READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
J.B. BURY’
CAMBRIDGE
MEDIEVAL HISTORY
VOLUME III
GERMANY
AND
THE WESTERN
EMPIRE
René Poupardin
II. THE CAROLINGIAN KINGDOMS (840-877) René Poupardin
III. THE CAROLINGIAN KINGDOMS (877-918) René Poupardin
IV. FRANCE, THE LAST CAROLINGIANS AND THE ACCESSION OF HUGH CAPET (888-987) Louis Halphen
V. FRANCE IN THE ELEVENTH CENTURY. Louis Halphen
Louis Halphen
VII. ITALY IN THE TENTH CENTURY. C. W. Previté Orton
VIII. HENRY I AND OTTO THE GREAT. Austin Lane Poole
Austin Lane Poole
Edwin H Holthouse
Austin Lane Poole
Caroline M. Ryley
Allen Mawer
XIV. THE FOUNDATION OF THE KINGDOM OF ENGLAND. William John Corbett
XV. ENGLAND FROM AD 954 TO THE DEATH OF EDWARD THE CONFESSOR. William
John Corbett
Rafael Altamira
XVII. THE CHURCH FROM CHARLEMAGNE TO SYLVESTER II. Louis Halphen
Paul Vinadogroff
XIX. LEARNING AND LITERATURE TILL THE DEATH OF BEDE. Montague Rhodes James
XX. LEARNING AND LITERATURE TILL POPE SYLVESTER II. Montague Rhodes James
XXI. BYZANTINE AND ROMANESQUE ARTS. W.R. Lethaby
PREFACE.
The first
words in this volume must, of right and of piety, be about the late Editor,
Henry Melvill Gwatkin. He had been one of the Editors from the first: he had
brought to the help of the undertaking not only his own unrivalled mastery of
the earlier period but also a singularly wide and accurate knowledge of history
at large. This meant a great deal, and was generally
known. But a constant colleague, in work which often called for large decisions
and always for care in details, can speak, like no one else, of the time and
trouble he freely spent even when he might sometimes have spared himself.
Nobody else can know or judge of these things, and it is fitting therefore that
I, who can, should pay the tribute of justice which memory demands. He had read
with his usual care and judgment most of the chapters in this volume, and he
was looking forward to their publication. But this he was not to see, although
this volume owes him much. It will be difficult to fill his place in future
volumes, for literary skill such as his is not so often added to an almost
universal knowledge as it was with him. To me, after so many hours spent with
him over the Medieval History, fellowship in our common work had grown into
friendship, and during it I had learnt many things from him on many sides. All
who knew him, and all who have read his own masterly chapters, will well
understand the sadness which I feel as we give to the public part of a work in
which he had shared and which owes him so much.
The volume
was nearly ready when the War began (WW1), and, after delaying it to begin
with, necessitated large changes in its plan and execution. Since the War ended
other causes have, to the great regret of the Publishers and Editors, delayed
it further, and for this long delay an apology is due to our readers. The fact
that some chapters have, for these reasons, been long in type, has hampered
both writers and editors and made it peculiarly difficult to make the volume
uniform in scale and execution. To all our contributors, foreign and English,
the Editors have been much indebted, and must here express to them most
grateful thanks.
In a history
which ranges over many lands but is written mainly for English readers there
are, naturally and always, difficulties about names, whether of persons or
places. In our special period these difficulties are unusually great. Personal
names vary from land to land, and the same name appears in different forms:
chroniclers and modern writers are a law to themselves, even if any law is to
be found. Uniformity has been sought, but it is too much to hope that it has
been reached. Certain rules have been followed so far as possible. Modern forms
have been generally used where they exist, and earlier forms have been
indicated. Names which are etymologically the same take different forms in
Germany, France, Burgundy, Italy, and Slavonic lands. It has been thought
proper in such cases to keep the local form, except for names which have a
common English form. Thus the French Raoul is
conveniently distinguished from the German Rudolf and the Jurane-Burgundian
Rodolph. Familiar English names of continental towns are used where they are to
be found: in other cases the correct national and
official names are used. Geographical names have special difficulties in this period,
where boundaries and territories largely varied and were in course of growth.
Accuracy, and, where needed, explanation, have been attempted.
Dr J. R.
Tanner and Mr C. W. Previte-Orton have been appointed Editors for Volume IV
onwards. To them many thanks are due for services readily and plentifully given
in this volume, although with no editorial responsibility. To Mr Previte-Orton
especially it owes much, indeed almost everything. Without the care and skill
brought by him to its aid, errors and omissions would have been much more
numerous. Any merits which the work possesses should be ascribed largely to
him, although defects must still remain. Professor J.
