EUROPE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE GREAT SCHISM.
XIVTH CENTURY
by
EUSTACE J. KITTS
I
THE HOLY ROMAN EMPIRE
By our forefathers the whole world was divided into
Christendom and Heathenness, and when Christianity became the state religion of
the Roman Empire, Christendom practically meant the whole of that Empire as
distinct from the rest of the world. The Holy Roman Church and the Holy Roman
Empire were thus two different phrases, signifying the same body of people,
viewed from their spiritual or their temporal side. In 327 Constantine the
Great moved the seat of Empire to Byzantium, which we call Constantinople, but
which was then called Rome, which is still called Rome to this day by
Mussulmans all the world over. The Rome on the Bosporus instead of the Rome on
the Tiber, the eastern Rome instead of the western Rome, became the seat of
Empire, and it remained the sole seat until the death of Theodosius. Then the
Empire was divided; Arcadius received the Eastern and Honorius the Western
provinces. In 476 the last Emperor of the Western provinces, Romulus
Augustulus, was deposed; the Senate sent the regalia to the Emperor Zeno at
Rome on the Bosporus, and informed him that they no longer required a separate
royalty, that Zeno himself would suffice as sole Emperor for both ends of the
earth. Thus the Western provinces were reunited with the Eastern, and there was
again a single undivided Roman Empire. This continued until the end of the
eighth century, when a wonderful change occurred. The Emperor Constantine the
Sixth was in 797 blinded and deposed by his mother Irene, who aspired to seat
herself on the imperial throne. There had before this been female regents who
had ruled while their sons or wards were minors, and even after : Theodora had
been crowned Empress when her husband, Justinian, was crowned Emperor; but no
woman had ever reigned alone, and in her own right, as Emperor of the Holy
Roman Empire. In 799 Charles the Great, Charlemagne, the Teuton King of the
Franks, was called upon to aid Pope Leo the Third, who had been brutally
assaulted in a procession, and had been left for dead after his enemies had, as
they thought, deprived him of sight and speech. Charles had already delivered
Italy from the Lombards; he now came to Rome for the fourth time, the charges
against the Pope were heard and his innocence pronounced in full synod, and on
Christmas Day Charles, robed in the chlamys and sandals of a Roman patrician,
heard Mass in the Church of Saint Peter. After the celebration of the holy
mysteries, Leo suddenly placed a precious crown on his head, and the dome
resounded with the acclamations of the people, “Long life and victory to
Charles, the most pious Augustus, crowned by God the great and pacific Emperor
of the Romans”. In that shout, says Mr. Bryce, “echoed by the Franks without,
was pronounced the union, so long in preparation, so mighty in its consequences,
of the Roman and the Teuton, of the memories and the civilization of the South
with the fresh energy of the North, and from that moment modern history
begins”.
The throne at Constantinople was vacant through the
death of the Emperor without male successor; Charles was therefore regarded as
sole Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire. His dominion was so wide, his conquests
so extensive, that in his day it was almost as it had been in the earlier days
of the Empire—to be a Roman was to be a Christian, and to be a Christian was to
be a Roman. The successors of Constantine at the Rome on the Bosporus were
looked upon as nothing more than mere kings of Greece; and if the continued
existence of the Eastern Empire be granted, it virtually came to an end with
the Fourth Crusade, for the Paleologi were feeble
representatives even of the Comneni, and their
Byzantine Empire was a mere shadow of the old Empire of the East. The Holy
Roman Empire, as a mighty all-embracing monarchy in which the rule of one man
was felt and acknowledged to the ends of the civilized world, was the Empire of
Charles and his successors who were crowned at Rome. The terms of the union
between Pope Leo and the Emperor Charles were not set forth in words, but they
were well known; they were that the Pope should rule the souls, and the Emperor
the bodies, of their common subjects in righteousness, the rulers acting
together in harmony, to the end that all men might inherit eternal life. It was
a noble theory, but impossible of realization in practice. It required a
complete accord of the papal and imperial powers; and this accord was attained
under Charles and Pope Leo the Third, under Otto the Third and Popes Gregory
the Fifth and Sylvester the Second, under Henry the Third, but certainly never
thenceforth.
The Emperors came to Rome merely to be crowned with
the golden crown; the Popes resided in Rome; theirs was the enduring power in
Italy. At first simply the Bishop of Rome, then the sole Patriarch of the West,
the Pope had gradually attained to be acknowledged as the spiritual head of
Christendom. The Emperor being the temporal head, it was natural that the
relation of the two powers should come to be defined. About the middle of the
eighth century there appeared the document known as the Donation of
Constantine, which was probably composed by one of the priests attached to the
Church of the Lateran. This set forth that Constantine, on being baptized by
Pope Sylvester, had in his gratitude conferred on the Pope and his successors
Rome, Italy, and the Western provinces—that is Lombardy, Venice, and Istria—in
order that the lamps of the Roman churches might be supplied with oil. After
the death of Charles the Great his dominions were divided among his heirs, and
their discord and wars speedily enfeebled the might of the Empire. The strength
of the Church was meantime growing owing to the fact that the bishops had
hitherto been the main supports of civil and orderly government. A clerical
tribunal, an irregular convention of certain Bishops of the Gauls, assembled
without proper sanction, deposed Louis the Pious in 833; bishops and clergy,
convened in Council at Aix-la-Chapelle, pronounced that the throne of Lothair was vacant in 842. From 858 to 867 there reigned at
Rome Pope Nicholas the First, the greatest of the Popes since Gregory the
Great. He took up the work, afterwards consummated by Hildebrand, of welding
the Church into one vast monarchy subject to the Pope and independent of the
civil powers. He insisted on the right of appeal to Rome against the decrees of
metropolitans; he put forward this claim, not only in the interest of the
clergy, but in order that those of every condition might have recourse to the
Roman Church as to their universal Mother, seeking from her the safety of their
bodies and their souls. He upheld the primacy of the Papacy against the Emperor
and the Patriarch at Constantinople. He interfered on the ground of morality in
the divorce of Lothair. He insisted, in the matter of
the Bishop Rothade, that the rights of the Church could
not be invalidated by the decrees of Emperors. He corresponded with the three
sons of Louis the Pious in their separate kingdoms, with Salomon of Brittany,
with the King of the Bulgarians, with the King of Denmark, with the Emperor at
Constantinople. He led the way to Pope Gregory the Seventh. Shortly before his
pontificate there burst forth on Christendom that wonderful forgery known as
the Decretals of Isidore. It was an age of forgery, but Nicholas himself made
no use of the false Decretals; they were introduced at Rome in the pontificate
of John the Eighth (872-882), and thenceforward they formed the armoury from which the Popes drew their arms to enforce the
theory of the papal sovereignty. This knavery, says Dollinger, brought about
slowly and gradually the complete transformation of the constitution and
government of the Church.
The Carolingian line of Emperors ended with Charles
the Fat, who died in 888. Then followed certain phantom Emperors in Italy, the
last of whom was Berengar, who died in 924. Meantime war and confusion reigned
everywhere. The Papacy was disgraced by the Reign of the Harlots; it had lost
all authority within Italy; it had lost all respect without; it looked as if
the Church Universal were about to split up into a number of merely national
churches. The Empire was in suspense; everything demanded its revival. In a
time of disintegration, confusion, strife, all the longings of every wiser and
better soul for unity, for peace and law, for some bond to bring Christian men
and Christian states together against the common enemy of the faith, were but
so many cries for the restoration of the Roman Empire. In Germany, Henry the
Fowler had been succeeded by his son Otto the Great; and the golden crown was
now offered by the Pope to Otto if he would revisit and pacify Italy. He
descended from the Alps with an immense army, marched to Pavia, where he was
acknowledged King of Italy, and on the 2nd February 962 was crowned Emperor in
the Church of Saint John Lateran by Pope John the Twelfth. His Empire was not
so vast as that of Charles the Great; it included Germany and two-thirds of
Italy, Lorraine and Burgundy, Bohemia and Moravia, Poland and Denmark, perhaps
Hungary: there were important differences in its inner structure and character;
that kingdom of France, which had its centre at
Paris, no longer acknowledged its sway, nor did England. Otto must therefore be
considered, not as the successor of Charlemagne, but as the second founder of
the Empire, of that Empire which denotes the sovereignty of Germany and Italy
vested in a Germanic prince. During the century which succeeded the coronation
of Otto the Great the Empire attained the zenith of its power, and held itself
highest with regard to Rome.
It was the Age of Feudalism. Before the second half of
the thirteenth century there was no political thought; but Rome had taught men
to believe in a World-Empire, and Christianity had taught men to believe in a
World-Religion; and these two being allied and conterminous, their alliance and
interdependence was assumed to be necessary and eternal. The clergy and the
realist philosophers alike believed in one universal temporal State and one
visible catholic Church. The underlying notion of that portentous fabrication,
the Donation of Constantine, is that the Pope must in every point represent his
prototype the Emperor; the spiritual power was to imitate and rival the
temporal, which was its necessary complement; hence the part which the Holy See
played in transferring the crown to Charles, the first sovereign of the West
capable of fulfilling its duties; hence the grief with which its weakness under
his successors was seen, the gladness when it descended to Otto as
representative of the Frankish kingdom.
The relation of the papal and the imperial powers is
represented at this time under the emblem of the soul and the body. Just as God
ruled over blessed spirits, so did the Pope rule over the souls of men; just as
God was Lord of Earth as well as of Heaven, so was he represented in temporal
matters by the Emperor; “le Pape et l’Empereur, les
deux moitiés de Dieu”. It was this belief in the
necessary existence of a conterminous world-empire and world-religion which
made the earlier crusades so popular and universal; it was its decadence which
rendered the later crusades so petty and abortive. When Otto the Great was
crowned he promised to protect the Church against all her enemies, and the Pope
and the people of Rome in their turn took an oath of allegiance to him and
covenanted not to elect any future pontiff without his sanction. The Saxon and
Franconian Emperors thenceforward either nominated the Popes or approved their
election; they exercised the right of deposition and of trial of the Head of
the Church. They did more; they set to work to cleanse the Augean stable : Pope
John the Twelfth, ‘the apostate’, was deposed; Pope Benedict the Ninth, who led
a life foul, shameful, and execrable, was degraded; German Popes were
appointed. The Papacy was reformed. But the reformed Papacy proved mightier
than the Empire; a change in their relative positions ensued. If the might of
the Empire was at its zenith during the reigns of the Saxon and Franconian
Emperors, the moral glory and influence of the Papacy were at their height
during the reigns of the greatest and grandest, the most high-minded and
politic Popes, from the days of Hildebrand to the pontificate of Innocent the
Third.
Hildebrand himself has been well described as the man
in whom were summed up all the grandeur and audacity of the Papacy. From his
early days he was imbued with the notion that on the Pope, as the successor of
Saint Peter and the representative of the Deity in this world, was conferred
the mission of directing humanity; Christ had commanded Peter to feed His
sheep, and Gregory took the command to himself. The clergy were sunk in moral
degradation; they were stained with simony and concubinage; the Church was in
the hands of the German Emperors. Gregory’s life-work was to elevate the clergy,
to make them fit to be the guides and rulers of mankind, and to free the Church
entirely from lay control. The task was so great that for long he shrank from
undertaking it himself. He had left Rome with Gregory the Sixth in 1047, he
returned two years later with Leo the Ninth; from the pontificate of Victor the
Second (1054-1057) onwards, his was the ruling spirit at Rome. It was he who
recommended Victor to the Emperor; Victor’s successor, Stephen the Tenth, was
elected at Rome without the participation of Germany. When Stephen died,
Hildebrand assembled the cardinals and the principal Romans and elected
Nicholas the Second; the election was notified to the Empress, but one of the
first acts of the new pontificate was the Bull which provided that in future
the Pope should be elected by the College of Cardinals—a deadly blow to the
influence of the Emperors. The next Pope, Alexander the Second, was elected
without any reference to Germany. The Emperors henceforth lost all authority in
the election of Popes. All this time Hildebrand had stood in the background; he
was the man behind the papal throne : his influence was universally
acknowledged. When Alexander was Pope, Peter Damiani indited to Hildebrand the
well-known couplet—
Papam rite colo, sed te prostratus adoro;
Tu facis hunc Dominum, te facit ipse Deum.
On the death of Alexander, Hildebrand in his own
despite was raised to the chair of Saint Peter; two days later he was prostrate
with trouble and anguish at his elevation.
Pope Gregory the Seventh lost no time in rising to the
height of his great mission. Filled with a fiery zeal, he waged unceasingly a
holy war for papal supremacy. He aimed to subdue the civil world to the clergy,
the clergy to the Papacy, to transform the whole of Europe into one vast
theocracy. The bishops were to be his faithful henchmen; he would have no
bishop whom he did not know and trust; he did not abrogate the old custom that
a bishop should be chosen from the diocese by the clergy and people, but where
a fitting man could not be so found, he was ready to recommend an outsider.
Almost his first public act, in a synod at Rome, was a declaration of war
against simony and the marriage of the clergy. In some countries, certainly in
England, in Germany, and in Italy, the majority of the clergy were then
married, and the clergy were as a consequence fast degenerating into a closed
caste. It was a choice of evils : on the one side was the temptation to illicit
connections; on the other, the hereditary succession and the degeneracy of the
order. Gregory’s action stirred up strife in the Church and widespread
discontent; but he was firm; he stood on the old ways, the weight of authority
was on his side. Not that this would have mattered, when once he was satisfied
as to his own righteousness; if he unto himself was true, he was ready to use
forged decretal or papal letter to explain and impress his meaning on others.
He was persuaded that the power of the Pope was ordained of God, that the civil
powers took their origin from evil; that it was his mission, therefore, to see
that the kings of the earth ruled in righteousness. He sent his legates into
every country of Europe; he exacted passive obedience from them toward himself,
passive obedience from the clergy toward them. Before he had been two years
Pope he excommunicated Italian dukes, he sent an embassy demanding
unquestioning obedience from the Emperor in Germany, he threatened to
excommunicate the King of France. His quarrel with Henry the Fourth led that
monarch to the Humiliation of Canossa (1077); it brought about the long, weary
strife of the Investitures. At the synod of Rome, held in Lent 1075, the Pope
abrogated the right of the investiture of bishops and abbots by the temporal
sovereign; their endowments were to be withdrawn from the nation to the Church;
the Pope was to become liege lord of one half the world. The dispute was not
settled until long after Pope Gregory had closed his weary eyes, an exile from
Rome at Salerno; he had fought valiantly for the Church, but was not conscious
of victory. “I have loved justice and hated iniquity, and therefore I die in
exile”, were the last words of Hildebrand.
Nevertheless the Empire had been abased, the Papacy
had been exalted; for three days in the snow had the supreme Lord of the Holy
Roman Empire awaited the beck of the carpenter’s son. Literary proofs to
support the Pope’s pretensions were now forthcoming; not merely the False
Decretals, but the Dictatus Papae, the works of Anselm of Lucca and of Cardinal Dieudonne, the Liber ad Amicum of Bonizo, followed later by the Polycarpus of Gregory of Pavia, all upheld the doctrine of papal supremacy. The Donation
of Constantine had been supplemented by the Donation of Charlemagne. All these
falsifications were subsequently (1142) adopted by Gratian and were embodied in
his Decretum, or more accurately the Concordantia discordantium Canonum, which swept all its predecessors out of
the field and soon won something of the authority that belonged to a definite
codification of previous ecclesiastical jurisprudence. The Pope’s claim to the
supreme power over king or emperor, power even to depose him if circumstances
required, could not, however, have been set forth in more uncompromising terms
than were used by Gregory himself to Bishop Hermann of Metz. But Pope Gregory
the Seventh, being a politic statesman, was careful how he practised what he preached. The strife as to investitures continued after both he and
Henry were dead. The Emperor died excommunicated, and his successor proposed
(1111) to resign the right of investiture, provided the bishops and abbots
resigned their temporalities. The Pope, Paschal the Second, consented, but the
prelates themselves would by no means agree to such a course. Rome was
besieged, the Pope yielded the right of investiture, but the Lateran Council
went back on his concession, and the Council of Vienne excommunicated the
Emperor. Finally the dispute was settled in 1122 by the Concordat of Worms :
bishops and abbots were to be elected freely in the presence of the Emperor or
his commissioners; the right of investiture by the ring and pastoral staff was
to be performed by the Pope, but they were to receive their temporalities from
the Emperor by the touch of the scepter. They were to obey the Pope in matters
spiritual, and they were faithfully to discharge to the Emperor all duties
incident to their principalities. The Pope had been constrained to abandon his
contention to make the Church absolutely independent both as to election and as
to the possession of vast feudal rights without the obligations of feudal
obedience to the Empire.
In the second half of the twelfth century, with the
advent of the Hohenstaufen Emperors, the strife between the Empire and the
Papacy entered on a new phase. Frederic Barbarossa was to the Empire what
Hildebrand and Innocent were to the popedom. He was assured that his temporal
superiority obtained over all other powers, even over that of the Pope. His
power was of God alone; to assert that it is bestowed by the successor of Saint
Peter was a lie, and directly contrary to the doctrine of Saint Peter. To him,
as Freeman says, the rights of the Roman Empire were a sacred cause, in whose
behalf he was ready to spend and be spent. For thirty years out of the
thirty-eight of his reign he was fighting to maintain his rights as King of
Italy against the municipalities of Lombardy, which were fast growing into
sovereign commonwealths. He was defeated at the battle of Legano (1176); he was obliged to make the peace of Constance (1183), whereby, although
the supremacy of the Empire was nominally saved, still the Lombard republics
practically became self-governing city-states. In 1159 two Popes had been
elected, and the Emperor convened a council at Pavia to decide between rival
claims; but Alexander the Third declined to acknowledge the authority. “No
one”, said he, “has the right to judge me, since I am the supreme judge of all
the world”. Thus began the warfare between the Hohenstaufen and the Papacy
which, one way and another, lasted for more than a century.
Frederic Barbarossa made his peace with the Pope at
Venice just one hundred years after the Humiliation of Canossa; he took the
lead in the Third Crusade, and was drowned in a little river in Cilicia. He was
succeeded by his son Henry the Sixth, whose overlordship Richard of the Lion
Heart was constrained to acknowledge as he lay a prisoner in the Castle of Trifels. After his death the majority of the electors chose
his brother, Philip of Swabia, but the minority chose Otto of Brunswick (1197).
The next year was marked by the advent to the papal throne of that Pope whose
pontificate marks the culminating point of theocratic power. Innocent the
Third, elected when he was thirty-eight years of age, reigned for eighteen
years : a consummate lawyer, both in the civil and the canon law; well read,
and possessing an excellent memory; prudent and methodical, persevering and
laborious, he brought the Papacy to the apogee of absolute power. He expected
that the disputed election would be referred to him for his decision: it was
not referred. Innocent therefore determined to interfere, and he pronounced for
Otto of Brunswick, but it was not until the dastardly assassination of Philip
of Swabia in 1208 that the Pope’s nominee obtained the throne, and then he soon quarrelled with the Pope. In 1212 Innocent accepted
Frederic, the grandson of Barbarossa, as Emperor; two years later Otto was
defeated at the battle of Bouvines, and Frederic was
thenceforth undisputed King of the Romans. The Pope had triumphed for the
moment. But the turning-point had been reached. The King of France drew a sharp
line of distinction between matters spiritual and matters temporal. In his
relations to his vassals, in his relations to other kings, he would admit no
superiority in the Holy See. The crusaders in the Fourth Crusade were equally
deaf to the instructions of the Pope; they turned their arms against a
Christian city; they besieged Constantinople itself for the benefit of the
Venetians. The Pope tried to start another crusade, but he preached to deaf
ears. His letters are measured and circumspect, never imperious.
In spite, however, of this divergence in political
ideas, in spite of the divergence in religious ideas which he tried to combat
in his crusade against the Albigenses, Innocent pushed the doctrine of papal
supremacy to its height. The old symbol of the soul and the body, to exemplify
the relationship of the spiritual and temporal powers, was replaced by that of
the sun and the moon; the Pope was the greater orb, the Emperor was the less.
Their authority was exemplified by a reference to the two swords. When the Son
of God came down on earth to save sinful man and to establish His own rule over
the kingdoms of the world, He entered, as the time for redemption drew nigh,
the garden which is beyond the brook Kedron, and told His disciples that he
among them who had not a sword should sell his coat and buy one; to which they
answered that they had already two swords. And the Lord answered that the two
swords were enough. These two swords are the emblems of spiritual and temporal
authority. Both alike belong to the Pope as the successor of Saint Peter : he
wields the one sword himself; the second sword is wielded by the temporal
authorities for the Church and under the direction of the Pope.
Under Innocent the Third also the famous fiction of
the Translation of the Empire was put into authentic form by the decree Venerabilem. It was alleged that the Empire of Charles the
Great was the continuation of that universal Empire whose seat Constantine had
established at Byzantium, which had become vacant by the succession of the
woman Irene, which had reverted therefore to its rightful seat, its title
devolving on Charles. The Empire had been transferred from the Greeks to the Franks
by the official act of Pope Leo the Third, so that the event of the year 800
was nothing less than a supreme example of the power inherent in the successor
of Saint Peter to displace and create Empires.
Frederic the Second, the most wonderful man of his own
or perhaps of any age, Stupor mundi et immutator mirabilis, as Matthew Paris styled him, the mightiest and most dangerous
adversary that the Papacy ever had, as he is described by Freeman, was when
eighteen years of age crowned King of the Romans in 1212, and had taken the
Cross; on the 22nd November 1220 he was crowned Emperor by Pope Honorius the
Third at Saint Peter’s, and again received the Cross from the hands of Cardinal Ugolino. By his fathers marriage with Constance of Sicily, Frederic was King of Lower Italy and Sicily,
but political affairs prevented him from fulfilling his vow before the death of
Honorius in 1227. Then Cardinal Ugolino, eighty years
of age, became Pope, and took the style of Gregory the Ninth. The Papacy was
then at the height of its power; it was, in the words of Hallam, the noonday of
papal dominion. The Pope was backed by the league of Lombardy, the Templars and
Hospitallers were his sworn champions in the battlefield, the Dominicans and
Franciscans were his powerful adherents in peace. Gregory had all the fire, the
energy, the ambition of youth; he was a skilled canon lawyer; he knew men and
manners; his heart was set on recovering Jerusalem from the Mussulman; he would
abate none of the pretensions of Innocent the Third. The Emperor was in
character, in aim, in object the exact opposite of his grandfather. Frederic
Barbarossa had exhibited the ordinary character of his time in its very noblest
shape; but it was still only the ordinary character of the time. Frederic the
Second was in every point extraordinary. A sensualist, yet also a warrior and a
politician; a profound lawgiver and an impassioned poet; in his youth fired by
crusading fervour, in later life persecuting heretics
while himself accused of blasphemy and unbelief; of winning manners and
ardently beloved by his followers, but with the stain of more than one cruel
deed upon his name, he was the marvel of his own generation, and succeeding
ages looked back with awe, not unmingled with pity, upon the inscrutable figure
of the last Emperor who had braved all the terrors of the Church and died
beneath her ban, the last who had ruled from the sands of the ocean to the
shores of the Ionian Sea. Between such an Emperor and such a Pope there was
bound to be war to the knife. The fight was for supremacy. Like Constantius,
the son of Constantine the Great; like Justinian, like the Emperors of the
East, the new Emperor would have the Church obedient to the Empire. Frederic
was determined to have the Pope his inferior; he was ready, if need were,
himself to ordain a much better rule of life and belief to all the nations. He
had the credit for being a freethinker and a misbeliever; his jests
scandalized the world; he described Moses, Christ, and Muhammad as the three
great impostors; he said that if God had seen fertile, smiling Sicily, He would
never have given the barren land of Judaea to His chosen people. Pope Gregory
excommunicated the Emperor for not going on crusade; he excommunicated him
again when he went, he excommunicated him again when he returned. Frederic
went; he won Jerusalem for the Christians, he was obliged himself to put the
crown on his own head in the Holy City, for no priest would officiate. His
offence was that he had won by diplomacy what others had been unable to win by
arms; he had made terms with the misbeliever, and was suspected of being a
misbeliever himself. After his return from the Holy Land he managed to make
terms with the Pope; there was a hollow peace between Gregory and Frederic for
nine years (1230-1239). Then war broke out again; the Empire and the Papacy met
in implacable strife; the Pope excommunicated the Emperor; the Emperor called
on all the sovereigns of Christendom to make a league against the oppression of
the Pope and the hierarchy. Pope Gregory the Ninth died in 1241; and Frederic
addressed a circular letter to the sovereigns of Europe, informing them that
the Pope had been taken away from this world, and had so escaped the vengeance
of the Emperor, of whom he was the implacable enemy. Innocent the Fourth was
obliged to flee to France, and held at Lyons, 1245, the Council at which the
Emperor was declared deposed; but in spite of all attempts to raise Germany
against him, Frederic reigned on undisturbed until his death in 1250.
He was succeeded by his son Conrad in Germany, by his
illegitimate son Manfred in Sicily. Still the war between the Papacy and the
Hohenstaufen continued. At length Pope Urban the Fourth conceived the idea of a
league between the Papacy, France, and Naples: he offered the kingdom of Naples
in the first instance to Louis the Ninth; it was accepted by the King’s
brother, Charles of Anjou. The triple alliance succeeded; Charles of Anjou came
and conquered; Conradin, the last of the
Hohenstaufen, the grandson of the Great Emperor, was defeated at Tagliacozzo, and was executed in the market-place at
Naples. Thus fell the Hohenstaufen before the Popes. The Holy Roman Empire
might, and so far as its practical utility was concerned ought, now to have
been suffered to expire; nor could it have ended more worthily than with the
last of the Hohenstaufen But it was not so to be. After the fall of the Hohenstaufens the prostrate Empire recognized in principle
the supremacy of the Pope; the Habsburgers confirmed
the theory that the Pope was the light-giving sun, the Emperor only the pallid
moon or lesser light. As the Popes had formerly sent their decrees of election
for examination to the Emperor, so the Emperors now sent their decrees of
election to the Popes, implored the latter to ratify them and to award them the
crown of Charles the Great, which they patiently submitted to receive as a
favor from the Pope after he had examined them in person. The triumph of the
Church was consequently complete. The Imperial power lay at the feet of the
Popes, who, after a memorable trial of more than two hundred years, had scored
one of the greatest victories known to history.
After the ruin of the greatest of the German houses,
there came the Kaiserless time, the Great
Interregnum, during which there was no king in Germany, and the election was
disputed between Richard of Cornwall and Alfonso of Castile. Anarchy everywhere
prevailed; the great lords, spiritual and temporal, to whom Frederic had
granted extensive charters, made war openly to increase their domains; the
commercial leagues and the cities, on whose rising fortune he had looked
coldly, were forced to protect themselves; the rivers and the highways were
infested with robber-knights. With the accession of Rudolf of Habsburg in 1273
the Empire entered on the third stage of its existence : it was shattered,
crippled, degraded; but it still remained in the eyes of all a necessary part
of the world’s order; and it had furthermore become indissolubly connected with
the German kingdom. It had been mighty as a fact, it was still mighty as an
idea; it was to inspire Dante and Petrarch; kings were still to cross the Alps
to take the iron crown of Lombardy and the golden crown of Empire. But the
kingdom of Germany was henceforth terribly overweighed by the burden of the
Holy Roman Empire.
The Papacy meantime enjoyed the noonday of its
triumph. Gregory the Ninth had affirmed that the Pope was sovereign master of
all in the world, and of all their possessions; whatever he might have delegated
to emperor or king, his proprietary right remained intact. Innocent the Fourth
pointed out that the Donation of Constantine was merely a restitution of what
had formerly been given him, that Christ had transmitted to Saint Peter the
empire of this world when He bestowed on him the two massy keys of metals
twain. Boniface the Eighth, in the Bull Unam Sanctam (1302), again derived the omnipotence of the Pope from the giving of the two
swords, one to be used by the Church, the other under its orders, and declared
that whosoever did not believe that every human creature was subject to the
Pope would be damned everlastingly. It was this same Pope who showed himself to
the crowding pilgrims at the jubilee of AD 1300, seated on the throne of
Constantine, arrayed with sword and crown and scepter, shouting aloud, “I am
Caesar! I am Emperor!”
These far-reaching claims to temporal overlordship at
the expense of the temporal powers were for the time successful. Gregory the
Seventh had claimed that the Church was entirely free from all bonds of the
State, and that the civil power needed not only the assistance, but also the
authority, of the Church. Up to the end of the thirteenth century this theory
remained practically unquestioned. It was upheld by John of Salisbury, by Saint
Thomas Aquinas. Under Gregory and Innocent the Papacy had won for itself the
respect of mankind by its moral superiority, by the fair and unimpassioned
manner in which it decided disputes among the lay powers of the earth, by its
rectitude of purpose and its nobility of principle. It had at this time no
temporal power to back its decisions; it rested for the enforcement of its
orders on the moral approbation and support of mankind. It was secure above all
in the high character of the Popes, in their political ability and discretion
no less than in their conscientiousness and virtue. When these qualities failed
the Popes the hour of danger came. The high claims of the Papacy required the
best, the most virtuous, the wisest of men to enforce them successfully; when
lesser men came, who failed to comprehend and to rise to the height of their
great mission, then the nature of their pretensions was questioned and
disputed. Gregory and Innocent, though the greatest of the Popes, had been
alike politic and circumspect; Gregory had given way to William the Conqueror;
the Kings of France had been invariably treated with deference. Both these
Popes had required the obedience of kings, but they sought not to abase them;
they upheld the royal dignity against all save themselves. But it was otherwise
with their successors, Boniface the Eighth and John the Twenty-second; they
were men of smaller political ability, who failed to read the signs of the
times; they were intoxicated with the sense of their own high position; they
inherited the pretensions of their predecessors, and rashly and unwisely
resolved to push them to their very uttermost limits.
On Christmas Eve, 1294, Benedict Gaetani became Pope
Boniface the Eighth; fourteen months later he was at war with the eldest son of
the Church. Philip the Fair had diverted to his war against England the tithes
levied for the crusade against Aragon. The Pope, on 24th February 1296,
fulminated the decretal Clericis Laicos, forbidding the clergy to pay any taxes to the
civil power without previous permission of the Pope. Neither Philip of France
nor Edward of England paid the slightest attention to the decretal. Philip
retorted by forbidding the exportation of any money to Rome. Boniface was at
this time at strife with the Colonnas in Rome and
with the Aragonese in Sicily. He therefore agreed
with his adversary Philip quickly. But in 1301 a second cause of dispute arose,
the matter of the Bishop of Pamiers. The Pope sent a
fresh Bull, Ausculta Fili, to Philip, which
the King burned. Then the French clergy were summoned to Rome for council. But
the Popes had, by their excessive centralization and by their favoring the
regulars, utterly broken the power and cowed the spirit of the secular clergy,
and they with one accord began to excuse themselves. Philip, beaten by the
Flemish at the battle of Courtrai, hesitated a little, but then plucked up
spirit, and defended himself in his Responsiones.
