During the Protestant Reformation, anti-clericalism resulted from opposition to the political and economic privileges of the clergy.
France Revolution The
Civil Constitution of the Clergy was passed on July 12, 1790, requiring all clerics to swear allegiance to the French government and, by extension, to the increasingly anti-clerical
National Constituent Assembly. All but seven of the 160 bishops refused the oath, as did about half of the parish priests. Persecution of the clergy and
of the faithful was the first trigger of the rebellion; the second being conscription. Nonjuring priests were exiled or imprisoned and women on their way to Mass were beaten in the streets. Many churches were converted into "temples of reason", in which services were held. There has been much scholarly debate over whether the movement was popularly motivated. As part of the
campaign to dechristianize France, in October 1793 the Christian calendar was replaced with one reckoning from the date of the Revolution, and Festivals of Liberty, Reason and the Supreme Being were scheduled. New forms of moral religion emerged, including the deistic
Cult of the Supreme Being and France's first established
state sponsored atheistic Cult of Reason, with all churches not devoted to these being closed. In April and May 1794, the government mandated the observance of a festival of the Cult of the Supreme Being. When
Pope Pius VI took sides against the revolution in the
First Coalition (1792–1797),
Napoleon Bonaparte invaded
Italy (1796). French troops imprisoned the Pope in 1797, and he died after six weeks of captivity.
Third Republic A further phase of anti-clericalism occurred during the
French Third Republic and its contention with the Catholic Church. After the
Concordat of 1801 the Catholic Church enjoyed preferential treatment from the French state (formally equal with the Jewish,
Lutheran and
Calvinist minority religions, but in practice with much more influence). During the 19th century, public schools employed primarily priests as teachers, and religion was taught in schools (teachers also lead the class to
Mass). This changed during the 1880s as several anti-clerical international gatherings took place in Paris, leading to the establishment of the
Fédération nationale de la libre pensée, a strongly anti-clerical society uniting socialists, anarchists and liberals. In 1881–1882
Jules Ferry's government passed the
Jules Ferry laws, establishing free education (1881) and excluding clerics and religious education from schools (1882). monastery in 1903 In 1880 and 1882
Benedictine teaching monks were effectively exiled. This was not completed until 1901. A law of 7 July 1904 prevented religious congregations from sponsoring and conducting schools, and the
Law on the separation of the Churches and the State of 1905, were enacted under the government of
Radical-Socialist Émile Combes.
Alsace-Lorraine was not subject to these laws, as it was part of the
German Empire. In the
Affaire des Fiches (1904–1905), it was discovered that the anti-clerical War Minister of the
Combes government, General
Louis André, was determining promotions based on the French
Masonic Grand Orient's card index on public officials, detailing which were Catholic and who attended Mass, with a view to preventing the promotion of Catholics. In the years following their relocation outside France, boarding schools of congregants were accused by some senators of trying to "recruit" French youth from abroad, supposedly placing the French Republic "in jeopardy".
Republicans' anti-clericalism softened after the First World War as the Catholic right-wing began to accept the Republic and secularism as allies against socialism. In the present day, the issue of subsidized
private schools, which are overwhelmingly Catholic but whose teachers draw pay from the state, remains a sensitive issue in
French politics, and the
Fédération Nationale de la Libre-Pensée, now commonly associated with the anti-clerical far-left, maintains its strongly anti-clerical stance.
Austria (Holy Roman Empire) Emperor
Joseph II (emperor 1765–1790) opposed what he called "contemplative" religious institutions – reclusive Catholic institutions that he perceived as doing nothing positive for the community. His policy towards them is included in what is called
Josephinism. Joseph decreed that Austrian bishops could not communicate directly with the
Curia. More than 500 of 1,188 monasteries in Austro-Slav lands (and a hundred more in Hungary) were dissolved, and 60 million florins taken by the state. This wealth was used to create 1,700 new parishes and welfare institutions. The education of priests was taken from the Church as well. Joseph established six state-run "General Seminaries". In 1783, a Marriage Patent treated marriage as a civil contract rather than a religious institution. Catholic historians have claimed that there was an alliance between Joseph and anti-clerical Freemasons.