B. Bury has always been ready to give us valuable suggestions and criticisms,
although he also is in no way responsible for the work. In the Bibliographies
Miss A. D. Greenwood, who has also prepared the Maps, has given the greatest
help. And it should be said that the Maps had been printed before the long
period of delay began. For the Index thanks are due to Mrs A. Kingston Quiggin
and Mr T. F. T. Plucknett.
To some of
our contributors special thanks are due for special
kindness. Professor L. Halphen has been throughout a most courteous friend, and laid us under many obligations. Mr Austin L. Poole
has been peculiarly ready to help us at need, and his father, Dr R. L. Poole,
has often given us advice, naturally of the greatest value. Prof. A. A. Bevan
and Dr E. H. Minns have given us expert guidance as to the proper forms of
Oriental and Slavonic names. Many other historians, apart from the
contributors, to whom we owe so much, have been of great service in various
ways. And it is needless to say that to the staff of
the University Press, working under peculiar difficulties caused by the war, we
owe much for constant and unfailing help.
A general
historical sketch has been added as an Introduction. It is in no way meant,
however, as an outline of the history or as a summary of the particular
chapters, but only as a general view of the period in its special
characteristics and in relation to the ages which follow. It will also be seen
that notes, short and significant, have been added as before where necessary:
they are possibly more numerous than in preceding volumes, and two or three
genealogical tables have also been given.
J. P. W. July, 1921.
INTRODUCTION
By
J.
P. WHITNEY
THE volume
before this brought us to the death of Charlemagne, with whom in many senses a
new age began. He, like no one either before or after, summed up the
imperishable memories of Roman rule and the new force of the new races which
were soon to form states of their own. Although we are compelled to divide
history into periods, in the truest sense history never begins, just as it
never ends. The Frankish Kingdom, like the Carolingian Empire, is a testimony
of this truth. It cannot be rightly understood without a knowledge of the Roman
past, with its law, its unity, its civilization, and its religion. But neither
can it be understood without a knowledge of the new conceptions and the new
elements of a new society, which the barbarian invaders of the Roman West had
brought with them. It was upon the many-sided foundation of the Carolingian
Empire that the new world of Europe was now to grow up. Yet even in that new
world we are continually confronted with the massive relics and undying traces
of the old. The statesman and warrior Charles, the great English scholar
Alcuin, typify some parts of that great inheritance. But how much the Empire owed
to the personal force and character of Charlemagne himself was soon to be seen
under his weaker successors, even if their weakness has often been exaggerated.
Such is one side of the story with which this volume begins.
We of today,
perhaps, are too much inclined to forget the molding force of institutions, of
kingship, of law, of traditions of learning, and of ideas handed down from the
past. When we see the work of Charlemagne seeming to crumble away as his strong
hand fell powerless in death, we are too apt to look
only at the lawlessness, the confusion, and the strife left behind. In face of
such a picture it is needful to seek out the great centers of unity, which were
still left, and around which the forms of politics and society were to
crystallize slowly. Imperial traditions, exemplified, for instance, in the
legal forms of diplomas, and finding expression as much in personal loyalty to
rulers of Carolingian descent as in political institutions, gave one such centre.
The Christian Church, with its civilizing force, had even a local centre in
Rome, to which St Boniface, the Apostle of Germany, had looked for guidance and
control. Other ancient cities, too, in which Roman civilization and
Christianity had remained, shaken but still strong, did much to keep up that
continuity with the past upon which the life of the future depended. But
beneath the general unity of its belief and its organization, the Church was
always in close touch with local life, and therefore had its local differences
between place and place. It had still much to do in the more settled
territories which were growing up into France, Germany and England. On the borders of the Empire it had
further fresh ground to break and new races to mould. Even within the Empire it
was before long to receive new invaders to educate and train: Normans and Danes were to bear witness, before our period ends, to the spirit
and the strength in which it wrought. As is always the case when two powers are
attempting the same task in different ways and by different means, there was
inevitable rivalry and strife between Empire and Church as they grew together
within one common society. But such generalizations give, after all, an
imperfect picture. Beneath them the details of ecclesiastical life, in Papacy,
diocese, parish and monastery, are also part of the common history, and have
received the notice which they can therefore claim.
But if
political history and ecclesiastical history present us with two centers of
unity in a tangled field, thought, literature, and art were no less distinctly,
though in other ways, guardians of unity and fosterers of future life. They too
brought down from the past seeds for the new world to tend. So their story also, with its records of inheritance, plainer to read, especially
in its Byzantine influences, than those of politics or ecclesiastical matters,
is an essential part of our task. Politics, Religion, and Thought in all its
many-sided fields, summed up for the future Western world all the remnants of
the past which were most essential and fruitful for generations to come. They
were the three great forces that made for unity and, with unity, for
civilization.