Boniface refused to accept the King’s excuses, declared them frivolous, and
threatened him with pains spiritual and temporal. The direction of the matter
was left by Philip to Nogaret. Boniface was at his
birthplace, Agnani. Nogaret proceeded there, and was joined by Sciarra Colonna
and others. Then followed the Outrage of Agnani, two
centuries and a quarter after the Humiliation of Canossa. Boniface died shortly
after (11th October 1303). Thus it was that the conqueror of the Empire fell
beneath the defiance of the French King, Philip the Fair, or more truly beneath
the irresistible opposition of a strong national spirit in the kingdoms of
Europe. Boniface was unable to see that the pretension to temporal lordship
which he put forward had outlived its time, that a spirit was born in the
countries of Western Europe which would no longer suffer the Pope’s dominion in
matters temporal. The Popes had pretended to spiritual and to temporal
lordship; the fourteenth century was to teach them that they had no temporal
dominion over the kingdoms of Europe; it was also to contest their spiritual
claims. Nearly all the literature hitherto had been on the side of the Papacy,
exalting its claims. Now the tide had turned. The claims of the Papacy were to
be brought low; the claims of the Empire were to be exalted.
The opposition to the temporal claims of the Papacy
naturally first became prominent in France during the strife between Philip the
Fair and Boniface the Eighth; there had been very few jurists or political
philosophers able to take up the cudgels in Germany for the Hohenstaufen. But
in the University of Paris intellectual life and discussion were vigorous.
Pierre du Bois, a royal advocate in the bailliage of Coutances, published his treatise, the Quaestio de
Potentate Papae, and probably four other
treatises also, about the year 1303; John of Paris published his Tractatus de Potestate regia et papali at the same time. Both writers
start with the assumption that France forms no part of the Empire, and hence
they are able to treat their subjects in a philosophical spirit. Their
arguments are derived from the Bible and Aristotle, but passages from the Bible
which had previously been understood in a mystical sense are now taken
literally. In the Dispute between the Soldier and the Clerk, the former relies
on Christ’s words, “My kingdom is not of this world”. “Christ”, he says,
“ordained Peter to be priest and bishop, but never dubbed him knight nor
crowned him king”; he draws a sharp distinction between spiritual and temporal
matters; it is for the Pope to punish sins, for the king to punish crimes; for
the latter to enforce civil rights, for the former spiritual; the servants of the
Lord should take thought only for what is necessary, they should devote their
superfluities to good works; since the King has to take thought for the general
safety, he can tax the clergy as well as the laity; he can alter the laws,
customs, and privileges of his kingdom as necessity may require. Pierre du Bois regarded the Papacy merely as a state, possessing no
temporal authority over France, as a state with which the French King could
treat just as he treated with any other state. John of Paris was no less
outspoken. He admitted that the Church might own property, but she held it not
by virtue of any vicarship of apostolical succession, but simply by way of
grant from princes or other persons, or by similar titles of succession. He
defines the temporal power as the rule by one of many for the common good; the
spiritual power he describes as that conferred on the Church by Christ for the
dispensation of the sacraments to the faithful. It is necessary that there
should be one spiritual authority over the whole world, but it is not necessary
that there should be one temporal power. As Head of the Church the Pope has a
limited control over the goods of the clergy, but he has none over the goods of
the laity, for Christ had none; if the destruction of the swine be alleged,
they were probably wild pigs, and at any rate were not good for the Jews to
eat. Christ only gave spiritual power to Peter; He gave him no temporal power;
if so, what was the good of the Donation of Constantine? The Emperor possesses
a temporal jurisdiction, the Pope a spiritual. If the former falls into sin or
unbelief, the Pope can warn him or excommunicate him; if the Pope, on the other
hand, practises usury, or otherwise breaks the
temporal law of the Empire, the Emperor can warn and punish him, as the
examples of Constantine the Second and John the Twelfth prove. The Pope
possessed no temporal overlordship; the delivery of the two swords to Peter,
which the Papacy had always interpreted in a literal sense, was taken by their
opponents in a mystical or figurative sense only, from which no argument could
be drawn.
Rather earlier than these works is that of Jordan of
Osnabruck, probably about 1285, on the Holy Roman Empire; rather later, about
1307-1310, is the work of the Abbot of Admont; then a
year or two after this appeared Dante’s well-known De Monarchia.
These writers believed in a world-monarchy as essential for the welfare of the
world; they held the existing Empire to be a continuation of that of Rome, and
traced it back through Aeneas the Trojan to the fourth great beast spoken of by
Daniel the Prophet. The Empire, therefore, dated from a time when Popes and
Bishops were unheard of; it was universal; other kingdoms—Spain, France,
Hungary, and the like—might be independent of it; but their position
established no common law; an Empire was necessary to fight the unbeliever.
After Charles the Great had restored to the Church the temporalities rent away
by the Lombards, after he had bestowed on it the Duchies of Benevento and
Spoleto, Pope Hadrian, in a Council at Rome, had formally acknowledged the
King’s right to choose the Pope; and Pope Leo the Third had adored Charles
after he had been crowned Augustus Imperator in 800. Christ’s promise to Peter,
that whatsoever he bound on earth to be bound in heaven, Dante refers entirely
to the spiritual jurisdiction of the Popes ; he rejects the simile of the sun
and the moon, and also that of the two swords.
Lupold of Bebenburg took up the theory of Dante, and pressed
it to its limits. He began by showing that Charles the Great was a Teuton, that
France was one of the countries subject to the Teuton Emperor, and that the
translation in the time of Otto was merely a renewal of that in the time of
Charles. The Empire had been transferred, not by the Pope, but by the Roman
people. The Donation of Constantine was a fiction; all that Constantine had
done was to choose a Pope, in order to be anointed by him, and to appoint Rome
for his dwelling, while he himself went to Byzantium; but he divided the Empire,
east and west, between his sons. The right to elect the Emperor had been
derived, not from the Church, but from the princes and people, who had
transferred it to the Electors in the time of Otto the Third. Their election
gave full right to the King; the Pope’s investigation, prior to anointing and
crowning, might in the case of a King who had committed sin and refused to do
penance, result in excommunication, and even in his consequent deposition by
the Electors. The anointing and crowning by the Pope was not indeed an empty
form, for it invested the Emperor with the rightful sway over lands which he
had not yet subdued; for the sway of the Emperor extended to the whole world.
It was unfortunate that these elaborate theories as to the worldwide extension
of the Empire should only have been perfected when the Empire itself was in
decadence. Dante’s book was an epitaph instead of a prophecy : so, too, were
the works of Lupold of Bebenburg.
After the Outrage of Agnani,
and the short pontificate of Benedict the Eleventh, the new Pope, Clement the
Fifth, was elected on the 5th June 1305. He was a Frenchman, Bertrand de Got,
Archbishop of Bordeaux; he was crowned at Lyons, and never set foot in Italy.
Now followed the Babylonish Captivity at the “sinful city of Avignon”; for
seventy years the Popes dwelt in the wide windy plain between the Alps and
Cevennes; they steadily lost their prestige in the eyes of Europe, and were
regarded as the obedient henchmen of the French King. Seven Popes in succession
were Frenchmen; all, without exception, were more or less dependent on France.
Several of them were excellent administrators; they also pushed missionary
effort in the East, and endeavored thus to enlarge the borders of Christendom.
But their situation damaged them in the eyes of other countries; the College of
Cardinals became preponderatingly French; the Curia was largely officered by
Frenchmen; the Pope was compromised in the eyes of the world; he was no longer
regarded as the impartial judge, as the supreme Father of Christendom, to whom
kings and litigants might look for arbitration and justice. There arose a
feeling of antagonism to the Papacy which had thus become of one nation. If the
long strife between the Popes and the Hohenstaufen had shaken the belief in the
concord and connection of the Empire and the Papacy, the feeling was
strengthened when men saw the Papacy become little better than the mere
ecclesiastical department of a kingdom notoriously at variance with the Empire.
And yet the Popes at Avignon were much more independent in their policy than
they were popularly credited with being. The most submissive Pope, Clement the
Fifth, by his policy of masterly inactivity, thwarted the wishes of the King of
France in the very matter of the Empire. Damaged and battered as the imperial
crown might be, the old belief in a world-empire was still strong; it was
supported by the clerical character of all culture and by the study of Roman
Law. The practical question was now not so much the mere existence as the practical
exercise of this empire; was it necessary that it should be always German? If
an Englishman and a Castilian had been, might not a Frenchman be elected
Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, and with more power, gain a wider and more
real sway? Albert of Austria, King of the Romans, was assassinated on the 1st
May 1308; Charles of Valois, the French King’s brother, was a candidate for the
Empire. Clement saw the overwhelming power which such a choice would give
France; he prevaricated and delayed; he would not in so many-words recommend
Charles to the Archbishops of the Rhine. The secular electors were equally
averse to the choice of a Frenchman. Baldwin, Archbishop of Trier, suggested a
compromise: his brother, Henry of Luxemburg, was elected, and France was
checkmated (1308). He was crowned Emperor at Rome in 1312; he died in Italy in
1313. Next year there was a double election in Germany.
Clement the Fifth died in 1314; his successor was not
elected until 1316. John the Twenty-second determined to urge against the
Empire the most extreme claims of the Papacy. He pushed his pretensions further
even than Boniface the Eighth. Since Christ had invested Peter with the
temporal no less than with the spiritual kingdom of this world, it followed
that what the Pope had given, in the Translation of the Empire, the Pope could
also take away; and that when the Emperor died the jurisdiction of the Empire
reverted to the Pope, and that it was for him to appoint the new Emperor. The
Pope, says Augustinus Triumphus,
who dedicated his treatise Summa de Potestate Ecclesiastica to Pope John between 1324 and 1328, may
choose an Emperor at his own discretion, depriving the established Electors of
their privilege, and thus altering the constitution of the Empire. This was the
contention of Pope John, and this was the crux of the quarrel between the Popes
and Louis of Bavaria. The Germans contended that it was for the Electors to
choose the future Emperor, and for the Pope to crown the object of their
choice; that in the event of a contested election, it was for the God of
Battles to decide between the rival candidates.
Louis of Bavaria had been elected by five Electors,
Frederic of Austria by two; and the God of Battles at Muhldorf had decided in favor of Louis. The claim of the Pope was not one which the
Electors could pass over in silence. They met at Rense and at Frankfurt in 1338, and resolved that the prince elected by them became
King of the Romans without further ceremony, without need for Papal
confirmation. Eighteen years later this position was upheld by that good Son of
the Church, Charles the Fourth; the Golden Bull passed over in complete silence
the Papal claims to veto or confirm an election, or to administer the Empire
during a vacancy. Pope John the Twenty-second, however, who even went so far at
one time as to determine to oust the Empire from all claim to overlordship or
concern in Italy, was firm to obstinacy in his quarrel with the Emperor, and
demanded that Louis should resign his crown. This advance in the Papal
pretensions took place at a critical time. The Empire had lost its old
prestige. France, England, Poland, Hungary, Scandinavia, no longer acknowledged
any German overlordship; early in the fourteenth century French jurists had
denied in express terms that France formed any part of the Empire. There were
reasons, they said, which warranted the Pope’s interference in Germany, which
were inapplicable to France or to England, seeing that these countries had not
been included in the Donation of Constantine. The Germano-Roman Empire was
already in the eyes of foreigners dwindling into a mere German kingdom. It was
at this time, when the power of Germany was thus diminished, when the Pope at
Avignon was regarded as a virtual dependant of the
King of France, that these extraordinary claims were put forward. So vast, so
unlimited were the pretensions of John, as of Boniface, that in the countries
where a feeling of nationality was gradually rising into existence, where the
modern consciousness of patriotism was then taking birth, these pretensions
naturally caused revolt, and a serious diminution of the actual power of the
Pope necessarily ensued.
The gradual disappearance of the old feeling of
citizenship in a world-empire, which was a very different sentiment from modern
cosmopolitanism, had allowed room for the growth of the new feeling of
nationality. So long as the older and wider sentiment existed, the newer and
more local pride in one’s own country could not commence; but with the gradual
disappearance of the former, the latter feeling, in countries where the
different parts and peoples cohered sufficiently, gradually took its place. In
such countries it began naturally where they had been longest separated from
the Empire. England was the first country to become distinctly a nation with an
independent, self-centred life and policy; Saxons and
Normans and Britons had coalesced into one people, and that people had become a
nation with a patriotism of its own. The acquisition of the large kingdom of
Toulouse toward the close of the thirteenth century allowed a similar feeling
to develop in France, but Brittany, and to a lesser extent Guyenne, was still a
land apart; and it was not until the time of Joan of Arc that the sentiment of
nationality became general. La Pucelle was the
godmother of modern France.
In 1344 King Peter of Aragon told Pope Clement the
Sixth that in worldly matters he recognized no superior save God; and the same
feeling prevailed in Scandinavia and in Hungary. In Italy, however, although
loyalty to the Empire was cold and interested, no feeling of nationality took
its place; it was supplanted by a narrower sentiment of pride in one’s own city
or republic; a man was proud of being a citizen of Florence, Bologna, or
Perugia, but he felt no pride in being an Italian. In Germany disruption was
general : the man of Bremen had no sympathy with the man of Frankfurt, the
Westphalian had nothing in common with the Saxon or the Bavarian. But although
Louis of Bavaria had no patriotism at his back to help him in his struggle with
the Papacy, he had other and very formidable allies.
The new quarrel between the Empire and the Papacy
began in 1323. A year or two later, between the summer of 1324 and the autumn
of 1326, Marsiglio of Padua, with the help of John of Jandun,
published his Defensor Pacis, a work
startlingly modern in its thought and reasoning. So utterly divergent is it
from mediaeval sentiment that it is small wonder that Pope Clement the Sixth,
when he read it, exclaimed that he had never come across a worse heretic than
this Marsiglio. The Italian physician, rector of the University of Paris, was
forty-five years of age at this time, a man imbued with the Politics of
Aristotle and with the arguments of the French apologists for Philip the Fair;
he was in the Middle Age but not of it; a cold-blooded political philosopher,
he was of the eighteenth, or of the twentieth, century rather than of the
fourteenth. Some of his theories were realized at the Reformation, some in the
political revolutions, some are still on the anvil of Time. His work is a defence of the State against the Church. The State is a
community to ensure a good life in this world and in the next. The sovereign
body is the community of the citizens or the majority of them; and if it be
alleged that most men are fools, still a man often grasps an idea when it is
put forth by another, and thus understands what he himself could neither have
initiated nor discovered. One duty of the sovereign body is to make the laws
necessary for the enforcement of right; a law is a rule, by whatever name
known, enforced by a sanction. All are entitled to participate in the making of
laws except minors, bondsmen, strangers, and women. Laws are best prepared by
the old and experienced rather than by handicraftsmen; by them they should be
presented to the assembly for discussion, before being passed, amended, or
rejected. Another duty of the sovereign body is to appoint their ruler; he
should be one who will conduct himself according to their will; he must be
clever and capable, and supported by a sufficient body of troops to enforce
obedience but not to usurp authority; it is for him to enforce the laws of
which the sovereign body or their representatives declare the meaning; his
correction and his removal rest with the sovereign body, but his slight
deviations from the law should be winked at. All this was fine theory, far
ahead of the tildes; it would have been passed in silence by the Church.
The head and front of Marsiglio’s offending was when he came to deal with the relations between Church and State.
It is to the interference of the Popes, of Clement the Fifth with Henry the
Seventh, of Boniface the Eighth with Philip the Fair, of John the Twenty-second
with Louis of Bavaria, that he attributes the trouble and unrest in the world.
The Pope has assumed a primacy which Saint Peter never possessed over the other
apostles; he bases his claim on the Donation of Constantine, which is vague and
obsolete and restricted; on the plenitudo potestatis, which is not warranted by Scripture as
pretended. The Emperors formerly regulated the election of Popes; and if they
allowed themselves to be consecrated by the Pope, this gave him no more right
over them than the Archbishop of Rheims has over the King of France. Christ
bestowed on His apostles spiritual powers, but no coercive jurisdiction
enabling them to interfere in temporal affairs; His kingdom was not of this
world; He ordained His followers to teach His gospel and to administer the
sacraments. The power of the keys, the power to loose and to bind, refers only
to the sacrament of penance; and here the forgiveness of sins belongs to God
alone; the priest cannot forgive a hypocrite nor refuse absolution to a
penitent; he is merely the turnkey carrying out the orders of the Divine Judge.
The Church is the community of all believers; the laity have as good a right as
the priests to be styled viri ecclesiastici; all alike are subject to the temporal
law, though bishops and priests ought to be punished more severely than others
because they are more enlightened. Sins are to be admonished by the clergy, but
their punishment belongs to God, and is reserved for the next world; even
heresy can only be punished on earth so far as it is contrary to the temporal
law. Excommunication, again, cannot be pronounced by any single priest or
bishop; it is reserved for the community or for a general council; for Christ
commanded not, when thy brother sin against thee, to tell it to the bishop or
priest or the College of Cardinals, but to tell it to the Church. Moreover, all
priests should follow their Master in apostolic poverty and in contempt of this
world; they should possess no real property; they should have no right to
follow personal property into the hands of others; benefices belong to the
patrons, not to the Church. The Catholic Faith rests on the Bible only, not on
decrees or decretals of Popes or Cardinals; doubts as to the interpretation of
the Scripture should be settled by a general council, on which laity and clergy
alike sit; the council is convoked by the sovereign body, the Pope as Bishop of
Rome presides, but has no coercive jurisdiction beyond what is conferred by the
council.
The pretensions of the Popes against the Empire are
then discussed. The shortsightedness of the Emperors in allowing themselves to
be crowned and anointed had engendered in the Popes the pretension that their
confirmation of the choice of the Electors is necessary, thereby making the
seven Electors of as little account as if they were seven barbers or seven
blind men; the authority of the King is derived from the sovereign body or
their proctors. As a matter of fact, such papal confirmation is entirely
unnecessary; the right conferred by election is complete and needs no
recognition or confirmation by the Pope to supplement it.
“This remarkable work of Marsiglio”, says Creighton,
“stands on the very threshold of modern history as a clear forecast of the
ideas which were to regulate the future progress of Europe”. With this work in
their hands the two students appeared at the Court at Nurnberg. “By God!” said
King Louis, “who can have induced you to leave that land of peace and quiet for
this warlike kingdom of uproar and trouble?”. They explained. There was a
consultation. Finally the King received them with open arms, appointed
Marsiglio his physician, and soon installed him as his counsellor. “I am a man
of war”, said Louis, “and understand nothing of sciences and learned
subtleties”. In 1327 the King entered Italy, and Marsiglio, who was allowed to
preach against the Pope, was soon in a position to carry his theories into
practice.
On the 17th January 1328, Louis was chosen to be
Emperor by the acclamation of the Roman people, and Sciarra Colonna, who twenty-five years earlier had stood in the burning palace of Agnani, his sword pointed at the Pope’s breast, placed the
crown of Empire on his head. It was the realization of the theory of Marsiglio;
it was also the first time a German King had ever received the sacred diadem
from the people of Rome. A public parliament was held on the 18th April, and
the Pope was deposed; Peter of Corbara, a Franciscan
friar, was elected Pope by the people of Rome on the 12th May, and the Emperor
set the crown on his head. Louis, however, was but a pinchbeck Emperor, a mere
parody of Frederic the Second; and the proceedings at Rome must have appeared
ridiculous in the eyes of all sober Christians. Frederic the Second was a man
of moderation when compared with the rash revolutionary Louis of Bavaria. The
revulsion soon came. The King was unable to make any headway against Robert of
Naples. The fickle Romans turned against him. Louis, the anti-Pope, the
anti-cardinals left Rome amid showers of stones, and the dominion of the
rightful Pope was at once restored. Disaster dogged the Emperor’s footsteps :
his troops mutinied; his adversaries in Germany threatened to set up a new
king; he was compelled to leave Italy; his journey to Rome had been utterly
unsuccessful; its actual result was the extinction of the last shadow of
respect enjoyed by the Empire, and the entire destruction of the dream of Dante
and the Ghibelines, who had expected the salvation of
Italy at the hands of the Roman Emperor.
Louis had failed disastrously in his Italian
expedition, but to his court at Munich there flocked all the most influential
thinkers and writers of the day. Michael of Cesena, the General of the
Franciscan Order, who counted Pope John a heretic because he exposed the
absurdity of their theory of apostolic poverty, composed a Tractate against the
errors of the Pope. Like Marsiglio, he upheld a general council as superior in
authority; a Pope may err, as many have erred, in faith and morals, but a
council representing the Universal Church is free from error. Bonagratia of Bergamo, Ubertino of Casale, Francesco of Ascoli, and his namesake of
Marca, Heinrich of Thalheim, Parisian And Italian
professors, English and German Franciscans—all were found at the Bavarian
court. The most famous of all was the Englishman, William of Ockham, the
nominalist leader who had finally settled the controversy of the schools.
“Defend me with your sword, and I will defend you with my pen”, was his
greeting to the monarch—a greeting which was repeated three hundred years later
by a much smaller divine to our own King James the First. Ockham took part in
the active resistance to the Pope, and his writings are his defence and justification. He wrote as a mediaeval philosopher, and hence his works,
though they lack the modern thought and brilliance of Marsiglio, had much more
influence with his contemporaries. He handed down a light which was never suffered
to be extinguished, and which served as a beacon to pioneers of reform like
Wycliffe and Hus. He also holds that the Pope is fallible, but even a general
council, to which women as well as men should be admitted, may also err. Like
Marsiglio, William of Ockham was not really in love with the imperial idea; all
that is of importance to them is to erect the estate into an organic,
consolidated force independent of, and in its own province superior to, that of
the spirituality; and this done, they circumscribe even the spiritual part of
the papal authority by making it in all respects subject to the general voice
of Christendom.
The writings of the refugees, the declarations of the
German Electors at Rense and the German Estates at
Frankfurt, had shattered the Hildebrandine doctrine
of the civil supremacy of the Papacy. Not merely the religious dissidents and
the speculative philosophers, but those who were dissatisfied with the moral
conditions of the Curia and the clergy, those who were shocked by the pomp and
simony, the extortion and sensuality which disfigured the Church, were inclined
to group themselves under the aegis of the Empire, its former associate but now
its rival. The Empire was still the centre of
knighthood, the maker of kings; it had been ruled uniformly for four centuries,
from Henry the Fowler to Charles the Fourth, by men of character and energy,
who spent themselves freely in the service of the State.
John the Twenty-second died in 1334, just as he was to
be summoned before a council for a fresh heresy; Benedict the Twelfth, who
would have given his soul to reconcile the Emperor, if he had had another soul
in addition to that which was already pledged to the King of France, died in
1342; and at this time Louis took a step which proved fatal to him. Margaret Maultasch, of the Tirol, who had married a son of King John
of Bohemia, grew tired of her husband, discarded him, and threw herself on the
protection of the Emperor. Louis pronounced her divorce, and according to the
theories of Marsiglio of Padua and William of Ockham, he was able to justify
this step; but his glaring self-seeking was apparent when he married
pock-mouthed Meg to his own son, Louis of Brandenburg. The clergy were up in
arms at his assumption of clerical powers, the lay princes were disgusted at
the addition of the Tirol to the House of Bavaria. Pope Clement the Sixth was
now able to raise an anti-imperial party in Germany; he deposed the Archbishop
of Mainz, who adhered to Louis, and appointed Gerlach of Nassau in his place;
the three Archbishops, the King of Bohemia, and Rudolf of Saxony then formally
elected Charles of Bohemia as King of the Romans. War between the rival
monarchs was averted by the death of Louis, while boar-hunting near Munich, on
the 11th October 1347.
Charles, the Pfaffen-Kaiser
or parson’s Emperor, was now King of the Romans. His succession, however, was
not undisputed. The deposed Archbishop of Mainz, and three others who claimed
electoral votes, offered the crown to Edward the Third, to Louis of
Brandenburg, to Frederic of Meissen, all of whom declined the honor. They
finally elected Gunther of Schwartzburg, who accepted
it, but died on the 14th June 1350, leaving Charles undisputed King. The new
monarch was a man of rare diplomatic ability and of no illusions. He had been
with his father in Italy, and knew that Italy was only a clog on Germany.
Rudolf of Habsburg had abandoned to the Pope the territories of Matilda of
Tuscany. Charles, when he went into Italy, appointed existing rulers to be
vicars of the Empire, in the hope that they might thereby acknowledge its
shadowy feudal superiority, but he renounced all those territorial rights for
which his predecessors had fought. He had also lived in France, and knew the
danger of territorial encroachment on that side, and got himself crowned King
at Aries in consequence. But his main endeavor was to build up a strong kingdom
to serve as a territorial basis for the Empire, which he hoped to make
hereditary in the House of Luxemburg; he failed to make the Empire hereditary,
but his policy was later successfully pursued by the House of Habsburg and was
essentially sound. He won over the imperial cities to his side by the
concession of privileges; he won over the House of Habsburg by the marriage of his
eldest son Rudolf; he won over the House of Wittelsbach by his own marriage
with the daughter of the Elector Palatine; he won over the House of Brandenburg
by disowning the false Waldemar. He attempted to make Bohemia the corner-stone
of the Empire, transferring the sovereignty from the west to the east; he
founded the University of Prague, the first university in Germany, and
attracted there thousands of students from all Christendom. He supported the
claim of his brother Wenzel to the Duchies of Brabant and Limburg against the
pretensions of the Count of Flanders; he secured the succession to the Duchy of
Brandenburg and the reversion of the Tirol. The great weakness of Germany was
its utter want of political union; the princes had become independent; the
spiritual lords were more formidable from their possessions than those of any
other European country, and enjoyed far larger privileges; the cities tended to
become independent republics, and were always ready to make leagues among
themselves regardless of the imperial sanction or interest. Little was now left
of the crown lands; the regalian rights had been mostly seized or granted away;
the Emperor had the mines in Bohemia and an inglorious traffic in honors and
exemptions as his main fiscal resource. Yet with all these disadvantages
Charles the Fourth made the Empire stronger and more respected, and he
succeeded in leaving it to his eldest and dearly loved son, Wenzel. The
greatest achievement of his reign was the Golden Bull.
It was patent to all that the disputed elections
caused continual disorder, and that one cause for the disputes was the
uncertainty as to the rules of election. This uncertainty Charles rectified by
the Golden Bull. Although he himself had admitted the necessity for confirmation
of the election by the Pope before the King of the Romans could be crowned
Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, yet the papal claims were passed over in
complete silence and the electoral resolution of Rense became the law of the Empire; on this point the Pope showed his displeasure,
but Charles remained firm. The number of the Electors was to be seven. In the
first place were the three great Archbishops of the Rhine: the Archbishop of
Mainz, arch-chancellor of Germany; the Archbishop of Cologne, arch-chancellor
of Italy; and the Archbishop of Trier, arch-chancellor of Burgundy,—these three
represented the German Church. Then came the King of Bohemia, cupbearer of the
Emperor; the Count Palatine, who was grand seneschal; the Duke of Saxony, who
was grand marshal; and the Markgraf of Brandenburg, who was grand chamberlain.
The territories of the Electors were to be indivisible, and were to descend by
the law of primogeniture in lineal agnatic succession. The Habsburgs and the
Bavarian Wittelsbachs were weakened by the Bull, as
also were the cities, which were forbidden to form confederations without the
permission of their territorial lords or to admit outsiders to their
citizenship. There were defects and omissions in the Golden Bull; there was
little that was new; but it crystallized into a constitutional law of the
Empire much that was aforetime in part matter of custom, in part matter of
dispute. In transferring the balance of power and of civilization to the east
of Germany, Charles was influenced by his desire to unite the eastern Slavs
with Bohemia and to pave the way for a union between the Latin and Greek
Churches. He was harshly described by Maximilian the First as the father of
Bohemia, but the stepfather of the Empire; but if his first thought was for Bohemia,
he also did his duty by the Empire. He had none of the romantic enthusiasm of
his father or his grandfather, but he had what was far better—a strong sense
of the practical duties of government, and a strenuous business capacity which
enabled him to carry them out. It is true that he failed to maintain the Ghibeline cause in Italy, but he preferred the more solid
and substantial aim of building up a territorial monarchy in Germany. He was
distinguished among contemporary monarchs for his preference of diplomacy to
force, for his strong legal sense and his love of order. Like Edward the First
of England and Philip the Fourth of France, he marks the transition from
mediaeval to modern ideals and methods of government.
Two months before Charles died (1378) there commenced
the great Schism of the West.
II
THE HOLY ROMAN CHURCH
(1)
Its Popular Side
“The two great ideas which expiring antiquity
bequeathed to the ages which followed”, says Mr. Bryce, “were those of a
World-Monarchy and a World-Religion”. These two ideas were intimately
connected. God had entrusted the care of men’s bodies to the Emperor, His vicar
on earth in matters temporal; and the care of their souls to the Pope, His
vicar on earth in matters spiritual. The Holy Roman Empire and the Holy Roman
Church thus represent two aspects of the same world-wide coextensive rule. In
the preceding chapter a brief survey of the Empire at the time of the
commencement of the Great Schism has been given; and we have seen how it had
shrunk and contracted until it was now merely the Romano-Germanic Empire, with
hardly a foothold outside Germany, but with much of the glamour of the old
title still attaching to the person and the office of the Emperor. Up to the
time of the Schism the Church had preserved its title as the world-religion;
Christians everywhere were still united in one religion under one father, the
Pope.
Another tie that bound all Christians together was the
fact that in their services and worship they all used one language—the language
of the Holy Roman Church, which she used then and uses still today. Not only
was Latin the language of the Church, it was the language of all educated
people throughout Europe. The clergy everywhere talked Latin and wrote Latin;
it was the one language of education. At Paris or at Prague, at Oxford or at
Bologna, the student heard lectures in Latin, took his notes in Latin, read
Latin, wrote Latin, spoke Latin. International intercourse was immensely
facilitated by this use of a common tongue. A scholar went from one university
to another; he exchanged kindly greetings with the clergy on the way; he was
welcomed at the parsonages and monasteries; the use of the lingua franca paved
the way for him everywhere. And it was the outward mark of men’s common belief;
it enabled the stranger to take his part in the church service ; even the
peasant might learn his Pater Noster and Ave Maria.
