READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
CHAPTER XVIII
THE SCANDINAVIAN NORTH.
THE Scandinavian nations had entered somewhat late
into the general stream of European history, and, at the beginning of the
sixteenth century, were still not a little behind the rest of Western Europe in
civilization. But they were early brought into contact with the Reformation
movement, and nowhere were its effects more generally felt or more
far-reaching. In order to see to what extent this was the case, some attention
must be paid to their earlier history.
It was not till the tenth century that Denmark,
Norway, and Sweden began to exist as single monarchies; and it was under their
early Kings that Christianity, first introduced some time previously, came to
be the religion of all their people. From this time forward, although they were
frequently devastated and rent asunder by internal warfare, the three kingdoms
may be said to have taken their part, each in its own way, in European history.
The Swedes, pressed by their heathen neighbors to the north and north-east,
were at first unable to make much headway. The Norwegians, fully occupied by
their activities beyond the seas, in Iceland, in parts of Scotland and Ireland,
and even in far-away Greenland, never acquired much strength at home. Denmark
was usually the most powerful kingdom of the three. Under the Kings of the Estridsen line the Danes vindicated their independence of
the Empire, and conquered large territories from the heathen Wends and Esthonians on the shores of the Baltic; in fact, there was
a time, under Valdemar the Victorious (1204-41), when the Baltic was to all
intents and purposes a Danish lake. But the capture and imprisonment of
Valdemar by Count Henry of Schwerin gave a blow to their power from which it
never recovered. The increasing influence of the Teutonic knights and the
Livonian knights of the sword on the one hand, and the rapid advance of Sweden
under its Folkung dynasty on the other, still further
shattered it. The Danes were further hampered by the commercial and naval
rivalry of the Hanseatic League, and by frequent border warfare with the duchy
of Holstein. Altogether, it looked for a time as though Sweden must take the
place of Denmark as the chief power of the north. But although the Swedes
gradually extended their sway over Dalecarlia and
Finland, their further extension was prevented by the advance of the Russians
of Novgorod to the shores of the Gulf of Finland; and thus the peoples of the
north were once more thrown back upon themselves.
After several unsuccessful attempts at dynastic union,
the three kingdoms were at length united. In 1363 Valdemar III (Atterdag) of Denmark had given his daughter Margaret in
marriage to Hakon of Norway. On his death in 1375 Margaret’s son Olaf became
King of Denmark. Five years later, on the death of his own father, Olaf
succeeded to the crown of Norway; and Margaret became the real ruler of both
realms in the name of her son. About the same time she laid claim to the crown
of Sweden in right of her late husband Hakon; and, although the claim was at
first very shadowy, it became formidable when the Swedish nobles espoused her
cause. The King, Albert of Mecklenburg, was defeated and made prisoner at the
battle of Falköping; and the Treaty of Lindholm
(1393) left her undisputed mistress of Sweden. Thus the three realms were
united under Queen Margaret, for her son Olaf had died in 1387. The personal
union before long became a constitutional one. In 1397 Margaret caused her
grand-nephew Erik to be crowned King at Kalmar; and on that occasion there was
concluded, by nobles representing the three kingdoms, the famous Union of
Kalmar, by which Sweden, Norway, and Denmark were declared to be forever united
under one King, each retaining its own laws and customs. But the Union was not
regularly promulgated or made widely known, its terms were vague and
indefinite, and they opened up more questions than they solved. It was provided
that a son of the reigning King should be chosen if possible; but nothing was
said as to the method by which the three kingdoms were to participate in the
election. It was provided that all should take up arms against the general
enemy but no reference was made to the carrying out of projects which
concerned one of the three only. It is plain that nothing but pressing common
interests or a strong ruler could render such an agreement permanent, and this
was precisely what was wanting. On the one hand, Erik and his successors really
ruled in the interests of Denmark; on the other, the condition of Sweden,
practically one of anarchy, made any settled government well-nigh impossible.
Revolts were of frequent occurrence, and before long the Danish governors were
driven out, and Karl Knudson, the leader of the higher nobility, became
administrator of Sweden. On the accession of the House of Oldenburg to the
throne of Denmark in 1448, Karl Knudson was proclaimed King of Sweden, and soon
afterwards of Norway also. Christian I soon regained his hold over the latter
realm; but from this time forward the Danish Kings were seldom able to make
good their claims over Sweden, which continued to be ruled by Swedish
administrators until 1520, when the death of Sten Sture the younger placed Sweden for the moment entirely in the hands of
Christian II of Denmark. On the other hand, the Oldenburg line had gained
ground elsewhere. In 1460 Christian I was chosen as Duke of Schleswig and Count
of Holstein. But the great revolt of the Ditmarsch peasants, ending in the destruction of the Danish army, with two Counts of
Oldenburg and the flower of the Schleswig-Holstein nobility, in 1500, further
weakened the Danish throne, and indirectly helped to break up the Union of
Kalmar.
The general effect of the changes which had taken
place in the Scandinavian kingdom since the twelfth century had been to
strengthen the power of the nobles at the expense of the King and the bonder or
free peasants. Neither in Denmark nor in Sweden was there a law of heredity;
and every election was secured at the cost of a capitulation which involved a
certain weakening of the royal prerogative. In order to obviate the evils of a disputed
succession, the Kings frequently attempted to secure an election in their own
lifetime and left large appanages to their younger sons : with the result that
the effort to transform these personal fiefs into hereditary possessions often
led to civil wars, and still further weakened the Crown. Under pressure from
the nobles the royal castles were step by step demolished everywhere, and the
royal domain was gradually encroached upon. The Rigsraad,
or Council of State, consisting entirely of the nobles and the higher clergy,
altogether supplanted the ancient assemblies of the people as the final
legislative authority. In Sweden King Albert (Count of Mecklenburg) was little
more than the President of this Council. Even in Denmark things were not much
better; and they did not improve. Under the Oldenburg Kings the Court was
German rather than Danish, and its influence was none the greater on that
account. Nor, owing to the privileges of the Hanseatic’ towns, was there a
great merchant class, to act as a counterpoise to the nobles. And as for the
fonder, formerly the most important class of all, their condition was pitiable
indeed. By degrees their rights were encroached upon, till, from free and
noble-born small proprietors, they became mere peasants. In Denmark they were
at length compelled to have recourse to the practice of commendation, which
ended, in the latter part of the fifteenth century, in a widespread system of serfage.
The power of the clergy had grown pari passu with that of the nobles. Down
to the twelfth century, indeed, the Scandinavian Bishops were only suffragans
of the see of Bremen. It was not till 1104 that the see of Lund, in the Danish
province of Skaane, was raised to metropolitical
rank, with jurisdiction over all the bishoprics of the three kingdoms and
it was only in 1152 that the famous mission took place of the Cardinal of
Albano, Nicholas Breakspeare (afterwards Pope Adrian
IV), which gave to the northern Churches their permanent character. Under his
guidance Nidaros (Trondhjem) was made the
metropolitical see of Norway, and soon afterwards Upsala was raised to a
similar position in Sweden; the payment of Roma skat was
introduced, and the ecclesiastical system of the northern nations was remodeled
on the lines which prevailed at the time in other parts of Western Christendom;
though it was not till 1250 that a papal Bull took the choice of the Bishops
from the people and gave it to the Chapters. From this time forward the power
and the riches of the clergy had rapidly increased. They held large fiefs in
all three countries; it is said that more than half of Denmark was in the hands
of the Bishops, and Copenhagen itself was built on a fief of the Bishop of
Roskilde. Their possessions, like those of the nobles, were exempt from taxation,
nor were they liable to the same restrictions with regard to trade as the
people at large. With some conspicuous exceptions, they were not less opposed
to the Kings than were the nobles; quarrels respecting clerical immunities were
frequent, and they generally ended in the infliction of ecclesiastical
censures, followed by the surrender of the King at discretion and the payment
of an indemnity. As a rule, the higher clergy had been trained abroad, and were
not less foreign in feeling and sympathies than the Court itself. Owing partly
to difficulties in securing confirmation at Rome, partly to the exaggerated
importance that was attached to their civil and constitutional functions,
Bishops elect frequently remained unconsecrated for years, their spiritual functions
being carried out by others. Naturally, abuses were far from uncommon amongst
them, and there was not much love lost between them and the people at large.
Indeed the success of the Reformation, both in Denmark and in Sweden, was
largely due to the fact that it put an end to the power of the clergy and
despoiled them of their possessions.
I
THE REFORMATION IN DENMARK.
The accession of Christian II in 1513 marks the
beginning of a new era. A man of great natural gifts but violent passions, his
father had given him an education which at once developed his love for the
people and his self-love, and at the same time made him one of the most learned
monarchs of the day. He was sent to Norway to put down a rebellion in 1502, and
as regent there he received his apprenticeship in government during a series of
turbulent years. His marriage in 1515 with Isabella, sister of the future
Emperor Charles V, obtained for him an influence in Europe such as for
centuries no other King of Denmark had enjoyed. But he was cruel and
treacherous, both by nature and of deliberate policy. These characteristics had
already shown themselves in Norway : they were present throughout his reign,
and after ten years they helped to drive him from his beloved Denmark. Thus,
although he introduced many notable changes, he himself was overthrown by the
reaction to which they gave rise; and they were only carried out in their
entirety by others after his downfall.
Christian had himself reconquered Norway for his
father : at his own accession he found Sweden practically independent. On the
death of the administrator Svante Sture in 1512 the Rigsraad had
chosen the old Erik Trolle in his place and had
decided in favor of union with Denmark. But a popular party led by Hemming
Gadd, the Bishop of Linköping, had risen against him and set up Sten Sture the younger in his stead, who, being a wise and
statesmanlike leader, soon obtained the upper hand. There was still a strong
party opposed to him however, under the leadership of Gustaf, the son of Erik Trolle and Archbishop of Upsala. In the course of the civil
war which followed Gustaf was besieged in his castle of Staekeborg near Stockholm. He at once appealed to the Danes for help; and his assailants
were excommunicated by Archbishop Berger of Lund, by virtue of the authority
which he claimed as Primate of Scandinavia. Thereupon Sten Sture and the Rigsraad resolved that Trolle should be no longer recognized as Archbishop,
and that he should be imprisoned and his castle razed to the ground. Gustaf at
once appealed to Pope Leo X, who approved the excommunication of Sten Sture and called upon Christian to enforce it. From
1517 onwards, therefore, Christian was endeavoring by negotiation or otherwise
to take possession of Sweden. At first he had little success, excepting that in
1518, after an attack on Stockholm which failed of its object, he suggested an
interview with Sten Sture, demanded hostages for his
own safety, and then carried them off to Denmark, Bishop Gadd and a young man
named Gustaf Eriksson among them. In the following year he returned to Sweden
with a large army of mercenaries. On January 18,1520, Sten Sture was defeated in a battle fought on the ice on Lake Âsunden and so severely wounded that he died some weeks after. A second battle before
Upsala left all Sweden in Gustaf’s hands except Stockholm, which was valiantly
defended by Sten Sture’s widow, Christina Gyllenstjerna; and the promise of a general amnesty made in
Christian’s name by his general, Otte Krumpen, together with the persuasions of Gadd, who had
gone over to the King’s side, at length prevailed upon her to open the gates.
Christian entered Stockholm, and was crowned King of Sweden on Sunday, November
4, 1520.
