After a two year interregnum, Pope Celestine V was elected to the head of the Vatican in 1294 but decided to resign after he was dominated by the King of Naples. Pope Boniface VIII (r. 1294-1303) was elected after Celestine V relinquished power and he soon faced numerous problems. Many people in the Church didn’t like the idea of the Pope with some Kings even refusing to obey him. When King of France Phillip the Fair taxed clergy in France, the Pope declared that any bishop who paid would be excommunicated.
In response, King Phillip declared that no resources in France would go to Rome, so Pope Boniface VIII backed down. By 1297, Pope Boniface and King Phillip tried to reconcile, but in 1301, Phillip imprisoned the Bishop of Pamiers without a trial. After a council was held in France in 1302, the Pope issued “Unam Sanctun” which was a document separating the Catholic Church and the power of kings.
Enraged by this, Phillip claimed that Pope Boniface VIII wasn’t legitimate, so Phillip was excommunicated. After French soldiers confronted Boniface, they were driven off, but Boniface died a month later. Following the brief reign of Pope Benedict XI (r. 1304-1305), Pope Clement V was elected. Clement was eager to please King Phillip and gave into all of his demands, even putting Pope Boniface VIII’s body on trial.
Marsilius of Padua (d. 1342) helped the emperor with the upcoming marriage of his son and stated that the Holy Roman Emperor could dissolve marriages. In 1324, Pope John XXII and Louis of Bavaria proposed an autonomous state that would not be subject to ecclesiastical oversight, since many Catholics wanted to end the practice of the Pope having all power over the Church’s decisions.
During the reign of Pope Clement V, the papacy was moved from Rome to Avignon, France from Rome. All the top Church officials were French and all of the next seven Popes were from France. These Popes imposed extremely high taxation rates among clergy, which caused sees to be left without bishops. Simultaneously, the cardinals also grew in power and in number, increasing from a dozen to 26 and often controlled the Pope’s decisions. Pope Leo X appointed 31 cardinals who were loyal to him, and they lived luxuriously. Because of their bad influence and rich lifestyle, the cardinals were hated by everyone in the Church
Pope Benedict XII (r. 1334-1342) was a great reformer, promising to avoid war on behalf of the Church and to cut back on the cardinal’s influence. Pope Clement VI (r. 1342-1352) undid Benedict’s reforms but became a great leader during the Black Death. In 1377, Gregory VII became the first Pope back in Rome after he moved the papacy back to the Vatican.
The 14th century was a time of disaster in Europe. There was widespread harvest failure, the Hundred Years War, the Black Death, and intense corruption in the Church. Moreover, Europe experienced a long period of extremely cold winters, which caused crop failure and rampant starvation from 1315-1317. In England there was a cattle disease from 1319-1321 which caused even more famine.
As a consequence of the Black Death (1346-1353), between one-third and one-half of Europe’s population perished, making it one of the worst plagues in human history. The disease was brought by rats on Italian ships coming across the Mediterranean from central Asia. There was a substantial rise in marriage and childbirth after 1350, which shows an attempt to rebuild the population. However more outbreaks of the plague occurred in following centuries, even as late as the 17th century, yet none were as bad as the first wave.
Since there were so few people left to work the land after the plague, people were forcibly taken from cities and made to work as serfs. In 1351, England unsuccessfully attempted to rebuild its economy by putting in fixed prices. After years of corruption, high taxes, and an English defeat in 1369 against the French, they issued the poll tax in 1380, which made everyone pay unfair taxes.
There was an uprising in 1381 known as the Peasant’s Revolt, which resulted in the massacre of royal officials and the storming of the tower of London by rioters. The rebellion was put down after King Richard II executed hundreds of revolutionaries. The peasants’ leader, John Ball, was drawn and quartered and had his head placed on a spike atop London bridge.