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chapter 12
THE CATHOLIC SOUTH.
THE great wave of
revolution and reconstruction which was passing over northern Europe in the
earlier half of the sixteenth century did not leave the south untouched. Though
the first actual outbreak occurred beyond the Alps, the feeling to which it
gave expression was not merely Teutonic. Many of the causes which led up to it
were common to all Western Christendom; some, as for instance the demand for
liberty of opinion and free enquiry, were even more characteristic of Italy
than of Germany. Accordingly, vigorous attempts arose in many parts of southern
Europe to bring about a reformation in the Church, attempts which were by no
means a mere echo of the changes in the north. But they never obtained a really
strong hold upon the affections of the common people, and never secured the
friendship, or even the neutrality, of the civil power; and so, both in Italy
and in the Iberian peninsula, their suppression was only a question of time. By
the year 1576, when the charges against Bartolomé Carranza were finally
adjudicated upon, they were practically at an end. Isolated cases of heresy
still occurred, but there was no longer anything like an organized revolt
against the doctrinal or disciplinary system of the Papacy.
In tracing the
course of the Reform movements of southern Europe we are dealing with forces
which became more widely divergent as time went on. Men at first acted together
who ultimately found themselves violently opposed to one another; principles
were adduced on the same side which proved in time to be sharply contrasted.
The old-standing desire to curb the power of the Curia and to vindicate the
authority of General Councils over the whole Church joined hands in the earlier
stages of the movement with the wider, yet more individualistic, aspirations of
the Renaissance. Men who had come under the influence of the new spirit in any
of its manifestations were able to work together at first, whether they strove
to reconstruct a worn-out theology, or to abolish corrupt practices, or to
restore the standard of personal devotion and moral conduct. It was only by
degrees that the ascetic, the humanist, and the doctrinal Reformer drifted into
relations of antagonism ; but this was the position ultimately reached. And a
stronger line of division appeared as time went on. There were some who refused
to take any step which would separate them from the communion of the Church;
as Carnesecchi expressed it, the Catholic
religion was theirs already, and all that they desired was that it should be
better preached. Others however felt compelled to withdraw from the fellowship
of a corrupt society, still strenuously affirming that by so doing they had in
no way departed from the unity of the Church. Of the former, many were
influenced by the doctrinal movement in its most extreme forms, and some even
died for their opinions without giving way. Of the latter, many recognised that their action could only be justified
by the immediate claims of Christian truth. But in spite of individual
divergences, here was a real line of division, in southern Europe as in the
north.
I.
THE REFORMATION IN
ITALY.
So far as the
movement was one of protest agat practical abuses, the need for Reform was
not less widely felt in Italy than in Germany. Rodrigo Niño, the imperial
ambassador to the Doge and Signory, wrote in 1535 that there were few in
Venice who were not more Lutheran than Luther himself with regard to such
matters as the reform of the clergy and their secular state. Venice was no
doubt exceptional, and the state of feeling there was not that of Italy as a
whole. Nevertheless, vigorous efforts after practical reform had begun in other
parts of Italy long before this. Adrian of Utrecht, Bishop of Tortosa, the friend of Erasmus and the former tutor of
Charles V, ascended the papal throne in 1522 with a firm resolve to set the
Church in order, and to begin with his own household. In many ways he seemed
well fitted for the task. A student of distinction, his uprightness, personal
piety, and strictness of life were known to all men; and already, as Legate in
Spain, he had taken a vigorous part in the reform of the Religious Houses
there. But in Rome he proved to be quite helpless. Satisfied with the
scholastic theology in which he was so great an adept, he did not understand
the questionings which were beginning to stir the minds of others. The Romans
had no fellow-feeling for a man who never gave way to anger or to mirth, and to
whom the treasures of sculpture in the Vatican were no more than ‘pagan idols’.
The scholar who had done so much to foster learning at Louvain was to them only
a stranger who knew no Italian, though he spoke Latin very well ‘for a
barbarian’. Moreover, the Curia was determined not to be reformed. Thus Adrian
achieved nothing; he died unregretted in 1523, not without the usual
suspicion of poison; and from that time forward every Pope has been an Italian.
But already an
important movement had been inaugurated. Just before or shortly after the
accession of Adrian VI, a number of earnest-minded men, clergy and laity, had
banded themselves together at Rome in the famous ‘Oratory of Divine Love’, to
work and pray for the purification of the Church. Their leaders were
Giovanni Pietro Caraffa, afterwards Pope
Paul IV, and the Count Gaetano de Thiene, who
was subsequently canonised. The society
consisted of fifty or sixty distinguished men, including amongst others
Jacopo Sadoleto, Giammatteo Giberti, Latino Giovenale, Girolamo and
Luigi Lippomano, and Giuliano Dati. They held their spiritual exercises in the Church
of Santi Silvestro e Dorotea, of
which Dati was curate, and consulted
together on the evils of the day. In 1524 Gaetano withdrew to form a new Order
of Clerks Regular, who were presently joined by Caraffa,
and came to be known as Theatines from his see of Theate(Chieti in the Abruzzi); but the original
society still continued to meet until it was dispersed by the Sack of Rome in
1527. Many of its former members, including Caraffa and Giberti, met again at Venice, where they came under the
influence of the senator Gasparo Contarini. By degrees others were admitted to their
consultations, including Gregorio Cortese, the Abbot of San Giorgio
Maggiore, Pietro Bembo, and Luigi Priuli,
and subsequently Brucioli, the Florentine exile,
the learned scholar Marcantoni Flaminio,
and the Englishman Reginald Pole. Contarini,
still a layman, became from this time forward the leading spirit amongst them.
When the
enlightened Alessandro Farnese became Pope as Paul III (1534), he found this
group of zealous men ready to his hand. Contarini was
made a Cardinal at his first creation, and Sadoleto, Caraffa, and Pole received the purple in the following
year. In 1537, when he appointed a commission to suggest measures for the
reform of the Church, most of its members were chosen from this quarter, the
names being those of Contarini, Caraffa, Sadoleto,
Pole, Fregoso, Aleander, Giberti, Cortese, and Tommaso Badia. The fruit of their labors, the famous Consilium de emendanda Ecclesia,
was unsparing in reprobation of abuses and rich in practical suggestions. But
although a few efforts were made to simplify the procedure of the Curia, the
forces of inertia proved too strong, and the Consilium was
little more than a dead letter. In after years it fell into bad odour, partly owing to its damaging admissions, partly
because the Lutherans had taken it up. Moreover Caraffa came
in time to suspect many of his former associates of heresy; and after he became
Pope the work was placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum of 1559. But, even had it been otherwise
received, it could not have stayed the tide. The revolt against abuses had
already opened the way to movements of a more destructive character; the new
opinions were already making their appearance south of the Alps.
Italy, always a
land of popular movements, was in many ways predisposed to welcome the new
opinions. Some of them had been foreshadowed there, and revolt against the
Papacy was to its peoples no new thing. The Cathari of
the north, with their Manichean and anti-trinitarian tendencies, had long
died out; but the Waldenses, although by no means so numerous as formerly, were
still to be found in the valleys of Piedmont and Calabria. The movements of the
sixteenth century in Italy were however entirely unconnected with these, and
the impulse as a whole came from without. There is indeed one notable
exception. Pietro Speziale of Cittadella finished his great work De Gratia Dei in
1542; but he tells us, with obvious sincerity, that he had formulated his
theory of Justification and Grace thirty years earlier, before Luther had begun
to preach. In the main he agrees with that of Luther, but he resolutely asserts
the freedom of the will, and repudiates the Lutheran teaching on this subject;
and although he speaks strongly against particular abuses, he does not
undervalue the Church system of his day. The old man was thrown into prison in
1543, escaped six years afterwards by the help of two Anabaptists and joined
their party, and subsequently made a formal recantation in prison. But Speziale stands alone; and it is clear that the
doctrinal revolt as a whole came from the north.
The intercourse
between Italy and Germany was very close; and a continual stream of traders and
students flowed in both directions. At Venice there was a large Teutonic colony,
having its centre in the Fondaco de' Tedeschi.
The imperial army which invaded Italy in 1526 contained a large number of
Lutherans; and with Georg von Frundsberg’s Landsknechte there came the
scholar Jakob Ziegler, later known in Venice as Luther’s lieutenant.
The commonwealth of letters ignored national boundaries; and there was a brisk
correspondence between Luther and Zwingli and their admirers in Italy. So early
as 1519 Luther’s works were being sold in Lombardy by Francesco Calvi or Minicio, a bookseller
of Pavia, who had procured a stock from Froben at
Basel. In the following year, as we learn from a letter
of Burchard von Schenk, they were eagerly purchased at Venice; and
Marino Sanuto notes in his Diary that a
seizure of them had been made at the instance of the patriarch, though not
until part of the stock had been disposed of. Writings of Luther, Melanchthon,
and others were presently translated into Italian; and being issued anonymously
or under fictitious names, they circulated widely. Thus Luther’s sermons on the
Lord’s Prayer appeared anonymously before 1525, and Melanchthon’s Loci
Communes about 1534 under the title Principii della Teologia by ‘Ippofilo da Terra Nigra’; while other tracts of
Luther’s were subsequently tacked on to the posthumously issued works of
Cardinal Federigo Fregoso.
In ways such as
these the opinions of Luther spread, and in a less degree those of Zwingli.
There were many who were ready to adopt them, in whole or in part. A hermit who
inveighed against ‘priests and friars’ at Venice in 1516 can hardly be called a
Lutheran; but Fra Andrea of Ferrara, who preached at Christmas, 1520, at San
Marco and in the open air, is expressly said to have ‘followed the doctrine of
Martin Luther’. So did a Carmelite friar, Giambattista Pallavicino, who preached at Brescia in Lent, 1527, and
others elsewhere. There were three ‘heretics’ at Mirandola in 1524 of whom nothing else is known; but the Florentine
physician Girolamo di Bartolommeo Buonagrazia,
when proceeded against in 1531, confessed that he had been in correspondence
with Luther in 1527, and accepted his doctrine. Nor was Zwingli without
supporters. The letters of Egidio della Porta,
an Austin friar of Como (a centre of heresy as early
as the time of Julius II), prove that he and some of his fellows were ready to
leave Italy and throw in their lot with Zwingli in 1525-6. In 1531 a native of
Como who had spent three years beyond the Alps was preaching against the
current doctrine of the Eucharist. About the same time priests at Como were
laying hands on others, who were to administer the Eucharist in both kinds :
one of them, Vincenzio Massaro, is said to
have taken a fee of fifteen ducats from all whom he ordained. And a letter
written in 1530 by Francesco Negri of Bassano, who had fled from a
Benedictine House at Padua and joined Zwingli, and who afterwards drifted to
Anabaptism, gives the names of many priests in North Italy whom he reckoned as
‘brethren’.
The disaffected
were very numerous. According to the ambassador Francesco Contarini, the Lutherans of Germany boasted in 1535 that
their sympathizers in Italy alone would make an army sufficient to deliver them
from the priests, and that they had enough friends in the monastic orders to
intimidate all who were opposed to them. This of course is a violent
exaggeration, and in Italy also popular rumor magnified the danger; yet even so
it was not slight. The Reforming movement was especially strong in certain well-defined centres, the chief being Venice and its territories,
Ferrara, Modena, Naples, and Lucca.
1524-55] The
Reform at Venice.
In VENICE, where
foreigners were many and toleration was a principle of the State, the Reform
soon made its appearance, and before long found a home. Measures of precaution
or repression were demanded by the Patriarch on behalf of the Roman Curia; but
as late as 1529 the Signory was able to certify that, excepting for
the tolerated German conventicles, the city was free from heresy. Soon
afterwards however, in a report to Clement VII on the subject, Caraffa mentions, amongst other evils, the fact that
many friars had fallen into heresy, and in particular the disciples of ‘a
certain Franciscan now dead’. Of these he names Girolamo Galateo, Bartolommeo Fonzio
and Alessandro da Piero di Sacco. The Bishop of Chieti was
thereupon commissioned, by a brief of May 9, 1530, to proceed against Galateo and from this time forward the extirpation of
heresy was the ruling passion of his life. He it was who procured from Pope
Paul III the bull Licet ab initia (July
21, 1542) reorganizing the Roman Inquisition on the basis of that of Spain. He
was its first head, and in 1555, as Pope Paul IV, he completed the extension of
its power over the whole of Italy.