The Stockholm Bath of Blood. [1520
The event that followed is the blackest in Christian’s
life. On the Wednesday, during the coronation festivities, the Swedish magnates
and the authorities of Stockholm were suddenly summoned into the citadel. Then Diederik Slaghök, a Westphalian
follower of the King’s, and Jens Andersen, surnamed Beldenak,
the Bishop of Odense, stood forth in the name of Gustaf Trolle and demanded reparation for the wrongs which, as they alleged, had been
inflicted on him. Christian at once called for the names of those who had
signed the act of deposition and committed them to prison; the only exceptions
being Bishop Brask of Linköping, who had signed under
protest, and another Bishop who now joined himself with Trolle as accuser. The following day, November 8, at nine o'clock, they were brought
before a Court of twelve ecclesiastics, one of whom was Trolle,
who thus became a judge in his own cause. The single question was put to them
by Beldenak, whether men who had raised their hands
against the Pope and the Holy Roman Church were not heretics? They could give
but one answer. Thereupon they were told that they had condemned themselves,
and were declared guilty of notorious heresy. On the very same day, at noon,
they were brought forth into the market-place and there beheaded one by one
before the eyes of the citizens. The Bishops of Strängnäs and Skara were the first to suffer; they were followed by the rest of the
signatories, amongst whom was the father of Gustaf Eriksson, afterwards King of
Sweden; and these by others of the principal nobles and citizens, who showed
their sympathy too plainly, until the square ran with blood. A spectator
counted more than ninety corpses before the day was done; and the ghastly work
was not confined to one time or place. The bodies lay where they had fallen for
three days, after which they were conveyed outside the town and burnt; the
bodies of Sten Sture and of his young son, born since
his excommunication, being exhumed and thrown upon the pyre. It was hoped that
this terrible deed, which is known as the Stockholm bath of blood (Stockholms Blodbad),
had secured Sweden to the Danes; as a matter of fact, as it has been said, the
Union of Kalmar was drowned in it for ever. Fierce revolts broke out
everywhere, and before long Sweden was independent under its own King Gustavus.
Christian was a more successful ruler at home than he
had been in Sweden. He was well aware of the evils under which Denmark was
groaning, and was resolved to provide a remedy. As the price of his election to
the Crown he had been compelled to accept not only the conditions which had
bound his father, but others even more onerous. One of these gave the judicial
power entirely into the hands of the magnates; another nullified the royal
right of conferring nobility; the last of all provided that if he broke his
agreement in any particular, “then shall all the inhabitants of the kingdom
faithfully resist the same without loss of honor and without in any wise by so
doing breaking their oath of fealty to us”. But from the first Christian
treated his capitulation as a dead letter, and endeavored in every way to
increase the power of the burghers and the peasants. Himself brought up in the
household of a burgher, Hans Metzenheim, surnamed Bogbinder, he surrounded himself with advisers of ignoble
and often of foreign birth: Sigbrit, the mother of
his beautiful Dutch mistress Dyveke, Diederik Slaghök, who has been
mentioned already, a Malmö merchant named Hans Mikkelsen, and many more. Mother Sigbrit, as she was called, a woman of great
capacity, was his chief counsellor in all fiscal and commercial matters. By her
advice he disregarded the Rigsraad altogether,
subjected the higher orders to taxation, and violated all their most cherished
privileges. Nor was it otherwise with the clergy, who soon found that in him
they had a master. He levied from them by arbitrary and lawless methods the
money which he really needed, but could not obtain in any legal way; Beldenak in particular was fleeced unmercifully. Meanwhile
he skillfully availed himself of the jealousy between them and the nobles, who
could not forget that many of them, including Archbishop Berger and Bishop Beldenak, were not nobly born, in order to overturn the
power of both. For the time it seemed as if he had succeeded; and two great
collections of laws, the so-called Secular and Ecclesiastical Code, which he
put forth in 1521 and 1522 on his own authority, without submitting them to
the Rigsraad, might seem to have marked
the downfall of the aristocratic power. But in little more than a year they had
been publicly burned and their author was a fugitive.
But Christian’s work was not merely destructive. The
people at large found in him a careful and wise ruler, who scrutinized every
detail of civil life and government and was never weary of working for their
good. His reforms of municipal government were at once elaborate and rigorous.
He built great ships and put down piracy; he made wise treaties with foreign
Powers. He extended commercial privileges to his burghers, and restricted those
of the Hanseatic towns, endeavoring to make Copenhagen the centre of the Baltic trade; and with this object in view he encouraged Dutch merchants
to found houses there, and extended a warm welcome to the rich banking-house of
the Fuggers. He brought Flemish gardeners to Denmark
in order that they might teach his people horticulture, and established them in
the little island of Amager, where their descendants
are to this day. He abolished the old “strand rights” and rights of wreck, and
decreed that all possible assistance should be given to ships in peril and to
shipwrecked mariners; and when the Jutland Bishops remonstrated with him,
saying that there was nothing in the Bible against wrecking, Christian
answered, “Let the lord-prelates go back and study the eighth commandment”. He
caused uniform weights and measures to be used throughout his dominions; he
took steps for the improvement of the public roads, and made the first attempt
at the creation of a postal system. He abolished the worst evils of serfage, and made provision for the punishment of cruel
masters. His laws on behalf of morals and of public order are enlightened and
wise; he abolished the death penalty for witchcraft; he founded a system for
the relief of the sick. He did his utmost for the encouragement of learning.
The University of Copenhagen, authorized by Pope Martin V in 1419, actually
founded by Christian I in 1478 with three professors only, of law, theology,
and medicine, first became important under Christian II. He founded a Carmelite
House in Copenhagen, which was to maintain a graduate in divinity who should
lecture daily in the University; and the famous Paul Eliae or Eliaesen (Povel Helgesen), a student of Erasmus’ writings and of Luther’s
earlier works, and an earnest seeker after Catholic reform, who has been not
inaptly styled the Colet of Denmark, came from Elsinore to be the first head
lecturer. Christian directed that schools should be opened for the poor
throughout his dominions; he exerted himself to provide better school-books; he
actually went so far as to enact that education should be compulsory for the
burghers of Copenhagen and all the other large towns of Denmark.
Meanwhile Christian had been turning his attention to
matters strictly ecclesiastical. Here too it cannot be said that he was
anything but an opportunist, and it would be superfluous to credit him with any
very pronounced convictions in favor of the Reformed doctrines; but there is no
reason to doubt the earnestness with which he set to work to correct practical
abuses. As early as 1517 there had come to Denmark a papal envoy named Giovanni
Angelo Arcimboldo, afterwards Archbishop of Milan, with a commission to sell
Indulgences, the right to act under which he purchased from the King for 1100
gulden. It was just at the time when Christian was engaged in negotiations with
Sweden; and he resolved to make use of Arcimboldo as an intermediary. Soon
however he discovered that the envoy, apparently in pursuance of secret
instructions from the Pope, was negotiating independently with Sten Sture. Arcimboldo managed to escape to Lübeck with
part of his booty; but the King at once gave orders for the seizure of what was
left, and found himself in possession of a rich harvest in money and in kind.
That this action did not involve any breach with the existing ecclesiastical
system is plain from the fact that the victims of the terrible “Stockholm bath
of blood” were put to death by Christian, not as traitors to the King, but as
rebels against the Holy See.
But he had already gone further than this. In 1519 he
wrote to his maternal uncle, Frederick of Saxony, begging him to send to the
University of Copenhagen a theologian of the school of Luther and Carlstadt.
Frederick sent Martin Reinhard, who arrived at Copenhagen late in 1520, and
began preaching in the church of St Nicholas. But Reinhard unfortunately knew
no Danish, and his sermons had to be interpreted, it is said by Paul Eliaesen. The effect was not happy : the sermons lost much
of their force, and the preacher’s gestures, divorced from his words, seemed
grotesque and meaningless. At the next carnival the canons of St Mary’s took
advantage of the fact by dressing up a child and setting him to imitate the
preacher. What was more serious, Paul began to find that he had no sympathy
with Luther’s developed position. Mocked by the people and bereft of his
interpreter, Reinhard was sent back to Germany. Christian now endeavored to
attract Luther himself; and, although this proved impossible, Carlstadt came
for a short visit. But the Edict of Worms (May, 1521), which placed Luther and
his followers under the ban of the Empire, was a hint too significant to be
neglected, and for a time no more is heard of foreign preachers in Copenhagen.
Within Denmark itself, however, things were not
standing still; and Christian’s codes of laws, already referred to, were full
of bold provisions for ecclesiastical reform. The monasteries were again
subjected to episcopal visitation. Clerical non-residence, which, partly owing
to local difficulties, was commoner in Norway and Denmark than elsewhere, was
stringently forbidden. To make an end of the ignorant “priest-readers” of whom
the Danish Church was full, no candidate for holy Orders was to be ordained
unless he had studied at the University and had shown that he understood and
could explain “the Holy Gospel and Epistle” in Danish. The clergy were not to
acquire landed property or to receive inheritances, “at least unless they will
follow the precept of St Paul, who in his First Epistle to Timothy counsels
them to be the husband of one wife, and will live in the holy state of
matrimony as their ancestors did”. The state which the Bishops were accustomed
to keep up was forbidden : in journeying “they shall ride or travel in their
litters, that the people may know them from other doctors; but they shall not
be preceded by fife and drum to the mockery of holy Church”. The spiritual
Courts were no longer to have cognizance of questions of property. Most radical
change of all, a new supreme tribunal was to be set up at Roskilde, by royal
authority alone, consisting of “four doctors or masters well learned in
ecclesiastical and imperial law”, the decisions of which, as well
ecclesiastical as civil, were to be final, the appeal to the Pope being abolished.
But Christian’s new code never came into operation.
His position was already one of great difficulty, and the toils were fast
closing round him. He was in bad odour at Rome,
partly on account of his attempted reforms, partly because of the three Bishops
whom he had slain in Sweden; for Hemming Gadd had been put to death not long
after the massacre of Stockholm, in spite of his loyalty to the King. This last
matter was arranged without much difficulty. The Nuncio Giovanni Francesco di
Potenza, whom Leo X had sent to Denmark, declared Christian innocent and found
a scapegoat in Diederik Slaghök,
now Archbishop elect of Lund. For this and other crimes he was condemned to
death, and burnt on January 22, 1522. But there were other difficulties which
could not be met in this way. The citizens of Lübeck had declared war, and were
soon devastating Bornholm and threatening Copenhagen. Christian was embroiled
in a hopeless contest in Sweden. He had offended his father’s brother,
Frederick of Schleswig-Holstein, by obtaining the investiture of the duchy at
the hands of Charles V, which he now abandoned by the Treaty of Bordesholm (August). And now, when everything was against
him abroad, the seething discontent at home came to a head. Late in 1522 the
nobles of Sjaelland broke out in open rebellion. To meet this, Christian
gathered together an army of peasants, and summoned a council of nobles (Herredag) to meet at Kallundborg.
The nobles and bishops from Jutland failed to put in an appearance, alleging
that the wind and time of year made it impossible. Thereupon he summoned them
and the representatives of the commons to meet in a national assembly (Riksdag) at Aarhuus.
But it was too late: the Jutlanders had already assembled at Viborg, renounced their allegiance to him, and
proclaimed Frederick King, putting forth at the same time a statement of
grievances (March, 1523). A letter in which they communicated the news to
Christian reached him early in the following month. The case was far from
desperate. Norway had not declared against him; most of the islands were still
his, and many of the chief citadels; the peasants were devoted to him, and so
were many excellent leaders, chief amongst them being the brave Admiral Sören Norby. But Christian had lost heart. Every day some renounced
their allegiance, and an alliance which Frederick had contracted with Sweden
and Lübeck filled him with alarm. On April 13 he left his capital and embarked
for Flanders with his young Queen and his three little children, and spent the
next nine years in exile, often under great hardships. He continued vigorously
to dispute Frederick’s throne, but without success, in spite of the fact that
he invoked the aid of his powerful brother-in-law, and at length, late in 1529,
was formally reconciled to the Roman communion. Two years later he desired to
enter into communication with Frederick, and gave himself into the hands of his
uncle’s commander, Knud Gyldenstierne,
on a safe-conduct. But in spite of this he was thrown into the dungeons of Sönderborg, where he remained for seventeen years, part of
the time with no companion but a half-witted Norwegian dwarf; and he only left Sönderborg for a less rigorous captivity elsewhere, which
endured till his death in 1559.
Frederick’s new position was no happy one. For years
his dominions were torn asunder by civil war; and Christian was still
recognized as the lawful King by the Pope, the Emperor, and the Lutherans. The
new King owed everything to those who had elected him, and concession was
naturally the order of the day. To Norway he granted that henceforward it
should be a free elective monarchy, as Denmark and Sweden were. To the nobles
he made even greater concessions than Christian II had made at his coronation,
promising amongst other things that none but noble-born Danes should be
appointed to bishoprics in future; whilst as regards the Church he bound himself “not to permit any heretic, Luther's disciple
or any other, to preach or teach, either openly or publicly, against the holy
faith, against the most holy father the Pope or the Church of Rome”. This last
promise was more than once repeated subsequently, in return for subsidies
granted by the clergy; but both parties must soon have come to realize that a
change was coming whether they would or no. And although the actual settlement
did not take place till after his death, the reign of Frederick I saw the real
overthrow of the Church in Denmark.
