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THE INQUISITION OF THE MIDDLE AGES
BOOK 1
- ORIGIN AND ORGANIZATION OF THE INQUISITION
CHAPTER VI
9
THE FLAGELLANTS
Even more remarkable, as a manifestation of popular
emotion, was the first apparition of the Flagellants. Suddenly, in 1259, in
Perugia, no one knew why, the population was seized with a fury of devotional
penitence, without incitement by friar or priest. The contagion spread, and
soon the whole of upper Italy was filled with tens of thousands of penitents.
Nobles and peasants, old and young, even to children five years of age, walked
solemnly in procession, two by two, naked except a loin-cloth, weeping and
praying God for mercy, and scourging themselves with leather thongs to the
drawing of blood. The women decently inflicted the penance on themselves in
their chambers, but the men marched through the cities by day and night, in the
sharpest winter, preceded by priests with crosses and banners, to the churches,
where they prostrated themselves before the altars. A contemporary tells us
that the fields and mountains echoed with the voices of the sinners calling to
God, while music and love-songs were heard no more, A general fever of
repentance and amendment seized the people. Usurers and robbers restored their
ill-gotten gain; criminals confessed their sins and renounced their vices; the
prison doors were thrown open, and the captives walked forth; homicides offered
themselves on their knees, with drawn swords, to the kindred of their victims,
and were embraced with tears; old enmities were forgiven, and exiles were
permitted to return to their homes. Everywhere was seen the operation of divine
grace, and men seemed to be consumed with heavenly fire. The movement even
spread to the Rhinelands and throughout Germany and Bohemia; but whatever hopes
were aroused of the regeneration of man vanished with the subsidence of the
excitement, which disappeared as rapidly as it came, and was even denounced as
a heresy. Uberto Pallavicino took effectual means of keeping the Flagellants
out of his city of Milan; for when he heard of their approach he erected three
hundred gibbets by the roadside, at sight of which they abruptly retraced their
steps.
It was in a population subject to such tempests of
emotion, and groping thus blindly for something higher and better than the
hopeless degradation around them, that the Mendicant Orders came to gather to
themselves the potential religious exaltation of the time. That they should
develop with unexampled rapidity was inevitable.
Everything favored them. The papal court early
recognized in them an instrument more efficient than had yet been devised to
bring the power of the Holy See to bear directly upon the Church and the people
in every corner of Christendom; to break down the independence of the local
prelates; to combat the temporal enemies of the papacy, and to lead the people
into direct relations with the successor of St. Peter. Privileges and
exemptions of all kinds were showered upon them, until, by a series of bulls
issued, between 1240 and 1244, by Gregory IX and Innocent IV, they were
rendered completely independent of the regular ecclesiastical organization. A
time-honored rule of the Church required that any excommunication or anathema
could only be removed by him who had pronounced it, but this was revolutionized
in their favor. Not only were the bishops required to give absolution to any Dominican
or Franciscan who should apply for it, except in cases of such enormity that
the Holy See alone could act, but the Mendicant priors and ministers were
authorized to absolve their friars from any censures inflicted on them. These
extraordinary measures removed them entirely from the regular jurisdiction of
the establishment; the members of each Order became responsible only to their
own superiors, and in their all-pervading activity throughout Europe they could
secretly undermine the power and influence of the local hierarchy, and replace
it with that of Rome, which they so directly represented. This independent
position, however, had only been reached by degrees. Papal briefs of 1229 and
1234, enjoining them to show proper respect and obedience to the bishops, and
empowering the bishops to condemn any friars who abuse their privileges of
preaching for purposes of gain, show that complaints of their aggressions had
commenced thus early, and that Rome was not yet prepared to render them
independent of the hierarchy; but when the policy had once been adopted it was
carried to its fullest development, and the cycle of legislation was completed
by Boniface VIII, in 1295 and 1296, by a series of bulls in which, following
his predecessors, the Mendicants were formally released from all episcopal
jurisdiction, and the statutes of the Orders were declared to be the only laws
by which they were to be judged, all provisions of the canon law to the contrary
notwithstanding. At the same time, by a new issue of the bull Virtute conspicuos, commonly known as
the Mare Magnum, he codified and
confirmed all the privileges conferred by his predecessors.
The Holy See was thus provided with a militia,
recruited and sustained at the expense of the faithful, panoplied in
invulnerability, and devoted to its exclusive service. In order that its usefulness
might suffer no limitation, in 1241 Gregory IX granted to the friars the
privilege of freely living in the lands of excommunicates, and of asking and
receiving assistance and food from them. They could, therefore, penetrate
everywhere, and serve as secret emissaries in the dominions of those hostile to
Rome. Human ingenuity could have devised no more efficient army, for, not only
were they full of zeal and inspired with profound convictions, but the
reputation for superior sanctity which they everywhere acquired secured for
them popular sympathy and support, and gave them an enormous advantage in any
contest “with local churches”.
Their efficiency, when directed against temporal
opponents, was thoroughly tried in the long and mortal struggle of the papacy
with Frederic II, the most powerful and dangerous enemy whom Rome has ever had.
As early as the year 1229 we hear of the banishment of all the Franciscans from
the kingdom of Naples, as papal emissaries seeking to withdraw from the emperor
the allegiance of his subjects. In 1234 we find them raising money in England
to enable the pope to carry on the struggle, and using every device of
persuasion and menace with a success which idealized immense sums and reduced
numbers to beggary. When, in the solemnities of Easter, 1239, Gregory
fulminated an excommunication against the emperor, it was to the Franciscan
priors that he communicated it, with a full recital of the imperial misdeeds,
and ordered them to publish it with ringing of bells on every Sunday and
feast-day. It was the most effective method that could be devised to create
public opinion against his adversary, and Frederic retorted with another edict
of expulsion. When Frederic was deposed by the Council of Lyons, in 1244, it
was the Dominicans who were selected to announce the sentence in all accessible
public places, with an indulgence of forty days for all who would gather to
listen to them, and plenary remission of sins to the friars who might suffer
persecution in consequence. Soon afterwards we find them playing the part,
which the Jesuits filled in Jacobean England, of secret emissaries engaged in
hidden plots and fomenting disturbances. Frederic always declared that the
conspiracy against his life in 1244 was the work of Franciscans who had been
commissioned to preach a secret crusade against him in his own dominions, and
who encouraged his enemies with prophecies of his speedy death. When, as the
result of papal intrigues, Henry Raspe of Thuringia was elected, in 1240, as
King of the Romans, to supersede Frederic, Innocent IV sent a circular brief of
instructions to the Franciscans to use every opportunity, public or secret, to
advocate his cause, and to promise remission of sins to those who should aid
him. Again, in 1248, we find friars of both orders sent as secret emissaries to
stir up disaffection in Frederic’s territories. He complained bitterly of it,
as he had always cherished and protected the Mendicants, and he met the attempt
with savage ferocity. The Dominican Simon de Montesarculo, who was caught, was
subjected to eighteen successive tortures; and Frederic instructed his
son-in-law, the Count of Caserta, that all friars showing signs of
disaffection, or contravening the strict regulations which he prescribes, shall
not be exiled as heretofore, but shall be promptly burned. The shrewd and experienced
prince evidently recognized them as the most dangerous enemies to whom he was
exposed. They continued to earn his hostility by the zeal with which they
preached the crusade against him, and, after his death, against his son Conrad;
and we can regard as not improbable the statement that Ezzelin da Romano, his
vicar in the March of Treviso, put to death no less than sixty Franciscans
during his thirty years of power.
THE FRIARS AS PAPAL COMMISSIONERS.
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