Renaissance and Reformation (c. 1300–1650)
Division in the West The many calamities of the "long fourteenth century", which included
plague,
famine,
wars, and
social unrest, led European people to believe
the end of the world was imminent. This belief ran throughout society and became intertwined with anti-clerical and anti-papal sentiments. Criticism of the church became an integral part of late medieval European life, and was expressed in both secular and religious writings, and movements of heresy or internal reform. Most attempts at reform between 1300 and 1500 failed. In 1309,
Pope Clement V fled Rome's factional politics by moving to
Avignon in southern France. By leaving Rome and the "seat of Peter" behind, this
Avignon Papacy, consisting of seven successive popes, unintentionally diminished papal prestige and power.
Pope Gregory XI returned to Rome in 1377. After Gregory's death the following year, the
papal conclave elected
Urban VI to succeed him, but the French cardinals disapproved and elected
Robert of Geneva instead. This began the
Western Schism, during which there was more than one pope. In 1409, the
Council of Pisa's attempted resolution resulted in the election of a third separate pope. The schism was finally resolved in 1417, with the election of
Pope Martin V. Throughout the Late Middle Ages, the church faced powerful challenges and vigorous political confrontations. The English scholastic philosopher
John Wycliffe (1320–1384) urged the church to embrace its original simplicity, give up its property and wealth, end subservience to secular politics, and deny papal authority. Wycliffe's teachings were condemned as heresy, but he was allowed to live out the last two years of his life in his home parish. In 1382, the first English translation of the Bible, known as
Wycliffe's Bible, was published. Wycliffe's teachings influenced the Czech theologian
Jan Hus (1369–1415) who also spoke out against what he saw as corruption in the church. Hus was convicted of heresy and burned at the stake. This was the impetus for the
Bohemian Reformation and led to the
Hussite Wars. Meanwhile, a vernacular religious culture called the
Devotio Moderna attempted to work toward a pious society of ordinary people. Through the Dutch scholar
Desiderius Erasmus Roterodamus (1466–1536),
Christian humanism grew and impacted literature and education. Between 1525 and 1534,
William Tyndale used the Vulgate and Greek texts from Erasmus to create the
Tyndale Bible. King James commissioned the
King James Version in 1604, using all previous versions in Latin, Greek, and English as sources. It was published in 1611.
East and Renaissance In 14th-century Byzantium,
St. Gregory Palamas, defended hesychast spirituality and the Orthodox understanding of God against the criticisms of
Barlaam a
Calabrian humanist philosopher, by writing his most influential work, "Triads", in 1341. A reunion agreement between the Orthodox and Catholic churches in 1452 was negated by the
Fall of Constantinople to the
Ottoman Empire in 1453, which sealed off Orthodoxy from the West for more than a century. Islamic law did not acknowledge the Byzantine church as an institution, but a concern for societal stability allowed it to survive. Financial handicaps, constant upheaval,
simony, and corruption impoverished many, and made conversion an attractive solution. This led to the state confiscating churches and turning them into mosques. The patriarchate became a part of the Ottoman system under
Suleiman the Magnificent (1520–1566), and by the end of the sixteenth century, widespread desperation and low morale had produced crisis and decline. When
Cyril I Loukaris (1572 – 1638) became Patriarch in 1620, he began leading the church toward renewal. A shared hostility towards Catholicism led Cyril to reach out to the Protestants of Europe and to be deeply impacted by their Reformation doctrines. Protestant pressure produced the
Lukaris Confession embracing
Calvinism. in the
Vatican City. The flight of
Eastern Christians from Constantinople, as well as the manuscripts they carried with them, were important factors in stimulating literary renaissance in the West. The Catholic Church became a leading patron of
art and
architecture, commissioning work and supporting renowned artists. Even while fifteenth-century popes struggled to reestablish papal authority, the
Renaissance Papacy transformed Rome by rebuilding
St. Peter's Basilica and establishing the city as a prestigious centre of learning. Reformation Protestants condemned these popes as corrupt for their lack of chastity, nepotism, and selling "hats and indulgences". In Russia,
Ivan III of Russia adopted the style of the Byzantine imperial court to gain support among the Rus' elite who saw themselves as the new 'chosen' and Moscow as the
New Jerusalem.
Jeremias II (1536–1595), the first Orthodox patriarch to visit north-eastern Europe, founded the
Orthodox Patriarchate of Russia during his journey. The
sixteenth-century success of Christianity in Japan was followed by severe repression, such as the
