Question:
disintegration, corruption and reform of medieval church from 800 to 1100 A.D?
me
2007-04-12 14:10:26 UTC
Does anybody know of a good website on this? I can't seem to find anything worth reading.
Three answers:
GenevievesMom
2007-04-12 14:16:43 UTC
You're asking for a synopsis of 300 years of history touching every country in Europe. That's more than a simple website could hold. I'd suggest you go to a large library and search for books on this that will touch on all the different aspects of the corruption, both in the Church of Rome and the Church of Constantinople, as this was pre-Schism, but part of the problem leading to the Great Schism.
jeremy l
2007-04-12 21:16:29 UTC
Depends on which church you are speaking about, its a pretty broad subject. All three parts of your question are separate issues in a way. I would look to the Avignon papacy, for your disintegration question. Corruption, well, was quite common. You might want to look at material regarding selling of tithes and selling bishops spots for money. Reform is harder to grasp...Martin Luther is one spot to start with.
jewle8417
2007-04-12 21:22:20 UTC
THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE





Medieval history begins with the dissolution of the Western Empire, with

the abandonment of the Latin world to German conquerors. Of the

provinces affected by the catastrophe the youngest was Britain; and even

Britain had then been Roman soil for more than three hundred years. For

Italy, Spain, and Gaul, the change of masters meant the atrophy of

institutions which, at first reluctantly accepted, had come by lapse of

time to be accepted as part of the natural order. Large tracts of Europe

lay outside the evacuated provinces; for the Romans never entered

Ireland or Scandinavia or Russia, and had failed to subjugate Scotland

and the greater part of modern Germany. But the Romanised provinces long

remained the dominant force in European history; the hearth-fire of

medieval culture was kindled on the ruins of the Empire. How far the

victorious Teuton borrowed from the conquered provincial is a question

still debated; the degree and the nature of Rome's influence on the new

rulers varied in every province, indeed in different parts of the same

province. The fact of the debt remains, suggesting a doubt whether in

this case it was indeed the fittest who survived. The flaws in a social

order which has collapsed under the stress of adverse fortunes are

painfully apparent. It is natural to speak of the final overthrow as the

judgment of heaven or the verdict of events. But it has still to be

proved that war is an unfailing test of worth; we have banished the

judicial combat from our law courts, and we should be rash in assuming

that a process obviously absurd when applied to the disputes of

individuals ought to determine the judgments of history on nationalities

or empires.



The immediate and obvious causes which ruined the Western Empire were

military and political--the shortcomings of a professional army and

professional administrators. If asked whether these shortcomings were

symptomatic of evils more generally diffused through other ranks and

classes of society, we must go deeper in the analysis of facts. No _a

priori_ answer would be satisfactory.



The beginning and the end of the disaster were successful raids on

Italy. Alaric and his Visigoths (401-410 A.D.) shattered the prestige

and destroyed the efficiency of the government which ruled in the name

of the feeble Honorius. The Ostrogoths under Theodoric destroyed the

last simulacrum of an imperial power rooted in Italy (489-493 A.D.).

After Theodoric had vanquished Odoacer, it was clear that the western

provinces would not again acknowledge an Emperor acclaimed at Ravenna;

although the chance remained that they might be reconquered and

reorganised from Constantinople. This chance disappeared when the

Lombards crossed the Alps (568 A.D.) and descended on the Po valley.

From first to last Italy was the key to the West. And these successive

shocks to imperial power in Italy were all due to one cause. All three

of the invading hordes came from the Danube. The Roman bank of the great

river was inadequately garrisoned, and a mistaken policy had colonised

the Danubian provinces with Teutonic peoples, none the less dangerous

for being the nominal allies (_foederati_) of the Empire. The

Visigothic raids, which were in fact decisive, succeeded because the

military defences of the Western Empire were already strained to

breaking-point; and because the Roman armies were not only outnumbered,

but also paralysed by the jealousies of rival statesmen, and divided by

the mutinies of generals aspiring to the purple. The initial disasters

were irreparable, because the whole machine of Roman officialdom came to

a standstill when the guiding hand of Ravenna failed. Hitherto dependent

on Italy, the other provinces were now like limbs amputated from the

trunk. Here and there a local leader raised the standard of resistance

to the barbarians. But a large proportion of the provincials made peace

on the best terms they could obtain. Such are the essential facts.



Evidently the original error of the Romans was the undue extension of

their power. This was recognised by no less a statesman than Augustus,

the founder of the Empire; but even in his time it was too late to sound

a retreat; he could only register a protest against further annexations.

Embracing the whole of the Mediterranean littoral and a large part of

the territories to the south, east, and north, the Empire was encumbered

with three land frontiers of enormous length. Two of these, the European

and the Asiatic, were perpetual sources of anxiety, and called for

separate military establishments. That neither might be neglected in the

interest of the other it was reasonable to put the imperial power in

commission between two colleagues. Diocletian (284-305 A.D.) was the

first to adopt this plan; from his time projects of partition were in

the air and would have been more regularly carried out, had not

experience shown that partitions led naturally to civil wars between

rival Emperors. In 395, on the death of the great Theodosius, the

hazardous expedient was given a last trial. His youthful sons, Arcadius

and Honorius, were allowed to divide the Empire; but the line of

partition was drawn with more regard to racial jealousies than military

considerations. It extended from the middle Danube (near Belgrade) to a

point near Durazzo on the Adriatic coast, and thence to the Gulf of

Sidra. East of this line lay the sphere of Greek civilisation, the

provinces which looked to Alexandria and Antioch and Constantinople as

their natural capitals. West of it the prevailing language was Latin,

and the higher classes of society modelled themselves upon the Italian

aristocracy.



Founded upon a principle which appeals to our modern respect for

nationality, this partition only gave a legal form to a schism which had

been long in preparation. But in one respect it was disastrous. The

defence of the Danube frontier was divided between the two governments;

and that of the East, rating the impoverished Balkan peninsula as of

secondary importance, and envisaging the problem from a wholly selfish

point of view, left unguarded the great highways leading from the Danube

into Italy. Stilicho, the great general who administered the West in the

name of Honorius, ventured to meet this danger by intervening in the

peninsula, and even in the political intrigues of Constantinople. He

only succeeded in winning a precarious alliance with the Visigoths and

the permanent ill-will of the Eastern Empire. He was left to deal

single-handed with the first invaders of Italy; and the estrangement of

the two imperial courts persisted after his untimely fall. The Western

Empire, betrayed by the one possible ally, collapsed under the strain

of simultaneous attacks along the whole line of the European frontier.



It has been alleged that the Roman armies were neither so robust nor so

well disciplined in the fifth century as they had been in an earlier

age. However this may be, they could still give a good account of

themselves when matched on equal terms with the most warlike of the

barbarians. It was in patriotism and in numbers, rather than in

professional efficiency, that they failed when put to the supreme test.



The armies were now largely recruited with barbarians, who numbered more

than half the fighting strength and were esteemed the flower of the

Roman soldiery. Many of these hirelings showed an open contempt for

their employers, and sympathised with the enemies whom they were paid to

fight. Furthermore, each army, whatever its constituent elements, tended

to be a hereditary caste, with a strong corporate spirit, respecting no

authority but that of the general. The soldiers had no civic interests;

but they had standing grievances against the Empire. Any political

crisis suggested to them the idea of a mutiny led by the general,

sometimes to obtain arrears of pay and donatives, sometimes to put their

nominee upon the throne. The evil was an old one, dating from the latter

days of the Republic, when Marius, in the interests of efficiency, had

made military service a profession. But it was aggravated under the

successors of Diocletian, as the barbarian element in the armies

increased and the Roman element diminished. Its worst effects appeared

in the years 406-407. The German inroads upon Italy and Gaul were then

followed by the proclamation of military usurpers in Britain and on the

Rhine; the Roman West was divided by civil war at the very moment when

union was supremely important. Hence the strange spectacle of the

Visigoths, still laden with the spoils of Rome, entering Gaul by

invitation of the Empire to fight against imperial armies.



The problem of numbers had been earlier recognised, but not more

adequately met. Diocletian is said to have quadrupled the armies, and in

the fourth century they were far larger than they had been under Julius

and Augustus; Constantine had revised the scheme of frontier-defence to

secure the greatest possible economy of men. Still, under Honorius, we

find that one vital point could only be defended by withdrawing troops

from another. The difficulty of increasing the numbers was twofold.

First, the army was mercenary, and taxation was already strained to the

point of diminishing returns. Secondly, it was difficult to raise

recruits among the provincials. The old principle of universal service

had been abandoned by Valentinian I (364-375); and although compulsory

levies were still made from certain classes, the Government had thought

fit to prohibit the enlistment of those who contributed most to

taxation. Every citizen was legally liable for the defence of local

strongholds; but the use of arms was so unfamiliar, the idea of military

service as a national duty was so far forgotten, that Stilicho, when the

barbarians were actually in Italy, preferred the desperate measure of

enlisting slaves to the obvious resource of a general call to arms.

We find ourselves here confronted with a social malady which was more

than an economic weakness. The Empire was, no doubt, a complex and

expensive form of government superimposed upon a society which stood at

a rudimentary stage of economic development. Barbarous methods of

taxation and corrupt practices among the ruling classes had aggravated

the burden to such a degree that the municipalities of the provinces

were bankrupt, and the middle-class capitalist was taxed out of

existence. For this and other reasons the population of the older

provinces was stationary or declining. But there was still much wealth

in the Empire; and the great landowners of the provinces could raise

considerable armies among their dependants when they saw fit to do so.

The real evil was a moral evil, the decay of civic virtue.



We do not mean that the ethics of private life had deteriorated from the

standard of the past. This is incredible when we remember that

Christianity was now the all but universal religion of the Empire; for

Christianity, at its worst and weakest, laid more stress upon ethical

duties, in the narrower sense, than any of the older religions. The

provincial was a more moral being than the Goth or the Vandal. It is a

mere superstition that every victorious race is chaste and frugal, just

and law-abiding; or that ill success in the struggle for existence is a

symptom of the contrary vices. In many respects the Greeks who submitted

to Philip and Alexander were morally superior to the victors of Salamis

and Plataea. Private and political morality may spring from the same

root; but the one has often flourished where the other has been stunted.

Perhaps this is only natural. Human nature seldom develops equally in

all directions. Men who are intensely concerned with the right ordering

of their relations to neighbours, friends and family, may well forget

the larger community in which their private circle is contained. The

Roman provincial had exceptional excuses for remaining indifferent to a

state which claimed his loyalty, not in the name of nationality or

religion, but in that of reason and the common good. Loyalty for him

could only be an intellectual conviction. But, unless he could enter the

privileged ranks of the army or the higher civil service, he had no

opportunities of studying, still less of helping to decide, the

questions of policy and administration with which his welfare was

closely though indirectly linked. Political ideas only came before the

private citizen under the garb of literature. The most admired authors

only taught him to regret republican polities long out of date. The

antiquarian enthusiasms which he acquired by his studies were in no way

corrected by the experience of daily life. If a townsman, he was legally

prohibited from changing his residence and even from travelling about

the Empire, for fear that he might evade the tax-collector. If a rural

landowner, he lived in a community which was economically

self-sufficient, and consequently provincial to the last degree. The

types of character which developed under such conditions were not

wanting in amiable or admirable traits. The well-to-do provincial was

often a scholar, a connoisseur in art and literature, a polished

letter-writer and conversationalist, a shrewd observer of his little

world, an exemplary husband and father, courteous to inferiors,

warm-hearted to his friends. Sometimes he found in religion or

philosophy an antidote to the pettiness of daily life, and was roused

into rebellion against the materialism of his equals, the greed and the

injustice of his rulers. But he despaired of bridging the gulf between

the Empire, as he saw it, and the ideal commonwealth--City of God or

Republic of the Universe--which his teachers held up to him as the goal

of human aspirations. Rather he was inclined, like the just man of

Plato, to seek the nearest shelter, to veil his head, and to wait

patiently till the storm of violence and wrong should pass away.



It is hard to condemn such conduct when we remember the appalling

contrast between the weakness of the individual and the strength of a

social order coextensive with civilisation itself. But in this spirit of

reasonable submission to a state of things which appeared fundamentally

unreasonable, in this conviction that the bad could not be bettered by

reforms of detail, there was more danger to society than in the crass

indifference of the selfish and the unreflecting. When the natural

leaders of society avow that they despair of the future, fatalism

spreads like a contagious blight among the rank and file, until even

discontent is numbed into silence. Nor does the evil end here. The

idealists pay for their contempt of the real, not merely with their

fortunes and their lives, but, worse still, with their intellectual

patrimony. Just as a government deteriorates when it is no longer tested

by continual reference to principles of justice, so a Utopia, however

magnificent, fades from the mind of the believer when he ceases to

revise it by comparison with facts, when it is no longer a reply to the

problems suggested by workaday experience. Life and theory being once

divorced, the theorist becomes a vendor of commonplaces, and the plain

man is fortified in his conviction that he must take life as he finds

it.



This analysis helps us to understand why the Western Empire, on the eve

of dissolution, had already assumed the appearance of a semi-barbarian

state. In those districts which had been lately settled with Teutonic

colonists the phenomenon may be explained as resulting from

over-sanguine attempts to civilise an intractable stock. But even in the

heart of the oldest provinces the conditions were little better. Law and

custom had conspired to sap the ideas and principles that we regard as

essentially Roman. The civil was now subjected to the military power.

The authority of the state was impaired by the growth of private

jurisdictions and defied by the quasi-feudal retinues of the great. For

civic equality had been substituted an irrational system of

class-privileges and class-burdens. Law was ceasing to be the orderly

development of general principles, and was becoming an accumulation of

ill-considered, inconsistent edicts. So far had decay advanced through

the negligence of those most vitally concerned that, if Europe was ever

to learn again the highest lessons which Rome had existed to teach, the

first step must be to sweep away the hybrid government which still

claimed allegiance in the name of Rome. The provincials of the fifth

century possessed the writings in which those lessons were recorded, but

possessed them only as symbols of an unintelligible past. A long

training in new schools of thought, under new forms of government, was

necessary before the European mind could again be brought into touch

with the old Roman spirit.



The great service that the barbarians rendered was a service of

destruction. In doing so they prepared the way for a return to the past.

Their first efforts in reconstruction were also valuable, since the

difficulty of the work and the clumsiness of the product revived the

respect of men for the superior skill of Rome. In the end the barbarians

succeeded in that branch of constructive statesmanship where Rome had

failed most signally. The new states which they founded were smaller and

feebler than the Western Empire, but furnished new opportunities for the

development of individuality, and made it possible to endow citizenship

with active functions and moral responsibilities. That these states

laboured under manifold defects was obvious to those who made them and

lived under them. The ideal of the world-wide Empire, maintaining

universal peace and the brotherhood of men, continued to haunt the

imagination of the Middle Ages as a lost possibility. But in this case,

as so often, what passed for a memory was in truth an aspiration; and

Europe was advancing towards a higher form of unity than that which had

been destroyed.









II



THE BARBARIAN KINGDOMS





The barbarian states which arose on the ruins of the Western Empire were

founded, under widely different circumstances of time and place, by

tribes and federations of tribes drawn from every part of Germany. We

expect to find, and we do find, infinite varieties of detail in their

laws, their social distinctions, their methods of government. But from a

broader point of view they may be grouped in two classes, not according

to affinities of race, but according to their relations with the social

order which they had invaded.



[Illustration: The Barbarian Kingdoms and Frankish Empire]



One group of kingdoms was founded under cover of a legal fiction; the

Visigoths, the Ostrogoths, and the Burgundians claimed to be the allies

of the Empire. At one time or another they obtained the recognition of

Constantinople for their settlements. Their kings accepted or usurped

the titles of imperial administrators, stamped their coins with the

effigies of the reigning Emperor, dated their proclamations by the names

of the consuls for the year, and in many other ways flaunted their

nominal subjection as the legal basis of their actual sovereignty. This

fiction did not prevent them from governing their new dominions in true

Teutonic fashion, through royal bailiffs, who administered the state

demesnes, and military officers (dukes, counts, etc.) who ruled with

autocratic sway over administrative districts. Nor did the most lenient

of them hesitate to provide for their armies by wholesale confiscations;

the ordinary rule was to take from the great proprietor one-third or

two-thirds of his estate for the benefit of the Teutonic immigrant.

Further, we have ample evidence that the provincials found existence

considerably more precarious under the new order. The rich were exposed

to the malice of the false informer and the venal judge; the cultivators

of the soil were often oppressed and often reduced from partial freedom

to absolute slavery. Yet in some respects the invaders of this type were

tolerant and adaptable. They left to the provincials the civil law of

Rome, and even codified it to guard against unauthorised innovations;

the _Lex Romana Burgundionum_ and the Visigothic _Breviarium Alarici_

are still extant as memorials of this policy. They realised the

necessity of compelling barbarians and provincials alike to respect

the elementary rights of person and property; Theodoric the Ostrogoth

and Gundobad the Burgundian were the authors of new criminal codes, in

the one case mainly, in the other partially, derived from Roman

jurisprudence. Such rulers were not content with professing an impartial

regard for both classes of their subjects; they frequently raised the

better-class provincials to posts of responsibility and confidence. By a

singular fatality the chief races of this group had embraced the Arian

heresy, which was repudiated and detested by their subjects. Yet their

great statesmen uniformly extended toleration to the rival creed, and

even patronised the orthodox bishops, by whom they were secretly

regarded as worse than the lowest of the heathen. This generosity was

little more than common prudence. Numerically the conquerors were much

inferior to the provincials; economically they had everything to lose by

needless ill-treatment of those whom they exploited. But the best of

them had studied the organisation of the Empire at close quarters,

sometimes as captains in the imperial service, sometimes as neighbours

of flourishing provinces in the years preceding the grand catastrophe;

and knowledge rarely failed to produce in them some respect or even

enthusiasm for the _Respublica Romana_. "When I was young," said

King Athaulf the Visigoth, "I desired to obliterate the Roman name and

to bring under the sway of the Goths all that once belonged to the

Romans. But I learned better by experience. The Goths were licentious

barbarians who would obey no laws; and to deprive the commonwealth of

laws would have been a crime. So for my part I chose the glory of

restoring the Roman name to its old estate." To such men the ideal of

the future was a federation of states owing a nominal allegiance to the

official head of the Empire, but cherishing an effective loyalty to all

that was best in Roman law and culture.



The second group comprises the kingdoms which were founded in outlying

provinces or comparatively late in time. The invaders of England, the

Franks in Northern Gaul, the Alemanni and the Bavarians on the Upper

Rhine and the Danube, the Lombards in Italy, the Vandals in Africa,

never came completely under the spell of the past. The Vandals might

have done so, but for their fanatical devotion to Arianism; for the

province of Africa, in which they settled, was one of those which Roman

statesmanship had most completely civilised. The Franks might have

imitated the Visigoths and the Burgundians, if fortune had laid the

cradle of their power in the valley of the Loire or the Rhone instead of

the forests and marshes of the Netherlands. The Lombards and the Saxons

showed no innate aversion to the ways and works of Rome; but they

entered upon provinces which had already been impoverished and

depopulated by the scourge of war. Such races proceeded rapidly with the

construction of a new social and political order, because the past was a

sealed book to them. Roman law vanished from England so completely as to

leave it doubtful whether the Saxons ever came to terms with the

provincials; it was tolerated but not encouraged by the Franks; it was

in great measure set aside by the Lombards; it seems to have been

unknown to the Alemanni and Bavarians. We shall see in the sequel the

importance of these facts. The future of Europe lay not with the Goths

or with the Burgundians, but with more ignorant or less impressionable

races who, rather by good fortune than by choice, escaped the vices in

missing the lessons of Roman civilisation. The Franks and the Saxons, as

we find them described by Gregory of Tours and the Venerable Bede, were

far from resembling the noble savage imagined by Tacitus and other

idealists. But they were trained for future empire in the hard school of

a northern climate.



All that concerns us in the history of these kingdoms can be briefly

stated.



(1) Teutonic England hardly enters into European history before the year

800. In the fifth and sixth centuries a multitude of small colonies had

been founded on the soil of Roman Britain by the three tribes of the

Angles, Saxons and Jutes, who migrated thither from Jutland and

Schleswig-Holstein. A few considerable kingdoms had emerged from this

chaos by the time when the English received from Rome their first

Christian teacher, St. Augustine: Kent, Sussex, and Wessex in the south;

Mercia and East Anglia in the Midlands; Northumbria between the Humber

and the Forth. The efforts of every ruler were devoted to the

establishment of his personal ascendancy over the whole group. Such a

supremacy was obtained by AEthelbert of Kent, the first royal convert to

Christianity; by Edwin of Northumbria and his two immediate successors

in the seventh century; by Offa of Mercia (757-796); and by Egbert of

Wessex (802-839), whose power foreshadowed the later triumphs of the

house of Alfred.



(2) Southern Gaul was divided in the fifth century between the Visigoths

and the Burgundians. The former of these peoples entered the imperial

service in 410, after the death of Alaric I, who had led them into

Italy. His successors, Athaulf and Wallia, undertook to pacify Gaul and

to recover Spain for the rulers of Ravenna; the second of these

sovereigns was rewarded with a settlement, for himself and his

followers, between the Loire and the Garonne (419). In the terrible

battle of Troyes, against Attila the Hun (451), they did good service to

the Roman cause; but both before and after that event they were chiefly

occupied in extending their boundaries by force or fraud. At the close

of the fifth century their power in Gaul extended from the Loire to the

Pyrenees, from the Atlantic to the Rhone valley, and along the

Mediterranean seaboard farther east to the Alps. In Spain--which had

been, since 409, the prey of the Vandals, Alans and Suevi--they found a

more legitimate field for their ambitions. Between 466 and 484 they

annexed every part of the peninsula except the north-west corner, which

remained the last stronghold of their defeated competitors. The

Burgundians, from less auspicious beginnings, had built up a smaller but

yet a powerful kingdom. Transplanted by a victorious Roman general to

Savoy (443) from the lands between the Necker and the Main, they had

descended into the Rhone basin at the invitation of the provincials, to

protect that fertile land alike against Teutonic marauders and Roman

tax-collectors. By the year 500 they ruled from the Durance in the south

to the headwaters of the Doubs and the Saone in the north, from the Alps

and the Jura to the sources of the Loire.



(3) Italy was less fortunate than Gaul; in the fifth century she was

ravaged more persistently, since Rome and Ravenna were the most tempting

prizes that the West could offer to conquerors seeking a settlement or

to mere marauders; and for yet another two centuries her soil was in

dispute between the Eastern Empire and the Teutons. The strategic

importance of the peninsula, the magic of the name of Rome, the more

recent tradition that Ravenna was the natural headquarters of imperial

bureaucracy in the West, were three cogent reasons why the statesmen of

Constantinople should insist that Italy must be recovered whatever

outlying provinces of the West were abandoned. For sixty years after the

deposition of Romulus Augustulus (476) Italy was entirely ruled by

barbarians; then for more than two hundred years there was an Imperial

Italy or a Papal Italy continually at feud with an Ostrogothic or a

Lombard Italy. It would have been better for the Italians if either the

Ostrogoths or the Lombards had triumphed decisively and at an early

date.



The Ostrogoths entered Italy from the north-east in 489, under the lead

of Theodoric, the first and last statesman of their race. They came from

the Middle Danube, where they had settled, with the leave of the Empire,

after the death of Attila and the dissolution of his army. They were now

in search of a more kindly habitation, and brought with them their

wives, their children, and their household stuff on waggons. Their way

was barred by Odoacer the Patrician--general of the Italian army and

King of Italy in all but name. It cost them four years of hard fighting

to overthrow this self-constituted representative of the Empire. After

that they had no overt opposition to fear. To the Italians there was

little difference between Odoacer and Theodoric. The change of rulers

did not affect their material interests, since Theodoric merely

appropriated that proportion of the cultivated land (one-third) which

Odoacer had claimed for his followers. Nor was submission inconsistent

with the loyalty demanded by the Eastern Empire; since for the moment it

suited imperial policy to accept the Visigothic King as the successor of

Odoacer. Theodoric reigned over Italy for thirty-three years (493-526).

A tolerant and enlightened ruler, he spared no effort to give his rule a

legal character, and to protect the Italians against oppression. Two

eminent Romans, Liberius and Cassiodorus, acted successively as his

confidential advisers and interpreted his policy to their countrymen. No

attempt was made to fuse the Ostrogoths with the Italians. The invaders

remained, an army quartered on the soil, subject for most purposes to

their own law. But the law of the Italians was similarly respected;

Theodoric applied the Roman law of crime impartially to both races; and

he rigourously interdicted the prosecution of private wars and feuds.

Unfortunately his subordinates were less scrupulous than himself. The

Ostrogothic soldiery maintained the national character for lawlessness;

the royal officers and judges were corrupt; men of means were harassed

by blackmailers and false informers; the poor and helpless were

frequently enslaved by force or fraud. The Italians could not forgive

the Arian tenets of their new rulers, even though the orthodox were

tolerated and protected. Naturally the clergy and the remnants of the

Roman aristocracy sighed for an imperial restoration. And Theodoric,

rightly or wrongly, came to suspect them all of treason. In his later

years he meted out a terrible and barbarous justice to the supposed

authors of conspiracy--notably to the Senator Boethius, who was beaten

to death with clubs after a long period of rigourous imprisonment.

Boethius has vindicated his own fair name, and blackened for ever that

of Theodoric, by his immortal treatise, the _Consolation of Philosophy_,

composed in hourly expectation of death. A Christian it would seem, but

certainly nurtured on the precepts of Plato and the Stoics, Boethius

turned in his extremity to these teachers for reassurance on the doubts

which must always afflict the just man enmeshed in undeserved

misfortune. Himself a philosopher only in his sublime optimism and his

resolve to treat the inevitable as immaterial, Boethius rivets the

attention by his absolute honesty. His book, revered in the Middle Ages

as all but inspired, will be read with interest and sympathy so long as

honest men are vexed by human oppression and the dispensations of a

seemingly capricious destiny. But the footprints of the Ostrogoths are

effaced from the soil of Italy; the name of Theodoric is scantily

commemorated by some mosaics and a rifled mausoleum at Ravenna. Here at

least Time has done justice in the end; from all that age of violent

deeds and half-sincere ideals nothing has passed into the spiritual

heritage of mankind but the communings of one undaunted sufferer with

his soul and God.



Theodoric died in 526, bequeathing his crown to his only daughter's son.

Eight years afterwards the boy king, worn out by premature excess, was

laid in the grave; his mother was murdered to clear the path of an

ambitious kinsman; and, while the succession was still in doubt, the

Emperor Justinian launched upon Italy the still invincible armies of the

Empire, led by Belisarius, the greatest general of the time and already

famous as the deliverer of Africa from the Vandals (536). The intrigues

of his court rivals, rather than the resources of the divided

Ostrogoths, robbed Belisarius of a decisive victory, and prolonged the

struggle for years after he had been superseded. But in 553 the last

embers of resistance were quenched in blood. Italy, devastated and

depopulated, was reorganised as an imperial province with an elaborate

hierarchy of civil and military officials. The change was welcome to the

orthodox clergy, the more so because Justinian gave large powers in

local administration to their bishops. Of outward pomp there was enough

to gild corruption and inefficiency with a deceptive splendour; but in

fact the restored Empire was little more civilised, in the true sense of

the word, than the barbarian states of the past and future. Upon the

Italians the Emperor conferred the boon of his famous _Corpus Juris_, a

compendium of that legal wisdom which constitutes the best title of Rome

to the world's gratitude. For the future it was momentous that Italy

learned, at this early date, to regard the _Corpus_ as the perfection of

legal wisdom. Through the Italian schools of later times (Ravenna,

Bologna, etc.) the _Corpus_ has influenced the law of every European

state and has dictated the principles of scientific jurisprudence. But

in the sixth century good laws availed nothing for want of good

government.



In 568, only fifteen years after the restoration, the Lombards descended

upon Italy from the Middle Danube, following the track of Theodoric and

inspirited by the fame of his success. A few years made them masters of

the North Italian plain still known as Lombardy. Within three-quarters

of a century they had demonstrated the hollowness of the Byzantine

power. The power of their kings, whose capital was Pavia, extended on

the one side into Liguria and Tuscany, on the other into Emilia and

Friuli; far away in the south, behind the line of fortresses which

linked Rome with Ravenna, the semi-independent dukes of Spoleto and

Benevento were masters of the land on both sides of the Apennines,

excepting Naples and the toe of the Bruttian peninsula. Apart from these

districts there remained in the imperial allegiance only the fisher-folk

of the Venetian lagoons and the lands which afterwards were to be known

as the Papal States. What the Byzantines achieved by the maintenance of

this precarious foothold was nothing less than the political disruption

of Italy. The Lombard duchies of the south were kept separate from the

parent state; with the result that their ruins were built long

afterwards into the fabric of a South Italian monarchy which was

irreconcilably hostile to the political heirs of the Lombard kings. In

many respects the Lombards showed capacity for governing a subject

population. They adopted the Latin language; they forsook Arianism for

Catholicism; they accommodated themselves to city life; they were

liberal patrons of Italian art and industry. Although they introduced a

strictly Teutonic form of administration, their rule compared not

unfavourably with the makeshift methods of Byzantine statesmanship. In

Imperial Italy we see the strange spectacle of a military despotism

tempered by the usurped privileges and jurisdictions of the great

proprietors, or by the ill-defined temporal pretensions of the bishops.

In Lombard Italy matters were at least no worse. The Lombards were

aliens; but so were the Greeks. The Greeks treated the Italians as

inferiors. But the Lombards intermarried freely with their subjects, and

the Lombard legislators (Rotharis, Luitprand) recognised no invidious

privileges of race.



(4) Northern Gaul remains to be considered. It was here that the

Frankish monarchy developed; and we deal last with the Franks because

they were destined to harvest the chief fruits of barbarian conquest and

colonisation. By the close of the eighth century Africa, Spain, and

Britain were the only western provinces of the Empire in which they had

failed to establish themselves as the sole or the dominant power; and

moreover they had penetrated by that time farther into Central Europe

than any Roman statesman, since Tiberius, had extended his schemes of

conquest. The expansion of the Franks was a slow process, interrupted by

periods of stagnation or relapse; and we can only trace it in the barest

outline.