The nations grew up and gradually used their national tongues, dropping the use
of Latin; but the Church remained one and indivisible, using the language which
had been her own from the beginning.
From the days of the Ottos onwards, the Papacy had
been growing in influence and esteem until it reached its zenith in the twelfth
and thirteenth centuries. The greater Popes had striven to realize their high
calling as being set in authority over princes and kings who were warring on
all sides; they had kept themselves above the smoke and stir of European strife
and warfare; they had endeavored to establish an authoritative council of
unimpassioned aim and high morality, aloof from the selfish plans and lustful
passions of secular princes. Such a tribunal was then sorely wanted, and such a
tribunal the Papacy did to some extent supply, enforcing its decrees by
spiritual sanctions. The Church in the days of her greatest glory had no
military force to support her. The years that lie between the rise of the monks
of Cluni and the coming of the Friars, the years from
Hildebrand to Innocent the Third, form for the Holy Roman Church an epoch of splendour and glory, an epoch during which her power over
the secular lords of the earth was the mightiest, during which her influence
for good was most strikingly exercised. Her spiritual claims were justified by
the beneficial uses to which they were applied. It was not orthodoxy alone that
the Church represented; it asserted also the moral conscience of humanity. It
waged war not only with heretics such as the Patarines and the Albigenses; it waged war also with the tyrant, the adulterer, the
oppressor. The worst of our Plantagenet kings, the only king thoroughly
despicable and contemptible, was John Lackland : Innocent the Third
excommunicated him. The most inhuman and barbarous of Italian tyrants was Eccelino da Romano : Alexander the Fourth preached a
crusade and sent an army against him. When Philip Augustus deserted his wife, Ingeburg of Denmark, for the beautiful Agnes of Meran, Innocent the Third did not hesitate to excommunicate
him. But until the time of this pontiff the Church had no temporal power. She
was strong only in the moral force which is given by public approbation. Her
voice was effectual only so far as it was re-echoed by public opinion. Her
penalties were enforced only where their justice was recognized. With all its
defects the Mediaeval Church uttered the only possible protest against the
tyranny of an unruly oligarchy ... The authority of the Pope was a useful
refuge against the overweening power of the King and lords. And if the Church
was thus, for the mighty ones of the earth, a court of equity and good
conscience, a tribunal whose decrees were usually respected and obeyed, to the
people at large she was a haven of shelter and peace. In the age of feudal
warfare, an age of unbridled tumult and ferocity, the highest and holiest
aspirations of all were for peace and rest, for quietude and order; and it was
because the Church offered a haven of rest to the rich, a haven of refuge to
the poor, that she obtained such a firm hold on the affection of the Middle
Ages. The high-born lord or lady did not disdain the shades of the cloister;
King Rudolfs daughter, Euphemia, became a nun; his
son-in-law, Otto, became a monk. In Germany, where the right of private war was
universally exercised, many a warrior, weary of strife, must have looked
forward to end his days in the peaceful seclusion of the convent walls—
For if heven be on this erthe and ese to any soule,
It is in cloistere (says
William Langland),
For in cloistere cometh no
man to chide ne to fighte,
But all is buxomness there and bokes to rede and to lerne.
To the men of low estate the Church was their only
efficient protector. In dealing with the bulk of the peasantry, and to some
extent with the townfolk also, might was right, and
the power of the strongest was tempered only by custom. When king or lord
oppressed them, if they could not plead custom in their favour,
and sometimes if they could, they were bound to submit; the Church alone could
help them. While to the man of learning and influence it opened a wide field
for ambition, to the poor man of intellect it was the only refuge, the only home,
in which he could hope to pursue his study unmolested and to reap some reward
of his labour. Eight at least of our own Archbishops
of Canterbury, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, were of humble
parentage. The Church was open to all alike; any man of free birth could become
a clerk; and there are numberless instances in which serfs paid fine to their
lords for permission to send their sons to school in order that they might be
admitted to the ranks of the clergy. Once admitted all were theoretically
equal; and although in Germany the higher posts in the Church were closed
against all who were not of noble birth, although in England there was a
prejudice against cobblers' brats becoming priests and bishops—
For shold no Clerk be crouned bote yf he ycome were
Of franklens and free men
and of folke yweddede,
says Langland, still there was a wide field
practically open to merit and ability. The highest offices and dignities of the
Church were open to all the sacred orders, to every Christian clerk alike. Pope
Gregory the Seventh was the son of a carpenter, Benedict the Twelfth of a
baker, Nicholas the Fifth of a poor doctor, Celestine the Fifth of a peasant,
Urban the Fourth and John the Twenty-second of cobblers, Benedict the Eleventh
of a shepherd, and Alexander the Fifth and Adrian the Fourth were beggars. In
those iron ages, when brutal force was everything, it was surely much, as M.
Sabatier has said, that the Church could point to peasants and workmen
receiving the humble homage of the lords of the earth, simply because they were
seated on the chair of Saint Peter and represented the moral law. Moreover, the
influence of the Church over all Christian souls was very thorough, very
impressive, very far-reaching. In those days, when in matters of faith all were
of one belief, when in matters of ceremony all were of one observance, the
Church breathed a spirit of common brotherhood which it is well-nigh impossible
for us nowadays to comprehend. We have no horror of schism; we live amid a thousand
jarring sects; religious and political strife and variety are to us as the
breath of our nostrils; but in the Middle Ages it was not so, neither in
politics nor in religion. The men of today, therefore, find it difficult to
sympathize with those who lived then; they cannot understand the fascination
which the idea of one all-embracing, all-pervading church exercised upon their
mediaeval forefathers. A life in the church, for the church, through the
church; a life which she blessed in Mass at morning and sent to peaceful rest
by the vesper hymn; a life which she supported by the constantly recurring
stimulus of the sacraments, relieving it by confession, purifying it by
penance, admonishing it by the presentation of visible objects for
contemplation and worship—this was the life which they of the Middle Ages
conceived of as the rightful life for man; it was the actual life of many, the
ideal of all. Thus, in the days of its greatest splendour and glory, the influence of the Holy Roman Church was beneficent, and was felt
by all to be so; it represented what people wanted. There never was a power
which could claim more entirely to rest upon public opinion than could the
papal power at its best.
But toward the end of the fourteenth century the papal
power was no longer at its best. It had formerly been a purely spiritual power,
enforcing its decrees by spiritual sanctions alone; but since the beginning of
the thirteenth century it had altered its position, and had become a temporal
power also, having acquired the States of the Church. The two great
world-powers, the Empire and the Papacy, had very little force of their own to
back up and carry out their decrees. They were dependent on public opinion, on
the might of others. The Emperor might issue his ban, the Pope might issue his
interdict, but the carrying into effect of these punishments depended on the
will of the subordinate powers on the spot. The might of the Empire rested on
the goodwill and obedience of its dignitaries, just as the might of the Papacy
rested on the goodwill and obedience of the countries of Christendom. In
proportion as the obedience of its subordinates became more precarious, so each
world-power came to feel the need for some more constant and trustworthy
support; each Emperor, Salian or Swabian, Habsburg or Luxemburg, tried to
fashion for his family some secure territorial basis on which its permanent
power might be indefeasibly grounded. Just in the same way, and for the same
reason, did the Popes seek to secure territorial sovereignty by the acquisition
of the States of the Church. This, however, necessarily brought the Papacy down
to a lower moral level: a Pope fighting for his own territorial sovereignty or
aggrandizement was a different matter, and no longer appealed to the imagination
and sympathy of mankind as did a Pope fighting for the higher policy, the
liberal ideas, the moral aims of the Church. In other respects it may have been
a matter of comparatively small moment at the end of the fourteenth century
that the Papacy had become a temporal power, although later, in the sixteenth
century, in the storm and stress of the Reformation, it was the possession of
the Papal States which probably saved the Papacy from being reduced once again
to its original condition of a mere Italian bishopric. For good and for ill the
Papacy had taken rank among the temporal powers of Europe, and had its temporal
as well as its spiritual aims to pursue.
While it had thus become a temporal power, the Church
had already become the greatest landowner in Christendom. Religion, which had
at first been a question of morals and had then been a question of orthodoxy,
had, from the seventh century onwards, become in the main a matter of
munificence to convents. The early Kings of England, the Merovingians and the Carlovingians in France, the Saxon Emperors in Germany, the
Kings of Leon, had all been prodigal in their gifts of land; the abbeys had
profited even more than the cathedrals. Men believed in Hell in those days, in
a “Hell where the worm dieth not and the fire is not
quenched”; and many a dying man was ready to secure a better chance after
death, many a widow was ready to improve the fate of her husband, by diverting
part of his worldly wealth into the coffers of the Church. Purgatory was the
lot of all true believers, and the fires of Purgatory, necessary though they
might be, were as bad as the fires of Hell. But the pains of the dead could be
shortened by the prayers and good works of the living; hence in all
monasteries, whenever any one belonging to it died,
the death-knell was rung, and though it were the depth of night, no sooner had
they heard that well-known bell swinging forth slowly and sadly its mournful
sounds, than all the inmates of that house arose and knelt down by their
bedsides, or hurried to the Church, and prayed for the soul of the brother or
sister that moment gone. Kings founded monasteries for their ghostly weal;
cathedrals and parish churches pledged themselves that a certain number of
Psalms should be sung and a certain number of Masses be said; chantries were
endowed in perpetuity or for a limited period for the offering up of the Mass
after the founder's death. Indeed, so universal did the practice become of
leaving a part of one's goods to the Church, that mere intestacy was regarded
by the clergy as a fraud, and the Bishop of Lisbon and his subordinates in the
days of Saint Francis actually refused to perform the funeral services for anyone
who had not left one-third of his wealth to the Church.
But for the fiefs which abbeys paid to their lay
advocates for protection, and but for the rapacious spoliations to which they
were subject at the hands of brutal and unprincipled warriors, it seemed as if
the Church would gradually engulf all the lands of the kingdoms of Europe. As
it was, the proportion of lands held by the Church was in some countries more
than one-half, and in all not less than one-third. The end of the twelfth
century was the time of most profuse liberality; after that, as the mendicant
friars rose in favour and the monks gradually lost
their popularity, the tide of generosity fell lower and lower; but at the close
of the fourteenth century the Church was still the greatest landowner in every
country of Christendom. The wealth of the Church in Germany was conspicuously
great. In 1111, King Henry the Fifth had proposed to the Pope to end the strife
about investitures by taking from the German prelates their landed estates, and
leaving them only their tithes and offerings; Paschal the Second had consented;
but the German clergy, through their primate the Archbishop of Salzburg,
declared that anything was preferable to seeing the Church thus spoiled of her
inheritance. The proposal therefore came to naught; the prelates still
continued to be feudal lords. The three great Archbishops of the Rhine not only
thus held their vast estates, but were ever on the lookout to add to their
strength; their position as Electors of the Empire enabled them at the time of
elections to drive unconscionable bargains with the candidates for Empire.
Perhaps the hardest bargains of all were those which the Archbishops of Cologne
and Mainz made with Adolf of Nassau and his two successors. The Bishops also,
almost universally throughout the Empire, donned coat of mail as readily as
cassock; they were ever ready to enlarge their sees, their privileges, their
immunities. The position of an exalted ecclesiastic was eagerly sought for by
the German nobles; and it was part of the policy of successive Emperors to
prevent two of the great archbishoprics being held by members of the same noble
family. They were not always able to hinder such an accumulation of influence
in the hands of a single house : when Kuno of Falkenstein was Archbishop of Trier in the days of King Wenzel, his nephew, Frederic, was
Archbishop of Cologne. The German prelates again, unlike those of England and
France, when once they were in secure possession of their sees, frequently
wavered in their allegiance to their feudal lord paramount; while their
obedience to their spiritual father, the Pope, was equally precarious and
uncertain. Innocent the Sixth failed to procure any pecuniary assistance for
his wars in Italy from the three Archbishops of the Rhine or from the
Archbishop of Salzburg. When Pope Boniface the Ninth granted two-tenths to King
Rupert, he found it impossible to levy the tax. And the clergy of Germany were
often as refractory to their bishops as were the bishops to the Pope.
Before noticing the state of the Church at the end of
the fourteenth century, it will be well to form some idea of its extent, and of
the principal points in which it differed from the Church of the present day.
In extent, taking the term in its widest signification, the Church coincided
with the Empire : it embraced the whole body of the faithful, the whole
Christian world considered on its spiritual side. Taken in its narrower sense,
as including the pastors and not the people, the Church still embraced the
whole body of clerks or clergy, practically the whole of the population which
earned its bread by its brains rather than by the sweat of its brow; the whole
body, with some exceptions, and those chiefly in Italy, of what we now call the
learned professions. “In the North of Europe”, writes Mr. Rashdall,
“the Church was simply a synonym for the professions. Nearly all the civil
servants of the Crown, the diplomatists, the secretaries or advisers of great
nobles, the architects, at one time the secular lawyers, all through the Middle
Ages the then large tribe of ecclesiastical lawyers, were ecclesiastics”. The
distinction meant much, for it corresponded to a cleavage in jurisdiction.
Every clerk was personally outside the jurisdiction of the secular courts. In
every country of Christendom alongside the secular courts were the courts
spiritual. The jurisdiction of these courts extended to the persons of all
clerks, to every one who wore a tonsure; it extended
also to all spiritual causes, not only to those strictly concerned with matters
of faith and discipline, but also to all cases in any way connected with
marriage, with church property, with wills, or with perjury; it extended also
to crimes against religion, to crimes committed in holy places, to violations
of the edicts against taking interest, and to breaches of the Truce or Peace of
God. The spiritual courts were far more popular than the secular courts; the
judges were more learned, the procedure was more reasonable, justice more
easily obtainable, and the punishments milder; consequently contracts were made
binding by oath in order that their non-obervance might be treated as a case of perjury, and laymen got barbers to give them the
clerks crown in the hope of coming within the jurisdiction of the spiritual
rather than of the secular court. The canon law was everywhere the personal law
of the clerk, and it had the advantage of being accompanied by a procedure
simpler, milder, and more rational. Whether there was or was not much to choose
between the substantive law of the systems, the adjective law of the one was
civilized, while that of the other was semi-barbarous. We have to take
ourselves back to a state of society in which a judicial trial was a tournament
and the ordeal an approved substitute for evidence, to realize what
civilization owes to the Canon Law and their Canonists with their elaborate
system of written law, their judicial evidence, and their written procedure. In
those days, as in the civil courts now, a man could not get justice without
paying for it; and the battle between the rival jurisdictions was to some
extent a battle for fees and fines. Perhaps the most important point in the
great share which the Church then took in the purely judicial work of a country
was that the ultimate appeal in all spiritual causes lay to the Pope.
“Religious life in the Middle Ages”, writes M.
Jusserand, “had not the definite visible boundaries which we see today; now a
man either belongs to the Church or he does not; but there was nothing so
sharply cut then. Religious life stretched across society like an immense river
without banks, with numberless affluents, with underground streams,
impregnating the soil even where it did not wash it”.
“In the Middle Ages”, writes Mr. Trevelyan, “the
Church administered whole sides of life which have since been put into the
hands of the secular government or left to the discretion of the individual”
(England in the Age of Wycliffe). It was necessarily so when all the educated
classes of the country other than those engaged in war, in commerce and
industry, were practically confined to the ranks of the clergy. Wherever the
services of an educated man were required, a clerk must be taken. The clergy
were in request in business houses as clerks and scriveners, and on estates as
stewards and accountants. The household of a great noble, like John of Gaunt,
included scores of their number: his chancellor was the Bishop of Salisbury,
his chief physician was Appleton, a Franciscan Friar. There were numbers of
clerks everywhere in the royal service—
Bischopes and bachelers bothe maistres and doctours, . .
.
Some serve the Kyng and his
silver tellen,
In cheker and in chancerye chalengen his dettes . . .
And some serve as servants lordes and laydes,
And in stede of stuwardes sytten and demen.
The Roman Catholic religion has always maintained a
close hold on the everyday life of its people; but in the Middle Ages, when the
proportionate number of the clergy was so very much greater, there was
necessarily much more intimate friendship and intercourse between the lower
ranks of the clergy and the mass of the people than is possible now. Church
festivals, and the village rejoicings connected with them, were more numerous;
some of those which were then of most significance, such as the feast of the
Exaltation of the Holy Cross (14th September), have now lost their first
importance. In the Middle Ages a religious feast was above all else a
representation, more or less faithful, of some Bible story or some saintly
legend; others were of half-pagan, half-religious origin; but into them all the
sub-deacons and deacons entered with boyish glee. Numerous are the instances in
which they are reproved by their bishop or even by the Pope for leading the van
in some such ceremony which tended to throw discredit on the Church, but which
was dear to the souls of the people and to the ranks of the lower clergy. A
short reference to some of those feasts which have now fallen more or less into
disuse will not be out of place.
In the first half of the fourteenth century, when the
peasantry everywhere were prosperous, there was much jollity and happiness in
their lives, so long as the piping days of peace were on, for all religiously
took part, and the children often took a special part of their own, in the
round of festivals which marked the course of the year. Some of these merry
observances have altogether disappeared, others have fallen more or less into
disuse and forgetfulness. The ‘Liberty of December’ was in France and other
countries a time of universal feasting and merriment, of dance and song. Then
were held the ‘Feast of Fools’, derived from the old heathen festival of the
Kalends of January; and the ‘Feast of Asses’, in which ‘little brother Francis’
took such innocent delight. At the Feast of Fools, songs not the most decorous
were sung; men dressed up as old women, or as calves or stags, bishops and
archbishops, joined in the Christmas games in the monasteries; a Pope of Fools
and two cardinals were elected and endued with the sacred robes, the matins
were travestied; they danced in the choir, they diced on the church-floor. This
feast, which was sometimes called the Feast of the Sub-deacons, was held on the
Day of the Circumcision. The Feast of the Ass was originally held on Christmas
Day. In this also masks predominated : Jews and Gentiles, Moses, Aaron, and the
Prophets, Vergil and Nebuchadnezzar, but the most popular figure was Balaam on
his Ass. Nebuchadnezzar delivered over the three children to be burned in a
fire made of tow and linen in the nave of the church. Balaam was met by a young
man with a drawn sword; a man under the donkey called out ‘Cur me calcaribus miseram sic laeditis?’ and the angel bade Balaam ‘Desine Regis Balac praeceptum perficere’. In the diocese of Beauvais the feast was held
on the 14th January. The finest donkey that could be found was led in
procession through the town, superbly caparisoned; a young girl, richly
dressed, with a child in her arms, was seated on it, to symbolize the Flight
into Egypt; they were met by the clergy and conducted to the door of the church
or cathedral, and High Mass was said with great pomp. A Latin hymn was sung to
announce the object of the festival—
Today is the day of gladness,
Away all thoughts of sadness,
Envy and grandeur away;
We will rejoice with heart and voice
For we keep the Ass's Feast today.
The donkey was then led to the high altar, having been
taught to kneel at the proper place, and the precentor chanted a Latin refrain—
Orientibus partibus,
Adventavit Asinus,
Pulcher et fortissimus,
Sarcinis aptissimus,
Hee haw! Sir Ass! Hee haw!
Hie in collibus Sichen,
Enutritus sub Ruben,
Transiit per Jordanem,
Salut in Bethleem,
Hee haw! Sir Ass! Hee haw!
Then the whole congregation joined in the chorus, very
likely the ass himself taking up the refrain—
Hee haw! Sir Ass! Hee haw!.
When the ceremony was ended, the priest, instead of
the usual words with which he dismissed the people, brayed three times like an
ass, and the people, instead of the usual response, “We bless the Lord”, brayed
three times in the same manner.
The Feast of the Ass has now entirely disappeared, and
of the Feast of Fools nothing but the Christmas-boxes and the holly and ivy at
Yule Tide now remain. The Christmas rejoicings in German villages nowadays
retain but a faint reminiscence of the time when festivities began three days
before Christmas with the children going round from house to house, singing and
telling the glad tidings of the coming birth of Our Lord, when the festivities
continued day after day, each with its appropriate festival, over Saint
Stephen’s Day, over the Day of Saint John the Evangelist, until on the Day of the
Holy Innocents a troop of mock devils scampered through the streets on the
lookout for any pretty child or maiden. On New Year's Eve boys sang in the
streets, ringing bells and making merry all through the night, and collecting
much money withal; and on New Year's Day presents were given to the female
members of the family and to the women servants and their children. During the
twelve days between Christmas and Epiphany the houses were fumigated to scare
away evil spirits, and the weather was carefully noted as prognosticating that
for the coming twelve months. The rejoicings peculiar to Christmas came to an
end at Epiphany, when the Feast of the Three Kings was kept with great
merriment throughout Germany: every house chose its king by a pfennig dropped
in the honey-cake after the manner of the coins and thimbles dropped into our
plum-puddings; a bean-feast was held at which every one drank his fill at the expense of the king of the feast; the schoolboys carried
lights to ward off misfortune of Saint Blasius’s Day. Another incident peculiar
to our own Christmas was then observed on Saint Nicolas's Day (December 6th),
before which the children used to invoke the Saint's favour by fasting so rigorously that their parents were often afraid lest they should
do themselves an injury; for it was Saint Nicolas, our own Santa Klaus, who put
presents into their little shoes. On this same day, too, was selected the
Boy-Bishop, who donned cope and mitre and collected
his revenues until he preached his sermon and gave up his crozier at the Feast
of Holy Innocents.
It was but natural that the times of chief observance
should be those of Our Lord's birth and of His death and resurrection; but
there were many other seasons of joy and mirth through the year. Of these the
principal was the Carnival, just before Lent. Italy was then, as now,
celebrated for the gorgeous pageantry of its processions; Germany was satisfied
with an occasional sledge or a 'ship of fools', but there was no end to the
masking and mumming. Men dressed as women, women as men; some disguised
themselves with red lead and ink as satyrs or devils; every one sought to
invent some new device; they Aasted, they drank, they
danced, they held long processions, they bantered the girls; they played the
good old game of the Blind Men and the Pig. Twelve blind men, well primed with
food and drink, were introduced, armed in old armour,
with helmets awry and cudgels in their hands, into an enclosure, and a sturdy
pig was let loose among them; they tried to belabour the pig, which rushed hither and thither, knocking them down and causing
universal confusion; then a bell was put round its neck, and finally the
porker, more tired out by heat and exertion than by the blows, was captured and
killed. In some parts of Swabia on Ash Wednesday a harrow was dragged through
the Danube by the young men and maidens. In Franconia the girls were yoked to a
plough by their swains, and a piper drove the team into the river, to give them
a salutary ducking for their levity during Carnival. At Whitsuntide in Germany
the custom, observed during the Rogation Days in England, was kept up; a
procession, singing the Litany, started from the church and proceeded round the
fields, the priest carrying the Host in front and praying to God to ward off
all danger from the crops. In England a dragon with a formidable tail was
earned the first two days in front of the procession, and on the third day,
without its tail, in the rear. The eve of Saint John the Baptist's Day was an
occasion for bonfires, for singing and dancing; young men and maidens crowned
their heads with mugwort and verbena, and carried
larkspur in their hands pines were brought from the forest and planted in the
village green; the girls procured clay vessels, full of holes, filled them with
rose-leaves, put a light in them, and hung them at their gables. On Corpus
Christi Day there was another procession of the Host, and mummery almost
amounting to a miracle-play, in which devils and saints, male and female, took
part, and the streets were strewn with roses and hung with may-blossom; the
whole concluding with a procession round the corn-fields, headed by the priest,
who sang the gospel over the new corn. On the Day of Saint Vitus hens were
offered to ward off cramps and poison; on the Day of Our Lady's Ascension,
fruits and herbs to keep away sickness and plague; on Saint Martin's Day it was
the custom to eat a goose. There were special observances connected with the
vintage. On Saint Urban’s Day (May 25th) the growers set a table in the
market-place, adorning it with leaves and sweet-smelling herbs and putting a
small statue of the Pope thereon. The weather on this day was taken as a
prognostic of the coming summer : if it was fine, the statue was crowned with
leaves and obeisance done to it; but if it was rainy, it was bedaubed with mud
and soused with water. Then, when the grapes were ready, not a husbandman
thought of beginning his picking until he had been authorized by the lord of
the tithe, and due provision had been made for the collection of God's tenth of
the produce; the grapes then were picked, and finally the children came with
their torches to cleanse the fields and burn out the old harvest. Every one was expected to taste the new wine—even the poor
had their share. When the agricultural operations of the year were thus
connected with religious observances, when Church festivals constantly
recurring called for the participation of all the villagers, when the social
and political life of the town or village centred in
the Church, when there was one form of devotion for all alike, when every man
attended the Church to which he belonged and was restricted to that Church, it
is evident that the Church must have been much more constantly before men's
minds and in their hearts, that it must have been much more intimately bound up
with their daily lives, that its welfare must have formed a much more important
consideration to them and have meant much more to them in the Middle Ages than
it does today.
The Church was emphatically the Schoolmaster of the
Middle Ages. During the Dark Ages, from the time of Charles the Great to the
eleventh century, education was in the hands of the Benedictine monks, and
every famous monastery had two schools, one claustral, for the young religious,
and the other for outsiders. Then came the dawn of a brighter time. Not only
every abbey, but every cathedral also, and many of the larger churches, had
each its own school. The famous cloisters of France, before the rise of the
University of Paris, were frequented by scholars from Germany, Denmark, Italy,
and England; the University itself sprang from the Cathedral School of Paris.
The smaller schools taught only reading, writing, and a little singing;
song-schools were attached to every cathedral for the instruction of the
choristers. The aim of instruction for the lower ranks of the clergy was to
enable them to read the Bible and the Fathers, and to meditate thereon. But
education at the larger, or Latin, schools was more ambitious; the course,
which might in these days be termed the first and the second Arts course, was
then known as the Trivium and the Quadrivium. The Trivium comprised grammar,
rhetoric, and logic; the Quadrivium comprised arithmetic and astronomy,
necessary to the clergy for the determination of Easter, music, a half-mystical
doctrine of numbers and the rules of plain-song, and geometry, a selection of
propositions from Euclid without the demonstrations. Grammar included the study
of the classics; under rhetoric certain treatises of Cicero were largely read;
but the heart and centre of the secular education of
the time in Northern Europe was the study of dialectic or logic, the science of
right reasoning, which took a wide range and introduced the student to the
ever-engrossing controversy between the Realists and the Nominalists. After the
days of Anselm the monasteries began to close their doors to lay students, and
to provide for their own people alone; the care for education was transferred
from the regular to the secular clergy, a change which was helped by the advent
of the friars and by the rise of the universities; although even in the first
half of the fourteenth century every son of the soil in France, who made his
way to name and fame, had received his early education at some monastic school.
The cathedrals and churches took up the work which the monks, in their
selfishness, were dropping; the chancellor of a cathedral was responsible for
the appointment of the schoolmaster and for the regulation of the studies.
Priests were enjoined to establish schools for gratuitous instruction in the
villages; in these the children learned their catechism, reading, writing, a
little arithmetic and grammar; such schools were in England often held by
chantry priests. In this way, up to the end of the thirteenth century, the
education of the people, save in Italy, remained almost entirely in the hands
of the clergy; boys were sent to school, girls were sent to a nunnery, or had
private teachers. In Italy, however, although church schools existed, the old
race of lay teachers never died out, even in the Dark Ages, and when the
revival came, its effects were most conspicuous in the schools of the
independent lay teachers. In Germany and Holland also, during the fourteenth century,
lay masters established schools in many of the cities, where the demand of the
merchants and artisans for education was greatest. But with such occasional
exceptions the Church did the whole work of education.
If the Church was the Schoolmaster of the Middle Ages,
she was, for the great majority of the population, the Physician also, although
in this good work they had for rivals the Jew and Arab physicians at one end of
the profession and the barber-surgeons at the other. From the fourth century onward
the Church had taught and practised the art of
healing : when the temples of Esculapius, Hygeia, and
Serapis were closed, Christianity opened its churches and monasteries to the
sick. The monks possessed a large number of traditional recipes; they made use
of medicinal herbs for wounds and bruises. The competition with the Arabs and
Jews compelled them to further study; they travelled to acquire practice and
knowledge; they accompanied crusades and armies as doctors. Hospitals were
attached to the monasteries and large churches; hospitallers, brothers and
sisters, were trained to tend the sick; a code of hygiene was formed. The
Emperor Henry the Second went to the monastery of Monte Casino to be treated
for stone. The eleventh century had seen a large increase in the number of
hospitals and lazar-houses; it had also seen the rise of different orders
devoting themselves to special diseases : the Brothers of Saint Antony applied
themselves to bowel complaints and cases of dysentery; the Knights of Saint John
and the Brethren of the Holy Spirit treated especially those who had fallen
victims to pestilential epidemics; the Brethren of Saint Lazarus held sovereign
specifics against small-pox and leprosy; the Templars tended warriors,
pilgrims, and travellers suffering from ophthalmia,
scurvy, or dangerous wounds. Surgeons, trained in the monastic schools, were
engaged in the Low Countries, in Italy and Germany, by the richer and larger
towns for the service of charity. In France, in the thirteenth century, it was
no longer necessary for a student of medicine or surgery to be a clerk; the
profession was opened, and the minor surgery fell into the hands of the
barber-surgeons. The barbers gradually usurped the functions which had
previously been reserved to the clergy, and at the end of the fourteenth
century there were three recognized orders of practitioners in France; the
physicians ‘of the long robe’, the surgeons ‘of the short robe’, and the
barbers; and the latter were allowed to wear swords, and were excused all duty
on the night-watch. The medical schools of Montpellier and Paris were by this
time formidable rivals of Salerno and Bologna; France and Italy were far ahead
of Germany and England in medical science. John of Bohemia was so unskillfully
treated that he flung his physician into the river Oder, being righteously
determined that he should do no further harm to any man. Sigismund of Hungary,
like Albert of Austria and Wenzel of Bohemia before him, and like another
Albert of Austria his contemporary, was hung by the heels for twenty-four hours
to allow poison to trickle out of him; Edward the Third of England, when a boy,
was wrapped in red cloth to cure small-pox; and the court physician who treated
him prescribed an ointment made of crickets, beetles, and common oil to cure
the stone. Another recipe for the same complaint was to take gromel, parsley, red nettle, violets, incense, and
cherry-stone kernels, to bray them together and to mix them with stale ale as a
healing-draught. A third method of dissolving stone was to take the white
stones from the maw of a cock twelve months old, to bray them in a mortar with
an iron pestle, and to mix them with wine. Some of the recipes were harmless
enough, and perhaps not the less efficacious : sore throats were steamed with
boiling cinquefoil water; excessive sweating was cured by binding linseed and
lettuce, stamped well together, on the stomach; while a sufferer from tertian
ague was directed to eat a hot barley-cake and to drink copiously of good wine
when the fit was coming on, then to drink a decoction made of plantains brayed
in wine and water, and to compose himself to sleep. A hare's gall in pottage
would make a man sleep for three days; southernwood brayed in wine would stop
him from talking in his sleep; violet-water would cure his broken bones;
centaury brayed and mixed with wine and water would cure snake-bite; while
goats' claws burned to powder in a new pot and eaten with pottage were a
sovereign remedy against incontinence of urine. Some of their recipes were
sufficiently fanciful : barley-bread and mustard-soup eaten with sage fasting,
were prescribed for palsy; aloes and opium, brayed and mixed with the milk of a
woman who was suckling a man child, formed an ointment for blindness; pig's
fat, hen’s fat, white of an egg, and darnel meal were the ingredients for an
ointment for white faces; and any one who had red
eyes was recommended to take a large red snail, to prick his back all over and
rub salt in, to catch the liquor which exuded, and to use it as a salve. Those
who suffered from worms were instructed to make a candle of virgin wax, with
which henbane, wild celery, and pimpernel had been mixed, to light the candle
and hold it in the mouth until the teeth got hot, when the worms would surely
drop out. A costive man had a parlous time: mallows and mercury were seethed
under a gobbet of pork, and he was required to eat the pottage made thereof,
and to drink therewith white wine or whey, ‘and he shall be soluble’. The
foregoing examples give some idea of the state of medical science and skill in
England at this time. Chaucer’s Doctour of Physick,
“a very parfit practisour”, clad in sangwin and in pers, worked by the rules of natural magic
and astrology. It was to the careful tending and patient nursing that they
bestowed, to the hygienic treatment and simple drugs and herbs which they used,
that the monks owed most of their success in the science of medicine.
