I have previously
written about the political and legal framework of the Middle Ages, for me
an eye-opening view into a decentralized society, where law was based on custom
and agreements bound by oath; where the king was not superior to the law, but
servant to it – with standing no higher than the lords; where each lord had
veto power.
In this post, I will look at various aspects of social life
in the Middle Ages. These include arts
and letters, serfdom, women in society, religious tolerance, and finally, some
additional aspects of the role of the king.
For this, I will use excerpts from a wonderful book by Régine Pernoud, entitled
“Those
Terrible Middle Ages: Debunking the Myths.”
The book was originally written in French, published in 1977.
Régine Pernoud (17
June 1909 in Château-Chinon, Nièvre - 22 April 1998 in Paris) was a historian
and medievalist. She received an award from the Académie française. She is
known for writing extensively about Joan of Arc.
The book is an easy read; Pernoud does not exhaust the
reader with significant details and footnotes.
This is not to suggest that there is no depth – her target audience is
not the academic community. She writes
here with a view toward busting the prevailing myths about the Middle Ages –
myths that circulate in both professional and lay circles. I find in this work a good amount that
confirms my earlier reading in this time period, as well as new insights that
are presented credibly.
Pernoud has written this book in a tongue-in-cheek manner –
the each chapter title is in the form of a myth regarding the Middle Ages, for
example: “Clumsy and Awkward,” “Crude and Ignorant,” and “Women without
Souls.” In the course of each chapter,
she describes and then debunks each of these myths.
Through my earlier work on the subject of the Middle Ages, I
gained an appreciation of the development of a decentralized society, with
decentralized law and political power.
Pernoud, in this book, adds color to my view: the result of
decentralization, as one should expect, was a flowering of liberal attitudes
towards many subjects – in most ways more liberal than the Rome that preceded
it, and the Renaissance that followed it.
I begin with a comment from the forward, written by
Cornelius Michael Buckley:
The Middle Ages – those one
thousand years of Western history between 500 and 1500 A.D. – witnessed the
abolition of slavery, the liberation of women, checks and balances on
absolutism, artistic achievements of medieval cathedrals, inventions of the
book, the musical scale, and the mechanical clock. Why is it then that the very term Middle Ages is equated, even in the minds of so-called
educated people, with such ideas as feudal servitude, cultural darkness,
massacres, famines, and plagues?
Pernoud attributes such ignorance
in part to classicism, which became predominant in the sixteenth century…. The
revival of Roman law brought about legal standardization in the interest of
centralized nation states. The Roman
notion of the jus utendi et abutendi, the
unrestricted rights of property, put an end to the legal rights enjoyed by
medieval serfs and feudal lords. The
result was the reintroduction of slavery, the subjection of women, the
exploitation of the worker, and the rise of the absolutist state.
Several of these points raised by Buckley I had not
previously considered. I will touch on
only one now, as it is a notion that runs counter to my free-market and
property-rights views.
JUS ABUTENDI.
The right to abuse. By this phrase is understood the right to abuse property,
or having full dominion over property.
Jus
utendi fruendi et abutendi (d. civ.): Facoltà del proprietario di usare la
cosa in modo pieno ed esclusivo (art. 832 c.c.), il che implica anche la
possibilità di decidere se e come usarla, di trasformarla e, al limite, di
distruggerla.
Roughly translated, courtesy of Google:
Right of the owner to use it in a
full and exclusive manner (art. 832 cc), which also implies the ability to
decide whether and how to use it, transform it and, ultimately, to destroy it.
This topic will be explored further, however it seems
medieval law regarding property placed limits on the use of the property – the
property owner did not have the right to destroy his property. The property-rights purist in me asks, why
not?
It seems, the lack of the ability to destroy tied the lord
to the land to the same extent as the serf was tied to the land – in other
words, there was something about this concept (which at the moment I don’t
fully grasp, and may never fully grasp) that leveled the playing field between
lord and serf – both were tied to the land, albeit at quite different levels.
In any case, Pernoud’s book raises the curtain on this and many
additional topics. Throughout this post,
I include many links (primarily to Wikipedia entries). There are many characters introduced by
Pernoud; I personally found it helpful to gain additional background for
context and I thought it appropriate to include these links for this purpose.
Middle Ages: Fallacies and
Myth
Pernoud begins by describing some of the countless false and
mythical ideas she encounters regarding the Middle Ages:
I had recently been put in charge
of the museum of French history in the National Archives when a letter was sent
to me requesting: “Could you tell me the exact date of the treaty that
officially put an end to the Middle Ages?...In what city were the
plenipotentiaries gathered who prepared this treaty?”
Of course, no such treaty was signed; no such event occurred
– were the people conscious that they lived in some “Middle Age”? There was, however, one event of
transformation described in the book: “the Council of Trent
(1547 – 1563), which can justly be regarded as the demarcation between the
medieval Church and the Church of classical times.”
