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THE GREAT WESTERN SCHISM II THE POPES AT AVIGNON 1305-1376 A.D.
THE disastrous struggle between the highest powers of
Christendom, which began in the eleventh century and reached its climax in the
thirteenth, was decided, apparently to the advantage of the Papacy, by the tragical downfall of the house of Hohenstaufen. But the
overthrow of the Empire also shook the temporal position of the Popes, who were
now more and more compelled to ally themselves closely with France. In the
warfare with the Emperors, the Papacy had already sought protection and had
found refuge in that kingdom in critical times. The sojourn of the Popes in
France had, however, been only transitory. The most sacred traditions, and a
history going back for more than a thousand years, seemed to have bound the highest
ecclesiastical dignity so closely to Italy and to Rome that, in the eleventh,
twelfth, and thirteenth centuries, the idea that a Pope could be crowned
anywhere but in the Eternal City, or could fix his residence for the whole
duration of his Pontificate out of Italy, would have been looked upon as an
impossibility.
A change came over this state of things in the time of
Clement V (1305-1314), a native of Gascony. Fearing for the independence of the
Ecclesiastical power amid the party struggles by which Italy was torn, and
yielding to the influence of Philip the Fair, the strong-handed oppressor of
Boniface VIII, he remained in France and never set foot in Rome. His successor,
John XXII, also a Gascon, was elected, after
prolonged and stormy discussions, in 1316, when the Holy See had been for two
years vacant. He took up his permanent abode at Avignon, where he was only
separated by the Rhone from the territory of the French King. Clement V had
lived as a guest in the Dominican Monastery at Avignon, but John XXII set up a
magnificent establishment there. The essential character of that new epoch in
the history of the Papacy, which begins with Clement V and John XXII, consists
in the lasting separation from the traditional home of the Holy See and from the
Italian soil, which brought the Popes into such pernicious dependence on France
and seriously endangered the universal nature of their position.
“O
good beginning
To what a vile conclusion must Thou stoop”.
The words of the great Italian poet are not
exaggerated, for the Avignon Popes, without exception, were all more or less
dependent on France. Frenchmen themselves, and surrounded by a College of
Cardinals in which the French element predominated, they gave a French
character to the government of the Church. This character was at variance with
the principle of universality inherent in it and in the Papacy. The Church had
always been the representative of this principle in contradistinction to that
of isolated nationalities, and it was the high office of the Pope, as her
Supreme Head, to be the common Father of all nations. This universality was in
a great degree the secret of the power and influence of the Medieval Popes.
The migration to France, the creation of a
preponderance of French Cardinals, and the consequent election of seven French
- Popes in succession, necessarily compromised the position of the Papacy in
the eyes of the world, creating a suspicion that the highest spiritual power
had become the tool of France. This suspicion, though in many cases unfounded,
weakened the general confidence in the Head of the Church, and awakened in the
other nations a feeling of antagonism to the ecclesiastical authority which had
become French. The bonds which united the States of the Church to the Apostolic
See were gradually loosened, and the arbitrary proceedings of the Court at
Avignon, which was too often swayed by personal and family interests,
accelerated the process of dissolution. The worst apprehensions for the
future were entertained.
The dark points of the Avignon period have certainly
been greatly exaggerated. The assertion that the Government of the Avignon
Popes was wholly ruled by the “will and pleasure of the Kings of France”, is,
in this general sense, unjust. The Popes of those day were not all so weak
as Clement V, who submitted the draft of the Bull, by which he called on the
Princes of Europe to imprison the Templars, to the French King. Moreover, even
this Pope, the least independent of the fourteenth century Pontiffs, for many
years offered a passive resistance to the wishes of France, and a writer, who
has thoroughly studied the period, emphatically asserts that only for a few
years of the Pontificate of Clement V was the idea so long associated with the “Babylonian
Captivity” of the Popes fully realized. The extension of this epithet to the
whole of the Avignon sojourn is an unfair exaggeration. The eager censors of
the dependence into which the Avignon Popes sank, draw attention to the political
action of the Holy See during this period so exclusively, that hardly any place
is left for its labors in the cause of religion. A very partial picture is thus
drawn, wherein the noble efforts of these much-abused Pontiffs for the
conversion of heathen nations become almost imperceptible in the dim
background. Their labors for the propagation of Christianity in India, China,
Egypt, Nubia, Abyssinia, Barbary, and Morocco have
been very imperfectly appreciated. The earliest of the Avignon Popes, Clement V
and John XXII, gave the greatest attention to Eastern affairs, and were the
originators of a series of grand creations, from which the best results were to
be expected. Their successors were chiefly occupied in the maintenance and
preservation of the works established by the wisdom of their predecessors, yet
in the time of Clement VI an effort was made to extend the sphere of the Church
even to the furthest limits of Eastern Asia. The unwearied assiduity of the
Avignon Popes in taking advantage of every favorable event in the East, from
the Crimea to China, to promote the spread of Christianity by sending out
missions and founding Bishoprics, is all the more admirable because of the
great difficulties with which the Papacy was at that time beset.
A complete estimate of their large-minded labors for
the conversion of the heathen, and a thoroughly impartial appreciation of this
period, will not be possible until the Regesta of
these Popes, preserved in the Secret Archives of the Vatican, have been made
accessible to investigation.
We shall then obtain an insight into that inner life
of Church affairs which held its clear and sure course amidst all external
tumults; which, while the Papacy was apparently on the brink of ruin, “did not
forget the lonely Christians among the heathens of Morocco and in the camps of
the wandering Tartars, and took thought for the eternal salvation of nations
still unconverted, as faithfully as for the deliverance of the imperiled Church”.
With the most ample recognition of the worldwide
activity of the French Popes, it cannot be denied that the effects of the
transfer of the Holy See from its natural and historical home were disastrous.
Torn from its proper abode, the Papacy, notwithstanding the individual
greatness of some of the Avignon Pontiffs, could not maintain its former
dignity. The freedom and independence of the highest tribunal in Christendom,
which, according to Innocent III, was bound to protect all rights, was
endangered, now that the supreme direction of the Church was so much under the
influence of a nation so deeply imbued with its own spirit, and possessing so
little of the universal. That France should obtain exclusive possession of the
highest spiritual authority was a thing contrary both to the office of the Papacy
and the very being of the Church.
This dependence on the power of a Prince, who in
former times had often been rebuked by Rome, was in strange contradiction with
the supremacy claimed by the Popes. By this subjection and by its worldliness,
the Avignon Papacy aroused an opposition which, though it might for a moment be
overborne while it leant on the crumbling power of the Empire, yet moved men's
minds so deeply that its effects were not effaced for several centuries. Its
downfall is most closely connected with this opposition, which was manifested,
not only in the bitter accusations of its political and clerical enemies, but
even also in the letters of its devoted friend St. Catherine, which are full of
entreaties, complaints, and denunciations. The Papal Government, founded as it
was on the principle of authority, built up in independence of the Empire, and
gaining strength in proportion to the decay of that power, was unable to offer
any adequate resistance to this twofold stream of political and religious
antagonism. The catastrophe of the great Schism was the immediate consequence
of the false position now occupied by the Papacy.
The disastrous effects produced by the residence of
the Popes at Avignon were at first chiefly felt in Italy. Hardly ever has a
country fallen into such anarchy as did the Italian peninsula, when bereft of
her principle of unity by the unfortunate decision of Clement V to fix his
abode in France. Torn to pieces by irreconcilable parties, the land, which had
been fitly termed the garden of Europe, was now a scene of desolation. It will
easily be understood that all Italian hearts were filled with bitter longings,
a regret which found voice in continual protests against the Gallicized Papacy.
The author of the Divine Comedy sharply reproved the “Supreme Pastor of the
West” for this alliance between the Papacy and the French monarchy. On the
death of Clement V, when the Cardinals assembled in conclave at Carpentras, Dante came forward as the exponent of the
public feeling which demanded the return of the Papal Throne to Rome. In a
severe letter addressed to the Italian Cardinals he says: “You, the chiefs of
the Church militant, have neglected to guide the chariot of the Bride of the
Crucified One along the path so clearly marked out for her. Like that false
charioteer Phaeton, you have left the right track, and though it was your
office to lead the hosts safely through the wilderness, you have dragged them
after you into the abyss. But one remedy now remains: you, who have been the authors
of all this confusion, must go forth manfully with one heart and one soul into
the fray in defence of the Bride of Christ whose seat is in Rome, of Italy, in
short of the whole band of pilgrims on earth. This you must do, and then
returning in triumph from the battlefield, on which the eyes of the world are fixed,
you shall hear the song Glory to God in
the Highest; and the disgrace of the covetous Gascons,
striving to rob the Latins of their renown, shall serve as a warning to all
future ages”.
