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DECLINE OF EMPIRE AND PAPACYCHAPTER X.THE POPES OF AVIGNON AND THE GREAT SCHISM
The seven
Popes from 1305 to 1378 resided, more or less continuously, at Avignon. This
prolonged absence from Italy constitutes a fact of the first importance and
quite unprecedented in the history of the Church. The explanation of it lies in
a combination of events and circumstances most complex in character.
When
Bertrand de Got, Archbishop of Bordeaux, became Pope under the name of Clement
V (1305-14), the situation in Italy was extremely critical. The cardinals who
notified to him his election depicted the country as plunged in anarchy, and
the States of the Church as ruined by war. Nevertheless, the new Pope on
several occasions manifested his firm intention of going to Italy, so soon as
peace should be concluded between England and France and the crusade organised.
He fixed oil Vienne, in Dauphiné, for his coronation, in the hope that the Kings
of England and France would consent to come there and to discuss the terms of a
settlement, without which an expedition to the Holy Land was impossible. Though
the meeting he planned did not take place, negotiations were set on foot and
soon resulted in a reconciliation. But even so, the Pope was not able to depart
for Rome. In July and August 1305 Philip the Fair reminded him of the
prosecution instituted against the late Pope Boniface VIII, which had not been
terminated. Clement, wishing to avoid its resumption, made a concession
pregnant with results: he went to Lyons, where his coronation took place on 14
November 1305, and there negotiations were begun. It was agreed to defer the
question of Boniface’s trial to a later interview, and so the Pope had to put
off his departure for Italy. At this point he fell ill and all but died. The
interview eventually took place at Poitiers in April 1307, but the parties
separated without arriving at a decision. On 13 October 1307 came the dramatic
stroke—the wholesale arrest of the Templars. This necessitated a further
meeting with Philip the Fair, but at Poitiers (May to July 1308) the French
King shewed himself so exacting that Clement determined to escape from his
clutches. To go to Rome was not to be thought of. It would have been madness to
leave Philip master of the situation on the eve of the assembling of the
Council of Vienne, where most important issues for the Church were to be
decided, and above all the scandalous trial of the Templars was to be debated.
The papal court was removed to Avignon.
The town of
Avignon, indeed, provided advantages of many kinds. It assured speedy
communication with Italy. It was close to, but not dependent upon France. Its
overlords were vassals of the Church, and there was nothing to fear from them.
Finally, it formed an enclave within the county of Venaissin,
which was itself a possession of the Holy See. No other town could offer the
Pope such strong guarantees of security and independence.
After the
close of the Council of Vienne, which lasted from 16 October 1311 to 6 May
1312, the Pope’s health, always feeble, took a serious turn for the worse, and
he finally succumbed on 14 April 1314.
Yet, even
if the Pope had enjoyed better health, he would hardly have braved the danger
of crossing the Alps in the years 1312 and 1313. The coming of Henry VII, King
of the Romans, into Italy had thrown the whole country into confusion. The city
of Rome, from 7 May 1312 onwards, was little more than a battlefield for the
sanguinary strife of Guelfs and Ghibellines. Henry VII treated the Pope as an
enemy, and proclaimed his complete independence of the spiritual power. In
concert with Frederick, King of Trinacria (Sicily),
he collected a large fleet against the Pope’s vassal, King Robert of Naples. In
these circumstances, Clement V judged it prudent to remain in the Venaissin, and his successors followed his example.
In fact,
during the whole of John XXII’s pontificate (1316-34), Italy continued to be
devastated by war. In 1332, however, the victories won by the Cardinal-legate
Bertrand du Pouget over the Ghibellines made possible
the crossing of the Alps. John XXII planned to bring about the pacification of
Lombardy and Tuscany, and to take up his residence at Bologna. But the
distraction of a crusade, the pressure of the King of France, and, above all,
the rebellion of the Bolognese put a speedy end to his designs.
At the
beginning of Benedict XII’s pontificate (1334-42), it was decided at a
consistory held in July 1335 that the papal court should start about 1 October
and should establish itself provisionally at Bologna. At a second consistory
the cardinals changed their minds and postponed the departure to a later date.
There were various urgent matters, including the projects for a crusade, that
impelled them to this course. But also, alarming news had arrived from Bologna.
The town seemed to be in too disturbed a condition to furnish a secure home for
the Holy See.
The
forebodings of the cardinals were soon justified. Bologna revolted; the local
lords in Romagna and the Marches planned to make themselves independent; even
in Rome revolt broke out, and lasted from 1347 to 1356. War became inevitable
under Clement VI (1342-52) and continued to rage fiercely under Innocent VI
(1352-62). It only came to an end when Cardinal Albornoz had reduced to
impotence the various nobles who troubled the peace of the peninsula. Urban V
(1362-70) thought the time had come to re-establish the Papacy at Rome. The
Romans, who had so often clamoured for his return, now devised schemes for his
expulsion. They allied against him with Perugia, which was already in revolt,
and the Perugians were emboldened to hire the
condottiere John Hawkwood and his bands, and to
launch an attack on Viterbo, where the Pope was residing. They were forced to
submit, but the situation was little improved thereby, for the free-lances in
the pay of Bernabò Visconti were overrunning Tuscany and threatening to invade
the Patrimony. In alarm for his safety and naturally distrustful of his
subjects after their recent behaviour, Urban V was also anxious to intervene to
check the hostilities which had broken out again between France and England. On
27 September 1370 he returned to Avignon.
To come
back to Italy was the uppermost thought in the mind of Urban’s successor,
Gregory XI (1370-78) but for some years circumstances thwarted his good
intentions. At last on 17 January 1377, he landed at the port of Rome. The
re-establishment of the Papacy in the Eternal City might have provoked the
Romans to gratitude. Far from it, however: once more the faction-fights broke
out. And, if credit can be given to the testimony of a contemporary, a Roman
cardinal even plotted against the life of the sovereign Pontiff. So, if the
Popes deserted Italy for about seventy years, Italy was to blame in giving them
regularly so inhospitable a reception.
The lack of
security afforded by Italy in the fourteenth century is not the only
explanation of the sojourn of the Holy See on the banks of the Rhone. The
dominant idea with the Avignonese Papacy was a
crusade, and the achievement of this splendid task could only be realised if
the disastrous war between France and England was brought to an end by a
definitive peace. The Curia displayed extraordinary zeal in attempting to
reconcile the hostile nations, as is attested in its voluminous diplomatic
correspondence. It is at least open to doubt whether it could have pursued this
laudable endeavour with as much vigour, had it been far removed from Avignon.
Besides
this, the Holy See had a vital interest in preserving the goodwill of the
kings of France, who aimed at keeping the Papacy within the sphere of their
influence, and who were also its most reliable allies in its bitter struggle
with Lewis of Bavaria from 1317 to 13472. As soon as it was freed of all
anxiety from the Empire, the Papacy worked unceasingly for the pacification of
Italy, in order to make its own residence there possible. When it had achieved
this object, the urgent entreaties of Charles V did not prevail to keep it at
Avignon.
The camera apostolica : the chancery
Although
endowed with very diverse qualities and with temperaments often conflicting,
the Avignonese Popes had the same ends in view, and
in matters ecclesiastical pursued the same policy. Their work, coherent and
characteristic, consisted in organising the administration of the Roman Church
on a new basis and in centralising it under their authority, in restoring the
papal finances, combating heresy, reforming abuses, preaching and directing
the crusading movement, and spreading abroad overseas the knowledge of the
Gospel.
Under the Avignonese Papacy the central administration of the Roman
Church was distributed among four main departments: the camera apostolica, the chancery, the judicial administration,
and the penitentiary.
The camera apostolica was the name given to the aggregation
of offices in which the financial business of the Holy See was transacted. At
the head were two high officials—the chamberlain and the treasurer. The
chamberlain was a real finance minister. Appointed by the Pope and holding
episcopal rank, his chief function was to supervise the collectors of papal
taxes throughout Christendom in the performance of their duties, and to check
the receipts and expenditure of the various departments in the papal court.
Having as his prime duty the safeguarding of the rights of the Roman Church,
the chamberlain became the most weighty and intimate councillor of the Pope,
who consulted him on all political issues. He was a sort of Secretary of State,
who drew up the instructions addressed to nuncios, and communicated directly to
kings the views of his master. He had under him scribes, known after 1341 as secretarii, who wrote the political correspondence
and the confidential letters of the Pope. The chamberlain was, therefore, the
most important personage in the papal court, and most of the functionaries of
the palace were under his orders. The treasurer and the financial advisers
(clerks of the chamber) assisted him in the performance of his duties. The
auditor, vice-auditor, and procurator-fiscal dealt with contentious business.
From the tribunal of the auditor an appeal lay to that of the chamberlain,
whose sentence, whether pronounced by himself or by deputy, was final. Lastly,
the coinage was also under the chamberlain’s control. The Mint was situated
first at Sorgues, and then from 1354 onwards at
Avignon. The management of it lay in the hands of a master of the Mint, a
keeper, a provost, an engraver, and an assayer, with a number of workmen under
them.
The term
chancery was applied to a group of departments occupied, each with its own
particular share, in the business of preparing the papal letters relating to
the administration of the Church. These departments were seven in number, and
were concerned respectively with petitions (supplicationes),
with the examination (examen) of candidates for benefices, with preparing the
draft (minuta, nota) of the letter, with writing it
out in full (grossa) on parchment, with inspecting it
with a view to correction (correctoria), with
affixing the seal (bulla), and finally with entering a copy in the register (registrum). The head of all this complicated organisation
was the vice-chancellor, but he had not the same liberty of action as the
chamberlain. He could only act on the Pope’s mandate.
In the
region of judicial administration, the number of cases which came to the Holy
See, whether of first instance or of appeal, had grown by the fourteenth
century to such proportions that a subdivision of judicial powers became
necessary. Up till then judges-delegate had only acted as examining
magistrates; at any rate the sovereign Pontiff had, with very few exceptions,
reserved to himself the right of pronouncing sentence. From the time of Clement
V regular courts of justice were established, and against the decisions of some
of these there was no appeal. They were the Consistory, the tribunals of the
cardinals, the audientia sacri palatii, and the audientia litterarum contradictarum.
The
Consistory, the assembly of Pope and cardinals, heard complaints, informations, accusations, and pleas of all kinds. It was
in fact a court of appeal. The business that came before it was either referred
to local judges who were appointed delegates to investigate or decide cases, or
after enquiry to the Consistory itself when the parties concerned agreed to a
compromise, or to one of the two following tribunals. The tribunals of the
cardinals were only occasional tribunals. Before the cardinals heard a case, it
had to be specially referred to them by the Pope, who notified to them in
detail their exact powers. As a rule they did not give final judgments. For the
most part they drew up a precis of the facts of the case, and then reported on
it to the Pope, who passed sentence. Usually they handed over their duties to a
deputy, known as auditor, who listened to the pleadings and to the parties concerned.
