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Showing posts with label Percecution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Percecution. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

A Discussion of Papal Authority in the High Middle Ages (Paper)


A Discussion of Papal Authority in the High Middle Ages

The following paper will discuss papal authority as viewed by Ivo of Chartres and will include a discussion on the Concordat of Worms as read in: Miller, Maureen C..Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. 



Power in Europe in the 11th and 12th Centuries was split between the nobility and the church in a murky power arrangement that neither side clearly understood. In the latter half of the 11th century the Bishops of Rome began to accumulate more direct power over the various sees in Western Europe placing them in direct conflict with the presiding Emperors and Kings. The most notable of these transgressions was with the Holy Roman Emperors of the German States which erupted into a wider battle with both sides claiming the right to appoint bishops and other church officials. What has been termed ‘The Investiture Conflict’ would culminate in the Concordat of Worms in 1122 with the Emperor Henry V coming to terms with Pope Calixtus II.1 In the agreement the Emperor gives up all claims to investing Bishops in his lands with symbols of spiritual power and returns all lands and goods taken from the church by himself and his father. In return he was granted the right to invest bishops with secular power.2 Some years previous to this Ivo of Chartres raised a few fundamental points on the relationship between King and Church in his letter of rejection sent to one Hugh of Lyon, an apostolic legate appointed by the Pope. In his letter he states that papal authorities have been asserting the power of the Bishop of Rome in ways that hinders the church or does not improve the church at all. He further states that it would be much easier for the local councils to vote for new bishops themselves rather than have them appointed to their posts by the Pope. Ivo also argues against the entire investing conflict because he does not see the harm in a king instating a bishop as it does not involve preforming any sacraments.3 While all these claims were made in Ivo’s Correspondence the only one actually addressed in the Concordat is the issue of the actual investing of bishops therefore, the issues presented by Ivo of Chartres were, for the largest part, left unaddressed in the Concordat of Worms.
In Ivo’s letter to the papal legate he asserts many points. The first and most important of these is the request not to be bound so tightly by papal laws that, according to Ivo, are not necessarily within the canonical laws that are exercised by the bishop of Rome. One may view this as a sign that while the Church was united they did not yet view the Bishop of Rome as the supreme power of the church. This is in spite of the fact that The Dictatus papae was written almost 30 years prior claiming more widespread authority for the Pope.4 This neglecting of the Pope’s authority can provide the historian with a glimpse into how the church in the High Middle Ages worked. Judging by the fact that many German bishops during the 1070s and 1080s rejected the authority of Gregory VII and called actively for his abdication until his death in 1085, one might say that the church was not centrally controlled by Popes at the time.5 This is fundamental to understanding why this conflict came about in the first place. In Ivo’s opinion the Pope was overstepping his authority by trying to broadly increase his authority not only over Emperors like Henry but also over bishops like Ivo. Central to the Pope’s aims was his claiming succession from St. Peter. In the eyes of Gregory VII this gave him the power to bar kings from heaven, appoint bishops from afar, and create new canon law. According to Ivo and his view on earlier church fathers, this should not be the case but rather the see of Rome should act in reference to the writing of predecessors instead of making up laws which benefit itself instead of the entire church.6
The second point made by Ivo inquires whether or not investiture by kings is truly a problem. This almost argues for the king to appoint the bishops otherwise, in effect, the church was saying that the kings and emperors were not holy. This was a direct contradiction to the populist ideas of the time as promulgated by Guibert of Nogent shortly after the letter by Ivo. In this account kings were able to miraculously heal their subjects with the slightest touch.7 This is powerful evidence for the social acceptability of Kings investing bishops. If kings were holy how could you deny them that power? At the same time Ivo states that it shouldn’t matter whether or not kings took part because in the end the bishop was invested by God himself. In this objection the historian may see why so many bishops supported the German Emperor in the first place. If the King or Emperor were seen as a holy figure in and of themselves as suggested by the tomb of Edward II and subsequent description in which bones of dead rulers where dispersed amongst his kingdom, the Bishops of his territory would naturally support him as: A-he was the one to invest them originally and B- They saw him as a way to contact god, as with saints.8
Ivo also argues that it is the power of the local clergy to appoint a bishop by election and that the pope should not interfere with this right unless that power had been granted by ancient rights of church fathers, which it had not. 9 Later, this power will be usurped by the pope as shown in the account of a disputed election in Auxerre. In other words the power of the popes is almost insured by the vague wording in the Concordat. Any power not expressly denied to the pope is still open for Papal rulers to somehow take as their own.
In the Concordat of Worms, the king gives up his ability to invest members of the clergy with symbols of Divine power such as the Staff and Ring. By doing this he has now limited his power to strictly temporal possessions and is therefore reliant on the church to provide him with divine absolution. In return for his cessation of investing with divine symbols Henry receives the ability to invest church officials in a more secular way with a scepter representing the power he is giving them over his lands. In this sense the clergy have now separated themselves further from the nobility by retaining more power for themselves in the form of divine investment which is done at the cost of the Kings and Emperors. The clergy will now solely hold the power to allow people into heaven. This is seen when Gregory VII excommunicates Henry IV, in essence barring him from heaven as the Pope is the direct successor to St. Peter, the Gatekeeper of Heaven.
In addition to the Emperors not investing clergy with divine symbols, the Concordat also states that any property that was seized by Henry or his father was to be given back to the church.10 This is actually a major setback for the nobility because large tracts of land that were previously granted to the nobility have since fallen into the hands of the Church through bequeathments and wills. This only served to strengthen the demands that the church made on the nobility.
Adjudicating the dispute between the church and the nobility is not an easy task for the brightest of men at the time of The Investiture Conflict and Ivo of Chartres is no exception. While many of his points about the differences in opinion between the two parties is spot-on the only actual point that is resolved in the Concordat of Worms is in regards to investment of actual bishops and leaves unresolved the issues of Papal authority, clergy autonomy, and the holiness of kings.
1 Miller, Maureen C. “The Agreements of Worms” Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. 120-121