Known from an early date to the Romans as vagrant marauders, the Franks

had been heavily chastised by most of the soldier emperors from Probus

to Julian. Some of them were forcibly settled as serf-colonists on the

left bank of the Rhine; others (the _Salian_ Franks) appropriated

to themselves a large part of Batavia, the marsh country at the mouths

of the Scheldt and Rhine; a third group (the _Ripuarians_) occupied

the lands between the Rhine and the Meuse, in the neighbourhood of Koln

and Bonn. The Salians and Ripuarians counted as allies (_foederati_) of

the Empire, at least from the time of Aetius; under whom, like the

Visigoths, they fought against the Huns at Troyes (451). Their

aggressions were checked on the West by the Roman governors of the

country lying between the Somme and the Loire; and their power

was impaired by the partition of the Salian people among a swarm of

petty kings. But in 481, with the accession of Clovis to the throne of

Tournai, there began a period of consolidation and advance. In 486

Clovis overthrew the Roman governor Syagrius and usurped his power. In

496 he annexed the purely Teutonic principality which the Alemanni had

recently established in the country now known as Suabia. This victory

was the occasion of his conversion to Christianity. The legend goes

that, in the crisis of the final battle, Clovis appealed to the God of

his pious wife: "I have called on my gods and they have forsaken me. To

Thee I turn, in Thee will I believe, if Thou wilt deliver me." He kept

his word, and was baptised by St. Remi, the Bishop of Rheims, thus

becoming a member of the orthodox communion, and the hope of all the

Gallic clergy, who had hitherto submitted with an ill grace to the

heretical rulers of the Visigoths and the Burgundians. A crafty and

ambitious savage, the King of Tournai quickly realised the advantage of

alliance with the native Church. In the year 500 he turned upon the

Burgundians in the hope of making them his tributaries. He failed in his

object, for the Burgundian King made a timely feint of conversion to

orthodoxy and otherwise conciliated the Gallo-Roman population. But over

Alaric II the Visigoth, who had been so impolitic as to persecute

orthodox bishops, the Franks secured an easy and dramatic triumph. "It

irks me," said Clovis to his army, "that these Arians should rule in

Gaul." The Aquitanians welcomed him as a Crusader; Alaric, after a

single defeat, took refuge in his Spanish dominions, where he was left

to rule in peace. At one stroke the power of the Franks had advanced

from the Loire to the Pyrenees (507). The latter days of Clovis were

prosperously occupied in exterminating rival Frankish dynasties and the

more dangerous of his own kindred. He died, after a reign of thirty

years, in the odour of sanctity: "God increased his kingdom every day,

because he walked with an upright heart and did what was pleasing in the

eyes of God." He was buried in the Gallo-Roman part of his dominions, at

Paris, which he had chosen as his capital. The province of Syagrius,

later known as Neustria or Western Francia, was the natural centre of

the Frankish state, nor was Clovis indifferent to the traditions and the

luxury of an older civilisation. In Aquitaine he posed as the

representative of the Empire, and he rode through the streets of Tours

in the purple robe of a consul, which he had received from the Emperor

Anastasius. The hope at Constantinople was that he would treat Theodoric

the Ostrogoth as he had already treated Alaric; this was the first of

many occasions on which the network of imperial diplomacy was woven

round a Frankish king. Church and Empire conspired to inflame the

ambitions and enlarge the schemes of Merovingian and Carolingian

conquerors.



But the Franks, more faithfully than any of their rivals, held to the

barbarian usage of dividing a kingdom, in the manner of a family estate,

equally between the sons of a dead sovereign. Logically pursued this

custom of inheritance would have led to utter disintegration, such as

Germany exhibited in the fourteenth century. Among the Franks a

partition was followed, as a matter of course, by fratricidal conflicts

and consequent reunion of the kingdom in the hands of the ultimate

survivor; but even so the energies of the nation were squandered upon

civil wars. The descendants of Clovis did little to augment the realm

that he bequeathed to them; this little was done in the fifty years

following his death. The Burgundians, Bavarians and Thuringians were

subdued; Provence was bought from the Ostrogoths at the price of armed

support against Justinian; the Saxons were compelled to promise tribute.

From 561 to 688 the power and the morale of the Franks steadily

declined. Dagobert I (628-638), the most renowned of the Merovingians

after Clovis, could only chastise rebels and strengthen the defences of

the eastern frontier. He released the Saxons from tribute; he was unable

to prevent an adventurer of his own race, the merchant Samo, from

organising the Slavs of Bohemia and the neighbouring lands in a powerful

and aggressive federation. Already in his time the East Franks

(Austrasians) refused to be governed from Neustria, and insisted that

the son of Dagobert should be their king. After Dagobert the three

kingdoms of Neustria, Austrasia and Burgundy asserted their right to

separate administrations, even when subject to one king.



In each of these divisions the effective ruler was the Mayor of the

Palace, a viceroy who kept his sovereign in perpetual tutelage. The

later Merovingians were feeble puppets, produced before their subjects

on occasions of state, but at other times relegated to honourable

seclusion on one of their estates. The history of the Franks from 638 to

719 is that of conflicts between the great families of Neustria and

Austrasia for the position of sole Mayor. At length unity was restored

by the triumph of the Austrasian Charles Martel. His father had gained

the same position, but it was left for the son to sweep away the last

remaining competitors.



Charles Martel is the true founder of the Carolingian house, although

his ancestors had long played a conspicuous part in Austrasian and

national politics. He was not the inventor of feudalism, but was the

first to see the possibility of basing royal power on the support of

vassals pledged to support their lord, in every quarrel, with life and

limb and earthly substance. To provide his vassals with fiefs he

stripped the churches of many rich estates. But he atoned for the

sacrilege upon the memorable field of Poitiers. In 711 the Arabs, having

wrested northern Africa from the Byzantine Empire, entered Spain and

overthrew Roderic, the last King of the Visigoths. With his death the

cause of his nation collapsed. Though the Visigoths had long since

accepted the orthodox creed and were in close alliance with the Spanish

bishops, they were detested by the provincials, whom they had reduced to

serfdom and brutally oppressed. Within ten years the soldiers of the

Caliph were masters of Spain and turned their attention to southern

Gaul.



The Frankish Duke of Aquitaine could neither protect his duchy nor

obtain a lasting treaty. In the last extremity he turned to the Mayor of

the Palace, whom he had hitherto regarded as an enemy. The appeal was

answered; and Charles with a great Frankish host confronted the Arabs

under the walls of Poitiers. For seven days neither side would make the

first move; on the eighth the infidels attacked. The Frankish host was

composed of infantry protected by mail-shirts and shields; against their

close-locked lines, which resembled iron walls, the Arabs dashed

themselves in vain. When the attack had been repelled in disorder, the

Franks advanced, bearing down resistance by sheer weight and strength.

The Emir Abderrahman fell on the field, and then night put an end to the

conflict. Both armies camped on the field; but next morning the Arabs

had vanished in full retreat for the Pyrenees (Oct. 732). The flood of

Islam had received the first check; though Spain was not to be recovered

by the Franks, they were held to have saved northern Europe. Modern

criticism has remarked that the internal dissensions of Moslem Spain did

better service than this victory to the cause of Christendom; that the

Arabs continued to hold Septimania and sent raids into Provence. But for

contemporaries there was no question that the Franks had established a

claim to the special gratitude of the Church, and Charles to his

anomalous position as an uncrowned King. The Mayor of the Palace was

fully alive to the value of ecclesiastical support. He lent his support

to the work of the English missionaries Willibrord and Boniface among

the unconverted German tribes (Frisians, Hessians, Thuringians) over

whom he claimed supremacy. He permitted Boniface to enrol himself as the

servant of the Holy See. It is true that he would not form a political

alliance with the Roman Church against the Lombards. Northern wars

absorbed him; wars with the Frisians, the Saxons, the rebellious

Bavarians, Alemannians, and Aquitanians. But from alliance with the

Church to alliance with Rome was a natural step for his successors.

Shortly before his death (741) he divided his power between his sons

Carlmann and Pepin, giving Austrasia to the one, Neustria to the other.

But Carlmann abdicated to become a monk (747) and Pepin his junior was

left to continue the work of their father single-handed. Both brothers

employed Boniface to reorganise and reform the clergy of their

dominions; Pepin allowed the saint to take from all the Frankish bishops

an oath of subjection to the Holy See; and accepted him as Archbishop of

Mainz and primate of the German church. Three years later the Mayor

obtained the permission of Pope Zacharias to depose the last of the

Merovingian puppet-kings and to assume the regal style; the Pope justly

recommending that he should have the title to whom the power belonged

(751). So ended the line of Clovis, and with it the barbarian period of

Frankish history. For the next sixty years the history of Europe is that

of Carolingian conquests and essays in political reconstruction.



And now the growing connection with the Papacy acquired a new character.

Since the beginning of the eighth century the Eastern Empire had

forfeited the last claim to Italian allegiance by embracing the

Iconoclastic heresy, a protest at once belated and premature against the

growing materialism and polytheism of Catholic Christianity. Pope and

Lombards made common cause to protect the images in imperial Italy.

Gregory III excommunicated the iconoclasts (731); the Lombard King

Aistulf seized Ravenna, the last important stronghold of the Byzantines

in the peninsula (751). Too late the Papacy realised that the orthodox

Lombard was a greater menace than the Greek heretic. Aistulf regarded

Rome, in common with the other territories of the Empire, as his

rightful spoil. For the first time the issue was raised between secular

statesmanship scheming for Italian unity and a Roman bishop claiming

sovereign power as the historical and indispensable adjunct of his

office. Pope Stephen II visited the Frankish court to urge, not in vain,

the claims of religion and of gratitude. By two raids across the Alps

Pepin forced the Lombard to withdraw the claim on Rome, and furthermore

to restore what had been conquered from the Empire. These territories,

lying in Romagna and the Marches, the Frankish King conferred on the

Pope, as the legitimate representative of imperial power (756). Pepin's

Donation, made in defiance of Byzantine protests, greatly extended the

temporal power which the predecessors of Stephen had long exercised in

Rome and the neighbourhood. A shrewd expedient for crippling the most

formidable rival of the Franks, it was to be the rock on which ideals

then undreamed of were to founder. For it was the temporal power which

provoked the last and mortal struggle of the Holy Roman Empire with the

Papacy, which presented the most stubborn obstacle to the leaders of the

_Risorgimento_.



Like his father, Pepin laboured hard to knit together the conquests of

the early Merovingians, but without the same success. He expelled the

Arabs from Narbonne; he recovered the duchy of Aquitaine and suppressed

the ducal dynasty after eight hard-fought campaigns. But neither from

the Saxons nor from the Bavarians could he win effective recognition of

his suzerainty. What he had achieved in Aquitaine was seriously

endangered when, on his deathbed, he followed the tradition of dividing

his realm between his sons Carloman and Charles (768). Fortunately

Charles, though harassed by the intrigues of his incompetent senior,

weathered the storm of a new Aquitanian rising; he saw Carloman sink

unlamented into an early grave (771) and easily obtained recognition as

sole king. Then indeed he stood in a position singularly favourable for

prosecuting a policy which should embrace and transcend the ambitions of

his ancestors. Heir to a power extending from the Atlantic to the

Bohemian border in the one direction, in the other from the North Sea

and the Channel to the Alps and Pyrenees; the hereditary patron of the

Roman Church; ruler of a hierarchy which had definitely accepted the

ideal of a Christian Republic and desired to see Christian unity

enforced by the sword of the secular power; lord of a military caste of

vassals filled with the pride and lust of conquest; he had at his

disposal the resources and supporters sufficient to make him, what

Theodoric had idly dreamed of becoming, the supreme lord of the Teutonic

peoples, the lieutenant of the Empire in all the western provinces. It

was no ordinary man to whom this opportunity fell. Imperfectly educated,

even for his age, but of ready wit and unbounded curiosity; a general

whose iron will and superhuman energy seldom failed in leading his

soldiers through difficulties and reverses to ultimate victory; a

dreamer whose imagination kindled whenever he came into contact with the

great ideas, Christian or pagan, of an older world; a practical

statesman whose innate love of order and respect for justice were

coupled with a gift for organisation and the power of extracting their

best work from his subordinates, it is not for any want of natural

qualifications that his claim to rank with the great world-heroes can be

challenged. The shortcomings of his work are merely those of the race

and the age to which he belonged. The highest statesmanship is only

possible when the statesman has at his disposal the accumulated

experience and the specialised capacity of a civilisation which is old

and at the same time vigorous.



The policy of Charles in his period of sole rule (771-814) is

Janus-headed; it looks forward and looks back. A true Austrasian, he is

faithful to the old Frankish ideal of military conquest; but he gives it

a new meaning, and besides fulfilling the projects of his predecessors

goes beyond the horizon of their most ambitious enterprises. In his

friendship for the Pope, in his care for ecclesiastical reform, he is

his father's son; but the relations of the son with the Church have a

new purpose and involve more than one breach with the past. His

administration is largely guided by the traditional standard of royal

duty; he is a notable steward of his demesnes; he is the reliever of the

poor, the refuge of the defenceless, the champion of justice. But he is

also a far-sighted reformer adapting old administrative methods to the

requirements of a new political fabric. In fact, to epitomise all these

antitheses in one, he is the heir of an old barbarian monarchy and also

the founder of a new Empire.



The story of his conquests reads like the epitome of a lost romance--so

varied are the incidents, so jejune the details afforded by contemporary

sources.



(1) In 773 he crossed the Alps, at the prayer of Pope Hadrian, because

the Lombard King Didier had seized some cities comprised in Pepin's

Donation and was even threatening Rome. Pavia was starved into

surrender, Didier relegated to a monastery; Charles annexed the whole of

Lombard territory except Spoleto (which submitted to the Pope) and

Benevento. He assumed the title of King of the Lombards; but beyond

garrisoning a few towns and appointing a few Frankish counts made no

attempt to displace Lombard officials or alter the Lombard modes of

government. He visited Hadrian at Rome, renewed the Donation of Pepin,

and concluded a pact of eternal friendship with the Papacy.



(2) Then followed the period of the Saxon wars, as much a crusade

against German heathenism as the vindication of old and dubious claims

to suzerainty. The first campaign against the Saxons had taken place in

772; their final submission was not made till 785. The Saxons were still

in that stage of political development which Tacitus describes in his

_Germania_, ruled by petty chiefs who set up a war-leader when

there was need for common action, otherwise united only by racial

sentiment and the cult of a tribal deity. But they were a warlike race,

and found in this crisis a leader of genius, the famous Widukind. At

last he set his followers the example of embracing Christianity. Charles

acted as sponsor at his baptism, and Widukind became a loyal subject of

his spiritual father. In a few years the whole of Saxony was dotted with

mission churches; in a few generations the Saxons were conspicuous for

their loyalty to the faith, and the Saxon bishops counted among the

wealthiest and most influential of ecclesiastical princes. It was

through Saxon rulers, descended from Widukind, that the imperial policy

of Charles was revived in the tenth century and the imperial diadem

appropriated by the German nation. Yet the Saxons sturdily adhered to

their national laws and language; their obstinate refusal to be ruled by

other races was a stumbling-block to the most masterful sovereigns that

medieval Germany produced.



(3) During the years 786-787 Charles was threatened with a conspiracy

against his power in Italy. Tassilo, the vassal Duke of Bavaria, aspired

to independence and was induced by his wife, a daughter of King Didier,

to make common cause with her nation; Areghis, the Lombard ruler of

Benevento, had emphasised his independence by assuming the style and

crown of a king. The two princes made common cause, but were detected

before their plans had matured, and successively terrified into

submission by the appearance of overwhelming armies on their borders.



The Lombard duchy was no permanent acquisition for the Franks, but that

of Bavaria was suppressed, in consequence of a second plot (788). The

addition of this large and wealthy province made the eastern half of the

Frankish kingdom practically coextensive with medieval Germany, and

almost equal in importance to the Romanised provinces of Gaul.



(4) As a natural precaution for the defence of Bavaria, Charles then

turned against the Avars, a race akin to the Huns, who had settled on

the middle Danube after the departure of the Lombards for Italy. The

Avars invaded Bavaria and Friuli as allies of Tassilo (788); they were

punished by three campaigns of extirpation (791-796), which broke their

power and spared only a miserable remnant of their people. Their land

was annexed but not settled; for Germany offered a more tempting field

to the Frankish pioneers. Indeed, some of the surviving Avars were

planted in the Ostmark (Austria), which Charles established as an

outpost of Bavaria, to keep watch upon the Slavs.



(5) To Spain the Emperor first turned his attention in 777, when he was

invited by the discontented emirs on the north of the Ebro to free them

from the Caliph of Cordova. The next year saw his abortive march through

the pass of Roncesvalles to the walls of Saragossa--an expedition

immortalised in the _Chanson de Roland_, the earliest and most famous

epic of the Charlemagne cycle, but fabulous from first to last, except

in recording the fact that there was a certain Roland (warden of the

Breton Mark) who fell in the course of the Frankish retreat. More

substantial work was done in Spain during the last years of the reign.

Navarre declared for the Franks and Christianity; the eldest son of

Charles captured Tortosa at the mouth of the Ebro (811), and founded the

Spanish Mark.



This lengthy catalogue only accounts for the more important of the wars

in which Charles and his lieutenants were engaged. We must imagine, to

complete the picture, a background of minor conflicts within and without

the Empire--against the Slavs, the Danes, the Greeks, the Bretons, the

Arabs, the Lombards of Benevento. These crowded years of war leave the

Frankish Empire established as the one great power west of the Elbe and

Adriatic. It did not include the Scandinavian lands or British Isles;

the Franks were never masters of the northern seas. It had failed to

expel the Arabs and Byzantines from the western Mediterranean; Spain,

Sicily, even parts of Italy remain unconquered. Of recovering North

Africa there could be no question. Still in magnitude the Frankish realm

was a worthy successor of the Western Empire. On Christmas Day, 800,

Charles was crowned Emperor of the Romans by Pope Leo III, in St.

Peter's basilica at Rome; and his subjects vainly imagined that, by this

dramatic ceremony, the clock of history had been put back four hundred

years. Though the Age of the Barbarians had been ended by the greatest

of them, the era which he inaugurated was an era not of revival but of

new development.









III



THE EMPIRE AND THE NEW MONARCHIES (800-1000 A.D.)





The imperial policy of Charles the Great constitutes a preface to the

history of the later Middle Ages. He holds the balance between nascent

forces which are to distract the future by their conflicts. He pays

impartial homage to ideas which statesmen less imperious or more

critical will afterwards regard as irreconcilable. He is at one and the

same time an autocrat, the head of a ruling aristocracy, and a popular

ruler who solicits the co-operation of primary assemblies. From the

highest to the lowest his subjects must acknowledge their unconditional

and immediate allegiance to his person; yet he tolerates the existence

of tribal duchies, he revives the Lombard kingdom, and creates that of

Aquitaine, as appanages for his younger sons. He fosters the growth of

territorial feudalism, and lends the sanction of royal authority to the

claims of the lord upon his vassal; but simultaneously he contrives

expedients for controlling feudalism and stifling its natural

development. He exalts the Church, and he enslaves her. He is there to

do the will of God as expounded by the clergy; but he disposes of sees

and abbacies like vacant fiefs, he dictates to the Pope, he interferes

with the liturgy, he claims a voice in the definition of dogma and the

wording of the creed. Finally, and most striking, there is the

antithesis between the two aspects of his power, the monarchical and the

imperial.



The Franks left to Europe the legacy of two political conceptions. They

perfected the system of barbarian royalty; they outlined the ideal of a

power which should transcend royalty and embrace in one commonwealth all

the Catholic kingdoms of the West. On the one hand they supplied a model

to be imitated by an Egbert, a Henry the Fowler, a Hugh Capet. On the

other hand they inspired the wider aims of the Ottos and the

Hohenstauffen. It is therefore worth our while to understand what a

Carolingian king was, and what a Carolingian Emperor hoped to be.



The king's power was based upon three supports: the general allegiance

of his subjects, the more personal obligations of the vassals who were

in his _mund_, the services and customs of the tenants on the royal

demesne. It is from these last that he derives his most substantial

revenue. He is the greatest landowner of his realm, until in the ninth

century he dissipates his patrimony by grants of hereditary

_beneficia_. The farming of the demesnes is an important branch of

the public service; they are managed by bailiffs, who work under rules

minutely elaborated by the king in the form of edicts, and who render

their accounts to a minister of state, the Seneschal or steward of the

household. The king is further the fountain of justice, the guardian of

public order, the protector of peaceful industry and commerce.

Accordingly he derives large profits from the fines of the law-courts,

the forfeitures of criminals, the tolls of highways and markets, the

customs levied at seaports and at frontier towns. In the exercise and

exploitation of his prerogatives he is assisted by functionaries of whom

most are household officers: the Chamberlain who keeps the royal hoard;

the Constable (_comes stabuli_) who marshals the host; the Seneschal, or

High Steward, who controls the demesnes; the Protonotary, by whose staff

the royal letters and all documents of state are written out; the

Arch-chaplain, to whom ecclesiastical suitors bring their petitions and

complaints. Finally there are the Counts of the Palace, appointed from

the chief races of the realm, who exercise the king's appellate

jurisdiction in secular cases. But the king is bound by custom to govern

with the counsel and consent of his great men--a Germanic tradition

which no after growth of respect for Roman absolutism can destroy. A

select body of influential nobles deliberates with the king on all

questions of national importance. Their decisions are submitted

for approval to a more general assembly (Mayfield), held annually in the

spring or summer. By this assembly the military expedition of the year

is discussed and sanctioned; here also are promulgated royal edicts

(_capitula_).



The ordinary freeman, upon whom falls the ultimate burden of military

service, has no voice in the debates of the Mayfield; but ordinances

affecting the old customary laws of the several races which make up the

kingdom (Salians, Ripuarians, Saxons, etc.) do not take effect till they

have been accepted by popular assemblies in the provinces which they

concern. And such revisions are infrequent. The royal prerogative in

legislation is limited by a popular prejudice, which regards the

customary law as sacred and immutable. The Capitularies are chiefly

administrative ordinances; the "law of the land," which is the same

everywhere and for all persons, is an ideal to be realised in England

alone of medieval states. Elsewhere the king's law is a supplement, a

postscript; the privilege of the free man is to live under the law of

his province, his lord's fief or his free city.



In local administration the king relies, outside the tribal duchies, on

counts whose districts are subdivisions of the old national provinces.

The count, often a hereditary official, is a royal deputy for all

purposes, military and civil. He collects the royal dues, leads the free

men to the host, maintains the peace and administers justice. His

tribunal is the old Germanic hundred-court, in which the free suitors

ought to be the judges; but the suitors for this purpose are represented

by a few doomsmen (_scabini_) chosen for their respectability and

knowledge of the law. They are an ineffectual check upon the count, and

it is a standing difficulty to find ways and means of compelling these

local viceroys to act with common honesty. For this purpose the king

annually appoints itinerant inspectors (_missi dominici_); in twos

and threes they are dispatched on circuit to acquaint the count with

royal instructions, to promulgate new legislation, and above all to

receive and adjudicate upon the complaints of all who are oppressed. A

comparatively late expedient, and the first part of the Carolingian

system to disappear, these tours of inspection were the one safeguard

against local misgovernment and the feudalising of official power. When

they ceased, the Carolingian county too often became a hereditary fief

exploited for the lord's sole benefit.



The Empire was not intended to supersede this system of royal

government; kings no less than emperors were regarded as holding a

definite rank and office in the Christian commonwealth. No traditions of

imperial bureaucracy, except in a debased and orientalised form, were

accessible to Charles the Great. In Gaul and Italy he had subjects who

lived under a corrupt and mutilated Roman Law; but he was unacquainted

with the scientific principles of the great jurists whose writings were

the highest achievements of the Roman genius. To the best minds of the

eighth century the Roman Empire appeared, not as to an Athaulf or a

Theodoric, a masterpiece of human statesmanship, but rather a divine

institution, providentially created before the birth of Christ to school

the nations for the universal domination of His Church. The model of the

Carolingian Emperors was not Augustus but Constantine the Great, the

Most Christian ruler who made it his first business to protect the

Church against heretic and heathen, to endow her with riches, to enforce

her legislation. However his relation to the Pope might be conceived,

the Emperor held his office as the first servant of the Church. What

then were his practical duties? According to some he was pledged to

restore the material unity of Christendom and to subdue all heathen

peoples. This childlike ideal of his office no emperor could put into

practice. Charles the Great waged no important wars after his

coronation; he did not scruple to make peace with the Eastern Empire or

even to exchange courtesies with Haroun al Rashid, the Caliph of Bagdad.

He held, and the sanest of his counsellors agreed, that his first duty

was to protect, unite and reform the societies over which the Church

already exercised a nominal dominion. To conquer other Christian rulers

was no more to be expected of him than that he should surrender his own

royal prerogative; though it was desirable that they should do homage to

him as the earthly representative of spiritual unity.



Within his own realms the imperial office was to make a difference in

the spirit rather than the forms of government. The Empire raised to a

higher power the dignity and the responsibilities which belonged to him

as a king. He conceived himself bound to provide more carefully than

ever for the maintenance of ecclesiastical and the betterment of secular

law. His subjects were to realise that through their allegiance to him

they were God's subjects, bound to observe the law of God as a part of

the law of the Empire; he on his side was to be, to the best of his

power, a moral censor, an educator, a religious missionary, a protector

of the clergy, a defender of the faith.



When we turn from this noble dream to follow the history of the

Carolingian Empire, the contrast between the real and the ideal is

almost grotesque. Within a generation the Frankish realm is partitioned

after the Merovingian fashion; all that remains as a guarantee of unity

is the imperial title attached to one of several kingdoms, and the

theory that the kings are linked in fraternal concord for the defence of

Church and State against all enemies. Contemporaries laid the blame on

the weakness of Lewis the Pious and the ambition of his sons. These

causes undoubtedly accelerated the process of disruption; but others

more impersonal and more gradual in their operation were at work below

the surface of events.



(1) The first was the dawning of nationality. North of the Alps the

subjects of the Empire fell into a Germanic group, lying chiefly east of

the Rhine, and a Romance group nearly co-extensive with the modern

France; Italy was sharply severed from both by geography, by differences

of race and language, and by political tradition. In the Treaty of

Verdun (843), which begins the process of political disintegration,

these natural divisions are only half respected. The kingdom of the East

Franks is wholly Germanic; that of the West Franks contains the

Gallo-Roman provinces subdued by Clovis; but between them lies the

anomalous Middle Kingdom, the portion of the titular Emperor, in which

are united Italy, Provence, Burgundy, the valley of the Moselle and a

large part of the Netherlands. In each re-distribution of territories

among Carolingian princes the lines of partition approximate more

closely to the boundaries of modern nations. Burgundy and Provence alone

remain, after the year 888, as memorials of the Middle Kingdom. Italy

becomes an independent state; the northern provinces (Lotharingia) are

disputed between the East Franks and the West Franks. And already the

rulers of the new states are identifying themselves with national

sentiments and aspirations; it is not without reason that a later age

has given to Lewis, the first King of the East Franks, the title of "the

German."



(2) But, in the minds of ordinary men, national sentiment was little

more than a contempt for those of alien race and speech. The

nationalities were ready enough to separate one from the other; having

done so, they split asunder into tribal or feudal groups. Thus in

Germany the Saxons, Suabians, Bavarians, Thuringians, Franconians group

themselves round provincial chieftains. West of the Rhine, where Roman

rule had long since weakened tribal feeling, we can see a broad

distinction between the North and South of Gaul, but in each half of the

country the feudal principle is the dominating force; from the middle of

the ninth century we remark the formation of those arbitrarily divided

fiefs which play so large a part in French history. But of the feudal

movement we shall speak elsewhere.



(3) Last but not least we must allow for the disappearance of that moral

enthusiasm which Charles the Great had evoked in his subjects. His

conception of the Empire was too large for narrow minds. They could see

no reason in it. They were acutely alive to the sacrifices which it

demanded in the present, and sceptical as to the advantages which it

promised in the future. The idea of working for posterity does not

naturally occur to half-civilised peoples; they live from hand to mouth,

and are continually absorbed in the difficulties of the moment; they

believe in the supremacy of chance or fate or providence, and speak of

human forethought as presumptuous or merely futile. The imperial

programme was cherished and publicly defended by a little clique of

clerical statesmen; but they did not succeed in making many converts.

When the last of the Carolingian Emperors was deposed (887), there were

cries of lamentation from ecclesiastics. But among lay statesmen not a

hand was raised to stay the process of disintegration. This Emperor,

Charles the Fat, had succeeded by mere longevity in uniting all the

dominions of his family under his immediate rule; but in three short

years he dissipated whatever lingering respect attached to the idea for

which he stood. In the words of the annalist "a crop of many kinglets

sprang up over Europe." All the new pretenders came from the class of

the great feudatories. Among the West Franks it was Eude the Count of

Paris who seized the royal diadem; the East Franks elected Arnulf, Duke

of Carinthia; Italy became an apple of discord between the margraves of

Spoleto and Friuli; Burgundy was partitioned by two native families.



Yet within a hundred years there arose a reaction in favour of the

imperial idea--a reaction of which Germany was the apostle, which Italy

accepted, which made many converts in West Francia. There were new and

sufficient reasons for returning to the discarded system. The national

hierarchies, who had undermined the Frankish Empire to broaden the

foundations of ecclesiastical privilege and influence, were discovering

that they had set up King Stork in place of King Log; the exactions of

an Augustus were as nothing compared with the lawless pillaging of the

new feudalism; and elective sovereigns, ruling by the grace of their

chief subjects, were powerless for good as well as harm. The lower ranks

of laymen had no better cause to be content with the new order under

which the small freeholder was oppressed, the peasant enslaved, the

merchant robbed and held to ransom. The freedom of the aristocracy

spelled misery for every other class. These self-constituted tyrants

passed their lives in devastating faction fights. Worst of all, their

divisions and their absorption in petty schemes of personal

aggrandisement left Europe at the mercy of uncivilised invaders. In the

ninth and tenth centuries, medieval society experienced the same ordeal

to which the Roman Empire had been subjected in the fifth. From the

North and from the East a new generation of barbarians, perceiving the

patent signs of weakness, began to break through the frontiers in search

of plunder and of settlements.



First came the Northmen from Norway and Denmark. Like the Saxons of the

fourth century they were unrivalled seamen. Their fleets transported

them from point to point faster than land forces could follow in pursuit;

the great rivers served them as natural highways; and if beaten in a

descent upon the land, they had always their ships as a safe refuge. To

make treaties and to offer blackmail was a worse than useless policy;

the Vikings came in bands which operated separately, or united in this

year to scatter and form new combinations in the next. One leader could

not bind another; to buy off one fleet was merely to invite the coming

of a second. These pirates had begun to molest the British Isles and

Frisia before the death of Charles the Great; but after the first

partition of his Empire they fell on the whole coastline from the Elbe

to the Pyrenees. Originally attracted by the hope of plunder they soon

aimed at conquest; when, at the close of the ninth century, there was a

sudden pause in the flood of armed emigration from the North, the

Danelaw in England and Normandy on the opposite side of the Channel

remained as alien colonies which the native rulers were obliged to

recognise.