Galateo was already in prison on suspicion of heresy for certain sermons
preached ‘Bible in hand’ at Padua; but under the lenient system of the Venetian
Inquisition he was soon at liberty. Caraffa now
commenced a new process against him; he was found guilty, and sentenced to
degradation and death. This led to a contest with the Signory, who
delivered him from Caraffa’s hands and
consigned him to prison. Here he had been for seven years, when, on the
intercession of a friendly senator, he was allowed to make his defence in writing. This Confession is remarkable. It is
Augustinian rather than Lutheran in doctrine. It affirms the doctrine of saving
faith without any extravagant depreciation of free-will or of good works; the
system of the Church as a whole is defended, and the Pope is ‘the chief of
shepherds’. Galateo was allowed out on
bail, but directed to amend his Confession on some points. He
refused to do this, and three years later was cast into prison again, where he
died in 1541.
Of Galateo’s two companions, Alessandro was already in
prison, and is not heard of again. Bartolommeo Fonzio had
already incurred the enmity of Caraffa by
his advocacy of Henry VIII's divorce; he managed however to clear himself of
heresy, and soon left Venice for Germany, where he was employed as a papal
agent. But he fell under the suspicion of Aleander and
others by his intercourse with the Lutherans; and not without reason, for it
was probably he who translated Luther’s letter An den christlichen Adel into Italian. On retiring
from the papal service he was transferred by Clement VII from the Order of
Friars Minor to the Third Order of St Francis and permitted to return to
Venice; but he was still an object of suspicion, which was not diminished by a
little Catechism which he produced. After years of wandering he settled at
Padua and opened a school; but it was broken up by order of Caraffa, now Inquisitor-General. Thence he passed to Cittadella, where reformed opinions were widespread, and
again began to teach, soon winning the love of the people. But in May, 1558, he
was again arrested, by order of the Dieci, and
condemned after four years’ examination for the general unsatisfactoriness of his teaching. He was called upon
to abjure but refused; then gave way to persuasion and recanted; then recanted
his recantation. At length he was sentenced to death at the stake; the sentence
was as usual commuted into one of drowning, and he was cast into the sea on
August 4, 1562.
Meanwhile, other
teachers were going further in the direction of Lutheranism than Galateo and Fonzio. Giulio della Rovere, an Austin
Friar of Milan, got into trouble at Bologna in 1538 for a course of sermons
preached there. Three years later he came to Venice, and preached at San Cassiano in Lent, staying in the house of Celio Seconde Curione, of whom more presently. His doctrine was attacked;
he abjured, and was sentenced to be imprisoned and then banished. He escaped
and fled to the Grisons, where the Reform movement had already taken root, the
main impulse coming from the Swiss Cantons. Here he ministered, generally
at Poschiavo, until his death in 1571. The
Florentine scholar Antonio Brucioli, banished
from his own city, had come to Venice and set up a printing-press. In 1532 (two
years before Luther’s German translation was completed) he published his
Italian translation of the whole Bible, based upon Santi Pagnani’s learned Latin version from the original
languages; and this he followed up subsequently by a voluminous commentary. In
1546 he was in the prisons of the Inquisition, accused of publishing heretical
books; and although it may be doubted whether anything of his could justly be
so described, his troubles at the hands of the Holy Office ended only with his
life. A more striking personality was that of Baldo Lupetino of Albona in
Istria, uncle of the well-known Mattia Vlacich (M. Flacius Illyricus). He
was a conventual Franciscan, and had held the office of provincial;
an acute scholar and a devout man. Accused of preaching heresy in the Duomo at Cherso, he fell into the hands of the Venetian Inquisition
in 1541; and, although the Lutheran Princes interceded on his behalf, he was
sentenced to imprisonment for life, it being clear from depositions made then
and subsequently that he was a Lutheran. In 1547 he was again in trouble for
preaching to his fellow-prisoners, and was sentenced to be beheaded, his body
to be burned, and his ashes to be cast into the sea ‘to the honor and glory of
Jesus Christ’. The Doge relaxed the sentence; but in 1555 he was again accused,
and the following year he was degraded and drowned.
Nor were disciples
lacking. The letters of Aleander, when Nuncio at
Venice, speak of a great religious association of artisans existing there in
1534, the leaders being one Pietro Buonavita of
Padua, a carpenter, a French glover, and several German Lutherans. The two
first-mentioned were taken and imprisoned for life; but Aleander continues to lament the progress of heresy
and the apathy of the Senate. We learn more about the Reformed in Venetian
lands from the letters of Baldassare Altieri of Aquila in the
Abruzzi, a literary adventurer who came to Venice about 1540, served Sir
Edmund Hastwell, the English ambassador, till
1548, and after two years of wandering died at Ferrara in August, 1550. He
acted as a kind of secretary to the Reformed, and wrote on behalf of ‘the
brethren of the Church of Venice, Vicenza, and Treviso’ to
Luther, Bullinger, and others, begging for the good offices of the
Lutherans with the Venetian government. The brethren are, he says, in the
sorest need, and cannot improve their state whilst the Signory allows
them no liberty. They have no public churches; each is a church to himself.
There are plenty of apostles, but none properly called; all is disorder, and false
teachers abound. Nevertheless, they adhere to Luther in doctrine as against
the Sacramentaries, and do not despair, since
‘God can raise up new Luthers amongst
them’. But their appeals were in vain; the Lutheran Princes had their hands
full already, and the Swiss were not likely to help those who sided with Luther
against them. In the end, their associations were broken up. Many were
punished, many more gave way; those who were left seem to have gravitated
towards anabaptist and speculative views of a very pronounced kind.
It is hard to form
a precise idea of the number of the Reformed in Venice, but they were evidently
very numerous. Processes for heresy were very common, especially after
Giovanni délia Casa became Nuncio in 1547,
with orders to expedite the work. Of the records which survive many are at
Udine; but at Venice alone-there still remain over eight hundred processes for
Lutheranism between 1547 and 1600, and more than a hundred more for Anabaptism,
Calvinism, and other heresies. The greater number are from Venice itself; but
Vicenza, Brescia and Cittadella are
represented, with a number of smaller places.
The Court of Renée
at Ferrara. [1528-39
FERRARA, long
famous for learning and the fine arts, was a centre of hardly less importance, though in quite a different way. Ercole, the son of the reigning Duke Alfonso, had married
Renée the daughter of Louis XII of France in 1528, and succeeded his father six
years later. Renée had already imbibed the new ideas from her cousin Margaret
of Navarre and from her governess Madame de Soubise, poetess and translator of
the Psalms. The latter, with the whole of her distinguished family, followed
her to Ferrara; and as most of Renée’s suite, which included Clément Marot, the
poet, were of the same way of thinking, her Court became a rallying-point for
the Reformed. From France came the statesman Hubert Languet and the poet
Léon Jamet; from Germany the Court physician
Johann Sinapius and his
brother Kilian, who acted as a tutor to Renée’s children. There were also
Alberto Lollio and the canon Celio Calagnani, joint
founders of the Academy of the Elevati; the
physician Angelo Manzioli, whose famous Zodiacus Vitae, published by him under
the pseudonym Marcello Palingenio Stellato, poured ridicule on the monks and clergy;
and Fulvio Peregrino Morato, who had preceded Kilian Sinapius in his office but had been banished in 1539,
perhaps for Lutheran opinions. He returned to the University in 1539, bringing
with him his more famous daughter Olympia Morata, ‘an infant prodigy who
became a distinguished woman’. She became an intimate member of Renée’s
household, corresponded on equal terms with the most learned men of the day,
passed through a skeptical phase to devout Lutheranism, and finally, having
incurred her patron’s anger, married a German physician named Grunthler and accompanied him to his own land. Nor
were Renée and Olympia the only well-known women who adopted Reformed views
there. Amongst others who did so were Lavinia della Rovere, grand-niece of Pope Julius II, and the Countess
Giulia Rangone, a daughter of the House of Bentivoglio. One other resident at the Court must be
mentioned, the learned Cretan who took the name of Francesco Porto. He was a
man of great caution and reticence, but devoted to the cause of Reform. After
studying at Venice and Padua and teaching for ten years at the University of
Modena, he came to Ferrara in 1546 to take the place of Kilian Sinapius. The complaints of the Pope led to his expulsion
in 1551. He was again with Renée, as her reader, in 1553, but then retired to
Venice and ultimately to Geneva.
Hither also at
various times came students and others whose lives were in danger elsewhere.
Among these was the Piedmontese Celio Secondo Curione, a latitudinarian and a student of the Reformed
doctrines from his youth. After several remarkable escapes from capture he fled
to Padua, thence (after three years as professor in the University) to Venice,
and thence to Ferrara. Through Renée’s influence he received a chair at Lucca
while Ochino was there, but after a short
and troublous stay had to take refuge beyond the Alps. But Ferrara gave shelter
to a greater fugitive than any of Italian birth. Early in 1536 Renée was
visited by Calvin, who had come to Italy under the assumed name of Espeville. We have no trustworthy account of the visit, but
it evidently made the deepest impression upon Renée and her Court. Apparently
he celebrated the communion for them in private; certainly he incited them to
protest against the accustomed services. In fact, on Holy Saturday (April 14),
when the officiating priest in one of the chief churches of Ferrara presented
the cross for the veneration of the faithful, one of Renée’s choristers, a
youth of twenty known as Jehannot or Zanetto, broke out in open blasphemies against what he
regarded as idolatry. The incident was probably prearranged in order to cause a
popular outbreak; but it is clear that the people were scandalized. Under
pressure from Rome Ercole took steps to
punish the offenders. But he found that the whole suite of his wife were
involved; while Renée invoked the French power to protect her servants. The
matter dragged on for some months; but at length, as the principal person
implicated (probably Calvin himself) escaped from his guards on the road to
Bologna, not without suspicion of their connivance, it was allowed to drop.
Henceforward
Calvin was Renée’s spiritual adviser, and she was in frequent correspondence
with him. Under his influence she refused in 1540 to make her confession or to
hear mass any longer. This does not seem to have involved an open breach with
the Church; there were many more who were equally remiss in their religious
duties. Ercole tried to avoid taking
action, and winked at her opinions so long as she and her associates avoided
giving open scandal. Moreover, when Paul III paid a visit to Ferrara Renée met
him on friendly terms, and obtained from him a brief, dated July 5, 1543, by
which she was exempted from every jurisdiction but that of the Holy Office. But
she disguised her Calvinism less and less, while the activity of the
Inquisition was daily increasing; and at length the pressure of the Holy See
compelled the Duke to act. In 1554 he applied to the French King for an ‘able
and energetic’ teacher for his wife, and the Inquisitor Mathieu Ory was sent. As his exhortations made no impression,
she was put on her trial for heresy, and condemned to imprisonment, twenty-four
of her servants being likewise sentenced. But a week afterwards, on September
13, it was announced that she had ‘abjured and received pardon’. The documents
are lost, so that it is hard to say precisely what occurred. It is certain that
Renée made her confession and received the Eucharist, equally so that she was
at heart a Calvinist, and went on in her old courses until, after Ercole’s death, she retired in 1560 to Montargis and became a protector of the French
Huguenots.
The Modenese Academy.
[1537-48
Ercole’s other capital, MODENA, was equally famous as a centre of learning. Many of the scholars of the Modenese Academy had long
been suspected of heterodoxy, among them being Lodovico Castelvetro, Gabriele Falloppio,
the anatomist, and the brothers Grillenzone, who
were its founders. In Advent, 1537, an Austin friar,Serafino of
Ferrara, denounced an anonymous book, the Sommario della Santa Scrittura,
which was being sold in Modena by the bookseller Antonio Gaboldino; but his action only called forth protests. In
1540 arrived the learned Paolo Ricci, a conventual Franciscan, who
had left the cloister, and now, under the assumed name of Lisio Fileno, publicly
expounded the Scriptures and denounced the Papacy. Thus the new opinions gained
ground. The annalist Tassoni (il Vecchio) declares that both men
and women disputed everywhere, in the squares, in the shops, in the churches,
concerning the faith and the law of Christ, quoting and misquoting the
Scriptures and doctors whom they had never read.
Attempts were soon
made to put a stop to this. The Sommario was
refuted by Ambrogio Catarino and
burned at Rome in 1539. Two years afterwards Ricci was arrested, taken to
Ferrara, and made to recant. Other measures were for a time averted by the
intercession of Sadoleto, himself
a Modenese; he urged that the academicians were loyal to the Roman Church,
and should not be molested because they claimed for the learned the right of
free enquiry. The Pope however was still suspicious; and Giovanni de Morone, the Bishop of Modena, then absent on a legation in
Germany and himself a friend of Contarini and
to the doctrines of Grace, was sent for to reduce this ‘second Geneva’ to
order. It was proposed that suspected persons should sign a formulary of faith,
drawn up by Contarini;in the plainest
possible terms. After strenuous resistance the signatures were secured, and the
matter seemed at an end. But a strong feeling of resentment had sprung up; the
Academy was still a hot-bed of disaffection, and preachers of doubtful
orthodoxy, such as Bartolommeo della Pergola,
were eagerly listened to.