The Council issued condemnations on
what it defined as Protestant heresies at the time of the Reformation and
defined Church teachings in the areas of Scripture and Tradition, Original Sin,
Justification, Sacraments, the Eucharist in Holy Mass and the veneration of
saints. It issued numerous reform decrees. By specifying Catholic doctrine on salvation,
the sacraments, and the Biblical canon, the Council was answering Protestant
disputes…. The Council of Trent, delayed and interrupted several times because
of political or religious disagreements, was a major reform council; it was an
embodiment of the ideals of the Counter-Reformation.
I do not understand enough of this history to suggest the
effect of society on this Council, or the effect of this Council on society –
as is almost always the case, societal transformation is not demarcated by such
obvious, singular events. In any case,
there is no declaration from this Council that claimed the end of the Middle
Ages!
Pernoud further sets the stage by highlighting common,
everyday sayings that use the term “Middle Ages” or “medieval” in some
derogatory, backward sense: “We aren’t in the Middle Ages anymore”; “That’s a
return to the Middle Ages”; “That’s a medieval mentality.”
I suspect in these few short phrases, Pernoud has captured
well the prevailing view about this dark period, the one thousand years in
between the demise of Roman law and the re-emergence of Roman law. It is interesting: Roman law – the law of a
most centralized state – is prevalent during the periods we are led to believe
are “light.” It is not in use during the
period of “dark.” Yet, from my earlier
work on this topic, there is much to recommend from this so-called dark, or
middle age.
Perhaps the terms “light” and “dark” in the context are
accurate only from the point of view of centralized power!
A sense of Pernoud’s style of writing in this book is
well-captured here:
The Middle Ages still signifies: a
period of ignorance, mindlessness, or generalized under development, even if
this was the only period of underdevelopment during which cathedrals were
built!
Artistic and Literary
Achievements
Pernoud begins by addressing the myths regarding the
supposed lack of arts and letters during the medieval times, with man’s creative
mind only to re-appear with the Renaissance:
“Arts and Letters, which appeared
to have perished in the same shipwreck as Roman society, seemed to flourish
again and, after ten centuries of shadows, to burn with a new brilliance.” That is how it was put in 1872 by the Dictionairre général des letteres….
Such is the marker of ignorance that Pernoud attacks within
the first two chapters. There were two
periods of light – the classic time of antiquity, and the Renaissance. In between were these terrible Dark Ages,
with no light.
Pernoud suggests otherwise: Latin and Greek authors were
known during the Middle Ages – these were not lost. How on earth could the Renaissance have
occurred had these texts been lost, had the manuscripts not been painstakingly copied
and safeguarded, she asks?
Such texts were not hidden in Constantinople, only to be
found with the subsequent flight to Europe by the Byzantines. Such misperception overlooks the libraries of
Europe, for example the library of Mont-Saint-Michael
which, in the twelfth century, contained texts of Cato, Plato, Aristotle,
Cicero, Virgil and Horace.
What changed with the Renaissance was not that these ancient
texts were found, but that through these texts the work of the ancients should be
models to be imitated. Not so during the
Middle Ages. Roman law and the
philosophies of the ancients were not looked at as the pinnacle of man’s
achievement:
Bernard of Chartres,
in the twelfth century, had exclaimed: “We are dwarfs who have climbed on the
shoulders of giants.” He nonetheless
concluded that, thus carried by the Ancients, he could “see farther than they could”.
Pernoud suggests that Middle Age thinking looked forward,
building on the past; the Renaissance brought a time when Europe looked
backward, longing for an ancient past. In
both the ancient times of Rome as well as the classical times of the Renaissance,
through Roman law the state was made paramount.
Might we not find, in this reality, a clue of the desire for the period
to be labeled “dark”?
Pernoud touches on a theme that I first came across in my
earlier work – the conformity of architecture throughout the Roman Empire,
suggesting the control Rome held throughout the land. This conformity offers one small glimpse of
the extent of centralization under the most centralizing power of the expanded
Mediterranean and European region.
The conformity of architecture ranged from the “most humble”
little country churches and Knights Templar chapels to the enormous pilgrimage
church. This is contrasted to the
varying design found throughout Europe during the Middle Ages:
How is it that the abbey of Fontenay is
so different from that of Thoronet,
when in both instances we are dealing with Cistercian abbeys responding to the
same original necessities, to the same traditional norms, to the same
design? How can these nuances be so
marked that we cannot confuse three sister abbeys belonging to the same region,
like Thoronet, Silvacane,
and Sénanque?
As to literature, the subject is taught in France today
(1977), according to Pernoud, as if it did not exist in France prior to the
sixteenth century.
Is it conceivable that there were a
thousand years without any poetic or literary production worthy of the
name? A thousand years lived by man
without his having expressed anything beautiful, profound, or great about
himself? Who could believe this?
It seems only the lack of curiosity or an attempt to hide
history could explain this.
…the High Middle Ages saw the book
begin to spread in the form in which it still occurs today, the codex, the instrument of culture if there ever was one,
which henceforth replaces the volumen the ancient
scroll; printing would not have been able to render the services it did without
this invention of the book.
Of course, the Gutenberg press itself is a product of the
latter Middle Ages, its developer, Johannes Gutenberg,
a child of the times. But even before
this, the codex was
developed. This form, developed in the
Middle Ages, made possible the efficient use of movable type in a mechanical press.
