arrived
the Bishop of Parenzo, treasurer of Eugenius IV, and was honorably received;
but the coldness of his manner showed the object of his mission. The Council
was at once in a ferment of excitement. In a congregation on December 29, the
citizens of Basel appeared in force, and protested against the dissolution.
Various speakers of the Council laid before the Bishop of Parenzo four
propositions; that the urgent needs of Christendom did not allow of the dissolution
of the Council; that such a step would cause great scandal and offence to the
Church; that if this Council were dissolved or prorogued, it was idle to talk
of summoning another; that a General Council ought to proceed against all who
tried to hinder it, and ought to call all Christian princes to its aid. The
Bishop of Parenzo was not prepared for this firm attitude; he found things at
Basel different from his expectations. He thought it wise to temporize, and
declared that if he had any Papal Bulls he would not publish them. Meanwhile he
tried to induce Cesarini to dissolve the Council. Cesarini was sorely divided
between his allegiance to the Pope and his sense of what was due to the welfare
of Christendom. It was agreed that two envoys should be sent to the Pope, one
from Cesarini and one from the Council. The Bishop of Parenzo thought it wise
to flee away on January 8, 1432, leaving his Bulls with John of Prato, who
attempted to publish them on January 13, but was interrupted, and his Bulls and
himself were taken in custody by the Council’s orders.
Cesarini was deeply moved by this attitude of the
Pope. To his fervent mind it was inconceivable that the head of Christendom
should behave with such levity at so grave a crisis. He wrote at once to Eugenius
IV a letter, in which he expressed with the utmost frankness his bitter
disappointment at the Pope’s conduct, his firm conviction of the need of
straightforward measures on the part of the ecclesiastical authorities to
restore the shattered confidence of Christian people. He began his letter by
saying that he was driven to speak freely and fearlessly by the manifest peril
of the faith, the danger of the loss of obedience to the Papacy, the obloquy
with which Eugenius was everywhere assailed. He recapitulated the facts
concerning his own mission to Bohemia and his presidency of the Council;
detailed the hopes which he and every one in Germany entertained of the
Council's mediation. “I was driven also to come here by observing the
dissoluteness and disorder of the German clergy, by which the laity are sorely
irritated against the Church—so much so, that there is reason to fear that, if
the clergy do not amend their ways, the laity will attack them, as the Hussites
do. If there had been no General Council, I should have thought it my duty as
legate to summon a provincial synod for the reform of the clergy: for unless
the clergy be reformed I fear that, even if the Bohemian heresy were
extinguished, another would rise up in its place”. Having these opinions, he
came to the Council and tried to conduct its business with
diligence, thinking that such was the Pope’s desire. “I did not suppose
that your holiness wished me to dissemble or act negligently; if you had
bid me do so, I would have answered that you must lay that duty on another, for
I have determined never to occupy the post of a dissembler”.
He then passed on to the question of the prorogation
of the Council, and laid before the Pope the considerations which he would have
urged if he had been in the Curia when the question was discussed.
(1) The Bohemians have been summoned to the Council;
its prorogation will be a flight before them on the part of the Church as
disgraceful as the flight of the German army. “By this flight we shall
approve their errors and condemn the truth and justice of our own cause. Men
will see in this the finger of God, and will see that the Bohemians can neither
be vanquished by arms nor by argument O luckless Christendom! O Catholic faith,
abandoned by all; soldiers and priests alike desert thee; no one dares
stand on thy side”.
(2) This flight will lose the allegiance of wavering
Catholics, amongst whom are already rife opinions contrary to the Holy See.
(3) The ignominy of the flight will fall on the
clergy, who will be universally attacked.
(4) “What will the world say when it hears of this?
Will it not judge that the clergy is incorrigible and wishes to moulder in its
abuses? So many Councils have been held in our time, but no reform has
followed. Men were expecting some results from this Council; if it be dissolved
they will say that we mock both God and men. The whole reproach, the whole
shame and ignominy, will fall upon the Roman Curia as the cause and author of
all these ills. Holy Father, may you never be the cause of such evils! At your
hands will be required the blood of those that perish; about all things you
will have to render a strict account at the judgment seat of God”,
(5 and 6) To promote the pacification of Christendom
ambassadors have been sent to make peace between England and France, between
Poland and the Teutonic Knights; the dissolution of the Council will stop their
valuable labours.
(7) There are disturbances in Magdeburg and Passau,
where the people have risen against their bishops and show signs of following
the Hussites. The Council may arrange these matters; if it bedissolved discord
will spread.
(8) The Duke of Burgundy has been asked by the Council
to undertake the part of leader against the Hussites. If the Council be
dissolved, he will be irritated against the Church, and his services will
be lost.
(9) Many German nobles are preparing for another
expedition into Bohemia if need be. If they are deluded by the Pope,
they will turn against the Church. “I myself will rather die than live
ignominiously. I will go perhaps to Nurnberg and place myself in the hands of
these nobles that they may do with me what they will, even sell me to the
heretics. All men shall know that I am innocent”.
(10) The Council sent envoys to confirm the wavering
on the Bohemian borders: if the Council be dissolved, their work will be undone
and there will be a large addition to the Hussites.
He then proceeded to answer the Pope’s objections. If
he cannot conveniently come to Basel in person on account of his health, let
him send a deputation of Cardinals and eminent persons. As to the safety of the
place, it is as secure as Constance. It is said that the Pope fears lest the
Council meddle with the temporalities of the Church. It is not reasonably to be
expected that an ecclesiastical assembly will act to its own detriment. There
have been many previous Councils with no such result. “I fear lest it
happen to us as it did to the Jews, who said: ‘If we let Him alone, the
Romans will come and take away our place and nation’. So we say: If we let this
Council alone, the laity will come and take away our temporalities. But by the
just judgment of God the Jews lost their place because they would not let
Christ alone; and by the just judgment of God, if we do not let this Council
alone we shall lose our temporalities, and (God forbid) our lives and souls as
well. Let the Pope, on the other hand, be friendly with the Council, reform his
Curia, and be ready to act for the good of the Church”.
The Council is likely, if pressed to extremities, to
refuse to dissolve, and there would be the danger of a schism. He begged to be
relieved of his commission and complained of the want of straightforwardness.
If he attempted to dissolve the Council, he would be stoned to death by the
fathers; if he were to go away, the Council would be certain to appoint for
itself another president.
This letter is remarkable for its clear
exhibition of the state of affairs in Europe at this time, and as we read it
now, it is still more remarkable for the political instinct which enabled its
writer to make so true a forecast of the future. It would have been well
for Eugenius IV if he had had the wisdom to appreciate its importance. It would
have been well for the future of the Papacy if Cesarini’s words had awakened an
echo in the Court of Rome. As it was, the politicians of the Curia only smiled
at the exalted enthusiasm of Cesarini, and Eugenius IV was too narrow-minded
and obstinate to reconsider the wisdom of a course of conduct which he had once
adopted. He did not understand, nor did he care to understand, the sentiments
of the Council. He had forgotten the current of feeling against the Papacy
which had been so strong at Constance. The decrees of Constance were not among
the Papal Archives; and one of the Cardinals who possessed a manuscript of
Filastre was heard with astonishment by the Curia when he called attention to
the decree which declared a General Council to be superior to the Pope. At
Basel, on the other hand, there were many copies of the Acts of the Council of
Constance, and it was held that the Pope could not dissolve a General Council
without its own consent. The rash step of Eugenius forced the Council into an
attitude of open hostility towards the Papacy, and a desperate struggle between
the two powers was inevitable.
The first question for both parties was the attitude
of Sigismund. His personal interest in the settlement of the Hussite rebellion
naturally inclined him to favour in every way the assembling of the Council. In
July, 1431, he took the Council under his Imperial protection, and in August
wrote in its interest to make peace between the Dukes of Austria and Burgundy.
But Sigismund felt that the years which had elapsed since the Council of
Constance had not been glorious to his reputation. He had failed ignominiously
in Bohemia and had exercised little influence in Germany, where he had
quarrelled with Frederick of Brandenburg, who was the most distinguished
amongst the electors. His early enthusiasm for acting with dignity the part of
secular head of Christendom had been damped at Constance, and he did not care
to appear at Basel without some accession to his dignity. With characteristic
desire for outward show, he determined on an expedition to Italy, to assume the
Imperial crown. He hoped to establish once more the Imperial claims, to check
the power of Venice, which was the enemy of Hungary, and to induce the Pope to
come to Basel. Yet to attain all these objects he had only a following of some
2000 Hungarian and German knights. His hopes were entirely built on the help of
Filippo Maria Visconti, who was at war with Venice and Florence, and with whom
Sigismund made a treaty in July. Before setting out for Italy he appointed
William of Bavaria his vicegerent as Protector of the Council: then early in
November he crossed the Alps, and on November 21 arrived in Milan. But the
jealous and suspicious character of Filippo Maria Visconti could not bear the
presence of a superior; he was afraid that Sigismund's presence might be the
occasion of a rising against himself. Accordingly he gave orders that Sigismund
should be honorably received in Milan; but he himself withdrew from the city,
and remained secluded in one of his castles. He refused to visit Sigismund, and
gave the ridiculous excuse that his emotions were too strong; “if he saw
Sigismund he would die of joy”. Disappointed of his host, Sigismund could only
hasten his coronation with the iron crown of Lombardy, which took place in the
church of S. Ambrogio on November 25. He did not stay long in Milan, where he
was treated with much suspicion, but in December passed on to Piacenza, where,
on January 10, 1432, he received news of the Papal Bull dissolving the Council
of Basel.
Sigismund had left Germany as the avowed Protector of
the Council: but it was felt that his desire to obtain the Imperial crown gave
the Pope considerable power of affixing stipulations to the coronation. In
fact, Sigismund’s relations with Eugenius IV were not fortunate for the object
which he had in view. Not only did the question of the Council an obstacle to
their good understand, but Sigismund’s alliance with the Duke of Milan was
displeasing to Eugenius IV, who as a Venetian was on the side of his native
city. When Sigismund discovered how little he could depend on Filippo Maria
Visconti his political position in Italy was sufficiently helpless. There were
grave fears in Basel that he might abandon the cause of the Council as a means
of reconciling himself with the Pope.
At first, however, Sigismund's attitude seemed firm
enough. Immediately on hearing of the proposed dissolution of the Council he
wrote to Basel, exhorting the fathers to stand firm, and saying that he had
written to beg the Pope to reconsider his decision. The Council, on its side,
wrote to Sigismund, affecting to disbelieve the genuineness of the Bull brought
by the Bishop of Parenzo, and begging Sigismund to send William of Bavaria at
once to Basel. On receipt of this letter Sigismund wrote again, thanking them
for their zeal, saying that he was going at once to Rome to arrange matters
with the Pope, and exhorting them to persevere in their course.
Before it received the news of Sigismund’s constancy
the Council on January 21 issued a summons to all Christendom, begging those
who were coming to the Council not to be discouraged at the rumours of its
dissolution, as it was improbable that the Vicar of Christ, if well informed,
would set aside the decrees of Constance, and bring ruin on the Church by
dissolving the Council which was to extirpate heresy and reform abuses.
Congregations were continued as usual to arrange preliminaries, and on February
3 William of Bavaria arrived in Basel, and was solemnly received as
Sigismund’s vicegerent. Prelates poured in to the Council, which daily became
more numerous. The Dukes of Milan, Burgundy, and Savoy all wrote to express
their cooperation with the Council. Cardinal Cesarini could not reconcile it
with his allegiance to the Pope to continue as President of the Council in
spite of the Pope’s wishes, and the breach with the Papacy was made more
notorious by the election of a new President, Philibert, Bishop of Coutances.
As a further sign of its determination the Council ordered a seal to be made for
its documents. Its impress was God the Father sending down the Holy Spirit on
the Pope and Emperor sitting in Council surrounded by Cardinals, prelates, and
doctors.
On February 15 was held the second general session, in
which was rehearsed the famous decree of Constance, that a General Council has
its power immediately from Christ and that all of every rank, even the Papal,
are bound to obey it in matters pertaining to the faith, the extirpation of
heresy, and the reformation of the Church in head and members. It was decreed
that the Council could not be dissolved against its will, and that all
proceedings of the Pope against any of its members, or any who were coming to
incorporate themselves with it, were null and void. This was the Council's
answer to the Pope’s Bull of dissolution. The two powers now stood in open
antagonism, and each claimed the allegiance of Christendom. The movement
against the Papal monarchy, which had been started by the Schism, found its
full expression at Basel. The Council of Pisa had merely aided the Cardinals in
their efforts to restore peace to the disturbed Church; the Council of
Constance had been a more resolute endeavor for the same purpose of the
temporal and spiritual authorities of Christendom. But the Council of Basel
asserted against a legitimate Pope, who was universally recognized, the
superiority of a General Council over the Papacy. It was a revolt of the
ecclesiastical aristocracy against the Papal absolutism, and the fate of the
revolt was a question of momentous consequences for the future of the Church.
After this declaration the Council busily sent envoys
throughout Christendom, and set to work to organize itself for the transaction
of business. The means for this purpose had been under discussion since September,
1431, and in the plan adopted we recognize the statesmanlike capacity of
Cesarini. The fortunes of the Council of Constance showed the danger of
national jealousies and political complications in an ecclesiastical synod. It
was resolved at Basel to avoid the division by nations, and to work by means of
four committees, which were to prepare business for the general sessions of the
Council. As the objects of the Council were the suppression of heresy, the
reform of the Church, and the pacification of Christendom, these objects were
confided to the care of deputations of Faith, of Reformation, and of Peace,
while a fourth was added for common and necessary business. The deputations
were formed equally out of every nation and every rank of the hierarchy. They
elected their own officers, and chose a new president every month. Every four
months the deputations were dissolved and reconstituted, care being taken that
a few of the old members remained. As a link between the four deputations was
appointed monthly a committee of twelve, chosen equally from the four nations,
who decided about the incorporation of new members with the Council, and their
distribution among the deputations. They decided also the allotment of business
to the several deputations, received their reports, and submitted them to a
general congregation. At each election four of the old members were left to
maintain the continuity of tradition; but the same men might not be reappointed
twice. For the formal supervision of the Council’s business was a small
committee of four, one appointed by each deputation, through whom passed all
the letters of the Council, which it was their duty to seal. If they were
dissatisfied with the form of the contents, they remitted the letter, with a
statement of their reasons, to the deputation from which it originated.
This system, which was conceived in the spirit of a
liberal oligarchy, was calculated to promote freedom of discussion and to
eliminate as much as possible political and national feeling. Secrecy in the
conduct of business was forbidden, and members of one deputation were
encouraged to discuss their affairs with members of the other deputations. The
deputations met three times a week, and could only undertake the business laid
before them by the president. When they were agreed about a matter, it was laid
before a general congregation; if three of the deputations, at least, were then
in favour of it, it was brought before the Council in general session in the
cathedral, and was finally adopted. Every precaution was taken to ensure full
discussion and practical unanimity before the final settlement of any question.
The organization of the Council was as democratic as anything at that time
could be.
The first deputations were appointed on the last day
of February. It was not long before cheering news reached the Council. The
French clergy, in a synod held at Bourges on February 26, declared their
adhesion to the objects set forth by the Council, and besought the King to send
envoys to the Pope to beg him to recall his dissolution; and at the same time
to send envoys to Sigismund to urge that nothingshould be done by the Council
against the ecclesiastical authority, lest thereby a plausible pretext for
transferring the Council elsewhere be afforded to the Pope. The letters of
Sigismund to the Council assured it of his fidelity; and his ambassadors to the
Pope on March 17 affirmed that Sigismund's coming to Italy aimed only at a
peaceful solution of the religious and political difficulties of Europe, and was
prompted by no motives of personal ambition. He wished the Pope to understand
that he was not prepared to win his coronation by a desertion of the Council’s
cause. From Bohemia also came the news that the Praguers had consented to
negotiate with the Council on the basis of the Four Articles, and had desired a
preliminary conference at Eger with the envoys of the Council, to which the
Fathers at Basel readily assented.
Yet the success of the Council and the entreaties of
Sigismund were alike unavailing to move the stubborn mind of the Pope. Envoys
and letters passed between Sigismund and Eugenius IV, with the sole result of
ultimately bringing the two into a position of avowed hostility. Sigismund said
that no one could dissolve the Council, which had been duly summoned. Eugenius
IV answered with savage sarcasm, “In what you write touching the
celebration and continuation of the Council you have said several things
contrary to the Gospel of Christ, the Holy Scripture, the sacred canons and the
civil laws; although we know these assertions do not proceed from you, because
you are unskilled in such matters and know better how to fight, as you do
manfully, against the Turks and elsewhere, in which pursuit, I trust, you may
prosper Sigismund must have felt keenly, the sneer at his failures in the
field. He fancied himself mighty with the pen and with the tongue, but even his
vanity could not claim the glory of a successful general”.
Sigismund had gone to Italy with the light-heartedness
which characterized his doings. He hoped to indulge his love of display and at
the same time fill his empty pockets. His coronation would give him the right
of granting new privileges and would bring presents from the Jews. He was not
sorry to send William of Bavaria to Basel in his stead, for he did not at first
wish to commit himself too definitely to the Council’s side; if the Council
could restore peace in Bohemia, he was ready to support it; otherwise its
action might come into collision with the Imperial pretensions. So long as Sigismund
was doubtful about the Bohemian acceptance of the Council’s invitation,
and about the Pope’s pliancy, he wished not to commit himself too far. Hence
William of Bavaria had a delicate part to play at Basel, where he distinguished
himself at first by care for the Council’s decorum, and forbade dancing on fast
days, to the indignation of the ladies of Basel. But soon William had more
important work to do, as Sigismund found that he needed the Council’s help for
his Italian projects. He had hoped, with the help of Milan, Savoy, and Ferrara,
to overcome Florence and Venice, and so force the Pope to crown him. But when
the Duke of Milan openly mocked him, Sigismund was driven to make a desperate
effort to retrieve his ignominious position. He could not leave Italy without
the Imperial crown; if he set himself to win it by submission to the Pope,
Bohemia would be lost for ever. He had tried to reconcile the Pope and the
Council; but Eugenius IV scornfully refused his mediation. The only remaining
course was to cast in his lot with the Council, and use it as a means to force
the Pope to satisfy his demands. On April 1, 1432, he wrote to William begging
him to keep the Council together, and not to allow it to dissolve before the
threats of the Papal dissolution. He advised the Council to invite the Pope and
Cardinals to appear at Basel; he even suggested that if the Council called him
to its aid, its summons would afford him an honorable pretext for leaving
Italy. Acting on these instructions, William prompted the Fathers at Basel to
take steps to prevent Eugenius IV from holding his Council in Bologna as he
proposed to do. Accordingly, on April 29, the Council in a general session
called on Eugenius IV to revoke his Bull of dissolution, and summoned him and the
Cardinals to appear at Basel within three months; in case Eugenius could not
come personally he was to send representatives.
The support of Sigismund and the obvious necessity of
endeavoring to find some peaceable settlement for the Bohemian question made
Europe in general acquiesce in the proceedings of the Council. No nation openly
espoused the Papal side or refused to recognize the Council, which gradually
increased in numbers. In the beginning of April the deputations contained in
all eighty-one members; and the hostility between the Pope and the Council
became more decidedly pronounced, all who were on personal grounds opposed to
Eugenius IV began to flock to Basel. Foremost amongst these was Domenico
Capranica, Bishop of Fermo, who had been a favorite official of Martin,
and had been by him created Cardinal, though the creation had not been
published at the time of his death. This secrecy on the part of Martin V arose
from a desire to abide as closely as possible by the decrees of Constance
forbidding the excessive increase of the Cardinalate. He endeavored, however,
to secure himself at the expense of his successor by binding the Cardinals to
an undertaking that in case he died before the publication of such creations,
they would, nevertheless, admit those so created to the Conclave. On Martin V’s
death Capranica hastened to Rome and presented himself as a member of the
Conclave: but the Cardinals were in violent reaction against Martin V and the
Colonna, and refused to admit one of their adherents. The new Pope
involved Capranica in his general hatred of the Colonna party, denied him
the Cardinal’s hat, and showed the greatest animosity against him. Capranica
for a time was driven to hide himself, and at last set off to Basel to obtain
from the Council the justice which was refused him by the Pope. On his way
through Siena he engaged as secretary a young man, aged twenty-six, Eneas
Sylvius Piccolomini, sprung from an old but impoverished family. Eneas found
the need of making his way in the world, and eagerly embraced this opportunity
of finding a wider field for the talents which he had already begun to display
in the University of Siena. No one suspected that this young Sienese secretary
was destined to play a more important part in the history of the Council and of
the Church than any of those already at Basel; when in May Capranica entered
Basel, where he was received with distinction, and in time received full
recognition of his rank, which Eugenius IV afterwards confirmed.
In Italy Eugenius IV found that things were going
against him. In Rome the Cardinals were by no means satisfied with the aspect
of affairs and many of them secretly left the city. The efforts of Eugenius IV
to stop Sigismund’s progress and raise up enemies to him in Italy were not
successful. From Piacenza Sigismund passed to Parma and thence in May to Lucca,
where he was threatened with siege by the Florentines. In July he advanced
safely to Siena, where he fixed his abode till he could go to Rome. In Basel
the Council pursued its course with firmness and discretion. The conference
with the Bohemians at Eger resulted in the settlement of preliminaries about
the appearance of Bohemian representatives at Basel. The Bohemians claimed that
they should be received honorably, allowed a fair hearing, be regarded in the
discussion as free from all ecclesiastical censures, be allowed to use their
own worship, and be permitted to argue on the grounds of God’s law, the
practice of Christ, the Apostles, and the primitive Church, as well as Councils
and doctors founded on the same true and impartial judge. Their proposals were
willingly received by the majority at Basel, and in the fourth session, on June
20, a safe-conduct to their representatives was issued. At the same time a blow
was aimed against the Pope by a decree that, if a vacancy occurred in the
Papacy, the new election should be made at Basel and not elsewhere. Another and
still bolder proceeding was the appointment by the Council of the Cardinal of
S. Eustachio as legate for Avignon and the Venaisin, on the ground that the
city was dissatisfied with the Papal governor and the Council thought it right
to interfere in the interests of peace.
Eugenius IV saw that unless he took some steps to
prevent it another schism was imminent. He attempted to renew negotiations with
Sigismund, and sent four envoys, headed by the Archbishops of Tarento and
Colocza, to Basel, where they arrived on August 14. They proposed a future
Council at Avignon, Mantua, or Ferrara. It was evident that the sole object of
the Papal envoys was to shake the allegiance of waverers and spread discord in
the Council. To repel this insidious attempt the promoters of the Council, in
its sixth session, on September 6, accused the Pope and Cardinals of contumacy,
for not appearing in answer to the summons, and demanded that sentence should
be passed against them. The Papal envoys were driven to demand a prolongation
of the term allowed, which was granted. After this, on September 6, Cesarini
again resumed the presidency of the Council, judging, it would seem, that
moderation was more than ever necessary.
Eugenius IV now turned his attention to Sigismund,
whose position in Siena was sufficiently pitiable. Deserted by the Duke of
Milan and his Italian allies, he was cut off by the Florentine forces from
advancing to Rome, and was, as he himself said, caged like a wild beast within
the walls of Siena. It was natural that Sigismund should be anxious to
catch at the Pope’s help to release him from such an ignominious position. When
Eugenius IV promised to send two Cardinals to confer with him, Sigismund wrote
to the Council urging it to suspend its process against the Pope, until he
tried the result of negotiations, or of a personal interview. The Council was
uneasy at this, and begged Sigismund to have no dealings with the Pope until he
recognized its authority. Sigismund answered, on October 31, that such was his
intention, but that he judged it wise to see the Pope personally, and so
arrange things peaceably. The Council grew increasingly suspicious, and
Sigismund did not find that his negotiations with the Pope were leading to any
satisfactory conclusion. Again he swung round to the Council’s side, which,
strengthened by his support, in its eighth session, on December 12, granted
Eugenius IV and the Cardinals a further term of sixty days, within which they
were to give in their adhesion to the Council, or the charge of contumacy
against them would be proceeded with.
So far Sigismund and the Council were agreed; but
their ends were not the same. Sigismund wished only for a pacification of
Bohemia and his own coronation; so far as the Council promoted these ends it
was useful to him, and he was resolved to use it to the uttermost. Accordingly,
on January 22, 1433, William of Bavaria prevailed on the Council to pass a
decree taking the King under its protection. By this means Sigismund was helped
both against the Pope and the Council; for if the Council made good its
claim to elect a new Pope, it might proceed to elect a new King of the
Romans as well. The reason of this decree was a rumour that Eugenius IV
intended to excommunicate Sigismund. The Council pronounced all Papal
proceedings against him to be null and void.
Eugenius IV at last felt himself beaten. The Council
had taken precautions against every means of attack which the Papal authority
possessed. The Pope had succeeded in driving Sigismund to espouse warmly the
Council’s cause, and was alarmed to hear that he was engaged in negotiating
peace with the Florentines. The arrival of the Bohemian envoys at Basel, on
January 4, gave the Council a real importance in the eyes of Europe. The
Council was conscious of its strength, and on February 18appointed judges
to examine the process against Eugenius IV. But Eugenius had been preparing to retreat
step by step from a position which he felt to be untenable, and strove to
discover the smallest amount of concession which would free him from his
embarrassment. He sent envoys to Basel, who proposed that the Council should
transfer itself to Bologna; when this was refused, they asked that it should
select some place in Italy for a future Council. Next they offered that the
question whether the Council should be held in Germany or Italy should be
referred to a committee of twelve; finally they proposed that any city in
Germany except Basel should be the seat of a new Council. When the Fathers at
Basel would have none of these things, Eugenius IV at last issued a Bull
announcing his willingness that the Council should be held at Basel, whither he
proposed to send his legates; on March 1 he nominated four Cardinals to
that office.
Sigismund rejoiced at this removal of the obstacles
which stood in the way of his coronation; he was anxious that the Council
should accept the Pope’s Bull and so do away with all hostility between himself
and Eugenius IV. But the Fathers at Basel looked somewhat suspiciously on the
concessions which had been wrung with such difficulty from the Pope. They
observed that the Bull did not recognize the existing Council, but declared
that a Council should be held by his legates. Moreover, he limited the scope of
the Council to the two points of the reduction of heretics and the pacification
of Christendom, omitting the reformation of the Church. It was argued that
Eugenius IV had not complied with their demand that he should withdraw his
dissolution; he refused to recognize anything done at Basel before the coming
of his legates. Determined to affirm its authority before the arrival of the
Papal legates, the Council passed a decree on April 27, renewing the decree of
Constance about the celebration of General Councils at least every tenth year;
asserting that the members of a Council might assemble of their own accord at
the fixed period; and that a Pope who tried to impede or prorogue a Council
should after four months' warning be suspended, and then after two months be
deprived of office. It was decreed that the present Council could not be
dissolved nor transferred without the consent of two-thirds of each deputation
and the subsequent approbation of two-thirds of a general congregation. The
Cardinals were henceforth to make oath before entering the Conclave that
whoever was elected Pope would obey the Constance decrees. To give all possible
notoriety to these decrees, all prelates were ordered to publish them in their
synods or chapters. So far as a new constitution can be secured on paper, the
Council of Basel made sure for the future the new principles of Church
Government on which it claimed to act. It was a transference to ecclesiastical
matters of the parliamentary opposition to monarchy which was making itself
felt in European politics.
When the Papal legates arrived and claimed to share
with Cesarini the office of president, Cesarini answered that he was the
officer of the Council and must obey their will in the matter. The Council, in
a congregation on June 13, answered that they could not admit the claim of the
Pope to influence their deliberations by means of his legates: not only the
President, but the Pope himself, was bound to obey the Council's decrees. They
were bent upon asserting most fully the supremacy of a General Council, and
aimed at converting the Pope into its chief official. The concessions made by
Eugenius IV had not ended the conflict between him and the Fathers at Basel.
They had rather brought more clearly to light the full opposition that had
arisen between the ecclesiastical hierarchy and the Papal monarchy.
But Eugenius IV had not so much aimed at a
reconciliation with the Council as a reconciliation with Sigismund. He saw that
for this purpose concessions must be made to the Council; but he hoped with
Sigismund’s help to reduce the Council in course of time. Sigismund's position
in Italy made him eager to catch at any concession on the part of Eugenius
which would allow him to proceed to his coronation without abandoning the
Council, from which he hoped for a settlement of his Bohemian difficulties. He
received with joy the Pope’s advances; and Eugenius on his side felt the
need of Sigismund’s protection even in Rome. Five Cardinals besides Capranica
had already left him and joined the Council. The officials of the Curia grew
doubtful in their allegiance, and began to think that their interests would be
better served in Basel than in Rome. On March 2, the anniversary of the
Pope’s coronation, as he went from the commemoration service he was beset by
members of the Curia, who craved with tears leave to depart, and followed
him with their cries to the door of the Consistory. A few had leave given them,
and all were bent on departure.
In this state of affairs Eugenius IV saw the wisdom of
gratifying Sigismund in the two matters which he had at heart, the
pacification of Italy and his coronation as Emperor. There were not many
difficulties in the way of peace. Florence, Venice, and the Duke of Milan were
all equally weary of war; and the Pope had little difficulty in inducing them
to submit their grievances to Niccolo of Este, Lord of Ferrara, who at that
time played the honorable part of mediator in Italian affairs. By his help the
preliminaries of peace were arranged at Ferrara on April 7; and on the same day
Sigismund's envoys arranged with the Pope the preliminaries of the Imperial
coronation. Sigismund acknowledged that “he had always held and holds Eugenius
as the true and undoubted Pope, canonically elected; and with all reverence,
diligence, care, and labour, among all kings and princes, all persons in the
world ecclesiastical as well as secular, venerates, protests, and acts in
defense of his holiness, and the Church of God, so long as he shall live,
faithfully and with a true heart, according to his knowledge and power, without
fraud or guile, so far as with God's help he may”. He agreed also to stay at
Rome for a time after his coronation, and labour for the peace of Christendom
and especially of Italy.
This alliance of the Pope and Sigismund was naturally
regarded with growing suspicion at Basel. Sigismund's letters to the Council
changed in tone, and dwelt upon the evils of scandal in the Church and the
disastrous effects of a schism. On May 9 he urged the Council to treat the
Papal legates with kindness, and to abstain from anything that might lead to an
open rupture. The Council loudly exclaimed that the Pope had beguiled the King
under the pretence of a coronation, and meant to keep him in Rome as a
protection to himself. Sigismund, however, hastened his coronation, and on May
21 entered Rome with an escort of 600 knights and 800 foot. Riding beneath a
golden canopy he was met by the city magistrates and a crowd of people. The
bystanders thought that his deportment showed a just mixture of affability and
dignity; his smiling face wore an expression of refinement and geniality, while
his long grizzly beard lent majesty to his appearance. On the steps of S.
Peter’s, Eugenius in pontifical robes greeted Sigismund, who kissed his foot, his
hand, his face. After mass was said Sigismund took up his abode in the palace
of the Cardinal of Arles, close to S. Peter’s. On Whit Sunday, May 31, the
coronation took place. Before the silver door of S. Peter’s, Sigismund swore to
observe all the constitutions made by his predecessors, as far back as
Constantine, in favour of the Church. Then the Pope proceeded to the high altar
and Sigismund was conducted by three Cardinals to the Church of S. John
Lateran, where before the altar of S. Maurice he was consecrated canon of
the Church. He returned to S. Peter’s, and took his place by the side of
the Pope, each seated under a tabernacle erected for the purpose. The mass was
begun, and after the epistle the Pope and Sigismund advanced to the altar. The
Pope set on Sigismund's head first the white mitre of a bishop and then the
golden crown; he took from the altar, and gave into his hands, the sword, the
sceptre, and the golden apple of the Empire. When the mass was ended the Pope
and Emperor gave one another the kiss of peace. Then Sigismund took the sword
in his hand, and Eugenius, holding the crucifix, gave him his solemn
benediction. When this was over they walked side by side to the church door:
the Pope mounted his mule, which Sigismund led by the bridle for a few paces
and then mounted his horse. Eugenius accompanied him to the bridge of S.
Angelo, where Sigismund kissed his hand and he returned to the Vatican. On the
bridge Sigismund, according to custom, exercised his new authority by dubbing a
number of knights, Romans and Germans, amongst others his chancellor Caspar
Schlick. The Imperial procession went through the streets to the Lateran, where
Sigismund dismounted.
The days that followed were spent in formal business
such as Sigismund delighted in. Letters had to be written and all grants and
diplomas given by the King of the Romans needed the Imperial confirmation,
which was a source of no small profit to the Imperial chancery. It is worth
noticing that after his coronation Sigismund engraved on his seal a double
eagle, to mark the union of his dignities of Emperor and Roman King. From this
time dates the use of the double-headed eagle as the Imperial ensign.
It soon, however, became obvious that Sigismund's
coronation had affected his relations towards the Council. He was still anxious
for its success in the important points of the reconciliation of the Bo-
hemians; but he had no longer any interest in the constitutional question of
the relations which ought to exist between Popes and General Councils. No doubt
this question had been a useful means of bringing Eugenius IV to acknowledge
the Council; now that he had done so, and Sigismund had obtained from the Pope
what he wanted, his instincts as a practical statesman taught him that in the
midst of the agitation of European politics it was hopeless for a Council to
continue on abstract grounds a struggle against the Pope, which could only lead
to another schism. On June 4 he wrote to the Council announcing his coronation,
and saying that he found in the Pope the best intentions towards furthering all
the objects which the Council had at heart. His envoys on their arrival at
Basel found the Council preparing accusations against Eugenius, and the seven
Cardinals present engaged in discussing the canonicity of his election. They
had some difficulty in persuading the Council to moderation, but at last
obtained on July 13 a decree which, while denouncing in no measured terms the
contumacy of Eugenius IV, extended again for sixty days the period for an
unreserved withdrawal of his Bull of dissolution, and for a declaration of his
entire adhesion to the Council. If he did not comply within that time the
Council would at once proceed to his suspension. Eugenius, trusting to the help
of Sigismund, showed a less conciliatory spirit; for he issued a Bull
withdrawing from the Council all private questions, and limiting its activity
to the three points of the extirpation of heresy, the pacification of
Christendom, and the reform of manners. In the same sense Sigismund’s envoys on
August 18 brought a message to the Council, exhorting to greater diligence in
the matters of pacification and reform, for so far no fruits of its energies
were apparent. He warned it against creating a schism, for after extinguishing
one at Constance he would rather die than see another. He begged the Fathers to
suspend all proceedings against the Pope till his arrival at Basel, when he
hoped to remove all difficulties between them and the Pope. The Council
answered that it was the Pope and not the Council that was causing a schism;
the relations of the Pope to a General Council was a matter concerning the
faith and the reformation of the Church, and nothing could be done on these
points till the present scandal was removed. Sigismund, in fact, was asking the
Council to desist from measures which he had formerly urged. The Council
naturally demanded securities for the future. Its position was undoubtedly
logical,though practically unwise. Eugenius IV, to strengthen Sigismund's
hands, issued a Bull on August 1 expressing, at Sigismund's request, his
willingness and acquiescence that the Council should be recognized as valid
from its commencement He declared that he entirely accepted the Council, and
demanded that his legates should be admitted as presidents, and that all
proceedings against his person and authority should be rescinded. The Fathers
at Basel naturally looked closely into the language of the Bull. They were not
satisfied that the validity of the Council from the beginning should merely be
tolerated by the Pope. They wished for the Papal 'decree and declaration' that
it had been valid all along. Every step towards conciliation only brought into
greater prominence the fact that the Council claimed to be superior to the
Pope, and that Eugenius was determined not to suffer any derogation from the
Papal autocracy
In this view of Eugenius IV Sigismund acquiesced. He
wished the Council to engage in more practical business, and he dreaded as a
statesman the consequences of another schism. In this he was joined by the
Kings of England and France, the German Electors, and the Duke of Burgundy. All
of them urged upon the Council the inexpediency of provoking a schism.
Eugenius IV’s repeated attempts at compromise at length created a feeling of
sympathy in his favour. He had given way, it was urged, on the practical points
at issue. The Council did not meet with much attention when it answered that he
had not conceded the principle which was at stake in the conflict. The great
majority were in favour of proceeding to the suspension of Eugenius IV when the
term expired; but the remonstrances of the Imperial ambassadors, and the
consideration that an open breach with Sigismund would render Basel an insecure
place for the Council, so far prevailed that in the session of September 11 a
further term of thirty days was granted to Eugenius IV, on the understanding
that within that time Sigismund would appear in Basel.
