Lecture IV
8 November, 1904
A common prejudice is
expressed in the maxim: Human evolution moves forward in regular
succession, the unfolding of historical events makes no leaps. This
is connected with another prejudice; for we are also told that
Nature makes no leaps. This is repeated over and over again; but it
is untrue both for Nature and for History. We never see Nature
making mighty progress without leaps. Her progress is not gradual;
on the contrary, small processes are followed by important results,
and the most important of all result from leaps. Many cases could be
enumerated in which Nature advances in such a way, that we can
observe a transition of forms into their exact opposite.
In History this is
particularly important, because there we have two significant
occurences, which gradually prepared, but then ebbed away, only to
make their eventual advance in a forward leap:
1. The founding of the
free cities at the beginning of the Middle Ages.
2. The great
inventions and discoveries at the end of the Middle Ages.
History moves very
quickly forward at the change from the 11th to the 12th century. New
forms of society evolve from old ones. From the fact that many men
left their homes, to settle in the cities, sprang up —
throughout Germany, France, England, Scotland, and as far as Russia
and Italy — cities with new conditions of life, new
organisations, laws and constitutions. At the end of the Middle Ages
we find the great discoveries, the voyages to India, America, etc.,
and the world-wide invention of printing. All this shows us what a
radical change has been affected through the birth of the new spirit
of Science — through Copernicus.
Two incisions were
made by this; and if we are to study the Middle Ages thoughtfully,
these two occurances must be place in the right light. They appear
as leaps, but such an event is gradually prepared, until with the
force of an avalanche it breaks forth, and rushes forward in a
flood. If we pursue them step by step, it will become clear that
these two events had been prepared in the life of the Germani. We
shall see through what circumstances it was that such great power
was given to the Franks, such influence over the configuration of
European relationships. For this purpose we must understand the
character of that race, the necessary metamorphosis of industrial
relationships, and the powerful penetration of Christianity in the
4th century. These two things indicate the alteration in the life of
the Germani. They condition the evolution of the Middle Ages. It
would be useless to follow all the wanderings of the Germani, to see
how Odoacer dethroned the last West Roman Emperor, how the Goths
were driven out of Italy by the Emperor Justinian, how the
Longobards seized possession of Northern Italy — we see the
same circumstances enacted over and over again.
In the southern
regions, where the Gemani found political and industrial conditions
already firmly established, the idiosyncrasies of their own tribes
disappeared; they lost all significance. We hear nothing more of the
Goths, Gepidae, etc., they have vanished, even to their names. In
contrast to this, the Franks had arrived at free, not yet fixed,
condition, where serious appropriation was as yet non-existent, and
through this political configuration, the Franks became the ruling
race.
Now we must see how
these developed in the empire of the Franks, that which we call the
Merovingian kingdom. It was actually nothing but many small
kingdoms, formed in the most natural way. The Merovingians remained
as victors, after they had overcome the others who were originally
their equals. All these kingdoms had been formed in the following
way: some little tribe wandered in, subjugated the inhabitants and
divided the land in such a way that all the members received small
or large properties. Thus all dominion was based on land ownership.
The most powerful received the largest domain. For the tilling of
these properties, a great number of people were employed, some taken
from the inhabitants, but part were prisoners of war, made into
workers. Simply through this difference between the ownership of
less of more land, were power relationships developed. The largest
landowner was the king. His power was based on his property —
that is the characteristic trait. Out of these powerful
relationships, the relationships of rights were formed, and it is
interesting to observe how this came about. Certainly we find among
the Germanic tribes, laws founded on customs evolved in ancient
times, before we have any knowledge of them. Among the smaller
tribes all the people assembled to administer justice; later, the
members of the tribe only came together on March 1st, to take
counsel about their concerns. But now the great landowner was not
responsible to the others for what he did on his own property. True,
we find a conservative clinging to the old prescriptive laws among
the different tribes. We find them preserved for long periods among
the Saxons, Thuringians and Frisians, also among the Cheruscans,
whose tribe kept them longer than has been generally believed. It
was different where large landowning had developed, because the
proprietor, absolute in his own domain, became also irresponsible.
This irresponsibility gave rise to a new legal position, in which
the jurisdiction of power, the authority of the police, was
exercised. If another man committed an offence, he was called to
account for it; if the irresponsible one did it, the same offence
was looked upon as lawful. What was illegal among those without
power, was legal among the powerful. They were able to change might
into right.
Now, in this way the
Franks could farther extend their power, and, especially in the
northeast, could conquer great territories. At a time when war
followed war, the less powerful were dependent on the protection of
the mightier. Thus arose the fief and vassal system, which called
forth a selection of powerful men. Then an arrangement for
transferring certain rights by means of contracts sprang up.
