Title: Lecture 3: Early 16th C
1Lecture 3 Early 16th C
- Ann T. Orlando
- 23 January 2006
2Introduction to Next Three Lectures (3,4,5)
- All three will have Martin Luther as the main
player - Lecture 3 focus on start of Reformation and
impact in Germany - Lecture 4 Martin Luthers Life and political
impact beyond Germany - Lecture 5 focus on theology and doctrinal issues
- NB these really are interlocking themes
3Outline Lecture 3
- Historical Review of Early 16th C
- Popes of early 16th C and political situation
- The Beginning of the Reformation
- Political Conflicts precipitated by Luther in
Germany
4Historical Review 14th 15th C
- Black death, Hundred Years War
- Avignon Papacy
- Great Schism 2 Popes
- Conciliar Movement 3 Popes
- Development of strong, competing nations
- Fall of Constantinople, 1453
5Recap Situation Early 16th C
- Byzantine Empire destroyed
- Powerful Ottoman Turks in control of Eastern and
Southern Mediterranean - Spain newly unified after expulsion of Muslims
- France and England in uneasy truce
- France and HRE in occasional battles over eastern
France - Popes in very weakened political situation after
Avignon papacy reliant on sale of indulgences
and simony for funds
6Popes of Early 16th Century
- Alexander VI (1492-1503), most notorious Borgia
Pope - Julius II (1503-1513), leads armies in battle to
solidify Papal States, decides to rebuild St.
Peters Basilica - Old St Peters built by Constantine in very bad
condition - What had been largest church in Christendom now a
mosque - Donation of Constantine accepted as a forgery
- Leo X (1513-1521), Now that God has given us the
Papacy, let us enjoy it. - Popular joke is ROMA Radix Omnia Malorum
Avaritia (Avarice the Root of All Evil) - Note, however, that these same Popes were also
patrons for some of the most important artists of
Renaissance and early Baroque - These same Popes were champions of learning and
encouraged establishment of major libraries,
including Vatican library
7Very Strong National Rulers Early 16th C
- Francois I of France
- Charles V HRE (Spain, Germany, Netherlands)
- Henry VIII in England
- Sulyman the Magnificent in Ottoman Empire
8Martin Luther (1483-1546)
- Luther was influenced by humanism studied
Biblical languages and the early Church Fathers,
especially Augustine - Driven by internal and external events
- Internal struggle
- As a young Augustinian monk, Luther struggles to
appease God for his sins - Finally realizes that nothing he can do can
appease God salvation must be Gods free gift
that one accepts by faith
9The Proximate Cause of the German Reformation
- In 1517, Albert of Mainz wants to be Archbishop
- Albert buys his archbishopric from Rome, with
money borrowed from Rome (Pope Leo X) - Rome needs the money in part to help pay for
rebuilding of St. Peters - Rome authorizes the preaching of a special
indulgence in Germany, with the money to go to
Albrecht, so he can repay his loan back to Leo X - Indulgence is preached by Johan Tetzel, When the
coin in the coffer rings, the soul from purgatory
springs
10Martin Luthers Response
- Luther is deeply offended by this corruption
- Responds to this situation with 95 Theses
- A thesis was an academic hypothesis which was ot
to debated among scholars - Luthers theses go far beyond denouncing sin of
simony and corruption - fundamentally calls into question Romes primacy,
- theology of indulgences
- denounces scholasticism
- German princes, especially Fredrick the Wise of
Saxony, support Luther against Rome and against
Charles V
11Map Central Europe 1500www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/
08/euwc/ht08euwc.htm
12Case Study Indulgences
- The Commission of Indulgences
- Purpose is to reconstruct St. Peters
- Indulgence remits all pain of purgatory for
living and dead - Money given depends on social status no prayer
needed, just give money - 95 Theses
- Pope cannot remit punishment due to sin only God
can - Certainly cannot effect dead who have already
been judged by God - 28 It is certain that when the penny jingles
into the money-box, gain and avarice can be
increased, but the result of the intercession of
