1. The Church and the Barbarian Invaders.
Be-
tween the fifth and the tenth centuries, the
downfall
of the Roman Empire in the West, the eruption of
barbarian
hordes from Asia, the establishment of
Teutonic monarchies and the long
period of wars and
migrations threw the map of the European continent
into the melting pot, until it finally emerged with a
general pattern that
is still recognizable today. From
the seventh century, the rise of Islam
and the expansion
of the Arabian Empire produced a drastic and perma-
nent division in that Mediterranean world
which had
been the seat of the Greco-Roman civilization and had
formed
the original Christendom. In the eastern half
of the ancient Roman Empire,
the imperial system
maintained itself at Byzantium, and, though it lost
to
Islam most of its territory bordering on the eastern as
well as all
the southern Mediterranean, it retained its
cultural continuity (and
preserved Christianity in
Constantinople) for a further period of something
like
a thousand years.
In a sense it is now the history of Europe that really
opens, and this
Europe is to emerge as the new form
of “Christendom”
though it is only very slowly that
the northern part of it becomes
Christianized. The
centuries of upheaval produced a grave decline of
culture even in the south, and much of what had been
subtle and profound in
classical thought—much even
of the scholarship and
science—was to disappear for
a long period. Henceforward, there
is a separate history
of the West and we trace the rise of a Western civili-
zation from a comparatively early stage at which soci-
ety itself has returned in many respects to
primitive
forms. Compared with the Byzantine world, and even
later
with the rapidly developing culture of Islam, the
West appears as a
backward region for a long time,
its backwardness illustrated by the
appalling collapse
of its city-life, at a time when Constantinople, and
later
Bagdad, were of tremendous prestige and size. For
special
reasons this Western civilization at its formative
period, when everything
was still malleable, found
itself under the presiding influence of a
Christianity
that had acquired greater power over mundane affairs
than
ever before.
Some of the Teutonic invaders had become Chris-
tianized before their eruption into the Roman world,
but they
had been converted by Arians and had re-
ceived
the faith in a heretical form. This would seem
to have created difficulties
with the populations they
subjected, for no Arian dynasty survived, though,
in
the case of Spain, the Visigoths maintained themselves
by going
over to Catholicism. The Frankish invaders
of Gaul may have owed some of
their success to the
fact that their dynasty was converted only after
their
migration into the Roman Empire, so that from the
very first,
they adhered to the Catholicism of their
Gallo-Roman subjects. For
centuries the reigning
dynasties were to have an exceptional part to play
in
the shaping of the map, the history and the culture
of Europe, and
it was they who brought their peoples
over to Christianity in those more
primitive conditions
under which it was inevitable that religion should
be
regarded as the affair of the group.
If Christianity had won its way in the Roman Empire
through individual
conversion, it owed its spread over
Europe sometimes to mass-conversion,
i.e., to the de-
crees, perhaps the example,
sometimes the pressures
and persecuting policies, of those who held the
govern-
ment. It was to be extended
further in the north of
Europe in subsequent centuries by movements
from
both the Catholic West and the Orthodox East, so that,
when the
thirteenth century opened, only a small
wedge of paganism remained, near
the point where
the southern coast of the Baltic turns north.
Lithuania
resisted longest of all, balanced for a considerable
period
between the influence of Rome and the influ-
ence of Byzantium. From the western side the advance
was sometimes
made through military conquest and
colonization policies, particularly in
the east of what
the modern historian knows as Germany. Here the
warfare between Christian and pagan might be of a
brutal kind, down to the
time when, in the thirteenth
century, Prussia was
“converted” by the Teutonic
Knights.
A considerable part of Europe was Christianized,
therefore, by methods not unlike the ones by means
of which a
similar area was brought over to commu-
nism
in the twentieth century. As in the case of
communism—though
with greater effect in those ear-
lier stages in
the history of society—the Christian
control of education, the
procedures of indoctrination,
and the withholding of knowledge about
possible al-
ternative systems (or the
treatment of all alternatives
as merely disreputable) ensured the
maintenance of the
authoritarian creed in subsequent centuries,
without
the need to continue perpetually the forcible methods
that had
been required for its installation. Granted the
conditions of the time, one
could say, however, that
those countries which became Christian were fortu-
nate. The existing alternatives would
hardly have been
more happy for them. Indeed, it was their conversion
that brought them into the orbit of civilization.
In the Byzantine East, Roman Emperors, continuing
a regime that had
developed from the time of Con-
stantine,
were able to exercise in some respects (though
perhaps less than was once
thought) a species of
“caesaropapism.” But in the
West the Roman Emperor
had disappeared, while the bishop of Rome
maintained
his spiritual ascendancy amongst Christian believers
and
acquired during the invasions even a certain lead-
ership in some secular matters. Pope Gregory the Great
(590-614)
was fervent in his religious duties, extending
his influence over western
countries, directing the con-
version of
England, and asserting the spiritual su-
premacy of Rome as the see of Saint Peter. But in
default of anybody
else, at a time when Byzantine
authority in Italy had become inert, he was
compelled
to negotiate with the Lombard invaders of Italy and
to
administer Rome as a governor, inaugurating the
temporal power of the
papacy. It almost seemed as
though the Church in the centuries before the
barbar-
ian invasions had unwittingly been
developing an or-
ganization exactly
calculated to survive, and to pre-
serve the
faith, through just such a period of cataclysm
as had now occurred.
In a world where civilization had suffered such a
recession, Christianity
itself shared in the “barbariza-
tion,” coming closer sometimes to those pagan super-
stitions that governed primitive
minds. Neither the
spiritual life nor examples of saintliness were impossi-
ble, but the intellect was ready to
accept magic and
legend even more easily than before; and, since
ancient
thought itself was now imperfectly known and imper-
fectly understood, something of
superstition was run
into the interstices, and there was produced an
outlook
which entangled the material with the spiritual, mak-
ing religion more earthy, in a way, and nature
herself
a field for the miraculous.