Pernoud moves on to music:
It was also in this period that
musical language was worked out that would be used everywhere in the West up to
our times.
She identifies the hymns and liturgical chants rooted in
this dark time; authors such as Virgil the
Grammarian or Isadore
of Seville in the sixth century, Aldhelm in the seventh, Bede the Venerable in the eighth.
Those who have studied these works,
written in a difficult Latin, of course, but much less difficult for us than
classical Latin, have appreciated their intense richness of thought and poetry,
their striking freedom of expression.
Serfdom and Slavery
Slavery is probably the one thing
about civilization that most profoundly marks ancient societies…. If one amuses
oneself, as I have done, by going through school textbooks for high school
classes, one observes that none of them points out
the progressive disappearance of slavery from the fourth century on. They mention medieval serfdom in very severe
terms but pass over in silence the rather paradoxical return of slavery in the
sixteenth century.
Prior to looking into this period of the Middle Ages, I had
not considered this one simple (and what should have been obvious) point: for
all of the wailing and gnashing of teeth about serfdom, it wasn’t slavery. Even further, I had little understanding
about the institution of serfdom, at most accepting of the stereotype. Pernoud sheds light on the fallacy of my
thinking:
The fact is, there is no comparison
between the ancient servus, the slave, and the
medieval servus, the serf. Because the one was a thing and the other a
man…. The substitution of serfdom for slavery is without a doubt the social
fact that best emphasizes the disappearance of the influence of Roman law, of
Roman mentality, in Western societies from the fifth and sixth centuries on.
The serf had rights, the slave had none. The serf’s rights were different in magnitude
to that of his lord, but directionally similar:
…the medieval serf was indeed a
person and treated as such; his master did not have over him the right of life
and death that the Roman law recognized.
Besides, far more than a determined juridical category, serfdom was a
state, tied to an essentially rural and land-based mode of life….the lord of
the domain could not expel him anymore than the serf could “clear out.” It was this intimate connection between man
and the soil on which he lived that constituted serfdom, for in all other
respects, the serf had all the rights of the free man: he could marry,
establish a family, his land as well as the goods he was able to acquire, would
pass on to his children after death. The
lord, let us note, had, although obviously on a totally different scale, the
same obligations as the serf, for he could neither sell nor give up his land
nor desert it.
The lord could not expel the serf – the serf had a right to
be on the land. The lord was also
equally tied to the land – he could not even sell it! This last point is a complete revelation to
me, and one that, as mentioned, runs counter to all I accept regarding property
rights.
The serf was most definitely not a slave:
The situation of the serf, as we
shall see, was radically different and in no way comparable to that of the
slave, who did not have the right to marry or establish a family or to avail
himself in any way of the dignity of a human person: he was an object that
could be bought and sold and over which the power of another man, his master,
was unlimited.
Pernoud goes on to describe the life of one particular serf,
Constant Le Roux, serf of the lord of Chantoceaux in Anjou. This Constant, a serf, was able to amass
land, was granted the custody of a storeroom near a monastery church, and put
in charge of various assets belonging to the nuns of Ronceray “as a life
income….” Constant was then able to pass
these holdings along to his nephew, being without a son himself. He was most definitely not a slave! Pernoud suggests that anyone willing to study
the documents would find many like Constant Le Roux.
Of course, while being a serf was preferable when the
reciprocal arrangement was imposed by vital necessities – security being
primary – it became intolerable once the serf reached some level of independence,
being able to assure his living on his own.
For this, there was the work of freeing serfs – with many recorded acts
of emancipation.
Pernoud examines the situation of a recently retired farm
worker from our time, living in the poorhouse with nothing to call his own. This in contrast to the serf, who at the end
of his productive working days would have been entitled to live on the lord’s
domain peacefully:
…nothing would have belonged to him
as his own, but the use of it could not have been withdrawn from him.
Pernoud explains that the serf and the lord had a similar
relationship to the land, despite the fact that the lord “owned” the land –
each had a right to use the property.
Even the lord only had right of usage over his principle domain:
And, from this point of view, the
serf had the same relation to the land as the lord himself: the latter never
possessed it in full ownership as we understand it today; ownership belonged to
his descendants: he could sell or alienate only the secondary belongings that
came to him through personal inheritance, but over the principle domain he had
only a right of usage.
Pernoud expands on this limitation on the property
owner. Whereas, under Roman law (and
today), the property owner has the right to destroy his property if he chooses,
this was not the case in Medieval times:
This is the specific characteristic
of the period, this particular conception of the relations of man and earth,
into which the notion of full and complete ownership did not enter. A characteristic of Roman law, ownership, the
right to “use” and “abuse”, did not exist in our medieval customs, which knew
only usage; and usage moreover that was most of the time burdened with multiple
easements: the right of the peasant of the place to pasture his animals in the
forest of the domain, the right to take wood from it for building or his
fireplace, and so on.
There are remnants of this in parts of Europe today, where private
owners of open or forested areas are required to maintain these and allow for
others the possibility of hiking and other recreational activities. The land is
privately owned, yet available for public use.