2  ibid Miller, "Power and the holy..." pp.120-121


3 Miller, Maureen C.”A Letter to the Apostolic Legate Hugh of Lyon”Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 115-119

4    Miller, Maureen C.. "Pope Gregory VII, The Dictatus papae." In Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. 81.

5 Miller, Maureen C. Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. p. 105

6 Miller, Maureen C.”A Letter to the Apostolic Legate Hugh of Lyon”Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 115-119

7 Miller, Maureen C. “On Royal Powers” Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 162-163

8 Miller, Maureen C. “The Tomb of Edward II, Foreword” Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 168-170

9 Miller, Maureen C.”A Letter to the Apostolic Legate Hugh of Lyon”Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 115-119

10 Miller, Maureen C. “The Agreements of Worms” Power and the holy in the age of the investiture conflict: a brief history with documents. Boston: Bedford/St. Martins, 2005. pp. 120-121

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Italian Inquisition (Paper)

Here is a rather longer paper that I just finished for my seminar in Medieval Marginalization. It is a scholarly look at primary and secondary sources regard heresy and accusations of such in 16th century Italy. Enjoy.



Injure me, for you I nurture.”1
Jeremy Eames
History Seminar
Dr. Gregory Milton
11/18/2011





For Large Wood: 55sols 6 deniers
For vine-branches: 21 sols 3 deniers
For straw: 2 sols 6 deniers
For four stakes: 10 sols 9 deniers
For ropes to tie the convicts: 45 sols 7 deniers
For the executioners, each 20 sols: 80 sols
-Inquisition accounts for an execution2
There are many things that qualify Italy as the birth place of the Renaissance, among them printing, universities, art, architecture, literature, philosophy, and trade. However when one thinks of Italy as a place of learning and commerce they inevitably miss the other factors that made such richness possible. There were three lives that perished to pave the way for the modern era and each will be examined. The reader will note that they are not the lives of explorers, inventors, or rulers, but of heretics. Included is also a brief account of political usage of heresy in the papal elections. This is included to show that accusations of heresy could be solely political in nature. The following essay will examine the lives of Girolamo Savonarola, Reginald Pole, Domenico Scandella, better known as Mennochio, and Giordano Bruno in an attempt to understand heresy and its political uses. As a precursor to these micro histories the reader will find a brief summary of the political turmoil in Italy and will then progress on to the circumstances surrounding each accusation or trial of heresy.
Like all history one cannot simply step into a specific event without first placing it into context. Because of this the reader will begin their journey at the beginning of the 1480s and continue through 1600. This will enable the reader to place each trial in a framework of ideology and time that, as the reader will see, lends itself to both persecution and marginalization.
In response to relapsed Jewish converts, the Spanish inquisition was established in 1479. While this was not directly tied to events in Italy it can be used to illustrate the wider tone of inquisition in Western Europe. The Borgia were in power in Italy along with the Medici's and Sforza. Witchcraft was on the rise in Italy along with the rise of printing, particularly in the city of Venice. This rise in literature, especially literature that was available to the masses is important to note. Knowledge was no longer held exclusively in the hands of the powerful. This rise in printing will lead to an increase, not just in accusations of heresy but also to the burning of convicted heretics. During the time period of 1550-1560, Italy also launched what has afterward been termed the Counter Reformation. This was a direct response to actions beginning in 1517 with Martin Luther's nailing of his 95 Theses to the door of a German church. Political turmoil is rampant in Italy with the French and Spanish making repeated invasions into both southern and northern Italy. They replace many governments, such as the government of Milan, which the French King claimed as his own and took the title of the Duke of Milan3, and Naples, which was seated with a Spanish Viceroy, with puppet rulers of their own.4 By any accounts this time in Italy's history is a violent and turbulent time. The task at hand is to discover how these political situations had an influence in creating an atmosphere of persecution and marginalization. To discover this the reader should turn to one of Italy’s power-broker families and their interactions with Savonarola and how this Dominican Friar affected, and was affected by, a politicized Italy.
Delving directly into the political arena the reader will begin our series of micro histories with Girolamo Savonarola, a Dominican friar born in Ferrara Italy in September 1452.5 In his tumultuous career he was mentored by his grandfather and attained larger instruction in the world at large before committing to the life of a mendicant.6 His recall to Florence in 1490 would begin his fall into the flames, though the friar did not know it.7 Recalled to a city that was full of vice, this itinerant preacher found a stable home in which to preach against human wrong and evildoing. According to O'Brien the people flocked to his sermons and when the French began their invasions in 1494 the local lord, a Medici , fled the city and the government turned into a primal theocracy based on eradicating human temptation to the physical world.8 In order to understand the fall of this preacher however the reader must also understand the man that in all but words sentenced him to his fate, Pope Alexander VI. This Pope was, according to O'Brien the exact incarnation of all that Savonarola found wrong with Italy.9 He was a man that had fathered several children while in ecclesiastical positions and was able to purchase the Papal Miter from the richest of Roman families. 10 While acting as a cardinal he received a letter from Pope Pius II rebuking him for taking part in an orgy in the city of Siena. A small excerpt reads, “All Siena is talking about this orgy.... Our displeasure is beyond words.... A Cardinal should be beyond reproach.”11
This was an entirely worldly man, who was known to have used his office to reap immense payments for letters of indulgence and even goes so far as to list what kind of indulgences are available each day of the year.12 Savonarola enters into the Italian city of Florence as a preacher against many things that had come to be associated with the current Pope. Let us take an in depth look at the content of these sermons and why they received such a brutal reprisal.