It was in Gaul that the ravages of the Normans were most severely felt,

though for a few years they were the scourge of Frisia and the adjacent

provinces. Germany and Italy had other enemies to fear. In the year 862

a new danger, in the shape of the Hungarians, appeared on the borders of

Bavaria. They were an Asiatic people, from the northern slopes of the

Ural Mountains, who had been moving westward since the commencement of

the century. Contemporaries identified them with the Huns of Attila, and

the resemblance was more than superficial. The Hungarians were of the

Tartar race--nomads who lived by hunting and war, skilled in

horsemanship and archery, utterly barbarous and a byeword for cruelty.

The rapidity of their movements, and the distances to which their raids

extended, are almost incredible. In 899 they swept through the Ostmark

and reached the Lombard plain; in 915 they sacked Bremen; in 919 they

harried the whole of Saxony and penetrated the old Middle Kingdom; in

926 they went into Tuscany and appeared in the neighbourhood of Rome; in

937 they even reached the walls of Capua. In fact, until the great

victory of Otto I upon the Lech (955), they were the terror of

two-thirds of Christian Europe. Italy, the most disunited of the new

kingdoms, was further vexed by the Saracen pirates who roamed the

Western Mediterranean. The only sea-power capable of dealing with them

was that of the Byzantine Empire. The Greek fleet protected the

southeast of Italy, but was powerless to save Sicily, which was

conquered piecemeal for the Crescent (827-965). Farther north the

seaports of Amalfi, Gaeta, Naples and Salerno paid tribute or admitted

Saracen garrisons; in 846 Ostia and the Leonine quarter of Rome

(including the basilica of St. Peter) were pillaged. Robber colonies

established themselves on the river Garigliano, and at Garde-Frainet,

the meeting-point of Italy and Provence.



The effect which these disasters produced on the minds of the sufferers

is nowhere more clearly visible than in England. Here the House of

Alfred was able, within a century of the partition made at Wedmore

between the West Saxon kingdom and the Danes (878), to establish a

kingdom of imperial pretensions, loosely knit together but more durable

and more highly organised than any power which had arisen in Britain

since the Roman period. In Germany the Saxon line, beginning with Henry

the Fowler (919-936), was permitted to make the royal title hereditary,

and to assert an effective suzerainty over the other tribal dukes. In

France the House of Paris, after ruling for many years in the name of a

degenerate Carolingian line, was invited in the person of Hugh Capet to

assume the royal dignity (987). We have here a European movement in

favour of monarchy; and on the heels of it follows another for the

restoration of the Empire. The new royal dynasties did good work; even

the weakest among them, that of France, served as a symbol of unity, as

a rallying point for the clergy and all other friends of peace; but both

on practical grounds and on grounds of sentiment they left much to be

desired. National monarchy meant national wars and the right of national

churches to misgovern themselves according to their several

inclinations. Every year the rent in the seamless robe of Christendom

grew wider; political unity was disappearing, and religious unity would

soon go the same way. The kingly title made but a slight appeal to the

imagination or the conscience; with whatever ceremonies a King was

crowned, the real source of his power was the position which he held,

independently of his office, as a chief of a tribal or a feudal group;

of men who, as St. Odo bitterly remarked, being oppressed took to

themselves a lord that with his help they might become oppressors.

Sovereign power had lost all poetry and dignity; it was being perverted

to serve petty ends. An Emperor was needed to restore a higher sense of

justice, to exalt the spiritual above the material side of life.



So the idealists reasoned, and in Germany their arguments found willing

converts. This may appear strange, since Germany had taken the lead in

repudiating the Carolingian Empire, and Henry the Fowler, who

established the new German monarchy, was the reverse of an idealist. But

the truth was that the peculiar constitution of the German kingdom and

the peculiar problems raised by German expansion towards the East were

such as to make the ideal policy the safest. Though Henry the Fowler had

sedulously limited his attention to German problems, his son, working on

the same lines, found himself led by the natural sequence of events to

cross the Alps, seize Italy and take the imperial crown from the Pope's

hands.



Henry the Fowler, elected after nineteen years of nominal kingship and

unbridled anarchy, defined his position by a series of compacts with the

great Dukes. Suabia, Bavaria and Lotharingia became dependent

principalities, whose rulers attended national Diets, occasionally

appeared at court, and still more occasionally rendered military

service. Under their sway the new feudalism, which they encouraged as

the means of creating armies both for defence and for pursuing an

independent foreign policy, took root and throve as a legal institution.

Within the borders of the duchies Henry had little power except as the

patron of the church. He claimed the right of nominating bishops--though

in Bavaria this claim was not made good till the next reign--and

religious foundations held their privileges by his grace. The

ecclesiastical councils which legislated with his sanction were more

important than the Diets composed indifferently of laymen and prelates.

His general policy gave greater cause for satisfaction to the clergy

than to the remainder of his subjects. The assertion of supremacy over

Lotharingia (925), and Bohemia (929), and the defeat of the Hungarians

at the Unstrut (933), were national achievements; but for nine years

before the battle of the Unstrut the King had allowed the Hungarians to

work their will in Bavaria and Suabia, having secured the immunity of

his own duchy by a separate truce. He had chiefly employed those years

in building strong towns for the defence of Saxony, and in extending

Saxon power by the conquest of Brandenburg, Lusatia, Strelitz and

Schleswig. These could only be called national services on the

assumption that the crown was to remain the hereditary possession of his

house; but the German kingship was elective. To the Church, however,

nothing was more welcome than conquests gained at the expense of heathen

Slavs and Danes. In her eyes this Saxon statesman was the forerunner of

the Christian faith in the dark places of Europe. For all these reasons,

then, the power of Henry and his successors remained a power resting

upon ecclesiastical support. To strengthen the alliance of church and

state must be the first object of a Saxon ruler.



For some years after his accession (936) Otto I was harassed by

pretenders of his own family who allied themselves with one or more of

the great Dukes. The Bavarians threatened to secede and form an

independent nation; the Franconians rebelled when their right of waging

private wars was called in question; the Lotharingians intrigued to make

themselves an independent Middle Kingdom. All such malcontents found it

easy to secure a brother or a son of the King as their nominal leader.

Even when Otto had placed all the duchies in the hands of his own

kinsmen or connections, his power was still precarious. For he claimed

new rights which, though necessary to the maintenance of kingly power,

did violence to feudal and provincial sentiment; while the Dukes whom he

nominated usually took up the pretensions of their predecessors, and

identified themselves with the interests of their subjects. It was more

important than ever that the King should have the help of the clergy in

educating public opinion. But in the most critical period (939-955) of

the reign the German primate, Archbishop Frederic of Mainz, lent the

weight of his influence and high personal reputation to the rebel cause.

In another direction also Otto found the clergy the chief opponents of a

cherished scheme. Organised missions were among the means on which he

relied for civilising and extending his father's conquests in Slavonic

territory. For this purpose he planned, with the approval of Rome, to

make Magdeburg an archbishopric and the head of a Slavonic province. To

this proposal the sees of Mainz and Halberstadt offered strenuous

resistance, on the ground that it would curtail their jurisdictions

(955). Twice, therefore, Otto had been sharply reminded that his

authority over the German Church was insufficient for his purpose.



Meanwhile the train of events had drawn him into Italian politics. The

Kingdom of Italy had been seized, in 926, by Hugh of Provence, an

adventurer of Carolingian descent. In 937, on the death of Rudolph II of

Burgundy, Hugh designed to seize this derelict inheritance. He was

forestalled by Otto, who assumed the guardianship of the lawful heir of

Burgundy, the young Conrad; a united kingdom of Italy and Burgundy would

have been too dangerous a neighbour for the German Kingdom. Hugh,

however, secured for his son, Lothair, the hand of Conrad's sister

Adelaide, thus keeping alive the claims of his family for a future day.

Somewhat later Otto retaliated by giving protection to an Italian foe of

Hugh, the Margrave Berengar of Friuli, who came to the Saxon court and

became the liegeman of the German King. In 950 this relation suddenly

acquired political importance, through the unexpected deaths of Hugh and

Lothair, and the succession of Berengar in Italy. Reminded of his oath

to Otto, the new King repudiated his obligations as a vassal, and gave

further provocation by ill-treating the widowed Adelaide. Otto was thus

equipped with a double excuse for making war. And war was forced upon

him by the ambitions of his brother Henry, Duke of Bavaria, and of his

son Liutolf, Duke of Suabia. Both cast covetous glances on Italy, which

was hopelessly divided and an easy prey for the first-comer. In 949 the

Duke of Bavaria had seized Aquileia; in 951 the Duke of Suabia crossed

the Alps ostensibly to champion Adelaide. Otto could not remain idle

while two of his subjects and kinsmen contended over the spoils of

Italy. He collected an army and followed hard on the footsteps of

Liutolf. Berengar fled, the Dukes made peace with their suzerain, and

Otto was free to dispose of the Italian kingdom (951).



It is possible that, if the opportunity had been forthcoming, he would

at once have proceeded to Rome for an imperial coronation. But the Pope,

who alone could make an Emperor, was the nominee of a Roman faction,

headed by the ambitious Alberic the Senator who aspired to build up a

secular lordship on the basis of the Papal patrimony. Otto was not

invited to visit Rome. After some hesitation he decided, instead of

himself assuming the unprofitable duties of an Italian King, to restore

Berengar on condition of a renewal of homage. Perhaps the arrangement

was intended to be temporary. Otto was still menaced by conspiracies in

Germany; and Berengar might serve to guard Italy against ambitious

Dukes, until the hands of his overlord were free for Italian adventures.

Later events justify some such hypothesis. Within a few years the chief

difficulties of Otto were removed. A great ducal rising collapsed; the

Hungarians were so decisively beaten at the Lechfeld (955) that they

ceased to trouble Germany; death relieved Otto of his most dangerous

rivals, Archbishop Frederic of Mainz and his own son, Duke Liutolf.

Then, in 960, arrived the long-delayed call from Rome. John XII, a

dissipated youth of twenty-two, the son of Alberic (died 954) but devoid

of his father's ability, invoked the aid of Germany to protect the

temporal possessions against Berengar. Otto required no second summons.

Descending upon Italy, he expelled his vassal, assumed the Italian crown

at Pavia (961) and then repaired to Rome. Here in 962 he was crowned by

the Pope as lord of the Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation. For good

or for evil the prerogative of Charles the Great was inseparably united

to the German monarchy.



From this complicated series of events some interesting conclusions may

be deduced. The Empire, which has so often been abused as a source of

countless woes to Germany, was revived in the interests of a purely

German policy. Unlike his son and his grandson, Otto I never submitted

to the spell of Italy. Since the time of Charles the Great it had been

taken for granted that the Empire could only be conferred by the Pope

and only held by a King of Italy. Otto did not greatly value his Italian

dominions, though circumstances forced him to reside in Italy for a

large part of his later years. For a time he had thoughts of recovering

Apulia and Calabria from the Greeks, Sicily from the Arabs. But he

abandoned his claims against the Eastern Empire as the price of a

marriage-alliance, and he left Sicily untouched. The Crown of Italy was

valuable to him chiefly as a qualification for his imperial office. To

the ecclesiastical duties of that office he was not indifferent. His

bishops, though largely employed as secular administrators, were

chosenwith some regard to their spiritual duties; he was a friend to the

Cluniac movement for monastic reform. But clearly he did not visit Rome

in pursuit of any plans for cleansing that Augean stable the Papacy. The

vices of John XII were notorious; but, as a Pope who could legally

confer the Empire, he was good enough for Otto's purpose. Only when John

repented of his bargain and turned traitor was he evicted in favour of a

more reputable successor (963). And John's successor was a layman until

the time of his election. Otto's chief concern was to secure a

trustworthy partisan; this remained the Saxon policy till the days of

his grandson.



Otto was not indifferent to the splendour or the more ambitious claims

of his office. He paraded before the world the benevolent protectorate

which he exercised over the young rulers of Burgundy and France; he

insisted upon the homage of the Polish and Bohemian dukes. He held

magnificent Diets to celebrate his new position, and made great efforts

to win recognition from the Byzantine court. But in substance his

ambitions were those of a German national king. He had a keen sense of

realities, a keen appreciation of concrete results; from first to last

his thoughts centred round the problems of his native land. The

extension of the eastern frontier, the alliance with the Church, the

management of the duchies--these were his main achievements as they had

been his main ambitions. But he had built better than he knew; and the

Empire acquired before his death a nobler significance than he perhaps

had ever contemplated.



The work of Otto I was skilfully done, since it survived the follies of

his son and grandson. For twenty years after his death (973) the titular

rulers of the Empire were boys and women-regents. At Rome, in Germany,

on the western and eastern frontiers all the beaten factions and

humiliated rivals plucked up courage to make another bid for victory.

The old Empress Adelaide, and her daughter-in-law the Empress Theophano,

divided or disputed the control of the administration until 991; from

that date till 998 the elder woman, freed from interference by the death

of Theophano, exercised a great though a declining influence. Neither

Empress was competent to handle the singular difficulties of the

situation. Adelaide, though true to the German ambitions of her husband,

was guided by personal prejudice in the selection of her ministers.

Theophano, a woman of remarkable abilities and attainments, despised the

monotonous intricacies of German politics, encouraged both her husband

and her son to regard Italy as the worthiest field for the activities of

an Emperor, and in Italy looked rather to Rome and the South than to

Lombardy. It was the church party, both in Germany and in Lombardy,

which in these years kept the subjects of the Empire true to their

allegiance. The German dukes were less disinterested. But the precedents

which Otto I had established proved invaluable when his son was required

to deal with a rebellion, or had the opportunity of appointing to a

vacant dukedom.



The blame for the chimerical ambitions of Otto II and Otto III is

usually thrown upon Theophano, that brilliant missionary of Byzantine

culture and Byzantine political ideas. But the influence which perverted

the judgement of these Emperors, until they became a byeword in Europe,

was something more impalpable than the will-force of a domineering

woman. They were born into the misty morning twilight of the medieval

renaissance, of an age when intellectual curiosity was awakening, when

philosophy, the sciences and Latin literature were studied with a lively

but uncritical enthusiasm, when the rhetorician and the sophist were the

uncrowned kings of intelligent society. The philosophy was little more

than school-logic, derived at second or third hand from Aristotle, the

science a grotesque amalgam of empiricism and tradition. The Latin

classics, apart from their use as a source of tropes and commonplaces,

only served to inspire a superstitious and uncomprehending reverence for

ancient Rome. Of this new learning Otto II and his son were naive

disciples. They could not sufficiently admire the encyclopaedic Gerbert,

the most fashionable and incomparably the ablest teacher of their day.

Otto II and his court listened patiently for hours while Gerbert

disputed with a Saxon rival concerning the subdivisions of the genus

philosophy. Otto III invited Gerbert to come to court and cure him of

"Saxon rusticity"; he deluged the complaisant tutor with Latin verses,

consulted him in affairs of state, and finally promoted him to the

Papacy. Gerbert was in fact a subtle and ambitious politician, who

filled the chair of Peter with no small degree of credit. But his more

serious talents would never have found their opportunity save for his

skill in ministering to the pseudo-classicism of rustic Saxons.



Each of these Emperors turned his back on Germany at the first

opportunity. Each met in Italy with bitter disillusionment and an

untimely fate.



Otto II, in whose idealism there was a trace of his father's concrete

ambition, planned the conquest of South Italy and Sicily. The scheme was

not impracticable as the Hohenstauffen were afterwards to prove. And in

the year 980 it could be justified as advantageous to the whole of

Christian Europe. A new Saracen peril was impending in the Western

Mediterranean. A new dynasty of Mohammedan adventurers, the Fatimites,

had arisen on the coast of Northern Africa and had made themselves

masters of Egypt (969). Five years before that event they had already

occupied Sicily; in 976 they turned their attention to Italy. The south

of the peninsula was divided between the Eastern Empire and Pandulf

Ironhead, the lord of Capua, who had established an ephemeral despotism

on the ruins of Lombard and Byzantine power. Even he could not face the

Arabs in the open field, and his death (981) was followed by the

partition of his lands and bitter strife among his sons. Unless Otto

intervened it was not unlikely that Italy, south of the Garigliano,

would become a province of the Caliphate of Cairo. Otto, however, was

ill-qualified to be the general of a crusade. His military experience

had been gained in petty operations against the Danes and Slavs, and in

an invasion of France vaingloriously begun but ending in humiliation

(978). Full of self-confidence he led a powerful force into Apulia,

intending to expel first the Greeks and then the Arabs. He captured Bari

and Taranto without difficulty; but he had no sooner entered Calabria

than he allowed himself to be entrapped by the Emir of Sicily. On the

field of Colonne (982) he lost the flower of his army and barely escaped

capture by flight to a passing merchant vessel. Next year he died, in

the midst of feverish preparations to wipe out this disgrace. It was

left for the despised Greeks to repel the Arabs from the mainland;

Sicily remained a Mohammedan possession till the coming of the Normans

(1062).



It is easier to sympathise with the policy of Otto II than with the man

himself. The case is reversed when we turn to the career of his son.

Otto III, an infant at his father's death, escaped from female tutelage

in 996, and made his first Italian expedition as an autocrat of sixteen.

He went to free the Papacy from the bondage of a Roman faction, the

party of the infamous John XII, again rearing its head under a new

leader. The boy-ruler suppressed the rebels with some gratuitous

cruelty. But he was not without noble ambitions or the capacity of

appreciating finer natures than his own. Called upon to nominate a Pope

he selected his cousin Bruno, a youth little older than himself, but a

statesman and an idealist, who set himself to assert the authority of

the Holy See over the national Churches, partly no doubt in the

interests of the Empire but more in those of morality and discipline.

Unhappily Bruno died before his influence had eradicated from the

Emperor's character the weaknesses fostered by scheming flatterers and

an injudicious education. Gerbert, who succeeded Bruno with the title of

Sylvester II, encouraged his pupil in a career of puerile extravagances.

While the new Pope extended his jurisdiction and magnified his office,

the young Emperor was planning to revive in Rome the ancient glories of

the Caesars. Otto built a palace on the Aventine; he imitated the

splendour and travestied the ceremonial of the Byzantine court; he

devised pompous legends to be inscribed on his seal and on his crown. In

the year 1000 he made a solemn pilgrimage to Aachen and opened the vault

of Charles the Great; another to Poland, to pray at the shrine of his

martyred friend, St. Adalbert, in Gnesen. Meanwhile the serious business

of the Empire was neglected; the Slavonic states shook off the German

connection; the eastern frontier was unguarded. Even the Romans, whom he

cherished as his peculiar people, despised his vagaries and rose in

insurrection. This was the awakening. Alive at last to the difference

between his dreams and his true position, he quitted the Eternal City to

wander aimlessly in Italy, and died broken-hearted at the age of

twenty-one.



It would obviously be unjust to judge the Holy Roman Empire of the first

Otto by the tragicomic aberrations of his immediate successors. Their

careers illustrate, in an extreme form, the temptations to which an

Emperor was exposed; but neither of them understood the essence of the

institution. Far from idealising the Empire overmuch they did not make

it ideal enough. The true conception of Empire eluded their grasp and

was unaffected by their failure. The policy of Otto the Great is

justified by the fact that he, like Charles the Great, gave to a

national monarchy the character of a religious office and the sense of a

sacred mission. To appreciate his achievement we need only compare the

German monarchy, as it stood in the year 1000, after a generation of

misgovernment had marred the architect's design, with that of the Capets

in France or of the House of Egbert in England. The difference is not

only in size or outward splendour. The Holy Roman Empire stood for a

nobler theory of royal and national Duty.









IV



FEUDALISM





Before discussing the origins or the effects of feudalism it is well to

form a definite conception of the system as we find it in the twelfth

and thirteenth centuries, when it is the basis of local government, of

justice, of legislation, of the army and of all executive power. In this

period the lawyers have arrived at the doctrine that all lands is held

from the King either mediately or directly. The King is himself a great

landowner with demesnes scattered over the length and breadth of the

realm; the revenues of these estates supply him with the larger part of

his permanent income. The King is surrounded by a circle of

tenants-in-chief, some of whom are bishops and abbots and ecclesiastical

dignitaries of other kinds; the remainder are dukes, counts, barons,

knights. All of these, laymen and churchmen alike, are bound to perform

more or less specific services in return for their lands; the most

important is military service, with a definite quota of knights, which

they usually render at their own charge; but they are also liable to pay

aids (_auxilia_) of money in certain contingencies, to appear regularly

at the King's council and to sit as assessors in his law court. They

hold their lands in fact upon a contract; but the precise obligations

named in this contract do not exhaust their relation to the King. In a

vague and elastic sense they owe him honour (_obsequium_) and loyalty

(_fidelitas_). They must do all in their power to uphold his interests

and exalt his dignity. He on his side is bound to consult them

collectively, in all matters of importance, and to maintain them

individually in the rights and possessions which he has granted to them.

These personal and indefinite ties should not be renounced, on either

side, without some very serious reason--gross treachery, gross neglect

of duty, gross abuse of power or privilege.



These tenants-in-chief have on their estates a number of sub-tenants,

who are bound to them by similar contracts and a similar personal

relation. The homage of the sub-tenant to his immediate lord ought to be

qualified by a reservation of the allegiance which all subjects owe to

the King. Whether this reservation shall be made or, when made, shall

have any practical consequences, will depend upon the King's resources

and personality. Where effective, it means that he can claim from the

sub-tenants the discharge of certain national duties, can call on them

for military service, can judge them in his court, can tax them with the

consent of his council, that is of their lords; on the other hand, it

means that these sub-tenants may not allege the commands of their lord

as an excuse for making war upon the King or committing any breach of

the public peace. Where the general duty of allegiance has lapsed into

oblivion, the tenant-in-chief is in all but name a dependent king, and

the feudal state becomes a federation under a hereditary president, who

occasionally arbitrates between the members of the federation and

occasionally leads them out to war.



The other members of the feudal state group themselves or are forcibly

grouped under the rule of different persons in the feudal hierarchy. In

the open country the soil is partly tilled by small free-holders, who

pay to this or that lord a rent in money, kind, or services. Like the

feudal sub-tenants these free-holders are, for most purposes, subject to

the jurisdiction of their lord; though in the well organised state the

royal judges protect them against the grosser forms of violence. But the

greater part of the land is divided between servile village-communities,

who give up perforce a large proportion of their working-days to the

cultivation of the lord's demesne. The tendency of feudal law is to

treat these peasants as slaves, to deny them the assistance of the royal

law-courts, to regard them as holding their land at the will of their

lord. In practice the lord finds that he cannot insist upon the full

measure of his legal right. Though he has the right to reclaim all

runaways, it is difficult to hunt them down; though he can fix the

measure of his own demands, it is dangerous and unprofitable to arouse a

spirit of mutiny. A judge from whom his serfs have no appeal in matters

that concern their tenure, he finds it politic to make and to observe

definite contracts, which remain unaltered from one generation to

another. Hence the condition of the serfs, though hard, is less

precarious than we might suppose if we only studied what the feudal

lawyer has to say about them. Turning from the country to the towns, we

find that all are subject to a lord or to the King; that some are only

half-emancipated communities of serfs; that in others the burgesses have

the status of small free-holders; that in a minority, but a growing

minority, of cases the burgesses have established the right to deal

collectively with the lord, to be regarded as _communes_ or free

cities. In these cases there is a form of popular self-government under

elected magistrates. Through the magistrates the town pays a fixed rent

to the former lord; usually it claims the special protection of the

King, and comes to hold the position of a tenant-in-chief (_une

seigneurie collective populaire_). No society could be, in spirit and

in organisation, more anti-feudal than the free town of the Middle Ages;

but it can only secure a safe existence by obtaining a definite position

in the feudal hierarchy. In fact, the clergy are the only considerable

class who succeed in resisting the universal tendency to feudalise all

landed property and to find for every man a lord. Even they are

compelled to make large concessions to the spirit of the age. It is only

at the cost of long and ruinous conflicts that bishops and other

prelates establish some distinction between their position and that of

the ordinary tenant-in-chief. Even so it remains the law that the

principal endowments of every religious foundation are fiefs held under

a feudal contract of service. More successful, though not less

difficult, was the struggle against the theory that the parish-priest is

the vassal of his patron and may, by recognising his obligations as a

vassal, acquire the vassal's privilege of passing on his office to his

son.



Such then was feudalism in the concrete. It is the negation of all that

we hold to be most important in the conceptions of the state and

citizenship. In effect, though not altogether in theory, it subordinates

the obligations of the citizen to those which the individual incurs by

entering on a voluntary contract. This contract may or may not be made

with the ruler of the state; in the majority of cases it is made with a

fellow-citizen. Though honourable, according to current ideas, this

contract always leaves to the lord some loopholes for the exercise of

arbitrary and capricious authority; it impairs, if it does not destroy,

the rule of law. Again, the effect of the system is to throw the main

burden of national defence, and the main control of the royal power,

upon a close hereditary caste of landowners. The standard of public duty

is lowered; the government becomes either an absolutism or an oligarchy,

and in either case studies chiefly the interests of a class which

despises industry and holds privilege to be the necessary basis of

society. Under feudalism the powers of the Crown, executive, judicial,

administrative, are often granted away to be held by the same tenure as

the fiefs over which they are exercised. And thus is created the worst

form of civil service that we can conceive; a corps of hereditary

officials, who can only be checked or removed with extreme difficulty,

who render no account of the sums which they collect under the name of

fines or dues, who are seldom educated to the point of realising that,

even in their private interest, honesty is the best policy. If this

system had developed to its logical conclusion, if the principles of

feudal government had not been mitigated by revolt from below and

interested tyranny from above, the only possible end would have been a

state of particularism and anarchy compared with which the Germany of

the fifteenth century, or the Italy of the eighteenth, might be called

an earthly paradise.



The very defects of the feudal system are, however, the best proof that

it was the natural and inevitable product of social evolution. A legal

theory so complex, so repugnant to the best traditions both of Roman and

barbarian government, could not have obtained general recognition, as

part of the natural order of things, unless it had grown up by degrees,

unless it had been the outcome of older usages and institutions. A form

of social organisation so cumbrous and so dangerous could hardly have

survived for centuries unless it had solved difficulties of unusual

urgency and magnitude. Let us then consider, in their historical order,

the antecedents of feudalism and the reasons of state by which it was

justified.



Before the downfall of the Roman Empire the duties of local government

were slipping from the grasp of the imperial executive. With or without

official consent, the great proprietors--already held responsible for

the taxes, the military service, and the good conduct of their

dependents--were assuming rights of jurisdiction. When Gaul was

reorganised by the Merovingians, these private courts of law continued

to exist; and they were even legally recognised (by Clotaire II in 614)

as institutions of public utility. A certain number of great estates

were further protected by special charters of privilege

(_immunitas_) which forbade public officials to enter them for the

purposes of making arrests, of holding courts, of collecting fines and

levying distraints. The owners were obliged to surrender any person

accused of a grave crime, but otherwise did justice at their pleasure.



This system of immunity was greatly extended by the Carolingian

sovereigns, but with two important changes. (1) Henceforward the

privilege was seldom granted to laymen, but was bestowed as a matter of

course on the estates of bishops and of religious houses. (2) The

holders of such ecclesiastical estates were compelled to vest their

powers of police and justice in the hands of laymen (_advocati_)

chosen either by the central power or by some approved form of election.

The intention of these changes was to use the private courts for the

maintenance of public order, to extract the sting from a dangerous

privilege, and to make it a serviceable instrument of royal policy. But

only one half of the scheme was permanent. By the middle of the ninth

century, when _immunitas_ had been granted to all religious foundations,

the Carolingians allowed the right of choosing the _advocati_ to slip

from their feeble grasp. The privileged estates remained, but the royal

control over their internal government was gone. They became

ecclesiastical seignories; whatever checks were imposed upon

the power of their rulers came from the lay-nobles who were their

neighbours, or from the subject population. Partly from respect for

custom and tradition, partly from motives of self-interest, the great

ecclesiastical landowners sided with the Crown, even in the tenth

century, when the fortunes of royalty were at their lowest ebb. But for

this support a price had to be paid; the old privileges were maintained

and even augmented by grants of the power of life and death

(_hautejustice, blut-bann_). Thus came into existence the class of

ecclesiastical princes, who throughout the Middle Ages maintained a

state, and wielded a power, comparable with that of any lay feudatory.



The ecclesiastical _immunitas_, as early as the ninth century, was

in the eyes of all ambitious landowners the model of a privileged

estate. But it was by another road that the layman arrived at the

position of a petty sovereign. Speaking broadly, there are two stages in

his progress. First, he comes into the position of a royal tenant,

holding his lands in exchange for services and fealty. Secondly, he

acquires, by delegation or usurpation, a greater or smaller part of the

royal authority over his own dependents.



(1) The idea of a personal contract between the free warrior and his

lord, by which the former places himself at the disposition of the

latter and promises unlimited service, is one which occurs in many

primitive societies and is peculiar to no one branch of the human race.

Tacitus noticed, as one feature of German life in his time, the free

war-band (_comitatus_) who lived in the house of their chief,

followed him to battle, and thought it the last degree of infamy to

return alive from the field on which he had fallen. The Merovingian

kings maintained a bodyguard of this kind (_antrustions_). Under

the Carolingians such followers appear in the host, in the royal

household, in every branch of the administration. They are the most

trusted agents of the King and possess considerable social consequence.

They are called _vassi_, a name formerly applied to any kind of

dependent, but now reserved for free men rendering free services to the

King or some other lord, and subject to his jurisdiction. So valuableare

these followers that, in the eighth and ninth centuries, the power

of the great is largely measured by the number of _vassi_ whom they

can put into the field.



Various considerations suggested to Frankish rulers and nobles the

expediency of endowing these followers with land, and of granting land

to no tenant unless he would take the vassal's oath. Usually land was

the only form of pay which the lord could give; and it always served as

a material guarantee of faithful service, since it could be resumed

whenever the vassal made default. In days when law and morality availed

little as the sanctions of contracts, the landlord naturally desired to

bind his tenant to him by a personal obligation; and there were obvious

advantages in providing that every tenant should be liable to aid his

lord with arms. The estates granted to vassals were known as benefices

(_beneficia_); they foreshadowed the lay-fief of later times. But

there are some distinctions to be drawn. The benefice was not _de

jure_ heritable; it escheated on the death of either lord or tenant.

The service was not measured with the same precision as in later times.

The military duties of the beneficed vassal were not different in kind

or degree from those of the ordinary freemen. Finally, the idea had not

yet arisen that vassals were superior in status to the rest of the

community. The importance of the vassal depended entirely on his wealth

and his rank in the King's employ. Only in the old age of the

Carolingian Empire, when the class of free landowners, acknowledging no

lord, had been almost ground out of existence by official oppression and

the intolerable burden of military service, was the burden of national

defence thrown entirely upon vassals. Then, as the sole military class

in the community, they acquired the consideration which, in early stages

of social development, is the monopoly of those who are trained to arms.