Whatever might have been the
advantages and the drawbacks, there was a great distance between medieval
serfdom and the renaissance of slavery that was abruptly produced in the
sixteenth century in the colonies of America…it seems unquestionable that the
renewed influences of antiquity played a part in justifying this unjustifiable
commerce.
The serf, while not free, was no slave. He had rights. He was able to build his own property and
wealth. He was able to live like a man,
owing to his lord a portion of the harvest in exchange for protection.
Women Were Human, Too
Pernoud describes the position of women in medieval society,
a position that would not again be fully achieved in the West until just the
last several decades. She begins with an
example that is not generally applicable to modern times, but telling
nonetheless:
It is not surprising, in fact, to
think that in feudal times the queen was crowned just like the king, generally
in Reims…. [A]s much importance was attributed to the crowning of the queen as
to that of the king.
This as opposed to the position of the queen both before and
in the centuries immediately following the period:
…it was only in the seventeenth
century that the queen literally disappeared from the scene in favor of the
“favorite”.
While women like Eleanor of Aquitaine
and Blanche of
Castile readily dominated their century, while they unquestionably
exercised power when the king was absent…the woman in classical times was
relegated to the background; she exercised power only in a hidden way….
It was the reintroduction of Roman law, again beginning to have
some influence as early as the fourteenth century, which – in addition to the
benefits of centralization – also returned women to a secondary status.
Now Roman law is no more favorable
to the woman than it is to the child. It
is a monarchical law, which allows only one single end. It is the law of pater
familias, father, proprietor, and, in his own home, high priest, the
head of the family with sacred, in any case unlimited power in what concerns
his children: he has the right of life and death over them – it is the same for
his wife, despite some limitation belatedly introduced during the Byzantine
Empire.
It was by relying on Roman law that
jurists like Dumoulin,
through their treatises and their teaching, contributed both to extending the
power of the centralized state and also – what interests us here – to
restricting the freedom of women and their capacity for action, particularly in
marriage.
As an aside, apparently Dumoulin prophesied the fall of the Roman
Catholic Church in 2015!
According to Pernoud, there is a myth that it was only in
the fifteenth century, at the beginning of the Renaissance, that the Church
admitted that women had a soul. Pernoud
attacks this in her usual manner, highlighting several examples of women who
took action for their faith:
So, for centuries, soul-less beings
were baptized, confessed, and admitted into the Eucharist! How strange that the first martyrs honored as
saints were women and not men: Saint Agnes, Saint Cecilia, Saint Agatha…. How truly sad that Saint Blandine and Saint Genevieve were
deprived of immortal souls.
Women occupied positions of high learning and scholarship…
It is surprising, also, to note
that the best-known encyclopedia of the twelfth century came from a woman
religious [presumably “religious woman”], the abbess Herrad of Landsberg. It was the famous Hortus
deliciarum, Garden of Delights, in which
scholars draw the most reliable information about the state of technical
knowledge of that time.
…and held positions of leadership over men:
…Robert d’Arbrissel
decided to found two convents, one for men and the other for women….this double
monastery was placed under the authority, not of an abbot, but of an
abbess….the first abbess, Petronilla of Chemillé …was twenty-two years
old…. during the whole feudal period, the place of women in the Church was
certainly different from that of men…but it was an eminent place….
What of women in everyday life, “peasants and townswomen,
mothers of families and women practicing a trade”? Through the recorded notarial acts, legal
documents, and even the “inquiries ordered by Saint Louis…”
…we find there, taken from everyday
life, thousands of small details…here the complaint of a woman hairdresser,
there of a woman salt merchant (trading in salt), of a woman miller, of the
widow of a farmer, of a chatelaine, of a woman Crusader, and so on.
…the tax rolls…show a host of women
plying trades: schoolmistress, doctor, apothecary, plasterer, dyer, copyist,
miniaturist, binder, and so on.
Women owned and ran businesses and shops. Further, they voted!
The picture that comes into focus
from the whole of these documents presents for us more than one surprising
trait, since one sees, for example, women voting like men in urban assemblies
or those of rural parishes….When texts allow us to differentiate the origin of
the votes…women are explicitly named among the voters, without anything being
said to imply it was a usage particular to the locality.
Married women were not held in a position of acting in businesses
matters only with the husband’s permission:
In notarial acts, it is very common
to see a married woman act by herself, in opening, for example, a shop or a
trade, and she did so without having to produce her husband’s authorization.
Finally, women had access to fulfilling state functions
(arguably not a worthy goal, from my viewpoint, nevertheless…):
It was only at the end of the
sixteenth century, through a parliamentary decree dated 1593, that women would
be explicitly excluded from all state functions.
Access to official royal duties, religious duties, scholarship,
business and entrepreneurial roles, suffrage, and state functions: one can
argue that women in the Middle Ages had more relative equality than at any time
until only quite recently.
Religious Tolerance
Believe it or not, the world was round as early as the
thirteenth century, according to Brunetto Latini. Latini, who understood this well before
Columbus, also understood much more than this.
From the Wikipedia source:
While in France, he wrote his
Italian Tesoretto and in French his prose Li Livres dou Trésor, both summaries
of the encyclopaedic knowledge of the day. The latter is regarded as the first
encyclopedia in a modern European language.
