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Holy Land or Holy Lands? Palestine and the Catholic West in the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Norman Housley*
Affiliation:
University of Leicester

Extract

In one passage in his famous account, Friar Felix Faber described how ‘some dull and unprofitable pilgrims’ to Jerusalem in 1480 mocked the excited behaviour of the devout in the courtyard in front of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, ‘calling them fools, hypocrites and Beghards’. The incident is revealing of the spectrum of reactions provoked by the experience of the Holy Land in late medieval and Renaissance Europe. Here more than anywhere else, tension was generated by the inescapable paradox of Christology, God become man, and the conflicts which it set up between the immanent and the representational, the universal and the elect, the eschatological and the timeless. This occurred, moreover, within a physical setting which constantly reminded the sensitive pilgrim of the difficulty of reconciling the Old and New Dispensations. But the same electrical charge which caused the Holy Land as sacred space to provoke diverse and at times contradictory responses, endowed the Holy Land as idea with a remarkable attraction. There took place a number of different ‘migrations of the holy’, to use John Bossy’s phrase. To a large extent the status of the geographical Holy Land was weakened by these developments, but in at least one respect it was strengthened.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2000

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References

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2 See the comments by H. de Lubac, quoted by Bredero, A. H., ‘Jérusalem dans l’Occident médiéval’, in Gallais, P. and Riou, Y.-J., eds, Mélanges offerts à René Crozet, 2 vols (Poitiers, 1966), 1, at p. 261 Google Scholar: ‘l’explication de Jérusalem renferme comme in nuce l’exposé total du mystère chrétien.’

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24 See De Witte, ‘Un Projet’, p. 446, for the altar stone, and passim for the negotiations.

25 Amongst the substantial literature, see in particular G. Bautier, ‘L’Envoi de la relique de la Vraie Croix à Nôtre-Dame de Paris en 1120’, Bibliothèque de l’École des chartes, 129 (1971), pp. 387-97; G. Bresc-Bautier, ‘Bulles d’Urbain IV en faveur de l’Ordre du Saint-Sépulcre (1261-1264)’, Mélanges de l’École française de Rome: Moyen âge, temps modernes, 85 (1973). pp. 283-310; eadem, ‘Les Imitations du Saint-Sépulcre de Jérusalem (IXe-XVe siècles). Archéologie d’une dévotion’, Revue d’histoire de la spiritualité, 50 (1974), pp. 319-42; D. Neri, Il S. Sepolcro riprodotto in Occidente (Jerusalem, 1971).

26 General accounts include Prescott, H. F. M., Jerusalem Journey: Pilgrimage to the Holy Land in the Fifteenth Century (London, 1954)Google Scholar; Sumption, J., Pilgrimage: An Image of Mediaeval Religion (London, 1975), pp. 257302 Google Scholar. Goez, W., ‘Wandlungen des Kreuzzugsgedankens in Hoch- und Spätmittelalter’, in Fischer, W. and Schneider, J., eds, Das Heilige Land im Mittelalter. Begegnungsraum zwischen Orient and Okzident (Neustadt an der Aisch, 1982), p. 41 Google Scholar, suggests a revival in popularity in the last quarter of the fifteenth century.

27 Kieckhefer, R., ‘Major currents in late medieval devotion’, in Raitt, J., ed., Christian Spirituality, II: High Middle Ages and Reformation (London, 1987), pp. 845.Google Scholar

28 See Cardini, ‘La crociata’, pp. 137-8; A. Benvenuti Papi, ‘“Margarita filia Jerusalem”. Santa Margherita da Cortona e il superamento mistico della crociata’, in F. Cardini, ed., Toscana e Terrasanta nel medioevo (Florence, 1982), pp. 124-6, 129; Goez, ‘Wandlungen’, p. 41.

29 For example, Stewart, The Book of the Wanderings, 1, p. 283.

30 Schein, S., ‘ Gesta Dei per Mongolos 1300. The genesis of a non-event’, EHR, 94 (1979), pp. 808, 813.Google Scholar

31 Cardini, ‘La crociata’, p. 138: ‘era ormai non più il Sepolcro del Cristo, ma quello di Pietro la nuova meta della devozione occidentale.’ Cf. Benvenuti Papi, ‘“Margarita filia Jerusalem”’, p. 127 and n.52.