Notaries, or clerks of the court, an usher, and a keeper of the seal, completed
the personnel of the court. The audientia sacri palatii became known
after 1336 as the tribunal of the Rota. The constitution Ratio iuris (16 November 1331) defined its functions. The auditores, whose exact number is unknown, gave final
judgments. They were distinguished jurisconsults, graduates, and were classed
in three ranks according to seniority. However, this classification, adopted in
1331 by John XXII, fell rapidly into disuse; by about 1341 it was no longer
current. When the auditores who were trying a
case had concluded the hearing, they were obliged to communicate their
conclusions to their colleagues of the same rank in 1331, or after 1341 of the
same group. When they were in possession of the views of their colleagues, they
pronounced judgment, which, if there was a difference of opinion, had to
express the views of the majority. Their competence extended to all cases
referred to them by the Pope or the vice-chancellor. Their usual business was
to decide actions to which the collation of benefices, resulting from papal
reservations, gave rise. Litigants employed all sorts of expedients to delay
the normal procedure. It was the audientia litterarum contradictarum that decided all pleas in bar of action. This court also heard the arguments
upon the documentary evidence, investigated the documents, arranged for copies
to be made, and decided on their validity. It also heard the various legal
points arising out of the execution of sentences.
The duties
of the Apostolic Penitentiary were to put an end to the effects of an
ecclesiastical censure (excommunication, suspension, or interdict), to remove
an irregularity, that is to say a canonical bar to the exercise of ecclesiastical
functions, to grant dispensations for marriage, to give absolution in reserved
cases. The head of this administration, to which Benedict XII on 8 April 1338
gave an important body of rules, was the Grand Penitentiary, a cardinal-bishop
or cardinal-priest in every case. A numerous personnel assisted him in his
work. From twelve to eighteen penitentiarii minores
heard the confessions of the faithful, between the hours of prime and tierce,
in the cathedral or principal church of the town where the Pope had his
residence. In cases easy to decide, they granted absolutions or dispensations;
other cases were referred to the Pope himself or to the Grand Penitentiary.
It is true
that most of the institutions, the working of which has been briefly indicated,
existed before the fourteenth century. But the Popes of Avignon put upon them a
special imprint; they developed them systematically. They laid down the rights
and duties of the officials so meticulously, and with such care to avoid fraud
and to prevent abuses, that some of their regulations were to remain in force
for several generations, while others were to serve as the basis for
improvements in detail which Popes of later ages adjudged necessary. Their
work, in short, was a lasting one.
Papal
provisions
The Avignonese Popes were not content with reorganising the
administration of the Church. They accelerated the movement of centralisation
which had been developing since the eleventh century. It can even be said that
in the fourteenth century this movement in some respects attained its apogee.
Appeals to the court at Avignon became very numerous. The Curia directly
conferred university degrees, to an unusual extent. It intervened more
frequently in the affairs of the religious Orders, suppressing some, such as
the Templars, reforming others against their will, such as the Order of Grandmont and the Knights of the Hospital of St John of
Jerusalem, appointing in others the head and subordinate officials. From 1305
to 1378 only one Ecumenical Council was celebrated, at Vienne (1311—12). There
Clement V peremptorily affirmed his sovereign authority. To those fathers of
the Council who would not assent to his project of uniting the possessions of
the Templars with those of the Hospitallers, he replied: “If you agree to the
conferring of these possessions on the Hospital, I will gladly pronounce my
assent; if not, I will do it all the same, whether you like it or no”. As this
did not silence the opposition, Clement overruled it. Contemporaries had no
doubt as to the real implications of the attitude taken by the Pope. An English
chronicler affirmed, with a little exaggeration, that the Council of Vienne
“did not deserve to be called a council, because the lord Pope did everything
on his own (ex capite propria)”.
There is
nothing that manifests so clearly the progress of centralisation in the Church
as the way in which the Popes assumed an ever increasing share in the collation
to benefices. They made use of the right of reservation, by which the Pope took
upon himself, in virtue of his primacy of jurisdiction, to confer benefices,
whether for an actual or a future vacancy, to the exclusion of all those,
ecclesiastics or laymen, who had the right of election, nomination, or
presentation thereto. Previous Popes, indeed, had set the example. The Popes of
Avignon did not make an innovation; they were content to multiply reservations
and to extend them more and more widely. The final stage was reached under
Urban V, when the elective principle was in the last phase of decline, and the
collation to benefices not subject to election had almost everywhere passed out
of the hands of the ordinary collators. In no period of history did the Holy
See exercise its powers of jurisdiction in so extreme a form.
It can be
easily realised that a policy so destructive of private liberties and
privileges aroused violent opposition. Discontent was rife throughout Europe.
Everywhere there were bitter criticisms of “the unbridled multitude of
provisions apostolic” in favour of clergy who were strangers to the dioceses in
which the benefices lay, and especially of cardinals. From all sides came the
same story of the disastrous consequences resulting from the direct nomination
to benefices by the Holy See: the absence from their benefices of those who
“have never seen the crucifix of the churches of which they eat the bread of
sorrow”, the exodus of capital from the national territories, the decay of piety
among the people, the decrease of divine worship, the wretched state of the
sacred edifices which were falling into ruins for lack of repair, the neglect
of almsgiving, the cessation of hospitality to the needy, the manifest breach
of the express intentions of pious founders, the collapse of discipline in the
monasteries, the accumulation of benefices. The chroniclers echo the complaints
continually uttered by the cathedral chapters who were deprived of their right
of election. They claim that the apostolic provisions are tainted with simony.
Their grievances are to be found in the writings of bishops, and even of a
cardinal. According to Cardinal Napoleon Orsini, almost all the episcopal sees
and even the smallest prebends in Italy were the object of barter and family
intrigues during the pontificate of Clement V.
The
denunciation pronounced everywhere against the papal policy with regard to
benefices was nowhere more bitter than in England. Edward III was bold enough
to remind Clement VI that “the successor of the Apostles was commissioned to
lead the Lord’s sheep to the pasture, not to fleece them”. The numerous
Parliaments in the fourteenth century, from that of Carlisle in January 1307 to
that in 1376, did not cease from breaking out into invective against the
actions of the Holy See. The continual complaints of the representatives of the
English nation penetrated in time down to the mass of the people, and there
engendered a very dangerous opposition to the Papacy. Men’s minds were attuned
to listen with sympathy to the violent attacks of John Wyclif on the
constitution of the Roman Church.
From words
they passed to deeds. In England, the Statute of Provisors (9 February 1351)
did away in theory with the practice of the Holy See in the matter of benefices,
and the Statute of Praemunire (23 September 1353) with the right to appeal on
these questions to the Roman courts. In the Empire, the position was still
worse. The cathedral chapters jealously, and often successfully, defended their
privileges against the encroachments of the Avignonese Popes; they persisted too in granting canonries and prebends to the younger
sons of noble families, in defiance sometimes of the canonical penalties
pronounced by papal officials. At Wurzburg, three clerks, who had come to read
an apostolic mandate conferring the archdeaconry of Künzelsan,
a canonry, and a prebend in the cathedral church on a Frenchman, John Guilabert, were seized upon, bound hand and foot, and
thrown into the Alain. The conflict which broke out between the Church and
Lewis of Bavaria gave an opportunity to the cathedral chapters to inflict a
series of humiliating rebuffs on the Papacy in the matter of episcopal
appointments. In vain the Holy See annulled elections made in defiance of
apostolic reservations, nominated fresh candidates of its own, pronounced
excommunication on the bishops elected and severe penalties on the electors;
its nominees could rarely get their authority recognised in the dioceses
entrusted to their charge, and had to be transferred to other sees. The
bishoprics of Wurzburg, Freising, Augsburg, Mainz,
Hildesheim, were all occupied by “intruders.”
The
accession of Charles of Bohemia to the imperial throne did not materially alter
the religious situation in the Empire. He had indeed promised Clement VI to
drive the “intruders” from their sees and to support the candidature of
prelates nominated by the papal Court. But even if he had the intention of
keeping his oath, he did not possess sufficient authority to do so. He avoided the
use of force and preferred to make terms with the supporters of the house of
Wittelsbach. Henceforth elections in chapters or abbeys took place in spite of
apostolic reservations and in defiance of them. In order to safeguard their
authority, the Popes had no other resource than to appoint as abbots or bishops
those very persons whose election they had previously quashed.
Tenacious
and widespread though it was, the resistance to papal provisions from 1305 to
1378 failed in the long run to be effective, even in the Empire; the final
victory lay with the Holy See. Success was often achieved only by means of a
fiction; but that was sufficient to determine the defeat of the chapters and
the ordinary collators, and to assure the triumph of papal omnipotence. For,
while papal provision was disadvantageous to some people, on the other hand it
entailed real benefit to others as well as to the Church itself. It brought to
an end the prolonged vacancies of episcopal sees, so damaging to the welfare of
souls and to the good management of episcopal revenues; it remedied the
negligence of the ordinary collators in providing incumbents for vacant
benefices, and the illegalities they committed in their choice of candidates;
it put an end to the intrigues which broke out within the chapters at the time
of an election, the violent competitions, the settlements in which simony
played a part, the long and disastrous schisms when the electors could not
agree. Finally, it was attractive to the public authorities and to some of the
ordinary collators as well. For between them and the Holy See grew up a tacit
concordat, advantageous to both of the contracting parties. Instead of imposing
their candidates on the chapters by methods that were hardly canonical, the
kings preferred to request the Pope to reserve such and such a church for his
own disposal, at the same time recommending their candidate to him. Ordinary
collators or patrons did the same; they addressed petitions to the Roman court
in favour of the clerk of their choice. The Pope, for his part, by means of the
mandates he issued for provisions, furnished himself with important financial
resources. He made the bishops and abbots, who received their appointments from
him, pay to the chancery the regular and the petty dues. As for the smaller
beneficiaries, they had to pay annates. And not only were taxes imposed on
bishops and abbots; they also had to take an oath of fealty to St Peter, to the
Roman Church, and to the Roman pontiff. Thus was accomplished the centralisation
of power in the hands of the sovereign Pope.
But merely
to retain the nomination to benefices was not enough for the Popes who had
their seat at Avignon. In the fourteenth century, it was impossible for a power
even of an essentially spiritual character to dominate the world unless wealth
supplied the driving force for its activities. This the Popes of Avignon
acquired by creating or developing a vast fiscal system, designed to secure to
them considerable pecuniary resources. Two kinds of taxes were levied on
ecclesiastical benefices: the one paid directly to the Curia by those liable,
the other levied locally by collectors.