Petrarch judges the French Popes with the greatest
severity. In theory he condemns every one, worthy or unworthy, who lived at
Avignon. No expression is too strong when he speaks of this city, which he
compares to the Babylon of the Apocalypse. In one of his poems he calls it
"the fountain of anguish, the dwelling-place of wrath, the school of
errors, the temple of heresy, once Rome, now the false guilt-laden Babylon, the
forge of lies, the horrible prison, the hell upon earth." In a whole
series of letters, which, however, he took care to keep to himself, he pours
forth the vials of his wrath on the city, which had drawn the Popes away from
sacred Rome. He even uses the peaceful sonnet, in which he had formerly been
wont to express only the bliss and the pain of love, to fulminate, like a
prophet of the Old Testament, against the doings of the unholy city. It would
be, however, a great mistake to consider his picture of the wickedness of
Avignon and the corruption of the Church, painted with true Italian fervor, as
strictly trustworthy and accurate. Petrarch here speaks as a poet and as a
fiery, enthusiastic, Roman patriot. His judgments are often intemperate and
unjust. His own life was not such as to give him the right to come forward as a
preacher of morals. Passing over his other failings, we need here only allude
to his excessive greed for benefices. This passion has much to do with his
bitterness against Avignon and the Papal Court. We are led to suspect that
there were many unsuccessful suits. Petrarch did nothing towards the amendment
of this evil world; the work of reformation was in his own case begun very
late. He was a dreamer, who contented himself with theories, and in practice
eschewed all improvements which demanded any greater effort than that of declamation.
The unmitigated condemnation of the Avignon Popes must
have been based in great measure on Petrarch's unjust representations, to
which, in later times and without examination, an undue historical importance
has been attached. He is often supposed to be a determined adversary of the
Papacy; but this is a complete mistake. He never for a moment questioned its
divine institution. We have already said that he was outwardly on the best
terms with almost all the Popes of his time, and received from them many favors.
They took his frequent and earnest exhortations to leave Avignon and return to
desolate Rome as mere poetical rhapsodies, and in fact they were nothing more.
If Petrarch himself, though a Roman citizen, kept aloof from Rome; if, though
nominally an Italian patriot, he fixed his abode for many years, from motives
of convenience, or in quest of preferment, in that very Avignon which he had
bitterly reproached the Popes for choosing, and which he had called the most
loathsome place in the world, must not the Babylonish poison have eaten deeply into his heart? How much easier it would have been for
Petrarch to have returned to Rome than it was for the Popes, fettered as they
were by so many political considerations!
But however much we may question Petrarch's right to
find fault with the moral delinquencies of the Court at Avignon; however much
we may, in many respects, modify the picture he paints of it, no impartial
inquirer can deny that it was pervaded by a deplorable worldliness. For this melancholy
fact we have testimony more trustworthy than the rhetorical descriptions of the
Italian poet. Yet it must in justice be borne in mind that the influx of
thousands of strangers into the little French provincial town, so suddenly
raised to the position of capital of the world, had produced all the evils
which appertain to densely populated places. Moreover, even if we are to
believe all the angry assertions of contemporaries as to the corruption
prevailing in Avignon, evidence is not wanting, on the other hand, of ardent
yearnings for a life conformable to the precepts of the Gospel.
Side by side with the profligacy which was the
characteristic of the age, and, therefore, prominent in its history, there were
still to be found scattered in various places many homes of quiet and devout
contemplation. Thence went forth an influence, winning noble souls to a higher
ideal of existence, and gently, but perseveringly, striving by means of
self-denial and persuasion, to allay the passionate feuds of parties and
disentangle their intrigues. As this higher life only manifested itself here
and there, history passes it by; it is dealt with in commonplace phrases,
judged, or rather misjudged, by the measure of the later movements of the
sixteenth century, as if they formed a canon for the historical investigation
of all religious phenomena. At no time were there wanting good and earnest men,
who were doing their utmost in their own circle to stem the tide of corruption,
and exerting a salutary influence on their age and surroundings. It would be
most unjust to the champions of the Papal rights to suppose that, because they
maintained the monarchy of the Pope and his right to both swords, they were
ready to sanction that which was evil at Avignon, or condone tyrannous abuses.
In the highest circles there were men of the ancient stamp with the strictest
views of life. Alvaro Pelayo praised the Cardinal
Legate Martin, who went to Denmark poor and returned poor, and the Legate Gaufridus who, when sent to Aquitaine, bought his own fish
and would not accept even wooden platters. He wished Bishops and Popes not to
have smart pages about them, and not to promote undeserving relations. He
prayed that all simoniacal practices should be abolished, that the Roman Church
should be a mother, not a sovereign, and that the Pope should consider himself
not a lord, but a servant, a steward, a laborer. These men, who looked on Louis
of Bavaria as a tyrant, were not on that account disposed to give the Pope a
free pass. While energetically asserting his rights, and those of the Church
and the Bishops, they also insisted on the accompanying duties with a plainness
of speech, which we miss in later ages, together with the magnanimity shown by
those who suffered it.
The removal of the Holy See to Avignon was most
disastrous to the Eternal City, which thereby lost, not only her historic
position as the Capital of Christendom, but also the material benefits which
the presence of the Popes conferred on the community at large, and on many of
the individual inhabitants. While the Popes resided in Rome and its
neighborhood, they were able, for longer or shorter periods, to maintain order
and peace between Barons and Burghers. Their Court and the influx of strangers
which it attracted, brought great wealth into the City, and when the Pontiff
was in their midst, the Romans could easily attain to lucrative ecclesiastical
positions. This state of things was now completely changed. Rome, thrown upon
herself, was in her interior resources inferior to all the considerable cities
of central Italy. She became a prey to increasing isolation and anarchy. The
longer the absence of the Popes continued, the greater was the desolation.
The Churches were so dilapidated and neglected that in St. Peter's and the
Lateran cattle were grazing even to the foot of the altar. Many sacred edifices
were roofless, and others almost in ruins. The monuments of heathen antiquity
fared even worse than those of Christian Rome, and were mercilessly destroyed. A
Legate sold the marble blocks of the Colosseum to be
burned for lime. The materials of the ancient edifices were even carried out of
the City. In the archives regarding the construction of the Cathedral of Orvieto are a number of documents, which show that the
overseers of the work brought a great deal of the marble employed from Rome,
that they sent agents there almost more frequently than to Carrara,
and that they repeatedly received presents of great blocks of marble,
especially from the families of the Orsini and Savelli. The only public work executed in Rome during the
Avignon period was the construction of the marble steps leading up to the
Church of St. Maria Ara Coeli. The remarkable
development of art which had been going on during the latter half of the
thirteenth century was suddenly arrested. The school of the Cosmati came to an end; the influence of Giotto had vanished. Avignon became in this
respect a dangerous rival to the Eternal City, for even in their exile the
Popes did not forget the fine arts. Death alone hindered Giotto from accepting
the flattering invitation of Benedict XII, and in 1338-39 the Pope summoned in
his stead the celebrated painter, Simone Martini of Siena, to adorn his
Cathedral and his Palace; the interesting but long-neglected frescoes of this
artist are now, alas! in a melancholy condition. The bereaved City fared almost
as ill in regard to literature as to art. The consequences of this state of
things, which then passed unperceived, made themselves felt at a later period.
The triumph of the Renaissance in Rome would have been neither so rapid nor so
complete, but for the state of barbarism into which the City had fallen when
deprived of the Pope.
It is hard to form an adequate idea of the utter
desolation and degradation of Rome at this time. The view on which Petrarch
looked down from the Baths of Diocletian, with its hills crowned by solitary
churches, its uncultivated fields, its masses of ancient and modern ruins, its
scattered rows of houses, had nothing to distinguish it from the open country
but the circuit of the old walls of Aurelian. The ruins of two epochs - heathen
antiquity and the Christian middle ages - made up the Rome of those days.
It was no mere figure of speech when Cardinal Napoleone Orsini, after the death
of Clement V (1314), assured the King of France that the transfer of the Papal
residence to Avignon had brought Rome to the brink of ruin, or when at a later
date (1347), Cola di Rienzo declared that the Eternal City was more like a den of robbers than the abode of
civilized men.