1522-6] Paul Eliaesen and
his followers.
Although the causes which brought this about were
political rather than religious, they were not entirely so, and there were
already not a few in Denmark who were propagating the new doctrines. Paul Eliaesen had indeed found himself unable to go the whole
length with the Lutherans, and before long received from them the nickname of
Paul Turncoat (Vendekaabe) for his alleged
instability. But Paul was neither a coward nor a renegade : he is almost the
only representative in the north of that class of earnest and enlightened men
who desired reform, both practical and doctrinal, without any general loosening
of the ecclesiastical system. It is true that after Christian II turned him out
of his lectureship in 1522 a rich canonry was founded for him by Bishop Lage Urne of Roskilde, the duties of which were to teach in the
University and preach to the people. But he had lost his former office in
consequence of a bold public denunciation of the King’s cruelty; and he was not
more flexible in the hands of Frederick I in 1526, when that monarch tried to
make him a Lutheran propagandist. Yet, although he refused to throw in his lot
with the extremists, and became more decided in his opposition to them as their
action became more decided, he never ceased to inveigh against the corruptions
of the old order. He translated selected tracts by Luther into Danish, and
asserted many of his earlier theses, even whilst he condemned that teacher's
later actions; and his last effort at peace-making, his Christian Reconciliation
and Accord, written about 1534, is an earnest plea for peace on the basis
of the historic system of the Church, with the services in Danish, communion in
both kinds, marriage of the clergy and the like.
But although Paul could go no further than this, there
were many of his disciples who went much farther. Chief amongst them was Hans Tausen, known as the “Danish Luther”. The son of a peasant
of Fyen (b. 1494) he had joined the Johannite priory
of Antvorskov, where his abilities soon won
recognition and he was sent abroad. After studying and lecturing at Rostock he
was nominated professor of theology at Copenhagen; but his Prior, willing to
see him still better equipped, sent him abroad again, and he now studied at
Cologne and Louvain. Thence he passed to Wittenberg (1523), where he was
listening to Luther’s teaching with avidity when the alarmed Prior summoned him
home in 1524 and imprisoned him. After a time he was transferred to the
Johannite house at Viborg, in order that the Prior there, the learned Peder Jensen, might show him the error of his ways. He soon
won Jensen’s confidence, and was permitted to preach to the people after
vespers. His preaching created a great sensation, but soon caused the prior to
admonish and warn him; so one day, at the end of his sermon, Tausen threw himself upon the protection of his hearers,
left the monastery, and took up his abode in the house of one of the chief
citizens.
Here he was joined by Jörgen Sadolin, who had studied with him under Luther, and
whose sister he presently married; and the two continued their irregular
preaching under the eye, and in spite of the prohibition of, the Bishop, Jörgen Friis. The same kind of
thing was going on at Malmö, where under the protection of the Burgomaster, Jörgen Kok “the moneyer”, one
Klaus Mortensen the cooper had begun preaching in the open air, until the
people rose and insisted that one of the churches should be placed at their
disposal. And the movement was spreading elsewhere. In 1524 there was printed a
Danish version of the New Testament, which is commonly attributed to Hans
Mikkelsen, formerly Burgomaster of Malmö, now a fugitive with the dethroned
King, and which may be in part his work. It was imported into Denmark in very
large quantities, and was largely read by the people in spite of episcopal
prohibition, until its place was taken five years later by a far better
version. This was the work of the gentle Christian Pedersen, known as the
father of Danish literature. He had been a canon of Lund, but followed
Christian II into exile, and became a convinced Lutheran; he returned to
Denmark in 1531, and spent the rest of his life, till his death in 1554, in
literary work for the cause of the Reform.
Such was the state of religion in Denmark when the
struggle began which led to the overthrow of the Danish Church. In May, 1525,
the nobles complained to Frederick I that the see of Lund had been over-long
vacant : they pointed out that the Archbishop of Lund was “the gate and bulwark
between Denmark and Sweden, as the Duke of Schleswig is between Denmark and
Germany”, and begged the King “no longer to allow that the Church in this land
should be thus dealt with”. The circumstances were peculiar. On the death of
Archbishop Berger in 1519, the Chapter had elected their Dean, Aage Sparre; the King had
nominated Jörgen Skodborg;
and Leo X, to the great indignation of the Danes, tried to appoint a young
Italian by provision. All three were set aside, and Diederik Slaghök was elected instead; but after his death
there was a deadlock. Frederick now attempted to put an end to this by
negotiation with the Pope. At first he seemed to have succeeded; Clement VII
apparently accepted the nomination of Skodborg, and
confirmed it. But what had happened in reality was that Skodborg had been induced to buy out his Italian rival, and by so doing had recognized
his claim. Frederick was furious at finding that he had been tricked. On August
19, 1526, he published a rescript by which he repudiated the appointment of Skodborg and (with the consent of the Rigsraad) confirmed the election of Aage Sparre, saving however Skodbor’s right of appeal to the King and the Rigsraad. The accustomed fees for the confirmation
were paid to the King instead of the Pope.
This momentous act had consequences greater, probably,
than those who took part in it anticipated. The procedure in question was accepted
at the Herredag at Odense in
December, 1526, not without careful stipulations for the safeguarding of
ecclesiastical liberties; and from this time forward no Danish Bishop sought
papal confirmation. Another sees fell vacant they were filled in the same way,
confirmation being given by the King; but in each case the Bishop elect
remained unconsecrated, such purely episcopal functions as were required being
performed by one or other of the retired Bishops or those who, like the Bishop
of Greenland, had never proceeded to their dioceses. Meanwhile Frederick was
rapidly carried in the direction of further change. His son Christian, Duke of
Schleswig, was already a convinced Lutheran; and in 1525 Albert of Brandenburg,
the head of the Teutonic Order, renounced Catholicism and as Duke of Prussia
became a suitor for the hand of Christian’s daughter. The prospect of a strong
Protestant alliance finally decided the question. Frederick, who had already
shown Lutheran inclinations, from this time forward did his utmost to propagate
the new views throughout his dominions. Naturally, not a few of his courtiers
went with him; and in particular Mogens Gjoe, the high steward of Denmark, became an ardent
Reformer.
His son Christian had already shown the way in Schleswig
and Holstein. A Lutheran preacher named Hermann Tast had been working at Husum since 1522, and under his influence and that of other
German preachers whom Christian had brought in as his chaplains, the new views
were spreading everywhere. Early in 1526 Christian attacked Bishop Munk of Ribe, telling him that he ought to provide his diocese with
married priests who could preach the Gospel. The Bishop temperately replied
that the Gospel was already preached, and that, with regard to the marriage of
the clergy, “when the Holy Church throughout Christendom adopts it, we will do
the same”. From this time forward Christian took matters into his own hands,
and drew up a new Lutheran order which he imposed on the duchies; four
clergymen who would not accept it were deprived, and the Duke’s chaplains
ordained others in their places. At Flensburg in 1529, after a disputation
between Tast and the Anabaptist Melchior Hofmann, the
doctrines of the Sacramentaries and Anabaptists were
abjured; and the system was complete when Bugenhagen gave them a Lutheran “Bishop” in 1541, and the Danish ritual came into use in
1542. In Denmark Christian’s Reforming tendencies were the cause of his never
being acknowledged by the Rigsraad as
successor to the throne during his father's lifetime.
Frederick followed his son’s lead by nominating Tausen and others as his chaplains, thus at once exempting
them from episcopal control and giving them protection. The plan was of course
not unknown before, but it was so effective that it caused the Bishops no
little alarm. At the Herredag of
1526 they remonstrated against any preacher being licensed excepting with their
consent, and “in such wise that he preach God’s Word”. Frederick was discreetly
silent on the former point, and answered as to the latter that he never
commissioned them to preach anything else; so the practice went on unchecked.
Soon it produced its effect in a widespread defection, which so alarmed the
Bishops that they endeavored to secure the presence in Denmark of Eck or Cochlaeus, or some other champion of orthodoxy, in order
that the doctrinal question might be thoroughly thrashed out. But this proved
to be impossible, and they were thrown back on their own resources, and
resolved to fight it out on the constitutional grounds with which alone they
were familiar.
At the Herredag at
Odense in August, 1527, they demanded that the people should be compelled to
pay the tithes and other dues, which were now being refused on all sides. This
was granted, in return for concessions to the nobles; as was also the claim
that they should be supported in the exercise of Church discipline. But when
they went on to protest against the propagation of the new doctrines and the
protection of the preachers, Frederick replied that faith is free, and that
each man must follow his conscience; that he was lord of men’s bodies and of
their goods, but not of their souls; and that every man must so fashion himself
in religion as he will answer for it to God at the Last Day. He would no longer
issue letters of protection to preachers; but if anyone molested those who were
preaching what was godly and Christian, he would both protect and punish. He
further suggested that the religious question should be decided by a national
assembly convoked for the purpose; but this suggestion was at once repudiated
by nobles and Bishops alike. He managed however to estrange the nobles from the
Bishops by supporting their attacks on ecclesiastical property; and thus the
ecclesiastical movement went on vigorously. In some places the old order was
overturned altogether; at Viborg for instance even the Cathedral came into the
hands of the Lutherans in 1529, and at Copenhagen, whither the King had
summoned Tausen, they soon had the upper hand.
Meanwhile, the Bishops seemed incapable of taking the only measures that could
have been of any use. Preaching was almost in abeyance on their side; and in
many places there were services only two or three times a year, and large
numbers of country benefices were left entirely vacant. In 1530 for instance
the sixteen extensive parishes of the diocese of Aarhuus had only two priests between them.
In 1530 the contest advanced a stage further.
Preparations were being made in Germany for the Diet of Augsburg, which, it was
hoped, would put an end to the religious controversy; and it seemed to the
Bishops that the same happy result might be looked for in Denmark, if the
Lutheran leaders could be made to appear before the King and the magnates.
Twenty-one of them were accordingly cited to appear at Copenhagen before
the Herredag, the Bishops taking care
also to secure the help of Paul Eliaesen and of two
German theologians, one of whom was Dr Stageführ of
Cologne. The session was opened, and several days were spent in accusations
against the preachers as heretics. When the time came for his reply, Tausen suddenly produced a confession of faith in
forty-three articles, which he and his fellows allotted among themselves and
publicly defended day after day before great multitudes of excited people, in
the Church of the Holy Spirit.
At first the Bishops only reminded the King of his
oath to put down heresy; but finding that this had no effect either upon him or
upon the assembly, they drew up twenty-seven articles against the preachers and
asked that their opponents might be kept under restraint till the whole matter
was decided. Tausen and his followers replied with an
apologia, also in twenty-seven articles, in which they made a violent attack
upon the whole Church system. But here the matter ended; the disputation which
had been projected never took place because of a disagreement as to the
language in which it was to be held. The Bishops asked that it should be in
Latin, so that their German advocates might take part; the preachers insisted
upon Danish, not only as the language best understood by the assembly, but
because their whole appeal was to the common people. Naturally, the popular
voice was on their side. There were loud outcries in Copenhagen against the
Bishops and still more against the German doctors; and when Frederick dismissed
the assembly, enjoining peace upon both parties, there could be no question
that the Bishops had lost their case. They were disheartened in many ways: the
ablest of their number, Lage Urne of Roskilde, was
dead; Jörgen Friis of
Viborg had been excommunicated, rather gratuitously, by the Pope; Beldenak had been deprived of his civil rights for
disrespect to the Crown, and soon afterwards resigned; and his successor Knud Gyldenstierne, the same who
brought the dethroned Christian to Copenhagen, had so far thrown in his lot
with the Lutheran movement as to make Sadolin a kind
of coadjutor in his diocese, where he translated Luther’s Shorter
Catechism into Danish and issued it to the clergy to be used as a
manual of instruction. On all hands the Lutherans were gaining ground. In some
places there were iconoclastic outbreaks, though both now and throughout the
period they were surprisingly few; and to this day many of the Danish churches
contain their ancient altar-tables and reredoses, and the clergy wear the old
copes. But everywhere the Reform progressed, until Elsinore was almost the only
stronghold of Catholicism.