Taking all
this for granted, then, we pass to the separate history of the individual
countries just growing into states. For a time, they grow within the common
mould of the Empire, and Carolingian traditions bind them to the past. Dimly to
begin with, but with growing plainness, the realms of France, Germany, Italy,
Lorraine, and Burgundy are seen taking their later territorial and
constitutional shapes. England lay somewhat apart, insular, and therefore
separated from the Empire, but by this very insularity everywhere exposed
to Northmen and Danes. Here, too, as on the continent, statesman-like
kings and far-sighted ecclesiastics worked together. The growth of territorial
unity is easiest of all to trace, for it can be made plain in maps. But the
growth of unity of thought and interests, of constitutions and social forms, is
harder to see and to express; it is easier to estimate the work
of Egbert, Edward the Elder, and Aethelstan than the more
many-sided achievements of Alfred and Dunstan, or the more pervasive influence
of the great Northern school which gave us Bede and Alcuin. But the peculiarity
of England's position and history is most significant for constitutional
growths, and it is, therefore, in connection with English affairs that the
origins of Feudalism are best investigated and discussed. Scientific history
begins with the observation of resemblances and with classification by
likeness. Then it passes on to detect differences, and to note their
significance. Nowhere is there more need to remember these twin methods than in
the study of Feudalism, where the Cambridge scholar Maitland was our daring and
yet cautious guide. Processes and details which we notice in English history
have their parallels elsewhere. If the centuries we traverse here have a large
common inheritance, they also have at the same time, in spite
of differences in place and character, something of a common history.
What is said, therefore, as to the origins of English Feudalism also applies,
with due allowance for great local differences, to Germany, France, and Italy;
even indeed to Spain, although there the presence and the conquests of the
Muslims impressed a peculiar stamp upon its institutions.
The period
with which we have to deal is more than most periods
what is sometimes called transitional; but this only means that it is more
difficult than other periods to treat by itself. History is always changing and transitional, but keeps its own continuity even when
we find it hard to discern. Breaches of continuity are rare, although in this
period we have two of them: one, the establishment of the Moors in Spain, and
the other, more widely diffused and less restricted locally, the inroads of
the Northmen ending in the establishment of the Normans, whose
conquest of England, as the beginning of a new era, is kept for a later volume.
In many other periods some histories of states or institutions cease to be
significant or else come to an end. Of this particular age we can say that it is specially and peculiarly one of beginnings, one in which
older institutions and older forms of thought are gradually passing into later
stages, which sometimes seem to be altogether new. The true significance,
therefore, of the age can only be seen when we look ahead, and bear in mind the
outlines of what in coming volumes must be traced in detail. This is especially
true of the Feudalism which was everywhere gradually
growing up, and, therefore, to understand its growth it is well to look ahead
and picture for ourselves the system which forms the background for later
history, although even here it is in process of growth and its economic and
military causes are at work.
The
dissolution of the Carolingian Empire ends its first stage with the Treaty of
Verdun, following the Oath of Strasbourg. The oath is in
itself a monument of the division between Romance and Teutonic
languages, a linguistic difference which soon joined itself to other
differences of race and circumstance. At Verdun Louis the German took most of
the imperial lands in which a Teutonic tongue was spoken: Charles took mainly lands in which Romance prevailed. This difference was to
grow, to become more acute and to pass into rivalry as years went by, and the
rivalry was to make the old Austrasia into a debatable land; so that, for the
later France and Germany, the year 843 may be taken as a convenient beginning
in historic record of their separate national lives. Henceforth we have to follow separate histories, although the process of
definite separation is gradual and slow.
At Tribur in
887 rebels deposed Charles the Fat, and next year the Eastern Kingdom
proclaimed Arnulf; when his son Louis the Child died in 911, election and
recognition by Frankish, Saxon, Alemannian (or Swabian), and Bavarian
leaders made Conrad the first of German kings. In this process, unity,
expressed by kingship, and disunion, expressed by the great tribal duchies
which shared in later elections, were combined. And through many reigns,
certainly throughout our period, the existence of these tribal duchies is the
pivot upon which German history turns. To the king his subjects looked for
defence against outside enemies: the Empire had accepted this task, and
Charlemagne had well achieved it. But his weaker successors had neglected it,
and as they made default, local rulers, and in Germany, the tribal dukes, above
all, took the vacant place. But the appearance on all hands of local rulers,
which is so often taken as a mere sign of disunion, as a mere process of decay,
is, beneath this superficial appearance, a sign of local life, a drawing
together of scattered elements of strength, under the pressure of local needs,
and, above all, for local defence. If on a wider field of disorder the appearance of great kings and emperors made for strength and happiness,
precisely the same was afterwards the case in the smaller fields. Here too the
emergence of local dynasties also made for strength and happiness. Local
rulers, then, to begin with, accepted the leadership in common local life. And
they did so somewhat in the spirit with which Gregory the Great, deserted by
Imperial rulers, had in his day boldly taken upon himself the care and defence
of Rome against barbarians. So, for Germany, as for France, the national
history is concerned as much with the story of the smaller dynasties as with
that of the central government.