Thus far we have noticed the Church of the Middle Ages
only in some of its wider aspects; we have seen how largely it bulked on the
horizon, how intimately it was connected in various ways with the life and
welfare of the people. But we have not yet considered the different orders,
secular and regular, of which it was composed, nor the abuses which had
gradually risen in its midst, impairing its efficiency, and arousing a
widespread feeling of unrest in the minds of its most earnest followers. They
recognized that the clergy were the salt of the earth; but if the salt were to
lose its savour, wherewith should the world be
salted?
(2) Seculars and Regulars
We have glanced at the position of the Holy Roman
Empire at the commencement of the Great Schism of the West; we have now to
consider the state of the secular and regular orders in the Holy Roman Church
at the same time.
The most glorious years of the Papacy extended, as has
been said, from the days of Hildebrand to the pontificate of Innocent the
Third. These mighty pontiffs endeavoured to establish
the Church in the beauty of holiness, to make it a guide and exemplar to all, a centre of purity bringing peace and healing on its
wings; they sought to bring all the kingdoms of the world in subjection to
themselves in order thereby to induce a universal reign of holiness. But they
had aimed too high; they had not made sufficient allowance for the frailty of
human nature. They were able almost everywhere to enforce a nominal rule of
celibacy on the clergy, but they were unable to procure their chastity; it was
celibacy tempered with concubinage; it was a common thing for the priest to pay
to his bishop the tribute known as cullagium to be allowed to keep his concubine in peace. The Pope was rightly the supreme
judge in matters of faith and doctrine, but in matters of discipline they had centralised too strictly. They had rendered the bishops so
subservient, that they had lost all respect and authority in their own
dioceses; the abbots also would decide nothing for themselves. The veriest trifles of discipline were submitted to Innocent
the Third for decision: points of grammar, the correct attitude in the choir,
the refectory, the dormitory, the shape and size of a bed coverlet—all such
matters the Pope willingly took upon himself to consider and decide. The Popes,
moreover, collated to all the more important benefices, and decided all cases
of contested elections. Finally, when Innocent acquired the States of the
Church, the work of practical government also fell to be executed; but this
very acquisition, while it marked the summit of Papal influence, marked also
the commencement of its decline. A firm territorial basis might be advantageous
or even necessary for the Papacy; but a Pope fighting for his temporal
possessions no longer appealed to men’s sympathies as he did when, in the days
of feudal oppression, he had fought for his purely spiritual dignity and
importance.
The thirteenth century, from the days of Innocent the
Third to those of Boniface the Eighth, has been styled the noonday of papal
dominion, the century during which Rome inspired all the terror of her ancient
name, during which she was once more mistress of the world and kings were her
vassals. It was in many ways the most wonderful time since the birth of Christ:
the world had renewed its youth; there was a renaissance of learning and
intellect which has made many wonder why the Protestant Reformation did not
come three hundred years earlier than it actually did. It was an epoch of great
sovereigns, great statesmen, great lawyers, great men of science, great
philosophers and divines, great architects, great poets and painters. It was a
century marked by a decline in the spiritual efficacy, but by an increase in
the temporal pretensions of the Papacy; never had any Pope set these so high as
did Benedict Gaetani when he became Pope Boniface the Eighth. But the glorious
promise of the thirteenth century was not fulfilled; the renaissance came to
naught; no summer followed the wonderful spring; instead thereof, a winter of
corruption and decay set in. Persecution, bribery (in the shape of patronage),
the natural tendency of any unusual stimulation of intellectual activity to
wear itself out, and above all the genius of the great orthodox Schoolmen,
prevailed. It was the theological dictatorship of the cosmopolitan University
of Paris which more than all else blasted the fair prospects of the
twelfth-century illumination, though at the same time it saved Northern France
from the ravages of the Holy Inquisition. The University of Paris aspired to a
theological dictatorship, and hence ran counter to the Popes. For the Popes
were not theologians; they were canon lawyers; they had all the lawyer's desire
to stand on the ancient ways, they had all the lawyer’s dislike for radical
reform. Clement the Fifth openly professed his contempt for the theologians of
Paris. Jean Gerson, on the other hand, who tried to arrogate to the Theological
Faculty the control of negotiations during the Great Schism, was never tired of
reiterating that the Canon Law must give way, when occasion demanded, to the
Divine Law and the welfare of Holy Church. From their education and training
the influence of the Popes was averse from all radical reform of the Church and
its members. The close of the thirteenth century was marked by a fearful
catastrophe for the Church. The Popes had come victorious out of their strife
with the Hohenstaufen; they were worsted in their strife with France. Boniface
fell before Philip; he died very shortly after the sacrilegious outrage at Agnani.
An immense change was marked by the transfer of the
Papacy to Avignon. It wrought woe in many ways. It wrought woe to the Papacy
itself, inasmuch as it deprived the Pope of the consideration and respect which
he had hitherto enjoyed as the impartial, international arbitrator, the supreme
head of Christendom, the common Father of all nations. It wrought woe to both
England and France, inasmuch as it rendered futile all the efforts of Benedict
the Twelfth to avert the Hundred Years' War, a conflict which wasted the
resources though it increased the glory of England, which brought incalculable
desolation and misery on the fair realm of France. It wrought woe to Germany,
inasmuch as there ensued the long strife between Louis of Bavaria and the
Popes, which brought with it the revolt of the Franciscan Friars and the
consequent alienation of much of the German peasantry. It wrought woe also to
Italy, which lapsed into anarchy as soon as the Pope had departed from
Rome,—the city fell into ruins, and cattle grazed at the foot of the altars in
St. Peter's and the Vatican. It saw the rise of the Tribune Rienzi, the tragic
actor in the tattered purple of antiquity; the state of the peninsula grew
worse and worse, until Florence and Bologna threw off their allegiance and
declared war on the Papacy, a war which was aggravated and stained by the
bloody massacre of Cesena under the orders of Cardinal Robert of Geneva.
Finally the Captivity rendered possible and probable the Great Schism, which
went far toward completing the baleful work which the residence in the “sinful
city of Avenon” had begun.
The transfer of the Papacy, moreover, initiated a
period of social decadence and gloom, during which the corruption of morals
everywhere made frightful progress. Through all Europe save Italy, says Renan,
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were a stagnant time, during which
thought existed no longer, literature was dead, art was dying, and poetry was
mute. The description, though overcharged, is true in the main outlines.
Corruption seized on the body ecclesiastic and spread through every part, from
the head downward. Simony was openly practised, and
was excused in Rome on the ground that everything belonged to the Pope, who was
only dealing with his own. Spiritual offices everywhere were sold and bartered,
for gold, for love, for gaming; the Pope's palace was a nest of money-changers
and usurers. Men's hearts failed them for the sins which they saw in high
places. Among the masses of the people superstition and ignorance prevailed;
every one believed in omens and portents, in ghosts and demons, in magic,
sorcery, and witchcraft. Signs and wonders were of daily occurrence. Sacred
pictures exhibited signs of life; drops of sacramental wine, Christ's blood,
worked marvels of healing; relics were purchased, even by hard-headed mercantile
men like the Venetians, for fabulous sums, and were feared and venerated as if
they were talismans; confession was equivalent to incantation; the Devil
intervened actively in everyday life; the sheeted dead sighed plaintively at
night along the streets when danger impended in the city. Rustics held their
Feast of Fools in churches and cathedrals; in Italy food was every year set out
for the dead during the four days before the Feast of the Chair of Saint Peter;
in England the villagers peeped in from the churchyard on Sundays to catch
sight of the priest waving the Host, and ran home delighted, exclaiming that
they had said their Mass, that they had seen their Lord; while those who
partook of the Holy Communion saved bits of wafer to rub their sick cattle
withal, or watered their cabbages with the crumbs to keep off caterpillars. Of
miracles there were enough and to spare; a temporary lack was set down to want
of piety, for sorry monks worked no wonders. There was everywhere gross
spiritual neglect; parish priests were admonished to teach their flocks once
every three months all the cardinal points of the Christian doctrine, but
teaching was scanty and preaching, practically confined to the bishops, was
scantier still.
The temporal possessions and political wars of the
Pope had introduced, had indeed almost necessitated, the sale of offices. Money
was wanted; and the Peter’s Pence contributed by the northern nations of
Europe, and the tribute paid by the States of the Church and occasionally by
other countries, such as England and Portugal, were utterly insufficient to
provide the needful sums. The expense to which the Pope was put for an
establishment was enormous. In addition to the determination of points of
doctrine and discipline, to the granting of dispensations, to the confirmations
and collations to benefices, to the manifold external relations with foreign
courts, there came an immense mass of work to the Pope as to the spiritual
court of ultimate appeal. This facility of appeal had been made matter of
reproach by Hildebert of Tours and by Saint Bernard
of Clairvaux, but it had continued and increased; and in the time of Gregory
the Twelfth cases came in for settlement at the rate of two thousand a week.
The huge amount of work with which the Pope had to contend was far greater than
that which came before any other chancery in Christendom. Whenever an order on
any of these matters was given, a minute had to be made, a Bull or other formal
order engrossed, and an office copy of it transcribed. It necessarily followed
that the Pope had to maintain an enormous staff of clerks and other officials
in the Curia, in addition to the officers of his own household, and this
implied the need for a correspondingly large revenue.
But while the expenses of the Curia were very large,
its revenue was fluctuating and precarious. Peter's Pence and tribute have
already been mentioned. When a crusade was on foot, a tenth was levied on the
clergy; and the same tax was imposed on other occasions resembling a war against
the unbeliever; and although the proceeds were supposed to be devoted to the
crusade, for the help of those warriors who could not pay their own way, it was
commonly believed that a certain part of the money never got beyond the papal
treasury; there were all the expenses and the inevitable peculation involved in
the collecting. Then again the Pope claimed, though he was not always
successful in appropriating, the revenues of all vacant benefices; and
benefices might be vacated by transfer as well as by death; the revenues might,
on the other hand, be annexed by the sovereign. The most considerable source of
revenue after this was the first-fruits, or annates, levied on the confirmation
of an appointment to a benefice, whether vacated by death or by transfer; the
Pope was entitled to the first year's income from all dignities and benefices
in his gift, and frequently a vacancy was accompanied by three or four
transfers, each bringing in its crop of first-fruits. Letters of reversion and
expectancies also produced a goodly revenue; and to these were added the tithes
from the clergy and the offerings of the faithful. Pope John the Twenty-second
drew up a regular tariff for collation to different benefices : three thousand
gulden were charged for the Bishopric of Munster, thirty thousand for the
archiepiscopal pallium of Mainz, twenty thousand for that of Trier, and the
like. Absolution for a city, taking off the interdict, reconsecrating the
cemetery, cost forty, fifty, or sixty gulden. Every appointment, however
humble, was sold. By these means John, being a careful and thrifty man, one
naturally opposed to any such doctrine as that of Apostolic Poverty, managed to
amass the enormous sum of twenty-five millions of gold florins, which his
successor, Benedict the Twelfth, another careful and thrifty Pope, managed to
double; the entire sum was most royally squandered by Benedict’s successor,
Clement the Sixth. The Popes after John the Twenty- second usually adopted the
simpler plan of taking all they could get, preferring a higher bid to the
lower. Archbishop William of Cologne paid Clement the Sixth seventy thousand
florins; Archbishop Friedrich paid Urban the Fifth one hundred and twenty
thousand florins; the Archbishopric of Mainz cost John of Nassau fifty thousand;
and other German prelates paid more than twice that sum. England was esteemed a
veritable gold-mine, and Englishmen had to pay accordingly. De Grey paid ten
thousand pounds for the Archbishopric of York, and others the like or even
larger sums; his bishopric cost Robert de Oxford fifteen thousand pounds. Every
new prelate was bound to start within a month of election on his journey to
Rome for collation; he frequently returned crippled for years by his debt to
the Lombards or the Jews. Pope Clement the Sixth, while his favourite the Countess of Turenne dispensed places and preferments for a price, while he
himself provided for his nephews and his court by imposing taxes which
irritated Teutons and Italians alike, laughed, and said that none of his predecessors
had known how to be Popes. At the same time, he was careful to keep in touch
with the royal courts; he told his cardinal that if the King of England wanted
to give a bishopric to an ass, he must be humoured;
and in 1349 a donkey did make its way into the consistory with a petition round
its neck that he, too, might be made a bishop. The Popes also exacted more
direct patronage than formerly. In 1226 two prebends in each cathedral were
demanded. In 1265 the Pope claimed to deal directly with all vacancies
occurring in benefices while the holders were in Rome; and as all bishops came
to Rome for collation, and many prelates of high degree came there to push
their litigation, the number of death vacancies thus arising was not small.
When a bishop was translated or made cardinal, the Pope dealt directly with the
vacancy thus caused, for he alone could loose the tie
which bound a bishop to his see. In the fourteenth century the right of direct
nomination of bishops was claimed, and the system of reservation and provision
was extended to the episcopate. Many Italians were thus provided with livings
both in England and in France and they were usually non-residents and
pluralists. At the beginning of the Great Schism, Clement the Seventh leagued
himself with the Duke of Anjou to spoil the Gallican Church : he doubled the
tithes; he reserved the collation of all benefices; his collectors seized the
personal property and the cash left by deceased bishops and abbes; benefices
were put up for sale to the highest bidder. It is no wonder that churches
became deserted, that clerks were reduced to beggary, that the revenues of
colleges and hospitals were plundered, that scholars were dispersed, that the
University of Paris saw her children abandoning her maternal breast, which had
no longer the wherewithal to nourish them. At Rome corruption reached its
climax under Pope Boniface the Ninth. Simony, forbidden to others, was rampant
at Rome itself; everything could be bought at the papal court for money, and
without money no justice or redress was to be had; full many a devout
ecclesiastic re-echoed the words of Grosseteste : “Ah! money, money, how
infinite is thy power, most of all in the court of Rome!”. The Commons of
England complained that no king in Christendom had one-fourth of the revenue
that went from England alone to the Pope.
Bad as was the reputation of the Curia for simony, the
moral repute of the Pope's court was not much better. The majority of the Popes
at Avignon were indeed themselves men of pure livelihood; but the court of
Clement the Sixth became renowned for its voluptuousness and sensual luxury,
and the “sinful city of Avenon” became a byword in
Europe. The ladies, the sisters and nieces of great prelates, held their courts
of the “gaie science”; their salons were the
recognized avenues of promotion. Those who wanted rich benefices in the time of
Clement the Fifth laid their petitions on the white bosom of the beautiful Brunisand de Foix; in the time of Innocent the Sixth they
paid their court to Enemonde de Bourbon. Great
churchmen might be celibate, but many of them were not chaste, and female honour was a thing of little worth in their eyes. When Butillo, in the time of his uncle, Urban the Sixth, broke
into a convent and ravished a beautiful high-born nun, the Pope excused his
nephew, who was more than forty years old, by ascribing his sin to the fire of
youth; and when the nephew of Gerard de Puy, Cardinal Legate at Perugia,
committed the like offence against a noble lady, whereby she in her haste to
avoid his brutality slipped, fell from her window, and died, the Cardinal
placidly inquired of the enraged Perugians whether
they thought that all the French were eunuchs!
The papal court, instead of being a model of virtue
for mankind, was under too many of the Popes a hotbed of vice. The riotous licence of the younger cardinals, says Petrarch, was
matched by the senile debauchery of their elders. Every one has read the story of the Jew Abraham, who visited the papal court. He began
circumspectly to acquaint himself with the ways of the Pope and the cardinals
and the other prelates and all the courtiers; and from what he saw for himself,
being a man of great intelligence, or learned from others, he discovered that
without distinction of rank they were all sunk in the most disgraceful
lewdness, sinning not only in the way of nature, but after the manner of the
men of Sodom, without any restraint of remorse or shame, in such sort that,
when any great favour was to be procured, the
influence of the courtesans and boys was of no small moment. Moreover, he found
one and all gluttonous, wine-bibbers, and next after lewdness most addicted to
the shameful service of the belly, like brute beasts. Saint Catherine of Siena,
as will be seen later on, is as scathing in her denunciation as is Boccaccio in
the Decameron.
The cardinals, says Nicolas de Clamanges,
look down upon primates and patriarchs; they make themselves the equals of
kings. They were judged very unfavourably, however,
by the outside world; they stank in the nostrils of Christendom for their
avarice and corruption. Henry of Hesse, vice-chancellor of the University of
Paris, censured in scathing terms their simony, pomp, and libertinage. They
were of all clerks the most noted pluralists. "Not two or three, nor ten
or twenty, but one or two hundred benefices, sometimes even four or five
hundred, do they accumulate" says Nicolas de Clamanges,
“and these, too, not mean or small ones, but the best and fattest”. The Popes
heaped on them pluralities with unstinted hand, so that in 1385 Charles the
Sixth of France asserted in an ordinance that the cardinals had absorbed all
the preferments in the kingdom—benefices, abbeys, orphanages, hospitals,
etc.—exacting revenue to the utmost and leaving the institutions disabled and
the fabric to fall into ruin. The Doctor already quoted makes the same charge
against them—nothing could equal their overbearing pride and arrogance, but
their private lives were a scandal : “I pass over their simoniacal interviews with the Pope, I pass over their venal patronage, I pass over the most
disgraceful and damnable corruptions and promotions almost entirely due to
them; I pass over the pay and rewards they received from temporal powers for
abetting them in church matters wrongfully. Nor will I mention the adulteries,
the lewdness, the fornications with which they now defile the Roman curia.
Their usury and trading and many other more grievous sins are omitted by this
dutiful son of the Church”. Pope Urban the Sixth had some grounds for his
public reproach, he preached in open consistory on the text, “I am the Good
Shepherd”, and descanted on the manifold failings of the lord cardinals. It is
small wonder that they took it ill; the truth was a bitter pill to swallow, and
in this instance this bit of bitter truth had its effect in producing the Great
Schism. When they were sent abroad on affairs of State, they lived on the
country to which they were deputed at the rate of a hundred golden gulden a
day; and when complimentary visits were paid to them at the papal court, it was
useless for the visitor to come empty-handed. William Langland spoke but the
common conviction when he declared that
'The country is the curseder that cardinals come in,
And where they lie and linger most, lechery there reigneth.
Nicolas de Clamanges is no
less severe in his strictures on the French bishops: “there are many of them,
he says, who have never visited their dioceses, who have never seen the faces
nor heard the voices nor felt the wounds of their flocks : luxury, pomp, and
avarice are the three Harpies who rule their lives. The bishops delight in
wine, banquet, and games; in lofty houses and wide palaces; in heaping up
money; they are given up to drinking, fornication, and gambling; they spend
their days in hunting, fishing, and tennis; their nights in feasting, dancing,
and debauchery”. The German bishops were on their part “wolves and hirelings”,
elected for the sake of their birth and breeding by worldly chapters who drove
hard bargains with them their sees were liable to be taxed both by the temporal
and the spiritual powers; the elections were all subject to the Pope's
confirmation, the donation of the regalia by the civil power being but an
empty form.
The bishops were the connecting link between the
generalissimo and the rank and file of the Church, though some of the
bishoprics were of so wide an extent—that of Utrecht, for example, which
covered the whole of Holland—that it was impossible for the bishop to become
acquainted with the whole of his diocese or the whole of his parish clergy. Nor
did they attempt the task, for, as a general rule, they were absorbed in the
temporal interests of their sees. They were the spiritual landed nobility,
corresponding to the dukes, earls, and counts among the lay nobles. They were
almost invariably warriors and statesmen rather than mere ecclesiastics. The
idea of making a man a bishop or an archdeacon on account of his zeal, his
energy, his success in the humble round of parochial duty, is one which would
hardly have occurred to sensible men in mediaeval times. Since land alone gave
social distinction, the wide possessions of the Church were coveted by German
princes and nobles as a welcome means of procuring riches and honour for the younger sons of their families. As early as
1139 Pope Innocent the Second applied the feudal system to the Church by
declaring at the Lateran Council that all ecclesiastical dignities were
received and held of the Popes like fiefs; and like fiefs, church dignities
were too often conferred as a reward for past services without thought of the
attendant duties. Bishops and abbots were, above all else, the spiritual lords
and princes of the Empire; pious men might occasionally be inducted, but the
possession and defence of land was the leading motive
in the strife after the higher church dignities.
Under these circumstances simony, notwithstanding the
efforts of Pope Gregory the Seventh and his successors, became almost
universal. Certain of the kings of France were notorious as vendors of
bishoprics, and where money was not paid, promotion commonly went by favour or relationship. The worthier bishops who
occasionally appeared could do little to enforce respect for religion and
morality ; in those days of violence the prizes were for those whose martial
prowess won respect for the rights of their churches and vassals. All this was
in some sort a necessity of the incongruous union of feudal noble and Christian
prelate, and though more marked in Germany than elsewhere, it was to be seen
everywhere. The bishops of Normandy fought under Philip the Bold : the Bishop
of Beauvais was captured by Richard of the Lion Heart, and his coat of mail
sent to the Pope with the inquiry : “Know now whether it be thy son’s coat or
not?” The same question was asked by the Marquis of Montferrat when he captured Aymon, Bishop of Vercelli. In 1265 the troops of
Manfred of Sicily captured the Bishop of Verona. Such was the worldly,
turbulent character of bishops generally that pious souls believed that no
bishop could enter the kingdom of heaven. The good prior of Clairvaux, on being
told that he was elected Bishop of Tournay, cast
himself on the ground, offering to become a vagrant monk, but a bishop never.
An ecclesiastic in Paris declared that he could believe all things except that
any German bishop could be saved. Nor was the moral character of certain of the
French archbishops and bishops above suspicion. Gerard de Rougemont, Archbishop
of Besançon, lived in incest with the Abbess of Remiremont and other holy women; the Bishop of Toul, Maheu de
Lorraine, was abandoned to debauchery, his favourite concubine being his own daughter by a nun; Berenger was eventually removed from
the archbishopric of Narbonne because of his scandalous life and character.
In England the archbishops and bishops were generally
educated and capable men. There were, of course, exceptions. Walter Reynolds,
Archbishop of Canterbury under Edward the Second, was said to be so illiterate
that he could not spell his own name aright; Lewis de Beaumont, Bishop of
Durham, who for days before his consecration tried to learn the Latin formula
which he had to repeat, finally stuck at one long word and said, “Let it be
taken as said”, and when he came to another troublesome phrase muttered, “By
Saint Louis, he is an ill-mannered fellow who put in that word here”. In
England also it was held somewhat of an anomaly for a bishop, such as Henry
Despenser of Norwich, to be a man of war; but when Henry the Fourth sent to
Innocent the Seventh the armour of the traitor Bishop Scrope, with the old request that he would know
whether this was his son’s coat or not, the Pope innocently answered, “An evil
beast hath devoured him”. The bishops generally were able men, and the chief
charge brought against them was that they were the servants, not of God, but of
the King. The employment of bishops in the civil administration of the State
was no new system; it had been adopted in every country of Christendom for
several hundreds of years, and its effects have been aptly described in its
inception in words which are equally applicable to the close of the fourteenth
century: “With power and great place came in worldliness and corruption in
increasing proportion as time went on, and though as statesmen these great
bishops were probably not worse councillors, and
often were more intelligent ones, with a natural leaning to order and peace,
than the rough dukes and counts with whom they acted, yet the meaning and
consciousness of their religious office became more and more lost in their
secular greatness”. Wycliffe and other reformers who held the impracticable
Utopian doctrine that the clergy should practise apostolic poverty were very severe on “Caesarean clergy”; they took no heed of
the needs of the kingdom. For the civil administration the king needed the
services of a certain number of able, educated, and trustworthy men, and he
could find many more of the class he wanted among the clergy than among the
nobility. These men must be recompensed. The King lived of his own; taxes were
exceptional, and were levied for special purposes. The ordinary mode of
recompense was by giving a man land on which he could live; and as the grant of
baronies in fee-simple was out of the question, the only resource was the gift
of ecclesiastical preferments, which were at best merely estates for life. This
was the attitude taken by such able kings as Philip the Fair and Edward the
First. In Germany, Bishops Raban of Speier, Matthew
of Worms, and Conrad of Verden served King Rupert as
diplomats. “There was much to be said”, remarks the Rev. W. W. Capes, “for the
King's desire to reward his ministers with ecclesiastical preferment, and to
relax the rules of discipline in their behalf. Only in their order could he
find the trained lawyers with the literary skill he needed for his work. His
own resources were too scanty to reward them fitly”. The Chancellor and
Treasurer were nearly always dignitaries of the Church. Promotion to a
bishopric could easily be arranged with the Pope, and was a convenient reward
for services rendered. The system was advantageous for the State, but
disastrous for the Church. Many of the bishops thus became engrossed in civil
pursuits; they filled important offices of State, and played a foremost part in
diplomacy and politics. But their episcopal duties suffered, and the Courts Christian
went by the board; these things were either left undone altogether, or were
performed imperfectly by deputy; the Church was thus starved for the sake of
the State. Yet there were many bishops, after the fashion of Bishop
Grosseteste, who were engaged solely in their episcopal duties. Many remained
at their posts and did their duty manfully during the Black Death. But their
sympathies again were with the beneficed clergy rather than with the poorer
parish priests, whom they were ready to suspend if they received more than six
marks a year, little more than a pittance absolutely needful for a yeoman’s
family, while some ministers with cure of souls received less than the pay of a
common soldier. The unfeeling language used by these bishops in their pastorals
rankled in men’s minds, and from this time we may note the growing sense of
jarring interests and divided sympathies between the higher and the lower
clergy, as in the country at large between the landowners and the peasants.
Like the bishops on the Continent, the English bishops also were not ashamed to
increase their incomes by the levy of a tax from priests whom they allowed to
keep concubines.
In Germany the bishops were often not statesmen, much
less ecclesiastics; they were warriors pure and simple, fighting to defend or
to increase the lands of the Church. When the newly elected Bishop of
Hildesheim inquired for the library of his predecessors, he was taken to the armoury and was shown the coats of mail and the arms
hanging on the walls; these were the books, he was told, with which the rights
of the diocese had been won and by which they must be maintained. Around the
bishops’ churches there had gradually arisen, especially during the Kaiserless time of the Empire, wealthy states with an industrial
population, devoid of landed property, but naturally desirous of political
position. These burghers were the natural enemies of the bishops, and with them
they were constantly at war. In Worms there was strife between the bishop and
the citizens : King Wenzel declared for the latter, King Rupert for the former.
In Magdeburg the burghers fell upon the houses of the canons, burned two of
them, drove the clergy out of the city (1402); they were brought back next year
by the Count of Schwartzburg; the old archbishop,
Albert of Querfurt, known for his greed, died, and
the count’s son, twenty-one years of age, was elected archbishop,—he never read
a Mass for the next thirty-three years. In Brunswick there was war between the
clergy and the burghers, and the Mendicant orders backed up the citizens. The
Bishop of Halberstadt laid his city under an
interdict, but he himself died in 1404, and long lay unburied since he was
himself excommunicated for throttling a canon with his own hands. Bishop
Gerhard of Hildesheim, successor to the bishop mentioned above, fought with and
took prisoners the Duke of Brunswick, the Archbishop of Magdeburg, and the
Bishop of Halberstadt; he spent their ransoms in
providing a golden ceiling to the tower of the Church of the Virgin Mary. In
Minden there were disputed elections at the end of the century; the citizens
arose, turned out the clergy, and burned the chapter-house. The Bishop of
Paderborn waged war against the association of knights. The Bishop of Wurzburg
seized his own chapter in their copes and hoods, imprisoned them, and held them
to ransom. Bishop Brunlow quarrelled with the citizens of Stralsund because they had cut down the funeral-fees,
robbed them of their cattle, and hacked the hands and feet off their workmen;
the burghers retaliated by binding three priests to ladders and throwing them
in the fire. The moral character of some of the bishops was often sufficiently
shocking. John of Liege, like young Gunther of Schwartzburg,
never got himself ordained; they were both lusty, wild warriors, who did their
work by deputy. Bishop Otto, appointed by the Pope to Minden in 1404, was a man
whom no one would believe on his oath, a debaucher of nuns. In Augsburg clergy
and laity were alike addicted to unnatural offences; the city council visited
the laity with severe punishment, but the bishops delayed to do the like with
the clergy, whereupon three seculars and a Dominican were caught, stripped,
bound hand and foot and placed in a cage; one was hanged, and the other three
starved to death. With such scenes disgracing the whole Empire at the end of
the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century, it was little wonder
that when any man inquired who was at the bottom of any new war or villainy, he
was invariably told it was some bishop, provost, dean, or priest. The real
cause of the constant strife was that Germany was then intent 011 winning back
from the clergy the rights and possessions which the clergy had acquired from
the laity.