The great landed
property, the king's estate, required special legal conditions,
which could be transferred to others by the king or the owner.
Together with the land, the jurisdiction and the police authority
would be transferred. King's law and the law of the small vassal
came into being. As the result of this innovation we see the
development of a powerful official class, not on a basis of stipend,
but of land owning. Such justiciaries were the highest judges. In
the beginning, when they still had to take into consideration the
rights of powerful tribes, they were bound to respect ancient laws.
Gradually, however, their position became that of an absolute
judicature, so that, in course of time, side by side with the
kingdom, there was formed in France a kind of official aristocracy
which grew to be a rival of the kingship.
Thus in the 6th
century, a rivalry developed between the sovereign and the new
nobility, and this attained the greatest significance.
The original governing
race, which sprang from the Merovingians, the large land owners, was
succeeded by the Carlovingians who had originally belonged to the
official aristocracy. They had been mayors of the palace to the
ruling race, which had been overthrown by the rivalry of the
aristocratic officials. Essentially, therefore, it was the
possession of large property that was the basis of power relations;
and the strongest moral current of the church, had to initiate its
rule in this roundabout way through the large land owner.
It was the
characteristic feature of the Frankish Church that, to begin with,
it represented nothing but a number of large land owners; we see the
rise of bishoprics and abbacies, and of vassals who placed
themselves under the protection of the Church, in order to receive
fiefs from it. Thus, side by side with the large, worldly land
owners, clerical proprietors also arose. This is the reason why we
see so little depth, and why the spiritual element which we find in
Christianity is essentially due to foreign influence. It was not the
Frankish race, but men of the British Isles who succeeded in
creating those mighty currents which then flowed out eastwards. In
the British Isles, many learned men and pious monks were deeply
engaged in work. Real work was being done, as we may see, in
particular, by the resumption of Platonism and its alliance with
Christianity. We see mysticism, dogmatism, but also enthusiasm and
pathos, issuing from here. From here come the first missionaries:
Columba, Gallus and Winfried-Boniface, the converter of the Germans.
And because these first missionaries had nothing in their mind but
the spiritual side of Christianity they were not inclined to conform
to the conditions of the Frankish tribes. Theirs was the healing
virtue, and they found, especially through Boniface, their chief
influence exercised among the East Germani. For this reason, Rome
acquired an increasing influence at this time in the empire of the
Franks. Two heterogenous elements combined together: the rugged
force of the Germani and the spiritual strength of Christianity.
They fitted in to each other in such a way that it seems wonderful
how these tribes submitted to Christianity, and how Christianity
itself modified its nature, to adapt itself to the Germani. These
missionaries worked differently from the Frankish kings, who spread
Christianity by force of arms. It was not forced into their souls as
something alien; their places of worship and sacred customs were
preserved; their practices and personalities so respected that old
institutions were made use of to diffuse the new content. It is
interesting to notice how what is old becomes the garment, what is
new becomes the soul. From the Saxon tribe we possess an account of
the Life of Jesus: all the details concerning the figure of Jesus
were clothed in Germanic dress. Jesus appears as a German duke; his
intercourse with the disciples resembles a tribal assembly. This is
how the life of Jesus is presented in Heiland.
Ancient heroes were
transformed into saints; ancient festivals and ritual customs became
Christian. Much of what appears today as exclusively Christian was
transferred at that time from heathen customs. In the Frankish
empire, on the contrary, we see in ecclesiastical Christianity a
means of consolidating power; a Frankish code of law begins with an
invocation to “Christ, Who loves the Franks above all other
peoples.” In the days when the British missionaries
represented the moral influence of Christianity, the influence of
the Roman Church also increased considerably. The Frankish kings
sought alliance with the papacy. The Longobards had seized
possession of Italy, and harassed the bishop of Rome, in particular.
They were Aryan Christians. That was why the Roman bishop turned
first to the Franks for help, at the same time tendering his
influence to the Franks. So the Frankish king became the protector
of the pope; and the pope anointed the king. Hence the Frankish
kings derived their exalted position, their dignity, from this
consecration by the pope. It was an enhancement of what the Franks
saw in Christianity. All this took place in the west, in the 7th
centure. This alliance between the papacy and the Frankish
authority, formed a gradual preparation for the subsequent rule of
Charlemagne. Thus we see the accomplishment of important spiritual
and social changes. This alone, however, would not have led to an
event which proved to be of the greatest importance, a material
revolution: the founding of cities. For something was lacking in the
Frankish Christian culture, although it had efficiency, intellect
and depth.