At length Ercole was goaded into taking action throughout his
dominions. A ducal edict of May 24, 1546, was so severe in its provisions that
the Modenese Academy promptly dispersed; and in 1548 Fra Girolamo Papino of Lodi was installed as Inquisitor at Ferrara.
A poor youth of Faenza, by name Fannio(or Fanino), was soon brought before him, who had fallen into
heresy through his perverse interpretation of the Bible. He recanted once
through fear, but relapsed, and began preaching throughout Romagna with great
success. At length he was arrested at Bagnacavallo,
and conveyed to Ferrara. Here his imprisonment was a succession of triumphs.
His friends were allowed access to him, and his visitors included
Olympia Morata, Lavinia della Rovere, and others, upon whom his cheerfulness and
earnest edictions made a great impression. After long
negotiations between Ferrara and the Holy See, in which Renée herself took
part, the order arrived for his execution as a relapsed heretic. It was
confirmed by Ercole, and on August 22, 1550, he
was strangled and his body cast into the river. His was the second recorded
death for religion in Italy, the first being that of Jaime de Enzinas, a Spanish Lutheran and, according to Bucer, an eager disseminator of Lutheranism, who was burned
at Rome on March 16, 1547. Another execution followed in 1551, that of a
Sicilian priest, Domenico Giorgio, who is described as a ‘Lutheran
and heretic’. Minor punishments followed in great numbers; so that Renée was
forced to send her Huguenot followers to Mirandola,
where under the Count Galeotto Pico they
found a place of refuge.
Some years
afterwards attention was again called to Modena, where the Reform still
prospered. On October 1, 1555, a brief of Paul IV demanded that four of the
leaders, Bonifaci and Filippo Valentine (the former of
whom was provost of the Cathedral), Lodovico Castelvetro(who
had translated the writings of Melanchthon into Italian), and the bookseller Gaboldino, should be arrested and handed over to the Holy
Office. Filippo Valentino and Castelvetro,
warned in time, made their escape. The others were taken and conveyed to Rome,
where Bonifaciorecanted; but Gaboldino,
on refusing to do so, was condemned to perpetual imprisonment. Four years
later Castelvetro , already condemned for
contumacy, was persuaded to go to Rome with his brother Giammaria, and stand his trial; but he fled before it was
over, was again condemned, and was burned in effigy as a contumacious heretic.
The two brothers escaped to Chiavenna,
where Lodovico died in 1571, having in 1561 appealed in vain for a
hearing before the Council of Trent.
Even this was not
the end of heresy in the duchy. The registers of the Inquisition contain long
lists of suspects, and not a few condemnations, both at Ferrara and Modena; at
Modena indeed, in 1568 alone, thirteen men and one woman perished at the stake.
Juan and Alfonso de Valdés.
Very different
again was the movement at NAPLES, at any rate in its earlier stages. It centres round one great man, Juan de Valdés, whose
position is thus described by Niccolo Balbini, minister of the congregation of Italian refugees
at Geneva, in his life of Galeazzo Caracciolo:
“There was at that time in Naples a Spanish gentleman, who having a certain
knowledge of evangelical truth and above all of the doctrine of justification,
had begun to draw to the new doctrines certain noble-born persons with whom he
conversed, refuting the idea of justification by our own deserving, and of the
merit of works, and exposing certain superstitions”. He adds that the disciples
of Valdés “did not cease to frequent the churches, to resort to mass like other
people, and to share in the current idolatry”. This however gives no idea of
his real greatness. Valdés was at once a devout mystic and a born teacher; and
having settled in Naples he at once became the leading spirit and the oracle of
a wide circle of devout and cultured men and women who submitted themselves
wholly to his teaching and guidance.
Born of a noble
family at Cuenca in new Castile (c. 1500), where his father Ferrando was corregidor,
he and his twin-brother Alfonso had been educated for the public service. Both
were early drawn into sympathy with the protest against abuses, but whilst
Alfonso died an ‘erasmista’, Juan advanced far beyond
this. Alfonso entered the service of the Emperor, and, though an indifferent
Latinist, gradually rose to be first secretary. In this capacity he was
responsible for several imperial letters which urged the necessity of reform in
no gentle terms. But these are not our only index to his opinions. He was a
close friend of Erasmus and a student of his writings; and after the Sack of
Rome in 1527 he put forth a Dialogue between Lactancio,
an imperial courtier, and a certain archdeacon, in which he vindicates the
Emperor, and declares the catastrophe to be a judgment upon the sins of the
Papacy. Lactancio allows that Luther had
fallen into many heresies, but very pertinently says that if they had remedied
the things of which he justly complained, instead of excommunicating him, he
would never have so lapsed. He calls for a speedy Reformation, that it may be
proclaimed to the end of the world how ‘Jesus Christ built the Church, and the
Emperor Charles V restored it’. Alfonso follows in the footsteps of Erasmus;
and the reader of the Colloquia will find little that is new
here, unless it be that Alfonso is, as a contemporary said, more Erasmian than Erasmus himself. He was at once
attacked, but found many defenders; and Charles himself declared that though he
had not read the book, Valdés was a good Christian, who would not write
heresies. Accordingly, he was not molested, and ended his life in the Emperor’s
service early in October, 1532.
Little is known of
Juan’s early life, excepting that he was for ten years about the Court,
apparently under his brother. Towards the end of this period, and just after
the Diàlogo de Lactancio was finished, Juan produced a similar
work, the Diálogo de Mercurio y Carón,
in which Mercury and Charon are made to confer with the souls of the departed
as to their religious life and the affairs of the world they have just left. It
really consists of two distinct dialogues differing in style and substance, one
being mainly political (showing signs of Alfonso’s co-operation) and the other
mainly religious, although in doctrine it does not go beyond a condemnation of
prayers to the Virgin. But they were joined in one, and published with
the Lactancio in 1529. We next hear
of Juan in 1530, at Rome, where he presently became a papal chamberlain under
Clement VII, by whom, according to Carnesecchi,
he was much beloved. He was at Bologna with the Pope in January, 1533, but soon
afterwards removed to Naples, where he remained, excepting for one visit to
Rome, till his death in 1541.
At Naples he gave
himself up to study, to religious meditation, and to the society of his
friends. Between April, 1534, and September, 1536, he produced his Diálogo de la lengua,
a valuable study of the Spanish tongue, and one of the most beautiful writings
of its day. During the next few years he wrote and circulated amongst his
friends, in manuscript, his Considerationes(subsequently
translated into English by Nicholas Ferrar),
hi Catechism, La Spirituale, a
large number of short treatises and commentaries, and translations of parts of
the Bible from the original languages. His doctrine as contained in these works
is certainly not distinctively Lutheran or Calvinist, but that of one whose
thoughts turned ever inward rather than outward, a devout evangelical mystic
who recommended frequent confession and communion, and had no desire to
overturn the ordinances of the Church. His disciples were won by himself rather
than by his doctrines; and even the element of his teaching which others seized
upon most eagerly-justification by faith only-was not to him what it was to the
Lutheran, the corner-stone of his whole system. To him it was the expression of
the fact that only by self-abnegation could men receive the divine
illumination, and thus conform to the image of God in which they were made. And
the tract by means of which this doctrine was most widely diffused in Italy,
the famous Beneficio della morte di Cristo,
which has been called the Credo of the Italian Reformed, was not the work of
Valdés himself, but of a disciple, the Benedictine monk Benedetto of Mantua,
who wrote it in his monastery at the foot of Mount Etna, and at whose
request Marcantonio Flaminio revised
it and improved the style. It began to be spread broadcast in Italy about 1540,
at first in manuscript and then in print, and made a deep impression wherever
it went.
The personal
influence of Valdés was very great, both amongst those who had known him at the
Court of Clement VII and those who now saw him for the first time. In his
unprinted life of Paul IV, written early in the seventeenth century,
Antonio Caracciolo reckons the number of
Valdés’ adherents at over three thousand, of whom many were leading men. This
is doubtless only a guess, but the number was certainly large. And since at
this very time, in 1536, an edict had gone forth in Naples forbidding all
commerce with heretics on pain of death and confiscation, it is clear that the
many persons of importance in Church and State who took part in his conferences
had no idea that their action came under this ban. Many, and especially
the Theatines, regarded him with suspicion; but that was all.
He and his two
chief adherents, Bernardino Ochino and Pietro Martire Vermigli, are styled
by Antonio Caracciolo the ‘Satanic
triumvirate’. With them
were Marcantonio Flaminio, Pietro Carnesecchi, Galeazz Caraccioli (nephew
of Pope Paul IV), Benedetto Cusano, Marcantonio Magno, Giovanni Mollio, the
Franciscan, Jacopo Bonfadio, the historian
(burned at Genoa, but probably not for heresy, in 1550), Vittorio Soranzo(afterwards Bishop of Bergamo) and Lattanzio Ragnone of
Siena, all of whom were subsequently regarded as heretics. There were also Pietrantonio di Capua, Archbishop of Otranto (who
attended Valdés on his deathbed and always held him in great reverence), the
Archbishops of Sorrento and Reggio, the Bishops of Catania, Nola, Policastro, and La Cava (Giovanni Tommaso Sanfelice, imprisoned by Paul IV for over two years on
suspicion of heresy), and Giambattista Folengo, a learned monk of Monte Cassino. With them,
too, were the most noble and respected ladies of
Naples, Vittoria Colonna, Marchioness of Pescara, her
kinswoman Costanza d'Avalos, Duchess
of Amalfi, Isabella Manrique of Brisegna,
sister-in-law to the Spanish Inquisitor-general of that name, above all Giulia
Gonzaga, Duchess of Traietto and Countess
of Fondi in her own right. On the death of
her husband she had retired to Fondi, where the
fame of her beauty was such that the corsair Khair Eddin Barbarossa attempted to kidnap her for the
Sultan. She had now taken up her abode in the convent of San Francesco at
Naples, and was much respected for her strict and pious life. She submitted
herself entirely to the guidance of Valdés; and several of his treatises were
written for her benefit.
After his death
most of his followers dispersed, and not a few of them were afterwards
proceeded against in other parts of Italy. Those who still remained were led,
according to a contemporary writer, by a triumvirate consisting of Donna
Giulia, a Benedictine monk named Germano Minadois, and a Spaniard, Sigismundo Muñoz,
who was director of the hospital for incurables. Some presently abandoned the
Roman communion. Galeazzo Caraccioli, for example, visited Germany in
the Emperor’s service, and learned that it was not enough to accept
Justification, but that he must forsake ‘idolatry’ also. Failing to induce even
his own family to accompany him, he went alone to Geneva in March, 1551, where
he was well received by Calvin, as was Lattanzio Ragnone, who followed two days later. He ventured into
Italy more than once, and many efforts were made, especially after his uncle
became Pope, to recall him; but they all failed, and he died at Geneva in 1586.
Isabella Brisegna also fled, first to
Zurich and then to Chiavenna. Some, again, seem
to have abandoned their views owing to the preaching of the Jesuit
Alfonso Salmerón in 1553 and the following
years; and some, as the Austin friar Francesco Romano, recanted under pressure.
Others still remained staunch, under the leadership of Giulia, who assisted
with her means those who fled, but refused to fly herself. Several were
proceeded against and put to death; and at length, in March,
1564, Gian Francesco di Caserta and Giovanni Bernardino di Aversa
were beheaded and burned in the market-place. It is probable that only the
death of Pius IV in December, 1565, saved Giulia herself from a like fate; as
it was, she remained in the convent till her death on April 19, 1566. With her
the party came to an end. Meanwhile, however, it had spread elsewhere : between
1541 and 1576 there are over forty trials for Lutheranism in the records which
still survive of the Sicilian Inquisition, about half of the culprits, who
include not a few parish priests and religious, being put to death. Other
heresies had arisen also; the records speak, for instance, of Sacramentaries, Anabaptists, anti-Trinitarians, and those
who disbelieved in a future life.
1500-76] Pietro Martire Vermigli.