The Count’s War. [1533-4
At this point however there came a period of disorder,
caused by the death of Frederick I at Gottorp in
Schleswig. The effect of Frederick’s concessions to the nobles had been to
divide the country into a series of semi-independent local governments; and
nobles, Bishops, and people alike realized that they had everything to gain or
to lose under the new King. Under these circumstances conflict was inevitable.
No sooner had the Estates come together than the Bishops demanded that the
religious question should be dealt with. This was distasteful to many of the
lay nobles; but in return for concessions they gave way, and it was resolved
that the old order should be in all respects upheld, saving for actual abuses,
that the Mass should be restored wherever it had been abolished, and that
nobody should preach without the consent of the Bishop. Thus all the
innovations introduced since the Herredag of
Odense in 1527 were swept away. The Estates next proceeded to the election of a
successor to the Crown. The late King, Frederick I, had left two sons,
Christian of Schleswig-Holstein and his half-brother Hans. Most of the nobles
favored the former, whilst the Bishops placed all their hopes in the latter,
who was a mere child and might still be kept from Lutheranism. Failing to come
to an agreement, they resolved to postpone the election for a year; whereupon Mogens Gjoe and others left
Denmark and endeavored to persuade Christian to claim the crown by force. This
he refused to do. But his self-restraint was of little use, for within a year
civil war had broken out. The towns, smarting under the curtailment of their
privileges at the hands of the lay nobles and of their religious liberties at
those of the Bishops, began to look back longingly to the days of King
Christian II, and soon broke out in revolt. The Burgomasters of Copenhagen and
Malmö, who were at the head of the movement, made common cause with the
democracy of Lübeck, whose forces took the field under Count Christopher of
Oldenburg in order to place the imprisoned Christian II once more on the
throne. Such at least was the avowed object of the so-called Count’s War; but
behind these were plans of another kind; for the people of Lübeck, under their
determined leader Wullenwever and his admiral Meyer,
had only thrown in their lot with the Danish towns in order to get Denmark into
their own hands and so to restore the old supremacy of the Hanseatic League in
the north.
Christopher directed his forces towards Zealand, and
disembarked at Skovshoved on June 23, 1534.
Copenhagen opened its gates to him, and Malmö soon drove out the garrison which
had been placed there to overawe it; and before long the islands had all
overthrown their oppressors, often with great ferocity, and proclaimed
Christian II. Freedom of worship was at once restored. Bishop Roennov of Roskilde was deprived and his see given to the
aged Gustaf Trolle, formerly of Upsala; and on Roennov offering a bribe of 10,000 marks in order to retain
possession of the See, Trolle was transferred to Fyen, in the place of Gyldenstierne,
who was likewise ejected. From the islands Christopher turned his attention to
the mainland. One of his lieutenants was sent to Jutland, where the peasants
quickly gathered round him. The nobles at once marched against them, but were
routed in the outskirts of Aalborg; and thus the greater part of Jutland once
more owned Christian II's sway. But the turning-point of the war was already
come. In the face of so great dangers the Estates had sought an alliance with
King Gustavus of Sweden, and another with Duke Christian of Schleswig-Holstein;
by the terms of the latter, Christian was to unite with them against the common
enemy, and differences were to be settled afterwards. He observed the terms
loyally; but first the nobles of Jutland and then those of Fyen elected him their King; and at length, in an assembly held at Ry, near Skanderborg, the nobles and Bishops of the mainland united
in proclaiming him.
Whether as ally or as King, everything depended upon
him and his power. As Duke of Schleswig he made peace with Lübeck, thus
becoming free to use his army elsewhere. Then he dispatched his best general,
Hans Ranzau, against the peasants of Jutland, who
shut themselves up in Aalborg. Ranzau took the town
by assault, and crushed the rising in Jutland by putting the enemy to the
sword, sparing none but women and children. Thence he passed into Fyen, and inflicted a crushing defeat upon the main body of
Christopher’s army on the hill of Oxnebjerg, near Ässens, in which Gustaf Trolle was mortally wounded. Meanwhile, Gustavus had invaded Skaane and Jutland, where his mere presence was enough to restore heart to the nobles,
who had only given in their allegiance to Count Christopher through necessity.
The Danish admiral Peder Skram (‘Denmark's Adventurer’) attacked and defeated the great Lübeck fleet near
Bornholm, thus regaining command of the sea; and Ranzau’s army being thereupon transported to Sjaelland, Copenhagen was invested by land
and by sea. These disasters occasioned great disorders at Lübeck: Wullenwever and Meyer having in vain attempted to retrieve
their fortunes by sending forth a new commander, Albert of Mecklenburg, were
themselves removed from power, and Lübeck made its peace with Denmark.
Gradually all resistance died away: Malmö opened its gates on April 2, 1536,
Copenhagen surrendered at discretion on July 29, and on August 6 Christian III
entered his capital in triumph. Soon after the victory of Ässens Norway had acknowledged his sway.
The accession of Christian, as the Bishops well knew,
meant their downfall; and it was only actual necessity which had compelled them
to accept him. Before the outbreak of the Count’s War it had seemed that their
cause might yet triumph : Tausen himself had been
proceeded against and silenced, their own authority was restored, they had even
reopened communications with Rome, which had been met, however, with chilling
reserve. Now, all was lost. Christian III was a determined foe of the old order
and had long ago expressed his intention of uprooting it. Nor were they long
kept in suspense. On August 11 Christian consulted with his commanders, who
agreed that the Bishops should be “pinioned”. At four o'clock the following
morning three of them were brought as prisoners into the castle. Four hours
afterwards the King called together the lay members of the Rigsraad, and proposed that the Bishops should be
deprived of their share in the government of the realm and that their
possessions should be forfeited to the Crown. They not only consented
willingly, but also voted that their spiritual power should no longer be
recognized, unless it should be approved by a general council of the Danish
Church; and the remaining Bishops were forthwith sought out and arrested. This
vote of the Rigsraad was approved by
a national assembly (Rigsdaag or Thing)
at Copenhagen, in which however the nobles took the chief part, which solemnly
declared, on October 30, 1536, that they wished to keep the holy Gospel and no
longer to have Bishops, and that the goods of the Church ought to be given up
to the Crown in order to lighten the taxation of the people. Thus fell the
Danish Bishops, as the result partly of the jealousy roused in the nobles by
their greed of temporal power, partly of the fanatical Lutheranism of Christian
III. They were not badly treated. The Raad of
August 12 had decided that they were to be set at liberty and adequately
supported, on condition of their promising to remain quiet; Rönnov indeed continued in prison till his death in 1544, but the rest were set free,
and two of them, Gyldenstierne and Ove Bilde,
ultimately conformed to the new order.
Christian now turned to Luther for help; and as the
services of Melanchthon were not obtainable, Jakob Bugenhagen,
who had already organized the Reform in Pomerania, was sent in July, 1537, to
accomplish the same work in Denmark. He was first called upon to crown
Christian and his wife, by a usurpation of the ancient privilege of the
Archbishops of Lund. Then the King nominated seven Superintendents, who were to
take the place of the ancient Bishops, and who soon became known by their name.
On September 12, Bugenhagen, himself no more than a
presbyter, laid hands on them; and thus, by a deliberate innovation, the new
Danish ministry was constituted. Of the persons chosen all were Danes, with the
unfortunate exception of Wandel, a German who knew no
Danish, and who had to be accompanied about his diocese by an interpreter. The
most important of them was Peder Plade (Palladius), who had studied at Wittenberg, and
became Bishop of Zealand, and the record of whose visitations gives us the most
graphic picture that we possess of the internal life of the new Church. Tausen was so far discredited as to be for the time
overlooked, though subsequently, on the death of Wandel,
he became Bishop of Ribe.
On the same day (September 2) was published the new
Church Ordinance, which had been prepared by the Danish theologians and
approved by Luther. It was subsequently sanctioned by the Assembly of Odense in
1539, and became, with additions made at various later synods (1540-55), the
fundamental law of the Danish Church. The Bishops were to have under them a
number of provosts or deans rural; and both alike were to be chosen by
delegates of the clergy, who in turn were chosen by the people or their representatives,
saving the rights of the nobles in some places; all being finally subject to
the King’s approval. These provisions, however, remained practically
inoperative, so far as episcopal elections were concerned. In each diocese
there were to be two diocesan officers who administered the confiscated Church
property (or so much of it as had not fallen into the hands of the nobles) in
the name of the King, and with the Bishops supervised the finances of the
churches, hospitals, and schools, and confirmed the election of the lower
clergy. These latter continued to hold their share of the tithe, to which the
nobles still refused to contribute; the episcopal tithe, however, was
confiscated and largely used for good works. The University, which had fallen into
decay, was greatly enlarged; ecclesiastical revenues were applied to the
support of men of merit and learning and the plans of Christian II with regard
to education were at length carried out. A liturgy was compiled, and a new
translation of the Bible from the original tongues was set on foot. For the
rest, changes were made gradually, and there was at first little disorder. The
Augsburg Confession was ultimately adopted with certain modifications, and Tausen’s Confession of 1530 was dropped; on the other hand,
the Formula of Concord was never accepted by the Danish Church. The monastic
houses and Cathedral Chapters were not at once abolished, though their members
were free to depart. The Chapter of Roskilde was engaged in a formal
disputation with Palladius and others as late as
December, 1543; this and most of the other Chapters only ceased to exist as the
canons died out; and the convent of women at Maribö was not suppressed till 1621. Unfortunately, in other respects a very different
temper prevailed as time went on. In 1551 Christian was compelled to issue an
edict forbidding the nobles to treat the children of ministers as serfs. The
power and influence of the nobles were, however, considerably increased under
his rule, the downfall of clerical authority contributing largely to this
result. The adherents of the Roman communion were treated with no little
severity; and the Pole John Laski, when he left England at the commencement of
Queen Mary’s reign, found that there was no toleration in Denmark for such
heretics as himself and his followers. Nevertheless, in spite of many
drawbacks, the Reformation brought with it a distinct advance in civilization;
and, when Christian III died on New Year’s Day, 1559, Denmark was in a more
settled condition than it had been since the days of Queen Margaret, whilst
trade and learning flourished as they had never done before.
II
THE REFORMATION IN NORWAY AND
ICELAND.
The same thing could hardly be said with regard to the
result of the changes in Norway and Iceland, where the ecclesiastical Order had
been much less unpopular, and probably less in need of reform, than in Denmark.
In fact, it cannot be said that in either case any popular movement for
Reformation existed. As regards Norway, Frederick I had made the same promises
to uphold the Church and to put down Lutherans which he had made in Denmark;
and his change of opinion was followed by the same results in both countries.
In 1528 there came to Bergen a Lutheran preacher named Antonius, who seems to
have devoted himself mainly to the German residents. Next year he was followed
by two others, Hermann Fresze and Jens Viborg, who
bore royal letters of protection similar to those which had been given to Tausen, and perhaps one or two more in other places.
Meanwhile a systematic spoliation began of the religious houses and churches in
Bergen. In 1528 the Nonnesaeter cloister was
secularized and given over as his residence to Vincent Lunge, the commander of
the royal citadel (Bergenhus). Soon afterwards, the
Dominican priory was destroyed by fire, apparently with the connivance of Lunge
and the prior Jens Mortenssön, who are said to have
divided the spoil; and the chapel royal was pillaged. But these were nothing
compared with the outrageous proceedings of Eske Bilde, who replaced Lunge in 1529, and became known as the Kirkebryder, from his activity in destroying
churches. About the citadel of Bergen stood a group of the richest and most
venerable churches in Norway, together with the palace of the Archbishops of Trondhjem and the canons’ houses. On the pretext (for it
seems to have been no more) that they interfered with the effective character
of the fortress, Frederick ordered an attack to be made on these. One by one
they were destroyed, and their treasures removed to Denmark; and at length, in
May, 1531, the ancient cathedral itself was demolished. This was done in
pursuance of a bargain made some three months before with the Bishop of Bergen,
Olaf Thorkildssön, by which he was to receive in
exchange for his palace and cathedral the great monastery of Munkeliv, formerly Benedictine, now Brigittine,
on the further side of the harbor. These proceedings naturally gave courage to
the disaffected; the Lutherans now seized upon the Church of St Cross whilst
the German merchants intruded their minister Antonius in the Church of St Halvard, and another in the Maria Kirke.