The taxes
paid at the Roman court were numerous. The ordinary dues (servitia communia) consisted of fees payable by bishops or
abbots when appointed to their offices by the Holy See, and amounted to
one-third of a year’s income. The petty dues (servitia minuta), the sacra, the subdiaconorum,
were gratuities paid to the personnel of the papal court and of the cardinals’
households. Abbots and bishops also had to pay high chancery dues, quittance
fees, charges levied on the occasion of their visits ad limina, and fees on
receiving the pallium. More important still were the taxes levied locally by
the agents of the papal treasury: the decimae,
or one-tenth of the net income of a benefice; the annatae (annalia, annualia,
fructus primi anni), the revenue of a benefice in
the year following the institution of a new incumbent; and subsidia caritativa, which were extraordinary
contributions. Further, on the death of any beneficiaries, clergy or bishops,
the Popes exercised right of spolia and took possession of their effects; and
during the whole vacancy of a benefice to which they collated, they received
the revenues, fructus vacantes as they were
called. Finally, they deprived the bishops and other prelates of the profits
arising from procurationes, the pecuniary dues
payable on the occasion of the canonical visitations they all were in duty
bound to make.
While the
number and the variety of the papal taxes constituted a heavy burden for the
clergy, the nature and methods of their collection made them still more odious.
No limitation of time could wipe out the debts of the taxpayers. Whether due
from personal or from real property, they remained a charge on the benefice,
however old they might be. Every holder of a benefice was made liable for the
debts of his predecessors. Certainly he could take action against them or their
heirs; but this was a doubtful advantage and often too expensive. The methods
employed in exerting pressure so as to hasten the payment of taxes and overcome
resistance combined to make the papal treasury universally execrated. In the
fourteenth century, outside the Church as well as within it, harsh measures
were the general rule. The collectors smote the recalcitrants with ecclesiastical censures, excommunication, the aggravatio,
the re-aggravatio. It can be imagined what a
deplorable impression it must have made on Christian people, when, during the
holy offices, they heard the thunders of the Church hurled, with all the
formalities, against their own pastors; and what a scandal it was for the
people of Mondonnedo to see the mortal remains of
their bishop deprived of Christian burial until his heirs made themselves
responsible for his debts.
The
accounts of contemporaries leave us in no doubt as to the general feeling. The
fiscal measures of the Popes of Avignon, though there was a reason for them—and
the maintenance of the papal court, the preparation for a crusade, the Italian
wars, the transference of the Holy See to Rome, give ample explanation—excited the most lively discontent throughout Christendom.
Not to mention the statements of chroniclers, we get from documents in archives
and from the very account-books of the collectors themselves a rough idea of
the state of mind of the clergy. In England, Parliaments expressed themselves
with great bitterness against the papal exactions. In France, the resistance of
the incumbents took the form of embarrassing the papal agents in the
performance of their duties. In the Empire, the collectors were hunted down,
thrown into noisome prisons, mutilated, and even strangled. The excitement
among the clergy in the dioceses of Cologne, Bonn, Xanten, Soest,
and Mainz reached such a pitch that in 1372 they bound themselves by oath not
to pay the tenth demanded by Gregory XI, and to support in their resistance all
against whom action was taken; any incumbent who betrayed his pledge was to be
deprived of his benefice and declared ineligible to possess one again in the
future.
The
grievances of the clergy were well-founded. The reasons they alleged against
the paying of taxes—the evils of the time, the disasters of war, the high cost
of food, the scarcity of money, famine, and, lastly, plague—were certainly
just. In France, above all, most benefices were ruined or destroyed by the
Grand Companies. As a result the papal taxes inevitably reduced the incumbents
to penury; and it cannot be wondered that these wretched people deserted their
parishes. On the other hand, the withdrawal from those who had enjoyed it
hitherto of the right of procuratio (provision of
entertainment during a visitation) resulted in the cessation of canonical
visitations, the relaxation of discipline, the abandonment of divine worship,
and the non-residence of the clergy. A contemporary gives a slightly
exaggerated account of this: “The people saw themselves everywhere deprived of
the Word of God, and in several places of participation in the sacraments,
because there remained no means of subsistence for their pastors to whose care
they had been entrusted; churches and other buildings were almost everywhere in
ruins, there being no possibility of keeping them in repair; while the poor
died of penury, deprived both of consolation and of succour.”
The Popes
of Avignon were not ignorant of the abuses that arose from their fiscal policy.
In claiming the taxes they were in fact simply exercising the right of
ownership over the property of the universal Church; this had been timidly
asserted in the thirteenth century, and now in the fourteenth was often
proclaimed aloud. Their pecuniary needs forced them to this regrettable
extremity. When John XXII became Pope, he had in his chest only 70,000 gold
florins. The papal treasure had been exhausted by the excessive legacies of
Clement V; and the new Pope created taxes to meet his difficulties. The
receipts amounted to a high figure, about 4,100,000 florins for the whole
duration of his papacy. But the expenses, in great part owing to the Italian
wars, came to 4,191,466 florins. The camera apostolica would have been driven to bankruptcy, had not John XXII paid in 440,000 florins
out of his private exchequer and also extracted 150,000 more from the estate of
Clement V. He left Benedict XII in a sufficiently favourable financial position
to save him from having to exact some of the taxes. In 1342 the sums in the
papal treasury amounted to 1,117,000 florins.
The
brightness of the financial situation was abruptly dimmed after the accession
of Clement VI. Accustomed to the life of a great nobleman, Clement scattered
money far and wide. The balance of the papal treasury had sunk at his death to
311,115 florins; and even this was a fictitious balance, for it had only been
created by borrowing. Innocent VI had an annual revenue of 253,000 florins, but
the Italian wars swallowed up more than the taxes brought in. Henceforward the
deficit was an ever yawning gulf. Innocent found himself obliged to sacrifice a
great part of his silver plate, and a large number of jewels and precious
ornaments. He was reduced to extreme penury; even works of art were sold for
their weight in gold and silver, regardless of their artistic value. Urban V,
at the end of his resources, had to borrow 30,000 florins from his cardinals,
and Gregory XI was in debt to Louis of Anjou to the extent of 120,000 gold
francs. Perforce they had to load taxes upon the holders of benefices.
The Italian
wars were not the only interest of the Popes. They reckoned that, in view of
the general increase in wealth, they would sink in the esteem of their
contemporaries if they did not display themselves as the centre of social pomp.
In consequence they lived like temporal princes and supported a gorgeous
retinue. Their court shone with a display of luxury, though relatively to their
other expenditure it was not excessive. The first place in the entourage of the
sovereign pontiff was taken by his relatives, male and female, who attired
themselves in precious stuffs and costly furs; then came knights, squires,
serjeants-at-arms, chaplains, ushers, chamberlains, chefs, and so on. In sum,
the private court of the reigning Pope was composed of three or four hundred
persons or even more; and they were all supplied with clothing, food, lodging,
and wages. Avignon under Clement VI became the rallying-place of the finest
spirits of the age. In it could be met Italian and German painters, French
sculptors and architects, musicians, poets, men of letters, lawyers,
philosophers, astronomers, doctors; it was the scene of balls, tournaments,
fetes, wedding banquets. An Italian eyewitness has left us an account of a
magnificent reception given by Cardinal Annibale da Ceccano to Clement VI in 1343. Further, the Head of the
Church needed a residence both secure and stately. Benedict XII and Clement VI
built on the Roches des Doms the gigantic towers
which still strike the visitor with astonishment, and connected them with
imposing walls. Inside their palace, which was like an impregnable fortress,
the Popes could defy the troops of free-lances who held France and Provence to
ransom. This was not sufficient, however. The invasion of the Grand Companies
into the county of Venaissin forced them to enclose
both the old town and the new with a common girdle of walls, having magnificent
ramparts, crowned with battlements, pierced with posterns, and defended by
moats. Luxury was displayed especially in the internal decoration of the papal
palace. Carpets adorned the various apartments and state chambers. Rich stuffs
hid the none too gorgeous furniture. On the walls, if they were not decorated
with frescoes, hung tapestries of high warp, the products of Spanish and
Flemish workshops, silken hangings, taffetas, green and red serge. The tables
were loaded with vessels of gold and silver.
The
cardinals, like the Pope, led a life of pomp and magnificence. In 1351 Bernard
of Garves rented fifty-one houses or parts of houses
in order to lodge all his retainers. Peter of Banhac needed ten stables for his horses, and five of them could alone take
thirty-nine horses.
So in the
fourteenth century a new state of affairs had come into being. The Papacy set
itself to extract all that heaped-up wealth could supply of worldly renown and
human delights. In this it imitated the temporal powers, who in the same period
were increasing their pomp. The papal court underwent a transformation similar
to that of the royal courts of France and Aragon. It extended too the cult of arts and letters inaugurated by Boniface
VIII. In sum, the period of the Avignonese Popes was
marked by a profound transformation. The Papacy had rapidly recovered the moral
prestige which it had lost at the time of the contest between Philip the Fair
and Boniface VIII. It aimed at creating a strong temporal power by continually
rounding off its lands that lay in imperial territory, and by reducing to
obedience those Italian States which, to a greater or lesser extent, recognised
its authority. The Pope declared himself as king, and as such surrounded
himself with a magnificent court, in which the cardinals played the part of
princes of the blood.
Undoubtedly,
to make the Church rich and powerful, they ran the risk of introducing into it
the spirit of the world and the desire for its gains. Would not the care of
souls be thereby neglected? In truth, the Pope’s example became contagious. The
clergy dressed in sumptuous garments, made of fine material patterned in
squares like a chess-board; they had on their feet pointed shoes of the latest
fashion; and, contrary to the canonical regulations, they wore their hair long.
A canon of Liege, Jean Lc Bel, came to divine service every day accompanied by
a guard of honour composed of some sixteen to twenty persons. There were
numerous exceptions, but far too many bishops, as the Cistercian James of Therines remarks, “were principally occupied with
increasing their power and worldly goods.” They practised luxury and
ostentation. Provincial councils ordered them to reduce their establishments,
and forbade them to keep jesters, dogs, and falcons; but without success.
Resultant
heresies
This new
orientation given to the Church was to some minds a grave scandal. The loudest
in their censures were the Franciscans in Provence, who were partisans of
absolute poverty. Known as Beguins or Spirituals,
they drifted into strange errors. According to them, the era of the Holy Spirit
had arrived; the Church, given up to avarice, pride, and the pleasures of the
flesh, had finished its course; the Pope was Anti-Christ; the official
priesthood was to be succeeded by monachism. These revolutionary views aroused
the attention of John XXII, who excommunicated all Fraticelli, Beguins, Beguines, Bizochi, and
Brethren of the Poor Life, and ordered them to dissolve the associations which,
under cover of privileges from Celestine V, they had tried to form in Italy and
the south of France (1317-18). A much more serious issue brought the Holy See
into conflict, no longer with a small body of fanatics, but with almost the
whole Order of Franciscans. It arose on a theological question: did Christ and
the apostles practise poverty to the extent of having no possessions either in
common or individually? The constitution Cum inter nonnullos (12 November 1323) taxed with heresy those who maintained the affirmative on
this point, and an important section of the Friars Minor revolted.