Rome learnt by bitter experience that she was
historically important only as the seat of the Papacy, and the Popes had also
much to suffer on account of their separation from their natural prescriptive
home. Parted from Italy, the States of the Church, and Rome, the very ground
had been cut away from under their feet. In one respect in particular this very
soon made itself felt.
The financial difficulties from which the Popes had
suffered even in the thirteenth century became much more serious after they had
taken up their abode on French soil. On the one hand, the income they had drawn
from Italy failed; and on the other, the tributary powers became much more
irregular in the fulfillment of their obligations,- because they feared that
the greater part of the subsidies they paid would fall into the hands of
France. The Papal financiers adopted most questionable means of covering
deficits. From the time of John XXII especially, the hurtful system of Annates, Reservations, and Expectancies, came into play,
and a multitude of abuses were its consequence. Alvaro Pelayo,
the most devoted, perhaps even over-zealous, defender of the Papal power in the
fourteenth century, justly considers the employment of a measure, liable to
excite the cupidity of the clergy, as one of the wounds which then afflicted
the Church. His testimony is all the more worthy of consideration, because, as
an official of many years' standing in the Court, he describes the state of
things at Avignon from his own most intimate knowledge. In his celebrated book,
"On the Lamentation of the Church," he says: "Whenever I entered
the chambers of the ecclesiastics of the Papal Court, I found brokers and
clergy, engaged in weighing and reckoning the money which lay in heaps before
them."
This system of taxation and its consequent abuses soon
aroused passionate resentment. Dante, “consumed with zeal for the House of God”,
expressed, in burning words, his deep indignation against the cupidity and
nepotism of the Popes, always, however, carefully distinguishing between Pope
and Papacy, person and office. It was not long, however, before an opposition
arose which made no such distinctions, and attacked not only the abuses which
had crept in, but the Ecclesiastical authority itself. The Avignon system of
finance, which contributed more than has been generally supposed to the
undermining of the Papal authority, greatly facilitated the attacks of this
party.
From what has been said it will be clearly seen that
the long-continued sojourn of the Popes in France, occasioned as it was by the
confusion of Italian affairs, was an important turning-point in the history of
the Papacy and of the Church. The course of development which had been going on
for many centuries, was thereby almost abruptly interrupted, and a completely
new state of things substituted for it. No one who has any idea of the nature
and the necessity of historical continuity, can fail to perceive the danger of
this transference of the centre of ecclesiastical unity to southern France. The
Papal power and the general interests of the Church, which at that time
required quiet progress and in many ways thorough reform, must inevitably in
the long run be severely shaken.
To make matters worse, the conflict between the Empire
and the Church now broke out with unexpected violence. The most prominent
antagonists of the Papacy, both ecclesiastical and political, gathered around
Louis of Bavaria, offering him their assistance against John XXII. At the head
of the ecclesiastical opposition appeared the popular and influential order of
the Friars Minor, who at this very moment were at daggers drawn with the Pope.
The special occasion of this quarrel was a difference between them and him,
regarding the meaning of evangelical poverty; and the great popularity of the
Order made their hostility all the more formidable. The Minorites,
who were irritated to the utmost against the Pope, succeeded in gaining great
influence over Louis of Bavaria, an influence which is clearly traceable in the
appeal published by him in 1324, at Sachenhausen,
near Frankfort. In this remarkable document, amongst the many serious charges
brought against “John XXII, who calls himself Pope”, is that of heresy, and it
is asserted that he exalts himself against the evangelical doctrines of perfect
poverty, and thus against Christ, the Blessed Virgin, and the company of the
Apostles, who all approved it by their lives. After a passionate dogmatic
exposition of the poverty of Christ and a shower of reproaches, comes the
appeal to the Council, to a future legitimate Pope, to Holy Mother Church, to
the Apostolic See, and to everyone in general to whom an appeal could be made.
This document, in which political and religious
questions were mingled together, was sedulously disseminated in Germany and
Italy. It must have greatly embittered the whole contest. A religious conflict
was now added to the political one. Louis, a simple soldier, was unable to
measure its consequences and powerless to control its progress. It grew more
and more passionate and violent. The Minorites no
longer confined themselves to the province of theology, in which the conflict
between them and the Pope had at first arisen, but also took part in the
political question. Led on by their theological antagonism, they proceeded to
build up a political system resting on theories which threatened to disturb all
existing ideas of law, and to shake the position of the Papacy to its very
foundations. The special importance of the action of the Minorites consists in the assertion and maintenance of these principles, which indeed did
not at once come prominently forward, for the writings of the Englishman,
William Occam, in which they are chiefly propounded, collectively date from a
period subsequent to the Diet of Rhense. There can,
however, be no doubt that the views which Occam afterwards expressed in his
principal work, the “Dialogus”, had already at an
earlier period exercised great influence.
According to the theory of Occam, who was deeply
imbued with the political ideas of the ancients, the Emperor has a right to
depose the Pope should he fall into heresy. Both General Councils and Popes may
err, Holy Scripture and the beliefs held by the Church at all times and in all
places, can alone be taken as the unalterable rule of Faith and Morals. The
Primacy and Hierarchical Institutions in general are not necessary or essential
to the subsistence of the Church; and the forms of the ecclesiastical, as of
the political, constitution ought to vary with the varying needs of the time.
With the Minorites two other
men soon came to the front, who may be considered as the spokesmen of the
definite political opposition to the Papacy. It was probably in the summer of
the year 1326 that the Professors of the University of Paris, Marsiglio of Padua and Jean de Jandun,
made their appearance at the Royal Court of Nuremberg. The “Defender of Peace”,
the celebrated joint work of these two most important literary antagonists of
the Popes of their day, is of so remarkable a character that we must not omit
to give a further account of its subversive propositions. This work, which is
full of violent invectives against John XXII, “the great dragon and the old
serpent”, asserts the unconditional sovereignty of the people. The legislative
power which is exercised through their elected representatives, belongs to
them, also the appointment of the executive through their delegates. The ruler
is merely the instrument of the legislature. He is subject to the law, from
which no individual is exempt. If the ruler exceeds his authority, the people
are justified in depriving him of his power, and deposing him. The jurisdiction
of the civil power extends even to the determination of the number of men to be
employed in every trade or profession. Individual liberty has no more place in Marsiglio’s state than it had in Sparta.
Still more radical, if possible, are the views
regarding the doctrine and government of the Church put forth in this
work. The sole foundation of faith and of the Church is Holy Scripture,
which does not derive its authority from her, but, on the contrary, confers on
her that which she possesses. The only true interpretation of Scripture is, not
that of the Church, but that of the most intelligent people, so that the
University of Paris may very well be superior to the Court of Rome. Questions
concerning faith are to be decided, not by the Pope, but by a General Council.
This General Council is supreme over the whole Church,
and is to be summoned by the State. It is to be composed not only of the
clergy, but also of laymen elected by the people. As regards their office, all
priests are equal; according to Divine right, no one of them is higher than
another. The whole question of Church government is one of expediency, not of
the faith necessary to salvation. The Primacy of the Pope is not founded on
Scripture, nor on Divine right. His authority therefore can only, according to Marsiglio, be derived from a General Council and from the
legislature of the State; and for the election of a Pope the authority of the
Council requires confirmation from the State. The office of the Pope is, with
the College appointed for him by the Council or by the State, to signify to the
State authority the necessity of summoning a Council, to preside at the
Council, to draw up its decisions, to impart them to the different Churches,
and to provide for their execution. The Pope represents the executive power,
while the legislative power in its widest extent appertains to the Council. But
a far higher and more influential position belongs to the Emperor in Marsiglio’s Church; the convocation and direction of the
Council is his affair; he can punish priests and bishops, and even the Pope.
Ecclesiastics are subject to the temporal tribunals for transgressions of the
law, the Pope himself is not exempt from penal justice, far less can he be
permitted to judge his ecclesiastics, for this is the concern of the State. The
property of the Church enjoys no immunity from taxation; the number of
ecclesiastics in a country is to be limited by the pleasure of the State; the
patronage of all benefices belongs to the State, and may be exercised either by
Princes, or by the majority of the members of the parish to which an ecclesiastic
is to be appointed. The parish has not only the right of election and
appointment, but also the control of the official duties of the priest, and the
ultimate power of dismissal. Exclusion from the Christian community, in so far
as temporal and worldly interests are connected with it, requires its consent.
Like Calvin in later days, Marsiglio regards all the
judicial and legislative power of the Church as inherent in the people, and
delegated by them to the clergy. The community and the State are everything;
the Church is put completely in the background; she has no legislature, no
judicial power, and no property.