LUCCA was the only
other place where the movement assumed a really popular form; and here it centres round one man. Pietro Martire Vermigli, born of
well-to-do parents at Florence in 1500, had joined the Austin canons at Fiesole
in 1516, and learned from them to know his Bible well. He studied Greek and
Hebrew at Padua and elsewhere, and being appointed to preach was soon well
known throughout Italy. High honors fell to him : he became Abbot of Spoleto,
and then Prior of the great house of San Pietro ad aram at Naples and Visitor-general of his Order. Here
he came into contact with Valdés, began to read the writings of Bucer and others, and lectured on the First Epistle to
the Corinthians. He was accused of heresy, and for a time forbidden to preach;
but the prohibition was removed by the Pope at the instance of Contarini, Pole, and other friends. In 1541 he left Naples
and became Prior of San Frediano at Lucca.
This was his opportunity, for the Prior had quasi-episcopal rights over half
the city. He gathered about him a body of like-minded scholars, and with them
set up a scheme of study which was shared by many of the chief citizens and
nobles. He himself expounded St Paul's Epistles and the Psalms. Latin was taught
by Paolo Lacizi of Verona, a canon of the
Lateran and afterwards Vermigli’s colleague
at Strassburg; Greek by
Count Massimiliano Celso Martinengo,
also a canon of the Lateran and subsequently pastor of the Italian congregation
at Geneva; and Hebrew by Emanuele Tremelli of
Ferrara, a Jew converted by Pole and Flaminio,
who afterwards came to England. With them also were Francesco Robortello and Celio Secondo Curione, public professors of letters,
and Girolamo Zanchi, afterwards professor
of theology at Strasburg. Vermigli himself
preached every Sunday to congregations which grew continually; and no small
part of the city listened readily when he told them to regard the Eucharist as
a mere remembrance of the Passion. This soon became known beyond the walls of
Lucca. Vermigli was summoned to the Chapter
of his Order at Genoa, and the magistrates of Lucca received a papal injunction
to arrest all heretical teachers and send them to Rome. An Austin friar was
taken, released by the nobles, and recaptured; and Vermigli,
never a man of much courage, resolved on flight. In August, 1542, he set out
for Pisa with two companions; and ‘in that city, with certain noble persons, he
celebrated the Supper of the Lord with the Christian rite’. Thence he wrote to
Pole and to the people of Lucca, giving as reasons for his flight the errors
and abuses of the pontifical religion and the hatred of his enemies; after
which he went to Switzerland by way of Bologna and Ferrara, and on to
Strasburg. He subsequently came to England and was made professor of divinity
at Oxford, but returned to Strasburg in 1553, and died at Zurich in 1562. It
appears that no fewer than eighteen canons of his house left Lucca within a
year, and escaped beyond the Alps. But although the shepherds had fled, the
flock did not at once melt away. They were in a measure supported by the
senate, which took measures at length to stamp out the heresy, but only under
pressure, and as an alternative to the setting up of the Roman Inquisition. In
1545 the senate issued an edict against the ‘rash persons of both sexes who
without any knowledge of Holy Scripture or the sacred canons dare to discuss
things concerning the Christian faith as though they were great theologians’;
and by 1551 the last Lucchese Reformers were compelled to fly.
Bernardino Ochino. [1534-51
We now turn to
leaders of the movement who were not connected with any particular centre. One who was even better known fled at the same time
with Vermigli, namely Bernardino Ochino, of Siena. When young he had joined the Friars
Observant, and rose to be their Provincial; but in 1534 he left them for the
Capuchins, a stricter body founded some six years before, by whom in 1538 he
was chosen Vicar-general. Meanwhile he had begun to preach, was appointed an
‘apostolic missionary’, and was soon recognized as the foremost preacher of the
day. His extant sermons hardly account for his fame; but preaching was at a low
ebb, and the strictness of his life added greatly to the effect of his fiery
eloquence. At Naples he became a follower of Valdés, as did others of his
Order; including, as he afterwards said, most of the preachers. At Florence he
visited Caterina Cibò; and his
conversations with her, put into the shape of Sette Dialoghi in 1539, afford clear evidence that he
had already rejected much of the current theology. So far, however, he cannot
have incurred serious suspicion; for although his preaching was impugned at
Naples in 1536 and 1539, he was re-elected Vicar-general in 1541. The following
year came the catastrophe. He was twice cited before the Nuncio at Venice for
his sermons, and the second time he was forbidden to preach any more, and went
to Verona. Whilst living there, in frequent intercourse with the venerable
bishop Giberti, he received a citation to appear
before the newly-founded Roman Inquisition. He set out in August, and on his
way through Bologna paid a visit to Contarini,
who lay dying there. The accounts of their interview differ; but Ochino gathered that if he went to Rome he would be
forced ‘to deny Christ or be crucified’. At Florence he met Vermigli, and resolved forthwith to fly, to throw in his
lot with the Swiss Reformers, and to disseminate his doctrine by his pen. He
reached Geneva, being then at the age of fifty-five, passing afterwards to
Zurich, Augsburg, England, and back to Zurich. But his restless mind could not
easily find satisfaction. Before long the Swiss expelled him because of his
views on marriage, and he began to turn to the party amongst his compatriots
which had abandoned not only the historic system but the historic faith of the
Church. As early as September, 1550, a secret Anabaptist meeting had been held
at Venice, attended by 60 deputies, which had rejected the divinity of Christ.
Many who shared these views had taken refuge amongst the Swiss, including
Giorgio Blandrata, formerly physician to
Sigismund I of Poland, Niccolo Gallo,
Giovanni Paolo Alciati, Matteo Gribaldi, and Valentine Gentile, all of whom fled to
Geneva, and Lelio Sozzini,
who went to Basel in 1547 and lived there unsuspected till his death in 1562.
Calvin at length grew suspicious, and on May 18, 1558, put forth a confession
of faith to be signed by all the members of the Italian congregation as a test
of orthodoxy. Gribaldi managed to clear
himself; Blandrata and Alciati, finding themselves unable to do so, fled to
Poland; Gallo and Gentile signed, but afterwards retracted and were proceeded
against for heresy : the last-named was ultimately beheaded at Bern, in 1556,
as a perjured heretic. After 1558, Poland and Transylvania became the
head-quarters of this extreme school, which remained the prey of vague and
mutually contradictory theories, Arian and Anabaptist, until Fausto Sozzini (1539-1604), the nephew of Lelio, came to Transylvania (1578) and little by little
organized a definite ‘Unitarian Church’, the doctrinal manual of which was
the Rakovian Catechism. To this party, in
its earlier stages, Ochino had made
approaches (in his Dialogi published
in 1563 in Poland); but even the Polish anti-trinitarians thought him
unsound; and he died in 1564, forsaken and alone, at Schlackau in
Moravia.
Ochino’s flight made a great sensation. To Caraffa it
suggested the fall of Lucifer. Some attributed it to disappointed ambition,
some to a sudden temptation. Vittoria Colonna, hitherto a frequent
correspondent, broke with him entirely; but Caterina Cibo, in whose house he had renounced the cowl, appears to
have corresponded with him still. In the records of the Roman Inquisition she
figures as doctrix monialium haereticarum,
the nuns being those of St Martha outside Florence. But she does not seem to
have been proceeded against, and died at Florence in 1555.
Pierpaolo Tergerio.
[1533-48
Another man of
mark who left the Roman communion was Pierpaolo Vergerio of Capo d'Istria.
He had been a lawyer in Venice, entered the service of the Nuncio at the
instance of his brother Aurelio, who was secretary to Clement VII, and soon
rose to importance. He went to Rome early in 1533, and was sent as Nuncio to
Ferdinand of Austria. Two years later he went to invite the German Princes to
the Council of Mantua, and had a memorable interview with Luther, whom he
describes with characteristic bitterness. In 1536 he received the bishopric
of Modrusch, exchanged soon after for that of
Capo d'Istria; all the orders being conferred upon
him in one day by his brother Giambattista,
Bishop of Pola, who at the time of his death was suspected of heresy, and
not without reason. Pierpaolo was still a
restless and energetic papal agent, distrusted by many, and scheming both for
practical reform and for his own aggrandizement. In time a change came over
him. During a mission to France he met, and was profoundly impressed by,
Margaret of Navarre. Passing into Germany, he consorted much with Melanchthon
and others. At the Diet of Worms (1540) he made an oration De unitate et pace ecclesiae, in which he urged the
necessity for a General Council for the reform of the Church. He allowed that
there were grave abuses in the Church, but not that they were any reason for
secession; he pointed to the quarrels amongst the Reformed, and urged them to
return to ‘the Body of Christ, who is our consolation and our peace’. His
survey of the facts is somewhat superficial, but a new tone of charity and
earnestness runs through it. He returned to Capo d'Istria to
take care of ‘the little vineyard which God had committed to him’; he visited
diligently, preached evangelical doctrine, and reformed practical abuses. He
read heretical books in order to confute them; but they only raised doubts in
his own mind. Suspicion arose on all sides. Late in 1544 the monks of his
diocese, irritated by his strictness, accused him to the Venetian Inquisition,
which began a process against him. It was still continuing when the Council of
Trent was opened. In February, 1546, he went to the Council and offered his defence; but, although the Cardinal of Mantua warned them
not to drive a good Bishop to desperation, they would not hear him or allow him
to take his seat, and forbade his return to his diocese. Then he asked for a
canonical trial from his fellow-Bishops, but in vain. After this he lost all
heart.
The last straw was
the case of Francesco Spiera, a lawyer of Cittadella, whose story was long remembered amongst the
Reformed. He had incurred suspicion by associating with Speziale and translating the Lord’s Prayer into
Italian. Being cited by the Inquisition in 1548, he abjured from fear, and
repeated his abjuration the following Sunday at Cittadella,
against his conscience. Presently, he fell grievously ill, and lay for months
under the conviction that he had committed the unpardonable sin by his
apostasy. In vain his friends spoke of God’s mercy; he met their exhortations
with a hopelessness which was the more terrible because it was so calm, though
broken occasionally by paroxysms of frenzy. From the investigation made by the
Inquisition after his death it seems likely that some rays of hope dawned upon
him towards the end; but this was unknown to the many who came to see him, and
awe and consternation prevailed amongst them. To Vergerio,
who watched often at his bedside, the warning seemed to be one which he dared
not neglect; he resolved to secede at once, and on December 13, 1548, he sent
his resolve, with an account of the dying Spiera,
to Rota, the Bishop Suffragan of Padua. His deposition and
excommunication followed on July 3, 1549. He fled to the Grisons, and for a
time worked at Poschiavo; in 1553 he passed to
Württemberg, where he remained till his death. He translated parts of the Bible
into Slavonic, and wrote fiery tracts against the Papacy; but to all he
appeared a schemer and a disappointed man : Calvin speaks of him as a ‘restless
busybody’, and Jewel calls him a ‘crafty knave’.
Paleario and Carnesecchi. [1508-70
We return now to
those who sympathized more or less with the new views but did not separate from
the Church. They were of very different types. Some, like
Michelangelo Buonarotti, were simply men of that evangelical spirit which
easily comes under suspicion when undue stress is being laid on externals; others,
like Falloppio, were bold thinkers who
overstepped the limits of medievalism; others, like Giangiorgio Trissino, the author of Sophonisbe,
honored by two Popes, directed the shafts of their satire against the Papacy
only; others really adopted the Reformed views, like the satiric poet
Francesco Berni, whose Orlando Innamorato appears
to have been manipulated after his death to disguise the Lutheran flavor. A
better representative of these last is Aonio Paleario of Veroli, a
man of querulous temper but devoutly Christian life, at once a humanist and a
doctrinal Reformer. So early as 1542 he was accused of heresy at Siena, partly
owing to a dispute with a preacher at Colle, partly on account of his
book Della pienezza, sofficenza, e satisfazione della passione di
Cristo. But he had friends, and the trial was stopped without his having to
read an oration which he had prepared in his own defence.
He continued to write boldly, and to correspond with the German and Swiss
Reformers. In 1542 or 1543 he unfolded to them an extraordinary plan for a
Council to settle the religious disputes of the day : all the princes of Europe
were to choose holy men, ‘entirely free from the suspicion of papal
corruption’, to the number of six or seven from each country; and these men,
having been consecrated for the purpose by twelve Bishops, chosen out of their
whole number by the Pope and the hierarchy on account of their holiness of
life, were to act as arbiters and umpires, after hearing the matters in dispute
fully discussed in a perfectly free assembly. Paleario became
professor of belles-lettres at Lucca in 1546, on the nomination of Sadoleto and Bembo, and in 1555 he went to fill a
like office at Milan. Here he was twice proceeded against; in 1559
unsuccessfully in the matter of Purgatory, on the accusation of his former
opponent; and again in 1567, when the trial was interrupted by a summons to
appear at Rome before the Holy Office itself. He pleaded his age, but
ultimately went and stood his trial. His answers on many points were
unsatisfactory; but the real ground of his condemnation was his steady
assertion that it was unlawful for the Pope to kill heretics, and that, so
doing, he could not be the vicar of Christ. He was called upon to make a set
abjuration, but refused (June 14, 1570); he was condemned as impenitent in the
presence of the Pope himself (June 30); and on July 3 he was strangled and
burnt in the Piazza del Castello. The records of
the Misericordia say that he died penitent. It is probable that this
refers to a general statement of penitence, by means of which, with the
connivance of the authorities, the punishment of burning alive was frequently
avoided. In any case, Aonio died a martyr
not so much for his particular opinions as in the cause of liberty of thought
itself.