Both
against the Spirituals and other more or less kindred sects, and against the
supporters of absolute poverty, the tribunal of the Inquisition took action. It
had just been reorganised by the Council of Vienne. The friar-inquisitor,
whether Franciscan or Dominican, who up to then had been in sole charge, had
henceforward to collaborate with the bishop to whom the accused was subject.
The presence of the ordinary was necessary for the use of torture, for the
custody of those under arrest or condemned, for the management of the prisons,
and for the publication of sentences. The errors professed by the Spirituals and
by the Franciscans in revolt against the Holy See were energetically
suppressed. Recalcitrants perished at the stake or
languished in prison. By the end of the century their numbers were very small.
Other
heretics, the Vaudois (Waldenses), who had taken refuge in the deep valleys of
Dauphine, were zealously tracked down. Their theological beliefs can be
practically summed up as the direct negation of the authority of the Roman
Church. The priests, they declared, soiled by the thirst for lucre and the love
of riches, had lost all right to lead Christians in the path of salvation.
Their own barbas (guides), men of upright and
intelligent minds who observed evangelical poverty, alone were qualified to
absolve sins. Expeditions were equipped by the orders of Gregory XII and were
completely successful; the prisons became too small to hold those whom the
sword and the stake had spared. The Great Schism gave the Vaudois the
opportunity to raise their heads again; and their numbers grew to such a point
that in 1488 an army was dispatched to massacre them to the very summits of the
Alps.
In spite of
the impulse given to it by the Popes of Avignon, the Inquisition was becoming
moribund. The public authorities were jealous and suspicious of it, and refused
it their support. The ill-feeling against the Church went on increasing; and
heresy, though persecuted, left its traces everywhere. In the last half of the
fourteenth century, Wyclif succeeded in stirring Europe by the trenchancy of
his writings and the thunders of his preaching, while the Bohemian priests
Conrad Waldhauser, Milic of Kromeriz, and Matthias of
Janov lashed the disorders of the clergy unsparingly. The spirit of
insubordination with which these innovators inspired the masses made ravages
throughout Christendom; their gravity was to be realised in the period of the
Great Schism.
If abuses
existed under the Popes of Avignon, it was not because they were tolerated. On
the contrary, the different Popes who resided on the banks of the Rhone strove
to suppress them. Clement V added to the Decretales a
sixth book, the Clementines, full of wise rules on
discipline. John XXII published a series of constitutions, later to form an
addition to the Corpus iuris canonici under the name of Extravagantes. He also created
new dioceses in South France, Aragon, and Italy, thinking by extraordinary
measures to provide for the salvation of souls. New bishops, he believed, could
more easily feed less numerous flocks. Benedict XII, Innocent VI, Urban V, and
Gregory XI enforced residence on incumbents, drove the parasites from the
court, favoured study, and combated the abuses whose existence they were the
first to note.
With the
reform of the religious Orders these Popes were equally concerned. While the
Franciscans were suffering from dangerous dissensions within the Order, the
Dominicans, the Knights of St John of Jerusalem, the Order of Grandmont, the Cistercians, the Benedictines, the Canons
Regular living under the rule of St Augustine, had all considerably abated
their pristine fervour. The Popes, especially John XXII, Benedict XII, and
Innocent VI, tried to restore the monastic life in its integrity. They imposed
new constitutions, they appointed to the headship men more likely to combat
abuses, after having deposed those who were unworthy of their high office, and
they restored in the cloisters the practice of poverty, work, and study. One of
the great evils in the Church in the fourteenth century arose from the crowd of
vagabond monks (gyrovagi), who had been
expelled from their convents or had left them without the permission of their
superiors, and who roamed the world in quest of adventures and lived a
hand-to-mouth existence dependent on the charity of the public. Benedict XII
and his successors were at pains to enforce the return of these vagabonds to
their own monasteries, or, if that created difficulties, to others of the same
Order. They also endeavoured to check the practice among members of the
Mendicant Orders of transferring to the Benedictines and Cistercians, thus
becoming eligible for benefices. Some of their regulations remained in force
until the Council of Trent; others, which they had propounded but not put into
force, were promulgated by that Council.
The reforms
inspired by the Popes of Avignon might have produced more effective and lasting
results, had it not been for the counteracting influence of events of a
disastrous nature and beyond papal control. The Black Death of 1348-49
depopulated the convents and profoundly disturbed monastic life; the ware which
raged almost throughout Europe, and particularly in France, led to the most
terrible disorders. The freebooting bands that devastated the country brought
ruin to monasteries and priories; they laid waste the fields, pillaged the
granaries and warehouses, burnt the dwellings, violated the nuns. This
accumulation of evils, detailed by chroniclers and documents alike, resulted
in the absence of discipline and the neglect of the essential principles of
monastic life. The number of wandering monks increased, and many of them went
to swell the ranks of the Flagellants, those fanatics who began by scourging
the body until blood flowed as a means of appeasing the wrath of God, but who
ended by becoming a public danger. Their blind zeal drove them to persecute the
Jews, to threaten ecclesiastical property, to emancipate themselves from the
authority of the Church, to scorn the ordinary means of salvation, and to
create a definitely revolutionary movement, against which prison and the stake
were the only methods that succeeded.
Crusading
zeal of the Papacy
The Popes
of Avignon were obsessed with the idea of a crusade. They preached it with a
praiseworthy devotion that deserved to earn success. At their appeals, the
princes solemnly took the cross; but the enthusiasm, which was possibly quite
sincere, died as rapidly as it had come into being. The warfare which raged
unceasingly in Europe prevented the kings from undertaking the pious journey
overseas; and finally the fall of Acre in 1291 had numbed the energy of the
West. The era of general crusades was over for good. Henceforward there were
only to be limited expeditions, brilliant indeed, but barren in their effects,
because of the small numbers of soldiers or sailors that took part in them;
thus there might have been great results from the capture of Rhodes on 13
August 1310, and the naval victory of Negropont during John XXII’s pontificate.
However, the papacy of Clement VI was marked by important achievements. Judging
that an appeal to arms addressed to the kings would receive an inevitable
rebuff, he took on himself to plan a crusade. His idea was to form a naval
league between the Latins of the East and the Venetians against the Turkish
corsairs who infested the Archipelago; then to profit by the weakness of the
Greek and Armenian schismatics to make them solicit the alliance of the Latin
league and abandon their schism.
The first
part of this ingenious plan was put into execution. After laborious
negotiations, in which Clement VI displayed both patience and ingenuity, a
league was formed between the Papacy, the Venetians, the King of Cyprus, and
the Hospitallers. In the spring of 1344 a flotilla of twenty-four vessels
assembled at Negropont, and, under the direction of the Patriarch Henry of
Asti, surprised Smyrna, which for long had been the head-quarters of the
Turkish corsairs, on 28 October 1344. Emboldened by their victory, the Latins,
after some further successes, wrested from the emir Omar Beg the command of the
sea. On land the Christian arms were less fortunate. The Turks could not be
dislodged from the citadel which dominated the town of Smyrna; and even,
following on a sortie of the Christians, killed all their leaders (January
1345). However, the early victories had roused the West from its apathy; an
army of about 15,000 crusaders came to Smyrna in 1346 to act under the command
of Humbert, the heir to Dauphiné. Unluckily Humbert was irresolute and
incapable of initiative. His indecision paralysed his troops, who had not the
spirit to make a move against the enemy. Soon sickness and dissensions among
the allies discouraged the unstable commander of the crusade; he obtained his
recall to Europe and retired into a Dominican convent. In spite of this, the
fleet won a striking success at Imbros, and destroyed more than a hundred
Turkish vessels. But, left without a leader, the league gradually
disintegrated; the Venetians had in view only the extension of their influence
at the expense of the Genoese and the Hospitallers of Cyprus. There was nothing
to be done but to sign a truce which should assure to the Christians the
advantages won at Smyrna (1350-51).
The
formation of the Latin league brought about a rapprochement between the Holy
See and Constantinople. The death of Andronicus Palaeologus had aroused
disturbances in the Eastern Empire, where the leading minister, John Cantacuzene, disputed the throne with Andronicus5 heir. The
Empress-regent in alarm sought the help of the Holy See, and addressed to it
written promises of submission to the Roman Church. Clement VI replied that if
the Greeks gave serious pledges of their sincerity, he would give them his
assistance. But for the Byzantine Court to treat of reunion at a time of civil
war was to run the risk of alienating a people strongly attached to its
traditions; so it took no action on the papal terms. It meditated an alliance
with Omar Beg, the powerful emir of Smyrna; but the capture of that town by the
Latins compelled the Greeks to change their policy and to veer round once more
to Clement VI. In the same way Cantacuzene had
intrigued with Omar Beg and now felt his position prejudiced thereby. He shared
the throne with John Palaeologus, and paid court to the Holy See, in order to
prevent the Empress and her party from allying with the Latins, and also to
fetter the actions of the Genoese and Venetians who were advantaging themselves
at his expense. Clement VI at first rejected the advances of Cantacuzene and then gave heed to them; but he made his
alliance conditional, especially on the union of the Churches and the
recognition of papal supremacy. When the break-up of the Latin league took
place, the scheme of reunion, which for Cantacuzene had really only been a diplomatic counter, entirely collapsed.
While
preaching and organising the crusade and working for the union of the Churches,
the Popes of Avignon kept in the forefront an object which they had much at
heart—the expansion of Catholicism in Asia. They did their best to get into
relations with the rulers of the Far East who seemed well-disposed to
Christianity, to the prejudice of the doctrines of Islam; secondly, they took
in hand the conquest of paganism. In place of temporary missions with no fixed
centre they substituted permanent missions which gave birth to new Churches. In
1312 the episcopate included an archbishop and ten suffragans in China; by 1314
there were almost fifty Franciscan convents. On 1 April 1318 John XXII created
ten suffragans for the metropolitan of Sultaniyah.
And in the Persian provinces twenty churches could now be counted. One measure
adopted by John XXII in 1324 greatly assisted the expansion of the missions.