The goods of the Church belong to the individuals who
have devoted them to ecclesiastical uses, and then to the State. The State is to
decide regarding sale and purchase, and to consider whether these goods are
sufficient to provide for the needs of the clergy and of the poor. The State
has also power, should it be necessary for the public good, to deprive the
Church of her superfluities and limit her to what is necessary, and the State
has the right to effect this secularization, notwithstanding the opposition of
the Priests. But never, Marsiglio teaches, is power
over temporal goods to be conceded to the Roman Bishop, because experience has
shown that he uses it in a manner dangerous to the public peace. Like Valla and Macchiavelli, in later times, Marsiglio assumes the air of an Italian patriot, when he attributes all the troubles of
Italy to the Popes. This is a palpable sophistry, for that reproach was in no
way applicable to Marsiglio’s days. Italy was then
under the sway of her most distinguished monarch, King Robert of Anjou, whom
the Popes had protected to the best of their power, and Louis of Bavaria's
expedition to Rome was certainly neither their wish nor their work. On the
contrary, at a later period, Pope John XXII issued a Bull with the object of
separating Italy from Germany, and thereby destroying the influence of the “Ultramontanes”, or non-Italians in Italy.
In face of these outrageous attacks and this blank
denial of the Divine institution of the Primacy and the Hierarchy, there were
never wanting brave champions of the Apostolic See and of the doctrine of the
Church. Most of them, unfortunately, were led by excess of zeal to formulate
absurd and preposterous propositions. Agostino Trionfo, an Italian, and Alvaro Pelayo,
a Spaniard, have, in this matter, gained a melancholy renown. As one extreme
leads to another, in their opposition to the Cesaro-papacy
of Marsiglio, they exalted the Pope into a kind of
demigod, with absolute authority over the whole world. Evidently,
exaggerations of this kind were not calculated to counteract the attacks of
political skepticism in regard to the authority of the Holy See.
The theory put forward in the “Defensor Pacis”, regarding the omnipotence of the State and
the consequent annihilation of all individual and ecclesiastical liberty, far
surpassed all preceding attacks on the position and constitution of the Church
in audacity, novelty, and acrimony. Practically this doctrine, which was copied
from the ancients, meant the overthrow of all existing institutions and the
separation of Church and State. Many passages of the work go far beyond the
subsequent utterances of Wyclif and Huss, or even
those of Luther and Calvin, whose forerunner Marsiglio may be considered. The great French Revolution was a partial realization of his
schemes, and, in these days, a powerful party is working for the accomplishment
of the rest. Huss has been styled “the Precursor of the Revolution”, but the
author of the Defensor Pacis might
yet more justly claim the title.
Louis of Bavaria accepted the dedication of the book
which brought these doctrines before the world and promulgated political
principles of so questionable a character, but a still greater triumph was in
store for Marsiglio. In union with the anti-papal Minorites and the Italian Ghibellines,
he succeeded in inducing Louis to go to Rome and to engage in the Revolutionary
proceedings of the year 1328. The collation of the Imperial Crown by the Roman
people, their deposition of the Pope and election of an anti-Pope in the person
of the Minorite, Pietro da Corvara, were the practical
results of the teaching of the Defensor Pacis.
Some of the Emperors of the House of Hohenstaufen had
been men of stronger characters than Louis was, yet none had ever gone to such
extremes. He appealed to doctrines whose application to ecclesiastical matters
was equivalent to revolution, and whose reaction on the sphere of politics
after their triumph over the Church would have been rapid and incalculable. For
a century and a half the Church had been free from schism; by his action he let
loose this terrible evil upon her. His culpable rashness gave a revolutionary
and democratic turn to the struggle between the Empire and the Papacy. He
repudiated all the canonical decisions regarding the Supremacy of the Pope
which the Emperors of the House of Hapsburg had accepted, degraded the Empire
to a mere Investiture from the Capitol, and despoiled the Crown of Charles the
Great, in the eyes of all who believed in the ancient imperial hierarchy, of
the last ray of its majesty. It is strange that under Louis the Roman Empire
should actually have been thus desecrated and degraded, so soon after Dante's
idealization had crowned it with a halo of glory.
It is impossible in the present retrospect to describe
all the vicissitudes of Church and State during the struggle which was so
disastrous to both. Envenomed by the dependence of the Popes on France, the
exasperation on both sides was intense. The ecclesiastical power was
implacable, lost to all sense of moderation, dignity, or charity. The secular
power, cowardly but defiant, shrank from no extreme, sought the aid of the
lowest demagogues, and by its vacillations frustrated each favorable chance
that arose. The long and obstinate warfare, so little honorable to either
party, could have no result save the equal humiliation of both and the complete
ruin of social order in Church and State. John XXII, restless and active to the
last, died at a great age on the 4th December 1334.
His successor, Benedict XII (1334-1342), a man of
austere morals, was unable, notwithstanding his gentle and pacific disposition,
to compose the strife with Louis of Bavaria and the Friars. King Philip VI of
France and the Cardinals in the French interest labored to prevent peace
between the Pope and Louis, and Benedict had not sufficient strength of will to
carry out his purpose in face of their opposition.
John XXII, in his latter years, had thought of returning to Rome, and Pope Benedict XII wished to do so,
but the Eternal City was at this time an arena of passionate discord and
constant bloodshed. A Pope could not have remained there, even if the
predominance of French influence and the irksome protection of the House of
Anjou had allowed him to make the attempt. King Philip VI and the French
Cardinals, who formed the large majority of the Sacred College, accordingly
found no difficulty in detaining the Pope on the banks of the Rhone. In face of
the hopeless and yearly increasing confusion in Italy, the wish to return to
the Tombs of the Apostles gradually died away in his noble soul. In 1339 he
began to build at Avignon a suitable dwelling-place, half palace and half
fortress; it was enlarged by his successors and so gradually grew into the
celebrated Palace of the Popes. This gigantic pile stands on the rock of the Doms, and with its huge, heavy square towers, its naked
yellowish-brown colossal walls, five yards in thickness and broken irregularly
by a few pointed windows, is one of the most imposing creations of medieval
architecture. In its strange combination of castle and cloister, prison and
palace, this temporary residence of the Popes reflects both the deterioration
and the fate of the Papacy in France. It was the Popes' prison, and at the same
time their Baronial Castle, in that feudal epoch when the Heads of Christendom
were vassals of the French Crown, and were not ashamed to bear the title of
Counts of Venaissin and Avignon. The Palace of the Popes, in comparison with
which the neighboring Cathedral has an insignificant appearance, also manifests
the decline of the ecclesiastical, and the predominance of the worldly,
warlike, and princely element, which marked the Avignon period.
The labors of Benedict XII as a reformer, in the best
sense of the word, are worthy of the highest praise. In this respect he forms a
striking contrast with his predecessor; he also most carefully avoided anything
approaching to nepotism. “A Pope”, he said, “should be like Melchisedech,
without father, without mother, without genealogy”. During his whole
Pontificate he manifested the most earnest desire to do away with the abuses
which had prevailed in the preceding reign, severely repressing bribery and
corruption in all the branches of ecclesiastical administration. He sent the
prelates who lingered about the Court back to their dioceses, and revoked all
In-Commendams and Expectancies, with the exception of those appertaining to the
Cardinals and Patriarchs. He made the reform of the relaxed Religious Orders of
men his special care and, as one of his biographers observes, he caused the
Church, which had become Agar, to be again Sara, and brought her out of bondage
into freedom.
Benedict XII’s successor, Pierre Roger de Beaufort,
was also a native of the South of France; he was born at the Castle of Maumont in the Diocese of Limoges, and, on his accession,
took the name of Clement VI (1342-1352). Unlike the pacific Benedict, this
strong-minded Pontiff proceeded to resume against Louis of Bavaria the
traditions of John XXII, and with success. He skillfully turned the enmity of
the Houses of Lützelburg and Wittelsbach to account against the Emperor. A deadly struggle between these two families
was imminent, when Louis suddenly died. The triumph of the Papacy seemed
assured, for Charles IV undertook to satisfy all the demands of the Papal
Court, and even the portion of the German nation which had followed the Emperor
in his opposition to the Popes, gradually reverted to its former path.