The archdeacon was the delegate of the bishop in
judicial work; he was a veritable Mr. Worldly Wiseman, learned in the law and
cunning to profit thereby; it was his function to suck the marrow from the
bones of all bodies committed to the spiritual charge of his lord the bishop.
As soon as he obtained his post, he usually got a dispensation, and hurried off
to Bologna to fit himself for his work. There he became acquainted with all the
intricacies of the canon law, he fell in love with beauteous Italian ladies, he
gambled and got into debt, he learned the arts of poisoning and the other
faculties which went to make up the virtue of the average Italian churchman.
When they returned from Bologna, the archdeacons began to exercise their
abilities for the benefit of one at the expense of the many. In England, as in
France, they hurried through their visitations, hurling excommunications right
and left, claiming from every parish a fixed charge, known as the “archdeacon’s
pig” or the “larder gift”. Chaucer’s Archdeacon was—
a man of heigh degree,
That boldly did execution
In punishing of fornication,
Of witchcraft, and eek of bauderye,
Of defamation, and avoutrye,
Of chirche-reves, and of
testaments,
Of contracts, and of lack of sacraments,
And eek of many another manner crime
Which nedeth nat rehercen at this tyme;
Of usury, and of simony also.
But certes, lechours dide he grettest wo;
They sholde singen, if that they were hent;
And smale tytheres weren foule y-shent . . .
For small tithes and for small offering,
He made the people piteously to singe.
For er the bishop caught hem with his hook,
They were in the erchedeknes hook.
Thanne hadde he, thurgh his Jurisdiccioun,
Power to doom on them correction.'
It is little wonder that pious souls, accused of
giving too small tithes or offerings, should have puzzled themselves, from the
time of John of Salisbury onwards, as to whether it were possible that an
archdeacon could be saved.
Like the archdeacons, their subordinates, the rural
deans, the archiprêtres of France, were accused of
avarice and rapacity; the Bishop of Exeter complained, moreover, that they gave
their official seals to substitutes, “men of low character, who falsified
official registers and by their fraudulent acts brought the office into
disrepute”.
Discipline within the Church was hard to maintain, not
only because of the frequent spirit of insubordination, but also because of the
right of freedom of control which was too often purchased from Rome for a
price. Grandisson, Bishop of Exeter, drew up armed
retainers in front of his cathedral to prevent the visitation of the Archbishop
of Canterbury; Antony de Bek, Bishop of Durham, threw
into prison the notaries and clerks who served on him the citation of the
Archbishop of York; a rector of Bromley sent a chaplain in full canonicals to
excommunicate his own bishop for passing sentence of deprivation against him.
Cathedral chapters quarrelled with their bishops,
pleading ancient precedent, raising technical points of law, and appealing to
King or to Pope to protect their vested rights. There was something to be said
for Wycliffe’s contention that wealth had introduced vice into the Church, that
the clergy should follow their master, Christ, who for our sakes became poor,
that “it belongeth not to Christ's vicar nor to
priests of Holy Church to have rents here on earth”.
Among the parish priests it is necessary to
distinguish the beneficed from the unbeneficed
clergy. The rectors were commonly men of good birth, enjoying the greater and
the lesser tithes, and possessing comfortable houses. The parsonages usually
had guest-chambers, for it was the recognized duty of the beneficed clergy to
be “given to hospitality”, and to entertain not only their own ecclesiastical
superiors, who were often more dreaded than welcome, but strangers of every
degree. The rector had a pewter platter and a horn drinking-cup placed for any
chance guest, and gave him a bed of clean straw or perchance a flock mattress
for the night. When in 1240 the Papal Legate assembled the rectors of the
churches in Berkshire, one of the arguments of the rectors for refusing to
contribute as the Legate desired was that their churches had been endowed and
enriched with lands and revenues for the especial purpose that the rectors of
them should receive guests rich as well as poor, and show hospitality to laity
as well as clergy, according to their means, as the custom of the place
required.
Rectors, however, were comparatively few in the land,
and vicars were many. Many churches were appropriated to cathedrals, very many
more to monasteries. The monks had acquired a large number of advowsons; they
scamped their duties, getting as much and doing as little as possible. The
Benedictines had formerly been model landlords and had restored agriculture;
the Cistercians had maintained model farms and were successful sheep-breeders,
but the Black Death had brought them into difficulty; they had been obliged to
let their farms on stock and land leases, and being in straits they paid their
vicars as low as possible. “The monks”, said Thomas Gascoigne, “do nothing for
the poor parishioners whose tithes they get, though they say they pray for
them, and provide an ill-paid vicar. Not content with the tithes, they try to
get the fees and offerings in the churches, refuse even to allow parish
churches to have fonts, that they may force parents to bring their children to
be baptized within the abbey walls”. Wycliffe also was very severe on the
worldly-rich bishops and abbots to whom parish churches were appropriated, and
not less severe on the monks and Austin Canons who neglected their spiritual
duties. ' They do not the office of curates neither in teaching nor preaching,
nor giving of sacraments, nor receiving of poor men in the parish, but set an
idiot for vicar or parish priest that cannot do the office of a good curate,
and yet the poor parish maintains him. Nicolas de Clamanges complains that the Popes appointed parish priests who were not taken from the
schools or universities, but from the plough or from the vilest callings,
priests who knew no more Latin than they did Arabic, who could not tell one
letter of the alphabet from another, who spent their time in indecency, debauch,
gambling, and quarrels. His tutor, Pierre d'Ailly, in
one of his earliest sermons, complains of the priests for the anxious thought
they bestowed on their dress, on their boots, on their hair, on their rings;
very many, he says, are stained with indecency from head to foot; they are
gluttonous in their meals, drunken in their drink, luxurious in their
unchastity, wantonly following their lusts, fond of disreputable society,
frequenting taverns and keeping concubines; they hurry from the bed of
fornication to the holy altar, and receive the body of Christ with those lips
which have just been kissing a harlot.
Saint Catharine of Siena gives a picture of the
Italian priests and prelates, whose lives are founded in self-love, and “who
perform the office of devils. Avarice, lust, and pride are the masters that
they serve. The table of the Cross is deserted for the sake of the tavern; the
poor are left destitute, while the substance of the Church is squandered on
harlots. Nay, more, the leprosy of unnatural vice, the sin from which even the
devils flee in horror because of their angelical nature, has contaminated their
minds and bodies”.
The priests celebrate Mass after a night of sin, and
often their mistresses and children join the congregation; others use the
Blessed Sacrament of the altar to make love-charms to seduce the little sheep
of their flock, or persuade them to commit fornication under pretext of
delivering them from diabolical possession. Jean Gerson is very fervent against
the unnatural vices of the clergy, as also against those priests who
threatened, if their concubines were taken from them, to fall on the wives and
daughters of their parishioners. So scandalous were their lives that in some
parts of France a priest was held viler than a Jew. Marsiglio of Padua
complained of the parish priests as unlearned and ignorant of grammar : they
were generally men of humble birth, poor, and uneducated; but the majority
probably knew some Latin, for they could not have done their work otherwise.
They were usually underpaid, and in Germany some abandoned their flocks and
took to beggary as more lucrative. It is small wonder that the parish priest,
considering his wretched lot, too often filled up his time with dice and
drinking. The cure of souls was commonly regarded as a mere source of income,
and the temptation was strong to desert the dull parish, with its houses far
asunder, and to resort to some large town, there to sing private masses or to
act as chantry priests. This tendency was increased by the distress consequent
on the Black Death.
In our own country it is clear that the parish priests
were both good and bad. Some were of holy thought and work, like Chaucer’s poor
parson, whose business it was “to drawen folk to heven by fairnesse by good ensample”.
He wayted after no pompe and reverence,
Ne maked him a spyced conscience,
But Cristes lore, and his
apostles twelve,
He taughte, and first he folwed it himselve.'
On the other hand, there were many others who failed
to give example by their own cleanness how their sheep should live; who left
their flock encumbered in the mire, while they “ran to London, unto seynt Poules”, to look for one of
the thirty-five chantries there established. There were full many priests like
Sloth in the Vision, who knew not his Paternoster nor the history of Our Lord
and Our Lady, but who knew the rhymes of Robin Hood and of Randolf,
Earl of Chester; who made forty vows today and forgot them all on the morrow,
who were never right sorry for their sins, but spent each day at the ale, full
seldom thinking of “Goddes peyne and his passioun”. This parson boasts of his
dishonesty, his drunkenness, his ingratitude, his lechery.
The parochial system in England on its religious side
was clearly in a parlous state. To us nowadays it is no less clear that the
whole secular side of the Church called for urgent reform. Today we attack
systems, but are chary of attacking individuals; five hundred years ago the
reverse was the case. Men were never tired of exposing the vices, the
sensuality, the utter unworthiness of the clergy, but they dared not attack the
priesthood nor the papal system; there was but one Church, and the only hope of
salvation lay through its portals.
The monasteries also by the end of the fourteenth
century had fallen on evil times; they had outgrown their original sphere of
utility and had lost much of their original good repute. Intended as a home of
refuge from the murder, rapine, and bloody war around, for those peaceful souls
who were content in choir, chapter, and cloister to observe the vows of
chastity, poverty, and obedience, to live by the rule of the order, to seek
after righteousness and godliness, their very success had been their bane. They
had flourished, and had manifestly come near attaining the ends for which they
were started; whereupon kings had endowed them, nobles had made over to them
lands and churches, death-bed donations and legacies had enriched them until
they became possessed of one-third or one-half of the vicarages in the kingdom.
The vow of poverty was lost sight of; that of obedience followed suit. The
monasteries everywhere got themselves for a price emancipated from episcopal
control and put immediately under the aegis of the Pope; before this time
Bishop Grosseteste had much trouble with the Gilbertines and the Austin Canons, the Cistercians having already escaped from his
jurisdiction.1 The vow of chastity might be observed, although Saint Catharine
complained that prelates connived at infamous monks corrupting the nuns in the
monasteries under their charge. Even at the beginning of the fifteenth century
the monasteries were generally of good moral repute; but they had become social
homes, and the best monks were “good clubbable men”. They had naturally fallen
in popular esteem, and the tide of popular benevolence no longer flowed as
formerly; the time when they were noted for their learning and influence, the
days of Lanfranc and Anselm, had long since passed; no new endowments came in,
and gifts of money became scantier and scantier. Some of the convents had
overbuilt themselves, others had overbought; some had indulged too freely in
litigation, others complained that their hospitality cost them too dear. The
fact was that the monks themselves had fallen from their former high estate;
the Carthusians, with their strict rule, still maintained model monasteries,
and the Austin Canons came next to them ; but the conventual life generally had
become more earthly and self-centred. The monks said
openly that the old Benedictine rule was no longer possible of observance; the
Cluniac revival had degenerated into laxity and outward splendour;
the Cistercians, formerly the “sour Puritans of the cloister”, had long ago
become high-minded and purse-proud. In Germany the Benedictine abbeys, ever the
most popular, were largely used as resting-places and harbours of refuge for those unfit for the war of life. Merchants sent their paralytic
or maimed children, the idiots and the half-wits, the idle and the thriftless,
those for any reason unfit for marriage, to the convent, and supported them
while there; nobles in similar fashion got rid of those members of their
households who were weak in body or in mind. Indeed so thoroughly was the good
old rule, of making due provision for the fool of the family, observed, that
some of the convents became little better than lunatic asylums, and there
remained in them no one capable of continuing the history of the abbey. The
Cistercians and the Austin Canons in Germany were, however, in better case. In
England married men, wearied of matrimony, occasionally left their wives and
betook themselves to monasteries to end their days in peace. The monks still
taught in their schools, but their own younger members only; they still
maintained their hospitals, but they received no sick folk from outside; they
copied and illuminated manuscripts, but their interest in history was dying
out. Their lands were leased to tenant farmers, and they no longer tried new
methods of agriculture or imported fresh products; “their hospitality was being
shifted on the shoulders of the neighbouring inns;
their almsgiving took the most wasteful and unwise forms of indiscriminate
doles”. The monks lived a thoroughly selfish life, removed from the haunts of
men; they loved their ease and preferred their own comfort even to the good
name and fame of their abbey. When the first Prior of Grammont died and his body began to work miracles, his successor, who could not abide
the crowds of unmannerly louts attracted round the quiet convent walls,
threatened to dig him up and throw his bones in the river, if he did not cease
his idle miracles; the threat worked, the miracles ceased, the monks lived in
quiet peace again. The monks in France were worse than those in Germany. Henry
of Hesse alleges that they were debauched, and that their monasteries were no
better than inns and brothels. Nicolas de Clamanges states that so far from being examples to the secular clergy they were in every
way more worldly, more abandoned, more immoral; that there was nothing they
hated so much as their cloister and the rule of their Order. In England the
abbot loved hunting and kept hounds, he loved hawking and kept falcons; the
monks loved good cheer and good wine. The monk among the Canterbury pilgrims,
to been an abbot able, was “full fat and in good point”; he loved venery—
Grehoundes he hadde, as swifte as fowel in flight;
Of priking and of hunting
for the hare
Was al his lust, for no coste wolde he spare.
The nunneries in Germany, although they shared many of
the faults of the monasteries, were generally superior to them both in morality
and intelligence. No attempt, however, was made to keep up the vow of poverty;
in most cloisters a noble’s or a citizen’s daughter was only admitted on
payment of a fixed sum; in others she brought her kitchen and table with her;
in others no vows were taken. There were, however, many exceptions. The
frivolity of the nuns of Cologne shocked a French observer. The nunneries in
some parts had an evil reputation: their inmates wore costly clothes, took part
in all merriments, danced round dances in the streets and at the
drinking-houses : their doors stood open, day and night, to clerk and layman
alike. The nuns of Bologna were notoriously light of love; they condescended to
rag-pickers and carders. Saint Brigitta complained
that the nunneries were rather brothels than holy retreats.
But the chief offenders were the friars of the Four
Orders; Gerhard Groot and Wycliffe alike condemned them : they had been
beautiful in their inception, they were baneful in their decay. They afforded a
marked example of the rule, which has so often been exemplified in the history
of the Church, that “it is the reforming organizations which have lost their
meaning that become the chief abuses in the world's history”. Two hundred years
had not elapsed since Dominic first sent forth his preachers to teach the
truth, since Francis sent forth his disciples with messages of love to the poor
and outcast, the sick and leprous. They had dwelt among the poorest and meanest
in the towns, in a “dense slough of stagnant misery, squalor, famine, loathsome
disease, and dull despair such as the worst slums of London, Paris, or
Liverpool know nothing of”; or outside the city walls in pestilential marshes
where the refugees from the country pitched their huts. They had lived with the
lowliest; they had won the hearts of all. But as their influence increased, so
did their prosperity. Peckham and Bradwardine,
Archbishops of Canterbury, were Franciscan and Dominican; the Franciscans,
nourished by Grosseteste, won over Simon de Montfort to become an English
patriot. The celebrated Doctor Albert the Great was a Dominican; Alexander of
Hales was a Franciscan; Saint Thomas Aquinas, the greatest glory of the
schoolmen, was a Dominican. But the friars of the latter part of the fourteenth
century were not as those of the thirteenth. In the early part of the century
indeed they maintained their hold over all classes. The marked contrast which
their renunciation and shabby dress exhibited to the worldliness, the gambling,
the hunting of the secular clergy, the greater influence over the lives of the
citizens which the friaries amid their busy haunts of men exercised as compared
with the secluded convents of the Benedictines and Cistercians, above all,
their gospel of the holiness of poverty, endeared them to the lower ranks of
society. At the General Congregation of the Franciscans in Paris in 1329,
whenever a barefooted friar arose to preach the doctrine of Apostolic Poverty,
the common people heard him gladly. During the terrible time of the Black Death
in England, in Languedoc and elsewhere, the friars stuck to their work
manfully, and thousands of them died at their posts. They were the spiritual
guides of the Flemish artisans at Courtrai and Roosebeke,
as they were of the English peasantry who rose in the insurrection of 1381. But
the majority of the friars gradually abandoned their early ideals, they sank to
a lower level of life and morality. In Bohemia, where education was more widely
diffused than in most other countries, the popular feeling against the
Mendicants was probably more bitter than elsewhere. The Dominicans fell into
disrepute with the orthodox because they denied the Immaculate Conception of
the Blessed Virgin, the Franciscans because they set themselves up against the
Pope and ordinary Christians as the champions of Apostolic Poverty. The
Spiritual Franciscans throughout, and the Observants from 1373, held to the stricter
vow of poverty and to the poorer and more squalid form of dress; but the great
bulk of the Franciscan Friars made no difficulty in accepting property ; while
in dress, if their circumstances allowed, they made no shame to assume a garb
“full and double and resplendent and of the finest stuff, and of a fashion
goodly and pontifical”. The lewd fellows of the baser sort among them were
always ready to brawl and quarrel, drawing their knives with fatal results;
fourteen were thus killed in a brawl at Assisi itself.
With the secular clergy the regulars were everywhere
in hopeless conflict; if the monks had tried to shift too much work to the
shoulders of the seculars, the friars tried to take too much from them; they
encroached on their preserves, and filched from them the offerings of the
faithful. They had obtained the right to carry about portable altars for the
celebration of the Mass, the right also to preach in parish churches and to
hear confessions. Their sermons often contained little but spicy jests and
humorous anecdotes; and their confessionals were the resort, as Wycliffe
complained, of every accursed perjurer, extortioner, and adulterer who was
afraid to go to his own curate to be shriven. The temptation to a wealthy man
was great to forsake his own parish priest, who knew too much of his
livelihood, and to go to a wanton, merry friar who would certainly have given
him absolution for a consideration; for the friar
'Ful swetely herde confessioun,
And plesaunt was his absolucioun;
He was an esy man to yeve penaunce
Ther as he wiste to han a good pitaunce.
The friars owned no superior but the Pope, with whom
their Minister-General resided in close connection ; they were the most
powerful agents of the Papacy, its deftest, ubiquitous agents. On their behalf
it must be remembered that they did not live in seclusion like the monks; they
dwelt amid the hum and stress of men, within the towns and cities, or close
outside the walls, open to the censure of the municipal fathers, exposed to the
prying gaze of a thousand curious eyes; their vices, as their virtues, were
seen and known of all men. As they fell off from their primitive simplicity and
became engrossed in piling up money for the Pope and their order, as the truth
which they preached became gradually mere dead words uttered by rote, so did
their influence turn to evil and increase until it became overpowering. The
Franciscans had always been the newsmongers in the village, and welcome in
every tavern; they soon began to haunt the inns and to leave the poor unheeded;
they
Knew the tavernes wel in every toun,
And everich hostiler and tappestere
Bet than a lazar or a beggestere.
By the close of the fourteenth century they had become
contemned and hated by all classes in all countries alike. In Italy they were
despised as cheats, thieves, fornicators, and workers of sham miracles;
everywhere they emptied the parish churches and corrupted the holy Catholic
religion. They played on the follies and weaknesses of the rustic and the ignorant;
their sale of spurious relics fostered superstition, and the easy terms on
which they granted absolution encouraged crime. As a song-writer said—
All wickedness that men can tell
Reigneth them among ;
There shall no soul have room in hell,
Of friars there is such throng.'
They had originally been the evangelists of truth and
goodwill; they had sunk to be propagandists of superstition and crime.
(3) Heresy and Reform
Already in the twelfth century, although there was
much blind faith and superstition on the Continent, there was much heresy,
which was fostered, if it was not created, by the vices of the clergy. It
appeared not in the schools and among the learned, but among men and women of humble
origin and of plain living and thinking. In almost every case it was
anti-sacerdotal; the leading arguments of the heretics were drawn from the
pride, the avarice, the unclean lives of their spiritual masters; they held the
old Donatist tenet that the sacraments are polluted in polluted hands; they
refused to accept the decision of Pope Gregory the Ninth distinguishing between
the offices of the priest in mortal sin as regards himself and as regards
others. This article of their creed had a long and stubborn life, for it was
common to the followers of Peter Waldo, of John Wycliffe, and of John Hus.
There were scores of heretical sects in Italy. In the north of Germany false
Christs and false prophets appeared; the Publicani or
Paulicians were sent over thence by King Henry the Second to Oxford for
examination. In Brittany arose Eon of the Star, “he who should come to judge
the quick and the dead”, who was worshipped by his followers as the Deity
incarnate; he, however, was probably mad. Pierre de Bruys preached in Vallonise and in Gascony; Henry, the Monk
of Lausanne, at Le Mans; the influence of the Italian, Gundulf, extended to
Arras. Arnold of Brescia, like Wycliffe after him, preached the doctrine of
apostolic poverty; the clergy should have no possessions, the Church should
have no civil jurisdiction, but should confine itself strictly to its spiritual
functions.
The Albigenses, known in Italy as the Patarines and elsewhere as the Cathari,
can hardly be called a Christian sect; they were the descendants of the
Paulicians, and were of Manichaean tendency. Paul of Samosata had lived in the
seventh century; his followers had been established in Armenia, Pontus, and
Cappadocia. They had resisted the persecution of Leo the Armenian and the
“sanguinary devotion of Theodora”; in the middle of the ninth century they had
been transferred “from the banks of the Euphrates to Constantinople and
Thrace”, where they were allowed to live in peace and to serve in the armies of
the Eastern Empire. In the beginning of the thirteenth century their Pope or
Primate resided on the confines of Bulgaria, Croatia, and Dalmatia, and
governed by his vicars the filial congregations of Italy and France. They
believed in the New Testament, but disbelieved the Old; Jehovah was Satan, and
the prophets and patriarchs were robbers. The spiritual world and the mind of
man were made by God, but Satan made the temporal world and matter. The
Albigenses therefore refused to eat flesh; they rejected the doctrine of the
Mass; they held that baptism profited nothing; and they disbelieved utterly in
carnal marriage. As regards the Saviour of mankind,
many of them reverted to the old heresy of the Docetes,
that Christ, the imperfections of matter being incompatible with the purity of
a celestial substance, had never issued from the Virgin’s womb; that “He had
imposed on the senses of His enemies and of His disciples”; and that the
ministers of Pilate had wasted their impotent rage on an airy phantom, who
seemed to expire on the Cross and after three days to arise from the dead.
Catharism discarded all the machinery of the Catholic
Church, replacing it by a simple daily benediction of the bread and wine, by a
monthly ceremony of confession, and by the Baptism of the Holy Ghost, which
reunited the soul to God, absolved it from sin, and distinguished the
“perfected” from the ordinary Christian. This ceremony consisted merely in the
imposition of hands, and, except in the case of those who proposed to become
ministers of the faith, it was usually postponed until death drew very nigh.
The sick man then generally remained without food for three days, and this
“privation” was usually equivalent to suicide. Through Provence and Lombardy
these latter-day Manichaeans abounded. It may seem strange that so sad a creed
should have won so many converts, should have induced so many to lead lives of
truth and purity; but the Cathari had rejected
Catholicism because its precepts and practice were to them irreconcilably at
variance, while their own simple dualistic creed fitted in with and explained
the facts of their own dull, hard lives. Not happiness, but truth, they held,
should make them free.
There were other heretics whose chief desire and aim
it was to remain faithful to the spirit of Christ and to revert to the
simplicity of the primitive Church. Chief among these were the Waldenses, the
followers of Peter Waldo, who were known as the Poor Men of Lyons. Originally
of no heretical tendency, they were enamoured of the
beauty of poverty and of the simplicity of the Gospel. They translated several
books of the Old and New Testaments; they produced in the Gallo-Roman language
a text and a gloss on the Psalter. Armed with these, two of the Waldenses
presented themselves in the Lateran Council before Pope Alexander the Third.
He, less wise than Innocent the Third after him, while he approved of their
poverty, refused them permission to preach without the consent of their clergy,
and condemned their interference with the sacred functions of the priesthood.
They were thus driven into hostility and opposition to the Church. They had
formed the conviction that it was the sanctity of a man’s life, and not
his spiritual office, which gave validity to his administration of holy
rites; a virtuous layman, or even a virtuous woman, could officiate, while the
offering of a vicious priest was of no avail. Transubstantiation, they held,
takes place only in the soul of the believer. They rejected prayers for the
dead, purgatory, and indulgences. No fairer testimony to their moral worth
could be given than that of an inquisitor who knew them well. “Heretics”, he
says, “are recognizable by their customs and speech, for they are modest and
well regulated. They take no pride in their garments, which are neither costly
nor vile. They do not engage in trade, to avoid lies and oaths and frauds, but
live by their labour as mechanics—their teachers are
cobblers. They do not accumulate wealth, but are content with necessaries. They
are chaste and temperate in meat and drink. They do not frequent taverns or
dances or other vanities. They restrain themselves from anger. They are always
at work ; they teach and learn, and consequently pray but little. They are to
be known by their modesty and precision of speech, avoiding scurrility and
detraction and light words and lies and oaths”. The modesty, frugality, honest
industry, chastity, and temperance of the Poor Men of Lyons were universally
acknowledged.
It is very probable that some account of the teaching
of the Waldenses may have been transmitted to Saint Francis of Assisi by his
father, who was a travelling merchant of considerable wealth and intelligence.
The “little brother” Francis was perhaps the most saintly man who had trod this
earth since the death of his Elder Brother on the Cross. He believed in
absolute poverty and the love of Christ, and through the whole of his short
life—for he died in 1226— he carried his belief in the holiness of poverty to
its logical conclusion. He preached the love of God; he did not argue; he
detested polemics; his life was his gospel. The truth, says M. Sabatier, needs
no proof; it forces itself on you. So it was with Saint Francis; his life and
example converted men from the error of their ways. For a time it seemed as if
heresy would disappear. But his gospel in its purity did not retain the
undisputed field long. When the Little Brother presented his rule to Innocent
the Third, the Pope warned him that it would be too hard for those who should
come after him. The warning proved true. Scarcely was the Saint dead than his
followers divided into two sects— the Spiritual Franciscans, who desired to
adhere to the letter of the rule as to utter poverty; and the Conventuals, who
saw how much could be done with property rightly administered. For more than a
century the strife between these sects continued. One general of the Order was
a Spiritual, the next was a Conventual; the Popes now favoured one sect, now the other. Nicholas the Third promulgated a Bull, Exiit qui seminat, laying down
that property should be vested in the Roman Church, the usufruct remaining with
the friars. About the middle of the thirteenth century the Spiritual
Franciscans adopted the mystical teachings of the Calabrian prophet, Joachim of
Flora. His three treatises were styled The Everlasting Gospel, and to them the
Franciscan, Gerard of Borgo San Donnino, published an
Introduction. Joachim’s speculative prophecies had been mystical and vague;
those of Gerard were clear and precise. The reign of the Father was over; the
reign of the Son was closing; the reign of the Holy Ghost was to begin in the
year 1260. The Roman Church, which was further from the truth than were the
Greeks, the Jews, or the Mussulmen, would be swept away in favour of an order of monks. This was rank heresy. Persecution, spasmodic and
intermittent, followed; John of Parma was disgraced, Gerard was imprisoned
underground. But the sect, with its mystical teachings, taken often from works
falsely attributed to Joachim of Flora, held its ground throughout the
fourteenth century up to the days of the Calabrian hermit, Telesphoro of Cosenza, and of Thomas of Apulia, and even later. The tertiary order of the
Franciscans continued to be the breeding-ground for all manner of strange
heresies, which lived their little day and died. Wilhelmina of Bohemia appeared
at Milan; she was held to be an incarnation of the Holy Ghost; her followers
believed that she would reappear on earth at the year of Jubilee, 1300. She
died in the odour of sanctity, but twenty years later
her bones were dug up and burned. In 1260, the year of the new dispensation,
was born Segarelli, who founded the sect of the
Apostolic Brethren, and who strove to surpass Saint Francis himself in his
imitation of Christ. He got himself circumcised, was wrapped in swaddling-clothes,
was rocked in a cradle and suckled by a woman. When he had perished at the
stake, his work was taken up by Fra Dolcino of
Novara, who published his three epistles, and who declared the Papacy to be the
Scarlet Woman of the Revelation. He had a spiritual sister, the beautiful
Margarita of Tirol, with whom he claimed to live in unblemished chastity.
Clement the Fifth issued a Bull against them; Dolcino and his followers took to the mountains; four crusades in four successive years
were sent against them in Mount Saint Bernard and the neighbouring Alps. At length, on Holy Thursday of Passion Week, 1307, Fra Dolcino was captured and was put to death with the most
atrocious tortures. But the sect of longest life which sprang from the
Franciscans was that of the Fraticelli, who wore the small hoods and the short
narrow gowns of the Spiritual Franciscans, and who, like them, preached the
doctrine of utter poverty. Pope John the Twenty-second did his utmost to
suppress them, for, although his was the golden age of missions in the East,
the doctrine of the poverty of Christ and His apostles was hateful in his
nostrils. He contradicted the decisions of his predecessors, and promulgated a
Bull in which he proved that the Franciscan doctrine of poverty was a perversion
of Scripture, and in which it was denounced as heretical. The Franciscan
friars, headed by their general Michael de Cesena, rose against him and ranged
themselves under the banner of his enemy, the Emperor Louis of Bavaria. The
narrow Franciscan dogma thus became of imperial importance. John’s successor,
Benedict the Twelfth, and Clement the Sixth after him, were unable to suppress
these Brethren of the Poor Life, as they called themselves; they swarmed
through Italy. Cola di Rienzo, when he fled from
Rome, took shelter with the Fraticelli of Monte Maiella;
Luigi di Durazzo, when he rebelled, proclaimed his sympathy with them; the
Archbishop of Seleucia in 1346 belonged to their order; so too did the Bishop
of Trivento in 1362. The Fraticelli continued to be
numerous in Italy during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
Meantime the merciless crusade of De Montfort, the
preaching of Saint Dominic and his followers, and the pitiless persecution of
the Inquisition during the thirteenth century, practically annihilated the sect
of the Albigenses in Southern France. The country was impoverished, its
industry was shattered and its commerce ruined; the estates of the nobles and
the goods of the wealthy were wrung from them; but, with the exception of a few
poverty-stricken Waldenses, heresy was stamped out of France. The subtleties of
Abelard and the schoolmen were refuted by the erudition and arguments of that
noble Dominican, Thomas Aquinas ; and thus it came about that, as Sismondi
says, whether there were an honest man or not, there was certainly at the end
of the fourteenth century not a heretic in the whole realm of France.