The Societas Peregrinantium propter Christum, founded by Innocent IV, received new statutes, and was
placed under the direction of a vicar-general. His duties consisted in the
sending of missionaries, Franciscan or Dominican, to the infidels wherever the
needs of the moment required. A few years later, about 1330, the Basilian monks
in Armenia abjured the schism, adopted the Dominican rule and habit, and under
the name of United Brethren (later Uniats) swelled
the missionary ranks. The Franciscans established themselves once more in the
Holy Land, and built convents at Jerusalem and Bethlehem. In Tartary,
Turkestan, India, at Tabriz and elsewhere, Christianity was preached. Political
events, however, in the second half of the fourteenth century put a sudden
check to the advance of the faith. The overthrow in 1368 of the Mongol dynasty
in China and the accession of Tamerlane (Timur) to the throne of Transoxiana
resulted in the expansion of Islam in Asia. Tamerlane undertook a holy war and
set himself to get possession of the Caliphate. The Muslims quickly regained
the ground lost by them at the beginning of the century; they subjugated
Kipchak in 1389 and India in 1398. Soon there was nothing left in Persia but
the bishopric of Sultaniyah, and on this its prelates
had but a precarious hold.
The Great
Schism
The
prolonged stay of the Papacy at Avignon had the effect of withholding from the
Italians the considerable advantages which they reaped from its presence among
them. Rome became a city of the dead. Instead of being the capital of
Christendom, it was reduced to the level of a provincial town tom by
faction-strife. Petrarch echoed the Italian grievances. With inimitable vigour
of expression he denounced the pontiffs who had deserted Italy. Avignon is
hateful in his eyes. “How shameful”, he writes, “to see it become suddenly the
capital of the world, in which it ought only to take the lowest place”. He even
calls it “the impious Babylon, the hell on earth, the sink of vice, the sewer
of the world. There is in it neither faith, nor charity, nor religion, nor the
fear of God, nor shame, nothing that is true, nothing that is holy....” The
matchless poet is not content with abuse of Avignon. He makes his talents subserve
his hatred, and paints the papal court in the blackest colours, as given up to
the worst debaucheries. For long the impassioned invective of Petrarch has been
taken as truthful and repeated complacently. But recent historians have
recognised its real value, in refusing to it any semblance of truth. One of
them speaks of Petrarch as “the implacable detractor of the Popes of Avignon”,
and this is the phrase that exactly describes him.
However,
there is one point on which the poet has not exaggerated. He is for us a
standing witness of the state of exasperation to which Italian opinion had
come. The Romans, especially, wished to end what was meaning ruin to them, the
absence of the Papacy. In Gregory XI’s time, their ambassadors summoned the
Pope to return within their city’s walls. They averred, according to Nicholas Eymerich, inquisitor in Aragon, “in the name of those that
sent them, that if he did not transfer the papal court to Rome, the Romans
would create a Pope who would pledge himself to fix his dwelling and his
residence among them”. According to the warden of the Castle of Sant’ Angelo,
the Abbot of Monte Cassino was ready to play the thankless part of anti-Pope.
Further, several Romans plotted to massacre the foreigners of whom the Curia was
composed, and especially the cardinals, in order to force the Pope to fix his
residence for ever in the Eternal City. If, as he declared his intention of
doing, Gregory XI had quitted Rome again, in all probability the schism would
have broken out. In his lifetime the crisis would have been easier to settle.
Unfortunately he died too soon, with the gloomy presentiment of the dissensions
which were to rend the Sacred College. However, before he died, in order to
dispel the danger, he thought it sufficient to allow the cardinals to carry out
his successor’s election under irregular conditions. He authorised them not to
preserve the interval prescribed by custom, not to stay in Rome, and not to
shut themselves up in conclave (19 March 1378).
The
forebodings of Gregory XI were speedily realised. The day after his death,
which occurred on 27 March 1378, the Romans began to bring pressure to bear on
the Sacred College. Steps were taken collectively by the municipal officials
and separately by individuals, all directed to prove to the cardinals the
necessity they were under of electing a Roman, or at least an Italian, as Pope.
These different demonstrations of the popular will were accompanied too by
threats. One man apostrophised Jean de Cros in the
following terms: “Give us an Italian or a Roman Pope; otherwise, all the ultramontane cardinals will be knifed”.
The
attitude of the Romans became still more dangerous. Getting possession of the
guard of the conclave and of the Borgo San Pietro, they evicted the papal functionaries
and drove the nobles out of the town. As they were afraid that the members of
the Sacred College might think of escaping by water, they confiscated the oars
and rudders of all the vessels anchored in the Tiber. Moreover, from the
Campagna and the neighbouring hills armed bands poured into Rome, who did not
scruple to molest the followers of the cardinals. Panic spread on all sides,
and there was fear of pillage. The far-sighted put their possessions in safe
custody. Peter of Luna dictated his will, while Robert of Geneva donned a coat
of mail before adventuring into the street. And yet the cardinals do not seem
to have fully appreciated the danger. They did not think of hiring mercenaries
in the service of the Church or of shutting themselves up in the Castle of
Sant’ Angelo. They relied on the promises of the Romans to respect their
freedom of voting.
On
Wednesday, 7 April 1378, the entry into conclave took place, accompanied by the
clamour of the populace demanding a Roman or an Italian Pope. The municipal
officials, faithfully interpreting the popular will, took an attitude which was
to bear important results: “Name a Roman or an Italian Pope”, they said to the
assembled cardinals; “otherwise your lives and ours are in danger, so
determined are the people to obtain what they want”. A disturbed night
followed. About day-break the alarm sounded. Soon the crowd, massed near the
Vatican, became tumultuous; its shouts grew more menacing. The three priors of
the Sacred College felt obliged to hold a parley with the demonstrators; but
the guard of the conclave represented the peril that threatened them: “You run
the risk of being torn in pieces, if you do not hasten to elect an Italian or a
Roman. We are outside, and can judge of the danger better than you can”. This
language had the effect of persuading the cardinals. The scrutiny was taken,
and the Archbishop of Bari, Bartolomeo Prignano,
received the unanimous vote of all the cardinals except Orsini, who refused to
participate in an election conducted in such circumstances. His colleagues also
seemed to have the feeling that they were acting without due consideration.
Some of them voted in these terms: “I freely name Bari”; “I name the Archbishop
of Bari with the intention that he shall be veritably Pope”. The expressions
they employed showed that they were conscious of having committed some irregularity
in the election. By using them, they wished apparently to give a belated
legality to their actions and to ease their consciences. But doubt was
uppermost; one of them, at the meal following the election, proposed that it
should be held again.
While a
deputation was on its way to make sure of Prignano’s consent, the Romans, in ignorance of the result of the scrutiny, were getting
impatient. They broke through the conclave enclosure and invaded the Vatican.
There was a general rush for safety. The cardinals scattered and took refuge
where they could; the cardinal of Brittany climbed to the roof of his house and
hid behind a chimney. Those most in danger shut themselves up in the Castle of
Sant’ Angelo or escaped from Rome. On 9 April twelve out of the sixteen
cardinals enthroned Prignano. No one thought of
denouncing the invalidity of the election of 8 April or of proposing the
holding of a new conclave. They even, individually or as a body, announced to
the Christian rulers the accession of Urban VI to the papal throne.
The Pope in
a very short while revealed himself in an unfavourable light: he was
capricious, passionate, and extremely violent. The cardinals repented of their
choice, and one after the other they left Rome and assembled at Fondi. There, thirteen in all, they elaborated a sort of
encyclical, in which they declared Prignano’s election invalid and pronounced anathema on his person (9 August 1378). On 20
September the foreign cardinals gave their votes to Robert of Geneva (Clement
VII); their Italian colleagues gave a tacit consent to the election by their
presence in the conclave. So began the period which bears the distinctive title
of the Great Schism of the West, partly because of its exceptional duration (it
lasted from 1378 to 1417), partly because of the gravity of the crisis, which
almost brought the Church to ruin and at any rate afflicted it with the direst
consequences.
Opinion in
modern times is much divided on the subject of the legitimacy of Urban VI and
of his rival Clement VII. The problem amounts to this. There are certain points
that are beyond dispute: the election of Prignano was
preceded and accompanied by popular disturbance, which brought a certain
pressure to bear on the electors; it took place under the sway of a definite
fear, but not entirely as the result of that fear; it was carried out with
undeniable precipitancy; its validity appeared doubtful from the first to a
number of the electors. Were these different circumstances sufficient to
deprive the cardinals of the freedom they ought to enjoy in the choice of a
Pope, and therefore to vitiate the election of 8 April 1378? This is the
crucial question, and in order to settle it we need not turn to the legal texts
that define wherein freedom in the election of a Pope consists. We have to
deal, on the contrary, only with the evidence of persons interested in
legalising their own conduct. The difficulty is not one peculiar to modern
times; contemporaries felt incapable of coming to a decision. The Council of
Constance, which met to end the crisis, Martin V and his successors, the Church
in fact—all have avoided pronouncing a verdict. “The solution of the great problem
posed in the fourteenth century escapes the judgment of history”—such is the
wise conclusion of Noel Valois, and to this we must subscribe
Since the
Church had two heads, it was only to be expected that each would excommunicate
the other or at least the opponents of his cause; also that each would nominate
to benefices, and that in consequence the partisans of Clement VII and the
partisans of Urban VI would be at daggers drawn in every diocese. Religious
warfare threatened the peace of every State, and the governments found that
they had either to give their adherence to one of the rival Popes or to remain
neutral. It has long been the custom to explain the composition of the rival obediences solely by political expediency. To France is
attributed the design of having sought for its own advantage to re-establish an Avignonese Pope and to associate its allies with its
own aims; opposed to it were England and the Empire, anxious, in concert with
other smaller States, to free themselves from French influence. The facts,
however, are somewhat different. Undoubtedly policy played a part, but
conscience played its part as well. At first, Charles V shewed no hostility
towards Urban VI in spite of the unfavourable reports that reached him from
Rome. Ignorant where the truth lay, he adopted an official neutrality (11
September 1378). It was only after having consulted the clergy of the realm
assembled at Vincennes on 16 November 1378, and after having examined the
documents dispatched by the cardinals from Fondi and
from Avignon, that he gave a tardy decision in favour of Clement VII.
Castile,
although the ally of France, preserved for some time a strict neutrality. At
last King John I determined to abandon this equivocal attitude. In May 1380 an
embassy was sent to Avignon, Rome, and Naples; it heard evidence from
eyewitnesses of the election of Urban VI and from the surviving cardinals. The
enquiry was strictly conducted and its results communicated on 23 November 1380
to the clergy assembled at Medina del Campo; on 19 May 1381 adhesion to Clement
VII was proclaimed.
The Kings
of Aragon took the same attitude as their neighbours of Castile; after having
instituted two enquiries, in 1380 and 1386, they adopted the cause of Clement
VII. On 6 February 1390 Charles III, King of Navarre, followed their example.
The King of Portugal had already, at the end of 1379, declared against Urban
VI; it was only the intervention of England that caused him to retract (29
August 1381). In fact, it was England that in every way opposed Clement VII. It
saw in him an ally of its enemy, France; and it tried to checkmate him in
Flanders, Italy, Tuscany, Umbria, Provence, and Guienne.