(2) It was natural that the tie of vassalage should be imposed on every

important official; and natural also to regard his office as a benefice,

tenable for life or during good behaviour. At an early date we find

cases of conquered princes--a Duke of Aquitaine, a Duke of Bavaria, a

King of Denmark--who take the vassal's oath and agree to hold their

former dominions as a _beneficium_. So again a member of the royal

house does homage and promises service in return for his appanage. More

common, and more important for the future, is the practice of treating

counts as vassals. All over the Frankish Empire the county was the

normal unit of local administration. The count led the military levies,

collected the royal dues, enforced the laws, maintained the peace, and

was a judge with powers of life and death. The Carolingians controlled

their counts by means of itinerant inspectors (_missi dominici_);

but with the disruption of their Empire this check was destroyed, while

the power of the count survived. By that time the office had often

become hereditary, on the analogy of the _beneficium_, and the

count appropriated to his own use the profits of his office. In such

cases his county became a small principality, classed by lawyers as a

fief, but often ruled without any reference to the interests of the

royal overlord. The fiefs of Anjou, Champagne and Flanders began in this

way as hereditary countships. Sometimes, again, we find that a great

vassal obtains, by grant of usurpation, the prerogatives of a count over

his own lands; examples are the prince-bishops of Trier (898 A.D.),

Hamburg (937), and Metz (945).



The first effect of this striking change in the nature of landed

property and of public office was to substitute for the centralised

state of the Carolingians a lax federal system, in which each unit was a

group of men attached to the person of a hereditary superior. This

nascent feudalism was often brutal, always summary and short-sighted, in

its methods of government. The feudal group was engaged in a perpetual

struggle for existence with neighbouring groups. Feudal policy was

aggressive; for every lord had his war-band, whom he could only hold

together by providing them with adventure and rich plunder; nor could

any lord regard himself as safe while a neighbour of equal resources

remained unconquered. Furthermore, as though the disintegration of

society had not gone far enough, every great fief was in constant danger

of civil war and partition. As the lord had treated the King, so he in

turn was treated by his vassals. He endowed them with lands, he allowed

them to found families, he gave them positions of authority; and then

they defied him. In the eleventh century the great fief bristled with

castles held by chief vassals of the lord; in the small county of Maine

alone we hear of thirty-five such strongholds; generally speaking they

were centres of rebellion and indiscriminate rapine. Such feudalism was

not a system of government; it was a symptom of anarchy.



Yet feudalism had not always been a mere tyranny of the military class

over the unarmed population. Like the Roman Empire, that of the Franks

had forfeited respect and popularity by misgovernment, by feeble

government, by insupportable demands on the personal service of the

subject. The land-owner was a less exacting master than the Empire;

often he could defend his tenants from imperial exactions. During the

invasions of the Northmen and Hungarians, he was impelled by his own

interest to guard his estates to the best of his ability. Therefore

common men looked to their landlord, or looked about them for a

landlord, to whom they could commend themselves. The great estate was

the ark of refuge from the general flood of social evils. In the

eleventh century the situation changed. The Hungarian tide of invasion

was rolled back by a Henry the Fowler and an Otto the Great; the

Northmen enrolled themselves as members of the European commonwealth.

The petty feudal despot was no longer needed. From a protector he had

degenerated into a pest of society. The great political problem of the

age was to make him innocuous. It was taken in hand, and it was settled,

by a variety of means.



In France the Church took the lead of the repressive movement,

endeavouring to mitigate the horrors of private war by certain

restrictions upon the combatants. During the eleventh century it was not

unusual for the bishop of a diocese to secure the co-operation of

representative men, from all classes of society, in proclaiming a local

Truce of God (_Treuga Dei_). This Truce, which all men were invited

to swear that they would observe, forbade the molestation of

ecclesiastics, peasants and other non-combatants; provided that

cultivated land should not be harried or cattle carried off; and named

certain seasons when no war should be waged. A typical agreement of this

kind enjoins that all private hostilities shall be suspended from

Wednesday evening to Monday morning in each week; from the beginning of

Advent till a week after the Epiphany; from the beginning of Lent till a

week after Easter; from the Rogation Days till a week after Pentecost.

The Truce of God was approved by the Crown both in France and in

Germany; even in the twelfth century it was still recommended by church

councils as a useful expedient. But it was seldom effectual. There was

no machinery for enforcing it; and those who swore to uphold it were so

divided by conflicting class interests that they could not co-operate

with any cordiality. The second of these defects, though not the first,

can also be perceived in the German system of the Land-peace.

Periodically we find an Emperor constraining a particular province, or

even the whole German kingdom, to accept a set of rules which are partly

modelled on those of the _Treuga Dei_ and partly in the nature of

criminal legislation. Thus in 1103 the magnates of the kingdom were

required to swear that for the next four years they would not molest

ecclesiastics, merchants, women, or Jews; that during the same period

they would neither burn nor break into private houses; that they would

not kill or wound or hold to ransom any man. In regard to the last rule

the magnates insisted on some modification; it was finally provided that

a man meeting a private enemy on the high-road might attack him, but

might not pursue him if he took refuge in a private house. The general

Land-peaces of Frederic Barbarossa (1152) and Frederic II (1235) are the

most important enactments of this kind; but they deviate widely from the

original type. They are permanent; they aim at the total suppression of

lawless self-help; they are codes of criminal law which, if thoroughly

enforced, would have opened a new era in German history. As the case

stands--they are only the evidence of an unrealised project of reform.



It was not by confederations of this kind, whether spontaneous or

compulsory, that feudalism could be bridled. The twelfth and thirteenth

centuries, the great age of medieval statesmanship, saw other and more

effectual remedies applied. In the free cities of France, Italy, the

Netherlands and Germany, the commercial classes perfected a form of

association which, however faulty in other respects, was successful in

excluding feudalism from the principal centres of urban industry. In the

larger states, whether kingdoms or not, the rulers, supported by the

Church and the commons, bestirred themselves to slay the many-headed

Hydra. Feudalism was not extirpated, but it was brought under the law.

In many districts it defied repression. To the end of the Middle Ages

the Knights of Suabia and the Rhineland maintained the predatory

traditions of the Dark Ages; and everywhere feudalism remained a force

inimical to national unity. But the great feudatories who survived into

the age of Machiavelli and of the new despotisms had usually some claims

upon the respect of their subjects. The Duchy of Brittany, the

Burgundian inheritance, the German electorates, were mainly

objectionable as impeding the growth of better communities--better

because more comprehensive, more stable, more fitted to be the nurseries

of great ideas and proud traditions.



It remains to speak of chivalry, that peculiar and often fantastic code

of etiquette and morals which was grafted upon feudalism in the eleventh

and succeeding centuries. The practical influence of chivalry has been

exaggerated. Chivalrous ethics were in great measure the natural product

of a militarist age. Bravery and patriotism, loyalty and truthfulness,

liberality and courtesy and magnanimity--these are qualities which the

soldier, even in a semi-civilised society, discovers for himself. The

higher demands of chivalric morality were as habitually disregarded as

the fundamental precepts of the Christian faith. The chivalric statesmen

of the Middle Ages, from Godfrey of Bouillon to Edward III and the Black

Prince, appear, under the searchlight of historical criticism, not less

calculating than Renaissance despots or the disciples of Frederic the

Great of Prussia. But something less than justice has been rendered to

the chivalric ideal. The ethics which it embodied were arbitrary and

one-sided; but they represent a genuine endeavour to construct, if only

for one class, a practicable code of conduct at a time when religion too

often gloried in demanding the impossible. Chivalry degenerated into

extravagance and conventional hyperbole; but at the worst it had the

merit of investing human relationships and human occupations with an

ideal significance. In particular it gave to women a more honourable

position than they had occupied in any social system of antiquity. It

rediscovered one half of human nature. But for chivalry the Beatrice of

Dante, the Laura of Petrarch, Shakespeare's Miranda and Goethe's

Marguerite, could not have been created, much less comprehended.



Chivalry in the oldest discoverable form was the invention of the

Church. The religious service by which the neophyte was initiated as a

knight has been traced back to the time of Otto III, when it appears in

the liturgy of the Roman churches. But the ceremony was not in general

use, outside Italy, before the age of the Crusades. It was Urban II who

inspired the knighthood of northern Europe with the belief that they

were _Dei militia_, the soldiers of the Church; and it is significant

that warfare against the unbeliever ranks prominently among the duties

enjoined upon the new-made knight, though it does not stand alone. The

defence of the true faith and of the Church is also inculcated; merit

might be acquired in persecuting heretics or in fighting for the Pope

against an unjust Emperor. Nor are the claims of the widow, the orphan

and the defenceless totally forgotten. But the perfect knight of the

Church was the Templar, the soldier living under the rule of a religious

order and devoting his whole energies to the cause of the Holy

Sepulchre. It was a remarkable innovation when St. Bernard, the mirror

of orthodox conservatism, undertook to legislate for the Order of the

Temple; for the primitive Church had hardly tolerated wars in self-

defence. From one point of view it was a wholesome change of attitude in

the moral leaders of society, that they should recognise war and a

military class as inevitable necessities, that they should undertake to

moralise and idealise the commonest of occupations. But the resolve was

marred in the execution. In the desire to be practical, the Church set

up too low an aim and translated Christianity into precepts which were

only suited for one short stage of medieval civilisation, the stage of

the Crusades.



In the long run the poet had far more influence than the priest upon the

chivalric classes. It is remarkable how uniformly Popes and Councils set

their faces against the bloodshed and extravagant futilities of the

tournament; still more remarkable that even threats of excommunication

could not deter the most orthodox of knights from seeking distinction

and distraction in these mimic wars. Equally significant is the growth

of the _service des dames_ which, although invested by troubadours

and minnesingers with a halo of religious allegory, was disliked by the

Church, not merely from a dread of possible abuses, but as inherently

idolatrous. The cult of the Virgin, while doing honour to the new

conception of womanhood, was also a protest against a secular

romanticism. Here and there a Wolfram von Eschenbach essays the feat of

reconciling poetry with religion in the picture of the perfect knight.

But the school of _courtoisie_ prevailed; the most celebrated of

the troubadours are mundane, not to say profane; Walther von der

Vogelweide, with his bitter attacks upon the Papacy, is more typical of

his class than Wolfram with his allegory of Parsifal and the Sangraal.

It was in Provence, on the eve of the Albigensian Crusade, in the

society which was most indifferent to official Christianity and most

hostile to the clergy, that chivalry was most sedulously preached and

developed in the most curious detail. In the hands of the troubadours it

became a gospel of pageantry and fanfaron, of artificial sentiments and

artificial heroisms, cloaking the materialism, the sensuality and the

inordinate ostentation of a theatrical and frivolous society,

intoxicated with the pride of life.









V



THE PAPACY BEFORE GREGORY VII





An institution is not necessarily discredited when we discover that it

has grown from small beginnings, has been applied under new conditions

to new purposes, and in the course of a long history has been defended

by arguments which are demonstrably false. The child, no doubt, is

father of the man; but the man is something different from, and may well

be something better than, his infant self. We must not attach undue

importance to the study of origins. On the other hand we cannot afford

to neglect them. However slight the fibres by which the present is

rooted in the past, to observe them is to realise the continuity of

human development--the most important, the most obvious, and the most

neglected of the lessons that history can teach. It is true that the

roots, however strong and however deeply set, are insufficient to

account for the characteristics of the plant which springs from them.

But it is also true that neither plants nor institutions can altogether

shed the husk of their immaturity. They are not entirely adapted to the

conditions under which they reach their full development. The Papacy in

the zenith of its power and renown is partly new and partly old. When we

consider the papal theory, as it floated before the mind of a Gregory

VII or an Innocent III, it produces in us the same impression of

symmetry, logical consistency and completeness, which we experience on

entering for the first time one of the great medieval churches. But when

once we have grasped the design of the architect, we shall usually find

that he has conformed in some respects to unmeaning traditions inherited

from an earlier period, and further that his work incorporates the

remnants of an older, simpler structure. Here are pillars of massive

girth altogether disproportionate to the delicate arches which they

carry; there an old tower has been buttressed to make it capable of

supporting a new spire. For all the builder's cunning, we can yet

distinguish between the new and the renovated. So it is with the papal

apologia in the great days of papal policy. A sentence from the laws of

ancient Rome dovetails with an axiom stolen from the philosophers of the

Porch or the Academy. Fables of Gallic or Egyptian origin are invoked to

corroborate the canons of Nicene and Chalcedonian synods. A text from a

Hebrew prophet is interpreted by the fancy of an African expositor. The

fabric composed of these incongruous elements has in truth a unity of

purpose; but the design is so disguised and so perverted by the

recalcitrance of the materials, that we are irresistibly impelled to ask

how and why they came to be employed.



More than any other human institution the Papacy has suffered from a

supposed necessity of justifying every forward step by precedent and

reference to authority. Twice in the course of sixteen centuries the

Holy See has ventured on a startling change of front, and has been

sorely embarrassed to rebut the charge of inconsistency. One such change

was silently effected at the close of the seventeenth century, when the

Popes ceased to concern themselves more than was unavoidable with

international affairs. This was a great change; yet not so great as that

made in the latter part of the eleventh century, by Gregory VII. For he

revolutionised the whole theory of papal prerogative. Neither a profound

lawyer nor a profound theologian, he regarded the past history of his

office with the idealism of a poet, and looked into its future with the

sanguine radicalism of a Machiavelli or a Hobbes. Gregory VII conceived

of Christendom as an undivided state; of a state as a polity dominated

by a sovereign; of a sovereign as a ruler who must be either absolute or

useless. And who, he asked, but the heir of the Prince of the Apostles

could presume to claim a power so tremendous? For us the audacity of his

pretensions is excused by the lofty aims which they were meant to serve.

To conciliate contemporary opinion it was necessary that the new claims

should be represented as the revival of old rights, as the logical

corollaries of undisputed truths. And this course involved as its

consequence an industrious, if partially unconscious, perversion of past

history. For the Popes who had gone before him claimed powers which,

though extensive, were capable of definition; which, though startling,

could in the main be defended by appeal to well-established usage. The

new policy led to this paradoxical situation, that precedents were

diligently invoked to prove the Pope superior to all precedents.



With Gregory VII the primacy of Western Christendom assumed a new

character. But the primacy, in one form or another, had for centuries

belonged to the Roman See. So much his remote predecessors had achieved,

and their success is all the more remarkable when we remember how few of

them had been distinguished statesmen. It is no matter for surprise

that, in the course of nine troubled centuries, some Bishops of Borne

had proved incompetent and others had betrayed the interests committed

to their charge. It is, however, surprising that the Roman See was able

to assume and hold the leading position among Western bishops without

rendering much service to the extension or the organisation of the

Church.



Of all the early Popes, save Leo I and Gregory I, it is true that we may

be tolerably at home in the history of their times without knowing much

about them. No Pope is ranked among the leading Western Fathers. The

only considerable theologian who occupied the Holy See, before the year

1000, is Gregory I; and the highest praise which we can give his

writings is that they imparted new life to some ideas of St. Augustine.

It is as statesmen, not as thinkers, that the early Popes appeal to our

attention. Yet their practical achievements scarcely account for the

reverence which they inspired. The one great mission which Rome set on

foot was that of Augustine to England. The other evangelists of the Dark

Ages found their inspiration elsewhere, in the monasteries of Ireland or

of Gaul and Germany. If we consider the progress of theological science,

and of ecclesiastical organisation, we find that the great controversies

were resolved, and the great legislative assemblies convened, in the

Eastern Empire. It was but rarely that Rome asserted her right to speak

in the name even of the Western Church; the record of the early Popes

who attained to such a momentary pre-eminence was not such as the West

could recollect with satisfaction. In fact, it was due to other causes

than the merits of individual Popes that Rome became and remained the

religious metropolis of Europe.



How, then, are we to account for her triumphant progress? Hobbes

suggested one explanation when he called the Papacy "the ghost of the

Roman Empire." And it is true that the later Emperors found it

convenient to confer special privileges on the bishops of their ancient

capital. But they adopted this policy too late, when reverence for the

Empire was already declining in the West. By imperial grants the Papacy

gained no substantial powers, while individual Popes lost credit and

independence by their special connection with the New Rome on the

Bosporus. They were compelled to play an ignominious part in the

squabbles of the Eastern Churches, they were loaded with onerous secular

duties; they became the emblems and the agents of an alien tyranny,

mistrusted alike by the barbarian invaders and the nominal subjects of

the Empire.



Other critics have explained the prestige of the Papacy as the fruit of

successful impostures. For this hypothesis there is little to be said.

One or two Popes, not the greatest, have condescended to use forged

title-deeds. But the effect of these frauds has been much exaggerated.

The most famous of them are the _Donation of Constantine_ and the

_False Decretals_. The former, though probably of Roman origin, was

little used at Rome, and only served to justify the modest beginnings of

the temporal power. The latter are of more importance, and are sometimes

regarded as opening an era of new pretensions. In fact they are little

more than reiterations and amplifications of very ancient claims. Though

frequently quoted by the canon lawyers, they are not indispensable links

in the claim of historical proofs and precedents. They are chiefly

significant as attesting the general desire of churchmen to find some

warrant for a vigorous exercise of the papal prerogative. A primate with

real powers was desired, not only by the clergy of the national churches

as a bulwark against the brutal oppression of the State, but also by all

religious thinkers as a symbol of corporate unity and a guarantee of

doctrinal uniformity.



No theory can be regarded as supplying a satisfactory explanation of

papal authority, unless it explains this general belief in the necessity

for a visible Head of the Western Church. In part the necessity was

political. Exposed to the common danger of secular tyranny, the national

churches looked for safety in federation; and they notified their union

in the only way that uneducated laymen could understand, by announcing

their subjection to a single spiritual sovereign. But there remained the

problem of justifying this act of independence amounting to rebellion.

The justification was found in two arguments, the one historical, the

other doctrinal; the one based upon the Roman legend of St. Peter, the

other on the acknowledged importance of holding fast to right tradition.

Each of these arguments calls for some consideration.



St. Peter, says the legend, was invested with the primacy among the

Apostles; such is the plain meaning of the Saviour's declaration, _Tu

es Petrus_. St. Peter founded the Roman Church and instituted the

Roman bishopric. To Linus, the first bishop, Peter bequeathed his Divine

commission and his knowledge of the Christian verities. From Linus these

gifts descended without diminution to one after another in the unbroken

chain of his successors. Hence Rome is entitled to the same pre-eminence

among the churches which Peter held among his brethren. To examine the

historical basis of the legend would be a lengthy and unprofitable task.

Of St. Peter's connection with the Eternal City we know nothing certain,

except that he preached and suffered there. If bishops existed in his

time, there is some reason for thinking that the office was collegiate,

and that the committee of bishops was less important then in the

spiritual life of the community than at a later time. Not until the

second century did the episcopate become monarchical and the holder of

the office the supreme authority within the Church by which he was

elected. The change was complete by the time of Irenaeus, who wrote

_circa_ 180 A.D.; to him we owe our earliest catalogue of Roman

bishops, beginning with Linus and ending with Eleutherus, the twelfth

from Peter and the contemporary of Irenaeus. The later names in the list

are doubtless those of authentic bishops; the earlier may be in some

sense historical, the names of famous presbyters or of men who made

their mark on the old episcopal committee. A point of secondary interest

is that Irenaeus speaks of bishops, not of Popes; this title came into

use a hundred years after his time. More important is the fact that, in

the third century, when our documents become more copious, Rome is

generally recognised as first in dignity among the churches (_ecclesia

principalis_), but has no appellate jurisdiction and no legislative

powers. It is only admitted that, when disputes arise on points of

tradition, her testimony is entitled to special honour, as that of a

church which preserves the memory of Peter's teaching. As doctrinal

controversies become more acute and more fundamental, the importance of

tradition is emphasised, the authority of those who voice it is

magnified. Ultimately all the pretensions of the Holy See are founded on

the claim that she possesses the only undefiled tradition. But it was

not until long after the third century that the consequences of the

claim were realised even by the claimants.



If we were invited, at the present day, to suggest a means of conserving

intact a body of doctrinal definitions and disciplinary law, we should

not naturally select some mode of oral transmission as the safest

available. Yet this expedient has found much favour in the past. Even

among the Jews, with their extreme respect for sacred books, the written

word was made of none account by the traditions of expositors. The

votaries of the Greek mystic cults deliberately avoided writing down

their more important formulae. Several considerations were in favour of

this curious policy. There were no scientific canons for the

interpretation of written texts; allegorising commentators read their

own wild fancies into the plainest sentences. The only way of meeting

them was to fall back on the traditional interpretation. We use the

texts to test the traditions; but criticism in its early stages pursues

the opposite course, and as a natural consequence rates tradition above

Scripture. Other reasons which discouraged the use of writing were,

first, the fear that no literary skill might be equal to the difficulty

of accurate statement; secondly, the natural reluctance of the religious

mind to let the deepest truths be exposed to the vulgar scoffs and

criticism of the uninitiated; thirdly, some remnant of the primitive

superstition that the formulae of a ritual are magic spells, which would

lose their potency if published to the world; and, finally, the natural

instinct of a sacerdotal class to reserve the knowledge of deepest

mysteries to a select inner circle. For all these reasons a jealously

guarded tradition, commonly designated as the _arcana_ or _secreta_, was

to be found in all the early Christian Churches. To give a few examples:

the Apostles' Creed, the distinctive symbol of the Roman Church, was

preserved by oral tradition only down to the fourth century, and was not

imparted to any catechumen until the time of his baptism. The minute

rules of penitential discipline were first committed to writing by

Theodore of Tarsus, Archbishop of Canterbury, towards the close of the

seventh century; and this innovation was sharply criticised by some

ecclesiastical synods. Most remarkable of all is the reluctance of the

churches to write down the essential, operative parts of the Mass.

Written copies are first mentioned in the fourth century, and it was not

until a much later period that the diversities of local tradition were

corrected by the issue of a standard text. It might be supposed that the

non-existence of official copies was due to the want of any device, such

as printing, by which they could be cheaply multiplied. But there is a

curious fact which suggests that publication was considered undesirable.

One section of the Canon of the Mass was called the secret part

(_secretum_), and was recited by the celebrant in an undertone, that it

might not become known to the congregation. Similarly, all literary

exposition of such central doctrines as the Atonement, or the Trinity,

was deprecated by early theologians, who pass by them with the remark

that they are known to the initiate.



This cult of secrecy engendered difficulties which are written large

upon the page of history. Disputes arose about the wording of the

creeds, about the canon of the Scriptures, about the number and nature

of the mortal sins, and the penances which they should entail.

Periodically a curious investigator raised a storm by claiming that he

had discovered a flaw in the traditional formulae, or a mistake in the

sense which was currently attached to them. The one way of meeting such

doubts was to compare the traditions of the older churches. This could

be done by a provincial synod or a general council. But of these

tribunals the former was unsatisfactory, as its decisions were of merely

local validity and might be overruled by the voice of the universal

Church. The general council was hard to convene, particularly after a

rift had opened between the Eastern and the Western Churches. It was

easier to select as the final arbiter a bishop whose knowledge of

tradition was derived from an apostolic predecessor. In the East there

were three such sees (Antioch, Jerusalem, Alexandria), but in the West

Rome alone satisfied the necessary conditions. And the Bishops of Rome

could claim, with some show of reason, that their tradition was derived

from a worthier source, and had been better guarded against contagion,

than that of any other Apostolic Church. Was it not a well-established

fact that Rome had preserved an unwavering front in the face of the

heretical Arius, when even Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria had

wavered?



Recourse to Rome as the oracle of the faith was so obvious an expedient,

given the prevailing attitude towards tradition, that we can only be

surprised to find how slow and gradual was the triumph of the Roman

claims. The victory of logic was retarded both by the pride and by the

common sense of the other Western Churches. On the one hand, the See of

Carthage clung to the old ideal of Christendom as a confederation of

self-governing churches, which might consult one another as they pleased

but recognised no superior except a general council. Carthage carried

with her the whole Church of Africa, and furnished an example which less

illustrious communities were proud to imitate. The conquest of Africa by

the Vandal heretics was necessary before the African Christians would

consent to look to Rome as their spiritual metropolis. On the other

hand, the rulings of the Roman bishops were justly suspected of being

tempered by regard for expediency. Sometimes they relaxed penitential

discipline, for fear of driving the weaker brethren to apostasy.

Sometimes, under pressure from Constantinople, they proposed an

ambiguous compromise with heresy. Such considerations were but gradually

overborne by the pressure of circumstances. The spread of Arianism and

the irruption of the Teutons (themselves often Arians) at length

compelled the churches to take the obvious means of preserving their

imperilled uniformity and union.



It is in the acts of the Council of Sardica (343 A.D.) that we find the

first explicit recognition of the Pope as an arbiter and (we may almost

say) a judge of appeal. This council was merely a gathering of Western

bishops, and the canons which it passed were never accepted by the

Church of Africa. So doubtful was their validity that the Popes of the

next generation disingenuously asserted that they had been passed at the

earlier and more famous Council of Nicaea (325). Yet even at Sardica the

Pope was only endowed with one definite prerogative. Henceforward any

bishop condemned by a provincial synod might appeal to him; he could

then order a second trial to be held, and could send his legates to sit

among the judges; but he could not hear the case in his own court. More

striking than this decree are the words of the letter which the Council

addressed to Pope Julius: "It will be very right and fitting for the

priests of the Lord, from every province, to refer to their Head, that

is to the See of Peter." This recommendation was readily obeyed by the

Churches of Gaul and Spain. Questions from their bishops poured in upon

the Popes, who began to give their decisions in the form of open

letters, and to claim for these letters the binding force of law. Pope

Liberius (352-366 A.D.) appears to have commenced the practice, although

the earliest of the extant "Decretals" is from the pen of Pope Siricius

(385). Sixty years after Siricius' time, when the Western Empire was in

its death-agony, this claim to legislative power was formally confirmed

by the Emperor Valentinian III (445). But for some time after the

Council of Sardica the new prerogative was used with the greatest

caution. The Popes of that period use every precaution to make their

oracular answers inoffensive. They assure their correspondents that Rome

enjoins no novelties; that she does not presume to decide any point on

which tradition is silent; that she is merely executing a mandate which

general councils have laid upon her. Those who evince respect for her

claims are overwhelmed with compliments. A decretal of Innocent I

(402-417) begins as follows:--



"Very dear brother, the Church's rules of life and conduct are well

known to a priest of your merit and dignity. But since you have urgently

inquired of us concerning the rule which the Roman Church prescribes, we

bow to your desire and herewith send you our rules of discipline,

arranged in order."



On the other hand, no opportunity is lost of calling attention to the

Roman primacy. Pope Siricius (384-398) writes in one of his letters: "We

bear the burdens of all who are oppressed; it is the Apostle Peter who

speaks in our person." Through the more confidential and domestic

utterances of these Popes there runs a vein of haughty self-assertion.

In the homilies of Leo I (440-461) the text _Tu es Petrus_ rings

like a trumpet note; here we have the Roman ruler communing with his

Roman people, the pride of empire taking a new shape amidst the ruins of

that secular empire which the pagan Romans of the past had built up.



In the general chaos produced by the barbarian migrations the

consequence of the Papacy, as compared with that of other Western sees,

was considerably enhanced by various causes: by the ruin of Carthage,

the most unsparing of her critics; by the progressive deterioration of

the other churches, which was most marked in those provinces where the

barbarians were most readily converted; by the rising tide of ignorance,

which overwhelmed all rival conceptions of Christendom and blotted out

the past history of the Church. So great was this ignorance that

Innocent I could claim, without much fear of contradiction, that "no man

has founded any church in Italy, Sicily, Gaul, Spain, or Africa,

excepting those whom Peter and his successors have ordained as priests."

In the Italian peninsula there were three churches--Ravenna, Milan,

Aquileia--which obstinately refused to consider themselves mere

offshoots from the See of Peter. But the legend struck root and throve,

as successive Popes associated themselves with missions to the

unconverted tribes and with reforms in the barbarian churches.



Among the earlier events which contributed to make the Roman belief the

standard for all Western Christendom we need only mention the conquests

of the orthodox Frankish monarchy; the official conversions from

Arianism of the Burgundians (516) and the Visigoths in Spain (586); the

extirpation of the Vandals and Ostrogoths by Justinian's generals; the

missions of Augustine to England, of Wilfrid, Willibrord, and Boniface

to the Germans; the submission of the Frankish Church under the

influence of Boniface and Pepin the Short (748). Naturally the moral

influence of Rome in the northern lands was augmented by the revival of

the Western Empire, which meant the co-operation of Pope and Emperor in

the extension of the Christian Republic. Cyril and Methodius, the

Apostles of the Slavs, found it necessary to renounce the allegiance of

the Greek Church, and to place their converts under the protection of

Rome (866). It was from Rome that St. Adalbert went forth on his

ill-starred but glorious mission to the Prussians (997); and it was a

Pope, Sylvester II, who earned the glory of uniting the Hungarian people

to Western Christendom (1000). Finally, Canute the Great, of Denmark and

of England, came in the manner of a pilgrim (1027) to lay the homage of

his Scandinavian subjects on the altar of St. Peter. The Popes reaped

where they had not sown; but the harvest was rich and splendid.



No less important was the political character which the papal office

assumed with the revival of the Empire. Already under Gregory the Great

we can trace the beginnings of a temporal power. Naturally and

necessarily the Pope, already like other bishops a functionary charged

with important secular duties, took upon himself the protection and

government of Rome and the surrounding duchy, when the rulers of

Byzantium shook off these unprofitable responsibilities. Naturally and

excusably he claimed, over his vast Italian estates, the powers of

jurisdiction which every landowner was assuming as a measure of

self-defence against oppression or unbridled anarchy. In the time of

Pepin the Short a further step was taken. The Frank, unwilling to

involve himself in Italy yet anxious to secure the Holy See against the

Lombards, recognized Pope Stephen II as the lawful heir of the derelict

imperial possessions. And Charles the Great, both as King and as

Emperor, confirmed the donation of his father. To make the Pope an

independent sovereign was indeed a policy which he refused to entertain.