But the whole nature of the conflict between the two
divinely appointed powers, and the new ideas which had come to light during its
continuance, had worked a great change in the spirit of the age. The old Pagan
idea of the State, so destructive of every other human or divine right, had
been revived by Marsiglio and Occam, and its delusive
sophistry had beguiled many. The disastrous struggle had shaken the allegiance
of thousands to the authority of the Pope, many spiritual bonds which had
hitherto attached them to the Church were loosened, the general feeling was no
longer what it had formerly been, and, moreover, the corruption of morals
during these years had made frightful progress.
The Pontificate of Clement VI was marked by the revolt
of Cola di Rienzo, and the
magic power attached to the name of the Eternal City was again manifested, but
the fantastic extravagance of the Tribune, the instability of the Roman people,
and, finally, the measures taken against it by the Pope, soon made an end of
the new Republic and its head. The whole revolt seemed like some meteor that
beams forth for a moment and is immediately lost in the darkness. Yet in some
respects it was an important sign of the times. The programme of Italian unity
under an Italian Emperor, put forth by the “Tragic Actor in the tattered purple
of antiquity”, clearly showed the progress already achieved by the modern idea
of nationality. The ruin of the great political unity of the Middle Ages
brought forth the selfish spirit of modern times. This unchristian nationalism
was first developed in France, the very nation into whose power the Head of the
Church had fallen. Thence it spread to Italy, where it found an ally in the heathen
Renaissance. This was only natural, for nationalism in its narrowest sense was
the spirit of the ancient world. Sooner or later a conflict between the Church
and this degenerate principle was inevitable, for the Universal Church cannot
be national. According to the will of her Divine Founder, she must accommodate
herself to every race: there must be One Fold and One Shepherd. At one and the
same time the Most stable and the most pliable of all institutions, the Church
can be all things to all men, and can educate every nation without doing
violence to her nature. She persecutes no tongue nor people, but she shows no
special preferences. She is simply Catholic, that is, Universal. Were it
possible for her to become the tool of any one nation, she would cease to be
the Universal Church, embracing the whole world.
Clement VI was in many respects a distinguished man.
He was celebrated for immense theological knowledge, for a marvelous memory,
and, above all, for rare eloquence.
Some of his sermons, preached in the Papal Chapel
before his elevation to the Pontificate, are preserved in manuscript in German
Libraries. When Pope, he used to preach publicly on occasions of special
importance to the Church, such, for example, as the appointment of Louis of
Spain to be Prince and Lord of the Canary Islands (1344).
The gentleness and benevolence of this Pontiff were
even more remarkable than his erudition and eloquence. He was ever the helper
of the poor and needy, and the brave defender of the unfortunate and oppressed.
When a sanguinary persecution broke out against the Jews, who were
detested as the representatives of capital, and slain by thousands by the
excited populace in France and Germany, the Pope alone espoused their cause. He
felt that his exalted position imposed on him the duty of curbing the wild
fanaticism of the turbulent masses. In July and September, 1348, he issued
Bulls for the protection of the abhorred race. If in the frantic excitement of
the time, these measures were almost fruitless, Clement VI at least did all
that was in his power, by affording refuge to the homeless wanderers in his
little State.
But notwithstanding the admirable qualities of this
Pontiff, there is a dark side, which we must not conceal. Through the
acquisition, by purchase, of Avignon and the “creation of many French Cardinals”,
he made the Roman Church still more dependent on France. Her true interests
suffered much from the manner in which he heaped riches and favors on his
relations, and from the luxury of his Court. Extravagance and good cheer were
carried to a frightful pitch in Avignon during his reign. There was a certain
magnanimity in the prodigality of Clement, who said that he was Pope only to
promote the happiness of his subjects; but the treasure left by his two
immediate predecessors was soon exhausted, and fresh resources were needed to
enable him to continue his liberal mode of life. He was only able to procure
these at the cost of the interests of the Church, for his financial measures
were even more injurious than those of Clement V and John XXII. As in former
times, so now, the frequent and excessive exercise of the undoubted right of
the Popes to levy taxes led, in many countries, to violent resistance. Among
the Teutonic nations especially, the discontent was extreme. England endeavored
to protect herself by strict legislative enactments, and her example was
afterwards followed by Germany. Owing, however, to political distractions, the
opposition was not unanimous, although the measures adopted were, in some
cases, sufficiently stringent. In October, 1372, the monasteries and abbeys in
Cologne entered into a compact to resist Pope Gregory XI in his proposed levy
of a tithe on their revenues. The wording of their document manifests the depth
of the feeling which prevailed in Germany against the Court of Avignon. “In
consequence”, it says, “of the exactions with which the Papal Court burdens the
clergy, the Apostolic See has fallen into such contempt, that the Catholic
Faith in these parts seems to be seriously imperiled. The laity speak
slightingly of the Church, because, departing from the custom of former days,
she hardly ever sends forth preachers or reformers, but rather ostentatious
men, cunning, selfish, and greedy. Things have come to such a pass, that few
are Christians more than in name”. The example of Cologne was soon followed.
Similar protests were issued in the same month by the Chapters of Bonn, Xanten,
and Soest, and in the month of November by the
ecclesiastics of Mayence. Such was the feeling in
Western Germany towards the end of the Avignon period, and in Southern Germany
the same sentiments prevailed. Duke Stephen the elder of Bavaria and his sons
addressed a letter to the ecclesiastics of their country in 1367, informing
them “that the Pope lays a heavy tax on the income of the clergy, and has thus
brought ruin on the monasteries; they are therefore strictly enjoined, under
severe penalties, to pay no tax or tribute, for their country is a free
country, and the princes will not permit the introduction of such customs, for
the Pope has no orders to give in their country”.
Clement VI, unfortunately, did not recognize the
injury inflicted on the interests of the Church by his extravagant demands for
money. On the contrary, when the abuses which had ensued were brought to his
notice, and he was reminded that none of his predecessors had allowed things to
go to such lengths, he replied: “My predecessors did not know how to be Popes”,
a saying which is characteristic of this Pontiff, in whose person the period of
the Avignon exile is most characteristically portrayed.
Happily for the Church, Clement’s successor, Innocent VI (1352-1362), was of a very different stamp. This “austere
and righteous” man seems to have taken Benedict XII as his model. Immediately
after his coronation he revoked the Constitution of Clement VI, granting
benefices in certain cathedral and collegiate churches to ecclesiastical
dignitaries, suspended a number of Reservations and In-Commendams, expressed
his disapproval of pluralities, and bound every beneficed priest to personal
residence, under pain of excommunication. In this way he emptied the Papal
Palace of a crowd of useless courtiers, whose only occupation was intrigue and
money-making. Naturally frugal in his own expenses, and convinced that it was
his duty to be very careful in regard to the possessions of the Church, he banished
all splendor from his Court, put a stop to superfluous outlay, and dismissed
needless servants. He required the Cardinals, many of whom were given up to
luxury and had amassed immense wealth, to follow his example, and often rebuked
the passions and failings of individual members of the Sacred College.
Preferment in his days was the reward of merit. “Ecclesiastical dignities”, he
used to say, “should follow virtue, not birth”. Innocent VI, who
contemplated a thorough reform of Church government in general, earnestly
strove to stem the corruption of the age, even beyond his own immediate sphere.
Accordingly, in 1357, he sent Bishop Philippe de Labassole to Germany to labor at the reform of the clergy. Almost all historians regard
Innocent VI as an austere, earnest, and capable ruler, who, - although not
wholly free from the taint of nepotism, - worked unceasingly for the welfare of
the Church and of his people. Some even consider him the best of the Avignon
Popes.
This remarkable Pontiff also lent a helping hand to
the final restoration of the Empire, but this new Empire was too weak to have
sufficed for itself even in ordinary times. From the fear of a return to the
days of Frederick II and Louis of Bavaria, it was considered prudent, if
possible, to deprive the Empire of all power of injuring the Church, and
everything else was sacrificed to this idea. The mistake proved a serious one.
With all his admirable qualities, Innocent VI was no politician.
The brightest spot in his Pontificate is the
restoration of the papal authority in Italy, by means of the gifted Cardinal Albornoz. The return of the Pope to his original and proper
capital was now a possibility. It was, moreover, becoming a matter of urgent
necessity, as the residence of the Papal Court on the banks of the Rhone had
been rendered most insecure by the increasing power of mercenary bands and the
growing confusion of French affairs. Innocent VI had indeed meant to visit
Rome, but old age and sickness frustrated his purpose. His successor, the
learned and saintly Urban V (1362-1370), was more fortunate. Two great events
mark his Pontificate as one of the most important of the century.