Upon Savonarola's entrance into Florence in 1490 he began fiery sermons against the vice that had gripped the city for decades. His appeal spread throughout the city until he was, in essence, the moral leader of the city.13 His attacks on the physicality of the rulers of the city, of the secular clergy, and eventually the ecclesiastical community eventually led to recognition by Pope Alexander VI. His actual beliefs here become more important as Savonarola saw a single ruler, such as the pope, as a simple unifier of corruption who was responsible for the moral failure in society instead of for its morality.14 In an attempt to silence the friar who, in the interim between French invasions, had managed to effectively become the autocratic leader of the city of Florence, Pope Alexander VI sent a brief to the friar in which he congratulated him on his efficacy and summoned him before the pope to further explain his doctrines.15 According to O'Brien this was simply a ploy to get the priest within his grasp and thence to silence him and Savonarola saw it as such. With his first request spurned by Savonarola the pope went to further lengths to silence the preacher by refusing him the ability to preach openly upon pain of excommunication.16 This ban was revoked a few months later with a college of theologians declaring that nothing Savonarola had said was anathema.17 Over the course of the next few years Savonarola never left Florence nor, with the exception of a brief entrance of the plague into the city in 1497, did he cease preaching to the community.18 His sermons however once again incited the wrath of Alexander VI and he was excommunicated in 1497.19 Despite this turn of events he continued to publicly preach in the square of the town, the Duomo, and even went so far as to preach that his excommunication was a heretic.20
The reader should note that here a man eventually burned as a heretic himself is making accusations of heresy against the populace in general. He then took the fatal step of writing letters to secular leaders calling for a change in papal power to be effected by their hands.21 These letters eventually fell into the hands of the Pope himself. Savonarola was subsequently arrested. Under pain of torture he confessed to many things, all of which were later recanted, that enabled the Pope to brand him as a Heresiarch. On May 24th 1498 Girolamo Savonarola was led to the gallows, hanged, and then burned until nothing remained.22 The primary cause here, judging by the decision reached by the college of theologians about the content of his sermons, can easily be seen in a political light. It was not the actual occurrence of heresy about which the Pope was concerned but rather the way in which Savonarola was able to influence people against the vice and corruption inside the church that worried him. The influence that Savonarola had inside Italy was a danger to the Pope, both politically and morally. The moral outlook of Savonarola was ultimately positive and seeking redemption while the Pope was simply after vengeance.23 This wide moral chasm between these two men precipitated the eventual death of Savonarola not due to theological differences but due to power dynamics. In this case the accusation of heresy was enough to sentence a man to death even though, according to the documents available, there was never any evidence for the heresy that he was accused of and then admitted to under torture, only to later recant it. This is a clear cut case of hard ball Papal Politics.
Moving forward from the power struggles of the powerful with a mendicant friar, let us examine the role of one Reginald Pole briefly. Upon his death bed Reginald Pole was to Rome a Lutheran and to Germany a Papist.24 A man that seems to have been stuck between two worlds in a highly polarized environment in the middle of the 16th century. Pole was well known for being a supporter of the Spirituali, a group pushing for reform from inside the Roman Curia. The intriguing part of Pole was that even though he was accused of heresy several times in his life by both Lutherans and Catholics he came within one vote of obtaining the Papal Miter, that is until the arrive of the French Cardinals and his re-branding as a heretic. 25 While these accusations were unfounded, they did reference the ideas of reform that Pole had at the time. In the nearly 7 months between the death of Pope Paul III and the ascension of Julius III papal politics are seen within a context that used heresy, and specifically the accusation of heresy, to eliminate a contender for the Papacy. Fenlon here disagrees and speaks of other causes that might have excluded Pole from the Papacy. Among his list are the facts that he is English, and hence a foreigner, the fact that after the election of Julius III Pole held many other offices for the Curia including the position of Papal Legate to England.26 While these are accurate, these reasons still do not rule out the use of heretical accusations in denying the papacy to Pole. More instrumental in doing so was the questioning of his orthodoxy by the cardinals assembled.27 It should also be noted that in 1550 Pole was appointed as one of seven members a council to protect the faith against heresy.28 This can be used to illustrate that the heresy he was accused of did not have long-lasting effects and was hence a politically expedient way of denying him the papacy.
With the increase in papal inquisitions beginning with the establishment of the Congregation of the Holy Office of the Inquisition in 1542 one can find a very clear image of the type of heresy that it was targeted to root out by examining the case of Domenico Scandella, better known as Mennochio. The work of quintessential importance here is that of Carlo Ginzburg, The Cheese and the Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth Century Miller. In this work Ginzburg examines the mind of a sixteenth century, surprisingly well read, miller. Mennochio is well known for espousing his beliefs from a mixture of misunderstood works and his own pontifications on the world at large.29 Why then did the Roman Inquisition take such an interest in a man that had been elected to several offices in his small town outside Venice. And why, upon reaching a conviction at a second trial did the the Papal legates hesitate in his sentencing and require the interest of the Pope before they would act? Lets first examine the actual functioning of the inquisition at this time.
The usual course of action would involve having a period of leniency in which people could openly repent of the sins and be accorded a reduced penance.30 Following this the inquisitors would begin a general inquest into the population extolling all people to come forward and give names of heretical persons in the area.31 The first time around, this second step seems to be what ensnared Mennochio. Following this general inquest with a list of heretics to prosecute, the inquisitors then collected evidence against the accused. While this evidence and witness collection is taking place the accused is normally held in the local jail to deter fleeing. Once the evidence is collected the trial begins.32