His ideal was that of the Eastern Emperors: himself as the head of State

and Church, the Pope as the Patriarch of all the churches in the Empire,

elected with the Emperor's approval, ruling the clergy with the

Emperor's counsel, enjoying over the lands of his see the largest

privileges bestowed on any bishop, but still in all secular affairs a

subject of the Empire. But on the other hand arose at Rome a different

conception of the Pope's prerogative. Long ago Pope Gelasius had

formulated the principle, more useful to his remote successors than

himself, of the Two Powers, Church and State, both derived from God and

both entitled to absolute power in their respective spheres. On this

principle the State should not interfere with episcopal elections, or

with matters of faith and discipline; it should not exercise

jurisdiction over the priesthood who are servants of the Church, or over

Church estates since they are held in trust for God and the poor. This

view was proclaimed to the world by Leo III, who caused to be set up in

the Lateran a mosaic representing in an allegory his relations to the

Empire. St. Peter sits enthroned above; Charles and Leo kneel to right

and left, in the act of receiving from the Apostle the pallium and the

gonfalon, the symbols of their respective offices.



No powerful Emperor ever accepted the Gelasian principle entire. To

refute it was, however, difficult, so well did it harmonise with the

current conception of the State. Under the later Carolingians it became

the programme both of reformers and of mere ecclesiastical politicians.

The new monasteries, founded or reorganised under the influence of

Cluny, placed themselves beneath the special protection of the Pope,

thus escaping from secular burdens. The national hierarchies hailed the

forgeries of the Pseudo-Isidore as the charter of ecclesiastical

liberty. Pope Nicholas I took his stand at the head of the new movement,

and gave it a remarkable development when he asserted his jurisdiction

over the adulterous Lothaire II (863). Nicholas died before he couldgive

further illustrations of his claim to be supreme, even over kings,

in matters of morality and faith. From his time to that of Hildebrand

there was no Pope vigorous enough to make a similar example. Dragged

down by their temporal possessions to the level of municipal seigneurs

and party instruments, the Popes from 867 to 962 were, at the best, no

more than vigorous Italian princes. To that level they returned after

the period of the Saxon Ottos (962-1002). In those forty years there

were glimpses of a better future; the German Pope, Gregory V, allied

himself to Cluny (996-999); as Sylvester II (999-1003) the versatile

Gerbert of Aurillac--at once mathematician, rhetorician, philosopher,

and statesman--entered into the romantic dreams of his friend and pupil,

Otto III, and formed others on his own behalf which centred round the

Papacy rather than the Empire. Sylvester saw in imagination the Holy See

at the head of a federation of Christian monarchies. But fate was no

kinder to him than to Otto; he outlived his boy patron only by a year.









VI



THE HILDEBRANDINE CHURCH





Modern life has travelled so far beyond medieval Christianity that it is

only with an effort we retrace our steps to the intellectual position of

a St. Bernard, a St. Francis, or the _Imitatio Christi_. Apart from

the difficulties of an unfamiliar terminology, we have become estranged

from ideas which then were commonplaces; beliefs once held to be

self-evident and cardinal now hover on the outer verge of speculative

thought, as bare possibilities, as unproved and unprovable guesses at

truth. Our own creeds, it may be, rest upon no sounder bottom of logical

demonstration. But they have been framed to answer doubts, and to

account for facts, which medieval theories ignored; and in framing them

we have been constrained partly to revise, partly to destroy, the

medieval conceptions of God and the Universe, of man and the moral law.



This is not the place for a critique of medieval religion. But, unless

we bear in mind some essential features of the Catholic system of

thought, we miss the key to that ecclesiastical statesmanship which

dominates the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The programme of the

great Popes, from Gregory VII to Boniface VIII, must appear a tissue of

absurdities, of preposterous ambitions and indefensible actions, unless

it is studied in relation to a theology as far remote from primitive

Christianity as from the cults and philosophies of classical antiquity.



The first article in this theology is the existence of a personal God

who, though all-pervading and all-powerful, does not reveal Himself

immediately to the human beings whom He has created to be His

worshippers, and does not so order the world that events shall always

express His will and purpose. He has endowed man with a sinful nature,

and has permitted His universe to be invaded by evil intelligences of

superhuman power and malignancy, who tempt man to destruction and are

bent upon subverting the Divine order of which they form a part. He is

supremely benevolent, and yet He only manifests the full measure of this

quality when His help is invoked by prayer; His goodwill often finds

expression in miracles--that is, in the suspending or reversing of the

general laws which He has Himself laid down for the regulation of the

universe and human destinies. He is inscrutable and incomprehensible;

yet to be deceived as to the nature of His being is the greatest of all

sins against His majesty. The goal of the religious life is personal

communion with Him, the intuitive apprehension and spontaneous

acceptance of His will, the Beatific Vision of His excellencies. But

this state of blessedness cannot be reached by mere self-discipline; the

prayers, the meditations, the good works of the isolated and

uninstructed individual, can only serve to condone a state of

irremediable ignorance. The avenue to knowledge of Him lies through

faith; and faith means the unquestioning acceptance of the twofold

revelation of Himself which He has given in the Scriptures and in the

tradition of the Church. The two revelations are in effect reduced to

one by the statement that only the Church is competent to give an

authoritative exposition of the sacred writings. Upon the Church hangs

the welfare of the individual and the world. Without participation in

her sacraments the individual would be eternally cut off from God;

without her prayers the tide of evil forces would no longer be held in

check by recurring acts of miraculous intervention, but would rise

irresistibly and submerge the human race.



A society charged with these tremendous duties, the only organ of the

Divine will and affording the only assurance of salvation, must

obviously be superior to all mundane powers. It would be monstrous if

her teaching were modified, if her powers of self-government were

restricted, to suit the ambitions or the so-called common sense of a lay

ruler. The Church stands to the State in the relation of the head to the

members, of the soul to the body, of the sun to the moon. The State

exists to provide the material foundations of the Christian society, to

protect the Church, to extend her sphere and to constrain those who

rebel against her law. In a sense the State is ordained by God, but only

in the sense of being a necessary condition for the existence of a

Christian Commonwealth. Logically the State should be the servant of the

Church, acting with delegated powers under her direction.



But theories, however logical, must come to terms with facts, or vanish

into the limbo of chimeras. The power of the Hildebrandine Church was

subject to serious limitations. On certain questions of importance the

national hierarchies were inclined to side with the State against the

Pope; and thus, for example, the claims of the Curia to tax the clergy,

and to override the rights of ecclesiastical patrons, were restricted at

one time or another by concordats, or by secular legislation such as the

English statutes of Provisors and Praemunire. Where the whole of the

clerical order presented a solid front, it was sometimes possible to

make good a claim against which there was much to be said on grounds of

common sense; as, for instance, benefit of clergy,--the exclusive

jurisdiction of the Church over criminous ecclesiastics,--which was

enforced even against a sovereign so powerful and so astute as Henry II

of England. But, in the last resort, the pretensions of the Church

depended for success upon a public opinion which was hard to move. Not

because the average layman was critical or anti-clerical, but because he

was illogical and unimaginative, he remained cold to any programme of

reform which could only be justified by long trains of deductive

reasoning; his natural impulse was against violent innovations, and he

felt rather than argued that the State, as the ultimate guarantee of

social order, must be maintained even at some cost of theological

consistency. Until he could be convinced that high moral issues and his

own salvation were at stake, it was useless or dangerous to

excommunicate his king and to lay his country under interdict. For want

of lay support the Church failed to make good such important claims as

those of immunity from national taxation and of jurisdiction in cases of

commercial contract. More striking still, she was prevented from

establishing the Inquisition in states where that tribunal would have

found no lack of work.



Still, in spite of clerical divisions and lay conservatism, "the freedom

of the Church" was an ideal which commanded universal homage; and it was

necessary for the most obstinate opponent of ecclesiastical privilege to

make it clear that his policy involved no real attack upon this freedom.

Otherwise, defeat was certain. Thrice in two hundred years the cry for

freedom was raised against the Holy Roman Empire; and three prolonged

conflicts ended in the discomfiture of the most resolute and resourceful

statesmen who ever held that office-Henry IV (1056-1105), Henry V

(1106-1125), Frederic Barbarossa (1152-1190), and Frederic II

(1212-1250). In the first of these great conflicts the question at issue

was the reformation of the national clergy and their emancipation from

secular authority. Henry IV paid for his assertion of prerogative and

custom, both by the ignominious though illusory surrender at Canossa

(1077), and by the unparalleled humiliations of his latter days, when he

was compelled, as the prisoner of his own son, not only to abdicate but

also to sign a confession of infamous offences against religion and

morality. Henry V, reviving the plans of the father whom he had betrayed

and entrapped, was reduced through very weariness to conclude the

Concordat of worms (1122)--a renunciation which only ended in something

less than absolute defeat for the Empire, because the imperial

concessions were interpreted with more regard to the letter than the

spirit. In the second struggle the immediate issue was the freedom of

papal elections, the ultimate question whether Pope or Emperor should

shape the Church's policy; and Frederic Barbarossa was compelled, after

a schism of seventeen years' duration to surrender claims which dated

from the time of Charles the Great, and to make peace with Alexander

III, whom he had sworn that he would never recognise (Treaty of Anagni,

1176). Henry VI, the son of Barbarossa, when he joined the kingdom of

Sicily to the Empire through his marriage with Constance, the heiress of

the Norman throne, sowed the seed of a new conflict, and bequeathed to

Frederic II the perilous ideal of an Italy united under a Hohenstauffen

despotism. Ecclesiastical freedom now became a euphemism for the

preservation of the temporal power, and for the project of a federal

Italy, owning allegiance to a papal suzerain. Frederic II, who came

nearer to success in a more far-reaching policy than any of his

predecessors, was worn out by the steady alternation of successes with

reverses, and left his sons and grandson to reap the bitter harvest of a

failure which he had barely realised.



The moral issue dwindles to smaller proportions in each successive stage

of this titanic duel between the titular representatives of State and

Church; and from first to last the Papacy depended largely upon allies

who were pursuing their own objects in the Church's name. The German

princes, the Normans of Lower Italy and Sicily, the Lombard communes,

all contributed in varying degrees to the defeat of the Henries and the

Frederics. The German princes brought Henry IV to his knees at two

critical moments in the reign; the majority of them held obstinately

aloof from the Italian wars of Barbarossa; and Frederic II, who

endeavoured to buy their neutrality by extravagant concessions, found

himself confronted by German rebels and pretenders towards the close of

his career (1246-1250), when the Italian situation appeared to be

changing in his favour. The Normans intervened more than once in the

Wars of Investitures to shelter a fugitive Pope or rescue Rome from

German armies; the Lombards, as we shall relate elsewhere, were the

chief barrier between Rome and Frederic Barbarossa, between Frederic II

and Germany. Charles of Anjou was the latest and most efficient champion

of the papal cause; and he lives in history as the forerunner of the

conscienceless and shameless statesmanship of the Renaissance epoch. And

yet, when we have allowed for the utility of these alliances, the

question remains why radical communes, rebellious feudatories, and

adventurers in search of kingdoms, found it worth their while to enlist

in the service of the Church, and to endure the restrictions which such

a service inevitably entailed. The true strength of the Church lay in

her moral influence. It was a handful, even among the clergy, who

devoted themselves heart and soul to the ideal of society which she set

up. Still her ideal was in possession of the field; it might be

subjected to a negative and sceptical criticism by an isolated

philosopher, by a heretical sect, or by an orthodox layman smarting

under priestly arrogance; but when the forces of the Church were

mobilised, the indifferent majority stood aside and shrugged their

shoulders. The way of Rome might not be the way of Christ; but if the

Apostolic misinterpreted the lessons of Scripture and tradition, from

whom could a better rule of life be learned? An erring Church was better

than no Church at all. In the thirteenth century, when papal extortions

were a subject of complaint in every European state, Frederic II put

himself forward as the champion of the common interest, and appealed

from the Pope to the bar of public opinion. It was his turn today, he

said with perfect truth; the turn of kings and princes would come when

the Emperor was overthrown. His eloquence made some impression; but his

fellow-sovereigns could not or would not prevent the Pope from taxing

their clergy and recruiting their subjects for the Holy War against the

secular chief of Christendom, the head and front of whose offending was

that he opposed the interests of the State to the so-called rights of

the Church.



It is no mere accident that the heyday of sacerdotal pretensions

coincided with the golden age of the religious orders; that the

Hildebrandine policy took shape when the Cluniac movement was

overflowing the borders of France into all the adjacent countries; that

Alexander III was a younger contemporary of St. Bernard, and that the

death-grapple between Empire and Papacy followed hard upon the

foundation of the mendicant fraternities by St. Francis and St. Dominic.

The monks and the friars were the militia of the Church. Not that the

medieval orders devoted themselves to a political propaganda with the

zeal and system of the Jesuits in the sixteenth century. The

serviceswhich the Cluniacs and the Cistercians, the Dominicans and the

Franciscans, rendered to the militant Papacy were more impalpable and

indirect. From time to time, it is true, they were entrusted with

important missions--to raise money, to preach a crusade, to influence

monarchs, to convert or to persecute the heretic; St. Bernard, the

founder of Clairvaux and the incarnation of the monastic spirit, was for

twenty years (1133-1153) the oracle to whom Pope after Pope resorted for

direction. But even in St. Bernard's time, and even when the reigning

Pope was his nominee or pupil, there was a certain divergence between

the theories for which he stood and the actual policy of the Curia. It

was, for example, against his better judgment that he organised the

Second Crusade in deference to the express commands of Pope Eugenius

III; and on the other hand, the Papacy preserved towards the pioneers of

scholasticism an attitude which he thought unduly lenient. Rome was more

broad-minded than Clairvaux, more alive to realities, more versed in

statecraft and diplomacy; while Clairvaux fostered a nobler conception

of the spiritual life, and was more consistent in withholding the Church

from secular entanglements. The qualities which made the monk

invaluable as a leader of public opinion also made him an incalculable

and intractable factor in political combinations. He was most useful as

the missionary and the embodiment of an ecclesiastical idea which,

unconsciously perhaps but none the less emphatically, attacked the

foundations of the secular State. The founders of the great orders,

whether they found their inspiration (with St. Bernard) in the Rule of

Benedict, or rather strove (with St. Francis) to follow literally the

commission imposed by Christ upon his twelve Apostles, returned upon a

past in which the State and Caesar were nothing to the Christian but

"the powers that be." The monastic or mendicant order, designed as an

exemplar of the Christian society, was a voluntary association governed

by the common conscience, as expressed in the will of representative

chapters and an elected superior. The absolute obedience of the monk or

friar was self-imposed, the consequence of a vow only accepted from one

who had felt the inner call and had tested it in a severe probation. In

virtue of his self-surrender he became dead to the world, a citizen of

the kingdom of heaven upon earth. No secular duties could be lawfully

demanded of him; he had migrated from the jurisdiction of the State to

that of God. The religious orders claimed the right to be free from all

subjection save that of the Church, as represented by the Pope. Though

far from holding the State a superfluous invention--they regarded it as

a Divine instrument to curb the lawless passions of the laity--they

demanded that all other ministers of God, from the archbishop to the

humblest clerk in orders, should enjoy the same exemption as themselves

on condition of accepting the same threefold obligation--Poverty,

Obedience, Chastity. It was consequently in the religious orders that

the chief movements for reforming the medieval clergy found their

warmest partisans; and the same school supplied the theoretical basis

for each new claim of privilege. The Orders were the salt of the Church,

so long as they preserved the spirit of their founders. But they were

also responsible for the insanely logical pretensions which characterise

the Church's policy in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries; and it

was with reason that Wycliffe, the greatest medieval critic of the

sacerdotal theory, attacked the Mendicant Orders as typifying all that

was worst in the hierarchy of his age.



Naturally enough the monastic spirit has been often treated as an

absolute antithesis to the lay statesmanship which it so bitterly

opposed. But in fact they sprang from the same root of a discontent,

which was wholly reasonable, with the anarchical conditions of the early

Middle Ages. The religious reformer, stunned and bewildered by the

wrong-doing of men and the manifest inequity of fortune, argued that a

world so irredeemably bad must be regarded as an ordeal for the faith of

the believer. Man was afflicted in this life that he might realise the

supreme value of the life to come. He was surrounded by evil that he

might learn to hate it. He was placed in society that he might school

himself to control the immoral and non-moral instincts which society

calls into play. The political reformers, at least in their more

disinterested moods, were animated by the same belief in an all-wise

Providence, but drew different deductions from it. The God who created

man as a social being could not have intended that society should remain

perpetually unjust. He must have intended that it should approximate,

however imperfectly, to the idea of justice which He has revealed. The

State is a divine institution, and therefore man must do his best to

reform the State. The lay ruler, as the representative of justice, is

God's steward and even in a sense His priest. Frederic II, whom his

contemporaries denounced as an apostate and blasphemer, only expressed

in a particularly daring form the tradition of medieval royalty when he

styled himself, or allowed his flatterers to style him, the Corner-Stone

of the Church, the Vicar of God, the New Messiah.



Similarly, the heretics and rationalists, whose criticism was even more

dangerous to the Church than the open violence of the State, had more in

common with their opponents than we should infer from the duration and

the character of the disputes which they provoked. In the background of

medieval history, and developing _pari passu_ with the feud of

Papacy and Empire, there was a war, of arguments and persecution,

against free thought, in which the religious Orders figured as the

protagonists of orthodoxy. Berengar of Tours, who challenged the

doctrine of transubstantiation and so endangered the basis of the

sacerdotal theory, lived in the age when a regenerated Papacy was arming

for the war on secularism; it was Hildebrand himself who pronounced the

final sentence on the first of the heresiarchs. The age of Henry V and

of the Concordat of Worms saw the rise of a medieval Puritanism in

Languedoc and Flanders. Between the Concordat of Worms and the schism of

Frederic Barbarossa lies the age of Abelard,--the metaphysical

free-lance who made philosophy the talk of the street-corner and the

marketplace,--and of Arnold of Brescia, who demanded that the Church

should be reduced to apostolic poverty. To the youthful days of Frederic

II belong the Albigensian Crusade, the futile campaign of authority

against Averroes and Aristotle, the heresy-hunts of volunteer

inquisitors in Italy and Germany. While the same Emperor was trying

conclusions with Innocent IV, the Papal Inquisition became a permanent

branch of the ecclesiastical executive; and the Mendicant Orders, who

supplied the inquisitors, simultaneously took upon themselves the harder

task of converting the universities from the cult of Aristotle to a

belief in the Christian scholasticism formulated by Albertus Magnus and

Aquinas. The weapons of this interminable and many-sided controversy

were as rude as the age which forged them: on the one side, coarse

invective and irreverent paradox; on the other, scandalous imputations,

spiritual censures, the sword, the prison, and the stake. For the

medieval attitude towards heterodoxy was unflinching and uncompromising.

To remain sceptical when the Church had defined was as the sin of

witchcraft or idolatry. The existence of the rebel was an insult to the

Most High, a menace to the salvation of the simple; he was a diseased

limb of the body politic, calling for sharp surgery. And yet these

nonconformists were anything but unbelievers. The free-thinkers of the

schools, apart from a few obscure eccentrics, only desired to find a

rational basis for the common creed or to eliminate from it certain

articles which, on moral grounds and grounds of history, they

stigmatised as mere interpolations. The offence of Berengar was that he

attacked a dogma which had been an open question within the last two

hundred years; of Abelard, that he offered his own theories on some

points in regard to which the orthodox tradition was mute or

inconsistent. As for the sectaries, their offence usually consisted in

exaggerating one or other of three doctrines which the Church

acknowledged in a more moderate shape. Either, like the Poor Men of

Lyons, they desired that the Church should return to primitive

simplicity; or, like the Albigeois, they harped upon the Pauline

antithesis between the spirit and the flesh, pushed to extremes the

monastic contempt for earthly ties, and exalted the Christian Devil to

the rank of an evil deity, supreme in the material universe. Or,

finally, with Joachim of Corazzo and the Fraticelli, they developed the

cardinal idea of the more orthodox mystics, the belief in the inner

light, and taught that the letter killeth but the spirit giveth life. In

short, all were guilty, not of repudiating Christianity, but of

interpreting the Christian doctrine in a sense forbidden by authority.

Beneath all differences there was unity; behind the controversy,

agreement. There are no feuds more bitter, no recriminations more

unjust, than those of men who look at the same faith from different

sides.



In justice to the official Church it must be remembered that, whether

she had to deal with kings or heretics, the peculiar nature of her power

forced her to work through instruments which she was powerless to keep

in hand, and in which she had placed her confidence with the temerity of

desperation. There can be no greater contrast than that between the

Hildebrandine programme and the measures by which it was incompletely

realised. To enforce the celibacy of the clergy the mobs of Milan and

the South-German cities were commissioned to rabble married priests. To

make an end of simony the German princes were encouraged in a policy of

provincial separatism, a premium was placed on perjured accusations, and

a son was suborned to betray his father. That the tide of the

Albigensian heresy might be stemmed, Innocent III launched against the

brilliant civilisation of Languedoc the brutal and avaricious feudalism

of the North. Sometimes the error was recognised after it had been

committed. But no experience could cure the official Church of the

delusion that every volunteer must be credited with the purest motives

until the contrary is proved. The same ignorance of human nature

characterised her methods of administrative routine. Even if, for the

sake of argument, we admit the truth of the principles which were

alleged to justify the Papal Inquisition, or the censorship of the

bishops' courts, or the appellate jurisdiction of the Curia, the fact

remains that these institutions were so organised and so conducted that

the most flagrant abuses were only to be expected. A system which, if

staffed with saints, would have been barely tolerable, became iniquitous

when it was committed to the charge of petty officials, ill-paid, ill-

supervised, and ill-selected. To a great extent the crimes and follies

of the medieval Church were those of a complex bureaucracy in a

half-civilised state. Such a system fails through being too ambitious;

the founders have neither the technical experience requisite for a

satisfactory arrangement of details, nor the subordinates who can repair

the defects of the machine by the efficiency and honesty with which they

tend it; and yet because the aim is grandiose, because the supporters of

the scheme proclaim their readiness and their capacity to regenerate the

State and human nature, they are hailed as the prophets of a new order;

they are allowed to plead the excellence of their motives in extenuation

of all and any means; and they end by creating new evils without

appreciably diminishing the old.



But if the Church as a scheme of government was a doubtful blessing to

those who gave her their allegiance, the Church as a home of spiritual

life was invested with a grandeur and a charm which were and are

apparent, even to spectators standing at the outer verge of her domain.

We may compare the religion of the Middle Ages to an alpine range, on

the lower slopes of which the explorer finds himself entangled in the

mire and undergrowth of pathless thickets, oppressed by a still and

stifling atmosphere, shut off from any view of the sky above or the

pleasant plains beneath. Ascending through this sheltered and ignoble

wilderness, he comes to free and windswept pastures, to the white

solitude of virgin snowfields, to brooding glens and soaring peaks robed

in the light or darkness of a mystery which he is as little able to

define as to resist. Far below him, illimitably vast and yet infinitely

little, extends the prospect of the lower levels which, whether

beautiful or sordid, are too remote to seem a part of the new world in

which he finds himself, and strike his senses only as a foil and a

background to the severer hues, the more majestic lines and contours of

the snow-capped mountain-ranges. On such heights of moral exaltation the

medieval mystics built their tabernacles and sang their

_Benedicite_, calling all nature to bear witness with them that God

in His heaven was very near, and all well with a universe which existed

only to fulfil His word. It was a noble optimism; and those who embraced

it are the truest poets of the Middle Ages, none the less poets because

they expressed their high imaginings in life instead of language.

Philosophers they neither were nor sought to be; the temperament which

feels the mystery of things most keenly is not that which probes into

the how and why; but the world of their dreams was at least superior to

ours in being founded upon an ever-present and overwhelming reverence

for the truth behind the veil. The vision of the mountain-peaks, however

clouded, was worth the toil of the ascent; and there was reason in the

docility with which the vulgar bowed themselves before the forms and

ceremonies and rules of outward conduct which the visible Church

prescribed; since they believed that so they might find the way, in this

life or a better, to that higher rule of service, exemplified in the

finest characters of their experience, which as Scripture said and the

saints testified was perfect life and freedom. It is no wonder that they

were disposed to go further still; to stake their earthly fortunes and

the future of society on the bidding of those among the elect who from

time to time descended among them, like Moses from the mountain, with

transfigured faces and the message of a new revelation. And if the

result was sometimes calamitous or pitiable, there were compensating

gains; a matter-of-fact prosperity is not altogether preferable to

enlistment in the forlorn hope of idealism. Had medieval society been

more consistently secular and sceptical, it might have been more

prosperous, more stable, the nursery of more balanced natures and the

theatre of more orderly careers. But there would have been the less to

learn from the ethical and political conceptions of the age. What

appeals to us in the medieval outlook upon life is, first, the idea of

mankind as a brotherhood transcending racial and political divisions,

united in a common quest for truth, filled with the spirit of mutual

charity and mutual helpfulness, and endowed with a higher will and

wisdom than that of the individuals who belong to it; secondly, a

profound belief in the superiority of right over might, of spirit over

matter, of the eternal interests of humanity over the ambitions and the

passions of the passing hour. Without Christianity these articles of

faith could scarcely have passed into the common heritage of men; and,

without the Church, it is in the last degree improbable that

Christianity would have survived that age of semi-barbarism in which the

foundations of the modern world were laid.









VII



THE MEDIEVAL STATE





Between the years 1100 and 1500 A.D. the state-system of Europe passed

through changes amounting in their sum-total to a revolution. But the

changes which endured, whether they affected political boundaries or

constitutions, came about by slow instalments. At no stage of the

development was there any general cataclysm such as had followed the

dissolution of the Frankish Empire, and was to follow the advent of

Napoleon. New ideas matured slowly in the medieval mind; by the twelfth

century the forces making for social stability had grown until they

balanced those of disruption; and it was only in the age of the

Renaissance that the equilibrium was again destroyed. In the interim the

vested interests of property and privilege, of religious and secular

authority, presented a firm front to the anarchists and radicals. The

Jacquerie in France and Wat Tyler's followers in England, the Albigeois

of Languedoc and the Hussites of Bohemia, were overwhelmed by armies of

conservatives spontaneously banded together in defence of the

established order;--while this spirit prevailed among the ruling

classes, there was little fear that a revolution of any kind would be

effected by a sudden stroke. As in domestic politics, so too in

international relations, these solidly established states were

habitually inert, strong in defence, but irresolute and sluggish in

attack. The age produced no conqueror to sweep through Europe like a

whirlwind, because the implements of conquest on the grand scale had

either been destroyed or had not yet come into existence. The peoples of

Europe had emerged from the nomadic stage of culture, and they were not

yet organised as so many armed camps. The feudal host was hard to

mobilise, harder still to keep in the field, and at the best an

unmanageable weapon; a standing army of mercenary soldiers would have

called for taxation heavier and more regular than any ruler dared to

demand, or any people could afford to pay. The wars of the Middle Ages

have therefore, with few exceptions, a stamp of futility and pettiness.

Ambitious enterprises were foredoomed to failure, and powers apparently

annihilated by an invading host recovered strength as soon as it had

rolled away. In short, on the European and on the national stage alike,

medieval politics meant the eternal recurrence of the same problems and

disputes, the eternal repetition of the same palliatives and the same

plan of campaign. It is true that political science made more progress

than the art of war. But substantial reforms of institutions were

effected only in a few exceptional communities--in Sicily under the

Normans and Frederic II, in England under Henry II and Edward I, in

France under Philip Augustus and his successors. Even in these cases the

progress usually consists in elaborating some primitive expedient, in

developing some accepted principal to the logical conclusion. The more

audacious innovators, a Montfort, an Artevelde, a Frederic II, were

tripped up and overthrown as soon as they stepped beyond the circle of

conventional ideas. It will therefore suffice for our present purpose to

state in the barest outline the leading events of international

politics, and the chief advances in the theory of government, which

signalised the Middle Ages.



Extensive diplomatic combinations, though continually planned, seldom

came to the birth and very rarely led to any notable result. The

existence of some common interests was recognised; no power viewed with

indifference any movement threatening the existence of the Papacy, which

represented religious unity, or of the crusading principalities which

formed the outer bulwark of Western Christendom; the principle of the

Balance of Power, though not yet crystallised into a dogma, was so far

understood that the inordinate growth of any single power alarmed the

rest, even though they stood in no imminent danger of absorption.

Therefore whenever the Empire gained the upper hand over the Church,

whenever a new horde of Asiatics appeared on the horizon, whenever

France seemed about to become a province of England, or Italy a province

of France, the alarm was sounded by the publicists, and there ensued a

general interchange of views between the monarchies; treaty was piled on

treaty, alliance parried with alliance, as industriously as at any time

in modern history. But the peoples seldom moved, and the agitation of

the ruling classes effervesced in words. It is altogether exceptional to

find two of the greater states uniting for the humiliation of a third,

as England and the Empire united against Philip Augustus of France. Few

medieval battles were so far-reaching in their consequences as Bouvines

(1214), to which England owes her Magna Carta, Germany the magnificent

and stormy autumn of the Hohenstauffen dynasty, France the consolidation

of her long-divided provinces under an absolutist monarchy.



At ordinary times there were in medieval Europe two groups of states

with separate interests and types of polity. They were divided from one

another by a broad belt of debatable territory, extending from Holland

to the coast of Provence--the northern lands of the Carolingian Middle

Kingdom.



To the west lay the monarchies of the Iberian peninsula, of France,

England, and Scotland; connected by their interest in the trade of the

Atlantic seaboard, by a common civilisation in which the best elements

were of French origin, but most of all by their preoccupation with the

political questions arising out of England's claim to a good half of the

territory of France. The rivalry of these two great powers, which dated

in a rudimentary form from the Norman Conquest of England, became acute

when Henry II, heir in his mother's right to England and Normandy, in

that of his father to Anjou and Touraine, married Eleanor the duchess of

Aquitaine and the divorced wife of Louis VII (1152). Developing from one

stage to another, it alternately made and unmade the fortunes of either

nation for four hundred years, until Charles VII of France brought his

wars of reconquest to a triumphant conclusion by crushing, in Guyenne,

the last remnants of the English garrison and of the party which clung

to the English allegiance (1453). In the interval there had been sharp

vicissitudes of failure and success: the expulsion of the English by

Philip Augustus from Normandy, Maine, Anjou, Touraine, and Poitou; the

capture of Calais and recovery of Aquitaine by Edward III and the Black

Prince; the almost complete undoing of their work by Charles V and

Bertrand Duguesclin; the union of the French and English crowns (1420),

resulting from the victories of Henry V and the murderous feud of the

Burgundian and Armagnac factions; the apparition of Jeanne d'Arc as the

prophetess of French nationalism, and the regeneration of the French

monarchy by a new race of scientific statesmen. All the West had been

shaken by this secular duel. For Scotland it spelled independence, for

Navarre the loss of independence; in Castile it set on the throne the

new dynasty of Trastamare; to Aragon the result was the appearance of a

new rival in Mediterranean commerce, the frustration of hopes which had

centred round Provence and Languedoc, the imperilling of others which

were fixed on Italy. With each successive triumph of French over English

arms, the influence of France penetrated farther to the south and east;

and by the marriages or military successes of princes of the French

blood-royal, new territories were joined to the sphere of the western

nations. Under St. Louis the counties of Toulouse and Provence became

French appanages; his brother, Charles of Anjou, added to Provence the

derelict kingdom of Naples; and Sicily only escaped from the rule of the

Angevins by submission to the House of Aragon. After the victories of

Charles V the Valois dukes of Burgundy, supported by the influence now

of France and now of England, sketched the outlines of a new Middle

Kingdom, stretching from the Jura to the Zuyder Zee, and chiefly

composed of lands which had hitherto been attached to the Empire.