His return to Rome, which the Emperor Charles IV
promoted with all his power, was effected in 1367. It was the only means by
which the papal authority could be reinstated, the Papacy delivered from the
entanglement of the war between France and England, and the necessary reform of
ecclesiastical discipline carried out.
The second great event, which occurred in the
following year, was the Emperor Charles IV's pilgrimage to Rome and the
friendly alliance between the Empire and the Church. The return of Urban V to
the tombs of the Apostles was an occasion of immense rejoicing to all earnest
and devout Italians. Giovanni Colombini, the founder
of the Gesuati, and his religious came as far as Corneto to meet the Pope, singing hymns of praise. They
bore palm branches in their hands, and accompanied the Holy Father on his way
with rejoicings. Shortly afterwards he confirmed their statutes which were
based on the Rule of St. Benedict. Petrarch welcomed the Pope on his entry into
Rome in the words of the psalmist: “When Israel went out of Egypt, the house of
Jacob from a barbarous people, then was our mouth filled with gladness and our
tongue with joy”.
Rome had seen no Pope within her walls for more than
sixty years; the city was a very picture of utter decay: the principal
churches, the Lateran Basilica, St. Peter's, and St. Paul’s, and the Papal
Palaces were almost in ruins. The experience of two generations had proved,
that while the Popes might possibly do without Rome, Rome could not do without
the Popes. Urban V at once gave orders for the restoration of the dilapidated
buildings and churches. Royal guests soon arrived at her gates, and the city
gradually began to recover. The Romans came to meet their Sovereign with all
due respect and submission; peace and quietness seemed at last to have
returned. But Urban V was not endowed with strength and perseverance to unravel
the tangled skein of Italian affairs, and resist his own longing and that of
most of the Cardinals for their beautiful French home. In vain did the
Franciscan, Pedro of Aragon, point out the probability of a schism if the Pope
should forsake the seat of the Apostles. The supplications of the Romans, the
warnings of Petrarch, and St. Bridget’s prediction that he would die when he
left Italy, were unavailing to turn Urban V from his purpose. To the great
sorrow of all true friends of the Papacy and the Church, he went to Avignon,
where he shortly died (December 19, 1370). When Petrarch heard the tidings he
wrote: “Urban would have been reckoned amongst the most glorious of men, if he
had caused his dying bed to be laid before the Altar of St. Peter and had there fallen asleep with a good conscience, calling God and
the world to witness that if ever the Pope had left this spot it was not his
fault, but that of the originators of so shameful a flight”. With the exception
of this weakness, Urban V was one of the best of the Popes, and his resistance
to the moral corruption of the day is worthy of all honor, even though he was
unable completely to efface the traces of the former disorders.
The period was in many ways a most melancholy one. The
prevailing immorality exceeded anything that had been witnessed since
the tenth century. Upon a closer inquiry into the causes of this state of
things, we shall find that the evil was in great measure due to the altered
conditions of civilized life. Commercial progress, facilities of intercourse,
the general well-being and prosperity of all classes of society in Italy,
France, Germany and the Low Countries, had greatly increased during the latter
part of the thirteenth century. Habits of life changed rapidly, and became more
luxurious and pleasure-seeking. The clergy of all degrees, with some honorable
exceptions, went with the current. Fresh wants necessitated additional
resources, and some of the Popes (as, for example, John XXII and Clement VI)
adopted those financial measures of which we have already spoken. Gold became
the ruling power everywhere. Alvaro Pelayo, speaking
as an eye-witness, says that the officials of the Papal Court omitted no means
of enriching themselves. No audience was to be obtained, no business transacted
without money, and even permission to receive Holy Orders had to be purchased
by presents. The same evils, on a smaller scale, prevailed in most of the
episcopal palaces. The promotion of unworthy and incompetent men, and the
complete neglect of the obligation of residence, were the results of this
system. The synods, indeed, often urged this obligation, but the example of
those in high places counteracted their efforts. The consequent want of
supervision is in itself enough to explain the decay of discipline in the
matter of the celibacy of the clergy, though the unbridled immorality, which
kept pace with the increasing luxury of the age, had here also led many astray.
Urban V, himself a saintly man, attacked these abuses
with energy and skill; he clearly saw that the reformation of the clergy was
the first thing to be attended to, and took vigorous measures, not only against
heretical teachers, but also against immoral and simoniacal ecclesiastics and
idle monks. He enforced the rule regarding the holding of Provincial Councils,
which had long been neglected, put a stop to the disgraceful malpractices of
the Advocates and Procurators of the Roman Court, and conferred benefices only
on the deserving. He wished his Court to be a pattern of Christian conduct,
and, therefore, watched carefully over the morals of his surroundings. He was
fearless wherever he believed the interests of God to be concerned, and,
although of a yielding disposition, showed an amount of decision in maintaining
the rights and liberties of the Church, which astonished all who knew him. The
luxurious life at Avignon was distasteful to him, and furnished one strong
reason for his journey to Rome. He was free from any taint of nepotism, and
induced his father to give up a pension which the King of France had granted
him; justice was his aim in all things; he was punctual in holding
Consistories; all business, especially such as concerned the affairs of the
poor, was promptly dispatched, he kept strict order in his Court, and put down
all fraud and oppression. During his sojourn in Italy, Urban also occupied
himself with ecclesiastical reforms, one of which was that of the celebrated
Abbey of Monte Casino.
The weakness of Urban V in so speedily abandoning Rome
was visited on Gregory XI. (1370-1378), a Pontiff distinguished for learning,
piety, modesty, and purity of life. In his time, the spirit of Italian
nationality rose up against the French Papacy. The great mistake which had been
made in entrusting the government of the States of the Church almost
exclusively to Provençals, strangers to the country
and to its people, was sternly avenged. A national movement ensued, the effects
of which still survive in Italy, and which produced a general uprising of the
Italians against the French.
The Republic of Florence, once the staunchest ally of
the Holy See, now took the lead in opposition “to the evil Pastors of the
Church”, and in July, 1375, associated itself with Bernabo Visconti, the old enemy of the Apostolic See. Unfurling a red banner, on which
shone the word, “Liberty”, in golden letters, the Florentines called upon all
who were dissatisfied with the rule of the Papal Legates to arise. The
preponderance of Frenchmen amongst the governors in the States of the Church
was, no doubt, in some degree the cause of the ready response made to this
appeal. Still, the most loyal adherent of Gregory XI, St. Catherine of Siena,
denounces the conduct of the “evil Pastors”, and urges the Pope to proceed
vigorously against those “who poison and devastate the garden of the Church”."It
would, however, be unfair to adopt the tone of the majority of Italian
chroniclers and historians, and lay all the blame on the Papal Legates. “The
policy of most of the Italian states”, to quote the words of one thoroughly
conversant with this period, “was infected with that same disease of selfseeking and duplicity, of which the Legates were
accused, while the mode of government in the princely Castles and in the
Republics was incomparably more oppressive than in the Papal dominions. Some of
these Legates were among the most distinguished servants of the Church of that
age, but they all shared in the Original Sin of foreign nationality, and did
not understand the Italians, who, on the other hand, found it convenient to
attribute to others their own faults”.
The behavior of the Florentines towards Gregory XI was
closely connected with the internal affairs of the Republic. A numerous party
in Florence, to whom the increased authority of the dominant Guelph section of
the nobles was obnoxious, extremely disliked the strengthening of the
territorial power of the Pope. Dreading a diminution of Florentine influence in
Central Italy, they adroitly made use of the errors of the Papal governors to
stir up the States of the Church. Their efforts were successful beyond all
expectation. In the November and December of 1375, Montefiascone, Viterbo, Citta di Castello, Narni,
and Perugia rose in revolt, soon to be followed by Assisi, Spoleto, Ascoli, Civita Vecchia, Forli, and
Ravenna, and before two months had passed, the March of Ancona, the Romagna,
the Duchy of Spoleto, in short, the whole of the States of the Church were in
open insurrection. The power of the revolutionary torrent is strikingly shown
by the defection of Barons like Bertrando d'Alidosio, the Vicar Apostolic of Imola,
and Rodolfo da Varano, who
had been numbered among the most devoted adherents of the Pope. The
Florentines, not yet content, made constant efforts to gain the few cities
which still resisted the Revolution, and, where letters and emissaries failed
to accomplish this object, proceeded to more forcible measures.
Consternation reigned in Avignon; Gregory XI, timid by
nature, was deeply shocked and alarmed by the evil tidings from Italy. Fearing
that the cities which still remained true to him would also join the standard
of revolt, he endeavored to make terms with his opponents, but in vain; the
Florentines had no desire for peace, especially when they had succeeded in
inducing the powerful city of Bologna, the “pearl of the Romagna”, to turn
against the Pope.