But a
distinction is to be noted between the course of this mingled central and local
history in Germany and France. In France the growth of local order was older
than it was in Germany; towns with Roman traditions were more abundant and life
generally was more settled. In Germany a greater burden was, therefore, thrown
upon the kings and, as was so generally the case with men in those days, they
rose to their responsibilities. Accordingly the
kingship grew in strength, and Otto the First was so firmly seated at home as
to be able to intervene with success abroad. His Marches, as later history was
to show, served adequately their purpose of defence, and German suzerainty over
the neighboring lands became more real. The basis of his power was Saxony, less
feudalized than the other duchies and peopled mainly by freemen well able to
fight for their ruler. Otto understood, moreover, how necessary for strength
and order was close fellowship in work between State and Church. Throughout his
land the Bishops, alike by duty and tradition, were apostles of civilization,
and, on the outskirts of the kingdom above all, the spread of Christianity
meant the growth of German influence, much as it had done under Charlemagne
himself. To the Bishops, already overburdened with their spiritual charge, were
now entrusted administrative duties. In England individual Bishops were
counselors of the king: in France Bishops, although later to be controlled by
neighboring nobles, had been a more coherent body than elsewhere, and the
legislative authority of synods had been so great that the Episcopate had even
striven to become the leading power in the realm. But it was characteristic of
Germany to make the Bishops, with large territories and richly endowed, a part,
and a great part, of the administration in its local control, working for the
Crown and trusted by it, but with the independent power of Counts or even more: thus there grew up in Germany the great
Prince-Bishoprics, as marked a feature of the political life as the tribal
Duchies but destined to endure still longer. And furthermore, because of this
close alliance between German Crown and German Episcopate, the later struggle
between Church and King, which arose out of forces already at work, was to
shake with deeper movement the edifice of royal power. Because of this special
feature of German polity, the eleventh century strife between Pope and German
King meant more for Germany than it did for other lands. And this was something
quite apart from the revival of the Western Roman Empire.
Otto's
political revival, with its lasting influence on history, was in the first
place a bringing to life again of the Carolingian Empire. Like the earlier
Empire it arose out of the needs of the Church at Rome: Otto the Great, like
Charlemagne and his forerunners, had come into Italy, and Rome with the Papacy
was the centre, indeed the storm-point, of Italian politics and strife. But
Otto, unlike Charlemagne, was more a protector than a ruler of the Church, and
here too, as on the political side of the Empire, he set out from a
distinctively German rather than from a general standpoint. His first care was
rather with the German Church, needed as an ally for his internal government,
than with the Papacy representing a general conception of wide importance. The
new series of Emperors are concerned with the Papacy more as it affected
Germany and Italy than under its aspect of a world-wide power built on a
compact theory. The future history of the Empire in its relations to the Papacy
turns, then, mainly upon the fortunes of the Church first in Germany and then
in Italy: conflict arises, when it does arise, out of actual working conditions
and not out of large conceptions and controversies. This is certainly true of
our present period and of the Imperial system under Otto. Upon the Papal side
things were very different. From it large statements and claims came forth:
Nicholas I presented to the world a compact and far-reaching doctrine which
only needed to be brought into action in later days; although, as a matter of
fact, even with the Papacy, actual jurisdiction preceded theory. Ecclesiastics
were naturally, more than laymen, concerned with principles (embodied in the
Canon Law), of which they were the special guardians, and they remained so
until Roman Law regained in later centuries its old preeminence as a great
system based on thought and embodied in practice. Its triumph was to be under
Frederick Barbarossa and not under Otto the Great, although its study, quickened
through practical difficulties, began both in France and Lombardy during the
eleventh century. To begin with, churchmen led in the realm of thought, and,
when clash and controversy came, were first in the field. Laymen, from kings to
officials, were, on the other hand, slowly forging, under pressure of actual
need, a system that was strong, coherent, and destined to grow because it was
framed in practice more than in thought. But for the moment we are concerned
with the Empire and not with the Feudal system, to which we shall return.