[Illustration: France]



The eastern group of nations is widely different in character. It

includes a greater number of states, even if we omit from the reckoning

the great German principalities which were, by the end of the Middle

Ages, all but sovereign powers; and it is less homogeneous in culture.

The Empire forms the centre of the group, and round the Empire the minor

states are grouped like satellites: on the west, Savoy and Provence;

south of the Alps, Venice, the Papal States, and the Kingdom of Sicily--

the last-named independent until 1194, and the private property of the

Hohenstauffen from that date till 1268; on the east the kingdoms of

Hungary and Bohemia and Poland, and the Russian principalities; on the

north the three Scandinavian powers. Large as it is, this group only

includes one state of the first rank; for the Norman kingdom, though a

masterpiece of constructive statesmanship, was important in European

politics rather as a second and a makeweight than as a principal, and

would have been more admired than feared but for the accidents which

made the Norman alliance so valuable to the Holy See. When Naples and

Sicily were held by German Emperors, the Empire towered like a colossus

above the states of Scandinavia, the Slav and the Magyar. But even

without this support, the Empire might have continued to dominate two-

thirds of Europe, if the imperial resources had not been swallowed up by

the wars of Italy, and if the Emperors who came after the interregnum

had given the national interest priority over those of their own

families. In fact, however, the mischief of the Mezentian union between

Italy and Germany survived their separation; as in western so in central

Europe, the course of political development was largely determined by

the persistent and disastrous efforts of a Teutonic to absorb a Latin

nationality. But whereas the English attacks on France were directly

responsible for the growth of a French national state, the failure of

Germany left Italy but half emancipated from the foreigner, and more

disintegrated than she had been at any period in the past. And whereas

England, by her failure, was reduced for a while to a secondary rank

among the nations, the purely German Empire of the fifteenth century was

still the leading power east of the Rhine. This was partly the result of

calamities to neighbouring nations which could neither be foreseen or

obviated. While Western Europe was shielded, in the later Middle Ages,

from the inroads of alien races, Eastern Europe felt the impact of the

last migratory movements emanating from Central Asia and the Moslem

lands. In the thirteenth century the advance guards of the Mongol Empire

destroyed the medieval kingdom of Poland, and reduced the Russian

princes to dependence upon the rulers of the Golden Horde. In the

fifteenth, the advance of the Turks along the Danube completed the ruin

of the Magyar state, already weakened by the feuds of aristocratic

factions. But, apart from these favourable circumstances, the resources

of Germany were irresistible when they could be concentrated. Twice

after the Great Interregnum the integrity of the Empire was threatened

by the Bohemian kingdom. On the first occasion, when Ottocar II had

extended his power into the German lands between Bohemia and the

Adriatic, he was overthrown by Rudolf of Hapsburg at the battle of the

Marchfeld (1278); and a new Hapsburg principality was formed out of the

reconquered lands to guard the south-east frontier against future

incursions of Czech or Magyar. On the second, when the Hussite levies

carried their devastations and their propaganda into all the

neighbouring provinces of the Empire (1424-1434), crusade after crusade

was launched against Bohemia until the heretics, uniformly victorious in

the field, were worn out by the strain of their exertions against

superior numbers, and all the more moderate spirits recognised that such

triumphs must end in the ruin and depopulation of Bohemia. The case was

the same in the Baltic, where the struggle with Danish ambitions was

left to the princes and the free towns. Waldemar II (1202-1241), who had

planned to revive the Scandinavian Empire of the great Canute, the

conqueror of England, saw his ambitious edifice crumble to pieces while

it was still in the making; even the Union of Kalmar (1397), by which

the crowns of Norway and Sweden and Denmark were vested in a single

dynasty, could not save the rich prize of the Baltic trade from falling

into German hands. Germany, even when ill-governed and a prey to the

ambitions of provincial dynasties, was still _grande chose et

terrible_, as more than one political adventurer learned to his cost.

The energy, the intelligence and the national spirit of a great people

made good all the errors of statesmen and all the defects of

institutions.



[Illustration: Holy Roman Empire under Frederick Barbarossa]



Late in the fifteenth century the Germans were mortified to discover

that, although a nation, they had not become a state. They found that

the centre of political power had shifted westward, that the destinies

of Europe were now controlled by the French, the English and the

Spaniards. These nations had perfected a new form of autocracy, more

vigorous, more workmanlike in structure, than any medieval form of

government. Germany in the meanwhile had clung to all that was worst and

feeblest in the old order; her monarchy, and the institutions connected

with it, had been reduced to impotence. The same process of decay had

operated in the minor states of the eastern group. In Scandinavia, in

Hungary, in the Slavonic lands, the tree of royal power was enveloped

and strangled by the undergrowth of a bastard feudalism, by the

territorial power of aristocracies which, under cover of administrative

titles, converted whole provinces into family estates and claimed over

their tenants the divine right of unlimited and irresponsible

sovereignty. To investigate all the reasons for the political

backwardness of these eastern peoples would carry us far afield. But one

reason lies on the surface. Outside the free towns they had produced no

middle class; and their towns were neither numerous nor wealthy enough

to be important in national politics. They were not even represented in

the national assemblies. In consequence the sovereigns of these states

were obliged to govern by the help of aristocratic factions; to purchase

recognition by the grant of larger and larger privileges; and for the

sake of power to strip themselves of the resources which alone could

give their power any meaning. But good government in the Middle Ages was

only another name for a public-spirited and powerful monarchy. Such

monarchies existed in the western states; they rested upon the shoulders

of a middle class of small landowners and wealthy merchants, too weak to

defend themselves in a state of nature, a war of all against all, but

collectively strong enough to overawe the forces of anarchy.



It may seem strange that this class, which desired strong government for

purely practical and material reasons, should uniformly have accepted

hereditary kingship as the one form of government practicable in a large

community. Even where there was the warrant of tradition for recourse to

free election, the better governed states preferred that the supreme

power should pass automatically from father to son. The explanation is

to be found in the motives which prompted the Athenians, under widely

different circumstances, to choose their magistrates by lot. The grand

danger, to be avoided at all costs, was that a disputed succession would

leave the daily work of government in abeyance and open the door for

destructive party-conflicts. If continuity and stability of government

were assured, all would go well. The work of a ruler was not supposed to

demand exceptional abilities; he existed to do justice, to secure every

man in the possession of his own, to apply the law without respect of

persons. For these purposes a high sense of duty was the main requisite.

The wisest heads of the community would be at the king's service for the

asking; he could hardly go wrong if he heard attentively and weighed

impartially the counsel which they had to offer. Admitting that he would

be all the more efficient for possessing some practical capacity, some

experience of great affairs, was it not probable that a man of average

intelligence, who had been trained from his youth to fill the kingly

office, would acquit himself better than some self-made adventurer of

genius, who had paid more attention to the arts of winning place and

popularity than to the work that would be thrown upon him when he

reached the goal of his ambition? When we further recollect that

hereditary kingship was sanctioned by use and wont, was the most

intelligible symbol of national unity, and possessed as of right all the

prerogatives which were necessary for effective government, it is no

wonder that even those to whom doctrines of popular sovereignty and a

social contract were perfectly familiar acquiesced contentedly in a form

of government which the modern world regards as unreasonable and

essentially precarious.



But a monarchy, however energetic, however public-spirited, was

powerless until based on the firm foundations of an organised executive,

an expert judicature, and an assembly representative in fact if not in

form. No medieval state was so uniformly fortunate as Germany in finding

kings of exceptional character and talent. Yet Germany, from the

beginning to the end of the Middle Ages, was badly governed. This was

not due solely to the circumstance that the German monarchy was in

principle elective. It is true that the German crown was often purchased

by ill-advised concessions; but a greater source of weakness was the

inability of the Emperors to make the most of the prerogatives which

they retained, and which the nation desired that they should exercise.

Imperial justice was dilatory and inefficient because the imperial law

court followed the Emperor; because the professional was liable to be

overruled by the feudal element among the judges; because the rules of

procedure were uncertain and the decisions based not upon a scientific

jurisprudence but on provincial custom. The Diet of the Empire was weak,

both in deliberation and as a legislature; because the towns and the

lesser nobility had no respect for resolutions in framing which they had

not been consulted. The executive was necessarily inefficient or

unpopular; because the highest offices were claimed as a right by

princes who, if laymen, owed their rank to the accident of birth or, if

ecclesiastics, could only be good servants of the State by becoming

unworthy servants of the Church. The Emperor who confided in his natural

counsellors was ill-served; and if he relied upon new men, selected

solely for their loyalty and qualifications, he incurred the reproach of

tyranny or submission to unworthy favourites. The evils thus rooted in

the German constitution had existed at an earlier date in France and

England. To eradicate them was the object of the constitutional changes

devised by the Plantagenets in England, by the later Capetian kings in

France. And in essentials there is a strong likeness between the work of

the two dynasties. But in England the policy of construction was earlier

adopted, proceeded more rapidly, and produced an edifice which was more

durable because established on a broader basis.



The first stage of the policy was to organise the administration of

those parts of each kingdom which, not having been absorbed in

privileged fiefs, were still subject to the royal justice and

contributory to the royal revenue. Owing to the foresight of William the

Conqueror, there were few such fiefs in England; only in two palatine

earldoms (Durham and Cheshire), on the Welsh and northern borders, and

on the lands of a few prelates, was the king permanently cut off from

immediate contact with the subject population. With these exceptions the

face of England was divided into shires, and administered by sheriffs

who were nominees of the Crown, dismissable at pleasure. The shires

again were divided into hundreds governed under the sheriff by

subordinate officials. But for the most important duties of executive

routine the sheriff alone was responsible; he collected the revenue, he

led the militia, he organised the Watch and Ward and Hue and Cry which

were the medieval equivalents for a constabulary; finally, he presided

over the shire moot in which the freeholders gathered at stated

intervals to declare justice and receive it. The shires were

periodically visited by Justices in Eyre (analogous to the Frankish

_missi_) who heard complaints against the sheriff, inspected his

administration, tried criminals, and heard those civil suits

(particularly cases of freehold) which were deemed sufficiently

important to be reserved for their decision. These itinerant

commissioners were selected from the staff of the royal law court

(_Curia Regis_), a tribunal which, in the thirteenth century, was

subdivided into the three Courts of Common Law and acquired a fixed

domicile at Westminster. The shire courts and the royal court were alike

bound by the statute-law, so far as it extended; but, in the larger half

of their work, they had no guides save the local custom, as expounded by

the good men of the shire court, and the decisions recorded on the rolls

of the royal court. From the latter source was derived the English

Common Law, a system of precedents which, in spite of curious subtleties

and technicalities, remains the most striking monument of medieval

jurisprudence. In and after the fourteenth century it was supplemented

by Equity, the law of the Chancellor's court, to which those suitors

might repair whose grievances could not be remedied at Common Law, but

were held worthy of special redress by the king in his character of a

patron and protector of the defenceless. Lastly, on the fiscal side, the

work of the sheriffs and of the judges was supervised by the Exchequer,

a chamber of audit and receipt, to which the sheriffs rendered a

half-yearly statement, and in which were prepared the articles of

inquiry for the itinerant justices. Originally a branch of the Curia

Regis and a tribunal as well as a treasury, the Exchequer always remains

in close connection with the judicial system, since one of the three

Courts of Common Law is primarily concerned with suits which affect the

royal revenue. Such was the English scheme of administration, and

_mutatis mutandis_ it was reproduced in France. Here the royal

demesne, small in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, was enormously

enlarged by the annexations of Philip Augustus and the later Capets, who

brought under their immediate control the larger part of the Angevin

inheritance, the great fiefs of Toulouse and Champagne, and many smaller

territories. To provide for the government of these acquisitions, there

was built up, in the course of the thirteenth century, an administrative

hierarchy consisting of provosts, who correspond to the bailiffs of

English hundreds, of _baillis_ and _senechaux_ who resemble the English

sheriffs, of _enqueteurs_ who perambulate the demesne making inspections

and holding sessions in the same manner as the English Justices in Eyre.

All these functionaries are controlled, from the time of St. Louis, by

the _Chambre des Comptes_ and the _Parlement_, the one a fiscal

department, the other a supreme court of first instance and appeal.

Within the _Parlement_ there is a distinction between the Courts of

Common Law and the _Chambre des Reqeutes_ which deals with petitions by

the rules of Equity.



The vices of both systems were the same. The local officials were too

powerful within their respective spheres; neither inspectors nor royal

courts proved adequate as safeguards against corruption and abuses of

authority, which were the more frequent because the vicious expedients

of farming and selling offices had become an established practice.

Otherwise the English system was superior to that of France,

particularly in making use for certain purposes of local representatives

as an additional check upon the servants of the Crown. The English shire

was in fact as well as in law a community with a true corporate

character (_communitas_), and possessed a public assembly which was

a law court and a local parliament in one. Though the ordinary suitor

counted for little, the secondary landowners, united by ties of local

sentiment and personal relationship, took a lively interest and an

active share in the business of the shire court, upholding the local

custom against sheriffs and judges, serving as jurors, as assessors of

taxes, as guardians of the peace, and (from the fourteenth century) as

petty magistrates. Whether elected by their fellows or the nominees of

the Crown, these functionaries were unpaid, and regarded themselves as

the defenders of local liberty against official usurpations. In France

the district of the _bailli_, and still more that of his subordinate the

_prevot_, was an arbitrary creation, without natural unity or corporate

sentiment; there was therefore no organised resistance to executive

authority, and no reason why the Crown should court the goodwill of the

landed gentry. In the lower grades of the Plantagenet system a powerful

middle class served a political apprenticeship; under the Capets all

power and responsibility were jealously reserved to the professional

administrator. In England the next step in constitutional development,

the addition to the national assembly of a Third Estate, was brilliantly

successful, since the House of Commons was chiefly recruited from

families which had long been active partners in local administration. In

France the Third Estate, though constantly summoned in the fourteenth

century, proved itself politically impotent.



Both in France and in England (after 1066) the national assembly began

as a feudal council, composed of the prelates and barons who held their

lands and dignities directly from the Crown. But that of France was,

before the twelfth century, seldom convened, sparsely attended, and

generally ignored by the greater feudatories, a conference of partisans

rather than a parliament. In England the Great Council of the Norman

dynasty, inheriting the prestige and the claims of the Anglo-Saxon

Witenagemot, held from the first a more respectable position. Even a

William I or a Henry II scrupulously adhered to the principle of

consulting his magnates on projects of legislation or taxation; under

the sons and grandson of Henry II the pretensions of the assembly were

enlarged and more pertinaciously asserted. The difficulties of the Crown

were the opportunity of Church and Baronage. The Great Council now

claimed to appoint and dismiss the royal ministers; to withhold

pecuniary aid and military service until grievances had been redressed;

to limit the prerogative, and even to put it in commission when it was

habitually abused. In fact the English nobility of this period, thwarted

as individuals in their ambitions of territorial power, found in their

collective capacity, as members of the opposition in the Council, a new

field of enterprise and self-aggrandisement. In France there was no such

parliamentary movement, because the fundamental presupposition of

success was wanting; because it was hopeless to appeal to public

opinion, against a successful and venerated monarchy, in the name of an

assembly which had never commanded popular respect. Under these

circumstances it was natural that very different consequences should

ensue in the two countries, when the reformation of their national

assemblies was taken in hand by Edward I and his contemporary, Philippe

le Bel. The problem before the two sovereigns was the same--to create an

assembly which should be recognised as competent to tax the nation. The

solutions which they adopted were closely alike; representatives of the

free towns were brought into the Etats Generaux, of free towns and

shires into the English Parliament; in each case a Third Estate was

grafted upon a feudal council. But the products of the two experiments

were different in temper and in destiny. The States General, practically

a new creation, neither knew what powers to claim or how to vindicate

them. They turned the power of the purse to little or no account; they

discredited themselves in the eyes of the nation by giving proofs of

feebleness and indecision in the first great crisis with which they were

called to deal, the interregnum of anarchy and conspiracy that ensued

upon the capture of King John at Poitiers (1356). The result was that

the States General, occasionally summoned to endorse the policy or

register the decrees of the monarchy, remained an ornamental feature of

the French constitution. In England, on the other hand, the Commons

accepted the position of auxiliaries to the superior Estates in their

contests with the Crown; and the new Parliament pursued the aims and the

tactics of the old Great Council, with all the advantages conferred by

an exclusive right to grant taxation. For more than two hundred years it

was a popular assembly in form and in pretension alone. The most active

members of the Lower House were drawn from the lower ranks of the

territorial aristocracy; and the Commons were bold in their demands only

when they could attack the prerogative behind the shield of a faction

quartered in the House of Lords. But the alliance of the Houses

transformed the character of English politics. Before Parliament had

been in existence for two centuries, it had deposed five kings and

conferred a legal title upon three new dynasties; it had indicated to

posterity the lines upon which an absolutism could be fought and ruined

without civil war; and it had proved that the representative element in

the constitution might overrule both monarchy and aristocracy, if it had

the courage to carry accepted principles to their logical conclusion.



Even in England a medieval Parliament was scarcely a legislature in our

sense of the word. Legislation of a permanent and general kind was an

occasional expedient. New laws were usually made in answer to the

petitions of the Estates; but the laws were framed by the King and the

Crown lawyers, and often took a form which by no means expressed the

desires of the petitioners. The most important changes in the law of the

land were not made, but grew, through the accumulated effect of judicial

decisions. The chief function of Parliaments, after the voting of

supplies, was to criticise and to complain; to indicate the shortcomings

of a policy which they had not helped to make. Except as the guardians

of individual liberty they cannot be said to have made medieval

government more scientific or efficient. In the fifteenth century the

English Commons criticised the government of the Lancastrian dynasty

with the utmost freedom; but it was left for Yorkist and Tudor despots

to diagnose aright the maladies of the body politic. Englishmen and

Frenchmen alike were well advised when, at the close of the Middle Ages,

they committed the task of national reconstruction to sovereigns who

ignored or circumvented parliamentary institutions. A parliament was

admirable as a check or a balance, as a symbol of popular sovereignty,

as a school of political intelligence. But no parliament that had been

brought together in any medieval state was fitted to take the lead in

shaping policy, or in reforming governmental institutions.









VIII



THE EXPANSION OF EUROPE--THE CRUSADES





Neither the internal development of the medieval state nor the

international politics of medieval Europe can be explained without

constant reference to class distinctions. First, there is a sharp line

dividing each state horizontally and marking off the privileged few from

the unprivileged many, the rulers from the ruled. Below the line are the

traders, artisans, and cultivators of the soil; above it the landlords,

the officeholders, and the clergy. If an industrial community, here and

there a Milan or a Ghent, succeeds in asserting political independence,

the phenomenon is regarded as anomalous and revolutionary; still graver

is the head-shaking when mere peasants, like the Swiss, throw off what

is called their natural allegiance. And such cases of successful

rebellion are rare. It is true that in England, in France, and in the

Spanish kingdoms there are privileged towns which receive the right of

representation in national assemblies; but this concession to the power

of the purse is strictly limited; the spokesmen of the burgesses are not

invited to express opinions until asked for subsidies or military aid.

Government is the affair of the King and the privileged classes. But

again there is a division within the privileged classes, a vertical line

of cleavage between the various grades of the lay and clerical

aristocracies. The prelate and the baron, the knight and the priest,

harmonious enough when it is a question of teaching the unprivileged

their place, are rivals for social influence and political power, are

committed to conflicting theories of life. The ecclesiastic, enrolled in

an order which is recruited from every social grade, makes light of

secular rank and titles; he claims precedence over every layman; he

holds that it is the business of the Church to command, of princes to

obey. The lay feudatory, born into a hereditary caste of soldiers,

regards war as the highest vocation for a man of honour, is impatient of

priestly arrogance, and believes in his heart that the Church ought not

to meddle with politics. It would be a mistake to think of the two

privileged classes as always at strife with one another and their social

inferiors. But the great wars of Pope and Emperor, the

fourteenth-century revolts of French and English peasants, are not

events which come suddenly and unexpectedly; each such outbreak is like

the eruption of a volcano, a symptom of subterranean forces continually

in conflict. The state of peace in medieval society was a state of

tension; equilibrium meant the unstable balance of centralising and

centrifugal forces. And this was one reason why wars, condemned in the

abstract by the Church, were frequently regarded with favour by sober

statesmen and by idealists. In more ways than one a successful war might

serve to heal or salve the feuds of rival classes. It offered an outlet

for the restless and anarchic energies of feudalism; sometimes it ended

in conquests with which the landless could be permanently endowed. It

might offer new markets to the merchant, a field of emigration to the

peasant, a new sphere of influence to the national clergy. Better still,

it might evoke common sentiments of patriotism or religion, and create

in all classes the consciousness of obligations superior to merely

selfish interests.



Such statecraft may perhaps seem rude and barbarous to us. The idea of a

nation as a system of classes, and of national unity as a condition only

to be realised when all classes combine for some purpose extraneous to

the everyday life of the nation, is foreign to our thought. We believe

that by making war upon class privileges we have given to the State a

less divided and more organic character. We maintain that the State

exists to realise an immanent ideal, which we express by some such

formula as "the greatest good of the greatest number." But we are still

so far from a reconciliation of facts with theories that we must

hesitate before utterly condemning the medieval attitude towards war. In

place of classes we have interests, which are hard to unite and often at

open variance. Our statesmen balance one interest against another, and

consider war legitimate when it offers great advantages to the interests

most worth conciliating. Nor have we yet succeeded in giving to the

average citizen so elevated a conception of the purpose for which the

State exists that he can think of national policy as something different

from national selfishness. It is easier to criticise the enthusiasts who

urged medieval nations to undertake "some work of noble note," remote

from daily routine, than it is to discover and to preach a nobler

enterprise on behalf of a less visionary ideal. It helps us to

understand, though it does not compel us to accept, the medieval theory,

when we find modern poets and preachers glorifying war as a school of

patriotism or of national character.



Wars of conquest were less frequent in the Middle Ages than we might

expect, and were usually waged on a small scale. Their comparative

infrequency, in an age of militarism, must be explained by reference

both to current morality and to economic conditions. For an attack upon

a Christian power it was necessary that some just cause should be

alleged. Public opinion, educated by the Church to regard Western

Christendom as a single commonwealth, demanded that some respect should

be shown to the ordinary moral code, even in international relations.

Furthermore the medieval state, loosely knit together and bristling with

isolated fortresses, showed in defeat the tenacious vitality of the

lower organisms, and could not be entirely reduced without an

expenditure, on the invader's part, which the methods of medieval

state-finance were powerless to meet. Edward I failed to conquer the

petty kingdom of Scotland; and the French provinces which were ceded to

Edward III escaped from his grasp in a few years. The profitable wars

were border wars, waged against the disunited tribes of Eastern Europe,

or the decadent Moslem states of the Mediterranean. And such wars were

of common occurrence, sometimes undertaken by the nationalities most

favourably situated for the purpose, sometimes by self-expatriated

emigrants in search of a new home.



Thanks to the teaching of the Church, a large proportion of the border

wars were converted into Crusades for the propagation of the faith or

the extermination of the unbeliever or the defence of holy places. Often

enough the religious motive was introduced as an afterthought, and gave

a thin veil of respectability to operations which it would otherwise

have been difficult to excuse. In some cases, however, those who

enlisted as the soldiers of the Church were sacrificing their material

interests for the good, as they supposed, of their own souls and the

Christian commonwealth. There was nothing essentially Christian in this

spirit of self-devotion; it had long been epidemic in the Mohammedan

world, and accounts for the most successful encroachments of Islam upon

Europe and the Eastern Empire. The impulse affected Western Christendom

for a relatively short period of time, only once or twice producing

movements at all commensurable with those which had emanated from

Arabia, Asia Minor, and Africa, and leading to no conquests that can

rank in magnitude with the caliphates of Bagdad, Cordova, and Cairo. But

the Christian Crusade is in one sense more remarkable than the

Mohammedan Jehad. Western Europe had long ago emerged from the nomadic

stage, and even the ruling classes of Western Christendom, cosmopolitan

as they may seem to us, were attached to their native soil by many ties.

If the upheaval was smaller in the West than in the East, the material

to be set in motion was more stubborn and inert, the prizes to be held

before the eyes of the believer were more impalpable and dubious. There

were ventures near at hand for which the Church could find volunteers

without the slightest difficulty. But those which she was more

particularly bent on forwarding were distant, hazardous, and irksome;

the majority of the men who went on her great Crusades had no prospect

of any temporal advantage. In the end those enterprises to which she

gave her special countenance proved the least successful. It was not in

the Eastern Mediterranean but in Spain, in Lower Italy, and in Central

Europe, that the frontiers of Western Christendom were permanently

advanced. For the historian, however, the failures have an interest not

inferior to that of the more productive enterprises.



The age of border wars and border colonies begins long before the

appearance of a true crusading spirit. In German history the movement of

expansion dates from Henry the Fowler; when he captured Brandeburg (928)

and annexed the heathen tribes between the Elbe and Oder, he inaugurated

a policy of settlement and colonisation which the German Margraves of

those regions were to pursue, slowly and methodically for more than two

hundred years. In its later stages the policy was sometimes assisted by

Crusaders; from the first it made many converts to Christianity, and was

furthered by the foundation of frontier sees and churches subject to the

German archbishops of Hamburg and Magdeburg. But the men who directed

the policy were purely secular and selfish. The greatest of them, Henry

the Lion, Duke of Saxony from 1142 to 1180, and Albert the Bear,

Margrave of Brandenburg from 1134 to 1170, concentrated their energies

upon the development and extension of their principalities, exploited

the Slavs, plotted against one another and their Christian neighbours,

neglected national interests, and frankly made the Church the instrument

of their ambitions. Yet in the craft of state-building they showed

exceptional sagacity, enlisting as their allies the traders of the

Baltic, the peasants of North Germany and the Low Countries. Under their

rule and that of their most successful imitators, the Teutonic Knights

in Prussia, cities such as Lubeck (founded 1143) and Dantsic (colonised

1308) became centres of German trade and culture; while the open country

in the basins of the Elbe and Oder was covered with newly settled

villages of German immigrants. The effects of this colonisation have

extended far beyond the lands immediately affected and the limits of

medieval history. The new colonies laid the foundations of modern

Prussia and modern Saxony. To their existence is due the connection of

Poland and Bohemia with the state system of medieval Europe, and the

consequent division of the Slavonic peoples into a western and an

eastern group; the westward expansion of the Russian Empire was

forestalled and prevented by these early pioneers of German and of Roman

influence. Only less important was the German advance along the Danube,

from the river Inn to Vienna and the Hungarian frontier, which was

mainly directed by successive heads of the family of Babenberg

(971-1246), first as Margraves and afterwards as Dukes of Austria. The

Hapsburg power, like that of the Hohenzollerns, is partly an inheritance

from medieval frontiersmen who drove a German wedge into the heart of a

Slavonic territory.



The history of these German colonies often reminds us how naturally such

business ventures came to be regarded as a species of crusade. In 1147 a

large body of German pilgrims, enlisted for the Second Crusade, were

allowed to fulfil their vows by serving against the Slav in the armies

of Saxony and Brandenburg. The Babenberg dukes, grown weary of their

monotonous work on the Danube, roamed eastward to conquer Egypt or

Palestine, westward to exterminate the Albigensians of Languedoc and the

infidels in Spain. And when we turn from Germany to the Spanish

peninsula, the alliance between religious fervour and commercial

enterprise is still more striking. The Christian reconquest of Spain and

Portugal began two or three generations before the Council of Clermont;

but, from the first, the southward advance against the rulers of Cordova

foreshadows the age of the Crusades. In Spain, as in the German marks,

the pioneers of Christendom were often ruffianly, and always fought with

an eye to the main chance. Among them are mere desperadoes like the Cid

Campeador (_d._ 1099), who serves and betrays alternately the Christian

and the Moorish causes, founds a principality at the expense of both

religions, but is finally claimed as a hero and a martyr by his native

Castile, because he has the good fortune to die in her allegiance. Many

_conquistadores_ of more reputable character settled down contentedly

amongst a tributary and unconverted Moorish population, whose manners

and vices they adopted. But in Spain the racial antipathies of Moors and

Christians were always aggravated by religious zeal. Several times it

seemed as though Spanish Christianity was in danger of complete

extinction. In the tenth century two great rulers of Cordova,

Abderrahman III and Al Mansur, drove back the Castilians to the northern

mountains and raided the inmost recesses of the Christian territories.

Somewhat later the Wild Berber hordes of the Almoravides and the

Almohads, crossing from Africa to usurp the Ommeiad dominions and carry

on the holy war with greater energy, aroused new fears and provoked in

the threatened kingdoms a fanaticism equal to their own. The Spanish

Christians appealed for help to their northern neighbours; armies of

volunteers from Normandy, from Aquitaine, and from Burgundy, poured over

the Myrenees to strike a blow for the Cross against the Crescent, and

incidentally to gain rich spoils or found a colony. The movement was

early taken under the patronage of Rome. Gregory VII offered papal

commissions to the immigrants, on condition that they would hold their

conquests as vassals of the Holy See (1073). And thenceforth each new

enterprise against the Moors was officially recognised as a service to

the Catholic Church.



Still, even in Spain, the tendency was for material ambitions to gain

the upper hand. All classes in the Christian kingdoms benefited by the

wresting of a new province from the infidel. The nobles received new

fiefs; the burghers flocked into the cities evacuated by the Moors, or

were encouraged, by large grants of privileges, to build new cities;

round the cities clustered communities of peasants, who joyfully

exchanged the barren security of the northern uplands for the risks and

the prizes of the river valleys. No kings were so popular as those who

planned and carried to a successful conclusion these ventures for the

common good. One such ruler, James the Great of Aragon, has left us in

his memoirs a faithful and instructive account of the use to which he

and his subjects turned one of these so-called Crusades. At six years of

age he had succeeded to a divided kingdom and the shadow of a royal

prerogative. At fourteen he began a hard struggle, for the mastery of

his rebellious barons and cities, which lasted five years and earned for

him more credit than substantial success. When at length the rebels sued

for peace, he was obliged to grant it without exacting compensation; the

Crown remained as poor after the victory as before it. A little later he

conceived the idea of attacking the Moors in the Balearic Isles, "either

to convert them and turn that kingdom to the faith of our Lord, or else

to destroy them." He propounded his plan to the Cortes (1229); and in a

moment dissension was changed to harmony, civil indifference to loyal

enthusiasm. The barons said that to conquer a Saracen kingdom set in the

sea would be the greatest deed done by Christians for a hundred years.

