Lecture V
15 November, 1904
If you take up one of
the ordinary school books, or any other of the usual presentations
of the Middle Ages, dealing with the period of which we are now
going to speak — the 8th or 9th century — you will find
that the personality of Charlemagne (768–814) occupies an
inordinate space in it. Following the feats and triumphal marches of
Charlemagne in this way, you will hardly understand what it was that
actually made the significance of this epoch. All this was only an
external expression of much deeper events in the Middle Ages, events
which will appear as the converging of many significant factors. In
order to study these factors, we must mention certain things which
we have already touched upon, and which will throw light on this
subject.
If you remember the
description of European conditions after the folk migrations, when,
after these occurrences, the Germanic tribes came to rest in
different places, you will think of the way these races brought
their ancient institutions, their manners and customs, with them
into their new homes, and developed them there. And we see that they
preserved their own peculiar character, a kind of social order,
consisting in the distribution of private and common property. There
were little social assemblies, which formed their original
organisation: village communities, then, later, hundreds and
cantons; and in all these, what could be common property was so:
forest, meadow, water, etc. And only what a single individual could
cultivate was assigned to the private family and became hereditary;
all the rest remained common property.
Now we have seen that
the leaders of such tribes received much larger territories at the
conquest, and that on this account certain positions of mastery
sprang up, especially in Gaul, where much land was still to be
reclaimed. For the working of these domains, it was partly members
of the former population, partly the Roman colonists or prisoners of
war, who were taken. In this way, certain legal conditions grew up.
The large landowner was not responsible to others for what he did on
his own property; he could not be brought to book for any orders
that he gave. Hence he could rescind for his own estate, any legal
prescription or police regulation. So, in the Frankish Empire, we
meet with no united monarchy; what was called the Empire of the
Merovingians was nothing more than such a large landed estate. The
Merovingians were one of the families which possessed much land;
according to civil law — through the struggle for existence
— their rule extended farther and farther. New territories
were constantly added to it. The large landowner was not such a king
as we have been accustomed to in the 13th, 14th, yes, even in the
16th century; but private government gradually became legal
rule.
He transferred certain
parts of his domain, and with them his rights; to others with less
land; that was called being “under exemption"; this judicial
authority had grown out of the irresponsible position in such
circumstances. In return, this type of landowner must pay tribute,
and do military service for the king in time of war. In the
expansion of such proprietary relationships, the Merovingian stock
as conquerors took precedence of all others, so that we must retain
the formula: the ancient Frankish Empire progressed through purely
private legal conditions.
Again the transition
from the Merovingian to the Carlovingian stock, from which Charles
Martel descended, took place in the same way, out of the same
conditions. The Carlovingians were originally stewards of the
domains of the Merovingians; but they gradually became so
influential that Pepin the Short succeeded in putting the imbecile
Childeric into a monastery, and, with the help of the pope, in
deposing him. From him was descended his successor, Charlemagne. In
a cursory survey we can only touch upon the external events; for,
indeed, they have no further significance. Charlemagne made war on
the neighbouring German tribes and extended his control in certain
directions. Even this empire, however, cannot be called a State. He
waged lengthy wars against the Saxons, who clung to the ancient
village organisation, the old manners and customs, the old Germanic
faith, with great tenacity. Victory was won after wearisome wars,
fought with extraordinary ferocity on both sides.
Among such tribes as
the Saxons, one personality in particular would stand out, and would
then become a leader. One of these was Widukind, a duke with great
possessions and a strong military retinue, whose courage withstood
the most violent opposition. He had to be subdued with the greatest
cruelty, and then submitted to the rule of Charlemagne. What did the
rule amount to? It amounted to this: if the authority of Charlemagne
had been withdrawn, nothing special would have happened. Those
tribesmen who in their thousands had been obliged to submit to
baptism, would have gone on living in the same way as before.
It was the form
Charlemagne had given the Church which established his powerful
position. Through the power of the Church these territories were
subdued. Bishoprics and monasteries were founded, the large
properties formerly possessed by the Saxons were distributed. The
cultivation of these was in the hands of the bishops and abbots;
thus the Church undertook what had formerly been done by secular
landholders protected by “exemption,” namely, judiciary authority.
If the Saxons did not acquiesce, they were coerced by fresh inroads
of Charlemagne. Thus the same things went on as in western France:
the smaller landowners could not carry on alone, hence they gave
what they had to the monasteries and bishoprics, to receive it again
under feudal tenure.