In the Spanish peninsula also there was very little
heresy. A few Cathari escaped from Languedoc and
penetrated as far as Leon; a few Fraticelli and Waldenses troubled the
universal orthodoxy. The Inquisition was established in Aragon, and worked in
the early part of the thirteenth and again in the opening years of the
fourteenth century, but was never really effective; and when, in 1401, Vincente
de Lisboa was appointed Inquisitor over all Spain,
the only heresy specifically mentioned in the Bull is the idolatrous worship of
plants, trees, stones, and altars—a mere superstitious relic of paganism.
In Italy, however, Lombardy, with Milan as its centre, continued throughout to be the home of heresy. Not
only did the heretical sects of the Franciscans flourish there, but other
heretics also. The Waldenses retreated to the Cottian Alps. The Cathari, when they fled from persecution in Languedoc, were
able to find a shelter in any large town of Northern Italy. Ezzelino da Romano would permit n persecution for heresy in his dominions, nor would his
conqueror, Uberto Pallavicino,
after him. Heresy spread to Central Italy, but political faction and party
spirit were everywhere dominant; and when Saint Peter Martyr won two bloody
battles in Florence for the Church in 1245, the victories were as much those of
Guelfs over Ghibelines as of orthodoxy over heresy.
After the victory of Charles of Anjou at Benevento in 1268, and the consequent
revival of the papal power through Italy, the inquisitors were able to set to
work with more gusto, and by the end of the century heretics were no longer
able to live securely in Lombardy or in Central Italy. But the Inquisition was
ineffective in Naples; it was merely nominal in Sicily ; it never gained a hold
in Venetian territory. In Italy as in France, says Mr. Lea, the history of the
Inquisition during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries is one of decadence.
It had in fact for the time done its work. The pessimistic doctrines of
Catharism gradually became extinct, although the simple and hopeful creed of
the Waldenses continued to flourish amid the mountain fastnesses of Piedmont.
There was never a heretic in England before John
Wycliffe, and it is not necessary to speak of him at length here, for his
writings before the Great Schism had mainly a political character and tendency,
and were thus utilized by John of Gaunt. Other political philosophers had based
their theories on “the Bible of the Christians or the Bible of the
philosophers, the Scriptures of Aristotle”. Wycliffe based his on the feudal
system. His treatises Of the Lordship of God and Of Civil Lordship were
published by 1372. Lordship and service linked man to God; God was the
universal lord paramount of every man; and every individual man was dependent
on God alone, and was bound to do Him faithful service. Lordship is founded in
grace; “no one in mortal sin has any right to any gift of God, while on the
other hand, every man standing in grace has not only a right to, but has in
fact, all the gifts of God; ... the righteous has all things ; the wicked has
nothing, only occupies for the time that which he has unrighteously usurped or stolen from the righteous”. If the righteous man has not all things
in this present life, if the wicked man has that which he should not, their
recompense will come after death. Wycliffe’s doctrine of Apostolic Poverty was
the result of his veneration for the spiritual dignity of the Church, which led
him to sever its sphere of action entirely from that of the world. At this
period of his life he might indeed, like many another true son of the Church,
expose “the political abuses of the hierarchy, but in his dogmatic theology he
was without blemish”. He had not broken loose from the Papacy when King Edward
the Third died; it was the Great Schism which made him a notorious heretic.
Except by reason of their political influence, his followers in England indeed
were but a feeble folk; the dawn of Reformation here was but a false dawn.
Wycliffe’s great work in the religious world was wrought through John Hus of
Bohemia; and it is somewhat curious that, just as there had been no heresy in
England before the time of John Wycliffe, so John Hus boasted that there had
never been a heretic in Bohemia.
If England, France, and Spain at the outbreak of the
Great Schism were free from heresy, very different was the state of religious
life in Germany, where speculation always simmered, where the prelates resented
papal interference, where they and also the whole of the secular clergy hated
the Mendicant Orders, and resented anything like the introduction of the
Inquisition. All through the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries
pantheistic teachers arose, for Northern Germany had no sympathy with the
Catharism which took its rise in the Slavic countries, in Servia and Bosnia.
The troublous times led to the predominance of sentiment over intellect. Among
the people associations were formed, providing quiet retreats in which inmates,
male or female, might live secluded from the world, bound only by the vows of
chastity and obedience, enjoying the blessedness of inward peace. David of
Dinant, Amalric of Bena, and Eckard of Cologne
promulgated a pantheism which became more and more removed from Deism and from
the historical foundation of Christianity. Hence arose the Brotherhoods and
Sisterhoods of the Free Spirit. They held that God is everywhere, that
everything emanates from Him and returns to Him; that all souls return to Him
at death, and that there is neither purgatory nor hell; that sacerdotal observances
and the sacraments are useless; since the divine and human spirits are in
nature identical, every act of a godly man is good; perfection consists in
absolute unity with God, and thenceforth all outward actions are indifferent,
for “that which God wills in man is that which man has the strongest
inclination to do, and to which he inwardly feels himself most forcibly
impelled, and hence man requires only to follow the voice within to execute the
divine will”. The Brethren of the Free Spirit claimed that being led by the
Spirit they were no longer under the Law, they were free from its trammels;
they alleged that no man was perfect in whom the sight of a naked man produced
shame, or the sight of a naked woman produced passion. Every kind of indulgence
and excess was permissible to the godly and pure in heart—a doctrine most
attractive to the ungodly and the impure; and there is little wonder that the
carnal indulgence and licence of many of the
sectaries shocked the ordinary lay mind. One curious sect of pantheists, the Luciferans, maintained that inasmuch as God was the essence
of all things, therefore Satan himself must be divine, and the devil and his
angels must ultimately be reunited with the Deity. Fearful stories were told as
to their hideous rites and initiatory ceremonies. The Church was not idle.
There was a most cruel persecution of the Beguines at the beginning of the
fourteenth century : Archbishop Henry was very severe 011 the Beghards of
Cologne. On one occasion a jealous husband tracked his wife to an earthly
paradise, witnessed the sensual orgies which were customary there, and gave
information; many of the leaders were either burned or drowned in the Rhine.
This was about 1325; but through the whole of this century these Antinomians,
Beguines, Beghards, and Lollards were in opposition to the Church, and the
Church was engaged in an exterminating war against them.
The strife between Pope John the Twenty-second and
Louis of Bavaria was naturally favourable to the
growth of heresy; and no sooner had his successor, Charles the Fourth, “the
priests emperor”, been recognized, than there appeared that most fearful
scourge of suffering humanity, the plague known as the Black Death. Although it
was not so virulent in Germany as in many parts, still one-fourth of the
population died; and then in the midst of the universal misery arose the sect
of the Flagellants. They are said to have first appeared in Perugia in 1260. It
was, as it were, an extraordinary effort of propitiation to avert the destroying
wrath of God; it responded so thoroughly to the vague longings of the people,
and it spread so rapidly, that it seemed to be the result of a universal
consentaneous impulse. They held that except by the shedding of their own blood
there was no remission of sin. Their leader displayed a mysterious letter which
had fallen from heaven and had been found in the church of Saint Peter at
Jerusalem; in this Jesus Christ had promised to be very gracious to all
penitents in their processions, because the blood of the Flagellants was
mingled with His own. Vast herds of them congregated together— men, women, and
children—with veiled faces, but the men bare to the waists; they marched in
bands of moderate size, each under a leader and two lieutenants; they sang
penitential songs as they entered the towns, weeping, groaning, and lamenting;
they required everyone who joined them to remain with them for thirty-three
days, one day for every year of our Lord’s life on earth; they scourged one
another lustily with scourges knotted with four iron points until the blood ran
down their backs. From Poland to the Rhine they spread, but they flourished
mostly in Thuringia, where Conrad Schmidt was their prophet Elias, and one of
his companions their prophet Enoch. They professed that the blood with which
they bathed themselves washed away their sins and avoided all necessity for the
mediation of Holy Church ; they held that Pope and clergy had no power to loose or to bind; that churches were mere houses of stone
and dens of robbers; that the Mass was a howling of dogs, and the sacrament a
vain babble of the priest; that vows, Purgatory, the adoration of the Cross and
of saints were outworn, useless creeds. Clement the Sixth would have none of
them, and his severe measures repressed them for a time.
Charles the Fourth did little to aid the Church in its
war against heresy until his expedition into Italy in 1368, when, however, he
issued two edicts of unparalleled severity, intended for the support of Walter
Kerlinger, the papal inquisitor. The Waldenses swarmed all over Germany; in
Thuringia, Misnia, Bohemia, Moravia, Austria, and in
Hungary they appeared in their thousands. They were poor folk, viewed with no
ill-will even by the local priesthood; they conformed outwardly in every way to
the orthodox observances. A sect closely akin to them were the Winkelers. Another sect which sprang up in the lower
Rhineland was that of the Dancers : they also were poor and simple. They danced
and sang until they fell to the ground in convulsions; they were generally
regarded as possessed by the devil; they had not been properly baptized, folk
said, seeing that so many of the priests kept concubines. The sect spread over
a large part of Germany and lasted for some years. But the Inquisition directed
its labours more especially to the Brethren of the
Free Spirit, to the Beghards and Beguines, where there was spoil to be
gathered. The Beghards begged their bread to a monotonous cry of Brod durch Gott, but they and the
Beguines possessed property. The royal edicts had ordered the confiscation of
all their houses; those of the male recluses were to be handed over to the
Inquisition to serve as prisons; those of the Beguines were to be sold, part of
the proceeds being devoted to public purposes, part being handed over to the
Inquisitors for pious uses. In Saxony, Hesse, and Thuringia a rich harvest was
reaped. Nicolas of Basel, the “Friend of God”, the invisible Pope of an
invisible Church, a wandering missionary who had for years propagated the
doctrines of the Brethren of the Free Spirit, and who had deceived many by his
visions and revelations, was tracked by the Inquisition. He fled to Vienna with
two of his disciples; they were discovered and seized; Henry of Langenstein laboured to convert
them and flattered himself that he had succeeded, but they all three relapsed,
and were burned. Another disciple of Nicolas, Martin of Mainz, who had formerly
been a Benedictine monk, was burned at Cologne. Other heretics there were who
attacked auricular confession, extreme unction, indulgences, the veneration of
relics, and masses for the dead. Heretics were to be found all over Germany;
they were most thickly scattered over the Upper Rhine, in Switzerland, and in
Swabia, from Regensburg to the Austrian frontier, throughout Franconia, Hesse,
and the Thuringian Forest. They were usually ready to seal their faith with
their blood ; hundreds were burned at the stake, and the goods of the wealthy
were confiscated. But with the advent of the Great Schism and the reign of King
Wenzel, who, Gallio-like, cared for none of these things, persecution in great
measure subsided, and the heretics were left free to believe and to propagate
their heresy.
But while there was thus much pestiferous heresy and
revolt against the Papacy, there were also many devout men whose sincere desire
it was to remain within the obedience of the Church, but whose pious aim at the
same time was to bring about an internal reform which should sweep away the
worst abuses which discredited and disgraced the present system. Such were the
German mystics. The chief of these, theistical but not pantheistical, was John Ruysbroek (1293-1381), the spiritual father of John Tauler, the foremost preacher of his day, and of Gerard
Groot. Ruysbroek was a priest for sixty-four years of
his life; he lies interred in the church of his monastery at Gruenthal. His system, of the ecstasy of contemplation,
which has been criticized on the ground that it has no distinct and necessary
place for the general fact of sin, is based on the principle that man has
proceeded from God, and returns to Him again. Man does not, however, become in
all points one with God, for God always remains God, and the creature always
remains a creature; but when man gives himself up with perfect love to God, he
feels that he is in union with God; but when he acts he feels that he is a
separate being, distinct from God. Man attains to this unity with God through
the active, the inward, and the contemplative life. The active life consists in
God's service in abstinence, penitence, morality, and holy action ; the inward
life consists of love toward God, oneness of heart with Him, the conquest of
the senses, the guidance of the desires and senses to unity. The contemplative
life consists in free communion with God, a going out of ourselves and becoming
one spirit with God; its peculiarity lies in its ever satisfying, simple, but
blessed repose. “This—the eternal repose—is the existence which has no mode,
and which all deep spirits have chosen above all things. It is the dark
silence, in which all loving hearts are lost”.
The mystics were rebels against the system of
scholastic philosophy. They circumscribed the domain of reason to enlarge that
of faith. Reason, says Achard, is ignorant, but faith
begins by believing that which reason does not conceive; from the imperfection
of reason proceeds the perfection of faith. By grace, faith knows that of which
reason can acquire no certitude by experience. It is the province of reason to
follow faith, not to precede her, to enable us to understand what we believe.
Man’s business in this world is not to reason, but to pray; he ought to give
himself up wholly to God, who will make him perfect; he ought to set up the
sublime ladder of contemplation, and, like the eagle, taking flight from the
things of earth, to soar into the infinite. Intelligence guided by reason is no
infallible guide; the true guide is conscience illuminated by grace. To attain
true knowledge, one must leave the study of these vain things on which the mark
of their celestial origin is scarce apparent; one must believe, one must love,
one must intoxicate oneself with that love which communicates to the faithful
soul a holy ecstasy, which transports it far away from matter to the bosom of
God. The mystics longed by serene contemplation to lose themselves in God until
they found Him; they sought to work out their own salvation by a closer walk
with God, by communion with the Infinite. In this they resembled the early
monks. The votaries of this Divine Philosophy aspired to imitate a pure and
perfect model. They trod in the footsteps of the prophets who had retired to
the desert; and they restored the devout and contemplative life, which had been
instituted by the Essenians in Palestine and Egypt.
Other reformers there were who more nearly resembled
the early friars. Filled with a like consuming love for God, with a like
disdain for vain philosophy, and with a like hatred for polemics, they aspired
rather to live for others than for themselves; they sought to tread in the
footsteps of their master, Jesus Christ, and of sweet Saint Francis,' who,
like the Master, went about doing good. A life of holy contemplation had been
the ideal of John Ruysbroek; a life of holy activity
was the ideal of Gerhard Groot during his short existence (1340-1384). He was
the son of the burgomaster of Deventer: born in a house upon the Brink; weak
and feeble in body, but active of mind from his youth up. He studied at the
University of Paris from 1355 to 1358 under Henry of Kalkar,
who was distinguished for his works on rhetoric and music and for a history of
the Carthusian monks. Gerhard obtained his master’s degree in his eighteenth
year, and then went for further study to the University of Cologne, where he
first appeared as a professor. Being a man of good family, he soon obtained, in
those days of pluralities, several prebends, and was made Canon of Utrecht and
of Aix. He was a young prelate of the world; he ate and drank of the daintiest,
he clothed himself in fine raiment, he dressed his hair with care, he enjoyed
himself thoroughly in his own way, he went to all the public amusements. As he
was looking on at some games in Cologne, some one said to him, “Why standest thou here intent on these
vanities? Become another man”. His old tutor, Henry of Kalkar,
now prior of the Carthusian monastery at Monchhuysen,
met him at Utrecht; he admonished him on the vanity of this world, on death, on
eternity. His words sank into Gerhard’s heart; he was overcome with emotion; he
promised with God’s help to renounce the world and to lead a new life.
He began by retiring into his friend’s monastery,
where he spent three years in seclusion and reflection, in penitential
exercises, and in the study of the Scriptures. Then he returned to active life.
He became a deacon, but refused to become a priest, saying that not for all the
gold of Araby would he undertake the care of souls
for a single night. He obtained from his friend Florentius,
the Bishop of Utrecht, a licence to preach. He
preached in the language of the people, in Low Dutch; with an easy flow of
eloquence, out of the deep zeal of his love, with intense anxiety and concern
for their souls, he preached to them the repentance of sin and the Gospel of
Christ. “Christ died for us; we must live for Christ. Christ as delineated in
the Gospels, Christ the root and the mirror of life, Christ the sole foundation
of the Church”, was Gerhard’s faith; the primitive apostolic Church shone in
his eyes as the model of perfection. Forsaking scholastic disputations, the
“new apostle of Germany” was a revivalist of the modern type. Multitudes
thronged to hear him, so that the churches were not able to contain them ; he
was compelled to bring his hearers into the open air. Like Saint Francis, he
eschewed scholasticism and polemics; his erudition was not great; his Latin was
faulty and his Greek a negligible quantity. But he was instant in season and
out, with his fellow travellers, with those who sat
with him at meat, with the scholars to whom he gave books to copy; in loving
humility he called upon all alike, for their souls’ sake, to flee from the
wrath to come. He preached against sin, by whomsoever practised : when the Bishop of Utrecht wished to suppress concubinage among the clergy,
Gerhard Groot was commissioned to preach the sermon in the General Synod in the
Cathedral at Utrecht. His Sermo de forcaristis, factus in domo capitulari Trajectensi, has come
down to us; it was delivered in the summer of 1383. He was no fautor of heresy; in fact, he was a malleus haereticorum. Especially inimical was he to the sect of the
Free Spirit, who contemned all the holy sacraments; he pursued relentlessly the
Austin friar, Bartholomaeus of Dordrecht, whose
sermons smacked of this heresy. It was at this time that the strife between the
regular and the secular clergy was fiercest; and Bartholomaeus had influential friends among the magistrates of Kampen.
The Bishop of Utrecht was constrained to interfere; to make the blow as light
as possible for his friend, he forbade all deacons to preach in his diocese.
Gerhard refused to appeal against the order; until the last year of his life he
never preached again. His energy was not quenched; it was diverted into another
channel.
Shortly before this, in 1378, Gerhard had visited John Ruysbroek, the Prior of the Canons in the monastery
at Gruenthal ; he was deeply impressed by the
edifying and simple life of the mystic, and was no less impressed by the
brotherly spirit which pervaded the social life of the Canons of Gruenthal; they formed a true brotherhood. Gerhard pushed
011 as far as Paris to purchase books important for the instruction of youth.
When he returned to Deventer he set himself to the education of the young, and
to the transcribing of good books. He employed young men as copyists; and the
circle of his young friends, his scholars, and his copyists grew larger every
day and soon became a regular society. One of these was Florentius Radewin, then vicar of Deventer. “Dear master”, said Florentius one day, “what harm would it do were I and these
copyists to put our weekly earnings into a common fund and live together?”.
“The mendicant monks would never allow it”, answered Gerhard. “But what is to
prevent us trying? Perhaps God will grant us success”. “Well, then”, said Gerhard,
“in God’s name begin. I will be your advocate and will faithfully defend you
against them”. Thus arose the first Society of the Common Lot, soon to be
followed by many other brotherhoods of the same description.
The Brethren of the Common Lot or of the Common Life,
or the Brethren of Goodwill, as they sometimes styled themselves, shared their
goods in common; they lived partly by their manual labour,
they received but never solicited voluntary donations. Their object was, by the
simplicity of their life and by religious exercises, to promote the growth of
practical Christianity. Even during the life-time of Gerhard these houses of
the Brethren spread as far as Saxony. Each house, as a general rule, consisted
of about twenty members, four priests, eight clerks, and the rest laymen on
probation. Only after a year of rigorous probation was a layman admitted as a
clerk ; even then no vow was taken from him, and he was at liberty to leave at
any time on settling accounts. The brethren dressed in grey; they had fixed
hours for devotional exercises and for labour; they
dined together. A rector and a vice-rector presided over each house; and
certain of the brethren were entrusted with the offices of steward, of head
copyist, of librarian, of master of the novices, of keeper of the infirmary or
hospital; but no hard and fast rule was established; each house made its own
arrangements. The same was the case with the trades practised;
the transcribing and dissemination of holy books was the chief end for which
the houses existed; but the industry of each house depended upon its special
aptitude. The house at Hildesheim was a manufactory of mass-books and of
clerical garments; the Convent of St. Mary at Beverwijk traded in parchment, honey, wax, and salt-fish; the house at Hattem practised only agriculture
and weaving.
The house of the Brethren at Deventer, being the
earliest, was regarded as the parent-house, and its rector was looked upon as
the common father of the Brethren. When Gerhard Groot died of the plague in
1384, he appointed Florentius Radewin to be his successor; and when Radewin died he
appointed Emilius van Buren. Next to the
dissemination of the Scriptures, the education of the young was the principal
work of the brethren. Gerhard Groot’s scheme was simplicity itself: he aimed to
teach a godly life; he eschewed arithmetic, geometry, logic, rhetoric, grammar,
and the like. First he taught the Gospel, then the lives of the saints, then
the Epistles of Saint Paul and the Acts of the Apostles, then the works of
Bernard, Anselm, and Augustine. Reading, writing, singing, Latin spoken and
written, and religion were the subjects taught at the schools of the Brethren.
The teaching was not so superficial as in the conventual schools; it was not
confined only to those who could pay, as in the town-schools of Holland at this
time. The instructs was not generally gratuitous, but poor students were given
their subsistence and the means of study. The schools of the Brethren
flourished exceedingly: that at Groeningen was
frequented by extraordinary numbers; that at Herzogenbusch numbered twelve hundred scholars. Wherever a large number of pupils was
assured, the services of more distinguished teachers were permanently retained;
classics were put into the hands of the scholars and improved grammars were
introduced; scholastic Latin was superseded by Latin which Cicero could have
understood. Their preaching also was in the vulgar tongue, so as to be
understood by the people. Some preached only for a quarter of an hour, others
for three or even six hours; the people listened eagerly. They also gave
collations, “a sort of edifying private addresses”.'Preaching,
except in Latin, was almost a lost art; but now a succession of distinguished
men made their appearance in Holland. John Binkerink,
John Gronde, Wermbold,
William Henrici, Henry Gronde, Hugo Aurifaber, Giesebert Don, and
Brother Paulus, all, there is reason to believe, preached in the style and
spirit of Gerhard and Florentius. In the next
century, from the monastery on Mount Saint Agnes, came one Thomas à Kempis,
“the ablest expounder and most successful propagator” of the Christian
mysticism of the Brethren, the author of that wonderful work which has had more
influence than any other book save the Bible on the religious life of
Christendom.
The communities of the Brethren and of the Sisters of
the Common Life gave latitude without coherence, and their founder felt that
something more was needed to perfect his scheme. A backbone was wanted for the
system, some central organism to which these outlying members would be
articulated, something which should provide a rule and example for their life,
and a safeguard for their wellbeing and protection. Gerhard recognized that
some central authority was needed for counsel, support, and guidance; he saw
that if this supreme power were centred in some
well-ordered and regularly sanctioned body, it would help to keep the Brethren
together, to protect them from external corrupting influences, to shelter them
from the malicious machinations of the mendicant orders, and from others who
wished them ill.
For some years Groot had to this end designed to
establish an order of Canons, but death came to him before he had carried out
his scheme. As he lay a-dying, he called Florentius and others to him and charged them to form such a monastery as he described. He
did not wish his order to be of the severe and secluded Carthusian or
Cistercian pattern; he desired a monastery of Canons Regular of the Order of
Saint Augustine. There was a waste piece of ground on the bank of the Yssel, between Deventer and Zwolle, which he designated as
suitable for the purpose. Here, two years after the death of Gerhard Groot, the
monastery of Windesheim was founded. The Duke of
Guelders countenanced the undertaking. Bertholf ten
Hove and Lambert Stuerman gave the land; several rich
men endowed the institution; the Bishop of Utrecht sanctioned and approved. Six
years later, in 1392, a second monastery, the Fountain of the Blessed Mary, was
founded at Arnheim; to be followed by the monastery
of the New Light, near Hoern, and by that of Mount
Saint Agnes, the site of which had been chosen by Gerhard long years before,
though it was not founded until 1398. Eventually the number of monasteries in
Germany, the Low Countries, and the north and centre of France, increased to four score. The Canons took the vows of poverty,
chastity, and obedience; they provided leaders for the brotherhoods; they
disseminated the knowledge of the Gospel; they enlarged the area and extended
the scope of popular education. But the greatest glory of the Brotherhoods of
the Common Life is to have produced such humanists as Agricola and Hegius, Busch and Lange, Wessel and Erasmus, and to have
indirectly by their criticism of sacred and secular works prepared the way for
the Reformation.
A spirit of reform, akin to that which animated the
Brothers of the Common Life, manifested itself in the fourteenth century in
Bohemia, where the fostering care of the Emperor Charles the Fourth had raised
the clergy generally in education and morality to a higher level than their
brethren in the rest of the Empire. Here also the quarrel was with the Friars.
Conrad Waldhauser, an Augustine Canon, was invited by
the Emperor from Austria to Prague, and began his ministrations in 1360. In his
sermons he scourged the arrogance, avarice, and sensual luxury of his
listeners; the multitudes thronged to hear him, so that there was no room for
them in any church, and Conrad had to preach in the open squares. Usurers
ceased their usury and offered to restore their ill-gotten gains; men ceased to
molest merchants' daughters in the churches; women sacrificed their finery,
their costly veils, their robes decked with gold and pearls. Could the founders
of the Friars return to the earth, said Conrad, their present disciples would
stone them. The Augustinian Hermits and the Dominican Friars tried to convict
him of heresy, but their efforts failed : Conrad’s influence in Prague remained
unabated until his death in 1369.
Conrad preached in the German language, in a style noted
for simplicity, clearness, and accuracy; Milic preached in the Bohemian tongue,
and his poetical rhapsodies appealed to the emotions and passions of his
hearers. He was Prebendary of the Prague Cathedral and Vice-Chancellor to the
Emperor, but in 1363 he gave up place and power in order to follow Christ in
poverty and to preach His word. The “son and image of our Lord Jesus Christ”,
he meditated on the old prophecies and the Revelation until Antichrist became
an obsession to him; he saw its influence in everything, in the clergy from the
archbishops down to the friars; he discovered that Antichrist would appear in
person in the world in 1366. He went so far as on one occasion to attack
Charles the Fourth himself, and was thrown into prison by the archbishop; but
the Emperor did not remove his favour from him, and
Milic appealed to Rome. He went to Rome and there got again thrown into prison,
but when Urban the Fifth came back from Avignon, Milic was released and
returned to Prague and his preaching again. Antichrist retired into the
background; Milic attacked immorality with such fervour and effect that the Venetian quarter in Prague, where the women of evil fame
lived, became deserted by its inmates and was pulled down to build a
penitentiary, known as Jerusalem. Milic supported on a voluntary system both
this institution and his house for converts, and was often hard pressed for
funds; but he devoted to the work all the rich gifts which came to him, for he
was confessor and spiritual director to hundreds. His influence was enormous.
The Mendicant Friars attacked him, and brought twelve charges of heresy against
him ; Milic set out for Avignon, cleared himself of every suspicion of heresy,
but fell ill and died in 1374, before judgment was pronounced.
What Waldhauser and Milic
had endeavoured to effect by the living voice,
Mathias of Janow, the son of a Bohemian knight, did
by his writings. He had studied in Paris, had lived in Home and Nuernberg, and was appointed by Pope Urban the Sixth to be
Prebendary of Prague. His chief work, on the Maxims of the Old and New
Testaments, exercised an immense influence in his own time, though subsequent
ages found it insufficient; he deducted four fundamental principles from the
Old and eight from the New Testament, troubling himself but little about the
dogma but much about the practice of Christianity, the love of God and one’s
neighbour, meekness and self-sacrifice, the imitation of Christ in all things.
He was a great advocate for frequent communion by the laity, as were others of
the more learned among his Bohemian contemporaries; but he was always an
obedient son of the Church, and gave up his advocacy of daily communion and of
communion in both kinds at her bidding, and also recanted his condemnation of
the veneration of shrines and relics. Janow died in
1394; but many professors and preachers in Prague carried on the work begun by Waldhauser, Milic, and Janow.
They resembled the school at Deventer in their efforts toward a reformation of
life and morals, in their teaching and preaching in the vulgar tongue, in their
promulgation of the Holy Scriptures ; but they differed from that school in so
far that they established no brotherhoods nor monasteries, and so left no
settled organization to carry on the work of internal reformation. In Western
Germany and in Bohemia alike the reformers were faithful children of the
Church, and were bitterly opposed to and opposed by the Friars.
These efforts at internal reform, unlike the movements
of Wycliffe and of Hus, which have largely a political character, were free
from all taint of heresy. The promoters were indeed accused of heresy by the
Friars, but they had no difficulty in clearing themselves. They were always
ready to submit all points of doctrine to the arbitrament of the Pope, and they
desired nothing so much as to remain in the bosom of the Holy Roman Church.
In the internal reform of the Church in matters of
pure theology a predominating influence was exercised by the University of
Paris, the “eldest daughter of the King”, which in the sphere of ecclesiastical
politics had acquired a unique position in Europe. Its scholars were citizens
of the world : though almost all the greatest schoolmen from the time of
Abelard onwards taught in Paris at one period or another of their lives, hardly
one Parisian Scholastic of the very first rank was a Frenchman by birth. The
University owed its importance, partly to its position in the capital city of
France, in which it differed from the English Universities, and partly to its organization,
by which its judgment in matters theological was backed by the weight of
numbers—by its hundreds of Masters of Arts and its thousands of students,
wherein it differed from the Universities of Italy. It became the tribunal of
orthodoxy. In opposition to the Franciscans it condemned their doctrine of
Apostolic Poverty; in opposition to the Dominicans it upheld the Franciscan
doctrine of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin; in opposition to the
Franciscans and the Pope it condemned the doctrine of the Retardation of the
Beatific Vision, so that John the Twenty-second apologized for expressing an
opinion when he was not a Doctor of Divinity; in opposition to the Dominicans
and Franciscans alike it upheld the rights of the secular clergy. It was abundantly
clear that in the dissensions and discussions consequent on the Great Schism
the voice of the University of Paris would be one of the clearest and most
authoritative.
CHAPTER III
THE GREAT SCHISM
The Seventy Years’ Captivity of the Popes at Avignon
came to an end in 1377. Urban the Fifth had returned to Rome ten years earlier,
but he had again deserted the Eternal City for Avignon; he died three months
after his return, and his death was regarded as the judgment of God upon him in
abandoning Rome. It had been foretold by Saint Brigitta of Sweden. “If he should return” she had said, “he will in a brief while
receive such a stroke that his teeth will gnash, his sight will be darkened and
grow dim, and all the limbs of his body will tremble, . . . and he will render
account before God of the things which he has done”. Gregory the Eleventh,
stimulated by Saint Catharine of Siena, the successor of the Swedish
prophetess, returned to Rome at the end of 1377; he meditated a like treachery
with Urban, but his return to Avignon was prevented by his death (March 27,
1378).