He died in 1294, leaving a daughter
Bianca Latini who had married Guido Di Filippo De' Castiglionchi in 1284. His
tomb can be found in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, Florence, to the left
of the high altar.
Latini was afforded a burial in a most holy place in the
church. This in contrast to the
treatment of Galileo
during the enlightening period of the renaissance, where he was denounced a
heretic and lived under house arrest until his death in 1642.
The sentence of the Inquisition was
delivered on June 22 [1633]. It was in three essential parts:
Galileo was found "vehemently
suspect of heresy", namely of having held the opinions that the Sun lies
motionless at the centre of the universe, that the Earth is not at its centre
and moves, and that one may hold and defend an opinion as probable after it has
been declared contrary to Holy Scripture. He was required to "abjure,
curse and detest" those opinions.
He was sentenced to formal
imprisonment at the pleasure of the Inquisition. On the following day this was commuted to
house arrest, which he remained under for the rest of his life.
His offending Dialogue was banned;
and in an action not announced at the trial, publication of any of his works
was forbidden, including any he might write in the future.
Upon his death, an most honorable burial was denied:
The Grand Duke of Tuscany,
Ferdinando II, wished to bury him in the main body of the Basilica of Santa
Croce, next to the tombs of his father and other ancestors, and to erect a marble
mausoleum in his honour. These plans
were scrapped, however, after Pope Urban VIII and his nephew, Cardinal
Francesco Barberini, protested, because Galileo was condemned by the Catholic
Church for "vehement suspicion of heresy".
Galileo was not alone.
During this time began the great age of witchcraft trials. The first trials explicitly mentioned in the
texts were in the fourteenth century in the Toulouse region. These trials became more intense in the
second half of the fifteenth century. By
the sixteenth century, we are presented with such characters as Nicolas Rémy, judge and
general prosecutor for Lorraine, who sent to the stake, according to Pernoud,
some three thousand witches and sorcerers.
There is more:
…in fact, with the seventeenth
century – the age of reason – the number of witchcraft trials swelled to insane
proportions. There was scarcely a region
that cannot call to mind famous trials, whether Loudun, Louviers, Nancy, the Méautis
affair in Normandy, and so on.
This age of reason, this enlightenment, was in contrast to
the view taken by the church
in the medieval world (NB: the Wikipedia entry is cautioned):
The Councils of Elvira (306),
Ancyra (314) and in Trullo (692) imposed certain ecclesiastical penances for
devil-worship and this mild approach represented the view of the Church for
many centuries.
The general desire of the Catholic
Church's clergy to check fanaticism about witchcraft and necromancy is shown in
the decrees of the Council of Paderborn which in 785 explicitly outlawed
condemning people as witches, and condemned to death anyone who burnt a witch.
Emperor Charlemagne later confirmed the law. The Council of Frankfurt in 794,
called by Charlemagne, was also very explicit in condemning "the persecution
of alleged witches and wizards", calling the belief in witchcraft
"superstitious", and ordering the death penalty for those who
presumed to burn witches.
Similarly, the Lombard code of 643
states:
"Let nobody presume to kill a
foreign serving maid or female servant as a witch, for it is not possible, nor
ought to be believed by Christian minds."
This conforms to the teachings of
the Canon Episcopi of circa 900 AD (alleged to date from 314 AD), following the
thoughts of St Augustine of Hippo which stated that witchcraft did not exist
and that to teach that it was a reality was, itself, false and heterodox
teaching.
The Church of the time, rather than
punishing witchcraft, opposed what it saw as the foolish and backward belief in
witchcraft itself, which it saw as superstitious folly.
According to John of Salisbury,
bishop of Chartres in the twelfth century:
“The best remedy against this
sickness is to cling firmly to the faith, refuse to listen to those lies, and
never to give one’s attention to such pitiable follies.”
Which period might be labeled enlightened, and which period
labeled dark?
It’s (Not Necessarily So)
Good to be King!
This topic was extensively covered in my earlier post. I touch on it here to demonstrate the breadth
of Pernoud’s work, but also because she brings some additional views on the
subject, especially the utility of Roman law in enabling centralizing power.
Today it is generally accepted that only centralized power,
promulgating generalized laws offers the most efficient and fair legal
system. It was not always so. There was a time when “relations between men
were capable of being established on bases other than that of a centralized administration,
that authority was able to reside elsewhere than in a city…”
The feudal order, in fact, was very
different from the monarchical order that replaced it and to which succeeded,
in a still more centralized form, the order of state control that is found
today in various European nations.
Pernoud goes on to give a brief review of how this
decentralized system came about:
A centralized power in the extreme,
that of the Roman Empire, collapsed in the course of the fifth century. In the disarray that followed, local powers
arose; this was sometimes the head of a band of fellow adventurers grouped
around him; sometimes, too, the master of an estate trying to assure for those
around him as well as for himself a security no longer guaranteed by the state.
This can help us understand what
happened at that time: some little farmer, powerless by himself to assure his
security and that of his family, applied to a powerful neighbor who had the
possibility of maintaining armed men; the latter consented to protect the
farmer in exchange for which the farmer would give him a part of his harvest.