32 See in particular Cole, P. J., The Preaching of the Crusades to the Holy Land, 1095-1270 (Cambridge, MA, 1991), pp. 80217 Google Scholar; Lloyd, S., English Society and the Crusade 1216-1307 (Oxford, 1988)Google Scholar; Maier, C. T., Preaching the Crusades: Mendicant Friars and the Cross in the Thirteenth Century, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th ser., 28 (Cambridge, 1994)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Tyerman, England and the Crusades, pp. 152-258.

33 Powicke, F. M., The Thirteenth Century, 1216-1307 (2nd edn, Oxford, 1962), p. 80.Google Scholar

34 See for example Russell, Just War, p. 297: ‘Defense of the Holy Land and the Church gave rise to defense of the patria.’

35 Regestum dementis V, ed. cura et studio monachorum Ordinis S. Benedica, 8 vols (Rome, 1885-92), no. 7501.

36 Strayer, J. R., ‘France: The Holy Land, the Chosen People, and the Most Christian King’, in Rabb, T. K. and Seigel, J. E., eds, Action and Conviction in Early Modern Europe (Princeton, NJ, 1969), pp. 316 Google Scholar; Menache, S., The Vox Dei: Communication in the Middle Ages (New York and Oxford, 1990), pp. 17590 Google Scholar; Beaune, C., The Birth of an Ideology: Myths and Symbols of Nation in Late-Medieval France, tr.Huston, S. R., ed. Cheyette, F. L. (Berkeley, Los Angeles, and London, 1991), pp. 17293 Google Scholar. For a comparative study of the theme of ‘sanctified patriotism’ see Housley, N., ‘Pro deo et patria mori: le patriotisme sanctifié en Europe, 1400-1600’ in Contamine, P., ed., Guerre et concurrence entre les états européens du XlVe au XVIIIe siècle (Paris, 1998), pp. 269303.Google Scholar

37 Quicherat, J., ed., Procès de condamnation et de réhabilitation de Jeanne d’Arc, 5 vols (Paris, 1841-9), 5, p. 127.Google Scholar

38 Beaune, Birth of an Ideology, p. 180.

39 Leclercq, J., ed., ‘Un Sermon prononcé pendant la guerre de Flandre sous Philippe le Bel’, Revue du moyen âge latin, 1 (1945), pp. 16572 Google Scholar, and see Housley, N., ed., Documents on the Later Crusades, 1274-1580 (Basingstoke, 1996), pp. 345 Google Scholar n.1, for the problem of dating.

40 Ormrod, W. M., ‘The personal religion of Edward III’, Speculum, 64 (1989), p. 859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

41 See McKenna, J. W., ‘How God became an Englishman’, in Guth, D. J. and McKenna, J. W., eds, Tudor Rule and Revolution (Cambridge, 1982), pp. 313 Google Scholar. In my Later Crusades, p. 451, I described Houghton’s speech as ‘characteristic’; since reading McKenna’s article I view the speech in a more innovative light.

42 Rotuli parliamentorum, 6 vols (London, 1767-77), 2, pp. 361-3.

43 Wilks, M., ‘Royal patronage and anti-papalism from Ockham to Wyclif’, in Hudson, A. and Wilks, M., eds, From Ockham to Wydif, SCH.S, 5 (Oxford, 1987), p. 151 Google Scholar. See also his ‘Wyclif and the great persecution’, in M. Wilks, ed., Prophecy and Eschatology, SCH.S, 10 (Oxford, 1994), pp. 39-63. Jerusalem ‘transposed’ to England found its most sublime expression in William Blake’s mystical poem.

44 Wilks, ‘Royal patronage’, p. 153.

45 Housley, N., ‘France, England, and the “national crusade”, 1302-1386’, in Jondorf, G. and Dumville, D. N., eds, France and the British Isles in the Middle Ages and Renaissance (Woodbridge, 1991), pp. 1957 Google Scholar; Palmer, J. J. N., England, France and Christendom, 1377-99 (London, 1972), pp. 180210 Google Scholar. Both aspects of the subject will require revision in the light of James Magee, ‘Politics, society and the crusade in England and France, 1378-1400’ (unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of Leicester, 1998).