Whether Archbishop Olaf Engelbrektssön of Trondhjem would have been able to do anything to
stay the hand of the destroyer is perhaps doubtful, for his own diocese was not
a little troubled by the same kind of thing; but as a matter of fact it was
only when the work was complete that his suffragan of Bergen told him what was
being done. Archbishop Olaf was already none too well disposed towards King
Frederick. In 1523, whilst on his way to Rome to be consecrated, he had gone to
Malines, where the exiled Christian II (who might still have claimed to be the
legal King of Norway) then resided, and had sworn allegiance to him. On his way
home the Archbishop had visited Copenhagen, and had done homage to Frederick I;
nor does he seem to have flinched from his allegiance. But the spoliations in
Norway now made him feel that the Church would be safer under Christian, or at
any rate that they could get on better without Frederick. He was by no means
the only man in Norway who held this view; and Christian himself was at this
very time seeking an opportunity of invading Norway. Before long it came. The
Bishops and the Danish nobles in Norway were summoned to a Herredag to meet in Copenhagen in June, 1531;
the Archbishop, being provided with a good excuse in a great fire which
devastated Trondhjem and almost destroyed the cathedral,
remained behind. On November 5 Christian reached the Norwegian coast with a
fleet of twenty-five ships and a considerable army, and the next day he issued
a proclamation to the people of Norway in which he put himself forward as their
deliverer, and summoned them to gather round him at Oslo. The Archbishop
accepted and proclaimed him, as did the Bishops, but in a somewhat lukewarm
fashion; and Christian dissipated his energies and wasted his opportunity to
such an extent that the following year he was compelled to make overtures to
his uncle, which, as we have seen, ended in his imprisonment. Frederick was far
too wise to push matters to an extremity, and the Bishops were glad to purchase
their safety by paying him fines; but two monasteries which had given help to
Christian were secularized, and Knud Gyldenstierne carried off no small amount of Church plunder
to Denmark.
The death of Frederick I and the wars which followed
once more plunged Norway into disorder. The Archbishop was at the head of the
Norwegian Council, and had he only known his own mind, it is possible that he
might have chosen his own King, or even secured the independence of Norway. But
he hesitated until Duke Christian had won his first victories, and then it was
too late. In May, 1535, the Bishops of Oslo and Hamar,
together with the chief nobles of the south, signed a manifesto by which they
accepted Christian III as King, provided that he would promise to be faithful
to the ancient laws of Norway; and they sent this to the Archbishop and the
northern lords for their signature. By this time Olaf was beginning to
recognize the fact that anything was better than a Lutheran King; and just then
he received a letter from the Emperor urging him to support the claims of
Frederick, the Count Palatine, who was about to marry the daughter of the
imprisoned Christian II. He therefore temporized in the hope that matters might
settle themselves. Soon, however, there came two emissaries of Duke Christian
to Norway with instructions to press forward his cause, whereupon the members
of his party decided to go northwards to Trondhjem.
They arrived towards the end of December, 1585, and a Council was at once
summoned, at which were present the Bishops, the chief Danish nobles in Norway,
and a considerable number of the bönder of
the northern provinces. Vincent Lunge, the chief adherent of Duke Christian, at
once demanded that he should be elected King, and that Norway should forthwith
pay skat to him. To this it was answered, reasonably enough,
that no election could be complete until the person chosen should have promised
to observe the laws and customs of Norway, and that not till then was skat due.
The bonder now withdrew and held a hasty consultation with the Archbishop, from
which, probably roused by his words, they rushed in fury to the house of
Vincent Lunge and slew him. Some of the other leaders barely escaped with their
lives, and these were at once arrested and imprisoned by Olaf. There followed a
short and ill-judged attempt on the part of Olaf to get the upper hand in
Norway; but his party was less strong than he had supposed, and before long
practically the whole land was subject to Christian, and Olaf was seeking
terms. Presently losing all hope, the Archbishop collected all the treasure
upon which he could lay his hands, together with the archives of the kingdom,
and set sail for the Netherlands on April 1, 1537. He died at Lierre, in Brabant, on March 7 of the following year.
Christian III and the Reformation. [1537-45
His departure left the way open for Christian III, who
almost immediately took possession. He had already taken steps both to avenge
himself and to put an end to what had long been a serious danger to his realm.
By the third article of his capitulation, made in the Rigsdag at
Copenhagen in October, 1536, he vowed that the kingdom of Norway should
“hereafter be and remain under the Crown of Denmark, and not hereafter be or be
called a separate kingdom, but a dependency of the kingdom of Denmark”. Thus
Norway lost its ancient liberties at a stroke. After this, although the
“Recess” on religion which had been put forth at the same time (ratifying the
changes which had already been made) said nothing of Norway, it was inevitable
that the Norwegian Church should fall after the example of her sister of
Denmark. One by one the Bishops were turned out, with two exceptions. Hans Reff, the Bishop of Oslo, a man of easy convictions, soon
succeeded in convincing the King of his conversion to Lutheranism, and was
reinstated in charge not only of Oslo, but of Hamar,
where he remained till his death in 1545. Gebel Pederssön,
the Bishop elect of Bergen, a man of far nobler character, had become a
convinced Lutheran: in 1537 he went to Denmark, where Bugenhagen laid hands on him, and returned to take charge as Bishop of Bergen and
Stavanger. For the rest, little or none of the care which was taken in Denmark
to supply teachers, preachers, and schools, was extended to Norway. The undermanning of the Bishoprics was typical of what went on
elsewhere. In large numbers of country places the old clergy were left till
they died; at their death their places were left unoccupied. The few Lutheran
pastors who were sent to Norway were unacquainted with the ancient Norse
language, which was still, to a large extent, used in country places. Their
attempts to obtain possession of the tithes led to frequent disputes which
often ended in bloodshed; and on the whole the Reformation caused as much harm
to the social condition of the people in Norway, for half a century at any
rate, as it did good in Denmark.
In ICELAND things were even worse. At first, indeed,
there seemed to be hope of a conservative reformation; for Bishop Gisser Einarsen of Skalholt, who had been educated in Germany, began making
changes on the lines of those in Denmark, though without overturning the
ancient ministry; and an Icelandic version of the New Testament, printed in
1540, found plenty of readers. But when a formal attempt was made to introduce
the Danish ecclesiastical system, there came a violent reaction. In 1548 Bishop
Jon Aresen, of Holum, and Oegmund, the ex-Bishop of Skalholt,
placed themselves at the head of what rapidly grew into a revolt against the
Danish power. And although the former was taken prisoner in 1551 by David Gudmundarsen, and executed as a traitor, together with his
two sons, his followers long strove to avenge his death. It was not till 1554
that they were put down, and the Reformation imposed by force on Iceland.
III
THE REFORMATION IN SWEDEN.
We now return to trace the fortunes of SWEDEN, where,
as we have seen, the massacre of Stockholm had decided the fate of the Danish
rule. But if the Swedish War of Independence was already inevitable, in its
actual course it was the work of one man, the young Gustaf Eriksson, known to
later ages as Gustavus Vasa from the fascine or sheaf (vasa) which was the
badge of the family. Born in 1496 at Lindholm, he had studied from 1509 to 1514
at Upsala, after which he entered the service of the younger Sten Sture and fought under him against the Danes. Given as
a hostage to Christian II in 1518 and carried away treacherously to Denmark, he
had broken his parole in September of the following year and made his way to
Lübeck, whence after some months he was allowed to proceed to Sweden, and
landed near Kalmar on May 31, 1519. He spent the summer as a fugitive in the
south, till the news of the massacre reached him and he fled to his own remote
province of Dalecarlia. Here, after enduring many
hardships and having many narrow escapes, he found himself early in 1521 at the
head of a sufficient force of dalesmen to raise the
standard of revolt. From this time forward it was never lowered until the whole
country was in his hands and the Danes had been driven out. The first success
of the insurgents was the capture of the town, though not of the citadel, of Västeräs. Upsala fell not long afterwards, and within
little more than a year most of the Danish garrisons had been invested. Thanks
to the undisciplined character of his troops two attacks upon Stockholm failed;
and the same thing occurred elsewhere. But Christian’s own throne was insecure;
and when once the power of Denmark was divided it could only be a question of
time. On June 20, 1523, Gustavus entered Stockholm, and by July 7 the last
Danish garrison in Sweden, that of Kalmar, had capitulated. Meanwhile Gustavus
was no longer merely the leader of a band of insurgents. On July 14,1522, he
was able to issue a proclamation as the recognized commander of five provinces.
An assembly at Vadstena on August 24 is said to have
offered him the crown, which he refused, accepting however the office of
Administrator, and adding that it would be time enough to choose a King when
they had driven the foe out of the land. A general diet, so-called, met at Strängnäs on May 27, 1523. It is not clear whether the few
magnates who still survived were summoned, but the diet nominated a new Riksrad, and then, on June 7 proceeded to elect
Gustavus as King of Sweden.
The new King’s position was no easy one. Although he
had been duly elected he had little power; the peasants who were his strongest
supporters were impatient of control, and the older nobles looked on him with
jealousy, and almost with contempt. Sweden was so devastated by the war as to
be practically bankrupt; the fields lay fallow, the mines were unworked, and
many of the cities, Stockholm in particular, were desolated. The Swedish
possessions in Finland were still in the enemy’s hands; and the only ally of
the Swedes, the city of Lübeck, had helped them in pursuance of its own schemes
of aggrandizement, and was now claiming large sums of money in return for
advances made and aid given during the course of the struggle. To appease them,
the diet of Strängnäs had granted to Lübeck, Danzig,
and their allies a monopoly of Swedish commerce; but ambassadors still followed
Gustavus wherever he went, and urged the speedy payment of the account. To eke
out the scarcity of money, Gustavus, like most of the kings of his day and to
an even greater extent, had adopted the plan of debasing the coinage; but the
effect was to inspire distrust, and before long he was compelled to circulate
his Klippings at a greatly depreciated rate.
He was at the end of his resources, and the only
remedy seemed to be to turn to the Church, which was still as wealthy as ever.
The Bishops as a whole were not unfriendly. Johan Brask,
Bishop of Linköping, an astute and far-seeing patriot, had early thrown in his
lot on the winning side with Gustavus; the Danish Bishops of Strängnäs and Skara had been replaced by Bishops elect who
were favorable to him, and the vacant sees of Västeräs,
Abo, and Upsala (from the last-named of which Gustaf Trolle had fled) were likely to be filled in the same way. Moreover, Gustavus himself was
just then in good odor in Rome. He had indeed been accused of heresy by
Christian II in 1521; and his sojourn at and alliance with Lübeck lent color to
the charge. But his cause found a staunch defender in the famous Joannes Magni (Johan Magnusson), a Swedish scholar and canon of
Linköping who had lived away from his country for seventeen years without
losing any of his interest in its affairs. He had studied at Louvain under
Adrian of Utrecht, a man very likeminded with himself; and in 1522 his old master,
now Pope Adrian VI, sent him as Legate to Sweden. He arrived whilst the Diet of Strängnäs was in session, was warmly welcomed, and in
turn spoke very warmly with regard to Gustavus, and seemed to look favorably on
his plans for restoring efficiency to the Church. So much pleased with him was
the new Riksrad that it addressed a
letter to the Pope begging that he and the Bishops might be empowered to set to
work at once. To this request no answer was ever made, but soon afterwards the
Canons of Upsala chose Joannes to be their Archbishop.
Under these circumstances Gustavus, after having
already in 1522 claimed an aid from the clergy, made in 1523 an urgent demand
for money upon Bishop Brask, and issued a
proclamation calling upon all the monasteries and churches to send him, as a
loan, such church vessels and such money as could be spared, the amount which
each diocese or monastery was expected to provide being stated in a schedule.