Sigismund meanwhile at Rome had been employing his
versatile mind in studying the antiquities of the city, and drinking in the
enthusiasm of the Renaissance under the guidance of the famous antiquary
Ciriaco of Ancona. He lived in familiar intercourse with Eugenius IV, and a
story is told which illustrates the mixture of penetration and levity which
marked Sigismund's character. One day he said to the Pope, “Holy Father, there
are three things in which we are alike, and three in which we are different.
You sleep in the morning, I rise before daybreak; you drink water, I wine; you
shun women, I pursue them. But in some things we agree : you distribute the
treasures of the Church, I keep nothing for myself; you have gouty hands, I
gouty feet; you are bringing the Church and I the Empire to the ground”. But
these days of peaceful enjoyment were disturbed by the news from Basel, where
it was clear that Sigismund’s presence was needed. On August 21 he left Rome,
and journeyed through Perugia, Rimini, and Ferrara to Mantua. He would not go
through the territories of the Duke of Milan, against whom he nourished the
deepest anger. Venice took occasion of his wrath to make an alliance with him
for five years, in return for which they gave the needy Emperor ten thousand
ducats to pay the expenses of his journey from Rome to Germany. From Mantua
Sigismund hastened to Basel, so as to reach it at the end of the term granted
to the Pope. He arrived unexpectedly on October 11, having come through the
Tyrol to the Lake of Constance, and thence by boat to Basel. So hasty had been
his journey that he brought little baggage with him, and before entering Basel
the Imperial beggar had to send to the magistrates for a pair of shoes.
The Fathers of the Council hastily assembled to show
Sigismund such honor as they could. He was escorted to the cathedral, where he
took his place on the raised seat generally occupied by the Cardinals, who now
sat on lower benches. There he addressed the congregation, setting forth his
zeal for the Council’s cause, as his hasty journey testified; he asked for
further delay in the proceedings against the Pope, that he might carry out
successfully the work of pacification on which he was engaged. To this the
Council did not at once assent, but urged that the Pope’s suspension might help
on Sigismund’s endeavors. Murmurs were heard on all sides, and it was clear
that Sigismund’s authority was not omnipotent at Basel. The Council was filled
with the enemies of Eugenius IV, and was convinced of its own power and
importance. Sigismund reminded the Fathers that the Emperor was guardian of the
temporalities of the Church. He was answered that it was also his duty to
execute the decrees of the Church. He angrily asserted that neither he nor any
of the kings and princes of Christendom would permit the horrors of
another schism. In his vehemence he forgot his Latin, and gave schisma the
feminine gender. It was maliciously said that he wished to show the Council how
dear the matter was to his heart. At last the Council, which was not really in
a position to resist, reluctantly granted a prolongation of the term to
Eugenius IV for eight days.
Sigismund found it necessary to change his tactics and
listen to the Council’s side of the quarrel, as at Rome he had listened to the
Pope. He conferred with the ambassadors and with the chiefs of the Council, and
was present at a public disputation on October 16 between the president,
Cesarini, and the Papal envoys. Cesarini spoke for three hours in behalf of a
Council’s superiority over a Pope. He argued that the Bulls of Eugenius IV
refused to admit this proposition, and that without securing the means of a
reformation of the head of the Church it was useless to reform the members; as
to the Pope’s demand that all proceedings against himself should be revoked,
there were no proceedings if only he did his duty. On behalf of Eugenius IV the
Archbishop of Spoleto urged the sufficiency and reasonableness of his proposal,
to revoke his decrees against the Council if the Council would revoke its
proceedings against himself. There were replies and counter-replies, but both
parties were equally far from an agreement. A second prolongation of eight days
to Eugenius IV was obtained by Sigismund by a repetition of his former
assertion, that he could not endure a schism. This was succeeded by a third, on
which Sigismund repeated an old doggerel about the three Emperors Otto, which
afforded him a pun on the eight days of the prolongation.
Sigismund and the ambassadors of France united in
urging the Council to give Eugenius IV a security that no proceedings would be
taken affecting his title to the Papacy. Words ran high on this proposal, and
at length, on November 7, Sigismund's persistency succeeded in extorting from
the Council a further term of ninety days, within which the Pope was to explain
the ambiguities in his decrees by revoking anything which could be
construed to the derogation or prejudice of the Council.
In the interval Sigismund urged the Council to proceed
with the question of reform, a matter which had been making little progress
during the excitement of this conflict with the Pope. The only point inwhich
the Council had taken up reform was to use it as a Weapon against the Pope. On
July 13 a decree had been passed abolishing reservations and provisions except
in the domain of the Holy See, and enacting that elections should be made only
by those to whom the right belonged, and that no dues be paid for Papal
confirmation. This was merely an onslaught on the Pope’s revenues, and was
scarcely meant seriously. In answer to Sigismund's exhortations the Council
embodied, in a decree on November 26, the only point on which there was
agreement, the revival of the synodal system of the Church. The Council’s
scheme of reform was to extend the conciliar system to all parts of the
ecclesiastical organization. By means of diocesan synods the bishops were to
put down heresies and remedy scandals in their respective dioceses, and were to
be themselves restrained by provincial synods, whose activity was to be in turn
ensured by the recurrence of General Councils. It was on all grounds easier to
agree on machinery which was to deal with questions in the future than to amend
abuses in the present.
Even this measure of reform was secondary to a violent
dispute which convulsed the Council concerning precedence in seats at the
sessions between the ambassadors of the Imperial Electors and those of the Duke
of Burgundy. So keen was the contention that it almost prevented the solemn
celebration of the Christmas services, and was only ended in July, 1434, by
assigning a separate bench to the representatives of the Electors immediately
below the Cardinals, and arranging that the Burgundian envoys should sit next
to those of kings. This burning question was further complicated by the claims
of the envoys of the Duke of Brittany to be as good as those of the Duke of
Burgundy; at last it was arranged that the Burgundians should sit on the right,
the Bretons on the left.
In the middle of the controversy came envoys from
Eugenius IV, on January 30, 1434, announcing that he had at last given way.
They brought a Bull revoking all previous Bulls against the Council,
acknowledging its legitimacy from its beginning, and declaring fully the Pope’s
adhesion to it. Great was Sigismund's joy at this triumph of his mediatorial
policy. Great was the relief of all parties at Basel when, in the sixteenth
session on February 3, the Council decreed that Eugenius IV had fully satisfied
their admonition and summons. It was under the pressure of necessity that
Eugenius IV had given way. His impetuous rashness had raised up enemies against
him on every side. He had begun his pontificate by attacking the powerful
family of the Colonna. He had plunged into Italian politics as a strong friend
of Venice, and thereby had drawn upon himself the animosity of the wily Duke of
Milan. With these elements of disturbance at his doors he had not hesitated to
bid defiance to a Council which had the support of the whole of Christendom.
Basel had become in consequence the resort of the personal and political
enemies of the Pope, and on Sigismund's departure from Rome Eugenius was
threatened in his own city. The Duke of Milan sent against him the condottiere
Niccolo de Fortebracchio, nephew of Braccio da Montone, who on August 25, 1433,
captured Ponte Molle. The Pope fled for safety to the Church of S. Lorenzo in
Damaso, and in vain called for help. Fortebracchio, aided by the Colonna party,
took possession of Tivoli and styled himself 'the General of the Holy Council'.
Francesco Sforza, won over to the side of the Duke of Milan by the promise of
the hand of his natural daughter Bianca, invaded the March of Ancona, and
scornfully dated his letters ‘invito Petro at Paulo’, ‘against the will of
Peter and Paul’. The Duke of Milan was supported by the Council, which
Sigismund in vain tried to interest in the pacification of Italy. The name of
the Council lent a colourable pretext to all acts of aggression. Eugenius IV
found himself destitute of allies. Never had the Papacy been in a more helpless
condition. No course was possible except submission.
Accordingly Eugenius IV made his peace with the
Council, and then proceeded to face his enemies at home. He detached Francesco
Sforza from the side of Milan by appointing him, on March 25, Vicar of the
March of Ancona which he had overrun. Sforza willingly exchanged the dubious
promises of Filippo Maria Visconti for an assured position. But the Duke of
Milan sent to the aid of Fortebracchio the condottiere Niccolo Piccinino;
before their superior forces Sforza was driven to retire, and the blockade of
Rome was continued. The sufferings of a siege were more than the Romans cared
to endure for the sake of an unpopular Pope. It was easy for the foes of
Eugenius IV to raise the people in rebellion.
A crowd flocked to S. Maria in Trastevere, whither
Eugenius had retired for safety, to lay their grievances before the Pope. They
were referred to his nephew, the Cardinal Francesco Correr, who listened to
them with haughty indifference. When they complained of the loss of their
cattle, he answered that they busied themselves too much about cattle; the
Venetians who had none led a much more refined and civilized life. The remark
might be true, but it was not consoling. The people resolved to take matters
into their own hands, and on the evening of May 29 raised the old cry of “The people
and freedom!”, stormed the Capitol, and set up once more their old republic
under seven governors. Next day they demanded of the Pope that he should hand
over to them the castles of S. Angelo and Ostia, give them his nephew as a
hostage, and come himself to take up his abode in the palace of his predecessor
by the Church of SS. Apostoli. When Eugenius refused, his nephew was dragged
away by force in spite of his entreaties, and he was threatened with
imprisonment. Eugenius heard that the palace of SS. Apostoli was being prepared
for his custody, and he knew that there he would be the prisoner of
the Council and the Duke of Milan.
'There was no escape except by flight, which was
difficult, as his abode was closely guarded. At last a pirate of Ischia, Vitellio,
who had a ship at Ostia, was prevailed upon to help the Pope in his need. His
Florence, aid was secured just in time, as on the evening of June 4 the Pope
was to be removed to the palace of SS. Apostoli. At midday, when everyone
was taking his siesta, Eugenius and one of his attendants, disguised as
Benedictine monks, escaped the vigilance of the sleepy guards, mounted a couple
of mules and rode to the Tiber bank, where a small dirty boat was prepared for
them. A few bishops professed to be waiting for an audience with the Pope, so
as to lull the suspicion of his guards. But the two mules left riderless on the
bank, and the unwonted energy of the rowers, made the spectators give the
alarm. The people of Trastevere gave chase along the bank, hurling stones and
shooting arrows at the boat. The wind was contrary, the bark was crazy, the
crowd of pursuers increased along both banks; Eugenius lay at the bottom of the
boat covered by a shield. When the Church of S. Paolo was passed, and the river
became broader, the fugitives hoped that their danger was over; but the Romans
ran on before, and seized a fishing boat, which, filled with armed men, they
laid across the stream. Luckily for Eugenius his boat was commanded by one
of the pirate’s crew whose courage was equal to the occasion. In vain the
Romans hurled their darts, and promised him large sums of money if he would
deliver up the Pope. He ordered his boat to charge the enemy. Their boat was
old and rotten, and they feared the encounter. The prow turned aside
and the Pope’s boat shot safely past. Eugenius could now rise from his covering
of shields, and sit upright with a sigh of thankfulness. He reached Ostia in
safety and went on board the pirate's ship. There he was joined by a few
members of the Curia who had succeeded in fleeing. He sailed to Pisa and thence
made his way to Florence, where he was honorably received on June 23, and like
his predecessor, Martin V, took up his abode in the cloister of S. Maria
Novella. There he could reflect that his inconsiderate obstinacy had endangered
at Basel his spiritual supremacy, and handed over his temporal possessions to
the condottieri of the Duke of Milan.
CHAPTER V.
THE COUNCIL OF BASEL AND THE HUSSITES
1432-1434.
If the downfall of Eugenius IV was due to his
obstinacy, the prestige of the Council, which enabled it to reap the advantage
of his weakness, was due to the Bohemia hopes which were conceived of a
peaceable ending of the Bohemian revolt. It was much easier for a Council than
for a Pope to open negotiations with victorious heretics, and the Bohemians on
their side were not averse from an honorable peace. Bohemia, with a population
of four or five millions, had suffered much during its ten years' struggle
against the rest of Europe. Its victories were ruinous to the conquerors; its
plundering raids brought no real wealth. The commerce of Bohemia was
annihilated; its lands were uncultivated; the nation was at the mercy of the
Taborite army, which no longer consisted solely of the God-fearing peasants,
but was recruited by adventurers from the neighboring lands. The policy of
Procopius the Great was, by striking terror, to prepare the way for peace, that
so Bohemia, with its religious liberty assured, might again enter the
confederacy of European States. When the Council of Basel held out hopes of
peace he was ready to try what could be won; and Bohemia consented to send
representatives to Basel for the purpose of discussion.
Accordingly the Council proceeded to prepare for its
great undertaking. In November, 1432, it appointed four doctors, John of
Ragusa, a Slav; Giles Carlier, a Frenchman; Heinrich Kalteisen, a German; and
John of Palomar, a Spaniard, to undertake the defense of the Church doctrine
against the Four Articles of Prague. These doctors zealously studied their case
with the aid of all the theologians present at Basel. As the time of the advent
of the Bohemians drew near, strict orders were given to the citizens to abstain
from everything that might shock the Puritanism of their expected guests.
Prostitutes were not to walk the streets; gambling and dancing were forbidden;
the members of the Council were enjoined to maintain strict sobriety, and
beware of following the example of the Pharisees of old, who taught well and
lived ill. At the same time guards were set to see that the Bohemians did not
spread their errors in the seat of the Council. On the part of the Bohemians
seven nobles and eight priests, headed by Procopius the Great, were chosen by a
Diet as their representatives at Basel. They rode with their attendants through
Germany, a stately cavalcade of fifty horsemen, with a banner bearing their
device of a chalice, under which was the inscription, ‘Veritas omnia vincit’ (Truth conquers all). In alarm lest their
entry into Basel might seem like a demonstration and cause scandal, Cesarini
sent to beg them to lay aside their banner. Before his messenger reached them
they had taken boat at Schafthausen, and entered Basel, quietly and
unexpectedly, on the evening of January 4, 1433. The citizens flocked to gaze
on them, wondering at their strange dress, the resolute faces, and fierce eyes
of the men who had wrought such terrible deeds of valour. They were
conducted to their hotels, where several members of the Council visited them,
and Cesarini sent them presents of food. On January 6, the festival of the
Epiphany, they celebrated the Communion in their lodgings, and curiosity drew
many to attend their services.
They noticed that the Praguers used vestments and
observed the customary ritual, with the sole exception that they communicated
under both kinds. Procopius and the Taborites, on the other hand, used neither
vestments nor altar, and discarded the mass service. After consecration
of the elements they said the Lord’s Prayer and communicated round a
table. A sermon was preached in German, at which many Catholics were present.
This scandalized Cesarini, who sent for the Bohemians, and requested them to
discontinue preaching in German. They answered that many of their followers
were Germans, and the sermons were for their benefit; they had the right of
performing their services as they thought fit, and meant to use it; they
invited no one to come, but they were not bound to prevent them from doing so.
Cesarini sent to the magistrates of the city a request that they would prevent
the people from attending their preachings. The magistrates took no measures
for this end; but after a few days the crowd grew weary of the novelty, and
ceased of its own accord to attend. John of Ragusa makes a sage remark, which
the advocates of religious protection would do well to remember: “Freedom and
neglect succeeded where restraint and prohibition would have failed, for human
frailty is always eager after what is forbidden”. The Bohemians, on their side,
asked to be present at the sermons preached before the Council; permission was
given on condition that they entered the cathedral after the reading of the
Gospel, and left when the sermon was ended, so as not to be present at any
part of the mass service.
Next day, January 7, Procopius invited John of Ragusa
and others to dine; they had a general theological discussion, in which the
predestinarian views of the Hussites came prominently forward. Most skillful
among their controversialists was an Englishman, Peter Payne, an Oxford
Lollard, who had fled to Bohemia, whom John of Ragusa found to be as
slippery as a snake.
On January 9 the Council ordained that Wednesdays and
Fridays should be strictly kept as fast days and prayers for union be said
during the period of the negotiations with the Bohemians. A solemn procession
was made for success in this arduous matter; forty-nine mitred prelates and
about eight hundred other members of the Council took part in it. The Bohemians
asked when and where they were to have an audience. Cesarini fixed the next day
in the ordinary meeting-place of congregations, the Dominican monastery. The
Bohemians objected to the place as being too small and out of the way; but
Cesarini was firm in refusing to depart from the usage of the Council.
On January 10 the congregation assembled, and seats
were assigned to the Bohemians on two rows of benches opposite the Cardinals.
Cesarini opened the proceedings with a long and eloquent oration, in which,
speaking in the person of the Church, he exhorted all to unity and peace, and
addressed the Bohemians as sons whom their mother yearned to welcome back to
her bosom. On the part of the Bohemians, John of Rokycana arose and took for
his text, “Where is He that is born King of the Jews? We have seen His star in
the east, and are come to worship Him”. He said that the Bohemians were seeking
after Christ, and, like their Master, had been evil spoken of; he asked the
Council not to be astonished if they said strange things, for truth was often
found in strange ways; he praised the primitive Church and denounced the vices
of the clergy of the present day. Finally, he thanked the Council for its
courtesy, and asked for a day to be fixed for a full hearing. Cesarini answered
that the Council was ready at any time; after a private conference the
Bohemians fixed the next Friday, January 16.
The Bohemians brought with them to the Council the
same spirit of reckless daring which had characterized them on the field of
battle. Only on January 13 did they arrange finally their spokesmen, whereas
the theologians of the Council had been for two months preparing their separate
points. Each day the Bohemians paid visits to the Cardinals and prelates; they
were received as a rule with great friendliness. At first some of the Cardinals
tended to be cold, if not discourteous: but Cesarini’s anxious efforts to
promote conciliatory conduct were in the end successful, and free social
intercourse was established between the two parties. In a few days’ time a
Cardinal discovered at least one bond of union between himself and the
Bohemians; he laughingly said to Procopius: “If the Pope had us in his
power he would hang us both”.
On January 16 the proceedings began with a
ratification of the safe-conduct, and a formal verification of the powers of
the Bohemian representatives. Then John of Rokycana began the controversy by a
defense of the First Article of Prague, concerning the Communion under both
kinds. He argued from the nature of the rite, from the words of the Gospel, the
custom of the primitive Church, the decrees of the General Councils and the
testimonies of the Fathers, that it was not only permissible but necessary. His
speech extended over three days, and was listened to with great attention.
When he ended Procopius sprang to his feet—a man of middle height, of stalwart
frame, with a swarthy face, large flashing eyes, and a fierce expression of
countenance. He passionately exhorted them to open their ears to the Gospel
truth; Communion was a heavenly banquet, to which all were invited; let them
beware lest they incurred punishment by despising it, for God could vindicate
His own. The Fathers heard with amazement these expressions of a fervent
conviction that right could be on the side opposed to the Church. Cesarini,
with his wonted tact, interposed to prevent an untimely outbreak of zeal on the
part of the Council. He suggested that the Bohemians should first speak, and
then submit their arguments in writing, so that they might be fully answered on
the side of the Council. This was agreed to, and the assembly dispersed.
On January 20 Nicolas of Pilgram began the defense
of the Second Article of Prague—the suppression of public sins. He spoke
for two days, but on the second day did not imitate the moderation of Rokycana.
He attacked the vices of the clergy, their simony, their hindrance of the Word
of God; he reproached them with the deaths of Hus and Jerome, whose saintly
lives he defended. A murmur arose in the Council; some laughed scornfully, others
gnashed their teeth; Cesarini, with folded hands, looked up to heaven. The
speaker asked if he was to have a fair hearing according to promise. Cesarini
ironically answered: “Yes, but pause sometimes to let us clear our throats”.
Nicolas went on with his speech. Afterwards Rokycana blamed him for the
bitterness of his invective, and expressed a wish to speak himself on the Third
Article. He was overruled by the other ambassadors, and only at the last moment
was it definitely settled that Ulrich of Zynaim was to be their spokesman.
On January 23 Ulrich began his arguments for the
freedom of preaching, and also spoke for two days, urging the supremacy of the
Word of God over the word of man, the danger of the substitution of the one for
the other, the dignity of the true priest, and his duty to preach God’s Word in
spite of all endeavours to prevent him. At the end of his first day's speech
Rokycana rose and said that he had heard that the Bohemians were accused of
throwing snow at a crucifix on the bridge; they wished to deny it, and if it
could be proved that any of their attendants had done so he should be punished.
Cesarini answered that many tales were told about their doings, which, however,
the Council had resolved to endure as well as their speeches. He wished,
however, that they would restrain their servants from going into the
neighboring villages to spread their doctrines. He was answered that the
servants only went to get fodder for the horses, and if the curious Germans
asked them questions, such as, whether they held the Virgin Mary to be a
virgin, no great harm was done if they answered, “Yes”. They
promised, however, to see to the matter.
On January 26 Peter Payne began a three
days’ speech on the temporal possessions of the clergy. He admitted that
worldly goods were not to be entirely denied them, but, in the words of S.
Paul, having food and raiment, therewith they should be content; all
superfluities should be cut off from them, and they should in no case exercise
temporal lordship. When he had finished his argument, he said that this
doctrine was commonly supposed to originate from Wycliffe; he referred the
Council, however, to the writings of Richard, Bishop of Armagh, and went on to
give an account of Wycliffe’s teaching at Oxford, his own struggles in defense
of Wycliffite opinions, and his flight into Bohemia. When he had ended,
Rokycana thanked the Council for their patient and kindly hearing: if anything
that they had said could be proved to be erroneous, they were willing to amend it.
He asked that those who answered in the Council’s behalf should follow their
example and reduce the heads of their arguments to writing. One of the Bohemian
nobles, speaking in German, thanked William of Bavaria for his presence at the
discussion. William assured them of his protection, and promised to procure for
them as free and complete a hearing as they wished. Cesarini then proceeded to
settle the preliminaries of the Council’s reply. First he asked if all the
Bohemians were unanimous in their adhesion to the arguments set forth by their
speakers: he was answered, “Yes”. Cesarini then commented on the various points
in the Bohemian speeches which gave him hopes of reconciliation. He said that
the Council was resolved not to be offended at anything which was said contrary
to the orthodox belief: but if any concord was to be obtained they must have
everything under discussion. Besides the Four Articles, which had been put
forward, he believed there were other points in which the Bohemians differed
from the Church. One of their speakers had called Wycliffe “the
evangelical doctor”; with a view to discover how far they held with Wycliffe he
handed to them twenty-eight propositions taken from Wycliffe’s writings and six
other questions, opposite to each of which he asked that they would write
whether they held it or no. The Bohemians asked to deliberate before answering.
It was the first attempt of the Council to break the ranks of the Bohemians by
bringing to light the differences which existed amongst them.
On January 31 the reply on the part of the Council was
begun. First came a sermon from a Cistercian abbot, which gave offence to the
Bohemians by exhorting them to submit to the Council. Then John of Ragusa began
his proof that the reception of the Communion under both kinds was not
necessary and, when forbidden by the Church, was unlawful. His speech, which
was a tissue of scholastic explanations of texts and types and passages from
the Fathers, lasted till February 12. He angered the Bohemians by his tediousness
and by the assumptions, which underlaid his speech, that they were heretics.
Some stormy interruptions took place in consequence. On February 4 Procopius
rose and protested against the tone adopted by the Cistercian abbot and John of
Ragusa. “We are not heretics”, he exclaimed; “if you say that we ought to
return to the Church, I answer that we have not departed from it, but hope to
bring others to it, you amongst the rest”. There was a shout of laughter. “Is
the speaker going to continue rambling over impertinent matter? Does he speak
in his own name or in that of the Council? If in his own, let him be stopped:
we did not take the trouble to come here to listen to three or four doctors”.
The Cistercian abbot and John of Ragusa both excused themselves from any
intention of violating the compact under which the Bohemians had come to Basel.
Rokycana asked: “You talk of the Church: what is the Church? We know what Pope
Eugenius says about you; your head does not recognize you as the Universal
Church. But we care little for that and hope only for peace and concord”.
Cesarini exhorted both sides to patience; he reminded the Bohemians that if
they had answered the twenty-eight articles proposed to them there would be
less doubt about their opinions, and it would be easier to decide what was
pertinent and what was not.
On February 10 there was another outburst of feeling.
John of Ragusa, in pursuing his argument respecting the authority of the
Church, was examining the objections that might be raised to his positions. He
introduced them by such phrases as “a heretic might object”. This enraged the
Bohemians; Rokycana rose and exclaimed: “I abhor heresy, and if any one
suspects me of heresy let him prove it”. Procopius, his eyes flashing with
rage, cried out: “We are not heretics, nor has any one proved us to be
such; yet that monk has stood and called us so repeatedly. If I had known this
in Bohemia I would never have come here”. John of Ragusa excused himself,
saying, “May God show no mercy to me if I had any intention of casting a
slur on you”. Peter Payne ironically exclaimed: “We are not afraid of you;
even if you had been speaking for the Council your words would have had no
weight”. Again Cesarini cast oil on the waters, beseeching them to take
all things in good part. “There must be altercations”, he truly
said, “before we come to an agreement; a woman when she is in travail has
sorrow”. Next day the Archbishop of Lyons came to ask pardon for John of
Ragusa. The Bohemians demanded that the other three speakers should be more
brief and should speak in the name of the Council. During the remainder of
John’s address Procopius and another of the Bohemians refused to attend the
conference.
It was agreed by the Council that the other three
orators should speak in the Council's name, reserving, however, the right of
amending or adding to what they said. Matters now went more peaceably. The
speeches of Carlier, Kalteisen, and John of Palomar, which were studiously
moderate, extended till February 28. Meanwhile the Bohemians, on being pressed
to answer the twenty-eight articles submitted to them, showed signs of their
dissensions by standing on the treaty of Eger. They said that they had only
been commissioned to discuss the Four Articles of Prague, and they did not think
it right to complicate the business by introducing other topics.
The disputation had now come to an end; but Rokycana
claimed to be allowed to answer some of the statements of John of Ragusa, who
demanded that, in that case, he should also have the right of further reply. It
was obvious that this procedure might go on endlessly; and Cesarini suggested
that a committee of four on each side should be nominated for private
conference. However, on March 2, Rokycana began his reply, which lasted till March
10. When he had ended, John of Ragusa rose and urged that the Bohemians were
bound to hear him in reply. The Bohemians announced that they would hear him if
they thought fit, but they were not bound to do so. “
We will put you to shame throughout the world”, said
John angrily, “if you go away without hearing our answers”.
Rokycana sarcastically said that John of Ragusa
scarcely maintained the dignity of a doctor.
“And yet”, he added, “before we came here, we had
never heard that there was such a person in the world. Still, I have proved
that his sayings are erroneous; for is it not erroneous”, and he raised his
voice with passionate earnestness, “to say that either man or council can
change the precepts of Christ, who said: Heaven and earth shall pass away,
but ‘My words shall not pass away’?”
It was clear that such war of orators was preventing
rather than furthering the union which both parties professed to seek. William
of Bavaria interposed his mediation; and the Council deputed fifteen
members, chief of whom was Cesarini, to arrange matters in private with the
fifteen Bohemian representatives. Their meetings, which began on March 11, were
opened with prayer by Cesarini, whoexerted all his persuasive eloquence and
tact to induce the Bohemians to incorporate themselves with the Council, which
would then proceed to settle the differences existing between them. The
discussions on this point were at last summed up by Peter Payne:
“You say: ‘Be incorporated, return, be united’; we
answer: ‘Return with us to the primitive Church; be united with us in the
Gospel’. We know what power our voice has, so long as we are one party and you
another; what power it would have after our incorporation experience has
abundantly shown”.
The Bohemians began to speak of departing; but a
learned German theologian, Nicolas of Cusa, raised the question—if the Council
allowed the Bohemians the Communion under both kinds, which they regarded as a
matter of faith, would they agree to incorporation? if so, the other questions,
which only concerned morals, might be subjected to discussion. At first the
Bohemians suspected a snare; but William of Bavaria assured them of his
sincerity. After deliberating, the Bohemians refused incorporation, as being
beyond the powers given them as representatives; moreover, if they were
incorporated and the Council decided against them, they could not accept its
decision. An attempt was made to advance further by means of a smaller
committee of four on each side; but it only became obvious that nothing more
could be done in Basel, that the Bohemian representatives were not disposed to
take any decided step, and that, if the Council intended to proceed with the
negotiations, they must send envoys to Bohemia to treat with the Diet and
the people.
Meanwhile disputations continued before the Council,
in which Rokycana, Peter Payne, and Procopius showed themselves formidable
controversialists. They had been formed in a ruder and more outspoken school
than that of the theological professors who were pitted against them. John of
Ragusa especially met with no mercy. One day he was so pedantic as to say that
he did not wish to derogate from the dignity of his university.
“How so?” asked Rokycana.
“According to the statutes”, said John of
Ragusa, “a doctor is not bound to answer a master; nevertheless, as it
concerns the faith, I will answer you”.
“Certainly”, was the retort; “John of Ragusa is
not better than Christ; nor John of Rokycana worse than the devil; yet Christ
answered the devil”.
Another time, when John of Ragusa had been speaking at
great length, Rokycana remarked: “He is one of the preaching friars, and
is bound to say a great deal”.
Kalteisen, in his reply to Ulrich of Zynaim, reproved
him for having said that monks were introduced by the devil.
“I never said so”, interrupted Ulrich.
Procopius rose: “I said one day to the President:
If bishops have succeeded to the place of the Apostles, and priests to the
place of the seventy-two disciples, to whom except the devil have the rest succeeded?”.
There was loud laughter, amid which Rokycana called
out: “Doctor, you should make Procopius Provincial of your Order”.
It was at length arranged that on April 14 the
Bohemians should return to their own land, whither the Council undertook to send
ten ambassadors who should treat with the Diet in Prague. Procopius wrote to
inform the Bohemians of this, and urged them to assemble in numbers at the Diet
on June 7, for great things might be done. On April 13 the Bohemians took
farewell of the Council. Rokycana in the name of all expressed their thanks for
the kindness they had received. Then Procopius rose and said that he had often
wished to speak, but had never had an opportunity. He spoke earnestly about the
great work before the Council, the reformation of the Church, which all men
longed for with sighs and groans. He spoke of the worldliness of the clergy,
the vices of the people, the intrusion into the Church of the traditions of
men, the general neglect of preaching. Cesarini, on the part of the Council,
recapitulated all that had been done, and begged them to continue in Bohemia
the work that he trusted had been begun in Basel. He thanked Rokycana for his
kindly words: turning to Procopius, he called him his personal friend and
thanked him for what he had said about the reformation of the Church, which the
Council would have been engaged in, if they had not been employed in conference
with the Bohemians. Finally he gave them his benediction and shook them each by
the hand. Rokycana also raised his hand, and in a loud voice said: “May the
Lord bless and preserve this place in peace and quiet”. Then they took their
leave; as they were going, a fat Italian archbishop ran after them and with
tears in his eyes shook them by the hand. On April 14 they left Basel,
accompanied by the ambassadors of the Council.
The conference at Basel was most honorable to all who
were concerned in it; it showed a spirit of straightforwardness, charity and
mutual forbearance. It was no slight matter in those days for a Council of
theologians to endure to listen to the arguments of heretics already condemned
by the Church. It was no small thing for the Bohemians, who were already
masters in the field, to curb their high spirit to a war of words. Yet, in
spite of occasional outbursts, the general result of the conference at Basel
was to promote a good feeling between the two parties. Free and friendly
intercourse existed between the Bohemians and the leading members of the
Council, chiefly owing to the exertions of Cesarini, whose nobility and
generosity of character produced a deep impression on all around him. But in
spite of the friendliness with which they were received, and the personal
affection which in some cases they inspired, the Bohemians could not help
being a little disappointed at the general results of their visit to Basel.
They had been somewhat disillusioned. They came with the same moral earnestness
and childlike simplicity which had marked Hus at Constance. They hoped that
their words would prevail, that their arguments would convince the Council that
they were not heretics, but rested on the Gospel of Christ. They were chilled
by the attitude of superiority which showed itself in all the Council’s
proceedings, and which was the more irritating because they could not formulate
it in any definitely offensive words or acts. The assumption of an infallible
Church, to which all the faithful were bound to be united, was one which the
Bohemians could neither deny nor accept. In Bohemia the preachers had been wont
to denounce those who departed from the Gospel; in Basel they found themselves
the objects of kindly reprobation because they had departed from the Church. It
gradually became clear that they were not likely to induce the Council to
reform the Church in accordance with their principles: the utmost that would be
granted was a Concordat with Bohemia which would allow it to retain some of its
peculiar usages and opinions without separation from the Catholic Church. The
Bohemian representatives had failed to convince the Council; it remained to be
seen if the good feeling which had grown up between the two contending parties
would enable the Council to extend, and the Bohemian people to accept, a
sufficient measure of toleration to prevent the breach of the outward unity of
the Church.
The ten ambassadors of the Council, chief amongst whom
were the Bishops of Coutances and Augsburg, Giles Carlier, John of Palomar,
Thomas Ebendorfer of Haselbach, Canon of Vienna, John of Geilhausen, and
Alexander, an Englishman, Archdeacon of Salisbury, travelled peaceably to
Prague, where they were received with every show of respect and rejoicing on
May 8. They spent the time till the assembling of the Diet in interchanging
courtesies with the Bohemian leaders. On May 24 a Bohemian preacher, Jacob Ulk,
inveighed in a sermon against the Council’s envoys, and bade the people beware
of Basel as of a basilisk which endeavored to shed its venom on every side. He
attempted to raise a riot, but it was put down by Procopius, and the
magistrates issued an edict that no one under pain of death was to offend
the Council’s ambassadors. On June 13 the Diet assembled, and after preliminary
addresses John of Palomar submitted the Council’s proposal for the
incorporation of the Bohemians and the common settlement of their differences
in the Council. He was answered that the Council of Constance was the origin of
all the wars and troubles that had beset Bohemia; the Bohemians had always
wished for peace, but they were firm in their adhesion to the Four Articles of
Prague:
1.- Freedom to preach the Word of God.
2.- Celebration of the Lord’s Supper in both
kinds, bread and wine to priests and laity alike.
3.- No secular power for the clergy.
4.- Punishment for the mortal sins,
and they wished to hear the Council’s decision
respecting them. John of Palomar at once answered that the Four Articles seemed
to be held in different senses by different parties among the Bohemians; before
he could give the Council’s opinion, he wished them to be defined in writing in
the sense in which they were universally believed. It was the first step
towards bringing to light the dissensions of the Bohemian parties. A definition
drawn up by the University of Prague was repudiated by the Taborites as
containing treacherous concessions. Rokycana gave a verbal answer, and a
committee of eight deputies of the Diet was appointed to confer on this point
with the ambassadors of the Council. A definition was then drawn up in which
the Council's side gained nothing. They saw that by this procedure they would
merely drift back to the disputation which they had in Basel.
Accordingly on June 25 the Council’s ambassadors took
the decided step of negotiating secretly with some of the Calixtin nobles, to
whom they said that the Council would most probably allow to the Bohemians the
Communion under both kinds, if they would incorporate themselves for the
discussion of the other points. This was received with joy by some of the
nobles, amongst whom a party in favour of this course was gradually organized.
The Diet inquired under what form such privilege would be granted, and a
proposed form was presented by the ambassadors. The Diet, in answer, drew up on
January 29 a form of their own, which, if the Council accepted, they were
willing to unite with it. As the form contained the full acceptance of the Four
Articles of Prague, the ambassadors refused to entertain it. On July 1
they again had a meeting in Rokycana’s house with some of the Calixtin
nobles, who agreed to moderate the form into such a shape that another Bohemian
deputation might take it to Basel. In the discussion that ensued in the Diet
some sharp things were said. When the Council's ambassadors begged the
Bohemians to forget the past and be as they had been twenty years ago,
Procopius scornfully exclaimed, “In the same way you might argue that we ought
to be as we were a thousand years ago when we were pagans”. A statement,
however, was drawn up that the Bohemians agreed to unite with the Council and
obey “according to God’s Word”. Three ambassadors, Mathias Landa,
Procopius of Bilsen, and Martin Lupak, were appointed to take this, together
with an exposition of the Four Articles, to the Council. They, with the
Council’s envoys, left Prague on July 11 and reached Basel on August
2, where they were received with joy.