In face of the reckless proceedings of his enemies,
Gregory XI believed the time had come when even a pacific Pontiff must
seriously think of war. A sentence accordingly went forth, which, as time
proved, was terrible in its effects and in many respects doubtless too severe.
The citizens of Florence were excommunicated, an interdict was laid upon the
city, Florence, with its inhabitants and possessions, was declared to be
outlawed. Gregory XI came to the unfortunate decision of opposing force by
force, and sending the wild Breton mercenaries, who were then at Avignon with
their captain, Jean de Malestroit, to Italy, under
the command of the fierce Cardinal Legate, Robert of Geneva. War was declared
between the last French Head of the Church and the Republic of Florence.
No one more deeply bewailed these sad events than St.
Catherine of Siena, a young and lowly nun, who exercised a wonderful influence
over the hearts of her contemporaries, as the ministering angel of the poor in
their corporal and spiritual necessities, the heroic nurse of the
plague-stricken, and the mighty preacher of penance. This simple maiden, who is
one of the most marvellous figures in the history of
the world, clearly perceived the faults on both sides in this terrible strife,
and “in heart-stirring and hear-twinning words” spoke out her convictions to
all, even to the most powerful. As the true Bride of Him who came to bring
peace to the world, she constantly urged peace and reconciliation upon the
opposing parties. "What is sweeter than peace?" she wrote to Niccolo Soderini, one of the most
influential citizens of Florence; “it was the last will and testament which
Jesus Christ left to His disciples, when He said, 'You shall not be known as My
disciples by working miracles, nor by foretelling the future, nor by great
holiness shown forth in all your actions, but only if you shall live together
in charity and peace and love.' So great is my grief at this war which will
destroy so many among you, body and soul, that I would readily, if it were
possible, give my life a thousand times to stop it”.
The letters addressed by St. Catherine to Pope Gregory
XI are unique in their kind. She looks at everything from the highest point of
view, and does not scruple to tell the Pope the most unwelcome truths, without,
however, for a moment forgetting the reverence due to the Vicar of Christ. “You
are indeed bound”, she says in one of these letters, “to win back the territory
which has been lost to the Church; but you are even more bound to win back all
the lambs which are the Church's real treasure, and whose loss will truly
impoverish her, not indeed in herself, for the Blood of Christ cannot be
diminished, but the Church loses a great adornment of glory which she receives
from her virtuous and obedient children. It is far better to part with a
temporal treasure than with one which is eternal. Do what you can; when all
that is possible has been done, you are excused in the sight of God and of men.
You must strike them with the weapons of goodness, of love, and of peace, and
you will gain more than by the weapons of war. And when I inquire of God what
is the best for your salvation, for the restoration of the Church, and for the
whole world, there is no other answer but the word, Peace, Peace! For the love
of the crucified Saviour, Peace”. “Be valiant and not
fearful”, St. Catherine entreats after the revolt of Bologna; “answer God who
calls you to come and to fill and defend the place of the glorious Pastor St.
Peter, whose successor you are. Raise the standard of the Holy Cross, for as,
according to the saying of the Apostle St. Paul, we are made free by the Cross,
so by the exaltation of this standard which appears before me as the
consolation of Christendom, shall we be delivered from discord, war and
wickedness, and those who have gone astray shall return to their allegiance.
Thus doing you shall obtain the conversion of the Pastors of the Church.
Implant again in her heart the burning love that she has lost. She is pale
through loss of blood which has been drained by insatiable devourers. But take
courage and come, 0 Father; let not the servants of God, whose hearts are heavy
with longing, have still to wait for you. And I, poor and miserable that I am,
cannot wait longer; life seems death to me while I see and hear that God is so
dishonored. Do not let yourself be kept from peace by what has come to pass in
Bologna, but come. I tell you that ravening wolves will lay their heads in your
lap like gentle lambs, and beseech you to have pity on them, 0 Father”.
With like freedom did Catherine point out to the
rulers of Florence that they owed obedience to the Church, even if her pastors
failed in the performance of their duties. “You know well that Christ left us
His Vicar for the salvation of our souls, for we cannot find salvation anywhere
save in the mystical body of the Church, whose Head is Christ and whose members
we are. He who is disobedient to the Christ on earth has no share in the
inheritance of the Blood of the Son of God, for God has ordained that by his
hand we should be partakers of this Blood and of all the Sacraments of the
Church which receive life from this Blood. There is no other way, we can enter
by no other door, for He who is Very Truth says, I am the Way, the Truth, and
the Life.' He who walks in this way is in the truth and not in falsehood. This
is the way of hatred of sin, not the way of self-love which is the source of
all evil. You see then, my dear sons, that he who like a corrupt member resists
the Holy Church and our Father, the Christ upon earth, lies under sentence of
death. For as we demean ourselves towards him, whether honoring him or
disobeying him, so do we demean ourselves towards Christ in Heaven. I say it to
you with the deepest sorrow, by your disobedience and persecution you have
deserved death and the wrath of God. There can nothing worse happen to you than
the loss of His grace; human power is of little avail where divine power is
wanting, and he watcheth in vain that keepeth the city, unless the Lord keep it. Many indeed
think that they are not offending God but serving Him, when they persecute the
Church and her Pastors, and say they are bad and do nothing but harm; yet I
tell you that even if the Pastors were incarnate devils and the Pope the same,
instead of a good and kind Father, we must be obedient and submissive to him,
not for his own sake, but as the Vicar of the Lord in obedience to God”.
The words, alas! fell on a barren soil, St. Catherine
soon perceived to her great sorrow that the Florentines, who had sent her to
negotiate their terms of peace at Avignon (June, 1376), had no real desire to
come to an understanding with the Pope. For those who now held sway in Florence
intended to bring the Church to such straits that her temporal power would
disappear, and this not from any lofty ideal as to the higher interests of the
Church, but in order that the Pope should be without the means of punishing
them. The peace, with which the Saint of Siena saw that the fulfillment of the
dearest wish of her heart - the Pope's return to Rome - was closely connected,
seemed more distant than ever. But St. Catherine did not lose courage. During
her sojourn at Avignon she unceasingly implored the Pope to yield and to let
mercy prevail over justice; not content with this, she desired to lay the axe
to the root, in order to remove the evil thoroughly. She now urged him by word
of mouth, as she had already done in her letters, to undertake the reformation
of the clergy. The worldly-minded Cardinals were amazed at the plain speaking
of this nun. She told the Pope of his failings, especially his inordinate
regard for his relations. All Avignon was in a state of excitement; many would
have been glad to crush her, but they feared the Pope who had taken her under
his protection. She loudly complained that at the Papal Court, which ought to
have been a Paradise of virtue, her nostrils were assailed by the odors of
hell. It is greatly to the honor of Gregory that St. Catherine could venture to
speak thus plainly, and equally to her honor that she did so speak.
St. Catherine's zeal for reform was even surpassed by
that with which she endeavored to bring about the return of the Pope to Rome.
She labored with the greatest ardor for the realization of this project, which
lay very near her heart, in the first place on account of the relations then
existing between Rome and Italy, and the longing desire of all Italians. But
her strongest motive was her solemn conviction that the Chief Pastoral Office
in the Church ought to be closely associated with the City, which the blood of
the Apostles and of countless martyrs had hallowed. She by no means overlooked
the other advantages of the ancient abode of the Caesars, but her devout
enthusiasm - herein widely differing from that of Petrarch was kindled by the
vision of Rome, as the Holy City born again and ennobled in Christ. She writes
of Rome, as a “garden watered with the blood of martyrs, which still flows
there and calls on others to follow them”, and it was her desire to make her
great by restoring to her her choicest ornament, the
Throne of the Apostles. Equally earnest was her desire to restore the fallen
power of the Vicar of Christ; and, fully persuaded that in no other city on
earth could the Papacy flourish as in Rome, she gave herself no rest, until she
had undone the work of Philip the Fair.