Another who paid
the last penalty was Pietro Carnesecchi.
Born in 1508 of a noble Florentine family, he was educated in the house of
Cardinal Dovizzi at Rome, and entered the
papal service. Under Clement VII he became protonotary apostolic,
receiving also many rich benefices and a promise of the cardinalate :
so great indeed was his influence that it used to be said that he was Pope rather
than Clement. But the death of his master removed him from a post which was not
really congenial, and he retired into secular life. A visit to Giulia Gonzaga
in 1540 brought him into contact again with Valdés, whom he had known at the
papal Court. He now took him as his spiritual teacher, and ever afterwards
regarded this as the crisis of his life. From this point his history is
recorded in the details of the process instituted against him by the Roman
Inquisition. After some years of reading heretical books and conferring with
heretics at Venice, he was cited to Rome (1546) and put on his trial for
heresy. He denied everything, and ‘fraudulently extorted absolution from the
Pope’. After a visit to France, where he met many of the Reformers, he returned
to Venice (1552 c.), and there published some of the works of Valdés. In 1557 a
new process was commenced against him; he hid himself, and sentence was
pronounced upon him as a refractory heretic. Even this was not final. On the
death of Paul IV (1559), the people joyously broke open the prisons of the
Inquisition, destroyed the records, and suffered the prisoners (seventy-two
‘heresiarchs, or rather infernal fiends,’ says Antonio Caracciolo)
to escape. Carnesecchi saw his chance and
seized it. His sovereign, Duke Cosimo I, whom he had served as an
envoy and councillor of State, took his
part; the charges against him were no longer in existence; the new Pope was
anxious to relax the severity of his predecessor; and thus, in May, 1561, he
was declared innocent. After this he resided at Rome, at Naples, at Florence,
always in correspondence with heretics, and for a time with a strong
Calvinistic bias, though later his sympathies were Lutheran. The accession of
the stern old Inquisitor Ghislieri as Pope
Pius V again brought Carnesecchi into
danger. Cosimo consented to give him up (being rewarded two years
afterwards with the title of Grand Duke); and on July 4, 1566, he was in prison
in Rome. The trial was a lengthy one; he fought hard for his life, endeavoring,
as was his wont, to resist force by cunning. But it could have only one end. On
September 21, 1567, he was handed over to the secular arm, and on October 21,
with a friar Giulio Maresio, he was
beheaded and burnt.
1566-7] The
Catholic reformers.
But the great
process against Carnesecchi had an
importance apart from the man himself : as it has been said, he is but the
secondary figure in it, and its real heroes are the illustrious dead. Carnesecchi was the disciple of Valdés, the friend
of Flaminio and Pole; he had been on terms
of intimacy with that body of loyal sons and daughters of the Church of whom
mention has been made already, who had striven nobly, through evil report and
good report, for its reformation, and who had been hopelessly beaten at the
Council of Trent. They had been watched and suspected by the Inquisition ever
since; some indeed had actually suffered at its hands. Most of them were dead
before 1566; but the pursuit of heresy ceased not at the grave, and those who
during their lives were revered as the hope of the Church were impugned as
suspects or as actual heretics in the famous process of Carnesecchi. This Catholic minority, for such it really
was, grew out of the body of friends who centred round Contarini in Venice; it was reinforced by many who had
sat at the feet of Valdés, or who had travelled in the north. The aim of this
party was the reform of the whole ecclesiastical system; its doctrinal
rallying-point was justification by faith in Christ Jesus and not by a man’s
own works. So far they were at one with Luther. But, realizing as they did that
this had ever been the doctrine of the Church, they were not impelled, as he
was, to deny the reality of free will, to depreciate the fruits of faith, or to
eviscerate faith itself by reducing it to an act of intellectual assent, and
divorcing it from Christian love which issues in action. “We obtain this
blessing of complete and perpetual salvation”, wrote Sadoleto to
the citizens of Geneva, “by faith alone in God and in Jesus Christ. When I say
faith alone, I do not mean, as those inventors of novelties do, a mere
credulity and confidence in God, to the exclusion of love and other Christian
virtues. This indeed is necessary, and forms the first access which we have to
God; but it is not enough. For we must also bring a mind full of piety towards
Almighty God, and desirous of performing whatever is agreeable to Him, by the
power of the Holy Spirit”. Moreover, loyalty to the Church was with them a
fundamental principle. Many no doubt were in frequent and friendly
correspondence with the Reformers; but it must be borne in mind that the line
of division between the Protestant bodies and the Church was very gradually
determined, and that men long hoped for a speedy settlement of the existing
divisions. Here again Sadoleto’s letter
illustrates their position. He recognizes the existing evils in the Church, and
will even grant that there are serious doctrinal errors; but even so, the evils
of separation are greater; and to depart from the unity of the body of Christ
is to court destruction. “Let us enquire and see which of the two is
more conducive to our advantage, which is better in itself, and better fitted
to obtain the favor of Almighty God: whether to accord with the whole Church,
and faithfully observe her decrees and laws and sacraments, or to adhere to men
seeking dissension and novelty. This, dearest brethren, is the place where the
road divides: one way leads to life, the other to everlasting death”. The
letter is worthy of its occasion : so is the answer which it called forth from
Calvin.
Contarini, and Pole. [1541-9
The failure of
the Consilium de emendanda Ecclesia, the death of Clement VII, and
the secession of Caraffa, had dashed the
reformers’ hopes; but they did not lose heart. Contarini was
still their leader; and it was probably on this account that he was sent as
papal legate to the Colloquy of Ratisbon in 1541, whence he kept up a
correspondence with Pole, Morone, and Foscarari, afterwards Bishop of Modena. For a time all went
well, and an agreement was come to, not indeed without great difficulty, upon
the point of Justification. But neither side really trusted the other;
and Contarini himself was jealously
suspected by many members of the Curia. Consequently, the effort (the last real
effort to conciliate the reformers) came to nothing; Contarini returned
in deep sadness to Italy, and died the year after at Bologna. His place as
leader of the movement was taken by Reginald Pole, whose house at Viterbo,
whither he went as papal governor in 1541, became their headquarters. Here met
together for prayer and study Giberti and Soranzo, the former bishop of Verona, the latter before
long of Bergamo, Flaminio, Luigi Priuli, Donato Rullo, Lodovico Beccatello, and others. It was probably Pole’s influence
which kept Flaminio from seceding to the
Lutherans. Not less was his influence with Vittoria Colonna, to whom
he was greatly devoted, and who found in him a wise spiritual guide when many
others seemed to have gone astray. It was he who advised her to believe that we
are justified by faith only, and to act as though we were to be justified by
our works.
Little by little
their hopes faded. At the Council of Trent, indeed, Pole was one of the
Legates, and there were not a few Bishops and theologians who were with him in
the matter of Justification. But it soon became clear that the Council and
Curia were against him, and Pole left Trent before the decree on the subject
was actually made. He relapsed into silence, waiting, and advising his friends
to wait, for a more convenient season. It seemed as if this had actually come
when, in November, 1549, Paul III died. The English Cardinal was beloved by
some, respected by all. In the Conclave which followed it long appeared likely
that he would be chosen; and the betting outside, based upon information from
within, was much in his favor. But his views on Justification robbed him of the
tiara. His rival del Monte was chosen, who took the name of Julius III; and
Pole once more went into retirement until his mission to England in 1554. The
accession of his enemy Caraffa as Paul IV
was a still greater blow. Sadoleto’s commentary
on the Romans and Contarini's book on
Justification were declared suspect; Pole ceased to be Legate and was for a
time disgraced; Morone was actually
imprisoned for heresy, and remained in prison until the death of the Pope in
1559. The Inquisition resumed its activity all over Italy. Although the total
extinction of heresy was still long delayed, the end was only a question of
time. For the springs were dried up, and no new ones burst forth.
II
SPAIN
Although one of
the noblest leaders of the Italian Reform was a Spaniard, the movement never
obtained such a hold upon Spain as upon Italy: in part because measures of
repression were more promptly and more thoroughly applied, in part, perhaps,
because many of the practical abuses had already been abated or removed, while
the doctrinal abuses which called forth the protest had not yet prevailed in
Spain so largely as elsewhere. Many of the best-known Spanish Reformers lived
and died in Flanders or in some other foreign land; and in Spain itself the
movement appears to have had little vitality excepting in and about two centres, Valladolid and Seville. Two autos-de-fé at Valladolid and two at Seville, of the
thorough kind instituted by the Spanish Inquisition, sufficed to break up the
Reformed in these centres. Many fugitives
escaped and found refuge in Germany, England, or the Low Countries; and the few
who remained were gradually swept away by the same drastic methods of the
Inquisition.
A reform of the
Spanish clergy, regular and secular, had taken place before Luther arose. It
had begun, so far as the regulars were concerned, nearly a century before; for
example, the Cistercians had been reformed by Fray Martino de Vargas in the
time of Pope Eugenius IV, and afterwards Cardinal Mendoza had worked in the
same direction. But the chief agent in it was Fray Ximenez de
Cisneros of the Order of St Francis, to be better known as Cardinal Ximenez.
At the request of Ferdinand and Isabella he drew up a report on the state of
all the monasteries of Spain. Thereupon a Bull was sought from Alexander VI in
1494, by which Cisneros was empowered to visit and set in order all the
regulars of Spain; and he inaugurated the most drastic reformation, perhaps,
that Religious Houses ever sustained. His action was in general submitted to;
but his own Order, which was the worst of all, resisted strenuously, and
obtained a Bull of prohibition against him. On further information the Pope
annulled this, and the work went on. The monasteries were disciplined, their
‘privileges’ burned, and their rents and heritages taken away and given to
parishes, hospitals, &c. A large number of monks who were scandalous evil-livers,
and who seemed irreformable, were deported to Morocco, and the work was
complete. With the seculars Cisneros was less successful. But by degrees the
regulars reacted healthfully upon them; Bishops and provincial synods took them
in hand; and the earlier Inquisitors, especially Adrian of Utrecht, did much to
put away abuses amongst them. Without doubt, therefore, the moral state of the
Spanish clergy in the sixteenth century, especially that of the monks and
friars, was immeasurably superior to that of the clergy in any other part of
Western Christendom.
Moreover, the
purging of the Spanish clergy had been accompanied, or followed, by a revival
of learning. Ximenez was a scholar and a munificent patron of
scholarship; and under his fostering care the University
of Alcalá had become famous throughout Europe as a centre of theological and humane learning. The
Cretan Demetrios Ducas taught Greek;
Alfonso de Zamora, Pablo Coronel, and Alfonso de Alcalá were expert
Hebraists; and amongst other scholars there were the two Vergaras, Lorenzo Balbo, and Alfonso de Nebrija. The greatest monument of the liberality and
enterprise of Ximenez was the famous Complutensian Polyglott, which was in preparation at the very time when
Erasmus was working at the first edition of his Greek Testament, though it did
not begin to appear till 1520.
These facts have
no little bearing upon the way in which the writings of Erasmus were received
in Spain. To some he was a literary colleague whom they with all the world were
proud to honor: to others he was a rival, whose work was to be depreciated
wherever possible. Nor was it difficult to do this; for his satirical writings
against clerical abuses really did not apply to Spain. Elsewhere, all good men
were agreed in combatting the evils against which he wrote. In Spain, the
earnestness of his crusade was easily overlooked by those who had not lived
abroad; on the other hand, nowhere was there so keen a scent for heresy. His
liberal thought, and his ridicule of religious customs which, however liable to
abuse, were in themselves capable of justification, seemed most dangerous to
the orthodox Spanish mind; and only the more large-hearted were able to discern
the genuine depth of his piety.