The one condition was,
then, that the large properties should belong to the Church, as in
the newly established bishoprics of Paderborn, Merseburg and Erfurt,
which were cultivated for the bishop by the conquered tribes. But
even those who still had their own possessions held them as fiefs
and had to pay ever-increasing taxes to the bishoprics and abbeys.
This was how the rule of Charlemagne was established: with the help
of the great influence obtained by the Church whose suzerain he was,
his position of authority was achieved.
Charles extended his
authority in other regions, just as he was extending it here. In
Bavaria he succeeded in breaking the power of Duke Tassilo and
sending him to a monastery, so that he might bring Bavaria under his
own dominion. The Bavarians had allied themselves with the Avars, a
people who may be called the successors of the Huns. Charles was
victorious in this struggle and fortified a strip of land as a
boundary against the Avars, the original Avarian limit of the land
which to-day is Austria. In the same way he had protected himself
also against the Danes.
Like Pepin he fought
in Italy against the Longobards, who were harassing the pope; again
he was victorious, and established his authority there. He
experienced too against the Moors in Spain, and almost everywhere he
was the victor. We see Frankish rule established over the whole of
the European world of those days; it merely contained the germ of
the future State.
In these newly won
regions, Counts were inaugurated, who exercised justiciary
authority. In the places where Charlemagne alternatively held his
court — fortified places called Palatinates — were the
Counts Palatine, mostly large landowners, who received certain
tribute from the surrounding districts. It was not only tribute from
the land and soil, however, which fell to their share; they also
received revenues from the administration of justice. If a murder
were committed, the public tribunal was convened by the Count
Palatine. A relative, or someone who was closely connected with the
victim, brought the indictment. At that time certain compensation
could be paid for murder, a recognised sum, differing in value for a
free man and an unfree, paid partly to the family of the murdered
man, partly to the justiciary of the canton, and partly to the
king's central fund. Those who looked after communal concerns
— actually only such as concerned taxes and defense —
were the land-graves, who travelled from one district to another,
ambassadors with no special function.
Under these
conditions, the divergence between the new nobility of landowners
and the serfs became more and more marked, and also between the
landowners and those freemen who were indeed personally still free,
but had fallen into a condition of servile dependence, because they
had to pay heavy tribute and to render compulsory military service.
These conditions grew more and more critical; secular and
ecclesiastical property became increasingly extensive; and soon we
see the populace in bitter dependence, and already we meet with
small conspiracies — revolts — foreshadowing what we
know as the Peasant Wars. We can understand that, in the meantime,
material culture developed more and more productively. Many Germanic
tribes had had no concern with agriculture before the folk
migrations, but had earned their living by cattle raising; now they
were developing agriculture more and more; especially were they
cultivating oats and barley, but also wheat, leeks, etc. These were
the essential things which were important in that older
civilisation. There was, as yet, no actual handicraft; it was only
evolving under the surface; weaving, dyeing, etc. were mostly
carried on by the women at home. The arts of the goldsmith and the
smith were the first crafts to be cultivated. Still less important
was trade.
Actual cities were
developed from the 10th century onwards, and therewith a historical
event began to take shape. But what sprang up with these cities,
namely trade, had at that time no importance; at its best it was
only a trade in valuables from the East, carried on by Israelite
merchants. Trade usages hardly existed, although Charlemagne had
already had coins minted. Nearly everything was barter, in which
cattle, weapons, and such things were exchanged.
This is how we must
picture the material culture of these regions; and now we shall
understand why the spiritual culture also was bound to assume a
certain definite form. Nothing of what we picture as spiritual
culture existed in these regions, either among the freemen or the
serfs. Hunting, war, agriculture, were the occupations of the
landowners; princes, dukes, kings, even poets, unless they were
ecclesiastics, could seldom read and write. Wolfram von Eschenbach
had to dictate his poems to a clergyman and let him read them aloud
to him; Hartmann von der Aue boasts, as a special attribute, that he
can read books. In all that secular culture catered for, there was
no question of reading and writing. Only in enclosed monasteries
were Art and Science studied. All other students were directed to
what was offered them in the teaching and preaching of the clergy.
And that brought about their dependence on the clergy and the monks;
it gave the Church its authority.
When we read descriptions
today of what is called “the dark Middle Ages” —
persecution of heretics, trials of witches, and so on — we
must be clear that these conditions only began with the 13th
century. In the older times nothing of this kind existed. The Church
had no more authority than the secular large landowners. Either the
Church went hand-in-hand with the secular authority, and was only a
branch of it, or it was endeavouring to cultivate theology and the
science of Christianity.