Hardly at all did religious motives inspire its conduct. The contest with
Clement VII was for the Plantagenets only a particular phase of the struggle in
which they had been engaged for many years with the Valois. They declared in
favour of Urban VI without having seriously examined the validity of his
election; their information as to what took place at the conclave seems to have
been scanty and often erroneous. They carried their intolerance so far as to
refuse to receive the delegates of the cardinals. Policy equally dictated the
attitude taken by Scotland towards the rival claimants to the papal tiara; as
an ally of France it adopted the cause of the French Pope.
That the
Emperor declared for Urban VI was decided as much on political as on
conscientious grounds. His choice was defended by strong arguments derived from
the inconsistency of the cardinals’ actions: first the enthronement and
recognition of Urban, then the election at Fondi. His
manner of judging the events did not equally impress all the princes of the
Empire; some of them were for Urban, others for Clement. Some went through
strange alternations: after recognising Clement VII as the true Pope, they
abandoned his cause under pressure of circumstances, in spite of their French
sympathies. Hungary, on the other hand, never hesitated; from June 1379 onwards
it adhered to Urban VI.
The
situation in Italy was very complex and variable. In Sicily the Duke of Montblanch and his son Martin I corresponded both with the
Pope of Rome and with the Pope of Avignon. Their desire was to range themselves
within the Avignonese obedience, but the opposition
of the nobles and people prevented them from ever realising their aim. At
Naples, during the reign of Joanna I, there was considerable excitement. The
people were on the side of Urban VI, while the queen at one time proclaimed him
as Roman pontiff, at another as usurper. The accession of Charles of Durazzo to
the throne on 2 June 1381 ought to have strengthened the position of Urban; for
was it not to him that Charles owed his crown? But the violence and extravagant
conduct of the Pope of Rome turned the mind of Charles against him. Urban VI
seemed, in fact, to have been seized with madness. He stirred his own partisans
into revolt against him; he set himself to empty his own court. He put to the
torture several cardinals who disapproved of his strange conduct; five others
were moved by his barbarous proceedings to issue a sort of encyclical branding
the character and actions of him who had raised them to the purple. Pileo da Prata and Galeazzo Tarlati di Pietramala left Italy
and went to Avignon to make submission to Clement VII, who hastened to add them
to his own Sacred College (13 June 1387). The fantastic character of Urban
frightened the towns of Umbria and Tuscany, and they concluded a treaty of
defensive alliance against him. Gian Galeazzo Visconti, Florence, Bologna, and
many other towns entered into relations with Clement, and though not actually
recognising him received his ambassadors. Even at Rome riots broke out, and
Urban, feeling his position to be unsafe, left the city. So an examination of
the map of Europe some ten years after the double election of 1378 forces the
conclusion that the area of the two obediences is
practically equal, but that on the whole the balance is on the side of the Pope
of Avignon. This is of little consequence, however, beside the melancholy fact
that the West was rent asunder into two factions, each of which burled its
anathemas against the other.
This
abnormal state of affairs could not last. Had not then the Church the power
within herself to heal her wounds? Had she not in the past had recourse to a
remedy of which she had proved the healing effects—the assembling of a General
Council? But the application of such a measure necessitated the assent and the
co-operation of both the heads of Catholicism. Neither Urban VI nor Clement VII
would consent, nor would their cardinals either. Theologians pointed out that a
council had no authority over the person of a Pope. Who would convoke it? The
two rivals in concert? They could not be counted upon to take a step which put
their rights on an equality. One of them by himself? The partisans of the rival
obedience would not listen to a summons issuing from one whom they regarded as
a usurper. The cardinals, or the prelates? The Emperor? The kings acting in
harmony? All these solutions went right against tradition. A council assembled
under such abnormal conditions would be devoid of authority. From it, men
thought, the schism would only emerge the more vigorous.
To this
almost official doctrine certain writers gave formal contradiction. Henry of Langenstein in the Epistola Pacis (1379), Conrad of Gelnhausen in the Epistola Concordiae (1380), an anonymous writer—possibly Pierre d’Ailly—in
the Epistola Leviathan (1381), pleaded
the cause of the council. In 1381 Henry of Langenstein wrote a treatise even more unorthodox. His Concilium Pacis suppressed all the embarrassing questions as to the summoning of the council,
the person of its president, its legitimacy. It expounded the views that the
council is superior to the Pope, that infallibility resides in the congregation
of the faithful or their pastors, that the council can assemble at the summons
of the kings, can listen to the statements of Clement VII and Urban VI, and can
give a decision, whether in favour of one of them or for the holding of a new
election by the college of cardinals
The
subversive theories enunciated by Henry of Langenstein were not new. They practically reproduced the revolutionary propositions put
forward by William of Ockham, Marsilio of Padua, and
John of Jandun at the height of the struggle between
Lewis of Bavaria and John XXII. William of Ockham, some fifty years before, had
attacked the ancient prerogatives of papal power. In 1324, in the Defensor
Pads, which was condemned by John XXII shortly afterwards (23 October 1327), Marsilio of Padua and John of Jandun had maintained “the supremacy of the Empire, its independence of the Holy See,
and the invalidity of the powers usurped by the sovereign pontiffs.” They had
taught that the Papacy was of human institution and only obtained its
pre-eminence by a long series of usurpations. The supreme authority in the
Church belonged to the general council, the summons to which devolved on the humanus legislator fidelis, “which has no
power above it,” or its representative, “the princeps." From council and
“legislator” the Pope derived his powers. By them he could be punished,
suspended, or deposed. In short, Marsilio of Padua
and John of Jandun preached the subjection of the
Church to the State; they overturned the ecclesiastical hierarchy, despoiled
the clergy of their privileges, and degraded the sovereign pontiff to the
position of president of a sort of Christian republic governing itself, or
rather putting itself under the government of Caesar.
The
writings of Henry of Langenstein were too bold to win
at once the assent of the mass of the clergy and of the governments; they
needed time to accomplish their work. The ideas that the German doctor
enunciated penetrated at last into university circles and ended by being put
into practice, when all other means of ending the schism had been exhausted;
especially when the cardinals of both obediences seemed to shew their desire to perpetuate the schism by electing successors to
Urban VI and Clement VII, to the former Boniface IX on 2 November1389, and to
the latter Benedict XIII on 28 September 1394.
The French
government was the first to take the way of innovation. Charles VI, interfering
in spiritual affairs, assembled at Paris a national council, which sat from 2
to 18 February 1395 and numbered as many as 109 members. This imposing assembly
voted, by a majority of about three-quarters, the adoption of the method of
cession (the joint resignation of both Popes). The Dukes of Berry, Orleans,
and Burgundy went to Avignon to communicate, in the name of the king, the
decision to Benedict XIII. They received a point-blank refusal. But their
journey had the result of linking up the Sacred College with France; the
cardinals met at Villeneuve-les-Avignon on 1 June 1395, and adopted, with only
one dissentient voice, the French plan. More than a year passed in fruitless
negotiations; the sovereigns of Europe disliked the method of cession. At last
England and Castile changed their minds. Their ambassadors joined with those of
France, in the summer of 1397, in begging Benedict XIII and Boniface IX to
renounce the tiara simultaneously and to submit to the decision of a council.
Both Popes refused to listen to them and put forward proposals to create delay.
In despair
of obtaining the end of the schism, the French clergy met at Paris from 14 May
to 8 August 1398 and adopted an extremely serious resolution. They decided that
the best way of bringing the Papacy to their view was to deprive it of all the
sources of influence of which it disposed—the receipts from the heavy taxation,
which supplied it with abundant resources, and the collation to benefices. By a
process of self-deception they were ingenuously persuaded that such a
resolution did not amount to an act of disobedience; they adopted as a pretext
the fallacy that, in prolonging the schism by his refusal to abdicate, Benedict
XIII was guilty of heresy and therefore deprived of all right to govern the
Church. This revolutionary doctrine, borrowed from Ockham, Marsilio,
John of Jandun, and Henry of Langenstein,
overturned the constitution of the Church. It suppressed papal independence,
and handed over the Holy See to the mercy of the princes and the lower clergy.
It assured the triumph of disorder and the introduction of anarchy into the
government of the Church. In spite of all these consequences, the total
withdrawal of obedience from Benedict XIII was published on 27 July 1398. The
king announced it by ordinance; like the clergy, he thus attributed to himself
the right of dominating the Papacy. So, in a moment, the edifice cleverly and patiently
built up by Clement V and his successors toppled to the ground. The collation
to benefices that had taken so much trouble to acquire passed back into the
hands of the ordinary collators. The fiscal regime, imposed on ecclesiastics in
spite of their resistance, came to an end; but the bishops and the king clearly
meant to maintain it for their own advantage.
The
withdrawal of obedience necessitated the solution of certain problems, which
were decided by the clergy in August 1398. It was decreed that those elected to
the headship of monasteries, whether exempt or not, should receive confirmation
from the bishop of the diocese; that bishops should submit their elections to
the metropolitans; that elections, postulations, and provisions should be made
free of charge. The reversions to benefices granted by Benedict XIII lapsed,
unless the recipients bad already acquired a ius in re. In cases reserved for the Holy See, absolution was given by the
bishops, failing the papal penitentiaries, who kept their powers provided they
abandoned the cause of Benedict; even so the penitents had to apply to the next
Pope recognised. Dispensations for marriage in urgent cases were also a matter
for bishops and cardinals. Appeals were conducted in three stages: bishop,
archbishop, and provincial council.
The
publication of the royal ordinance of 27 July 1398 at Avignon on 1 September
produced a panic within the Curia. Almost everyone decamped, for fear of losing
their benefices. Five cardinals alone remained faithful to Benedict XIII; the
remaining eighteen crossed the Rhone and took up their quarters at Villeneuve.
Though separating themselves from the Pope they yet claimed to be maintaining
the government of Christendom. They confiscated the papal seal, and named one
of their number captain of Avignon. Fighting soon broke out in the town; the
inhabitants began the siege of the papal palace in which Benedict remained
enclosed.
The King of
France and the Sacred College had thought to prevail over the Pope; they
underestimated his obstinacy and his endurance. The aged Pope did not give way;
on the contrary, it was he that imposed his will on his adversaries. He
actually eluded the vigilance of the besiegers and escaped on 11 March 1403.
Once in his native Provence he was in safety. His escape had an immediate
effect. The cardinals on 28 March, the people of Avignon on 31 March, France
(28-30 May) returned to the obedience of Benedict XIII. Apostolic reservations
appeared again as in the past, and elections and collations made contrary to
them were declared null. The payment of annates was claimed from all who had
entered upon their benefices since 1 August 1398. The papal collectors exacted
even the payment of arrears of taxes, however far back they went. The policy of
violence adopted by the King of France had ended in a complete check.