On the other hand, whatever may be said about the
way in which the new nations of Europe were con-
verted, there was a sense in which the spread of
Christianity was the kind of conquest that justifies itself
retrospectively. The most impressive part of the story
is the tremendous
internal missionary work which the
Church conducted in the succeeding
centuries in the
countries into which it spread—work calculated
to
bring religion home to the individual, and to make it
gradually
more genuine and profound, even if it had
been shallow and unreliable at
first. It was not merely
a case of eliminating all the superstitions that
could
not be harnessed to Christianity or preventing lapses
into
paganism, but also teaching the belief that had
been handed down,
influencing manners and morals,
and deepening sincerity, deepening the
appreciation
of the faith. Part of the curious charm of Bede's
Eccle-
siastical
History (including those papal letters which
provide guidance for
the conversion of England and
prescribe special consideration for those who
need
careful weaning from paganism) lies in an amazing
gentleness that
stands out (early in the eighth century)
against a background of violence;
in it also is found
a combination of high ideas at the spiritual level
with
crude notions about the universe, a simple love of
amiable
miracles. The great support of the Church in
the Middle Ages was to be the
sheer fidelity of the
mass of the people to their beliefs, and whether
the
faith were superstitious or not, its genuineness was in
the last
resort the real weapon that popes were to have
against kings.
During its earliest centuries, the Church had devel-
oped in a highly civilized world, and its theological
teaching
had come to require a considerable degree
of sophistication. The literature
to which it was at-
tached, and its own
insistence on the continuity of its
doctrinal tradition, gave it a vested
interest in the
preservation of the Greco-Roman culture. It could not
prevent a serious relapse even within its own ranks;
but in a sense it had
from the first been particularly
organizing itself for the preservation of
a creedal system;
and this—indeed the maintenance of the whole
tradi-
tion—called for a staff
of trained ecclesiastics. These
latter, precisely because of the education
that was so
essential for them, were to become indispensable also
in
the work of secular government. The attachment
to the Scriptures made the
Christian Church the enemy
of illiteracy at a crucial stage in the
development of
peoples; and the need to have translations for mission-
ary purposes secured that it might
even be the chief
agency in the development of a literary language.
The whole situation, in fact, imposed upon church-
men the tasks of educating the “barbarians” and
they
became the principal instrument by which the culture
of the
ancient classical world was transmitted to the
Teutonic peoples who had acquired the predominance
in Europe.
In the most violent days the monasteries
stood like fortresses, preserving
the tradition of learn-
ing—preserving, sometimes without knowing it, the
manuscripts of classical works that went out of circu-
lation for centuries. And for centuries it was church-
men—people with minds
primarily shaped by their
religious beliefs and religious
training—who took the
lead in the gradual recovery and deepening
apprecia-
tion of the thought and
learning of antiquity. The
ancient materials were now envisaged in a
framework
of Christian ideas. It was as though, in Western Europe,
a
civilization was being constructed from old materials
but to a new
architectural design. There emerged in
the Arabian Empire a parallel
culture, closely con-
nected with that of
ancient Greece, but under the
presidency of the Islamic faith. These two
imposing
examples of a culture which developed in a religious
setting
almost under the eye of the historian, offer
promising material for a
resort to the comparative
method.
During centuries of tumult and upheaval, however,
the framework of medieval
culture (like the pattern
on the map of Europe itself) was slow in taking
shape.
There was a period in the eighth century when
England and
Ireland seemed to be the last refuge of
civilization, and missionaries
particularly from Nor-
thumbria (often in
the tradition of Bede) carried the
light back to the continent, converting
parts of
Germany that had never been Christianized, and con-
tributing to the emergence of the
“Carolingian Renais-
sance” at the end of the century. At this latter date,
a
long alliance between the papacy and the prede-
cessors of Charlemagne had resulted in the re-creation
of an
“empire”—one in which Charlemagne was able
to exercise a sort of “caesaropapism,” controlling
the
Church even in essential matters and expecting from
it spiritual
support—as though the function of the laity
was to fight the
battles while the function of the clergy
was simply to assist the warfare
with their prayers.
A “Carolingian Renaissance,”
which did not itself open
out into a long-term cultural development,
established,
through the emperor's edicts, the enduring principle
that
monasteries and cathedrals should accept the re-
sponsibility for education.
Then further waves of invasion in Europe—and even
in
Britain—in the ninth and tenth centuries brought
a renewed
period of turbulence; and in the tenth cen-
tury
the papacy, having no longer an emperor to pro-
tect it, came to “the saddest period in its
history” when
it met something worse than
“caesaropapism,” becom-
ing the victim and the plaything of the local Roman
aristocracy. The
danger from violence of this immedi-
ate sort
was doubled by the spread of the doctrine that
the lord of the soil had the ownership of all the land,
even
the land that was devoted to religious use. David
Knowles (in a paper,
“Some Trends of Scholarship,
1868-1968, in the Field of Medieval
History”) has
described how
The ownership and control of all churches, not excluding
monastic and
canonical foundations, passed gradually into
the hands of individuals
who, whether laymen or ecclesi-
astics, were lords of the land. Thus from the eighth century
onwards there was gradually established in western Europe
the regime of
the private or proprietary church, of which
the lord enjoyed many of
the fruits and to which he ap-
pointed a
priest (or abbot or bishop) of his choice, and which
he could give,
sell or divide like any other real property.
When the system was linked
at the summit to the extreme
claims [of] the emperors to appoint
bishops and even popes,
there existed in perfect form the
“church in the hands of
laymen.”