The result was not satisfactory. The demands of the Lübeck ambassadors were
indeed met, but the forced loan caused no little irritation in Sweden, and gave
mortal offence at Rome. A letter from Adrian VI was presently received, saying
nothing about the confirmation of the Bishops elect for which Gustavus had
asked, and insisting on the restoration of Archbishop Trolle.
The King wrote back in no measured terms, refusing to restore him; and in
November 2, 1528, in demanding confirmation for the Bishop elect of Âbo, he threatened that if it was refused they would do
without it, and that he himself would carry out the reformation of the Church.
“Let not your Holiness imagine”, he concludes, “that we shall allow foreigners
to rule the Church in Sweden”. These were plain words, and they appear to have
had some effect. Early in 1524 the new Pope granted confirmation to Peter
Magnusson, the Legate’s brother, Bishop elect of Västeräs (in place of the former elect Peter Jakobsson or Sunnenvaeder,
removed for disloyalty); and thus on Rogation Day there was consecrated, in
Rome, the Bishop from whom the whole of the later Swedish episcopate derived
its succession.
Meanwhile Gustavus’ position was not growing easier.
Soon after his accession a war for the recovery of Finland had greatly taxed
his resources. This was followed by an expedition against the ‘robbers’
stronghold’ of Sören Norby in the island of Gottland, which was rendered difficult by the ill-concealed
jealousy of Denmark and Lübeck, and became a positive danger when Bernhard von Mehlen, the German knight to whom Gustavus had given the
command of the expedition, turned traitor and endeavored by means of it to
reconquer Sweden for Christian II. Nor were things better at home. The further
demand for money which he was forced to make upon clergy and people alike gave
rise to serious discontent. When Peter Sunnenvaeder was removed from Västeräs for disaffection, as has
been mentioned above, he fled to Darlecarlia,
together with Knud, the Provost of Västeräs, at one time Archbishop elect of Upsala, who had
also been turned out, and there they raised the standard of revolt. One plot
followed another, now on behalf of Christian II, now on behalf of one of the Stures, and again, early in 1527, on behalf of a pretender
to their name. Gustavus found no great difficulty in suppressing them, and generally
took severe measures of reprisal; but he could not prevent their recurrence. An
entire readjustment of burdens, as between the clergy, the nobles, and the
people at large, was plainly needed; and when the King convoked the general
Diet of Västeräs to meet in June, 1527, it was with
the deliberate intention of taking action in the matter.
But it was no longer merely or chiefly a question of
money; during the last few years Lutheranism had made great strides in Sweden,
and the whole status of the Swedish Church was now at issue. The first
preachers of the new opinions were Olaus and
Laurentius Petri (Olaf and Lars Petersson, b. 1497
and 1499), the sons of a blacksmith at Orebro, who had sent them to study at
Wittenberg with no idea of the consequences which were likely to follow. On
their return to Sweden in 1519, Olaus went to Strängnäs, where, as master of the Chapter school, he soon
acquired a great influence over the Archdeacon, Laurentius Andreae (Lars Andersson, 1482-1552). For a time his teaching aroused no suspicion, and
his sermons preached at the diet of Strängnäs made a
great impression; but he had already roused the suspicions of Bishop Brask, who accused him of heresy in a letter dated May 7,
1523, and from this time forward was constantly urging Gustavus to take action
against him. At first the King seemed to agree, though he urged that persuasion
was a better remedy than force. But the inducements to take the other side were
very strong; and before long, partly from interest and partly from conviction,
he had decided to give his support to the new preachers, still protesting
however that he desired to reform and not to overthrow the Church.
In the summer of 1524 he summoned Olaus Petri to Stockholm as city clerk, sent his brother to Upsala as professor of
theology, and made Laurentius Andreae, already his
Chancellor, Archdeacon of Upsala. The advancing wave was checked for a moment
in the autumn, when the iconoclastic excesses brought about at Stockholm by two
Dutch Anabaptists, Knipperdolling and Melchior Rink,
caused a reaction of popular feeling and drew from Gustavus a stern
condemnation. At Christmas, however, a discussion held in the royal palace
between Olaus Petri and Peter Galle, a champion of
the old order, on the subject of the sufficiency of Scripture, once more gave
them confidence; and in February, 1525, Olaus publicly set the rules of the Church at defiance by marrying a wife. A few
months afterwards Gustavus directed Archbishop Magni to set on foot the translation of the Bible into Swedish. The work was actually
planned out and the books allotted to different translators; but, apparently
owing to the opposition of Brask, it was never
carried out; and the vacant place was in part filled by a version of the New
Testament, mainly the work of Andreae, which appeared
in 1526, followed subsequently, in 1540-1, by a much better translation of the
whole Bible, which was edited and largely made by Laurentius Petri. In the same
year (1526) Gustavus sent a series of doctrinal articles to the prelates,
intending to use their replies as the basis for a second and more exhaustive
theological disputation; and although this plan fell through owing to the
natural reluctance of some of the persons concerned to submit their faith to
the tribunal of popular opinion, the answers of Peter Galle were published,
with disparaging comments by Olaus Petri.
While thus undermining the claims of ecclesiastical
authority, the King was also making insidious attacks upon the property of the
Church. He systematically billeted his troops upon the monasteries; he left no
means untried to get a hold upon their internal affairs; he sought out legal
pretexts for reclaiming lands given to them by his ancestors. The property of
the Bishops suffered in like manner, and especially that of the richest of
them, the aged Brask, whom the King seems to have
despoiled with special malice or policy. Archbishop Joannes Magni suffered even worse things. Injudicious letters which he had written to
ecclesiastics abroad subjected him to a charge of conspiracy, on which he was
arrested and imprisoned. The King allowed him to leave Sweden in the autumn of
1526, ostensibly on an embassy to Poland; but it was really a banishment, from
which he never returned. He took up his abode at Danzig and was soon afterwards
confirmed by the Pope and consecrated with the barren title of Archbishop of
Upsala. And thus at length the way was prepared for further encroachment. By
the terms of the summons, the Diet of Västeräs was to
discuss questions of faith, and especially the relations between Sweden and the
Papacy.
The Diet met on June 24, 1527. There were present four
Bishops, four canons, fifteen lay members of the Riksrad,
one hundred and twenty-nine nobles, thirty-two burgesses, fourteen deputies of
the miners, and one hundred and four of the peasants. For the first time in
Swedish history the Bishops were degraded from their place of honor next the
King and were ranked below the senators. Smarting under the affront, they held
a secret meeting before the session of the following day, at which, instigated
by Brask, they signed a set of protests, a copy of
which was found fifteen years afterwards under the floor of the cathedral,
against anything that might be done in the direction of Lutheranism or contrary
to the authority of the Pope. When the Diet again met the Chancellor arose in
Gustavus’ name, reviewed the events of his reign, and urged the necessity for a
larger revenue, plainly pointing to the ecclesiastical property as the only
source from which it might be obtained. Brask replied
on behalf of the Bishops, saying that they could not help the state of the
kingdom; that they would do all in their power to put down abuses, but that,
being directed by the Pope to defend their property, they could not do
otherwise. This brought Gustavus himself to his feet. He enquired whether the
members of the Diet considered this a fair answer. Thure Jönsson, the oldest amongst them, replied that it
was. “Then”, said Gustavus, “I will no longer be your King, and if you can find
one who will please you better I shall be glad. Pay me for my property in the
kingdom, and return what I have expended in your service; and then I solemnly
protest that I will never return to this degenerate and thankless native land
of mine”. With this outburst he strode from the hall and left them to discuss
at their leisure. He knew what the result must be; he had made Sweden, and it
could not do without him. They had all the power in their hands, whilst his
only asset was his own personality. But it was enough; and after three days the
members of the Diet sent to say that they would conform to his wishes in all
things.
The Recess of Vasteras. [1527
Gustavus was now master. The Orders, with the
exception of the clergy, made their proposals for dealing with the crisis.
Contrary to all precedent, these proposals were formulated by the Riksräd instead of being voted on by the whole
Diet; but the resulting decree, the famous Västeräs Recess, was nevertheless put forth in its name. It provided that all episcopal,
capitular, and monastic property which was not absolutely required (and of this
he was the judge) was to be handed over to the King; all the lands exempt from
taxes which had been given to the Church since 1454 were to revert to the
original owners; taxable land was to be given up however long it had been
alienated. Preachers were to set forth the pure Word of God and nothing else,
whilst on the religious question in general a disputation was to be held in the
presence of the Diet, and a settlement to be made on it as a basis. The
disputation, if held at all, was naturally of no importance; and the Diet
proceeded, on June 24, to pass the Västeräs Ordinantie, consisting of twenty-two regulations
on the subject of religion. By these, detailed provision was made for the
confiscation of the bulk of the Church property, in accordance with the terms
of the Recess. No dignitaries were to be appointed until their names had been
approved by the King; parish clergy were to be appointed by the Bishops,
subject to removal by the King in case of unfitness; small parishes might be
united where it was desirable, the Gospel was to be taught in every school,
compulsory confession was abolished, monks were not to be absent from their
monasteries without licence from the civil authority,
and so forth. The result of these Ordinances was to give the King all the power
that he could wish for over the Church. Dispirited and almost heartbroken, the
aged Brask before long obtained permission to visit
the island of Gottland, which was part of his
diocese, crossed the Baltic, and joined Archbishop Magni at Danzig. None of his brethren dared to oppose Gustavus’ will.
Nor was it only the ecclesiastical order that
suffered. In Sweden, unlike Denmark, none but the King gained power through the
Reformation. The Riksräd, once
all-important, was now nothing more than a complaisant royal Council. As leader
of a popular movement, Gustavus had triumphed over the nobles, who were now
glad to make common cause with the peasants wherever they were aggrieved. It
should however be noted that one of the Västeräs Ordinances gave the nobles the right to recover all their property which had
been acquired by the churches and convents since the redaction of the year
1454, an important concession. There were revolts from time to time, generally
directed in part at any rate against the new ecclesiastical order, as for
instance in West Gothland in 1529 under Thure Jönsson, and again on a
larger scale in 1542 under Nels Dacke.
But they were in general easily put down, and always left Gustavus’ power
stronger than before. Nor was this all. The inevitable result of the changes
which were being made was to put into abeyance rights which formerly belonged
to one class or another of the community. These were by degrees seized upon by
Gustavus as a kind of extension of his prerogative royal; and before long he
was exercising without opposition an authority which no previous King of Sweden
had ever possessed. In a Council held at Orebro early in 1540, the chief nobles
were made to take an oath acknowledging Gustavus’ sons, Johan and Erik, as the
legitimate heirs to the kingdom; and the Act of Hereditary Settlement, passed
on January 13, 1544, formally recognized hereditary succession in the male line
as the rule of the Swedish constitution. Meanwhile the kingdom grew greatly in
wealth and importance. Under Gustavus’ influence the mines of the north became
vast sources of wealth; manufactures grew up everywhere, and commerce was
fostered by treaties with England, France, Denmark, and Russia. Before his
death, which took place on Michaelmas Day, 1560, he
had raised Sweden to a condition of unexampled prosperity, and had prepared the
way for the great epoch of the next century.
We now return to the Swedish Church. Although the
Ordinances of Västeräs had shorn it of its grandeur
and delivered it into Gustavus’ hands, they had not abolished its essential
character. On January 5, 1528, the Bishops elect of Skara, Strängnäs,
and Âbo were consecrated by the Bishop of Västeräs “by command of the King”, without the confirmation
of the Pope indeed, but with the accustomed rites; and on the following day
Gustavus himself was crowned by them “with great pomp” in the Cathedral of
Upsala. The monasteries were deprived of most of their property, and many of
them ceased to exist at once; but the rest only died away by degrees, until at
length there remained but a few nuns in the cloisters of Vadstena, Nadendal, Skenninge, and
Skog, who lived on the King’s bounty. But no man in all Sweden died for the old
faith. A certain number of the clergy were deprived, but the bulk of them still
went on; and their general condition may perhaps be gauged by the fact that in
not a few cases they married their former housekeeper or mistress in order to
legitimatize the children. The Bishops had lost much of their property, but
were still comparatively well off; for many years the new Archbishop of Upsala,
Laurentius Petri (called Nericius), consecrated in
1531, used to support some fifty students in Upsala, and Bishop Skytte of Âbo supported eight
abroad.