The return of Gregory was indeed a political necessity
if the Papal States were to be saved to the Church. Gerard du Puy had in 1372
succeeded Cardinal d'Estaing as Vicar Apostolic of Perugia, and in 1374
Guillaume de Noellet was appointed Papal Legate of
Bologna. These two rulers exasperated their subjects by their ruthless cruelty,
and a spirit of opposition to papal oppression blazed out and spread through
the surrounding country; they excited the hatred of their own people and the
distrust of their neighbours. Florence, suffering from pestilence and famine,
expected the usual convoys of grain from Bologna; the Legate not only stopped
the export, but sent soldiers to ravage the Florentine fields in which the new
grain was ripening. This was the culminating outrage. Florence took the lead in
a war of Liberty, to free the people who were groaning under the hated yoke of
the French Legates. The movement spread like wildfire. In ten days eighty towns
and castles threw off the yoke of the Church. The Pope put Florence under an
interdict, and procured the confiscation of Florentine goods through France and
England. In 1376 Bologna joined the league against the Church. Cardinal Robert
of Geneva was sent as Legate of the Romagna and the March of Ancona; he took
over charge of the Company of the Bretons, well known for their savage and
brutal ferocity, and made his way to Ferrara. He tried to provoke the men of
Bologna to battle, but they refused to come forth from behind their walls.
Robert of Geneva announced his intention of not leaving Bologna until he had
washed his hands and his feet in the blood of her citizens. He was constrained
to go into winter quarters, however, in the friendly town of Cesena. The
Bretons treated the town as if they had taken it by assault; they plundered the
houses of the citizens, they ravished their wives and daughters. On the 1st
February 1377 some of the townsfolk attacked the Bretons and killed three hundred
of them; the Cardinal acknowledged that his soldiers were in the wrong, and
promised a complete amnesty to Cesena if the citizens would again open their
gates to him. They believed him, and did so. The Cardinal thereupon ordered a
general massacre. He hounded on his troops, crying out for “Blood, Blood
: Kill them all!” he shouted. The bloody massacre of Cesena sent a thrill
of horror through Italy : it necessitated the return of the Pope to Rome.
Bologna, which had been the last to join, was the first
to abandon the league, and to return to her allegiance to the Pope; she was to
have the right of free government, and consented to receive a Vicar Apostolic. Vico followed suit. Florence, being abandoned by her most
powerful allies, herself opened negotiations with Gregory. A peace conference
was held at Sarzana, under the presidency of Bernabo Visconti. Before the terms had been arranged, on
the evening of March 27, 1378, there came a knocking at the city gate, and a
cry, “Open quickly to the messenger of Peace”. The gate was opened, but no one
was there. Then a cry ran through Sarzana, “The Olive
has come, the Peace is made”. It was at this day and hour that Pope Gregory the
Eleventh died.
The election of the new Pope was everywhere expected
with the utmost anxiety; it was universally recognized as a momentous event.
Gregory himself had been filled with the gloomiest forebodings. From his
death-bed he had issued a Bull ordering the cardinals then in Rome to proceed
at once to the new election without awaiting the arrival of their absent
colleagues. There were sixteen cardinals then in the city : ten of them were
Frenchmen, four were Italians. Six of the French cardinals were of the Limousin faction, connected by birth or otherwise with the
families of the last three Popes; the other four French cardinals constituted
the Gallican faction, and were bitterly opposed to the Limousins.
With the Gallicans acted the two remaining cardinals, Pedro de Luna, the favourite of Saint Catharine, and Robert of Geneva, who
only a year earlier (3rd February 1377) had perpetrated the bloody massacre of
Cesena. A majority of two-thirds was necessary for election : the French or
Gallican party was resolved that there should be no fresh Limousin Pope; they would have preferred one of themselves, but recognised that of this there was no chance. The young Roman Cardinal, Jacopo Orsini,
counting on the aid of the nobles and the populace, dreamed that the tiara
might fall to him. The Gallicans would have preferred Pierre Flandrin or Guillaume de Noellet.
Rome itself was in a turmoil: the nobles and high
officials of the Church were expelled from the city; the Romans themselves were
in a state of frantic excitement. They were determined that the divorce of the
Papacy from their city should no longer continue, that the profits which
pilgrims and others brought to the dwelling-place of the Pope should be theirs;
they were decided that no Frenchman should be Pope; they desired a Roman, or at
all events an Italian. Popular feeling ran to fever-heat. Each division of the
French cardinals was ready to side with the Italians rather than vote for the
candidate of the opposite faction; and the hopes of Orsini began to run high.
In this state, on the 7th April, with dissensions in
their own body and with a violent tumult raging outside, the cardinals entered
the upper story in which the conclave was held. Nature itself seemed to take
part in the strife; a storm of thunder and lightning came on; men said that the
lightning struck the cells of Robert of Geneva and Pedro de Luna, the future
anti-popes. The multitude howled without: “Romano, Romano volemo lo
Papa, o almanco Italiano!”. They swore to make the
heads of the cardinals as red as their hats; they piled with faggots the room
over which the conclave was held; they threatened death to the cardinals if
their wishes were not consulted. Bartolommeo Prignano,
Archbishop of Bari, said to a friend, “He who is elected in such a tumult can
never be Pope; nobody will recognize him”. All through the night the populace
kept up the din; peasants from the hills broke into the Vatican cellars and
drank up the good papal wine; men beat against the floor under the conclave
with their pikes and halberds; they rang all the church bells of the city and
sounded the tocsin of the Capitol; in the morning they forced the doors of the
conclave. Three cardinals came out to parley with the ringleaders, who
threatened to tear them in pieces if they did not at once elect a Roman or an
Italian. It was necessary to do something, and that speedily. The cardinals
promised to satisfy the wishes of the multitude, and consulted together. Divers
plans were suggested. Finally Jean de Cros, Cardinal of Limoges, of the Limousin faction, proposed that no one of the cardinals
should be elected, but that one outside the sacred college should be chosen,
and he named the Archbishop of Bari as future Pope : he was an Italian, a
Neapolitan, and his election would satisfy those who insisted on an Italian as
Pope. Moreover, the archbishop “had lately bought himself a house and a
vineyard in Rome, in order to qualify as a Roman citizen”. The Limousin faction also secretly comforted themselves with
the reflection that Bartolommeo Prignano had risen to
his present position through the patronage of the Cardinal of Pampeluna, who was a Limousin, so
that if elected they judged and hoped that he would be grateful to the Limousin party. All the cardinals thought that they would
find in the Archbishop of Bari, who had lived for some years at the court at
Avignon, a ready and subservient tool. Bartolommeo Prignano was accordingly elected Pope. The name of “Bari, Bari”, was called out to the
Roman crowd; they mistook it for the name of the Limousin,
Jean de Bar, and rushed into the conclave, threatening death to the traitor
cardinals. Then old Tebaldeschi, the Cardinal of Saint Peter’s, was presented
to the mob; but the aged prelate’s cries, protestations, and curses at length
undeceived them. The cardinals fled from the palace. Two days later, to the
intense joy of the populace, the Archbishop of Bari was crowned Pope, and took
the name of Urban the Sixth. The cardinals wrote to those of their number who
had remained behind at Avignon, announcing to them that under the guidance of
the Holy Spirit they had unanimously elected the Archbishop of Bari to be Pope,
that he had duly taken his seat on the apostolic throne, and that he had been
crowned on the day of Our Lord’s Resurrection.
The new Pope was a short, fat man, a dark-faced
Neapolitan, filled with a certain monkish piety, with a hatred of pomp and of
simony, but brusque and impetuous, utterly devoid of tact and self-restraint,
and without any knowledge of the world. Had he known how to appreciate the
circumstances aright, he would have seen a great future opening before him.
There is no doubt that his election, though it may have been tainted with
irregularity, was canonically valid. It had been held in the midst of a tumult,
and the cardinals had not been bricked up according to custom. But they had
solemnly declared that they had elected him freely and advisedly; they had
appeared at his coronation; nay, more, they stood by him, obeyed him, accepted
and solicited favours from him not only immediately
after his election, but for the first three months of his reign. Their conduct
during this time confirmed, if any confirmation were necessary, the canonicity
and regularity of his election. The new Pope was recognized by the cardinals,
was recognized through Christendom, as being the true and canonical Pope. Up to
the end of July not a breath of suspicion tainted the validity of the election.
But Urban himself knew as well as any man the peculiar circumstances which had
attended his elevation. He was fully aware of the contentions which divided the
sacred college, of the motives which had led the cardinals to give their
suffrages to an outsider. Had he been of politic mind, he would have given some
thought to the conciliation of the cardinals, at any rate during the first
months of his pontificate, in order to consolidate his position. Though not a
cardinal, he had lived at Avignon, and was aware of the weight and influence of
the College; he knew that the cardinals considered themselves the equals of
kings, and that they were everywhere treated with the utmost respect and
ceremony. He knew also that many of them expected him to return to Avignon. He
was resolved not to return, and herein he was right; but he might have shown
consideration and sympathy for the lofty dignitaries whose wishes he was
thwarting, who had raised him to be the spiritual Lord of Christendom. He
showed none; he was habitually rude and insulting to the members of the sacred
College; he abused and stormed at them; he called them fools and liars; he
sprang from his seat, intending to attack one of them; he threatened to swamp
their influence by creating new Italian cardinals. They had thought that he
would be their creature, ready to do whatever they wished; but he, on the other
hand, relying on the sympathy of the Romans, soon showed that he had played a
humble part long enough, that he was now Pope and was determined to be absolute
master. He was brutally overbearing and insolent to the Cardinal of Amiens, who
had taken no part in the election, but who returned on Low Sunday, April 25th,
to report the result of the negotiations which he had conducted with Florence,
after the war of the republics against Holy Church. The Pope charged the
Cardinal with destroying the peace of the world by his treacherous diplomacy;
the angry Cardinal retorted that had it been merely the Archbishop of Bari who
said so, he would have told him that he lied in his throat. The insult to his honour rankled in the proud Frenchman’s breast; it was he
who afterwards first suggested to his colleagues that the election of Urban
might be declared void.
Nevertheless, from April on to July the cardinals
recognized Urban as Pope, and breathed not a word of doubt as to the validity
of their choice. In electing him they had made a mistake, and too late they
discovered their error. To repair it, they resolved willfully to sacrifice the
welfare of Christendom. Under the pretext of escaping from the heat they
obtained permission to leave Rome, and betook themselves to Agnani.
The chamberlain, Pierre de Cros, who had charge of the tiara and the papal
ornaments, took them with him and accompanied the cardinals. Pedro de Luna, who
had backed up Urban all through, was the last to go. From Agnani they wrote to the four Italian cardinals who still remained at Rome, pointing
out that the recent election had been forced and irregular, and was therefore
void. Three of the four joined them; old Tebaldeschi died. Urban, utterly
abandoned, wept and recognized his own folly now that it was too late. All the
cardinals who had elected him were now banded together against him. He
determined, if possible, to checkmate them, and on the 18th September he
created twenty-six new cardinals, several of whom refused the proffered honour. Two days later the old cardinals, who had meantime
moved to Fondi for greater security—Urban having quarrelled with the Count of Fondi—elected
Robert of Geneva, the perpetrator of the bloody massacre of Cesena, as Pope. He
took the style of Clement the Seventh. Thus arose the Great Schism.
To us at the present day, as we read the history and
consider the circumstances of the time, it may not be surprising that there
should thus have arisen two rival Popes; but to the ordinary unlettered man of
the Middle Ages it was incomprehensible and inexplicable, a thing of wonder and
amazement. There had been anti-popes before, but never before had there been
two Popes elected by the same, or practically the same, body of cardinals. The
unity of the Holy Roman Empire, considering the portions that had been reft from it, considering also the growing rivalry of
independent nations, might have become almost a lost idea; but the Unity of the
Papacy had hitherto remained secure and unshaken, a fixed rock on which the
faith of Christendom was founded. There could, men thought, be but one head of
the Church on earth, even as there was but one head in Heaven. The clergy
everywhere acknowledged the over-lordship of one Pope. Bishops everywhere were
collated, many were directly appointed by him. Peter’s Pence still flowed in
from the northern nations of Europe, the tribute of the humblest Christians to
their one Father. The regular clergy acknowledged the one Pope as their head,
and knew no other superior outside their convent walls. Pardoners traversed all
countries selling indulgences which they claimed to have obtained direct from
the Pope. The wandering friars brought his name home to the poorest and
meanest. Every man in Christendom knew that there was one Pope, one supreme
Father over the hearts of all true believers. But now that the Schism had
begun, now that there were two Popes, the prospect to a lowly Christian soul
must have been awful in its perplexity. Each of the rival pontiffs hurled his
thunders of anathema against the other, each excommunicated the other and all
who adhered to him. That the rightful Pope had the power of consigning the
victims of his denunciations to everlasting damnation no true Christian
ventured to doubt. But who held this power? who was the rightful Pope? In the
heart of a kingdom a man might be content to follow without question the faith
of his ruler; the German and the Englishman would believe in Urban, the
Frenchman and the Scot would believe in Clement, but on the borders, where one
village owned one obedience and the next owned another, the doubt and dismay
must at times have been heartrending. Even where one Pope was generally
acknowledged, there was always1 some town or community which held for his
rival; often there was a division in the same town or even in the same house;
so that no one could find peace or rest on either side, and men's consciences
were troubled by doubt as to which was the true Head of the Church, and on
which side one could render to God real and acceptable service.
In the political and ecclesiastical worlds the Great
Schism introduced a new element of discord. France held for Clement, England
for Urban. Scotland precipitately, Castile, Aragon, and Navarre more
deliberately and independently, followed the lead of France. Portugal,
vacillating with the event of war, eventually embraced the cause of Urban. In
the Levant the powerful influence of Venice and of Genoa was exercised for the
Pope at Rome; but Clement was not without followers in Corfu, in Albania, in
Morea, in the Island of Cyprus, and among the cavaliers of Saint John of
Jerusalem. Charles the Fifth had fondly hoped to gain the adherence of Germany
for Clement, but to King Wenzel and to Germany generally the legitimacy of Pope
Urban was as clear as the sun at noonday : Prokop of Moravia, however, thought
otherwise; so too did the Duke of Juliers, the Count
de la Marck, the Count of Cleves, possibly also
Albert of Bavaria. Flanders consulted the doctors of Bologna and pronounced for
Urban; then followed the indecisive crusade of Bishop Despenser of Norwich
(1383), when the Urbanists donned the white bonnet with the red cross; this was
succeeded next year by the death of Louis de Male, Count of Flanders, and the
accession of the Duke of Burgundy : Philip the Bold was a Clementist,
and used his influence for Pope Clement, but he left his new subjects free to
follow their own convictions.4 Duke Leopold of Austria sold himself for a price
to Pope Clement; but the fatal day of Sempach (9th
July 1386) restored his dominions, Styria, Carinthia, the Tirol, Austria,
Switzerland, Swabia, and Alsace, to the obedience of Pope Urban. Holland,
Luxemburg, Brabant, Hainault, Lorraine, and Savoy all acknowledged Clement as
the rightful Pope. King Louis the Great of Hungary was on the side of Urban;
his sister-in-law, Joanna of Naples, soon took that of Clement. The Duke of
Mecklenburg and the King of Norway were contending for the crown of Sweden and
Denmark; Norway adhered to Clement, his opponent to Urban. In Naples, where the
childless queen Joanna had married her fourth husband, Pope Urban the Sixth,
who had no desire to see the country pass into German hands, refused to crown
Otto, Duke of Brunswick, and treated him with studied insolence. This alienated
the queen, who passed over to the Clementine faction, and subsequently adopted
the Duke of Anjou. Urban favoured at first the party
of her rival, Charles of Durazzo, until he quarrelled with him and excommunicated him; in Naples the party of Ladislas, son of
Charles of Durazzo, became ultimately the Roman party, while that of the Duke
of Anjou remained throughout Clementine. In ecclesiastical appointments the
same division occurred. Adolf of Nassau, Archbishop of Mainz, declared at first
for Clement; the Archbishops of Cologne and Trier declared for Urban. Where an
election was disputed, it goes without saying that one candidate was on the
side of one Pope and his rival on the side of the other : this was the case in
Liege, in Basel, in Metz, in Constance, in Chur, in Lübeck, and in other
bishoprics.
France, more than any other country, had been
responsible for the Schism. Urban the Sixth was crowned on Easter Sunday 1378;
before the end of May a sergeant-at-arms and four of his secretaries brought
the news to King Charles the Fifth; they were followed next month by four
persons attached to certain of the cardinals; and shortly afterwards the
discontented cardinals themselves, and among them the King’s old counsellor,
Jean de la Grange, Cardinal of Amiens, who had been so grossly insulted by
Urban, wrote to Charles warning him to give no credence to the official account
of the Pope’s election. Urban himself sent two messengers, Francesco Tortello and Pierre de Murles;
but the latter was a secret envoy of the cardinals. In August the cardinals
sent from Agnani a messenger, Jean de Guignicourt, to announce officially to the King that the
election of Urban had been null and void. Charles sent the sum of twenty
thousand francs for their assistance; he wrote also to Queen Joanna of Naples
to offer them shelter in case of need; he assured the cardinals themselves of
his goodwill, and his letter reached them two days before they elected Robert
of Geneva. All this was done by the King before the clergy of France were
consulted, before any official declaration of policy was made. For several
months the entire kingdom of France, like the rest of Europe, had recognized
Urban the Sixth as the true Pope; and the subsequent recognition of Clement the
Seventh was not universal in France, and met with special opposition in
Normandy. If the King of France did not exercise any direct pressure on the
cardinals, if independently of his action the Schism would certainly have
occurred, still he was undoubtedly an accessory after the fact. There can be no
doubt that Charles the Fifth, being persuaded of the validity of Clement’s election, hoped to get him recognized not only by
the Celtic nations, but by nearly all the Christian nations of Europe, and that
he counted in particular on his good relations with the German Empire : had he
lived to continue his cautious, able, and persevering policy, the result might
possibly have been eventually other than it was. But Charles died on the 16th
September 1380, and the Schism became established. In the eyes of the other nations
of Europe too, France was responsible for the Schism. To them the captivity of
the Popes at Avignon had rendered the Pope the confederate, the willing
servant, almost the tool, of the King of France. The later Avignonese Popes had
indeed been much more independent than they had had popular credit for; but
their position in the Provencal country, within easy access of France, and far
removed from the influence of Italy and Germany, was fatal to their credit as
the impartial head of Christendom. When they removed to Rome again, the French
influence was necessarily and visibly diminished; and men generally believed
that it was to regain the lost influence that France had fostered the Schism.
The real authors of the Schism were the cardinals. To
excuse themselves they accused themselves of a pitiful cowardice which Cardinal
Orsini, Pedro de Luna, and others of their number certainly never felt. To
attribute the election of Urban to coercion and intimidation was absurd, in the
case of fighting men like Robert of Geneva and Gerard de Puy. The great
majority of the cardinals were Frenchmen, and the old pleasant days at Avignon
beckoned them back to the sinful city. The prospect of a life in Italy, in a
ruinous city, amid a turbulent populace, under the thumb of an unmannerly,
overbearing pontiff who might at any moment treat any of them with the brutal
harshness which he manifested subsequently in the case of the six cardinals
whom he accused of conspiracy,1 was not alluring. There had been enough
violence and tumult to give colour to the plea that
the election was forced and not free, and they determined to avail themselves
of this plea. To their own greed and welfare they sacrificed the interest of
the Church, and brought on her a grievous affliction of which no one could
foresee the issue. The cardinals were the real, France was the ostensible,
author of the Great Schism.
While the Great Schism, the greatest affliction which
had ever befallen her since the degenerate days of the Harlots, was thus
beginning to desolate the Church, there were everywhere apparent through the
countries of Western Europe the signs of conflict and distress. The prosperity
which had attended the close of the thirteenth century had disappeared much of
the Continent was in a state of very slow recovery from long-continued war—from
war which meant the burning of churches and homesteads, the destruction of
crops, the houghing and harrying of cattle, the
murder of peasants and burghers from whom no ransom could be expected. By the
end of the century England, France, Spain, and the Scandinavian countries had
all been troubled by wars of succession. Black Margaret, the daughter of King
Waldemar, in 1397 succeeded in uniting Norway, Sweden, and Denmark under her
single rule. In the Spanish peninsula the struggle was of older date and of
longer continuance. Alfonso the Eleventh of Castile at his death left a
legitimate son, Pedro the Cruel, by his wife Mary of Portugal, and an
illegitimate son, Henry of Trastamara, by his leman, the beautiful Eleanor de
Guzman. In Spain a bastard always stood a better chance of recognition and
succession than in the Teutonic lands, and although Pedro won the crown of
Castile for his own lifetime, Henry of Trastamara succeeded him. On his death,
however, in 1379, a fresh war broke out, in which the title of Henry's son,
John, was contested by the King of Portugal and by the Duke of Lancaster. One
of John of Gaunt’s daughters was married to the King
of Portugal, but the ambitious duke did not scruple to desert his son-in-law,
to marry another daughter to the son of the reigning King of Castile, and to
conclude peace (1387). Aragon was spared for the present its war of succession;
it was soon to come. Navarre was ruled by the French prince Charles the Bad, a
traitor to his own country, a friend to Edward the Third; he died in 1387. On
the east of the Empire the Teutonic Order of knights had by the force of the
sword converted to the true faith much of heathen Prussia; and the Poles and
Lithuanians had nominally embraced Christianity when their king, Jagello, christened Ladislas at his baptism, had married
the beautiful Hedwig, the youngest daughter of the late mighty King of Hungary,
Louis the Great, who died in 1382.
The three most powerful kingdoms of Western Europe,
England, France, and Germany, had by the year 1380 fallen to three boys, each
of whom succeeded a firm and powerful sovereign who had done much to win for
his country the position which it held and the respect which it inspired. In
1377 Richard the Second, born without a skin, and nourished in the skins of
goats, had succeeded his grandfather at the age of ten; in Germany, Wenzel had
at the age of sixteen, in 1378, succeeded his father Charles the Fourth; and in
France, two years later, Charles the Sixth had succeeded his father Charles the
Fifth, deservedly known as Charles le Sage. Edward the Third of England was a
warrior who had brought great gain and glory to his own country, and who had
wrought untold woe on France by prosecuting his claim to the French crown; but
the war had languished since the Peace of Bretigny (1360), and Charles the Fifth, by his policy of masterly inactivity and his
care and economy, had done much toward the recovery of France. Even after his
death and up to the close of the century peace continued for the most part
unbroken; and the untiring industry and patient thrift, which then as now
characterized the French peasant, began to work an improvement; agriculture and
industry recovered, the barns which had been burned down were rebuilt, the
vines were replanted, the fields were again covered with crops. But the
improvement was not for long; the old reign of misery was to recommence with
the cruel civil war which broke out between the Orleanists and the Armagnacs.
The three young kings had each a hard game to play.
Richard and Charles were left under the tutelage of their uncles, and each of
their uncles had his own separate selfish policy. Each of the three boys was
handsome and lovable; each at times displayed a kingly vigour;
but each was doomed to give way to periods of inaction and to bouts of
self-indulgence. Richard the Second was beautiful and pleasure-loving, like his
mother, the Fair Maid of Kent. Charles the Sixth loved his people, and was
loved by them his whole life through; but he was ruined and maddened by
sensuality and voluptuousness, by the nights and days of feasting and
debauchery into which he was plunged by his uncles. Marriage produced no
improvement, but rather deepened the evil. His wife’s court was described by
the Augustine monk, Legrand, as the court of Venus, served by drunkenness and
debauchery, and where night was turned into day by the most dissolute dances.
The continued tax on his strength broke him down. A melancholy madness seized
the King in 1392, which rendered him incapable of government for lengthened
intervals thereafter; it was attributed by the people to sorcery. It was
recognized by all that the King of France was but a madman with lucid
intervals. He was betrayed by his wife, the beautiful, but soon somewhat
corpulent, Isabel of Bavaria, but was so fairly entreated by his “sweet
sister”, Valentine Visconti, that all men deemed that she by sorcery had bereft
him of reason. The King's madness not only delivered the kingdom to the selfish
intrigues of his uncles, but also introduced to active life his younger
brother, the handsome Louis of Orleans, the inconstant husband of the beauteous
Milanese, a far more attractive and brilliant figure than the Duke of Berri or
the Duke of Burgundy, but equally devoted to his own selfish aims, and equally
regardless of the welfare of France. From this time the kingdom was a prey, in
the intervals of Charles’s insanity, to his uncles and his brother, and the
factions were already forming which were to become notorious as the Burgundians
and Armagnacs.
In Germany the astute Emperor Charles the Fourth had
been preeminently a peacemaker, and had succeeded in establishing the imperial
authority over the numberless particles which made up the grand, but ill-assorted,
Holy Romano-Germanic Empire. When Charles died, his son Wenzel reigned well and
tolerably wisely for the first ten years, although he sacrificed his own
interest and the interest of the Empire in helping his half-brother Sigismund,
whom he loved, but who repaid his love and sacrifice with the basest
ingratitude; it was after the first ten years of his reign had elapsed that
Wenzel gave way to slothfulness and drink. It was while he was thus inefficient
that, at the further side of Europe, the Osmanlis had entered the continent,
and the Greek Empire was tottering to its fall; the Emperor Manuel was a
suppliant for aid at the courts of Venice, Paris, and London. It was the
recognized task of the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire to defend Christendom against
the Turk; but the work now fell on the shoulders of the stalwart young warrior,
Sigismund of Hungary. He tried to make headway against the misbelievers; a
crusade was preached, and the King raised a mighty army; he was joined by the
flower of the French chivalry under John of Nevers, eldest son of the Duke of
Burgundy; by the Germans under Count Rupert of the Palatine, Count Hermann of Cilly, John of Nuernberg, and
others; by contingents from Poland and Wallachia; by crusaders from England
under their future king; by the fleets of Venice and the Chevaliers of Rhodes.
Through the impetuous folly and vanity of the French, who set at nought the superior knowledge and advice of Sigismund, the
whole of this magnificent army was defeated at the battle of Nicopolis (1396) with such overwhelming loss that Eastern
Europe appeared to lie at the mercy of the infidel.
Four years later the succession to the Holy Roman
Empire, the highest temporal power then known to the civilized world, was in
dispute. The story will be told more in detail later on. It is only necessary
to refer to it here to complete a brief sketch of the state of Europe at the
end of the fourteenth century. Wenzel’s apathy and disregard of the affairs of
the Empire had disgusted certain of the Electors; he had neglected imperial
interests in Flanders, he had sold the duchy of Milan for a price, he had not
terminated the Great Schism which afflicted the Church; therefore the four
Electors of the Rhine, the other three holding aloof, called upon him to appear
and to answer these charges. It was true that Wenzel had fallen woefully from
his first estate. Originally of a good disposition and most carefully educated
by his father, he had allowed himself to fall under the influence of low-born favourites, and had given way to sloth and indecision; he
had become a sot, plagued with a thirst which was popularly attributed to the
dregs of poison lurking in his system; he had sold the freedom of a city for
four hundred tons of wine annually; he had loved with an engrossing, inordinate
love Bohemian lasses and Bohemian beer; he had proved himself, and he was
conscious that he was, utterly incapable of managing the affairs of a great
Empire. But he was tenacious of his dignity, and he could appoint a regent to do
the work. The three archbishops of the Rhine and the Count Palatine met at the
little white chapel which still overlooks the confluence of the Lahn and the Rhine, and they solemnly deposed Wenzel; next
day the three archbishops, one holding the proxy of the Count Palatine, crossed
the river to Rense, and at the Koenigstuhl under the walnut-trees, on the left bank of the Rhine—the platform which had
been built by Charles the Fourth as being within call of four electorates, the
platform which was used on this occasion and never again— they proclaimed
Rupert, Count Palatine, to be henceforth King of the Romans and future Emperor
of the Holy Roman Empire. Wenzel refused to recognize the deposition or to give
up the regalia; there were henceforth two kings in Germany, and a schism was
produced which lasted through the first ten years of the fifteenth century.
Italy was a land apart, utterly different from every
other country in Europe. In culture, in intellect, in imagination she was far
ahead of them all. The old classical authors were read, loved, and imitated.
Where other countries were making puny, childlike efforts toward art and
culture, the endeavours of Italy were great, almost
Titanic. Dante, Petrarch, and Boccaccio, three names to resound for ages, had
appeared and had passed away, taking their seats among the immortals. Cimabue
and Giotto had founded the modern school of Italian painting. Nicolo Pisano had
carved the famous pulpit in the Baptistery at Pisa and had left a school of
sculptors behind him. In architecture, in which the preeminence of Italy was
perhaps less marked, it is enough to mention such buildings as the Duomo at
Florence, the Cathedral of Milan, the Doges’ Palace at Venice, the Palazzo Municipale of Piacenza. But if the upper classes of Italy
were far in advance of those of other countries in culture and intellect, they
fell far behind them in morality and their conduct of life. Public and private
morality alike were utterly dissociated from religion among the upper classes,
from superstition among the lower, and had practically ceased to exist.
Political assassination, which roused such horror and called for such
long-winded defence in France, whence it was
ultimately referred to the Council of Constance, was taken as a matter of course
in Italy; if a man was in the way, it was only natural, if it were possible, to
remove him by poison or the stiletto. Treachery was of common occurrence, both
in public and in private life; loyalty was a plant of slow growth in Italian
soil. Female honour was lightly esteemed in many
nations, but nowhere more lightly than in Italy; rape was an ordinary incident
of everyday life. The Italian nobility unhappily lacked two motives which were
all-powerful in other nations, the point of honour and the fear of God. Chivalry had never struck root in Italy, and the
chivalrous sense of honour was unknown. Nor did their
men of thought turn to religion; art, scholarship, political science, and
philosophy occupied their minds, but towards religious questions they evinced
an intellectual apathy; they feared to sin against the law of culture more than
against the law of Christ. It is not wonderful that under these conditions vice
was rampant. It was as easy to sin in Italy as to put on your shoes or slippers
in London. State officers maintained brothels; priests acted as panders and
kept houses of bad repute. The courtesans of Venice were noted through Europe
for their numbers, their beauty, their grace and accomplishments, their
manifold arts of dalliance. The Italian required the fascination of the fancy
to be added to the allurement of the senses; he endeavoured to spiritualize abominable vices. But while in all these points Italy was the
shame of Europe, in other points she was its exemplar. The middle-classes
believed before all things in money and in money-making. They were shrewd men
of business; and the nobles did not disdain to take their part in commerce,
navigation, and industry. The merchants of Venice and Genoa traded not only
with the Levant, but also with South Germany and other parts of inland Europe.