This was a voluntary action, a trade. It was based on an oath, a sacramentum. The
act had religious value. Such was the
basis for societal relationships beginning in the fifth and sixth
centuries. It is important to note the
moral and religious tone of the relationship – the oath was sacred.
Law was not uniform.
This did not present a problem for the individual, but for the jurist –
the law followed the individual! When
someone was arrested for a crime, the first question asked was “What is your
law?” He was tried according to his own
law, and not the law of the region where he was arrested. It was truly a case where ignorance of the
law was no excuse, because the law followed the man!
What was his law? Law
was custom, particular to a community or region. Law was old and good.
Custom, usage that was lived and
tacitly approved, governed the life of the human group and constituted
obstacles to individual caprices.
As to offenders:
…if no public power to sanction
offenders existed, the latter were rejected by the group, which amounted to the
same thing, especially in a time when life was difficult for an isolated
person.
The entire relationship was governed by community, not by
state, actions. A common set of moral
and ethical values within the community were necessary to ensure that such a
system would survive and thrive.
What if satisfaction could not be achieved by such
relatively peaceful means – trials, verdicts, and the like? There was the possibility of private war:
“…the right for the group to avenge and offence suffered by one of its members
and to obtain reparation.”
This sounds so…barbaric; yet, is it? The system inherently kept conflicts to a
relatively low level, neighbor against neighbor, lord against lord. The idea of a continental or world war seemed
unimaginable, and certainly unnecessary, when differences could be resolved
locally.
But what of the feudal king?
What was his position relative to society? Was not the king empowered to resolve every
conflict, enact necessary law, etc.? It
is incorrect to view the feudal king in the same manner as the monarch of more
recent history. Pernoud describes this
briefly, yet thoroughly:
…if we consider royalty with
respect to its political, military, administrative role, how can we see in Louis XIV the successor of Saint Louis? That the terms are the same is, then, in
itself, a historical error; in reality, the evolution of the royal function has
been so profound that the use of a different terminology should be
imperative. The feudal king was one lord
among other lords; like the others, he administered a personal fief, in which
he rendered justice, defended those who populated his domain, and collected
rent in kind or in money. Beyond this
domain, there was the king, the one who had been marked by holy oil; he was the
designated arbiter in conflicts, the suzerain of suzerains, the one who assumed
defense of the kingdom and to whom, for that reason, the other lords owed
military aid….his title of king did not signify that his economic or military
power was greater than that of some particular vassal….
Whatever his authority might have
been, the feudal king possessed none of the attributes recognized as those of a
sovereign power; he could neither decree general laws nor collect taxes on the
whole of his kingdom nor levy an army.
There was nothing terribly special about being king
throughout much of this period. As
previously discussed, he was under the law just as the lords were under the
law. The lords had duty to the law, even
if it meant defying the king – and the king understood this. Sadly, the renaissance marked the end of this
relationship:
But the evolution about to begin,
notably in the fifteenth century, ended in precisely conferring these powers on
him; it was the direct consequence of the renaissance of Roman law, to which it
would be impossible to impute too much importance.
If one interested in the possibility of a greatly
decentralized society takes away nothing more regarding this period of the
Middle Ages, it should be this concept that the law was different. The law did not empower the sovereign – there
was no concept of sovereign. The law was
supreme, and each king and lord was subject to uphold the law.
Summary
In my previous work, I found a concept of law and king in
the Middle Ages quite different than our own, resulting in a decentralized
society – one in which a man was bound to law based on custom, not based on
sovereign power.
In this work, based on Pernoud’s book, I have found in the
same time and place a liberal society – certainly liberal when compared to the
Rome that preceded it and the monarchs and state that followed it. Arts and letters were not neglected, but
thrived; serfdom, while not freedom in the sense we understand today, was not
serfdom in the way typically understood today – and it certainly was not
slavery which dominated the centuries before and after this period; women,
while not holding equal roles in society, held prominent roles with many
opportunities for personal expression; and tolerance for views outside of
traditionally accepted Church doctrine existed, certainly when compared to the witch
trials that followed.
None of this should be terribly surprising: in a society
that is politically decentralized, one would expect to see more freedom
generally. This certainly seems to be
the case in the Middle Ages.
Another great post. Educational as always and with your eye on the correct goal of more freedom or NAP.
ReplyDeleteI have learned through my de-formal education or true education, to assume the opposite of what ever I was taught in government schools. This post is another proof to that theory. Thanks BM.
Thank you for the kind and encouraging comments.
DeleteVery interesting.Are you aware that it fits perfectly with the Tarpley/LaRouche theory of the Venetian takeover.
ReplyDeleteI am not familiar with the theory; I also am not sure to what aspect of this subject you are suggesting the theory fits.
DeleteVery nicely done! I would suggest, to supplement your work, a book by Peter S. Wells: "Barbarians to angels: The "Dark Ages" Revisited."
ReplyDeleteWells gives a powerful recount of economic and social developments that took place between AD 400 and 1000. This is generally speaking, the period before the development of formalized feudalism and as such even more interesting as a study of a society functioning without any real centralized government.