The object of this first embassy of the Council was to
survey the ground and report the position of affairs in Bohemia. On July 31 one
of the envoys, who was sent on before, announced to the Council that everywhere
in Bohemia they had found a great desire for peace, and had been listened to by
the Diet with a courtesy and decorum which the Council would do well to
imitate. He urged that conciliation be tried to the utmost. The other envoys on
their arrival gave a full report of their proceedings to the Council, which
appointed a committee of six to be elected from each deputation who, together
with the Cardinals, were to confer on future proceedings. Before this committee
John of Palomar on August 13 made a secret report of the general aspect of
affairs in Bohemia. He said that neither the nobles nor the people were free,
but were tyrannized over by a small but vigorous party, which feared to lose
its power if any reconciliation with the Church took place; the strength of
this party lay in the hatred of the Bohemians to German domination, and their
willingness to carry on war to escape it. He sketched the position of the three
chief sects, the Calixtins, Orphans, and Taborites; the only point on which
they all agreed was the reception of the Communion under both kinds. The first
party wished to obtain the use of f their rite by peaceable means and desired
union with the Church; the second party desired to be in the bosom of the
Church, but would take up arms and fight desperately to defend what they
believed to be necessary; the third party was entirely opposed to the Church,
and was not to be won over by any concessions, for the confiscation of the
goods of the clergy was their chief desire
The commission then proceeded to deliberate whether
the Communion under both kinds could be conceded to the Bohemians, and what
answer the Council should return to the other three articles, of which the
Bohemian envoys brought a definition to the Council. The discussions lasted for
a fortnight, and on August 26 an extraordinary congregation was held, which was
attended by the prelates at Basel and 160 doctors, who were all bound by oath
of secrecy. John of Palomar put before them, on behalf of the commission,
the pressing need of settling the Bohemian question, and the desirability of
making some concession for that purpose. He argued that the Church might
lawfully do so, and follow the example of Paul in his dealings with the
Corinthians; for he “caught them by guile”. The Bohemian people was intractable
and would not enter the fold of the Church like other Christians; they must
treat it gently as one treats a mule or horse to induce it to submit to the
halter. When once the Bohemians had returned to union with the Church, their
experience of the miseries of a separation from it would lead them to submit to
the common rites of Christendom rather than run new risks in the future.
Cesarini followed in the same strain; and next day William of Bavaria, on
behalf of Sigismund, urged the interest of the Emperor in securing his
recognition, by means of the Council, as King of Bohemia. After three
days’ deliberation it was agreed to concede the reception of the Communion
under both kinds, and an answer to the other three articles was framed. But the
secret was still kept from the Bohemian envoys, as the Council did not wish
their decision to be known too soon in Bohemia, and they were also afraid lest
Eugenius IV might interpose. On September 2 the Bohemians were dismissed with
kindly words and the assurance of the dispatch of four envoys from the Council
to Prague. Four of the previous embassy—the Bishop of Coutances, John of
Palomar, Henry Toh, and Martin Verruer—set out on September 11.
The second embassy from Basel did not meet with such a
peaceable entrance into Bohemia as had the first. War had again broken out, a
war in which were involved the contending interests of the Council and the
Hussites. In the very middle of Bohemia there still remained a city which held
fast by the cause of Catholicism and Sigismund. In the reaction which ensued
after the first successes of the commencement of the Hussite movement, the
strong city of Pilsen in the south-west of Bohemia had swung back to
Catholicism, and from its numerous outlying fortresses had defied all efforts
to reduce it. Year by year their sufferings from Hussite attacks made the
inhabitants grow firmer in their resistance; and when the Council’s envoys
first came as spies into the land the Bohemians keenly felt the disadvantage
under which they lay in their negotiations when they could not offer a decided
front to their foe. Messengers from Pilsen visited the Basel ambassadors and
prayed for help from the Council. As the Bohemians began to see that all that
the Council would grant them was a recognition of their exceptional position,
they felt the need of absolute internal unity if they were to secure or
maintain it. The Diet decreed a vigorous siege of Pilsen; the Council’s
ambassadors protracted their negotiations to allow the men of Pilsen to gather
in their harvest; and later the Fathers of Basel sent a contribution of money
to the aid of Pilsen, and used their influence to prevail on Nurnberg to do the
same. On July 14 the Bohemian army began the siege of Pilsen, and in the
beginning of September the besieging host had grown to 36,000 men. The might of
the Hussites was directed to secure religious unity within their land.
Pilsen was strongly defended, and the besiegers began
to suffer from hunger. Foraging parties were sent to greater distances, and on
September 16 a detachment of 1400 foot and 500 horse was sent byProcopius under
the command of John Pardus to harry Bavaria. As Pardus was returning laden with
spoil, he was suddenly attacked by the Bavarians; his troops were almost
entirely cut to pieces, and he himself, with a few followers, made his escape
with difficulty to the camp at Pilsen. Great was the wrath of the Bohemian
warriors at this disgrace to their arms. They rushed upon Pardus as a traitor,
and even hurled a stool at Procopius, who tried to protect him; the stool hit
Procopius on the head with such violence that the blood streamed down his face.
The wrath of the chiefs was turned against him; he was imprisoned, and the man
who had thrown the stool was made general in his stead. This excitement lasted
only a few days. Procopius was released and restored to his former position,
but his proud spirit had been deeply wounded by the sense of his powerlessness
in an emergency. He refused the command, and left the camp never to
return.
This was the news which greeted the Council's envoys
when they reached Eger on September 27. They feared to advance farther in the
present excited condition of men's minds. The Bohemians in vain tried to
discover what message they brought from the Council. The leaders of the army before
Pilsen at length sent two of their number to conduct them safely to
Prague, where they said that the Diet could not assemble: before S. Martin's
Day, November 11. The fears of the envoys were entirely dispelled by the
cordial welcome which they received in Prague on their arrival, October
22. A plague was ravaging the city, and the physicians vied with one another in
precautions for ensuring the safety of their city's guests. The preacher still
raised his voice against them; they had honey on their lips but venom in their
heart, they wished to bring back Sigismund, who would cut off the people’s
heads for their rebellion.
The proceedings of the Diet, which opened on November
17 resolved themselves into a diplomatic contest between the Council’s envoys
and the Bohemians. The Council was trying to make the smallest concessions
possible, the Bohemians were anxious to get all they could. But the four envoys
of Basel had the advantage in contending with an assembly like the Diet. They
could gauge the effect produced by each concession; they could see when they
had gone far enough to have hopes of success. Moreover, they knew definitely
the limits of concession which the Council would grant, while the Bohemians
were too much at variance amongst themselves to know definitely what they were
prepared to accept. Accordingly, after the preliminary formalities were over,
the Council’s envoys began to practise economy in their concessions. John of
Palomar, after a speech in which he lauded General Councils and recapitulated
all that the Fathers at Basel had done to promote unity, proceeded to give the
limitations under which the Council was prepared to admit three of the
Articles; about the fourth, the Communion under both kinds, he said that the
envoys had powers to treat if the declaration which he had made about the other
three was satisfactory to the Bohemians. The Diet demanded to have the
Council's decision on this also put before them. The envoys pressed to have an
answer on the three Articles first. For two days the struggle on this point
continued; then the envoys asked, before speaking about the Communion, for an
answer to the question whether, if an agreement could be come to on the Four
Articles, the Bohemians would consent to union. John of Rokycana answered on
behalf of all, “We would consent”; and all the Diet cried “Yes, yes”. Only
Peter Payne rose and said: “We understand by a good end one in which we
are all agreed”; but those around him admonished him to hold his tongue, and he
was not allowed to continue. Then John of Palomar read a declaration setting
forth that the Communion under one kind had been introduced into the Church,
partly to correct the Nestorian error that in the bread was contained only the
body of Christ, and in the wine only His blood, partly to guard against
irreverence and mishap in the reception of the elements; nevertheless, as the
Bohemian use was to administer under both kinds, the Council was willing that
they should continue to do so till the matter had been fully discussed. If they
still continued in their belief, permission would be given to their priests so
to administer it to those who, having reached years of discretion, asked for
it. The Bohemians were dissatisfied with this. They complained that the Council
said nothing which could satisfy the honor of Bohemia. They demanded that their
words, that the reception under both kinds was“useful and wholesome”, should be
adopted, and that the permission be extended to children.
On November 26 an amended form was submitted to the
Diet, which became the basis of an agreement. Bohemia and Moravia were to make
peace with all men. The Council would accept this declaration and release them
from all ecclesiastical censures. As regarded the Four Articles:—
1.-If in all other points the Bohemians and Moravians
received the faith and ritual of the Universal Church, those who had the use of
communicating under both kinds should continue to do so, “with the authority of
Jesus Christ and the Church His true spouse”. The question as a whole should be
further discussed in the Council; but the priests of Bohemia and Moravia should
have permission to administerunder both kinds to those who, being of the age of
discretion, reverently demanded it, at the same time telling them that under
each kind was the whole body of Christ.
2.- As regarded the correction and punishment of open
sins, the Council agreed that, as far as could reasonably be done, they should
be repressed according to the law of God and the institutes of the Fathers.
The phrase used by the Bohemians, “by those whose duty it was”, was too
vague; the duty did not devolve on private persons, but on those who had
jurisdiction in such matters.
3.- About freedom of preaching, the word of God ought
to be freely preached by priests who were commissioned by their superiors:
“freely” did not mean indiscriminately, for order was necessary.
4.- As regarded the temporalities of the clergy,
individual priests, who were not bound by a vow of poverty, might inherit or
receive gifts; and similarly the Church might possess temporalities and
exercise over them civil lordship. But the clergy ought to administer
faithfully the goods of the Church according to the institutes of the Fathers;
and the goods of the Church cannot be occupied by others.
As abuses may have gathered round these last three
points, the Diet could send deputies to the Council, which intended to proceed
with the question of reform, and the envoys promised to aid them in all
possible ways.
The basis of an agreement was now prepared, and a
large party in Prague was willing to accept it. Procopius, however, rose
in the Diet and read proposals of his own, which John of Palomar dismissed,
observing that their object was concord, and it was better to clear away
difficulties than to raise them. On November 28 the legates judged it prudent
to lay before the Diet an explanation of some points in the previous document.
The rites of the Church, which the Bohemians were to accept, they explained to
mean those rites which were commonly observed throughout Christendom. If all
the Bohemians did not at once follow them, that would not be a hindrance to the
peace; those who dissented on any points should have a full and fair hearing in
the Council. The law of God and the practice of Christ and the Apostles would be
recognized by the Council, according to the treaty of Eger, as the judge in all
such matters. Finally, on November 30, after a long discussion and many verbal
explanations given by the envoys, the moderate party among the Bohemians
succeeded in extorting from the Diet a reluctant acceptance of the proposed
agreement.
The success of the Council was due chiefly to the fact
that the negotiations, once begun, awakened hopes among the moderate party in
Bohemia and so widened the differences between them and the extreme party.
There were both plague and famine in the land. More than 100,000 are said to
have died in Bohemia during the year, and men had good grounds for feeling
sadly the desolate condition of their country and counting the cost of their
prolonged resistance. Moreover, the appearance of the Council’s envoys had emboldened
those who wished for a restoration of the old state of things to lift up their
heads. There were still some adherents of Sigismund, chief of whom was Meinhard
of Neuhaus; there were still formidable adherents of Catholicism, as the
continued ill-success of the siege of Pilsen showed. As soon as doubt and
wavering was apparent among the Hussites the party of the restoration declared
itself more openly. Further, the events of the siege of Pilsen brought to light
the disorganization that had spread among the army. The old religious real had
waxed dim; adventurers abounded in the ranks of the Lord's soldiers; the
sternness of Zizka’s discipline had been relaxed, and the mutiny against
Procopius bowed the spirit of the great leader and made him doubtful of the
future. The Bohemian nobles were weary of the ascendency of the Taborites,
whose democratic ideas they had always borne with difficulty. The country was
weary of military rule; and the party which was aiming at Sigismund's
restoration determined to use the conciliatory spirit of the Diet for their own
purposes. On December 1 a Bohemian noble, Ales of Riesenberg, was elected
governor of the land, with a council of twelve to assist him; he took oath to
promote the welfare of the people and defend the Four Articles. The moderate
party, which had sought to find a constitutional king in Korybut in 1427, now
succeeded in setting up a president over the Bohemian republic. The peace
negotiations with the Council had already led to a political reaction.
The Compact had been agreed to, but the difficulties
in the way of its full acceptance were by no means removed. The envoys demanded
that, as Bohemia had agreed to a general peace, the siege of Pilsen should
cease. The Bohemians demanded that the men of Pilsen should first unite with
the Bohemian government, and that all Bohemians should be required by the
Council to accept the Communion under both kinds. Other questions also arose.
The Bohemians complained that, in treating of the temporalities of the clergy, the
Council used language which seemed to accuse them of sacrilege. They demanded
also that the Communion under both kinds should be declared 'useful and
wholesome' for the whole of Christendom, and that their custom of
administering the Communion to infants should be recognized. The discussion on
these points only led to further disagreement. The envoys had convinced
themselves that a large party in Bohemia was prepared to accept peace on the
terms which they had already offered. As nothing more was to be done, they
asked to be told definitely whether the Compact was accepted or not; otherwise
they wished to depart on January 15, 1434. The Diet answered that it would be
more convenient if they went on January 14; a Bohemian envoy would be sent to
Basel to announce their intentions. Accordingly the Council's ambassadors left
Prague on January 15, and arrived at Basel on February 15.
The result of this second embassy had been to rally
the moderate party in Bohemia, and break the bond that had hitherto held the
Bohemians together. The envoys had laid the foundations of a league in favour
of the Church. Ten of the masters of the University of Prague subscribed a
statement that they were willing to stand by the Compacts and had been
reconciled to the Church; even when the envoys were at Eger two nobles followed
them seeking reconciliation. When the ambassador of the Diet, Martin Lupak,
joined them at Eger, it is not wonderful that they warned him that it was
useless for him to journey to Basel if he went with fresh demands. The Council,
after hearing the report of their envoys, gave Martin audience at once on
February 16. He asked that the Council should order all the inhabitants of
Bohemia to receive the Communion under both kinds; if all did not conform,
there would be different churches and different rites, and no real peace in the
land, for each party would claim to be better than the other, the terms
“catholic” and “heretic” would again be bandied about, and there
would be perpetual dissension. This was no doubt true; but the Council listened
to Martin with murmurs of dissent. It was clearly impossible for them to
abandon the Bohemian Catholics, and to turn the concession which they had
granted to the Hussites into an order to those who had remained faithful to the
Church. Still Sigismund besought them to take time over their answer and to
avoid any threats. The answer was drawn up in concert with Sigismund, and on
February 26 Cesarini addressed Martin Lupak, saying that the Council wondered
the Bohemians did not keep their promises, as even Jews and heathens respected
good faith. He besought him to urge his countrymen to fulfill the Compacts;
then the Council would consider their new demands, and would do all they could
consistently with the glory of God and the dignity of the Church. Martin
defended his demands, and there was some altercation. At last he taunted
Cesarini with the remark that the Church had not always wished for peace, but
had preached a crusade against Bohemia. “Peace is now in your hands, if you will
stand by the agreement”, said Cesarini. “Rather it is in the hands of the
Council, if they will grant what is asked”, retorted Martin. He refused to
receive a letter from the Council unless he were informed of its contents, and
after briefly thanking the Fathers for hearing him, he left the congregation
and departed.
A breach seemed again imminent; but the Council knew
that it would not be with Bohemia, but only with a party in it, which they
trusted to overcome by the help of their fellow-countrymen. The first envoys
had reported that there was a number of irreconcilables who must be subdued by
force; the second negotiations had brought to light internal dissensions and
had founded a strong party in Bohemia in favour of union with the Council.
Everything was done to strengthen that party and gain the means of putting down
the radicals. On February 8 the Council ordered a tax of 5 per cent, on
ecclesiastical revenues to be levied throughout Christendom for their needs in
the matter of Bohemia. John of Palomar was sent to carry supplies from the
Council and from Sigismund to aid the besieged in Pilsen, where the besieging
army was suffering from plague, hunger and despondency. In Bohemia Meinhard of
Neuhaus was indefatigable in carrying on the work of the restoration. In April
a league was formed by the barons of Bohemia and Moravia and the Old Town of
Prague for the purpose of securing peace and order in the land; all armed
bands were ordered to disperse and an amnesty was promised if they obeyed.
Procopius was roused from his retirement in the New
Town of Prague by these machinations, and once more put himself at the
head of the Taborites and the Orphans. But the barons had already gathered
their forces. The New Town of Prague was summoned to enter the league, and
on its refusal was stormed; on May 6 Procopius and a few others succeeded with
difficulty in escaping. At this news the army before Pilsen raised the siege
and retired. Bohemia merged its minor religious differences, and prepared to
settle by the sword a political question that was bound to press some day for
solution. On one side were the nobles ready to fight for their ancient
privileges; on the other side stood the towns as champions of democracy. On May
30 was fought the decisive battle at Lipan. The nobles, under the command of
Borek of Militinek, a companion-in-arms of Zizka, had an army of 25,000 men;
against them stood Procopius with 18.000. Both armies were entrenched behind
their waggons, and for some time fired at one another. The Taborites had the
better artillery, but their adversaries turned their superiority to their ruin.
One wing feigned to be greatly distressed by their fire; then, as if goaded to
exasperation, rushed from behind its entrenchment, and charged. When they
thought that the foe had exhausted their fire, they feigned to flee, and the
Taborites, thinking their ranks were broken, rushed from their waggons in
pursuit. But the seeming broken ranks skillfully reformed and faced their
pursuers, who had meanwhile been cut off from their waggons by the other wing
of the nobles' army. Shut in on every side, Procopius and his men prepared to
die like heroes. All day and night the battle raged, till in the morning 13,000
of the warriors who had been so long the terror of Europe lay dead on the
ground. Procopius and all the chief men of the extreme party were among the
slain. The military power of Bohemia, which had so long defied the invader,
fell because it was divided against itself.
The fight of Lipan was a decided victory for the Council.
It is true that among the conquerors the large majority was Hussite, and would
require some management before it could be safely penned within the fold of the
Church. But the Taborites had lost the control of affairs. The irreconcilables
were swept away, and the Council would henceforth have to deal with men of more
moderate opinions
CHAPTER VI.
EUGENIUS IV AND THE COUNCIL OF BASEL.
NEGOTIATIONS WITH THE GREEKS AND THE BOHEMIANS
1434—1436.
At the beginning of the year 1434 the Council of Basel
had reached its highest point of importance in the Position affairs of
Christendom and of the Church. It had compelled the Pope to accept, without
reserve, the conciliar principle for which it strove; it had gone so far in
pacifying Bohemia that its final triumph seemed secure. It looked to further
employment for its energies in negotiating a union betweenthe Greek and
the Latin Churches. Yet the Council’s success had been largely due to
accidental circumstances. Eugenius IV had been subdued, not by the Council’s
strength, but by his own weakness; he fell because he had so acted as to raise
up a number of determined enemies, without gaining anyfriends in return. The
Council’s policy towards him was tolerated rather than approved by the European
Powers; if no one helped Eugenius IV, it was because no one had anything to
gain by so doing. Sigismund, whose interest was greatest in the matter,
was kept on the Council’s side by his personal interest in the Bohemian
question; but he, with the German electors and the King of France, was resolute
in resisting any steps which might lead to a schism of the Church. If the
Council were to keep what it had won, it must gain new hold upon the sympathies
of Christendom, which were not touched by the struggle against the Pope.
Sigismund gave the Fathers at Basel the advice of a
statesman when he exhorted them to leave their quarrel with the Pope and busy
themselves with the reform of the Church. But to contend for abstract
principles is always easy, to reform abuses is difficult. The Council found it
more interesting to war with the Pope than to labour through the obstacles
which lay in the way of a reformation of abuses by those who benefited by them.
Each rank of the hierarchy was willing to reform its neighbors, but had a great
deal to urge in its own defense. In this collision of interests there was a
general agreement that it was good to begin with a reform in the Papacy, as the
Pope was not at Basel to speak for himself. Moreover, the Council had grown
inveterate in its hostility to the Pope. The personal enemies of Eugenius IV
flocked to Basel, and were not to be satisfied with anything short of his
entire humiliation. In this they were aided by the pride of authority which
among less responsible members of the assembly grew in strength every day, and
made them desirous to assert in every way the superiority of the Council
over the Pope.
The first question that arose was concerning the
presidency. Eugenius IV, after his recognition by the Council, issued a Bull
nominating four Papal deputies to share that office with Cesarini. The first
decision of the Council was that they could not admit this claim of the Pope,
since it was derogatory to the dignity of the Council, but they were willing
themselves to appoint two of the Cardinals. Again Sigismund had to interpose,
and with some difficulty prevailed on the Council to receive the Papal
presidents. They were not, however, admitted till they had bound themselves by
an oath to labour for the Council, to maintain the decrees of Constance, to
declare that even the Pope, if he refused to obey the Council, might be
punished, and to observe strict secrecy about all its proceedings. On these
terms the Papal presidents, Cardinal Albergata, the Archbishop of Tarento, the
Bishop of Padua, and the Abbot of S. Justin of Padua, were admitted to their
office on April 26, 1434, at a solemn session at which Sigismund in his
Imperial robes was present.
The pretensions of the Council went on increasing. On
May 2 Cardinal Lusignan, who was sent on an embassy to pacify France, received
from the Council the title of legatus a latere, in spite of the
protest of the five presidents against conferring a dignity which only the Pope
could grant. Sigismund also felt aggrieved by the small heed which the Council
paid to his monitions. Few German prelates were present; the large majority
were French, Italians, and Spaniards. The democratic constitution of the
Council prevented Sigismund from receiving the deference which was his due; he
was not even consulted about the appointment of ambassadors. He felt that a
slight had been offered to himself by the dealings of the Council with his
enemy, the Duke of Milan. He complained bitterly of the irregular conduct of
the Council in granting a commission to the Duke of Milan as its vicar, and so
abetting him in his designs on the States of the Church. The Council at first
denied, then defended, and finally refused to withdraw from, its connection
with the Duke of Milan. Sigismund saw with indignation that the Council adopted
a policy of its own, and refused to identify its interests with his. He sadly
contrasted the purely ecclesiastical organization at Basel with the strong
national spirit that had prevailed at Constance. He determined to leave a place
where he had so little weight that, as he himself said, he was like a fifth
wheel to a carriage, which did no good, but only impeded its progress.
Before departing he seems to have resolved to give a
stimulus to the Council. He sent the Bishop of Lübeck to the several
deputations to lay before them a suggestion that the marriage of the clergy
should be permitted. “It was in vain”, he pleaded, “that priests were
deprived of wives; scarcely among a thousand could one continent priest be
found. By clerical celibacy the bond of friendship between the clergy and laity
was broken, and the freedom of confession was rendered suspicious. There was no
fear that a married clergy would appropriate the goods of the Church for their
wives and families; the permission to marry would rather bring those of the
highest ranks into the clergy, and the nobles would be less desirous of
secularizing ecclesiastical property if it was in the hands of their relations
and friends”. The fathers listened; but “the old”, says Aeneas
Sylvius, “condemned what had no charms for them. The monks, bound by a vow
of chastity, grudged that secular priests should have a privilege denied to
themselves”. The majority ruled that the time was not yet ripe for such a
change; they feared that it would be too great a shock to popular
prejudice.
Before his departure Sigismund addressed the Council,
and urged that it would be better to follow the example set at Constance, and
organize themselves by nations. He wisely remarked that the reformation of the
Church would be better carried out if each nation dealt with its own customs
and rites. Moreover, decisions arrived at by a national organization would have
greater chance of being accepted by the States so represented. He was answered
that the deputations would take his suggestion under consideration. Finally, on
May 19, he departed in no amiable mood from Basel, saying that he left behind
him a sink of iniquity.
After Sigismund’s departure Cesarini besought the
Council to turn its attention to the question of reformation; he said that
already they were evil spoken of throughout Christendom for their delay.
The basis of the questions raised at Constance was adopted, and the
extirpation of simony first attracted the attention of the fathers. But there was
great difficulty in keeping to the point, and little progress was made.
Insignificant quarrels between prelates were referred to the Council as a court
of appeal, and the Council took greater interest in such personal matters than
in abstract questions of reform. The question of union between the Eastern and
Western Churches was hailed with delight as a relief. This question, which had
been mooted at Constance, slumbered under Martin V, but had been renewed by
Eugenius IV. The Council, in its struggle with the Pope, thought it well to
deprive him of the opportunity of increasing his importance, and at the same
time to add to its own. In January, 1433, it sent ambassadors to Greece to
inaugurate steps for the proposed union. In consequence of these negotiations
the Greek ambassadors arrived at Basel on July 12, 1434. They were graciously
received by the Council; and Cesarini expressed the general wish for a
conference on their differences, which he said that discussion would probably
show to be verbal rather than real. The Greeks demanded that they should have
their expenses paid in coming to the conference, and named as the place Ancona,
or some port on the Calabrian coast, then Bologna, Milan, or some other town in
Italy, next Pesth or Vienna, and finally some place in Savoy. The Council was
anxious that the Greeks should come to Basel; but when the Greeks declared that
they had no power to assent to this, their other conditions were accepted.
Ambassadors were to go to Constantinople to urge the choice of Basel as a place
for the conference. The Greeks also demanded that Eugenius IV should give his
assent to the Council's proposals, and envoys were accordingly sent to lay them
before him.
But Eugenius IV, on his side, had made proposals to
the Greeks for the same purpose; and the Greeks, with their usual shiftiness,
were carrying on a double negotiation, in hopes of making a better bargain for
themselves by playing off against one another the rival competitors for their
goodwill. Eugenius IV sent to Constantinople in July, 1433, his secretary,
Cristoforo Garatoni, who proposed that a Council should be held at
Constantinople, to which the Pope should send a legate and a number of prelates
and doctors. When the Council’s proposals were laid before him, Eugenius wrote
on November 15, 1434, and gently warned it of the dangers that might arise from
too great precipitancy in this important matter. He mildly complained that he
had not been consulted earlier. He added, however, that he was willing to
assent to the simplest and speediest plan for accomplishing the object in view.
The question of the place of conference with the Greeks was sure to open up the
dispute between the Pope and Council. The chief reason which Eugenius IV had
given for dissolving the Council was his belief that the Greeks would never go
so far as Basel. He was now content to wait and see how far the Council would
succeed. He already began to see in their probable failure a means of
reasserting his authority, and either transferring the Council to Italy, as he
had wished at first, or setting up against it another Council, which from its
object would have in the eyes of Europe an equal, if not a greater, prestige.
On the departure of the Greek ambassadors the Council
again turned to its wearisome task of reformation, and on January 22, 1435,
succeeded in issuing four decrees, limiting the penalties of interdict and
excommunication to the persons or places which had incurred them by their own
fault, forbidding frivolous appeals to the Church, and enforcing stricter
measures to prevent the concubinage of the clergy. Offenders whose guilt was
notorious were to be mulcted of the revenues for three months, and admonished
under pain of deprivation to put away their concubines; fines paid to bishops
for connivance at this irregularity were forbidden. The Council felt that it
was at least safe in denouncing an open breach of ecclesiastical discipline,
one which in those days was constantly condemned and constantly permitted.
From this peaceful work of reform the Council was soon
drawn away by a letter from Eugenius IV, announcing the hopes he entertained of
effecting a union with the Greeks by means of a Council at Constantinople. The
letter was brought by Garatoni, who, on April 5, gave the Council an account of
his embassy to the Greeks, and urged in favour of the Pope's plan, that it
involved little expense, and was preferable to the Greeks, who did not wish to
impose on their Emperor and the aged Patriarch a journey across the sea. The
Council, however, by no means took this view of the matter; it was resolved not
to lose the glory of a reunion of the two Churches. On May 3 an angry letter
was written to the Pope, saying that a synod at Constantinople could have no
claims to be a General Council, and would only raise fresh discord; such a
proposal could not be entertained. Eugenius IV gave way in outward appearance,
and sent Garatoni again to Constantinople to express his readiness to accept
the proposals of the Council. He was contented to bide his time. But the
Council was in a feverish haste to arrange preliminaries, and in June sent
envoys, amongst whom was John of Ragusa, to Constantinople for this purpose. It
also began to consider means for raising money, and the sale of indulgences was
suggested. This suggestion raised a storm of disaffection amongst the adherents
of the Pope, and seemed to all moderate men to be a serious encroachment on the
Papal prerogative.
It was not long, however, before a still more deadly
blow was aimed at the Pope’s authority. The reforming spirit of the Basel
fathers was stirred to deal vigorously with Papal exactions. The subject of
annates, which had been raised in vain at Constance, was peremptorily decided
at Basel. On June 9 a decree was passed abolishing annates, and all dues on
presentations, on receiving the pallium, and on all such occasions. It was
declared to be simoniacal to demand or to pay them, and a Pope who attempted to
exact them was to be judged by a General Council. Two of the Papal presidents,
the Archbishop of Tarento and the Bishop of Padua, protested against this
decree, and their protest was warmly backed by the English and by many other
members of the Council. There were only present at its publication four
Cardinals and forty-eight prelates. Cesarini only assented to it on condition
that the Council should undertake no other business till it had made, by other
means, a suitable provision for the Pope and Cardinals. The abolition of
annates was, indeed, a startling measure of reform. It deprived the Pope at
once of all means of maintaining his Curia, and to Eugenius IV, a refugee in
Florence, left no source of supplies. No doubt the question of annates was one
that needed reform; but the reform ought to have been well considered and
moderately introduced. As it was, the Council showed itself to be moved chiefly
by a desire to deprive the Pope of means to continue his negotiations with
the Greeks.
The decree abolishing annates was a renewed
declaration of war against the Pope. It marked the rise into power of the
extreme party m the Council—the party whose object was the entire
reduction of the Papacy under a conciliar oligarchy. At the time, Eugenius was
too helpless to accept the challenge. Two of his legates at Basel protested
against the annates decree, and absented themselves from the business of the
Council. The Council answered by instituting proceedings against them for
contumacy. But the matter was stayed for the time by the arrival, on August 20,
of two Papal envoys who had been sent expressly to deal with the Council on
this vexed question—Antonio de San Vitio, one of the auditors of the Curia, and
the learned Florentine, Ambrogio Traversari, Abbot of Camaldoli. The feeling of
the Italian Churchmen was turning strongly in favour of Eugenius IV; they saw
in the proceedings of the Council a menace to the glory of the Papacy, which
Italy was proud to call its own. Reformation, as carried out by the Council,
seemed to them to be merely an attempt to overthrow the Pope, and carry off
beyond the Alps the management of ecclesiastical affairs which had so long
centred in Italy. Traversari, who had been zealous for a reform, and had sent
to Eugenius on his election a copy of S. Bernard’s De Consideratione,
now placed himself on the Pope's side, and went to Basel to defeat the
machinations of what he considered a lawless mob.
The answers which Traversari brought from the Pope
were ambiguous: he was willing that the union with the Greek Church should be
conducted in the best way; when the preliminaries had advanced further he would
be willing to consider whether the expenses had better be met by indulgences or
in some other way as to the abolition of annates, he thought that the Council
had acted precipitately, and wished to know how they proposed to provide for the
Pope and Cardinals, There was, in this, no basis for negotiation; and
Traversari in vain endeavored to get further instructions from Eugenius IV. He
stayed three months in Basel, and was convinced that Cesarini’s influence was
waning, and that it was a matter of vital importance to the Pope to win him
over to his side; he urged Eugenius IV to leave no means untried for this end.
Traversari was shrewd enough in surveying the situation for the future, but for
the present could obtain nothing save an empty promise that the question of a
provision for the Pope should be taken into immediate consideration.
Pending this consideration, the Council showed its
determination to carry its decrees into effect. When customary dues for the
reception of the pallium demanded by the Papal Curia from the newly elected
Archbishop of Rouen, the Council interposed and itself bestowed the pallium on
December 11. In January, 1436, it resolved to admonish the Pope to withdraw all
that he had done or said against the authority of the Council, and accept fully
its decrees. An embassy was nominated to carry to Eugenius IV a form of decree
which he was to issue for this purpose. The reason for this peremptory
proceeding was a desire to cut away from the Pope the means of frustrating the
Council’s projects as regards the Greeks. Its envoys at Constantinople could
not report very brilliant success in their negotiations. They could not at
first even establish the basis which had been laid down at Basel in the
previous year. The Greeks took exception to the wording of the decree which was
submitted to them; they complained that the Council spoke of itself as the
mother of all Christendom, and coupled them with the Bohemians as schismatics.
When the ambassadors attempted to defend the Council’s wording they were met by
cries, “Either amend your decree or get you gone”. They undertook that it
should be changed, and one of them, Henry Menger, was sent back to Basel,
where, on February 3, 1436, he reported that all other matters had been arranged
with the Greeks, on condition that the decree were altered, and that a
guarantee were given for the payment of their expenses to and from the
conference, whether they agreed to union or no. He brought letters from the
Emperor and the Patriarch, urging that the place of conference should be on the
sea-coast, and that the Pope, as the head of Western Christendom, should be
present. The envoys attributed these demands to the machinations of the
Papal ambassador Garatoni.
More and more irritated by this news, the Council proceeded
with its plan of crushing the Pope, and on March 22 issued a decree for
the full reformation of the head of the Church. It began with a
reorganization of the method of Papal election; the Cardinals on entering the
Conclave were to swear that they would not recognize him whom they elected till
he had sworn to summon General Councils and observe the decrees of Basel. The
form of the Papal oath was specified, and it was enacted that on each
anniversary of the Papal election the oath, and an exhortation to observe it,
should be read to the Pope in the midst of the mass service. The number of
Cardinals was not to exceed twenty-six, of whom twenty-four were to be at least
thirty years old, graduates in civil or canon law, or in theology, none of them
related to the Pope or any living Cardinal; the other two might be elected for
some great need or usefulness to the Church, although they were not graduates.
It was further enacted that all elections were to be freely made by the
chapters, and that all reservations were to be abolished.
At the end of the month appeared the Pope’s
ambassadors, the Cardinals of S. Peter’s and S. Crose. They brought as before
evasive answers from the Pope, who urged the Council to choose a place for
conference with the Greeks which would be convenient both for them and for
himself; he did not approve of the plan of raising money by granting
indulgences, but was willing to issue them with the approval of the Council.
This was not what the Council wanted. It demanded that Eugenius IV should
recognize its right to grant indulgences. On April 14 it issued a decree
granting to all who contributed to the expenses of the conference with the
Greeks the plenary indulgence given to crusaders and to those who made a
pilgrimage to Rome in the year of Jubilee. On May 11 an answer was given to the
Pope's legates, complaining that Eugenius IV did not act up to the Council’s
decrees, but raised continual difficulties; he did not join with them in their
endeavors to promote union with the Greeks, but spoke of transferring the
Council elsewhere; he did not accept the decree abolishing annates, except on
the condition that provision was made for the Pope, although he ought to
welcome gladly all efforts at reformation, and ought to consider that the
question of provision in the future required great discussion in each nation;
he did not recognize, as he ought to do, the supremacy of the Council, which,
with the presidents who represented the Pope, had full power to grant
indulgences. On receiving this answer, the Archbishop of Tarento and the Bishop
of Padua resigned their office of presidents on behalf of the Pope and left the
Council. It was a declaration of open war.
Eugenius IV on his side prepared for the contest. He
drew up a long defense of his own conduct, and a statement of the wrongs which
he had received from the Council since his recognition of its authority. He set
forth the Council's refusal to accept the Papal presidents as the
representatives of the Pope, its decrees diminishing the Papal revenues and the
Papal power, interfering with the old customs of election, granting
indulgences, exercising Papal prerogatives, and doing everything most likely to
lead to an open schism. He commented on the turbulent procedure of the Council,
its democratic organization, its mode of voting by deputations which gave the
preponderance to a numerical minority, its avowed partisanship which gave its
proceedings the appearance of a conspiracy rather than of a deliberate
judgment. For six years it had labored with scanty results, and had only
destroyed the prestige and respect which a General Council ought to
command. He recapitulated his own proposals to the Council about the place of a
conference with the Greeks, and the repulse which his ambassadors had met with.
He stated his resolve to call upon all the princes of Christendom to withdraw
their support from the Council, which, he significantly added, not only spoke
evil of the Pope, but of all princes, when once it had free course to its
insolence. He promised reformation of abuses in the Curia, with the help of a
Council to be summoned in some city of Italy, where the condition of his health
would allow his personal presence. He called upon the princes to withdraw their
ambassadors and prelates from Basel.
This document of Eugenius IV contained nothing which
was likely to induce the princes of Europe to put more confidence in him,
alleged no arguments which could lead them to alter their previous position so
far as the Papacy was concerned. But there was much in his accusations against
the Council, where the extreme party had been gradually gaining power. Cesarini
was no longer listened to, and his position in Basel became daily more
unsatisfactory to himself. He had earnestly striven for a settlement of the
Bohemian difficulty, and for the pacification of France, which had been begun
at the Congress of Arras. He was desirous for reformation of the Church and so
had agreed to the decree abolishing annates. But he could not forget that he
was a Cardinal and a Papal legate, and was opposed to the recent proceedings of
the Council against the Pope. Round him gathered the great body of Italian
prelates, except the Milanese and the chief theologians. But the majority of
the Council consisted of Frenchmen, who were led by Cardinal Louis d'Allemand,
generally known as the Cardinal of Arles, a man of great learning and high
character, but a violent partisan, who belonged to the Colonna faction, and
intrigued with the Duke of Milan. He had no hesitation in taking up an attitude
of strong political hostility against Eugenius IV. The French followed him, as
did the Spaniards, so long as Alfonso of Aragon was the political enemy of
Eugenius IV. The Milanese and South Italians were also on his side. The English
and Germans who came to the Council were animated by a desire to extend its
influence, and so were opposed to the Pope.
