The Avignon Papacy and the Fourteenth-Century Crisis

Historically, the papacy was always located in the Vatican in Rome, however for a 68-year period in the 14th-Century it was centered in Avignon, France. A highly scandalous time in Church history, French monarchs had higher authority over the papacy than before and 111 out of the 134 cardinals were French. During this period there was also increased taxation of clergy and people illegally holding Church offices in order to earn higher income. Absentee pastors collected income while deputies did all the work and dioceses were left for generations without a bishop, due to the fact that these hierarchs were solely appointed for monetary gain. 

Why Did The Residence Of The Pope Move To Avignon In The 14th Century? |  HistoryExtra
Palace of the Pope’s in Avignon, France.

 Overall, this era produced many of the Church abuses that Martin Luther would later talk about in his Ninety-Five Theses since these problems were either created or got worse in Avignon. Despite the corruption, most of the seven Popes in office during the Avignon period were actually competent, but the bishops and cardinals gained massive power over the Popes and the Church as a whole. 

Pope Benedict XII (1334-1342) tried to reform the religious order and was careful about who he appointed. He also refused to wage war on behalf of Church territories, unlike how previous Popes had done. Although there were some good Popes, the papal office was still soured mainly because Popes like Clement VI (1342-1352) lived extremely luxurious, handsome and liberal lives and rewarded office seekers and appointed people to Church offices based on monetary gain. 

The Avignon papacy wasn’t the only crisis in Europe during the Fourteenth-Century, the others include harvest failures, the Hundred Years’ War, the Great Western Schism, the Black Death, and major social upheaval. The Great Western Schism was a period when there were two popes: one in Rome and one in Avignon, which caused all of Europe to be divided. 

However, the most famous and largest disaster was the Black Death, which killed 25-50% of Europe’s total population. It was especially deadly in urban areas, with most large living centers experiencing a death toll of 80-90%. Additionally, there were peasant uprisings across Europe, mainly in England, and from 1315-1317 crop failures and cattle disease are estimated to have killed 10-20% of Europe’s total population. 

Brought to Italy from Central Asia by boats that carried fleas on rats, the Black Death was a confluence of the bubonic and pneumonic plagues. 

Many people in Central Asia had built up a strong resistance to the plague, but not so in Europe. Because of the catastrophic numbers of death, people reacted in extreme ways, thinking God was punishing them for their sins. Some dedicated their lives to Christ, knowing they could die at any time, while others lived in debauchery for the short time they had left.

Song of Roland, Part 2

Although “The Song of Roland” is not historically accurate, it was considered by people to be a historical account at the time of its writing and inspired a fervent call to war against Islam and for more Crusades. Nevertheless, the poem is inconsistent, for instance the Franks had 120,000 men (20,000 of those were killed in action) at the beginning of the final battle, then somehow had 335,000. The pagan leader, Marsilie, had 20,000 men when the Franks went back to France, then had 400,000 troops when he attacked the rearguard. All of the Franks under Roland were killed, yet there was somehow an eyewitness. After Roland’s rearguard was attacked by Marsilie only three men remained: Roland, Turpin, and Gautier del Hum. Still, 40,000 cavalry and 1,000 infantry were supposedly afraid to march on these last three wounded knights. Miraculously, the injured archbishop Turpin killed 400 in his final stand, and Roland was slain as he tried to save the relics stored in his sword. 

The Legacy Of Charlemagne: Why Is He Considered The Father Of Europe? |  HistoryExtra
Charlemagne battling the Muslims in Spain.

Arriving to find his slaughtered rearguard, Charlemagne pursued the Muslims and won the battle after God stopped the setting of the sun in order to aid him. However the war was far from over, as the Muslim Emir arrived in Spain and vowed to Allah that he would defeat the French King, who returned to the battlefield and lamented Roland’s death. 