The
experiment of a self-governing Church had satisfied nobody; the mirage of
liberty had rapidly vanished. The principle of free elections had been
outrageously violated; and the chapters had had to obey nobles, princes, kings,
and to do violence to their own wishes. Hardest of all was the lot of the
ordinary collators and patrons; the clergy of their choice were evicted in
favour of university nominees and the candidates of the king or the princes.
Their last illusions were swept away by royal letters dated 20 March 1400:
collators received the injunction to provide alternately, according to the
vacancies, for proteges of the king, the queen, the dauphin, the king’s
brother, or his uncles, and for nominees of the University of Paris. The
Archbishop of Rouen was made to suffer for refusing a benefice to the confessor
of the Duke of Orleans: his temporalities were seized by the royal officials.
Also, during this period, the royal power, which had approved, if not provoked,
the suppression of papal taxes, quickly re-established them for its own profit
in the form of aids, extraordinary subsidies, and tenths. Needless to say, the
king’s agents shewed no moderation in collecting the contributions. The monk of
Saint Denis, who witnessed their brutality, states bitterly that “the first
fruit of the withdrawal of obedience was to expose the Church to the
persecution of the secular arm”. Thus had another chronicler written long
before of Pope and king: “While the one shears Holy Church, the other flays
it.”
The
withdrawal of obedience might perhaps have produced lasting results, if it had
had the assent of all the clergy. But some of the bishops, the universities of
Toulouse, Angers, and Orleans, and a large number of clergy and laymen, felt
invincible repugnance at breaking with a Pope regarded by them all as
legitimate; their consciences prompted them to obedience. These scrupulous
souls made up a minority working in favour of Benedict XIII, and they finally
brought about the reopening of negotiations with him. Outside France, in spite
of an active propaganda, only the Queen of Sicily (Naples), the King of
Castile, the Bishops of Metz and Verdun, the Dukes of Bar and Lorraine, the
Archbishop of Besançon, the Count of Namur, the Duchess of Brabant, and the
towns of Cambrai and Liege, joined in the withdrawal of obedience; while in
1401 Provence, a dependency of the Queen of Sicily, submitted of its own accord
to Benedict XIII, and in February 1402 Henry III of Castile, responding to the
almost unanimous wish of his people, did the same. The French policy,
therefore, met with a humiliating rebuff.
Benedict
XIII, who had taken refuge at St Victor’s in Marseilles, thought he ought to
give a proof of his good intentions for unity by entering into negotiations
with Boniface IX in September 1404. His ambassadors proposed a meeting, or at
any rate that discussions should be entered into by arbitrators appointed by
both parties. But Boniface IX refused, and treated his adversary as an obdurate
heretic. In this he was consistent with his previous attitude; for on 1 March
1391 he had declared it to be a sin for anyone to maintain the view that a
General Council was capable of ending the schism. At bottom, Boniface IX had
never doubted the justice of his cause; he could only see one solution for the
crisis from which the Church was suffering—the submission of the usurper, as he
regarded him. So naturally he repelled with indignation a project which implied
his recognition that the rights of his rival were oil an equality with his ow
n. His cardinals were of the same mind. When Boniface IX died on 1 October 1404,
they had the opportunity of displaying their altruism by suspending the
election of a successor and coming to terms with the delegates of Benedict
XIII, who were in Rome at the time. On the contrary, they demanded the
abdication of the Pope, “hoping to remain in sole possession of the field.” In
their defence, it must be acknowledged that the representatives of Benedict
refrained from enquiring about the guarantees that might be forthcoming if
their master should consent to surrender power. To the demands of the Roman
cardinals they replied with a direct refusal, and then took their leave and
departed.
The Roman
cardinals then met in conclave. After having all bound themselves to work for
unity and to abdicate if they obtained the tiara, they elected as Pope Cosmo Migliorato, better known as Innocent VII, on 17 October
1404. The new Pope seemed to intend to keep his promise. He invited the
ambassadors of Benedict XIII to return to Rome and renew the conversations that
had just been broken off. But he changed his mind and decided otherwise. When
the ambassadors proposed a conference with their master to debate the
question, Innocent would no longer receive them. Benedict XIII resolved to
profit by the advantage which his rival’s refusal gave him. On 16 May 1405 he
landed at Genoa, and renewed to the Roman Court his proposal of a conference.
As he expected, he met with a fresh refusal. A cleverly-worded bull, of 27 June
1405, pointed out that the wrong did not lie on his side. The princes were
invited to overcome the obstinacy of Innocent VII by force; but they remained
deaf to this appeal to arms.
On 6
November 1406 the Roman Pope died after a short illness. Gregory XII was
elected as his successor on 30 November, and on 11 December he published a bull
expressing his determination to renounce the tiara, provided that the Avignonese cardinals would consent to unite in conclave
with their Roman colleagues. While making it clear that his own preference was
to act by way of conference, Benedict XIII in somewhat ambiguous terms accepted
the proposal. In short, it was agreed that a meeting should take place at
Savona from 29 September to 1 November 1407. When the time came to carry out
the agreement, Gregory XII repented of his proposal of joint abdication. He did
not conceal his dislike of entering a port which was under the French King’s
authority, and he merely announced that he would approach as near as was
possible to Benedict XIII. This was a vague and not very helpful assurance. It
delighted Benedict, for it gave him an excellent part to play; he did not fail
to reach Savona by the appointed date. The festival of All Saints arrived with
Gregory at Siena, and refusing to go any farther. There were various reasons
for his not keeping his word: the fear of losing in his absence the Papal
States, which were threatened by the King of Naples, Ladislas of Durazzo; the
advice of his supporters among the lay rulers, who dissuaded him from going to
Savona; his mistrust of the King of France; and possibly too, the control that
his nephews and courtiers exercised over him. When Benedict, to maintain his
advantage, came to Porto Venere, Gregory brought himself to leave Siena and go
to Lucca, on 28 January 1408.
A
comparatively short distance now separated the two Popes. Gregory XII invented
countless excuses to avoid crossing the gap, and proposed various
meeting-places, such as Pisa, Avenza, and Leghorn.
Then came the capture of Rome by Ladislas of Durazzo on 25 April 1408, and this
gave him the opportunity to break off negotiations. The cause of unity seemed
for ever ruined. The Roman cardinals felt that they had been tricked; in May,
nine of them abandoned Gregory XII and went to Pisa; from there they sent
envoys to Benedict XIII, and discussions were begun at Leghorn. Four cardinals
represented Benedict, and they readily conferred with those from Rome. Without
the knowledge of their masters and in direct revolt against them, the cardinals
of the two obediences quickly came to terms. It
seemed to them that as the Popes lacked the courage to heal the schism, the
duty devolved upon them. They announced to the Christian world that a General
Council would meet at Pisa on 25 March 1409.
For the
Council to have a definite result it was necessary that the whole of
Christendom should be represented in it; this implied the withdrawal of
obedience by all countries from the reigning Popes. Now, in spite of the
efforts of the cardinals and of France, Europe was divided into two parties. On
one side were England, Lorraine, Holland, the Bishop of Liege, the Electors of
Cologne and Mainz and some other German princes, the King of Bohemia
(Wenceslas, King of the Romans), Poland, Austria, Lombardy, Tuscany, the
Romagna, France, Navarre, Portugal, the King of Cyprus, and Louis of Anjou, Ladislas’
rival for Sicily; on the other, the rest of the Empire including Rupert, King
of the Romans, the Scandinavian countries, Hungary, Venice, the March of
Ancona, a portion of the Romagna, Rome, Ladislas, King of Sicily (Naples),
Castile, Aragon, and Scotland. Policy, indeed, inspired the conduct of more
than one government; but the opponents of the Council were on strong ground in
contesting the right of the cardinals of the two obediences to convoke the Council while Gregory XII and Benedict XIII were still regnant.
On the day
fixed, 25 March 1409, the Council met at Pisa; it numbered some 500 members.
Its first care was to institute proceedings against Benedict and Gregory. On 5
June sentence was pronounced: the two Popes were deprived of the tiara as heretics.
It remained to choose a successor. To the cardinals present at Pisa was given
the commission of proceeding to the election of a Pope; twenty-four in number
they entered into conclave, and on 26 June 1409 elected Peter Philarges, cardinal of Milan, who took the name of
Alexander V. The new Pope did not occupy the chair of St Peter for long; he
died suddenly during the night of 3-4 May 1410. The Sacred College fixed its
choice on Baldassare Cossa, Pope John XXIII, on 17 May 1410. The fathers of Pisa
had thought to relieve the conscience of Christendom. By their precipitancy in
electing a Pope they had only aggravated the evil which they fondly imagined
they were curing. In place of two obediences there
were henceforward three.
Fearing for
his personal safety, Benedict XIII had taken ship on 16 June 1408; on 1 July he
landed at Port Vendres and made his way to Perpignan.
There he took up his residence, and summoned a council, which opened on 21
November. It was, all things considered, an imposing assembly; it comprised
about 300 members, including eight archbishops and thirty-three bishops. But of
the cardinals who had formerly composed his court, only three were present. The
fathers of the council came from Castile, Aragon, Navarre, Provence, Savoy, France,
and Lorraine. The other States were not represented, so that the council had
not the necessary qualification of universality. The question of unity figured
on the programme; but Benedict’s actual purpose was, by equipping himself with
resolutions of the council, to combat those who had deserted his cause.
Contrary to his expectations, he found himself obliged to give his promise to
abdicate; but his abdication was to take effect from the day on which Gregory
XII was deposed, both de facto and de iure.
This condition relieved him of apprehension for the future, for Gregory had no
intention of abdicating. Far from it; he had taken refuge in the territory of
Friuli, and held a council there at Cividale from June to August 1409. One
decree was published, citing Benedict XIII and Alexander V to appear before
him, and affirming that he alone was the rightful successor of St Peter. If he
made mention of abdication, he was careful to hedge his promise round with
conditions which made it nugatory. To avoid the danger of compulsion being
brought to bear upon him, he put himself under the protection of Ladislas of
Durazzo; it was to Ladislas’ interest to undertake his defence and to ensure
its efficacy. So neither Benedict XIII nor Gregory XII would bring themselves
to surrender their office. Their partisans, undoubtedly, were only thinly
scattered throughout Christendom, but there was always the chance that reasons
of State or weariness of the strife might cause a revulsion of feeling, and
that the government of the Catholic world would thus be restored to them.
In fact,
the countries which had decided for the obedience of the Popes of Pisa were not
long in realising that the expectations they had based on them were being sadly
deceived. The Council had demanded from Alexander V the establishment of
reforms which would restrict the rights of the Holy See to an alarming degree.