According to O'Brien, the strongest part of the inquisition was their relentless insistence on maintaining records from each trial.33 This was sure to have an impact on Mennochio and will lead to his eventual death. In Mennochio's case historians are allowed a glimpse into popular culture and can attempt to extrapolate several things from his responses to the inquisitors questions. As Ginzburg himself argues, the way that Mennochio thought is actually more accurate a depiction of everyday people rather than seeing them as all selfless drones that believed exactly what they were told. The point that Ginzburg does not tease out of the documents is, why did the Inquisitio decide to prosecute Mennochio in the first place?
I would argue that, because he is in a position of power in the town both as a 'politician' of sorts and as a miller, the political ramifications of him remaining in power would have been, in the eyes of the church, been detrimental to the populace's souls. Also because of the proximity to the Calvinist and Lutheran populations in Switzerland and Germany, the impetus for the Roman Curia to take special interest in the case of Mennochio should not be surprising. The Pope himself, after the second trial in which Mennochio is found to be a relapsed heretic, urges the Inquisitors to carry out their sentence swiftly and execute Mennochio.34 This execution and desire for a swift punishment can further illustrate the way in which Mennochio's trial had political implications. By providing this public spectacle, the Pope effectively showed that the price for deviation, not just heretical but also political deviation, is deserving of death. The way that Mennochio could have influenced his neighbors was a risk that the church could ill afford to take.
Finally the reader will turn to the trial and execution of one of Europe's liberal thinkers of the 16th century, a scientific man known throughout Europe, Giordano Bruno. Bruno's case with first the Venetian Inquisition and then the Holy Office itself serves as a capstone to the previously discussed instances of accusations of heresy. In order to understand the nature of the trial of Bruno the reader must first understand several political factors that led to his arrest, trial, and death. The arrest of Bruno plays out much like a spy thriller with the accused fleeing from Italy to Switzerland to Paris to England and then back to Venice. His education was completed at the Monastery of San Domenico Maggiore in Naples. He spent much of his life preaching about the ideas of science and how the churches ideas of a Heliocentric world were scientifically incorrect.35 He was an avid reader and the start of his chase through Europe is due to his possession of Erasmus' work, an illegal book in Italy because of its heretical thought. Above all it was his desire to be able to speak with the Pope himself and attempt to convince him of the churches wrong.
On his return to Italy in 1592 he is arrested by the Venetian Inquisition.36 Here one must draw further distinctions, for the politics of the era become transparent here. The Venetian Inquisition was a separate and distinct body from the Holy Office. While the Venetian Inquisition was tasked with the area in and around Venice itself, the Holy Office was tasked with the world at large. The Venetian Inquisitor was able to begin the trial of Bruno without much delay however due to the political wranglings with the Holy Office his eventual execution would not happen until 1600, a full eight years later. The main reason for this was his long imprisonment in the Vatican Prisons.37
Of the many reasons that are given by the Doge of Venice not to turn over this accused heretic to the Vatican the most pertinent of these to our case is that of nationalist pride.38 After turning to a well known lawyer the Doge is finally able to acquiesce to the papal demands for Bruno.39 The Papal trial is begun anew in Rome and reaches a guilty verdict. Unlike in Venice, where many heretics were taken quietly out to sea to drown, the papal burning of Bruno was a public spectacle, with a full parade.40 It should also be noted that during this parade the erstwhile Bruno had many philosophical exchanges with the crowd for which he was rewards with 2 stakes, 1 placed through his cheeks to pin his tongue and 1 to pass through his lips allowing him the ability of speech no more.41 Previous to this it should also be noted that this philosopher/heretic also repeated his desire to be rejoined with the holy mother church. Upon reaching the site of execution he was tied to the post and burned. It was the year 1600.
Once again the reader may find themselves asking the question why. One must attempt to decode this trial while at the same time refraining from investing it with modern notions. One can see Bruno as a highly intelligent writer and philosopher with the power of written word. The rise of Venetian printing led not only to his ability to procure Erasmus' work, which led to his eventual arrest but also the way in which he published in excess of 15 works to an audience that bridged 12 different nationalities. His outspoken nature in contradicting orthodoxy in the academic world and assaulting, though inadvertently as a result of his writing, normal church views. By doing this he assaulted the churches power, particularly political power. His transfer from Venice to Rome also served to reinforce the political reality in Italy, that Rome held enormous sway throughout the peninsula. Enough in this case to demand an extradition. This extradition also served to show the way that the Italian states were politically involved with Rome. The reader will remember that the Venetian Doge had to find a politically correct time to allow the prisoners transfer.
In conclusion, this paper has surveyed, albeit briefly, three lives that were terminated by accusations of heresy and one account of a cardinal being accused of heresy to deny him the papal office. In two of the cases the men burned were intelligent, well taught, and capable of directly challenging the authority of the Pope. In a third it was a simple man who, while being literate, did not pose any direct threat to the Pope but rather an indirect capability of foster individuals of more intelligence than himself to actively challenge the church. The part played by Reginald Pole was illustrative of how accusations of heresy could reach into even the highest parts of the church when there was a political advantage to hold. It is reasonable to consider many of the trials and executions in 16th century Italy to be politically motivated rather than economically, morally, or reactionary.