They would give an aid, they would find contingents, they would serve in

person; always on the understanding that each should share in the spoils

proportionately to the size of his contingent. The Archbishop of

Tarragona, speaking for the clergy, said that now at last his eyes had

seen the salvation of the Lord. He could not serve; he was too old for

that; but his men and his money were the King's for this sacred

undertaking, and he would gladly give a dispensation to any bishop or

abbot who would go with the King; always provided that the clerical

Crusaders were to share in the booty on the same terms as the laymen. To

the same purpose, with the same stipulation, spoke the trading-cities.

The expedition was a brilliant success. Majorca was reduced by the

efforts of the whole expedition; Minorca capitulated without a struggle;

and the Archbishop of Tarragona, by special licence from the King,

conquered Ivica for himself. But the Moors were neither extirpated nor

converted. Those of Majorca became the tenants of the Crusaders between

whom that island was divided. Those of Minorca paid an annual tribute to

the King. In both islands they were guaranteed the use of their native

customs and religion. Surveying the Crusade many years after it was

completed, James expresses the highest satisfaction with the results.

From Minorca he receives not only the agreed tribute, but whatever else

he chooses to demand. As for Majorca, the Lord has so increased it that

it produces twice as much as in the days of Moorish rule.



We are now in a position to understand the complex nature of the motives

which animated the preachers, the generals, and the soldiers of the

Crusades; for these enterprises are a continuation on a greater scale of

the German, Spanish, and Norman wars of conquest.



Like the wars of Spain, the Crusades were suggested by fears of a

Mohammedan advance; the signal for the First Crusade was given by the

successes of the Seljuk Turks under Alp Arslan and Malik Shah

(1071-1092). These uncivilised and fanatical usurpers of the caliphate

of Bagdad overran the whole of Asia Minor and of Syria in twenty years;

they dealt a heavy blow to the Eastern Empire on the field of Manzikert

(1071), and founded in Asia Minor the sultanate of Roum; they

established smaller principalities in Syria. The rulers of

Constantinople sent urgent appeals for help to the West; and pilgrims

returning from the Holy Places complained loudly of the insults and

persecutions by which the conquerors manifested their hostility to the

Christian faith. Gregory VII, immediately after his election, was moved

to plan an expedition for the defence of the Eastern Empire, which he

justly regarded as the bulwark of Europe against Islam. He issued a

general appeal to the princes of Europe for help and personal service;

he even proposed to accompany the relieving force. But Gregory, though

not without imagination, lacked the power of firing popular enthusiasm,

and aroused mistrust by the admission that he intended using the Crusade

in the first instance against the Normans of Lower Italy. Few volunteers

were forthcoming, and his own energies were diverted to another channel

by the outbreak of the War of Investitures. It was left for Urban II to

revive Gregory's project, in another and more popular form, at a moment

when Henry IV seemed a beaten and a broken man, and the unity of the

Seljuk power had been shattered by the death of Malik Shah. In reality

the danger from the Turks was then a thing of the past; but, even if

Urban was correctly informed of their weakness, it needed little

knowledge of history to warn him that one aggressive movement of Islam

only died away to be succeeded by another. Like Gregory, he desired to

strengthen the Eastern Empire; but his plan was new--to found a Latin

state in Palestine for the defence of Jerusalem and the south-east

Mediterranean. As with the First Crusade, so with the Second and the

Third; each was a response to new victories of Mohammedan princes. The

Second Crusade (1147) was proclaimed in consequence of the fall of

Edessa, the north-east outpost of the Latin Kingdom. The Third (1189)

was designed to recover Jerusalem and to cripple the sultanate of Egypt,

which, under Saladin, seemed on the eve of absorbing not only Syria, but

also Asia Minor and the Euphrates valley. The signal failure of an

expedition for which armies were raised by the Emperor, the Kings of

France and England, and many lesser princes, left the power of Egypt an

object of almost superstitious awe. The Fifth Crusade (1217) and the

Seventh (1248) expended their best energies in fruitless and disastrous

descents on the Nile Delta.



To this view of the Crusades, as a business of high political

importance, the best of the laymen who led the Christian armies were

sincerely attached. Many others, equally sincere but governed more by

sentiment than reason, were moved by the desire to see the Holy Places

and secure them as the common property of Christendom. But the most

pertinacious and successful of the commanders went eastward, as their

kinsmen went across the Elbe or the Alps or the Pyrenees, to carve out

for themselves new principalities at the expense of Byzantine or

Saracen, it did not matter which. Naturally the sovereign princes who

took the Cross do not fall into this category. For them an expedition

might be either an adventure, or the grudging fulfilment of a penance,

or a bid for the esteem of their subjects; but it was often a conscious

sacrifice of self-interest and national interests to a higher duty.

However low their motives, it would not have paid them to turn aside

from the task enjoined upon them by European opinion. Even Frederic II,

the least Christian of Crusaders, who only accomplished his vow to put

the Pope his adversary in the wrong, fulfilled his undertaking to the

letter before he ventured to return. But a Crusade controlled by men of

lower rank tended to be a joint-stock company of freebooters. For every

Crusade the Pope was, to a certain point, responsible. He issued the

appeal, he tuned the pulpits; he invited contributions from the laity

and exacted them from the national churches; he provided for the

enforcement by ecclesiastical censures of all Crusading vows. In the

choice of leaders, and in the preliminary councils of war, he had a

claim to be consulted. One or more of his legates normally accompanied

the armies. But, if the generals chose to ignore his suggestions and to

override his representatives, after the march had once begun he was

powerless. Usually, it is true, his views would appeal to the rank and

file, exempt as they were from the temptations presented to their

leaders. But the Common soldiers could only leave the host if they had

the means of paying for themselves the expenses of the homeward journey.

Often they protested against the uses to which their arms were put; but

very seldom were they able to enforce a change of policy.



[Illustration: The Crusaders]



These general statements may be illustrated from the First and Fourth

Crusades.



Godfrey of Bouillon and his fellow-leaders, when they passed through

Constantinople (1097), did homage to the Emperor Alexius for any lands

that they might conquer. The transaction may not have been voluntary;

this homage was the price demanded for a safe-conduct through the Greek

dominions. But later events proved that the chief Crusaders were

resolved not to hold their conquests as fiefs from the Holy See, for

which they were nominally fighting. As they drew near to the Holy Land,

it became clear that the rescue of the Holy Sepulchre was a subordinate

consideration with them. At Tarsus and at Antioch there were fierce

disputes between rival claimants to the conquered territories. Baldwin

separated from the main army to found a seignory for himself at Edessa.

Bohemund remained behind, when Antioch was once assigned to him, for

fear that any rival should rob him of his prize. Raymond of Toulouse

turned aside to reduce Tripoli, and was with the greatest difficulty

constrained to continue the march. The final result of a war in which

the loss of men must be reckoned by tens of thousands was the

establishment of the four states of Jerusalem, Edessa, Antioch, and

Tripoli. To extend the boundaries of these colonies, and to consolidate

them under the suzerainty of the Crown of Jerusalem, was the work of

their rulers for the next eighty years. These princes were esteemed as

champions of the Cross; to assist them in the defence of their

territories the military orders of the Temple and the Hospital were

founded under the sanction of the Church; apart from the great relieving

expeditions, such as those of 1101 and 1147 and 1189, annual fleets of

soldier-pilgrims arrived to take part in the operations of the year. But

there is little to show that either the Kings of Jerusalem or their

great vassals ever justified their position by pursuing an unselfish

policy. That the dominions which they ruled were imperfectly colonised

cannot be made a reproach against them; only for knights and merchants

had the Holy Land any attractions. But the inevitable weakness of the

Frankish states was aggravated by their feuds and reciprocal ill-faith.



More than a hundred years elapsed before another expedition of this kind

started for the East. The Second Crusade, inspired by St. Bernard acting

as the half-reluctant spokesman of the Holy See, was ill-organised,

ill-directed, and so disastrous a failure that it was followed by a

perceptible reaction against the idealistic policy of which it was the

outcome. It revealed to Europe the inefficiency of forces raised with

more regard to the pious motives than to the efficiency of the recruits,

and laid bare the calculating selfishness of the Latin principalities.

But the principal leaders, Louis VII of France and the Emperor Conrad

II, could not be charged with insincerity. They made gross mistakes, but

were faithful to the purpose with which they set out. Similarly in the

Third Crusade, though part of the failure can be directly attributed to

the national jealousies of the various contingents, and to the quarrels

of Richard I with the more important of his colleagues, the recovery of

Jerusalem remained from first to last the dominants object of the army.

There were cases of petulance, of unnecessary meddling in the squalid

disputes of the Latin settlers, of readiness to depart on the first

honourable excuse. But there was no disposition to make the pilgrimage a

commercial undertaking. It was otherwise in 1203 when the soldiers of

the Fourth Crusade set out from Venice, leaving behind them the papal

legate and openly defying the injunctions of Innocent III, whose appeal

to Christendom was nominally the warrant for their venture.



No kings sailed with them; from the first the movement had been in the

hands of turbulent feudatories, inspired by chivalry rather than

religion. Their leader, Boniface of Montferrat, the patron of all the

troubadours and knights-errant of the South, was a sworn friend of the

Pope's worst enemy, Philip of Suabia, the brother and successor of the

Emperor Henry VI. Boniface had been elected to the command without the

sanction of the Pope; and from an early date was in league with Philip

to turn the Crusade against Constantinople. This plan was for a time

concealed from the army, in which a majority of the common soldiers were

bent upon recovering the Holy Sepulchre. But the nobles, with whom lay

the last word, were ready for whatever adventure the course of events

might suggest. Their original hope was to conquer Egypt,--an infinitely

more tempting prey than Palestine, where the chief fruits of any success

would be claimed by the remnants of the standing garrison. To obtain

ships from Venice they undertook on her behalf the siege of Zara; their

first feat of arms was the conquest of a Christian city, the only

offence of which was that it disputed the Venetian supremacy in the

Adriatic. At Zara they were invited by Philip's envoys to attack

Constantinople, to overthrow the Emperor Alexius III, and to substitute

for him another Alexius, son of the deposed Isaac Angelus and

brother-in-law to Philip. The proposal received enthusiastic support

from the Venetians, whose great commercial interests in the Greek

capital had been often assailed by the fanaticism of the city-populace.

The Venetians held the key of the situation, since, if they withdrew

their transports, the army could neither go forward nor return in

safety; and the nobles, who needed little persuasion, were able to

convince the more earnest pilgrims that Philip's offer must of necessity

be accepted, though Alexius III was on friendly terms with the Pope and

had been expected to assist the Crusade. To palliate the flagrant

treachery a promise was exacted from the pretender that, when installed

as Emperor, he would help in the conquest of Egypt with men, money, and

supplies.



On July 17th, 1203, the army entered Constantinople, after a short

siege. Alexius III escaped by flight and Alexius IV was installed in his

place. Still the Crusaders lingered in a city the outward splendour of

which appealed irresistibly to their imagination and their avarice. The

winter, they said, was approaching, and their candidate far from secure

upon the throne; they would wait for the spring. Before that date, and

in spite of their countenance, he had fallen before a nationalist

rebellion (January 1204); and the army hailed the opportunity of

reuniting the Greek Church to Rome and partitioning the Greek Empire

among themselves. An agreement was made with the indispensable Venetians

for the election of a Latin Emperor, to be endowed with one-fourth of

the provinces; the booty of Constantinople and the remaining lands of

the Empire were to be divided equally between the Venetians and the

remaining leaders. For the second time Constantinople was carried by

storm; a fire destroyed a large part of the city; and the Crusaders

completed the devastation by three days of indiscriminate plunder and

massacre. Neither the treasures of the churches nor the priceless

monuments and statues of the public places were spared. The sum-total of

the booty was thought to be equal to all the wealth of Western Europe;

but when it came to the official division all that the knights obtained

was twenty marks apiece; ten were the portion of a priest, and five of a

foot-soldier. The other articles of the treaty, which had been referred

for form's sake to the Pope, were executed without awaiting his reply.

The Venetian candidate, Count Baldwin of Flanders, was elected to the

Empire and received the Asiatic provinces. Boniface of Montferrat

obtained, as a solatium, the kingdom of Thessalonica, embracing roughly

the modern provinces of Thessaly and Macedonia; his followers were

allowed to establish themselves by degrees in Central Greece and the

Morea. The Venetians took the islands of the Ionian Sea, the Cyclades,

and Aegina and Negropont; the provinces of Albania, Acarnania, and

Aetolia; the city of Adrianople with the adjacent territories, and other

possessions of less note.



The Pope, compelled to recognise accomplished facts, merely demanded

three concessions: that the Latin faith should be established as the

official religion of the Empire; that the possessions of the Greek

Church should be handed over to the Latin clergy; and that the Crusaders

should continue their pilgrimage at the end of a year. Only the first of

these points was conceded. The Crusade of Innocent III ended, like that

of Urban II, in the creation of a string of feudal states and commercial

factories. But in 1204 there was hardly the attempt to justify what had

been done in the name of religion. The Venetians behaved from first to

last as commercial buccaneers; a fickle and frivolous ambition, rather

than calculating villainy, characterised their highborn associates.

Plainly, these were the only materials available for a Crusade; the

collapse of the Crusading policy was near at hand.



A few romantic careers illuminate the monotonously sordid annals of the

Latin Empire, threatened from within by the feuds of the rival baronial

houses, from without by the Bulgarians, the Greek despots of Epirus, and

the Greek Emperors of Nicaea. Henry of Flanders, the second Latin

Emperor (1205-1216), the one constructive statesman produced by the

Crusade; William of Champlitte, who overran the Morea with but a hundred

knights, was hailed by the oppressed Greeks as a liberator, and founded

the Principality of Achaea (1205-1209) only to lose it through the

treachery of a lieutenant; Niccolo Acciajuoli (+1365), the Florentine

banker, who rose to be Lord of Corinth, Count of Malta, and

administrator of Achaea--these were men who on a greater stage might

have achieved durable renown. But the subject Greeks were not to be

Latinised by a handful of energetic seigneurs and merchants; one by one,

as opportunities occurred, the provinces of the Latin Empire deserted to

the allegiance of Nicaea. Adrianople and Thessalonica were lost in 1222,

the Asiatic territories by 1228; in 1261 Michael Palaeologus recovered

Constantinople, which was to remain the possession of his family until

the capture by the Turks (1453). In Greece and the islands the colonists

maintained a foothold long after the fall of the Latin Empire. But the

last of the Frankish Dukes of Athens fell, with all his chivalry,

fighting against the Catalan Company (1311), a horde of freebooters

half-Christian and half-Turkish in its composition. Achaea, after years

of ignominious subjection to the Angevins of Naples, was similarly

conquered by the Company of Navarre (1380). In a maimed condition the

two states survived these calamities; but the Greeks and the Venetians

were enabled to absorb the richest parts of the peninsula; the last

traces of Frankish blood and institutions were swept away by the Turkish

conquerors of the fifteenth century. Before these grim invaders the

Venetians and the Knights of St. John, the last representatives of

Western power, slowly evacuated the Eastern Mediterranean.



The story of this brilliant and ephemeral episode in the expansion of

Europe is closed by the Venetian peace of 1479 with the Sultan, and by

the fall of Rhodes, the stronghold of the Knights, before the Turkish

arms (1522). But in Malta, down to the commencement of the ninteenth

century, might be seen the strange and scandalous spectacle of a

Crusading Order, emancipated from the old vows and obligations, yet

still allowed to exercise a medieval tyranny in memory of the services

which their remote predecessors had rendered to the Cross. The other

Orders had vanished, not less ignominiously, at earlier dates. The

Templars, who had evacuated Syria to live on their European estates and

ply the trade of bankers, were proscribed on charges of heresy, by Pope

Clement V (1312), to gratify the brutal greed of a French king. The

Teutonic Knights, better counselled by their Grand Master, Hermann of

Salza (1210-1239), looked about for a new field of conquest; they found

it on the lower Vistula, where they settled with the countenance of the

Pope, the Emperor, and the King of Poland to reduce the heathen Slavs.

But, embroiled with their Polish protector by their territorial

ambitions, they were reduced, after 1466, to narrow boundaries in East

Prussia; and hardly a voice was raised in their favour when the last

Grand Master, a Hohenzollern by birth, became a Protestant and

bequeathed the lands of the Order to his own family (1525).



From the adventures of the Frankish colonists we turn with relief to

notice the last expiring flashes of enthusiasm in the armies equipped

for their relief. The Germans and Hungarians of the Fifth Crusade (1217)

showed more sincerity than worldly wisdom in delegating the chief

command to a papal legate, and in following to the bitter end his

reckless plan of campaign. Inspired with the hope of expelling Islam

from the Eastern Mediterranean, they would neither be content with

Damietta, which they conquered, nor with the Holy Land, which was

offered in exchange by the Sultan of Egypt. They would have all or

nothing, and they lost even Damietta in the end. Their discomfiture by

the Nile floods, which they had forgotten to take into their reckoning,

was a tragi-comic ending to a campaign in which greed and discord had

been expiated by extraordinary daring. St. Louis, in his Crusades of

1248 and 1270, flew in the face of common prudence and was thought a

pious fool, even by the barons who were too loyal to disobey his call.

But it is such follies that make history something better than a Newgate

Calendar of the crimes of common sense. He was no general; his attack on

Egypt was foredoomed to failure, and was made more disastrous by neglect

of ordinary precautions; that on Tunis, undertaken in the heat of an

African summer, ended, as might have been expected, in his own death and

the decimation of his followers by disease. Even as an example these

expeditions were all but fruitless. Yet, when the worst has been said of

the Crusades and those who led them, there are moments in the quixotic

career of St. Louis which haunt the fancy and compel our admiration: his

bearing when, a captive of the Egyptian Sultan, he refused, even under

threats of torture, to barter a single Christian fortress for his

freedom; his lonely watch in Palestine, when for three years he

patiently awaited the reinforcements that were never sent; his

death-bed, when he prayed for strength to despise good fortune and not

to fear adversity. Ideals may fade, but the memories of those who

realise them are the world's abiding possession.



If we ask what results of a more tangible sort remained from the

Crusades, when the service of the Holy Sepulchre had become a legend,

and the name of Crusade a byeword for whatever enterprises are most

impractical and visionary, the answer must be, that they affected Europe

chiefly in a negative sense and through indirect channels. They helped

to discredit the conception of the Church militant; they relieved Europe

of a surplus population of feudal adventurers; and they accelerated the

impoverishment of those other feudal families which took an occasional

part in the Holy War. It has never been proved that they led to

wholesale emancipation of serfs, or wholesale enfranchisement of towns;

though it is true that all such expeditions meant an increased demand

for ready money. To Western civilisation they contributed very little,

the truth being that there was little to be learned from the Mohammedans

in Syria. It is through Palermo and Toledo, where Christianity and Islam

met and mixed in peaceful intercourse, that the knowledge of Arab

science and philosophy filtered into Europe. The Fourth Crusade was an

exception to the general rule; it is no accident that Venetian art and

architecture developed rapidly when the republic was brought into close

and friendly relations with Constantinople. Through these relations, and

through studying the masterpieces brought home by the Crusaders,

Venetian artists recovered the antique feeling for pure form, and

founded a school which was classical in spirit, Christian only in

external and unessential features. The learning and literature which the

Eastern Empire inherited from Rome and Athens had no attraction for

Venetian merchant princes. But north of the Alps, and especially at

Paris, the thirteenth century saw an increasing interest in the Greek

language, and in Greek books, so far as they were useful to theologians

or scholastic disputants. Politically the Fourth Crusade is memorable

for its effect upon the Italian balance of power. It gave Venice an

advantage over her commercial rivals, Pisa and Genoa, which she never

lost; it gave her also a unique position as an intermediary between East

and West; and it placed her at the head of an empire comparable to those

of Athens and of Carthage, the great sea-powers of antiquity. But the

nation-states of Northern Europe, who had borne the burden and heat of

the Crusades, were less affected by them, politically or otherwise, than

were the city-states of Italy.









IX



THE FREE TOWNS





Scattered broadcast over the territory of every medieval state are towns

endowed with special privileges, and ruled by special magistrates. Some

of these towns--particularly in Italy, Southern France, and the

Rhineland--stand on the sites, and even within the walls, of ancient

_municipia_, those miniature Homes which the statecraft of the

Empire had created as seats of government and schools of culture. But,

even in Italy, the medieval town is indebted to classical antiquity for

nothing more than mouldering walls and aqueducts and amphitheatres and

churches. The barbarians had ignored the institutions of the

_municipium_, though it often served them as a fortress or a royal

residence or a centre of administration. The citizens were degraded to

the level of serfs; they became the property of a king, a bishop, or a

count, and were governed by a bailiff presiding over a seignorial court.

Only at the close of the Dark Ages, with the development of handicrafts

and a commercial class, was it found necessary to distinguish between

the town and the manorial village; and to a much later time the small

town preserved the characteristics of an agricultural society. Many a

burgess supplemented the profits of a trade by tilling acres in the

common fields and grazing cattle on the common pastures; pigs and

poultry scavenged in the streets; the farmyard was a usual adjunct of

the burgage tenement. Whether small or great, the town was a phenomenon

sufficiently unfamiliar to vex the soul of lawyers reared upon Teutonic

custom. They recognised that they were dealing with a new form of

community; but they were not prepared to define it or to generalise

about it. They preferred to treat each town as _sui generis_, an

awkward anomaly, a privileged abuse.



Indeed, definition was no easy matter, for medieval towns differed

infinitely in size, in government, and in the ingredients of their

population. In one respect they are all alike; the most energetic and

influential, though not necessarily the greater number, of the

inhabitants are artisans or traders. But side by side with the

industrial colony stand older interests, which often struggle hard

against the ascendancy of commerce. In the town or near it there may be

an abbey or a castle or a cathedral or a royal palace, to which the very

existence of the burgess community is due. The townsmen, profiting by

the custom and the protection of the great, have grown rich and

independent; they have bought privileges or have usurped them. But they

have still to reckon with the servants, the retainers, and the other

partisans of a superior always on the watch to recover his lost rights

of property and jurisdiction; the forces of the common enemy are

permanently encamped within the walls. Again, if the town lies on a

frontier or in newly-conquered country, it will be as much a fortress as

a mart; a number of the residents will be knights or men-at-arms who

hold their lands by the tenure of defending the town; and these

burgesses will be naturally indifferent to the interests of the traders.

Finally, in the Mediterranean lands, with their long tradition of urban

society, we find the nobles of the neighbourhood resorting to the town,

building town-houses, and frequently caballing among themselves to

obtain control of the town's government. Often a long time elapses

before the class which conceived the idea of municipal liberty is able

to get the better of these hostile forces; and still more often the

hardly-won privileges are wrested from those for whom they were

intended, are cancelled, or are made the monopoly of an oligarchic ring.



Still, the aims of the medieval burgess are more uniform, from one place

to another and from one generation to another, than we might anticipate

in ages when information travelled slowly, and when the relations of

every town to its lord were settled by a separate treaty. In modern

Europe the town is an administrative district of the state, and is

organised upon a standard pattern. In medieval Europe the town-charter

was frequently a compromise with the caprices and the interests of a

petty seignor; and even kings were inclined to deal with the towns which

stood upon the royal demesne in a spirit of the frankest opportunism.

Moreover, the inclination of all lords was to meddle with their

burgesses no further than seemed necessary to ensure the full and

punctual discharge of all services and pecuniary dues. So long as these

were guaranteed, the internal affairs of the town might be left for the

residents to settle as seemed good to them. But, as to the main

conditions of the compact, each of the contracting parties holds

clear-cut and unwavering views. The lords are agreed that privileges of

trade and tenure may safely be granted if the chief magistrates are

nominated by, and accountable to themselves. The townsfolk, on the other

hand, assume that promises of free tenure and free trade will be worth

nothing unless accompanied by the permission to elect all magistrates

and councils.



Sometimes the victory rests with the lord, and sometimes with the

burgesses. Accordingly, there are two kinds of chartered town. The

larger class includes communities enjoying certain privileges under the

rule of seignorial functionaries. A smaller class consists of those

which are not only privileged but "free," that is, self-governing bodies

corporate. The distinction between the two classes is not precise enough

to satisfy a modern lawyer. Often a "free" town is obliged to allow the

lord some voice in the appointment of magistrates; while the humblest

body of traders may enjoy the right of doing justice in a market-court

without the interference of a bailiff. The one class shades off into the

other, if only for the reason that "freedom" is usually won by a gradual

process of bargaining or encroachment on the part of towns which are

already privileged. The higher type is simply a later stage in the

natural course of municipal development.



If we analyse the privileges of those towns which remain in

leading-strings, the first in order of time and of importance is the

town-peace, which only the king or his delegate can grant. Invested with

this peace the town becomes, like a royal palace or the shrine of a

saint, a sanctuary protected by special pains and penalties; the burgess

stands to the king in the same relation as the widow and the orphan; to

do him wrong is an outrage against the royal majesty. Next comes the

right of trade. The burgesses are allowed to commute their servile dues

and obligations for a fixed money-rent, that they may be at liberty for

pursuits more lucrative than agriculture. They also receive a licence to

hold a weekly market, and possibly a yearly fair as well; it is agreed

that all disputes of traders, which arise in fair or market, shall be

decided according to the law of merchants, the general usage of the

commercial world; and a safe-conduct is granted to all strangers who

resort to either gathering for lawful purposes. At first the tolls of

the fair and market are collected by the lord, and the law-merchant is

administered in the court of his bailiff. Often, however, he ends by

leasing both the tolls and the commercial jurisdiction to the townsmen.

When they are permitted (as in Flanders and in England) to form a

merchant-gild, it is with this body that such bargains are concluded;

and the gild usually purchases from the lord a quantity of other

privileges--the monopoly of certain staple industries in the town and

neighbourhood; rights of pre-emption over all imported wares; and the

power of making by-laws to regulate wages, prices, the hours of labour,

and the quality of manufactured goods. Where the lord is a sovereign

prince, he is often induced to make concessions of a wider scope:

freedom from inland tolls and from customs at the seaports; the right of

making reprisals upon native and foreign enemies who rob the merchants

or infringe the privileges of the town; immunity, in civil suits, from

every jurisdiction but that of the town-court.



It would be easy to multiply examples of this type of town, but we can

only mention here a few whose history and customs are particularly

instructive. One of the oldest is St. Riquier in Ponthieu, a notable

instance of an industrial community dating from Carolingian times and

fostered by the policy of a great religious house. The second half of

the eleventh century is remarkable for the speculative acumen displayed

by lay and secular lords in fostering the development of new commercial

centres; the Norman _bourg_ of Breteuil, founded in 1060 by a

seneschal of William the Conqueror, deserves special consideration as a

model extensively imitated in England, Wales, and Ireland; the Suabian

towns of Allensbach and Radolfszell, chartered by the great Abbey of

Reichenau a few years later, are monuments of German seignorial

enterprise. Lorris en Gatinais, a town on the demesne of the French

monarchy, received from Louis VI a set of privileges which became the

standard for the numerous _villes de bourgeoisie_ founded under the

immediate sway of the Capetian dynasty.



But the charters thankfully accepted by new colonies or embryonic

market-centres were insufficient to satisfy the aspirations of older and

greater cities. At the very time when far-sighted seigneurs are

scattering commercial privileges broadcast, there begins among the urban

classes of North France, of Flanders, and of some Italian provinces, an

agitation for more extensive rights, for "free" municipal constitutions

of our second type. In these regions the popular cry is "Commune,"

_novum ac pessimum nomen;_ and it is blended with complaints of

feudal tyranny, which often develop, since the seigneur of the town is

commonly a bishop or an abbot, into complaints against the Church. The

commune is a sworn confederacy (_conjuratio_), which bears some

resemblance both to the fraternities established for the enforcement of

the Truce of God (_supra_, p. 103) and to the merchant-gilds. But

it has also new and striking features. It is formed in defiance of

authority, and for the purpose of seizing rights which are legally

vested in the seigneur or the Crown. It is hostile to the ruling classes

of society; and the object of the members is to establish a republican

form of government within their city. They are largely merchants or

artisans; but they concern themselves with wider interests than those of

trade, and often insist that no man, of whatever avocation, shall remain

in the city unless he joins the commune.



We should be glad to know more of the bold spirits who directed the

communal movement in this early stage. They startled contemporaries by

their radicalism, and their conduct gives the lie to our preconceived

idea that a townsman is a man of peace. These medieval burgesses were

accustomed to defend their rights by force; there is nothing abnormal in

the rule of the merchant-gild of Valenciennes that the gild-brethren

should always bring their weapons with them to the market, and should

ride in armed companies to distant fairs. The Milanese and the men of

Ghent are typical in their greed for empire, in their readiness to

strike a blow for their own profit whenever war is in the land. If the

seigneurs of such cities gave cause for dissatisfaction, they found that

they had brought a hornet's nest about their ears. In the struggle for

liberties the popular party displayed a high courage which rose superior

to defeat, though in the hour of triumph it was too often sullied by

ferocious acts of vengeance. They threw themselves with intelligence and

energy into the feuds of other interests and classes, backing the Church

against the State, the State against the baronage, or the weaker against

the stronger of two rival lords. The policy of the towns was often

double-faced, material and separatist; but it also embodied ideals of

justice and of citizenship which were destined to prevail in the

struggle for existence, and to produce a wholesome reformation in the

structure of society.



The communal programme was not realised in a day; the struggle for free

governments, which began in the eleventh century, was continued into the

thirteenth and fourteenth; and the forces of the movement were already

exhausted in North France and Italy before it reached a head in South

France or in Germany. Naturally, in a conflict waged over so wide an

area for several hundred years, the watchwords were often modified, and

many different patterns of town government were devised. In its later

stages the movement was more peaceful, and the purse was often found a

better argument than the sword; the communal parties ceased to be

democratic, though they never ceased to be republican; and power was

practically if not formally monopolised by a municipal patriciate. The

mass-meeting of the burgesses, all-powerful in the days when the commune

was an organised rebellion, gradually became insignificant in the older

communes, and in many of the late foundations was never recognised at

all, its powers being distributed among the craft-gilds meeting in their

separate assemblies. Concurrent with this diminution in the importance

of the ordinary burgess, there is a tendency to restrict the franchise

by demanding higher and higher qualifications from the candidates. The

commune, in fact, sinks almost to the level of a trades union or a

benefit society, and membership is valued chiefly as a title to

exclusive rights of trade and poor-relief. The political aspect of the

institution is almost forgotten in countries where the power of the

state gains ground upon the centrifugal forces of society; and, in those

communes which preserve the dignity of states, an internecine conflict

between the rich and poor, the rulers and the ruled, usually becomes the

main feature of domestic politics.