The exact
extent of St Augustine's influence upon medieval thought has been much
discussed: to write of it here would be to anticipate what must be said later on. But it came to reinforce, if not to suggest, the
medieval view of society, already held, though not expressed in the detail of
Aquinas or Dante. Life has fewer contradictions than has thought, and in the
work of daily life men reconcile oppositions which, if merely thought over,
might seem insuperable. To the man of practice in those days, as to the student
of St Augustine's City of God, Christian society was one great whole, within
which there were many needs, many ends to reach, and many varied things to do.
But the society itself was one, and Pope or Monarch, churchman or layman, had to meet its needs and do its work as best he could. This was
something quite unlike the modern theories of Church and State, and it is only
by remembering this medieval conception, which the late Dr Figgis so
well expounded to us, that the course of medieval history can be rightly
understood. Under such a conception, with a scheme arrived at by life rather
than by thought, Pope or Bishop, Abbot or Priest, did secular things with no
thought of passing into an alien domain. Emperor or King, Count or Sheriff, did
not hesitate to undertake, apart, of course, from sanctuary or worship, what
would seem to us specially the churchman’s task. Here there were possibilities
of concord and fellowship in work, which the great rulers of our period,
whether clerical or lay, tried to realize. But there were also possibilities of
strife, to be all the sharper because it was a conflict within one society and
not a clash of two.
Only the
preparation for this conflict, however, falls within our scope. But this
preparation is so often slurred over that its proper presentation is essential.
The medieval king, like Stuart sovereigns in England, was faced by a tremendous
and expensive task, and had scanty means for meeting it. The royal demesne was
constantly impoverished by frequent grants: to keep up order as demanded by
local needs, and to provide defence as demanded by the realm at large, called
not only for administrative care but also for money which was not forthcoming.
It was easy to use the machinery of the Church to help towards order: it was
easy to raise something of an income and to provide for defence by laying a
hand upon church revenues and by making ecclesiastical vassals furnish
soldiers. Most of all, horse-soldiers were needed, although to be used with
economy and care, like the artillery of later days: their utility had been
learnt from the ravages of the Danes, able to cover quickly large areas because
of the horses they seized and used. Kings were quick to learn the lesson;
knight-service grew up and is recorded first for ecclesiastical lands in
England.
It is
therefore first in the estates of the Church that the elements of feudalism are
noted in the double union of jurisdiction and knight-service with ownership of
lands. Thus, beginning with the equally urgent needs of the crown and of
localities, the elements of the Feudal system appeared and gradually grew until
they became the coherent whole of later days. But its practical formation
preceded its expression in theory. Its formation brought many hardships and
opened the way to many abuses. An individual often
finds his greatest temptations linked closely to his special capabilities and
powers, and in the same way, out of this attempt to give the world order and
peace, made by able rulers who were also men of devoted piety, sprang the
abuses which called forth the general movement of the eleventh century for
church reform. This was partly due to a revival within the Church itself, a
reform both in diocesan and monastic life, beginning in Lorraine and Burgundy,
and seen significantly in the rapid Western growth of Canon Law. But it was
complicated and conditioned by politics, especially by those of Italy and
Germany, imperfectly linked together by the Empire. Its history in the earlier
stages is indicated in this volume but must be discussed more fully along with
the church policy of the great Emperor Henry III. Because its history under him
is so closely joined to that of the wider period, reaching from the Synod
of Sutri to the Concordat of Worms, it is left over for a later
volume, although the purely political side of his reign is treated here.
To the
German kingship, ruling the great German duchies, inevitably entangled in
Italian affairs and in touch with warlike neighbors as yet heathen and uncivilized, fell the traditions of the Empire, so far as
territorial sway and protectorship of the Papacy was involved. But to
the growing kingdom of France there came naturally the guardianship of
Carolingian civilization. Mayence, Salzburg, Ratisbon, and Cologne to begin
with, Hamburg and Bamberg at a later date, might be
the great missionary sees of the West, but Rheims and the kingdom to which it
belonged, together with the debatable and Austrasian land of
Lorraine, inherited more distinctly the traditions of thought and learning.
Paris, the cradle of later France, had a preeminence in France greater than had
any city in its Eastern neighbor land. So France
with its older and more settled life from Roman and Merovingian days had,
although with some drawbacks, a unity and coherence almost unique, just as it
had a history more continuous. Yet even so it had its great fiefs, with their
peculiarities of temperament and race, so that much of French history lies in
their gradual incorporation in the kingdom of which Paris was the birthplace
and the capital. And at Paris the varied story of Scholasticism, that is, of
medieval thought, may be said to begin.