The organization of the Council gave the Pope a just
ground for complaint. It had been decided at the beginning that the lower ranks
of the clergy should have seats and votes. The Council was to be fully
representative of the Church, and so was entirely democratic. All who satisfied
the scrutineers, and were incorporated as members, took equal part in the
proceedings. At first the dangers of this course had not shown themselves; but
as the proceedings of the Council were protracted, the prelates who took a
leading part in its business became fewer. The constitution of the Council was
shifting from week to week. Only those were permanent who had some personal
interest to gain, or who were strong partisans. The enemies of Eugenius IV
clung to the Council as the justification of their past conduct as well as of
their hope in the future. Adventurers who had everything to gain, and little to
lose, flocked to Basel, and cast in their lot with the Council as affording
them a better chance of promotion than did the Curia. Thus the Council became
more and more democratic and revolutionary in its tendencies. The prelates drew
to the side of Cesarini, and found themselves more and more in a minority,
opposed to a majority which was bent on the entire humiliation of the Papacy.
It was natural that the violence of the French radical
party should cause a reaction in favour of the Pope. Many had been in favour of
the Council against the Pope, when the Council wished for reform, which the
Pope tried to check. They were shaken in their allegiance when the Council,
under the name of reform, was pursuing mainly the depression of the Papal
power, and the transference of its old authority into the hands of a
self-elected and non-representative oligarchy. The cry was raised that the
Council was in the French interest; that it simply continued the old struggle
of Avignon against Rome. The friends of Eugenius IV began to raise their heads,
and attacked the Council on political grounds, so as to detach from it the
princes of Christendom. Their arguments may be gathered from a letter of
Ambrogio Traversari to Sigismund, in January, 1436: “The Council of Basel has
found time for nothing but the subversion of Catholic peace and the depression
of the Pope. They have now been assembled for five years; and see on how
wrongful a basis their business proceeds. In old days bishops, full of the fear
of God, the zeal of religion, and the fervour of faith, used to settle the
affairs of the Church. Now the matter is in the hands of the common herd; for
scarcely out of five hundred members, as I saw with my own eyes, were there
twenty bishops; the rest were either the lower orders of the clergy, or were
laymen; and all consult their private feelings rather than the good of the
Church. No wonder that the Council drags on for years, and produces nothing but
scandal and danger of schism. The good men are lost in the ignorant and
turbulent multitude. The French, led by the Cardinal of Arles and the
Archbishop of Lyons, want to transfer the Papacy into France. Where every one
seeks his own interest, and the vote of a cook is as good as that of a legate
or an archbishop, it is shameless blasphemy to claim for their resolutions the
authority of the Holy Ghost. They aim only at a disruption of the Church. They
have set up a tribunal on the model of the Papal court; they exercise
jurisdiction, and draw causes before them. They confer the pallium on archbishops,
and claim to grant indulgences. They aim at nothing less than the perpetuation
of the Council, in opposition to the Pope”.
There was enough truth in this view of the situation
to incline the statesmen of Europe to take a more languid interest in the
proceedings of the Council. Moreover, the Council had lost its political
importance by the gradual subsidence of the Bohemian question. The Council had
done its work when it succeeded in bringing to a head the divergence of opinion
which had always existed between Bohemian parties. The negotiations with the
Council had given strength to the party which wished to recognize authority,
and was not prepared to break entirely with the traditions of the past. Round
it gathered the various elements of political discontent arising from the long
domination of the democratic and revolutionary party. At the battle of Lipan
the Taborites met with such a defeat that they could no longer offer a
determined resistance to the plan for a reconciliation with Sigismund.
But the hopes of immediate success which the fight of
Lipan awakened in Basel were by no means realized at once. The spirit of the
Bohemian Reformation was still strong; and though the Calixtins were on
the whole in favour of reconciliation with the Church, they had no
intention of abandoning their original position. The Bohemian Diet in June,
1434, proclaimed a general peace with all Utraquists, and a truce for a year
with all Catholics. It took measures for the pacification of the land and the
restoration of order. To Sigismund's envoys, who had come to procure his
recognition as King of Bohemia, the Diet answered by appointing deputies to
confer with Sigismund at Regensburg. Thither the Council was requested by
Sigismund to send its former envoys. On August 16 its embassy, headed by
Philibert, Bishop of Coutances, but of which John of Palomar was the most
active member, entered Regensburg an hour after the Bohemians, chief amongst
whom were John of Rokycana, Martin Lupak, and Meinhard of Neuhaus. As usual, Sigismund
kept them waiting, and did not arrive till August 21. Meanwhile the Council’s
envoys and the Bohemians had several conferences, which did not show that their
differences were disappearing. The Bohemians were requested to do as they had
done at previous conferences, and not attend mass in the churches. They
consented; but John of Rokycana remarked that it would be better if the Council
were to drive out of the churches evil priests rather than faithful laymen, who
only wished to receive the Communion under both kinds. John of Palomar had to
apologize for the Council’s delay in its work of reform; the English and
Spanish representatives, he said, had not yet arrived, and everything could not
be done at once.
When negotiations began on August 22 Sigismund and the
Council's envoys found that the Bohemians were firm in their old position. They
were willing to recognize Sigismund on condition that he restored peace in
Bohemia, which could only be done by upholding the Four Articles of Prague, and
binding all the people of Bohemia and Moravia to receive the Communion under
both kinds. Sigismund appealed to the national feelings of the Bohemians by a
speech in their own tongue, in which he recalled the connection of his house
with Bohemia. About the questions in dispute John of Rokycana and John of
Palomar again indulged in the old arguments, till the Bohemians declared that
they were sent to the Emperor, not to the Council's envoys. They submitted
their request to Sigismund in writing, and Sigismund in writing gave answer,
begging them to stand by the Compacts of Prague. The Bohemians declared their
intention of doing so, but said that the Compacts must be understood to apply
to the whole of Bohemia and Moravia. John of Palomar declared that the Council
could not compel faithful Catholics to adopt a new rite, though they were
prepared to allow it to those who desired it. The conclusion of the conference
was that the Bohemian envoys should report to the Diet, soon to be held at
Prague, the difficulties which had arisen, and should send its answer to the
Emperor and to the Council. Matters had advanced no further than they were at
the time of accepting the Compacts. In some ways the tone of the conference at
Regensburg was less conciliatory than that of the previous ones. One of the
Bohemian envoys fell from a window and was killed. The Council’s ambassadors
objected to his burial with the rites of the Church, on the ground that he was
not received into the Church’s communion. This caused great indignation among the
Bohemians, who resented this attempt to terrorize over them. Still they
submitted to the Council’s envoys a series of questions about the election of
an archbishop of Prague, and the views of the Council about the regulation of
ecclesiastical discipline in accordance with the Compacts. Sigismund besought
the Council for money to act against Bohemia, and some of the Bohemian nobles
asserted that with money enough Bohemia could soon be reduced to obedience. Yet
Sigismund did not hesitate to express to the Council's envoys his many grounds
for grievance at the Council’s procedure. The parties in the conference at
Regensburg were at cross purposes. Sigismund, dissatisfied with the Council,
wished to make it useful for himself. The Council wished to show Sigismund that
its help was indispensable for the settlement of the Bohemian question.
Bohemia wished for peace, but on condition of retaining in matters
ecclesiastical a basis of national unity, without which it felt that peace
would be illusory. On September 3 the conference came to an end without
arriving at any conclusion. All parties separated mutually dissatisfied.
Still these repeated negotiations strengthened the
peace party in Bohemia. Of the proceedings of the Diet held at Prague on
October 23 we know little; but they ended in an abandonment by the Bohemians of
the position which they had taken up at Regensburg. There they had maintained
that, as the people of Bohemia and Moravia were of one language and under one
rule, so ought they to be of one ritual in the most solemn act of Christian
worship. They now decided to seek a basis of religious unity which would
respect the rights of the minority, and on November 8 wrote, not to the
Council, but to the Council's envoys, proposing that in those places where the
Communion under both kinds had been accepted it should be recognized; in those
places where the Communion under one kind had been retained it should remain.
Mutual toleration was to be enjoined, and an archbishop and bishops were to be
elected by the clergy, with the consent of the Diet, who were to be subject to
the Council and to the Pope in matters agreeable to the law of God, but no
further, and who were to regulate the discipline of the Church in Bohemia and
Moravia. It was a proposal for the organization of the Bohemian Church on a
national basis, so as to obtain security against the danger of a Catholic
reaction.
The Council’s answer to the Bohemians was, that they
would again send their former envoys to confer with them and with the Emperor.
The Bohemians, seeing that little was to be hoped for from the Council,
resolved to see if they could obtain from Sigismund the securities which they
wished. A Diet held in Prague in March, 1435, sent Sigismund its demands:
the Four Articles were to be accepted; the Emperor, his court, his chaplain,
and all State officers were to communicate under both kinds; complete amnesty
was to be given for the past, and a genuinely national Government was to exist
for the future. The envoys who brought these demands to Sigismund inquired if
the Council's ambassadors, who were already with Sigismund in Posen, were
prepared to accept the offer made by the Diet in the previous November;
otherwise it was useless for the Bohemians to trouble themselves further or
incur more expense. But the Council's ambassadors had come armed with secret
instructions, and refused to have their hand forced. They answered that their
mission was to the Emperor in Council of the Bohemians assembled, and then only
could they speak.
Many preliminaries had to be arranged before the
Conference finally took place at Brunn. There the Council’s envoys arrived on
May 20, and were received with ringing of bells and all manifestations of joy
by the people. On June 18 came the Bohemian representatives; but Sigismund did
not appear till July 1. Meanwhile the Bohemians and the Council's envoys had
several sharp discussions. Those of the Bohemians who had been reconciled to
the Church were allowed to attend the mass; but the others were forbidden to enter
the churches, and were refused a chapel where they might celebrate mass after
their own fashion. On June 28 some of the Bohemians, on being requested to
withdraw from a church where they had come with their comrades, were so
indignant that they were on the point of leaving Brünn, and were only
appeased by the intervention of Albert of Austria, who had luckily arrived a
few days before
The day after Sigismund’s arrival, on July 2, John of
Rokycana brought forward three demands on the part of the Bohemians: that the
Four Articles be accepted throughout the whole of Bohemia and Moravia; that
those countries be freed from all charge of heresy, and that the Council of
Basel proceed with the reformation of the Church in life, morals and faith. He
asked also for an answer to the demands sent to Eger by the Bohemian Diet in
the previous November. The Council’s envoys answered by justifying the
procedure of the Council and blaming the Bohemians for not keeping to the
Compacts but raising new difficulties. There was much disputation. The
Bohemians professed their willingness to abide by the Compacts as interpreted
by their demands sent to Eger; the legates answered that these demands were
contrary to the Compacts themselves. Sigismund urged the legates to give way, but
they refused. On July 8 the legates demanded that the Bohemians should declare
their adhesion to the Compacts, as they had promised; no promise had been made
by the Council about the Eger articles, otherwise it would have been fulfilled.
It was clear to the Bohemians that the Council regarded the Compacts as the
ultimate point of their concessions, whereas the Bohemians looked on them only
as a starting-point for further arrangements. John of Rokycana angrily
answered the legates, “We are willing to stand by the Compacts; but they cannot
be fulfilled till they are completed. Much must be added to them; for instance,
as regards obedience to bishops, we will not obey them if they order what is
contrary to God’s word. How do you ask us to fulfill our promises when you will
not fulfill yours? It seems to us that you aim at nothing save to sow division
amongst us, for since your coming we are worse off than before, and will take
heed that it be so no longer. We ask no difficult things. We ask for an
archbishop to be elected by the clergy and people or appointed by the King. We
ask that causes be not transferred out of the realm. We ask that the Communion
be celebrated under both kinds in those places where the use exists. These are
not difficult matters; grant them and we will fulfill the Compacts. We do not
ask these things through fear, or through doubt of their lawfulness; we ask
them for the sake of peace and unity. If you do not grant them, the Lord be
with you, for I trust He is with us”. While John of Palomar was preparing a
reply, the Bohemians left the room and thenceforth conferred only with the
legates through Sigismund.
The Bohemian envoys had, in fact, begun to negotiate
directly with Sigismund, who showed himself much more ready to give way than
did the legates of the Council. On July 6 a proposal was made to Sigismund that
he should grant in his own name what the Council refused. Under the pretext of
removing difficulties and providing for some things omitted in the Compacts,
Sigismund promised that benefices should not be conferred by strangers outside
Bohemia and Moravia, but only by the king; that no Bohemian or Moravian should
be cited or be judged outside the kingdom; that those who preferred to
communicate under one kind only should, to avoid confusion, be tolerated only
in those places which had always maintained the old ritual; that the
archbishops and bishops should be elected by the Bohemian clergy and people.
These articles Sigismund promised to uphold “before the Council, the Pope, and
all men”. The legates of the Council strongly deprecated any secret
negotiations on the part of Sigismund; the Bohemians, relying on the promises
they had received, showed themselves more conciliatory. On July 14 they offered
to sign the Compacts with the addition of a clause, “Saving the liberties
and privileges of the kingdom and of the margravate of Moravia”. This the
legates would not accept, as it clearly carried the election of the archbishop
by the people and clergy. Sigismund answered the legates privately, and
besought them to consent, lest they should be the cause of a rupture, and woe
to them through whom that came. When the legates again refused, he angrily
said, "You of the Council have granted articles to the Bohemians, and have
held conferences without my knowledge, but I acquiesced. Why, then, will you
not acquiesce for my sake in this small matter? If you wish me to lose my
kingdom, I do not". He exclaimed in German to those around
him, “Those of Basel wish to do nothing except diminish the power of the
Pope and Emperor”. He showed his indignation by abruptly dismissing the
legates.
Sigismund’s anger cooled down, and the clause was
withdrawn. The Bohemians demanded the acceptance of various explanations of the
Compacts, which the legates steadily refused. At last the signing of the
Compacts was again deferred because the legates would not substitute, in the
article which declared that "the goods of the Church cannot be possessed
without guilt of sacrilege", the words “unjustly detained” (injuste
deteneri) for “possessed” (usurpari). On August 3 the
Bohemians departed, and the legates undertook to lay their demands before the
Council and meet them again at Prague in the end of September.
The Council’s envoys had acted faithfully by the
letter of their instructions; they had stood upon the Compacts, and had
refused to make any further concessions or even admit any material
explanations. The negotiations had therefore passed out of their hands into
those of Sigismund. The Compacts had laid the foundations of an agreement. The
Council had opened the door to concessions; and Sigismund was justified in
declaring that the Council could not claim to have the sole right of
interpreting the concessions so made or regulating the exact method of their
application. The proceedings at Brünn led the Bohemians to think that the
Council had dealt with them unfairly, and after begging them to accept the
Compacts as a means to further agreement, was now bent on doing its utmost to
make the Compacts illusory. The Bohemians therefore turned to Sigismund and
resolved to seek first for political unity, and then to maintain their own
interpretation of the Compacts by securing the organization of a national
Church according to their wishes. In this state of things the interests of the
Council and of Sigismund were no longer identical. The Council wished to
minimize the effect of the concessions which it had made— concessions which
were indeed necessary, yet might form a dangerous precedent in the Church.
Sigismund wished to obtain peaceable possession of Bohemia, and trusted to his
own cleverness afterwards to restore orthodoxy. The one thing that was rendered
tolerably certain by the conference at Brünn was the recognition of Sigismund
as King of Bohemia, and he was determined that the Council should not be an
obstacle in the way. At the same time Sigismund was rigidly attached to the
orthodox cause; but he was convinced that the reduction of Bohemia was a matter
for himself rather than the Council.
The proceedings with Sigismund at Brünn satisfied the
party in Bohemia, and the Diet, which met in Prague on September, ratified
all that had been done. The submission of Bohemia to the Church and to
Sigismund was finally agreed to on the strength of Sigismund's promises. A committee
of two barons, two knights, three citizens, and nine priests was appointed
to elect an archbishop and two suffragans. Their choice fell on John
of Rokycana as archbishop, Martin Lupak and Wenzel of Hohenmaut as
bishops. On December 21 the Bohemian envoys again met Sigismund and the legates
of the Council at Stuhlweissenburg. The legates had heard of Rokycana’s
election, though it was kept a secret pending Sigismund's confirmation. They
were perturbed by the understanding which seemed to exist between Sigismund and
the Bohemians. They had come from Basel empowered to change the words in the
Compacts as the Bohemians wished, and substitute “unjustly
detained” for “possessed”; but before doing so they demanded that
Sigismund should give them a written agreement for the strict observance of the
Compacts on his part. This was really a demand that Sigismund should declare
that he intended the promises which he had made to the Bohemians at Brünn to be
illusory. Meinhard ofNeuhaus, the chief of Sigismund’s partisans amongst the
Bohemians, was consulted on this point. He answered, “If the Emperor publicly
revoke his promises, all dealings with the Bohemians are at an end; if he
revoke them secretly, it will some day be known, and then the Emperor, if he
were in Bohemia, would be in great danger from the people”.
Accordingly Sigismund refused to sign the document
which the legates laid before him, and submitted another, which declared
generally his intention of abiding by the Compacts, but which did not
satisfy the legates. Sigismund referred the legates to the Bohemians, and they
accordingly demanded that the Bohemians should renounce all requests which they
had made contrary to the Compacts. This the Bohemians refused, and Sigismund
endeavored to lead the legates to a more conciliatory frame of mind by telling
them that dissimulation on many points was needful with the Bohemians, that he
might obtain the kingdom; when that was done, he would bring things back to
their former condition. The legates answered that their instructions from the
Council were to see that the Compacts were duly executed; when this was done,
the king's power would remain as it had always been; if the Bohemians wanted
more than the king could grant, they could seek further favours from the Council.
The question of the Emperor’s agreement with the Council again raised much
discussion. The Bohemians refused any responsibility in the matter.
“If there is ought between you and the legates”, they
said to Sigismund, “it is nothing to us, we neither give assent nor
dissent”.
The agreement was at last drawn up in general terms.
The legates contented themselves with Sigismund's verbal promise as to his
general intentions, and a written statement that he accepted the Compacts
sincerely according to their plain meaning, and would not permit that any one
be compelled to communicate under both kinds nor anything else to be done in
contradiction to the Compacts. Iglau was fixed by the Bohemians as a frontier
town in which the final signing of the Compacts might be quietly accomplished,
and the ambassadors departed on January 31, 1436, to reassemble at Iglau in the
end of May.
In all these negotiations the result had been to put
difficulties out of sight rather than to make any agreement. Since the
conference at Prague in 1433 no nearer approach had been made by the
Bohemians to the orthodoxy of the Council. They had rather strengthened
themselves in a policy by which they might obtain the advantages of peace and
union with the Church, and yet might retain the greatest possible measure of
ecclesiastical independence. This they hoped to secure by a strong national
organization, while Sigismund trusted that once in power he would be able to
direct the Catholic reaction; and the Council, after taking all possible steps
to save its dignity, was reluctantly compelled to trust to Sigismund's
assurance.
Sigismund appeared at Iglau on June 6; but the
Bohemians were on the point of departing in anger when they found that the
legates had come only with powers to sign the Compacts, not to confirm the
election of the Bohemian bishops. With some difficulty the Bohemians were
prevailed upon to accept Sigismund's promise that he would do his utmost to
obtain from the Council and the Pope a ratification of the election of the bishops
whom they had chosen. At last, on July 5, the Emperor, in his robes of state,
took his place on a throne in the market-place of Iglau. The Duke of Austria
bore the golden apple, the Count of Cilly the sceptre, and another count the
sword. Before Sigismund went the legates of the Council, and by them took their
places the Bohemian envoys. The signing of the Compacts was solemnly ratified
by both parties. John Walwar, a citizen of Prague, gave to the legates a copy
of the Compacts duly signed and sealed, together with a promise that the
Bohemians would accept peace and unity with the Church. Four Bohemian priests,
previously chosen for the purpose, took oath of obedience, shaking hands with
the legates and afterwards with Rokycana, to show that they held him as their
archbishop. Then the legates on their part handed a copy of the Compacts to the
Bohemians, admitting them to peace and unity with the Church, relieving them
from all ecclesiastical censures, and ordering all men to be at peace with them
and hold them clear of all reproach. Proclamation was made in Sigismund's name
that next day the Bohemians should enter the Church and the Compacts be
read in the Bohemian tongue. Then the Bishop of Coutances, in a loud clear
voice, began to sing the Te Deum, in which all joined with fervour.
When it was done, Sigismund and the legates entered the church for mass; the
Bohemians, raising a hymn, marched to their inn, where they held their service.
Both parties wept for joy at the ending of their long strife.
The next day showed that difficulties were not at an
end, that the peace was hollow, and that the main points of disagreement still
remained unsettled. In the parish church, the Bishop of Coutances celebrated
mass at the high altar, and John of Rokycana at a side altar. The Compacts were
read by Rokycana from the pulpit in the Bohemian tongue, then he added, “Let
those of the Bohemians who have the grace of communicating under both kinds
come to this altar”. The legates protested to the Emperor. John of Palomar cried
out, “Master John, observe the canons; do not administer the sacraments in
a church of which you are not priest”. Rokycana paid no heed, but administered
to seven persons. The legates were indignant at this violation of
ecclesiastical regulations, and said, “Yesterday you vowed canonical
obedience; today you break it. What is this?”. Rokycana answered that he was
acting in accordance with the Compacts, and paid little heed to the technical
objection raised by the legates. Sigismund urged the legates to grant a church,
or at least an altar, where the Bohemians might practise their own ritual. The
legates, who were irritated still more by hearing that Martin Lupak had carried
through the streets the sacrament under both kinds to a dying man, refused
their consent. The Bohemians bitterly exclaimed that they had been deceived,
and that the Compacts were illusory. They threatened to depart at once, and it
required all Sigismund’s skill in the management of men to prevail on the
Bohemians to stay till they had arranged the preliminaries about his reception
as King of Bohemia. The utmost concession that he could obtain from the legates
was that one priest might celebrate mass after the Bohemian ritual. They
refused to commission for this purpose either Rokycana or Martin Lupak, and
accepted Wenzel of Drachow, on condition that they should first examine him to
be sure of his orthodoxy. This Wenzel refused, and the Bohemians continued to
celebrate their own rites in their houses, as they had done previously.
Thus the long negotiations with the Council had led to
no real agreement. The signing of the Compacts was rather an expression on
both sides of the desire for peace, and for the outward unity of the Church,
than any settlement of the points at issue. The conception of a united
Christendom had not yet been destroyed, and both parties were willing to make
concessions to maintain it. But neither side abandoned their convictions, and
the peace which had been proclaimed affected only the outward aspect of
affairs. The Bohemians remained the victors. They had re-entered the Church on
condition that they were allowed an exceptional position. It remained for them
to make good the position which they had won, and use wisely and soberly the
means which they had at their disposal for this purpose.
In political matters also they saw the necessity of
abandoning their attitude of revolt, and entering again the State system of
Europe. They were willing to recognize Sigismund, but on condition that he
ensured the Bohemian nationality against German influences. On July 20
Sigismund agreed to ratify the rights and privileges of the Bohemians, to be
guided by the advice of a Bohemian Council, to uphold the University of Prague,
to admit none but Bohemians to office in the land, and to grant a full amnesty
for all that had happened during the revolt. On August 20 the Governor of
Bohemia, Ales of Riesenburg, laid down his office in Sigismund’s presence, and
the Bohemian nobles swore fidelity to their king. On August 23 Sigismund
entered Prague in state, and was received with joyous acclamations by the
people. The pacification of Bohemia was completed. The great work which Europe
had demanded of the Council was actually accomplished.
If we consider the deserts of the Council in this
matter, we see that its real importance lay in the fact that it could admit the
Bohemians to a conference without injuring the prestige of the Church. A Pope
could adopt no other attitude towards heretics than one of resolute resistance.
A Council could invite discussion, in which each party might engage with a firm
belief that it would succeed in convincing the other. The decree for reunion
with the Church arose from the exhaustion of Bohemia and its internal
dissensions; it found that it could no longer endure to pay the heavy price
which isolation from the rest of Europe involved on a small state. The temper
of the Bohemians was met with admirable tact and moderation by the Council
under the influence of Cesarini. Moral sympathy and not intellectual agreement
tended to bring the parties together. The impulse given at first was strong
enough to resist the reaction, when both parties found that they were not
likely to convince each other. But the religious motives tended to become
secondary to political considerations. The basis of conciliation afforded by
the negotiations with Basel was used by the peace party in Bohemia and by
Sigismund to establish an agreement between themselves. When this had been
done, the position of the Council was limited to one of resistance to the
extension of concessions to the Bohemians. The Council was thenceforth a
hindrance rather than a help to the unscrupulous policy of illusory
promises, which Sigismund had determined to adopt towards Bohemia till his
power was fully established. From this time the Council lost all political
significance for the Emperor, who was no longer interested in maintaining it
against the Pope, and felt aggrieved by its treatment of himself, as well as by
its democratic tendencies, which threatened the whole State system of Europe.
CHAPTER VII.
WAR BETWEEN THE POPE AND THE COUNCIL.
1436—1438.
If Sigismund’s interest in the Council had faded away,
the interest of France had equally begun to wane. At the opening of the
Council, France, in her misery and distress, the legacy of the long war with
England, felt a keen sympathy with one of the Council's objects, the general
pacification of Christendom. The Council’s zeal in this matter stirred up the
Pope to emulation, and Eugenius IV busied himself to prevent the Council from
gaining any additional prestige. In 1431 Cardinal Albergata was sent by the
Pope to arrange peace between England, Burgundy, and France. His negotiations
were fruitless for a time; but the ill-success of the English induced them in
1435 to consent to a congress to be held at Arras. Thither went Albergata as
Papal legate, and on the side of the Council was sent Cardinal Lusignan.
Representatives of the chief States of Europe were present; and 9000 strangers,
amongst whom were 500 knights, thronged the streets of Arras. In the conference
which began in August the rival legates vied with one another in splendor and
in loftiness of pretension. But though Lusignan was of higher lineage,
Albergata was the more skillful diplomat, and exercised greater influence over
the negotiations. England, foreseeing the desertion of Burgundy, refused the
proposed terms, and withdrew from the congress on September 6. Philip of
Burgundy's scruples were skillfullycombated by Albergata.
Philip wished for peace, but wished also to save his
honor. The legate’s absolution from his oath, not to make a separate peace from
England, afforded him the means of retreating from an obligation which had
begun to be burdensome. On the interposition of the Church Philip laid aside
his vengeance for his father’s murder, and was reconciled to Charles VII of
France on September 21. The treaty was made under the joint auspices of the
Pope and the Council. Both claimed the credit of this pacification. Cesarini,
when the news reached Basel, said that if the Council had sat for twenty years,
and had done nothing more than this, it would have done enough to satisfy all
gainsayers. But in spite of the Council’s claims it had won less prestige in
France than had Eugenius IV, and France had no further hopes of political aid
from its activity.
Thus the chief States of Europe had little to gain
either from Pop or Council, and had no reason to take either side, when the
struggle again broke out about the union with the Eastern Church. The letter of
Eugenius IV, asking the princes of Europe to withdraw their countenance from
the Council, met with no answer; but the Council had no zealous protector on
whose help it could rely. The conflict thatensued was petty and ignoble.
The policy of Eugenius IV was to allure the Council to
some Italian city where he could more easily manage to bring about its
dissolution. In this he was helped by the desire of the Greeks to avoid a
long journey overland, and his envoy Garatoni had continued to confirm them in
their objection to go to Basel or to cross the Alps. The Council was fully
alive to the Pope’s project, and hoped to prevail upon the Greeks, when
once their journey was begun, to give way to their wishes. But the great
practical difficulty which the Council had to face was one of finance. The cost
of bringing the Greeks to Basel was computed at 71,000 ducats and their
maintenance, which could not be reckoned at less than 200,000 ducats. Moreover,
it would be needful that the Western Church should not be outdone by the
Eastern in the number of prelates present at the Council. At least a hundred
bishops must be summoned to Basel, and it might not be an easy matter to induce
them to come. The sale of indulgences had not been productive of so rich a
harvest as the Council had hoped. In Constantinople the Bull was not allowed to
be published, and the Greeks were by no means favorably impressed by this proof
of the Council's zeal. In Europe, generally, it had awakened dissatisfaction;
it was a sign that the reforming Council was ready to use for its own purposes
the abuses which it condemned in the Pope. Altogether, the Council had before
it a difficult task to raise the necessary supplies and celebrate its
conference with due magnificence in the face of the Pope’s opposition.
As a preliminary step towards raising money and
settling the place of the conference, envoys were sent in May, 1436, to
negotiate for loans in the various cities which had been mentioned. They were
required to promise 70,000 ducats at once, and to undertake to make further
advances it necessary. The envoys Greeks visited Milan, Venice, Florence,
Siena, Buda, Vienna, Avignon, as well as France and Savoy. In August Venice
offered any town in the patriarchate of Aquileia, the Duke of Milan any town in
his dominions; both guaranteed the loan. Florence also offered herself. Siena
was willing to receive the Council, but could not lend more than 30,000 ducats.
The Duke of Austria was so impoverished by the Bohemian wars that he could not offer
any money but would welcome the Council in Vienna. The citizens of Avignon were
ready to promise all that the Council wished. During the month of November the
representatives of Venice, Florence, Pavia, and Avignon harangued the Council
in favour of their respective cities. Venice and Florence were clearly in
favour of the Pope, and so were not acceptable to the Council. In Pavia the
Council would be sure enough of the Duke of Milan's hostility to the Pope, but
could not feel so confident of its own freedom from his interference. If the
Greeks would not come to Basel, Avignon was, in the eyes of the majority, the
most eligible place.
But though the majority might be of this opinion,
there had been growing up in the Council a strong opposition. The undisguised
hostility of the extreme party to the Pope had driven moderate men to acquiesce
in the pretensions of Eugenius IV, and this question of the place of conference
with the Greeks was fiercely contested on both sides. Cesarini had for some
time felt that he was losing his influence over the Council, which followed the
more democratic Cardinal d'Allemand. He now began to speak decidedly on the
Pope's side. He argued with justice that Avignon was not specified in the
agreement made with the Greeks; that the Pope's presence at the conference was
necessary, if for no other reason, at least as a means of providing money; that
if any help was to be given to the Greeks against the Turks the Pope alone
could summon Europe to the work; finally, he urged that if the Pope and Council
were in antagonism, union with the Greeks was rendered ridiculous. On these
grounds he besought the Council to choose a place which was convenient for the
Pope. There were angry replies, till on November lo Cesarini took the step of
openly ranging himself on the Pope's side. He warned the Council that
henceforth they were to regard him as a Papal legate, and sent a paper to all
the deputations demanding that in future no conclusions be arrived at
respecting the Roman See until he had first been heard at length on the matter.
But the dominant party was determined to have its own
way and took measures to out-vote its opponents. It summoned the priests from
the neighborhood and flooded the Council with its own creatures. On
December 5 the votes were taken, and it was found that more than two-thirds of
the Council, 242 out of 355, voted at the bidding of the Cardinal d'Allemand
for Basel in the first instance; failing that, Avignon, and failing that, some
place in Savoy. Basel had been already refused by the Greeks. The Duke of Savoy
had not offered to provide money for the Council. The vote was really given for
Avignon alone. Cesarini, in the Pope's name and in his own, protested against
Avignon as not contained in the treaty made with the Greeks; if the Council
refused to go to Italy there remained only Buda, Vienna, and Savoy as eligible;
if the Council decided on Savoy, he would accept it as according to the
agreement; beyond this he could not go. In spite of his written protest, the
majority confirmed their vote by a decree in favour of Avignon.
At the beginning of February, 1437, the Greek
ambassador, John Dissipatus, arrived in Basel, and was surprised to find that
the Council had fixed on Avignon. He vainly pleaded that Avignon was not included in
the decree which the Greeks had accepted, and when the Council paid no heed he
handed in a protest on February 15. The Council requested him to accompany
their envoys to Constantinople. He refused, declaring his intention of visiting
the Pope and renewing his protest before him : if no remedy could be found
he would publish to the world that the Council could not keep its promises. The
majority at Basel was little moved by these complaints, save so far as they
tended to strengthen the position of the minority which was working in favour
of the Pope. Through fear of playing into their hands, a compromise was made on
February 23. The Council decreed that the citizens of Avignon were to be
required to pay, within thirty days, the 70,000 ducats which they had promised;
a further term of twelve days was allowed them to bring proof of their payment
to Basel; if this were not done in the appointed time the Council “could,
and was bound” to proceed to the election of another place.
During the period of this truce arrived, on April 1,
the Archbishop of Taranto, as a new Papal legate, accompanied by the Greeks who
had visited the Pope at Bologna. His arrival gave a new turn to affairs.
Cesarini was opposed, on grounds of practical wisdom, to the proceedings of the
Council rather than decidedly in favour of the Pope; the Archbishop of Taranto
entered the lists as a violent partisan, as energetic and as unscrupulous as
was the Cardinal d'Allemand. He set to work to organize the Papal party and to
devise a policy of resistance. Opportunity soon befriended him. As the term
allowed to Avignon to pay its money drew near its close there was no news of
any payment. Parties in favour of the Pope and the Council were formed amongst
the burghers, and the disunion awakened the fears of the cautious merchants,
who doubted whether the Council's presence within their walls would prove a
profitable investment; they proposed to defer the full payment of the money
till the actual arrival of the Greeks. On this the Papal party insisted that
the agreement with Avignon was forfeited, and on April 12, the day on which the
term expired, Cesarini exhorted the Council to proceed to the choice of another
place. In his speech he used the words “the authority of the Apostolic See”;
there was at once a shout of indignation, as it was thought that he hinted at
the dissolution of the Council. The discussion was warm, and the sitting
broke up in confusion.
The position assumed by the Archbishop of Taranto was
that the decree of February 23 was rigidly binding; the contingency
contemplated in it had actually occurred, and the Council was bound to make
a new election. Nay, if some members of the Council refused to do so, he
argued, from the analogy of a capitular election, that the power of the Council
devolved on those who were ready to act—a numerical minority, if acting
according to the law, could override a majority which acted illegally. The
Papal party numbered about seventy votes, their opponents about two hundred;
but the Archbishop of Taranto’s policy was to create a schism in the Council
and destroy the power of the majority by the prestige of the ‘saner part’.
Accordingly on April 17, when the deputations voted on the question of adhering
to Avignon or choosing another place, the presidents in three of the
deputations, being on the Papal side, refused the votes in favour of Avignon as
technically incorrect, and returned the result of the voting as in favour of a
new election. When the majority protested with shouts and execrations, the
minority withdrew and allowed them to declare their vote in favour of Avignon.
There was now a hopeless deadlock; the two parties sat separately, and the
efforts of the German ambassadors and of the citizens of Basel were
alike unavailing to restore concord
When agreement proved to be impossible, both sides
prepared to fight out their contention to the end. On April 26 the
majority published its decree abiding by Avignon; the minority published its
choice of Florence or Udine, and asserted that henceforth the power of the
Council, as regarded this question, was vested in those who were willing to
keep their promise. In the wild excitement that prevailed suspicions were rife
and violence was easily provoked. On the following Sunday, when the Cardinal of
Arles proceeded to the Minster to celebrate mass, he found the altar already
occupied by the Archbishop of Taranto, who suspected that the opportunity might
be used of publishing the decree of the majority in the name of the Council,
and who had resolved in that case to be beforehand. Loud cries and altercations
were heard on all sides; only the crowded state of the cathedral, which
prevented men from raising their arms, saved the scandal of open violence. The
civic guards had to keep the peace between the combatants. Evening brought
reflection, and both parties dreaded a new schism, and were appalled at the
result which seemed likely to follow from a Council assembled to promote the
peace of Christendom. Congregations were suspended, and for six days the best
men of both parties conferred together to see if an agreement were possible;
but all was in vain, because men were swayed by personal passion and motives of
self-interest, and the violence of party-spirit entirely obscured the actual
subject under discussion. Every one acted regretfully and remorsefully, but
with the feeling that he had now gone too far to go back. The die had already
been cast; the defeat of the Council involved the ruin of every one who had
till now upheld it; to retreat a hair's breadth meant failure. Conferences
brought to light no common grounds; matters must take their course, and the two
divisions of the Council must find by experience which was the stronger.