In spite of these changes in principles and spirit, the organs of

communal government are almost everywhere the same. The executive power

is vested in a board or committee, called in Italy the _consules_, in

France the _echevins, jurati_, or _syndics_, in Germany the _Rath_

(council). Commonly this board has a president, known in France and

England as the mayor, in Germany as the burgomaster, who represents the

body-corporate in all negotiations with the seigneur or the Crown or

other communes. One or more councils (_sapientes, pares_, etc.) are

often found assisting the executive with their advice; and in the older

type of commune the mass-meeting plays a conspicuous part, not only

electing magistrates and councils, but also voting taxes, auditing the

accounts of expenditure, and deciding on all questions of exceptional

importance. Where the general assembly is non-existent or moribund,

offices are filled either by co-optation or by elections in the

assemblies of the craft-gilds, or are even allowed to descend by

hereditary right. As the popular control over the executive declines,

jealousy of the executive leads to some disastrous changes: to the

multiplication of offices, to the shortening of terms of office, to

the creation of innumerable checks and balances, to the organisation of

this or that powerful interest or party as a state within the state. But

the morbid pathology of the communes in their last stage of decline is a

subject with which we need not here concern ourselves. These intricate

expedients, which are best exemplified in the constitution of

fourteenth-century Florence, weakened the government but could not make

it more impartial or more tolerant. By the end of the Middle Ages, the

ordinary burgess was prepared to hail the advent of a royal bailiff or a

self-constituted despot, as the only cure for the inveterate disorders

incident to freedom.



It is refreshing to turn back from the period of disillusionment to that

of sanguine expectations, and to study the commune in the period of

infancy and growth, when no other refuge from anarchy and oppression was

open to the industrial classes, and when emancipated serfs were still

intoxicated with the dream of liberty.



Curiously enough, the communal revolution began most quietly in the land

where it was ultimately responsible for the fiercest conflicts. The

cities of North Italy gained their first instalments of freedom, at

different periods in the eleventh century, by bargains or by usurpations

of which few records have come down to us. At Pisa we hear of an

agreement between the bishop and the citizens (1080-1085) under which

the latter are permitted to form a peace-association, to hold

mass-meetings, and to elect _consules_ who shall co-operate with

the bishop in the government. At Genoa, on the other hand, the commune

appears (in 1122) after several earlier _conjurationes_ have been

successfully resisted and dispersed. Probably the case of Pisa is more

typical than that of Genoa, since we usually hear of a commune for the

first time when it is already a fully developed institution. In most of

the North Italian cities it was at the expense of a bishop that the

commune was established. Legally the change meant the transference, from

the bishop or another seigneur to the town, of powers derived by

delegation from the Emperor; and it took place in the course of the

Investitures contest, when the bishops, conscious of simony and other

offences which made their position insecure, were more concerned to

dissuade their citizens from siding with the party of ecclesiastical

reform than to fulfil their duties as officials of the Empire. The

Emperors themselves, hard-pressed in the struggle with the Papacy and

eager to purchase support at any price, contributed to the success of

the communal movement by the charters which they bestowed on some

important cities.



In Northern France the situation was less favourable to the towns. Often

indeed it suited the policy of the Capets to weaken an over-mighty

subject by protecting his rebellious serfs. But the bishops and the lay

seigneurs offered a pertinacious opposition to all demands for

enfranchisement; the King was a timid and vacillating ally, always

inclined to desert the cause of the townsfolk for a bribe, always in

fear that the movement might spread to his demesne. Whatever his

sympathies, he could do little, when it came to blows, but stand aside

and watch the conflict. Two examples will serve to illustrate the

general features of these feuds between municipalities and lords.



(1) In 1070 the men of Le Mans were driven to rebellion by the

lawlessness of the local baronage, and by the oppressions of the

governor whom an absentee count had put over them. They formed a

commune, and compelled the more timid of their enemies to swear that

they would recognise it. Others they caught and hanged or blinded; and

they made systematic war against the castles of the neighbourhood, which

they took one by one and burned to the ground--and this, says the

outraged chronicler, in Lent and even on Good Friday! The citizens

themselves thought no season too sacred for such a crusade against

anarchy; once, when their militia went out to attack a castle, the

bishop and his clergy were induced to lead the vanguard, bearing crosses

and consecrated banners. But after a time the fortune of war turned

against the commune; the militia were routed and the count's lieutenant

recovered the castle which dominated Le Mans. The citizens offered their

allegiance to the Count of Anjou, if he would deliver them. He came to

the rescue, the governor fled, the castle was surrendered by the

garrison and at once demolished. But, before the citizens had settled

their future relations with Anjou, an English army appeared, led by

William the Conqueror, their lawful suzerain. The Angevins effaced

themselves; the citizens, making a virtue of necessity, opened their

gates to the King; and since he would only confirm their ancient

liberties, the existence of the commune was abruptly terminated (1073).



(2) At Laon in the next generation there was a wilder and more

calamitous rising against the misrule of the bishop. His name was

Waldric; he had been Chancellor to Henry I of England, and was elected

by the chapter of Laon (1106) because of the great wealth which he had

accumulated, none too honestly, in the course of his short official

career. Much of his private fortune was expended in procuring the Pope's

approval of his very irregular election. The remainder was soon

squandered in extravagant and riotous living; and the bishop then began

to exploit his seignorial rights in Laon. His extortions were the more

resented since he kept no order; the environs of the city swarmed with

brigands and footpads, and kidnappers were allowed to work their will

inside the city. At length the burgesses seized an opportunity, when the

bishop was away in England, to set up a commune. On his return he was

obliged to accept the situation and to recognise the commune in return

for a substantial payment. But he further recouped himself by debasing

the local currency, till it was practically worthless; and he gratified

his spite against the citizens by an atrocious crime. Professing to have

discovered a conspiracy against his life, he arrested the Mayor and

caused the unhappy man to be blinded by a black slave, whom he employed

as his bodyguard and executioner. The friends of the Mayor complained to

the Pope; but the bishop got before them with his own version of the

story, and by the help of bribery secured an honourable acquittal. By

the same arguments he induced the King to quash the charter of the

commune, and then seemed master of the situation. But the men of Laon

conspired to kill him as he was going in state to the cathedral; he was

with difficulty rescued by his knights, and found it necessary to

garrison the episcopal palace with villeins from his country estates.

Arrogant as ever, he boasted of his power and the satisfaction that he

would exact; the time was coming, he said, when his black slave should

pull the noses of the most respected citizens, and the fellows would not

dare to grunt. He was soon undeceived. The mob of Laon stormed the

palace and massacred the defenders; they found the bishop in the

cellars, disguised as a peasant and hiding in an empty cask; they

dragged him forth by the hair of his head, and hacked him to pieces in

the street (1112). When a calmer mood returned, the citizens were

appalled at the prospect of the King's indignation. Those who were

conscious of guilt fled from the city, which was left half-deserted. The

barons and the serfs of the surrounding country swooped like vultures

upon Laon, pillaged the empty houses and fought with one another for the

spoil. For the next sixteen years the remnant of the citizens lived a

miserable existence as the mere serfs of Waldric's successors. In 1128

the King permitted them to associate under a Mayor, for the better

maintenance of the public peace; but they were denied the title of a

commune, and continued to be subject to the jurisdiction of the bishop.



These dramas of oppression and retaliation, though characteristic in the

sense that they reveal the worst faults and the best excuses of the

communal movement, were happily exceptional in Northern France; not

because oppression was rare, but because rebellions defeated their own

object. No seignorial concessions were worth the parchment on which they

were inscribed, without a confirmation from the King; and it was not the

King's interest to condone sacrilege or overt treason against a feudal

lord. Hence the founders of a North French commune preferred to keep

their agitation within the bounds of law. They invoked the King's help,

and he, for an adequate consideration, destroyed seignorial rights by a

few strokes of the pen; which he did the more readily since his lawyers

had formulated the doctrine that communes were tenants of the Crown,

liable to military service and to taxation at the royal pleasure. From

the close of the twelfth century there was a firm alliance between the

Third Estate and the French monarchy. On the whole it was more

advantageous to the King than to the communes. Under St. Louis and his

successors, when the power of the feudatories was broken, the commune

presented itself as an obstacle in the path of central government. On

one pretext or another, here because of faction-fights and there for

mismanagement of the communal finances, the cities lost their charters

and passed under the rule of royal commissioners. It was a poor

compensation that the Third Estate obtained the right of sending

delegates to the States General of the Kingdom. Representation brought

new liabilities without corresponding rights. The Third Estate, holding

jealously aloof from the estates of the nobles and the clergy, was

powerless against a determined sovereign.



The French commune, in fact, was a special expedient for the cure of a

transitory evil. Republican institutions were in France an exotic

growth, inconsistent with national traditions, and only welcome to

classes which had neither the political intelligence nor the material

resources to maintain their own ideals in the face of persistent

opposition. It is significant that the charters of the French communes

were frequently cancelled with the approval of the citizen assemblies.

The situation was different in Flanders and North Italy, where the city

was the natural unit of society, and the burgher class, enriched by

foreign trade, were strong enough to negotiate on equal terms with their

nominal superiors. Cities such as Ghent and Milan were shielded from

contact with the great monarchies until the habit of self-government was

firmly rooted in the citizens. When at last they were confronted with

the absolutist claims of the Capets or the Hohenstauffen, these cities

did not shrink from a direct appeal to arms; and the wars which they

waged for independence are not the least interesting chapter of medieval

history.



Flanders was vexed by a problem of over-population, for which neither

the continuous exodus of emigrants nor the systematic reclaiming of

marsh-lands offered a permanent solution. At an early date her

middle-classes discovered the grand principle of modern industry: that

by manufacturing for foreign markets the production of wealth can be

accelerated to an indefinite degree, and the most prolific communities

maintained in affluence upon a sterile or restricted territory. The

superfluous labour of the Flemish countryside flocked into towns, at the

bidding of Flemish capital, and found remunerative employment in the

weaving trade. From 1127 onwards these towns were bargaining with the

Counts of Flanders for emancipation. Bruges, Ypres, Lille and Ghent were

only the most successful among forty thriving communities which, at the

close of the twelfth century, enjoyed a large measure of self-government

but found their liberties threatened by the King of France. To meet the

danger the Flemish communes embarked on the stormy sea of politics. At

first they fought the King, in the name of the Count, and made their

first appearance as a military power on the disastrous field of Bouvines

(1214), which cost Count Ferrand his liberty and the communes the flower

of their militia. The successors of Ferrand sank deeper and deeper into

dependence on the Capets, until the communes were forced in self-defence

to assume the leading role. At Courtrai (in 1302) they turned the tables

on the Crown, and took an ample vengeance for Bouvines, by a terrible

slaughter of French knights and men-at-arms, demonstrating to a startled

Europe that feudal tactics were obsolete, and that pikemen on foot were

a match for the best mailed cavalry. Cheated by a treacherous Count of

the due fruits of their victory, the Flemish communes nursed their

resentment and waited for new opportunities, while consoling themselves

with savage persecution of the nobles, the clergy, and all others whom

they suspected of French sympathies. The ambition of Edward III came at

length to their assistance; under the leadership of Jacques van

Artevelde, a merchant-prince and demagogue of Ghent, they signed a

treaty with the English King for the invasion and conquest of France

(1339). It was a brief and ill-starred alliance, ruinous to Flemish

trade and abruptly ended by the fall of Artevelde, whom his

fellow-citizens tore limb from limb under the impression that he was

aiming at a tyranny (1345). But events soon justified the bold proposals

of the fallen statesman. In 1369 the heiress of the county was given to

a French prince of the blood; the French party in Flanders reared their

heads; Bruges, to the alarm and fury of all patriots, joined the foreign

cause from jealousy of Ghent. War broke out between the two great

rivals; and the men of Ghent, commanded by Philip, the son of Jacques

van Artevelde, gained the upper hand. Victorious in a pitched battle,

they pursued the beaten army into Bruges, massacred the partisans of

France, and put the city to the sack. No other commune dared to imitate

the policy of Bruges, or to dispute the supremacy of Ghent in Flanders.

The younger Artevelde, like his father before him, stood out for a brief

moment as the dictator of a league of free republics. But the generals

of France had profited by their hard experience in the wars with

England; at Roosebeke (1382) the men of Ghent, charging the French

cavalry "like wild boars," found themselves outflanked, and were crushed

by the weight of superior science and numbers. They fought with the fury

of despair, neither expecting nor receiving quarter. More than twenty

thousand of the citizens fell in the battle, and were left, by the

King's order, unburied on the field. The corpse of Artevelde, who had

been suffocated in the press, was hanged on a gibbet for a warning to

all demagogues. With him died the day-dream of an independent Flanders.

Though her cities remained prosperous, they were destined to be

successively the subjects of the Burgundian, the Spaniard, and the

Austrian. It was only in 1831 that Flanders at length became a province

in a kingdom based on the Walloon nationality.



The Italian communes present, in their sharp vicissitudes of fortune, a

spectacle not less dramatic and infinitely more momentous for the

general history of Europe. In Italy, as in Flanders, the fair ideal of

civic freedom was blurred and defaced by party feuds and personal

ambitions, by the fickleness and passion of the mob, by the lust of

conquest and the fratricidal jealousies of neighbouring republics. Yet

to the influence of this ideal we must attribute both the solidarity of

the Italian city-state and the wealth of individual genius which it

fostered. The Italian Renaissance was little more than the harvest-time

of medieval Italy, the glorious evening of a day which had dawned with

the Fourth Crusade and had reached high noon in the lifetimes of Dante

and Giotto. In the fifteenth century the aptitudes which had ripened in

the intense and crowded life of turbulent republics were concentrated

upon art and letters. The leisure and the security which the specialist

demands were bought by renouncing the Utopian visions of the past. But

the growth of technical dexterity was a poor compensation for the

narrowing of interests; the individual was sacrificed to make the

artist; and art, too, suffered by the divorce from practical affairs. If

we are moved to impatience by the waste of life and energy involved in

the turmoils of medieval Italy, we must remember that in no atmosphere

less electric would the national energies have matured so early, or

piled achievement on achievement with such feverish speed.



[Illustration: (map) The Alps and North Italy]



The city, from time immemorial the meeting-ground for the best elements

in Italian society, had become in the early Middle Ages the one bulwark

between the Italian middle-classes and a particularly lawless form of

feudalism; and it had served this purpose well. The number of these

cities, their population and resources, the luxury of the citizens, the

splendour of the palaces and public buildings, were the admiration of

all Europe at a time when the Flemish burghers still lived in wooden

houses and the Flemish cities were still rudely protected by palisades

and earthen ramparts. Nature had done much for Italy. Thanks to the

central situation of the peninsula, the trade between Northern Europe

and the Mediterranean converged upon her seaports and the Alpine passes

which stand above the valley of the Po. The untiring industry of Italian

capital and labour made Lombardy and Tuscany the homes of textile

manufactures, of scientific cultivation, of banking and finance. In

every port of the Levant, the Aegean and the Black Sea, the shipmen and

merchants of Venice, Benoa, and Pisa hunted for trade like

sleuth-hounds, and fought like wolves to secure a preference or a

monopoly. By land and sea the rule of life was competition for territory

and trade. War was a normal and often a welcome incident in the quest

for wealth; few Italians were free from the belief that conquests are a

short cut to prosperity, that trade follows the flag, and that the gain

of one community must be another's loss. Within the city walls, class

strove with class and family with family. Riot, massacre, and

proscription were the normal instruments of party warfare; minorities

conspired from fear of proscription, and majorities proscribed in order

to forestall conspiracy. Boundless, indeed, was the vitality of

republics which, under such conditions, not only throve, but also held

at bay the ablest sovereigns and the most formidable troops of Europe.



The best and the worst features of the communal regime are illustrated

in the resistance of the Lombard cities to Frederic Barbarossa, the

first Emperor who formulated and applied to Italy a scheme of absolutist

government. Between 1154 and 1176 the Lombards turned the course of

history. They prepared the way for Innocent III to plant his foot upon

the necks of kings, and for Innocent IV to destroy the House of

Hohenstauffen. That this would be the result of their stand for liberty,

neither they nor the other parties to the struggle could foretell. But

on both sides it was felt that the greatest issues were at stake. The

question was whether Italy should, once for all, accept a German yoke;

whether the Papacy should become a German patriarchate; whether free

institutions, both in Church and State, should give place to a

bureaucracy.



The question did not take this shape from the beginning. When Frederic

first intervened in Lombardy he came to protect the smaller cities

against the imperialist ambitions of Milan, to restore the public peace,

to investigate innumerable complaints of force and fraud. Many of the

cities hailed him as a deliverer; against him were only the clients of

Milan, or those who, on a humbler scale, aspired to emulate her policy.

Even so it was no easy matter to chastise the most insignificant of the

contumacious communes; and Milan, who refused point-blank to give

satisfaction for her lawless acts of conquests, or even to renounce what

she had won, could not safely be attacked.



Two circumstances were against the Emperor. Any war against the Lombards

must be a war of sieges; but the military science of the age was more

skilful in defence than in attack. And no war could be carried to a

prosperous conclusion without Italian help; for it was impossible to

interest the German princes in the wars of Italy, or to exact

substantial help from them. The first of these difficulties Frederic

Barbarossa never overcame. With the second he was more successful in the

middle period of the conflict (1158-1162); and it was then that the

representatives of Lombard independence were most nearly overwhelmed.



In 1158 he came back from Germany to besiege Milan, having carefully

concluded treaties with her rivals in Lombardy, in the Mark of Verona,

in Emilia and the Marches. With their help he starved the impregnable

city into a surrender on terms dictated by himself. In these there was

nothing to excite suspicion or alarm. It was a matter of course that the

Milanese should take the oath of allegiance and emancipate the enslaved

cities. He stipulated further for a palace in the city, and for the

restitution of all imperial prerogatives (_regalia_) which the

consuls had usurped; but the full import of these latter articles only

became clear some two months later, when he announced his future policy

at a Diet held on the plain of Roncaglia. He disclaimed the intention of

ruling as a tyrant, but demanded that his lawful rights should be

respected. As guardian of the public peace, he would permit no private

wars to be waged and no leagues to be formed among the cities. As lord

of the land, he claimed, under the title of _regalia_, a formidable

list of rights and dues which the jurists of Bologna had compiled at the

expense of much historical research. It included the nomination of the

highest magistrate in every city; the supreme jurisdiction in appeals

and criminal causes; the control of mints, markets, and highways; and

rights of purveyance and taxation. Some of these had been in abeyance

from time immemorial; most of them had been exercised by the cities for

more than fifty years. Frederic held that no prescription could avail

against the Crown; and, if this attitude seemed more appropriate to a

Justinian than to a King of the Lombards, there was still something to

be said for his claims on grounds of public policy. Till a strong

monarchy was re-established in Italy, city would oppress city, and the

strong would rob the weak. But such a monarchy could only be maintained

if an ample revenue were assured, and if the powers arrogated by the

communes were curtailed.



Even those cities which had originally supported Frederic began to waver

when they saw the logical consequences of his policy. They were not

disposed to cavil at any measures that he might take against Milan. But

to deal with friend and foe on the same principles struck them as

injustice. To run the risk of enslavement by a neighbour was an evil;

but it was worse to lose for ever the prospect of enslaving others. And

what guarantee was there that the new absolutism, once firmly in the

saddle, would always be benevolent, or would always be represented by

officials of integrity? The claims of the Emperor might be in a sense

historical; but the cities knew, if he did not, that the so-called

restoration of _regalia_ was in effect a revolution. The time was

nearly ripe for general defection; loyalty was strained to

breaking-point when Frederic began to appoint for each city a resident

commissioner (_podesta_), empowered to exercise the regalian rights

and to collect the revenue accruing from them. But Milan was still

feared and hated. When she alleged that her recent treaty of

capitulation was infringed by the decrees of Roncaglia, and when she

expelled the envoys whom Frederic had sent to instal a _podesta_,

the other cities rallied to the imperial cause. There was one notable

exception. The little commune of Crema had been ordered to destroy her

walls; she refused, and made common cause with her great neighbour.



The imperial ban was issued against both cities (April 1159); troops

were hurriedly called up from Germany, and contingents were obtained

from the Italian allies, until Frederic had in the field a force

estimated at 100,000 men. But for six months he was held in check by the

resistance of Crema, which he had planned to reduce with a small force

while the main bulk of his levies were gathering for the siege of Milan.

The attack on Crema was cordially seconded by the citizens of the

neighbouring Cremona, who gave their assistance in diverting the

watercourses which ran through the city, and lent Frederic the most

famous of living engineers to make his siege-machines. Crema was

completely invested; and every known method of assault was tried. The

moat was filled with fascines, and movable towers of wood, so high as to

overtop the battlements, were brought up to the walls; which were also

attacked with rams, and undermined by sappers working in the shelter of

huge penthouses. But breaches were no sooner made than repaired; every

scaling-party was repulsed; and the defenders derided the Emperor in

opprobrious songs. For once in his life he descended to bluster and

ferocious inhumanity. He swore that he would give no quarter, he

executed captives within sight of the walls, and he suspended his

hostages in baskets from the most exposed parts of the siege-towers.

Fortunately for his fame he relented, when hunger and the desertion of

their master-engineer compelled the Cremesi to sue for terms. They

received permission to depart with as much property as they could carry

on their backs. The rest fell to the imperial army; and the men of

Cremona were commissioned to demolish the city, which they did with a

goodwill. The turn of Milan followed; the Emperor, warned by experience,

fell back upon the slow and costly, but irresistible method of blockade.

At the end of eight months (May 1161-Feb. 1162) the city was

surrendered, evacuated, and condemned to destruction--a sentence which

it was found impossible to execute completely, so solid were the

ramparts and so vast the buildings they enclosed. For the moment all

resistance seemed at an end. The policy outlined at Roncaglia could at

length be put in force through the length and breadth of Lombardy; and

Frederic departed for Germany, leaving trustworthy lieutenants to

complete the vindication of his Italian rights. It only remained to try

conclusions with a recalcitrant Pope and the evasive Normans of the

South. The Emperor already saw himself in imagination the master of

Italy, and even of the Western Mediterranean. Five years passed without

bringing him nearer to his goal. Then Frederic returned to effect the

expulsion of Alexander III from Rome. He succeeded in this object, and

was crowned in St. Peter's by the anti-Pope of his own choosing (August

1167). It was the highest point of his fortunes, and the calamities

which followed were so unforeseen and terrible that contemporaries saw

in them the hand of God. While he was still in Rome, a pestilence broke

out which cost him two thousand knights and his best counsellors. He was

forced to fly from the infected city. On his way to the north he found

the road barred by a new and formidable coalition. The Lombard League

had come into existence--an alliance organised by Cremona, hitherto the

staunchest of imperial allies, and closely linked with Venice, which

Frederic had regarded as a negligible quantity. Of the intentions of the

League there could be no doubt. The members were already engaged in the

rebuilding of Milan; they had admitted to their inmost councils a legate

of Alexander III; they announced that they would only render to the

Emperor his ancient and undoubted rights. Frederic would not trust

himself in their vicinity. Accompanied by a handful of knights he

escaped ignominiously to the north, taking a circuitous route through

Savoy. The Leaguers no longer troubled to mask their true intentions. As

a token of their unity they built the city of Alessandria, named after

Frederic's bitterest enemy, the lawful Pope; and they solemnly

repudiated the appellate jurisdiction of the imperial law-court (1168).



Six years elapsed before Frederic could return to demand satisfaction,

and even then he could only muster some eight thousand men. From October

1174 to April 1175 he was engaged, first in besieging Alessandria, and

then in making fruitless overtures to the League for a compromise. By

the end of 1175 he was virtually blockaded in Pavia with a dwindling

remnant of his army. Reinforced in the spring, he made a rapid march on

Milan, in the hope of taking unawares the headquarters of the League.

But the Lombards were forewarned, and met him, at Legnano (29th May

1176), with a force outnumbering his by more than two to one. The battle

was hotly contested. The Lombard vanguard, composed of cavalry,

scattered before the onslaught of the Germans. The Emperor then led a

charge which penetrated to the centre of the enemy's position. Here was

the banner of Milan, mounted on a triumphal car (_carroccio_) and

guarded by picked burgesses, who had sworn to defend their trust to the

death. Round them the fighting raged for hours; the Germans made no

impression on their ranks, and by degrees the Lombard troops who had

fled returned to renew the battle. At length the imperial

standard-bearer was slain, and Frederic himself unhorsed. Thinking all

was lost, the imperialists fled confusedly towards Pavia, which they

reached after suffering more loss in the flight than in the battle.

Frederic, cut off from his followers, only escaped capture by hiding for

some days until the road to Pavia was clear.



Legnano was no overwhelming catastrophe, but it was ominous that citizen

levies had defeated German knights in a fair field. Frederic's

counsellors insisted that it was foolhardiness to pursue the war

interminably, when at any moment the papal interest might gain the upper

hand in Germany. Peace must be made at any cost with Alexander, and he

would accept no peace from which the Lombards were excluded. Frederic

yielded to the inevitable with a good grace. A treaty was concluded with

the Pope in the same year (November 1176); a few months later, a six

years' truce with the Lombards was arranged at Venice; and at Constance,

in 1183, this was converted into a lasting peace. In form there was a

compromise. The cities, while retaining the regalia and the free

election of their consuls, recognised their allegiance to the Emperor

and his appellate jurisdiction. In reality the Emperor had surrendered

everything of value, and the cities ignored any stipulations in the

treaty which were unfavourable to them.



So matters remained until Frederic II, the grandson of Barbarossa,

having firmly established himself in his Sicilian heritage, began to

meditate a closer union between his dominions north and south of the

Alps. The better to secure his communications with Germany, he prepared

to enforce in Lombardy the imperial rights reserved at Constance (1226).

At once the dormant Lombard League revived. The Alpine passes were so

effectually blockaded that Frederic was left entirely dependent on his

Sicilian forces. He turned the flank of the League at length, by an

alliance with Ezzelin da Romano, the tyrant of Verona, which gave him

access to the Brenner pass; but the League retaliated by lending support

to his rebellious son, Henry, King of the Germans. So began another war

in Lombardy. Legnano was brilliantly avenged on the field of Cortenuova

(1237), where the Emperor routed the Milanese and captured the

_carroccio_, the symbol of their independence. But he, like his

grandfather, was worn out by the difficulties of siege warfare; and in

1240 he turned southward to reduce the States of the Church. One more

attempt he made on Lombardy in the winter of 1247-1248. But a disastrous

fiasco destroyed his hopes and gave a mortal blow to his prestige. For

five months he blockaded Parma, and the city was at the last gasp, when

he imprudently dismissed a part of his troops. The garrison saw their

opportunity, and made a desperate sortie while the Emperor was absent on

a hunting expedition. They surprised and burned the strongly fortified

camp which he had named Victoria; his baggage and even his crown jewels

were captured; more than half of his army were slain or taken, and the

rest fled in confusion to Cremona (18th February 1248). It was necessary

for Frederic to beat a retreat, and he appeared no more in Lombardy. His

son Enzio, whom he left to represent him, was captured next year by the

Bolognese and sentenced to perpetual captivity.



Frederic died in 1250; and from this year we may date both the

disruption of the Empire and the decadence of the free Italian commune.

What he had failed to effect, with the united power of Sicily and

Germany behind him, was accomplished by a score of petty local

dynasties. At Milan the Visconti completed the enslavement which the

Delia Torre had first planned; at Verona it was the Scaligeri who

entered on the imperial inheritance; at Ferrara, the Este; at Padua the

Carrara; at Mantua, the Gonzaga. The tide of despotism rose slowly but

surely, until in the fifteenth century Venice alone remained to remind

Italy of the possibility of freedom.



It is to Germany, rather than Italy or Flanders, that we must look for

the last and perhaps the most fruitful phase in the development of

medieval town life. Free institutions were acquired by the German towns

comparatively late; and although it was the Lombard commune which they

aspired to reproduce, they never succeeded in securing so large a

measure of independent power, or in making themselves the capitals of

petty States. The Hohenstauffen, like the early Capets, were sensible of

the advantages to be gained by alliance with the Third Estate; but

Frederic II was obliged to renounce the right of creating free imperial

cities within the fiefs of the great princes; and most towns were left

to bargain single-handed with their immediate lords. Shut off from any

prospects of territorial sovereignty, the towns, even those which held

from the Empire, were also excluded from the Diet until the close of the

fifteenth century. Trade afforded the only outlet for their activities.

But in trade they engaged with such success that, by the close of the

Middle Ages, Augsburg rivalled Florence as a centre of cosmopolitan

finance, and the Baltic towns had developed a commerce comparable to

that of the Mediterranean. It was the Baltic trade which gave birth to a

new form of municipal league, the famous Hansa. The nucleus of this

association was an alliance formed between Lubeck and Hamburg to protect

the traffic of the Elbe. Other cities were induced to affiliate

themselves, and in 1299 the Hansa absorbed the older Gothland League of

which Wisby was the centre. By the year 1400 there were upwards of

eighty Hanseatic cities, lying chiefly in the lower Rhineland, in

Saxony, in Brandenburg, and along the Baltic coast; but the commercial

sphere of the League extended from England to Russia and from Norway to

Cracow.



The Hanseatic cities were subject to many different suzerains, and were

federated only for the protection of their trade. The League was loosely

knit together; there was a representative congress which met at

irregular intervals in Lubeck; but the delegates had no power to bind

their cities. There was only a small federal revenue, no standing fleet

or army, and no means of coercing disobedient members save by exclusion

from trade privileges. Yet this amorphous union ranked for some purposes

as an independent power. The Hansa policed the Baltic and the waterways

and high roads of North Germany; it owned factories (steelyards) in

London, Bruges, Bergen, and Novgorod; it concluded commercial treaties,

and on occasion it waged wars. In the fourteenth century it monopolised

the Baltic trade, and was courted by all the nations which had interests

in that sea. In the fifteenth it began to decline, and in the age of the

Reformation sank into insignificance. New sea-Powers arose; England and

the Netherlands, Sweden and Denmark, came into competition with the

Hanso; the growth of territorialism in Germany sapped the independence

of the leading members of the league; and the Baltic trade, like that of

the Mediterranean, became of secondary importance when the Portuguese

had discovered the Cape route to India, and when the work of Columbus,

Cortes, and Pizarro opened up a New World in the Western hemisphere.


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