Thus the lines upon which later histories were to run were
already being laid for France, Germany, and England, and for Italy something
the same may be said. There to the mixture of races and rule, already great,
was added now the Norman element, to be at first a further cause of discord,
and then, as in France and England, a centre of stability and strength. The
grasp of the Byzantine Emperors on Italy was becoming nominal and weak: the
Lombards, with scanty aspirations after unity, were by this time settled. In
Sicily, and for a time in the South, Saracens had made a home for themselves,
and, as in Spain, were causing locally the terror which, in a form vaster and
more undefined, was to form, later on, a dark
background for the history of Europe as a whole. Rome, for all the West outside
Italy a place of reverence and the seat of Papal jurisdiction, sinking lower
but never powerless, was itself the playground of city factions and lawless
nobles reveling in old traditions of civic pride. But above all the distinction
between Northern and Southern Italy was becoming more pronounced. In the North,
still subject to the Emperor, growing feudalism ran, although with local
variations, a normal but short-lived course. The South, on the other hand, had
drawn off into a separate system of small principalities, where inchoate
feudalism was to be suddenly developed and made singularly durable by the
Normans. But in the North and, as yet, in the South
thickly strewn cities were the ruling factor in political life and social
progress. For Italy, as for the other great lands, the period was one of
beginnings, of formations as yet incomplete. Events on
the surface were making national unity hopeless: forces beneath the surface
were slowly producing the civic independence which was to be the special glory
of later medieval Italy.
The fortunes
of the Papacy in these centuries were strangely variable. It is a vast descent
from Nicholas I (858-867), who could speak as if “lord of all the earth”,
to Formosus (891-896), dug up from his grave, sentenced by a synod,
and flung into the Tiber. But the repeated recoveries of the Papacy would be
hard to explain if we did not recall its advantages in the traditions of
administration, and in the handling of large affairs in a temper mellowed by
experience. Roman synods, as a rule, acted with discretion, and long
traditions, both administrative and diplomatic, enhanced the influence of the
Western Apostolic See; Gregory VII could rightly speak of
the gravitas Romana. The Empire of Charlemagne opened
up new channels for its power, and the weakness of his successors gave
it much opportunity.
On the side
of learning, as on that of Imperial rule, Rome had, however, ceased to be the
capital. Not even the singular learning of Gerbert, furthered by his
experiences in many lands, could do more for Rome than create a memory for
future guidance. Before Gerbert’s accession, however, the Papacy had
undergone one almost prophetic change, which looked forward to Leo IX, while
recalling Nicholas I. For a time under Gregory V (996-999), cousin and chaplain
to the Emperor, the first German Pope, it had ceased to be purely Roman, in
interests as in ruler. It took up once again its old missionary enterprise and
care for distant lands. St Adalbert of Prague, who both as missionary and
bishop typified the unrest of his day, wavering between adventurous activity
and monastic meditation, had come to Rome and was
spending some time in a monastery. He was a Bohemian by birth and had become
the second bishop of Prague (983): besides working there he had taken part in
the conversion of Hungary, and is said to have
baptized its great king St Stephen. Commands from the Pope
and Willigis of Mayence sent him back to his see, but renewed
wanderings brought him a martyr's death in Prussia. He had also visited Poland
and there, at Gnesen, he was buried. Such a career reminds us of St
Boniface, but there is a distinction between the two to be noted. Boniface had
always worked with the Frankish rulers, and had
depended greatly upon their help. Adalbert, on the other hand, looked far more
to Rome. Pope, German rulers, and even German bishops like Pilgrim of Passau,
had independent or even contradictory plans of large organization. In Bohemia,
Hungary, and Poland, the tenth century saw the beginning of national churches,
looking to the Papacy rather than to German kings. Thus were brought about later complications in politics, Imperial and national,
which were to be important both for general history and for the growth of Papal
power. But although Gregory was thus able to leave his mark on distant lands,
and to legislate for the churches of Germany and France, he could not maintain
himself in Rome itself: he was driven from the city (996), faced by an
anti-Pope John XVI (who has caused confusion in the Papal lists), and was only
restored by the Emperor for one short year of life and rule before Gerbert succeeded
him. The Strength of the Papacy lay in its great traditions and its distant
control: its weakness came from factions at Rome.
Gerbert,
born in Auvergne, a monk at Aurillac, a scholar in Spain, at Rheims added
philosophy to his great skill in mathematics. As Abbot of Bobbio he
had unhappy experiences. For a time, through the favor of Hugh Capet, he held
the Archbishopric of Rheims, where he learnt the strong local feeling of the
French episcopate, in which his great predecessor Hincmar had shared. Otto the
Great admired his abilities: Otto II sent him to Bobbio: Otto III, his
devoted pupil, made him Archbishop of Ravenna (998) and, a year later, Pope.