That which we call
Science, purely external Science, did not exist for them. We have
followed a merely material and moral movement. What Science there
was among them had remained at the same level as at their first
contact with Christianity. And just as the Frankish tribes took no
interest in the improvement of their simple agriculture, and never
thought of developing it economically, similarly the Church only
sought to build up its moral influence. Primitive tillage offered no
special difficulties, such as, in Egypt, have led to the evolution
of physics, geometry and technical science. Everything here was
simpler, more primitive; thus the financial trading, which was
already in use, gave place again to barter.
So European culture
needed a new stimulus, and cannot be understood without taking this
stimulus into account. Out of Asia, form the far East, whence
Christianity once came, came now this new culture, from the Arabs.
The religion founded there by Mahomet is, in its content, simpler
than Christianity. The spiritual content of Mohammedanism is,
essentially, based on simple monotheistic ideas confined to a divine
fundamental Being, whose nature and form is not closely
investigated, but to whose will men surrender, because they have
faith. Hence this religion produces proud confidence in this will, a
confidence which leads to fatalism, to a complete self-surrender.
This is how it became possible for these tribes to extend Arabian
rule, in a few generations, over Syria, Mesopotamia and North
Africa, as far as to the realm of the Visigoths in Spain, so that,
as early as the turn of the 7th to the 8th century, Moorish rulers
were established there, and implanted their own culture in place of
that of the Visigoths.
Thus something quite
new, of an entirely different nature, flowed into European culture.
The spirit of Arabism culture was not filled with dogma concerning
angels and demons, etc., but precisely with that which was lacking
in the Christian Germanic tribes namely, with external science. Here
we find all such sciences — medicine, chemistry, mathematical
thinking — well developed. The practical spirit brought over
from Asia to Spain found employment now in seafaring, etc. It was
brought over at a moment when an unscientific spirit had established
its kingdom there The Moorish cities became centers of serious
scientific work; we see here a culture which cannot fail to be
admired by all who know it. Humboldt says of it: “This depth,
this intensity, this exactitude of knowledge is unexampled in the
history of culture.” The Moorish intellectuals had width of
outlook and depth of thought; and not only did they, like the
Germani, embrace Greek science, they developed it farther. Aristotle
also contiuned to live among them, but with the Arabs, it was the
true Aristotle who was honoured, with a wide outlook, as the
father of Science. It is interesting to see how the Alexandrine
culture, started in Greece, continued its existence here, and with
this we tough upon one of the most remarkable currents in the human
mind. The Arabs laid the foundations of Objective Science. From
them, this flowed, in the first place, into the Anglo-Saxon
monasteries in England and Ireland, where the old energetic Celtic
blood now dwelt. It is strange to see what active intercourse had
been introduced between them and Spain, and how, where profundity of
mind and capacity to think were present, Science revived through the
medium of the Arabs.
And it is a remarkable
phenomenon that the Arabs who, to begin with, took possession of the
whole of Spain, were soon outwardly conquered by the Franks under
Charles Martel a the Battle of Poiters in 732. By this victory the
physical strength of the Franks overcame the physical strength of
the Moors. But the spiritual strength of the Arabs remained
invincible; and just as, once, Greek culture rose triumphant in
Rome, so Arab culture conquered the West, in opposition to the
victorious Germani. Now, when the science which was needed to extend
the horizon of trade and world intercourse, when city culture,
arose, we see that it was Arab influence which made themselves felt
here. Quite new elements flowing in sought to adapt themselves to
the old.
We see expressed by
Walther von der Vogelweide the perplexity which may assail anyone
who follows, with an open mind, the conflicting currents of the
Middle Ages. The poet saw how the Germanic tribes were striving for
power, and how an opposing current was flowing from Christianity.
That which flowed through the Middle Ages was transmuted by Walther
von der Vogelweide into feeling, in the following sorrowful
description:
No answer came into my mind
How men might come by these three things,
So that no man need to perish.
Two are honour and worldly goods;
These often do each other harm
The third, the chiefest of them all,
Is simply pleasing God. I longed to have them in one
shrine
Alas, that that can never be!
For worldly goods and honour
Dwell not, within one human heart,
Together with the grace of God.
Hindrances are everywhere,
Faithlessness sets endless snares,
Haughty force lays all men low.
Thus Peace and Right are done to death.
Never will the Three find refuge
Till these two are healed and well.
We shall see shortly
how difficult it was for the man of the Middle Ages to combine these
three things in their heart, and how these three gave rise to the
great struggles which rent that age asunder
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