Nowhere,
therefore, did Erasmus’ writings rouse such feelings as in Spain. Diego Lopez
de Stúñiga and Sancho Carranza de Miranda
inveighed against him, the former repeatedly, accusing him of bad scholarship,
of heresy, of impiety, calling him not only a Lutheran but the standard-bearer
and leader of the Lutherans. Erasmus replied, publicly and privately, with
comparative moderation; and by degrees the controversy died away. Meanwhile he
had many personal friends in Spain, through whose influence some of his
writings were translated into Spanish, the first being the Enchiridion,
which appeared in 1526 or 1527 with a dedication to Manrique the
Inquisitor, and bearing his imprimatur. Some spoke against it, including
Ignatius Loyola, who says that when he read it (in Latin) it relaxed his fervor
and made his devotion grow cold; nevertheless it had a wide popularity. This
brought its author into still greater prominence; and a contemporary writer
says that his name was better known in Spain than in Rotterdam.
Gradually two
hostile camps were formed, of erasmistas and anti-erasmistas. In 1526 the Archdeacon
Alfonso Fernandes, the translator of the Enchiridion, wrote to
Coronel that certain friars were preaching against its author, and suggesting
that they should be censured; on the other hand, the friars demanded that
certain theses selected from Erasmus1 writings should be condemned. In the
ecclesiastical juntas which met at Valladolid in Lent, 1527, a formal enquiry
was begun before Manrique and a body of theologians; but no agreement
was reached, and Manrique dissolved the enquiry, leaving things as
they were. Alonso Fonseca, Archbishop of Toledo, also took the part of Erasmus;
and by the influence of Gattinara and other
friends at the Court of Charles V a Bull was obtained from Clement VII imposing
silence upon all who spoke or wrote against his writings, which ‘are contrary
to those of Luther’. Thus the erasmistashad
won a complete victory, and for a time had things all their own way. But after
the death of Fonseca in 1534 the tide turned. Juan de Vergara and his
brother were cited before the Inquisition, accused, says Enzinas, of no crime but favoring Erasmus and his writings;
and although they were ultimately acquitted, it was only after years of
detention. Fray Alonso de Virués was
condemned for depreciating the monastic state and was immured in a convent; but
the charges were so preposterous that Charles V, whose chaplain he was, came to
his rescue; and the sentence was annulled by the Pope. Mateo Pascual, professor
of theology at Alcalá, was less fortunate; he had expressed a doubt as to
purgatory in a public discussion, was imprisoned, and his goods were
confiscated. Another who fell under suspicion was the great scholar Pedro
de Lerma, who had lived at Paris over fifty years, had been dean of the
faculty of Theology there, and had returned to Spain as Abbot of Compludo. In 1537 he was called upon to abjure eleven ‘Erasmian’ propositions, one of which seems to have been
justification by faith. He forthwith returned to Paris, at the age of over
seventy years, accompanied by his nephew Francisco de Enzinas,
in whose arms he died not long after.
‘Erasmianism’ gradually died out in Spain. Elsewhere it
either died out, or took a line of its own (as in the case of Juan de Valdés),
or became merged in Protestantism. Pedro de Lerma was on the
borderline; his nephews crossed it. Francisco de Enzinas (or Dryander as
his name was frequently rendered) was the younger brother of that Jaime who was
burnt at Rome in 1547; they were sons of rich and noble parents at Burgos, and
were educated at Louvain and Paris. On the death of
de Lerma Francisco became a matriculated student of Wittenberg
University, where there were about that time four other Spanish students, one
of whom, Mateo Adriano, was professor of Hebrew and medicine. The young man
lived in the house of Melanchthon, becoming so dear to him that he was often
spoken of as ‘Melanchthon’s soul’; and it was by his advice that Enzinas translated the New Testament into excellent
Spanish. Having finished it he went to the Low Countries; and from this point
we are able to follow his steps by means of his Narrative. The edicts of
Charles V against heresy were being put into force, but he felt safe, as he had
many friends. He presented his version to the theological faculty of Louvain
for their imprimatur; but they replied that they had no power to
give this, and could not judge of its accuracy. So he himself published it at
Antwerp, with a dedication to the Emperor, in which he defended the translating
of the Scriptures (against which, he said, he knew no law) and placed his own
version under Charles’ protection. On November 23,1543, he arrived at Brussels
to present it in person, and was introduced to the Emperor's presence by the
Bishop of Jaen. After a conversation of which Enzinas has
left a rather partial account, the Emperor promised to accept the dedication
provided that the version was satisfactory; and it was submitted to his
confessor, Fray Pedro de Soto.
Soto was disposed
to be friendly, but took the precaution of making enquiries. The following day
he sent for the young man, set before him the dangers of the unguarded reading
of the Scriptures, as demonstrated by Alfonso de Castro in his De Haeresibus, and added that Enzinas had
broken the law by publishing an unlicensed work; also, that he was still more
to blame for consorting with heretics at Wittenberg, and for publishing a
heretical book based upon Luther’s De servo arbitrio. Enzinas answered, reasonably enough, that there was no
law in Flanders against translating the Bible, and that if it was wrong to
consort with the German doctors, then the Emperor himself and many more were to
blame. As to the book, he denied roundly that he had ever published anything
but the New Testament, a denial which it is very hard to accept. Ultimately he
was committed to prison in Brussels for his civil offence, and thus was saved,
evidently by Soto’s desire, from the tender mercies of the Spanish Inquisition.
There he remained, in easy confinement, until February 1, 1545, when, by
the negligence, or more probably connivance, of his gaolers,
he escaped and made his way to Wittenberg, and thence to Strasburg, Basel and
elsewhere. In disgust at the discords amongst Protestants, he seriously thought
of going to Constantinople to preach the Gospel there; but instead of doing so
he married a wife, came to England on Cranmer’s invitation, and was made
professor of Greek at Cambridge. There he remained for about two years; but in
1549 he returned to the Continent to arrange for the printing of his Spanish
versions of the classics, and died at Augsburg on December 30, 1550.
1545-50] Juan
Diaz.
Jaime de Enzinas had remained at Paris for some time after his
brother’s departure, and whilst there had imbued another Spaniard, Juan Diaz,
with his own views. Born at Cuenca, the city of the brothers Valdés, Diaz had
studied for thirteen years at Paris, becoming proficient in theology and in
Hebrew. About 1545 he went to Geneva, and spent some months in Calvin’s
society. Thence he passed to Strasburg with the brothers Louis
and Claud de Senarcleus, the latter of
whom, with the help of Enzinas, afterwards wrote
his life. At Strasburg the tenets of Calvin were held in some suspicion, and
before being admitted to communion Diaz was called upon to show his orthodoxy
by making a public profession of faith. At the end of the year the city
sent Bucer as its deputy to the second
Colloquy of Batisbon, summoned by Charles V; and
by his desire Diaz was sent with him, meanwhile acting - also as agent for
Cardinal du Bellay, the protector of the Huguenots of France. At Ratisbon in
1546 he had a series of discussions with the Dominican Fray Pedro de Malvenda, whom he had known at Paris; but his account of
these is very one-sided, and all that is certain is that neither converted the
other. From Ratisbon Diaz went to Neuburg on
the Danube. Meanwhile, news of his doings reached his brother Alfonso, who was
a lawyer at Pavia. He at once hastened to him in the hope of being able to
persuade him to return to the Church, or at least to abandon the society of the
Germans. On the advice of Ochino, who was then
at Augsburg, Juan refused to do either. Alfonso, maddened with fanaticism and
the shame of having a heretic in the family, thereupon compassed his death,
and, with an accomplice, cruelly assassinated him at Feld-kirchen on
March 27, 1546. The murderers were captured and brought to trial at Innsbruck;
but as they were in minor Orders, Soto and others caused the case to be cited
to Rome, where the murderers escaped scot-free. Not unnaturally the Protestants
regarded Diaz as a martyr, and attributed his death to the direct orders of the
ecclesiastical authorities; but though they connived at the escape of the
murderers, the act itself was certainly one of private vengeance.
Another Spaniard
who adopted the Reformed views about this time was Francisco de San Roman, a
rich merchant from Burgos. In 1540, going from Antwerp to Bremen on business,
he went by chance into a Lutheran church where Jakob Speng, formerly prior of the Austin canons at Antwerp, was
preaching. Although he knew no German, he was attracted by the preacher, stayed
at his house, and adopted his views. He at once began to preach and to write in
Spanish, with the eagerness of fanaticism and the self-confidence of ignorance.
Returning to Flanders, he was arrested and examined; his books were burnt, and
he himself was imprisoned. Being released after six months, he went to Louvain,
where he met Enzinas, who rebuked him for
risking his life uselessly by shrieking like a madman in the market-places, and
for impiously taking upon himself to preach without a call from God, and
without the requisite gifts or knowledge. The rebuke made no impression. In
1541 he went to Ratisbon and presented himself before Charles, who heard him
patiently again and again, but at length ordered his detention as a heretic. He
was taken to Spain, handed over to the Inquisition, and burned in an auto-de-fé at Valladolid in 1542. His fidelity won him
commendation where his rashness and ignorance had failed; and after his
death Speng wrote to Enzinas with the tenderest reverence and
love for the man whom they had little esteemed while he lived.
Reform movements
in Spain. [1521-70
Passing over
Pedro Nuñez Vela of Avila, of whom little
is known save that in 1548 and again in 1570 he is spoken of as professor of
Greek at Lausanne, we turn to Reform movements within Spain itself. Precautions
had been taken from 1521 onwards to prevent the diffusion of Lutheran books in
Spain. Attempts were not infrequently made to introduce them by sea : in 1524
two casks full were discovered and burnt at Santander, and in the following
year Venetian galleys were attempting to land them on the south-eastern shore.
But it was neither in Biscay nor in Granada that the storm burst, nor was it
caused by the importation of Lutheran books. It began in Seville and in
Valladolid, then the capital of Spain; and amongst its leaders, even if they
were not its founders, were three chaplains of the
Emperor, Dr Agustin Cazalla, Dr Constantino Ponce
de la Fuente, and Fray Bartolomé Carranza, Archbishop of Toledo and
Primate of Spain.
To begin with
Seville. A noble gentleman there, Rodrigo de Valer,
suddenly turned from a worldly life to one of devotion, studying the Bible till
he knew it almost by heart. He also began to inveigh against the corruptions of
the Church, preaching in the streets and squares, and even on the Cathedral
steps, saying that he was sent by Christ to correct that evil and adulterous
generation. He was more than once cited before the Inquisition, but treated
with great leniency, partly because he was thought to be insane, partly because
he was a cristiano viejo,
without admixture of Jewish or Moorish blood. At length he was condemned to
wear a sambenito and to undergo
perpetual imprisonment in a convent. There he died about 1550. His life had not
been fruitless: he had made many converts, amongst them the canon Juan Gil,
of Olvera in Aragon. Gil, or Egidio (as he was also
called), had studied with distinction at Alcala, and was a master of theology
of Siguenza. About 1537 he obtained
the magistral canonry of Seville, which imposed on him the duty of
preaching. At first his preaching had little success. But he gained new views
of truth by his intercourse with Valer, and
before long he became famous as a preacher.
But he owed even
more to his brother-canon, Constantino Ponce de la Fuente, than
to Valer; for he it was who first taught him, in
set terms, the doctrine of justification by faith. Constantino, a native
of San Clemente near Cuenca, had studied at Alcalá with Gil and a
certain Dr Vargas; he was a man of great learning, skilled in Greek
and Hebrew, who had probably learnt the doctrine of Justification from books.
In 1533 he had been made a canon of Seville; and although he was not so popular
there as Gil, elsewhere his fame was far greater. The three friends now began
to work together, Gil being the most active. He
and Constantino preached diligently; Vargas expounded the Gospel of
St Matthew and the Psalms; and by degrees they gathered a body of adherents to
whom they ministered in secret. For a long while nothing was suspected; in
fact, Constantino was chosen by the Emperor to accompany him as his
preacher and confessor, and was out of Spain with him from 1548 to 1551, much
revered and honored. He subsequently came to England with Philip II, and only
returned to Seville late in 1555. During this period he produced a series of
books which were then much valued, but were ultimately regarded as heretical.
Meanwhile, the
others had been less fortunate. Gil, indeed, had been nominated by the Emperor
for a bishopric in 1550; but soon afterwards he and Vargas were cited before
the Inquisition. Vargas fell ill and died; but Gil was proceeded against
vigorously, the charges including the points of Justification, Works,
Purgatory, Invocation of Saints, and actual iconoclasm in the Cathedral. In
prison he wrote an apology on Justification which was held to make his case
worse; but ultimately, on Sunday, August 21, 1552, he made a public recantation
in the Cathedral, extorted, his friends afterwards said, by fraud. He was
sentenced to a year’s imprisonment in the castle of Triana near
Seville (the headquarters of the Inquisition), with permission to come to the
Cathedral fifteen times; he was to fast strictly every Friday, to make his
confession monthly, communicating or not as his confessor directed, not to
leave Spain, not to say mass for a year, or to exercise other functions for ten
years. Gil however did not modify his views. In 1555 he visited the Reformed at
Valladolid, and died a few days after his return, early in 1556.