While he slept with his lance containing the spear of destiny, Charlemagne dreamt of two military conflicts but could not tell what either of the outcomes would be. When he awoke, there would be the final battle against the Emir: 335,000 Franks versus 3.5 million Muslims, who arrived in Spain on 4,000 ships. The two armies began to fight fiercely and God sent the Archangel Gabriel to aid Charlemagne. After the battle was over, a victorious Charlemagne now controlled all of Spain and sent the Arabs fleeing back to their homeland. Forced to convert to Christianity or die, many of the Muslims were executed, although 100,000 converted. Ganelon, the betrayer of Roland, received justice by being executed along with 29 of his relatives. Despite his unbelievable victory and his complete control of Spain, Charlemagne was informed by an angel that he had more major battles to fight against the evil forces of Islam. Hearing this, the battle-weary King wept and pulled his beard. 

The poem offers the sovereignty of God as the explanation for the stunning victories won by Charlemagne. Along with being a battle cry against Islam, the influential work is also about hubris and death. Roland was prideful, Charlemagne was not; rather he listened to the council. Described as a hero for his sacrifice leading to Charlemagne’s ultimate triumph, Roland was also responsible for his own death and 20,000 others due to his self-absorbed nature.

The Fall of Constantinople and Humanism in the Renaissance

Map of the Eastern Mediterranean before the Fall of Constantinople.

At the end of the 13th century, the Ottoman Turks became the most powerful empire in the Middle East, and started putting pressure on the Byzantine Empire and took the majority of Asia Minor. Pope Urban V (r. 1361-1370) tried to call a crusade against the Ottomans to assist the Byzantines, but the Western powers refused to help. Under Pope Gregory XI (r. 1370-1378), some eastern European countries such as Hungary, Serbia, Bosnia, and Bulgaria allied with the Byzantines, but this was only because they were directly threatened by the Ottomans, unlike Western Europe. 

The Christian coalition was severely weakened after the Serbian army’s destruction at the Battle of Maritsa in 1371. After the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, Serbia and much of the Balkans fell under control of the Turks. The Western powers, including the Holy Roman Empire, France, and multiple Italian states agreed to help the Byzantines. Unfortunately their force was annihilated at the Battle of Nicopolis in 1396. 

Battle of Nicopolis, 25th of September 1396.

The Ottomans unsuccessfully attempted to take Constantinople on four different occasions: 1391, 1394-1402, 1411, and 1422, with Byzantine Emperor John VIII (r.1422-1428) barely holding off the Turks during the siege in 1422. The West was reluctant to help the Byzantines after this, because they thought if the Byzantines were to regain power again that the Christians of the East would eventually betray the West. 

During the reign of Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI (r. 1449-1453), the Ottomans once again encircled Constantinople and also blocked the city with their navy. Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II’s army was able to overpower the Byzantine defenses rather quickly, and on May 29, 1453, the walls of Constantinople were breached by the Turks. 

Byzantine Emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos.

Emperor Constantine defended the city with his men until he was killed in action, along with most of the Byzantine army. After the Turks took the city, they looted cathedrals and palaces of their values, and converted churches into mosques. During the brutal conquest, the Ottomans murdered, raped, forcibly converted, and enslaved the population of the city, acquiring 50,000 new slaves as a result of their victory. 

The Fall of Constantinople marked the end to the last remnants of the Roman Empire, and made the Ottoman Empire the most powerful empire in Europe. Vicious and persistent, the Ottomans would continue to push further into Europe, but would finally be stopped 200 years later. Sultan Mehmed II would go down in history as one of the most famous Ottoman rulers, and earned a new name: Mehmed the Conqueror. 

Mehmed the Conqueror entering Constantinople.

During the Renaissance, there was a revival of ancient Greek sources and material. This led to a rise in secularism, and made scholars look at the world more through a worldly lens and less of a spiritual one. Francesco Petracra (1304-1374) was one such scholar, and was an early humanist. Petraca claimed that he was living in a barbaric time, adding that the Greeks and Romans of ancient times were more enlightened than barbaric Europeans of the Middle Ages.