Germany '', 1875. The
Kulturkampf (literally "culture struggle") refers to German policies in reducing the role and power of the Catholic Church in Prussia, enacted from 1871 to 1878 by the Prime Minister of
Prussia,
Otto von Bismarck. Bismarck accelerated the
Kulturkampf, which did not extend to the other German states such as
Bavaria (where Catholics were in a majority). As one scholar put it, "the attack on the church included a series of Prussian, discriminatory laws that made Catholics feel understandably persecuted within a predominantly Protestant nation."
Jesuits,
Franciscans,
Dominicans and other orders were expelled in the culmination of twenty years of anti-Jesuit and antimonastic hysteria. In 1871, the Catholic Church comprised 36.5% of the population of the German Empire, including millions of Germans in the west and South, as well as the vast majority of Poles. In this newly founded Empire, Bismarck sought to appeal to liberals and Protestants (62% of the population) by reducing the political and social influence of the Catholic Church. Priests and bishops who resisted the
Kulturkampf were arrested or removed from their positions. By the height of anti-Catholic measures, half of the Prussian bishops were in prison or in exile, a quarter of the parishes had no priest, half the monks and nuns had left Prussia, a third of the monasteries and convents were closed, 1800 parish priests were imprisoned or exiled, and thousands of laypeople were imprisoned for helping the priests. The Kulturkampf backfired, as it energized the Catholics to become a political force in the Centre party and revitalized Polish resistance. The
Kulturkampf ended about 1880 with a new pope Leo XIII willing to negotiate with Bismarck. Bismarck broke with the Liberals over religion and over their opposition to tariffs; He won Centre party support on most of his conservative policy positions, especially his attacks against
socialism.
Italy Anti-clericalism in
Italy is connected with reaction against the absolutism of the
Papal States, overthrown in 1870. For a long time, the
pope required Catholics not to participate in the public life of the
Kingdom of Italy that had invaded the Papal States to complete the unification of Italy, prompting the pope to declare himself a
"prisoner" in the Vatican. Some politicians that had played important roles in this process, such as
Giuseppe Garibaldi and
Camillo Benso, conte di Cavour, were known to be hostile to the temporal and political power of the Church. Throughout the history of Liberal Italy, relations between the Italian government and the Church remained acrimonious, and anti-clericals maintained a prominent position in the ideological and political debates of the era. Tensions eased between church and state in the 1890s and early 1900s as a result of both sides' mutual hostility toward the burgeoning Socialist movement. Initially also anticlerical,
fascist Benito Mussolini tempered such rhetoric to win support from Catholics and later as dictator, official hostility between the
Holy See and the Italian state was finally settled by Pope Pius XI and him: the
Lateran Accords were finalised in 1929. After World War II, anti-clericalism was embodied by the
Italian Communist (PCI) and
Italian Socialist (PSI) parties, in opposition to the Vatican-backed party
Christian Democracy (DC). Since the PSI joined DC-led coalition governments, the DC under
Aldo Moro turned centre-left. In 1978, with support of the PSI, the DC-led coalition government legalized
abortion despite strong opposition from the Catholic Church and DC conservative factions. The revision of the Lateran treaties during the 1980s by the PSI
Prime Minister Bettino Craxi, removed the status of "
official religion" of the Catholic Church, but still granted a series of provisions in favour of the Church, such as the
eight per thousand law, the teaching of religion in schools, and other privileges. In recent years, the Italian society has got increasingly secularized and many contest the intervention of the Catholic Church in Italian politics, usually through voting instructions to the faithful and to Catholic parliamentarians on the legislative and regulatory action of the State. For example, the positions of
Cardinal Camillo Ruini in the
2005 Italian fertility laws referendum attracted criticism, and so did his opposition to a 2007 bill that would have provided
recognition of same-sex unions in Italy. From the side of the Church, a right to express its opinions and a moral duty in guiding Christians on ethical questions is claimed.