Molded in many lands, illustrating uniquely the unity of Western Christendom, the
foremost thinker of the day, yet on the Papacy he left no mark answering to his
great personality.
Not even
insignificant Popes and civic strife lessened Papal power as might have been
supposed. Benedict VIII (1012-1024) came to the throne after a struggle with
the Crescentii: his father, Count Gregory, of
the Tusculan family, had been praefectus navalis under
Otto III, and had done much for the fortification of the city against the
Saracens who had once so greatly harassed John VIII (872-882). Benedict himself
was dependent upon the Emperor for help against Byzantines, Saracens and factions in Rome itself. He could not be called a Pope of spiritual
influence, but he was an astute politician, and under him Papacy not only
exercised without question its official power but also moved a little in the
direction of church reform. As a ruler with activity and energy in days of
darkness and degradation, he regained for the Papacy something of the old
international position.
This
administrative tradition in papal Rome is often hidden beneath the personal
energy of the greater Popes and the growing strength gradually gained by the
conception of the Papacy as a whole. Already we can see the effect of the union
with the Empire; and of the entanglement with political, and especially with
Imperial, interests, upon which so much of later history was to turn. Already
we can see the growing influence of Canon Law, beginning, it must be
remembered, in outlying fields, and then slowly centering in Rome
itself. The letters of Hincmar, for instance, show great knowledge of the older
law, a constant reference to it and a grasp of its principles. The rapid spread
of the False Decretals, in themselves an expression of existing tendencies
rather than an impulse producing them, show us the system in process of growth.
Their rapid circulation would have been impossible had they not fitted in with
the needs and aspirations of the age. They embodied the idea of the Church's
independence, and indeed of its moral sovereignty, two conceptions which, when
the ecclesiastical and civil powers worked in alliance, helped to mould the
Christian West into a coherent society, firmly settled in its older seats and also conquering newer lands. But when in a later day the
two powers came to clash, the same conceptions made the strife more acute and
carried it from the sphere of action into the region of political literature.
One
significant feature of this age of preparation demands special notice. St
Boniface, when he laid the foundation of Church organization in the Teutonic
lands, had built up a coherent and united Episcopate. Joined to older elements
of ecclesiastical life, it became, under the weaker Carolingians, strong enough
to attempt control of the crown itself. Before the Papacy could establish its own
dominion, it had to subjugate the Bishops: before it could reform the Church
and mould the world after its own conceptions, it had further to reform an
Episcopate, which, if still powerful, had grown corrupt. Constantine had sought
the alliance of the Church for the welfare of the Empire because it was strong
and united, and both its strength and unity were based upon the Episcopate. The
Teutonic Emperors did the same for the same reasons, and now this Episcopate
had to reconcile for itself conflicting relations with Empire and Papacy. And
in establishing its complete control of the Bishops the Papacy touched and
shook not only the kingly power but the lower and more local parts of a
complicated political system.
Those
results, however, belong to a later volume. For the present we are in the
period of formation, watching processes mostly beneath the surface and
sometimes tending towards, if not actually in, opposition among themselves.
Thus, the Imperial protection of the Church, working superficially for its
strength, tended, as a secondary result, to weaken and secularize it, and
therefore in the end, to produce a reaction. And, when it came, that reaction
was caused as much by the inner history of the leading nations as by the
central power of Rome and the Papacy itself. It was one side of the complicated
processes which, in the period dealt with here, molded the Age of Feudalism.
It is well
to recall the words of Maitland about Feudalism. "If we use the term in
this wide sense, then (the barbarian conquests being given us as an unalterable
fact) feudalism means civilization, the separation of employments, the division
of labor, the possibility of national defence, the possibility of art, science,
literature and learned leisure; the cathedral, the scriptorium, the library,
are as truly the work of feudalism as is the baronial castle. When therefore,
we speak, as we shall have to speak, of forces which make for the subjection of
peasantry to seignorial justice and which substitute the manor with
its villeins for the free village, we shall—so at least it seems to
us—be speaking not of abnormal forces, not of retrogression, not of disease,
but in the main of normal and healthy growth. Far from us indeed is the
cheerful optimism which refuses to see that the process of civilization is
often a cruel process; but the England of the eleventh century is nearer to the
England of the nineteenth than is the England of the seventh, nearer by just
four hundred years." And again he says:
"Now, no doubt, from one point of view, namely that of universal history,
we do see confusion and retrogression. Ideal possessions which have been won
for mankind by the thought of Roman lawyers are lost for a long while and must
be recovered painfully." And "it must be admitted that somehow or
another a retrogression takes place, that the best legal ideas of the ninth and
tenth centuries are not so good, so modern, as those of the third and
fourth." Historians, he points out, often begin at the wrong end and start
with the earlier centuries, and yet “if they began with the eleventh century
and thence turned to the earlier time, they might come to another opinion, to
the opinion that in the beginning all was very vague, and that such clearness
and precision as legal thought has attained in the days of the Norman Conquest
has been very gradually attained and is chiefly due to the influence which the
old heathen world working through the Roman church has exercised upon the new.