Bibliography

Primary Sources
Anon. Imprint: London : Wynkyn de Worde, ca. 1505
Venitian Wood Cut, c. 1530, courtesy of Early English Books Online. The translation of this piece was done by Jeremy Eames with help from Dr. Gregory Milton, USF, and Oraleze Byars, USF.
Secondary Sources
Anglo, Sydney. Machiavelli: a dissection. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1970
Bahar, Sonya . "Giordano Bruno, Philosopher/Heretic." Journal of Biological Physics 36, no. 4 (2010): 329-338.
Thomas James Dandelet, John A. Marino, and Antonio Alvarino. "The State of Milan and the Spanish Monarchy." In Spain in Italy: politics, society, and religion 1500-1700. Leiden: Brill, 2007. 99-134.
Dandelet, Thomas James, and John A. Marino. Spain in Italy: politics, society, and religion 1500-1700. Leiden: Brill, 2007.
Fenlon, Dermot. Heresy and obedience in Tridentine Italy: Cardinal Pole and the counter reformation. Cambridge: University Press, 1972.
Finlay, Robert. Venice besieged: politics and diplomacy in the Italian wars, 1494-1534. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2008.
Gatti, Hilary. "Why Bruno's "A Tranquil Universal Philosophy' Finished In A Fire." In Essays on Giordano Bruno. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2011. 310-323.
Ginzburg, Carlo. The cheese and the worms: the cosmos of a sixteenth-century miller. 1980. Reprint, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
Malley, John W.. Praise and blame in Renaissance Rome: rhetoric, doctrine, and reform in the sacred orators of the papal court, c. 1450-1521. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1979.
Martin, John Jeffries. Venice's hidden enemies Italian heretics in a Renaissance city. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
Peters, Edward. Inquisition. New York: Free Press ;, 1988.
Milton, Gregory. "Popular Culture and Witchcraft." Class lecture, History Seminar from University of South Florida, Tampa, October 31, 2011.
Pugliese, Olga. "A Last Testimony by Savonarola and His Companions." Renaissance Quarterly 34 , no. 1 (1989): pp. 1-10. www.jstor.org/stable/2861159 (accessed November 3, 2011).
White, Michael. The pope and the heretic: a true story of Giordano Bruno, the man who dared to defy the Roman Inquisition. New York: William Morrow, 2002. 