Poland Your Movement is an anti-clerical party founded in 2011 by politician
Janusz Palikot. Palikot's Movement won 10% of the national vote at the
2011 Polish parliamentary election. In
modern Polish media anti-clericalism is/was promoted by magazine
NIE and
Roman Kotliński's newspaper .
Portugal The fall of the Monarchy in the
Republican revolution of 1910 led to another wave of anti-clerical activity. Most church property was put under State control, and the church was not allowed to inherit property. The revolution and the republic allegedly took a
"hostile" approach to the issue of church and state separation, like that of the
French Revolution, the
Spanish Constitution of 1931 and the
Mexican Constitution of 1917. As part of the anti-clerical revolution, the bishops were driven from their dioceses, the property of clerics was seized by the state, wearing of the
cassock was banned, all minor
seminaries were closed and all but five major seminaries. A law of February 22, 1918, permitted only two seminaries in the country, but they had not been given their property back.
Religious orders were expelled from the country, including 31 orders comprising members in 164 houses (in 1917 some orders were permitted to form again). Religious education was prohibited in both primary and secondary school. Religious oaths and church taxes were also abolished.
Spain in 1933 The first instance of anti-clerical violence due to political conflict in 19th-century Spain occurred during the
Trienio Liberal (Spanish Civil War of 1820–1823). During
riots in Catalonia, 20 clergymen were killed by members of the liberal movement in retaliation for the Church's siding with absolutist supporters of
Ferdinand VII. In 1836 following the
First Carlist War, the
Ecclesiastical Confiscations of Mendizábal () promulgated by
Juan Álvarez Mendizábal, prime minister of the new regime abolished the major Spanish Convents and Monasteries. Many years later the
Radical Republican Party leader
Alejandro Lerroux would distinguish himself by his inflammatory pieces of opinion.
Red Terror The
Republican government which came to power in Spain in 1931 was based on secular principles. In the first years some laws were passed secularising education, prohibiting religious education in the schools, and expelling the
Jesuits from the country. On
Pentecost 1932, Pope Pius XI protested against these measures and demanded
restitution. He asked the Catholics of Spain to fight with all legal means against the injustices. June 3, 1933, he issued the encyclical
Dilectissima Nobis, in which he described the expropriation of all Church buildings, episcopal residences, parish houses, seminaries and monasteries. By law, they were now property of the Spanish State, to which the Church had to pay rent and taxes continuously in order to use these properties. "Thus the Catholic Church is compelled to pay taxes on what was violently taken from her". Religious vestments, liturgical instruments, statues, pictures, vases, gems and other valuable objects were expropriated as well. During the
Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939, Catholics largely supported Franco and the Nationalist forces. Anti-clerical assaults called the
Red Terror by Nationalists, included sacking and burning monasteries and churches and killing 6,832 members of the clergy. This number comprises: • 13 bishops (from the dioceses of
Sigüenza,
Lleida,
Cuenca,
Barbastro Segorbe,
Jaén,
Ciudad Real,
Almería,
Guadix,
Barcelona,
Teruel and the auxiliary of
Tarragona); • 4,172 diocesan priests; • 2,364 monks and friars, among them 259 Clarentians, 226
Franciscans, 204
Piarists, 176 Brothers of Mary, 165
Christian Brothers, 155
Augustinians, 132
Dominicans, and 114
Jesuits. • 283 nuns, according to one source, some of whom were badly tortured. There are accounts of Catholic faithful being forced to swallow rosary beads, thrown down mine shafts and priests being forced to dig their own graves before being buried alive. The Catholic Church has
canonized several
martyrs of the Spanish Civil War and
beatified hundreds more. Prior to the
Falangists joining Francisco Franco's unified alliance of right-wing parties, the party exhibited anti-clerical tendencies, and saw the Catholic Church as an elite institution that presented an obstacle to the Falangist's full control the state. Despite this, the Falangists had not been involved in any
massacres of Catholics, and it went on to support the Church as a result of their alliance to monarchists and other
nationalist movements. ==Philippines==