Meanwhile the aspect of affairs in Italy had become
more and more threatening to the Papacy. Besides Rome, only Cesena, Orvieto, Ancona, Osimo, and Jesi, had remained true to the Pope, and the rebels had
left no means untried to shake the allegiance of these places. Rightly judging
that the attitude of the Eternal City must have a decisive influence, they laboured especially to induce the Romans to rebel. But
happily for Gregory, the violent letters of the Florentine Chancellor, Coluccio Salutato, urging them to
rise against “the barbarians, the French robbers, and the flattering priests”,
were unheeded. It was, however, impossible for Rome to continue absolutely
uninfluenced by the general insurrectionary movement, and a party arose there
which threatened that if Gregory put off his return to Italy, an antipope
should be elected. The great excitement which reigned throughout the States of
the Church, is proved by the fact that many of the inferior clergy in the
revolted Provinces joined the insurrection, and incited the members of their
flocks to expel the Papal officials.
Since the days of Frederick II the Papacy had never
been in such imminent peril, for it now seemed on the point of losing its
historical position in Italy, and even of being permanently banished by the
Italians themselves to Avignon. St. Bridget had, many years before, expressed
her fear that, unless Gregory XI soon returned to Italy, he would forfeit not
only his temporal, but also his spiritual authority, and this fear seemed on
the point of realization.
The restoration of the Papal residence to Rome was the
only possible remedy.
Gregory XI had long entertained the idea of going to
Rome, but the influences which detained him in France had as yet been too
strong; his venerated father, Count de Beaufort, his mother, his four sisters,
his King, his Cardinals, and his own repugnance towards a country whose
language was unknown to him, were all so many hindrances in the way. If the
sickly and timid Pontiff at last overcame the pressure put upon him by those
around him, and by the French King, who sent his own brother, the Duke of
Anjou, to Avignon, this result is due to the burning words of St. Catherine of
Siena. On the 13th September, 1376, Gregory XI left Avignon for Genoa,
travelling by way of Marseilles. At Genoa, St. Catherine succeeded in
counteracting all the attempts made to induce him to turn back. Fearful storms
delayed the voyage to Italy, and in consequence he only reached Corneto on the 5th December. The inhabitants of this
ancient Etruscan City went forth to meet the Pope when he landed, carrying
olive branches in their hands, and singing the Te Deum.
Gregory XI remained here five weeks, principally on
account of inconclusive negotiations with the inhabitants of the Eternal City,
whom the Florentines were ceaselessly inciting to revolt. The practical Romans,
however, came to terms with the Pope's plenipotentiaries, and on the 21st
December, 1376, an agreement was concluded which enabled him to continue his
journey. He left Corneto on the 13th January, 1377,
and on the 14th landed at Ostia and went up the Tiber to St. Paul's, whence on
the 17th, accompanied by a brilliant retinue, he made his entry into the City
of St. Peter.
The conclusion of the unnatural exile of the Papacy in
France was a turning point in the history of the Church, as well as in that of
Rome. The spell with which Philip the Fair had bound the ecclesiastical power
was broken; a French Pope had set himself free. The gratitude of the world was
assured to him, and that of Rome could not be wanting. Yet Gregory XI found no
rest in the Eternal City, where anarchy had taken such deep root that the
Florentines found no difficulty in stirring up fresh troubles. Hardly had he
established himself in the Vatican, when the conflict regarding the limits of
his authority in the City broke out anew, and the treaty concluded between the
Pope and the Romans proved but a false peace. Yet more melancholy were the
experiences of the well-meaning Pontiff in regard to general affairs. He had,
as he himself wrote to the Florentines, left his beautiful native land, a
grateful and devout people, and many other delights, and, notwithstanding the
opposition or the prayers of Kings, Princes and many Cardinals, had hastened to
Italy amid great dangers, with great fatigue, and at great cost, fully
determined to remedy whatever his servants might have done amiss, ready, for
love of peace, to accept conditions little honorable to himself, if only by
this means tranquility might be restored to Italy. To his deep sorrow, all the
hopes which he had built on his personal presence in Italy, were disappointed.
The improvement expected, not only by the Pope, but also by many discerning
contemporaries, failed to appear. The rebellion had assumed such formidable
dimensions, hatred against the rule of the Church seemed to be so interwoven
with the sentiment of patriotism, that the evil might be deemed incurable. And
the anti-papal feeling was fearfully intensified by the tragical massacre perpetrated at Cesena (February, 1377), by orders of the Cardinal of
Geneva. This deed of blood was welcome to the Florentines, who now appealed,
not only to their allies and to the hesitating Romans, but to many Kings and
Princes of Christendom. While they portrayed the horrors that had taken place
in Cesena in the darkest colors, they sought to justify their own attitude and
to increase the hatred felt for the Papal cause. In Italy their efforts were
very successful, as we learn from a passage in the Chronicle of Bologna, which
declares that the people would believe neither in the Pope nor in the Cardinals,
because such things had nothing in common with the Faith.
Gregory XI, whose health had suffered much from the
climate, to which he was unaccustomed, and the troubles of the few months he
had spent in Rome, left the unquiet city in the end of May for Anagni, where he remained until November. Amid the
increasing confusion of affairs and exhaustion of financial resources, he never
lost courage. He well knew that the fortune of war is subject to many
vicissitudes, and he had firm confidence in the justice of his cause. The wise
policy, with which he had liberally rewarded the loyal, severely punished the
irreconcilable, and readily forgiven the repentant, gradually worked a change
in his favor. He succeeded in reconciling the wealthy City of Bologna to the
Church, and winning to his side Rodolfo da Varano, the chief General of the Florentines. The Prefect
of Vico, to whom Viterbo was subject, also gave up the Florentine League, which seemed threatened with
dissolution. But the people of Florence were not to be influenced by these
events, and instead of adopting moderate measures, proceeded to extremities.
The conditions proposed to the Pope were such as he could not accept. Not only
did the Republic refuse to restore the confiscated property of the Church and
to repeal the Edict against the Inquisition, but it also demanded that all
rebels against the Church should remain for six years unpunished in statu quo, and should be free to make
treaties, even against the Pope and the Church. Such proposals could not really
be called conditions of peace; they were, as Gregory XI justly observed, merely
an effort to strengthen revolutionary tyranny and to prepare the way for fresh
war. And yet, in a letter addressed soon afterwards to the Romans, the
Florentines had the audacity to complain most bitterly of the Pope as preaching
peace with his lips only!
It is no wonder that, instead of listening to the mild
counsels of St. Catherine of Siena, Gregory XI vigorously carried on the war
with his inexorable opponents, who ended by disregarding even the Interdict. He
took every means to ensure the publication of his terrible sentence against the
Florentines, by which their trade was most seriously affected, in places such
as Venice and Bologna, where it had not yet been promulgated. If tidings
reached him, from countries where this had been done, of a lenient execution of
the decree, he at once protested in the strongest terms. The injury thus
inflicted on the national prosperity of the Republic was quite incalculable.
The prosecution of the war demanded an immense
outlay. The increasing tyranny in the internal government of the Republic, and
the insufferable burden laid by the Interdict on the consciences of a religious
population, produced a growing desire for peace, which endangered the success
of the warlike party. Signs of discord became apparent among the confederates.
Accordingly, when the Bishop of Urbino, as envoy from the Pope, proposed their
own ally Bernabo Visconti to the Florentines as
umpire, the chiefs of their party did not venture to refuse to appear at the
Peace Congress to be held at Sarzana. Early in the
year 1378 Bernabo arrived in the city, where
ambassadors from most of the Italian powers soon assembled. Gregory XI had at
first been averse to sending a Cardinal to the Congress, but for the sake of
peace he finally resolved on this concession, and the Cardinal of Amiens,
accompanied by the Archbishops of Pampeluna and
Narbonne, accordingly appeared on his behalf. On the 12th of March the
negotiations began, to be almost immediately interrupted by the death of the
Pope.
Gregory XI had returned to Rome from Anagni on the 7th November; the Romans who during his
absence had become reconciled to the Papal rule, received him joyfully and
delivered to him the contract of peace with Francesco di Vico, prefect of the City. A little before his death
the Pope was able to assure the Romans that the condition of their City had
hardly ever been so peaceful as during the preceding winter. The tranquility of
Rome could not, however, deceive Gregory as to the dangers which threatened the
Papacy; he knew too well how much was still wanting to a durable settlement of
Italian affairs, and he could not but acknowledge that he had failed to carry
out the ecclesiastical reform so strongly and so justly urged upon him by St.
Catherine. Dark visions hovered round his sick-bed. He seems to have had a
foreboding of the schism that was imminent, for, on the 19th of March, 1378, he
made arrangements to ensure the speedy and unanimous election of a successor.
His health had always been delicate, and on the 27th March he succumbed to the
continual agitation he had undergone and to the unfavorable effects of the
Italian climate. Gregory XI was the last Pontiff given by France to the Church.
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