46 Gesta Henrici Quinti, ed. and tr. F. Taylor and J. S. Roskell, OMT (Oxford, 1975), pp. 78, 84-6, 122-6, 155, 178, 180. Reconciliation in the interests of a crusade was, however, to be realized through French submission, which was paralleled by Joan of Arc’s proposal that the English join their French foes in a crusade after evacuating the French provinces which they had unjustly seized: P. Tisset and Y. Lanhers, eds, Procès de condamnation de Jeanne d’Arc, 3 vols (Paris, 1960-71), 2, pp. 185-7, and see too Quicherat, Procès, 5, pp. 126-7.

47 Gesta Henrici Quinti, pp. 104, 108.

48 Webb, D., ‘Cities of God: ‘The Italian communes at war’, SCH, 20 (1983), pp. 11127 Google Scholar; D. Weinstein, ‘The myth of Florence’, in N. Rubinstein, ed., Florentine Studies: Politics and Society in Renaissance Florence (London, 1968), pp. 15-44; Benvenuti Papi, ‘“Margarita filia Jerusalem”’, pp. 118-19.

49 Höfler, K., ed., Geschichtschreiber des husitischen Beivegung in Böhmen, 2 vols (Vienna, 1856-65), 2, pp. 11228.Google Scholar

50 See Hruza, K., ‘Die hussitischen Manifeste vom April 1420’, DA, 53 (1997), pp. 1545 Google Scholar. See also F. Seibt, Hussitka: Zur Struktur einer Revolution (Cologne, 1965), pp. 100-2.

51 See Šmahel, F., ‘The idea of the “nation” in Hussite Bohemia’, Historica, 16 (1969), pp. 143247, 17 Google Scholar (1969), pp. 93-197, at 16, pp. 184-6; idem, La Révolution hussite: Une Anomalie historique (Paris, 1985), pp. 92-3.

52 Hruza, ‘Die hussitischen Manifeste’, pp. 162-6.

53 ‘Litera de civitate Pragensi continens lamentationes de actis et factis quondam ab haereticis ibidem commissis’, in Höfler, Geschichtschreiber, 2, pp. 311-19, at p. 311.

54 Laurence of Brezová, ‘De gestis et varus accidentibus regni Boemiae 1414-1422’, in Hofler, Geschichtschreiber, 1, pp. 321-527, at p. 435.

55 Smahel, The idea of the “nation”’, Histórica, 17, pp. 103-4.

56 Dubois, Pierre, De recuperatane Terre Sancte, 20, 108, ed. Langlois, Ch.-V. (Paris, 1891), pp. 1617, 923 Google Scholar; Fulcher of Chartres, Historia Hierosolymitana, iii, 37, in RHC.Occ, 3, pp. 467-8. See also S. Schein, ‘The future regnum Hierusaiem. A chapter in medieval state planning’, JMedH, 10 (1984), pp. 99-100.

57 See for example Leclercq, ‘Un Sermon’, p. 168, referring to I Mace. 3.19-21; D. Wood, Clement VI: The Pontificate and Ideas of an Avignon Pope, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought, 4th ser., 13 (Cambridge, 1989), pp. 128-9, referring to I Mace. 3.58.

58 The moderate Taborite Nicholas of Pelhrimov, for example, commented around 1430 that God would transfer his favour to other peoples if the Czechs let him down. See H. Kaminsky, ‘Nicholas of Pelhrimov’s Tabor: an adventure into the eschaton’, in A. Patschovsky and F. Smahel, eds, Eschatologie und Hussitismus (Prague, 1996), p. 147.

59 See the excellent summary by Lerner, R. E., ‘The medieval return to the thousand-year sabbath’, in Emmerson, R. K. and McGinn, B., eds, The Apocalypse in the Middle Ages (Ithaca, NY, 1992), pp. 5171.Google Scholar

60 Milhou, A., Colón y su mentalidad mesiánica en el ambiente franciscanista español (Valladolid, 1983), pp. 41719 Google Scholar (with illustration).

61 See, for example, Housley, ‘Jerusalem’, pp. 35-6.

62 Milhou, Colón, pp. 349-50, 399 and n.904: the themes of the ‘Spanish complex’ were neatly encapsulated in the Mamluk threat of reprisals against the Christian shrines and inhabitants of the Holy Land if Castile persisted in the Granada war in 1489. See J. M. Doussinague, La politica internacional de Fernando el Católico (Madrid, 1944), pp. 515-17.