On May 7, a day which many wished never to dawn, the
rival parties strove in a solemn session to decree, in the name of the Council,
their contradictory resolutions. In the early morning the Cardinal of Arles,
clad in full pontificals, took possession of the altar, and the cathedral
was filled with armed men. The legates arrived later, and even at the last
moment both sides spoke of concord. It was proposed that, in case the Greeks
would not come to Basel, the Council be held at Bologna, and the fortresses be
put in the hands of two representatives of each side. Three times the Cardinals
of Arles and of S. Peter's stood at the altar on the point of making peace; but
they could not agree on the choice of the two who were to hold the fortresses.
At twelve o'clock there were cries that it was useless to waste more time. Mass
was said, and the Bishop of Albienra mounted the pulpit to read the decree of
the majority. The hymn Veni Creator, which was the formal opening
of the session, had begun; but it was silenced that again there might be
negotiations for peace. Ali was in vain. The session opened, and the Bishop of
Albienza began to read the decree. On the part of the minority the Bishop of
Porto seized a secretary's table and began to read their decree, surrounded by
a serried band of stalwart youths. One bishop shouted against the other, and the
Cardinal of Arles stormed vainly, calling for order. The decree of the minority
was shorter, and took less time in reading; as soon as it was finished the
Papal party commenced the Te Deum. When their decree was finished,
the opposite party sang the Te Deum. It was a scene of wild
confusion in which violent partisans might triumph, but which filled with
dismay and terror all who had any care for the future of the Church. Both
parties felt the gravity of the crisis: both felt powerless to avert it. With
faces pale from excitement, they saw a new schism declared in the Church.
Next day there was a contention about the seal of the
Council, which Cesarini was found to have in his possession, and at first
declined to give up. But the citizens of Basel insisted that it was their duty
to see that the seal was kept in the proper place. On May 14 a compromise was
made. The seal was put in custody of a commission of three, on condition that
both decrees be sealed in secret; the Bull of the conciliar party was to be sent
to Avignon, but not to be delivered till the money was paid by the citizens; if
this was not done within thirty days the Bull was to be brought back; meanwhile
the Bull of the Papal party was to remain in secret custody. Again there was
peace for a while, which was broken on June 16 by the discovery that the box
containing the conciliar seal had been tampered with, and the seal used by some
unauthorized person. The discovery was kept secret, and the roads were watched
to intercept any messengers to Italy. A man was taken bearing letters from the
Archbishop of Taranto, which were produced before a general congregation. There
was an outcry on both sides, one protesting against the seizure of the letters,
the other against the false use of the Council’s seal. Twelve judges were
appointed to examine into the matter. The letters, which were partly in cipher,
were read, and the case against the Archbishop of Taranto was made good. He was
put under arrest, and when the matter was laid before the Council on June 21
there was an unseemly brawl, which ended in the use of violent means to prevent
an appeal to the Pope being lodged by the Archbishop’s proctor. On July 19
the Archbishop, surrounded by an armed troop, made his escape from Basel and
fled to the Pope.
The majority in the Council of Basel might pass what
decrees they would, but they had reckoned too much on their power over the
Greeks. The Papal legates won over the Greek ambassadors, and sent them to
Eugenius IV at Bologna. The Pope at once ratified the decree of the minority,
fixed Florence or Udine as the seat of a future Council, and on May 30 issued a
Bull to this effect. He wrote to all the princes of Christendom announcing his
action. But Sigismund raised a protest against a Council being held in Italy,
and the Duke of Milan strongly opposed the choice of Florence. Apparently
wishing to avoid discussion for the present, Eugenius IV prevailed on the
Greeks to defer till their arrival on the Italian coast the exact choice of the
place. The Greek ambassador, John Dissipatus, solemnly declared in the
Emperor's name, that he recognized as the Council of Basel, to which he had
formed obligations, only the party of the legates, and that he accepted the
decree of the minority as being the true decree of the Council. Eugenius IV
hired at his own expense four Venetian galleys to convey the Greeks to Italy.
Preparations were made with all possible speed, and on September 3 the Bishops
of Digne and Porto, representing the minority of the Council, and Garatoni, now
Bishop of Coron, on the part of the Pope, arrived in Constantinople. Claiming
to speak in the name of the Pope and of the Council, they at once began to make
preparations for the journey of the Greeks to Italy.
The assembly at Basel could not make its arrangements
with Avignon quickly enough to compete on equal terms with the Pope. It had to
face the usual disadvantages of a democracy when contending against a
centralized power. Its hope of success with the Greeks lay in persuading them
that the Council, and not the Pope, represented the Western Church, and was
strong in the support of the princes of Western Europe. It determined again to
proceed to the personal humiliation of Eugenius IV and so by assailing
his power to render useless his dealings with the Greeks. On July 31 the
Council issued a monition to Eugenius IV, setting forth that he did not loyally
accept its decrees, that he endeavored to set at nought its labours for the
reformation of the Church, that he wasted the patrimony of the Holy See, and
would not work with the Council in the matter of union with the Greeks; it
summoned him to appear at Basel within sixty days, personally or by proctor, to
answer to these charges. This admonition was the first overt act towards a
fresh schism. Sigismund and the German ambassadors strongly opposed it on that
ground, and besought the Council to recall it. It was clear that the Council
would meet with little support if it proceeded to extremities against the Pope.
But in its existing temper it listened to the ambassadors of the King of Aragon
and the Duke of Milan, the political adversaries of Eugenius IV, and paid
little heed to moderate counsels; On September 26 it annulled the nomination to
the cardinalate by Eugenius of the Patriarch of Alexandria, as being opposed to
the decree that during the Council no Cardinal should be nominated elsewhere
than at Basel. It also annulled the decree of the minority on May 7, by
whatever authority it might be upheld, and took under its own protection the
Papal city of Avignon.
In vain the Council tried to win over Sigismund to its
side. Sigismund had gained by the submission of Bohemia all that he was likely
to get from the Council. In Italian politics he had allied himself with Venice
against his foe the Duke of Milan, and so was inclined to the Papal side. He
wrote angrily to the Council on September 17, bidding them hold their hand in
their process against the Pope. He reminded them that they had found the Church
united by his long labour, and were acting in a way to cause a new schism. They
had met to reform and pacify Christendom, and were on the way to do the very
reverse; while wishing to unite the Greeks, they were engaged in dividing the
Latins. If they did not cease from their seditious courses, he would be driven
to undertake the defense of the Pope. The Council was somewhat dismayed at this
letter; but the bolder spirits took advantage of current suspicions, and
declared it to be a forgery, written in Basel, by the same hands as had forged
the Council's Bulls. Passion outweighed prudence, and men felt that they had
gone too far to withdraw; on October the Council declared Eugenius IV guilty of
contumacy for not appearing to plead in answer to the charges brought against
him.
On his side also Eugenius IV was not idle. He accepted
the challenge of the Council, and on September 18 issued a Bull decreeing its
dissolution. In the Bull he set forth his desire to work with the
Council for union with the Greeks; in spite of all he could do they chose
Avignon, though such a choice was null and void as not being included in the
agreement previously made with the Greeks. Still, in spite of the default of
Avignon to fulfill the conditions it had promised, the Council persevered in
its choice. The legates, the great majority of prelates, royal ambassadors, and
theologians, who made up the saner part of the Council, protested against the
legality of this choice, and chose Florence or Udine, and at the request of the
Greeks he had accepted their choice. The turbulent spirits in the Council,
consisting of a few prelates who were animated partly by personal ambition and
partly were the political tools of the King of Aragon and the Duke of Milan,
gathered a crowd of the lower clergy, and under the specious name of
reformation resisted the Pope, in spite of the Emperor’s remonstrances. To
prevent scandals and to avoid further dissension, the Pope transferred the
Council from Basel to Ferrara, which he fixed as the seat of an Ecumenical
Council for the purpose of union with the Greeks. He allowed the fathers to
remain at Basel for thirty days to end their dealings with the Bohemians; but
if the Bohemians preferred to come to Ferrara, they should there have a
friendly reception and full hearing.
The Council on October 12 annulled the Bull of
Eugenius, on the ground of the superiority of a General Council over a Pope,
and prohibited all under pain of excommunication from attending the pretended
Council at Ferrara. It warned Eugenius IV that if he did not make amends within
four months he would be suspended from his office, and that the Council would
proceed to his deprivation.
Both Pope and Council had now done all they could to
assert their superiority over each other. The first question was which of the
two contending parties should gain the adhesion of the Greeks. The Papal envoys
had arrived first at Constantinople, and their offers were best adapted to the
convenience of the Greeks. When on October 4 the Avignonese galleys arrived off
Constantinople with the envoys of the Council, the captain of the Papal galleys
was with difficulty prevented from putting out to sea to oppose their landing.
The Greek Emperor was perplexed by two embassies, each
brandishing contradictory decrees, and each declaring that it alone represented
the Council.
Each party had come with excommunications ready
prepared to launch against the other. This scandalous exhibition of discord, in
the face of those whom both parties wished to unite to the Church, was only
prevented by the pacific counsels of John of Ragusa, who had been for three
years resident envoy of the Council in Constantinople, and had not been
swallowed up by the violent wave of party-feeling which had passed over Basel.
The Council's ambassadors proceeded at once to attack the claims of their opponents
to be considered as the Council. They succeeded in reducing to great perplexity
the luckless Emperor, who wanted union with the Latin Church as the price of
military help from Western Europe, and only wished to find out to whom or what
he was to be united. The Greeks were puzzled to decide whether the Pope would
succeed in dissolving the Council, or the Council in deposing the Pope: they
could not clearly see which side would have the political preponderance in the
West. The two parties plied the Emperor in turn with their pleadings for a
space of fifteen days. The Council had the advantage that the Greeks were
already committed to an agreement with them. But the Papal party had diplomats
who were adroit in clearing away difficulties. The Greeks ultimately decided to
go with them to Italy, and the Emperor exhorted the Council's envoys to peace
and concord, and invited them to accompany him to Venice. They refused with
cries of rage and loud protestations, and on November 2 departed for Basel.
Now that the breach between Pope and Council was
irreparable, and the Pope had won a diplomatic victory in his negotiations,
both parties looked to Sigismund, who, however, refused to identify himself
decidedly with either. He disapproved of the Pope's dissolution of the Council,
from which he still expected some measures of ecclesiastical reform; on the
other hand, he disapproved of the Council's proceedings against the Pope, which
threatened a renewal of the schism. Eugenius IV had showed his willingness to
conciliate Sigismund by allowing the Council in his Bull of dissolution to sit
for thirty days to conclude its business with Bohemia; or, if the Bohemians
wished, he was willing to receive their representatives at Ferrara. This was
important to Sigismund and to the Bohemians, as it showed that the Pope
accepted all that had been done in reference to the Bohemian question,
and was ready to adopt the Council’s policy in this matter.
Sigismund had indeed reason to be content with the
result which he had won. His restoration to Bohemia had been accomplished, and
he had organized a policy of reaction which seemed likely to be successful. On
August 23, 1436, his entry into Prague had been like a triumphal
procession. He lost no time in appointing new magistrates, all of them chosen
from the extremely moderate party. The legates of the Council were always by
his side to maintain the claims of the Church. Bishop Philibert of Coutances
began a series of aggressions on the episcopal authority in Bohemia. He
asserted his right to officiate in Rokycana’s church without asking his
permission; he held confirmations and consecrated altars and churches in virtue
of his superior office as legate of the Council. The Bohemians, on their part,
waited for the fulfillment of Sigismund's promises, and the knights refused to
surrender the lands of the Church until they were satisfied. Sigismund was
bound to write to the Council, urging the recognition of Rokycana as Archbishop
of Prague; but he told the legates that he trusted the Council would find some
good pretext for delay. “I have promised”, he said, “that till he dies I
will hold no other than Rokycana as archbishop; but I believe that some of the
Bohemians will kill him, and then I can have another archbishop”. It is clear
that Sigismund knew how to manage a reaction, knew the inevitable loss of
popularity which a party leader suffers if he makes concessions and does not
immediately gain success. Rokycana was looked upon as a traitor by the extreme
party, and as a dangerous man by the moderate party. We are not surprised to
find that in October rumours were rife of a conspiracy organized in
Rokycana’s house against the Emperor and the legates. Inquiries were made, and
without being directly accused Rokycana was driven to defend himself, and then
his defense was declared to be in itself suspicious.
Rokycana seems to have felt his position becoming
daily more insecure. On October 24 he paid his first visit to the legates
to try and find out their views about the confirmation of his title of archbishop.
The legates received him haughtily, and talked about the restoration of various
points of ritual whichthe Bohemians had cast aside. “You talk only about
trifles”, said Rokycana impatiently; “more serious matters need your
care”. “You say truly”, exclaimed John of Palomar, with
passion; “there are more serious matters: for you deceive the people, and
can no more give them absolution than this stick, for you have not the power of
the keys, seeing you have no apostolic mission”. This bold onslaught staggered
Rokycana, who repeated the words of Palomar in amazement, and said that the
people would be indignant at hearing them; he would consult his fellow-priests.
One of his followers warned the legates that they and the Emperor were becoming
unpopular through their refusal to confirm Rokycana’s election as archbishop.
Rokycana withdrew with a bitter feeling of helplessness.
The legates on November 8 pressed the Emperor to take
further measures for the Catholic restoration. They had now been
two months in Bohemia, they urged, and little had been done. The
Communion was given to children, the Epistle and Gospel were read in Bohemian
and not in Latin, the use of holy water and the kiss of peace was not restored,
and toleration was not given to those whocommunicated under one kind. All this
was contrary to the observance of the Compacts, and the kingdom of Bohemia was
still infected with the heresy of Wycliffe. Sigismund angrily answered, “I was
once a prisoner in Hungary, and save then I never was so wearied as I am now;
indeed, my present captivity seems likely to be longer”. He begged the legates
to be patient till the meeting of the Diet. He was engaged in treating with
Tabor and Koniggratz, which were still opposed to him and he needed time to
overcome their resistance. Tabor agreed to submit its differences to
arbitration; Koniggratz was reduced by arms.
On November 27 the legates and Rokycana came to a
conference on the disputed points in the Emperor’s presence. Rokycana
demanded the clear and undoubted Confirmation of the Compacts; the legates the
reestablishment of the Catholic ritual. There were many difficulties raised and
much discussion; but Rokycana found himself abandoned by the masters of the
University, and opposed by the city magistrates and the nobles. He gave way
unwillingly on all the points raised by the legates except the Communion of
children and the reading of the Epistle and Gospel in Bohemian. On December 23
the Catholic ritual was restored in all the churches in Prague; the use of holy
water and the kiss of peace was resumed, and images which had been cast down
were again set up in their former places. Still, Bishop Philibert abode in
Prague, and exercised the office of Bishop. On February II, 1437, the Empress
Barbara was crowned Queen of Bohemia by Philibert, and Rokycana was not even
bidden to the ceremony.
On February 13 the legates at last received from the
Council the Bull of ratification of the Compacts of Iglau. Together with it
came an admonition to the Emperor not to tolerate the Communion of children. He
was urged also to restore the Catholic ritual throughout Bohemia, and to hand
over to the Council Peter Payne, who maintained the Wycliffite doctrine that
the substance of bread remained in the Eucharist. When the ratification was shown
to Rokycana, he demanded that there should also be issued a letter to the
princes of Christendom freeing Bohemia from all charge of heresy. He brought
forward also the old complaint that many priests refused to give the sacrament
under both kinds; he demanded that the legates should order them to do so,
should enjoin the bishops to see that the clergy obeyed their command, and
should request the Bishop of Olmutz himself to administer under both kinds. The
legates answered that the letter clearing the Bohemians had already been issued
at Iglau; for the future the Bohemians, by observing the Compacts, would purge
themselves in the eyes of all men better than any letter could do it for them.
To the other part of his request they answered that they would admonish any
priest who was proved to have refused the Communion under both kinds to any one
who desired it; they could not ask the Bishop of Olmutz to administer the
Communion himself, but only to appoint priests who were ready to do so. This
was the utmost that Rokycana could procure, in spite of repeated renewal of his
complaints.
The reaction went on with increasing strength. The
rest of Bohemia followed the example of Prague, and restored the Catholic
ritual. Sigismund set up again in the Cathedral of Prague the old
capitular foundation with all its splendor. The monks began to return to
Prague; relics of the saints were again exposed for popular adoration. In this
state of affairs representatives of Bohemia were summoned to Basel to discuss
further the question of the necessity or expediency of receiving the Communion
under both kinds. Sigismund, wishing to rid himself of Rokycana, urged him to
go. Rokycana steadily refused, knowing that at Basel he would only meet with
coldness, and that during his absence from Prague the triumph of the
reaction would be assured. On April 7, Procopius of Pilsen, in the Emperor’s
presence, bade Rokycana remember that he had been the leader in former
negotiations with the Council. “You are experienced in the matter”, he said; “you
have no right to refuse”.“Procopius”, said Rokycana, forgetting where he
was, “remember how our party fared at Constance; we might fare in like
manner, for I know that I am accused and hated at Basel”. “Think you”,
said Sigismund angrily, “that for you or for this city I would do anything
against mine honour?”. It was so long since Sigismund had broken his plighted
word to Hus that he had forgotten that it was even possible for others to
remember it.
Though Rokycana stayed in Prague, he was systematically set
aside in ecclesiastical matters. On April 12 Bishop Philibert appointed rural
deans throughout Bohemia, and charged them how to carry out their duties;
Rokycana was not even consulted. The church in which Rokycana preached was
given to the Rector of the University, who was inducted by the legate. Peter
Payne was banished by Sigismund from Bohemia as a heretic, and an opportunity
against Rokycana was eagerly looked for. This was given by a sermon preached on
May 5, about the Communion of children, in which he said that to give up this
practice would be a confession of previous error and of present instability of
purpose. “Too many now condemn what once they praised. But you, poor children,
lament. What have you done amiss that you should be deprived of the Communion?
Who will answer for you? Who will defend you? Now no one heeds”. Mothers lifted
their voices, and wept over the wrongs of their children, and that was judged
sufficient to establish against Rokycana a charge of inciting the people to sedition.
The Diet demanded that some steps should be taken to administer the
archbishopric of Prague; and Sigismund’s influence with the moderate party was
strong enough to obtain on June 11 the election ofChristiann of Prachatic
to the office of Vicar of the Archbishopric. Rokycana on being asked to
surrender the seal and submit to Christiann as his spiritual superior, judged
it wise to flee from Pragueon June 16.
The exile of Rokycana was the triumph of the moderate
party, the Utraquists pure and simple, who wished for entire union with the
Church, but who were still staunch in upholding the principles of a reformed
Church for Bohemia. Envoys were sent off to Basel to end the work of
reconciliation and settle the points which still were disputed. On August 18
the envoys, chief amongst whom were the priests John Pribram and Procopius of
Pilsen, entered Basel with great magnificence. Pribram in his first speech to
the Council demanded that the Communion under both kinds should be fully
granted, not only in Bohemia and Moravia, but universally, seeing that it was
the truth of God's law. Pribram and John of Palomar argued learnedly for many
days on the subject; but Pribram felt that he met with little attention from
the Council. One day he angrily met the suspicious coolness which surrounded
him by declaring that the Bohemians had never been heretical, but had always
remained in the unity of the faith; if any one said otherwise, they were ready
to answer with their steel as they had done in past. When Pribram had ended his
disputation, Procopius of Pilsen advocated the Communion of children with no
better success.
At last, on October 20, the Bohemians submitted nine
demands to the Council, which deserve mention as Demand, showing the ultimate
point arrived at by these long negotiations;
1) That the
Communion under both kinds be granted to Bohemia and Moravia;
2) that the Council declare this concession to be more
than a mere permission given for the purpose of avoiding further mischief;
3) that the Church of Prague be provided with an
archbishop and two suffragans, who should be approved by the realm;
4) that the Council issue letters clearing the good
name of Bohemia;
5) that in deciding whether the Communion under both
kinds be of necessary precept or not, the Council adhere to the authorities
mentioned in the Compact of Eger, the law of God, the practice of Christ and
the Apostles, general councils and doctors founded on the law of God;
6) that the Communion of children be allowed;
7) that at least the Epistle, Gospel, and Creed in the
mass service be said in the vulgar tongue;
8) that the University of Prague be reformed and
have some prebends and benefices attached to it;
9) that the Council proceed to the effectual
reformation of the Church in head and members.
Pribram besought that these be granted, especially the
Gospel truth concerning the Sacrament. “The kingdom of Bohemia is ready”, he
added, “as experience has shown, to defend and assert this even by
thousands of deaths”. Great was the indignation of the Bohemians when, on
November 6, Cesarini exhorted them to conform to the ritual of the universal
Church as regarded the Communion of the laity under one kind only; still, he
added, the Council was willing to stand by the Compacts.
Cesarini had gone too far in thus openly showing the
policy of the Council to reduce the Bohemians to accept again the Catholic
ritual. It required some management on the part of other members of the Council
to allay their indignation. On November 24 the Council gave a formal answer to
the Bohemian requests. As regarded the necessity of the Communion under both
kinds the point had now been argued fully; it only remained for them to join with
the Council and accept its declaration on the subject as inspired by the Holy
Ghost. Their other points had either been already settled by the Compacts or
were favours which might afterwards be discussed by the Council. This was of
course equivalent to a refusal to grant anything beyond the bare letter of the
Compacts. The Bohemian moderates saw themselves entirely deceived in their
hopes of obtaining universal tolerance for their beliefs. The Council would
grant nothing more than a special favour to Bohemia and Moravia to continue to
use the ritual which they had adopted, until such time as it could safely be
prohibited. In vain the Bohemians asked that at least they should not be sent
away entirely empty-handed, lest it be a cause of fresh disturbances. They
could get no better answer, and left Basel on November 29. In spite of
Cesarini’s remonstrance against the imprudence of such a step, the Council on
December 23 issued a decree that the Communion under both kinds was not a
precept of Christ, but the Church could order the method of its reception as
reverence and the salvation of the faithful seemed to require. The custom of
communicating under one kind only has been reasonably introduced by the Church
and was to be regarded as the law, nor might it be changed without the Church's
authority.
In Bohemia the disappointment of the expectations
which the great mass of the people still retained caused growing irritation,
and seemed likely to lead to afresh outbreak. Moreover, Sigismund's declining
health gave an occasion to the ambitious schemes of those of his own household.
Sigismund had no son, but his only daughter was married to Albert of Austria;
and the fondest wish of Sigismund's declining years was that Albert should
succeed to all his dignities and possessions. But the Empress Barbara
had already tasted the sweets of power and was unwilling to retire into
obscurity. She and her relatives, the Counts of Cilly, raised up a party among
the Bohemian barons with the object of elevating Ladislas of Poland to the
thrones of Bohemia and Hungary, and marrying him, though still a youth, to
Barbara, in her fifty-fourth year. Sigismund discovered this plot and felt the
danger of his position. He was seized with erysipelas, and had to submit to the
amputation of his big toe. His one desire was toquit Bohemia and secure
Albert’s succession in Hungary. Concealing his knowledge of what was passing
around him, he left Prag on November, borne in an open litter and dressed in
the imperial robes. He was accompanied by the Empress and the Count of Cilly,
and on November 21 reached Znaym, where Albert and his wife Elizabeth awaited
him. There he ordered Barbara to be imprisoned, but the Count of Cilly had
timely warning and escaped. At Znaym Sigismund summoned to his presence several
of the chief barons of Bohemia and Hungary, and urged on them the advantages to
be gained by uniting both lands under one rule; he warmly recommended to their
support the claims of Albert. This was his last effort. Feeling his malady grow
worse, he was true to the last to that love of dramatic effect which was so
strong a feature of his character. He wished to die like an emperor. Attired in
the imperial robes, with his crown on his head, he heard mass on the morning of
December 9. When mass was over he ordered grave clothes to be put on over the
imperial vesture, and sitting on his throne awaited death, which overtook him
in the evening. He was left seated for three days according to his
command, “that men might see that the lord of all the world was dead and gone”.
Then his corpse was carried to Grosswardein and buried in the resting-place of
the Hungarian kings.
The facile pen of Eneas Sylvius gives us the following
vigorous description of Sigismund: “He was tall, with bright eyes, broad
forehead, pleasantly rosy cheeks, and a long thick beard. He had a large mind
and formed many plans, but was changeable. He was witty in conversation, given
to wine and women, and thousands of love intrigues are laid to his charge. He
was prone to anger, but ready to forgive. He could not keep his money, but
spent it lavishly. He made more promises than he kept, and often deceived”.
These words are a fair representation of the impression produced on his
contemporaries by this mighty lord of all the world. With all his faults, and
they were many, on the whole men loved and esteemed him.
No doubt vanity was the leading feature of Sigismund’s
character; but it was the dignified vanity of always seeming to act worthily of
his high position. He would have been ludicrous with his dramatic strut had not
his geniality and keenness of wit imposed on those who came in his way, and so
saved him from hopeless absurdity. It is easy to mock at Sigismund's
undertakings, at his pretensions as compared with the results which he achieved;
but it is impossible not to feel some sympathy even for the weaknesses of an
Emperor who strove to realize the waning idea of the empire, and whose labours
were honestly directed to the promotion of the peace and union of Christendom.
Sigismund possessed in perfection all the lesser arts of sovereignty; kindly,
affable, and ready in speech, he could hold his own amidst any surroundings.
His schemes, however chimerical they might seem, were founded on a large
sympathy with the desires and needs of Europe as a whole. He laboured for the
unity of Christendom, the restoration of European peace, and the reformation of
the Church. Even when he spoke of combining Europe in a crusade against the
Turks, his aim, however chimerical, was proved by the result to be right. But
Sigismund had not the patience nor the wisdom to begin his work from the
beginning. He had not the self-restraint to husband his resources; to undertake
first the small questions which concerned the kingdoms under his immediate
sway, to aim only at one object at a time, and secure each step before
advancing to the next. Relying on his position, he caught at every occasion of
displaying his own importance, and his vanity led him to trust that he would
succeed by means of empty display. Hence his plans hampered one another. He
destroyed his position at the Council of Constance by a change of political
attitude resulting from a futile attempt to bring about peace between England
and France. He induced Bohemia to think that its religious interests were safe
in his keeping, and then trusted to repress its religious movement by the help
of the Council of Constance. When he had driven Bohemia to revolt, he
oscillated between a policy of conciliation and one of repression till matters
had passed beyond his control. He lost his command of the Council of Basel
because he entered into relations with the Pope, who was bent upon its
overthrow. His schemes of ecclesiastical reform slipped from his grasp, and
after spending his early years in extinguishing one schism, he lived to see the
beginning of another. Few men with such wise plans and such good intentions
have so conspicuously failed.
The death of Sigismund removed the only man who might
averted an open outbreak between Eugenius IV and the Council of Basel. Both
sides now proceeded to extremities. On December 30 Eugenius IV published a Bull
declaring the Council to be transferred from Basel to Ferrara. At Basel
Cesarini made one last attempt to bring back peace to the distracted Church. On
December 20, in an eloquent speech breathing the true spirit of Christian
statesmanship, he pointed out the evils that would follow from a schism.
Farewell to all hopes of a real union with the Greeks, of real missionary
enterprise against the Mohammedans, who were the serious danger to Christendom.
He besought the Council, ere it was too late, to recall its admonition to the
Pope, provided he would recall his translation of the Council: then let them
send envoys to meet the Greeks on their arrival in Italy, and propose to them
to come to Basel, Avignon, or Savoy—failing that, let them frankly join with
the Pope and the Greeks in the choice of a place which would suit all parties.
He offered himself as ready to do his utmost to mediate for such a result. But
Cesarini spoke to deaf ears. The control of the Council had passed entirely
into the hands of Cardinal d'Allemand, who was committed to a policy of war to
the bitter end. A ponderous reply to Cesarini was prepared by the Archbishop of
Palermo, a mass of juristic subtleties which dealt with everything except the
great point at issue.
Cesarini saw the entire disappointment of the hopes
which six years before had been so strong in his breast at the opening of the
Council. He had longed for peace and reform; he saw, instead, discord and
self-seeking. The Council, which ought to have promoted the welfare of
Christendom, had become an engine of political attack upon the Papacy. The
noble, generous, and large-minded aims of Cesarini had long been forgotten at
Basel. The reformation which he projected had passed into revolution, which he
could no longer control nor moderate. He shared the fate of many other
reformers at many times of the world’s history. The movement which he had
awakened passed into violent hands, and the end of his labours for peace and
order was anarchy and discord. With a sad heart he confessed his failure, and
on January 9, 1438, he left Basel amid demonstrations of respect from his
opponents. At the request of the Pope and all the Cardinals he went to Florence,
where he was received with honour and lived for a time in quietness and
study.
At Basel Cardinal d'Allemand was appointed
president in Cesarini’s stead. The Council on January 24 took the next step in
its process against Eugenius IV. It decreed that, as he had not appeared to
plead within the appointed time, he was thenceforth suspended from his office;
meanwhile the administration of the Papacy belonged to the Council, and all
acts done by Eugenius were null and void. Sixteen bishops were present at this session,
of whom nine were Savoyards, six Aragonese, and one Frenchman. Of the eighteen
abbots who were there, eleven were Aragonese and six were Savoyards. The
Council was, in fact, supported only by the King of Aragon and the Dukes of
Milan and Savoy. The Duke of Savoy hoped to use it for his personal
aggrandizement. The King of Aragon and the Duke of Milan saw in it a means of
forcing Eugenius IV into subserviency to their political schemes in Italy.
Neither of them was prepared to support the deposition of the Pope, but they
wished the process against him to be a perpetual threat hanging over his head.
The rest of the European powers looked with disapproval, more or less strongly
expressed, on the proceedings of the Council. Henry VI of England wrote a letter
addressed to the Congregation (not the Council) of Basel, in which he reproved
them for presuming to judge the Pope, denounced them for bringing back the
times of Antichrist, and bade them desist from the process against Eugenius.
Charles VII of France wrote to the Council to stay its measures against the
Pope, and wrote to the Pope to withdraw his decrees against the Council; he
forbade his bishops to attend the Council of Ferrara, but allowed individuals
to act as they pleased at Basel. His purpose was to regulate ecclesiastical
matters in France at his own pleasure. In Germany, Sigismund’s policy of
mediation survived after his death; men wished to avoid a schism, but to obtain
through the Council some measures of reform. The Kings of Castile and Portugal
and the Duke of Burgundy all admonished the Council to withdraw from
their proceedings against Eugenius.
The quarrel of the Pope and the Council now ceased to
attract the attention of Europe; it had degenerated into a squabble in which
both parties were regarded with something approaching contempt. But this
condition of affairs was full of danger to the future of the organisation of
the Church.
CHAPTER VIII.
EUGENIUS IV IN FLORENCE AND THE UNION OF THE GREEK
1434—1439.
Since his flight from Rome in 1434, Eugenius IV has
merely appeared as offering such resistance as he could to the growing
pretensions of the Council. During the four years that had passed from
that time he had been quietly gaining strength and importance in Italy. True to
her old traditions, Florence graciously received the exiled Pope; and under the
shadow of her protection, Eugenius IV, like his predecessor Martin V, had been
able to recruit his shattered forces and again reestablish his political
position.
At first his evil genius seemed still to pursue
Eugenius IV, and he played a somewhat ignominious part in Florentine affairs.
The time when he arrived in Florence was a great crisis in Florentine history.
The prudent conduct of Giovanni de' Medici had preserved the internal peace of
Florence by carefully maintaining a balance between the aristocratic and
popular parties in the city. But between his son Cosimo and his political rival
Rinaldo degli Albizzi a bitter hostility gradually grew up which could only end
in the supremacy of the one or the other party. The first step was taken by
Rinaldo, who, in September, 1433, filled the city with his adherents; Cosimo
was taken unawares, was accused of treason, cast into prison, and only by a
skillful use of his money succeeded in escaping death. He went as an exile to
Venice; but his partisans were strong in Florence, the city was divided,
and a reaction in his favour set in. It was clear that the new magistrates who
came into office on September 1, 1434, would recall him from banishment, and
Rinaldo and his party were prepared to offer forcible resistance. On September
26 Florence was in a ferment, and Rinaldo degli Albizzi, with 800 armed men,
held the Palace of the Podesta and the streets which led to the Piazza. Eugenius
IV in this condition of affairs offered his services as mediator. He sent
Giovanni Vitelleschi, Bishop of Recanati, to Rinaldo, who, to the surprise of
every one, was persuaded to leave his position and confer with the Pope at S.
Maria Novella. It was one o'clock in the morning when he did so. What arguments
the Pope may have used we do not know; but at five o'clock Rinaldo dismissed
his armed men and remained peaceably with the Pope. Perhaps he was not sure of
the fidelity of his adherents, and trusted that, by a show of submission, he
might, with the Pope’s help, obtain better terms than the doubtful chances
of a conflict seemed to promise.
His enemies at once pursued the advantage thus offered
to them. The Signori sent some of their number to thank the Pope for his good
offices, and whatever may have been the first intention of Eugenius IV, he was
soon won over to abandon Rinaldo. On October 2 the party of the Medici filled
the Piazza and decreed the recall of Cosimo. Next day Rinaldo and his son were banished.
The Pope attempted to console Rinaldo, and protested the uprightness of his own
intentions and the pain which he felt at the failure of his mediation.
“Holy Father”, answered Rinaldo, “I do not wonder at
my ruin; I blame myself for believing that you, who have been driven out of
your own country, could keep me in mine. He who trusts a priest's word is like
a blind man without a guide”.
Sadly Rinaldo
left Florence for ever, and on October 6, Cosimo de' Medici returned in triumph
amid shouts that hailed him father of his country. From that day forward for
three hundred years the fortunes of Florence were identified with those of
the house of Medici.
In his abode at Florence things gradually began to
take a better turn for Eugenius IV. The rebellious Romans, who had proudly sent
their envoys to Basel announcing that they had recovered their liberties and
that the days of Brutus had returned, began to find themselves in straits. The
Papal troops still held the castle of S. Angelo and bombarded the town; their
commander also by a stratagem took prisoners several of the Roman leaders. The
people soon turned to thoughts of peace and submission, and on October 28
Giovanni Vitelleschi, at the head of the Pope's condottieri, took possession of
the city in the Pope’s name, and put to death the chief leaders of the
rebellion. Moreover, Venice and the Pope renewed their league against the Duke
of Milan, appointed Francesco Sforza as their general, and sent him against the
Duke's condottiere general, Fortebracchio, who had occupied the neighborhood of
Rome. Fortebracchio was routed and slain, whereon the Duke of Milan found it
advisable to come to terms. On August 10, 1435, peace was made, leaving
Eugenius IV master of the Patrimony of S. Peter and the Romagna, while
Francesco Sforza obtained the lordship of the March of Ancona. The Duke of
Milan also withdrew his aid from the rebellious Bologna, which on September 27
submitted to the Pope. Even in Florence Eugenius IV was not safe from the
machinations of the Duke of Milan. A Roman adventurer, named Riccio, obtained
the connivance of the Milanese ambassador at Florence, the Bishop of Novara, to
a plot for seizing the person of Eugenius when he retired into the country
before the summer heat. The city magistrates discovered the plot, and Riccio
was tortured and put to death. The Bishop of Novara abjectly prayed for pardon
from Eugenius; and the Pope granted his life to the entreaty of Cardinal
Albergata, who was just setting out as Papal legate to the Congress of Arras.
Albergata took the Bishop of Novara to Basel, where he remained as one of the
bitterest opponents of Eugenius IV.
In another quarter the affairs of the kingdom of
Naples afforded a scope for the activity of Eugenius IV. The feeble Queen
Giovanna II continued to the end of her reign to be the puppet of those around
her. Even her chief favorite, Caraccioli, could not retain his hold upon her
changeful mind. He saw his influence fail before the intrigues of the Queen's
cousin, the Duchess of Suessa, who at length succeeded in obtaining the Queen's
permission to proceed against her over-weening favourite. On August 17, 1432,
Caraccioli celebrated magnificently his son's marriage; in the night a message
was brought to him that the Queen was dying, and wished to see him. Hurriedly
he rose, and opened his door to a band of conspirators, who rushed upon him and
slew him on his bed. Giovanna wept over his death, and pardoned those who
wrought it. His mighty tomb in the Church of San Giovanni Carbonara is worthy of
a more heroic character. Three knightly figures of Strength, Skill, and Justice
bear the sarcophagus on which stands Caraccioli as a warrior. The tomb is in
the vast style of the old Neapolitan work; but in its execution we see the
delicacy of Tuscan feeling and the hand of Florentine artists. The way is
already prepared for the later flow of the Renaissance motives into the rude
regions of Naples.