Gustavus himself did all in his power to prevent
changes being forced on a reluctant people. A synod held at Örebro in 1529, under the presidency of Laurentius Andreae,
provided that a lesson from the Swedish Bible should be read daily in all
cathedrals, and that evangelical preachers should be appointed to carry the new
doctrines about the country; but the King was so careful to preserve the old
ceremonies, or such of them as “were not repugnant to God’s Word”, that he
roused no little indignation amongst the more extreme Reformers as having
fallen away from the Gospel. In 1528 he issued an ordinance insisting upon the
payment of the legal dues of the clergy. Ten years later, when the nobles
seemed to have learned too well the lesson which he had given them in the
despoiling of churches, he restrained and rebuked those whose religious zeal
manifested itself only in the way of destruction. “After this fashion”, he
said, “every man is a Christian and evangelical”. Yet he recognized no limits
to his own power: “it behoveth us as a Christian
monarch”, he wrote to the commons of the northern province, “to appoint ordinances
and rules for you; therefore must ye be obedient to our royal commands, as well
in matters spiritual as temporal”. In 1540, when Laurentius Andreae and Olaus Petri were put on their trial for treason
in not having made known to the King a conspiracy, the existence of which they
had learned in confession, the Archbishop was compelled to be their judge. They
were condemned to death, and only obtained pardon by the payment of a large
fine.
But although Gustavus ever denied that he was setting
up a new Church in Sweden, the changes became more pronounced as time went on,
both in doctrine and discipline. Olaus Petri was
putting forth a continual stream of tracts and pamphlets in Swedish which
reflected his own strict Lutheranism, and by degrees they had a considerable
effect. The first Swedish service-book, Een Handbock pää wensko, appeared in 1529; it was followed in 1530 by a
hymn-book, and in 1531 by the first Swedish “Mass-book”, the Eucharistic
doctrine of which was the Consubstantiation of Luther’s earlier days; all these
were many times reprinted in subsequent years, though the use of the Latin
service was by no means everywhere abolished. Gustavus himself gradually went
further. He repudiated prayers for the dead, and confession; for instance, he refused
on his deathbed to listen to the clergy when they urged him to confess his sins
and seek absolution. He seems at one time almost to have contemplated the
discontinuance of the episcopal office. In 1539 one George Norman, who had been
recommended to him by Melanchthon, was appointed, by a commission not unlike
that which had been given by Henry VIII to Cromwell a few years before, to
superintend and visit the clergy and churches of Sweden; and a general
visitation of the whole kingdom took place under his auspices in 1540. From
1544 the King refused to give the episcopal title to any but the Archbishop of
Upsala; the rest he styled Ordinaries. As time went on, the dioceses were
divided up into some twelve portions in all, each under its Ordinary. That this
division was in itself desirable is likely enough, for the old dioceses were
very large and unwieldy. Moreover some at any rate of Gustavus’ new Ordinaries
were in episcopal orders; e.g. when the old diocese of Abo (Finland) was
subdivided into Abo and Viborg, the two new Ordinaries, Michael Agricola (who
had previously been vicar-general of the whole diocese) and Paulus Juusten, were consecrated as Bishops together by Bishop Bothvid of Strängnäs in 1554.
Nevertheless the effect of his action was undoubtedly to cast a slight upon the
episcopal Order, and had there not been a reaction subsequently it must have
been highly prejudicial if not fatal to the continued existence of episcopacy
in Sweden.
1560-69] Erik XIV.
The nine years of Gustavus’ son and successor Erik XIV
(1560-9), for some time the suitor of Elizabeth of England, were years of
disaster for the Swedish State, and not less so for the Church. He inclined
towards Calvinism, and already during his father’s lifetime an overture had
been made by Calvin towards the Swedish royal House by the joint dedication of
a writing to father and son. It was ineffective so far as Gustavus was
concerned, but Erik on his accession at once began to show favor towards
Calvinists, announced his intention of making Sweden a refuge for distressed
Protestants, and used his authority in the Church to bring about the
suppression of a few fast days and other observances of the old order. His
wasteful extravagance from the first pressed heavily on the State. But the real
afflictions arose in the latter part of his reign, when he was engaged in war
both at home and abroad, and everything was allowed to fall into neglect;
churches fell into ruins, the church plate disappeared, benefices were not
filled up, or only by incompetent persons, and the schools ceased to exist. At
length in 1569 Erik was dethroned by his brothers, Johan and Karl, to whom
their father had left hereditary dukedoms, and who seem to have agreed upon a
joint conduct of the government after Erik’s deposition; and some years later
he was brutally murdered in prison, in pursuance of a vote of the members of
the Riksrad, both lay and clerical.
The new King, Johan III, was a scholar and a
theologian, whose reading of Cassander and other similar divines led him to lay
all possible stress upon the ancient order of the Swedish Church, whilst his
love for his consort, Catharine, the sister of Sigismund II of Poland, who was
a Roman Catholic, inclined him to seek a reconciliation with the Pope, if it
could be obtained on reasonable terms. Under his influence a new Church order (Kyrko-ordning) was drawn up by the aged Archbishop
Laurentius Petri and put forth by authority, which became the basis of the
practice which prevails at the present day. Care is taken for the education and
examination of the clergy, though the use by them of books of Homilies, such as
the Postilla of Olaus Petri, is permitted. Latin psalms and prayers may still be used, and
confession, excommunication, and public penance are provided for. The Bishop is
elected by the clergy and others having competent knowledge, and consecrated in
due course. The people choose their minister and present him to the Bishop, who
either ordains him or another in his place; but it is to be noticed that the
same form of service is to be used whether the person so “consecrated” is
previously a layman or a minister from another charge. There are also assistant
clergy or chaplains (Kapellaner) in the larger
parishes. Before long the King was able to make further changes. The old
Archbishop died in October, 1573; in June of the following year “the principal
divines” were convened for the election of a successor, and “the votes of the
great majority” were given to his son-in-law, Laurentius Petri Gothus, who was a student of the Fathers, and in many ways
likeminded with the King.
In December the Archbishop elect was confirmed by the
King after giving his assent to a series of seventeen articles which approved
of the restoration of the convents, prayers for the dead, and the veneration of
saints; and on July 15, 1575, he was consecrated “according to the complete
Catholic use”, with mitre, crosier, ring, and chrism,
which were also used by the new Archbishop in future consecrations of his
suffragans. A royal ordinance presently restored to the Archbishop that
jurisdiction over his suffragans which had almost ceased to exist under
Gustavus; and another gave the Archbishop and Chapter of Upsala a voice in all
elections of Bishops. Other changes were made of the same general character,
and some of the old convents were reopened. In 1576 a more important step was
taken : a new liturgy on the lines of the reformed Roman Missal, the so-called
“Red Book of Sweden” (Röda Boken),
was published; it was fathered by the Archbishop in a preface, but was really
the work of the King and his secretary, Peter Fechen.
It was adopted, after considerable opposition (in which the Bishops of
Linköping and Strängnäs took part) at the Diet of
1577; and the King did his best to force it upon the whole Church. But he was
never able to compel all the country clergy to use it; and his brother Karl,
the Duke of Suthermanland (afterwards Charles IX),
the ablest by far of the ‘brood of King Gustavus’, not only refused to adopt
it, but made himself the champion of the Kyrko-ordning (New
Church Order) of 1571 and of all who suffered for their fidelity to it. The
result during Johan’s lifetime was estrangement, and very nearly civil war,
between the brothers; after his death it led to the triumph of Lutheranism at
the Upsala assembly.
All this time the King was carrying on negotiations
with the Papacy. So early as 1572 Cardinal Stanislaus Hosius was writing hopefully of his conversion. In 1576 two Jesuits from Louvain,
Florentius Feyt and Laurentius the Norwegian,
appeared at Stockholm in the guise of evangelical preachers. They were
instructed to proceed with great caution. The Cardinal gave directions that the
last-named was to extol faith and depreciate works without faith, to preach
Christ as the only mediator, and His cross as the only means of salvation ;
“and thereupon”, he proceeded, “let them show that nothing else has been
preached in the papal Church”. We know from their own account that at the
King’s bidding they concealed their real condition and were taken for
Lutherans; and the clergy were compelled to receive their instruction, which
was carried on in the spirit of Hosius’ directions.
In the same year the King sent messengers to Rome to negotiate for the
restoration of the papal authority in Sweden. It soon became evident that he
was asking for conditions which were not likely to be granted; he demanded,
amongst other things, the concession of the Cup to the laity, the partial use
of Swedish in the liturgy, the surrender of clerical exemptions, toleration of
the marriage of the clergy (though with a preference for celibacy), and the
condonation of all that had been done in the past.
The time was past for such concessions, although hopes
of something of the kind were held out more than once by Cardinal Hosius in his letters. In 1577 however the Jesuit Antony Possevin was sent to the north, with a commission as Legate
to the Emperor, and instructions to use all his influence with King Johan. He
made his appearance in the following year ; and so great was the impression
which he produced upon the King that after a few interviews, as we are told in
his reports, Johan declared his willingness to make the Tridentine profession
of faith without waiting to see what concessions the Pope might be willing to
make towards Sweden. He accordingly did so, made his confession and was
absolved (penance being imposed upon him for the murder of his brother, for
which he had always felt the deepest remorse), and received the Communion in
the Roman manner. This year, then, marks the zenith of the papal influence.
About the same time Bishop Martin Olafsson of
Linköping, who had always been opposed to the direction in which things were
moving in the Swedish Church, was deposed and degraded for calling the Pope
antichrist. Luther’s Catechism, which had been used in the schools for some
years, was made to give place to that of Canisius; many Jesuits were admitted
into the country, on one pretext or another, and large numbers of Swedish boys
were sent abroad to be educated in their seminaries; above all, the primatial
see was kept vacant for four years after the death of Laurentius Petri Gothus in 1579, in the hope that it might next be filled by
an Archbishop of the Roman obedience.
This hope was doomed to be disappointed, for the
proposed surrender proved to be less attractive on a nearer view. The King’s
plans in religion were closely bound up with political schemes which had for
their object the obtaining for himself the Duchies of Bari and Rossani in right of his wife, whose mother was a Sforza;
and these had just received a check. Gregory XIII declined to make the
concessions which Johan thought that he had been led to expect; and on further
consideration he found himself too honestly convinced of the essential
soundness of the position of the Swedish Church to be content to give up all
that had been won already. The last shreds of the influence of the Romanizing
party disappeared entirely after the death of Queen Catharine in 1584; the
Jesuits and their fautores were once
more expelled; and Johan, after turning his thoughts for a moment towards the
orthodox east, settled down to the work of consolidating the Swedish Church as
he found it.
Not long afterwards, however, the question was
reopened, and in a more acute form, by the death of Johan III on November 17,
1592. The crown fell to his son Sigismund, who had been elected King of Poland
in 1586, and who was a convinced Roman Catholic. With the consent of the Riksrad, his uncle Duke Charles at once assumed the
government in his name; and together they resolved to make provision for the
maintenance of Protestantism before the new King arrived. The Rad was anxious that
the matter should be dealt with by certain members of their own body in
conjunction with the delegates of the clergy; but Charles had made his brother
promise two years before that a general assembly (Kyrko-möte)
should be held, and he assented to the demand of the clergy that it should take
place now. Accordingly a synod was convened which was attended by deputies both
clerical and lay from all parts of the kingdom, though Finland was but sparsely
represented. There were present, in addition to the members of the Riksrad, four Bishops (most of the sees were vacant, and were filled whilst the Synod was
still in session), over three hundred clergy, and nearly as many nobles and
representatives of the citizens, miners, and peasants. The famous “Upsala-möte” was opened on February 25, 1593, Nicolaus Bothniensis, one of the professors of theology at Upsala,
being chosen as speaker. The assembly first laid down the rule of Scripture as
the basis of all doctrine. Then it sought a doctrinal standard; and the obvious
one was the Augsburg Confession, which had already been commonly accepted in
Sweden, though it had never been definitely adopted by the Swedish Church. The
articles were now gone through one by one, after which it was solemnly received
as the confession of the Swedish Church. Luther’s Catechism was again made the
basis for instruction in religion; the use of the “Red Book” was abolished, and
Laurentius Petri’s Church Ordinance once more became the standard of worship,
subject however to a certain amount of pruning in the matter of ritual. After
this the Synod proceeded to the details of practical reform.