Endnotes 
1Venitian Wood Cut, c. 1530, courtesy of Early English Books Online. The translation of this piece was done by Jeremy Eames with help from Dr. Gregory Milton, USF, and Oraleze Byars, USF.
2White, Michael. The pope and the heretic: a true story of Giordano Bruno, the man who dared to defy the Roman Inquisition. New York: William Morrow, 2002. p. 1
3Thomas James Dandelet, John A. Marino, and Antonio Alvarino. "The State of Milan and the Spanish Monarchy." In Spain in Italy: politics, society, and religion 1500-1700. Leiden: Brill, 2007. 99-134. pp. 99-108
4 Thomas James Dandelet, John A. Marino, and Carlos Sanchez. "Naples and Florence In Charles V's Italy:
Family, Court, and Government in the Toledo-Medici Alliance." In Spain in Italy: politics, society, and religion
1500-1700. Leiden: Brill, 2007. 135-180. pp. 135-140
5John A. O'Brien, "Savonarola: A Heretic?." The Inquisition. New York: Macmillan, 1973. 159-182. Print. p. 159
6O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 160
7O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 160
8O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p 162
9O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 172
10O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 166
11O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 165
12Anon. Imprint: London : Wynkyn de Worde, ca. 1505
13O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 160
14Sydney Anglo. Machiavelli: a dissection. New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1970 pp.198-199
15O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." pp. 161-162
16O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 162
17O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 162
18O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 163
19O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 163
20O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 163
21O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." p. 163
22O'Brien "Savonarola: A Heretic?." pg 181 ,For a more in depth account of the last days of Savonarola please see Olga Pugliese, "A Last Testimony by Savonarola and His Companions." Renaissance Quarterly 34 , no. 1 (1989): pp. 1-10.
23John W. Malley, Praise and blame in Renaissance Rome: rhetoric, doctrine, and reform in the sacred orators of the papal court, c. 1450-1521. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 1979. p. 111
24 Dermot Fenlon, Heresy and obedience in Tridentine Italy: Cardinal Pole and the counter reformation. Cambridge: University Press, 1972. pg 280
25Fenlon Heresy and obedience in Tridentine Italy p. 228
26Fenlon Heresy and obedience in Tridentine Italy p. 232
27Ibid., p. 232
28Fenlon Heresy and obedience in Tridentine Italy p. 233
29Carlo Ginzburg. The cheese and the worms: the cosmos of a sixteenth-century miller. 1980. Reprint, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
30O'Brien, “The Inquisition” pp. 13-15
31ibid., pp. 13-15
32 John A.O'Brien, The Inquisition pp. 27-35
33John A. O'Brien, “The Inquisition” p. 43
34Ginzburg pp. 127-128
35Hilary Gatti. "Why Bruno's "A Tranquil Universal Philosophy' Finished In A Fire." In Essays on Giordano Bruno. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 2011. pp. 310-323.
36Hilary Gatti. "Why Bruno's” pp. 310-323
37White The pope and the heretic p. 141
38White The pope and the heretic pp. 140-146
39White The pope and the heretic pp. 140-146
40White The pope and the heretic p. 181
41White The pope and the heretic p. 181


Friday, October 28, 2011

Iberian Persecution (paper)

Well now that we know each other I suppose that I will introduce you to my academic works. Recently I wrote a paper on Jews in Iberia (modern Day Spain) and the exile that they faced at the end of the 15th century. I do apologize for the work not being very literary but I hope that you will enjoy it all the same. Currently as I post this I am awaiting the arrival of my beautiful girlfriend for a night with the parents and then shopping for a Halloween costume. Anyway, enjoy the paper.