63 A. Milhou, ‘La Chauve-souris, le Nouveau David et le Roi caché (trois images de l’empereur des derniers temps dans le monde ibérique: XIIIe-XVIIe s.)’, Mélanges de la Casa de Velazquez, 18 (1982), pp. 61-78; idem, Colón, pp. 372-89; M. Aureli, ‘Prophétie et messianisme politique: la péninsule ibérique au miroir du Liber Ostensor de Jean de Roquetaillade’, Mélanges de l’École française de Rome: Moyen Age, 102 (1990), pp. 317-61.

64 Milhou, Colón, pp. 391-4; A. I. Carrasco Manchado, ‘Propaganda política en los panegíricos poéticos de los reyes católicos: una aproximación’, Anuario de estudios medievales, 25 (1995), PP. 517-43.

65 For a balanced view of the propagandistic content and impact of such prophecies see Milhou, A., ‘Propaganda mesiánica y opinión pública. Las reacciones de las ciudades del reino de Castilla frente al proyecto fernandino de cruzada (1510-11)’, in Iglesias, C., Moya, C., and Zúñiga, L. R., eds, Homenaje a Jose Antonio Maravall, 3 vols (Madrid, 1985), 3, pp. 5162.Google Scholar

66 Milhou, Colón, pp. 399-400, 420-1.

67 There is a substantial literature, much of it referred to in my forthcoming article, ‘The eschatological imperative: Messianism and holy war in Europe, 1260-1556’, in Numen, supplementary series (Leiden).

68 See Franz, G., ‘Zur Geschichte des Bundschuhs’, Zeitschrift für die Geschichte des Oberrheins, nF 47 (1934), pp. 34 Google Scholar, and cf. H. Haupt, ‘Ein oberrheinischer Revolutionãr aus dem Zeitalter Kaiser Maximilians I.’, Westdeutsche Zeitschrift fiir Geschichte und Kunst: Erganzungsheft, 8 (1893), p. 200.

69 Milhou, Colón, pp. 314-15, with reference to the prophecy of Johan Alamany, ibid., pp. 302-8. On the other hand, it is striking that Jerusalem seems to have played no role in the ideology of the Hungarian rebels in 1514, despite the fact that they were crusaders. The chiliastic thinking attributed to them by some commentators is not apparent in the surviving sources. See my ‘Crusading as social revolt: The Hungarian peasant uprising of 1514’, JEH, 49 (1998), pp. 1-28, esp. pp. 19-20.

70 See Prosperi, A., ‘New heaven and new earth: Prophecy and propaganda at the time of the discovery and conquest of the Americas’, in Reeves, M., ed., Prophetic Rome in the High Renaissance Period (Oxford, 1992), pp. 279303 Google Scholar; J. W. O’Malley, ‘The discovery of America and reform thought at the papal court in the early cinquecento’, in F. Chiappelli, ed., First Images of America: The Impact of the New World on the Old, 2 vols (Berkeley, CA, 1976), 1, pp. 185-200.

71 Milhou, Colón, pp. 287-470; Watts, P. M., ‘Prophecy and discovery: On the spiritual origins of Christopher Columbus’s “Enterprise of the Indies”’, AHR, 90 (1985), pp. 73102 Google Scholar; V. I. J. Flint, ‘Christopher Columbus and the friars’, in Intellectual Life in the Middle Ages: Essays Presented to Margaret Gibson, ed. L. Smith and B. Ward (London and Rio Grande, OH, 1992), pp. 295-310.

72 O’Malley, J. W., Giles of Viterbo on Church and Reform: A Study in Renaissance Thought, Studies in Medieval and Reformation Thought, 5 (Leiden, 1968), pp. 1226, 135, 190 Google Scholar. On Joachimist treatment of Rome at this time, Reeves, Prophetic Rome, passim.

73 O’Malley, J. W., ‘Fulfilment of the Christian Golden Age under Pope Julius II: Text of a discourse of Giles of Viterbo, 1507’, Traditio, 25 (1969), pp. 265338 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, esp. p. 316.