The process that is started when barbarism is brought into contact with
civilization is not simple”.
Here the
great historian is speaking mainly of legal ideas and legal history which he
taught us to understand. In a wider than a legal sense, it is the same process
which this volume tries to trace and sketch. The steps and details of the
process are to be read in the chapter on Feudalism and in the chapters on
England. But once again it is here the preparatory stages with which we deal:
the full process in English history, for instance, belongs to a later volume
where William the Conqueror and his Domesday Book give us firmer
ground for a new starting-point. But if it is more
difficult, it is as essential, to study the stages of the more elusive
preparation. It is the meeting-ground of old and new: the history in which the
new, with toil and effort, with discipline and suffering, grows stronger and
richer as it masters the old and is mastered by it.
In these
centuries, even more than in others, it is chiefly of kings, of battles and
great events, or of purely technical things like legal grants or taxes, of
which alone we can speak, because it is of them we are
mostly told. We know but little of the general life of the multitude on its
social and economic side. For that we must argue back from later conditions,
checked by the scanty facts we have. Large local variations were more acute:
economic differences between the great trading cities of the Rhineland and the
neighboring agricultural lands around Mayence, or again the differences between
the east and west of the German realm, had greater political significance than
they would have today. Contrasts always quicken the flow of commerce and the
tide of thought: travel brought with it greater awakening then than now. Hence
thought moved most quickly along the lines of trade, which were, for the most
part, those of Roman rather than of later medieval days. We know something of
the depopulation due to wars, and of the misery due to unchecked local tyranny,
which drove men to welcome any fixity of rule and to respect any precedent even
if severe and rough. The same causes made it easier for moral and religious
laws to hold a stricter sway, even if they were often disregarded by passion or
caprice. Under the working of all these forces a more settled life was slowly
growing up, although with many drawbacks and frequent retrogressions.
Under such
conditions men were little ready to question anything that made for fixity and
peace. The reign of law, the control of principles, were welcome, because they
gave relief from the tumultuous barbarism and violence that reigned around. The
past had its legend of peace: therefore men turned to
memories of Roman law and of a rule supposed to be stable: thus, too, we may
explain the eager study of old ecclesiastical legislation and the ready acceptance
of Papal jurisdiction, even when it was in conflict with local freedom. The
future, on the other hand, seemed full of dread, so men preferred precedent to
revolution. In a world abounding in contrasts and fearful of surprise, strong
men trained in a hard school were able to shape their own path and to lead
others with them. So dynasties, like precedents, had
peculiar value. And moreover from simple fear and
pressing need, men were driven closer together into towns and little villages
capable of some defence. In England some towns appear first, and others grow
larger, under the influence of the Danes: in France it is the time of
the villes neuves; Italy was thickly sown with castelli,
around which houses clustered; in Germany, Nuremberg
and Weissenburg, Rothenburg on the Taube with other towns are
mentioned for the first time now: it was a period of civic growth in its
beginnings. Socially too men were drawn into associations with common interests
and fellowship of various kinds, beginning another great chapter of economic
history. Thus in these centuries men were beginning to
realize, first in tendency and afterwards in process, the power and attraction
of the corporate life. This was to be, in later centuries, one great feature of
medieval society. The old tie of kinship, with its resulting blood-feuds, was
already weakening under the two solvents of Christianity and of more settled
local seats. The attempt to combine in one society conflicting personal laws,
Roman or barbarian at the choice of individuals (expressed, for instance, in
the Constitutio Romana of Lothar in 824) was causing chaos.
Hence, in our centuries, society was seeking for a more stable foundation, and
out of disorder comparative order arose. Dynasties, precedents, traditions, and
fellowships for protection and mutual help had already begun to shape the
medieval world as we shall see it later in active work.
This general
view gives significance to the constitutional and ecclesiastical side of the
history, but it gives it perhaps even more to the history of education, of
learning and of art. The new races brought new strength, and were to make great histories of their own. But we see in our period how nearly
all that brought high interests and ideals, nearly all that made for beauty and
for richness of life, came from the old, although it was grasped with new
strength and slowly worked out into a many-sided life beneath the pressure of
new conditions. We have moved in a time of preparation, guided by the past but
nevertheless working out a great and orderly life of its own.
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