I reviewed Wells' book for "Liberty" back when it was in print, the article is available here:
http://www.libertyunbound.com/sites/files/printarchive/Liberty_Magazine_August_2009.pdf
Unfortunately it is a pdf of the entire issue, mt review appears on page 42.
I appreciate your attention to a period that is to me both beautiful and enigmatic. There is much to be learned there.
Best,
Mike
Thank you for the kind words. I will look into these recommendations.
DeleteYou quoted (with comment in brackets): "... the best-known encyclopedia of the twelfth century came from a woman religious [presumably “religious woman”], the abbess Herrad of Landsberg."
ReplyDeleteIn the Catholic Church the word "religious" is used as a noun to describe a member (e.g., nuns, monks, etc.) of a religious order.
To say that someone is a "religious", means that they have entered a religious order (e.g., Benedictines, Carthusians, Dominicans, Franciscans, etc.), submitting themselves to the "evangelical counsels", i.e., taking the three vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience.
A monk would be a "male religious"; a nun, "woman religious".
France historically, and today nominally, is a Catholic country, and Régine Pernoud's book, and the Middle Ages (before the rise of Protestantism) can be better understood with a good understanding of Catholicism and its teachings.
Distributism (not to be confused with Socialism or Communism) is also evident during the Middle Ages, especially under the guild system.
Within the Catholic Church, devotion to Mary, mother of Jesus, promoted a greater appreciation for women in general and within society. With Protestantism, and its deemphasis on Mary, came also a deemphasis and limitation of the social rights of women.
Crown Leaf, thank you for the clarification / education. On many subjects, certainly to include this one, I write along the path of my learning.
DeleteThe Jus Primae Noctis is myth?
ReplyDeleteThe author of this work makes no mention of it. I cannot speak authoritatively one way or another, and only offer the following for consideration. From Wikipedia:
Deletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droit_du_seigneur
“Instances of the practice, while never present in Medieval Europe[citation needed], have been observed elsewhere.”
“Braveheart (1995); ius primae noctis is invoked by Edward Longshanks in an attempt to breed the Scots out. This was one of the many inaccuracies cited by critics of the film.”
According to Albrecht Classen (2007). “The Medieval Chastity Belt: A Myth-Making Process,” Macmillan. p. 151:
“The simple reason why we are dealing with a myth here rests in the surprising fact that practically all writers who make any such claims have never been able or willing to cite any trustworthy source, if they have any.”
This is exceptionally well written, researched and editorialized.
ReplyDeleteKudos to you Johnathon.
Thank you, Nick.
DeleteTesting (it wasn't accepting my comment, but gave no error message).
ReplyDeleteFYI, "Women religious" means women in religious orders, i.e., nuns. All women religious are religious women, but not all religious women are women religious. Got that?
ReplyDeleteHans-Hermann Hoppe likewise argues the Middle Ages were more respectful of individual rights than what came after. Great article!
Thank you for the helpful and kind comments.
DeletePerhaps I can offer some explanation of why the ownership of land in feudal times differs so much from what is generally accepted, especially amongst libertarians, today. In a feudal society, all relationships, even that of an owner to his major property, is considered contractually. A lord owns his fief only in light of the oaths he has pledged to his underlings and his overlord. In his position as a lord, he is bound to be the steward of his fief and its inhabitants just as firmly as his serfs are bound to offer him taxes and the king is bound to defend him. To sell or destroy his land would be to violate an oath taken before God in perpetuity, which simply is not done. The exact details of this oath vary, but it is almost always there, if you look.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the legal importance of the king is understated here. In the era discussed, all land within a kingdom was *technically* owned by its king. This was with the understanding that it would be carved up and given to lords, yeomen, and serfs in perpetuity for nearly unlimited usage; but it was still the explanation. Furthermore, all the oaths taken between serfs and nobles were also *technically* based upon the king's power. While the king may have really been just a lord among lords, all the other lords were nothing but his representatives, according to the technicalities of the law. The law and nation was embodied by the king in feudal society, which actually never had any real effect until the system was already breaking down.
"In the era discussed, all land within a kingdom was *technically* owned by its king."
DeleteI have not read this in any of my work to date - not to say it isn't so, I just haven't seen it. If you have a reference, I would welcome it.
The only comments in my reading that I recall on this point are covered here:
http://bionicmosquito.blogspot.com/2013/01/someone-will-always-own-land.html
"In a feudal society, all relationships, even that of an owner to his major property, is [sic] considered contractually."
DeleteNo!
They are considered in a way that superficially looks like that to moderns, but that is misleading. The analogy does not quite fit, in a way that turns out to be rather important.
In a contract as today's systems have it, there is an outside enforcing structure, and there is no contract without a consideration. If either party defaults on the terms of the contract, the other is automatically no longer bound by it.
Contrariwise, feudal bonds involved the exchange of binding but free standing promises, with no enforcing structure external to that. If either party defaulted, the other was still bound regardless, but the binding was "only" enforced by respect for the sacredness of any oaths, by the importance of honour (which is not what the U.S. media describe when talking up their soldiers) which could not be forfeited without losing the valuable ability to be trusted enough to be allowed feudal ties (see Montaigne's description of why the Turk withdrew from Italy) - and by any force the other party could bring to bear as a sanction, which depended on having other feudal connections on tap (the defaulter, being without honour, would find it hard to call on similar strength). Of course, prudent oaths were framed with exit clauses allowing non-performance if the other party defaulted, or if being called on to support a defaulter against sanctions, so that trouble would be quarantined - but sometimes people were too weak or too foolish to insist on such caveats (read Alfred Duggan's first historical novel about the First Crusade).