The Chapter of
Seville had stood by their colleague nobly, although, or perhaps because, their
Archbishop, the stern Fernando de Valdés, was at the head of the Inquisition.
They paid Gil a considerable salary whilst he was in prison, and set over his
grave in the Cathedral a fine monument; moreover, in spite of great opposition,
they elected Constantino magistral canon in his place. He at
once took up his friend’s work, and besides preaching began a course of Bible
lectures at a school in the city. By degrees he also was suspected by the
Inquisition, which frequently summoned him to explain his conduct. When his
friends asked him the reason of his frequent visits to Triana,
he replied, “They wish to burn me, but as yet they find me too green”. As time
went on he began to lose heart, and at length, in order to disarm suspicion,
resolved to join the newly-arrived Jesuits. But they had been warned, and
refused to receive one who would otherwise have been acceptable enough as a
recruit.
At length the
Inquisition obtained proof of what they had doubtless long suspected : there
existed in Seville a sect of considerable size, whose members met together
secretly and had their own organization and services. They had grown up about
Gil and Constantino, had increased rapidly, and had obtained copies of the
New Testament from abroad through the activity of one of their members. The
detection of this society led to the accidental discovery of a large collection
of Constantino’s writings, in which he had spoken his full mind. He
was at once arrested. After a vain denial, he avowed that the books were his,
and that they represented his convictions. He was imprisoned in the dungeons
of Triana, and died two years afterwards of
disease and privation. Meanwhile, the search went on vigorously; and by degrees
all was discovered. From the Sanctae Inquisitionis artes aliquot detectae,
published under an assumed name in 1567 by a former member of the sect, it
appears that more than eight hundred people were proceeded against altogether.
They had two centres, the house of Isabel
de Baena, ‘the temple of the new light’, the
place ‘where the faithful assembled to hear the Word of God’, and
the Hieronymite monastery of San Isidro. Led by their
prior Garci-Arias, known as Maestro Blanco from his white
hair, the friars of San Isidro embraced the new views almost to a man, amongst
them being the learned Cristóbal de Arellano, Antonio del Corro, and Cipriano de Valera; they abolished
fasts and mortifications, and substituted readings from the Scriptures for the
canonical hours. Amongst the lay members of the sect were Juan Ponce de León,
second son of the Count de Bauen, Juan Gonzales,
the physician Cristóbal de Losada, and Fernando
de San Juan, rector of the Colegio de la doctrina;
above all, there was Julian Hernandez, known to the rest as Julianillo, since he was very small of stature and ‘no more
than skin and bone’. But he was a man of fearless courage, and by his means
they were able to procure religious books in Spanish, including the New Testament.
Juan Pérez, the former rector of the Colegio de la doctrina, had fled from Spain when Gil was
arrested; in his exile he had prepared a version of the New Testament, which
was published at Venice in 1556. By the courage and resourcefulness of Julianillo two great tuns filled with copies
were safely smuggled into Seville, despite the watchfulness of the Inquisition.
Little by little
the Inquisition got through its work, drawing its net closer and closer about
the chief offenders and allowing lesser persons to go free on doing penance. At
an auto-de-fé celebrated in the
Plaza de San Francisco on September 24,1559, fourteen persons were burnt to
death for heresy, including four friars and three women. A large number were
sentenced to lesser penalties; and the house of Isabel de Baena, in which they met, was razed to the ground, a
‘pillar of infamy’ being erected on the site. On December 22,1560, a second
auto was celebrated at the same place, when eight women, one being a nun, and
two men, one of whom was Julianillo, were burnt.
Gil, Constantino, and Pérez were burnt in effigy, and a number of friars
and others were visited with lesser penalties. Some contrived to escape and
fled from Spain; and a few single cases of heresy were dealt with in later
years. Thus ended the history of the Reform in Seville.
1542-60] The
Reform at Valladolid.
At VALLADOLID the
movement had already come to an end, for although it began later than at
Seville, it was discovered somewhat earlier. Its founder was Agustin Cazalla, born of rich parents who had lost rank for Judaising. He had studied under Carranza at Valladolid, and
afterwards at Alcalá. In 1542 he was made chaplain and preacher to the
Emperor, and till 1551 followed the Court. On his return to Spain he was made
canon of Salamanca and from that time forward dwelt there or at Valladolid. He
became addicted to the Reform either under Carranza’s instructions or in
Germany, and was confirmed in his views by Carlos de Seso,
a nobleman from Italy who had married a Spanish wife and had been made corregidor of Toro. Seso had
heard of justification in Italy, and became an ardent propagandist; in fact it
is clear that Toro, not Valladolid, was the real birthplace of the movement in
New Castile. A large number of well-born persons accepted Seso’s teaching, including the licentiate Herrezuelo, Fray Domingo de Rojas, many members of
the Cazalla family, and many devout ladies;
and all who accepted it became teachers themselves. Zamora and Logrono, near
which town Seso had a house, were affected
by the movement; above all, it found its headquarters in Valladolid, where it
soon had a very large following, both of rich and poor. The nuns of the rich
House of Belén, outside the city, were largely
involved; so were many of the clergy. Meetings and services were held
frequently, and the communion administered in the house of Leonor de Vibera, Cazalla’s mother.
It is not known
how they were discovered, but the arrests were precipitated by the action taken
at Zamora, by the Bishop, against Cristobal de Padilla, steward to the Marquesa de Alcañices,
who was preaching the new doctrines there. He was able to warn his friends in
the capital, some of whom fled to Navarre, and thence into France. But the
greater number were already taken early in June, 1558; the prisons were full;
and Valdés the Inquisitor-General was able to report to Charles V, in his
retirement at Yuste, that each day brought fresh
evidence against them. Moreover, mutual trust was lacking; when under
examination, even without torture, they accused one another and endeavored by
all means to exculpate themselves, so that there was no lack of incriminating
evidence. The cause was pressed on vigorously, special powers being sought from
Rome that it might not be delayed; and an auto-de-fé,
the first against heresy, was arranged for Trinity Sunday, May 21, 1559, to be
held in the Plaza Mayor.
On the appointed
day a concourse gathered, the like of which had seldom been seen. After a
sermon by the theologian Melchor Cano, the sentences were read out.
Fourteen heretics were condemned to death, together with a Portuguese Jew. They
were Agustin Cazalla and his brother
Francisco (also a priest), his sister and four other women, and seven laymen,
including Juan Garcia, a worker in silver of Valladolid, and Anton Asél, a peasant. The bones of Leonor de Vibera were burnt, her house pulled down, and the spot
was marked by a ‘pillar of infamy’. Sixteen were reconciled, and sentenced to
various terms of imprisonment; thirty-seven were reserved in prison. Of those
who suffered, most showed sufficient signs of penitence to be strangled before
being burnt, including Cazalla himself. But
exhortations were wasted upon the licentiate Herrezuelo,
who held to his opinions and was burnt alive.
A second auto followed
on October 8, in the presence of Philip himself. Seven men and six women were
burnt, and five women were imprisoned for life. The former included Fray
Domingo de Rojas, Pedro Cazalla, two other
priests, a nun of Santa Clara at Valladolid, and four nuns of Belén; of the latter, three were nuns of Belén. Several of those who were burnt were gagged that
they might not speak; but Fray Domingo demanded leave to address the King, and
said, “Although I die here as a heretic in the opinion of the people, yet I believe
in God Almighty, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and I believe in the
passion of Christ, which alone suffices to save the world, without any other
work save the justification of the soul to be with God; and in this faith I
believe that I shall be saved”. It would seem, however, that only two were
burnt alive, Carlos de Seso and Juan
Sánchez.
Many isolated
cases of heresy are to be found after this, and doubtless the records of others
have perished. Leonor de Cisneros, the mother of Herrezuelo,
was burnt alive as an obstinate heretic on September 26, 1568; several cases of
heresy were dealt with at an auto-de-fé at
Toledo in 1571, and recent research has found a certain number of other
instances elsewhere. As time went on such cases were in increasing proportion
of foreign origin. But wherever heresy was discovered it was ruthlessly stamped
out. Nor was this merely the work of a few officials. From his retirement
at Yuste Charles V adjured his son to carry
out the work of repression to the uttermost; and Philip replied that he would
do what his father wished and more also. He told Carlos de Seso that if his own son were a heretic, he would
himself carry the wood to burn him; and in this, as in most other things, he
was a typical Spaniard. The rage against heresy regarded all learning, all
evangelical teaching, with suspicion; to speak overmuch of faith or of inward
religion might be a disparagement of works and of outward religion. Sooner or
later most of the learned men of the day were cited on suspicion of heresy, or,
if not actually cited, their actions and words were carefully watched. Fray
Luis de Leon, poet and scholar, spent nearly five years in the prisons of the
Inquisition whilst his works were being examined; and although he was at length
acquitted, his Translation of the Song of Solomon was suppressed, and he again
fell under suspicion in 1582. Juan de Avila, Luis de Granada, even St Teresa,
and St John of the Cross were accused; and it is said that Alva himself and Don
John of Austria were not above suspicion.
1503-82] Bartolomé
de Carranza.
Above all, the
Inquisition struck, and not ineffectively, at the highest ecclesiastic in
Spain, and brought him low, even to the ground. Bartolomé de Carranza was born
in 1503, of a noble family, at Miranda in Navarre, and he entered the Dominican
Order at the age of seventeen. In 1523 he was sent to the College of San
Gregorio at Valladolid, of which he ultimately became Rector. It is possible
that on a visit to Rome in 1539, to attend the Chapter-general of his Order, he
met Juan Valdés. As time went on Bartolomé was more and more honored in Spain
for his learning and goodness. In 1545 Charles V sent him as theologian to the
Council of Trent, where he won golden opinions. His doctrine of Justification
was indeed questioned on one occasion; but he had no difficulty in showing that
his words were in harmony with the decree of the Council, and he was vigorous
in his treatment of heretical books. In Spain (1553), in England (1554), and in
Flanders (1557), he showed himself zealous against heresy; and when, late in
the latter year, he was chosen to be Archbishop of Toledo, his own was the
single dissentient voice. Having at length accepted the office, he gave himself
unreservedly to its duties. But it soon appeared that he was not without
enemies. Some of the Bishops were ill-disposed towards him because he
rigorously enforced upon them the duty of residence. Valdés, the
Inquisitor-General, was jealous of him, perhaps because he himself had aspired
to the primatial see. And the great theologian Melchor Cano,
of his own order, was a lifelong rival. The two men differed in the whole tone
of their minds; Fray Melchor was a thinker of almost mathematical
accuracy, while Fray Bartolomé reasoned from the heart.
Under these
circumstances very little evidence would suffice for a process for heresy; and
Carranza himself, learning that it was in contemplation, wrote repeatedly to
the Inquisitors in his own defence. Valdés however
had applied to Rome for permission to proceed against him. The brief arrived on
April 8, 1559, the King gave his permission in June, and in August Carranza was
arrested and imprisoned. The main charges against him were based upon his
relations with Cazalla, Domingo de Rojas, and
others then under condemnation; upon his writings, especially the Commentaries
on the Catechism, which he had published at Antwerp just after he became
primate; and upon his last interview with Charles V. Of these the first head
was by far the most serious. Many of the accused at Valladolid spoke of the way
in which he had met their doubts in the early days of the movement; and Rojas
in particular, desiring to shelter himself under the aegis of his old master,
had in effect implicated him. The evidence showed that he had been in
correspondence with Juan Valdés; and it seems clear that at this period his
position had been that of the loyal doctrinal Reformers of Italy. Although he
had willingly accepted the Tridentine decree on Justification, it
does not appear that his doctrinal position ever really changed. His interview
with Charles V had been very short, but he was accused of making use of words
which savoured of heresy. The Catecismo was next examined : and, although
some, both of the prelates and of the doctors, had no fault to find, others
censured it severely. Melchor Cano in particular found much that was
ambiguous, much that was temerarious, much that was even heretical, in the sense
in which it was said. Nevertheless, the Tridentine censors had
pronounced the book orthodox and had given it their approval.