The Upsala Assembly may be considered
the coping-stone of the Swedish Reformation. Sigismund came to the throne with
the knowledge that his new kingdom had made a definite stand from which there
could be no withdrawal; and although many efforts were made during his reign on
behalf of Roman Catholicism, first for concurrent establishment, and then for
bare toleration, the issue was never for a moment doubtful. The Swedish Church
was definitely committed to Lutheranism; the clergy continued to be an estate
of the realm down to the middle of the nineteenth century; and separation from
the national communion was so severely punished that until modern days organized
dissent was practically unknown. The endeavors of Charles IX, the most learned
of the royal brothers, to widen the doctrinal basis of the Swedish Church, were
on the whole unsuccessful. But it was not only in Sweden that the mote had
far-reaching consequences. The definite adhesion of Sweden to the Augsburg
Confession gave strength to the cause of Protestantism everywhere : it opened
the way for the Protestant League of the North in the following century.
NOTE ON THE REFORMATION IN POLAND.
THE Reformation in Poland, although its influence on
general European history in the period treated in this volume is comparatively
slight, has some features of special interest. It pursued its course for nearly
half-a-century without material hindrance either from the national government
or the authorities of the Church. During this era its difficulties arose
principally from the dissensions of the Reformers, from the independence of the
nobility, the ignorance and apathy of the oppressed peasantry, and the want of
sympathy between the country and the towns, where the German element was
strong, and between the burghers and the nobles. Thus the evolution of a
national Reformed Church was impossible; the Reform movement never obtained any
vital hold on the mass of the people; and no united opposition could be offered
to the forces of the Counter-Reformation, when at length they began to act. On
the other hand the lack of organization, of combination, and of national and
ecclesiastical control, left the way free for the most hazardous and audacious
speculations. Every man’s intellect was a law to himself, and heresy assumed
its most exorbitant forms.
The conditions of the Church in Poland called for
reform not less than elsewhere. The Bishops were enormously wealthy; and the
character of the episcopate was not likely to be improved by the measures of
1505, and 1523, which were intended to exclude all but nobles from the
bishoprics. The right of the King to nominate to bishoprics was practically
recognized. In 1459 a memorable attack was made upon the administration of the
Polish Church by John Ostrorog, a man not only of the
highest rank, but of great learning. His indictment, made before the Diet,
foreshadows the general demand for a reform of the Church, though nothing is
said about doctrine. The excessive authority of the Pope, the immunity of the
clergy from public burdens and public control, the exactions of the Papacy, the
expenses of litigation before the Curia, indulgences, simony, and the
requirement of fees for spiritual offices, the unworthiness and ignorance of
monks and clergy, the encouragement of idleness, are all put forward with no
sparing hand. Owing to the privileges of the Polish nobility the power of the
ecclesiastical Courts was less in Poland than elsewhere, and excommunication
was openly set at defiance. On the side of doctrine Hussite influence,
continually spreading in Poland during the fifteenth century, prepared the
ground; and the fact that nearly a half of the subjects of the Polish Crown,
the Slavonic population of the South and East, professed the faith of the Greek
Church, familiarized the Jagellon Kings with
divergences in faith, and the people with the existence of other beliefs.
It was not long before the movement initiated by Luther
spread to Poland, and it appeared first in Polish Prussia, the western part of
the territory of the Teutonic Order, ceded by it in 1466 to King Casimir III.
Danzig was the first centre of an active propaganda,
and the urban population favored the new opinions. The ecclesiastical
authorities endeavored to act with firmness, but found their authority
insufficient. In 1525 the Reformers captured the town government, and the
Reformation was set on foot. But in the following year Sigismund I, then King
of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania, took forcible measures to suppress the
Reform. In this, almost the only energetic step taken by that King against the
spread of Reform, he was actuated by political motives. In 1523 Albert of
Brandenburg, the last Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, had adopted the
Reform, and in 1525 he converted the dominions entrusted to his charge into a
hereditary dukedom; and Sigismund feared that the Reforming tendencies of West
Prussia might lead the inhabitants into closer political relations with the
emancipated master of East Prussia. In spite, however, of Sigismund’s temporary
success at Danzig, Lutheran opinions continued to spread, and finally triumphed
in Polish Prussia.
In Poland itself frequent acts against the new
opinions were passed by ecclesiastical synods, in 1527, 1530, 1532, 1542, and
1544. But the Church was powerless in face of the famous Polish privilege and
the other immunities of the nobles. The ecclesiastical Courts were regarded
with general contempt. The hostility of the Diets was undisguised. In 1538 they
forbade the Polish clergy to receive any preferment from the Pope, in 1543 they
abolished annates, and in 1544 they subjected the clergy to ordinary taxation.
Sigismund I issued an order in 1534 forbidding Polish students to study at
foreign universities, but this order was cancelled in 1543; and the inaction of
Sigismund proclaims either his impotence or his lack of zeal. His son,
Sigismund II Augustus, who succeeded in 1548, was probably rather friendly than
indifferent. In any case the power of the King was little; and individual
nobles took what line they pleased without reference to King or Church.
In these circumstances not only did Lutheran views
spread freely, but other heresies appeared. A society was formed at Cracow,
under the influence of Francisco Lismanini, which not
only ventilated the opinions of the more orthodox Reformers, but also cast
doubt upon the doctrine of the Trinity. In 1548 the Reformation in Poland
received a great impulse by the expulsion from Bohemia of the Bohemian
Brethren, a sect which received a definite organization about 1456, and had
survived through many vicissitudes, preserving many of the more advanced
Hussite opinions. Luther, at first hostile to their views, afterwards became
reconciled, and established a spiritual communion with them. Ferdinand, after
other repressive measures had failed, expelled them from his territories; and
on their way towards Prussia they found temporary hospitality in Posen, where
they were entertained by Andreas Gorka, the Castellan
of Posen. The Bishop of Posen, however, before long procured their expulsion;
they passed into Prussia, leaving behind, however, many converts; and their
congregations afterwards evangelized many districts of Posen and of Great
Poland.
The reign of Sigismund Augustus (1548-72) saw the
Polish Reformation at its height. The Synod of Piotrkow in 1552, at which Stanislaus Hosius, the Bishop of Ermland, first took a prominent part as a defender of the
Church, initiated a vigorous campaign against the Reform; but although the
clergy procured the martyrdom of a poor priest, they found themselves helpless
against the nobles. The Diet of 1552 left to the clergy the power of judging
heresy, but deprived them of the authority to inflict any civil or political
penalty. In the same year a Polish Reformer, Modrzewski,
laid before the King a remarkable and moderate scheme of national
ecclesiastical reform; but there was no authority capable of carrying it out.
In 1556 licence assumed the form of law, and the
principle of cujus regio was carried to its extreme consequence, when the Diet enacted that every
nobleman could introduce into his own house any form of worship at his
pleasure, provided that it was in conformity with the Scriptures. The King at
this time also demanded from Pope Paul IV in the name of the Diet the
concession of mass in the vernacular, communion in both kinds, the marriage of
priests, the abolition of annates, and a National Council for Reform and the
union of sects. He received in the following year a stinging reprimand from the
fiery Pontiff for an offence in which he was little more than a passive agent.
The Reformation seemed to be triumphant. But excessive
liberty was a source of weakness. The Bohemian brethren, indeed, formed a
durable union with the Genevan Churches in Poland in 1555. The former were most
powerful in Posen and Great Poland, the latter in Little Poland and Lithuania.
But the Lutherans were a persistent obstacle to union. It was hoped that the
return of John Laski (à Lasco) to his native land in
1556 might put an end to divisions. This member of a noble Polish house had
listened to the voice of Zwingli and Erasmus in his youth, and afterwards had
renounced his prospects of high preferment in his own Church in order to preach
reform. His self-denying labors in East Friesland had been crowned with
success, and as head of the community of foreign Reformers in London he had won
a reputation beyond the Channel. His gentle nature, and the moderate character
of his opinions, which, although they were nearest to those of Calvin and
Zwingli, were calculated to give the least possible offence to the Lutherans,
raised great hopes of him as a mediator. But he died in 1560, having effected
nothing.
1560-79] Protestant dissensions. The Sozzini.
Protestant dissensions continued, and the Protestant
cause was further discredited by the activity of the anti-Trinitarians. Lismanini had openly denied the Trinity, and Bernardino Ochino in 1564 found many hearers. He was expelled,
however, very shortly. The Unitarians had their centre at Pinczow, near Cracow, and among their leaders were
first Stancari and Lismanini,
and afterwards Georgio Biandrata,
and Peter Gonesius, a Pole. Even in the face of this
double danger, from their own advanced wing and from the Catholic side, the
Protestants failed to achieve unity. At length at the synod of Sandomir, 1570, mutual toleration rather than union was
arranged between the Lutherans on the one hand, and the united Church of
Genevans and Bohemians on the other. Thus the critical time of the death of
Sigismund Augustus in 1572 found the Protestant sects widely spread in the
Polish dominions, enjoying virtual toleration, but probably not very deeply
rooted in the Polish people, compromised by advanced freethinkers, and barely
concealing their mutual antagonism.
Meanwhile dangers were arising. The direct efforts of
Stanislaus Hosius, the mission of Lippomani in 1555, and that of Commendoni in 1563, did little
to check the Reformed opinions. But from the introduction of the Jesuits into
Poland at the suggestion of Cardinal Hosius in 1564,
and from the transfer into their hands of the institutions of higher education
founded by him in Poland, dates the beginning of a more insidious and effective
opposition, which was destined in a period beyond our present scope to attain
complete success.
This brief note may serve to show the position of the
new religions in Poland down to the death of Sigismund Augustus. But the name
of Socinus is so closely linked with the religious history of that country and
with that of the dissidentes de religione (the appellation given in Poland in 1573
to the adherents of the Reformation, though afterwards extended in its
significance), that a word must be said about the two well-known teachers of
that name. Lelio Sozzini was a native of Siena, born
in 1525. Attracted early by the writings of Luther, he made himself suspected
at home, and travelled widely throughout Europe, coming into contact with all
the leading Reformers. He visited Poland twice, and doubtless found kindred
spirits there; he probably influenced Lismanini; but
although the audacity of his opinions and the free expression of his doubts
seem to have caused him to be regarded with suspicion by more orthodox Reformers,
he does not appear to have actually denied the doctrine of the Trinity. He died
in 1562. His nephew, Fausto Sozzini, passed the line.
He also was born at Siena in 1539. He came to Poland in 1579, after the
anti-Trinitarian opinions had long been developed there. Under the protection
of the Transylvanian Prince, Stephen Bathory, the sect had flourished, and had
acquired in the town of Racow its own school, church,
and printing-press. Sozzini speedily won great
influence, and was able to influence the doctrines of the Unitarians.
Eventually the sect received his name, and was known as Socinian.
The distinctive doctrine of the Socinians was the
denial of the doctrine of the Trinity, the teaching of One God. They recognized
divinity in the Father alone, and denied it to the Son and the Holy Ghost. They
reverenced Christ as the Messiah, as a teacher and a reformer, but as a human
being. They believed nevertheless in His supernatural birth, in His miracles,
His resurrection, His ascension. They believed that He received revelations
from the Father. They followed also the Bible as their guide and standard;
giving it their own interpretation, which differed from that of the Protestants
and of the Fathers of Nicaea. They rejected the Augustinian doctrine of original
sin, and believed that salvation was to be obtained by conscientious following
of Christ’s teaching, and virtuous living. They rejected therefore also the
doctrine of the Atonement. Baptism was for them only the symbol of admission
into the Christian communion, and the Lord’s Supper a mere memorial. This
remarkable sect had its origin in the active brains of speculative Italians,
its favorable ground for growth in the religious liberty or anarchy of Poland,
but it received its definite organization, its tenets, and its name from Fausto Sozzini.
CHAPTER XIXCHURCH AND REFORM. |