In the rare case of a property being an allod, owned outright, there was no constraint on the owner at all - and, if he possessed it as a feudal grant, he wasn't the owner of it at all, but only of certain rights over it that were passed to him by that grant.
That second paragraph is also wrong, except:-
Delete- In kingdoms that were set up with that in place, like England after the Norman Conquest.
- In kingdoms in which the kings had, piece by piece, got hold of those ownership rights by working the system from their "bully pulpit" over generations. That got under way fairly early in France, and became material after the kings of England lost the duchy of Normandy, but it wasn't complete until the Middle Ages were over (technically, not even by the French Revolution, what with Avignon, Montbeliard, etc. - and maybe not even now, what with Monaco, Andorra and the enclave of Spain). But during the Hundred Years War even loyal magnates like the Sire de Coucy - who owned allodially - did NOT stand in that sort of relationship to the king - yet.
So, no, it was NOT true that "[i]n the era discussed, all land within a kingdom was *technically* owned by its king". Research the "barons of the land" in the crusader kingdoms for other counter-examples.
My apologies on the statements about the king being technical owner of everything; I had learned about it from English law (which still upholds it as a technical fact, I believe), and was under the impression that this was representative of Europe as a whole. Evidently, I was wrong.
DeleteAs to the first point I made: The oaths of the day may have been somewhat different from the contracts we are familiar with, Lawrence, but they were still contracts of a sort, and they were indeed the reason for the restrictions upon the rights of lords.
That last is like saying that promissory estoppels are "contracts of a sort". Yes, feudal ties were "indeed the reason for the restrictions upon the rights of lords", but no, contracts had nothing to do with it, it was their OATHS that were binding. If anyone had taken it into his head to make such an oath in a free standing way with nothing in exchange, it would have been just as binding, so it has more in common with promissory estoppels than with contracts. Where the contract analogy does hold up is that, in practice, those binding oaths were only made in exchange for other binding oaths - but as soon as they were made, that aspect ended. Thereafter, the oaths operated on their own terms without reference to anything resembling contract - unless they had implicitly or expressly included provision for that. For instance, if someone swore to serve another in peace or war, saving his duty to his Grace the King (a common form), then the other - the lord - couldn't waive that duty, though he could put his own reading on "serve"; it was a duty in respect of him, about him, but in a sense not "to" him and not in any sense "his" to dispose of. Yet that would seem weird in a contract, that the parties couldn't mutually agree to vary its terms unless a procedure for that had been implicitly or expressly put in the contract. Sam Gamgee does not abandon Frodo, even at Frodo's order.
DeleteI apologize to all who have commented and have been waiting to see your post here. I have been tending to other matters, and have only returned to the site now.
ReplyDeleteI will reply, as appropriate, to these comments in the next day.
Again, I apologize for the delay, and I thank you for taking time to both read the article and make your comments.
The cubs of the lion, be they male or female, are lions...
ReplyDelete-Shota Rustaveli, The Knight in the Panther's Skin
"He nonetheless concluded that, thus carried by the Ancients, he could “see farther than they could”." - Pernoud
ReplyDeleteFrom Lord Acton's 'History of Freedom in Christianity:'
"Looking back over the space of 1,000 years, which we call the Middle Ages to get an estimate of the work they had done, if not towards perfection in their institutions, at least towards attaining the knowledge of political truth, this is what we find:—Representative government, which was unknown to the ancients, was almost universal. The methods of election were crude; but the principle that no tax was lawful that was not granted by the class that paid it; that is, that taxation was inseparable from representation, was recognized, not as the privilege of certain countries, but as the right of all. Not a prince in the world, said Philip de Commines, can levy a penny without the consent of the people. Slavery was almost everywhere extinct; and absolute power was deemed more intolerable and more criminal than slavery. The right of insurrection was not only admitted but defined, as a duty sanctified by religion."
I've posted this here before, but it is just such a great quote!
"the Renaissance brought a time when Europe looked backward, longing for an ancient past." - BM
Was it Europe or just ambitious kings and bishops who wished to bring back the real Ancient Regime?
"one can argue that women in the Middle Ages had more relative equality than at any time until only quite recently." - BM
This section knocked my socks off. I didn't know any of this. Awesome.
"The Church of the time, rather than punishing witchcraft, opposed what it saw as the foolish and backward belief in witchcraft itself, which it saw as superstitious folly." - Pernoud
This was my suspicion. Thanks for confirming it.
"None of this should be terribly surprising: in a society that is politically decentralized, one would expect to see more freedom generally." - BM
Decentralizationism!!! =)
"Was it Europe or just ambitious kings and bishops who wished to bring back the real Ancient Regime?"
DeleteFair enough; using terms like "Europe," "America," "government" are often shorthand for something else....