They amounted to this: restitution to the bishops of the rights of procuration,
suppression of annates, servitia, tenths, and
other taxes, re-establishment of canonical elections and of collation to
benefices by the ordinary collators. The Pope resisted demands so contrary to
the practice hitherto observed in the Church. He consented to certain limited
concessions: for example, that the ordinary collators should have the power of
appointing to one out of every four of the benefices within their gift; and
that arrears of taxes due under previous Popes should not be exacted. But these
concessions vanished into thin air. The old taxes reappeared. Freedom of
elections, especially from papal provisions, was not restored, with the
connivance certainly of the lay rulers. The general discontent increased when
John XXIII imposed on Christendom a collection of crushing fiscal measures. In
short, the reforms promised at Pisa miscarried; they were betrayed by those who
had shouldered the responsibility for seeing them carried into effect.
John XXIII
had to pay a heavy reckoning. The Council of Constance deposed him on 29 May
1415, and he himself ratified the sentence. Gregory XII adopted a more
dignified attitude: after having issued his summons to the Council, he
abdicated on 4 July. As for Benedict XIII, the Emperor Sigismund made a special
journey to Perpignan, and tried to obtain from him the abdication he had
promised so often, notably at the council in Perpignan itself. The old Pope
obstinately refused to abdicate. He believed in the legitimacy of his rights
and in the loyalty of his supporters, who still numbered about one-fifth of the
Catholic world. Here his calculations went astray. On 13 December 1415 at
Narbonne, the representatives of the Kings of Aragon, Castile, Navarre, and the
Count of Foix signed an instrument by which they bound themselves to leave the
Council of Constance to proceed against Benedict, provided, as his legitimacy
was not contested by them, that he did not voluntarily abdicate. On 26 July
1417 Benedict XIII was deposed. On 11 November 1417 Cardinal Odo Colonna was elected unopposed as Pope Martin V.
This
election did not immediately end the schism. Benedict, enclosed in the castle
of Peñíscola, persisted in resistance until his death on 29 November 1422.
Before he died, he reconstituted his court by the creation of four cardinals.
The intrigues of King Alfonso V of Aragon, who was interested in prolonging the
schism, caused this college of cardinals to elect Gil Sanchez Muñoz, provost of
Valencia, on 10 June 1423 as Pope Clement VIII. He held office for six years,
and abdicated on 26 July 1429. He even experienced a schism within his party.
John Carrier, one of Benedict XIII’s creations, who had not been summoned to
the conclave of 1423, set up a rival Pope, Benedict XIV; of him no single act
is recorded. The Aragonese schism ended thus in farce.
Effects of
the Schism
The crisis
through which the Church had passed had been in the highest degree detrimental;
its constitution was wellnigh overturned. For the great achievement of the
Popes of Avignon had been to increase the papal sovereignty over Christendom by
encroaching gradually upon episcopal rights, and to develop a system of
centralisation, complete in all its details, by absorbing little by little
every individual activity in the Church. The withdrawal of obedience adopted in
1398 by France, Castile, and other countries dealt a grave blow to tradition.
In spite of the inconveniences it created and the discontent to which it gave
rise, it taught the clergy to organise, and to govern without the Pope. The
attempt made, fruitless as it was, acted as a spur some ten years later, when
the neutrality voted at the fifth council of Paris in 1408 was received with
enthusiasm. The general discontent degenerated into revolt against the Papacy.
Profiting by the lessons of the past, the council organised on systematic lines
the autonomy of the French Church. For the papal power were substituted two
main organs of government—provincial councils and primacies.
The
provincial councils were held each year, and lasted for at least a month. They
gave dispensations for marriage, heard appeals, exercised jurisdiction over all
the clergy including the bishops and the metropolitan, and examined and
confirmed the elections of the primates. The primates confirmed the archbishops
in office, consecrated them, and heard appeals from their courts. In case of
death or other impediment, their powers were exercised by their suffragans and
the provincial council. In the religious Orders the central authority was in
the hands of the general chapters; a permanent committee, composed of four
members and having its seat at Paris, heard cases from exempt monasteries.
Minute regulations were laid down about benefices; especially they aimed at
preventing the secular authorities from exercising pressure over elections by
the chapters. The disputes to which the collation to smaller benefices gave
rise were dealt with by a committee of five members who, in the event of
absolute disagreement between collators and privileged clergy (i.e. royal and
university nominees), themselves appointed to the benefices, though only alternately
with the ordinary collators. Papal taxation was entirely suppressed.
As we have
seen, the violent attacks made by Henry of Langenstein in the Squalores curiae romanae and Dietrich of Niem in the Speculum aureum de titulis beneficiorum had passed in time from the realm of
theory to that of practice. Their revolutionary phrases reappeared on the lips
of the various orators who prepared with skill and virulence the charges
against the Papacy in the Paris councils—Pierre Leroy, Gilles Deschamps, Jean Jouvenel, Jean Petit, Gerson, Pierre d’Ailly,
Jean Cortecuisse. Moreover, from 1408 onwards,
national Churches with their own liberties and customs were being formed
outside France also, in the various kingdoms that adopted neutrality both
towards Benedict XHI and Gregory XII. These Churches, however, had no vitality
apart from what they obtained from the royal power. In spite of their desire
for independence, they were obedient to the rulers. They were essentially State
Churches, and in a few years they were to acquire so much power that Martin V
had to negotiate and make concordats with them. The constitution of the Roman
Church was thus profoundly modified. The Holy See could no longer communicate
directly with the episcopate; it must henceforward beat against the royal will
which barred its way. The ideals of the Middle Ages faded away in the troubles
that resulted from the Great Schism. Even the power of the Pope was to be
limited in a dangerous fashion.
Faced with
the evils that grew out of the schism of the West, controversialist writers and
speakers of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries transferred to
the days of uncontested Popes the grievances which could justly be formulated
against the Popes of the three obediences. In
domineering tones they demanded the reform of the Church in head and members;
some of them aimed at more radical measures. One verse-writer, a member
undoubtedly of the University of Paris, compares the Church abandoned to schism
to a woman with two husbands, and made a Greek address it, or, to be more
precise, counsel it, thus:
L'Eglise ha pour espous Jhesu, vray Dieu et home.
John Wyclif
went so far as to refer to the Papacy in the following terms: “To get rid of
such a demon would not harm the Church, but would be useful to it; in working
for his destruction, the Church would be working solicitously for the cause of
God.” However, though these daring propositions found some echo among
contemporaries, most people were not so extreme as this. They confined
themselves to proclaiming the need for reforms and the superiority of the
Council over the Pope, as the only practical way of bringing the schism to an
end; and their theories were to triumph, at long last, at Pisa and Constance.
The prestige of the Papacy was, therefore, profoundly affected; its absolute
power seemed to have been taken from it, or at least to have been considerably
limited in scope.
Grave as
was the crisis through which the Church had passed, it is advisable to avoid
exaggeration about it. Historians who base their views on the violent charges
made in the controversial literature of the time, above all in the celebrated
work of Nicholas of Clamanges, the De corrupto Ecclesiae statu,
have depicted the moral condition of religious society in the fourteenth
century in the blackest colours. Going back to the period before the Great
Schism, they have drawn plentifully from the writings of Dante, Petrarch, the
chroniclers, and even of convinced champions of papal omnipotence, such as
Alvaro Pelayo, St Catherine of Siena, and St Bridget of Sweden. Their enquiries
all end in the same conclusions. But the documents published out of the Vatican
Archives have caused other historians to revise the charges by which the memory
of the Popes of Avignon has been assailed, at least to a certain extent. While
condemning what was deserving of condemnation, these recent writers have
clearly distinguished Clement VII and Benedict XIII from their predecessors.
Though in every pontificate there were abuses, it is necessary to take note of
the sum of Christian endeavour, and of the manifestations of popular piety. The
evils of the time drove the faithful to the exercise of severe penances.
There were
saints in all ranks of society and in every country. Raymond Lull (1256-1315)
and Pierre Thomas (1305-66) died as martyrs for the faith, the one at Bougie,
the other at Famagusta. Bertrand of Saint- Genies, Patriarch of Aquileia, fell
a victim in 1350 to his zeal for recovering the property and privileges of
which his Church had been unjustly deprived by predatory vassals. The Blessed Venturino da Bergamo (1304-46) excited the crowds by his ringing
eloquence, and at his voice they forgot their feuds, practised charity, gave
themselves up to exercises of penance. On 1 February 1335 he left Bergamo, and
drew after him to Rome a mass of pilgrims who numbered up to 20,000 or 30,000
persons, all of whom devoted themselves ardently to prayer and the strictest
asceticism. In 1343 his enthusiastic sermons excited the populace in Lombardy
to take the cross, and when they embarked for the Holy Land he followed them,
to meet his death at Smyrna. The Blessed Giovanni Colombini (1304-67) also traversed Italy, not to preach the crusade, but to announce and
prepare the kingdom of God. “Praised be Jesus Christ1’ was his motto and
device. As his Divine Master had set the example of charity, so he continually
preached peace. His disciples took the name of Gesuati in 1364, and gave themselves up to the care of the poor and the sick. The
Sienese Giovanni Tolomei, St Bridget of Sweden, St
Catherine of Siena, St Colette, the Blessed John Discalceatus,
Peter Ferdinand Pecha, Gerard Groote of Deventer, James of Bourbon, the Blessed
Peter of Luxemburg, and others, were all famed for terrible austerities. These
pious souls were not isolated cases. Besides the Gesuati,
other new religious congregations were founded such as the Olivetans, the
Hieronymites, the Brethren of the Common Life, and the Brigittines.
Mystic Christianity, preaching the renunciation of the things of this world and
the abandonment of the soul to God, had in the fourteenth century its most
illustrious representatives—Master Eckehart, Margaret
Ebner, Johann Tauler, Heinrich Suso,
Jan Ruysbroeck, Jean Gerson, and above all Thomas a
Kempis, the author of that admirable treatise of perfection, the Imitatio Christi. Around these diverse
persons were gathered lay folk, themselves in love with mysticism and the
spirit of penance. The fourteenth century counted an indefatigable apostle in
Vincent Ferrer, who evangelised in turn Aragon, Castile, Languedoc, Auvergne,
Touraine, Brittany, Burgundy, the Lyonnais, Dauphine, and Flanders, and
everywhere won the multitudes by his eloquence. Finally, at the summit of the
ecclesiastical hierarchy, the Blessed Urban V, with his gentle mien, illumined
the whole Church.
So there
existed in the fourteenth century a remarkable contrast of good and evil, and,
in spite of the deep wounds from which the Church was suffering, she gave proof
of an intense vitality. One most anxious question, however; still demanded an
answer. Could the Church herself heal her own wounds?
CHAPTER XIFRANCE: THE LAST CAPETIANS
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