Until the current of
spiritual influence came from the Arabs, all spiritual concerns were
fostered only in the monasteries; the activities of the monks were
completely unknown to the world outside. All that was known outside
the monasteries was the preaching, and a kind of spiritual
instruction given in the primitive schools.
The authority of the
Church was enhanced by the fact that it was the clergy themselves
who carried out all the arrangements for promoting knowledge. The
monks were the architects; it was they who adorned the churches with
statues, they who copied the works of classical, too, the emperor's
chancellors, were, for the most part, monks.
One form of culture
which was fostered in the monasteries was Scholasticism. A later was
Mysticism. This scholasticism, which flourished until the middle of
the 14th century, endeavoured — at least at one juncture
— to inculcate a severely disciplined way of thinking. There
were severe examinations to undergo; nobody could make progress in
absolutely logical discipline of thinking without hard tests; only
those who could really think logically, were able to take part in
the spiritual life. Today that is not considered. But actually it
was because of this training in consistent logic that when the
Moorish-Arabian culture came to Europe, this science found
disciplined thinking there already. The forms of thought with which
Science works today were already there; there are very few
arrangements of ideas, which are not derived from thence.
The concepts with
which the Science — still operate today, such as subject and
object, were established at that time. A training of thought, such
as does not appear elsewhere in world history, was developed. The
keen thinker of today owes that which flows in the veins of his
intellect to the training fostered between the 5th and 14th
centuries. Now some may feel it to be unjust that the masses at that
time had nothing of all this; but the course of world history is not
directed by justice of injustice, it follows the universal law of
cause and effect. Thus we see here two definite currents flowing
side by side: 1. Outside, material culture, absolutely without
science; 2. A finely chiseled culture, confined to a few within the
Church. Yet the culture of the cities was based on this strict
scholastic way of thinking. The men who carried through the great
revolution were ecclesiastics: Copernicus was a prebendary, Giordano
Bruno was a Dominican friar. Their education and that of many
others, their formal schooling, was rooted in this spirit of the
Church. They were not powerful men, but simple monks, who, indeed,
often suffered under the oppression of those in power.
Nor was it bishops and
rich abbots, but on the contrary, poor monks, living in obscurity,
who propagated the spread of Science. The Church, having allied
itself with external powers, was obliged to materialise itself; it
had to secularise its teachings and its whole character. Very long
ago, up to the 12th century, nothing was held more solemn, more
sublime, by the Christians, than the Lord's Supper. It was regarded
as a sacrifice of grateful remembrance, a symbol of the intensifying
of Christianity. Then came the secularisation, the lack of
understanding for such exalted spiritual facts, especially as
regards the festivals.
In the 9th century
there lived in the land of the Franks, at the court of Charles the
Bald, Scotus Erigena, a very distinguished Irish monk, in whose book
De Divisioni Naturae we find a rich store of profound
intellectual thought — though, indeed, not what the 20th
century understands as Science. Erigena had to fight against hostile
criticism in the Church. He defended the old doctrine that the
Lord's Supper represented the symbolism of the highest Sacrifice.
Another, materialistic, interpretation existed, and was supported in
Rome, namely, that the bread and wine was actually transformed into
flesh and blood. This dogma of the Lord's Supper originated under
the influence of this continuous materialisation, but it only became
official in the 13th century.
Scotus Erigena had to
take refuge in England, and at the instigation of the pope, was
murdered in his own monastary by the fraternity of monks. These
struggles took place, not within the Church, but through the
interpenetration of secular influence. You see that spiritual life
was confined to a few, and was closed to the masses, upon whom lay
an ever-increasing pressure, both from the secular and the spiritual
side. In this way discontent continued to grow. It could not be
otherwise than that dissatisfaction should increase among these
people of divided loyalties. In country, on the farms, new causes of
discontent kept cropping up. No wonder that the small towns, such as
those already established on the Rhine and the Danube, should
continually grow larger and form themselves anew from the influx of
those who could no longer get on in the country. The fundamental
cause of this reorganisation of conditions was the people's thirst
for freedom.
It was a purely
natural motive which gave rise to the culture of the cities.
Spiritual culture remained undisturbed for the time being; many
cities developed round the bishoprics and monasteries. From the
city-culture rose all that constituted trade and industry in the
Middle Ages, and afterwards brought about quite different
relationships.
The need to develop
the full life of the human personality, was the cause of the
founding of the cities. It was a long step on the path of freedom;
as, indeed, according to the words of Hegel, history signifies the
education of the human race towards freedom.
And if we follow the
history of the Middle Ages farther, we shall see that this founding
of the city-culture represented, not an insignificant, but a very
important step on the path of freedom.
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