The last two decades of the 15th century was a tumultuous time for the Jewish community living in Iberia. Throughout these last years they were coerced into converting to Christianity, doggedly “relieved” of their personal possessions, and expelled from the peninsula entirely. Modern day scholars are constantly in debate over the actual cause of the Jewish expulsion from the Kingdom of Castile-Leon and the Crown of Aragon in 1492, the expulsion from Portugal in 1497, and from Navarre in 1498. The two schools of thought on the expulsion of the Jews are as follows: first, one side believes that the actual expulsion was negligible because by the time that these decrees were made many Jews had either left the peninsula already or had converted to Christianity, thereby making the task of expelling them inexpensive and therefore largely an attempt to garner national support for the increasingly nationalistic monarchs and is largely supported by Norman Roth and Henry Kamen; the opposite theory advocates the intention of the Iberian monarchs to use the expulsion of the Jews to more efficiently collect taxes and seize the property of the Jews for their own benefit. This second reason is better represented in works by academics such as Jerome Friedman and E. William Monter and partially so by Benjamin Gampel. The idea that financial benefits could be the root cause of the expulsion is well founded in primary and secondary sources. In order to understand the actions taken in the last decades of the 15th century, one must also be aware of the events at the end of the 14th century. The end of the 14th century also saw an increase in coerced conversions and a general massacre in 1391. Beginning in the early 1400’s it becomes standard practice for priests to actively work at the conversion of Jews.1 In addition to this in certain areas Jews are also encouraged to move into Alhamas, areas of limited Jewish self-government, and separate areas of residence by both Christian and Jewish elite. General dislike of Jews was common but not overwhelmingly malicious. 1480, however, was the beginning of the end of Spanish Jewry. In this year the Inquisition of the Holy Office was established in the peninsula and Alhamas were more forcefully applied. The Inquisition was established, in part, in order to root out Conversos who were corrupting recently converted Jews or continued to Judaize, or act sympathetic to Jews.23
The financial effects on the Jews being expelled from Castile and Aragon in 1492 were quite dramatic, as some authors have portrayed. The expulsion such as the one that was ordered in the domain of Ferdinand and Isabella only allowed the removal of material wealth but not coinage nor unminted bullion.4 The decree also made a large mass of people sell off the majority of their personal possessions in a fairly restricted amount of time thereby flooding the market and devaluing everything that was being sold. In one account it is described as giving away a house in return for an ass.5 Prior to the expulsion, all Jews that were not converted to Christianity sold off their possessions in return for little money and then proceeded to immigrate to places such as Tunis, Byzantium, and the Ottoman Empire. The left over wealth that they left behind was normally seized by the royal families.6 In 1484, Torquemada, the Inquisitor in Spain, issued a decree which included 27 clauses, of which six were non-monetary.7 In the opinion of Monter this therefore made the Spanish Inquisition, and by extension the Iberian Monarchs, “…less bloodthirsty than bloodsucking.” The intent, according to Monter was for the monarchs to leach money from both Jews and Conversos alike before actually expelling the remaining unconverted Jews. In this practice they were utterly efficient.
According to Henry Kamen however the Jews by this point in time were, while hard working, not the richest section of society.8 But he provides little evidence to support his claim and even undercuts himself a few sentences before by claiming that many Jews were in fact money-lenders and jewelers. He comments that Isaac Abravanel, a contemporary Jewish elite living during the time, does not provide evidence for his sum of the Jewish worth, some 30 million msr. (Maravedes), the standard unit of Spanish Currency. He would instead advocate that the Jewish expulsion did not serve any major economic purpose.
The effect of the Inquisition of the Holy Office on Conversos was monumental in the decision for many remaining Jews, instead of converting, to leave the Kingdom of Spain altogether. The Inquisition was mainly interested in the financial assets of Conversos and resorted to placing the dead on trial to claim property that had passed to their heirs. Torquemada can is quoted by Monter as saying that “trails of the living must never take precedence over trials of the dead”. By burning their bones they were able to seize entire estates that had in some cases already been passed down to heirs9 The Inquisition was, curiously enough, monetarily motivated as shown by Torquemada’s explanation of certain fiscally pertinent decrees in which the Inquisition could, “…give cause for the treasury to take possession of their property.”10 Monter argues that this was clearly the reason for the Inquisition into Spanish Conversos. In the years between 1482 and 1491 it should be noted that at least, but likely more than, 9,647,523 liquid msr. was collected from individuals and communities by The Holy Office.11 This does not include property also seized.12 The inquisition was given even further allowances to prosecute citizens when it was discovered that Jews, not Conversos, of a certain sect were actively praying for the death of Queen Isabella, enraging Ferdinand.13 The Holy Office also was extraordinary in the fact that it actually burned at the stake three of the men accused of these acts, a harsh sentence usually reserved only for inquisitorial assassins.14
In Death of Coexistence Monter also presents the case of Portuguese Jews in 1497 that were forcibly converted after emigrating from Spain in 1492. The main difference between the two countries was the fact that the Holy Office, The Inquisition, did not operate in Portugal at that time. Because of this the King of Portugal, Manuel, was able to extend to the newly converted population of Jews, Conversos, a twenty year moratorium on persecution which, when ended, was renewed for an additional 20 years. While this might be seen by some to be a good will gesture it can just as easily be interpreted as a targeted marketing campaign. With a 20 year safety net Conversos were more likely to immigrate to Portugal than anywhere else until the banishment from that kingdom later in the decade. 15 Upon being converted these Conversos would then provide increased taxes to the new king, possibly in the form of charters for their individual alhamas, as well as fees that might be incurred for the conversion process. In this case the idea put forward by Monter seems to be that the King was forcing the Jews to convert and then providing them a safe haven merely out of the goodness of his heart, which is seldom a stable reason. 16
In his book, Norman Roth advocates the idea of nationality after the fall of Muslim Granada as the primary reason for Jewish persecution in Spain.17 In his book he relieves the Iberian Monarchs of their responsibility in expelling the Jews. However, his research is not presented in full because “there is not enough space here but look in my future works” and therefore it seems as though the majority of his argument, chiefly that the blame lay on local churchmen and even partially on the Jews themselves, comes across in a way that makes it sound as though he is attempting to vindicate the Spanish Monarchs for personal rather than academic reasons. He presents ideas that while intriguing are not presented in full negating their potential to actively participate in the academic discussion. He later repeats that the numbers of Jews in Spain, as listed by a colleague, are just “ridiculous”.18
The Jewish expulsion from Navarre rather than being motivated by financial gains was instead, according to Gampel, a way for the Navarrese Monarchs, Johan and Catalina, to remain independent of their larger southerly neighbors.19 During the waning of the 15th century after the expulsion of the Jews from Castile, Aragon, and nearby Provence the French, Castilian, and Argonese all had their eyes set on Navarre.20 In order to remain independent and to discourage an invasion by the Castilian Monarchs the Navarrese expelled the Jews with remarkable success, if that is the term to be used, in 1498.
Among the reasons for Iberian Monarchs to convert and expel Jews from their lands at the end of the 15th century, the most probable and realistic reason is financial in origin. The Catholic Monarchs had just concluded a costly and expensive war against the Moors to the south in Granada and were looking for an effortless way to accrue more money. Jews had long been known to be moneylenders and merchants and cases that had been brought before the Cortes were concerned with the interest that Christians paid on loans taken from Jews. Therefore the Crown saw the Jews as an easy target not adequately able to defend themselves from increased pressure. Outstanding loans made by Jews to Christians were cancelled or more simply just paid off by conversos, depleting their (the conversos) ability to ward off the grasping fingers of the Inquisition. This was the case in 1491 with Isaac Abravanel in which he was owed the enormous sum of 1.5 million msr. by the Crown of Castile and it was repaid by a recent Converso, Luis de Santangel, his cousin. 21The Crown also ‘repays’ loans in the years of 1489-92 but it should be mentioned that the Jews leaving Iberia were not allowed to carry coinage with them therefore making any repayment more like a modern day CD.22 A borrower repays the Jews, allows them to invest it and make a profit then exiles them and seizes their property. Even if they were Conversos there remained a good chance that the Inquisition would still find them guilty of anything ranging from desecration of the Sacraments to following false prophets thereby enabling them to still seize their property.
In all, the actual reason for the expulsion of the Jews from Iberia is believed by some such as Roth and Kamen, to a brief extent, to be nationalistic in origin and having little effect on anything economic. This hypothesis disregards simple human greed in determining the root cause of the expulsion. While an increase in nationalism after concluding the war with Granada might have led to the ejection of the Jews partially, it is more likely that the expulsion fed nationalism and not the other way around. The main driving force behind Jewish expatriation is financial in origin allowing both the upper nobility and monarchs to benefit from their left over goods and property, money and fines acquired through the Inquisition, and new taxes levied against recent Jewish Conversos.

