On Caraccioli’s death Louis of Anjou prepared to
return to Naples; but the imperious Duchess of Suessa preferred to exercise
undivided sway over her feeble mistress. The death of Louis, in November, 1434,
awakened the activity of Alfonso of Aragon; but Giovanna II would not recognize
him as her heir, and made a will in favour of René, Count of Provence, the
younger brother of Louis of Anjou. On February 2, 1435, Giovanna II died, at
the age of 65, worn out before her time; one of the worst and most incapable of
rulers that ever disgraced a throne. On her death the inevitable strife of the
parties of Anjou and Aragon again broke out. René claimed the throne by
Giovanna’s will, Alfonso of Aragon put forward Giovanna’s previous adoption of
himself, and the claims of the house of Aragon. But Eugenius IV put forth also
the claims of the Papacy. The Angevin line had originally come to Sicily at the
Papal summons, and had received the kingdom as a papal fief. Eugenius IV
asserted that on the failure of the direct line in Giovanna II the kingdom of
Sicily devolved to the Pope. He appointed as his legate to administer the affairs
of the kingdom Giovanni Vitelleschi, who had been created Patriarch of
Alexandria. Little heed was paid to the Pope's claims. Alfonso’s fleet
vigorously besieged Gaeta, which was garrisoned by Genoese soldiers to protect
their trade during the time of warfare. Genoa, at that time under the signory
of the Duke of Milan, equipped a fleet to raise the siege of Gaeta, and on
August 5 a battle was fought off the isle of Ponza, in which the Genoese were
completely victorious. Alfonso and his two brothers, together with the chief
barons of Aragon and Sicily, were taken prisoners.
Italy was shaken to its very foundations by the news
of this victory, of which the Duke of Milan would reap the fruit. It seemed to
give him the means of making himself supreme in Italian politics. But the
jealous temper of Filippo Maria Visconti looked with distrust on this signal
victory which Genoa had won. His first proceeding was to humble the pride of
the city by depriving it of the glory of bringing home in triumph its illustrious
captives. He ordered Alfonso and the rest to be sent from Savona to Milan, and
on their arrival treated them with courtesy and respect. Alfonso’s adventurous
and varied life had given him large views of politics and great experience
of men. He recognized the gloomy and cautious spirit of Filippo Maria, who
loved to form plans in secret, who trusted no one, but used his agents as
checks one upon another. In the familiarity of friendly intercourse, Alfonso
put before the Duke political considerations founded upon a foresight which was
beyond the current conceptions of the day. “If René of Anjou”, he
argued, “were to become King of Naples, he would do all he could to open
communications with France, and for this purpose to establish the French power in
Milan. If I were to become King of Naples I should have no enemies to dread
save the French; and it would be my interest to live on good terms with Milan,
which could at any moment open the way to my foes. The title of king would be
mine, but the authority would be yours. With me at Naples you will remain a
free prince; otherwise you will be between two strong powers, an object of
suspicion and jealousy to both”.
The state system of Italy was already so highly
organized that arguments such as these weighed with the Duke of Milan, and he
determined to forego all thoughts of present glory for future safety. Instead
of treating Alfonso as a captive, he entered into an alliance with him, gave
him his liberty and ordered Genoa to restore his captured ships. Alfonso was
sufficiently keen-sighted to perceive, and Filippo Maria was sufficiently
prudent to recognize, the danger that would arise to Italian independence from
the centralization of the French monarchy and the power of the house of
Austria. They devised a scheme for neutralizing this danger. The idea of a
balance of power in Italy, founded on identity of interest between Milan and
Naples, which was to keep Italy in peace and exclude all interference from
beyond the Alps, began from this time forward to be a central point in Italian
politics.
The immediate result of this policy was that Genoa,
indignant at the slight thus cast upon her, revolted from Milan, and joined the
league of Florence, Venice, and the Pope. Eugenius IV, alarmed at the alliance
between Alfonso and the Duke of Milan, withdrew his own claims on Naples, and
espoused the cause of René, who was a prisoner of the Duke of Burgundy but was
represented in Naples by his wife, Elizabeth of Lorraine. Neither she nor
Alfonso had any resources at their command, and the war was carried on between
the rival factions in the realm. We have seen that Alfonso was anxious to
minimize the help which the Pope could give his rival, by supplying him with
sufficient occupation in the affairs proceeding at Basel.
When Eugenius IV had recruited his shattered fortunes
by an abode of nearly two years in Florence, he left it for his own city of
Bologna, on April 18, 1436. Before his departure he consecrated the stately
Duomo of Florence, which had just received its crowning ornament of
Brunelleschi’s mighty dome, and was again ready for divine service. The city
wished that the ceremonial should be befitting of its splendour. A scaffolding,
adorned with carpets, was erected from S. Maria Novella to the Duomo, on which
Eugenius IV walked in state, the gonfaloniere of the city bearing his train.
On April 22 Eugenius I entered Bologna with nine
Cardinals, and was soon followed by two others from Basel. The Papal government
of Bologna had not been such as to win the affections of the people. The
legate, the Bishop of Concordia, had proclaimed a general pacification, on the
strength of which Antonio de' Bentivogli, after fifteen years' exile, returned
to the city which he had once ruled. He had not been there three weeks when he
was seized as he left the chapel where the legate had been saying mass. He was
gagged, and immediately beheaded by order of the Pope’s Podesta, as was also
Tommaso de' Zambeccari. The only reason assigned for this treacherous act was
dread of the number of their followers. The cruelty and tyranny of the Podesta
made the Papal rule hateful in the city. Nor did Eugenius IV do anything to
mend this state of things. He was busied with his negotiations with the Council
and with the Greeks. The only attention which he paid to the citizens of
Bologna was to extort from them 30,000 ducats by holding out hopes of summoning
his Council thither. When the citizens found themselves disappointed they
looked with scarce concealed discontent on the Pope's departure for Ferrara on
January 23, 1438. Scarcely had he gone when Niccoli Piccinino, the Duke of
Milan's general, appeared before Bologna. On the night of May 20 the gates were
opened to him by the citizens. Faenza, Imola, and Forli joined in the revolt,
and the greater part of Romagna was again lost to the Pope.
This was, however, of small moment to Eugenius IV. His
attention was entirely fixed on the Council of Ferrara, through which he hoped
to win back all that of the he had lost. The union of the Greek Church was to
reinstate the Papacy in its position in the eyes of Europe; the Pope was again
to appear as the leader of Christendom in a great crusade for the protection of
Constantinople. It is a melancholy spectacle that is offered to our view. The
Eastern Empire, with its splendid traditions of past glories, has sunk to be a
cat’s-paw in the ecclesiastical squabbles of the West. The trembling Greeks are
ready to disavow their religious convictions to obtain help from their Western
brethren. The States of Europe are so rent by intestine struggles, or are so
bent upon purely selfish ends, that they are incapable of understanding the
menace to European civilization contained in the establishment of the Turks on
this side of the Bosphorus. The Greeks cannot appeal to any feeling of European
patriotism, or to any considerations of political wisdom. Only through the
semblance of an ecclesiastical reconciliation can they hope to awaken any
interest for their cause in Western Europe. At the last moment they see the
Western Church itself distracted by contending parties; they engage desperately
in a sacrifice of their convictions, which they half feel will avail them
nothing.
The causes of the separation between the Churches were
national rather than religious. The beliefs and rites of the two Churches did
not materially differ. But the political development of the East and West had
been different. In East, the Imperial autocracy had maintained and strengthened
its power over the Church; in the West, where the Teutons had weakened the
fabric of the Imperial system, the Pope, as supreme head of the Western Church,
had won an independent position for his authority. It is true that the Greek
view of Purgatory differed somewhat from that of the Latins, that they used
leavened and not unleavened bread for the Host, and that they did not adopt the
addition of the words “and from the Son” (Filioque) to the clause of the
Nicene Creed which defines the procession of the Holy Ghost. But no vital point
was concerned in any of these differences. The real disagreement was that the
Papacy strove to assert over the Eastern Church a supremacy which that Church
was unwilling to admit. The ill-feeling created by the claim of Pope Nicolas I
in 863, to interfere as supreme judge in the question of the election of the
Patriarch of Constantinople, simmered on till it produced a formal rupture in
1053, when Leo IX at Hildebrand's suggestion excommunicated the Greek
Patriarch. Round its ecclesiastical establishment the narrow spirit of Greek
nationality centred, and the Greeks were ready in every sphere to assert their
superiority to the barbarous Latins. In the time of their distress their pride
was humbled if their minds were not convinced. They were ready to sacrifice the
traditions of the past, which they still held firmly in their hearts, to the
pressing need for present aid. It is sad to see the feeble representatives
of an ancient civilization lowering themselves before the Papacy in its
abasement.
On November 24, 1437, the Greek Emperor, John
Palaeologus, his brother, the Patriarch, and twenty-two bishops, went on board
the Papal galleys and set sail for Italy. Though the Greeks journeyed at
the Pope’s expense, yet the Emperor, in his anxiety to display fitting
magnificence, converted into money the treasures of the Church. An earthquake,
which occurred at the time of his departure, was looked upon as an evil omen by
the people who with heavy hearts saw the ships quit the harbour. After many
perils and discomforts on the way, the Greeks reached Venice on February 1438,
and were magnificently received by the Doge, who went out to meet them in
the Bucentaur, which was decked with red carpets and awnings
wrought with gold embroidery, while gold lions were standing on the prow. The
rowers were clad in uniforms richly wrought with gold, and on their caps was
embroidered the image of S. Mark. With the Doge came the Senate in twelve
other splendid ships, and there was such a multitude of boats that the sea
could scarce be seen. Amid the clang of trumpets the Emperor was escorted to
the palace of the Marquis of Ferrara, near the Rialto, where he abode. The
amazement of the Greeks at the splendour of Venice is the most striking
testimony to the decay of their own noble city. “Venice splendid and
great”, says Phranza, “truly wonderful, yea most wonderful, rich,
variegated and golden, trimly built and adorned, worthy of a thousand praises,
wise, yea most wise, so that one would not be wrong in calling it the
second land of promise”.
For twenty days the Greeks remained in Venice. The
Doge offered them hospitality as long as they chose, and advised them to see
whether they could get better terms from the Pope or from the Council. There
was not much difference of opinion on this point. Three only of the Greek
prelates thought itdesirable to wait; the Emperor’s doubts, if he had any, were
decided by the arrival of Cardinal Cesarini, who was the representative of
that saner part of the Council to which the Greeks professed to adhere.
The stay of the Greeks in Venice was not without melancholy reflections.
Wherever they turned they were reminded that the glory of Venice was in a
measure due to the spoils of Constantinople. In the rich jewels which bedecked
the colossal statue on the high altar of S. Mark’s they saw the plunder of S.
Sophia’s.
On February 28 the Emperor set sail for Ferrara. The
Patriarch was sorely displeased at being left behind to follow in a few
days. The Emperor disembarked at Francolino, where he was received by the
Marquis of Ferrara and Cardinal Albergata as the Pope’s legate. He entered
the city on March 4, riding on a magnificent black charger beneath a canopy
held by his attendants. He advanced into the courtyard of the Papal palace,
where Eugenius IV was seated with all his clergy. The Pope rose to greet the
Emperor, who dismounted and advanced; Eugenius prevented him from kneeling and
embraced him. Then he gave him his hand, which the Emperor kissed and took his
seat on the Pope's left; they continued some time in friendly conference. The
Patriarch, who was particular to keep close to his luggage, followed grumbling,
and reached Ferrara on March 7. His good humour was not increased by a message
from the Emperor, telling him that the Pope expected him to kiss his foot on
his reception. This the Patriarch stoutly refused to do. “I determined”,
he said, “if the Pope were older than me, to treat him as a father; if of
the same age, as a brother; if younger, as a son”. He added that he had
hoped by the Pope’s aid to free his Church from the tyranny of the Emperor, and
could not subject it to the Pope. The negotiations respecting this knotty
question occupied the entire day. At last the Pope, for the sake of peace,
consented to waive his rights, provided the reception was in private, and only
six of the Greek prelates were admitted at one time. On the evening of March 8,
the Patriarch Joseph, an old man of venerable aspect, with white hair and a
long white beard, of dignified bearing, and considerable experience of affairs,
greeted the Pope in his palace. The Pope rose and the Patriarch kissed his
cheek, the inferior prelates his right hand. When the ceremony was over they
were conducted to their lodgings.
The Council had been opened at Ferrara on January 5 by
the Cardinal Albergata as Papal legate. Its first decree on January 10 was to
confirm the translation of the Council from Basel to Ferrara, and to annul all
that had been done at Basel since the Pope's Bull of translation. On January
27, the Pope entered Ferrara escorted by the Marquis Nicolas III of Este. He took
up his abode in the palace of the Marquis; and as he suffered grievously from
gout, the citizens of Ferrara consulted his infirmity by erecting a wooden
scaffold, communicating between the palace and the cathedral, so as to spare
him the inconvenience of mounting steps. On February 8 he presided over a
congregation, and commended to its deliberation the work of union with the
Greeks, and the repression of the excesses of those still remaining at Basel.
The result of this deliberation was the issue of a Bull on February 15
annulling the proceedings of the Council of Basel, and declaring excommunicate
all who did not quit it within thirty days. Eugenius IV had thus done all he
could to affirm his dignity before the arrival of the Greeks.
In like manner the first point of importance with the
Greeks was to affirm their own dignity at Ferrara. The question that first
called for solution was the arrangement of seats in the Council. Cesarini
suggested that the Greeks should sit on one side of the cathedral, the Latins
on the other, and the Pope in the middle as a link between the two parties. The
Greeks bluntly answered that they needed no such link; but if a link were
thought necessary it should be strengthened by the addition of the Greek
Emperor and Patriarch to the Pope. Both sides fought to win prestige; but the
Greeks were not fighting on equal terms. They were the Pope’s
stipendiaries in Ferrara, and the arrangement for supplying them with the
stipulated allowances went on side by side with the negotiations about the
knotty question of seats. The Pope at first proposed to supply the Greeks with
food; this they resisted, and demanded an allowance in money. Ultimately
the Pope gave way; it was agreed that the Marquis of Ferrara should furnish
them with lodgings, and the Pope give the Emperor thirty florins a month, the
Patriarch twenty-five, the prelates four, and the other attendants three. The
Greeks accepted a compromise about seats. The Latins were to sit on one side,
the Greeks on the other. The Pope’s seat was highest, and was nearest the
altar; next him was a vacant seat for the Western Emperor, opposite to which
sat the Greek Emperor, and behind him the Patriarch. When the Patriarch wished
to adorn his seat with curtains like the Papal throne, he was not allowed to do
so. The Greeks murmured at this arrangement, but were obliged to submit. The
Emperor exclaimed that the Latins were not aiming at order, but were gratifying
their own pride.
Before appearing at the Council the Greek Emperor
Insisted that it should not be merely an assembly of the prelates but also of
the kings and princes of the West. The Pope was driven to admit that some time
was necessary before the princes could arrive. It was agreed that a delay of
four months should take place to allow them to be duly summoned. Meanwhile a
general session should be held to proclaim that the Council was to be held at
Ferrara, and nowhere else.
Some time was spent in settling these matters. At last
on April 9 a solemn session was held in the cathedral, “a wonderful and awful
sight”, says a Greek; “so that the Church looked like heaven”. The Pope
and Papal retinue chanted the psalm, “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel”.
The Patriarch was too ill to be present; but a declaration of his consent to the
Council was read in his absence. Then the decree convoking all to Ferrara
within four months was read in Latin and Greek, and received the formal
approval of both parties. After a few thanksgivings, the synod was dismissed.
The festivities of Easter occupied some time, and the
Greeks were annoyed that they could not get a church in Ferrara for the
celebration of their own services. The Pope referred them to the Bishop of
Ferrara, who answered that all his churches were so crowded that he could not
find one large enough for their purposes. One of the Greeks said that he could
not worship in the Latin churches, as they were full of saints whom he did not
recognize; even the Christ bore an inscription which he did not understand; he
could only make the sign of the cross and adore that. The tone of mind
exhibited in these remarks did not augur well for any real Agreement, nor did
the Emperor wish the discussions to go too far. His plan was to defer matters
as long as possible, to insist upon the Council being representative of the
powers of Europe, to obtain from them substantial help against the Turks, and
to go back to Constantinople having made as few concessions as were
possible.
The Latins, however, were anxious to make their
triumph complete. They urged that it was a useless waste of time to do nothing
while they waited for the appearance of the European princes. Cesarini
displayed his wonted tact in inviting the Greeks to dinner, and overcoming the
reserve which the Emperor wished them to maintain. He succeeded in inducing one
of the most stubborn of the Greek prelates, Mark of Ephesus, to publish his
views in writing, to the great wrath of the Emperor. The Papal officers were
remiss in the payment of allowances, and hinted that the Pope could not
continue to pay men who would do nothing. By such means the Greeks were at last
driven to agree to the appointment of ten commissioners on either side, who
should engage in preliminary discussions upon the points of variance. Chief
among the Greeks were Mark, Bishop of Ephesus, and Bessarion, Bishop of Nicaea;
the Emperor ordered that they only should conduct the discussions. On the side
of the Latins Cesarini took the leading part.
The conferences began on June 4. The first question
discussed was that of Purgatory, on which the real difference of opinion
was not important. The Latins held that sins, not repented of during life, are
purged away by purgatorial fire, which at the Judgment is succeeded by
everlasting fire for the reprobate. The Greeks admitted a Purgatory, but of pain
and grief, not of fire, which they reserved as the means only of eternal
punishment. Also the Greeks maintained that neither the punishment of the
wicked nor the joy of the blessed was complete, till the general resurrection,
seeing that before that time neither could receive their bodies. The Latins
admitted that the punishment of the wicked could not be perfect till they had
received their bodies, but held that the blessed, as souls, enjoy at present
perfect happiness in heaven, though on receiving their bodies their happiness
would become eternal. Even the most staunch upholder of the Greek doctrines,
Mark of Ephesus, was driven to admit that there was not much difference between
the Greek and the Latin opinions on this question. When the discussion was
ended, the Latins handed in their opinion in writing. The Greeks were timid in
committing themselves. Each wrote his opinion and submitted it to the Emperor,
who combined those of Bessarion and Mark, to the effect that the souls of the
happy departed, as souls, enjoy perfect felicity, but when in the resurrection
they receive their bodies they will be capable of more perfect happiness and
will shine like the sun. On July 17 this statement was submitted to the
Latins. The only result of these conferences was to bring into prominence the
differences existing amongst the Greeks themselves. The narrow and bigoted
spirit of old Byzantine conservatism, expressed by the rough outspoken Mark of
Ephesus, did not harmonize with the cosmopolitan feeling of the polished
Platonist Bessarion, who saw the decadence of the Greeks, and wished to bring
his own ability into a larger sphere of literary and theological activity. The
Latins learned that there were some amongst the Greeks who would bow, and some
who must be driven, to consent to union.
Then came a pause till the four months’ interval
had elapsed for the fuller assembling of the Council. None of the European
princes appeared, and the delay continued. Ferrara was attacked by the plague;
some of the Greeks grew terrified or weary, and fled home. The Emperor
requested the magistrates to keep guard over the gates, and forbade any of the
Greeks to leave the city without his permission. The Emperor meanwhile spent
his time in hunting in the woods round Ferrara, and paid no heed to the
requests of the Marquis that he would spare his preserves, which had been
stocked with great difficulty. The plague drove the Latins out of the city. Of
a hundred and fifty prelates who were present at the first session, only five
Cardinals and fifty bishops remained. The Greeks escaped the ravages of the
plague, except only the household of the Russian archbishop.
It was some time before the Pope could obtain the
Emperor’s consent to a second session of the Council. The Greeks were suspicious;
they were indignant at a rumour which had been spread that they were guilty of
fifty-four heresies; they were afraid that, if they allowed the Council to
proceed, they might be outvoted. Their fears on this last point were set at
rest by an agreement that each party should vote separately. After that they could
no longer resist the Pope’s entreaties that the business of the Council should
proceed.
On October 8 the second session was held in the Pope’s
chapel, as Eugenius was unable to move through attack of the gout. The Greeks
had previously decided among themselves the question to be discussed. The more
moderate party, headed by Bessarion, who was in favour of a real union if it
were possible, wished to proceed at once to the important point which divided
the two Churches, the double procession of the Holy Ghost. The Nicene
Creed, which had been framed to define the orthodox doctrine of the Trinity,
dealt chiefly with the relation between the Father and the Son, and
contenteditself with the statement that “the Holy Ghost proceeded from the
Father”. The continuance of controversy in the West led to the addition of the
words “and from the Son” (Filioque), an addition which the Greeks
never made. The Western Church argued that the procession of the Holy Ghost
from the Father alone derogated from the dignity of the Son, who was equal with
the Father in all points save only in His generation by the Father. The
explanatory addition gradually became incorporated in the Creed. The greater
metaphysical instinct of the Greeks led them to reject such an addition, which
seemed to them dangerous, as tending to give a double origin to the Holy Ghost,
and thereby to imperil the Unity in Trinity. There was no fundamental
difference of opinion between the Greek and Latin fathers at first; but the
genius of the Greek language admitted of finer distinctions than a Latin could
comprehend. The Greeks were ready to allow that the Holy Ghost proceeded from
the Father through the Son, not that He proceeded from the Father and the Son.
The difference was of little moment till the resentment of the Greek Patriarch
against the Papal claims to supremacy led in the ninth century to an open
rupture between the two Churches, and every shadow of difference was at once
brought into prominence. Tomes of learning had been amassed on either side in
support of their opinions on this point, and a molehill had been piled to the
height of a mountain. It was felt that this question presented the greatest
difficulty in settlement. Bessarion and his followers wished to discuss it at
once. Mark of Ephesus, and those who were opposed to the union, succeeded in
overruling them, and proposed the more dangerous preliminary question, “Is
it permissible to make any addition to a Creed?”. Six disputants were chosen on
either side: Bessarion, Mark, and Isidore of Russia were chief among the
Greeks, Cardinals Cesarini and Albergata, and Andrea, Bishop of Rhodes, among
the Latins.
The arguments were long and the speeches were many on
both sides. The Fathers of Ferrara found, like the Fathers of Basel when
dealing with the Bohemians, that a disputation led to little result. Speech was
directed against speech; orator refuted orator. But amid the flow of words the
central positions of the two parties remained the same. The Latins urged that
the Filioque was an explanation of the Nicene Creed in
accordance with the belief of most of the Latin and Greek Fathers, notably S.
Basil; the Greeks urged that it was not derived from the text of the Creed
itself, but was an unauthorized addition, which gave a careless explanation of
a doctrine needing careful definition. Through October and November the
discussion rolled on. The monotony was only broken by the arrival of
ambassadors from the Duke of Burgundy, who aroused the deepest indignation in
the Greek Emperor by paying reverence to the Pope and not to himself. When
they urged that they were commissioned only to the Pope and had letters to him
alone, the Emperor was still more enraged and threatened to leave the Council
where he was subject to such slights. He could only be appeased by the solemn
and public presentation of a letter forged by the ambassadors.
The discussions were leading to no result. As a way of
escaping from a mere strife of words, Cesarini besought that the real point of
issue, the truth of the double procession of the Holy Ghost, be taken into
consideration. If they were agreed that it was true, the addition of it to the
Creed was of small moment. The majority of the Greek prelates were loth to
enter upon a doctrinal discussion; but the rumours of a new Turkish attack on
Constantinople made the Emperor more desirous for succours. He assembled his
prelates and said that it was unworthy of them, after so many labours and so
much trouble, to refuse to come to the point; their refusal in the present
state of affairs would only give cause of triumph to the Latins. In vain the
Patriarch urged that it was unwise to quit the safe position of the
unlawfulness of an addition to the Creed. The Emperor succeeded in extorting
from the discordant prelates a reluctant consent to the discussion of the
doctrine.
The Pope meanwhile had been pressing on the Emperor
the necessity of transferring the Council from Ferrara to Florence. He pleaded
that at Ferrara he could fulfill his agreement with the Greeks. Niccolo Piccinino
was ravaging the neighborhood so that no revenues could reach the Papal
coffers; the plague had made Ferrara an unsafe place of residence; Florence had
promised a large loan to the Pope, if he would again take refuge within its
walls. Eugenius IV was anxious to remove the Greeks further from their own
land, to a place where they would be more entirely dependent on himself. The
Greeks murmured, but their necessities gave them little option; as the Pope's
stipendiaries they were bound to go where he could best find them rations. On
January 10, 1439, the last session was held at Ferrara and decreed the
transference of the Council to Florence on the ground of the pestilence.
On January 16 Eugenius IV left Ferrara for Florence;
his journey was more like a flight before the troops of Piccinino than a papal
progress. The sedentary Greeks were greatly wearied by the discomforts of a
long journey across the Apennines in winter. The aged Patriarch especially
suffered from the journey; but his vanity was gratified by the splendor of his
reception in Florence, where he was met by two Cardinals, and amidst a blare of
trumpets and the shouts of a vast multitude he was escorted to his lodgings.
Three days after, on February 16, arrived the Emperor; but a storm of rain
spoiled the magnificence of his reception, and scattered the crowd which came
to give him the welcome that the Florentines, better than, any others,
could give to a distinguished guest.
In Florence the Pope was determined to proceed more
speedily with business than had been done at Ferrara. The Greek Emperor had by
this time seen the actual position of affairs. He was obliged to submit to the
failure of the expectations with which he had come to Italy. He had hoped to
play off the Council of Basel against the Pope, and so secure good terms for
himself; he found Latins united and undisturbed by the proceedings of the
fathers still remaining at Basel. He hoped that the Western princes would have
assembled at the Council, and that he could have made the question of union
secondary to a project for a crusade against the Turk; he found a purely
ecclesiastical assembly which he could not divert from purely theological
considerations. As he could not with dignity go back to Constantinople
empty-handed, and as he sorely needed succors, he saw no other course open than
to accept such terms of union as could be obtained, and trust afterwards to the
generosity of Western Christendom. At Florence he used his influence to
expedite matters, and fell in with the Pope's suggestions for this purpose.
On February 26, a meeting took place at Florence in
the Pope’s palace, confined to forty members on each side. It was agreed to
hold public disputations three times a week for three hours at least, and also
to appoint committees on each side, who might confer privately about the union.
The public sessions, which began on March 2, were really a long theological
duel between John of Montenegro, a famous Dominican theologian, and Mark of
Ephesus. Day after day their strife went wearily on, diversified only by
disputes about the authenticity of manuscripts of S. Basil against Eunomius,
whose words Mark of Ephesus was convicted of quoting from a garbled manuscript.
The argument turned on points verbal rather than real; each side could support
its own opinion more easily than prove the error of its opponent. Even Mark of
Ephesus was wearied of talking, and in a long speech on March 17 fired his last
shot. John of Montenegro, on his part, made a statement which the partisans of
union among the Greeks seized as a possible basis for future negotiation. He
said explicitly that the Latins recognized the Father as the one cause of the
Son and of the Holy Ghost. This was the only theological point involved in the
two positions. The Emperor requested John to put his statement in writing, and
laid it before his assembled prelates. He spoke of all his labours to
bring about union, and he urged them to accept this basis. The Greeks in truth
were weary of the controversy; they longed to return home. The Patriarch grew
feebler day by day; the Emperor grew more determined to see some fruits of all
his trouble. A passage of a letter of S. Maximus, a Greek writer of the seventh
century, was discovered by the Greeks, which agreed with the language of John of
Montenegro. “If the Latins will accept this”, exclaimed the partisans of the
Union, “what hinders us from agreement?”. In an assembly of the Greek
prelates the Emperor’s will overbore all opposition except that of Mark and the
Bishop of Heraclea. The letter of Maximus was submitted to the Latins as the
basis for an agreement; meanwhile the public sessions were suspended.
John of Montenegro, however, was anxious to have his
reply to the last onslaught of Mark of Ephesus. Another session was held on
March 21 to gratify the vanity of the Latins; but the Emperor took the
precaution of ordering Mark to absent himself. When thus bereft of an adversary
and listened to in solemn silence, John of Montenegro talked himself out in two
days. An understanding had now been established between the Pope and the
Emperor; but the susceptibilities of the Greeks were still hard to manage.
Public sessions, which only awakened vanity, were stopped. Committees composed
of ardent partisans of the Union were nominated on both sides for the purpose
of minimizing the difficulties that still remained. Bessarion and Isidore of
Russia among the Greeks strove their utmost to overcome the rigid conservatism
of their fellow-countrymen. The Cardinals Cesarini and Capranica among the
Latins laboured assiduously to secure the Papal triumph. Perpetual messages
passed between the Pope and the Emperor. Documents were drawn up on both sides;
proposals towards greater exactness of expression were put forward. Bessarion
argued in a learned treatise that there was no real difference of meaning, when
the Latins said that the Holy Ghost proceeded from the Son, and the Greek
fathers wrote that He proceeded through (Sia) the Son, if both agreed that
there were not two causes, but one, of the procession, and that the Father
and the Son formed one substance.
The Patriarch was lying on his death-bed. Bessarion
and his party were resolute for the Union on large grounds of ecclesiastical
statesmanship. Others of the Greeks, following the Emperor, were convinced of
its practical necessity. They had gone so far that they could not draw back.
They were willing to seek out expressions of double meaning, which might serve
for a compromise. Yet many of the Greeks held by the stubborn Mark of Ephesus,
and would not give way. The discussion passed from being one between Greeks and
Latins to one between two parties among the Greeks. Many were the fierce
controversies, many the intrigues, great the anger of the Emperor, before an
end was visible to these troublesome disputations. At last, on June 3, the
Greeks agreed that, without departing from their ancient belief, they were
ready to admit that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son as one
cause and one substance, proceeds through the Son as the same nature and the
same substance. Next day a schedule was drawn up, of which a copy was handed to
the Emperor, the Pope, and the Patriarch: it ran: “We agree with you, and
assent that your addition to the Creed comes from the Fathers; we agree with it
and unite with you, and say that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and
the Son as from one origin and cause”.
Matters had proceeded so far that the Emperor turned
to business, and asked the Pope what succours he would grant. Eugenius IV
promised to supply 300 soldiers and two galleys for the constant defence of
Constantinople; in time of need, twenty galleys for six months, or ten for
a year.
He also undertook to preach a crusade and rouse the
West for the defence of the Greeks. Satisfied with this promise, the Emperor
hastened to bring matters to a conclusion. Mark of Ephesus was peremptorily
ordered to hold his tongue, and he himself admits that he was not unwilling to
be relieved from further responsibility in the matter.
But the sudden death of the Patriarch Joseph on the
evening of June 10 seemed at first likely to put a stop to all further
negotiations. The Greeks, bereft of their ecclesiastical head, might well urge
that without his sanction all proceedings would be useless. Happily for
Eugenius IV, there was found a paper subscribed by Joseph a few hours before
his death, approving what seemed good to his spiritual sons, and acknowledging
the supremacy of the Roman Church. The Patriarch was buried with due honours in
the Church of S. Maria Novella, where the inscription on his tomb is the only
memorial remaining to this day of the labours spent in uniting the Eastern
and Western Churches.
Fortified by the Patriarch’s declaration, the Emperor
urged on the completion of the work of union. The Pope submitted to the Greeks
for their consideration the differences between the Churches, concerning the
use of unleavened bread in the Eucharist, Purgatory, the Papal Primacy, the
words used in consecration. The Pope had already laid before them a statement
of the views which the Latins would be ready to accept. The only question
was that those who were in favour of the Union should win over the rest to
accept the proffered terms. The subject of Purgatory had already been threshed
out at Ferrara, and the difference was seen to be slight. A satisfactory form
of agreement was soon found. It was laid down that those who died in sin went
to eternal punishment, those who had been purged by penitence went to heaven
and beheld the face of God, those who died in penitence before they had
produced worthy fruits of penitence for their omissions and commissions went to
Purgatory for purification by pains, and for them the prayers and alms of the
faithful availed, as the Church ordained. The use of leavened or unleavened
bread was a small point of ritual, on which the Latins could urge that their
own custom of using unleavened bread was more in accordance with the facts of
the institution of the Sacrament, as it was clear that at the time of the
Passover Christ could only have unleavened bread. The Pope declared that,
though the Latin Church used unleavened bread, the Sacrament might also be
celebrated with leavened bread. The question was left open. As to the
consecration of the elements, the Greeks were in the habit of using after the
words of consecration a short prayer of S. Basil that the Spirit might make the
bread and wine the Body and Blood of Christ. The Latins demanded that the
Greeks should declare that the Sacrament was consecrated only by the words of
Christ. The Greeks did not doubt the fact, but objected to the declaration as
unnecessary. It was agreed that it should be made verbally, and not inserted in
the Articles of Union.
So far all went smoothly enough; but the greatest
difficulty arose about the Papal Supremacy. Up to this point the Greeks might
flatter themselves that they had been making immaterial compromises or engaging
in verbal explanations. Now they had to face the surrender of the independence
of their Church. However true it might be that they must make some sacrifices
to gain political consideration, the recognition of the Papal headship galled
their pride to the quick. The Pope demanded that the Greeks should recognize
him as the chief pontiff, successor of Peter, and vicar of Christ, and admit
that he judged and ruled the Church as its teacher and shepherd. The Greeks
requested that their own privileges should be reserved. There was a stormy
discussion. At length the Greeks, on June 22, proposed to admit the Pope's
Supremacy with two provisos :
1) That the Pope should not convoke a Council without
the Emperor and Patriarch, though if they were summoned and did not coine, the
Council might still be held;
2) That in case an appeal were made to the Pope
against a Patriarch, the Pope should send commissioners to investigate and
decide on the spot without summoning the Patriarch to the Council.
Next day the Pope answered roundly that he intended to
keep all his prerogatives, that he had the power of summoning a Council when it
was necessary, and that all Patriarchs were subject to his will. On receiving
this answer the Emperor angrily said, “See to our departure”. It seemed that
the negotiations were to be broken off, and that the Greeks would not give way.
But next day, June 24, being the festival of S. John Baptist, was given to
religious ceremonies. The Greeks who had committed themselves to the Union,
Bessarion, Isidore of Russia, and Dorotheus of Mitylene, spent the time in
trying to arrange a compromise. Reflection brought greater calmness to the
Emperor, and on June 26 Bessarion and his friends submitted a proposal couched
in vaguer terms: “We recognize the Pope as sovereign pontiff, vicegerent and
vicar of Christ, shepherd and teacher of all Christians, ruler of the Church of
God, saving the privileges and rights of the Patriarchs of the East”. This was
accepted by the Pope. Nothing now remained save to draw up in a general decree
the various conclusions which had been reached. For this purpose a committee of
twelve was appointed, which laboured for eight days at the task.
On July 4 the decree was finished. When it was taken
to the Emperor he objected to the fact that it ran in the Pope’s name, in the
usual style of an ecclesiastical decree, and he insisted on the addition of the
words—“with the consent of the most serene Emperor and Patriarch of
Constantinople”. On July 5 it was signed separately by the Latins and the
Greeks. It bears the signature of one hundred and fifteen Latin prelates and
abbots, and of thirty-three Greek ecclesiastics, of whom eighteen were metropolitans.
A great majority of the Greeks signed it unwillingly. Syropulus tells us of
many machinations which were used to win their assent. On the one hand, the
declared will of the Emperor drove the compliant to submission; on the other
hand, Papal largesses were doled out to the needy, and social cajoleries were
heaped upon the vain. Mark of Ephesus, alone of those who were at Florence, had
the courage of his opinions and refused to sign. He was too considerable a
person to be intimidated by the Emperor, and too stubborn a conservative to be
won over by the Pope. In spite, however, of the pathetic account of Syropulus,
it is difficult to feel much sympathy with the reluctant Greeks. They knew, or
they might have known, when they left their homes what they had to expect.
It was a question of political expediency whether or not it was desirable in
their imminent peril to abandon their attitude of isolation, and seek a place
amid the nations of Western Christendom. If so, they must expect to make some
sacrifice of their ancient independence, to overthrow some of the walls ot
partition which their conservatism had erected between themselves and the Latin
Church. An acknowledgment of the Papal Supremacy was the necessary price for
Papal aid. It was useless to appear as beggars and demand to retain all
the privileges of independence. It was useless to advance so far on rational
calculations of expediency, and to raise objections the moment that the actual
pinch was felt by national vanity. The wisest heads among the Greeks confessed
that since the Greek Church was no longer the centre of a vigorous national
life, it must conform in some degree to the Latin Church if the Greeks looked
for aid to the Latin nations. Moreover, the circumstances of the time were such
that the Pope was as anxious for the Union as were the Greeks themselves. The
Latins were willing to accept vague conditions and to agree readily to
compromises. The Greeks could not complain that they were hardly pressed in
matters of detail.
On July 6 the publication of the Decrees took place in
the stately cathedral of Florence. The Greeks had at least the satisfaction of
outdoing the Latins in the splendor of their vestments. The Pope sang the
mass. The Latin choir sang hymns of praise; but the Greeks thought their
Gregorian music barbarous and inharmonious. When they had ended the Greeks sang
their hymns in turn. Cesarini read the Union Decree in Latin and Bessarion in
Greek; then the two prelates embraced one another as a symbol of the act in
which they had engaged. Next day the Greeks who had been spectators of the
Latin mass asked that the Pope should in like manner be present at the
celebration of their mass. They were told that the Pope was not certain what
their mass was, and would like to see it performed privately before he
committed himself to be present at a public ceremony. The Greeks refused to
subject themselves to this supervision. The Emperor said indignantly that they
had hoped to reform the Latins, but it seemed that the Latins only intended
to reform them.