The process
dragged on its slow length, with many delays and many interruptions. At length
the case was cited to Rome. On December 5, 1566, Carranza came out of his
prison, and a few months afterwards he set out for Italy. Here the question had
to be reopened, and the documents re-examined and in many cases translated,
which involved a further delay. But it appears that Pius V was convinced of
Carranza’s innocence; and a decree would probably have been given in his favor
had not the Pope died on May 1, 1572. His successor Gregory XIII reopened the
case, and sentence was not actually given till April 14, 1576. The Archbishop
was declared to have taken many errors and modes of speech from the heretics,
on account of which he was ‘vehemently suspected’ of heresy; and he was
condemned to abjure sixteen propositions. Having done this, and performed
certain penances, he was to be free from all censures, but to be suspended for
five years from the exercise of his office, meanwhile dwelling in the house of
his Order at Orvieto. The Catecismo was
prohibited altogether. The decision was severe, but not unjust according to the
views of the sixteenth century, which applied the tests of doctrinal orthodoxy
to the minutiae of individual opinion. But Carranza was no longer subject to
it; for seventeen years in prison had broken his strength. He endeavored to
fulfill his penances, humbly made his profession of faith and received the
Eucharist, and expired on May 2, 1576.
Miguel Servetus
Thus ended the
Reform in Spain, as it had ended in Italy, uprooted by the intolerant dogmatism
which assumed that there was an ascertained answer to every possible
theological question, confused right-thinking with accuracy of knowledge, and
discerned heresy in every reaction and every independent effort of the human
mind. Many of those who had been driven out of Spain continued to work
elsewhere. Such were Juan Perez already referred to, Cassiodoro de
Reina, and Cipriano Valera, each of whom translated the whole Bible
into Spanish, and many more. But without following these further, mention must
be made of one great Spanish thinker of the earlier part of the century, who
spent most of his life abroad. Miguel Serveto y Reves was born at Tudela in
Navarre about 1511, his family being of Villanueva in Aragon; and he studied at
Toulouse. As secretary to Juan de Quintana, the Emperor's confessor, he was
with him at Bologna in 1529 and at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530 (where he met
Melanchthon, of whose Loci communes he became a diligent student), but soon
afterwards left his service and went to Basel. In 1531 he published his De Trinitatis Erroribus, and in 1552 two Dialogues on the
Trinity: and the suspicion which he incurred by his views led him to flee
to France. Here for the first time he met Calvin, who was his antithesis in
every way, being as clear, logical, and narrow in his views as Serveto was the reverse. After acting as proofreader
to Trechsel at Lyons, and producing a
remarkable edition of Ptolemy, he went to study medicine at Paris. In this
field he greatly distinguished himself, for he appears to have been the first
discoverer of the circulation of the blood. After a period of wandering, during
which he submitted to rebaptism by the Anabaptists of Charlieu,
he came to Vienne, where his old pupil Pierre Palmier was now
Archbishop, and remained there till 1553. In 1546-7 he engaged in a violent
theological controversy with Calvin; and when at length he published his Christianismi Restitutio the
letters were added to the book as a kind of appendix. Not unnaturally offended,
Calvin meanly accused his adversary, through an intermediary, to the
Inquisition, and in April, 1553, both Serveto and
the printer of the book were imprisoned. Serveto made
his escape, probably by complicity of his gaolers,
and was burned in effigy (June 17). He now resolved to make his way into
northern Italy; but by a strange mischance he went by way of Geneva. His
arrival was reported to Calvin, who resolved that his enemy should not escape;
the blasphemer must die. On October 27, 1553, Serveto was
burnt at the stake.
It is difficult to
estimate his theological position; for his one follower, Alfonso Ligurio of Tarragona, is now little more than a name.
Miguel Serveto stands quite alone, and
towers far above other sceptical thinkers
of his age. In some ways essentially modern, he is in others essentially
medieval. He could not throw in his lot with any party because he held that all
existing religions alike were partly right and partly wrong. It is impossible
to judge of him by constructing a theological system from his writings; for his
mind was analytic and not synthetic, his tenets varied from time to time, and
his system was after all but a framework by means of which he endeavoured to hold and to express certain great
ideas—creation in the Logos, the immanence of God in the universe, and the
like. But in his anxiety to correct the rigidity of the theological conceptions
of his age he took up a position which often degenerated into the merest
shallow negation; and his books on the Trinity are anti-trinitarian, not
because of his teaching, but in spite of it. And thus, whilst supplying many elements
which were lacking to the religious consciousness of most other men of his age,
he obscured them, and marred his own usefulness immeasurably, by alloying them
with elements of dogmatic anti-trinitarianism which were never of the
essence of his teaching.
III
PORTUGAL.
In Portugal the
religious revolt never attained serious dimensions: there were a few erasmistas, and a number of foreigners were
proceeded against for heresy from time to time; but that is all. Nevertheless,
the prevalence of heresy was one of the reasons alleged for the founding of the
Lisbon Inquisition; and the circumstances under which this took place may well
claim attention here.
The social
condition of Portugal in the early part of the sixteenth century was not a
little remarkable. Great opportunities for acquiring wealth had suddenly been
opened to its people by the discovery and colonization of the Indies. The
result was that they flocked abroad as colonists, or else left the country
districts in order to engage in commerce at Oporto or Lisbon, which rapidly
increased in size. But this had a curious effect upon the rural districts.
Before long there were scarcely any peasants, and the few that there were
demanded high wages. To supply their place, the landowners began to import huge
gangs of negro slaves, who were far cheaper, and could be obtained in any
number that was required. But this system had one great disadvantage, so far as
the exchequer was concerned. It became increasingly difficult to get the taxes
paid; for there was no longer anybody to pay them, the property of the
merchants being for the most part not within reach for the purpose. And thus
the King, Dom Joao III (1526-57), found himself in a curious position. He had
great hoards of money in the treasury, but there was
a continual drain upon them; and there were no means of replenishing them,
although he reigned over the richest people in Europe. In a letter to Clement
VII dated June 28, 1526, he complains of his poverty, and gives this as his
reason for not succoring the King of Hungary in his resistance to the Turks.
Various expedients
were adopted in order to replenish the royal treasury. Amongst others, a Bull
of 1527 gave the King the right of nominating the heads of all monasteries in
his realm, with all the pecuniary advantages which this privilege involved. But
Dom Joao soon found that he could not make much from this source without
scandalizing his people and incurring the enmity of the Church. There was
however a source of revenue, yet untapped, which was not open to this objection
: namely, the novos cristaos. If he could proceed against them as was done
in Spain, a lucrative harvest was ready to hand. Accordingly, early in 1581 the
King instructed Bras Neto, his agent in Rome, to apply to the Holy See for
a Bull establishing the Inquisition in Portugal on the lines of that of
Seville, and urged him to use every means in his power to this end, since it
would be for the service of God and of himself, and for the good of his people.
Bras Neto’s task
proved to be one of considerable difficulty. One Cardinal, the Florentine
Lorenzo Pucci, declared roundly that no Inquisition was needed, and that
it was only a plan to fleece the Jews; and his nephew, Antonio, who succeeded
him as Cardinal, proved little more tractable. The Jews themselves had always
been influential with the Curia, and they resisted strenuously.
Bras Neto found that, for his purpose, heresy was a better name to
conjure with than Judaism; and he did not fail to press the necessity for the
Inquisition as a safeguard against it. At length he succeeded, and on December
17, 1531, the Bull Cum ad nihil was signed, which
provided for the inauguration of the Inquisition at Lisbon. The reasons given
were that some of the novos cristaos were returning to the rites of their
Jewish forefathers, that certain Christians were Judaising,
and that others were following ‘the Lutheran and other damnable heresies and
errors’ or practising magical arts. These
reasons were, as Herculano has said, ‘in
part false, in part misleading, and in part ridiculous’: there were no
Lutherans in Portugal; the novos cristaos had as yet given no trouble there; and
the Christians of Portugal were no more inclined to Judaism, and less inclined
to magic than those of other parts of Europe. But the allegations had served
their purpose. On January 13,1532, a brief was dispatched to Frey Diego da
Silva, the King’s confessor, expediting the Bull and nominating him as
Inquisitor-General; and it looked as if the question was ended. As a matter of
fact it was hardly begun. For now began a series of intrigues and
counter-intrigues on the matter, now one side getting the best of it and now
the other. The brave knight Duarte de Paz, who was the agent for the Jews,
worked for them with a zeal and vigour restrained
only by the fact that he was a Portuguese subject. The King more than once
procured laws which placed the Jews at the mercy of his subjects, and then had
to withdraw them. Money, promises, threats were freely expended on both sides. Herculano calculates that between February, 1531, when
the matter was first opened, and July, 1547, when it was finally settled, over
two million cruzados (or nearly £300,000) were paid by the
King to the Papacy, without counting gifts to individual Cardinals. And since
the Jews disbursed money even more freely, it is clear that one party at any
rate was the gainer by the negotiations.
To trace the
changes in detail. On October 17,1532, a brief was issued suspending the Bull
of December 17, 1531. On April 7,1533, this was followed up by a Bull which
divided the novos cristaos into two classes, those who had received
baptism by compulsion and those who had been baptized voluntarily or in
infancy: the former are not bound to observe the laws of the Church, the latter
are, but their past failures are condoned. The King was very angry at this
amnesty and directed his agents to suggest various alternatives, one being that
the Jews should be shipped to Africa so as to be interposed between Christians
and Moors. But Clement VII did not waver. On April 2,1534, he dispatched a
dignified brief to Dom Joao, saying that he was not bound to give reasons for
his action, but that he would do so as an act of grace; and he proceeded to
give his reasons with admirable clearness. Not long afterwards he died. His
successor Paul III seemed more tractable at first. But he would not withdraw
the pardon, even when Dom Joao threatened to renounce the papal obedience like
the King of England. At length however, at the desire of Charles V, Paul agreed
to the setting-up of the Inquisition; and it was again provided for by a Bull
of May 23, 1536. But the matter did not end here, and it was not until July
16,1547, that the precise extent of the amnesty was settled and the Inquisition
finally established.
Even when it was
established it had very little to do with heresy properly so called. A few
writings, for instance those of Antonio Pereira Marramaque,
who insisted upon the duty of translating the Bible, were placed on the
Portuguese Index; but it was far more largely concerned with foreign works than
with those of natives. A considerable number of foreign students or traders
came under its influence; for instance, the Scottish poet George Buchanan (1548
c.) and the Englishmen William Gardiner and Mark Burgess. Even the records of
the foreign Church at Geneva, so largely recruited from Spain and Italy, only
supply some five or six Portuguese names. So that Damiao de
Goes remains the one Portuguese heretic of distinction during this period.
1538-72] Damiao de Goes.
Damiao was born about 1501 of a noble family, went to Antwerp about 1523,
and spent six years there in study. Then he travelled in the north, and
returned by way of Germany, passing through Münster to Freiburg,
where he stayed some months with Erasmus, and had long conferences with him.
After this he was in Italy from 1534 to 1538, with one short interval, during
which he came to Basel to tend Erasmus, who died in his arms on the night of
July 11-12, 1536. In 1537, at the desire of Sadoleto,
he began a correspondence with the Reformers at Wittenberg, in the hope of
bringing them back to the Church. He was at Louvain in 1538, and after fighting
on the side of Flanders and being for two years a prisoner of war, he at length
returned to Portugal in 1545. He was almost immediately denounced to the
Inquisition, but as the charges were vague and the Inquisitor-General his
friend, he was set free, and soon after was appointed royal archivist and
historiographer. In 1550 a second denunciation was made
by Simao Rodrigues, a Jesuit who had known him in Italy; it was more
precise and therefore more dangerous, but although he was vehemently suspected
the charges fell through. More than twenty years later, however, the charges
were again disinterred. He was brought before the judge Diogo da
Fonseca, on April 4, 1571, and remanded; and the old man of seventy remained in
prison for twenty months while the charges were being investigated. He frankly
confessed that he had been remiss in the performance of his religious duties,
and that he had held certain points of doctrine which were then held by many
great theologians, and were only subsequently made unlawful by the Council of
Trent. This, he said, was between 1531 and 1537; and against it he set more
than thirty years of blameless life. Nevertheless, he was sentenced to
perpetual imprisonment. Here the King interfered, commuted the punishment, and
sent him on December 16, 1572, to perform his penance in the monastery of Batalha. We do not know when he returned to his own home;
but he died there not long afterwards of an accident, a judgment, as people
said.
Such then was the
work of the Portuguese Inquisition during this period in its relation to
heresy. It was founded for reasons ostensibly religious, but actually fiscal;
and although when once established it made Protestantism impossible in
Portugal, there is nothing to suggest that the movement for Reform would have
found many adherents there had there been no Inquisition.
chapter 13
HENRY VIII
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