Works Cited
Baer, Yitzhak . A History Of The Jews In Christian Spain. 1961. Reprint, Tel Aviv: The Jewish Publication Society, 1966.
De Quiros, Felipe Torroba Bernaldo. The Spanish Jews. 1959. Reprint, Madrid: Sucs. de Rivadeneyra, 1972.
Gampel, Benjamin R.. The last Jews on Iberian soil: Navarrese Jewry, 1479/1498. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.
Goodman, Martin, Jeremy Cohen, and David Jan Sorkin. The Oxford handbook of Jewish studies . Oxford [England: Oxford University Press, 2002.
Kamen, Henry. "The Mediterranean and the Expulsion of Spanish Jews in 1492." Past and Present 119 (1988): 30-55.
Nirenberg, David. Communities of violence: persecution of minorities in the Middle Ages. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1996.
Roth, Norman. Conversos, Inquisition, and the expulsion of the Jews from Spain . Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1995.
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. "Death of Coexistence." In The Expulsion of the Jews: 1492 and after. New York: Garland Pub., 1994. 4-14.
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and Jerome Friedman. "New Christian Religious Alternatives." In The Expulsion of the Jews: 1492 and after. New York: Garland Pub., 1994. 19-31.

1
Roth, Norman. Conversos, Inquisition, and the expulsion of the Jews from Spain . Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press, 1995. Pg 66-67
2
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. "Death of Coexistence." In The Expulsion of the Jews: 1492 and after. New York: Garland Pub., 1994. 4-14. Pg 12
3
Roth, Norman. Pg 285
4
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. 4-14. Pg 12
5
De Quiros, Felipe Torroba Bernaldo. The Spanish Jews. 1959. Reprint, Madrid: Sucs. de Rivadeneyra, 1972. Pg 283
6
Roth, Norman. . Pg 285-286
7
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. 4-14. Pg 8
8 Kamen, Henry. "The Mediterranean and the Expulsion of Spanish Jews in 1492." Past and Present 119 (1988): 30-55.
9
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. 4-14. Pg 8
ibid
Roth, Norman. Pg 263
12ibid
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and E. William Monter. Pg 12
ibid
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and Jerome Friedman. "New Christian Religious Alternatives." In The Expulsion of the Jews: 1492 and after. New York: Garland Pub., 1994. 19-31.Pg 21
Waddington, Raymond B., Arthur H. Williamson, and Jerome Friedman. Pg 23
Roth, Norman. Pg 271
Roth, Norman. Pg 274
Gampel, Benjamin R.. The last Jews on Iberian soil: Navarrese Jewry, 1479/1498. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989. Pg 122
Gampel, Benjamin R.. Pg 121
Roth, Norman. Pg 280-281
Roth, Norman. Pg 280-281