The Greeks were now anxious to depart, but waited to
receive from the Pope five months' arrears of their allowance. The Pope tried
to raise some other questions for discussion, chief of which was divorce, which
the Greek Church allowed, while the Latin Church did not. He suggested that
they should at once proceed to the election of a Patriarch. The Emperor refused
any further discussion, and said that they would proceed to elect a Patriarch
on their return, according to their own customs. The Pope requested that Mark
of Ephesus should be punished for his contumacy, but this also the Emperor
wisely refused. To make assurance doubly sure, the Pope demanded that five
copies of the Union Decree should be signed by the original signatories, one
for the Greeks, the rest to be sent to the princes of Europe. The Greeks
objected that this was unnecessary; at last, however, they agreed to sign four
duplicates, on the understanding that no further difficulties were to be put in
the way of their departure. On July 20 the Greek prelates began to quit
Florence. The Emperor remained till August 26, when he made his way to Venice,
and returned to Constantinople after an absence of two years.
“Have you won a triumph over the Latins?” was the
Reception question eagerly asked of the returning prelates. “We have made
a satisfactory compromise”, was the general answer. “We have become
Azymites” (so the Latins were called by the Greeks because they used
unleavened bread in the mass), “we have become Azymites, and have betrayed
our Creed”, said Mark of Ephesus, and the Greek people took his view of the
matter. They were profoundly conservative, and though their leaders might see
the necessity of departing from their national isolation, the people could not
be induced to follow the new policy. The Greek prelates who at Florence had
unwillingly accepted the Union could not stand against the popular prejudice,
and by their excuses for what they had done only tended to inflame the popular
wrath. Mark of Ephesus became a hero; the prelates who had wished for the Union
were treated with contumely. The Emperor was powerless. The Bishop of Cyzicum,
whom he made Patriarch, was looked upon with aversion as a traitor. When he
gave the people his blessing many of them turned away that they might not be
defiled by one tainted with the leprosy of Latinism. The Emperor, finding that
he could do nothing to abate the force of this popular feeling, adopted an
attitude of indifference. The Pope supplied for the defence of Constantinople
two galleys and 300 soldiers, as he had promised; but no great expedition was
equipped by Europe against the Turks. The Emperor’s brother, Demetrius,
despot of Epirus, who had been with him in Italy, and had been a spectator of
all that had there been done, actually ventured to raise a rebellion. He
combined Turkish aid with the fanatical feeling of the extreme Greek party
against the Latins, and for some time troubled his brother. The three
Patriarchs of Jerusalem, Antioch, and Alexandria issued in 1443 an encyclical
letter, in which they condemned the Council of Florence as a council of
robbers, and declared the Patriarch of Constantinople a matricide and heretic.
Thus the Council of Florence was productive of no
direct fruits. The Popes did not succeed in establishing their supremacy over
the Greek Church; the Greeks results got no substantial aid from Western
Christendom to enable them to drive away their Turkish assailants. Yet the
Council of Florence was not utterly useless. The meeting of two different
civilizations and schools of thought gave a decided impulse to the literary
world of Italy, and attracted thither some of the leaders of Greek letters. It
was not long before Gemistus Pletho took up his abode at Florence, and
Bessarion became a Cardinal of the Roman Church. Greek letters found a home in
the West; and when the impending destruction at last fell upon Constantinople,
the Greek exiles found a refuge prepared for them by their fellow-countrymen.
To Eugenius IV and to the Papacy the Council of
Florence rendered a signal service. However slight its ultimate results might
be, it was the first event since the outbreak of the Schism which restored the
ruined prestige of the Papacy. Public opinion is naturally influenced chiefly
by accomplished facts. No one could judge of the permanence of the work, but
all were in some measure impressed by a new sense of the Papal dignity when
they heard that, downcast as he was, Eugenius IV had still succeeded in healing
the schism which had so long rent asunder the Christian Church. The Pope whose
name was loaded with obloquy at Basel had been accepted as supreme at
Constantinople. The power which was hard pressed at Rome still had sufficient
vigour to win new conquests abroad. With lofty exultation Eugenius IV wrote to
the prince of Christendom, and announced the success of his efforts. He
recapitulated his labours in this holy cause, carried on in spite of many
discouragements, because he knew that only in Italy, and only in the presence
of the Pope, could this great result be obtained. It was a home thrust which
the fathers of Basel would find it hard to parry.
The Council of Florence was felt to be a triumph of
Papal diplomacy. The prospect of it had drawn from Basel all men possessed of
any moderation. The Italians saw in it the means of reasserting their hold on
the headship of the Church, which the transalpine nations had begun to
threaten. In union with the Greeks, they saw the beginning of a new epoch of
crusades, in which the Papacy might again stand forth as the leader of the
Latin race. The acute statesman and learned scholar, Francisco Barbaro, who was
at that time Capitano of Brescia, wrote to the Archbishop of Florence at the
beginning of the Council, pointing out the means to be employed. Learning and argument,
he said, were useless; for the Greeks were too acute and too proud of their
knowledge to be overcome by disputation. They must be treated with tact and
with kindness; they must be led to see that in union lie their safety and
glory. He urged the necessity of the greatest care. The union must be made to
succeed; otherwise there was no chance for the Papacy, and Italian affairs
would be plunged into hopeless confusion. The policy recommended by Barbaro was
that pursued by the Pope’s advisers. Cesarini’s experience at Basel had fitted
him admirably for the work to be done at Florence. The Papal diplomacy won a
signal triumph, and followed up its first victory by others, less conspicuous
indeed, but which added strength to the Papal cause. In December, 1439, the
reconciliation of the Armenians to the Roman Church was announced to Europe,
and Jacobites, Syrians, Chaldaeans, and Maronites in succeeding years made
illusory submission, which served to present a dazzling display of Papal power.
CHAPTER IX.
THE GERMAN DECLARATION OF NEUTRALITY AND THE ELECTION
OF FELIX V.
1438—1439.
Eugenius IV might triumph at Florence; but the fathers
of Basel, weakened yet not dismayed, pursued their course with an appearance of
lofty indifference. In the January, 1438, they suspended Eugenius IV from his
office for venturing to summon a Council without their assent. The logical
consequence of such a step was the deposition of Eugenius; and to this Cardinal
d'Allemand and his followers were ready to proceed. But, although all who had
any leaning towards Eugenius, or who had any scruples about the omnipotence of
the Council, had already left Basel, there still remained many who did not wish
to proceed at once to extremities. Motives of statesmanship and considerations
of expediency landed them in a somewhat illogical position. Through their
desire to support the Council without attacking the Pope they were nicknamed at
Basel “the Greys”, as being neither black nor white. This party, though it had
the weakness which in ecclesiastical matters always attaches to a party that is
trimming through political pressure, was still strong enough to put off for
some time the deposition of Eugenius. It raised technical points, disputed each
step, and gave weight to the remonstrances against a new schism which came from
the princes of Europe.
Accordingly, says Aeneas Sylvius, the question of
procedure against Eugenius was discussed according to the Socratic method.
Every possible suggestion was made, and every possible objection was raised
against it. Was Eugenius to be dealt with simply as a heretic, or as a relapsed
heretic, or was he a heretic at all? On such points the fathers differed; but
they agreed on March 24 in fulminating against the Council of Ferrara, declaring
all its procedure null and void, and summoning all, under pain of
excommunication, to quit it and appear at Basel within thirty days.
It was, however, impossible that this war between the
Pope and the Council could continue without exciting serious attention, on
political grounds, amongst the European nations most nearly interested in the
Papacy. Germany and France, about the same time, took measures to protect
themselves against the dangers with which they were threatened by the impending
outbreak of a schism. What Germany desired was a measure of ecclesiastical
reform without the disruption of the unity of the Church. It felt no interest
in the struggle of the Council against the Pope; rather the German princes
looked with suspicion upon the avowed object of the Council, of exalting the
ecclesiastical oligarchy at the expense of the Papacy. It bore too near a
resemblance to their own policy towards the Empire, and they did not wish to be
embarrassed in their own schemes by an access of independence to the bishops.
Accordingly the Electors entered into correspondence with Cesarini in 1437, and
lent their support to his efforts for a compromise between the Pope and the
Council. When this failed, the Electors, under the guidance of Archbishop Raban
of Trier, devised a plan of declaring the neutrality of Germany in the struggle
between the Pope and the Council; by so doing they would neither abandon the
reformation of the Church nor assist in creating a schism, but would be in a
position to take advantage of any opportunity that offered. This scheme was, no
doubt, suggested by the example of the withdrawal of the French allegiance from
Boniface XIII, and had much to be said in its favour. The Electors had sent to
obtain the assent of Sigismund when the news of his death reached them.
In March, 1438, the Electors met for the purpose of
choosing a new king at Frankfort, where they were beset by partisans of
Eugenius IV and of the Council. They resolved that before proceeding to a
new election they would secure a basis for their new policy. In a formal
document they publicly declared on March 17 that they took no part in the
differences between the Pope and the Council, nor would they recognize the
punishments, processes, or excommunications of either, as of any validity
within the Empire. They would maintain the rights of the Church till the new
king found means to restore unity; if he had not done so within six months they
would take counsel of the prelates and jurists of their land what course to
adopt. Next day Albert, Duke of Austria and King of Hungary, Sigismund’s
son-in-law, was elected king, as Sigismund had wished and planned.
This declaration of neutrality was a new step in
ecclesiastical politics, and was equally offensive to Pope and Council, both of
whom were loud in asserting that in such a matter neutrality was impossible.
Both hastened to do all they could to win over Albert; but Albert was not easy
to win over, nor indeed was he in a position to oppose the Electors. His hold
on Hungary, threatened by the Turks, was but weak, and Bohemia was insecure.
His personal character was not such as to afford much opportunity for intrigue.
He was upright and honest, reserved in speech, a man who thought more of action
than of diplomacy. Tall, with sunburnt face and flashing eyes, he took his
pleasure in hunting when he could not take it in warfare, and was content to
follow the advice of those whom he thought wiser than himself. Ambassadors
could do nothing with him, and in July he joined the band of the Electors, and
declared himself personally in favour of neutrality.
The example of Germany was followed by France. Germany
had taken up the attitude most in accordance with its views; France proceeded
to do likewise. For the large questions of Church government involved in the
struggle between Council and Pope, France had little care. Since their failure
at Constance the theologians of the University of Paris had sunk into lethargy.
France, suffering from the miseries of its long war with England, took an
entirely practical view of affairs. Its object was to retain for its own uses
the wealth of the Church, and prevent Papal interference with matters of
finance. Charles VII determined to adopt in his own kingdom such of the decrees
of the Council as were for his advantage, seeing that no opposition could be
made by the Pope. Accordingly, a Synod was summoned at Bourges on May 1, 1438.
The ambassadors of Pope and Council urged their respective causes. It was
agreed that the king should write to Pope and Council to stay their hands in
proceeding against one another; meanwhile, that the reformation be not lost,
some of the Basel decrees should be maintained in France by royal authority.
The results of the Synod’s deliberation were laid before the king, and on July
7 were made binding as a pragmatic sanction on the French Church. The Pragmatic
Sanction enacted that General Councils were to be held every ten years, and
recognized the authority of the Council of Basel. The Pope was no longer to
reserve any of the greater ecclesiastical appointments, but elections were to
be duly made by the rightful patrons. Grants to benefices in expectancy, whence
all agree that many evils arise, were to cease, as well as reservations. In all
cathedral churches one prebend was to be given to a theologian who had studied
for ten years in a university, and who was to lecture or preach at least once a
week. Benefices were to be conferred in future, one-third on graduates,
two-thirds on deserving clergy. Appeals to Rome, except for important causes,
were forbidden. The number of Cardinals was to be twenty-four, each of the age
of thirty at least. Annates and first-fruits were no longer to be paid to the
Pope, but only the necessary legal fees on institution. Regulations were made
for greater reverence in the conduct of Divine service; prayers were to be said
by the priest in an audible voice; mummeries in churches were forbidden, and
clerical concubinage was to be punished by suspension for three months. Such
were the chief reforms of its own special grievances, which France wished to
establish. It was the first step in the assertion of the rights of national
Churches to arrange for themselves the details of their own ecclesiastical
organization. It went no further, however, than the amendment of existing
grievances as far as the opportunity allowed. It rested upon no principles
applicable to the well-being of Christendom. While Germany, true to its
imperial traditions, was content to hold its hand till it discovered some means
of bringing about a reformation without a schism, France entered upon a
separatist policy to secure its own interests.
The issue of both these plans depended upon the
struggle between the Pope and the Council. Charles VII besought the Council to
suspend their proceedings against the Pope, and received an answer that it was
doing so. On July 12, at a Diet held at between Nürnberg, the Electors offered
to mediate between the Pope and Council, but were answered by the Council’s
envoys that secular persons might not judge ecclesiastical matters, and that it
would be a bad precedent if Popes and Councils were interfered with. The
Electors, with Albert’s assent, extended the neutrality for four months. On
October 16, at a second Diet at Nurnberg, appeared Cardinal Albergata, as the
head of a Papal embassy; but the envoys of the Council, headed by the Patriarch
of Aquileia, were received with greater marks of distinction. Eugenius IV never
again subjected any of his Cardinals to such a slight, but chose less important
and more skillful diplomatists. The Electors again offered to mediate, on
the basis that the Councils of Ferrara and Basel should alike be dissolved, and
a new one summoned at another place. The Basel envoys replied that they had no
instructions on this matter; they asked if the Electors accepted the decrees of
the Council, and were answered in turn that envoys should be sent to Basel to
answer this question. At Basel accordingly there was much negotiation with the
German envoys, who were joined by those of the other princes, but the fathers
resolutely opposed a translation of the Council, and rejected all proposals
tending to that end. When the third Diet met at Mainz on March 5, 1439, matters
had advanced no farther than they were at first.
To Mainz Eugenius sent no envoys; but many of his
adherents were there to plead his cause, chief amongst whom was Nicolas of
Cusa, a learned theologian, who had been an admiring follower of Cesarini, “the
Hercules of Eugenius’ party”, as Aeneas Sylvius calls him. But the Electors now
wavered in their policy of mediation, and began to turn their eyes to the
example of France. They tended towards using the opportunity for establishing
the privileges of the German Church. The Council sent again the Patriarch of
Aquileia. But the German princes had by this time seen that a reconciliation
between Pope and Council was impossible. They had an adviser of keen sagacity
in the legist John of Lysura, sprung, like Nicolas of Cusa, from a little
village in the neighbourhood of Trier. He was the firm upholder, if not the
originator, of the policy of neutrality. He now advised the Electors, if
nothing were to be gained by mediation, to follow the example of France, and
secure such of the work of the Council of Basel as satisfied them. On March 26
the Diet took the unwelcome step of publishing its acceptance of the Basel
decrees concerning the superiority of General Councils, the organization of
provincial and diocesan synods, the abolition of reservations and expectancies,
freedom of election to ecclesiastical benefices, and the abolition of annates
and other oppressive exactions of the Curia. The Pope was not to refuse
confirmation to the election of a bishop, except for some grave reason approved
by the Cardinals. Appeals to Rome, until the cases had been heard in the
bishops’ courts, were, with few exceptions, forbidden. Excommunications were
not to be inflicted on a town for the fault of a few individuals. Such were the
chief provisions of this pragmatic sanction of Germany.
The state of things which now existed in France and
Germany was really a reversion to the system of concordats with which the
Council of Constance Pope and had ended. The rights that had then been granted
by the Papacy for five years, and had afterwards proved mere illusory
concessions, were now extended and secured. The strife between the Pope and the
Council enabled the State in both countries to assert, under the sanction of a
General Council, liberties and privileges which needed no Papal approval. Such
a policy of selection was opposed equally to the ideas of the Council and of
the Pope. The Council wished for adhesion to its suspension of Eugenius IV; the
Pope was not likely to acquiesce quietly in the loss of his prerogatives and of
his revenues. Meanwhile, however, each was bent on using its opportunities.
Eugenius IV hoped by the brilliancy of his success at Florence to establish
himself again in a position to interfere in European affairs. The Council
trusted that, if it carried to extremities its proceedings against the Pope,
Germany and France, after establishing reforms by virtue of its authority,
would be driven to approve of a decisive step when it was once taken.
Accordingly at Basel the process against Eugenius IV
was prepared. The proctors of the Council gathered together a hundred and fifty
articles against the Pope, swelling the number of charges to make matter look
more terrible, though all converged to the one point, that Eugenius by
dissolving the Council had made himself a schismatic and the author of a
schism. It was clear that such a process might be protracted endlessly by a few
determined opponents at every stage of the pleadings. The more resolute spirits,
led by a Burgundian abbot Nicolas, carried the adoption of a more summary
method of procedure. The Council was summoned to discuss the heresy of Eugenius
and set forth the great points of Catholic doctrine which he had impugned. This
discussion took place in the middle of April, and for six whole days, morning
and afternoon, the dispute went on. First the theologians laid down eight
conclusions:—
1) It is a truth of the Catholic faith that a
General Council has power over a Pope or any other Christian man.
2) It is likewise a truth that the Pope cannot by
his authority dissolve, transfer, or prorogue a General Council lawfully
constituted.
3) Anyone who pertinaciously opposes these
truths is to be accounted a heretic.
4) Eugenius IV opposed these truths when first he
attempted by the plenitude of the Apostolic power to dissolve or transfer
the Council of Basel.
5) When admonished by the Council he withdrew his
errors opposed to these truths.
6) His second attempt at dissolution
contains an inexcusable error concerning the faith.
7) In attempting to repeat his dissolution he
lapses into the errors which he revoked.
8) By persisting in his contumacy, after
admonition by the Council to recall his dissolution, and by calling a Council
to Ferrara, he declares himself pertinacious.
The Archbishop of Palermo, who had formerly
distinguished himself as an opponent of Eugenius IV, now at his King’s bidding
counselled moderation. He argued with much acuteness that Eugenius had not
contravened any article of the Creeds, nor the greater truths of Christianity,
and could not be called heretical or relapsed. John of Segovia answered that
the decrees of Constance were articles of faith, which it was heresy to impugn.
The Bishop of Argos followed on the same side in a speech of much passion,
which the Archbishop of Palermo indignantly interrupted. The Bishop of Argos
called the Pope “the minister of the church”.
“No”, cried the Archbishop of Palermo, “he is its
master”.
“Yet”, said John of Segovia, “his title is servant of
the servants of God”.
The Archbishop of Palermo was reduced to silence.
The discussion went on; but really narrowed itself to
two questions, “Has a General Council authority over a Pope? Is this an article
of faith?”
The disputation at last ended, and the voting began.
Three deputations at once voted for the conclusions of the theologians. The
fourth deputation accepted the first three conclusions, but doubted about the
last five; it hoped by delay to keep the whole question open. When the day came
for a general congregation to be held, the Archbishops of Milan and Palermo
prepared for resistance with the aid of the ambassadors of the princes. They
pressed for delay, on the ground that the princes of Europe were not
sufficiently represented. When they had finished their arguments, Cardinal
d'Allemand made a splendid speech for a party leader. The princes of Europe, he
said, were well enough represented by their prelates; the Archbishops of Milan,
Palermo, and Lyons had said all that could be said. They had complained that
the voice of the bishops was disregarded in the Council, and that the lower
clergy carried everything against them. What Council had done so much to raise
the condition of bishops, who till now had been mere shadows with staff and mitre,
different only in dress and revenues from their clergy? The Archbishop of
Palermo had said that his opinion ought to prevail because more bishops were on
his side. The order of the Council could not be changed to suit his
convenience; it had pleased him well enough so long as he was in the majority.
Everybody knew that the prelates were only anxious to please their princes;
they confessed to God in private, to their political superiors in public. He
himself maintained that it was not the position, but the worth, of a man that
was of importance. “I could not set the lie of the wealthiest prelate above the
truth spoken by a simple priest. Do not, you bishops, despise your inferiors;
the first martyr was not a bishop but a deacon”. The example of the early Church
showed that Councils were not restricted to bishops. If it were so now, they
would be at the mercy of the Italians, and there would be an end to all further
reforms. The Archbishop of Palermo pressed for delay only as a means of wasting
a favorable opportunity. He threatened them with the anger of princes, as if
the Council was to obey princes, and not princes the Council. They must cleave
to the truth at all hazards. He ended by urging them to affirm the first three
conclusions, as a means of stopping the intrigues of Eugenius IV, and defer for
the present the remainder in deference to the Archbishop of Palermo’s request.
All listened with admiration to the dashing onslaught
of D'Allemand. But on the attempt to read the decree affirming the three conclusions
a scene of wild clamour and confusion arose, as had happened two years before.
The Patriarch of Aquileia turned to the Archbishop of Palermo and cried out,
“You do not know the Germans; if you go on thus, you will not leave this land
with your head on your shoulders”. There was a loud cry that the liberty of the
Council was being attacked. Again the citizens of Basel had to interfere to
keep the peace. The fathers were free to conduct their debates at pleasure, but
a citizen guard was always present to see that arguments were not
enforced by stronger than verbal means.
When silence was restored, the debate was resumed for
a while, till Cardinal d'Allemand again rose to put the question. The
Archbishop of Palermo interposed, saying, “You despise our entreaties, you
despise the kings and princes of Europe, you despise the prelates; but beware
lest, while you despise all, yourselves be despised by all. We have the
majority of prelates on our side; we form the Council. In the name of the
prelates I declare that the motion must not be carried”. There was a hubbub as
of a battlefield, and all was again confusion. John of Segovia was sufficiently
respected by both parties to obtain a hearing while he denounced the scandal of
the day’s proceedings, urged the observance of the ordinary procedure of the
Council, and defended the authority of the president. His speech made no
impression on the Archbishop of Palermo, who declared that he and the prelates
of his party constituted the Council and would not allow any decree to be
published in the teeth of the protest he had just made. No one kept his seat;
the rival partisans gathered round their leaders, the Cardinal of Arles and the
Archbishop of Palermo, and looked like two armies drawn up for contest. It
seemed that the Archbishop’s policy would prevail, that the congregation would
be ended by the evening darkness without passing any vote, and thus a
substantial triumph be gained for Eugenius IV. The followers of the Cardinal of
Arles loudly upbraided him with his incompetency: “Why do you sleep? Where is
nowyour courage and your skill?”
But the Cardinal was only waiting his time. When a
slight lull prevailed he called out suddenly in a loud voice, “I have a letter
just come from France which contains wonderful, almost incredible news, which I
would like to lay before you”. There was at once silence, and D'Allemand began
to read some trivialities; then the pretended letter went on to say that
messengers of Eugenius IV filled France and preached that the Pope was above
the Council; they were gaining credit, and the Council ought to take measures
to check them.
“Fathers”, said the Cardinal, “the necessary measures
are found in the eight propositions which you have examined, all of which,
however, you do not intend at present to pass; but I declare the three first to
be passed, in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost”.
Thus saying, he hastily left his seat and was followed
by his triumphant partisans. He had snatched a formal victory at a time when
defeat seemed imminent. He had shown that French craft was a match for Italian
subtlety.
A few days afterwards arrived from Mainz the
ambassadors of the Electors, from whom the opponents of the decree expected
help in their resistance. But the Electors at Mainz had practically forsaken
their position of mediators. They had seen the hopelessness of mediation unless
supported by a general agreement of European powers. Private interests
prevailed too strongly for this to be possible. Portugal and Castile were at
variance. Milan and Aragon had their own ends in view in any settlement that
might be made with the Pope.
The attitude of France was dubious; and the Germans
suspected that France aimed at getting the Council into its own hands, and
reviving the French hold upon the Papacy. The Electors had no settled policy,
and were content with a watchful neutrality. The German ambassadors did nothing
at Basel, though an attempt was made to revive the national divisions, and
procure joint action on the part of the German nation. On May 9, the German
ambassadors were present, though by an accident, at a general congregation
which accepted the form of decree embodying the conclusions previously passed.
Again there was a stormy scene. The Archbishop of Milan denounced the Cardinal
of Aries as another Catiline, surrounded by a band of ruffians. When the Cardinal
of Arles began to read the decree the Archbishop of Palermo thundered forth his
protest. Each side shouted down the other, to prevent their proceedings from
claiming conciliar validity. The Cardinal of Arles rose to leave the room. His
opponents prepared to stay and enact their protest; but a sudden cry of one who
declared that he would not be untrue to his oath, and allow the Council to
degenerate into a conventicle, recalled all to a sense of the gravity of the
situation. All felt that they were on the verge of disruption of the Council.
The Cardinal resumed his seat; those who were departing were recalled. The
Bishop of Albi read a protest to himself, for no one could hear him for the
hubbub. The Lombards, Castilians, and Aragonese declared their adhesion to the
protest, and left the congregation. The Cardinal of Arles then went on with the
ordinary business, late though it was, and the form of decree was at last
adopted. As the Archbishop of Palermo left the Council he turned to his
followers and said with indignation, “Twice, twice”. It was the second time
that the policy of the Cardinal of Arles had been too acute for him, and had
baffled his attempts at obstruction.
For a few days the followers of the Archbishop of
Palermo absented themselves from the meetings of the deputations; and on May 15
the ambassadors of the Electors feebly protested that they did not assent to
any proceedings which were contrary to the conclusions of the Diet of Mainz.
Next day they tried to make a compromise, but failed, as the opponents of the
decree could not make up their minds what terms they were prepared to accept. A
session was held on the same day, May 16, for the publication of the decree.
The greater number of prelates refused to be present. None of the Aragonese bishops,
none from any of the Spanish kingdoms, would attend. From Italy there was only
one, and from the other kingdoms only twenty. But the Cardinal of Arles was not
deterred by their absence. He had a large following of the inferior clergy, and
had recourse to a strange expedient to cast greater ecclesiastical prestige
over the assembly. He gathered from the churches of Basel the relics of the
saints, which, borne by priests, were set in the vacant places of the bishops.
When the proceedings began, the sense of the gravity of the situation moved all
to tears. In the absence of opposition the decree was read peaceably, and was
formally passed.
On May 22 the ambassadors of the princes appeared in a
general congregation, and took part in the business, excusing themselves for
their previous absence on the ground that it was not their duty as ambassadors
to mix with such matters. It was clear from such vacillating conduct on the
part of their representatives that the princes of Europe had little real
interest in the struggle between Pope and Council. They had ceased to act as
moderators, and had no large views about the need of ecclesiastical reforms.
They were content to gain what they could for their separate interests, as they
understood them at the moment, and to let the whole matter drift. They were
incapable of interposing to free the question of reform from the meshes of
personal jealousy in which it had become entangled. So long as every power
which could interfere with their own projects was enfeebled, they were content
that things should take their own course. The only man at Basel with a settled
policy was the Cardinal of Arles; and he was no more than a party leader, bent
on using the democracy of the Council as a means of asserting the power of the
ecclesiastical oligarchy against the Papal monarchy.
Emboldened by his first triumph, the Cardinal of Arles
pursued his course. The German ambassadors still urged a suspension of the
process against the Pope. On June 13 a solemn answer was made by the Council that
the process had now been suspended for two years in deference to the wishes of
princes. They must not take it amiss if the Council, whose business it was to
regulate the affairs of the Church, declined to delay any longer. Faith,
religion, and discipline would be alike destroyed if one man had the power to
set himself against a General Council, and bear a tyrant’s sway over the
Church; they would rather die than desert the cause of liberty. The ambassadors
were silent when, on June 23, the remaining five of the eight conclusions were
decreed by the Council, and Eugenius IV was cited to appear in two days and
hear his sentence. The plague was at this time raging in Basel, and very little
pressure would have sufficed to induce the fathers to transfer the Council
elsewhere; but there was no real agreement amongst the powers of Europe. The
session on June 25 was attended by thirty-nine bishops and abbots, and some 300
of the lower clergy. Eugenius IV was summoned by the bishops, and when he did
not appear was declared contumacious. He was declared to be a notorious cause
of scandal to the Church, a despiser of the decrees of the Holy Synods, a
persistent heretic, and destroyer of the rights of the Church. As such he was
deposed from his office; all were freed from his allegiance, and were forbidden
to call him Pope any longer. The dominant party in the Council had everything
to win and nothing to lose by pursuing to its end the quarrel with the Pope. In
the divided state of political interests there was a chance that some of the
European powers might be drawn to its side if once a decided step was taken.
But it forgot, in the excitement of the conflict, that the Council’s hold upon
men’s obedience was a moral hold, and rested upon hopes of ecclesiastical reform.
When this had been sacrificed to the necessities of a party conflict, when a
schism and not a reformation was the issue of the Council's activity, its
authority was practically gone. It required only a little time to make
this clearly manifest.
The Council, however, did not hesitate in its course.
On the day of the deposition of Eugenius IV a consultation was held about
future procedure; and the opinion of John of Segovia was adopted, to defer for
sixty days the election to the vacant office of Pope. The position of the
Council was discouraging. The plague, which since the spring had been raging in
Basel, had grown fiercer in the summer heat. Five thousand of the inhabitants
are said to have fallen before its ravages. Terror prevailed on every side, and
it was hard to keep the Council together. The learned jurist Pontano and the
Patriarch of Aquileia, two pillars of the Council, were amongst those who fell
victims to the mortality. The streets were thronged with funerals and priests
bearing the sacrament to the dying. The dead were buried in pits to save the
trouble of digging single graves. Aeneas Sylvius was stricken by the plague,
but recovered. Eight of his friends amongst the clerks of the Council died.
In spite of all danger and the repeated advice of his
friends that he should flee before the pestilence, the Cardinal of Arles stood
to his post, and so kept the Council together. At the beginning of October the
business of the Council was resumed, and the method of the new election was
discussed. The College of Cardinals was represented in Basel only by Louis
d'Allemand. It was clear that Electors must be appointed. After some discussion
their number was fixed at thirty-two, but there were many opinions about the
means of choosing them. At last William, Archdeacon of Metz, proposed the names
of three men who should be trusted to co-opt the remaining twenty-nine. The
three whose high character and impartiality were supposed to place them above
suspicion were Thomas, Abbot of Dundrennan, in Scotland, John of Segovia, a
Castilian, and Thomas of Corcelles, Canon of Amiens. At first this plan met
with great objections; but they gradually disappeared on discussion. The
Germans urged that they were not represented, and it was agreed that the three
should associate with themselves a German, Christian, Provost of S. Peter’s in
Bruma, in the diocese of Olmutz. They took an oath that they would choose
fitting men who had the fear of God before their, eyes and would not
reveal the names of those they chose till the time of their publication in a
general Congregation.
The triumvirs at once set about their business. They
conferred with representative men of every nation: they did their best to
acquaint themselves with the characters of those whom they had in view. Yet
they displayed singular discretion in their inquiries; and when, on October 28,
they met to make their election, no one knew their intentions. Next day the
congregation was crowded to hear their decision. Everywhere speculation was
rife. The more vain and more simple among the fathers displayed their own
estimate of their deserts by appearing in fine clothes, with many attendants,
ready to enter the conclave at once. Suspense was prolonged because the
Cardinal of Arles was late. He appeared at last with a gloomy face, and took
his seat, saying, “If the triumvirs have done well, I confess that I am rather
late; if they have done ill, I am too soon”. He was afraid that their
democratic sympathies might have outrun his own. His words were an evil omen;
every one prepared for a dissension, which in the matter of a new election
would work irreparable ruin to the Council.
The triumvirs behaved with singular prudence. First
Thomas of Dundrennan, then John of Segovia, explained the principles on which
they had acted. They had regarded national divisions, and had considered the
representative character of those whom they chose; goodness, nobility, and
learning had been the tests which they had used. The general result of their
choice was that the electors would consist of twelve bishops, including the
Cardinal of Arles, which was the number of the twelve apostles, seven abbots,
five theologians, nine doctors and men of learning, all in priests’ orders.
This announcement in some degree appeased the general dread. When the names
were read, the position of the men chosen, and their distribution amongst
nations, met with general approval. The Cardinal’s brow cleared; he praised the
triumvirs for their wisdom and prudence, and the Congregation separated in
contentment. On October 30, after the usual ceremonies, the electors entered
the conclave in the house Zur Brücke.
The Cardinal of Arles was, of course, ready with a
nominee for the papal office; naturally, he had not proceeded to extremities
without making preparations for the result. If the cause of the Council was to
succeed, it must again strike its roots into European politics, and must secure
an influential protector. As other princes had grown cold towards the Council,
the Duke of Savoy had declared himself its adherent. The greater part of the
fathers now remaining at Basel were Savoyards. Amadeus VIII had ruled over
Savoy since 1391. He was a prudent man, who knew how to take advantage of his
neighbors’ straits, and had greatly increased the dominions and importance of Savoy
till it embraced the lands that extended from the Upper Saone to the
Mediterranean, and was bounded by Provence, Dauphiné, the Swiss Confederacy,
and the Duchy of Milan. Like many others, Amadeus VIII had drawn his profits
from the necessities of Sigismund, who, in 1416, elevated Savoy to the dignity
of a duchy. The Duke of Savoy refused to take any side in the internal
struggles of France or in the war between France and England, but grew rich on
his neighbors’ misfortunes. He married a daughter of Philip the Bold, Duke of
Burgundy; his eldest daughter was married to Filippo Maria, Duke of Milan, his
second was the widow of Louis of Anjou. From his wealth, his position, and his
connections, the Duke of Savoy was a man of great political influence. But the
death of his eldest son caused him deep grief and unhappiness. In 1431 he
retired from active life, and built himself a luxurious retreat at Ripaille,
whither he withdrew with seven companions to lead a life of religious
seclusion. His abode was called the Temple of S. Maurice; he and his followers
wore grey cloaks, like hermits, with gold crosses round their necks, and long
staffs in their hands. Yet Amadeus, in his seclusion, took a keen interest in
affairs, and, when the suspension of Eugenius IV was decreed by the Council,
sent an embassy to the Pope excusing the Council, and offering to mediate. As
matters went on his support was more openly declared, and he offered to send to
Basel the prelates of his land. During the year 1439 Savoyards had largely
reinforced the Council, and the scheme of electing Amadeus as the future Pope
had taken definite form. Amadeus had consulted other princes on the subject,
and from the Duke of Milan had received the warmest promises of support. The
electors to the Papacy had been chosen equally from the nations represented at
the Council—France, Italy, Germany, and Spain. But, from its geographical
position, Savoy was reckoned both in France and Italy. Of the twelve bishops
amongst the electors seven were Savoyards; the others were the Cardinal of
Arles, two French and one Spanish bishop, and the Bishop of Basel. Without any
accusation of false play in the choice of the electors, it fell out that quite
half of them were either subjects of Amadeus or were bound to him by ties of
gratitude.
The proceedings of the conclave were conducted with
the utmost decorum. At its commencement the Cardinal of Arles reminded the
electors that the situation of affairs needed a rich and powerful Pope, who
could defend the Council against its adversaries. On the first scrutiny of
votes it was found that seventeen candidates had been nominated, of whom
Amadeus had the greatest number of votes—sixteen. On the next scrutiny he
had nineteen votes, and on the third twenty-one. His merits and the objections
that could be raised against him were keenly but temperately discussed, and in
the final scrutiny on November 5 it was found that he had received twenty-six
votes, and his election to the Papacy was solemnly announced by the Cardinal of
Arles.
The Council published the election throughout
Christendom, and named an embassy headed by the Cardinal of Arles, with seven
bishops, three abbots, and fourteen doctors, to carry to Amadeus the news of
his election. Probably from want of money, the embassy did not leave Basel till
December 3, when it was accompanied by envoys of the citizens and several
nobles. On reaching Ripaille they were met by the nobles of Savoy. Amadeus,
with his hermit comrades, advanced to meet them with the cross borne before
him. Amadeus entered into negotiations in a business-like spirit, and rather
surprised the ambassadors of the Council by stipulating that a change should be
made in the form of the oath administered to the Pope, that he should keep his
hermit’s beard and his former name of Amadeus. The envoys replied that the oath
must be left to the Council; they could not alter the custom of assuming a
religious name; the beard might be left for the present. Amadeus also
disappointed the Council’s envoys by showing an unexpected care about his
future financial position. “You have abolished annates”, he said; “what do you
expect the Pope to live on? I cannot consume my patrimony and disinherit my
sons”. They were driven to promise the cautious old man a grant of first-fruits
of vacant benefices.