crucifixion of the
26 Martyrs of Japan.
Colonialism and missions Colonialism, which began in the fifteenth century, originated either on a militaristic/political path, a commercial one, or with settlers who wanted land. Christian missionaries soon followed with their own separate agenda. Relations between missionaries and colonialist companies, politicians, settlers, and traders were often antagonistic, because mission and colonial interests were in opposition to each other. Missionaries promoted human development and provided healthcare and education which colonial governments were unwilling or unable to provide. Between 1500 and 1800, Catholic Christianity gained followers worldwide through missionaries from the
Spanish,
Portuguese, and
French empires. During the Hispanic colonization of the Americas, Latin America largely became a
New World form of
Iberian Catholicism, while the merging of native and Spanish traditions also created a multitude of indigenous Christianities. Missionaries relied on colonial governments for protection, transportation, and status, so many of them cooperated with and benefitted from colonialism. Many accepted the social views of the day which saw Western culture as superior; they encouraged the adoption of European practices and values to the detriment of indigenous customs and the disruption of local societies. Some missionaries participated in forced relocation programs and boarding school systems that separated children from their families and cultures. In Greater Syria during WWI, French missionaries used their local contacts to supply intelligence to French authorities. Jesuits tried to suppress the trade in
Amerindian slaves in the Caribbean, but became one of the largest holders of black slaves. "There were intense theological, moral, and juridical debates about the status and nature of human beings throughout [this] period. In the Spanish dominions, forceful denunciations of the ill-treatment of indigenous peoples in the Americas sometimes prompted new laws and measures aimed at regulating and controlling these abuses." This led many missionaries to openly oppose colonialism. Some actively worked to maintain the rights of indigenous peoples, advocated for their protection, and opposed oppressive colonial policies. These missionaries respected local cultural structures, maintained local language and customs, and advocated for a "self-supporting, self-governing, and self-propagating church". Missionaries like
John Mackenzie fought for equal legal protection and protected native lands. Some missionaries can be seen as the forerunners of today's human-rights-advocates smuggling out reports of colonial abuses to their media contacts willing to expose injustices. Religious societies such as the Moravians and the Quakers opposed slavery and worked toward abolition.
Women, witch frenzy, and Modern Inquisition Women in the Middle Ages were considered incapable of moral judgment and authority. However, there were women who became distinguished leaders of nunneries, exercising the same powers and privileges as their male counterparts, such as
Hildegard of Bingen (d. 1179),
Elisabeth of Schönau (d. 1164/65), and
Marie d'Oignies (d. 1213). Hildegard began writing the first of her three-volume theology in 1141. Although the Catholic Church had long ruled that
witches did not exist, the conviction that witches were both real and malevolent developed throughout fifteenth-century European society. No single cause of the "witch frenzy" which followed is known, although the
Little Ice Age is thought to have been a factor. In Finnish scholar 's view: "Most likely... there was no single economic, social or ideological (not even political) factor leading to witch-hunts. One has to face the fact that behind most accusations [there were] personal and private motives, of a very malicious nature..." Between 100,000 and 200,000 people were accused most often by fellow villagers. Approximately 80% of the accused were women; most were acquitted; most trials were civil trials. Inquisitions lessened the impact by requiring strict evidence. From 1561 to 1670, it is estimated that between 40,000 and 50,000 people were executed. Between 1478 and 1542, the Spanish and Portuguese inquisitions were initially authorized by the church but soon became state institutions. Authorized by
Pope Sixtus IV in 1478, the
Spanish Inquisition was established to combat fears that Jewish converts were conspiring with Muslims to sabotage
the new state. Five years later, a papal bull conceded control of the Spanish Inquisition to Spanish monarchs, making it the first national, unified, centralized institution of the nascent Spanish state. The monarchy centralized state power by absorbing and adapting military orders, Inquisitorial courts and
police organizations for political purposes. The
Portuguese Inquisition, controlled by a state board of directors, incorporated anti-Judaism before the end of the fifteenth century. Many of these forcibly converted Jews, known as
New Christians, fled to
Portuguese colonies in India, where they subsequently suffered as targets of the
Goa Inquisition. The bureaucratic and intellectual
Roman Inquisition, best known for its condemnation of
Galileo, served the papacy's political aims in Italy.
Reformation Supported by secular and canon law, the fourteenth century was among the most oppressive for
minorities in Western Europe. Protests against the church led to the
Protestant Reformation which began in 1517 when the Catholic monk
Martin Luther nailed his
Ninety-five Theses to the church door in
Wittenberg. Luther challenged the nature of the church's role in society and its authority. For Catholics, authority meant the Pope. For the protesters, authority was found in the priesthood of believers and in Scripture. Luther asserted there were two realms of human existence, the secular and the sacred, that neither should be allowed to dominate the other, and only secular authority had the right to use force. Edicts issued at the
Diet of Worms in 1521 condemned Luther. After protracted and acrimonious struggle, three religious traditions emerged alongside Roman Catholicism: the
Lutheran,
Reformed, and
Anglican traditions. Reformed churches, formed by followers of theologian
John Calvin, argued that the church had the right to function without interference from the state, and they advocated for a
constitutional representative government in both the church and in society.
Puritans and other
Dissenter groups in England,
Huguenots in France,
"Beggars" in Holland,
Covenanters in Scotland who produced
Presbyterianism, and
Pilgrim Fathers of New England are Reformed churches that trace their theological roots to Calvin. The Anglican church was first created as the
Church of England by
Henry VIII (1491 – 1547) who severed it from papal authority and appointed himself
Supreme Head of the Church of England. Henry preserved Catholic doctrine and the church's established role in society. The Roman Catholic Church responded in the
Counter-Reformation, spearheaded by ten reforming popes between 1534 to 1605. The
Council of Trent (1545–1563) answered each Protestant claim, and laid the foundation of modern Catholic policies. New monastic orders were formed, including the
Society of Jesus – the "Jesuits" – who adopted military-style discipline and strict loyalty to the Pope. Monastic reform also led to the
Spanish mystics and the
French school of spirituality, as well as the
Uniate church which used Eastern liturgy but recognized the authority of Rome. Quarreling royal houses, already involved in dynastic disagreements, became polarized into the two religious camps. In 1562, France became the centre of
a series of wars, of which the largest and most destructive was the
Thirty Years' War (1618–1648). While some scholars argue that these wars were varieties of the
just war tradition for religious liberty and freedom, most historians argue that the wars were also about nationalistic state-building and economics. == Modern period (1650–1945) ==