74 Ibid., pp. 325-38, esp. pp. 336-7.

75 As we saw above (p. 232), the pope had earlier in 1507 come under pressure from Henry VII of England to organize a crusade. The fact that Henry argued without overt reference to eschatological considerations makes the point that they were not to everyone’s taste.

76 J. L. Phelan, The Millennial Kingdom of the Franciscans in the New World (2nd edn, Berkeley, CA, 1970).

77 Baudot, G., Utopie et histoire au Mexique. Les premiers chroniqueurs de la civilisation mexicaine (1520-1560) (Toulouse, 1977), pp. 72118 Google Scholar, esp. pp. 80-9.

78 Phelan, Millennial Kingdom, pp. 23-4.

79 Ibid., pp. 109-10; Prosperi, ‘New heaven and new earth’, pp. 302-3.

80 The ground was prepared by Columbus, who in his account of his third voyage described the lands he had discovered as an earthly paradise: C. Varela, ed., Cristóbal Colón, Textos y documentos completos (Madrid, 1982), pp. 217-21. See also Milhou, Colón, p. 457.

81 Lafaye, J., Quetzalcóatl and Guadalupe: The Formation of Mexican National Consciousness 1531-1813 (Chicago, 1976)Google Scholar, passim, esp. pp. 306-7.

82 Milhou, Colón, pp. 328, 414., 451; O. Niccoli, Prophecy and People in Renaissance Italy (Princeton, NJ, 1990), pp. 189-96, arguing for a decline in public prophecy in Italy as early as the 15 30s. Others have seen eschatological excitement persisting north of the Alps until the end of the Thirty Years Year. R. B. Barnes, for example, in Prophecy and Gnosis: Apocalypticism in the Wake of the Lutheran Reformation (Stanford, CA, 1988), p. 265, described the war as ‘the last great age of apocalyptic hope in Germany’.

83 See the fundamental studies by Guilmartin, J. F., Gunpowder and Galleys: Changing Technology and Mediterranean Warfare at Sea in the Sixteenth Century (Cambridge, 1974)Google Scholar; A. C. Hess, The Forgotten Frontier: A History of the Sixteenth-Century Ibero-African Frontier (Chicago, 1978).

84 Thomas à Kempis, for example, commented adversely on the benefits accruing from pilgrimage by comparison with mystical contemplation of the sacrament: De imitatione Christi libri quatuor, iv, 1, ed. T. Lupo, Storia e attualita, 6 (Rome, 1982), pp. 308-9. Compare the slighting reference to Jerusalem pilgrimage voiced by Folly in Erasmus’s Moriae encomium, id est Stultitiae laus, ed. C. H. Miller, 48, in Opera omnia Desiderii Erasmi Roterodami, IV.3 (Amsterdam and Oxford, 1979), pp. 136-9.

85 Anna Benvenuti Papi more or less dismissed the clear enthusiasm which St Margaret of Cortona displayed for the recovery of the Holy Land because it did not agree with her argument that the saint’s devotion epitomized the move from seeking Jerusalem corporaliter to seeking it spiritualiter. ‘“Margarita filia Jerusalem”’, pp. 132-6.

86 Hamilton, ‘The Ottomans’, pp. 15-16; O. Gründler, ‘Devotio moderna’, in Raitt, Christian Spirituality, pp. 176-93.

87 For a recent treatment see Raedts, P., ‘St Bernard of Clairvaux and Jerusalem’, in Wilks, , Prophecy and Eschatology, SCH.S 10 (Woodbridge, 1997), pp. 169182 Google Scholar, esp. pp. 173, 178.

88 Constable, G., ‘Opposition to pilgrimage in the Middle Ages’, Studia Gratiana, 19 (1976), pp. 12546.Google Scholar

89 Stayer, J. M., ‘Christianity in one city: Anabaptist Münster’, in Hillerbrand, H. J., ed., Radical Tendencies in the Reformation: Divergent Perspectives (Kirkville, MO, 1988), pp. 11734 Google Scholar, provides the best short account.

90 See Hsia, R. P., ‘Münster and the Anabaptists’, in Hsia, R. P., ed., The German People and the Reformation (Ithaca, NY, 1988), p. 60.Google Scholar