Ancona and Rimini on the eastern coast, Pisa and Amalfi on the western, were
merchant ports of considerable importance. Milan and Florence were noted for
their banking-houses; the Bardi, the Peruzzi, and
others financed Edward the Third of England and the King of Sicily as the same
houses had financed Charles of Anjou. The commercial integrity of the Italian
bankers stood very high throughout Europe. It is unnecessary to do more than
mention the industrial guilds of Florence, the silk- weavers of Lucca, the armourers of Milan, the workers in oil and in wool, and the
like. The Italian cities had succeeded in doing what the German cities were
striving hard to accomplish : they had won a right of independent self-development,
but the right was marred by the despotisms and tyrannies under which they had
in many instances fallen; it was also distinguished by the fact that the
Italian cities had absorbed into their rule the surrounding country in a manner
which the German Free States never attempted. The people had thus enjoyed
centuries of wealth and civilization in great cities while the northern races
had remained in a state of comparative poverty and barbarism. With respect to
the lower classes, the dictum of a celebrated scholar may safely be accepted,
that if the artists of Italy, “not few of whom were born in cottages and
educated in workshops, could feel and think and fashion as they did, we cannot
doubt that their mothers and their friends were pure and pious, and that the
race which gave them to the world was not depraved. . . . Italian art alone
suffices to prove”, says Symonds, “that the immorality of the age descended
from the upper stratum of society downwards”. Italian soldiers and the lower
classes generally were not so ignorant and gross as those of England; they were
less cruel and inhuman than those of Spain ; they were not gluttons and
drunkards as were those of Germany ; they took no delight in brawls and
bloodshed as did the Switzers; they were more sober
and courteous than the French.
In its political development also Italy differed from
the rest of Europe. In the twelfth century the whole of Upper and Central Italy
was split up into a number of little republics, somewhat resembling the cities
of ancient Greece or the free states of Germany. The passion for
self-development was everywhere the ruling motive. They were impatient of
control by Pope or Emperor; they recognized that they formed part of the Holy
Roman Empire, and they sought no other or closer bond of union. Each city
desired to develop its own particular industry or commerce, to organize itself
on its own social lines, to expand on its own political type; availing itself
of its existing municipal machinery, it sought to secure independence and to
place the government in the hands of its own citizens. But disturbing forces,
factions within and wars without, entered and played havoc, until little by
little each republic in turn became weaker, more confused in policy, more
mistrustful of itself and its own citizens, more subdivided into petty but
ineradicable factions, until at last it fell a prey either to some foreign
potentate or to the Church, or else to an ambitious family among its members.
By the end of the fourteenth century the ruling powers
in Italy had become reduced to five in number. The Republic of Genoa, through
fear of the Visconti of Milan, had in 1396 surrendered its liberty to the King
of France, and was no longer independent ; the French Constable Boucicaut was lord of Genoa and of the sea front from the
Western Riviera round to Livorno (Leghorn). The Duke of Milan and the Republic
of Venice divided between them the northern part of Italy; the Republic of
Florence and the Papal States occupied the centre;
the Kingdom of Naples formed the south of the peninsula.
Naples also had been and still was the scene of a
disputed succession. Charles of Anjou had been called in by the Pope nearly a
century and a half earlier (1262) to expel the Hohenstaufen; he had won for
himself the kingdom of the Two Sicilies; but his oppression and cruelty had
driven the Sicilians to revolt, and after the “Vespers” (1282) Sicily was lost
and Naples alone remained to the House of Anjou. In the city of Naples itself,
Frederic the Second, the grandson of Barbarossa, had built him a lordly palace,
and here Charles of Anjou, and his son and grandson after him, reigned in
undisputed succession. The grandson, Robert, left a granddaughter, Joanna, who
succeeded him. She married her second cousin, Andrew; but Andrew, not content
with the position of a prince-consort, claimed the crown in his own right, on
the ground that his grandfather, Charles Martel, had been the elder brother of
his wife’s grandfather, Robert. This unfortunate claim cost Andrew his life;
and Joanna married Louis of Tarentum, her father’s first cousin, who was
suspected with Joanna herself of having murdered the luckless Andrew. Sixteen
years later Louis died, and Joanna married again; and finally, in 1376, she
married for the fourth time, but she had no children by any of her husbands.
Her heir-presumptive was her second cousin, Charles of Durazzo; but the Papal
Schism had now commenced, dividing Christendom, and often royal families, into
two contending families. This had happened in the case of the Anjou family; the
opposition of Pope Urban to Queen Joanna had caused an important change in
Neapolitan politics. The Queen, when the Pope insulted her husband, went over
to the French side; whereas Charles of Durazzo was an adherent of Urban. To
spite Charles and to defeat his expectations, Joanna, on the 29th June 1380,
made a will, whereby she adopted Louis, Duke of Anjou, brother of Charles the
Fifth of France, as her heir in Italy, in Sicily, and in France. Clement the
Seventh lost no time in confirming her donation. The King’s death prevented the
Duke from starting at once to take possession of his new kingdom; he had first
of all to rob France of the necessary funds for the enterprise. Pope Urban
wrote to Louis of Hungary, urging him to punish Joanna for the murder of her
former husband; the aged monarch passed the task on to his nephew, Charles of
Durazzo. The adoption by Joanna, letting in the second house of Anjou, provided
abundant trouble for Italy both in the near and in the distant future. Charles
accepted his task with alacrity; he invaded Naples, defeated the Queen’s
husband, captured Joanna herself—she was murdered shortly afterwards—and was
crowned King of Naples in 1382, to the joy of the Neapolitans, who preferred
their own countryman as Pope to the Butcher of Cesena. In the same year Duke
Louis of Anjou, having provided himself with money and men, brought a
formidable army to support his claim; but delay, disease, and starvation played
havoc with his troops, and in 1384 the Duke himself died. Charles of Durazzo was
now firmly established as King of Naples. Unfortunately he was offered the
crown of Hungary; he went to that country, gained the crown, but was
assassinated in June 1386. This left the claim to the crown of Naples to be
fought out between two boys, Ladislas, the son of Charles, who was ten years
old when his father died, and Louis the Second of Anjou, who was three years
the junior of Ladislas. Louis was represented by his mother, Marie de Bretagne,
who was unable to do anything for the time to advance her son's claim, which
remained in abeyance.
The foregoing sketch of the state of Europe at the
time of the Great Schism has shown that the predominant place throughout was
taken by war. War, bloodshed, and rapine, violence and disorder, were the
glaring evils of the time; all classes suffered, but the lowest suffered more
terribly than others. Peace and quietude was what they coveted, but what they
found it difficult to obtain. The clerical greeting, “Pax Vobiscum” whose full
meaning we in this country find it difficult to realize, sounded a mockery to
those poor souls, whose crops were pillaged, whose cattle were harried or
maimed, whose houses were burned over their heads. War was the occupation and
the sport of the knightly class; when real war was not to be had, they
delighted in the mimic war of the joust and the tournament. But the knights
formed only one class of the community.
Society in the Middle Ages was divided, roughly
speaking, into four main divisions or classes. There were the knights and their
retainers, who dwelt in castles and strongholds; there were the merchants and
tradesmen, with their dependants, in the walled towns
and cities; there were the agriculturists, with their labourers,
who lived for the most part in wattled huts, clustered around the church in
walled villages, or gathered together close under the protection of their lord,
spiritual or temporal; and there were the clerks (clerici)
or clergy, who dwelt partly in clergy-houses, monasteries, or other buildings,
protected by their sanctity, and partly also in the larger cities and towns. To
this rough classification there were many exceptions, such as the Jews, the lay
lawyers, the sea-going folk, the wayfarers, and others; but for the population
generally the division holds good. Men were born into the first three classes
and took their places therein by right of birth. But with the clerks it was
otherwise. A man was sometimes called a clerk because he was a scholar; but the
clergy, properly speaking, were men who had received orders, minor or sacred.
The minor orders1 were those conferred on acolytes, readers, doorkeepers, and
exorcists; the greater or sacred orders began with the sub-diaconate; and upon
all those who had received them the rule of celibacy was, from the time of Gregory
the Seventh, enforced. This rule was not of divine institution, it was a rule
of the Church, and it was bitterly opposed at first; but long before the end of
the fourteenth century it had ceased to be contested. The ranks of the clergy
were therefore recruited by voluntary enlistment from the other three classes.
Voluntary enlistment implies deliberate choice, generally of the volunteer,
sometimes of his forebears; and a deliberate choice implies a certain amount of
intelligence. For this reason, and because of their education and the demands
which their duties cast upon them, the clergy formed everywhere the intelligent
class in the State.
Among the population generally the grossest ignorance
abounded; superstition trenched on idolatry; the time might almost be fitly
called “the Devil's Reign”. Men of light and leading did things then which
would be incomprehensible now. Popes and condottieri generals consulted the
stars; magicians baptized their books in the lake at the foot of Mons Pilatus;
the learned and reverend doctors of the University of Paris, when at their
wits’ end, hesitated not to consult certain wise women, foolish simpletons who
saw visions and dreamed dreams. But although there was much that was ignoble
and debasing, there was much also of the childlike and picturesque, much that
found great joy in the mystery plays and in that spirit of mimicry and
imitation necessary for the education of an unlettered people, much that still
lingers among the peasantry of Europe everywhere. In the early part of the
century there had been a considerable amount of prosperity even among the
peasantry. In France the agriculturists had been exceptionally numerous and
exceptionally well off; they fared well and their farms were well stocked; the
beggars had white bread given them, and the peasantry spread clean napery for
their friends and ate their fowls larded. In Germany also, when there was no
war in his vicinity, the peasant was well-to-do; he dressed respectably and had
money in his pocket; he became the laughingstock of his city compeers because
of his bearing and his independence. In England a little later the beggars were
no longer content with their former rations; they demanded bread of clean wheat
and beer of the best and brownest; the landless labourer despised penny-ale or cabbage that was a night old, and asked for fresh meat
and for fish freshly fried. And together with plenty of this rough comfort and
coarse enjoyment there was among all classes, in those days when all the world
was one religion, much good fellowship, much cheery intercourse and
camaraderie. Men crossed and greeted one another at their daily avocations,
they mingled in friendly rivalry in their sports and games, they prayed
together in one church, they met in the evening at the alehouse; quite apart
from guilds and fellowships, there reigned a spirit of goodwill and
brotherhood. Rudolf of Habsburg would drink, mug in hand, to the burghers of
Thuringia; Edward the Third would dance with the citizens1 wives at Guildhall;
Saint Louis of France would dispense justice under an oak at Compiegne.
In the middle of the century came the Black Death, the
most terrible scourge which has ever desolated humanity in historic times; it
swept through nearly every part of Europe, and carried off here one-third,
there one-half, in some places two-thirds of the inhabitants. The fearful
depopulation went far to revolutionize society; the Black Death shook the bonds
of custom and introduced the reign of contract. The shortness of labourers after the calamity gave to every workman,
agricultural or other, a market value; and he soon learned no longer to be
content with the old customary valuation placed on his services. There was
everywhere a demand for labour, and he could leave
his old home and get work at better wages elsewhere. In England wages doubled;
they were everywhere in excess of the statute rate, but employers were willing
to risk the liability and to go on paying: the labourers worked only eight hours a day; they throve under their guilds and
trades-unions; the peasants began gradually to acquire land. Very different was
the state of things in France. That country had sunk from the height of
prosperity to the depth of misery. The Hundred Years’ War had begun, and in the
intervals of the war the country suffered from the ravages of the Free
Companies. The English and their allies among the Bretons and the Navarrese had
committed frightful atrocities, but Frenchman and foreigner alike, clerk and
layman, combined to pillage the unhappy land of France. The grandes compagnies were composed of miscreants of all nations, bands with the
discipline of an army and the instinct of brigands, commanded by chiefs like
Robert Knolles or Hugh Calverley, like Olivier de Clisson or Eustache d'Anberchicourt,
or even by the priests like Jacques d'Aigregeuille,
the curé of Mesvres, or the
Archpriest Arnaud de Cervolles. These ruffians spared
neither man, woman, nor child in their fury and lust; they burned and despoiled
houses, sacred and profane : indeed, after the castles, the buildings most
capable of fortification and defence were the
cathedrals, churches, and abbeys, and these were therefore invariably the
object of attack. King Charles the Fifth, by his wise economy and his policy of
masterly inactivity, had done much to restore the credit of his country, but he
could not recompense his peasantry for the sufferings they had endured. After
the insurrection of the Jacques had been quelled, the country abode in
comparative peace. In Germany also the Emperor Charles the Fourth did his best
to keep the peace among the numberless heterogeneous elements of which the
Empire was composed, and for the most part he succeeded. But everywhere through
Western Europe toward the end of the fourteenth century a spirit of popular discontent
had been rising among the people, and it gradually culminated in insurrections
and outbreaks. In 1378 the “Ciompi” or wooden shoes,
the proletariat of Florence, rose in a half-revolution, half-strike, to obtain
reduction of taxes and better terms of employment: they burned the palaces of
the nobles and introduced a reign of terror, during which the city was given
over to outrage and pillage. In Flanders the “white bonnets”, the democratic
party, rallied in Ghent around the bourgeois Philip van Artevelde; they marched
victoriously against Bruges, but were mown down in their thousands by the
French at Roosebeke (1382). In England the peasants
throughout the eastern counties, from Norfolk round to Sussex, revolted,
thousands of them marched on London, and demanded from their King the abolition
of serfdom (1381). At Rouen the coppersmiths and others rose; they elected as
their king a rich draper, a big man but poor of spirit; they opened the gaols, pillaged the houses of former mayors, tore up
charters (1382). In the same year the Parisians rose against the tax-gatherers
and the Jews; they seized twelve thousand leaden mallets from the Hotel de
Ville, and for three days the Maillotins were masters
of the city. In Auvergne the “Tuchins”, or
dog-killers, appeared; they were recruited from the poorest of the poor, and
nothing was safe from them. In Languedoc the peasants and the men of the
faubourgs, reduced to the utmost misery by the war and taxation, rose in fury
against the nobles and the priests, killing all who had not hard and horny
hands like their own (1382). Something resembling an international feeling of
sympathy among the working classes had sprung up; for the first time, says
Henri Martin, the populace in the different nations of the West experienced the
instinct of the identity of their cause, and an electric movement of sympathy
ran from the banks of the Seine and the Scheldt to those of the Thames. In 1386
the Swiss peasants defeated Leopold of Habsburg in the disastrous battle of Sempach; and next year the war, simmering since 1379, broke
out between the Swabian cities and the Dukes of Bavaria, and between the towns
on the Rhine and the Count Palatine. Most sad were the results: for miles round
the cities and fortresses the villages were utterly destroyed, and not a church
nor a house remained standing. There was at this time, as Michelet has said,
the profoundest trouble throughout Christendom; it seemed as if universal war
were commencing between the low and the great.
It was in the middle of all this horror and misery
that the Great Schism had begun. Its existence was universally admitted and
universally deplored. It was everywhere felt to be necessary in the interest of
Christendom to put an end to the disunion as speedily as possible. “Divine
Providence”, Frederic Barbarossa had once said, “has specially appointed the
Roman Empire to prevent the continuance of schism in the Church”. The Emperor,
when he uttered this axiom, was undoubtedly the most powerful monarch in
Europe. But when Charles the Fourth died there was no Emperor; the King of the
Romans was a mere boy of sixteen. Charles had recognized Urban; he had
commended his cause to his son; and all Europe expected, and the Pope at Rome
most anxiously hoped, that Wenzel would forthwith proceed to Rome to be crowned
Emperor, and that the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire would thus proclaim to
all Christendom that Urban the Sixth was the rightful and legitimate Pope and
that Clement was a usurper. But there were obstacles in the way. In 1381
indeed, Wenzel and King Louis of Hungary sent an embassy to Paris to endeavour to convert the French court to the Roman
obedience; but the result was a foregone conclusion, as was that of the
counter-embassy sent two years later from Paris to Prague. The journey to Rome
was imperative in the interest of Urban. Difficulties in the Empire,
negotiations with Hungary and Austria, the strife over the archbishopric of
Mainz and over the Swabian League, occupied Wenzel in the earlier years of his
reign ; and when in 1382 he announced his intention of making the journey to
Rome, the death of Louis of Hungary and the consequent advancement of the
claims of his half-brother Sigismund to the crowns of Hungary and Poland
delayed the project for some years further. At this time in his reign Wenzel
practically gave up his chance of wearing the golden crown in order to further
the interests of Sigismund, and bitterly he was repaid for his sacrifice. The
coronation of Wenzel and his acknowledgment of Urban were not to be. An
Emperor was not thus to put an end to the Schism. Some other means must be
sought.
From the very beginning the plan of a general council
had been broached. Before the election of Clement, the Italian cardinals, with
the assent of Urban, had proposed that the question of the validity of his
election should be referred to a council; two of them repeated the suggestion
afterward at Nice. The Florentines, when the Duke of Anjou tried to win them to
Clement, replied that they had already recognized Urban as their Pope, and that
they must stand by their decision until a general council decided that they
were wrong. King John of Castile, in his letter of the 20th September 1379;
advised Charles the Fifth of France to refer the matter to a general council, this
being the plan, he said, which all Christendom approved. The most eloquent and
persuasive advocate at this time of a general council was undoubtedly Henry of Langenstein, the vice-chancellor of the University of
Paris, who (1381) held that God had in His mercy permitted the Schism in order
to bring about the much needed reform in the Church, for which a general
council was necessary. He was the first to urge that the divine right of the
Pope must itself be subordinate to the welfare of the Church; his teaching
fashioned the thoughts of Jean Gerson, who when Pierre d'Ailly was promoted to a bishopric, succeeded to the chancellorship of the University
in 1390. King Charles the Fifth was himself in correspondence with the warmest
adherents of the scheme of a council; but despite the embassy of the Duke of
Luxemburg, despite the arguments of Henry of Langenstein and Conrad of Gelnhausen, the King of France died
with the assertion on his lips that he still believed Clement the Seventh to be
the true shepherd of the Church, although he so far wavered as to admit that he
would have obeyed the finding of a general council had it gone against him.
But the chief argument against a council was that
neither Urban nor Clement nor the cardinals would hear of it. There were indeed
almost insuperable difficulties in the way of its adoption at that time. There
was the difficulty as to the place of convocation amid the wars and jarring
interests of Europe. There was the difficulty as to the mode of convocation :
it was the duty of the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire to convoke a council,
but Wenzel had not yet received the golden crown; and if a council could not
meet without the consent of the Pope, then both Popes and cardinals refused to
act. There was the further difficulty of enforcing the decrees of the council
when they had been made. The project was, at the commencement of the Great
Schism, repeatedly made; it was as often, because of the manifest difficulty
and dilatoriness attending its execution, deliberately discarded. The plan was
especially favoured by the Universities of Paris,
Oxford, and Prague; and the year after the death of King Charles the Fifth, the
University of Paris returned to their scheme. Pierre d'Ailly received a respectful hearing, but when Jean Rousse, a Doctor of Abbeville, was
commissioned by the University to lay the matter formally before the royal
council, the Duke of Anjou, who had welcomed the election of Clement far more
heartily than his brother, and who looked to the new Pope to finance him in his
design on the crown of Naples, not only did not allow the orator to speak, but
sent armed men by night to seize him in his bed, and consigned the Doctor to
the blackest cachot of the Chatelet. For several
years the University was reduced to ignominious silence. The way of fact, the
expulsion of the opponent by brute force, was at this time the only solution of
the difficulty which found favour at any court of
Europe.
On Christian Europe the Schism produced its natural
result. Scholars began to doubt and inquire; divisions of opinion and heresy
speedily appeared. The spirit of scepticism as to the
Pope’s authority and infallibility had indeed appeared in Germany in the days
of Louis of Bavaria, when Pope John the Twenty-second, in his quarrel with the
King, had laid the land under interdict and had introduced strife into many
bishoprics, when he had fallen foul of the Franciscans because of their
doctrine of the poverty of Christ and had himself come under suspicion because
of his theory of the Beatific Vision, when the sect of the Free Thinkers gained
ground and the Mystics taught personal communion with God—all these things
turned men’s eyes toward the shortcomings of the Church and opened their minds
to inquiry and scepticism. The critical spirit dated
from the days of the Babylonish Captivity at Avignon. Michael of Cesena had
taught that the Pope may err, but that a Council of the Universal Church cannot
err. William of Ockham believed that the Pope may err, that a general council
may also fall into error, and that infallibility is to be found only in the
Scriptures and the beliefs of the Universal Church. Marsiglio of Padua had
published the Defensor Pacis, a work which in many
points might be accepted almost without reserve by a Protestant today : its
teaching was, as has been already shown, that the domains of the spiritual and
civil powers were separate, that the former had no coercive jurisdiction, that
the Catholic Faith rests on Holy Scripture alone, that when doubts arise as to
the meaning of the sacred Word, these can only be settled by a general council
of the faithful, on which clergy and laity alike have seats. The Schism
profoundly shocked John Wycliffe; he saw each rival Pope fulminating
excommunications against the other; and he speedily came to the conclusion that
the Papacy itself was the great evil, that it was the poison of the Church.
Like the Spiritual successors of Francis of Assisi, he believed in the absolute
poverty of the clergy; he believed also in dominion founded on grace. These
were doctrines which, carried to their logical conclusions, might have
important political bearings; his opposition to the Church was most clearly
evinced by his theory as to transubstantiation; he denied the orthodox
doctrine, he refused to believe that a priest could by a daily miracle
transform the wafer and wine into flesh and blood. Wycliffe thus became a
heretic, and a dangerous heretic. But heresy, if not engendered, had been
fostered and increased by the Schism. As a German historian has put it, the
Captivity at Avignon, followed by the Schism, brought on the Reformation.
Furthermore, it was the Schism which discredited the papal dignity and tended
to destroy all reverence for the supreme head of the Church. In England it
strengthened immensely the reforming movement, and made entire distrust,
defiance even, of a Pope seem not merely a patriotic but a religious duty.
Christ’s vineyard in England had been beautiful and fruitful, sang an old Latin
poet, but now the Lord’s vineyard was laid waste; “O now, plague-stricken land,
that didst team with all sound learning free from the taint of heresy, stranger
to all error, exempt from all deception : now thou rankest as the chief in all
schism, discord, madness”. Wycliffe had sown the seed; the fruit soon appeared.
Oxford, London, Leicester, and Bristol became centres of Wycliffite influence. Nicholas of Hereford, Philip Repyngdon,
and John Aston were summoned before the archbishop to answer for their advocacy
of the new doctrines. A few years later several fellows were expelled from
Queen’s College, Oxford, because of their sympathy with the teaching of the
reformer. Even at court the gentle Queen Anne, elder sister of Sigismund, was
not unfriendly to the new teaching; she encouraged the use of the open Bible.
The Bohemian scholars who followed her to the English Court took back with them
afterwards to their native land the books and teaching of John Wycliffe.
Far more important to the Popes than any such
downright heresy, which could be met with and fought outright, was the
anti-papal, almost latitudinarian, spirit which had taken possession of that
stronghold of orthodoxy, the University of Paris. The sight of two Popes in
Christendom raised the question whether the Pope was after all the real head of
the Church, whether the real head was not Christ; if the Pope was merely His
earthly representative, might there not be two or three, or ten or twelve
Popes, an independent Pope for every different country, with its own
independent Church? Such speculations indulged in by theologians were fatal to
an undivided papal supremacy, but luckily they found no response in the civil
powers. In the University of Paris itself, however, they were rife, and she was
the acknowledged champion of the faith, to whose dictates kings, and even
Popes, were wont to defer. For the University of Paris was the first seminary
of theology in Europe, she was a cosmopolitan institution, with scholars from
all countries, speaking the cosmopolitan tongue, Latin; and at this time she,
the venerated mother of Saint Thomas Aquinas and of William of Ockham, had in
her midst a crowd of eminent theologians. There was Henry of Hesse of Langenstein, the great advocate of the scheme for a general
council, who left Paris in 1382; there was Matthias of Janow,
who was later Prebendary of Prague ; there was Pierre Plaoul,
who was sent on an embassy to Germany; there was the celebrated Pierre d'Ailly, who regarded the person of neither Pope, who was
also an advocate for a general council, but who, in his advocacy thereof, bided
his time, waiting until 1407 for a favourable opportunity; there were the three noted disciples of Pierre d'Ailly,
Gilles des Champs, the sovereign Doctor of Theology, Jean Charlier de Gerson, the Christlike teacher, and Nicholas de Clamanges,
the Cicero of his time. These were men who would exert a profound influence on
the progress of negotiations during the Schism; and it is important, therefore,
to grasp the nature of their thoughts and predilections. Perhaps the most noteworthy
phase was the revolt in the bosom of the University itself of the despised and
neglected theologians against the canon and the civil law. This revolt was
necessarily anti-papal, for the Popes were almost invariably lawyers, doctors
of the canon or of both civil and canon law, with a lawyer's liking for the
clear-cut intelligible wording of the decretals, with a lawyer's dislike for
the subtle metaphysical distinctions of the mediaeval scholastic theology.
Moreover, Clement the Seventh, when he became Pope at Avignon, took no thought
for the Church but to suck the marrow from her bones, and troubled not at all
about the professors at Paris. It is small wonder, then, that an anti- papal
spirit grew among them. Its position as the champion of orthodoxy gave the
University prominence, and lent to the teaching of its professors an importance
and a weight which did not attach to those of Wycliffe or of Hus. Hence arose
during the continuance of the Schism the preponderating influence of men such
as D'Ailly and Gerson, whose views it is important to
understand. The theology of D'Ailly may serve as an
example.
Born in 1350, the son of humble but honest parents, Colard and Petronilla, a patriotic Frenchman all his life
through, Pierre d'Ailly went to the College of
Navarre at the University of Paris; when he was twenty-two years of age, he was
chosen proctor for the French Nation at the University, and took his degree as
Doctor in 1380. It was then that he published his theological tractate on the
Church. He was a middle man, standing cautiously between the two parties; he
had imbibed the teaching of Pierre Dubois and John of Paris, of Marsiglio of
Padua and William of Ockham; but he saw that the Church had not been utterly
overthrown by Philip the Fair, and his liberalism was moderated. Above all, he
was a Frenchman and a Gallican, a Gallican before the time of Bossuet, a
Gallican before the Pragmatic Sanction of Bourges. He was too conservative to
belong to the party directly opposed to the Church, and too close a follower of
the new philosophy to belong to the orthodox. In philosophy he was a
nominalist, and nominalism had the advantage of drawing a sharp line between
matters of the faith and of the intellect, of confining the reason to the
things of which consciousness was taken, mediately or immediately, through the
senses and the intellect, and of relegating the higher truths of religion to a
supernatural mysticism. But through it all D'Ailly was essentially anti-papal. The Church, in his view, was built on Faith, Hope,
and Charity. Faith, inspired faith, infusa fides, was
the evidence of things not seen, the intellectual assent to the catholic
verities; it provided the set stones of the building, of which Hope raised the
unsurmountable walls, and to which the Love of God and one’s neighbour formed
the all-embracing roof: the truly spiritual were the inner walls, the preachers
and teachers were the windows of the building, the portals were the truth of
God’s word, and the pillars were the men of action, the shepherds and leaders.
Thus was Holy Church an organized whole, the fellowship of Christians based on
Holy Writ, perfect but not yet perfected, for believers are still united with
Christ in building up the House of God. There is no mention of the Pope here; it
is the Church which is all-important; she is the Holy Mother who reconciles men
with God; her priests administer the sacraments which build up inspired faith;
and when the sinner through fear dare not betake himself directly to Christ, he
turns trustfully to the arms of the merciful mediator, the Church. D'Ailly set a high value on the written word of the Bible,
he was energetic in favour of a correct translation
of the original; but he did not accept the written word as his criterion, he
regarded it as merely a sign or symbol of the true law, and as a nominalist he
looked through the word to find the underlying idea; he found his touchstone in
inspired faith, backed by conclusive argument. “The law of Christ”, he says,
“may be most properly defined as inspired faith, or its action, by which
rational man assents to the truths of Christian doctrine”; the law may indeed
be enunciated in words, but it may also be known inwardly as the knowledge of
good and evil. Holy Church he takes to be the community of believers; its
foundations are the words and promises of Christ, who is the true Head of the
Church. The Church is not founded on timid, frightened Peter, but on Christ;
“for other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Christ Jesus”.
There are pillars of the Church of the second order, among which is Peter, the
rock on which Christ built His Church, so that the gates of Hell shall not
prevail against it. But Peter obtained thereby no pre-eminence, seeing that all
believers rest equally on Christ's words; nor was the promise that his faith
should not fail made to him personally, but to the Church committed to him. So,
too, Christ’s promise to His disciples to be with them to the end of the world
is a promise made to the Church of faith for believers. D'Ailly did not believe in Saint Thomas Aquinas’s doctrine of the infallibility of the
Pope, any more than did Saint Bernard of Clairvaux or the Electors at Rense, or John the Twenty-second when he claimed to correct
the errors of his predecessors. He pointed out how the Decretal of Gratian had
been corrected by Gregory the Ninth on the ground that some of the contents
were superfluous and others contradictory, and how Boniface had made further
additions, bolstering up some parts and cutting down others; he urged that the
Canon Law was not necessary to the Church’s existence, for it had been said
long before decretals were known that Christ was the end of the law for
righteousness to every one that believeth. In his
view as to a general council D'Ailly resembled
William of Ockham; he avoided the recognition of its infallibility even in
matters of faith; he thought it possible that such a council might err, and
that the knowledge of the truth might be restricted to a few poor simple souls,
as at the time of the Crucifixion it had been restricted to the Virgin Mary. In
practice, however, D'Ailly was not troubled by these
subtle distinctions; he was ready to refer the termination of the Schism to a
select committee chosen from both obediences—an
impracticable scheme which he soon abandoned. He was clear above all things on
the two points that neither the Church at Rome nor the Pope was essential to
salvation. Frenchmen who had embraced the cause of Clement were unanimous on
the former point; and as to the latter, D'Ailly,
while admitting that a human body without a head is dead, contended that the
Church was the mystical body of Christ, and that even without an earthly head
She would remain alive through faith and grace, seeing that She had a high
priest in heaven, even Christ, who was head over all things to the Church.
There is much that is mystical in the reasoning, there is much that is
apparently capricious in the way in which a text is taken now literally and now anagogically, but the trend of the theology of D'Ailly and also of Jean Gerson was distinctly anti-papal.