the Church is in the power of God alone. - Much better to give money to poor and engage in
works of mercy than to buy pardons - 50 Christians are to be taught that if the pope
knew the exactions of the pardon-preachers, he
would rather that St. Peter's church should go to
ashes, than that it should be built up with the
skin, flesh and bones of his sheep. - Gospel is true treasure of Church
13German Political Situation Early 16th C
- Germany (all of Central Europe) actually composed
of separate dutchies, loosely confederated into
the Holy Roman Empire - HRE goes back to Otto I in the 10th C
- Diet an assembly of more important princes, or
Electors, who administered much of Germany
also chose the HRE - By 15th C Emperor almost always chosen from
Hapsburgs who ruled Austria - Roughly three classes nobility, knights,
peasants - But a growing new class of merchants, small
business owners Luthers father
14German 16th C Social Unrest
- Major nobility (electors) becoming increasingly
powerful - But recognized that Charles V was a very strong
Emperor - Concerned that Pope could appoint powerful
bishops and funds leaving Germany through simony
and indulgence selling - Knights losing place in society
- Rulers using lawyers for counsel and standing
armies or mercenaries for military - Knights become mercenaries
- Peasants economically oppressed by nobility and
urban merchant class - Printing press is increasing literacy among
peasants
15Luther and Politics
- Luthers primary political supporter was Fredrick
the Wise of Saxony - He establish University at Wittenburg
- Protected Luther after Diet of Worms taking him
to Wartburg - Battled Charles V and succeeded in getting the
Peace of Augsburg signed - But Frederick also allied with Pope Leo X against
Charles V and the Turks - Luther interpreted Rom. 13 as requiring
Christians to support their rulers, regardless of
circumstances
16Luther and Peasants and Jews
- Peasant unrest throughout 16th C
- Misunderstand Luthers call to freedom of
Christian and priesthood of all believers as call
to greater social autonomy - Publish 12 Articles of Grievances of Peasants
1525 - Peasant Revolt of 1525 led by one of Luthers
supporters, Thomas Muentzer - Luther repudiates Peasant Revolt, encourages
nobility to crush revolt in Against the Murderous
and Thieving Hordes of Peasants - Jews in 16th C
- Recall popularly blamed for plague
- Competitors to rising merchant class
- Luther was deeply anti-Semitic, The Jews and
Their Lies
17Appeal to German Nobility, 1520
- Three walls built around Roman Church
- Popes decree that temporal powers have no
jurisdiction over them - Only Pope can interpret Scripture
- Only a Pope can summon a council
- Luthers response
- No difference between laymen and priests
- Scripture does not say that only Pope can
interpret Scripture - When Pope acts contrary to Scripture it is the
duty of Christians to oppose him
18Political Response Against Luther and German
Princes
- Pope Leo X did not want to cross Fredrick the
Wise - Check on Charles V power
- Wanted Germans to take up arms against Turks
- Luther appeared before Diet of Worms, 1521
- Luther is condemned by Charles V
- Kidnapped by Fredrick the Wise and taken to
Wartburg Castle to prevent capture by Charles V - Schmalkaldic League formed in 1531 by German
nobles opposed to Charles V - Sporadic Battles between them and Charles V until
1555
19Peace of Augsburg, 1555
- Cuius regio, eius religio, whose reign, his
religion - Only valid for Lutheran and Catholic princes
- Final answer to who is in charge the prince
- Note there is still no separation of Church and
State
20Assignments
- 1. Bokenkotter, Chapter 18, 19
- 2. Archbishop Albert Mainz. The Commission of
Indulgences in The European Reformations
Sourcebook. ed Carter Lindberg. Malden
Blackwell, 2000. 29-30. - 3. Martin Luther. 95 Theses, available at
http//www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenbe
rg/luther/web/ninetyfive.html - 4. Martin Luther. Appeal to German Nobility and
Babylonian Captivity of the Church. in The
European Reformations Sourcebook. ed Carter
Lindberg. Malden Blackwell, 2000. 36-39. - 5. Peace of Augsburg available at
http//www.uoregon.edu/sshoemak/323/texts/augsbu
rg.htm