At last matters were arranged. Amadeus accepted his
election, assumed the name of Felix V, and took the oath as prescribed by the
Council. Then he left his solitude in Ripaille, and went in pontifical pomp to
Tonon, where, amid the ecclesiastical solemnities of Christmastide, his friends
were so struck by the incongruity of his bearded face that they persuaded him
to shave. On the festival of the Epiphany he took the final step of separating
himself from his worldly life by declaring his eldest son Louis Duke of Savoy,
and his second son Philip Count of Geneva. By the Council’s advice he agreed
not to fill up the offices of the Curia, lest by so doing he should hinder the
reconciliation of those who held them under Eugenius IV; as a provisional
measure they were put into commission. Felix V also submitted to the Council’s
demand that, in the letters announcing his election, the Pope’s name should
come after that of the Council. On the other hand, the Council allowed him to
create new Cardinals, even in contradiction to their decrees on this point.
Felix named four, but only one of those, the Bishop of Lausanne, as a dutiful
subject, accepted the doubtful dignity, to which small hope of revenue was
attached.
On February 26, the Council of Basel issued a decree
commanding all to obey Felix V, and excommunicating those who refused. This was
naturally followed by a similar decree of Eugenius IV from Florence on March
23. Neither of these decrees was very efficacious. Eugenius IV had strengthened
himself in December by creating seventeen Cardinals, Bessarion and Isidore of
Russia among the Greeks, two Spaniards, four Frenchmen, one Englishman (John
Kemp, Archbishop of York), one Pole, one German, one Hungarian, and five
Italians. Unlike the nominees of Felix, all accepted the office except the
Bishop of Krakau, who refused the offers of both Popes alike. The news of the
election of Amadeus at first caused some consternation in the court of Eugenius
IV; but the sagacity of Cesarini restored their confidence. “Be not afraid”, he
said, “for now you have conquered, since one has been elected by the Council
whom flesh and blood has revealed to them, not their Heavenly Father. I was
afraid lest they might elect some poor, learned and good man, whose virtues might
be dangerous; as it is, they have chosen a worldling, unfit by his previous
life for the office, one who has shed blood in war, has been married and has
children, one who is unfit to stand by the altar of God”.
Felix V did not find matters easy to arrange with the
Council. He stayed at Lausanne for some time, and did not comply with the
repeated requests of the fathers that he would hasten to Basel. No steps were
taken to provide for the support of the Papal dignity. The letter of Felix V,
nominating the Cardinal of Arles as president of the Council, was ruled to be
so informal that it was not inserted in the Council’s records. Questions
concerning the Council’s dignity in the presence of the Pope gave rise to many
discussions; it was agreed that the Pope and his officials should take an oath
not to impede the jurisdiction of the Council over its own members. Not till
June 24, 1440, did Felix enter Basel accompanied by his two sons, an unusual
escort for a Pope, and all the nobility of Savoy. On July 24, he was crowned
Pope by the Cardinal of Arles, the only Cardinal present. The ceremony was
imposing, and more than 50,000 spectators are said to have been present. Felix
V looked venerable and dignified, and excited universal admiration by the
quickness with which he had mastered the minutiae of the mass service. No
expense was spared to give grandeur to the proceedings; the tiara placed on
Felix’s head cost thirty thousand crowns. After this, Felix abode in Basel
awaiting the adhesion of the princes of Europe.
The two Popes were now pitted one against the other;
but their rivalry was unlike any that had existed in former times. Each had his
pretensions, each represented a distinctive policy; but neither had any
enthusiastic adherents. The politics of Europe were but little concerned with
ecclesiastical matters; the different States pursued their course without much
heed to the contending Popes. Germany was the least united State and had the
least determined policy. To Germany both Eugenius IV and Felix V turned their
attention; each strove to end its neutrality favorably to himself. The hopes of
both parties were awakened by the death of Albert II, on October 27, 1439. He
died in Hungary of dysentery, brought on by eating too much fruit when fatigued
in hot weather. Albert in his short reign had not succeeded in restoring order
in the Empire, in giving peace to the Church, or in protecting his ancestral
kingdoms; but his noble and disinterested character, his firmness and
constancy, had roused hopes in men’s minds, which were suddenly extinguished by
his untimely death. It became at once a question what would be the policy of
the Electors during the vacancy in the Empire.
CHAPTER X.
EUGENIUS IV AND FELIX V.
1440—1444.
The German Electors heard at the same time the news of
the death of Albert II, and of the elevation of Amadeus to the Papal dignity.
They refused to receive either the envoys of Eugenius IV or of Felix V, and
renewed their declaration of neutrality. Everything urged them to hasten their
election to the Empire, and on February 1, 1440, they unanimously chose
Frederick, Duke of Styria, second cousin of the deceased king and head of the
house of Austria. Frederick was a young man, twenty-five years of age, whose
position was embarrassing and whose responsibilities in Germany were already
heavy. He was guardian of the county of the Tyrol during the minority of
Sigismund, son of that Frederick who had played so luckless a part at
Constance. Moreover, Albert II died without male heir, but left his wife
pregnant; when she gave birth to a son, Ladislas, Frederick became guardian
also of Bohemia and Hungary. At his election Frederick was held to be sagacious
and upright; but he was not likely to interfere with the plans of the electoral
oligarchy. Representatives of the two Popes at once beset both Electors and
King. Frederick III, unlike his predecessor, was not committed definitely to
the policy of neutrality, and only said that he proposed at the first Diet to
confer with the Electors about the means of amending the disorders of the
Church. He took no steps to hasten the summoning of a Diet, which met at Mainz
a year after his election, on February 2, 1441. Even then Frederick III
did not appear in person.
Meanwhile Felix V had received the adhesion of a few
of the German princes. In June, 1440, Albert of Munich recognized him, and in
August Stephen of Zimmern and Zweibrücke came to Basel with his two sons,
and did him reverence. Albert of Austria, brother of Frederick III, followed,
as did also Elizabeth of Hungary, widow of the late king. On the other hand,
Felix met with a decided rebuff in France, where a synod was held at Bourges to
hear ambassadors of both Popes. On September 2 answer was made in the King’s
name that he recognized Eugenius IV, and besought his relative, “the lord of
Savoy” (as he called Felix), to display his wonted wisdom in aiming at peace.
France had no reason to deviate from her old policy, especially as Eugenius IV
maintained the cause of René of Anjou in Naples. The Universities, especially
those of Vienna, Koln, Erfurt, and Krakau, declared themselves in favour of
Felix. It was but natural that the academic ideas, from which the conciliar
movement sprang, should accept the issue which followed from the application of
their original principle. The Council was especially anxious to gain the
adhesion of the Duke of Milan, and Felix consented to pay a large subsidy in
return for his protection. But Filippo Maria Visconti merely played with the
offers of Felix. He promised to send envoys, but nothing came of it. In like
manner Alfonso of Aragon adopted an ambiguous attitude. Both these princes
wished to play off Felix V against Eugenius IV in Italian affairs, but saw
nothing to be gained by committing themselves too definitely.
Thus Felix V was supported by no great power, and the
schism had little influence on the mind of Europe. Felix represented only the
new-fangled ideas of the Council—ideas which had long deserted the sphere of
practical utility, and so had lost their interest, Felix and the Council were
indissolubly bound together. The Council, in electing a Pope, had taken its
last step. Felix could not dissolve the Council against its will, and was
helpless without it. Yet, in spite of their close connection, it was difficult
to regulate the relations between the two. There was at the outset a difficulty
about money. The Council had elected the Duke of Savoy as a man who would spend
his money in its behalf. Felix demanded that the Council should make due
provision for its Pope and his Cardinals. This could only be done by granting
to Felix V what had been taken away from Eugenius IV. The reforming Council
must admit that it could not afford to carry out its own reforms; there was no
escape from this admission. On August 4 a decree was passed giving the Pope for
five years a fifth, and for the succeeding five years a tenth, of the first
year’s revenues of all vacant benefices. It is true that the reason assigned
for this special grant was to enable him to rescue from tyrants the patrimony
of S. Peter. None the less it awakened opposition from the Germans in the
Council, and was defended only by the fact that it was practically inoperative
except in the dominions of Savoy. It brought little money; and when, on October
12, Felix, at the instance of the Council, nominated eight Cardinals, amongst
whom were the Patriarch of Aquileia and John of Segovia, the question of their
revenues again became pressing. On November 12 six Cardinals were created to
conciliate France. It was necessary to have recourse to the old system of
provisions of benefices to supply them with revenues. Felix chafed under the
restraints which the Council laid upon him, and took advantage of the absence
of the Cardinal of Arles in November to preside over the Council, and pass some
decrees which awoke much comment. When he asked to have the same rights granted
to him over ecclesiastical benefices in Savoy as the Pope exercised in the
States of the Church, the Council refused the demand.
Meanwhile Frederick III gave no signs of his
intention. This indecision, which was the result of indolence and infirmity of
purpose, passed at first for statesman- like reserve. Both parties looked to
the Diet at Mainz for an opportunity of achieving a signal victory. They were
disappointed to hear that the King found himself too much engaged with
difficult matters in his own States to undertake in person the affairs of
Germany. He sent four commissioners to Mainz, who were to hear the arguments of
the rival claimants. Eugenius IV had learned wisdom by former experience, and
sent as his representatives two men skilled in affairs, but not of high
dignity, Nicolas of Cusa, a deserter from the Council, who well knew the temper
of Germany, and John of Carvajal, a Spaniard of great personal piety and worth,
a trained official of the Papal court. The Council, on the other hand, sent its
highest dignitaries, Cardinal d'Allemand and three of the new Cardinals, chief
of whom was John of Segovia. John claimed to appear as Papal Legate; but when
he was entering with pomp the Cathedral of Mainz the Chapter met him, and
declined to admit his legatine authority, so that he was obliged to retire. The
Diet decided to hear him as an ambassador of the Council, but not to recognize
on either side the claims of any dignity which had been conferred since the
declaration of neutrality. When the Council’s representatives tried to resist
this decision, they were told by the citizens of Mainz that their safe-conduct
would be revoked within eight days if they did not submit to the demands of the
Diet. They were driven sullenly to give way, and only the Cardinal of Arles
received the honor due to his office.
On March 24 d'Allemand appeared before the Diet, and
pleaded the cause of the Council, while his colleagues remained sulkily at
home. Next day Carvajal and Cusa answered him, and seemed to
produce considerable effect upon those present, the Electors of Trier and
Mainz, the king’s commissioners, the ambassadors of France, and a few German nobles.
Stung by the success of Cusa, John of Segovia laid aside his pride, assumed a
doctor’s robes, and with great clearness and cogency restated the Council’s
position. He produced a vast treatise, divided into twelve books, in which he
had argued out at length the various points raised by his speech. Carvajal and
Cusa replied. When John of Segovia wished to return to the charge the Diet
ruled that it had heard enough. It is no wonder that it quailed before John of
Segovia’s treatise, especially as the matter in dispute was one in which
Germany took a political, not an ecclesiastical, interest. A paper was
circulated amongst the members of the Diet, most probably the work of Jacob,
Archbishop of Trier, urging the acceptance of whichever Pope would summon a new
Council, to be organized by nations, and would guarantee to the German Church
the reforms which it had claimed for itself. In accordance with this plan the
Diet laid before the rival parties the old proposal that a new Council should
be summoned in some neutral place with the concurrence of the kings of Europe.
Six places in Germany and six in France were submitted for choice, and
Frederick III was to negotiate with the two Popes further arrangements for this
new Council, which was to meet on August 1, 1442.
Both parties retired from Mainz disappointed, and
beset Frederik with embassies. Frederick, who was rapidly showing himself
to be a master of the art of doing nothing, said that he proposed to hold
another Diet at Frankfort next year, when the question might be again
discussed. He was not altogether satisfied with the policy adopted by the Diet.
The Diet was ready to recognize the Pope who would grant to the German Church
such reforms as suited the Electors; Frederick III, was desirous to recognize the
Pope who was generally held to be legitimate, especially if in so doing he
could further his own interests.
Pending the next Diet, the fathers at Basel composed
and disseminated statements of their cause. Their proceedings otherwise were
not very harmonious. There was the old difficulty about money. Felix complained
that he incurred great expenses in sending out embassies and the like, while he
received little or nothing. The Cardinals clamoured for revenues, and the
officials of the Curia claimed their share of such money as came in. The
Council granted to Felix a bishopric, a monastery, and one benefice in Savoy
till he should recover the States of the Church. An outcry was raised against
the excessive fees of the Papal Chancery; the officers answered that they only
exacted the dues recognized by John XXII. Want of money led to a strict inquiry
into the conduct of the financial officers of the Council; and this caused
great bitterness. Felix sent the captain of his guard to imprison some who were
accused of malversation. The Council loudly complained that their liberty was
infringed, and called on the citizens of Basel to maintain their safe-conduct.
The magistrates interfered, restored peace, and fined the Pope’s captain. The
Council urged on Felix to send embassies on all sides to set forth his cause.
Felix answered that embassies were costly things, and as yet he had got little
for his money spent on them. The Council, believing in the power of
plausibility, commissioned the Archbishop of Palermo to draw up a letter to be
presented to Frederick III. When he had done his work it did not satisfy them,
and the facile pen of Aeneas Sylvius was employed to put it into a more
seductive form. The time for the Diet of Frankfort was drawing near, and Felix
was prevailed to send another embassy. His Cardinals at first pleaded their
outraged dignity, and refused to go. Felix bade them disregard their clothes in
the interests of truth and justice. The Cardinal of Aries, the Archbishop of
Palermo, and John of Segovia accepted the office and set out in May, 1442.
Eugenius IV meanwhile had asserted his authority by
decreeing, on April 26, 1441, the transference of his Council from Florence to
Rome, on the ground that Rome was a better place to receive the ambassadors of
the Ethiopian Church, who were conducting an illusory reconciliation with the
Papacy. It was a proud assertion of Papal superiority over Councils. An attempt
was made by the more decided of the Electors to obtain the assent of Eugenius
IV to the policy which they had put forward at Mainz. A learned jurist, Gregory
Heimburg, was sent to Florence with the proposals of the Electors, drawn out in
the form of two bulls, one dealing with the new Council, the other with the
liberties of the German Church. Eugenius gave no definite answer, as Heimburg
brought with him no credentials. He deferred his answer to the Diet at
Frankfort. But this negotiation showed a disposition on the part of the German
princes at this time to take the matter into their own hands, without waiting
for Frederick, whose dubious attitude was probably due to a hope of winning
back from the Swiss cantons some of the Hapsburg possessions, with which view
he did not choose to quarrel with Basel or with Savoy.
On May 27 Frederick arrived in Frankfort with the
three ecclesiastical Electors, the Count Palatine, and the Duke of Saxony. The
Council was represented by its three Cardinals; Eugenius IV by Carvajal and
Cusa, as before. But they were not permitted to air their eloquence before the
King. He decided, before entering the troubled sea of ecclesiastical disputes,
to secure his position by the prestige of a coronation, and announced his
intention of going to Aachen for that purpose. In his absence commissioners
would hear the arguments of the rival envoys, that on his return he might
not find them contending. The Cardinal of Arles, as a prince of the Empire,
accompanied the King; but at Aachen he was shut out of the cathedral by the
bishop as being excommunicated. At Frankfort the Archbishop of Palermo
harangued the royal commissioners for three days, and Cusa, not to be outdone,
did the same. The weary commissioners asked that the arguments might be reduced
to writing, which was done. On Frederick’s return, July 8, they were laid
before him, and the business of the Diet commenced. The plan of the five
Electors for recognizing Eugenius was, under Frederick’s influence, laid aside.
At Aachen he had signed a treaty with Zurich to help him to recover his
ancestral domains. The Electors agreed to stand by their King, and leave in his
hands the decision of the ecclesiastical question.
The policy adopted at Frankfort did not in its
contents differ from that previously followed. Envoys were to be sent to
Eugenius and to Basel, urging the envoys summons of an undoubted Council. But
the object the two of this new embassy was the glorification of the new King of
the Romans. Six places were proposed for the Council, all in Germany, because
in Germany was greater liberty and security than in other kingdoms, where war
prevailed and scarcity was felt. Punctilious orders were given to the
ambassadors as to the manner in which they were to observe the neutrality.
Eugenius IV was to be treated with the ordinary respect due to the rank which
he had held before the declaration of neutrality. Felix V was not to be treated
as Pope. Everything was done to convince both parties that they must submit
their cause to the decision of the German King.
From Frankfort Frederick III made a kingly progress
through Alsace and the Swiss Cantons, which received him with due
respect. He was accompanied by the Cardinal of Arles, and proposals were made
to him for a marriage with Margaret, the daughter of Felix V, and widow of
Louis of Anjou. Frederick III does not seem to have rejected the proposal. It
suited him to take no decisive steps. He promised to visit Basel, but demanded
that first his ambassadors should be heard, and an answer be returned by the
Council, which, sorely against its will, was driven to consider the proposals
of the Diet. After many discussions and many complaints, the Council answered
that, though they were lawfully assembled and enjoyed full security at Basel,
and would run many dangers in changing their place, still, in their desire for
peace, they were willing to agree to the King’s proposal, provided the King and
princes would promise obedience to all the decrees of the new Council, and also
would agree to choose the place of its meeting from a list which the fathers in
Basel would submit. It was clear that such reservations made their concession
entirely futile.
On receiving this answer Frederick III entered Basel
on November 11, and was honorably received by the Council. He maintained,
however, an attitude of strict neutrality, and visited Felix V on the understanding
that he was not to be expected to pay him reverence as Pope. The interview took
place in the evening. Felix V appeared in Papal dress, with his nine Cardinals,
and the cross carried before him. The Bishop of Chiemsee on Frederick’s behalf
explained his master’s attitude, and was careful to address Felix as “your
benignity”, not “your holiness”. Nothing was gained by the interview. Frederick
was respectful, but nothing more. The marriage project did not progress, though
Felix is said to have offered a dowry of 200,000 gold ducats provided he was
recognized as Pope. Frederick left Basel on November 17, saying, “Other Popes
have sold the rights of the Church; Felix would buy them, could he find a
seller”.
The German envoys to Eugenius IV were referred to a
commission, chief amongst whom was the canonist, John of Torquemada, who raised
many technical objections to their proposals. But Eugenius IV refused to take
advantage of the technicalities of the commission. On December 8 he gave a
decided answer. He wondered at the demand for an undoubted Council, seeing that
he was then holding a Council which had done great things for Christendom, and
to call it doubtful was nothing less than to oppose the Catholic faith. He did
not call Frederick by his title of King, but spoke only of “the Electors and
him whom they had elected”. He was willing to summon more prelates to his
Council at the Lateran, and leave them to decide whether any further steps were
necessary. The answers of the Pope and the Council were formally reported to
the envoys of the King and some of the princes at Nurnberg on February 1, 1443.
They deferred their consideration to a Diet to be held in six months; but they
fixed no place for its meeting. In fact, the German Electors were rapidly falling
away from their mediatorial attitude, which had never been very genuine. No
sooner had Frederick III succeeded in checking their league in favour of
Eugenius IV than a new league was formed in behalf of Felix V. The personal and
family relationships of the House of Savoy naturally began to tell upon the
German princes. A man who had a dowry of 200,000 ducats at his disposal was not
likely to be without friends. In December, 1442, negotiations were set on foot
for a marriage between the son of the Elector of Saxony and a niece of Felix V.
The Archbishop of Trier was busy in the matter, and stipulated for his reward
at the expense of the Church. The Archbishop of Koln was a declared adherent of
the Council. These Electors were indifferent which Pope was recognized; they
only bargained that the victory should be won by their help, and that they
should be rewarded by an increase of their power and importance. It was
hopeless to attempt to secure for Felix V universal recognition; but it would
answer their purpose if he obtained by their means a really important position.
A league in favour of Felix V was definitely formed, and its success depended
upon obtaining the support of Frederick III or of the French King.
The plan dearest to Frederick III was the recovery of
the possessions of the House of Hapsburg from the Swiss Confederates. His
alliance with Zurich and his march through the lands of the Cantons was
regarded by Frederick III as an important step.
But the jealousy of the Confederates was easily
aroused, and the quarrels which had urged Zürich to seek alliance with
Frederick soon revived. Zürich was called upon to renounce her alliance with
Austria, and on her refusal was attacked. The war was waged with savage
determination. Zürich was overmatched in numbers, but trusted to Austrian help.
Frederick III could raise no forces in his own dominions, where he had troubles
on every side. The German princes refused to send troops to prosecute a private
quarrel of their King. A crushing defeat on July 22, 1443, threatened Zürich
with destruction, and Frederick III, in his desire for aid, turned to the
French King, and begged to have the loan of some of the disbanded soldiers, who
were the miserable legacy to France of the long English war. These Armagnacs,
as they were called after their former leader, were a formidable element in the
French kingdom, and Charles VII was willing enough to lend them to his
neighbors. But he also was ready to fish in troubled waters; and the
embarrassments of the Empire suggested to him that he might extend his frontier
towards the Rhine. Instead of 5000 troops, as Frederick III demanded, he sent
30,000; instead of sending them to the Austrian general, he sent them under the
command of the Dauphin. Eugenius IV tried to use this opportunity for his own
purposes. He conferred on the Dauphin the title of gonfalonier of the Church,
with a salary of 15,000 florins, in hopes that he would attack Basel and
disperse the Council. In August, 1444, the French marched through Alsace,
took Mümpelgard, and, spreading devastation in their way, advanced towards
Basel. In a bloody battle on the little river Birs, by the cemetery of S.
Jacob, not far from the trails of Basel, a body of 1500 Confederates fought for
ten hours against the overwhelming forces of the French. They were cut to
pieces almost to a man; but the victory was so dearly bought that the Dauphin
made no further attempts to conquer Basel, or to fight another battle against
the troops of the Cantons. He made peace with the Confederates through the
mediation of the fathers of the Council, and retired into Alsace, where
his troops pillaged at will.
This was the state of things when, at the beginning of
August, 1444, Frederick III at last arrived at Nurnberg, to be present, as he
had so often promised, at a Diet which was to settle the affairs of the Church.
He had during the past year sent letters to the princes of Europe, begging them
to consent to a General Council, which he, following the example of the
Emperors Constantine and Theodosius, proposed to summon. He received dubious
answers; it was clear that such a Council was impossible. The French King, in
his answer, said that it would be better to drop the name of a Council, and
bring about an assembly of secular princes; where were the princes there was
also the Church. Aeneas Sylvius expresses the same opinion still more forcibly:
“I do not see any clergy who would suffer martyrdom for one side or the other.
We all have the same faith as our rulers, and if they were to turn idolaters we
would do so too. We would abjure not only a Pope, but Christ Himself at their
bidding. For love has waxed cold, and faith is dead”. Fortified by the
proposition of the French King, Frederick III put off his presence at a Diet
till the need had grown urgent. He went to Nurnberg more interested about Swiss
affairs than about the position of the Church.
On August I Frederick III arrived in Nurnberg, where
the Electors of Trier, Saxony, and Brandenburg awaited him, and were soon
joined by the Archbishop of Mainz. Many of the chief German princes were also
there. Frederick’s first desire was to get help from the Diet against the Swiss
Confederates; but in this he was coldly listened to, and when the news of the
battle on the Birs reached Nurnberg the King was placed in a sorry predicament.
The hungry bands of France had ravaged the possessions of the Empire, and the
Dauphin was already negotiating peace with the enemies of Austria, whom he had
been summoned to overthrow. Frederick, crimson with shame, had to listen to reproaches
which he could not answer. The only lesson which he learned from them was not
to face another Diet, a lesson which for the next twenty-seven years he
steadfastly practised. The Diet appointed the Pfalzgraf Lewis general of the
army of the Empire against the strangers from France. Frederick III, by his
supineness, had lost his control over the German princes. A proposition which
he put forward about ecclesiastical matters—to extend the neutrality for a
year, and proclaim a Council to meet on October 1, 1445, at Constance,
or, failing that, at Augsburg—was not accepted. The Diet separated without
coming to any joint decision. The discord between the King and the Electors had
at length become manifest.
Moreover, at Nurnberg the Pfalzgraf Lewis had been won
over to the side of Felix V by a marriage contract with Margaret, the daughter
of Felix, whom Frederik had refused. Four of the six Electors were now
leagued together in favour of Felix. It was a question how far they would
succeed. The dispute between the two Popes had passed into the region of mere
political expediency and personal intrigue. The whole matter was felt to centre
in Germany, and in the midst of these political intrigues the Council of Basel
sunk to insignificance. Felix V had found that the Council was useless to him,
as well as irksome. Towards the end of 1443 he quitted Basel on the ground of
health, and took up his abode at Lausanne. There he might live in peace, and be
rid of the expense which the Council perpetually caused him. Forsaken by the
Pope of its own choice, the Council became a mere shadow. Its zeal and energy
had been expended to little abiding purpose. After a glorious beginning, it had
gone hopelessly astray, and had lost itself in a quagmire from which there was
no escape.
The hopes of Felix V entirely rested on Germany.
Eugenius IV relied upon the revival of his prestige as sure to tell upon
Italian politics, in which the Papacy was a necessary element to maintain the
balance of power. In Italy Eugenius IV had been slowly gaining ground. In 1434
the condottiere bishop, Giovanni Vitelleschi, had taken possession of Rome in
the Pope’s name, and ruled it with severity. Francesco Sforza had, however,
gained a firm hold of the March of Ancona. The Duke of Milan encouraged Bologna
in 1438 to throw off the Papal yoke and declare itself independent; its example
was followed by Faenza, Imola, and Forli. The condottiere general, Niccolo
Piccinino, in league with the Duke of Milan, beguiled Eugenius IV into a belief
that he was going against Sforza in the March. Suddenly he showed himself in
his true colours, and prepared to enrich himself at the Pope’s expense.
Moreover, he planned an invasion of the Florentine territory, and was
supposed to have drawn to his side the Papal general, Vitelleschi. Vitelleschi
with a strong hand introduced order into Rome and the neighborhood; he even
waged war against Alfonso in Naples. He enjoyed to the full the confidence of
Eugenius IV, over whom he had greater influence than anyone else, and by whom
he was created Cardinal in 1437. Vitelleschi was a condottiere influenced by
the same ambitions as Sforza and Piccinino, and in Rome he held an independent
position which tempted him to act on his own account. He was known to be
bitterly hostile to Sforza, and was negotiating with Piccinino for the
overthrow of their rival. When Eugenius IV summoned to the aid of the
Florentines the Pontifical forces under the leadership of Vitelleschi, the
cautious Florentine magistrates were alarmed lest the understanding between the
two condottieri might prove stronger than Vitelleschi’s obedience to the Pope.
They laid before Eugenius IV intercepted letters of Vitelleschi to Piccinino.
The favorite had many foes among the Cardinals, who succeeded in persuading the
Pope that Vitelleschi was a traitor. But Eugenius IV dared not proceed openly
against a powerful general. Secret orders were sent to Antonio Redo, captain of
the Castle of S. Angelo, to take him prisoner. On the morning of his departure
for Tuscany Vitelleschi came to give his last orders to the commander of the
Castle. Suddenly the drawbridge was raised; Vitelleschi was attacked by
soldiers and received three severe wounds. He was made prisoner, and resigned
himself to his fate. When he was told that his captivity would be brief, as the
Pope would soon be convinced of his innocence, he answered, “One who has done
such deeds as mine ought either never to have been imprisoned, or can never be
released”. He died on April 2, 1440, and the rumour spread that his death was
due to poison, and not to his wounds.
At all events, the Florentines were glad to be rid of
Vitelleschi, and managed to persuade the Pope to appoint as his successor a man
whom they could trust, Ludovico Scarampo, who had formerly been Archbishop of
Florence. In June, 1440, Eugenius IV conferred on Scarampo and his own nephew,
Pietro Barbo, the dignity of Cardinal.
The fall of Vitelleschi freed Florence from the fear
of Piccinino, for it restored the balance between him and his rival Sforza. But
the Duke of Milan was growing weary of the indecisive war which he had been
waging against the League of Venice, Florence, and the Pope. Sforza and
Piccinino had won all that for a time they were likely to hold. All parties
wished for peace, which was concluded at Cremona in November, 1441, on the
usual terms that each should keep what they had won. Sforza also received in
marriage the illegitimate daughter of the Duke of Milan, Bianca, whose hand had
often been promised him, and often refused. Eugenius IV alone was discontented;
for Sforza was left in possession of the March of Ancona and other conquests in
the States of the Church.
In Naples also the Angevin party, which Eugenius IV,
supported, was gradually giving way before the energy of Alfonso. In 1442 René
was driven into enters Naples and there was besieged. His only hope June,
was to gain assistance from Sforza; but the Duke of Milan, jealous of his
powerful son-in-law, set Piccinino to keep him in check, and Eugenius IV, who
now saw in Sforza his chief enemy, was only too glad to do his part of
fulminating against him. Alfonso pressed the siege of Naples, which he entered
on June 2, 1442. René was driven to flee from the Castel Nuovo, where the
superb triumphal arch in the inner doorway still stands to commemorate the
entrance of Alfonso. René fled on board a Genoese galley to Florence, where he
received the Pope’s condolences, and afterwards betook himself to his county of
Provence.
The fall of the Angevin party in Naples greatly
affected the policy and position of Eugenius IV. He had little to expect from
France, whose position towards the Papacy was now declared. On the other hand,
he had much to gain from Alfonso, and Alfonso had shown by his dealings with
the Council of Basel that his chief object was to bring the Pope to terms. By
an alliance with Alfonso, Eugenius could obtain help against Sforza, and could
also pave the way for a peaceful return to Rome. He had begun to feel that in a
contest against a pretender the establishment of his Curia in Rome would add to
his prestige. He had already decreed the adjournment of his Council from
Florence to the Lateran, and it was worthwhile to make his hold on Rome secure.
Moreover, he had gained little by his alliance with Florence and Venice; in the
peace of 1441 they had regarded only their own interests and had paid no heed
to his desires. Accordingly Eugenius IV negotiated with Alfonso to recognize
him in Naples, and legitimatize his son Ferrante, on condition that Alfonso
helped him against Sforza. As this was a step alienating himself from the
League and from Florence, Eugenius IV found it desirable to leave Florence on
March 7, 1443. The Venetians urged the Florentines to keep him prisoner, and
only on the morning of his departure did the Florentines determine to let him
go. Yet the final departure was courteous on both sides, and Eugenius IV
thanked the magistracy for their hospitality. He betook himself to Siena, a
city hostile to Florence, and, by so doing, gave a clear indication of his
change of policy.
In Siena Eugenius IV was honorably received, and
concluded his negotiations with Alfonso. He also had Eugenius an interview with
Piccinino, and doubtless devised with him schemes against their common enemy
Sforza. On September 13 he set out for Rome, where he arrived on September 28,
after an absence of eight years. The Romans received their Pope with
acquiescence, but without enthusiasm. Eugenius IV settled down quietly into his
capital, and proceeded at once to open his Council in the Lateran. But the
Council of the Lateran was an empty form maintained against the Council of
Basel, which was now weakened by the defection of Scotland and Castile, as well
as Aragon. Eugenius IV trusted to diplomacy to destroy the last hope of Felix
V, by driving Frederick III to abandon the German neutrality. Meanwhile in
Italy he had important work to do in using his new allies as a means of
recovering from Sforza his possessions in the States of the Church.
In Italy circumstances favored the Pope’s policy. The
suspicious Duke of Milan was always jealous of his powerful son-in-law, and
wished to keep him in check. Alfonso of Naples was true to his agreement with
the Pope, and in August, 1443, marched against Sforza. He was joined by
Piccinino, and their combined army is said to have numbered 24,000 men, against
which Sforza could only command 8000. Sforza resolved to act on the defensive
and secure his chief cities by garrisons; but many of the leaders in whom he
trusted betrayed his cause. His ruin seemed imminent, when suddenly the Duke of
Milan interposed on his behalf. He wished to see his son-in-law humbled, but
not destroyed, and so prevailed on Alfonso to withdraw his troops. Sforza was
now a match for Piccinino, and succeeded in defeating him in battle on November
8. But Piccinino was rich in the resources of Eugenius IV, while Sforza
suffered from want of money. Both sides retired into winter quarters, and as
spring approached Piccinino had a superior force at his command. Again the Duke
of Milan interposed, and invited Piccinino to a conference on important
affairs. No sooner was Piccinino absent than Sforza hastened to seize the
opportunity. He gathered together his starving troops, and told them that now
was their last chance of wealth and victory. His skillful generalship
outmatched Piccinino’s son, who, with the Papal legate, Cardinal Capranica, was
left in charge of the troops of the Church. Piccinino, already an old man, had
gone to Milan with sad forebodings; he was so overwhelmed with the news of this
defeat, that he died of a broken heart on October 25, 1444. He was a marvelous
instance of the power of genius over adverse circumstances. Small in stature,
crippled through paralysis so that he could scarcely walk, he could direct
campaigns with unerring skill; though devoid of eloquence or personal gifts, he
could inspire his soldiers with confidence and enthusiasm. He was impetuous and
daring, and showed to the greatest advantage in adversity. But he lacked the
consistent policy of Sforza, and saw, in his last days, that he had founded no
lasting power. With his death his army fell in pieces, and no captain was left
in Italy to match the might of Sforza.
When the fortunes of war had begun to turn against the
Pope, Venice and Florence joined with the Duke of Milan in urging peace, which
was accepted on condition that each party should retain what it held on October
18. Sforza employed the eight days that intervened between the conclusion of
the peace and the date for its operation in recovering most of the cities which
had been won for the Pope. Eugenius IV only retained Ancona, Recanati, Osimo,
and Fabriano, and they were to remain tributary to Sforza. His first attempt
against the powerful condottiere had not met with much success. Next year,
however, he was again prepared to take advantage of another quarrel which had
arisen between Sforza and the Duke of Milan, and war again broke out. Bologna,
which had been in the hands of Piccinino, proclaimed its independence under the
leadership of Annibale Bentivoglio; but the Pope and the Duke of Milan both
looked with suspicion on the independence of a city which each wished to bring
under his own sway. In June, 1445, a band of conspirators, supported by the
Duke of Milan, assassinated Annibale Bentivoglio after a baptism, where he had
been invited to act as godfather to the son of their ringleader. But their plan
of seizing the city failed. The people were true to the house of Bentivoglio,
and slew the assassins of Annibale. Florence and Venice came to their help. There
was again war in Italy with Sforza, Florence, and Venice on one side, the Pope,
Naples, and Milan on the other. Again Sforza was hard pressed, and the Papal
troops overran the March of Ancona. In June, 1446, Sforza made a raid in the
direction of Rome, and penetrated as far as Viterbo. But the cities shut their
gates against him, and he had no means of besieging them. Sforza’s ruin seemed
certain; Jesi was the only town in the March which he held. But, luckily for
him, the Venetians took this opportunity to attack the Duke of Milan, who,
being ill provided with generals, needed the help of Sforza, whose ambition was
henceforward turned to a nobler prize than the March of Ancona, which fell back
peaceably into the hands of the Pope.
Thus Eugenius IV, by stubborn persistency, succeeded
in repairing the mischief of his first political indiscretion, and obtained
again a secure position in Italy, while the mistakes of the Council had done
much to restore his ecclesiastical power, which had been so dangerously threatened.
The leading theologians of the Council had been driven to quit it, and range
themselves on the side of the Pope; only John of Segovia and John of Palomar
remained true to the principles with which the Council opened. It is noticeable
that the great advocate of the Council’s power, Nicolas of Cusa, was now the
chief emissary of Eugenius IV. Cusa had been taught in the school of Deventer,
and came to Basel deeply imbued with the mystic theology of the Brethren of the
Common Life. His work, De Concordantia Catholica, written in 1433,
represented the ideal of the reforming party, a united Church reformed in soul
and body, in priesthood and laity, by the action of a Council which should
represent on earth the eternal unity of Heaven. Cusa’s work was the text-book
of the Council; yet its author was disillusioned, and found his theories fade
away. He quitted Basel with Cesarini, and in common with others who felt that
they had been led away by their enthusiasm, laboured to restore the Papal power
which once he had striven to upset. The Council of Florence gathered round the
Pope an extraordinary number of learned theologians, whose efforts were now
devoted to the restoration of the Papacy. Again, after the interval of a
century and a half, the pens of canonists were engaged in extolling the Papal
supremacy. John of Torquemada, a Spanish Dominican, whom Eugenius IV raised to
the Cardinalate, revived the doctrine of the plenitude of the Papal power, and
combated the claims of a General Council to rank as superior to the Pope. Now,
as in other times, the immediate result of an attack upon the Papal supremacy
was to gather round the Papacy a serried band of ardent supporters; if the
outward sphere of the exercise of the Papal authority was limited, the
theoretic basis of the authority itself was made stronger for those who still
upheld it.
These labours of
theologians were to bear their fruits in after times. The immediate question
for Felix V and Eugenius IV was the attitude of Germany towards their
conflicting claims. Germany was to be their battlefield, and diplomacy
their arms
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